Hidden 3 yrs ago 3 yrs ago Post by BangoSkank
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Vietnam
December 31st 1967



Yeah yeah yeah. Yeah. You heard right. Vietnam is hot. It's muggy. It smells different. It looks different. That don't mean everything is different though. People are still people and fuck yes New Years Eve is still New Years Eve.

The last day of December 1967 and goddam if we weren't still riding high off Tam Quan. This shit was what we here for. This shit was one hundred percent the shit that I was here for. Every single one of us who was here to be here had gotten some this December and after we got done getting some and we got back to what passes for civilization out here you know god damn well we got some. If you weren't getting it from someone in your unit you were getting it somewhere. All of it. Sex, booze, smokes, weed, acid, speed, uppers, downers, zips, zooms, and whamwhams.

We'd just been walking the fences since then. Baking in the sun. Sharing stories and bodily fluids with each other. Training together, talking shit together, playing cards together, listening to music together, killing time in the armpit of the world man, together. There were so many of us, it was so goddamned hot, and we were all still so pepped up on Tam Quan. That was where I met Betsy. Fucking Betsy man. Thinking about her gets me antsy again. Ooo wee.

See December had jumped off quick. Word came down in the tail end of November that Intelligence had heard the PAVN or Vietcong or LASV or some group was heading on down to Bong Son so we were ready. We were itching. PAVN, LASV, Vietcong, those are all just slight variations on enemy. Sure enough in the first few days of December they headed down Highway 1 and started moving on our boys, that's ARVN, Army of the Republic of Vietnam. The good guys, second place anyway. America is Number One and all that shit. So that's how it started, the Battle of Tam Quan.

December 6th and they send the 9th Cav in to investigate. They're pinned down quick so they call in the 8th Cav and they send me with 'em. Goddamned Captain America shit here we go. Hey bartender get me a beer yeah? Whatever you got. Yeah that's right I drink this shit. It's beer man. No. Fuck no they ain't gonna poison me, I'm a regular customer and these are friendlies. Plus I'm just too damn good. Look at me. Just look at me.

You know how we do it. 1725 Hours they tell us to go. 1800 Hours my feet hit the street and I've got a new dancing partner. Helicopter crew was worried, they smelled it so they hooked me up with my girl. Betsy. You know where Betsy came from brother? Goddamned General Electric. No, I'm not kidding. General Electric. This sweet piece of ass is a scaled down M61 Vulcan. She can put out 4,000 a minute before she overheats. That's more than your mom. Goddamn, right?

So like I was saying. 1800 Hours we're landed, by 2100 we've got the 9th Cav on their way out and we're setting up perimeter. Betsy wanted to dance. You should really see us go. We do a mean Mashed Potato.

What happened next? Yeah, sure I'll tell yeah. Let me just get a drink. Long story. Shit gets real you know? You want one? I got you, it's no problem.

Tam Quan, Binh Dinh Province, Vietnam
December 1967



We just about always came onto the scene the same way. Hot, fast, and spitting lead with a fury that spirit of vengeance those preachers are so fond of might find familiar. Not everyone is in it. They never are. Enough folk have second thoughts, enough don't really want to be there. Me and my boys were right where we wanted to be. I was right where I was made to be. My element.

My assistant gunner wasn't much of a killer. Isaiah Green. Maybe Greene with an E, I never did see it spelled out. He wasn't any good behind a barrel but he was goddamned fearless. Shouldn't have been here, got into a whole pile of shit for dating the wrong white woman and didn't let those sons of bitches just beat him to death. Got his pick between life behind bars and death out in the jungles of fucking Vietnam. He was good people. He painted my face up right every morning and he kept Betsy dancing all through the night. He shouldn't have been here but thank fuck he was. Kept me from getting myself into too much trouble when I was feeling myself a little too much.

And god damn if I wasn't feeling myself that day. Bare feet hanging out the chopper, and I was just looking for a target, someone that wanted shooting. Sometimes the pickings were slim and these were definitely some slim pickings. Made our job easier but a lot less fun. No one for me to shoot, no need for Isaiah to keep my belt fed, just a quick landing and we all met up with the 50th Infantry and piled into their ACAV armored carrier. Took us straight into Tam Quan no fuss no muss. They come in from LZ English and took us all the way in. By 2100 Hours we had the 9th Cav on their way out and we were setting in for the fun to come. Night Perimeter. Whole lot of nothing. Hair trigger tension. Sweat beading out and trickling down your face. Bugs eating you up. Just watching the seconds tick and waiting for the shit to kick. Shit never did kick, not all night.

Morning start up and I smelled it. Fuck if I know what it smells like but you do the right time and you can smell it. No mistaking it. Not ever. It was coming and when shit like that come you gotta be ready or you'll be dead. Gotta take inventory of who you got and what you got. Gotta be able to judge a man. I'm a goddam killer and no doubt about it. Isaiah wasn't no killer. His business never was killing, but he got down to anything else with a fear of nothing but God. Rumlow was solid too. Killer just like me except he was pay for play, wasn't in no ones service but his own. Damn good though, good man to have on your side and a horrible man to have for an enemy. Most of the other men I knew by face and reputation. Not much sense in learning names at the rate we were dropping.

Sat there with Isaiah talking shit out. Man had a keen mind. We did that more often than not. I knew one side of it, the killing. Isaiah had a sharp mind for all the other shit. The shit that meant me and mine could keep on killing without getting killed our damn selves. Vehicle positioning, traps, assignments, that was mostly his doing. Lead where you can right but know your limits. While he was going over all that I finished my preparations. Cheap shit MRE, watery mashed potatoes. Helped them out with a Red. Broke it apart and mixed the innards in with the potatoes. Isaiah kept talking and time kept on ticking. Threw another Red in there. I smelled it. The boys would be busy soon enough.

Most of them weren't killers but you didn't have to be a killer to be a soldier. You had to follow orders or at least try to. In Vietnam a lot of men died trying. Lot of men decided not to try and a lot of them we saw sure to dying. Wasn't nice. War never was. By the time we got clear to Tam Quan we'd cut most of the fat.

Lean meat. All around the perimeter. Betsy front and center behind a couple of barrels. Dancing shoes strapped tight. Vehicles positioned up front for cover and early detection. Traps laid. Bright eyed and bushy tailed. The best of America just waiting for what every one of us knew was coming, and then it did.

