By the time she was done, her hands had as much in the way of bandages as there was exposed skin.  She flexed her fingers to make sure she could still move them, adjusted two bandages, and then returned to the kitchen.

“Progress?”

“Nearly done.  It hasn’t cooked very long, and I’m worried it’ll just taste like boiled vegetables in water, but you said people were hungry.  How do you want to get the soup out there?”

Just let it trickle off the roof and let gravity do the rest.

“There’s three spots where people are sleeping tonight.  Let’s mobilize the kids and get some food out to everyone.”

“The kids?”

“Everyone needs to contribute.  Maybe if they see seven-year-olds doing their part, the O’Daly clan will get the message.”

…I suppose.

“Sierra,” Charlotte made a pained expression as she spoke, “They’ve been through a lot.”

That’s true. So has everyone here, but the kids need special care.

“They’re using our sleeping space, they’re eating our food supplies.  We can’t hold their hands and baby them.  Everyone’s having a hard time these days.”

If there’s anyone who should be babied, it’s the kids.

Also, the contrast between this and Sierra’s attitude towards Bryce is not lost on me.

“That’s cold.”

It is. Skitter may not have made an effort to change you, Sierra, but I think the whole situation has done it anyway. Made you colder, harder.

“Maybe, but I’ve been working from sunrise to well after dark, here, and they were just sitting around, getting in the way, complaining and crying.”

“Most of their family died just a few days ago.”

I’m with Charlotte here. Sierra talks like someone who barely knows what a child is.

Sierra didn’t have a response to that.  They were still eating far too much and taking up too much room for people who hadn’t lifted a finger to help.  “Anyways, think I can use the kids?”

“Don’t push them.  Some are pretty emotionally sensitive.  But yeah.”

Use the ones who want to help.

Sierra turned around, “Hey, munchkins!  Got a job for you.  Help out and we’ll give you first dibs on the after-dinner treats!”

This is good, though: Promising a reward rather than a punishment.

Roughly half of the little ones approached her.  Six to ten years old, boys and girls, a variety of ethnicities.

“Who’s the oldest?  Raise your hand if you’re ten… okay, if you’re nine?  Eight?”

It’s like a switch was flipped when she turned around.

“Have her cut it out?  I don’t want to sound like I’m giving you orders, but I don’t want my little brother shooting people.”

“It’s fine.  Tattletale told us to do whatever you required as far as the boy is concerned.  I will tell Minor, and he will order the others to keep the boy away from weapons.”

Sounds alright.

“Thank you.”

“I will also decide on a punishment for the boy for being rude and hanging up on his sister.  I think we would all like him to learn some respect for his betters.”

I know, right?

She could imagine him looking at Bryce as he said it.

Hehe.

“Nothing too serious?  As punishment goes?”

“Nothing serious.  It will build character.”

‘Course, who knows what “nothing serious” means to Jaw.

“Thank you.  Any word on what Skitter and Tattletale are doing?”

“No.  All I know is that it will be dangerous, and every squad is on high alert.  We are sleeping in shifts, maintaining combat readiness and doubling patrols.

In case the Undertravelers need backup.

I take it they haven’t requested the Coildier support to the Boat Graveyard yet?

We were informed three hours ago that the downtown area is off-limits.  I know Lieutenant Fish was deployed there when the order came down, and he has ceased all communications.”

Alright, I’m pretty sure it hadn’t been three hours since the miasma struck, so it looks like the chronology is linear here.

“All of downtown?”

“Yes.”

Probably worth staying out of a bit beyond that, too.

She hung up and headed for the bathroom to tend to the damage her hands had accumulated over the day’s work.  Disinfectant, antibiotic ointment, bandages.  Every time she thought she’d found the last small scrape, she found another.

I hope there was an unnarrated goodbye here. Otherwise I’d have to question the entire Kiley family’s phone manners.

He’s supposed to be getting better, more disciplined.  Had she made the wrong call?  If Bryce was getting training with guns and knives, and still failing to shape up, this thing with him being recruited by Tattletale could be disastrous in the long run.

Hm. Perhaps.

It’s not like I didn’t spend some time right before this call talking about how Lisa is more likely to manipulate someone into villainy than Taylor, while largely forgetting about Bryce.

She waited a minute, then called the same number.

“Yes?”  Again, Jaw’s deep voice.

