LLH 12.3
“Learning to Fly” by Brother Grimace
I
remember the first time that I met Quinn Morgendorffer. I wasn’t impressed.
However… that would change.
From Inside The Tower, by K. M. Sherrie
The tall, slender brunette sat atop her bed and watched as Quinn
Morgendorffer exited the bathroom and walked over to her bed. “Nice outfit,”
she remarked, noticing the pink, frilly nightgown that Quinn had in her
hands. “Is that what the well-dressed superhero wears to bed?”
Quinn looked over at Sherrie – she remembered that as the female cadet’s name
– and shrugged. “I always wear things like this – even before I got my
powers. You never told me what you do.”
Sherrie looked her over for a long moment, and Quinn got the distinct feeling
that the unremarkable brunette – not unattractive, but just average in looks
and presence – was considering if she was worth even speaking to. Quinn knew
that look very well; it was the same look that Daria had leveled in her direction
countless times.
The girl shrugged. “I’m a ‘fixer.”
“A what?”
“A ‘fixer’. I have the power of intuitive awareness of a problem or a
situation; I look things over, study it for a while, and then, I can tell you
just what needs to be done in order to fix it or improve it. If I’m
personally exposed to something, my body adapts to protect me from it, and
then allows me to synthesize materials that perform the same function.”
“Huh?” Quinn’s eyes showed her complete ignorance of what Sherrie had just
said. “How does that work?”
“Okay… demonstration,” the girl said, sliding off to the side of her bed and
fixing her eyes on Quinn. “You generate and control lightning, right?”
“Yes…”
Sherrie looked her over for about a minute, and Quinn grew distinctly uncomfortable
by the way the girl ran her eyes over her. “Okay, I see,” she said, standing
up and taking a plastic drinking cup from her dresser as she headed for the
bathroom. “I see how it works, now… oh, yeah.”
The girl went to Quinn and ran a finger across her forehead, then stuck the
finger in her mouth as Quinn flinched. “Oh, stop that,” she said, filling the
cup with water from the faucet, then went back to her bed and sat down,
holding a finger in the water as she did so.
Quinn’s face crinkled as she watched. “Ewwww… I hope you don’t think that I’m
going to drink that after you-“
“I can’t believe that you’re the Leader of the Legion,” Sherrie
huffed, her voice making Quinn sit without further comment as she stirred the
water with her finger. “I could see your sister, or Jane Lane doing it again,
or even Sandi Griffin – but you…” She finished stirring, and handed
the glass to Quinn. “Drink this – wait a minute.”
She rose again from her bed, and took a couple of ice cubes from the
mini-fridge on the floor, which she held in her palm for a minute before
letting them fall into the cup. “Oh, stop rolling your eyes and crinkling
your face – you said you wanted to see how my power works, right?”
Quinn looked uneasily at the cadet, and then lifted the cup to her lips.
“Drink all of it,” the girl ordered; when Quinn finished, she took the cup
and stepped back. “Okay – let’s see you use your power.”
As Quinn stood in the middle of the floor, she let a electrical current leap
and flow between her outstretched palms – and noticed that, instead of the
usual golden-yellow bolt of power, her electrical arc was a burning
bluish-white arc that seemed more powerful than usual!
Sherrie walked to the bathroom, refilled the cup and without warning, threw
the water on Quinn, whose scream filled the room! “Why did you do that?”
Quinn asked, looking at Sherrie with total confusion on her face.
“I adapted your body chemistry so that you can’t be affected by your own
powers,” the female cadet calmly informed her. “Before now, if you’d been
using your powers and someone tossed water on you, you’d have been zapped by
your own blasts – now, you could be underwater and fire at full power without
hurting yourself. You’re also immune to the negative effects of
superconductivity, too – that’s what the ice cubes were for. Cold will boost
your powers, but you’ll be able to fully control them if that happens – and
your powers won’t be affected by heat any longer… you did know that heat
would reduce the intensity of your powers, right?”
Quinn stood in the middle of the room, water dripping from her nightclothes
as Sherrie dropped the cup on the desk and went back to her bed. “I’ve got
dry pajamas in the top drawer,” she said, curling up beneath the covers.
“There are plenty of towels in the closet, too. Get the water up before you
go to sleep, and if you decide to go out, don’t make noise when you come back
– I’m turning in early because I need some sleep for tomorrow. I don’t want
to slip and fall when I wake up. Oh, yeah – you’ve powers are boosted; your
output’s probably doubled – and you should be able to use your powers in any
environment the way you do normally. In vacuum, you’ll generate streams of
conductive gas when you use your power.”
The girl turned towards the wall, and Quinn stood open-mouthed for a moment
before starting towards the closet. “Thank you,” she said, wiping her face
with a thick, fluffy towel. “But… but why did you-“
Sherrie rolled back over to give Quinn a look of dismissal that Daria would
have been impressed by. “Because a nitwit like you needs all the help that
she can get. Stop talking and dry up the floor. I have tests this week, and
just because I agreed to let one of you Legionnaires bunk in here doesn’t
mean I have to be a celebrity babysitter.”
*****
Sitting in a cool, secluded spot on the private beach her family frequented
for vacations for five generations on the Caribbean island of Cristal Cielo,
Natalia Lucchini was in a foul mood that even the excellent wine she sipped
could dampen.
