Mutual Flame
Mutualflame
Prologue: Born of Fire.
*******************
The golden sarcophagus gleamed in the light of a hundred torches.
(The torches were an affectation, but affectations amused him.)
'You are certain it's genuine, Dr. Summerbell?'
'Ninety-nine percent certain, Mr. Luthor.'
'Only ninety-nine percent certain?'
'No one may be one hundred percent certain of anything, save perhaps
God.'
'Point taken…. Well, let's open it and see what's inside, shall we?'
'Open it! Mr. Luthor, that would be a sacrilege…. No, no, not for
religious reasons I do assure you, but for scientific reasons.
This… this dungeon is not a suitable environment. Such a
remarkable find must be opened only under the most stringent of
conditions, after first alerting the archaeological community, and
garnering the best advice from the most qualified specialists.'
'I thought you might say that,' sighed Lionel Luthor.
'Of course I would say that,' Dr. Summerbell protested. 'You
hired me to give you the benefit of my professionalism, and I have done
so.'
'And you have done so, but… could nothing persuade you to make an
exception in this instance?'
'I am afraid not, and if you persist in asking such a thing of me, I
must consider our association to be terminated.'
'Very well, Dr. Summerbell. Our association is at an end.'
'I am leaving now, to lodge a complaint with the proper
authorities. I consider myself culpable in this crime, but
perhaps a full confession will persuade them to be lenient with me.'
'I'm sure it would, Doctor.'
The archaeologist took an earnest step toward his erstwhile
employer. 'This is indeed a most remarkable find,' he said
again. 'Our fame would be assured for all time. If we were
to say we found it by accident, few would doubt us, at least
openly. I do hope you will reconsider.'
Lionel Luthor looked down at the dungeon floor, and frowned.
Then, he looked up and smiled. 'I have reconsidered, Doctor, and
I find that I am of the same mind still. I have plans for this
sarcophagus, and its contents, you see. Plans that do not include
the archaeological community. Plans that no longer concern you.'
The archaeologist sighed. 'Very well,' he said. 'I must be
on my way.'
'Yes,' said Lionel. 'Please be on your way.' Fire
flashed from his hand. A hole appeared in the very centre of the
archaeologist's head, and a surprised expression upon what was left of
his face. He fell to the floor, and lay quite still.
'I have plans, Doctor,' Lionel said again, with a peculiar emphasis, as
though now the archaeologist must see his point, and acknowledge its
primacy, if he did not done so before. 'Fame -- at least fame of
the academic sort -- is not among them. Fame of another sort,
yes. But you would not understand that sort of fame. And
now I have your body to dispose of.'
The torchlight flickered. Something black, with a long black
tail, skittered along the wall. This ancient dungeon had for many
dire ages been a disposal facility for inconvenient dead bodies.
Lionel searched for and found a room of gnawed bones, and tossed the
doctor's corpse among them. Soon, no one would be able to tell at
a glance which bones were the doctor's and which were his long-dead
predecessor's.
The floor in front of the sarcophagus was stained with blood, but blood
would not offend its occupant if half the stories about him were true.
Lionel nodded toward the Presence within the tomb. 'Well, now we
are alone,' he said. 'I will bring no other inferior beings
before you, for they would not understand us. We must manage
ourselves.'
It would not be easy lifting the lid of the sarcophagus alone, but
Lionel Luthor was always prepared to act alone. It had not really
been a surprise to him, when Dr. Summerbell reneged on their
agreement. The seal cracked open, the winch turned, the
cover lifted enough for him to slide it from its base. He pushed,
using every scrap of his considerable power. The cover slid back
far enough for him to look inside.
The face, in all its calm, regal beauty, looked back at him with blind
eyes. He had been dead for over two thousand years, but the
embalmers had done their work well. He lay there, in more peace
than he had ever known in his short life. Waiting. Waiting
to be reborn, thought Lionel.
'Not yet,' he said. 'Not quite yet. But soon.' He carefully
slid the cover back into place. There were a few more
preparations to make. But now he knew. One look, and he had
known. One hundred percent certain, as only a god could be.
Two Days Later:
*************
It was midnight, the very time and date that all the auguries, both
scientific and mystical, had pointed toward as the most
auspicious. Torches flamed against blackened stone walls.
Incense wafted in great waves through musty air. Braziers had
burned constantly through the last few days, to keep the cold from
affecting the mummy. The body had survived more than two thousand
years buried in the sand near Siwah, but who knew what the cold damp
conditions of this dungeon might do to it.
Soon enough, the cold would matter nothing.
'Come, Lillian,' Lionel commanded.
Lillian Luthor stepped out of the passageway, into the light of the
torches. She was naked. Her long hair flowed down her
back. She moved gracefully, as though wafting a foot above the
ground. Her eyes were dark, the pupils dilated..
'Lie down upon the altar,' Lionel commanded.
Lillian climbed up the steps, to the top of the altar, and sank to the
stone top. She lay still. Her eyes gazed up toward the
ceiling, blank and sightless.
Lionel cranked open the sarcophagus once more. The mummified body
looked unchanged. Perhaps the skin of the face had darkened
a little, or perhaps that was only shadows cast by the waves of
incense.
Lionel began to chant, summoning his powers. Torches flared, the
flames bending toward him, trying to bridge the distance. A spark
ignited in his hand, and he held it for a moment, breathing more life
into it. Then, he let it drop.
The body, preserved by ancient spices and myrrh, dried out by millennia
in the desert of Siwah, burst into flame like a torch. Like a
man-shaped torch it burned. The dried flesh burst, the bones
creaked and cracked. Smoke rose from the body, smelling of
myrrh. Lionel breathed in the smoke, bathed in it, dipped his
hands in it, and poured the smoke over his naked body.
Then, he turned toward his wife, lying on the altar insensible and
incognizant.
She fought him, at the end, as the shock broke through the effects of
the drug. She had been a virgin, kept chaste for this purpose,
and his touch was not that of a lover, but of a conqueror. The fight,
violent but short, with a preordained resolution, made his victory even
sweeter.
************************************************************************************
Chapter One: Fire From Heaven
**************************
Lex knew his father wasn't happy. He knew it the way he knew the
sun was bright and hot. He knew it the way he knew that he himself was
thirsty and tired. His father's unhappiness was as inevitable as
gravity, and as unyielding as the ground so far below them.
Those thoughts -- of the distance to the ground, coupled with the
effects of gravity -- made his stomach lurch once more, and he found
himself wishing his imagination were not quite so vivid.
'Lex!' his father snapped. 'You must learn to conquer your
own fear. A man who can conquer his own fear, can conquer the
world. If he cannot conquer himself, he is not a man.'
Lex felt the Presence inside him awake, and give assenting voice.
He closed his eyes even more tightly, trapped between the pressure from
outside, and the pressure from within. Only because the two
pressures were equal did he manage to keep from exploding or
collapsing. His father thought him a weak coward, and so, it
appeared, did the Presence. Yet he kept them both from tearing
him asunder between them, and had done so all his life.
The Presence was insane, Lex knew. He often doubted his father's
sanity as well, but he knew the Presence was insane, the same way he
knew his father was unhappy. The Presence spent most of its time
asleep and dreaming. At other times would it awake, and scan its
near environment with desire. It would demand to make itself known, and
to insist upon Lex's obedience to its desire. Lex always
refused. He had been created as a vessel for the Presence, but
Lex refused to give over command of the vessel to its contents.
'Open your eyes and face your father,' said the Presence. 'Tell
him you are as strong as he is, even if you are only a boy.'
That was just it, thought Lex. He wasn't only a boy -- he was a
Vessel. A jar. A cup. He had been created to hold the
spirit and mind of another living being. He hated and
feared that being, because he… it… it knew everything he felt and
thought and did, when it was awake. Awake, it knew everything, and thus
it knew far too much.
Go back to sleep, thought Lex. There's nothing for you
here. Just corn. Fields of corn, miles of corn, as far as
the eye could see, nothing but corn. What interest does corn hold
for such as you?
The helicopter landed. Lex followed his father out onto the
safety of solid ground, to stand amidst the alien corn, to conquer it,
and make it their own.
Lionel Luthor was all for conquering the world -- one corn field at a
time. A stretch of barren wasteland at a time. A factory here, a
town there, and yet another town over there. Another
factory. Another stretch of barren wasteland. He had a
plan, he informed Lex. A plan, yes. Lionel always had plans.
But no Vision… and whose thought was that? His own, or was it the
Presence speaking, commenting when it should be asleep? These
days, Lex feared he soon would be unable to know the difference, would
be unable to know where he ended and the Presence began.