Hi. The little douche hung up on her.

“He hung up on me.  I wanted to ask you how he was doing.”

“The boy is learning.”

Yeah, but learning what? Clearly not decency.

“I’d rather he wasn’t learning how to use weapons.  If he’s getting in a situation where he needs to fight, you guys aren’t keeping your end of the deal.”

I mean, would you rather he get killed if he ends up in such a situation by accident?

“That would be Pritt.  He thinks she’s attractive, and listens to her best, so Minor has her accompany him much of the time.  She is a former child soldier, she would have thought self-defense was a good way to regain confidence after the boy lost his fingers.”

…sure, that does make a bit of sense. Just… make sure the confidence extends to other things, and he doesn’t rely on having weapons.

She could imagine Jaw saying that with Bryce overhearing, her brother getting simultaneously annoyed and embarrassed.  She liked it.

“It’s a good thing that you’re not being dragged into a firefight.  Especially one with capes.”

“They’ve been teaching me how to fight with a knife, how to throw one, how to use a gun-”

That doesn’t mean you should seek out situations where you have to do it.

“I don’t want you learning that stuff.”

Also that. I didn’t expect her to take kindly to that.

“I have to, in case we get ambushed or something.  And I’m not bad at it.  We could have fought those guys.”

“Did Tattletale tell you that you should fight them?” she asked, already knowing the answer.

“No…”

“Like I said, Tattletale isn’t around and hasn’t been for a while.”

“So the answer is no, she didn’t give you the go-ahead.”

So if Lisa did tell Bryce to fight some capes, how would you take that, Sierra?

“No.”

“That’s a good enough reason to back off, then.  I don’t know exactly who she is or what she does, but she knows what she’s doing.  Trust her in that.”

Most of the time, yeah.

“Jaw gave me some painkillers,” Bryce said.

I do not trust these painkillers.

“What kind?”  Sierra felt a stab of alarm.

It must have been audible, because Bryce replied, “Relax.  Over the counter stuff.”

Are you sure?

“Okay.  What have you been doing?”

“Nothing big.  Keeping track of some members of the Chosen as they move around.  Hookwolf’s guys.”

“I know who they are.”

Probably worth keeping track of them, yeah. If you don’t, before you know it they’re somewhere you don’t expect, interfering with your plans.

“They’ve been moving in.  I thought we were going to get in a fight, but Jaw had us all retreat.  I think because I was with them.  It’s annoying.”

I mean, I get it, he doesn’t want to be patronized, but he is a kid without powers.

Skitter had been gone for roughly as long as Tattletale.

“Is that it?” Bryce asked.

I’m sorry, Sierra, but I have to say it: Bryce is an inconsiderate, ungrateful little fucker.

“I was hoping for more than two words of response.  How’s your hand?”

“Hurts.”

“Here, have a third word.”

“That’s going to happen.  You lost all four fingers.”

“No.  It hurts like my fingers are still there and they’re being crushed.”

That’s called phantom pains, right? The nerves have been cut off at the roots of the fingers, but the brain can’t tell the signals don’t come from further out.

She didn’t know what to say to that.  I’m sorry?  You deserved what you got?

I’m not sure I’d say he deserved it, but he sure as hell didn’t make it so he didn’t deserve it.

If that makes any sense.

“Ask Tattletale about it?”

I think this is a normal result of amputations. I’ve heard of the same thing happening with entire limbs, like leg amputees thinking they can feel toe pains.

Of course, it’s also possible that there’s some parahuman stuff going on, but I doubt it.

“She’s gone.  Has been for more than a day, now.  Jaw said she’s not to be disturbed with phone calls or anything like that.”

Well, that’s gonna sound familiar to Sierra.

Skitter had been gone for roughly as long as Tattletale.

Alright, so she hasn’t been away for that long. Might even be a bit early for Charlotte to be thinking “what if she never comes back”.

According to Charlotte, Skitter had invited a bunch of local villains over and then left shortly after.  They were probably the other eight territory bosses who were working to occupy the city.  That had been over forty-eight hours ago.

Ah, two days. Yeah, sounds about right.

It was almost too much.  A huge part of her wanted to call Skitter, to get some guidance, to order supplies and defer on the harder problems, like the bodies.

Ah. So while they have access to phone contact with Skitter, they haven’t used it yet since Burnscar?

