《Death's Dancer》Chapter 19: Ballerina Burgles Bank!
Advertisement
BALLERINA IN BLACK BURGLES BANK!
“Ten out of ten for alliteration, but I’d only give you a five for accurate reporting,” I muttered to myself, eyes glued to the front page of the Toronto Star. I was celebrating my success last night with an early morning piece of pie and a stack of newspapers, as many as I could find.
In my eagerness to splash my name all over the news, I hadn’t even stopped to consider how I was going to introduce myself. I wasn’t sure if the Rubes would accept my fame if it was garnered under the wrong name. Either way, letting the press pick a name for me invalidated all those months and years of thought that I had put into choosing just the right moniker. My next scheme would have to involve a public announcement of my identity.
I flattened out the newspaper, grimacing at the fuzzy photo of myself diving into the bank. I was thrilled they had given me the full front page, but didn’t those idiots at the Star know how to take a decent photo? Perhaps a proper photo shoot could be arranged. I grinned, imagining what their reaction would be if a supervillain showed up at their offices in full costume and requested a photo shoot. I would probably have to be a bit subtler than that if I wanted them to take me seriously.
Taking a bite of delicious apple pie, I returned to my reading, savouring the words and the sweet, cinnamony filling equally.
Last night, a new and vicious villain appeared in our city, wreaking havoc on the RUBE Central Bank. After blasting a hole straight through the bank, this dastardly dancer darted away with bags of cash. Rough estimates from bank officials calculate that she made off with over three hundred thousand dollars. The best efforts of the police, aided by the fearsome Fireball, were not enough to halt this pirouetting pilferer.
“Shocking, isn’t it?”
My head jerked up, as though pulled by an invisible puppeteer. I had been so absorbed in my reading I had entirely forgotten to pay attention to the world around me. Stupid, stupid, stupid. That kind of inattentiveness could get a villain killed in a hurry.
Luckily it was only Abe, who slid into the seat across from me with his own piece of pie. He looked disgustingly wide-awake for this early in the morning, especially since I knew he had been helping count our stolen cash until at least 3am.
“That’s the bank we robbed last night,” Abe said, nodding towards the newspaper before taking a large bit of pie.
“What?!”
A couple at a nearby table halted their conversation to look at me curiously, and I ducked my head, shamming embarrassment at my outburst. In truth, it had been carefully calculated to properly convey surprise and horror while not drawing undue attention to our little table. The couple turned back to their conversation and I resisted the urge to stick my tongue out at their smartly-dressed backs.
Advertisement
“Yup,” Abe replied. “But you already knew that, didn’t you?”
Not this again, I thought to myself, staring at the newspaper as I folded into a careful square. Why couldn’t I have chosen stupid minions? Or at least ones that weren’t quite so observant? I tucked the newspaper into my backpack, simultaneously using one foot to nudge my large pile of newspapers underneath my chair. There was no way I would be able to explain those away easily.
Still avoiding Abe’s gaze, I took another bite of pie. The gooey apple filling didn’t taste quite as sweet as it had before though, and I had to force myself to swallow.
“Why are you still hanging around here?” Abe’s voice had dropped to a whisper, and I looked up to find myself staring into his eyes, just six inches away. “You’ve delivered your message. Why don’t you leave?”
“I’m helping out Bea,” I said, placing another forkful of pie in my mouth and chewing furiously. Bea’s accusations still rang in my ears. She’d barely said a word to me since that argument two days ago, and I hadn’t realized how much her friendly banter had meant to me until it was suddenly missing. Her unabashed friendliness had filled a hole in me that I hadn’t even known was there, and now it ached with emptiness.
You’re a supervillain, I reminded myself furiously. Friendships were for people who went for a quiet piece of pie at ten in the morning without a stack of newspapers. Friendships were for people who spent their nights watching cheesy movies, not robbing banks. Having my, admittedly fuzzy, image splashed across the front pages of a half dozen newspapers was well worth the loss of a friendship or two. My heart gave a painful squeeze at this thought, but I ignored it. I was fed up with my minions thinking that they could just poke around my business, asking questions and ruining everything I had worked to build.
“Are you going to make me leave then, is that it?” I speared the crust of my pie with my fork, sending flaky crumbs of pastry flying across the table.
“No, not at all,” Abe said absentmindedly, unaware how close he came to dying for daring to order me around, as useless as that order would have been. “I just find it...odd...your coming here just before that supervillain.”
