Rating: PG
Disclaimer: I still do not own the X-Men. Darn. I make no money from writing about them.
Author's Notes and Acknowledgments
When I started writing this story, it was January 2002. I thought I'd have it done before my birthday at the end of February. Ha!
This story was begun after X1 and before X2, and the overall plot remains unaltered from the initial drafts written then. However, I have incorporated lots of background information provided in the sequels. There are no major spoilers for X3 in here. I've also drawn heavily - although I hope comprehensibly - on the comics.
In the years since its conception, Coalescence, more commonly known as the Fanfic From Hell, has become the albatross around my neck. That it's here at all is a tribute to those who have helped and encouraged me along the way. Because the creative process has been dragged out so long, I'm afraid that I've forgotten some of the many people who have betaed this monstrosity. I remember showing it to
This is dedicated to everyone who ever said 'hey, when are you going to finish that Xavier story?' At 7,500 words, it's the longest thing I've ever posted.
In the beginning there are no words.
There would be nothing to create or describe with them the void is grey and everything is indistinguishable from everything else. It is a place of shadows, silences. You are a grey thing within it.
Once that particular thought has passed, things become marginally better: there is you. It is a good beginning.
The next thing you notice is pain. Startled, you move for the first time, and that makes it worse. Stabbing and slicing instead of the dull, sucking ache that was before. This is not good.
At least you have defined 'good' and 'bad.'
After that, a question: who am I?
A string of concepts: cliche, humorous. A flicker of colour. It is only then you realise that the void is not your natural state of being. It is an absence of something better.
Who am I? is still a good question.
You go looking for more colours.
"... are you ...?"
In moving, you find other ways of sensing - hearing, taste, touch, sight, smell. You have other senses, too, that are strange and nameless. It is with those that you feel the pain.
From somewhere you can hear a faint voice suggesting that there is somebody in the universe apart from yourself - but it is far away. You are separated from each other by veil upon veil. You begin to break through the barriers, but it is tiring and it hurts. Why are there so many walls?
Soon, you become sure that the work you are tearing down is your own, although you can't explain how you know. There are walls because you built them.
Now you remember doing so, and now you realise what you have lost: your memory. The thought paralyzes you for a moment, but at least you have one fragment of it back. With one, you might perhaps recover the rest.
So. Begin with what you know. Why did you build walls?
Because you were driven to this place once before, by so many voices and colours and tastes and touches that you thought you would go mad. The void is quiet, and it soothed your pain. Now, it is a trap.
You follow the voice, and other voices, and chains of images, as far into the past as you are able.
You are lying on your back, looking up at a constellation of bright, blurry shapes that hover above you, far out of reach. You struggle to touch them for what feels like a long time before collapsing in frustration. Why are they up there, if you can only look and never reach? You begin to cry.
Tantalus, standing waist-deep in water, straining for the fruit that hangs above his head. It isn't hard to understand why he wants it - in the illustration, the fruit looks brighter and more delicious than any you've seen in life, and the tree is laden with many different varieties. You identify the apples and pears and peaches easily enough, but there's one that puzzles you. A pomegranate?
Conscious of the feel of the thick, off-white paper under your hands and the smell of dust and old leather, you look up from your book. Father will know, if you can only find him.
You open the envelope, glancing sideways at the girl smiling nervously beside you. It says Happy Father's Day. There's a picture of a sailing ship on the front. Your eyes skim over the hideous poem inside.
"I just thought, since so many of us think of you as ... maybe we should, uh..." she says. Her smile falters slightly in the face of your blank expression.
"It's ... lovely, Kitty."
"Oh, great!" she says, obviously relieved that she hasn't overstepped some invisible boundary. "We got you a present, too, but I think John's still wrapping it."
Against all reason, you find yourself blinking tears out of your eyes.
You huddle around the book in your lap, bitterly cold, the moth-eaten navy wool blanket wrapped around your shoulders inadequate to keep off the winter chill. Heat may rise, but it always seems to disperse before it reaches the attic.
Still, you soon manage to lose yourself in Malory's tales of Arthur and his knights and forget the winter outside. Although you are enchanted by the stories of daring, wonders, and chivalry, parts of them annoy you. The trouble could have been avoided so easily. If only Arthur had been sensible and not gotten married, he could have kept his kingdom and his life. You never understand why he didn't listen to Merlin. The wizard looks wise and powerful in the pictures, wand raised in the air, mouth open declaiming a prophecy.
