Scott Summers (
notrosecolored) wrote2015-10-10 11:17 am
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Sandy
Scott said he'd be there with information in five minutes. He was at the door, fully dressed and with his glasses replaced by a visor, in four. It took him that long to grab a cup of coffee and walk to the lounge where Sandy was waiting.
He got his debriefing on the move, and directly into his brain.
He felt better for having been looped in, however perfunctorily.
He walked in, and stayed standing up. Looked the guy over, and wondered why the hell this kid was the recon specialist and then moved on.
"New mutant manifested in Chicago. She's sitting in a jail cell, supposedly for her protection. We're going to get her. How long do you need to pack?"
He got his debriefing on the move, and directly into his brain.
He felt better for having been looped in, however perfunctorily.
He walked in, and stayed standing up. Looked the guy over, and wondered why the hell this kid was the recon specialist and then moved on.
"New mutant manifested in Chicago. She's sitting in a jail cell, supposedly for her protection. We're going to get her. How long do you need to pack?"
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It was dry, and it was wry, but it had happened often enough now to call a pattern and while it was interesting it struck him as a little bit strange. Not bad strange, but strange strange. Truth of the matter was, he was enough of a mess himself that there was a limit to how entangled in somebody else he'd get.
Wait, no there wasn't. There was a limit to how hard he'd push to get entangled.
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"I think it's for the same reason you're in the running for 'best friend'," he admitted with a little shrug. "You don't push. Give me enough time to think. In this case, you gave me enough time to realize I was jumping down your throat for no reason."
He let his own gaze hit the ceiling before refocusing.
"This is probably the longest I've been in a room with someone I wasn't interrogating or have known for ages for... Years. You can blame that too."
He'd forgotten how to small talk.
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Scott stopped there, backed up and tried again.
"My wife and I were together from the time we were just kids. I wasn't even social then, but she was a telepath. That made things easier. Now, I guess I'm just out of practice when it's not a mission or a debriefing."
Why was he sharing even that, he didn't know. Maybe because Sandy was sharing and reaching out and deciding he was safe with the lack of pushing. Maybe because he was lonely and could. Maybe it was just as simple as it being what seemed fair in the moment.
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He couldn't imagine how something like that could be. Wes and Dian had been... well, it made complete sense to him that they'd gone within days of each other. That was just how the universe was made. That was just right. Separating them was wrong on every level.
His own romantic adventures had consisted of exactly one person, who'd ambushed him with a kiss that had gotten him removed from his leadership position in the JSA and lost him one of his oldest friends. Looking back on it, there hadn't been much to the whole thing besides desperation: Kendra had been looking to escape the idea of being with Carter because of 'destiny' and he'd been looking for anything and anyone to hold onto. Anything or anyone to see him as worthy.
And of course, the one who'd kissed him had been destined for someone else. He'd saved the world, spent a year spread out throughout the Earth to hold it together and let it heal after Gog's attack, another prison, and he'd come back from that with hope. Hope that had, of course, eventually been dashed. Because some people were meant to be.
And he was meant to be...
Who knew.
"I never had friends my age. I was an orphan, and then I was with Wes and my aunt, and then I figured out what Wes was doing at night and joined him in his work. Then I was..." he spread his hands, "Sandy the Golden Boy, kid sidekick. The one whose hair got ruffled."
He ruffled his own hair and his eyes were anywhere but Scott's.
"Then I was the object lesson in the velvet cage."
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He couldn't stand more sympathy.
So silent respect and moving on in this slightly odd exchange of information felt about right.
"I don't remember much before Charles found me." Jack of Diamonds. He remembered that, but that wasn't something that was worth revisiting. "Being in the hospital, one foster home out of what must have been several." Those foster parents had died. "I was the first of us. Jean was the third. Bobby was between us and a couple of years younger . The kid sidekick and golden boy sounds a lot like him."
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He started working on the fries then.
"Bobby is the iceman you have, isn't he?"
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"Bobby's Iceman. The other couple who were there in the early days were Beast and Angel." Codenames. That was more useful, he realized. More public, more known.