“How should I know why the supervillain does what she does?” I pressed my fork into my remaining pie, watching with satisfaction as the apple filling oozed out the sides.
“I don’t know; how should you know?” Abe repeated back to me. I shot him a sharp look, which he met impassively.
I broke the staring contest first, looking over his shoulder at the television hanging in the corner of the room. All thoughts of Abe’s accusations flew from my head, because there I was, on television, looking pretty fantastic in my red-and-black costume. The volume was turned off, but a shaky video showed me ascending from the depths of the bank, grinning and waving at the camera.
Advertisement
My hair was escaping from its tight ballet bun and one of my elbow-length red gloves had slid down my arm. Overall, I looked like an utterly deranged and wildly successful supervillain. Not bad for my first big crime.
“What’re you looking at?” Abe asked, and I turned back to see him watching my face very closely. I realized I was grinning, and carefully wiped the smile away.
“I was just watching the TV,” I said, shrugging. The news story had already cut to an advertisement for deodorant.
“A bit of friendly advice? That supervillain is bad news. Smart thing would be to get out of town while you still can and never look back.” He leaned across the table, staring at me intently from within his halo of curly brown hair. Shivers ran down my spine. I wanted to laugh at the absurdity of one of my minions warning me to steer clear of myself, but something in his voice made me pause. I couldn’t shake the feeling that there was an important message in his words, one that I was missing entirely.
“Hi there! Mind if I join you?”
The two of us looked up like guilty children caught with our hands in the cookie jar. There, grinning cheerfully down at us and holding a freshly cut piece of pie, was Sera. How long had she been standing there?
Abe, retreating into his customary recalcitrance, merely shrugged. That was enough of an invitation for Sera, who immediately set her plate on the table and dragged over a third chair.
“Thanks!” Sera said, grinning at both of us and sticking a forkful of pie in her mouth. She chewed, swallowed, and let out a small moan of delight. “This really is the best pie I’ve ever had, Bea was right. I was planning to come here with her, but she’s been moping around for the past few days and said she couldn’t leave the store unattended. So I figured I’d just come on my own. I hope I’m not interrupting your date.”
“Date?!” The word popped out of me. My last piece of pie, which I had been in the middle of raising to my mouth, tumbled from my fork. I automatically reached out with my mind, asking the air molecules beneath the falling pie to solidify. The pie paused, hanging in the air for the briefest of moments before I realized what I was doing and released my control on the air molecules. I carefully set my fork down on my plate before anyone noticed how much my hands were shaking. Usually I had no problems remembering to only use my powers when I was safely hidden behind the mask of Death’s Dancer. The shock of Sera’s unexpected comment had momentarily cut through my self-control, and I could only hope no one had noticed my floating pie.
“Well yes, isn’t that what you’re doing here?” Sera said, oblivious to my brief moment of panic.
“No,” Abe grunted, stuffing his last bite of pie in his mouth and chewing loudly. I had to look away, as crumbs escaped his mouth only to become caught in his bushy beard.
“Definitely not,” I added.
Abe stood up abruptly, his chair screeching against the concrete floor. Without a word to either of us, he walked straight out the front door. In silence, we watched him stroll down the street towards Bea’s shop.
“Strange man,” Sera said.
I only nodded my agreement, still trying to get over the fact that Sera had thought I was dating Abe. Chasing the last piece of pie around my plate, I finally scooped it up and popped it in my mouth. Delicious. But somehow the flaky pie crust and sweet filling weren’t quite as delicious as they had been a few minutes before.
“I need to talk to you,” Sera said.
“Isn’t that what you’re doing now?” I glanced sharply at her, and was surprised to find her eyes darting all over the pie shop, as though afraid someone would leap out from beneath a nearby table and attack us.
“No, not here. I need to talk to you somewhere private.”
“Well that’s very mysterious,” I said, stalling for time as I tried to figure out what her angle was. I still didn’t trust this strange sister of Bea’s, but so far she’d done nothing more sinister than pair up mismatched sock at the used clothing store.
Nevertheless, my mind began working overtime, churning out conspiracy theories. Was she a reporter, and undercover cop, a spy for Fireball?
“Meet me outside the backyard of the shop at midnight.” Sera must have seen the refusal already forming in my mouth, because she grabbed my arm tightly. It took all my self-control not to stand and throw her halfway across the room, just as we had been taught in school. “I promise you will want to hear what I’ve got to say.”