Interrupted by noise from downstairs, your hands tighten against the pages. Unlike the heat from the fire, the raised voices always drift up to reach you.
"You don't have to go. For heaven's sake, you don't even have to use your powers. They give deferments to college students, don't they?"
"If I don't go, they'll only send somebody else. Wouldn't it be better if I went, since I'm better able to defend myself?"
Erik laughs, harshly, suddenly looking horribly old. "You're not the one who can stop bullets. Not that it ever did me any good."
This is your first real fight oh, you argue all the time, but never like this. Ever since your draft notice came, you've done nothing but shout at each other. It isn't that you want to go, but you feel that you ought to. Perhaps you even believe that it would finally stop Erik thinking that you're naοve and sheltered.
"Erik, I'll come back, I promise."
You understand that he's angry because he's in pain, that he's lost too many people already in his short life. You could, of course, make him agree with you. But you won't do that either.
Your breath should not be visible in the air, in your office, in September. But these things happen in a school full of inexperienced mutants. You wish you were wearing a heavier jacket.
"Professor, it was an accident!"
"Robert," you say, deliberately using Bobby's hated given name, "I do not doubt that. What I want to know is why you were using your powers in here in the first place."
He looks down at his feet, not wanting to give his accomplice away. He must know that you know that John who is hovering in the doorway and trying not to smirk was involved. It's more than likely Bobby was just trying to keep his friend from setting your desk on fire. His loyalty is commendable, in its way - it worries you more that John isn't willing to step in to defend him.
You take in the icicles on the blackboard, the desk, and the bookshelves, which are now starting to drip on the carpet. Some of your books will be ruined, which is painful. Fortunately, you already know better than to keep anything of sentimental value outside your locked bedroom.
"I'm really sorry. It won't happen again."
You sigh. These little accidents will happen. "It's all right, Bobby. Just clean up the mess I'm sure John will be glad to help you."
You can feel John glaring at your back as you leave them to restore your office to order. It would be pointless to tell him that you didn't need to read anyone's mind to know what kind of a friend John is.
The water cascading down your body lost its warmth long ago, but you hardly notice. You can't even tell any more if the drops on your face are tears or not. The tiles are freezing where you rest your back on them, and the concrete is gritty against your naked skin.
Knowing all the answers on your exams before you learn them might just mean you're even smarter than you think you are. People doing as you tell them might just mean you're persuasive. The constant whispering in your head might just mean you're going mad.
The hair that's falling out in handfuls and clogging the drain, though, is something visible. Now everyone will know you're a freak.
You've never been seasick in your life telepathy is far more disorienting than the movement of the ocean but on this trip you've been queasy almost since you embarked from Portsmouth. You can hardly complain about another passenger being ill, but you do wish they wouldn't shout about it in your head. It's ruining what should be a pleasant transatlantic crossing.
On the third day out you're taking a stroll around the deck, watching the liner plunge through the waves, when you sense the object of your irritation. All you can see of him at first is his long black coat, since predictably -- he's leaning over the railing. Grimacing as a wave of his nausea washes through you, you reach out unthinkingly and will it to stop.
The moment you touch him, you start in surprise. His mind is lit up somehow, a different colour from any other you've encountered. Stranger still, you find yourself meeting resistance when you try to see inside.
As you instinctively push harder, he turns to look at you, startled. As if he felt your mind in his. For too long, you stare at each other in mutual confusion.
"Are you all right?" you manage to ask at last.
You're at least managing to block his projection now, but the man a boy, really, he can't be any older than you still looks positively green.
"Just the seasickness, no? I will be fine."
His heavily accented voice sounds wary. German, or perhaps Polish. He's thin and pale, with shadows under his bright blue eyes. You don't think that's just because the journey disagrees with him so. He's regarding you suspiciously as his reaches for a handkerchief to wipe his mouth.
He may be the most beautiful thing you've ever seen.
