Project Northwoods (3 page)

Read Project Northwoods Online

Authors: Jonathan Charles Bruce

“You can’t take him on alone! Let me help you!” Arbiter roared.

“No! We both know you need him out of that shell.” Another chunk of light evaporated with a pop.

“You need back up!”

The former President gave an airy laugh. “I have it.”

Raucous laughter erupted over the suit’s radio. “Tin hats on, lads!” a British voice slurred. “Let’s show Jerry and G.I. Joe a thing or two about flight school!” Laughter crackled again from the speaker.

“You enlisted Spitfire?” Arbiter said, bordering on rage.

“He helped Britain outlast the Blitz.” Photon shot Arbiter a glance. “He can help us outlast ours.” He buckled as the hail of gunfire continued on the shield.

Arbiter grunted. “Villains can’t even trust one another.” The sound of machine gun fire was joined by a propeller as Spitfire strafed Desecrator. The machine squealed and stopped the assault on Photon, breaking away to fire on the plane as it arced back toward him. As tracer rounds fired through the air, Spitfire spiraled through the hail, returning fifty-caliber rounds straight into the still-sparking hole Arbiter had blasted into the armor.

Desecrator raised his arm to swat the plane out of the sky as a blanket of bombs exploded on his back. Several of the cannon towers were warped as the payloads expanded, scoring the metal as it went. Another screech as the modern jet fighters arced overhead.

“Take that, you damn Kraut!” There was a sharp clank of glass against metal. “Cheers, Photon! You’ll always be my president! Ha ha!” The flak towers on Desecrator’s back thundered, blasting one of the jets from the sky.

“Do not equate villains with the irredeemable, Arbiter.” With that, Photon sprinted toward the pivoting foot of Desecrator.

Without stopping, he brought the shimmering blade up and raked it against the thinly-armored ankle joint. The impact was more solid than Photon had expected, the alloy reverberating with pulsing energy, but the crackling blade still ate through it with an eager ferocity. With a pop and hiss of liquefied metal, he was through, the metal foot detaching from the leg. The bipedal construct stumbled onto its knee as another hail of gunfire raked across its back. As Spitfire led the American jets over him, Desecrator reached upward, its fingers wrapping around a fighter’s wing before pitching it to the ground.

The explosion licked at the tips of the machine’s fingers as the propeller plane doubled back. Inside the cockpit, Jack Cleese, the villain known as Spitfire, wiped the scotch from his chin. “Right, Jerry, prepare for the Victoria Cross!” Desecrator spun and hunched over, bringing the flak-cannons about. As he unleashed a volley of anti-aircraft fire, Photon leapt onto the thing’s back and swept the energy blade through the towers as he charged toward the shoulders. Clouds of shrapnel filled the sky, Spitfire nimbly evading them while one, two, then three of his American escorts were blown asunder. The plane grew closer and then unleashed the machine guns, peppering the head with bullets.

The plane pulled up as Photon reached the shoulders. The behemoth rose to its full height, shaking dangerously. Steadying himself on the shifting machine, the hero sprinted the last few feet and leapt, jamming the blade into the mechanical shoulder. It squealed in what could be construed as agony as Photon worked the blade downward. He looked up, and the other hand was moving toward him now, preparing to dislodge him.

“Photon!” Arbiter shouted and leapt toward the distracted Desecrator, landing on the walking armor’s knee. He glanced upward, and saw the shoulder devoid of the hero. “No!” Arbiter leapt, rebounding off the beast’s chest plate and landing on the shoulder. The sparking gouge where Photon’s blade had been glowed blue-hot. With a scream of fury, Arbiter punched at the weakened metal, widening the hole by inches with every blow.

Photon heard the scream as he dangled from the back of the monstrosity’s hand. The smaller energy blades he clung to were buried deep in the metal, supporting his weight while dragging deep lines along the armor. Desecrator held out his hand and shook, trying to remove the meddlesome hero. “So now you cling to me like a parasite? How fitting!” Its other hand moved up, shakily at first, then more deliberately. When the hand lay directly beneath him, Photon released his grip, falling to the open palm below as it rocketed upward. Once he touched down, he leapt away, toward the metal chest as the hands smashed together. On impact, Photon kicked off the surface into a backflip, summoning an energy blade in mid-flight and bringing it down as he fell.

