[center][h1][color=CC0000][b]K I D F L A S H[/b][/color][/h1][color=7e6e75]18[color=CC0000] ♦[/color] Wallace Rudolph West [color=CC0000]♦[/color] Neutral Good [img]http://i.imgur.com/K0PGu7a.png?1[/img][/color][/center] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] O R I G I N[/sub][/color][hr] [color=7e6e75][b]1 9 9 8 - 2 0 1 3 // D R E A M E R[/b] [indent][b][color=CC0000]Wallace Rudolph West[/color][/b] was born to [color=CC0000]Rudy[/color] and [color=CC0000]Mary West[/color] in the town of [color=CC0000]Blue Valley, Nebraska[/color]. An avid daydreamer, he would spend his days dreaming about the long-disbanded [color=CC0000]Justice Society of America[/color], namely [color=CC0000]the Flash[/color] – a speedster who could, according to recounts of countless stories, run as fast as sound. Idolising the hero did well for Wally’s personal development; since the beginning of his infatuation with the Flash, he’d adopted the speedster’s strong moral principles as his own, seeing the world in black and white – good and evil – wherever he looked. However, his reputation as a dreamer and his admiration of the Flash didn’t do as well for his schooling. His parents would often be called up to the principal’s office, be it because the young West’s grades were at an all time low, or because he’d gotten in yet another fight with a bully picking on kids below his weight. But while most parents would scold their child, let them know how disappointed they were and then punish them accordingly, Wally’s parents were not so invested in their duties. Being what some would consider emotionally distant, Rudy and Mary were too busy trying to get rich quick and worrying about what others thought of them to truly concern themselves with their son’s upbringing, and as such did what they always did in such circumstances: they sent him to stay with his [color=CC0000]Aunt Iris[/color]. This was not the punishment they thought it to be. Wally was as close to Iris as he was distant from his parents – as a little boy, he would often refer to her as his best friend. Living in [color=CC0000]Central City, Missouri[/color] – “the city always on the run” – Iris lived a life more exciting than that of anyone else he knew. Working as a journalist for [color=CC0000]Central City Picture News[/color], she delivered news on both paper and television screens; if the story was big, you could bet that her name was on the byline. More than her job, though, Wally felt like she truly got him – like she truly understood who he was, and not only that, accepted it. During his “punishments”, so cheekily named by his aunt, one of his favourite pastimes was their visits to [color=CC0000]Keystone[/color], Central’s sister city on the other side of the Missouri River, across the Kansas-Missouri border. The Flash’s home city before his retirement in the eighties, Keystone was also home to [color=CC0000]the Flash Museum[/color], a proud building full of memorabilia from the Justice Society and the Flash’s heyday. It was here that Wally and Iris would spend the majority of their weekends together, dividing their time between the museum and sites where the Flash had fought what were considered some of his toughest battles, namely those between himself and the aptly named [color=CC0000]Rival[/color], a man considered his reverse – a perversion of the speedster’s every principle, of everything he had ever stood for. Although Wally was born in Blue Valley, it was in Central-Keystone, the Gem Cities, that he was raised. In Nebraska, he was ridiculed because of his idol; an outsider. With his Aunt Iris, he was home. It wasn’t until the middle of 2011 that he met [color=CC0000]Barry Allen[/color]. A forensic scientist for the [color=CC0000]Central City Police Department[/color], Barry initially struck Wally as a boring man; Iris’ new boyfriend, he was around more often than not, and from what Wally saw of him, he did not impress. Always the last to arrive, Barry seemed so uninteresting, so dull, that he often found himself wondering what his aunt saw in the man; the only interesting thing he could find out about him was the coma he’d been in after getting struck by lighting – that was until they had their first real conversation. Once Wally actually paid Barry the attention Iris wanted him to, he was surprised – and happy – to find a kindred soul that shared his opinions on the world, on good and bad, on heroism and villainy, but not only that – on the Flash. When Barry spoke of the Flash, it was as if he was speaking from experience; an impossibility, Wally knew, as Barry was born in the decade that the Flash retired, but still – the teenager couldn’t help but wonder at how Barry could describe running at high speeds so vividly, how his imagination could take him to such places with so much detail and emotion. And then the Flash released his autobiography. Titled [color=CC0000][i]Things You Can’t Outrun[/i][/color], the book revealed the Flash’s identity as that of one [color=CC0000]Jason “Jay” Garrick[/color], a former scientist turned superhero caught in a one-in-a-million lab accident that transformed him into the speedster of fame. Upon its release, Wally immediately purchased a copy, and it was everything he expected it to be – a near one thousand page shrine of information on his childhood hero. The quotes collected over his years of activity didn’t portray half the man Jay was. In his autobiography, his words radiated the values he upheld, giving depth and detail to the tall tales Wally knew of – and to those he didn’t – that he could only dream of. But there was one thing in particular that caught his eye that both puzzled him and filled him with excitement – a single paragraph in one of the final chapters of the book. [indent] [i]“I never thought that my two decades as the Flash would have any lasting consequences, any legacy behind them. And yet, walking through Keystone City, I saw the monuments her people have put up in my honor, the statues – the [/i]museum[i], Lord help my ego – and I saw the impact that I’ve had, that the Justice Society have had on the world. But somehow, that still wasn’t enough for me to [/i]truly[i] see the change my team and I had brought – something that I didn’t realise until a young man showed up on my door, exhibiting the very same powers as mine. He, whose name isn’t mine to share, had discovered my identity through careful research, and had come to me for my permission, for my blessing, to take the identity that I’d forged over the years and make it his own; to become the second Flash. I don’t know where he is right now, but I can assure you, from our initial meeting and the many that succeeded it, that he’s a good man – the best person I could have ever hoped for to continue the Flash’s legacy. And who knows? By the time this gets published, there may already be another speedster running around the Gem Cities.”[/i] [/indent] The thought of a second Flash debuting in a time when Wally was alive seemed absolutely mind-blowing – and to think that he, whoever he was, had the blessing of Jay Garrick, was even more so. It seemed impossible to Wally. Another Flash, in this modern era. No way that could happen. And then it did. Within days of [color=CC0000]Superman[/color]’s debut in [color=CC0000]Metropolis[/color], the second Flash sped his way through the Gem Cities in a sleek red suit, apprehending a grand total of two hundred criminals between the two cities before a minute passed noon. Wally was staying with Iris when it happened, and even saw the new speedster rush past her apartment building. Barry arrived shortly after, too late to catch a glimpse. Over the next year Wally would continue to spot the Flash during his visits, quickly growing to admire the new hero just as much as he did Jay Garrick. The former superhero was right; whoever this new Flash was, he was the best candidate for the job. He wouldn’t dish out anything a criminal didn’t deserve. To those who could still walk away, he gave a chance. Even when the supercriminals began to surface – [color=CC0000]Captain Cold[/color] and his [color=CC0000]Rogues[/color], [color=CC0000]Turtle Man[/color], [color=CC0000]Double Down[/color] and [color=CC0000]Peek-a-Boo[/color], to name a few – he didn’t serve them any unneeded punishment, never allowing his anger to get the better of him. But there was more to it than that. It was the little stories, too; the fluff pieces in the news about how he took the time (a few seconds) to paint an elderly couple’s fence, about how he renovated an apartment block that had been damaged in one of his run-ins with the Rogues, about how he’d brought pizza to a group of kids he’d saved from plummeting off the Central-Keystone Bridge in their school bus. He wasn’t like that supposed urban legend in [color=CC0000]Gotham[/color], the [color=CC0000]Batman[/color], a silent protector that hid in the dark – he was that guy all the locals knew, who always lent a hand because he wanted to, not because he was obliged to. One hot summer’s day in the August of 2013, everything changed. Wally, now fifteen, was once again in Central City. This time was worse than the others. He and his parents had argued before, but it had never escalated to the point that it had now. Rudy had hit him. Before either of his parents could tell him to, Wally had already packed his bags. Barry and Iris could tell that something was wrong; yes, Wally was usually in a bad mood upon his arrival, but it was usually gone by the time he set foot in Iris’ apartment. But now, his mood only ranged from sullen to joyless – not even a sighting of the Flash near Iris’ work was enough to lift his spirits. A few days into his stay, Iris and Barry made an executive decision. They needed help from a friend. The