All the alcohol does is make you throw up on the bathroom floor. Kneeling there next to a puddle of your own vomit, you know despair. The liquor still buzzing through your system doesn't stop the voices in your mind ... but it does make them less intense. Perhaps, if you took the tranquillizers instead, you might attain the kind of numb equilibrium your mother reached before she went too far into the fog and never came back ...
Or you might try to pull yourself together.
It is not the easy choice it should be, and it is a long time before you get to your feet and put your head in the sink.
Jean
The contents of your office, drifting in midair, twitch in frustration.
I'm not Jean.
It doesn't do to encourage delusions in a patient, but ... well. She could be right. You're starting to have trouble connecting the entity you're speaking to telepathically with the shy, sweet girl you've been getting to know in more conventional ways. Sometimes she does seem to be two different people.
Do you have a name?
She sends you an impression of fire, air, endless rebirth. Strength and passion.
A phoenix, you say.
The Phoenix. There's only one of me.
You are unique. It is also beautiful, although you hide that thought from it. It does not need encouraging.
Your furniture floats higher, which seems to indicate assent. You can't cage me forever, it thinks one day I will be stronger than you. If you don't grow old and die first.
It is a problem you have considered at length, without coming up with a solution. Erik is no help at all. I hope that by then you are in control of yourself.
I am in control of myself now.
If that is true, you fear for the future of Jean's future, and everyone else's. The desk and chairs bob around you, and you wonder if you can convince it to put everything down gently this time.
"... hear me? I'm calling you, but I don't know if you can hear me ..."
The land mine takes most of the man's lower body off, and his surprised torso and head take a horribly long moment to die, twitching all the while, as the smell of burning and human waste fills the air. You feel his mind go blank, which is a relief.
"There," you say to the remainder of your stretcher team, who are numbly attempting not to look at the remains of their dead colleague. Veterans to a man, some after all of three weeks. "Over there."
You always find them, of course. Your comrades in arms find this both frightening and useful most of the time. It's no good at all against land mines.
You leave half a body lying on the track, and go to see if there's anything left to save somewhere else.
The smell of blood never changes. It covers up the scent of the dusty carpet, covered in roses, and mingles with the odor of the alcohol that's splattered against the golden wallpaper. Your mother stares at the stain blankly. You creep out from behind the door, where you have been waiting for your stepfather to leave, and examine the situation.
Her hand is covered in blood and broken glass - she crushed the tumbler by accident, and it has made even more of a mess than his throwing the bottle against the wall. You approach her carefully, as you might a wounded animal, and begin trying to repair the damage. She pays you no attention at all, slumped in the chair, but at least she allows you to dig the glass out this time.
You'd like to say it happens so fast you don't have time to think, but the truth is that you don't have time to do anything but think.
The woman is too busy picking up her groceries to see the car, the car is moving much to fast, there is too much distance between you. All you can do is watch. All you can do is think.
MOVE you say to the driver.
The car swerves, and you don't know who is more surprised: the man you controlled, or you, that you managed to do it on purpose.
"What you did was irresponsible, childish and dangerous. If it ever happens again, your punishment will be far more severe than grounding."
You fall into the role of disapproving principal too easily, mostly because you were genuinely afraid for Jubilee's safety - baiting anti-mutant bigots is a dangerous sport for students here. Partly because you just want to get the lecture over and done with, and get back to dealing with the mountain of paperwork that her flailing arm threatens to send sprawling across the floor of the office. You wonder when exactly you got old.
"You treat us like kids!" she shouts, playing the role of hysterical teenager to the hilt. "Like you can tell us what to do all the time, like you can control us!"
You can tell that you have Jean back for good when she flings her arms around you, sobbing, heedless of the way the wheelchair makes this awkward. If she leans on you too hard, you're going to slide backwards. Not that you mind.
"Shhhhhh," you say, patting her back gently.
"Professor, it was so dark and ... where have I been? It felt like I was nowhere."
"You were lost, but I found you."
You test the blocks gently, wishing that Jean wouldn't make quite so much noise. Your head is pounding. But it's worked - the psychic barriers are firm, and the split is now complete. This girl is finally free of the thing that calls itself Phoenix. Everything that has happened is worth it, for this.
"It's all right, Jean. Everything will be all right."
Erik hates hospitals. One night, when you are curled up together in your cabin, soothed by the rocking of the waves, he tells you why.