The blade tore through both hands. The hero began to work the sword violently, melting the metal and circuitry together. Gunfire erupted again as Spitfire descended in a full dive. Inside the cockpit, the pilot merrily patted his flight stick. “Finally getting the taste of Nazi out of your system, eh, girl?” He took a swig from a new bottle of scotch as he pulled out of the dive. Desecrator, flailing wildly, struck the wing of the plane. The engine sputtered as Cleese tried his best to keep his craft under control. “Stay together! You survived the Blitz!”

Spitfire’s plane spiraled away, leaving Photon to return to the task at hand. He removed the blade from the beast and sprinted up the trembling arm toward Arbiter. “I told you to stay away!”

Arbiter looked up from the greatly enlarged hole in the armor’s shoulder, rage ebbing from his face only slightly. “I thought you were dead!”

“It’ll take more than…” With a great screech of metal, Desecrator’s hands were free. Photon shoved Arbiter off the machine as a palm whipped toward them. The remaining hero fell to his stomach to dodge the sweeping blow. The hand slowed and then slapped down, denting the armor and crushing Photon’s legs. The hero screamed as the fingers worked themselves into the screeching metal, further grinding his bones to powder. Through the haze of suffering, he summoned another blade and jammed it inside the shoulder again.

Arbiter returned to his feet as the dust from his impact was just falling. Without thinking, he leapt at the nearest building, rebounding off of it and grabbing onto the titan’s arm. He used the surface as a springboard and, again, leapt toward and off the building. Finally, he reached the shoulder, watching as Photon slowly wormed the blade further down the armored surface. The hero looked up.

“Arbiter!”

With human-like flexibility, the very arm that Photon was trying to remove swept up, snatching Arbiter in its hand. The Bestowed growled in pain as the grip tightened around him.

“I will do what no others could! I will kill both the American Lord of Justice and their mightiest leader!” The colossus straightened as its pilot laughed, the thunderous waves of sound washing over the street. “Hitler shall–” He stopped, the whirring head transfixed on something.

Spitfire had torn off the cockpit glass and was one foot in, one foot on the frame as the plane’s engine spewed smoke and flame. He took a swig of scotch and wiped his chin. “You were my one true love, girly!” He tightened his parachute strap. “Let’s show this Kraut how the English give head!” Spitfire dove from the plane, the struggling, dying vehicle still aloft and under his control.

His Bestowed ability, limited in scope as it was to propeller aircraft, spiraled the plane past Desecrator’s fist as he tried to deflect the missile with the hand wrapped around Arbiter. Despite the engine’s protest, it even soared through his other hand’s fingers and slammed against the whirring, robotic head. With a tremendous explosion, the robotic skull detonated, sending shrapnel and bursts of flame into the air.

Arbiter found himself hurled to the ground as the limp body of Photon thumped unceremoniously at Desecrator’s feet. With a whine of twisting metal, the towering war machine stumbled and reeled before tripping up completely and smashing to a stop in a building. It remained still, bricks clattering around and casting pulverized mortar into the air, mixing with the black smoke billowing from what remained of the goliath’s head.

“How… how did that work?” Arbiter coughed as he rose again to his feet, shakily. He limped, a sensation altogether new to him, toward the gently writhing form of Photon. His legs, damaged from polio and only enabled to walk with his suit coaxing the muscles to work, were now irreparably smashed. Blood had worked its way out of the suit through numerous holes, no doubt provided by the shattering blow Desecrator had dealt him. Arbiter knelt by his compatriot’s side and placed a hand on his shoulder, rolling him gently to face the sky. “Photon…”

His helmet had been partially torn away, exposing his ghastly white, but determined, face. Blood streamed from his mouth, nose, and eyes, grimly adding color to a white canvas. “Arbiter… you have to stop him…”

“But while he’s in that suit…”

Photon weakly waved his hand. “The suit… was only indestructible… without coordination…” He coughed, a gush of fresh blood escaping his lips. “The armor vibrated, dissi… dissipating energy across the whole…” The walking tank stirred, hefting itself up with its one functional arm, the other dangling limply and sparking at the shoulder. “Focusing an attack on one location… made the rest of it vulnerable… like with Spitfire’s plane… the missiles…” Spasms wracked his body.

Arbiter hefted the former president. “I’ll get you out of here.”

“No!” Photon shoved him, but the blow barely registered.

“I need to get you to safety!”

“Irritants!” The voice of Desecrator reverberated through the street. Arbiter looked up as a metal foot hovered in the air before plummeting toward him again. A burst of light blinded him. Before his vision cleared, the dome of light was already crumbling, glasslike shards breaking free from its surface. When his eyesight returned, the metal foot was melting and warping as it continued to bear down on them.

“Get out!” Photon ordered, straining beneath the force of maintaining the wall of coherent light.