Flash met a starstruck Wally that evening, angry storm clouds overhead, touring him around the Gem Cities at speeds high enough to exhilarate, but not enough to cause injury by the laws of physics. They talked for a while, Wally asking all of the questions he had wanted to since the Flash first debuted a year earlier: what’s it like to be a superhero? How didn’t he get sick of criminals like the Rogues, always seeming to break out just to hurt people again? How did he get his powers? And so it was that Wally found himself in a familiar forensics lab in which he’d met with Barry countless times before. The Flash rearranged the room, placing vials of chemicals in a specific order, explaining that those were the substances that spilled onto him when he was struck by lightning – it was then that everything clicked, and Wally realised who it was that he was really talking to. And then the lighting struck. Months after Wally woke from his coma, he and Barry theorised that Barry had subconsciously drawn the [color=CC0000]Speed Force[/color] to Wally, thus replicating the accident that gave him his powers – and making a sad kid’s dreams come true. When Wally awoke from his coma, six months had passed. He wasn’t in the hospital, though – he was in [color=CC0000]STAR Labs[/color]’ Central City facility, under the care of [color=CC0000]Dr. Harrison Wells[/color] and [color=CC0000]Darwin Elias[/color], who Barry told him were his go-to experts on their power source, barring Jay Garrick. At first, Wally thought he’d misheard Barry; surely he hadn’t said that the Speed Force was [i]their[/i] power source. But then time slowed down, and Wally zipped from one end of STAR Labs to another, and he knew that he hadn’t misheard Barry. He had the Flash’s powers. But while Wally was ecstatic, and Barry had agreed to help him learn how to control his speed, not all was well – his parents, more angry at Barry and Iris than they were happy to see him up and about, had banned Wally from visiting them until he was able to live on his own, and for a few moments, he was devastated. And then it hit him. He had the Flash’s powers. He didn’t need their permission to visit Barry and Iris; he could run from Blue Valley to Central City before either of them even noticed. So began a new chapter in Wally’s life, running to the Gem Cities to catch up with Barry and Iris, training with the former in the use of his powers. Eventually, Barry made him a costume with a reversed colour scheme to his own, and Wally happily debuted as [color=CC0000][b]Kid Flash[/b][/color]. For a while, all was well. And then his mother died.[/indent] [b]2 0 1 3 - P R E S E N T // S P E E D S T E R[/b] [indent]Mary West was on a cruise. She needed a break from everything; Rudy was starting to drink again, and ever since Wally awoke from his coma, it seemed as if he wanted to do anything but spend time with his [i]immediate[/i] family. No, he’d much rather have spent time with his aunt and her boyfriend in Central City, the very people that were to blame for his ending up in a coma. The only person that seemed to want to be with Mary was herself, and so she came to the conclusion that she shouldn’t wait for Rudy to snap out of his drunken, violent stupor, and nor should she expect Wally to suddenly prefer her company over that horrible woman’s – so the first chance she got, she bought a ticket for a relaxing cruise through the Caribbean. She did not make it back home. A freak storm, seemingly out of nowhere. No one was prepared. The majority of the cruise ship’s occupants managed to get to the safety of a life raft. Mary was not one of them. Wally blamed himself. He knew he shouldn’t, that it wasn’t his fault, but he couldn’t help but feel that with his powers – his speed – maybe, just maybe, he could have saved her. Maybe, just maybe, she would still be alive… if he’d just been [i]fast enough[/i]. Rudy blamed Wally, too. Slipping further into his drinks, he insisted that it was Wally’s insistence on keeping away from Mary, from him, that drove her to go on that cruise. Not long after her funeral, Rudy packed his bags and left, leaving Wally without his parents. Without a home. Barry and Iris took Wally in without hesitation. They shared in his grief, but they were happy to be able to provide him with some semblance of normality, providing him with a family he could come home to. [color=CC0000]Joe West[/color], Wally’s great uncle, became a more prominent figure in the young speedster’s life. Whereas before he’d served as an ally for the Flashes, after Mary’s death he became something more – what he was always meant to be. Family. Wally began attending school at [color=CC0000]Central City High[/color], held back a year due to his time spent in a coma. He was quick to find friends in [color=CC0000]Jared Morillo[/color], [color=CC0000]Lilith Clay[/color] and [color=CC0000]Linda