Octavania
Midnight
Church of Our Lady of Mercy
The young man shivered in his thick coat watching the empty street. The old church dreamed in the autumn wind. That's how it felt to the young man. The church dreamed of its glory days when it was filled to bursting with parishioners. These parishioners raised their voices in worship, their voices shaking the rafters with their devotion to the Lord. But that was long ago before the young man was even born. Now it lay empty, its pews rotting into dust, the stained glass caked over with filth letting only inky shafts of light fall on to warped floorboards.
The hard-faced, devout man drew his face into an even deeper frown as he saw five figures approaching. Their boots scuffed against the cobble as they skulked closer to the church. They were all men. Three were much like the one at the door: young, hard-faced, and strong. The other two were much older. One had long graying hair and a thick mustache, the other had his hair clipped short and was smoothly shaved. They stepped through the crumbling doors of the narthex. They made the sign to the young man at the door who nodded and released his grip on the pistol he held in his coat.
"Finally you are here, we can start the meeting." The young man waved them in.
"How are you feeling tonight my son?" The gray old man asked.
"I am worried, Father Andrescu. The power of the evil one is strong and we are but men! How are we to free our city from her power?"
"With faith Sebastian," Father Andrescu said.
"With science, pal, with science," the other older man said. Father Andrescu's warm smile was strained as he looked at his companion.
"Yes with science as well, but without faith in the Lord we cannot succeed!"
"Just let me see what I have to work with, Padre, and we'll see how much 'faith' I have in your little gang of fanatics."
"How dare you!" Sebastian stepped forward with his thickly callused hands balled in meaty fists.
"Back off kid, lest you get hurt." His eyes glowed with a cruel light. He was amused by the punk's outburst of pious outrage.
"Sebastian, that's enough! We need to begin," Father Andrescu said.
The gray haired old man put a hand on the young man's shoulder and guided him into the nave. The young man's eyes bore into the other man's cynical eyes. The floorboards creaked as the six made their way to the altar where the rest of the men were gathered.
"Let's hope that spirit keeps you alive, punk," the man muttered to himself.
"Everyone! Gather around please, our ally from the United States of America has arrived!"
Father Andrescu clapped his hands to get his "congregation's" attention. With the men who accompanied him, plus Sebastian, there were a dozen loitering about the ruined church. They were all young, between 18 and 25, and all had a hard look in their eyes. Adolf Andrescu, priest of the Church of Our Lady of Mercy for these last forty years, felt uneasy looking at these young men. Despite their devotion to returning the city to the true faith, they were not what he would have considered "good Christians."
He had taken confessions from these young men, the sons of farmers and laborers and some of their acts had left him shaken and left Andrescu uncertain if it was wise to recruit them to the cause. But Andrescu reasoned that the crusaders who retook Jerusalem from the Muslims were not all saints and angels either and the infinite love of the Son forgives all sins; excepting those that turned away from the mother church. Blasphemy could never be forgiven.
The man that had come all the way from New York (by way of Rikers Island, Alcatraz, and an undisclosed prison in the United Kingdom) stepped forward. He had dark hair and blue eyes and his nose was crooked and his lips seemed to have a permanent sneer.
"Alright boys, listen up! I'm Doctor Wesley Hughes, distant and disreputable relative of the late Howard Hughes. I'm here at your padre's request to help you bunch make the powers that be in your fair city quake in their boots!"
Doctor Hughes looked at the rough group of country bumpkins that Father Andrescu had gathered. It was poor pickings. But they looked tough so maybe they'd survive the process. Maybe.
"Well, I'm about to give you a leg up on the competition. I led a group who were trying to recreate the famous 'Super-Soldier Serum'. We had some successful results. But our lily-livered government stopped us and sent a bunch of gaudily clad goons to stop our pioneering work. I'll make you more than men here in Octavania! You will be like the heroes of legend, strong, fast, virtually indestructible!"
Father Andrescu held his hands high. "My brethren, we have a tremendous opportunity to bring our city back from the brink of damnation. The disgusting thing that calls herself Countess DeVoyant, has announced the date she will open the doors to her vile temple to the Father of Lies! In three weeks time she will lure thousands into the gaping maw of Hell itself to please her dark Lord! She has even given an open invitation to those damned ones, those demons made flesh, the world ignorantly calls 'Mutants'. Let us pray for strength and courage to face this terrible foe!"
Hughes rolled his eyes and folded his hands. That about two-thirds of these idiots would be dead, or wishing they were dead, in two weeks was no skin off his nose. But if he could transform at least two of the assembled men into something more than mortal, it would all be worth it. He'd be a few steps closer to perfecting his process and then the real money would start coming in. And maybe just maybe he could raise himself above the common lot of mankind and become a superman himself.
But he was bothered by the gene freaks that had been coming into the city. They could mess things up badly for Hughes. Apparently the Countess, a ravishing blonde who reminded him of the old starlet Veronica Lake, was friendly to the Mutants and had been making laws to protect them from discrimination or persecution. He had seen some of them on the streets, walking, talking, doing business and not being chased by a mob with torches and pitchforks.
He looked at the men in the room and he looked again counting heads.
"Where's that Sebastian kid?" He grabbed Andrescu's shoulder abruptly, ending the old man's rambling prayer. The old man looked around at his small flock and let out a cry of surprise.
"He's gone!" Andrescu shouted.
"I can see that you old fool! Where could he have gotten off to?"
The old man looked around confused and blinked his rheumy eyes. Hughes started blinking because tears were burning his eyes. Then the smell hit him and his heart started pounding in panic.