Men were bowing, acknowledging their new owner. Lionel smiled,
nodding back politely. He was usually polite, even when killing
people. It seemed he wasn't about to kill anyone yet, and Lex
grew bored. Talk of yields and how long a field should lie fallow
bored him. He was no farmer. Lionel believed in supervising
all his holdings in person, as much as he could, since he trusted no
one.
'Everyone will cheat you, Lex,' he said at every opportunity. 'If
not right away, then sooner or later. If you aren't there to
catch them at it, eventually they will grow careless and reveal
themselves -- but by then, you will have lost profits, and your
reputation besides.'
The corn fields were more interesting in themselves, than what the
adult conversation about them let on. Stalks of corn,
taller than a man, row after row, leading off into the distance, to the
very edge of the horizon, and then some. He could almost sense
the ruminations of a strange, devious, vegetable mind. One could get
lost in corn, perhaps never to be found. Lex often wanted to get
lost. He had dreams of never again feeling the wrath of his
father. Perhaps then he could conquer the Presence that lived
inside him, and become himself. Lex Luthor.
Himself. Not the son of the rich, powerful Necromancer, Lionel
Luthor. Not the Vessel for the Presence. Just Lex.
Then he could own his own soul, whatever that was, wherever that was.
His father stalked toward the edge of the field, eyeing the corn,
making pronouncements upon its worth and value. His contingent of
agents and counsellors and hangers-on followed.
Lex stepped slowly backwards, away from the general consensus, and
toward his own path. The corn beckoned, it had its own mind,
expressed its own thoughts. Fortunate corn. Strength of
roots, leaves, husks. Love of rain and sunlight. Fear of
earworms and borers. From the edge of the field, such concerns
had seemed amusing and light-hearted compared to his own fears.
But now, surrounded by corn, and only corn, Lex felt outnumbered, and
lost. He was the alien, not the corn. The corn knew more about
the environment of cornfields than did Lex Luthor. The corn had
its own undeniable logic. He ran, seeking he knew not what, and
suddenly, above him, fire flashed across the sky. Great bursts of
fire. From every direction he could hear screams. Over it
all, he heard his father calling, 'Lex! Lex!'
His father sounded truly afraid, as if Lex weren't the disappointment
he knew himself to be, now that he had gotten himself lost. Lex
turned toward the voice, drawn by the magnet of longed-for love, and as
he turned, a great globe of fire landed at his feet, and exploded, and
he knew nothing but flame. Red flame, black flame. Red
flame, black flame. Red, and black, and red and black….
************
'I am sorry, Mistress Kent.'
'No, don’t say that,' Martha remonstrated. 'It isn't your fault.'
'It is no one's fault, Mistress Kent.'
'That's not true, Doctor. It is my fault. I am imperfect.'
'And who is perfect? Not I, certainly. You speak of fault,
Mistress, where there is none.'
'I cannot have a child, Doctor, and that is a fault. I am sorry to have
troubled you. It isn't as if it were news to me. I've
consulted many other doctors and midwives, and everyone has told me the
same thing. I suppose… I suppose I hoped for a miracle.'
'A miracle? From me? How very touching, Mistress. But
I have no miracles. It is the gods who create miracles.'
'And they hand them out very unfairly,' said Martha.
'It seems so to us -- but then we are mere humans, and we don't
understand how the universe works. Or why.'
Martha gazed at the doctor. Cassandra was old, white haired,
blind. More seer than physician. But Martha was desperate
to try anything.
'You were desperate when you came to me, and I understand that,' said
Cassandra, gently. 'But desperation only makes our problems
worse. I'm sure many people have said this to you, but why not
adopt a child, if you wish for one so desperately?'
'Adoption? It… it feels like giving up. Accepting failure.'
'Accepting what must be. Accepting what the Goddess has planned
for you. That is not failure. That is Grace.'
'I'll think about it,' said Martha, at last.
'Do think about it, Mistress. I must tell you that often and
often when a woman adopts a child, she then feels one quicken in her
own womb. It comes of acceptance, of not trying to create a
miracle, but accepting the miracle the Goddess gives her.'
'Do you think so?' asked Martha, new hope in her voice.
'I believe it with all my heart,' said Cassandra.
Martha turned to the Goddess Altar, in the tree grove. She bowed
her head, trying to feel acceptance in her heart. She wondered if
the Goddess could read her heart to its depths, and would feel the
anger still brewing there.
'The Goddess knows we are human, and imperfect,' said the doctor, with
a smile. 'But she appreciates all gestures, all attempts to
try.' Then her face changed, her voice changed. 'Give me
your hand, Mistress,' she said.
Martha held out her hand, and the blind woman took it,
unerringly. 'Fire from heaven,' she said. 'The dragon
wakes. And the world changes.'
'What? What does that mean?' asked Martha.
Cassandra was silent for a moment. 'I'm sorry,' she said, at
last. 'Did I say something strange? I had a warning, but I
have forgotten it. Be careful, Mistress. That's all I know.'
'You said something about fire, and dragons.'
'There are no more dragons,' said Cassandra. 'They died in
chains.'
'You said the world would change.'
'The world is always changing,' said Cassandra. 'Change is
nothing to fear. But be careful.'
Martha turned to Jonathan, who was waiting by the gate. He held
out his arms, and she ran to them, and rested her head upon his
shoulder. He had always been willing to adopt, she knew.
She had been the one holding back, longing for a child all their
own. Now, she smiled up at him, trying to be brave.
'Let's look into adoption, then,' she said. 'Let us trust the
Goddess.'
************
'There are good things about adoption,' Jonathan was saying.
'Pregnancy and childbirth can't be much fun.'
'Fun?' said Martha. 'Not fun, no. But, it's an important
part of life. Women… most women want to experience it.' She
was watching the fields speed by, as Jonathan drove the old pickup
truck home. Another wasted attempt, she thought. But no,
Cassandra was right. It was time for acceptance.
'But we can choose our own baby, this way, instead of just taking what
comes,' Jonathan pointed out. 'A little girl, maybe? Blond
hair, blue eyes? We'll have everything ready for her, and it will
be perfect.'
Martha looked up, and smiled. Not much chance of getting exactly
what they wanted. They were poor farmers, not wealthy landowners
or necromancers. But Jonathan knew that as well as she did, so no
need to say it and spoil the mood.
Acceptance.
Something boomed overhead, a great fireball. It landed in the
road ahead of them, and Jonathan couldn't stop the truck in time.
They skidded into the fire and smoke, and the truck flipped over.
For a moment, Martha blacked out. Only a moment, she thought, as
she opened her eyes. I was only unconscious for a moment. Nothing
terrible can happen in a moment.
A moment was long enough for her whole world to turn upside down, along
with the truck. For, when she opened her eyes again, a sweet
little face was looking at her, through the window. A small, naked
child. A boy. He smiled at her easily, as if they were playing in
a sandbox together. Then -- he picked up the truck in his tiny
hands, and turned it upright.
********************
'It must be a Necromancer War,' Jonathan announced.
'What makes you think that,' said Martha, driving the truck with savage
concentration.
'Fire from the sky. Explosions. Children with superhuman
powers,' Jonathan ticked the evidence off on his fingers.
'A child who hasn't said a word so far,' said Martha. 'Nor has he
threatened us in any way. I think he wants nothing to do with the
battle, if there is one.'
'He's a Wizard's Child, that's certain. He's powerful.'
'Yes, a Wizard's Child, but innocent, and we must hide his origins, if
we're going to keep him,' said Martha.
'Keep him?' asked Jonathan. He looked down at the baby in his
arms. Martha had wrapped him in a red blanket. 'You want to keep
him?'
'He's ours,' said Martha. 'He found us. He saved us.
He's ours. Or we are his.'
'He's dangerous. Not in himself, but if he's a Wizard's Child…'
'The wizard should have taken better care of him.'
'Yes, but….' Jonathan caught a glimpse of his wife's face. Just a
glimpse, but he shut his mouth and said no more. He knew that
expression. The little Wizard's Child had roused a mother's
protective instincts in his Martha, on top of her usual stubborn
resolve, so he had lost the battle before it began. They were
keeping the Wizard's Child. It was Jonathan's job to find a way
to make that possible. A husband's duty was to make his wife's
dreams possible.
Up ahead, on the dusty road, stood a man, holding another little boy in
his arms. The man was tall, and thin, and dressed in black, and
his hair was red. A Necromancer, fresh from the battle. He
stood in the path of the truck, and waved his hand.
'Drive on by!' said Jonathan.
'We can't,' said Martha.