The lovely young Argentinean woman reclined upon a pair of plush, decorative
pillows she had brought along and looked out over the incredible view of the
setting sun, unbothered by the servants from her family’s mansion about a
mile away (several of whom had experienced her flamethrower temper before,
but not without cause). She sipped her wine and snacked upon the wonderful
appetizer of ‘sea marbles and blood’ (tiny meatballs of shrimp, crab,
scallops and calamari, lightly breaded and baked with tiny amounts of cheeses
inside - provolone and freshly-made mozzarella di bufala campana,
flown in from Italy specifically for the making of that dish – and served
with an extraordinarily thick and savory tomato paste seasoned with Italian
flavorings, kept warm in a special dish heated by warm water in a second
receptacle) provided for her and her now VERY-late date, who Natalia (‘Nat’
to her friends and family) decided that she’d be only wildly infuriated with
– if he had a good reason for not being here, and on time.
Nat was a young woman who didn’t like for her plans to be interrupted. She
knew exactly how her evening was to have played out – first, she’d worn a
very nice dress of the richest cream hue, one that contrasted nicely with the
bronzed luster of her flawless skin. She’d taken ninety minutes to decide
which dress to wear - up to the knee (not too long, not too short), not too
revealing, but very attractive. She had examined herself in the full-length
mirror and pronounced herself worthy to be seen outside the walls of her
bedroom. Of course, she expected her boyfriend to see her and think that she
was gorgeous, even breathtaking… how could she be anything but?
They would have dinner at sunset, here, on the Lucchini’s private beach (her
family owned fully half of the tiny island paradise outright, and for all
practical purposes controlled the other half). A main course of homard
lobster, prepared perfectly, with a wonderful dessert of a decorative,
custom-made strawberry and mint helado from her home of Buenos Aires
that she adored afterwards. A walk on the beach, afterward, with them finding
a nice place to sit and watch the almost divine beauty of a Caribbean sunset,
with his strong arms around her as she marveled at the amazing panorama of
color in the slowly darkening skies over the sea…
Afterwards… Nat felt her body beginning to respond to just the imagined touch
of her boyfriend. For an American, he was surprisingly sensitive and
responsive to her own needs, and he was more than capable in bed. He was, as
the saying goes, ‘a real catch’. Wealthy, intelligent, capable of thinking
for himself, quite fit physically and handsome…
His only flaw is that he’s not here, right now. Damn! Where is he?
Nat stretched, showing off her legs (wonderfully sculpted and long) as she
turned to look behind her at the single road leading to the beach, and her
large, dark eyes narrowed. Darren Appleton, you’d best have a world-class
excuse for standing me up, she thought, spearing another sea marble with
a toothpick and allowing the tiny morsel to dissolve upon her tongue. If
you’re not dead or two steps away from it, you’re going to wish that you were
when next you lay eyes upon me – or you’ll wish that you were at least deaf,
and even that won’t save you, because I know American Sign Language.
Where are you, Darren…?
Enough was enough, she thought; with a casual flick of her hand, she opened
her cell phone and hit a trio of buttons.
Thousands of miles away, on a breathtaking estate located forty miles
northwest of New York City, a small woman in her early 60's with white hair
and a stern, worn look was sipping her drink of cranberry juice and vodka
when the multiple-line phone on the other side of her bedroom rang. Sighing,
she went to the phone, and her eyes rolled as she saw what number was
calling, as well as the line it was on.
Hussy, the older woman thought; as she answered the phone, it was more
than clear that she didn’t appreciate having to speak to Nat.
“What… do you want?”
Natalia raised an eyebrow at the way Elenor Bairn – the maid for the Appleton
family’s estate – spoke to her with obvious disdain. That doesn’t matter.
You helped take care of him as a baby - and you’ll help with our children
just as well, when the time comes.
“I was expecting Darren
a half-hour ago on the beach, Elenor. He’s not here, he hasn’t bothered to
call, and it’s not like him to just vanish! Do you happen to know where he
is?”
“Well, since Master Darren actually has to think about his future and how
he’s going to do things of worth for the people-“ Nat bristled as the older
woman continued, “He’s probably been called away on an important matter
that’s just come up. When I see him next, I will tell him you called.
Enjoy your time on the beach, Miss Natalia.”
As she closed her phone, Nat thought coolly horrid thoughts of what she’d
like to do the older woman, but stilled her temper with a sip of wine. Daddy
was right – I have to learn how to keep my temper around people like her –
and I can’t teleport her a thousand meters into the Earth, into an active
volcano or into orbit just because she annoys me.
Furman did like that about me, though… She thought about how her temper
was the factor that made the Council decide against her as Furman Singh’s
wife; she was the last of the three finalists, and even though marrying the
handsome, exorbitantly wealthy and powerful Sikh would have had it’s
advantages, she really did prefer her Darren… even if he were only a
‘grubworm’…
As wealthy as the Appletons are, no one will say a word if I marry him….
and when our babies come someday, they’ll have an incredible birthright. I’ll
have to tell Darren about what I can do soon – when he asks me to marry him,
that’s when I’ll tell him… and show him. He’s going to love it when I take
him around the world, to every major city on the planet in the space of
seconds… and he’ll finally understand how I manage to always have special
things from across the globe at my fingertips. Money really doesn’t buy
everything… but being Elite helps there.
I do want to go looking for him… but if I show up in New York City an hour
from now, there’s no way to play it off. Damn! I want him right here, right
beside me, right now!
Unaware of just how adorable she looked as she pouted, Nat finished her glass
of wine and poured another, before she waved her hand – and a slender
gentleman in a perfectly tailored suit appeared besides her.
“Miss Natalia… you need not use your powers to have me come and attend to
you,” the stately Asian gentleman said, a dry tone in his voice. “I see that
Master Darren was not able to arrive for dinner this evening. Shall I serve
you at this time?”