Park[/color], three people with very clear aspirations – a future cop, psychologist and journalist – their sureness in where they wanted to go in life drawing him to them like some sort of lightning rod. Wally didn’t want to admit it then, but he, along with everyone else in the school, knew that he was drawn to Linda most of all. It wasn’t until mid-2015 that he found the nerve to ask her out. No one was surprised when she said yes. As Kid Flash, Wally was increasingly in his element, taking to the role of a superhero as easily as he did talking. He even got to meet his childhood hero, the one and only Jay Garrick, and his wife, [color=CC0000]Joan[/color]; a meal with the Garricks became a near weekly event, something that Wally got excited for no matter how often they visited. Jay was everything the media and his book said, and more. Wally knew of the saying, “Never meet your heroes,” but people would eat those words if their hero was the original Flash. All in all, despite his mother’s death, things were going well for Wally. He wasn’t expecting the [color=CC0000]Kryptonians[/color] to attack. But even before [color=CC0000]General Zod[/color] came with his army and the World Engines, an invisible enemy was making himself known to Barry. The Flash would find notes at work and in his home, letters from his “biggest fan” informing him of “something big” in the works, disturbed fan mail from an untraceable stalker. When the Kryptonians invaded… he struck. [color=CC0000]Eobard Thawne[/color]. [color=CC0000]Professor Zoom[/color]. A man wearing a perverted, reversed version of Barry’s costume, he was faster than anyone Wally had ever seen before – initiating a chase through the Gem Cities as they were torn apart by Zod’s army, taunting them the entire way… to STAR Labs. It was no secret that the Central City division of the think tank were constructing a particle accelerator; the media frequently cited it as a controversy, with renowned scientists such as [color=CC0000]Dr. Reed Richards[/color] and [color=CC0000]Anthony Stark[/color] stating that there was no telling what the activation of such an apparatus within a populated urban environment such as Central City would mean, or what kind of damage it would cause. Professor Zoom’s plan soon became clear, as he sought to activate the accelerator – unfinished in its current state – under the blanket of distraction the Kryptonians provided. In desperate need of help, Barry and Wally called for help, signifying Jay Garrick’s return to action. As he and Wally did what they could to protect civilians from Zod’s army, Barry confronted Zoom, but was ultimately unable to defeat him – he was too fast. With the particle accelerator primed to explode, Barry began to run around STAR Labs, pushing himself to run as fast as he could without breaking the time barrier. If he was fast enough, then he might have been able to contain the explosion. But the strain was beginning to be too much for him, and with the onslaught of antimatter and other “theoretical” energies, released as the accelerator ripped open the fabric of reality, causing him more damage than anything ever had, Barry was beginning to become one with the Speed Force. Unwilling to let his mentor and uncle (Barry and Iris had married a few short months ago) die, Wally helped him, running faster than he ever had before. With their combined speed, the explosion was contained to a two-block radius, dimensional energies flooding what was a relatively minimal area, as opposed to what could have been. Barry, Wally and Jay did their best to get everyone out of the blast radius, and as far as they knew, they did. Soon after, Superman and his allies defeated Zod and his army. The Kryptonians left in the Gem Cities fled at their leader’s defeat. One month later, the Gem Cities were still recovering. Barry, Wally and Jay (who “temporarily ran out of retirement”) did their best to assist with the clean up, speeding up the process significantly. All the while, Barry and Wally reeled from the beat-down they received from Professor Zoom, his whereabouts thus far unknown.[/indent][/color] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] A L L I E S[/sub][/color][hr][indent][color=7e6e75][b]Amanda Waller |[/b] The director of A.R.G.U.S., S.H.I.E.L.D.'s special tasks and operations branch, Amanda Waller, called "the Wall" by many in her department, is a cold, calculative woman that will do anything for the protection of her country. Wally and Barry have had the unfortunate pleasure of meeting her during one of his team-ups with Vibe. [b]Director David Singh |[/b] The director of the CCPD crime lab, Director Singh is Barry's hot-tempered boss. [b]Hunter Zolomon |[/b] A close ally of Barry and Wally's, Hunter is a former detective for the Keystone Police Department prior to the Kryptonian Invasion. Crippled from the waist down during the tragic calamity, he