Black Cat: Discord, page 1
part #5 of Marvel Heroines Series





black Cat: Discord
Champagne dripped off the face of the man who’d had the audacity to grab my arm. “How dare you! Do you have any idea who I am?”
“Mmm, no,” I purred, leaning in closer. “Do you have any idea who I am?” I put my lips right next to his ear and grabbed his arm. He grunted and tried to pull away, but I didn’t budge. “I’m not a lockpick for hire, and I’m not just a pretty face. If I have to go to the trouble of figuring out who you are after I already said I’m not interested, I will ruin you. That’s a promise.” I drew back and let go of his arm. We stared at each other in silence for a long moment, then he lowered his eyes, turned around, and walked right out of the museum. A few yards away, a little crowd of ladies clapped.
Yeah, girls, I feel you. Good riddance to him.
“I’ve already got his name, social security number, work history, and credit score,” Boris said over my earpiece. “How should we ruin him?”
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First published by Aconyte Books in 2022
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Ebook ISBN 978 1 83908 135 4
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Chapter One
Everywhere I looked – gold.
Jewels.
Fashion so high it could probably see its house from up here.
It was like walking into a dream tailored exactly to me, a dream where I was surrounded by all the wealth of New York’s most elite, laid out and mine for the taking.
Diamonds winked playfully in the bright overhead lights. Chandelier earrings dazzled. Pendants and pocket watches alike rested against chests like little welcome signs: “Hey there, Felicia! Come and get me, girl! You know you want to.”
I did want to. Oh lord, how I wanted to. But unfortunately, I wasn’t in a dream right now. I was, in fact, at the Met Gala, dressed like the hottest member of Ocean’s 8 – not the pink one, pink wasn’t my best color – and surrounded by the contents of some of the finest, most secretive, most challenging vaults in the entire city. The real kicker was that I wasn’t here to steal anything. Not this time. Epic shopping lists took time and effort to compile, after all.
Restraint of any sort was the exact opposite of my normal MO, but there’s being an unrepentant thrill-seeker, and then there’s pulling off a heist in a museum packed with ninety percent of the Big Apple’s super heroes. I might be bold, but even I knew the value in choosing your moment, and tonight? Tonight wasn’t for stealing. My clutch was tiny and I barely had room underneath this dress for my Spanx, never mind somebody else’s big, beautiful, bulky gems.
That didn’t mean that the evening was a waste, though. I mean, firstly, I looked absolutely fabulous, and stealing someone’s attention was almost as nice as stealing their Cartier bracelet. Secondly, did I mention that there was a lot of bling on display? Things normally kept locked away where no one could admire them or, say, valuate them? Oh, I had every intention of making tonight into a shopping expedition eventually, but first I had to put together my wish list! Diamonds might be a girl’s best friend, but if they didn’t crack the five-carat marker I wasn’t interested in them.
Sorry, pretties. You’ve got to do better than that to catch the Black Cat’s eye.
I extended a hand, and three separate trays of champagne curved toward me like my fingertips were magnetic. Ha, nope, just sharp enough to slice and dice anyone who got on my bad side. I picked out a glass and winked at the young woman who’d brought it, who blushed as red as the guy dressed up like a sparkly blood clot on the other side of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s great hall.
“Will you stop flirting and get a move on? There are over five hundred people here and you’ve only cased thirty of them so far!” The voice came through the com hidden inside my diamond earring loud and clear – almost too loud.
“Will you stop worrying and relax?” I murmured around the rim of my glass as I took a tiny sip. Mmm, delicious – I loved champagne. There was a lot I didn’t like about the wealthy elite, which made stealing from them a very potent form of therapy for a firmly middle-class girl like me, but the drinks were something I could appreciate. “The event has hardly started. You can’t expect me to march around here like I’m a grand marshal and muster them all into parade rest. This is a delicate crowd.”
Boris Korpse, my henchman extraordinaire, huffed on the other end of the line. “Delicate, my butt. Half of them came here drunk and the other half will be that way before the end of the night. Just swan up to some randos, throw out a few compliments to get their attention, and let the necklace do the work. Like that guy! The tiepin alone must be worth a quarter of a million dollars!”