0725 that morning they hit the vehicles hard. Blew the Jeep apart and tore up the ACAV pretty decent. Poured a shit ton of artillery fire in too. Too far away to be accurate and we were dug in well. Only suffered one casualty. Youngster got his with a bolt from the Jeep, pulped his head. Quick death. No pain.

From there it was all action. Reinforcements got flown in. More men, more weapons. ARVN, 40th Regiment. We reformed the perimeter and then me and my boys set out to get some. Sent Rumlow out to the East, where they was coming from, to rustle some shit up. Flamethrowers, grenade launchers, our last Armored Personnel Carrier, half diversion half retribution. They pushed hard. That Rumlow was a hard son of a bitch. Pushed hard East, got around those bastards and pushed them back. Back to us.

I always liked to keep shit simple. Direct. Lethal.

Colt Commander .45, my M60, my KA-BAR, a few grenades. That was my standard issue. 8 round magazines for the pistol. Belts for the M60. She was a hungry bitch too, ate them belts up fast. Gas operated, short stroke, open bolt, more than 500 rounds per minute. That was my kit. Sometimes I took some extra goodies, but I kept it simple today. Simple is good, simple is predictable.

Rumlow did things different and today, with Betsy, it all worked out just fine. Just fine.

That day and the days that would follow, the Battle of Tam Quan. That's Vietnam in a nutshell brother.

Us and the ARVN holding the line. A bunch of American boys in the middle of Vietnam standing beside a bunch of Vietnamese boys while another bunch of Vietnamese boys come at us. Screaming bloody murder, opening fire, running out of the tree line. My brothers firing on them. Their brothers firing on us. Blood. Fire. Smoke. Oil. Clouds of CS coming out from behind them, flushing the Vietcong out. That would be Rumlow's work. The gas and the fire. Chaos on chaos. Can't hardly hear a thing over the shots. Can't hardly see a thing over the flames and the smoke. Just shapes running at you pointing sparking sticks at you, and then they're gone.

It's a nightmare. It's a dream. And there I am. Flag paint mostly washed off ages ago from the sweat and the heat but I got a new paint. My own paint, got opened up a bit at some point. Didn't even notice it. Was a bit busy. I notice it now in this one instant. This postcard memory of Tam Quan.

I'm standing there in the middle of it. Fucking rooted. Blood leaking from my head, trickling down my chest. The heat of flames drying it out, dancing on my skin. The sight of the smoke. The sounds of our guns and occasionally the sound of one of their rounds zipping past our heads. Betsy dancing in my hands, Isaiah keeping her fed. The smell of coppery blood, oil, and the lavender scent of the gas Rumlow was using to flush the enemy out. If I hadn't been so hopped up I might be running too.

Probably not though. Would have missed out on this. Couldn't do that. Not ever. Can't forget it. Not ever. Couldn't tell you what day I took that little mental snapshot. Some time between December 6th and the 9th. That's Vietnam baby. It all bleeds into one.
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Hidden 3 yrs ago Post by Retired
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I M P U L S E




The world was brighter.

That was the first thing that Bart noticed about the past. This world some six decades removed from his own was vivid and cheerful and radiant in ways he had never known possible.

It wasn't just that the skies, devoid of perpetual smog and ash, were a beaming shade of blue; nor was it only the distinct lack of rubble and tell-tale signs of devastation everywhere he looked. It was the people that were brighter, too. Smiles and laughter abound, but even those without still held purpose and pasion, regardless of how routine, that had almost entirely been cleansed in the time Bart had come from. Society still fully existed in this period, and with it came light.

They didn't yet know what it was to truly be without hope. To despair beyond belief. To be trapped in a living nightmare where all one could do was struggle and fight to survive to the next Hellish, dark day.

It was a reality that Bart Allen intended to ensure the people of this world would never have to face.

He had first rematerialized five days ago precisely where the time machine had ferried him away from back in the future: Happy Harbor, Rhode Island. Barely a hundred feet outside of a cavern entrance that led deep into a mountain that had once, in the world that had been his home, served as a secret sanctuary of sorts during the various alien invasions that had laid havoc to the Earth.

During the Dominator's occupation, the twisting network of caves had been used by Max Mercury, Richard Grayson, and the rest of the freedom fighters to plan their four-year-long insurgency and later as a staging ground for the final assault that had driven the invaders from the planet. Seven years following, it had functioned as a hiding place for nearly two thousand civilians during the height of Apokalypse's assault on Earth, and six years further still the mountain's caverns had been the headquarters for what became the Young Justice League.

Now, it fulfilled its role as the birthplace for Bart's new life in the past.

He had wasted no time upon exiting the contraption that had shunted him through time. Immediately, Bart set about dismantling the device just as Max had instructed him to, rushing each component he stripped away to various sections of the Harbor and discarding them thousands of feet into the bay. It was of the utmost importance, he had been told, that no one could ever find any of the future technology the time machine had utilized, so Bart had taken the extra precaution of speedily pulverizing certain pieces until nothing remained but dust.

In the several days since, Bart had spent his time acclimating to his new surroundings. At least, as best as one could acclimate when they were racing across the continental United States at subsonic speeds. The time-displaced youth had been doing his best to adhere to Max's guidelines, and not revealing himself unless necessary was second only to avoiding "needlessly contaminating the timeline" as the elder speedster had put it. So, Bart was doing all of his sightseeing with powers engaged.

He had already visited several American cities that had been annihilated in his time. New York and Metropolis, Chicago and Fawcett, Keystone and Central; all were rubble the last he had seen them. Now, they were sprawling hubs of civilization that practically danced with activity. Bart had observed more people in Fawcett City in a single hour than there had been in all of the Eastern United States in the year 2030.

To go along with his tourism, Bart had also been partaking in some careful liberation of items throughout the country. Clothing, food, blankets, and the like. Nothing of genuine importance and mostly taken from those who would not be in dire need without them. Excluding, perhaps, a tempting blueberry pie that had been sitting out on a windowsill the previous day. Not a necessary meal by any means, but it was hungry work running across the United States at speeds even jetliners would be envious of, and he was, after all, a growing boy.

He would run for an hour, then explore for a handful more, before pilfering some food to restock his energy reserves, after which he'd bunk down in some isolated field far away from towns and prying eyes. Each day, he repeated the process. This was the fifth since he had arrived, and by his estimations, he was only about six hundred miles from his destination. By evening, Bart would arrive on time at the location Max had drilled into his head.