'Of course we can,' said Jonathan. 'He's a wizard, he's
dangerous. It's the only thing to do.'
'He's a wizard, he's dangerous, he's seen us, and we can't fight
him. To drive on by would be suspicious. Smile. Act
friendly.' She pulled the truck to a stop, right in front of the
Necromancer.
Jonathan took a deep breath, and plastered a friendly smile on his
face. 'Good afternoon, sir,' he said. 'Need any help?'
*******************
Lex was on fire. He wanted to run away, to run off toward the
pale blue sky, and find peace, but he was paralysed, and could only sit
and burn. Someone spoke to him, a man with red hair -- his
father? Lex didn't know. Lex couldn't answer. He
could only sit and burn, and watch while the man waved his arms, as if
trying to cast a spell that didn't work The man picked him up in
his arms and carried him out to the road. The road was
dusty, and smelled like ashes, and burning people. The ashes made
him cry.
A truck came rumbling toward them, and pulled over. A woman. A
man. A child -- a little boy. The child reached out and
touched his face, and it was like the touch of rain on his face.
Like the touch of falling tears, or falling stars.
Pale blue sky. Peace.
**************************************************************************************
Chapter Two: Bridge of Sighs
*************************
'Everyone will say I'm a coward!'
'Clark….'
'They will. They'll say I'm a coward. Most of the boys are
joining. Even some of the girls. Chloe. Chloe's
joining.' Clark couldn't keep the bitterness out of his
voice.
'Clark!'
'It's not fair, Dad.'
'You are our only child. We need you on the farm. We got an
exemption. No one will say you're a coward. Everyone
understands the reasons.'
'I don't. I don't understand at all. We have to fight for
independence. That's more important than this stupid farm…. I'm
sorry, Mom. I didn't mean it like that. But I feel trapped
here. I want to fight. I'm not weak. I don't want to be
exempted.'
'We can't always do what we want, Clark Kent,' said Martha Kent.
'I never get to do what I want. You never let me. I could fight
as well as any of the other boys. Better than some.'
'Better than any of them, that's the problem,' Jonathan Kent
observed. 'It's dangerous.'
'Dangerous? Dangerous for who? For me, or for the
Luthors? I could take them all on.'
'No! You could take them all on, but we're not letting you.
Listen, son. If the Luthors saw you, if they saw what you could
do… The gods only know what might happen. The Luthors are
Necromancers.'
'So what?'
'We never told you where you came from, did we?' asked Martha.
Clark grinned. 'You explained to me about sex,' he said.
'And you told me I was adopted. So, I guess my biological parents
had sex, since I'm here, aren't I?'
'Maybe,' said Jonathan.
'Maybe? What are you saying, Dad? That they didn't have
sex? That I'm a clone? What?'
'We're not exactly sure. You came with the meteors,' said Martha.
'My biological parents were meteors?' Clark scratched his head,
with his best 'adults are idiots' expression.
'You came here, to Smallville, at the same time as the meteors.
We thought it was a Necromancer war, but we heard no more about it, so
now we're not sure.'
'We thought you were a Wizard's Child,' said Martha. 'You didn't
speak. But you cast no spells, and no wizard came after you, to
claim you as his own.'
'But you're not an ordinary human,' said Jonathan. 'We found a
ship, a space ship, right where the meteors landed. We think you
came in that ship.'
Clark looked back and forth between his parents, as they talked.
When Jonathan finished, he sat for a moment in silence. 'A ship?'
he said, at last. 'With the meteors?'
'A space ship,' said Martha. 'Perhaps you came from another
world. Another dimension. We found the ship, and hid it.'
'I'm an Wizard's Child, and I'm a alien?'
'We think so,' she answered.
'Cool,' said Clark. 'I'm an alien Wizard's Child. I'm
stronger than normal humans. And you won't let me fight?
What's the point of me being so strong, if I can't use it to defend my
family, to protect people? Our people. My friends are going
to die. Pete. Chloe. Lana, maybe. Maybe you, if the
Luthors show up here at the farm.'
'If that happens, we'll let you fight. I promise, Clark.'
'By then it would be too late, Dad.'
'It won't go that far,' said Jonathan.
'How do you know?'
'I know the Luthors,' said his Dad. 'You can't fight them.
You can't win. It will all be over sooner than you think.'
'Great! Then I'll really be a coward, won't I? I could help
us win, but you won't let me? I'm old enough to do what I want,
you know.'
'No!' said Jonathan. 'We have the exemption. They won't let
you sign up.'
Clark got to his feet, and stared down at his parents for a moment, in
silence. Then, still in silence, he stalked out of the kitchen,
got into the truck, and drove to town. He was going to enlist.
******************
'I'm finally giving you a chance to prove yourself, Lex. Why are
you arguing? I thought this is what you wanted.'
'It was. At one time.' Lex Luthor shrugged. 'Now, I
couldn't care less.'
'That's too bad, son. But it changes nothing. You're mine to
command.'
'I'm over twenty-one. I'm an adult.'
'You're a Luthor. I'm the head of the family. You do as I say.'
'Quelling some stupid peasant rebellion,' said Lex, dreamily.
'Yes. Sounds like fun.'
'I don’t really care whether you think it's fun or not,' said
Lionel. 'Go quell the stupid peasants. If you can manage
that, we'll talk. I'll find you something more interesting and
important to do.'
'I was finding interesting things to do all by myself,' said Lex.
'Interesting things to do? Stuck in a laboratory? Lex, Lex,
Lex. Luthors are warriors, wizards, business tycoons. Not
lab technicians.'
'Lab technicians? Is that what you think I am? Dad, I was
on to something… something great.'
'On something, you mean,' said Lionel. 'Sniffing too many of
those chemicals in your lab. It's time you got out in the fresh
air. Get some exercise. Have a little fun with the peasant
girls. Some of them are pretty enough to be worth it. And
why are you still standing here arguing? Go!'
'Sure, Dad,' said Lex. He saluted, with sarcastic
elaboration. 'Thanks, Dad.'
****************
'I see you finally got up the courage to enlist,' said Whitney Fordham.
'My parents finally agreed to let me join the Home Guard,' Clark
corrected him. 'They won't let me go to the Front, but we'll
probably see some action here.'
'Action? I'll tell you what action you won't see. Lana is
off limits. You got that?'
'Lana? I'm not after Lana,' said Clark.
'I've seen you watching her, tripping over your own feet every time she
gets near. But she's mine, so keep your hands off.'
'Whitney?' It was Lana, calling to her boyfriend from the door to
the men's barracks. She wore fatigues, with a nurse's insignia,
and the green stone necklace that was her constant companion.
Clark started to get to his feet, but he felt that sudden loss of
strength he often experienced in Lana's presence, and he sat back down
again, rather quickly.
'There's a meeting at the school tonight,' Lana told them.
'Before the troops leave for the Front. Are you both coming?'
'I am, of course,' said Whitney.
'I want to go,' said Clark. 'But I have to get home and tell my
parents where I'm based. They were worried I'd just run off for
the Front. I'll see if I can make it back here in time.'
'You're looking pale, Clark. Are you alright?' asked Lana.
'I'm fine. Just need some fresh air, I guess.'
'Well, if you're not feeling better later, you should come round to the
hospital. Have someone check you out. I have to go, they
made me the messenger girl about this meeting, but I'll talk to you
both later.'
'Lana will talk to me later -- and you can stay away from her,' said
Whitney, after Lana left. 'You trying to win her sympathy, or
just turning yellow?'
'Neither,' said Clark. 'I'm not after your girl, or any other
girl. How much clearer can I make it?'
'You're telling me you're not interested in girls?' asked Whitney, his
tone incredulous.
'Not that much,' said Clark. 'I like them, but I'm not chasing
after them. I'm too busy right now.'
'I'll never be too busy for that. Maybe you just haven't met the
right one.'
'Maybe,' said Clark. 'I like Lana. She's my friend.
That's all.'
'That's never all,' said Whitney. 'But you try for anything more,
and I'll kill you.'
*************
Sun Tzu said to know your enemy. Lionel Luthor thought his own
son was his enemy. Sun Tzu said to treat your soldiers as you
would your sons. Lionel Luthor treated his own son as lesser than
his servants. Sun Tzu said….
'Sun Tzu has been dead for centuries, and Lionel Luthor is Lionel
Luthor. We have better things to worry about.'
'Thanks,' said Lex to his internal critic. 'You're not telling me
anything I don't already know.'
The little war exercise to which Lionel had condemned his son, was
shaping up as a trap. How could Lex know his enemy?