“That wasn’t a rando,” I said, resisting the urge to roll my eyes. “That was Tony Stark.” Who hadn’t noticed me, thankfully, because I wasn’t quite ready for that level of chattiness yet. Maybe by the time I got to my third glass of champagne.
“Was it really?” Boris hummed. “Huh, I didn’t recognize him without the helmet on. I should have guessed, I suppose. He walked like a man used to wearing concrete boots.”
“The armor is actually very light!” At least, the set I’d sort-of-OK-very-illegally-fabricated was. I hadn’t ever actually worn it, just used it to distract Tony Stark for a while, but it had looked very aerodynamic.
“His armor is a disgrace to science! And don’t get me started on the–”
I tuned out most of Boris’s rant; I knew his opinion of Tony Stark, and manipulating his dislike to give me a few moments of peace was child’s play. A few of his lines were enough to make me chuckle, but I restrained myself to a distant smile as I began to wander the Temple of Dendur.
Smiles were one thing, laughter quite another at the Met Gala. We were supposed to be living up to a somber and reflective theme, after all, which was – get ready for it – Celestial Bodies: An Exploration of Fashion and the Universe. There was a time when a theme like this would have had people dressing as stars, or planets, or maybe some daring designer would try to find a person who could embody the stultifying terror of a black hole and deck them out in all Vantablack. I’d met plenty of people here tonight who were very stultifying and would be vastly improved with a black bag over their heads.
Abstracts like that weren’t anywhere to be seen tonight, though. The number of people I’d passed who were dressed like Asgardians alone was as staggering as it was uninspired, and let me tell you, most of them
At least they’d decorated their fashion missteps with their sparkly best.
I made a slight adjustment to the gorgeous emerald brooch situated in the middle of my chest, making sure it was displayed to its finest advantage. It really was a work of art – a lab-created emerald with a microscopic computer literally grown into the crystal structure that used the emerald itself with the versatility of a microscope/camera hybrid. Oh, and it had its own Wi-Fi! No cadging from coffee shops for me.
“You need to stop lookin’ at the guys,” Bruno Grainger, my other partner in crime, chimed in. “Get a load of the dames instead. They’re the ones who’re really dressed to impress, right?”
“Dames.” Boris scoffed. “What decade do you think you’re in, sir? When did you start preferring your galas hard-boiled and drenched in the desperation of Prohibition?”
“Questionable nomenclature aside, you make a good point,” I said, and turned toward the snack bar.
Yes, the snack bar. Trust me, after working out and eating in for months to fit into these dresses, the first thing anybody who’d been avoiding carbs and sugars did once they got past the photographers on the main staircase was fill their mouths with as much canapé as they could, and I didn’t blame them one bit. I pulled in behind the deputy mayor’s wife, a woman with some sort of Celestials thing going (if the rows of lights in her massive headpiece were any indicator), and tried to get a bead on her… well, beads. Were they pearls, or white jade? I sidled closer.
“–course I’m here by myself, like I am every night lately,” she was saying in bitter tones to the man next to her as she piled miniature crab cakes on a plate. “David has been working himself to the bone at the office, the bone, I tell you. I can’t wait for this awful trial to be over. Joseph Manfredi should never see the light of day again as far as I’m concerned, and if there were a jot of justice in this world his father would be joining him behind bars.”
“Take it easy, Barbara,” the man at her side said, making a soothing motion with his free hand. “It’s all for show, you know that. Silvermane is just flexing in his old age, hoping to spring his son loose before he finally kicks the bucket.”
“He’ll never kick the bucket,” Barbara snapped. “That man practically is a bucket, with all of the metal parts he’s got these days. A retrial is an absolute farce. The motion should never have gotten past a judge in the first place, but the Maggia has half the judiciary in its pocket.”
I really shouldn’t linger – especially not after my brooch informed me that the beads were plastic – but I was interested despite myself. Silvio Manfredi, aka Silvermane, was one of the oldest and most established power brokers in New York City. His super villainous heyday might have passed, but the Maggia crime syndicate he was a member of was still going strong. Silvio’s only son and former heir was Joseph Manfredi, who’d done a brief stint as the villain Blackwing before one of his guys ratted him out to the FBI. He’d been locked up ever since, but apparently his father was reconsidering his son’s usefulness if he’d gone to the trouble and expense of buying him a second chance.