Of course, the speedster could have easily made it there, completely on the other side of the country from where he had begun, in less than an hour. Less than ten minutes, actually, if he really pushed himself. However, breaking the sound barrier near populated areas was never an ideal situation, let alone reaching hypersonic rates. In his time, achieving supersonic speeds had rarely been something he had to concern himself with. Most things that could be damaged from the pressure wave when going supersonic were already destroyed in the future, and human beings were so sparse that there was seldom a danger if Bart chose to stretch his legs a little.

Here, in 1968, that wasn't the case. Even traveling across the midwest with its vast open fields, the sound waves he would leave in his wake while running at such speeds could easily damage crops and cattle if nothing else. With an entire timeline at risk, Max had warned Bart of taking such chances with the butterfly effect.

So, Bart made sure he never reached speeds approaching Mach 1, and thus his journey was much longer. Not that he minded much, truthfully. Even running at barely 600 miles per hour, it would have taken less than half a day to reach the West Coast. Instead, he had used the excuse to move extra leisurely so that he could truly take in the wonder that was the past.

Besides, according to Max's plan, Bart had until January 6th, 1968 at 7:58 PM to be in place. At that time, and no earlier, would the first event occur the young man was instructed to change. Therefore he saw no harm in taking in the sights and appreciating a normal world until then, even if he could not actively enjoy the normality himself.

He had a little over eleven hours until then and intended to make every use of that time.

So, as he crossed the California borderline, Bart wondered if he could find another blueberry pie to borrow.
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Hidden 3 yrs ago 3 yrs ago Post by Bounce
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Hidden 3 yrs ago Post by NeverEnding
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NeverEnding Շђє Ŧเภคɭ Ŧг๏ภՇเєг

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"Splintered" | Issue #1 | Prague


The Winter Soldier closed his eyes and took a deep breath.

“Dušan?” Štefan’s voice was barely audible for a normal man’s hearing. “Are you okay?” The aid placed his hand on the Soldier’s arm. The assassin barely restrained himself from ripping the man’s arm clean off. “You’re pale.” There was a pause. “And shaking.”

The Soldier’s eyes finally opened and he looked down at the crumpled pad. Indeed, his hands were shaking. The serum Hydra had given him took care of all physical ailments. He should never shake. He should report this back to his handler. At the thought his hands trembled just a little more. Being seen by Hydra had never made him shake before.

“Are you sick?” Laid asked from Dušan‘s other side. She placed her hand in the crook of his elbow.

“Men.” She sighed and shook her head. “Never taking care of themselves. You got this Štefan? I’m going to take him to the clinic.” The two friends exchanged looks.

“I’ll cover.” The aid agreed. “You make sure he doesn’t pass out on his fool ass.”

Ladi’s rogue mouth twisted up into a smirk. “So gracious.” She tugged on the Winter Soldier’s arm and pulled him out of the room. The immediate area was clear of people and he drew in another breath. The shadows of what he just saw still clung to him.

“I’m fine.” The man pretending to be Dušan groused.

“Sure. And I’m the Queen of Sheba.” Ladi poked him in the side. “Why don’t you sit down for a second?”

The brunette man let Ladi sit him down on one of the benches in the Castle. She sat down next to him and he turned his head to avoid her concerned look. He had no answers for her. None even for himself.

Report to Hydra.

The Winter Soldier ran his hands through his hair and inhaled shakily.

“Dizzy? Nauseous?” Ladi rubbed her hand up and down his back.

“Just-“ The man pretending to be Dušan took a deep breath. “I think I need to go home.”

The woman nodded her head. “Of course. Think you can make it on your own?”

Dušan nodded in return. Then before he could think twice he reached out and hugged her. “Thank you.” With that he was gone like a dream.
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Hidden 3 yrs ago Post by BangoSkank
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BangoSkank Halfway Intriguing Halfling

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San Francisco, California
10:24 PM, December 31st 1967



Dum Dum and I, we went way back. We fought together through some of the most substantial battles of that war, recorded, not recorded, and top secret. Two Irish boys, me from Brooklyn and him from Boston, going through horrors no man should have to face. Horrors that never should have been. We know each other's stories well. We are bonded in sweat and blood, triumph and tribulation. Nick Fury, Howling Commandos, French Resistance, the Red Skull. He was my brother and I was his.

In my hubris I believed I knew his story. What more could he tell me. I was there for so much. The years we had spent together, the adventures we had had. I imagined the day that changed his life was the day he met me.

"You probably figure the day I met you was the day for me, the one day."

He was right, I sure had.

"Sure Rogers, that was a big day for me but I was already on a course long before then. Already knew Fury, already Second in Command of the Howling Commandos. Already fought with the Dirty Dozen, before you ever did. Our meeting, it wasn't some grand revelation for me. It didn't change the way I viewed the world. I was already riding hard, but man when you came into the equation I turned it up to eleven. We turned it up to eleven, all through the war. Now shaddap Rogers, this is my story."

We had. We sure had. And I did, I sure did.

"For a long time I thought that that would be the day for me Rogers. I was fine with it. We pushed each other to be better men, pushed each other to the very limit. We set a hard pace and we held it steady. So yeah, that was an important day. The day we lost you Steve, that was another day that changed my life, but it still wasn't THE day. Not my day."

After I was gone he had stayed in the fight. Having faced the horrors of World War Two he took up the mantle once more when his country asked. Went to Korea. Fought a whole war there while I was frozen in the North Atlantic. Reunited the Howling Commandos with Nick Fury. Led them all through it. That took up most of the 1950s, then in '59 he formed a team. Pulled them from all over the world. Madripoor, Paris, the Emerald Coast, and right back in his backyard, in Boston. They were a team of superhumans, he said. They weren't all exactly what we might call heroes today. Dangerous men, but they answered the call and they were led by the super-est human I know.

"We fought Red Skull again and we killed him. One of my men, Victor Creed, wasn't exactly the most put together but they were difficult times, Creed cut his head off and as evil as he was that really ought to do it. Red Skull, he was trying to remake you. Was trying to make an army of Super Soldiers. He had a sample of the Serum, but we picked it up off his corpse."

He and his team protected General Hill from an assassination attempt. They rescued Black Panther from a resurgent group of Nazis who still hadn't accepted their defeat. In the beginning of this decade he and Fury had taken steps to forging a lasting peace. The real dream. They had called it The Great Wheel. It had broken, but what a beautiful dream. He had helped Fury form S.H.I.E.L.D. and continued to work with them as an operative. A year after the formation of S.H.I.E.L.D. he had been grievously wounded by a ricocheted bullet.