They never showed themselves. They never met him face to face in
battle. They weren't warriors, they were spies, who crept about
after dark, and blew up bridges, and stole trucks loaded with supplies.
Sun Tzu said to first put yourself into a position where you could not
be defeated, and then look for a way to defeat your enemy.
Lex had the superior troops and weaponry, so he was undefeatable from
the start. But his enemy knew the land. It was theirs, and
they wanted it back. There was no way Lex could defeat them, and
the truth was, he didn't want to defeat them. They held the moral
high ground. Stalemate.
Lionel had bought up this country piece by piece, and then put
the squeeze on. He'd pretended to be a benevolent landlord, and
turned into a tyrant and a despot. Lex had no sympathy for
Lionel, now that the peasants had turned into guerrillas. All his
sympathy was for the peasants. But it was useless to tell Lionel
that. Lionel never listened to a word he said.
He could run away. He'd thought about it many times. But
Lionel would just have him captured and brought back in chains.
Lex was not the sort of person who could disappear into a crowd.
At least this part of the country had been pacified.
Temporarily. Enough so that Lex could get away from the base for
a drive, occasionally. It was foolish, everyone told him
that. But if he spent all his time hanging around the base
studying maps and troop movements he'd go crazy, and do something rash.
Like call Lionel up on the phone and tell him what he really thought of
him.
The countryside was very much as it had been in peacetime, except for
the bomb craters, and the smell of blood and burning flesh. The
armoured jeep he was driving didn't handle like his Porsche, or his
Mercedes, but it could get up a good head of steam, if he pushed it to
the floor. The cornfields whipped by outside the bombproof glass
of the windows. They reminded him of… too much. Of fire
that fell from heaven. Of the voices inside his head that had
become too loud. Of everything that had happened since the
meteors. His brother. His mother. Their graves.
His father's hate….
Lex often wished he could drive fast enough to escape the demons in his
own head. But he had never yet found a car could that could
travel that fast.
There was a bridge up ahead. A truck coming the other way.
The idea entered Lex's mind that he was too far from the base and
should turn back. At that moment, the truck on the bridge
swerved, blocking his path. Lex desperately spun the wheel of the
jeep, trying to avoid hitting the truck. The bridge exploded
under his wheels, fragments of the truck flew through the air in every
direction, and Lex realized the truck was a moving bomb, and the bridge
was blowing up under him and he swerved the jeep toward the bridge
railing, since driving off the bridge was a better way to
die. It was better to die under his own power, not being
blown up by some idiotic suicidal peasant.
The truck crashed through the bridge railing. The river rose to
meet him. He was under the water, his eyes filling with water,
his lungs filling with water, his head roaring with the rushing sound
of the water. And then hands were gripping him, pulling him out,
lifting him up, up, up out of the water, high over the river. And
then he was lying on the riverbank, looking up into the sky, into the
sun. A mouth was pressed to his, forcing air into his lungs. He
took a deep breath on his own, and then he opened his eyes and looked
up, into a face, as bright and as beautiful as the sun.
'Good,' said the beautiful boy. 'You're alive. You're
breathing.'
*******************
Clark was the boy's name. Lex was wearing Clark's jacket, sitting
in the peaceful sun, watching the river flow by, carrying away all
possibility of hope. Lex was in enemy hands, though his enemy
seemed oblivious of that fact -- checking his eyes, asking Lex if he
felt dizzy, behaving completely unlike the victor in this battle.
Lex sat on the riverbank in the peaceful sun, waiting until he felt
less dizzy and until Clark's attention was diverted, waiting for his
chance to jump up and escape. The jeep was at the bottom of the
river, and his chances of actually escaping were rather slim. But
he had to try. Giving up was not an option. Not for a Luthor
'Are you with the army?' Clark asked. 'The Luthors?'
'Um…' said Lex Luthor. He supposed he should reveal himself as a
maniac general who went driving alone through enemy territory, except
that he didn't want his nice friendly captor to turn vicious just yet.
'I'm sorry about what happened,' Clark went on. 'No one was
supposed to get hurt. You came out of nowhere.'
'No need to apologise,' said Lex. 'My fault entirely. I was
driving too fast. Your friend who was driving the truck? I
guess he suffered the most.'
'Um… yes. I guess he did.' Clark seemed rather unconcerned
about his friend and comrade who must be in little pieces at the bottom
of the river. But then Lex supposed that had happened rather
often the last few months, and Clark no longer noticed.
'Why… why were you out driving alone?' Clark asked suddenly. 'It's not
safe, you know?'
'I didn't realise it was dangerous,' said Lex. 'I thought this
area was pacified, by now.'
'We'll never be pacified,' said Clark, fiercely.
'I see,' said Lex. 'I wasn't intending any harm. I just
wanted to feel free, you know?'
'Absent without leave?' asked Clark, with a grin. 'You'll be in
trouble when you get back.'
'Oh, yes?' said Lex. 'About that, if you don't mind? I
should be going. I have a long walk back.'
Clark grinned. He seemed entirely innocent of the fact that Lex
was, officially, his prisoner, and Lex wondered if he could pull this
off without too much trouble. He was getting to his feet,
shrugging off Clark's jacket, when he heard them.
'Woohoo! We did it!'
'Clark? Hey! Who's that?'
'Hey, look. Clark's got a prisoner, I think. He's not one
of us. He's dressed like a Luthor.'
'He is a Luthor, you fool,' said a tall, blond man. The man
strode up to Lex, and hit him in the face. 'Sit down!' he ordered.
'Dad! What do you think you're doing?' Clark was on his
feet, stepping between Lex and his attacker.
'Be quiet, Clark. This is a Luthor, all right. He's Lex
Luthor. Lex Fucking Luthor! Lionel Luthor's son. We
got ourselves a real prisoner here. We got ourselves a
hostage. And we're going to make Lionel Luthor pay, if he ever
wants to see his son alive again.'
*************************************************************************************
Chapter Three: Mother's Right
*************************
'I like Lex Luthor!'
'Clark…'
'Don't, Dad. Just don’t. I like him.'
'He's a Luthor,' said Jonathan Kent.
'Yeah, he is,' said Clark. 'Lex Luthor. Not Lionel Luthor.'
'What's the difference?'
'I don't believe you. What do you mean, what's the difference?'
'Clark, don’t talk to your father that way,' said Martha,
automatically.
'Lex Luthor is Lionel Luthor's son. That's the difference,' said
Clark.
'Clark. Jonathan. I'm tired of listening to this argument,'
said Martha. 'Please stop.'
'I'm tired of arguing, Mom. But you weren't there. Dad kept
hitting Lex. He hit him and hit him. I'm not going to
forget that.'
'Jonathan. Is that any way to behave?'
'I'm sorry, Martha. But he makes me so angry. He's Lionel
Luthor's son, yes. He's also Lionel's general sent to kill us
all.'
'It's war, Dad. We're rebelling. That's what generals do,
when the peasants rebel.'
'You're defending him? Whose side are you on? What
kind of traitor are you?'
'I'm not a traitor. I'm on our side. I'm just saying that I
understand his side. I don't agree with it, but I understand
it. We're rebelling. We've been blowing up his bridges,
stealing his supplies, killing his men. Of course he's defending his
interests. What do you expect him to do?'
'I expect him to give up and go home!'
'Oh, Dad. I thought I was the alien from another world.'
'Well, now he's our prisoner, so he'll have to give in.'
'Will he? What do you think is going to happen now?'
'We're sending a message to his troops, and to Lionel Luthor. Lex
Luthor is our hostage. They'll have to listen to us.'
'And do what? You think Lionel will make peace and keep his
word? Lex could die. Or he could escape, and then we'd have no
hostage. We'd have a real sworn enemy. Someone who hates us
because of how we treated him. Or we can make peace, and release
Lex, and Lionel can go back on his word. We'll be even worse off
then, because he'll hate us for forcing his hand.'
'And what do you suggest we do? Since you're so wise.'
'I saved Lex's life. I was making friends with him, when you
interrupted us.'
'So you did know who he was?'
'No. I had no idea who he was. We were talking. He
knew I'd blown up the bridge, and nearly killed him, and he was polite
about it. He was politely suggesting I let him go free. I was
going to politely suggest walking part of the way back with him, and
telling him why we were rebelling.'
'And what good do you think that would have done?'
'More good than holding him hostage. I don't think Lex was our
enemy when he came here, but you're helping to turn him into one.
He's really smart, Dad. He's not some butcher. How many of
us has he killed? Not many. We've killed more of his men.'
'Of course he's a butcher. He's a Luthor.'