was forced to resign from the force. He is currently recuperating at Central City General Hospital with the help of Dr. Wells. He and Wally consider each other friends. [b]Frederick Chyre |[/b] A beat cop in Keystone P.D., Chyre is a cynical hothead with a serious bone to pick with any criminal in his city. [b]Harrison Wells |[/b] The reclusive head of Keystone City's STAR Labs, Doctor Harrison Wells was among the first people to know of Barry's identity. He helped Barry to better understand the source of his powers, and remains the Flash's go-to guy for all things Speed Force. Despite the years he's known Barry and Wally, he is insistent on remaining nothing more than an associate. [b]Darwin Elias |[/b] Perhaps the only man considered to be Wells' equal in STAR Labs, Doctor Elias rivals his knowledge of the Speed Force, exhibiting a passion for it that Wells does not seem to share. However, whereas Wells often tells the speedsters of how they can better utilise their powers to get faster, Elias is prone to warning them of the dangers doing such things pose. As such, Barry and Wally remain mere acquaintances with him, as opposed to their comparatively close relationship with Doctor Wells.[/color][/indent] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] F R I E N D S[/sub][/color][hr][indent][color=7e6e75][b]Linda Park |[/b] Linda Park is the girl Wally wants to spend the rest of his life with – which people might say is a bit of a rushed statement, considering that they've barely been dating for a year. An aspiring journalist, Linda is a smart, capable young woman, and despite what some might say, she's the girl of Wally's dreams. [b]Chester P. Runk |[/b] An overweight, highly intelligent classmate of Wally's, frequently picked on for his size and smarts. [b]Jared Morillo |[/b] Wally's best friend, Jared dreams of becoming a detective for the police force. [b]Lilith Clay |[/b] Linda's best friend, Lilith has been apart of their tight circle (or is it square?) of friends since Wally first arrived at Central High. [b]Malcolm Duncan |[/b] Central High's most popular jock, Mal Duncan is a guy with a strong sense of justice and a penchant for standing up for what he believes in. [b]Francisco Ramon // Vibe |[/b] Based in Detroit, Cisco leads a double life as an intern at STAR Labs and an agent of A.R.G.U.S., working for the latter as the superhero, Vibe. Having the ability to manipulate multidimensional energies, he has worked with Barry and Wally before, coming to call them friends. [b]Captain Darryl Frye |[/b] The man who took Barry in after his mother was murdered, Darryl is the captain of Barry's precinct. A close friend of the Flash's, and like a second father to Barry. [b]Patty Spivot |[/b] A forensic analyst in Barry's crime lab.[/color][/indent] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] F A M I L Y[/sub][/color][hr][indent][color=7e6e75][b]Barry Allen // The Flash II |[/b] The second man to take on the title of the Flash, Barry is the husband of Wally's aunt, Iris, and therefore, his uncle. Granted his powers after being struck by lightning in his workplace, a crime lab at the CCPD, Barry succeeded Jay Garrick after receiving his blessing, working hard to fill in his predecessor's boots. He has recently met, fought with, and lost to his mother's killer. [b]Iris West |[/b] Wally's aunt, Iris works as a journalist and reporter for Central City Picture News. Since Wally was a young boy, she has been everything his parents were not – giving the love and guidance they seemed too busy to give him. She is the wife of Barry Allen, the second Flash, and Wally's favourite person in the world. [b]Rudy West |[/b] Wally's father, Rudy was often too busy to be anything resembling a father. Following his wife's death, he left Wally, leaving him in Barry and Iris' care. [b]Mary West |[/b] Mary, much like Rudy, often neglected her duties as a mother – but unlike him, she at least had the credit of trying. In 2012, she died while on a cruise in the Caribbean. [b]Daniel West |[/b] Rudy and Iris' brother, Daniel is Wally's uncle. Growing up, Wally had only ever met Daniel a few times, his uncle's reputation as a criminal straining his relationship with his family; it's fair to say that Wally is as distant from Daniel as he is close to Iris. Daniel is the father of Wally's cousin, Wallace Joseph West. He disappeared during the Kryptonian Invasion, leaving his son in the care of his uncle, Joseph. [b]Wallace Joseph West |[/b] Much like Wally, Wallace Joseph was named after his great grandfather. Kid Flash's cousin, Wally has grown up idolising his father, Daniel – a career criminal. A troublemaker at heart, he strives to be better, but often finds himself clashing with authority. Up until recently, he had never met Wallace Rudolph. However, following his father's disappearance during the Kryptonian Invasion, he has