"He used to perform experiments." Erik's formidable shields are as impenetrable as they get, but not infallible. You've seen the children sewn together, the eyes pinned to the wall. "If you were lucky he would inject chloroform into your heart at the end of it. I was not lucky."
That is, more or less, all he will ever say on the subject. Part of you thinks that you should try to get more out of him, but another part says that it would do no good, and another simply doesn't want to know.
The MASH unit is eerily quiet. The patients are asleep, or at least so full of morphine that they're too languid to do more than whimper. It's the middle of winter, the middle of the night, and even the insects seem to be in merciful hibernation for once.
In your head, there is screaming.
That damn boy in the corner, who hasn't said a word since they brought you in, makes more noise inside your head than anyone you've ever had the misfortune to spend time around, including Erik on his bad days. You cannot shut it out - it's more insistent than the cries of the dying or the panicked in battle.
At some point after three in the morning, something inside you snaps. It's not compassion that finally makes you drag yourself out of bed, across the floor, hauling the plaster cast on your leg behind you. It's not guilt that makes you move slowly, just exhaustion. You only want him to shut the hell up.
For the first time, you reach deep down into another mind. Not accidentally, as you have done too often, and not to share the thoughts of the one man who knows what you can do, taking only what he will give you ... but to heal. You feel his walls shatter at your touch.
Within a moment, the screaming in your head has been transferred into the material world, and the doctors and nurses come running. Later, you try to explain what happened to the unit psychiatrist, without much success.
You clutch the bag containing your mother's nightdress as a kind of security blanket, although you know you're too old to take any real comfort in it. Even though your legs are dangling in the air, still too short to reach the floor, you feel fragile and grown up. They won't let you into her room, and people keep looking sideways at you and whispering.
The hospital corridor smells of disinfectant, and underneath that there's an even more unpleasant hint of blood and waste. Everything is painfully white, from the walls to the sheets to the doctors' coats and the nurses' uniforms. You wonder why they want to make the stains stand out more clearly.
"You're talking about mutilating her!"
"Restraining her, Erik, for the good of everyone. Especially Jean herself."
Your arguments have escalated to the point where you wonder if this is why it took you so long to open the school. Now the ideological differences that have always fueled your disagreements are practical problems. You don't think that you will ever agree about Jean.
"Her powers are her birthright. I won't stand by and watch you do this."
"And I won't allow you to stop me."
The words are out before you can think about the implications. Erik frowns at you, turns on his heel, and walks out of your room without another word.
Later, when Jean asks, you will deny that there is anything wrong and go back to carefully installing the psychic blocks. Erik is no longer the most important thing in your life, and if that makes you sad, it's a sadness you'll have to live with.
"... remember when we ..."
The pain took you away, but now it brings you back. You find yourself curled up on the floor in the foetal position, nails cutting deep into your palms.
It's dark, and chilly - you've been ... unconscious? No. Gone. For hours by the look of it. You're hungry and stiff, and your room seems silent after ... wherever you were, it was uncomfortably loud. You feel as though your ears should still be ringing. Perhaps your mind is ringing instead.
You rise onto your knees, look at yourself blearily in the mirror. On your skull there are bruises. Not from where you struck your head in falling, but as if some internal pressure has forced the blood to the surface.
Right now, even the bruises on your shins feel good as does the way you're coated in mud and bleeding a little from a graze on your forehead. You think you pulled a muscle in your side, too. A good game all around.
The rest of the team gather around and punching each other cheerfully. Michael slaps you on the shoulder, hand lingering for not quite long enough. "That was a moment of genius, Charlie," he says, grinning at you. "You seem to know where the other team is going before they do."
Just like that, the bubble bursts. You find it hard to smile through the school's victory celebrations.
You kneel on the sidewalk, cradling the young man's head in your lap, as he bleeds all over you. Through the semi-conscious haze of his brain, you sense youth, dazzling intelligence, gentleness.
"I'm sorry," you say again, waiting for the ambulance to arrive. You aren't sure what you're apologizing for. Not being here sooner? Not preventing this before it could happen to him, or anyone?
If he were not a mutant, the boy would be dead instead of gravely wounded. Even if he hadn't been killed outright, you wouldn't have heard his mental cries for help and come to his aid.