“Hikaru, you are divine,” she said. “Yes. The larger lobster – I’m feeling a
touch hungry.”
“Of course, Miss Natalia*,” he replied, refilling her wineglass. “I’ll ready
a small broccoli salad for you as well.”
“No, the lobster will be enough.”
*****
“What are you working on, Martin?”
Cadet 1stC Martin Peters looked up from a very large, loose-leaf binder as
Tom Sloane and Mack Mackenzie walked into the large, comfortable area known
as the ‘Cadet’s Club’. “Oh, hey, guys,” the young man replied, waving them
over to his table. “We’ve got major exams next week, including the Federal
Certification boards. Just brushing up on some of the basics – people should remember
that they always ask some of the simplest questions, some of the stuff they
learn in their first years, just to trip them up.”
Tom looked at the cover of another large binder on the table. “Metagenetics?”
Martin shrugged. “You’re pronouncing it wrong,” he said with a friendly
smile. “Meta-GEN-etics, instead of ‘meta-gen-net-ics.’ It’s the study of the
‘how and why’ behind people developing metahuman abilities. You guys haven’t
had to study this yet?”
He looked from Tom to Mack; Mack held his hands up in a friendly gesture.
“Hey, I joined the super-powered part of the Lawndale Legion just today,” he
said. “I still haven’t even really used my powers for anything big like the
others have; I’ve just done a few tests. Ask him.”
“Yeah – I thought I saw your name down for tomorrow morning – they’re
clearing the entire day for you guys, and for you, they’ve got the entire
morning penciled in. They really expect for you to put on a show when you use
your powers, don’t they?”
Mack shrugged again. “Aren’t there a lot of people with powers like this?”
Martin shook his head. “That’s another thing about you guys that’s got
everyone all buzzing. Almost all of you either have powers that are very
rare, or you’ve got power levels that are higher than almost anyone else
who’s ever come through here. The power levels that your friend Daria’s
putting off… if she were here, she’d be one of the five most powerful psis to
ever go through the program, and the most powerful female telepath in fifteen
years.” He reached over for the chocolate Pop-Tart lying in its wrapper, and
broke a corner off before popping it into his mouth.
Tom had opened the binder, and flipped through the first couple of pages.
“What’s this stuff about ‘forms?”
“That’s how they classify the way people with metahuman abilities got them,”
Martin explained, turning the binder and flipping to a foldout chart. “Form
One is people who were born with their powers – that’s single-generation
independent metahuman development. People born like that are classified as Homo
Sapiens Superior, or just Homo Superior… mutants. Less than
one percent of the metahumans known are classified as Form One.”
“Form Two is anomalous-catalyst metagene activation,” he continued. “Without
boring you to death, about twenty years ago, they found out that roughly
twenty percent of the population has the potential to have metahuman powers –
that’s actually gone up since then. If you were to grab five people off the
face of the planet – five people at random – at least one of them would have
what the scientists call the ‘metagene’ – a chromosomal variant that causes
metahuman development if the person is subjected to some form of
life-and-death situation, usually involving some form of chemical or
radiation... the ultimate version of the ‘fight-or-flight’ reflex. Why do you
think World War Three hasn’t happened yet, even with the way America and
Russia were at each other’s throats in the 1980’s? Everyone starts throwing
off nukes, and we’ll have a world of metahumans… in a world of billions of
people, we’d have millions of metahumans.”
The two Legionnaires looked at Martin with a bit of shock on their faces, and
then Tom looked to Mack. “Sounds like what happened to you, doesn’t it?”
Mack nodded numbly as Martin continued. “Your friends Daria, Jane and Quinn?
The legendary ‘skunk attack?’ Classic Form Two development – but considering
that Daria and Quinn are sisters, they might be considered under Form Three,
too – that’s linear generational manifestation. If you have powers, it might
be because your parents had them, or that your brothers and sisters may have
them, and there’s a very good chance that your kids will, especially if you
and your mate both do. Ninety percent chance in that case - and even then,
they still might have the metagene...”
Mack noticed the look that passed over Tom’s face so quickly that he wiped it
from him mind as Martin spoke. “Then, there’s people who got their powers
through Form Four – radically-induced metagenetic development. Those are the
people who were normal, baseline humans, but they went through some form of
procedure to specifically give them powers. A lot of people mix up Forms Two
and Four; what I just mentioned about specifically trying to get powers is
one of the two differences.”
Mack looked up from the chart. “What’s the other?”
“People who gain powers that way wouldn’t have survived a Form Two activation
incident.” He ate another chunk of Pop-Tart. “Want one? I’ve got a couple
left…”
Both declined; Tom noticed a couple of very pretty women, one in casual
attire and another in an Air Force uniform, sitting with a couple of men in
shirt and tie as they enjoyed drinks as they sat near the surprisingly large
stage up front, where a quintet of musicians were warming up. “They serve
alcohol here?”
“21 and older – for the most part,” Martin said, smiling as he remembered how
the club was closed for the night two weeks ago last Saturday; he and the
graduating First Class cadets celebrated the completion of the practical exam
portion of their Federal Boards – a seven-day, full-power training exercise
on the west coast of Ellesmere Island, in the Canadian territory of Nunavut.
“It’s actually a nice little club – they have live music four nights a week,
and some sick person decided that Thursday night should be ‘Karaoke night’,
so it’s usually crowded then… they’ve got a serious selection of juices,
smoothies and they mix up specialty drinks that aren’t bad…”
The cadet sat up a bit straighter. “You ought to check out a few of the jocks
around here,” he said, looking in Mack’s direction. “We’ve got a few sports
teams here.”