I’d heard a little about the new trial – it was hard to avoid it when it was splashed across every headline at every newsstand in the city – but I hadn’t heard that Silvermane had deep enough pockets to buy out so many judges. Was he hiding a special treasure vault somewhere? It had been, oh, months since I’d stolen anything of note from the Maggia, and all I’d gotten away with last time was a measly million dollars. A million dollars was barely enough to keep my mad scientist and NASCAR-wannabe driver in equipment for a month, never mind pay my rent. A penthouse apartment in New York City cost a mint, and healthcare? As a very specialized small business owner? Ridiculous.
“Move along from the cheap seats already,” Boris said. “You’re not going to get anything worthwhile out of the civil servant section, you need to go swimming with the big fish! Find the corner where the billionaires are all pulling out their–”
“Rude,” Bruno interrupted. I could practically see the frown across his broad face. He and Boris had been with me from the start of my illustrious thieving career, and were as loyal as two crooks could be. They also bickered like an old married couple.
“I was going to say wallets,” Boris replied, sounding far too smug for that to be true. “Pulling out their wallets to see whose is the fattest. Or really, in this day and age, comparing the size of their personal rocket ships. Is it just me, or is everybody going to space lately?”
“Only the ones we don’t want to come back,” I murmured as I made my way through the crowd. “It’s such a waste of time, too. There’s plenty of fun to be had right here on Earth.” The idea of roaming the galaxy for the biggest scores posed its own temptations, for sure, but I wasn’t about to be beholden to a billionaire or offer to host a Klyntar to get there. There were plenty of temptations here on Earth… like this delicate little morsel of a human being right up here.
Ah, now this was the fashion statement I’d been yearning to see. This well-heeled young woman had come dressed as the sun, and what a fine choice it was. Her costume was absolutely resplendent with gold – a gold dress, heavy gold bracelets with an Egyptian air to them stacked practically up to her shoulders, a gold collar-style necklace that mirrored the crown on her head… and all of it, my little computer informed me via Boris, was at least eighteen carats. She didn’t quite manage elegant, but she was definitely striking.
“Get closer,” my loud-mouthed minion said, “I think these actually might be genuine antiquities. I can cross-reference the museum database with the–”
“Get out!” the center of the solar system exclaimed to the person nearest to her, smacking one of her well-rounded hips with a bejeweled hand. “Are you kidding me? There’s totally gonna be a golden apple in New York City! It just doesn’t make sense otherwise.”
“Jasmine, honestly,” the older woman at her side said in a lower voice, like she was embarrassed. She was dressed to look like the moon, but this was no Beyonce/Solange comparison of excellence. This lady was doing little more than reflecting the big, bright personality next to her. I sidled a little closer – I might as well get a good look at the moonstone choker around her neck anyway. “This is hardly the place to be discussing something so… crass.”
“Oh please, how’s it crass, Mom?” Jasmine of the golden regalia asked. “Why shouldn’t we talk about what everybody wants to talk about anyway? And I’m telling you, deada–”
“Jasmine!”
Jasmine sighed. “Deadbooty, is that all right? I’m telling you, deadbooty, once an apple shows up here? I’ll be punching my way to the front of the line to get my hands on it. Can you imagine? The answer to any question you want! Totally accurate! Isn’t that amazing?”
“I’m sure it’s some sort of gimmick,” another person in her circle said. “Watch, it’ll be some big corporation’s marketing ploy, or some kind of mass hallucination spurred on by an out-of-control mutant, or–”
“No! No, they’re real!” A new voice entered the conversation, a gentleman dressed like a… like a… was all that latex supposed to make him look like a symbiote?
Jeez, insensitive much?
I wanted to punch him in the face on account of his bad taste alone, but I restrained myself. After all, he’d done some sort of opal overlay for the eyepieces, and to say they looked expensive would be a gross understatement, emphasis on gross. I breathed a little heavier, so the camera would tilt up and get a better angle.
“They really are,” the man went on, oblivious to my appraisal of his otherworldly goods. “I know someone who knows the man who found the one in Sydney. He took it to a casino and won over five million dollars in a single night!”
“What an idiot,” Jasmine moaned, and I had to agree with her. “He could have gotten so much more if he’d just focused on the motherfu–”
“Jasmine, watch your mouth!”
“The motherfreaking stock market, is that all right, Mom?” she snapped.