If he were not a mutant, he would never have been harmed in the first place.
From his huge musculature, you conclude that he must be as strong as any half dozen men. If he'd been willing to kill, even to defend himself properly, he could have escaped his attackers. Instead, he let them hurt him. The wounds to his flesh will heal (if the ambulance arrives in time, you note anxiously, straining to hear a siren) but the scars to his psyche must be far worse.
He is harmless, but that has never yet protected anyone from harm.
Sometimes, you come down to Cerebro just for the peace and quiet. The walls are shielded, so you can't hear the thoughts of anybody outside the room until you put the helmet on. You've even been known to bring a book with you.
At other times, you use the machine to check up on certain people. There are more of you every day. You should disapprove of the thief in New Orleans and the bank robber who can copy himself dozens of times, but you can't help but find their adventures amusing. You haven't indulged in such voyeurism since you were a teenager, but it's comforting to see a few mutants who don't seem to need your help.
Sitting here, you always feel that you're at the centre of the world, and that it isn't such a very bad place after all.
"I don't see why you can't help out," Ororo says, only half joking.
"I'm perfectly happy to cook, if you're happy to risk food poisoning." You wish that you were joking.
Ororo is by far the best cook among you, as you've discovered in the week and a half since the hired professional got fed up with the chaos and left for good. You're even getting used to being a vegetarian, at least temporarily.
"That's not what I meant just go down to the basement and find us a mutant who can make food appear out of thin air."
"It's not quite that simple," you tell her, smiling.
"You could always mind control the cook into coming back."
"Now, now, Ororo. I've taught you better than that."
"Yeah," she agrees, stirring the stew thoughtfully. "You know, this is going to be more of a problem when we have more students. We're going to need a lot more domestic staff."
Until now, you've been debating the pros and cons of expansion with your students, most of whom have graduated from high school now. Apparently Ororo has already decided that it's going to happen sooner or later. Maybe you should go and find that mutant after all.
The boy is perhaps fifteen, and far too thin. His clothes are worn through in many places, but he is scrupulously clean - you can smell the cheap soap on him from here. He has washed his hair with soap, too, or he's not eating properly and it's lost all its natural luster. Probably both.
"I want you to come home with me," you say. There is something wild about him, feral. You wonder if Erik, Henry, Jean and the others will take to him. Still, that's hardly the issue. You notice the way he always avoids looking directly at you - you've sensed through Cerebro that the intermittent manifestations of his powers are becoming more and more frequent with time. He needs your help.
"Yeah?" he says. Obviously you can't be sure, but you think that his eyes are taking in the quality of your suit and the vintage of the car, sizing up the situation, looking for the best move. You don't need to see behind the sunglasses or into his mind to know what he thinks you want, and pointing out that you have a man your own age for that probably wouldn't help.
"I want to help you, Scott. I think I know how to stop the light beams."
Through all that mistrust you feel a flicker of hope, but you can't tell if it's his or yours.
His hand, reaching out over yours, is enormous. "Do you see? The knight can move in three dimensions, remember - it changes the entire shape of the game." He guides your hand, so that it moves his pieces. The wood is pleasantly cool and smooth under your fingers, and you like the definite click each piece makes when placed down on the board.
Without hearing him say 'check' or seeing him take another pawn, you realise that you will lose this game. You are fascinated by the way you can deduce this, rather than upset. "Why am I going to lose?" you ask.
He laughs, surprised. "Well, in the first analysis I'd say it's because you're far too young to be learning this ... but if you want something specific, you're too impressed by the power of your queen. She's flexible, but you can't rely on her for everything."
"Be good for the professor," Sean says, giving his daughter one last hug. She nods wordlessly, wiping a tear away on the back of her hand.
You can feel the jealousy radiating from some of the other students who have come to say hello to the new girl. Many of them don't have parents to bring them to the school, let alone a father who has the same power as them. They think Theresa is lucky. Having lost your own mother when you were even younger than she is now, you're not certain that you agree.
Sean looks over at you. You're proud that he's letting you have the keeping of his daughter, and you hope that the it will be good for her.
I'll keep her safe, you promise him silently.
"... without a map, but you ..."