"I should have died Rogers. I was dying. My body wasn't strong enough to pull me through my injuries or keep me kicking after the surgery."

I had a hard time believing that. When was Dum Dum ever not strong enough.

"That was my one day Rogers. The day I wasn't strong enough. They pulled the bullet out, had the best doctors available working on me and my heart gave out. Doctors said it was a miracle I'd lived that long. That I hadn't had a massive coronary getting up one morning or walking up some stairs. They told me my odds and they weren't good. Last rites. Whole nine yards. Fury came to visit, so did a few of the Commandos. Our old pal Liberty Belle, she came by to represent the All-Star Squadron. Hell T'Chaka came by to send me off. Good to see him again, never thought I would."

I sat there, probably slack jawed. He didn't look like I remembered him. He'd lost a lot of weight and gained some wrinkles, I could believe 20 years had passed easily enough, but this was hard to believe. Maybe I just didn't want to. He had always been one of the strongest men I ever served with. A tough, brave, bear of a man. It was hard to hear I had almost missed seeing him again. I tapped my finger on the bar, couldn't think of what to say to that.

"Fury gave me something called the Infinity Formula that's supposed to help it. Slows aging, helps me stick around. I'm not going anywhere just yet but it's not going to undo the damage. I nearly killed myself trying to keep with you all those years Rogers. Nearly killed myself trying to keep that same pace after you were gone. I didn't want to sully our Legacy."

I never had much of a poker face, not with my men at least. I guess he saw what I was thinking straight away.

"Don't get me wrong now, those were the best days of my life. I'm proud of what we did. I'm damn proud. I don't regret those days with you and I never will but I found a new way. You're already a leader Rogers, you can't not be, it's not in you, but I want you to embrace it. There are new wars, we were soldiers and we were damn good at it, but it's time for us to transition."

I didn't quite protest. Dum Dum was a brother and it was clear he felt passionately about this. But I wasn't ready to hear it either.

"I didn't tell you about my day and expect you to make a decision today. There is still so much you don't know. We have twenty years of history to catch up on. We have wars, Presidents, movements, government operations, a lot has happened since we lost you. A lot of stuff that will be hard to hear. The end of the war was complicated. The years since haven't gotten any more simple. You and I will have to talk about a lot in the coming days, certainly about that ship that found you. The Ishii, that might be some serious trouble Steve."

He reached under his desk and pulled out a box then pushed it across the bar toward me.

"I wanted to hear your story and I wanted you to hear mine. It's been amazing to see you again. 1968 is going to be a hell of a year. With all that's ahead I wanted to give you something to help keep you rooted to the past. Fury helped me out, they cleared out your place after you disappeared, but we held on to some of it. Open the box."

He poured me another drink and pointed toward the box. I shook my head, drank it down and opened the box up. It was a lot to take in. His story, his state, and the box.

"I know there isn't much in it. They took most of your stuff for museums. Everyone wanted a piece. Captain America memorabilia, hell there is still a big market for it. I tried to grab the most important stuff. The most Steve Rogers-y stuff. They didn't want to let me take the baseball but I don't think they had the stones to tell me no."

"No," I said in response, "This is great Dum Dum. This is amazing."

It wouldn't look like much to much of anyone else. An old baseball. An old picture. An old sketchbook.

If you were a baseball fan you would probably recognize my ball and you might just take off with it. Made sense it would be what folks tried to keep. Signed by Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. Babe Ruth, The Great Bambino, the Sultan of Swat. Yankee. Over 700 home runs. .690 batting slugging average. 1.164 on-base plus slugging. The greatest that ever lived. I would come to find out later he no longer did. Lou Gehrig, The Iron Horse, renowned for his durability. Yankee. All-Star seven consecutive times, Triple Crown winner, American League MVP twice, a member of six World Series Championship teams. Passed away at just thirty seven from a disease they would name after him. First player to have his uniform number retired by a team. It was just an old baseball but it was my old baseball.

A picture with me, out of my Captain America uniform, and Bucky. Just two soldiers in World War Two posing beside a plane. Me being me, Bucky being him, no airs, standing next to the plane he was in when he disappeared from the world forever. It had been the last time I ever saw him. Through all the war we had come together and parted and come together again. I never thought that cycle was going to change until it did.

My sketchpad and some art supplies. It was a fresh pad, just one drawing on the first page and not even finished. A recreation. Taped to the page was an old picture of a smiling woman. My mother. The drawing wasn't even halfway finished, I had been taking my time.

"I got one more thing for you. Technically it's still in deep storage somewhere. Officially it's still in deep storage somewhere."

My shield. My old original shield, triangular. Three stars horizontal across the top and nine stripes vertical down it's length. Had barely seen this thing since T'Chaka gave me the circular one I always carried.

"It's almost New Years Steve, I want you to enjoy it. I've got one more thing I want to say to you and then I want you to mix in. We've all seen a lot, we've all got stories."

It was a lot to take in, but I was going to try.

"You're more than just a fighter Rogers. I've led men who wanted nothing but a battle, I've known men who were nothing more than fighters, that isn't you. You're a defender, you're a leader. The world didn't love you just because you killed Nazis. Killing something repugnant, even the Nazis, that alone isn't enough to generate love, not real love. They loved you because you defended their brothers, their husbands and their sons. You're a defender, a beacon, a leader, like it or not. You're a symbol of America Steven, it's up to you what that symbol means."

We shared a drink after that. It was kind of hard to pick up a conversation after something like that and he really did want me to talk with the others. Dum Dum had given me a lot to think about and he gave me a little more to get me moving. He gave me a smile and a nod and a light push on the shoulder to spin my stool around, urging me to get out there and talk to the others. I guess that was it, that was my christening. World War Two was over and had been for decades. New wars had been fought, newer wars were being fought. Dugan was right, I was a Leftover now, we all were. Couldn't ask for better company.
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Hidden 3 yrs ago 3 yrs ago Post by Bounce
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"Superboy Begins" | Prologue | [ next ]
Post Theme

S M A L L V I L L E
Kansas, United States of America
April 14, 1964

“...up now we take you back to 1944 with this piece by the Glen Miller Band.”

The engine case on the tractor was open. A woman in a sun bonnet and a long skirt sat in the driver’s seat, watching as a man rolled up his sleeves and labored with a wrench.

“I told you, I didn’t like the look of that salesman.”