“Not without you!” Sparks shot out of the construct’s ankle as the crumbling energy field buckled. Now, hydraulic fluid spurted free of its hoses, greasing the pavement and side of the machine.

“I have nothing to fear, Arbiter… I served my country…” The old man looked up at Arbiter, his eyes flashing. “End this nightmare.”

Arbiter’s vision filled with light, and a heavy thump in his chest threw him backward. He lost his grip on Photon as his body was propelled away. He blinked away the light and saw, in what seemed like slow motion, the foot smashing through the shield and slamming into the earth. A mixture of light and dust erupted from the crater, sparks wafting lazily in the air even as debris clattered to the ground.

Arbiter hit a jagged chunk of displaced road and he crumpled, sputtering for air as the armor staggered into a slouch. The lopsided machine whirred and sparked before stumbling to its knees. “Your… heroes… die! They will always die! Your so-called Lord of Justice… runs while I crush the man who killed the greatest leader the world has ever known!” Arbiter struggled to his feet. The beast hunched further, the limp arm dragging forward. “I… will… never stop hunting the filth of the earth!” Desecrator screamed as his machine squealed upright.

Arbiter leapt forward and latched onto the broken arm dangling millimeters above the road. Adrenaline and fury fueled him as he yanked and twisted, wrenching the shoulder about. The pilot roared as his armored shell was forced onto its back. Arbiter pulled ferociously, tearing the metal arm from its socket. The machine attempted to right itself and rose to its knees. Releasing the useless appendage, Arbiter braced as Desecrator swung the other arm toward him. It connected, Arbiter catching the fist and digging into the street, slowing and ultimately ceasing the blow’s momentum.

Arbiter released the limb and leapt into the air and smashed downward, crushing the metal between himself and the pavement. Now partially embedded, the hand worked to free itself despite the smoking protests of its servo motors. Arbiter leapt into the air, flipping and then barreling down, the hero severing the elbow of the monstrosity.

Suddenly free of what was pinning his vehicle, Desecrator stumbled backward and fell, twisting onto the mech’s front. Rising to its knees, it buckled over in a moment as the disembodied metal fist smashed with a horrific clang into its back. The damage was substantial, a sufficient dent just below where the left shoulder had been.

It rose again, slower this time. The massive creation wobbled in place dizzily before something rocketed through its chest, right where the heart would have been. The thing went rigid, then fell to the earth, upsetting the dust from Desecrator’s earlier assault. A figure rose from the debris, yanking another upright.

Arbiter held Desecrator aloft by the neck, the blond-haired and blue-eyed soldier squinting from the sunlight and pain. Releasing him, Arbiter sent a fist across Desecrator’s face. He felt the bone crack from the blow, and Desecrator reeled about and returned with a headbutt, the Bestowed gift of strength denting Arbiter’s helmet and smashing his nose. Desecrator slammed a fist into Arbiter’s gut, punched his jaw, and grabbed his arm. With a twist, Desecrator wheeled Arbiter around, straightening his arm, and then rammed his palm upwards against the hero’s elbow. With a snap, the bone gave, punctuated by Arbiter growling in pain.

Desecrator released Arbiter and smiled. “Super strength, O Lord of Justice. How else do you think I could pilot my battle suits?” he laughed. Arbiter cradled his arm and looked at Desecrator, watching as he circled him. In a flash, the Nazi leapt forward and kicked out Arbiter’s knee, and he partially collapsed. “I have claimed the lives of countless champions today… crushed them like vermin. And what do you offer me as a challenge?” He coughed another laugh before smashing a fist on top of Arbiter’s helmet, sending the hero prostrate. He knelt down as Arbiter pushed himself up. Gripping Arbiter’s face, Desecrator sneered and pulled him close. “An old man and a hero as easily crushable as a neutral.” His hands snapped to Arbiter’s throat, and he lifted him in the air, heedless of how his opponent’s arm had healed yet still lay limp at his side. “And in your last moments, you don’t even fight back.”

Arbiter smiled. Red splotches burned instantly along Desecrator’s throat, immediately turning a deep crimson. Blue eyes wide in shock, Desecrator dropped Arbiter and stumbled backward, clawing at his throat. “No!”

Other books

The Last Good Night by Emily Listfield
Dare You by Sue Lawson
Europe in Autumn by Dave Hutchinson
Vigilante by Kerry Wilkinson
Swag by Elmore Leonard
Snowy Christmas by Helen Scott Taylor
The Exiled Earthborn by Paul Tassi