"I've been thinking," Jean says, one day when you're sharing tea with her.
"Mmmmm?" you say, reaching for a second cookie. The chef has outdone herself.
"It might be a good idea if you tried to teach me to use Cerebro."
"Jean," you say, exasperated. "We have been over this a dozen times. You're not ready for that yet."
You can see the flash of anger in her eyes. "Professor, I'm twenty-eight. I'm a qualified doctor. I've been your student since I was thirteen. When will I be ready?"
You're sorry that she's upset, but not sorry enough to take the risk. "Cerebro is dangerous," you say. You don't only mean that it would be dangerous for her.
All of a sudden, you're back. There are arms wrapped around you. Blood dripping from your nose, a nasty metallic taste in your mouth. The floor under your hips is cold. All of these sensations are equally welcome, equally grounding.
"Are you all right?" Erik says an anxiously as you open your eyes. "I thought I'd lost you."
He pulls you up until your head rests on his shoulder, kisses your forehead as if he doesn't mind that you're getting blood all over his expensive jacket. You look around the room dully, noting the way its finish is marred by the places where the paneling hasn't gone in yet and the wires are exposed. You must fix that, along with whatever the actual problem with the machine is. You like things to be tidy.
"I have a headache, but other than that ... I'm fine." It's not really a lie - something is wrong, but you can't put your finger on what.
You close your eyes again and rest for a moment. How to explain? You weren't unconscious so much as ... gone. Somewhere grey and empty.
You notice idly that the nurse arranging the flowers is very pretty - she has long hair, an unnatural red, wound up in a bun, and one of the best pairs of legs you've ever seen. While you're still looking, she turns and grins at you, in a way that frees you from any embarrassment. Besides, it's all a little academic at this point.
"Xavier, Charles F." she says. "You're awake now."
It sounds right, somehow, to have your name backwards. It makes you smile just a little. "I have been for some time, in fact."
"We thought for a while there you weren't going to make it, you know."
You aren't quite sure how to respond. "I suppose I should be grateful that the doctors stopped the internal bleeding."
"Yes. You really should." Her tone is still light, but you're in no doubt that she means it as an order.
You close your eyes. You told everyone that it was an accident. It's not as though it's a lie, precisely. Even if you didn't want to live like this, you don't have a choice. Your students need you, more than ever, with Erik gone. Jean in particular, if you're ever to finish the job and stop this or something worse than this happening to someone else.
You need Erik. You may never forgive him for not being here now, in addition to all of his other sins. Not that you would take much consolation in being proven right about Jean, once and for all.
"Is there anything I can do for you?" the nurse asks.
You think about it. "Well, I'd very much like something to read."
The next morning, you wake up feeling dazed and hungover and not a little confused. Also happier than you've been in a while.
Moira is curled up in bed next to you, naked skin glowing in the sunlight streaking through the window. "Good morning," she says.
"Moira, I "
"If you're going to apologise for taking advantage of me, don't. I'm sure you know exactly how long I've been fantasizing about doing that. I just never thought I'd get the chance."
It's true, she's been thinking about it ever since you met. You only thought of it last night. "Neither did I."
She smiles. "To be honest, I always thought you were ... well."
"When I met Erik, I was seventeen years old. I'm not sure I knew what I wanted."
"What do you want now, Charley?"
What you want is to say that, no matter how brilliant she is, she's far too young for you. That you're not over the man you lived with for close to forty years, and probably never will be. Last night was passing insanity, even though you do love Moira.
"I want a shower, and an aspirin, not necessarily in that order," is what you actually say.
She wraps her arms around you, and kisses your cheek. "It's all right. I didn't expect to keep you."
The book is ruined. Corners folded over to mark places. Covered in an illegible, multi-coloured scrawl you would barely be able to read if it were in your first language. Spine cracked where it's obviously been left open face down. There is a tea (or possibly coffee) stain across an important page. You think it may have been dropped in the bath at some point.
"I made some notes," he says, apparently reading something worrying into the blankness you are attempting to project. He already knows you too well. "I hope you don't mind."
"No, no. It's perfectly all right. Did you enjoy it?"
"Well ... I don't think I agree with a word he says, but lately that doesn't seem to trouble me as much as it used to." He smiles at you, and the flip your heart does is worth the destruction of a thousand copies of The Once and Future King.
