Better not linger in her starting place too much longer. Yellow's faster than her and may have already come home to a wreck. Thorn might have a habit of checking up on the place, even, just in case. She's invisible, inaudible, unsmellable - that won't help if he sends someone thorough. Or comes in person.
She sets out.
She's been flying for about thirty minutes after her shopping trip when she falls through a tear and squeaks inaudibly and lands in the middle of -
Marquis explains himself. "I am here because I refused to break my word. If it forces me to stay longer, it is a trade I've already made. Though I would hope you would be satisfied by my word to hold to whatever you enforce on the others, even without your power."
The population of the Birdcage is by now informed, thanks to messengers from the cell block leaders and facilitation from Dragon. There isn't anywhere several hundred escapees can congregate, but as many as can fit here have arrived.
Though she considers there no reason anymore not to add Floating Girl as a candidate for the syllables she's already going through with faceless guy. She's going to have to namecheck everybody who goes through the gate, she's well past not learning too much about what humans like to name one another.
"And how did refusing to break your word land you here?" she asks, now handing out sheets of paper with copies of her intended order set for ex-supervillain residents of Hawthorn, a summary of current conditions there, the parameters of her release-under-commands plan for anyone who can be made safe to release under orders and would prefer to take their chances on a more populated Earth.
While I was unable to flee for...other reasons, the Brockton Bay Brigade understandably sent their female members after me. I would certainly have killed to stay out of the Birdcage—I don't claim to be a good person—but decided against breaking a promise."
As people get more informed, the deal is still near-unanimously accepted. Promise's competition is the Birdcage.
The faceless person's original name contains a stressed "ree" syllable, which Promise had to start varying sounds she already has for. Nothing on floating girl yet, so she keeps going; faceless guy can wait a little longer.
I can't offer much proof, unfortunately. All I have's my honor, a tolerance for pain, a couple of good lieutenants and a top-notch brain. But if I stay in the Birdcage and it's worth your time to check, everyone from the Protectorate to the Slaughterhouse Nine will confirm that I do not break promises."
And then, click, last syllable of Shatterbird's name is a match for Floating Girl.
"It is, but that is probably more immediately pressing. Whatever you just did, Glaistig Uaine took exception to it. I would have expected her to try to kill you, and can't say what she might be doing instead."
"I figured out her name. Which does mean she can't attack me directly but does not mean she can't get help, if that's in her repertoire. Damn. Dragon, you may communicate this incident to interested parties and add my willingness to help any good-faith effort to collaborate on recapturing her."
"On it," sighs Dragon's voice.
"Could she have left the entire time? On her own?"
"Probably. She agreed to stay for a time in exchange for collecting the 'ghosts' of Birdcage inmates who died while she was here."
"And I just made that much less lucrative for her. Grand. I don't know whether that even makes me less pleased that I pulled off the heist or not. Well, I have no idea where she is, can't gate directly to her, and have several hundred other vassals to manage. You," she says to the faceless person, "have a 'ree' in your original name. If you don't want to back out at the last minute, would you like to be the first through the gate?"
"Yes." (The order may only be enforced to the one prisoner, but several of the nearer ones answer it.)
And then she proceeds to namecheck everybody else who's coming, ask them in batches the same question, and give the same instructions.
The Birdcage has six hundred inmates. This won't be instant. But they're being let in to cell block W a few at a time, so at least everything on this side is orderly. A few people try lying about their names, but it quickly becomes common knowledge that this doesn't work. Very soon everyone ends up in Fairyland.
And then Promise's bodyguard goes invisibly through, Promise follows and collects the flattener she hid in the crystal, and she leads them all to Hawthorn.
Everyone else finds Hawthorn preferable to the Birdcage (mostly because it's not the Birdcage), but a large majority are curious about Promise's conditions for returning to Bet.
"I'm going to want to interview each of you," Promise says when she has them all assembled, "learn your cape names if you prefer them, learn your powers, learn what you want to do with yourselves - including if that's 'go home'. It's possible some of you cannot be made safe to my standards of safety to go back to Bet, but that probably won't apply to most people. You are also welcome to stay, and either lounge around the colony or volunteer to help me with constructive projects of one sort or another; I have a list of things that I'll post publicly after I've reshuffled the priorities in light of the interviews. If you are interested in helping me organize the other people here, raise your hands?"
Hands go up. All the former cell block leaders present, and a few per block who weren't. One block leader, a short man introducing himself as Teacher, volunteers his students to help with the construction.
The look Promise gives Teacher is eloquent. "Ah," she says. "There you are. You can be interviewed first."
She starts a list of interview time slots (in Hawthorn time), names some things that should increase priority, estimates a ballpark of ten minutes per person on average, and sends the volunteers except Teacher to prioritize everybody.
Teacher shows up first, looking as inoffensive as supervillainly possible.
"You're why I finally decided to empty the Birdcage," Promise remarks, writing Teacher and his real name.
She's not exactly hiding that this isn't because she thinks he was unjustly sent there.
Nobody comes to me unless desperate. There were a lot of desperates in the Birdcage."
They are all still themselves, but many become more passive than before and some have lost noticeable amounts of intelligence."