About Me

Dude in his 30s, starting his first blog. Damn tired of waiting for straight artists to create gay superheroes that AREN'T relegated to minor titles or vaguely fay. So I got off my duff and made my own!

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Episode 2, Part 7


Orbis froze to the spot where he sat. “You found him?”
Manny paused in mid-sentence.
“Where you at?”
“At Manny’s office.”
“Good. Already in da Castro. See you in 30.”
“Wait! What did you find?”

“He’s German,” ROM announced definitively. She slapped down a picture of a smiling blond boy with bowl haircut. It was the same boy in Orbis’s photo. “Meet Matthäus Metz, age 6. Son to Karl and Sybille Metz. He’s got an older sister, Bettina. This photo was taken right before he vanished twenty-two years ago from a market in Essen, Germany.” She looked quietly at Orbis. “And your pic musta been right after he vanished.”
“I really wish you could see this,” Orbis muttered to Scepter.
“So do I.”
Mirrorball, Bang, Tug-of-War, and Paine came into the light shone from the single desk lamp. Paine spoke first. “I’m not sure I understand all this.”
“I’m not sure I buy it,” Bang continued.
“It’s just so speculative,” Mirrorball summed up. His muttonchops, flowing like two party streamers down his chest, glowed in the fading light. “You’re taking a huge leap of faith off of other leaps of faith.”
“I know it sounds far-fetched,” Orbis replied. He had shown them the photo he stole from evidence, and ROM’s age progression of it. “Yes, this kid is blond and Vagabond is black-haired—“
“I know a dye-job when I see one,” ROM said, the African-American pointing to her neon-pink ox-horns. “’Sides, he didn’t dye everything.
“Moving on!”
ROM tossed her head, “Meant the pit-hair, guy.”
“The point is,” Orbis said, veering the conversation back to the matter at hand. “Is that the working theory goes like this: Vagabond-Matthäus gets kidnapped into the ring. Now, I’m not going to go into the gory details of what probably happened to him, but I think we can all imagine. This goes on until he’s in his mid teens, when Paul buys him.”
“’Buys?’” Mirrorball looked aghast.
“That’s usually how it works,” Orbis sighed.
ROM added, “I hacked his records. Everything I could find. His bank accounts were perfect.” She paused. “Too perfect. As soon as I connected my mind to the database, I found traces of another hack. I’ll bet you money they were cleaned up after he died. But there is this time when suddenly Merryman starts paying bills and shit at the minimum. The year before that, he began dumping a ton of stock. Paid out in cash each time.”
“How much?” Bang asked.
“All of it? Around 12 grand,” ROM replied. “In cash.”
“$12,000 in cash?” Mirrorball and Tug-of-War asked in unison.
“God, I get nervous walking around with a $100 in my wallet,” Paine remarked.
ROM shook her head. “This guy had money all over the world. Cashed shit out in New York, Hong Kong, London, Tokyo, some place called the Isle of Man…”
“Merryman traveled for his job,” Orbis went on. “And he lived high on the hog. It looked like he was preparing a pool of cash to wait for him at whatever location he was at. He was already part of a financial circuit that believes in discretion.”
“But what does cash mean?” Tug-of-War asked.
Bang eyed him. “You’re an escort. You know. Untraceable. Untaxable.”
“You don’t charge another human being on ‘Visa,’” Orbis replied. “I’m betting that he was getting ready to buy Matthäus, who was well into his early teens at this point.”
“Merryman was probably an ephebophile,” Scepter supplied.
“A what?”
“Basically, pedophiles go for pre-adolescents,” the psychologist replied. “Ephebophiles go for teen-agers, which is what Vagabond would have been at the time. And lets face it: then and now, he’s a particularly handsome guy. Must have been a hot commodity from day one.”
“I feel sick,” Tug gurgled.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Episode 2, Part 6


“Didn’t quite go as planned, huh?” Manny said, handing Bo a very much needed drink. Which, in Orbis’s case, was soda water. It was the end of the day. The sun was setting over the Pacific, bathing his office in a glorious golden glow. “ROM’s going to kill you for telling her she did something wrong, you know.”
Bo downed the water and handed the glass back so fast Manny didn’t have time to sit down. “Whatever. I can’t believe he’s not in Missing Persons.”
“Hm.”
Orbis looked at Manny, and the blind man needed not his eyes, nor his telepathy to know the resolve the man felt. “Manny, I am right about this. I am right!”
“Fine. But you hit a dead end. What else do you have?”
The other man, a bundle of nerves, sighed and somehow managed to relax enough to sit down. “We have the ballistics from the bullet that killed Merryman—“
“Which neither we nor the SFPD have been able to trace to the gun that fired it.” Manny sat down next to the man, his hands on the Orbis’s wide shoulders.
 “The gun that killed Merryman was the same gun that killed the informant that gave us the photo of Vagabond.”
Scepter froze.
“It was a hunch. I already had the photo,” Orbis said. He sounded very tired. “I’m just a rookie cop. I was never involved enough to know all the details, but I’m a Navy SEAL. I knew it was going on. When the informant was killed, it just so happened that I was one of the officers on the scene. Did a real number on the guy. Pulped his whole head, practically.”
“Ok, ew.”
“It goes to show these people mean business. Completely professional hit.”
“’Professional?’”
I’m a SEAL. I know a sniper when I see one,” Orbis sighed, sitting back. “It wasn’t until today I found out who he was. When I heard the investigation was being disbanded a few days ago, I stole the photos and by pure chance found Vagabond. When the informant ended up on the slab, I put the pieces together. Headed over to ballistics and pulled the files on Merryman. They confirmed it for me on the spot. Same gun. The informant was killed in the AM. In the PM, my department was told to bury this case. They were half-way through the autopsy. That’s confidential all, by the way.”
 “You serious?”
“Yes, I am,” came the reply.
Scepter was quiet for a minute. “Did anybody see you take that photo?”
“Huh?”
“Are you in danger. Of being targeted yourself.”
Orbis looked up at the man. “I…I don’t think anybody saw me.”
“Who else knows you are here?”
“Um. ROM, does. Miss Gwen, probably. ROM probably told her—“
Scepter got to his phone and started dialing.
“Who are you calling?”
“Everybody I can reach. This isn’t about Vagabond anymore. It’s about you…Alastair, hi. It’s Manny…”
Then Bo’s cell went off. ROM. Probably to rail into him. “Hi, ROM, look, I'm sor--”
“I found him.”