Wiping the sweat from his brow, the man shot the woman a look. Middling in his forties now, Jonathan Kent was a powerful figure of an aging soldier. “Just some bad fuel,” the man offered flatly, before adding, “Try it now.”

Pumping the gas pedal a few times, the woman leaned forward to turn the starter. The engine seemed to give a whirl of protest before the starter turned over.

Closing the engine case, the man pulled a rag from out of his pocket and wiped at the grease staining his hands. As the woman stepped down, he just looked at her and said, “Tractor’s fine.”

“Or I just married a good mechanic,” the woman tossed back playfully.

As she stepped by, the man gently smacked her butt to send her on her way back to the farm house. Then, tucking the rag back into his pocket, climbed up into the tractor and moved the tractor into gear.

The plow was already attached. The fickle contraption took an act of God to get going, then the engine had stalled on him in the middle of clearing the field. At this rate, it felt like it’d be summer before he had the field tilled. Easing the tractor forward, he grimaced at the notion that Martha might have been right as the vehicle lurched awkwardly. A sigh escaped him when it had finally started creeping forward.

Relaxing into the drive, the man just held the wheel steady as he continued on down the row. The goal was to have corn and cabbage planted, but if he was going to get caught up with the almanac schedule, he might have to take on some extra hands…

The tractor stopped.

Jonathan lurched into the steering wheel. It was only after the fact that the realization hit him. It wasn’t a stall, the plow had hit something. “Oh, God damn,” the man swore under his breath. The engine seized, then summarily died.

Martha had heard it. He could see his wife walking back from the house. Holding up a hand, he waved the woman back as he jumped down. “It’s all right. Something in the ground,” the man shouted, before glancing back at the plow as he stepped to the back.

Over on the porch of the house, the radio seemed to skip several frequencies. “Bottom of the seventh inning, Twins and Indians, the score now…”

Kneeling down, the man looked over where the plow seemed lodged in a purplish sand.. Flecks of something like gold stood out. It was, quite simply, the oddest thing he’d ever seen. Reaching down, the man pinched a bit of the odd substance. It looked like sand -- it had a grit to it -- but it felt more like... gelatin?

The radio slid over another band of stations. Andy Williams suddenly came across the air, singing, “A fool never learns and I’m gonna do the very foolish thing...”

There was a moment where Jonathan stopped being curious and a sense of dread sank in. The hair stood up on the back of his neck. It felt like...

It felt like there was someone standing over his shoulder.

From underneath the plow, the purple goo seemed to shift and move on its own. It floated up from the ground. Large droplets at first, then a stream. A series of streams. Jonathan took several steps back, watching with his jaw agape as a purple ball formed in mid-air.

When he finally found his voice, the man shouted, “Martha, get in the house!”

The purple ball just hung in the air. Hovering, like a bee over a flower. Except, there were no wings. It was just a... ball.

A ball of what, Jonathan was certain he had no idea.

A series of lights seemed to flicker around the ball. Then, he could hear his own voice echo back at him as he heard, “Martha, get in the house!”

The man took another step back.

The ball started to change. Subtle at first, expanding outward until something like arms, legs, and a head began to appear. The roughly humanoid shape was like a figure made of a purple clay, until there was a shimmer and...

And then Jonathan Kent found himself looking at a boy.

He couldn’t be more than ten years old. A mop of dark hair and a pair of blue eyes that seemed to glow. He was dressed in a blue shirt and red shorts, with red boots and a crest emblazoned across the front like a giant S.

The child’s feet silently touched down on the ground. He looked directly at the man. And then he said, “There is no cause for alarm.” Holding out his arms, palms open, the boy inclined his head toward the man, then slowly turned and did the same toward the woman. When he had turned back to Jonathan a moment later, he said, “I mean you no harm.”

Jonathan shot a glance over at Martha. She was giving him the same look. Mouth still agape, the man turned back toward the boy with more questions than he knew how to ask.

Hands still raised, the boy gestured faintly to indicate the spot that the plow had hit. “I was dormant here. It was never my intention to disturb you,” the strange youth offered. Then paused a moment, again looked at the man and then the woman. This time, when he spoke again, he said, “I have frightened you. My appearance is meant to be non-threatening. Is there a different form that I could assume which may put you more at ease?”

During the War, Jonathan had seen a lot of things he couldn’t explain. More than a couple he didn’t care to recall. Still, he’d have thought himself crazy for what he was about to say.

“You’re not human.”

Now it was the boy’s turn to be taken aback. Or, at least, he seemed uncertain of how to respond. “That is correct,” the youth stated finally. “I am still calculating my period of dormancy. Has your species made contact with non-human lifeforms?”

“Non-human lifeforms,” Jonathan echoed. He was trying to wrap his brain around that statement. He thought he understood it, but he didn’t like the implication.

“You mean animals?” Martha uttered, speaking up from where she stood off a distance.

The boy gave a tilt of his head. “Curious,” he uttered aloud, as though not certain, himself, just what to think of the two of them.

Jonathan recovered enough to ask, “Who are you?”

The boy looked back at the man. For a brief moment, the boy seemed to flicker and the purple clay figure underneath was visible. “As you have observed, this appearance is an illusion. Though, it is not my intent to deceive you,” the strange figure offered, as the child-like appearance again shimmered into being. “This form is intended to facilitate interaction. I am a what, rather than a who. A tool, or machine, if you will.”

“All right,” the man uttered, holding up a hand as he asked, “What are you?”

“I am a protoplasmic matrix. Or just matrix, if you prefer,” the youth answered, with the same seeming candor as before. Slowly, the child-like figure lowered its arms and then gestured toward the man as it asked, “To whom do I have the honor of addressing?”

The man’s jaw hung open a second time. The honor of addressing? Well, this was just a first time for everything. “Name’s Kent,” the man stated flatly.

“Mister Kent,” the boy intoned politely, then turned toward the woman as he asked, “And you are Mrs. Kent?”

“I’ll ask the questions, if you don’t mind,” Jonathan uttered. Hearing his own voice, he realized it was a tad more forceful than he’d intended.

Turning back toward the man, the child seemed to give a nod of acknowledgement. “I do not,” the boy responded.

Which, honestly, threw the man off for a moment as he hadn’t expected a response. Or, that response, anyway. When he recovered, the man asked, “You referred to yourself as a tool. Were you left here?”

“I am designed for exploration and research,” the boy stated, preferencing the explanation as he added, “I was conducting a geological survey of this area when I lost contact with my home observatory. When that happened, I assumed my input was no longer required and shut down.”