'He's a Luthor because his father is Lionel Luthor. Did he have a
mother? Most people do. What about her?'
'His mother was Lillian Savage,' said Martha, speaking for the first
time in some minutes.
'Lillian Savage? Savage? Aren't they….'
'Yes, Jonathan. They're distant cousins of mine. Not close, but cousins.'
'Cousins?' said Clark, rather excited, for some reason.
'Mom, we're related, then. Well, sort of. I mean, I know
I'm adopted, but….'
'Lex is related to my family, yes. Lillian's own family all died
in some tragedy, years back. A fire, I think. Her lands are
run by a bailiff now.'
'For Lex's daughter, when he has one?' asked Clark.
'If he has one,' said Martha. 'But that's all
academic. I mean, with the situation the way it is.'
'Mom, listen. That's the answer, don't you see? We're
related. He's one of us. His mother's lands are right
there, waiting for him.'
'Oh, no, no. No, Clark.'
'Dad! Dad, listen to me. It's the answer. Much better
than all this killing. He'll be on our side, then.'
'A Luthor? On our side? Never. All any Luthor thinks
about is himself.'
****************
'Lex.'
Lex tried to burrow deeper into the covers, but strangely, the covers
slithered away, and he couldn't block out the voice.
'Lex.'
'Go away, Dad,' he said.
'Alexandros.'
That last syllable did it. That and the fact that his father
would have dragged him out of bed by now, and slapped him around a bit
to wake him up.
Lex sat up warily, and tried to look around, but the room was
dark. The room was cold, and damp, and he wasn't lying on a bed,
but on the bare ground. He wasn't at home in his own bed after
all.
'You really are a genius, aren't you?' asked the voice in his head.
'I'm sure, that in my situation, you would have worked it out much
faster.'
'I wouldn't be in your situation,to start with,' the voice answered.
'No, because you had the whole Macedonian army to protect you,' Lex
snapped.
'You had an army to protect you, but you went off alone.'
'Whereas you would have slunk around behind your bodyguards, where you
felt safe? Sure you would.'
There was a long, poignant silence. Then, the voice spoke, more
gently than it ever had before.
'Child,' it said.
'I'm not a child,' said Lex.
'You are to me,' said the voice. 'I'm over two thousand years
old.'
'You mean you've been dead for over two thousand years,' said Lex.
'Dead,' said Alexander. 'Dead, but not forgotten.'
'I've tried to forget you, but you keep coming back and reminding me.'
'We got off to a bad start,' Alexander admitted.
'You tried to take over my body,' said Lex.
'I didn't know it was your body,' said Alexander. 'I thought it
was mine.'
'Well, now you know it's mine. So please go away.'
'I can't. I've tried. But I'm part of you, forever. Until
you die, anyway. We have to get along.'
'No,' said Lex. 'We don't. I don't want to be you, and you
don't want to be me. You despise me.'
'I don't despise you.'
'Of course you despise me,' said Lex. 'Everyone does.'
'And why is that?' asked Alexander, after another long silence.
'I don’t know,' Lex admitted. 'They don't trust me. No one
ever has. No matter what I do. No matter how hard I try….'
Again, the long silence.
'It's because of me,' said Alexander, at last. 'They sense my
presence. They sense that something is different, wrong about
you. That you're two people.'
'I'm not two people,' said Lex. 'I'm me. I'm myself.
You… you're a parasite.'
'Alexander the Parasite,' said Alexander. 'Not what I'd pictured
for myself, in my megalomania.'
'Why are you saying these things?' Lex asked. 'Are you trying to
get in good with me? Make friends, or something?'
'Why not?' asked Alexander. 'We're stuck with each other.
Why not make friends? If we learn to get along…'
'Oh, no!' Lex shouted out loud. 'We're not making friends, got
it? I'm not getting along with you, not now, not ever. I'm
not going to be you!'
'Shut up in there!' One of the guards pounded on the door. 'Shut
up, or I'll shut you up.'
But Lex couldn't seem to stop, once he started. 'I'm not going to
be you!' he went on screaming.
The door slammed open. The guard pulled him up off the floor, and
started hitting him. Lex screamed back defiance, threatening the
guards, the entire population of Kansas, and Alexander himself, with
every bloody reprisal he could think of.
Outside the shed, another hurricane was blowing. It blew through
the farmyard, knocked down walls, tossed guards aside like wood
chips. It picked Lex up like a doll, tore his bonds asunder, and
carried him off, into the night.
************
Lex opened his eyes cautiously. It was still dark. He
stretched out his hand, and touched damp earth. Not again, he
thought. But the air was fresher than it had been in the shed.
Where was he?
'Lex? You awake?'
'Yes,' he answered. 'I think so. Who are you?'
'Clark. Clark Kent. I… kidnapped you.'
'I see, Clark Kent. You kidnapped me. And why, exactly, did you
do this? Your father wants a few more kicks at my balls?'
A long moment of silence. Lex sat up, and looked around.
Clark had set up a small camp. There was a sleeping bag. A
lantern. A backpack leaning against a rock. Clark's face
was deep in shadow, and Lex couldn't see his expression, but he seemed
disturbed.
'I'm sorry about that,' said Clark, at last. 'But no, he's not
here. He doesn't even know about this, that I've actually done
it, I mean. Not yet. I'm… well, I'm liberating you, to tell
the truth.'
'Liberating me? Letting a prisoner escape, you mean? Isn't
that treason, Clark Kent?'
'Yes, well. It's a long story. Here, let me help you sit
up. We're out in a field… somewhere. No farms around.
Near a stream. You can wash up when it gets light. I
brought a change of clothes. Those things you're wearing are all ripped
and bloody. And here. Have some coffee. It's hot. I
brought a big thermos of it.'
It was hot, and very welcome. But Clark's arm was welcome, too,
helping him to sit up.
'I'm not exactly letting a prisoner escape,' Clark explained.
'It looks like it to me,' said Lex. 'Not that I'm complaining.'
'Things aren't always what they look like,' said Clark. 'Did you
know we were related?'
Lex almost spit out his coffee. 'No?' he said.
'Related? Us?'
'In a way. Your mother was Lillian Savage.'
'She was. How did you know that?'
'Your mother was my mother's cousin. Distant cousin, but still
cousin. That makes us cousins.'
'I see,' said Lex.
'You probably don't see at all,' Clark allowed. 'Or by now you'd
be way ahead of me.'
'You're saying that you owe me your help because we're related?'
'Yes, but more than that. Your mother was Lillian Savage.
She held the lands that way, off toward Metropolis. Savage
Valley. She died, without leaving a daughter to inherit.
But she had a son. You. That means, according to our laws, that
her lands are yours, to hold for your daughter, or other female heir.'
'Yes? And?'
'And we are going to claim them. You and I. You as the
Regent. Me as your Champion. And then, our people will make
peace with you, and accept you as one of us. You can challenge
everyone for Governor of our state. That will end the war.
Do you see now? I'm not a traitor. I'm trying to bring
peace to my people.'
Lex stared. For the first time in many years, he was speechless.
**************************************************************************************
Chapter Four: Challenge
*********************
'I can run really fast,' Clark explained.
'I can tell,' said Lex.
'I'm very strong. I can pick up the tractor at our farm.
You could shoot me, and I'd bruise badly, but that's about it. I
can see for miles. Oh, and I shoot fire from my eyes. I
wish I could control that, but mostly it happens when… well, when I get
excited.'
Clark whispered this last piece of information, as if it were
embarrassing. Perhaps it was, now that Lex thought about
it. Imagine kissing someone, having warm, exciting thoughts about
him or her, and then sending your loved one up in flames.
'My parents tell me they found me in a Necromancer War. That I'm
a Wizard's Child.'
'A simulacrum?' asked Lex. He smiled at Clark's bewildered
expression. 'A Wizard's Child is a simulacrum. A construct
of the wizard's mind, created to carry out his spells in a place where
he cannot be in person. You can't be a Wizard's Child.'
'Why not?'
'When did this supposed war happen?'
'Ten years ago.'
'And you're still alive? No. You would have lived long
enough to cast the spell, and then died. Disappeared. Like
a thought. As if you had never been.'
'Then what am I? I appeared out of nowhere, during the meteor
shower…'
'The meteor shower? I remember that.'
'I came with the meteors, my parents told me. I didn't speak for a
long time, but I had strange powers. What else could I be,
but a… one of those simulacrums?'
'If you are, you're a new improved model,' said Lex. 'And why hasn’t
your master shown up to check on you?'
'I don't know,' said Clark. 'I don't know a single spell. I
have no memory of my master. Perhaps I'm not an improved
model. Perhaps I'm damaged in some way, and he's forgotten about
me.'