The Legionnaires spoke at the same time. “Is that fair?”
“Nobody’s allowed to use their powers – and besides, they’re allowed to use
‘flush’ before games if they want. In the First Academy, there’s football,
basketball, baseball, soccer, rugby, and swim teams that compete with other
schools – regular and like ours – and up in the Elite Academy – we’ve got a
few other sports, too. About three years ago, some crazy fool actually got a
Quidditch team started here. Now, they get to travel…”
“Quidditch? Like in the Harry Potter books?”
“And in the movies – and in real life, so to speak,” Martin said, a smile on
his face. “Yeah, I know that sounds crazy, but wait until you read the back story
on Rowling – it’s the biggest international government disinformation
campaign since the whole Wormhole X-Treme franchise. You should see
the way they tricked out the brooms – you haven’t lived until you’ve gone
200-plus miles an hour on a broomstick. Funny thing – the teams are usually
mostly female…” He turned to face Tom. “You know, it’s kind of unusual to see
you getting along so well with Daria and Jane, after all I’ve seen of you
guys together… in the tabloids, I mean…”
A very curious look went over Tom’s face, but Mack cut him off. “I just
thought of something – how many people go to school here?”
“Well, they take a hundred new students every year – getting into the Academy
is a serious prestige thing, if you make it through, you can basically write
your ticket, career-wise – you do six years in the First Academy, and five
years in the Elite Academy, including a year’s internship off-campus
somewhere… there’s about a hundred special-assignment students in both
academies and a hundred or so students from other nations whose governments
sent them …roughly thirteen hundred students are enrolled here.”
He looked again at Mack. “You’d probably like it here, Mack – Mack, right?
You’d probably come in as a Cadet First Year – that’s a senior in regular
high school – and from what I’ve seen, you’d be able to walk onto the
football team when they begin summer training. Then, if you decided that you
still wanted a shot at the pros after your senior year here, getting your
powers down solid, they would probably swing you an appointment to one of the
main service academies so you could play on one of their teams, but doing
summer classes here at the Elite Academy as your internship year. They can be
flexible for people here.”
Mack sat back in his chair, his eyes wide; he was about to speak when a
familiar voice turned his head. “I could go to school here?”
“Well, isn’t that part of why Colonel Armalin brought you guys – to see if
any of you wanted to go to school here?”
Mark turned to Tom, whose face was as blank as his own, and turned back to
Martin when a voice from behind pulled his head in that direction.
“Mackenzie! A moment of your time, please?”
Tom also looked up as he saw Colonel Kyle Armalin walk up to the table;
Martin immediately slid from his chair and came to attention. “As you were,
Cadet Peters,”
He said, seeming slightly uncomfortable by the look of admiration on Martin’s
face. “Mackenzie…?”
As Armalin and Mack walked away, Martin turned to Tom. “You guys were trained
by Colonel Armalin personally. Do you know how many people would kill to be
in your shoes?”
“It’s not such a big deal,” Tom replied, as the memories of the Wagon Wheel
and lifting multi-ton weights came back to him. “Really.”
“Are you crazy? I can count on one hand the number of people in the U.S.
Government or the services who went to the Xavier Institute and served as one
of his operatives! The Commandant went to school there and was on the team
for a bit, but he just runs the Academy. It’s not like he’s standing there, directing
everything himself…”
“Hey, rich boy,” a voice from behind spoke, and Tom turned his head to see
the pretty cadet who had spoken to him at Legion Tower. “Nice to see you in
town…”
Martin raised an eyebrow as he saw his fellow cadet come up and put a
delicate hand on Tom’s shoulder. “You know Maryann, Tom?”
Tom slid out of his seat and turned to the cadet, noticing that she was his
height and that she was very pretty – she’s got her ‘hot girl next door’
thing down pat, doesn’t she? – and then, immediately went red…
“No, I’m not a telepath,” the girl said, her eyes nevertheless holding a
clear message: I know what you were just thinking. You’re really cute,
too… “I’m like you. I’m Maryann Lyter. Cadet Third Class Maryann Lyter.”
Martin looked at the light blue beret she held in her hands. “What’s with the
beret?”
“Oh, nothing… it just means that I can toss you all around the room,” she
said coyly. “Buy me a cranberry juice – that way, I have something else to do
with my hands.”
Tom became suddenly very aware of just how close Maryann was standing to him.
“Uh, I’m seeing someone –“
Large gray eyes fixed upon him. “That would factor into your getting me a
juice because…?”
Suddenly feeling very small, Tom turned and slunk over to the bar as Martin fixed
his eyes on his fellow cadet. “That was mean, Lyter. You shouldn’t do that to
him – he’s already noticed that you’re a girl…”
“I know – but with these rich boys, you can’t let them ever think that
they’re in control. Gotta keep them off balance… besides, when I rescue him
from that artist girlfriend of his, he’ll need to remember that I didn’t fall
all over him the first time we met.”
“Isn’t that a bit petty?”
“Excuse me – but you’re the one that’s had a huge crush on Daria
Morgendorffer from afar for how long, and now that she’s here, you can’t even
get near her, let alone talk to her,” Maryann replied, but with a touch of
compassion in her tone. “You don’t tell me how to deal with someone that
interests me, and I’ll return the favor.”
Martin set down his pen. “Just tell me that when – if you get him, you won’t
do anything stupid, like making out while both of you are using your
super-strength. It’s embarrassing when everyone’s wondering what caused the
mini-tremors… and even more embarrassing when the tremors only last for a few
minutes.”