Another part of her was scared to.

She dialed another number instead.

Ooh, who are we about to meet?

Or maybe it’s one of the other Undertravelers?

“Yes?” the voice was deep.

Coil?

She was put in mind of being a little kid, calling a friend and hearing an adult on the other end.  It felt awkward.  She sort of resented it.

That is a really good analogy here.

“I’d like to talk to Bryce?”  It came out as more of a question than a statement.

Ohh. I guess the deep voice is one of Lisa’s Coildiers.

“One moment.”

She watched with the phone pressed to one ear as Charlotte recruited some of the older children to prepare dinner.  They started putting things back in cabinets, ordered not by the type of food, but by how long it would last.  One of the children found a cutting board and began to cut lettuce.

That’s child labor.

But y’know, since they’re there, I suppose. It’s not heavy child labor. Nothing schools don’t make kids do.

“Sierra?”

“Yeah,” she answered.

“Well?  What do you want?”

“Checking up on you, moron.”

Heh.

“I’m fine,” Bryce said.  He managed to sound sullen.

You sure?

She crossed the room to approach the kitchen counter and mimed proper cutting technique for the ten-year-old that was preparing the lettuce.  It wouldn’t do to have the kid lose any fingertips.  Or maybe she was sensitive to the idea while talking to Bryce.

Also fingertips make a terrible addition to the soup, unless your name is Siberian.

“Maybe soup?  I figure we need to eat these vegetables, there’s stock, and if we water it down so we can split it up more…”  Charlotte trailed off.  “I never really cooked at home.  I helped my parents cook, but that’s not the same thing.”

Yeah, when you do that, you’ve got an authority to look to, who can help you know what to do.

“It works.  Prepare some rice from the supplies, since we have more than enough of that.  Bulk it out.  We have a lot of mouths to feed.”

“Okay.”

All she wanted to do was stop.  Instead, she stepped into the living room, where makeshift beds had been arranged with piles of blankets and sleeping bags.

The momentum keeps her trucking.

Only two kids were sleeping there, both clearly brother and sister.  It was as much privacy as she was going to get.  She plucked the satellite phone from her pocket.

Oh right, I forgot they’d have phone contact with Skitter.

So when is this, exactly? Has the PRT’s jamming stopped?

This scenario wasn’t what she’d expected, on any level.  Even as Skitter had explained the job duties as being helping out, rebuilding, organizing, Sierra had maintained doubts.  She’d been waiting for that one job where Skitter tested her limits, asked her to do something a little dangerous, something morally ambiguous.

Tried to turn her into a villain…

That’s Tattletale’s MO, though, not Skitter’s.

It would be subtle, or it would have consequences she wasn’t immediately aware of, but it would set her on the road to something darker.

Or both.

If you were working for Tattletale.

Except it hadn’t happened yet.  Even the scope of what she was doing here caught her off guard.  There were innumerable dead, and yet more people forced out of their homes by the fires Burnscar had started.  It seemed like everyone was walking a narrow line between banding together as a community and killing one another.

Yikes.

Has the miasma even happened yet? Are we in the past, seeing how the miasma caused the civilians in the territory to act?

It felt strange to identify as one of the key people who were pulling for the former.  She was organizing everone, keeping in touch with the groups handling the other cleanup jobs and working tirelessly at the hardest and most unwanted jobs in the hopes of inspiring others to keep going.

You’re doing a great job.

When the smell of shit and rot that accompanied the dead got to someone, Sierra was at their side, helping calm them down, always ready to name another place where they were needed.

Taylor made some really good choices of people to hire as her right and left hands.

“It’s less like she went shopping and more like she wanted to stock this place like it was a miniature grocery store.  A little bit of everything.

Hehe.

Like me buying candy. Gotta have variety.

I’m trying to organize it by expiry date so we can prioritize eating and serving the food that’s going bad now, in case she never comes back and the food starts to get low.”

Alright, so Charlotte at least believes Skitter is alive, but doubts whether she’s coming back.

“I know it’s a bit late, but there’s a lot of us who’ve been working hard, cleaning up the mess from the attacks…”  Sierra hedged.

What are you getting at? You want extra rations for the workers?

That does seem reasonably fair.

“You want dinner?”

Sierra pressed her hands together in a pleading gesture.

This is cute. :p