Chapter 223: The Monster in the Cage
The Apex City Supermax Penitentiary, 'The Cage', was a fortress of concrete and despair. Nox and his team stood on a rooftop overlooking it.
"So, the plan is to break into the most secure super-prison in the world," Elisa said. "I am one hundred percent on board with this plan."
"We are not here to release everyone," Vexia corrected. "That would cause irreparable narrative chaos."
"We are here for one specific prisoner," Nox said. "The story of Captain Comet needs a real villain. A real monster. An agent of pure, unpredictable chaos. The Unraveller is feeding on this world's predictability. We're going to give it a meal it can't digest."
He looked at his team. "His name is 'Jinx'. He's a reality-warper, a chaos mage. They've had him locked in a null-magic cell for the past ten years. He's the only prisoner with a 'narrative potential' rating high enough to challenge Captain Comet on a conceptual level."
"You want to release a chaos mage into a city that's already on the verge of a narrative collapse?" Mela asked. "That is the single most insane idea I have ever heard."
"Yep. Let's go."
The infiltration was a symphony of quiet chaos. Vexia created a 'dead zone', disabling the prison's outer security grid. Mela's hunters scaled the walls, neutralizing the guards with sleep-inducing needles. Nox and his core team moved through the prison like ghosts.
They reached the central tower. The corridors here were made of a gleaming, silver, null-magic alloy.
"Null-magic alloy," Vexia stated. "It dampens all supernatural abilities. Our powers will be weakened in here."
"Good thing I don't just rely on my powers anymore," Elisa grunted.
They found Jinx's cell. It was a perfect, seamless cube of the null-magic alloy. Inside, a man was sitting on a simple metal cot. He was thin, with a shock of wild, green hair and a pale, scarred face. His eyes, when he looked up, burned with a frantic, intelligent, and utterly mad light. He wore a simple, orange prison jumpsuit.
"Well, well," Jinx said, his voice a scratchy whisper. "Look what the cat dragged in. Have you come to play with me?" He stood up, his movements jerky, unpredictable. He pressed his face against the small window. "I've been so bored in here. The story has been so… dull."
"We're here to offer you a new one," Nox said.
Jinx's grin was a terrifying, broken thing. "Oh, are you now? And what kind of story would that be?"
"A story where you get to be the star. A story where you get to break all the rules. A story where you get to play with the big, shiny hero in the cape."
Jinx just stared at him. "You're not from around here, are you? You don't have the stink of this boring, predictable little narrative. You feel… different. You feel like a new author."
"Something like that."
Nox placed his hand on the solid, null-magic door. He did not try to break it. He just fed a single, perfect concept into the metal. The concept of a key. The door, a material designed to be the absolute antithesis of magic, was suddenly given a new instruction.
The seamless wall of his prison swung silently inward.
Jinx just stared. He looked at Nox.
"Oh," Jinx said, his voice a low, reverent whisper. "This is going to be fun."
He walked out of his cell, a free man for the first time in a decade. He was not just a villain anymore. He was a story that had just been unleashed. The story of Captain Comet was no longer just deconstructed. It was about to explode.
***
Jinx stretched, a series of loud, popping cracks echoing in the silent corridor. "Ten years of the same gray walls, the same gray food, the same gray, boring thoughts." He looked at Nox, his mad eyes gleaming. "Thank you. You have given me a new color palette to play with." He turned and started walking down the corridor.
"Where are you going?"
"I'm going to the warden's office. I believe he has some of my things. And then," a wide, unhinged grin spread across his face, "I'm going to redecorate." He reached the end of the corridor and just… walked through the solid, null-magic wall.
"Well," Elisa said. "He's enthusiastic."
"We have unleashed a force of pure, narrative chaos," Vexia stated. "The consequences will be… unpredictable."
"That's the point."
They followed Jinx, with Elisa smashing a hole for them to walk through. They found him in the warden's office. The warden was sitting in his chair, a look of placid contentment on his face, a small, perfect, and completely imaginary butterfly perched on his nose.
Jinx was rummaging through an evidence locker. He pulled out a deck of playing cards, a small, brightly-colored rubber chicken, and a long, purple and green jester's coat. He slipped the coat on.
"Ah," he said with a sigh of satisfaction. "Much better." He turned to face them, a chaotic, vibrant force of nature. "Now then. For my first act, I think a little city-wide performance is in order. A grand debut, to let the good people of Apex City know that the story is finally getting interesting."
He drew a single card from the deck. It was the Joker. He smiled and tossed the card into the air. The card hung there for a moment, then exploded in a silent, shimmering wave of pure, rainbow-colored chaotic energy that washed through the entire prison.
Every alarm in The Cage began to blare, not with a siren, but with a chorus of cheerful, circus-calliope music. The null-magic dampeners flickered and died. The cell doors slid silently open.
In the city below, the world began to change. Gray office buildings began to twist and warp, their colors shifting to bright, impossible hues. Levitating cars grew wings of candy-floss and began to fly in lazy, looping patterns. The holographic statue of Captain Comet was suddenly wearing a giant, floppy clown nose.
"What have you done?!" Serian asked.
"I've raised the curtain," Jinx replied cheerfully. He gave them a theatrical bow. "And now, I must make my exit. I have a hero to re-introduce myself to." With a final, mad cackle, he dissolved into a shower of laughing, confetti-like particles and was gone.
Nox and his team were left standing in the warden's office, in a prison in full-blown, candy-colored riot, in a city turned into a surrealist painting.
"So," Elisa said, looking out at a flock of pigeons that were now flying backward and singing opera. "I think we may have broken the story a little too much."
"No," Nox said, a slow, satisfied grin on his face. "It's perfect."
The Unraveller had been feeding on the world's predictability. Nox and his team had just force-fed it a dose of pure, unadulterated, and utterly indigestible chaos. He could feel it, a psychic shriek of pure, logical frustration from the heart of the creeping void. The Unraveller's attack on this world had been repulsed. Their mission here was done.
But a new problem presented itself. Captain Comet appeared in the sky outside the prison. His face was a mask of confused, horrified disbelief as he looked at the surreal chaos his city had become. His gaze fell on the prison, on the open cell doors, on the escaped super-villains.
And then his eyes met Nox's. He didn't know how, but he knew. He knew this boy in the black hoodie was responsible. He was no longer just a hero. He was a man whose home was under attack. And he was very, very angry.
"YOU!" he roared, and his voice was not the voice of a hero, but of a man pushed too far. He shot toward them, a streak of red and blue, his eyes burning with a new, and very real, fire.
"Well," Nox said. "This could be a problem."