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"I remember reading about them. Tight work. I missed that whole... period."
He cracked something like a smile.
"Threw Captain America for a bit of a loop. I never got to work with him during the war, but he'd assumed we were all long dead. Ted..." wait, codenames were better, "Wildcat, he still likes to greet him with a 'boo'."
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Scott gave a soft snort, and a minute shake of his head. "I'd love to tell you amusing stories about Captain America, but most of our encounters have ended with one or both of us flying through the air and occasionally through a wall or two." How could anyone not like Steve? It was a mystery, but Scott was that guy.
It wasn't the aggressive kind of hate he reserved for real bad guys, at least.
"I'm sure finding out there were some people from his past still around in his presence was startling, but I'm sure it wasn't a bad thing. I know he and Wolverine go back to the war, too."
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"I can understand that." And really, he could. "The guy's not exactly the bending type. Thankfully, most of our interactions have been about neighborly issues. Anything else, we leave to the League."
There was also a card game that no one but those invited ever mentioned, but that was private.
"Much easier to have Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman deal with it. Diana especially. We're a little short on diplomats around the brownstone."
Jay and Alan could, of course. They could be friendly. But when push came to shove, it usually involved Alan flashing them out and the JSA doing what they felt they had to do anyway. Not the most diplomatic.
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"I don't much care about what the other teams out there are doing," he admitted. It was an understatement. He couldn't have cared less if he tried. He had absolutely zero fucks to give, over all. "We're pretty narrow focus. We're not even considered a hero team, super human or otherwise. The people who make those kinds of classifications consider us a terrorist organization about as often as they don't. Those are the same people who dispatch the Avengers to deal with threats above and beyond their capacity to handle themselves, and Stark seems to be a big fan of registering people with special abilities. Meanwhile there's legislation proposed every other year to register mutants like we're a bunch of dangerous dogs and the lucky kids with an extra gene are being locked up in prison cells. I've got just about all I can handle without worrying about the Justice League and Superman."
He had some, um, issues with the Avengers, the government, and Stark.
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The JSA had been practically destroyed at one point, false charges brought against the founding members. Some of them even locked up. Carter still held a grudge, and it was one of the very few that Sandy agreed with. What it'd done to Kent, to Wes, to Terry...
"We practically had to start the whole thing up again when I got--" and there it was, almost a slip. He really wasn't used to talking so much. "When I woke up. Because they wouldn't fall in line." Because while the All-Stars had fought for their country, they'd refused to help with the witchhunts afterwards. "We're not mutant specific, or even metahuman specific, but we're firmly skeptical. Especially of any kind of registration."
Because the JSA kept their own records. And didn't trust those records to anyone BUT them. Family took care of their own. And they'd seen what had happened when other people got their hands on that kind of information.
Mr. America. His family.
The Haywoods.
They'd almost lost Tomcat and Ted hadn't even known he had a son the week before.
"I'm not making false equivalences." It wasn't the same. It couldn't be. The issue of mutants was so much bigger. "I'm just saying I wouldn't be here, we wouldn't be doing this, if Kara and Mr. Terrific and your professor didn't feel we were aligned in some sense."
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He thought about and nearly was a much bigger smart ass about his agreement, but in the end went with the direct and simple, and hopefully the unmistakable.
"I don't have any trouble believing that or objections to working with you. There aren't many scenarios I can see putting us in direct conflict." Very, very few, actually. That was a good thing, because he could think of lots of reasons he'd conflict with lots of groups. He was good at anticipating trouble.
The near miss didn't go unnoticed, but it got the same response as his mention of Jean. Respect, but without pushing.
"I'm just..." Bitter. Disillusioned. Angry. Sick of putting kids in the ground. "Frustrated," he finally settled on.
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"It's a pretty terrible. I mean, why're we here, right? That kid couldn't be older than 12 and she's sitting in a cell underground getting treated like a goddamn monster."
And Scott might notice that Sand's voice got slightly sharper as he went along before settling out with a breath.
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Scott pulled one knee up, so the heel of his sneaker rested on the edge of his chair, and the light behind his glasses dimmed as he closed his eyes.