'I know plenty of spells,' Lex told him. 'I have books of them
back at the base. They're all useless for us right now.
Purifying water. Turning water into wine. Turning lead into
gold. Making plants grow faster.'
'Lex! You think that's useless?'
'It is at the moment. I'm an alchemist, not a battle wizard, like
my father. Like my father was, I mean.' Lex lowered his
voice. 'Don't tell anyone. Keep what I'm about to tell you
a deep, dark secret, since we're related.'
'I promise,' said Clark, intrigued.
'He lost most of his power in the meteor shower,' Lex went on.
'Not all of it, and he can hide the lapses, because he's so
clever. But he depends on me too much. It's why he's angry
that… Never mind. The thing is, we need an army.'
'You have me,' said Clark, with adolescent pride.
'Yes. But you don't want to reveal your powers. If you're
not a true wizard, if you don't have spells backing your powers up, you
would be vulnerable to an attack from a necromancer with far less
power, but a good book of spells.'
'That's how it works?' Clark asked.
'That's how it works,' said Lex. 'Knowledge. It beats out
brute strength every time. My father lost most of his power, but
he hides it well, like I said. We need a battle wizard. We
need an army.'
'You have me,' said the voice in Lex's head.
'I don't want to use you,' Lex responded. It seemed out loud,
because Clark looked confused.
'Sorry,' said Lex. 'I'm not talking to you, Clark.'
'You have an invisible friend?' asked Clark, with a grin. 'I used
to have one of those.'
'That's about the size of it,' said Lex. 'I'm an alchemist,
remember? We're all strange.'
'You're stranger than most,' his "invisible friend" told him.
'Why don't you want to use me? I'm the greatest general that ever
lived.'
'What good is a general without an army?' asked Lex.
'Cadmus,' said Alexander.
'Cadmus?' Lex stared, off into the middle distance for a long
moment. 'Cadmus was the man who founded the city of Thebes, in
ancient Greece. He raised an army by sowing dragon's teeth.
He was an alchemist, of course, and so am I. But even an
alchemist needs something to work with.'
'Dragon's teeth?' said Clark. 'There have been no dragons around
here for many years.'
'Many hundreds of years,' said Lex.
'No, not that long. There was a nest of them up by the Old Mill,
Mom tells me. They died out before she was born, but her mother
used to tell the tale.'
'You think they had teeth?' asked Lex.
'All dragons have teeth,' Clark told him.
**********************
The dragon had teeth.
The Old Mill was a ruin of stone and rotting wood. Around it lay
the bones -- and teeth -- of a dragon.
Lex knelt by the side of the huge skeleton.
'They had it in chains, Clark,' he mourned.
Clark touched his shoulder. Clark's face was sad, but
unsurprised.
'They had it in chains,' Lex repeated. 'It was old, very
old. Look! The bones are warped. It died in chains.'
'It happened years ago,' said Clark. Clark was still very
young. Whatever happened before he was born was ancient history.
'Why was it in chains? Oh. I see. It was a draught
animal. It turned the mill, to grind the corn. A
dragon. Used like an ox.'
'We have electricity now,' said Clark, brightly.
The world was now a better and kindlier place, saved by electricity.
'Yes,' said Lex. 'Electricity.'
He pulled the chains away from the dragon bones. Clark sighed,
but after a moment, he helped. When the ancient bones were no
longer in bondage, they looked around for the dragon's teeth.
Teeth were scattered all around the skull, as though the head had
exploded when the dragon died. Perhaps it had, thought Lex.
Who knew what happened when a dragon died?
The teeth were very large. The smallest was a foot long.
They were worn, and yellow. In some cases the teeth were broken,
and the enamel was cracked.
'Where should we sow them?' Clark asked.
'Close by, if you want my opinion,' said Lex. 'They're too
numerous, and too heavy to carry far. But I don't know what's
going to happen, if I can even manage to do the spell properly.
When Cadmus sowed his teeth, most of the warriors killed each other in
combat. We don't want that.' Lex thought for a moment.
Then, 'I know where I want to sow my warriors,' he said.
**************************************************************************************
Chapter Five: Dragon's Teeth
************************
The cornstalks were shorter than they had been all those years ago….
but no, it was that Lex was taller. He knew this, logically, in
his mind, but in his heart, he knew the corn had shrunk, and that was
all to the good.
The scarecrow wore a bright red jacket, and a crow sat upon its
shoulder, pecking at one of the buttons sarcastically. Lex
smiled. It was wise not to be afraid of men made of straw.
'Let's do this,' said Lex. 'There are eighty teeth….'
'Yes,' said Clark. 'Dragons have eighty teeth, my mother told me.'
'That will give us a Century, if all goes well. I'm the general,
and I'm naming you Centurion.'
'Thanks, Lex,' said Clark.
'Don't thank me,' Lex replied, ignoring Clark's sarcastic tone.
'When Cadmus sowed his dragon's teeth, the warriors fell upon each
other, and fought to the death until only five were left. My
first command to you, is to prevent that from happening. We need
every warrior we can get.'
'Yes, my General,' said Clark.
Lex raised an eyebrow, not quite ignoring this instance of sarcasm, but
Clark grinned back at him, and Lex couldn't help but smile.
'Here,' he said, handing him a tooth. 'Start sowing your
warriors. Let's space them well apart, in phalanxes. These
are soldiers, not guerrillas, like your friends. I cast my spell.
We have Earth, and Air. We need Water, and Fire.'
'There are hoses to water the fields. We could turn them
on. As for the fire… I could try….'
'Clark. I have matches. The corn stalks are dry, and
they'll burn easily. Then, we'll put out the fire, and hope.'
'Hope. And pray?' asked Clark.
'Yes, let us pray,' said Lex.
************
'How long will this take?' asked Clark, eyeing the horizon with a
worried expression. The smoke from the fire had died down, but he
still expected a distressed farmer to show up at any moment.
'Patience, Grasshopper,' said Lex.
'Don't say that word in farming country.'
'Don't say what? Patience? Doesn't farming require
patience?'
'Grasshopper, moron. Don’t say grasshopper.'
'Grasshopper, grasshopper, grasshopper….'
'Do you always do that, Lex? Say what you're told not to say?'
'Yes. And I do, and think, and feel what I'm told not to. I
was born this way. I can't ever…
'Lex, look. What's that? Something rising up from the
earth, taller than the corn.'
'Are they armed? They should be armed. The stories say they
should be armed.'
'I don't… Yes! Armed, and armoured. But I don't know how
much use their arms will be. Those are spears and swords.'
'A bit outdated, I'll admit. But you'd be surprised how dangerous
swords can be.'
'Yes… and uh, Lex. They're not men. They're women.
Women warriors.'
'Amazons,' Lex breathed out. 'It must have been a female
dragon. I felt something… something female, when I cast the
spell. I felt the power of the Goddess.'
There were eighty of them. Tall, regal, dressed in scaled armour,
scales like dragon scales, armed with swords not made of steel.
Made of dragon bone, perhaps?
They did not fall upon each other, and fight to the death. They
stalked toward Lex, offering the hilts of their swords to him.
'Father!' said the tall blonde in front. She held out her sword,
and Lex touched the hilt. The seventy-nine amazons behind her
nodded, in unison. 'Our mother was in chains, and you freed
her. We are her daughters. You have set us free. We are
your daughters. What shall we do now?'
'My mother,' said Lex. 'Her name was Lillian. Lillian
Savage. She lived in Savage Valley.'
'Savage Valley,' said the Amazon leader. 'Our mother came from
Savage Valley. Dragons lived there, for many ages. Our
mother was the last, and she was old, and she was brought here in
chains. You freed her.'
'Yes,' said Lex. 'We should go and reclaim our mothers'
lands. My mother was held in chains as well, until she
died. I am the last of her line, and you are my daughters.
Together we will claim our heritage, and hold it.'
'Is there treasure?' asked the smallest of the Amazons. Her skin
was dark ivory, and her hair was red. Red as the colour of blood.
'Treasure? There may be treasure. Hidden treasure, perhaps.
Let us go and see.'
'Yes, we should go,' said Clark. 'My mother and father know what
I was planning. I don't think they'll have told anyone else
yet. Probably they're trying to find us on their own, but we
can't count on it.'
'They'll head for Savage Valley?' asked Lex.
'At first, yes. Mom has relatives there. They might raise a
posse.'
'A posse? A posse to hunt me down! How quaint.'