“Funny. At least I can talk to people I’m interested in outside my own
personal Holodeck.” She put her hand on Martin’s shoulder. “David Allen
thinks that she’s okay – a huge plus all by itself – and if you don’t make a
move soon, Leda might beat you there. Rumor is that she’s already crushing on
her…”
Martin remembered the way Leda was holding Daria’s hand, and nodded. “Maybe
you should go and talk to her – and show her the other part of your power.
You’re not a bad guy, Martin. That mom of yours is scary, but you’re okay…
six-foot-two, two hundred pounds and its lots of nice, solid muscle - you’re
a catch, you know? Also, considering what they’ve dealt with, your mom
wouldn’t scare her off… and you could show her that hot springs you created
for the Quidditch team’s celebration after we beat the Brits back in
January.”
Tom arrived with a glass of juice. “Good, you can follow orders,” she said,
taking the glass in her right hand and Tom’s hand in her left. “Come on, rich
boy, let’s sit and talk.”
“I can’t – I just remembered that I wanted to ask the guitar player
something…”
Tom scampered away, and Maryann let an exasperated sign escape her lips. “You
get to escape this time, rich boy…”
*****
“You’ve been looking around the place, Mackenzie?”
“Ah, yes, sir,” Mack said; for some reason, he didn’t feel the need to be on
guard as Armalin talked to him. “You wanted to ask me that?”
“Not exactly,” came the reply. “You know, you haven’t started Legion training
yet, so there’s nothing to unlearn in terms of protocols or tactics if you
decide to attend school here for your training.”
Mack gave Armalin a wide-eyed stare. “The stipend that you’d get for
attending here isn’t as much as you’d get for being in the Legion – but there
are several advantages, and disadvantages as well. Might as well be open
about it,” the older man continued.
“You’re asking me if I want to go to school here, instead of being a part of
the Legion?”
“I’m presenting you with another choice,” Armalin told him. “There’s a reason
I wanted you to come along, even though you’ve been with the others for
roughly fifteen seconds. You have a choice that isn’t clouded by the fact
that you attended Lawndale High with most of the other Legionnaires until
last year; you know them and you all like each other, but you’re not part of
the team yet – you haven’t made yourself a place among them. You could do
that – you would be a great asset to the Legion on many levels – but I’m just
pointing out that you do have options.”
“Do I have to decide right now?”
“You don’t have to make a decision at all,” Armalin told him. “You’re a
Legionnaire. If you wanted to attend the Academy, it could happen – I’ve had
the chance to go over your school records, you’d have no trouble getting in –
but you’re your own man.”
Mack paced about for a moment, and Armalin said nothing for several seconds.
“There’s something else that I wanted to say, if you decide to stay with the
Legion… something that most people don’t want to hear. The Legion gets a lot
of publicity, and by becoming a member, you’re going to get a lot of it…
mainly because you’re a ‘first-black’. Someday, if you’re a Legionnaire and
they go public… you’re going to get a lot more. As an Academy student,
you’d just be another potential military officer, or Special Agent, or
whatever your fancy carries you toward – but where you are now… you’re the
first Black Legionnaire. For good, ill, just out of morbid curiosity and as a
‘role model’ – people will be watching you.”
“I got that all the time at Lawndale,” Mack said, thinking back to how
self-conscious he felt on occasion at LHS, especially with Ms. Li’s maniacal
desire for ‘The HONOR of… Lawndale High…’
The young man smiled, and Armalin raised an eyebrow. “Sorry – I just
remembered how the principal at Lawndale was psychotic about how everyone’s
actions reflected on the school. I always felt like I was under a magnifying
glass there.”
“Well, if you’re a Legionnaire… the magnifying glass will be the size of
Nebraska, someday. I trust you saw the photos of your friends Morgendorffer
and Rowe?”
If he didn’t know better, Mack would have sworn Armalin asked him that to get
a reaction; he’d heard some of the cadets mentioning the magazine, but hadn’t
seen it himself yet. “No, I haven’t,” he mentioned.
“Talk to Morgendorffer about it,” he suggested. “She has a way of keeping to
herself, even with the celebrity light on her. “Better yet – watch how she
deals with what’s about to happen. If she can survive the spotlight, anyone
can. Oh – and Griffin, too, if you need to talk about this subject.”
*****
The room was surprisingly quiet as Jane and Leda sat on their own beds and
munched popcorn as a DVD movie played.
Leda broke the silence first. “Don’t you want to ask me anything?”
Jane actually managed to chew through the mouthful of popcorn she’d stuffed
inside, and washed it down with a big swallow of orange drink. “Nope. Daria’s
cool about you, so you’re solid with me.”
“Okay.” Leda gobbled down a handful of popcorn. “You wanna make out?”
“What are you – hitting me for reactions, or just a character from off TV?”
Leda smiled at the exasperated look on Jane’s face. “Oh, I just wanted to see
that look on your face – that’s the look that says, ‘Oh, Daria…’ – kind of
like her mom. You two really are good friends, you know?”
“I know.”
Jane drew back as Leda studied her for a moment, and then sat up, her green
eyes shining. “Oh, wow… did you and Daria – she let you in, didn’t she? She
did a mindlink with you, and you two… oh, wow. She really does trust you more
than anyone else she’s ever met.”
The look on Jane’s face was priceless. “Daria said that about me…?”
“No – she thought it. She believes it. It just rolls out of her. Hey, you’re
sure that you don’t want to make out?”
“Daria said that you’d do that to mess with my head.”