Yeah, this was going exactly where Jonathan had hoped that it wasn’t. “And this observatory,” the man began, pausing there as his mind was still working through the implications. A machine? No way he was Russian. Jonathan couldn’t fathom anyone with technology like this. “It's on another planet.”

Yeah, it sounded crazy. Even to him, and he’d just said it aloud.

“Mars?”

The child’s head tilted in the other direction. After a short pause, as though mulling that question over, the boy responded, “I am unfamiliar with an astronomical unit of that designation. Do you refer to a world within your solar system or outside?”

“Mars is the red planet,” Jonathan answered, in his mind trying to recall his school science lessons. “It's the fourth planet from our sun.”

“Noted,” the boy chirped, as a planetarium seemed to pop into being right over the man’s head.

“Holy Jesus...” the man uttered, taking yet another step back as he craned his head back to what seemed a night’s sky at mid-day.

“This is your solar system as I recorded it when I arrived here,” The child explained, reaching up to motion toward a red object. “So this planet is Mars,” the boy remarked, before pointing to a blue-green orb. “My creators know your world only by its astronomical designation Y-two-one-seven. How is it called by your people?”

Pursing his lips, the man just blurted out, “How long were you lying in that ground?”

A tangent. The boy seemed to pause, as though considering the question. Or, perhaps, how to address the question. “It is difficult to correlate time as it is perceived in different star systems. Without a connection to Kelex, I am unable to determine the present Krypton Standard Time,” the boy offered, all of which sailed straight over the man’s head.

“I’ll take that as you're not sure.”

“Accurate,” the boy affirmed with a slight nod. “I require further analysis of your stellar bodies to arrive at that answer. However, I have not previously recorded human development of electromagnetic frequencies or internal combustion engines,” the strange youth clarified, gesturing first toward the radio and then back to the tractor behind him. “Clearly, a significant period of human societal development has occured in my dormancy.”

“Earth,” Jonathan offered finally. When the boy again tilted his head, the man explained, “We call our planet Earth.”

“Thank you,” the boy offered politely.

Gesturing up at the planetarium, the man threw whatever sanity aside as he asked what seemed, bizarrely, the only sane question. “So you’re not from any of these planets, I take it?”

The planetarium illusion seemed to dissolve. For a brief moment, Jonathan got the sense that something like a fine sand was hanging in the air, before the boy drew his attention back to the youth as he said, “I originate from a planet located in a different star system, which my creators named Krypton.”

The man seemed to weigh that for a moment. “And Kelex is..?” the man asked, recalling the boy’s words from earlier.

The head tilt again. After a brief pause, the child spoke and offered, “Based on a limited perception of humanity’s present level of technology, it is difficult to articulate a response that may be within your comprehension.”

“Huh,” Jonathan uttered gruffly.

The grunt seemed to prompt the boy to consider his earlier statement. “I do not mean to demean or seem dismissive. It is merely a difficulty in composing a translation.”

The man merely gave a nod. Then, he started to walk around the child-like figure. “I take it you’re not intending violence,” the man observed candidly, rationalizing aloud as he explained, “If you were, you wouldn’t be lying in the dirt or having this conversation with me.”

“So why come here?”

The man and the boy each looked over toward the woman as she spoke. Gesturing faintly as she spoke, Martha asked, “If you’re from outer space, why come to Earth at all?”

The boy seemed to consider his response for a moment. Then he finally spoke and posed, “Your people developed telescopes in order to study the stars. Why did they do that?”

“You’re answering a question with a question,” Jonathan remarked from behind the boy.

“Because I believe our answers are one in the same,” the strange youth answered, turning to look at the man for a moment, then back over to Martha as he said, “And hope to provide you a human example that you may better associate with.”

“So you’re a….” Jonathan began, finding himself at a pause. What would someone from Krypton be called? If someone from Mars was a Martian, then: “Kryptonian?”

“No, but I was invented by the Kryptonians.” the matrix supplied in answer. “Three matrices dispatched to three different astronomical objects in order to answer several questions about those planets. I was the matrix assigned to study this planet you call Earth.”

“So what were the questions?” Martha asked. When both Jonathan and the boy had looked her way again, she added, “The ones you were sent her to answer.”

“Is there life on this planet? What kind? Does the life exhibit art, music, language, or demonstrate social constructs that may be unique to it?” the boy rattled off, before he paused and stated, “I am not a living being as you are, but if I understand my creator’s desires then I believe the ultimate question is, are we alone in the universe?

Are we alone in the universe. Jonathan couldn’t have said he hadn’t heard the question posed before. Perhaps a dozen times. “That is the ultimate question,” the man echoed finally.

The boy turned to regard the man for a moment. “It resonates with you?”

“I think I understand it, yes,” Jonathan answered, oddly finding himself at ease with the strange figure.

The man glanced over to his wife for a moment, as though debating his next words carefully. Then, turned and asked,“You still have no contact with your observatory, I take it?”

“I have initiated a signal to indicate that updated information is available,” the boy responded simply. “However, due to the distances involved, it will be approximately one of your years before any response may be forthcoming.”

“Well, I seem to have plowed your resting spot,” Jonathan noted, laying a hand on the till. Glancing down at the boy, the farmed asked pointedly, “What will you do until then?”

The matrix again gave a tilt of its head as it contemplated the inquiry. Then, when he had looked up again, asked, “You appear to be in the process of tilling the soil. May I be of assistance?”
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Hidden 3 yrs ago 3 yrs ago Post by BangoSkank
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BangoSkank Halfway Intriguing Halfling

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Two voices on the line, two different sides of the country.

"He just left with the box, met a few of my guys and he seems ok, he's trying [*buzzing noise*]. He's definitely trying."
"What does he know?"
"Doesn't seem like he knows much, been in the ice and all, but one thing, we have to look in to one thing. And I mean right now. We talked a little, about coming back. The ship that picked him up out of the drink, it was the Ishii. They had him [*buzzing noise*]."
"Fuck."
"Yeah."
"Did he know the significance?"
"No, didn't seem like he did. But-"
"Yeah. I know."
"He's not ready for this shit [*buzzing noise*]. It's a different world, it's so goddamned different from what we knew and he-"
"Don't tell him shit."
"I don't like it. I don't like keeping secrets from him. He deserves better than that."
"Deserve doesn't have shit to do with it."
"He's going to start asking questions. [*buzzing noise*] isn't the type to just go along, you know that, and I can't lie to him. Not to him."
"We will deal with that when we come to it."
"Listen, I can't lie to him. I can decide not to tell him things, to protect him I can do that, but I can't lie to him."