"Early on, you might've even convinced me to get on board with testing kids so they could be found before they manifested. Give them somewhere safe to learn to control it, knock out some of that fear and everything would be all right...."
He snorted. "We've got fucking hate groups storming the school gates. Go out on the street and mothers are pulling their kids away and everyone's wondering how many ways you can kill them. Nothing short of us being dead or 'cured' is going to satisfy them."
He'd... noticed the extra sharpness and cursing. Clearly, since he was talking this much.
"Including 12 year old little girls."
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He took another fry.
"And trust me, that's happening. It's like a constant itch under my skin."
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Scott wasn't prepared to join Magneto, he wasn't about to go off his rocker, not yet, but he was not the kid he had once been, either.
He stretched and stood up. "I'm gonna go ahead and suit up. Are you capable of riding in a car?" Hell, he didn't know.
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"If you can believe it, I can actually drive one."
But he pushed himself up from the chair and picked up his hat and his coat to suit up properly.
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He disappeared into the bathroom. "Good. I'm going to need some help on the trip back." Both in staying awake and having another adult in the car.
He was back out inside two minutes in throat to toe black leather, aside from the bright yellow X emblem on a shoulder. "Let's go save a kid."
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It didn't take long to get to the jail, park the SUV in a dark ally where it would go unnoticed for at least a while and to head in. He expected this to be a case of walking in, introducing himself to a kid and walking out again with minimal scuffle.
That wasn't what happened.
It wasn't a twelve year old that was waiting for them. It wasn't even law enforcement, though Stryker must have had one of his fanatical Purifier in the agency, though, because that was exactly who and what was waiting for them.
The suggestion of a trap was never too far from Scott's mind, but this had seemed routine enough that he was blindsided. His reaction times were fast, which meant he was able to say 'Trap', shift gears and start fighting fast, but that wasn't going to be enough. It wasn't going to be enough because he had walked into an underground, confined space and was outnumbered. If he even tried to use his optic blasts, he was going to bring the building down on top of himself.
They were apparently prepared for Sandy, or just wanted him out of the way fast, because it was Sandy who got hit first. There was some kind of bang that literally blew him apart. After that it was just chaos and close quarters righting.
The last thing he remembered before it all went dark was a loud crack, a flash of bright light behind his eyes and the taste of blood in his mouth when something a hell of a lot harder than even his skull impacted with the back of his head.
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The thing about Sand is that he really didn't like getting blown up, but he disliked his professional work being undermined even more. The fact that it had resulted in them losing track of a young girl (did she even exist?) and his new 'friend' getting knocked over the head just made him extra irritated.
But while his instinct initially was to do a bit of knocking around given their underground location, he knew that the most important thing was to find out where the issue in communication, either intercepted or false, was originating. And that meant letting the majority of his granules hide amongst the folds and equipment of the men who'd attacked them to 'follow' where they were taking Scott.
...hopefully Scott wouldn't be upset about this choice.
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These people wouldn't have hesitated to kill a child if it suited their purposes. They also didn't hesitate to vent some of their frustration on Scott, even after he was down and out. He was soundly kicked in the ribs by one of Stryker's men - one he'd managed to land an elbow in the face of - and had his arm stomped on by another he'd nearly put through a wall.
He was unconscious. He wasn't fighting back.
He wasn't fighting back when he was injected with something before he was moved, either. Between it and the whack to the skull, Scott stayed out while he was moved into the back of a van, tied with his hands behind his back, his ankles together and visor duct-taped down (they were taking no chances).
Then he was driven to another location - one far outside the City.
The new location was also under ground. There was a building on top but the van drove down to an underground garage where they unloaded Scott. They checked to make sure he was still alive once he was thumped to the floor in a very barren, dimly lit, cell.
Then they left, with the slam bang of a sliding door behind them.
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She was there, though. Blonde hair, blue eyes, tear stained cheeks and freckles and light dancing along her skin in flashes. She wasn't particularly close to Scott's room, but was apparently uninjured in spite of being handcuffed to a wall.
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