Without another word, she pushed her chair back and walked out of the store as abruptly as Abe had just a few minutes prior. She left behind her piece of pie, untouched but for a single forkful. That was the last straw. Even if I hadn’t already been suspicious of her, what person in their right mind left this store without finishing their pie?
I had plenty of time to think about this as I ate Sera’s pie, not wanting it to go to waste. Then I gathered up my newspapers and headed down the street to Bea’s store.
A black car with tinted windows pulled up next to me as I walked. I kept walking, lost in my own thoughts, until the door opened and someone inside called out “Death’s Dancer!”
I whirled around, and found myself staring into the soulless eyes of Principal Sicarius.
Advertisement
- In Serial53 Chapters
Where It All Began
On the eve of the apocalypse, Eva finds herself confined to a clearing in the woods with only her clothes on her back. Staring her down is a goblin armed and ready to fight. Eva will have to survive not only the goblin, but also gain enough strength to confront the aliens responsible for bringing mana to Earth in the first place!
8 161 - In Serial39 Chapters
Sixth Finger
Year 506. The last human empire surrenders to the Great Majin Lord and joins his cause. As the continent in its entirety is submitted to the absolute rule of an undead stories arise of inhuman creatures that led his majesty's armies to terrifying success. While the demon lord grasps the entire world in his hand, generals and comrades eleven of his most loyal and trusted serve as the extension of his will and power. Common world knows these beings only by their position's names. Fingers. Goblins goblins goblins... I hate those pesky creatures. Not smart enough to talk, but intelligent enough to kill. Well. In this world of madness where blood spills left and right fantasy creatures run rampart alongside crazed devotees of long dead gods all meanwhile the frickin Demon Lord is slowly gaining power in order to take over the world precisely without causing its immediate collapse, our little Gob will have quite a chance to find true strength and maybe even understand why humans often do stupid things for this weird word that starts with the letter "L". Who knows, maybe he will even get a better name than Gob in the process... The story is posted daily in short chapters (from 900 to 2000 words per chapter) The story is NOT an Isekai. It's a high fantasy story with isekai element's at best (Majin lord is a Majin after all). I spent some time to create a custom, magic system I hope to properly explore together with you my dear reader. So what are you doing? Go read those early chapters! The story is said to only get better after you drink it... I mean read it. Seriously. After 15 chapters you won't stop. I just feel like pointing something out. I never read "The Iron Teeth: A Goblin's Tale" which seems to be the first thing my fiction will be compared to... P.S. Cover artwork was made by my very own me (hurray me!) PM if you want something painted (no promises). I sometimes lurk in RR discord.
8 229 - In Serial8 Chapters
Dungeon Core: Total war
Born in stone deep within the earth, a gemstone stares out into the grassy expanse before them. A cascade of light from a giant crevice above is the only thing that sustains this underground world. Lining the walls of the ravine this dungeon core is delighted to find that there others like them. However with so many competitors in this enclosed eco system it will soon become apparent that there is limited natural resources and room for expansion. And there are those who will believe that for their growth to continue unimpeded there are those who must be, Eliminated. You have seen plenty of dungeon core stories, but what if there were many, and there could only be one? Well that's the question I ask today. So assuming you decide to read this and I decide to write this here are my plans: 1. PvP between Dungeon Cores 2. Take monster suggestions 3. At least 3 major players
8 178 - In Serial53 Chapters
He's my MATE... HELL NO!!!
An unforgettable night in Vegas was all the 15 year old, Lexy Moon wanted. A whole night partying with her pack. Did she get what she want? Somehow yes. She did have the night of her life, the same night her Virginity was stolen from her. She woke up sleeping in a bed naked beside a black haired, brown eyed were who asked to have a drink with her that night. She quickly changed not minding to wake him up.What will happen if there paths cross? will love exist or will anger take over?what does the moon goddess in store for them?will the spark exist? or will something new come?Follow Lexy as she goes through hardship, love, revenge, traitors, secrets, and lost love.(I'm not really good with summarizing but please give this book a chance.)*Knight O_O*
8 83 - In Serial12 Chapters
In a modern world with a game system!!!
In a mordern world like our own, a young boy is walking with his dog trough the forrest arround his village. But nothing would have prepared him for what would happen to him. Follow the adventure of Dan Williams after he was struck by lightning and how it would change his live. This story will be a weekly update
8 52 - In Serial8 Chapters
Lighters // Adopted by Frank Iero
Kai's life seems to be getting slightly harder, until Frank Iero comes along, but its not all bands and great music from then.
8 67