The line went silent for a moment.

"[*buzzing noise*] is an idealist in a less than ideal world. We don't deal with the world as we would like it to be, we deal with what we have. What we have right now is a big shit sandwich and we're all going to have to take a bite. You tell him there is work to be done. A soldier's work. There's a place here for him still, but if he starts digging too fast."
"What? What if he does?"
"We will deal with that when we come to it, if we come to it. For now we manage him. Surface answers. Let him figure things out organically, slowly. We control the pace."




San Francisco, California
January 1st 1968



I walked back to my apartment a little over an hour into the year. It had been good for me. We shared some stories, shared a beer. I wore my Captain America Smile. It's always strange to me to hear how similar but how different our experiences were. Stranger still to hear how people perceived me, mostly still do. Those feelings, the way people imagine Captain America to be, have only grown stronger in these last decades.

It's like I died 20 years ago, yet some version of me became immortal.

There was Captain America and there was Steven Rogers. Captain America was a propaganda poster, a figment, a smiling face, and Steven Rogers was a young man in the 1940s who dreamed of being a cartoonist and ended up a soldier. Both of them were dead but I was still around. Twenty Five years old in 1968. Built like a brick shit house, pardon my French, walking through the streets of San Francisco on New Years Eve feeling sorry for myself and feeling guilty for feeling sorry for myself when so many of my brothers were dead.

I ran through a list of names as I walked. Not knowing where to go or what to do. That list grows so long. I knew it was longer than I realized. Common sense told me it had grown considerably longer while I was a popsicle. I felt tears running down my cheeks, but slowly and sparsely, stubborn. I fought them back but it was a losing fight. I was a mess. Survivor's guilt, maybe, but naming it didn't change anything. Dum Dum helped, I knew I wasn't alone. I knew I had a purpose, or at least there was a purpose Dum Dum envisioned for me, but I felt this great pressure pushing down on me.

Dum Dum he wanted me out there, wanted me building a new life, leading the future. All I wanted was to sleep. I knew it then but would never admit it, I wanted to return to the ice. To where Bucky was smiling that goofy smile, Peggy was shooting me those eyes of hers, Dum Dum was right there at my side backing my every play. All my other brothers, we were young and we were doing the right thing. The life of Steve Rogers instead of whoever the fuck I was now.

I kept walking, I made it back home, and I climbed in to bed. I'd won the war tonight. I was still kicking. Tomorrow would be another battle. At least I had my shield back.
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Hidden 3 yrs ago 3 yrs ago Post by Bounce
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"Superboy Begins" | Part I | [ prev | next ]
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S M A L L V I L L E
Kansas, United States of America
September 7, 1966

“...weather tomorrow, hold on. We’re getting word through Associated Press that there’s an incident in New York harbor. An ocean cruise liner, the Hanseatic, has caught fire. I say again, an ocean liner has caught fire in New York’s harbor. More on this story as it develops.”

The sound of the newspaper folding crackled, as Jonathan adjusted how he was seated in the recliner. Peering from over the top of the paper, the man glanced over at the television set. Were they going to get to the weather?

“Matrix,” the man uttered aloud.

There was a pause, silence following save for the round of rustling paper as the man folded the newspaper and set it aside. Glancing over at the sofa, the man asked, “Have you seen Matrix lately?”

Rolling her head to the side, Martha glanced over as she offered, “He’s probably in the Fortress of Solitude.”

The man’s head rolled forward. “The what?”

“The barn loft,” Martha said. “It’s where he goes to... I don’t know, re-charge maybe?”

“Huh,” the man uttered, as he folded his hands down into his. He just seemed to sit there for a moment, then, “He’s so good at just being invisible, I never even thought about where he went.”

Martha shifted on the sofa, so that she was turned on her side as she glanced over at her husband. “I threw that old cot we had up there, in case he ever wanted to lay down, but it doesn’t look like it’s ever been touched.”

“Huh,” Jonathan echoed softly, still in thought.

“I also told him he was welcome to use the bathroom in the house, but he never looks dirty,” Martha added, as she continued.

“I don’t think what we see is who he is,” Jonathan offered, glancing back over at his wife.

Propping her head up on one arm, the woman answered, “When you put it that way, it sounds ominous.”

Now that she said it, he supposed that it was. They were living with a disembodied alien thing in the house. Which had abilities that were simply not human. How wasn’t that ominous? “I just remember that purple orb, hanging in the air,” the man recalled, thinking back to the tractor accident. “I kind of feel like maybe that’s the real Matrix.”

“Makes sense,” Martha noted. When Jonathan looked back her way, she explained, “Well, he said his appearance was for interaction. Can you imagine having a conversation with a ball?”

With a soft grunt, Jonathan lifted himself from out of the chair.

As he stood, he heard Martha add, “It’s hard to believe that he isn’t... real.

“I don’t know about those Kryptonians, but,” Jonathan remarked, shuffling around as he looked for his shoes. As he prepared to step outside, he finished the statement, “Sometimes I feel like Matrix is more real than some people we know.”

Exiting from out of the house, the man made his way over to the barn that was set off to one side of the property. Pushing the doors open, he could peer through the dim light to make out the outline of the tractor and other equipment that was in there. At one time, they’d thought about having horses. Or goats. But, it had become Jonathan’s workshop.

“Matrix?”

He paused in the doorway. No answer. Making his way inside, he felt around toward the back for the ladder that led up to the loft.

As he hauled himself up onto the partial second floor of the loft, he could see the outline of the boy. He had adopted a more human appearance, at least in terms of clothing. Now, he wore a red tank top with a pair of denim overalls. If one paid close attention to the details, the same strange S-in-a-triangle logo was still present, this time on the buttons.

From what Jonathan had gathered, it was something of a maker’s mark. “Matrix?” the man repeated.

The boy was staring out the open barn window, his arms resting on the ledge as he stared off into space.

After an awkward moment of silence, Jonathan hesitantly reached out a hand to tap the youth on the shoulder. He connected, so the boy wasn’t just a hologram, but there was still no response. Taking hold of the boy’s shoulder, the man slowly turned the youth to face him. “You there, son?”

What could Jonathan do if he wasn’t? He couldn’t exactly take his local Matrix to the Sears Roebuck for repair.

