Steelheart (The Reckoners #1)(32)
Tia said.
“I …” That I couldn’t prove. “I can’t promise it wasn’t, though its being a Polaroid makes that less likely. Tia, he has to be corporeal some of the time. That photo is the best clue, but I have others. People who have smelled phosphorus and spotted someone walking by who matches
his
description.”
Phosphorus was one of the signs of him using his powers. “I’ve found a dozen sources that all match this idea. It’s sunlight that makes the di erence—I suspect it’s the ultraviolet part of sunlight that matters. Bathed in it, he turns corporeal.”
Tia held the photo before her, contemplating it. Then she began scanning through my other notes on Nightwielder. “I think we need to investigate it, Jon,” she said. “If there’s a chance we can actually get to Steelheart …”
“We can,” I said. “I have a plan.
It will work.”
“This is stupidity,” Megan cut in.
She stood by the wall with her arms crossed. “Sheer stupidity. We don’t even know his weakness.”
“We can gure it out,” I shot back. “I’m sure of it. We have the clues we need.”
“Even if we did gure it out,”
Megan said, throwing a hand up into the air, “it would be practically useless. The obstacles in e v e n getting to Steelheart are insurmountable!”
I locked eyes with her, ghting down my anger. I got the feeling she was arguing with me not because she actually disagreed, but because she found me o ensive for some reason.
“I—” I began, but Prof
interrupted me.
“Everyone follow me,” he said, standing up.
I shared a glare with Megan, and then we all moved, joining him as he walked toward the smaller room to the right of the main chamber.
Even Cody made his way in from the third room—unsurprisingly, he’d been listening. He wore a glove on his right hand. It glowed with a soft green light at the palm.
“Is the imager ready?” Prof asked.
“Mostly,” Abraham said. “It’s one of the rst things I set up.” He knelt beside a device on the oor connected to the wall by several wires. He turned it on.
Suddenly, all of the metal surfaces in the room turned black. I jumped. It felt like we were floating in darkness.
Prof raised a hand, then tapped on the wall in a pattern. The walls changed to show a view of the city, presenting it as if we were standing atop a six-story building.
Lights sparkled in the blackness, shining from the hundreds of steel buildings that made up Newcago.
The old buildings were less uniform; the new buildings, spreading out onto what had once been the lake, were more modern.
They had been built from other materials,
then
intentionally
transformed to steel. You could do some interesting things with architecture, I’d heard, when you had that option.
“This is one of the most advanced cities in the world,” Prof said. “Ruled by arguably the most powerful Epic in North America. If we move against him, we raise the stakes dramatically—and we’re already betting up to the limits of what we can pay. Failure could mean the end of the Reckoners completely. It could bring disaster, could end the last bit of resistance against the Epics that mankind has left.”
“Just let me tell you the plan,” I said. “I think it will persuade you.”
I had a hunch. Prof wanted to go after Steelheart. If I could make my case, he’d side with me.
Prof turned to me, meeting my eyes. “You want us to do this? Fine, I’ll give you your shot. But I don’t want you to persuade me.” He pointed to Megan, who stood beside the doorway, her arms still crossed. “Persuade her.”
13
PERSUADE
her. Great, I thought. Megan’s eyes could have drilled holes through … well, anything, I guess. I mean, eyes can’t normally drill holes through things, so the metaphor works regardless, right?
Megan’s eyes could have drilled holes through butter. Persuade her?
I thought. Impossible.
But I wasn’t going to give up without trying. I stepped up to the wall of glistening metal overlaid with the outline of Newcago.
“The imager can show us
anything?” I asked.
“Anything the basic spynet watches or listens to,” Abraham explained, standing up from the imaging device.
“The spynet?” I said, suddenly feeling uncomfortable. I walked forward.
This
device
was
remarkable; it made me feel as if we really were standing on top of a building outside in the city, rather than in a box of a room. It wasn’t a perfect illusion—if I looked around closely I could still see the corners of the room we were standing in, and the 3-D
imaging wasn’t great for things nearby.
Still, so long as I didn’t look too closely—and didn’t pay attention to the lack of wind or scents of the city—I really could imagine I was outside. They were constructing this image using the spynet? That was
Steelheart’s
surveillance
system for the city, the means by which Enforcement kept tabs on what the people in Newcago were doing.