“Oh, poo,” Leda mock-pouted. “Wanna talk about anything else?”
“Yeah… what’s up with this testing tomorrow?”
“Well, you guys have probably been tested and gone through a lot of stuff
with the scientists to see what you can do, right? Well, they’re going to
give all of you ratings tomorrow – that’s the way everyone has to go – and
they’ll try to see if there’s any other latent abilities that you have that
you just haven’t manifested yet. They’ll also try you out with people who
have powers like yours, so you can talk tricks and give each other ideas.”
“There’s other people with magnetic powers like me?”
“Not many at all – but when they show up, from what I’ve heard, they’re
always powerful,” Leda told her. “I think there’s only seven or eight in all
of the files, and only two have come through the Academy – this redhead back
in the mid-eighties, and Alison’s here now. She’s a Cadet Second Year – about
the same age as you and Daria. They’ll probably stick you with her tomorrow.”
“Can she fly?”
“Yes, but she doesn’t, much. You gotta see her torpedoes, though.”
Jane let that comment pass. “Are there other students here with powers like
ours?”
“Okay… a couple of metamorphs, Carolyn controls electricity and has those
whips, Maryann’s just like your boyfriend – better watch out for her, she
likes stealing boyfriends,” Leda said, setting her popcorn bowl aside. “We’ve
got a couple of people who have camouflage and invisibility powers – nobody
as strong as your friend Taylor – and we’ve got enough fighters like Rowe to
have their own club, even though none of them can fly anywhere nearly as fast
as she can. A couple of people that can phase – and a lot of people with
different radiation, energy and light powers that are like your friend
Mack…but if the rumors are true, he’s going to put them all to shame.”
Leda lay back in her bed. “Why are you turning in early, anyway?”
“Because if we’re going to spend the entire day in tests, I want to get some
rest now,” she replied, remembering how she felt after Legion training – as
well as the fact that she was, when they began, the only Legionnaire who was
reasonably athletic. “I don’t want to consider what you guys deal with in
training”
“Not as intense as you guys, from what I heard. You guys basically went
through Marine Corps boot camp, compared to what we do here. If you were more
out in the sticks – if you’d stayed out in Utah, he’d probably have put you
through live-fire exercises. THAT is not fun.”
“Live-fire?” Jane’s eyes went wide; she knew that Leda was right about that. It
sounds like something the Colonel would do, if he could… well, I’m the one
who’s responsible for that. I’m the one who asked for him, more or
less.
“Yeah,” the girl replied. “Not fun, if you’re not paying attention – and
there’s always somebody who isn’t. Thank God the Medical Wing is a
full-fledged hospital in all but name – a hundred beds, and a full staff –
and there’s almost always several students who are healers or something like that.
You’ll get to meet Danielle tomorrow; she’s a year behind me – I’m a Cadet
Third Class… I turn twenty in July.”
“A hospital.”
“Come on – don’t tell me that you guys don’t have a serious sickbay or
something in that fancy tower you just built?”
“Well, yeah – I guess I haven’t thought about it that much,” Jane admitted.
“Don’t think about it tonight – if you do, you’ll have bad dreams, and I’ll
pick up on it,” Leda said, her voice surprisingly kind. “No, I won’t go into
your dreams, but I’m empathic – people radiate emotions like sunlight when
they dream, and I get very clear imprints of your dreams because of it. My
roommate all through the First Academy was a girl named Debi Coeli – she
could move through time up to an hour forwards or backwards. Because of her
power, she was really focused in the way she thought… sleeping around her was
like taking a good sleeping pill. Like sleeping next to a calm lake.”
“What about the girl who gave up her bed for me?”
“Rhonda? Trust me, I’m glad she’s gone for now. She chatters like a squirrel
on uppers – and she still accidentally transmutates things occasionally. Not
that people complain – her last major screw-up paid for the uniforms and
footwear for the entire Corps of Cadets for the next three years, as well as
the new fleet of Academy vehicles. She transmuted four entire banquet tables
full of food and about six tables into pure platinum; the Admiral let her
keep her plates, silverware and glasses, kept one of the turkeys for his
trophy room and had the rest melted down and sold. Things like that happen
all of the time – it’s one of the reasons we have so many things here,
because the Academy is mostly self-sustaining. We don’t take in nearly as
much government money as you’d think.”
Jane looked over at Leda; even with the money of Russell Stark, a lifetime of
being two steps ahead of bill collectors had anchored Jane firmly in reality
when it came to money- or any way of getting it. “Has she ever transmuted
anything for you?”
Leda snorted. “Not for me, on purpose… it’s not that they say you
can’t use your powers for personal gain, but they teach us here that if
you’re always coming up with things to make money and you can’t easily
explain where it comes from, people will start looking for you. They’ve actually
got a class on the subject – and they say that it’s okay to survive using
your powers to make your life easier, but you need not to attract attention.
Hey… they give you money for being in the Legion, right?”
“We get a stipend…” A sudden stab of guilt flashed through Jane; even though
Trent had just gotten a job with the Legion, she had started paying the bills
at the Lane home… and she’d forgotten all about them for the month. “Why?”
“Well… let me show you.” Leda slip off her bed and went to her closet;
moments later, after opening a small safe, she turned back with a strange
clacking sound in her hand. “Want some M&M’s – the coolest M&M’s
you’ll ever see in your life?”