been placed in his great uncle's custody: Joe West. He's recently been enrolled at Central City High. [b]William West |[/b] Wally's paternal grandfather, William was an abusive alcoholic after his wife died at childbirth. When Daniel reached his teens, he had enough of William's abuse, pushing him down the stairs of their home. William has been crippled from the waist down ever since. [b]Nadine West |[/b] Wally's paternal grandmother, Nadine died giving birth to his uncle, Daniel. Her death saw her husband spiral into a cycle of alcoholism and abuse, neglecting their children, most of all Daniel, who he blamed for Nadine's death. [b]Joseph West |[/b] Nadine's half-brother, Joe is Iris, Rudy and Daniel's uncle. After Daniel ran away from home, leaving Iris and Rudy with their now crippled father, Joe took them in, taking care of them and his former brother-in-law. A detective for the CCPD, he's worked with Barry many times before ever since he joined the crime lab, coming to see him as the son he never had; a feeling only made stronger once Barry and Iris began seeing each other. He's aware of Barry and Wally's double life, and has recently been awarded custody of Wally's cousin, Wallace Joseph West, after his father, Daniel's, disappearance following the particle accelerator explosion. [b]Jay Garrick // The Flash |[/b] The original Flash, Wally has idolised Jay ever since he first heard stories of his heroism. Since he became Kid Flash, Jay has transitioned from being some mythical hero to just another member of Wally's family. [b]Joan Garrick |[/b] Jay's wife, Joan is a lovely woman who often acts as the grandmother Wally never had.[/color][/indent] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] E N E M I E S[/sub][/color][hr][indent][color=7e6e75][b]The Rogues |[/b] Led by Captain Cold, the Rogues are criminals with a code – efficient, skilled criminals with a twisted set of morals, but with a code nonetheless. They have been Barry and Wally's primary enemies since Barry's debut. [INDENT][b]Leonard Snart // Captain Cold |[/b] The leader of the Rogues, Snart is a tactical genius equipped with an experimental cold gun, hence his motif. [b]Mick Rory // Heatwave |[/b] Snart's second-in-command, Mick is an arsonist at heart, his love for flame burning bright. Armed with a flamethrower that reaches insane temperatures, he is the brawn of Snart's operation. [b]Evan McCulloch // Mirror Master II |[/b] A hitman who became known throughout America's underworld as one of the best there is, McCulloch found the tech belonging to the first Mirror Master, an enemy of Jay Garrick's, in the possession of one of his targets. With his "mirror gun", he can travel to the Mirror World, an alternate dimension only accessible through reflective surfaces. [b]Mark Mardon // Weather Wizard |[/b] Mardon was a serial robber before he stumbled upon the technology that enables him to control the weather. Becoming the Weather Wizard, he joined the Rogues in pursuit of riches and personal satisfaction. [b]Axel Walker // The Trickster II |[/b] A teenager inspired by the original Trickster, James Jesse, Axel is every bit the deranged psychopath Jesse is not. He joined the Rogues in the hopes of "impressing" them, Captain Cold, Heatwave and Mirror Master being particular idols of his.[/INDENT] [b]Digger Harkness // Captain Boomerang |[/b] An ex-Rogue, Digger left the group in favour of a solo act. Working as a mercenary, he pulls off jobs for anyone willing to cough up the dough. [b]James Jesse // The Trickster I |[/b] A former circus performer, Jesse was an enemy of Jay Garrick nearing the hero's retirement. A mentally ill middle-aged man, Jesse is actually a nice guy if he attends his psychiatry appointments and takes his meds when he should. However, if for whatever reason he happens to skip one of the two, mostly the latter, he occasionally slips back into old habits, often without realising it. [b]Eobard Thawne // Professor Zoom |[/b] Hailing from the future, Thawne claims to be the Flash's greatest enemy, claiming to be the one that murdered Barry Allen's mother. Following his attack during the Kryptonian Invasion, he achieved what he said was only his [i]first[/i] victory against the Flash. Barry Allen is no longer the fastest man alive. That title belongs to Thawne. [b]Jeremy Tell // Double Down |[/b] Tell is a conman who gained his abilities when he was bonded with a cursed pack of cards. After a brief stint with the Rogues, he left the group in favour of working as a mercenary, much like Captain Boomerang. [b]Lashawn Baez // Peek-a-Boo |[/b] A metahuman, Lashawn has the ability to teleport within a small radius. Her father was severely injured during the Kryptonian Invasion. [b]Grodd |[/b] ???[/color][/indent] [color=CC0000][sub][ ߜ ] N O T E S[/sub][/color][hr][indent][color=7e6e75]He doesn't like Gardner Kolins. At all.[/color][/indent]