X-Men; X-Men 2
Page 22
On the surface, Jamie Madrox was her polar opposite, matching her fierce passion with an almost infuriating calm, still water where she was a roiling cataract. He was Canadian, from Saskatchewan, where the land is flat and covered with wheat. He was a farm boy and proud of it, he liked growing things, and soon after arriving at Xavier’s he took over the care and feeding of the estate’s formal garden. He was the only kid in school who could keep up with Tracy; that came from running mile after mile across the prairie, and from winters pounding up and down the community rink playing ice hockey. But what she really adored about him was his mouth. She tended to slash and burn anyone who crossed. She had a temper and a tendency to scorch those who ignited it. Jamie, though, had that trademark Canadian knack for irony. He’d smile at the person making fun, as though he was too dumb to realize what was being said, and then respond with such outward politesse that it took the other person a minute to realize how deftly the insult had been turned back. By then, of course, everyone else was in stitches laughing. There was always the possibility of a fight, but then again, Jamie was a farm boy and he had a farm boy’s physique.
He and Bobby Drake were roommates. Jamie didn’t mind that Bobby had adopted his style.
Tracy was waiting for him by the fountain that some Xavier ancestor had decided would be the perfect design element for the patio. The fact that it was a monstrosity, totally at odds with all the architectural elements around it, evidently hadn’t been a consideration. At one time or other, just about every student in the school had fantasized about using his or her mutant powers to make the fountain go away, but until somebody acted on those impulses, it was the ideal place to meet.
She’d been picking flowers, and as Jamie approached she held them out for him to take a sniff. Too much pollen, or dust or something; he knew right away he was in trouble. He started to back away, but the sneeze caught him in midstep. The way he reacted, it might as well have been a rocket engine firing. Off balance, he went straight down on his butt, landing hard at the very moment the force of the sneeze doubled him over . . .
. . . and, just like that, thirty identical copies of him filled the patio.
He took a great breath, desperate to calm himself before another such outburst triggered a second attack of doubling. That was his power, to take the kinetic energy of any physical blow and use it to manifest duplicates of himself.
Tracy’s power was the embodiment of her code name: Siryn.
She was startled enough when Jamie fell. Seeing him megadouble for the first time spooked her completely.
She screamed.
Jamie covered his ears, but that didn’t do much good as the sonic waves lanced right through the bones of his skull. The air around him shimmered with the raw force of her outburst, flowers and shrubs bent as if they’d been hit by a sudden gust of wind, and every lightbulb within eyesight instantly shattered.
Tracy stopped, covering her mouth with both hands in shock and shame as the echo of her shriek hung between them a few moments longer. She looked around at the shattered bulbs, the cracked and crazed windows, and she bolted.
Jamie knew better than to follow. He wiped his upper lip and took a big sniff to stop his nose from bleeding. Tracy hated losing control, and whenever she did she demanded to be left alone until she worked through it enough to come back and apologize.
He looked up, saw Scott Summers looking down from an upper-floor turret window, where Jamie knew the staff had their lounge, and shrugged. The course of true love—yada yada yada.
Scott offered a small smile he knew the boy down below couldn’t see and traced his fingers lightly over the hairline cracks that Siryn’s scream had caused in the windowpane. If Jamie’s doubles lasted long enough, he’d put them to work replacing the glass. Afterward, when he had the time, Scott would have to see if he could make the panes more resistant to sonic attack.
Everything all right?
His smile broadened inside at the sound of Jean’s thoughts mixing with his. It was the strangest and most wonderful sensation, to know that they were standing on opposite sides of the room yet to feel her inside himself, as real and tangible as could be. When she spoke to him telepathically, he processed it the same as verbal speech, but it came with so much more besides. He had a sense of her emotions, as well, layer upon layer of subtle textures that made the most innocent exchanges incredibly intimate. For someone as private, as guarded, as he, the miracle wasn’t that she could share herself so with him, but that he didn’t mind.
I think young Jamie’s going to need your services, Doctor, he thought.
Siryn? she asked, and her silent laughter thrilled him to the core. The poor boy must have such a headache! Then her manner turned serious and professional. Oh, dear, this actually could be serious. If he integrates his doubles before taking any medication, he’ll have to cope with a headache times thirty. But if all those doubles take a dose and then they integrate he’ll be processing thirty times the medication his body can safely absorb.
Can you help him? Scott asked.