She walked over to Jane, and held up a faded, crumpled one-half pound bag of
M&M’s, Jane gasped in surprise as Leda poured nine of the candies out
into her hand – and that they looked like small, shining baubles in the light
of the room. “Three years ago, just after Rhonda and I had moved in, I’d gone
on a trip to town – okay, I had a date. I got back, and I found Rhonda
raiding my stash of M&Ms –I’d just opened the bag – and I yelled
‘GOTCHA!”
Leda shook the bag. “She jumped, screamed – and transmuted all of the
M&Ms in the bag into diamonds. She said that I could keep them, but it might
be a good idea not to go spreading it around. That’s another thing they teach
in that class – it’s the height of bad manners to ask someone with powers
like that to help make you rich. Of course, people help out their friends all
the time; you know, everyone has families, not everyone is rich, and things
have been bad overall for a lot of families – the war in Iraq and the way the
country’s going…”
She turned to head back to her safe. “This is my safety net, in case
something very, very bad happens. Between this and my powers, I’ll be able to
have a decent life anywhere in the world.”
Jane was dumbfounded by the fact that Leda had left the nine diamond
M&M’s in her palm. “Um, Leda – why are you telling me all about this… and
don’t you want these back?”
“No, those are for you- and I’m telling you because Daria trusts you… and if
she trusts you, then I think I can, too,” Leda replied. “As for those… oh,
I’ve got more than enough. Think of them as… a gift. Something from a new
friend that you can put away for a rainy day, just in case you, Daria and her
sister have to run away again. This time, you’ll have the cash to do it
right, and Daria won’t be so afraid.”
“She let you see what happened when we ran.” Jane’s tone ensured that her
words were not a question, and Leda nodded. “Oh.”
“Just… just take care of her. I trust you to watch out for her – even from
herself, because bad things do happen – and if you ever need our help to help
Daria, just call us. We’ll be there.”
*****
Morning came.
“Get up, Lane,” a familiar voice spoke, driving sleep from Jane’s brain
immediately, and she opened her eyes as a bundle landed on her midsection
with a thump. “New uniform – courtesy of your hosts.”
Jane looked inside the bundle, and her eyebrows rose as she saw that it was
one of her Legion uniforms and a pair of the boots she wore with it. “Good
morning, Sgt. Nemec. What’s so special about this?”
“They’ll explain it to you later,” she said, turning to the door. “It’s
oh-seven-eighteen. You’re expected in front of the Administration Building at
oh-nine-hundred, so if you want an actual breakfast, I suggest you get
moving… or should we go back to Legion breakfast schedules?”
Nemec allowed herself a smile as she left; Jane slid out of the bed in a
hurry and dashed for the shower before the older woman cleared the door.
*****
Fourteen minutes later, Jane (dressed in her Legion uniform and getting
appreciative glances) walked into Trueblood Cafeteria – the smallest of the
three cafeterias on the Academy grounds – and headed for the twin serving
lines when a female cadet about her age walked in after her and tapped her on
the arm.
“Hello,” the girl said, and Jane took in her appearance; shorter than even
Daria, but with butter-blonde hair and huge, dark-blue eyes flecked with
gold, a face and legs that would have instantly gotten her into the old
Fashion Club, and a bosom that rivaled Brittany’s (but firmer, Jane sighed,
feeling a bit self-conscious). “Jane Lane, right? I didn’t get to meet you
yesterday, but I was hoping… I’m Alison Cockrum.”
A light went off in Jane’s head. “Hold on… Leda mentioned you last night, I
think. She said that you’ve got powers like mine.” Not to mention what she
said about her ‘torpedoes’. Oh, I bet she doesn’t need magnetism to attract guys
– and I bet she hates come-ons like that already.
“Yeah, I do,” she said, slightly shyly. “I… ah, I’m really not supposed to be
over in here to eat – I’m a second-year, and Trueblood’s for the Elite
Academy and special guests only. I just wanted to meet up with you and ask
you things…”
A tall, stately cadet, first-class insignia on his lapel and a tray with
wheat pancakes and peaches in his hands, walked up to the two of them.
“Cockrum – you’re cute, but you know that you’re not supposed to be here, and
you know that you’re not supposed to be trying to get autographs or anything,
right?”
Jane immediately disliked the pompous tone in the otherwise handsome cadet’s
voice, and her dislike intensified as she saw the way the younger cadet
reddened as she snapped to attention. “Excuse me. I’m having a conversation,
and I don’t recall asking you to step in – so why don’t you step off?”
The noise level immediately dampened down in the general area around the two
cadets and Jane; the older cadet looked around and drew himself to his full
height as Jane noticed that they both wore the same night-black version of
the basic cadet uniform, with a braided silver-and-white cord off their left
shoulder. “People under my command are expected to follow my orders – and I’m
giving you one, Cockrum. Leave.”
“I see punks are punks even when they wear nice uniforms and have some rank,”
Jane said, not backing down one bit as the cadet looked down on her with the
same contempt he would show a dog vomiting in front of him. “I guess that
means that I should address you in the right manner – Major Asshole, right?”
Alison’s eyes widened (even more than she’d have thought possible, Jane
thought) as the older cadet flushed crimson. “I am Cadet First Class William
T. Feltson – and you will speak to me with the proper respect. Not everyone
here is all starry-eyed over you and your little club of publicity-hounds…
Lane. Some people actually worked hard to get where they are.”
Jane looked at him, then snorted and turned her back on the cadet. “Oh, screw
you-!”
A hand clamped onto her shoulder, and without thought, a tight, heavy beam of
pure magnetic force speared out of Jane’s back and threw William through an
ocean of gasps and cries of surprise as he flew across the full length of the
cafeteria and hit hard against a wall!