'To hunt us down,' Clark pointed out. 'We're lucky we've avoided
them so far -- but it's not really luck. No one expected us to be
here. That smoke a few minutes ago might have tipped them off,
though.'
'Yes,' said Lex. 'Let's get moving. You can run much faster
than normal humans, but what about your Century?'
'We are daughters of a dragon, Father,' said the Amazon leader.
'We can run fast. We should be able to fly, too, but that takes
time to learn.'
'We're new,' said the smallest Amazon. 'We need time to practice
our skills.'
'There is no time,' said Lex. 'They're hunting us, I can feel it.'
'You're right,' said Clark. 'I can hear many footsteps, coming up
the road.'
'Peasants with pitchforks.'
Clark smiled, with truly insane cheerfulness. 'How did you know?'
he asked.
'Old horror movies are truly educational. Some of them have
semi-automatic weapons, too. Am I right?'
Clark's grin disappeared. He didn't ask how Lex knew.
'Let's get moving,' he said.
******************
The Valley of the Savages looked much like every other valley Lex had
seen in this vicinity, and he said as much to Clark. 'Savage
Valley?' he said. 'It looks pretty peaceful to me.'
'Have you ever been here?' asked Clark. He set Lex down,
gently. He told himself he was out of breath from the long run,
which was true enough. But not the whole truth.
'Dad wanted me to have as little influence as possible from my mother's
side of the family,' said Lex.
Clark supposed that was a no. 'There's savagery here,' he
said. 'It just doesn't show on the outside. The
people. They're necromancers. Witches. Many of them,
anyway. My mother….'
'Your mother is a witch?' Lex sounded fascinated.
'No. That's just it. It's why she left. Her powers are
minimal. She was a great disappointment to her family. Then
she married a farmer, and that settled it. She brought me here
once, to show her father, but he wouldn't really look at me. I
don't even have red hair.'
'My mother was a witch,' said Lex. After a long, silent moment he
added, 'My father stole her powers, to feed his own, before I was
born.' Another long moment.
Then, 'These are her lands?'
'I checked a map before I left home,' said Clark. 'From the
river, see? To the road that leads to town. There, out to
the hills. The lands border on the neighbouring fields on the
last side. There should be a fence… yes. A fence right
there. These are your lands.'
'Our lands,' said Lex. 'Yours. Mine. The Amazon
Warriors' lands. Our lands.'
Clark smiled. He felt a warmth he'd never known before. A
feeling of belonging, of being completely accepted. It was an
addictive feeling, and his father might have called it dangerous.
His mother, too, perhaps, considering who Lex Luthor was.
Clark knew his parents loved him, but did they really accept him as
himself, or did they wish he were normal? Not that it mattered if
they did wish he were normal. They still loved him, and Clark
himself had often wished he were like other children. But today,
with Lex, and yesterday at the river, with Lex, there was something new
and different. A feeling of belonging, but more. Lex looked
at him with love, when he revealed his powers. Not with fear, not
with reproach. With admiration.
Clark had wrapped Lex in his arms, and sped off toward the valley, the
Amazons following. Lex had gasped, once, with astonishment, and
then he had smiled up at Clark, and murmured something about the gods,
and divine justice, and that was all. No lectures about who
might have seen them. Clark felt free for the first time in his
life.
'What do we do now?' asked Lex. And Clark realized Lex really
cared about his opinion.
'We should announce ourselves,' Clark suggested. 'Announce our
intentions.'
'You have a loud voice,' said Lex. 'Announce us.'
*****************
'Alexander Luthor announces he is here to claim Mother's Right to these
lands. If anyone should have objections, let him speak now, or
forever hold his peace. Alexander Luthor announces he is here to
claim Mother's Right to these lands….'
Clark had been shouting for some time, and the novelty had worn
off. So far, no one had taken him up on his invitation to
object. People leaned out of windows, stood in doorways or on
street corners. They stared, and pointed. But no one
blocked their path… but there. Someone was finally blocking their
path, and Clark smiled a sincere welcome.
'Clark Kent, I presume?' asked the man.
'Yes. My name is Clark Kent. My mother is Martha Kent, the
daughter of William Clark, and Roxanne Wilde. Her cousin was
Lillian Savage, and she married Lionel Luthor. Alexander Luthor
is her son, and he claims these lands….'
'By Mother's Right. Yes. We heard you.'
'And someone has answered us at last,' said Lex. 'You have
objections to my objectives, Dominic Santorini?'
'I do,' said Dominic. 'Your objectives are horse shit. You
have no claim to this estate. It belongs to your father, Lionel
Luthor, and he put me in charge, as his steward.'
'And instructed you to bar my way,' said Lex, his voice smooth as cream.
'No,' the man admitted. 'But I obey him, and only him. I am
here by his orders, and I can't abandon my post.'
'Your objections are noted and logged,' said Lex. 'You have done
your duty. Step out of my way.'
'You're not listening, Lex….'
'No, I'm not,' said Lex. 'Move. Now!'
Dominic moved, but toward Lex, as if to restrain him. Clark
grabbed him by the shoulders, and tossed him aside as if he were a rag
doll. He lay still for a moment, then sat up, looking mystified
that a mere boy could have conquered him so easily. But Clark
wasn't paying attention to his defeated foe, he was watching Lex.
'If there are no further objections,' Lex began.
'I have an objection.' A new voice, but a familiar one.
'What do you think you're doing, Clark?'
Jonathan and Martha Kent stood by the side of the road, their faces
pale and shocked.
'What I said I would do. Mom, Dad, this is important.
You'll see that eventually. Please don't interfere.'
'Clark, we can't let you do this. You don't know what you're
getting into.'
'Yes, I do. Mom. I know,' Clark stepped closer, and
lowered his voice. 'I know now why I was born. Why I
came here. It's to make peace, to fight for justice, to make a
better world.'
'You're deluded,' said Jonathan. 'Luthor has warped your
mind.'
'This was all my idea, Dad. Not Lex's. I wish you'd trust
me. I wish you'd listen to me.'
'You're a child,' said Jonathan. He bent down and picked up the
shotgun he placed upon the ground. 'Step aside,' he ordered.
'No.'
'Do as you're told,' his father ordered, again.
'Not if you're going to try to shoot someone,' said Clark.
'You'll have to shoot me first.'
At a signal from Lex, Mercy stepped forward. 'I will not permit
any violence to my father,' she announced. 'You must put your
weapons away. You must challenge my father's Champion in a fair
contest. That is the Tradition.'
'Your… your father?' asked Martha.
'Alexander Luthor raised us from the skeleton of our mother. We
are the Daughters of the Dragon. He is our father. We will
die for him.'
The other Amazons raised their swords in unison, and rattled their
shields. The clamour echoed down the valley.
'These lands are our mother's lands, and his mother's lands, and his
lands, and our lands. We are the Daughters of the Dragon.'
'The Daughters of the Dragon!' shouted all the Amazons.
'Jonathan. Step aside,' said Martha. Her voice was steel --
sheathed in velvet, and coated in more steel.
Jonathan stepped aside, but his eyes were cold as they watched Lex.
Jonathan stepped aside, but someone else took his place to bar their
way. She was old, and blind, and leaning on a cane.
'Cassandra?' asked Clark. 'What are you doing here?'
She gazed at him with her blind eyes.
'Fire from heaven,' she said. 'The dragon wakes. And the
world changes.'
'I brought fire from heaven,' said Clark, softly. 'Lex woke the
dragon… well, he woke her daughters. But we are only two
people. Can two people change the world?'
Lex shifted restlessly beside him, looking off into the distance.
'You are a Wizard's Child,' Cassandra continued. 'Or you are the
child of wizards. I'm not sure which. Choose one.
Does it make a difference to you?'
''If I am a Wizard's Child,' said Clark. 'I will die when I
fulfil my destiny.'
'And what is your destiny?' asked Cassandra. 'And is it worth
dying for?'
'I don’t know,' said Clark. 'If I am a Wizard's Child, the wizard
didn't tell me my destiny. I never even knew him. I have to
make my own destiny.'
'Perhaps your destiny is to change the world,' said Cassandra.
'But be careful. Be careful how you change it, and why. Once you
open that door, it cannot be closed again.'
Lex brushed by Clark. His fingers touched Clark's shoulder as he
passed. A shiver of anticipation raced down Clark's spine.
Ghostly images of bodies merging filled his mind.
'Cassandra? That is your name?' asked Lex.
'Yes.' For the first time ever, Cassandra sounded more than a
little uncertain. 'You… you are Lex Luthor.'
'Alexander,' said Lex, firmly. 'I am Alexander. You are
Cassandra, named after the prophet, the daughter of Priam and Hecuba.'