Hush, she cautioned, and he knew she was multitasking as only she could, listening to the ongoing conversation with part of her brain while reaching out to Jamie Madrox with another, using her telepathy to effect a homeopathic remedy for his pain. The image that came to him, from Jean no doubt, was of a form of psychic acupuncture.
Satisfied that Jamie was in the best of hands, Scott turned back to the room, to behold a holographic image of a man’s head hovering at eye level above the portable projector that had been placed on the coffee table. It was a handsome face, almost that of a fallen archangel, tempered and textured by a lifetime of struggle, which had borne witness to horrors beyond imagination. Where Charles Xavier was bald, Eric Lehnsherr possessed a thick shock of white hair, swept back from the face in a leonine mane. Where Xavier’s smiles were generous and offered without reservation, Lehnsherr’s had an edge. Xavier looked at the world and saw its possibilities. Lehnsherr’s gaze was more guarded and wary. He had no trust in him, and when you looked into his eyes you felt as if he had no mercy, either. He was a man who’d long ago drawn his line in the sand: You stood beside him, or against him.
He was a mutant, as powerful in his own way as Xavier himself. When they were both younger, they had worked together. They’d been friends. Perhaps in some ways they still were. He held dominion over all the forces of magnetism; hence his code name, Magneto. Scott had seen the projections that Xavier had extrapolated of his power; given the right circumstances, it was conceivable that Eric Lehnsherr could manipulate the magnetic field of the Earth itself.
Months before, Lehnsherr had used Rogue and a metal called adamantium to power a generator that was designed to reconfigure the human genetic structure in such a way that everyone exposed to its energy field would be transformed into a mutant. His intent was to unleash this weapon on the world leaders gathered on nearby Ellis Island for the ceremonial opening of a United Nations conference. He believed that, by transforming all of them into mutants, he would force them to become more sympathetic to the fate of what was now their own kind.
Unfortunately, he’d underestimated the power of his device, and the awful consequences. The metamorphosis had proved unstable, resulting in the death of the subject within forty-eight hours. Worse, the effective radius of the energy wave would have encompassed almost the entire city, involving a population of millions.
Scott was leader of the team that had stopped him.
Xavier’s School had been founded with a dual purpose, both clandestine. On the one hand, he used a device he called Cerebro to identify those children on the cusp of adolescence whose mutant abilities had the greatest potential of going active with puberty. He sought them out and recruited them to his school. Here, they received a first-rate academic education; they also learned how to use their powers and the ethics of doing so responsibly.
At the same time, Xavier knew there were mutants—some, like Lehnsherr, already well established—who
had no regard for the constraints of society. To oppose such mutants, Xavier had established a strike force, which he code-named X-Men. The founding members were Scott, Jean Grey, and Storm. One other mutant had been involved in the confrontation with Magneto on Liberty Island, but Scott wasn’t sure if he qualified as a recruit. He didn’t seem interested in joining the team; it was more a marriage of necessity. His name was Logan; code name, Wolverine.
He’d left right afterward, and Scott hadn’t shed any tears, metaphorical or otherwise, to see him go, because it was becoming more and more apparent that the man had taken a bit of Jean’s heart with him.
Scott blinked, belatedly realizing that Xavier had spoken to him. He blinked again while he shifted mental gears to let the part of his consciousness that was paying attention move to the forefront. He had his own talents when it came to multitasking.
“My opinion,” Scott said, taking another moment to shrug his shoulders even though he’d actually made up his mind the moment he first heard the news reports. “Magneto’s behind this.”
Surprisingly, instead of the professor himself, it was Jean who disagreed.
“No, Scott,” she said. “I don’t think so.” Mentally she provided an update on Jamie: He’s fine and back together.
Xavier spoke now, thoughtfully: “While Eric is certainly capable of organizing something like this from prison—for him, such an act, such a gesture, is too . . . irrational. It does nothing to further his goal of mutant prosperity.”
“You mean superiority.”
“You’re right.” Xavier nodded. “If Eric had his way.”
“Think of the repercussions, Professor,” Scott said. “It pushes us into a corner, it forces everyone to choose sides. Mutants, good or evil, no more middle ground, no more equivocating.”
“You know how the government will respond,” Storm said. “They’ll reintroduce the Mutant Registration Act.”
“Or worse,” Xavier agreed.