“You locked onto the iron in his blood, put a charge in him and reversed the
charge in your own body… and you did it in a heartbeat,” Alison said, looking
at Jane with respect. “I can’t do that…” “Well, I’m sure that you can do lots
of things that I can’t,” she replied. “Come on. I don’t think that I want to
eat in any place that has him-“
“Where do you think you’re going?”
Jane turned to see William rise up from the floor. “If you want to dance - I
wouldn’t be a gentleman if I didn’t finish out the waltz!”
The pompous cadet raised his right hand and snapped his fingers-
Before she could take another breath, Jane found herself savagely immersed in
a thick, overflowing torrent of pure sound that seemed to press into her from
every single square centimeter of her body, as if she had suddenly appeared
in at the bottom of a giant swimming pool, but with sound instead of water
smothering her, drowning her, crushing into her, forcing itself down into her
throat and driving up into her nostrils…
It was as if Mystik Spiral had suddenly hit the opening riff on every single
song that they had ever played, every single time that they had ever played
them, and all at once, right besides her, around and inside her, ripping that
single, brutal combined note – magnified over and over and tripled again - at
a level that seemed to drive it straight through her eardrums and into her
brain-
Jane was on her knees before her scream had even escaped from her mouth.
William started towards her when a solid blow to his jaw from off to his left
knocked him over a table, and Jane looked up to see Charles Ruttheimer
rubbing his fist as the slightly taller cadet scrambled to his feet! “Hey,
look – it’s the freak geek with the antennae like a giant mutant cockroach.
You don’t impress me, either.”
Charles’ face didn’t change expression as his skin took on a metallic
glimmer; six seconds later, William’s jaw dropped as he was staring up at a
twenty-five-foot tall, factory-new-and gleaming blue-with-orange-trim VFA-6Z
Veritech Alpha Fighter in Battloid Mode... straight from the animated world
of Robotech, but all, all too real for the cadet’s taste. He almost
lost control of his bladder as the giant robot raised its tri-barreled 80mm
pulse-cannon gun pod and brought the evil-looking black weapon down to his
face, the barrels beginning to spin up…
“Opinions vary. Apologize to Jane.”
“I think that’s a good idea, don’t you?”
William went white in the face as a voice from another door made him turn;
the cafeteria seemed to grow eerily silent as a well-toned young man in the
same uniform as William and Alison, highlighted by the same insignia and
braid (but with a prominent gold thread added to the braid) walked through
the door from which, it seemed, he had seen the entire incident. “You were
being an ass again, Feltson, and you put your hand on a young lady without
her permission. Your choice. Apologize to her… or apologize to me.”
The taller cadet hesitated for just a moment, and then walked stiffly over to
Jane, who Alison had helped to her feet. “I apologize for my actions.”
Jane’s eyes swept across his face with an implicit promise in her glare: someday,
there will be payback. “Get away from me.”
As William felt the eyes of everyone in the area upon him, he scuffled out of
the cafeteria, and the young man in the black uniform looked up at the
Battloid. “Nice GU-XX gun pod, Robby. Power down before one of the officers
comes in and sees you.”
Charles returned to normal form and was immediately swarmed by female
admirers, which he ignored as he followed the cadet over to Jane and Allison.
“You okay, Jane?”
“My ears are still ringing,” she admitted, and an obviously infatuated male
cadet with raven-black hair like hers came up to Jane, a puppy-dog look on
his face.
“I can help you – if you don’t mind,” he said, offering his hand to Jane –
and as she took it, a quick flickering of tiny sparkles rushed up his fingers
and over Jane’s form, rising quickly around her head and then spurting away
in a mass twinkling of bursts, like tiny fireworks going off! “Better-?”
“Yeah – thanks!” Jane said, feeling a rush of energy flow through her, as if
she’d just awakened from the best sleep she’d ever had. “Thanks – uh…”
The young cadet’s face was immediately brightened. “Kevin – my name’s Kevin!”
“Hmn. Well, thank you, Kevin. I owe you one.” She smiled at him, which sent
the boy away on an actual cloud – well, trail of little starbursts that he
seemed to walk away on as he went back to his table, where his friends
laughed good-naturedly teased him about the way he was acting; her attention
then turned to her fellow Legionnaire. “Nice punch, U- Charles.”
The look on Charles’ face was more serious than she’d ever seen on him. “He
shouldn’t have put his hands on you.”
“True enough,” the cadet in the black uniform said, extending his hand.. “I
haven’t had the pleasure. Cadet Jason Todd.”
“He’s our cadre commander,” Alison said, smiling proudly as Jane shook the
cadet’s hand. “The Phantom Eagles – the best cadet cadre here at the
Academy.”
“It can’t be that good, if you let jerks like him in.”
“He’s our Animal Mother,” Jason allowed. “He’s the best human being in the
world; all you need is for someone to throw grenades at him, or try and fry
him with plasma beam-fire. If you’ll excuse me – I don’t think he apologized
to you as well as he could have.”
Jane noticed the way Alison’s face fell. “Maybe we’ll get to talk later,” the
pretty cadet said, following Jason out the door.
Watching the two cadets leave, Jane turned to watch as several cadets helped
a number of cafeteria workers clean up the mess on the other side of the
cafeteria, as well as move tables back into place. “Charles, do you-“
She shook her head and smirked as she saw Charles being all but swept away in
a small knot of female cadets. “Is it just me, or does anyone else find that
ironic… not to mention slightly disturbing?” she thought aloud. “We never
have this much drama at Legion Tower… the Colonel would never let it fly –
waffles. Gotta get waffles before he comes looking for me.”
*****