The things we do for love. You laugh at yourself.
"I assure you that your concern, while entirely understandable and certainly appreciated, is unnecessary. We will retrieve the unfortunate young mutant and return to you within the hour. You'll hardly notice our absence."
Henry's cheerful tone does little to diffuse the atmosphere in the briefing room, although you appreciate the effort. Scott has his arms folded, withdrawn and frowning. He thinks that you're worried because you don't trust him to lead the mission. Nothing could be further from the truth.
You only wish that they weren't naοve enough about battle to be excited instead of nervous. You knew that you'd have to send them into a potential combat situation when you started this ... but that doesn't make it an easy thing to do. All you want is to go with them. If you did, you might be able to convince the boy to come quietly instead of setting fire to your students.
"I'll be monitoring your situation," you tell them, redundantly.
Jean, who seems to understand better than the others, leans over and kisses you on the forehead in a way that's just this side of daughterly as she leaves.
"Please don't fret. I promise we'll be fine, and I'll call you when it's over. You trust me, don't you?"
"... do you ... the way back in: see, it's right here. I can show you the ..."
Erik is crushing your ribs, but as you're trying to do the same to his, you can hardly complain. You're tempted to reach out and turn every face in the airport away so that you can kiss him right here. You're tempted to kiss him anyway, consequences be damned.
You can't believe that you've survived an entire year in hell, that you're safely back on American soil. If you have anything to say about it, you're never going to leave Erik again if you go, you'll go together, and it won't be anywhere near Korea. You've forgotten that you ever fought. Anyway, he was right to tell you not to go, not that you'll admit that.
At last, he pulls away from you slightly, searching your face for something. "While you were gone "
You tighten your grip on his arm. "Erik, I don't care what happened while I was gone. It doesn't matter."
If it matters to him, he never tries to tell you again.
"... I know it hurts, but you can use the pain as a focus. Remember how you showed me? Try to do that ..."
Henry's hug is going to leave fur all over your suit the image inducer won't do anything to help with that problem. You're just glad that he's happy.
"Charles," he says when he lets go and stands up, "I can't tell you how much this means to me."
"You don't have to, Henry. Forge is building a training facility in the basement, based on hologram technology. I think it took him all of one afternoon to design a portable unit for you."
"I wish " he says, the face that isn't his own wrinkling in frustration.
"That you didn't have to use it? You don't have to tell me that, either. I wish that none of us had to hide. Sometimes I think we shouldn't." Erik would be horrified that Henry no longer wants to appear in public covered with blue fur, but then, that's why Erik isn't here.
Henry shakes his head. "Appearances are important sometimes."
"If you persist in wearing that tie, not only will I not go to dinner with you, I shall refuse to speak to you ever again, and pretend we've never met if we're seen together in public."
"You don't like it?" Your bewilderment is only half-feigned.
"I told you to wear the green one."
"I thought this was the green one." This is one of those languages Erik speaks that you haven't been able to borrow wholesale from his brain. He assures you that you're much better dressed since you've known him.
He clicks his tongue disapprovingly, wraps an arm around you so you can't escape, and drags you back to the wardrobe. "There's only one thing for it. I'll have to undress you and start all over again."
"Well, if you must," you say, pretending reluctance.
"Please don't move," Piotr says quietly, when you start to turn away from the window.
You didn't realise until now that he was even there, your mind on other things. Now you can see him out of the corner of your eye, furiously sketching your profile. You resist the temptation to smile, knowing that it will annoy the artist at work, and try to remain perfectly still.
When you come to, you find yourself lying under one of the bookshelves. You wonder why it doesn't hurt more, until you attempt to move and find that you can't feel your legs, let alone shift them. Then you just freeze somewhere inside.
You can hear somebody crying, and you're reasonably certain that it isn't you.
"Jean?"
"Professor?" she says, crawling over and peering at you with concern.
"Jean, I need you to go and find Henry for me. Tell him to call an ambulance."
"Professor, what happened?" she asks. "I know that you were in my mind, and then "
"Please, Jean, don't worry. There was an accident, and the shelf fell down."