'I am,' Cassandra allowed.
'I believe in oracles, and I am not denying your predictions. But
the world is always changing, whether we will it or not. What
sort of door should remain forever closed? Is that safety, or a
prison?'
'You ask piercing questions, Alexander. There are closed doors
behind your own eyes, do you know that?'
'Yes, but not by my choice.'
'Ah. Eyes are to be seen through. Doors are to be walked
through. Two should be as one. Those are my answers.'
'Tell that to the other one. The one who denies his own nature.'
Clark reached out and touched Lex's shoulder, as Lex had touched
his. Lex seemed… different somehow. Altered.
Clark knew that people could become strangers, even people you knew
well, even your own parents. But when it came to Lex, it
disturbed him more than usual. 'Lex?' he asked, tentatively.
Lex turned. His eyes blazed with power. They focused on Clark's
face, and then softened. 'Clark,' he said, as if stating a
fact. Clark now existed, by decree. 'If no one else
challenges us, have we claimed Mother's Right?'
'I think so. And without violence.'
'Not much violence, so far. Though my father will know about this
soon enough, and then who knows? Your parents don't approve, and
the Future is ambivalent. So this campaign has not been without
its dangers, but my mother's lands belong to us. All is well that
ends well. Where do we sleep tonight, by the way? Is there
a house, or do we camp in the fields?'
'There's a house,' said Clark. 'On the hill overlooking the
valley.'
Lex looked in the direction Clark was pointing. 'That's not a
house,' he said, after a moment. 'That's a castle.'
'It's the largest house around. It must be ours.'
No one challenged them as they moved up the long, curving
driveway. The monstrosity loomed ahead, looking entirely out of
place in a Kansas landscape.
'I know what this is,' said Lex, after a long, contemplative
silence. 'I thought Dad was joking. Many years ago, he told
me he was going to transplant the family castle over here, brick by
brick. He never spoke of it again, but he must have done
it. Why here? Was he making a statement? Laying claim
to my mother's lands?'
Lex didn't really seem to want or expect an answer, so Clark said
nothing.
The castle servants were waiting, lined up before the doors. They
may have been warned by Dominic Santorini. A very
imposing-looking elderly gentleman stepped forward.
'I am Lionel Luthor's major-domo,' he said.
'Well,' said Lex. 'Now you are my major-domo, if I am pleased
with your service.'
'I am afraid not,' said the major-domo. 'I am Lionel Luthor's
man, and no other's.'
'Fine,' said Lex. 'Please leave the house by sunset.' He
looked around at the waiting servants. 'You!' he said to a
manservant at the back of the crowd.
The man looked quiet and retiring, but steady. He stepped
forward, looking Lex straight in the eye. 'Sir?' said the man.
'What is your name?' asked Lex.
'John Savage, Sir.'
'A distant cousin, I presume? Never mind. If you please,
you are my new major-domo. I suppose you know your new
duties. If not, improvise. I need rooms for myself and my
friends. Clean clothes. Dinner. Directions for
finding my way around this pile. Means to communicate with my
troops back at Smallville. Something to read….'
Lex's voice faded out as he mounted the staircase, his bemused new
major-domo following a step or two behind.
************
'I know this room,' said Lex. 'But how can that be? I've
never been in this house before today.'
'This is the War Room, Sir,' said John Savage. 'That's what
everyone calls it. What Mr. Luthor… I mean, your father….'
'Mr. Luthor will do, Mr. Savage, as a name for him. I am Lex
Luthor. Call me Lex.'
'I… that wouldn't exactly be….'
'Call me Lex,' said Lex, more firmly. 'It's appropriate if I say
it is.'
'Yes, Sir.'
'Go on about the War Room, Mr. Savage, please.'
'Mr. Luthor called it the War Room. He says his forebears plotted
invasions and so on from here. I don't know about the truth of
that.'
'Oh, it's true enough,' said Lex. 'My forebears were
savages.' He grinned. 'Maybe that's why Dad chose your
relation for his wife, and my mother. But I wonder why this room
is so familiar.'
'You were Named in this room. When you were a baby. The
house was still in Scotland, then.'
How would you know that, Lex thought to his inner tormentor.
'Thank you for the tour, Mr. Savage,' he told his major-domo.
'Please see that my friend, Clark Kent, is suitably taken care
of. And my troops, as well. I'll speak to you again later.'
The major-domo bowed himself out of the room, and Lex was left alone
with the weapons of his forebears, and the voice of his parasite.
'You took me over,' he said out loud. 'You took over my body, to
speak to that woman Cassandra. Don't do it again.'
'She's an interesting woman,' said Alexander. 'I wanted to have a
word with her. I'm tired of filtering my opinions through you.'
'That's too bad,' said Lex. 'I'm tired of listening to your
opinions completely unfiltered, but what choice do I have?'
'You admit it! You admit you have no choice. Good.
Here's another one. That sweet-faced boy, Clark Kent. What a
beauty. And he'd be willing, I can tell.'
'You're a lech,' said Lex.
'A lech? Lecherous! I'm lecherous! I?'
Alexander's outraged voice raged in his mind. 'I am no lecher,
and I never was. I put up with your lecherous behaviour for
years, while you ran after everything on two legs, and I suppose you
expected me to be grateful you reserved yourself to creatures on two
legs and didn't expand your attentions to creatures that ran on
four? And they cared for you even less than you cared about
them. You complain that no one loves you, but what do you do to
change that? You waste your energy on fucking people you wouldn't
give the time of day to in your business life. You're a warrior,
a general, you should be noble…'
'I try!' Lex shouted.
'You try to be noble? What use is trying? Be what you want
to be.'
'What I want to be? I don't want to be you. I don't….'
'Lex? Lex, what's wrong?'
Clark stood in the open doorway to the War Room. He looked
confused, and a little uncertain, but brave enough and ready enough to
deal with any insanity.
'I'm sorry, Clark. I was just talking to myself.'
'To your invisible friend, you mean?' asked Clark with a smile. 'I've
been looking for you. Your butler, John Savage.…'
'My major-domo, you mean. He ranks above my butler.'
'John called this the War Room. I thought he was joking, but I
guess he was right. Look at all these weapons. And what's
this?' Clark indicated the long table that ran along the wall
under the bay windows.
'A conference table, upon which to plot our next invasion,' said Lex.
'Our next invasion? Lex, I hope you're joking.'
'For now,' said Lex. 'I need to run for Governor first.'
'And then?'
'And then, we challenge Rome,' said Lex, mildly.
'Rome? Rome! What sort of crazy plan is that?'
'I know. It is crazy, isn't it? It will draw a lot of
dangerous attention to us. All of Rome's might will fall upon
us….'
'If you think you're frightening me, child, you are mistaken.'
'No, I'm not frightening you, not even trying. But it's what you
want, isn't it? To rule the world again?' Lex caught sight of
Clark's face. The boy looked frightened for the first time.
'Am I going out of my mind? No, Clark. I've always been out
of my mind. I've always shared my mind with someone else.
You should know this. Listen. No one else knows, only my
father, because he did it to me. He's a wizard, remember? A
necromancer, to be precise. He summoned a spirit, and, and
installed it inside of me. I've been living with the consequences
ever since.'
'Can't you get rid of it?' asked Clark. 'The spirit, I mean?'
'It would seem not,' said Lex. 'He's been there all my life, from
my conception.'
'He's this invisible friend you told me about.'
'He's not really a friend, Clark.'
'I could be your friend,' said Alexander. 'If you tried.'
'And what would you want in return? Nation after nation
capitulated to you, and it wasn't enough.'
'I loved many people, and was loved in return,' said Alexander.
'You do not let yourself be loved. Why? What do you fear?'
'Who could ever love me? What legacy could I offer them?
Madness. Murder. War. And it's not true that I don't
want love. But I have to be honest with anyone from the
start. I can't pretend to be someone I'm not. But when I
even hint at the truth, they always run in the opposite
direction. The ones who aren't lying and after my money, I mean.'
'I'm not after your money, Lex,' said Clark.
'Aren't you? Then you're a fool. What else do I have to
offer? And all your friends will warn you that I'm dangerous.'
'I'm dangerous too,' said the sweet-faced boy. 'I'm a
Wizard's Child, and I could die after fulfilling my destiny,
remember? What do I have to offer you? But I'll take the
chance.'
Clark was standing close, very close. He bent his head, and their
lips touched.
'They said of me that I was never defeated, except by
Hephaistion's thighs,' said Alexander, but the heat from Clark's
body burned like a hundred suns, and they were both consumed.
***The End***
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