The boy’s eyes flickered. Then he blinked and moved his head, looking up at the man as he answered, “Yes, Mister Kent?”

“You seemed like you were a million miles away,” Jonathan noted softly. Glancing around the loft, he spied the cot that Martha had mentioned. Shuffling over toward it, the man sat so that he was closer with the boy’s eye level -- as relative as that may or may not have been. “Everything okay?”

“I have been unable to detect any frequencies originating from the Krypton System,” the boy supplied in answer. Then seemed to change topics as he asked, “Was there something that you required?”

“Nothing that couldn’t wait,” the man admitted, before he clarified, “I was wondering what your thoughts were on tomorrow’s weather forecast.”

A swirl of light formed in front of the man, as a holographic depiction of Kansas appeared, with an overlay of clouds. “Present atmospheric conditions indicate precipitation with some fog in early morning. I estimate the high temperature will be seventy-two degrees. Relative humidity will be sixty-eight percent.”

Glancing at the projection a moment, the man shifted his attention back to the youth. “Should we hold off harvesting the south field?”

There was a pause, as the boy seemed to be calculating his response. “I do not believe that will be necessary,” the youth remarked finally.

The man gave a nod. He glanced around for a moment, then something caught his eye. Getting up from the cot, he stretched out as he bent down to pick up a pail. It was just an ordinary, if old, pail. He’d bought it off an old dairy farmer at a flea market. Except, this one was in better condition than he recalled.

Turning the pail over in his hands, the man turned back to the boy to ask, “Can you return to Krypton?”

“Krypton is approximately twenty-seven lightyears from your solar system,” Matrix supplied. Then, when the answer seemed to merely prompt a shrug from the main, explained, “Without assistance, the voyage to the edge of your solar system would take ten years, nine days, seventeen hours under ideal circumstances.”

He’d known that space was large, but ten years to get past Pluto? Obviously, he didn’t have a good concept of the size or scope of these things. “So ten years to get on the highway, then what?”

“At my top speed in interstellar space, seventy-three thousand of your years,” Matrix answered succinctly. “However, it is a statistical improbability that I would be able to operate continuously for that span of time.”

That statement made Jonathan switch topics for a moment. “What is your lifespan? Or... average lifespan”

“Your question presumes that I am alive,” the boy remarked. When the man merely gave a nod, the youth answered, “With proper upkeep and maintenance, indefinite. However, interstellar space is an environment of extremes.”

Well, that answered one mystery. Safe to say that Matrix hadn’t traveled to Earth on his own. “So you got here by a ship of some kind?”

“You think in three dimensions,” the boy stated. At the look of confusion, the boy held up his hands as a geometric diagram popped into view as he illustrated, “Travel involves a point of origin and a destination, with the distance involved being a static length between two points.”

“You say that like there’s more than three dimensions,” Jonathan observed wryly.

“Accepting for the sake of our conversation that there are,” Matrix responded, without dropping a beat, as the hologram seemed to fold in on itself. “Now, in an alternate dimension, or examining the dimensions along an alternate perspective, the origin and the destination may overlap another, in which case the travel between them is…”

“...like me walking through that door,” Jonathan surmised, eliciting a nod from the boy. “And that’s how Kryptonians travel?”

“No, that is how a matrix travels,” the boy responded frankly. Then, explained, “Passing beyond three dimensions inflicts stress that morphs and alters the structure of an object as it traverses the fold.”

It brought back to mind the conversation with Martha. “But you,” Jonathan began, pointing the pail toward the boy as he added, “The real you...”

“My physical structure is malleable, designed to both compress and expand,” the boy confirmed. Then, glanced back at the window before he said, “I was aware when I was provided my directive that it was a one-way trip.”

“You’re homesick,” Jonathan realized aloud.

The youth turned back to regard the man. If Jonathan wasn’t mistaken, he’d say that he’d just insulted the boy. “I am a machine. I am not capable of being homesick,” Matrix refuted simply. “However, I am... curious, regarding the loss of contact with Krypton.”

Jonathan couldn’t help a small level of amusement at the boy’s insistence he wasn’t homesick. It was very human. In fact, for a moment, it was easy to forget the child was an illusion. Probably a good time to switch topics again. “Is this the pail I tossed out the other day?” the man asked, turning the pail over in his hands.

The boy gave a nod. “I have repaired it.”

“Why? It’s just a pail. Easy to replace,” the man asked, more curious about the answer than anything else.

“It is for me,” the boy answered cryptically.

When Jonathan gave a quizzical look, the boy paused as he tried to compose an explanation.“I sleep in the pail,” he remarked finally. Not an entirely accurate description, but the best of the available translations.

“What?” Jonathan uttered, finding himself confused about what he was hearing.

“I produce a field that pushes or holds my physical form in a particular shape. When I want to...” the boy began, pausing there a moment to allow for a translation to process, “...restart my processes, or check that my function is operating normally, I need to shut off those fields.”

“And then you’re no longer solid,” Jonathan realized aloud, finding it odd to think of the boy as being a liquid. Semi-solid? A metal like mercury? He could recall the purple sand having a consistency like gelatin.

So that was why the pail. “Well, we can at least get you a better pail,” the man offered, holding up the beaten, weathered flea market buy.

At that offer, the boy just cocked his head to one side. Jonathan could see the question forming in his boy’s expression, though he hadn’t anticipated the ask.

“Is there something wrong with the one that I have?”

“Jonathan?”

Martha’s voice rose up from below. Lowering the pail back to the floor, the man called out, “Up here.” Then, when the woman’s head poked up at the top of the ladder asked, “Is everything all right?”

“You should come see the news,” Martha offered, giving Jonathan a hand as he helped her to her feet. “And Matrix. I think you’ll really get a kick out of it.”

The two males exchanged a look. “CBS?” the boy asked.

It was their usual evening broadcast. A wave of his hand signaled a flicker, as a holographic projection of the televised signal appeared in mid-air.

Through grainy, off-color resolution, they could make out a harbor. A large ship had smoking rolling off of it, as what looked like a tornado swirled around it.

“...what you are seeing is footage from hours ago, recorded by our affiliate in New York,” the narration supplied, from the disembodied projection.

The image then jumped to an interview with a young, bald man in a white lab coat. “Our hope is that the Red Tornado project will be of use, not only here for domestic emergencies, but also abroad. Maybe even in Vietnam.”

“It’s a robot,” Martha explained.

“That tornado thing. It’s a robot, like Matrix.”
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