She turns even paler. "It wasn't " she says. "I didn't "
You make your decision. "Of course not," you say gently. "You can't move anything this heavy, can you?" You reach into her mind, and you make her believe it. If you have to do the same thing to Henry and Ororo later, then you will. You won't have Jean held responsible for something that isn't her fault.
Nobody will ever know what happened here. Not even you. Telepath or no, you'll never be completely sure if the Phoenix broke you in half on purpose or not.
"It's not so bad, I'm right here, right next to you, I swear, just reach out ..."
You glance up from your morning newspaper, to find Scott looking worried as he pours himself a glass of orange juice. He's been trying to cut down on his caffeine intake, and you sometimes wonder if you should follow his good example.
"What if Senator Kelly passes the registration bill?" he says, no doubt noticing the day's headlines. "Do we comply with the law of the land, or fight the government openly?"
You hesitate before answering. He isn't asking because he has any great respect for the rule of law in a country that doesn't convict a mob for beating mutants to death, but sends a mutant to the electric chair for manifesting a power unexpectedly in a way that should be considered manslaughter at worst. Scott is afraid that noncompliance will harm the students, even bring the army down on your heads.
"It may never happen," you say, trying to sound reassuring.
Your coffee tastes bitter today.
Your mother pays little attention to the ceremony going on around her, murmuring to herself although she is weeping too much to pray loudly. Your own eyes are dry.
Throughout your father's funeral, you keep your hand in hers. At the age of ten, you are the man of the house. You will look after her. Your father would expect no less. You will always be there to protect her, to keep her safe from harm like the sanctified walls of the church itself.
You ignore the man holding her other hand, and you look straight ahead.
You call Moira to tell her that it's over, and as always she sympathiszes as good friends do, and as always she doesn't believe you. It isn't as if you blame her; you never believed it yourself until now.
"I think," you say, trying to stay calm. "That he might do something stupid."
She obviously still thinks that this is a minor rift, not a yawning chasm. "What, chain himself to a public monument? Interfere with the radio transmission again? Give an inflammatory interview to the newspapers?"
You don't know how to tell her that this is far worse than a bit of direct action. You can't explain how you didn't see this coming decades ago. It isn't as if you didn't know mutants could be dangerous ... but you've loved him since you were seventeen. You've always been too close to the problem. You still are.
You see Erik's handiwork on the news that night like everyone else, and when Moira calls back you don't pick up the phone.
"... please? I'm trying to help you, I know ..."
"Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum, benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui Iesus. Sancta Maria Mater Dei, ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc ..." you stop before you reach 'and at the hour of our death', but the end of the phrase hangs in your mind.
You weren't thinking of the words when you began the prayer, only of the hand that's gripped in yours. There is a good chance, right now, that Scott will die despite all that Jean and Hank can do. He's lost a great deal of blood.
"It should be me," Jean says, striding through the door like a woman on a mission. "It's dangerous, and ..."
She falters. What she means is that she's already lost enough people today.
"It's not dangerous, not for me. All I'm going to do is call after him, help him find his way back. You're not experienced enough yet, Jean, and he needs your medical expertise more than your powers." Only the first sentence is a lie.
Bullets have no compassion, but you wonder if anyone could hate mutants if you could only give each one of them this image to hold in their minds: the fragile wounded body in this bed.
"We're right here. I just need you to do one more thing for me, get just a little more solid. You can do that, can't you?"
When you first learn how to leave your body at will, the freedom is intoxicating. Sometimes you think you could go further and further and never return at all. It is the water that saves you. The water keeps you anchored. Surrounding your body, the cold reminds you that you have hands and feet and nerve endings and lungs and eyes, that you are more than a mind adrift on the astral winds. Like a dolphin at play, you learn how to send the mobile part of yourself into the mental ocean, secure in the knowledge of the way back.
The light is so bright that it makes your eyes hurt when you open them. The ceiling is too white, the bed beneath you too cool. You feel the pressure of the sensors attached to you, hyper-sensitized by the lack of truly solid sensation for so long. You swallow, tasting nothing. You are thirsty.
"I knew you'd make it back," Jean says, smiling. You can see by her expression and the crackling surface of her mind that you have missed all the excitement. It could have been days.
"I had you to guide me," you reply.
You flex your fingers. Home.
The End