“He’s a survivor of Auschwitz, Professor,” Scott said, returning the topic to Magneto. “Maybe this is his own little version of the Reichstag Fire. Maybe he figures, by provoking an extreme response against mutants, we’ll have no choice but to embrace his cause. Mutant superiority, mutant hegemony, guarantees mutant survival.”
“Do you really believe that, Scott?”
“He does, Professor. That’s what matters. I know he’s your friend. I know this school is as much his creation as yours, but he’s seen—he’s survived—the worst we can do to one another. I think that’s made him willing to do anything, anything, to prevent it from happening again. If that means destroying the village in order to save it, he’s there, locked and loaded.”
“The White House assassin’s the key,” Jean said.
Scott nodded agreement. “If the Feds had him, they’d have announced it. That means he’s on the run.”
“Could he have been working alone?”
“The only way to determine that,” Xavier decided, “is to find him before the authorities do. Using Cerebro, I’ve identified his signature and have been able to track it to the vicinity of Boston. Jean, Storm, I’d like you to take the Blackbird and make contact. Hopefully, through him, we can defuse this nightmare before it gets any further out of hand.”
Normally, the President’s “body man”—his personal aide—ushered visitors into the Oval Office. Today, it was a Secret Service agent, hard-bodied and hard-faced, chosen for his intimidating size and strength to match.
“Mr. President,” he said, stepping aside to allow the guest to enter as the President crossed the carpet with hands outstretched.
“William,” he said. “A helluva day!”
“I came as soon as I heard, sir,” the older man replied.
William Stryker stood a little shorter than the chief executive, but broader in the shoulders and the body. Looking at the pair of them, eyes instinctively went to Stryker as the more commanding presence. He had a full head of close-cropped hair that was still more pepper than salt, marking a distinct widow’s peak on a broad forehead above deep-set eyes that missed nothing and gave away even less. This was not a man to face at poker, nor at chess. His cheeks were clean-shaven, but he favored a neatly trimmed mustache and beard around his mouth. He was a rugged man and utterly direct, so much so that people’s first impressions cataloged him as having no subtlety or grace whatsoever, akin to plastering the shell of a Rolls-Royce over the body and soul of a Mack truck. It was a facade Stryker cultivated deliberately, and well. He made his career on the backs of adversaries who’d underestimated him. It was a mistake they rarely made twice, because he just as rarely allowed them to survive.
Without preamble, he leaned over the President’s desk and idly rubbed a finger across the gash made by the mutant’s knife.
“It was close, wasn’t it?” he said, in a voice as accustomed to being heard on a battlefield as in the halls of Congress. “Far closer than anyone’s admitted.”
George McKenna didn’t reply at once. He waited for the door to close, for the two men to be alone—that is, if he didn’t count the two Secret Service agents flanking the fireplace and a young woman standing over in the corner. Obviously a secretary, so unassuming and inconspicuous it was easy to forget she was even there. Which made Stryker smile to himself as he turned toward the President. From where she sat, she had a better view of the room than the two men, which meant in any combat situation she’d be the key player. The report he’d read mentioned that a female agent had shot the mutant and probably saved the President’s life. No doubt this was her.
McKenna finished pouring brandy and handed one of the cut crystal snifters to Stryker, indicating a seat on the couch. McKenna, being President, took the chair beside it.
“What do you need, William?” the President asked, meaning “What do you want?”
Stryker flicked his glance to the watching agents, which provoked a humorless chuckle from the President.
“They’re here for the duration, I’m afraid,” McKenna said, making a fair attempt to keep the comment light and casual. He was handling this better than Stryker had expected. “In fact, I had the devil’s own time keeping them from posting agents in my own damn bedroom.”
“I can imagine the first lady’s reaction, sir.”
“So could they. I think that’s why they caved.” The President took a small sip of brandy, letting the prompting expression on his face repeat the question he’d asked.
“Your authority, sir,” Stryker replied, “for a special operation.”
McKenna took another swallow of brandy and leaned back in his chair.
“And somehow I thought you’d come to talk about school reform.”
Stryker uttered a short, barklike laugh. “That was top of your schedule for today, as I recall. Funny you should mention it, though.”
He looked up, irritated, at the sound of a discreet knock. This time it was the President’s aide who stuck his head in. McKenna himself, Stryker noted, wasn’t surprised. The meeting wasn’t to be as private as he’d first assumed.
The new arrival was a face as well known on the nation’s airwaves as the President’s himself, as befit someone who’d made his own run for the White House in years past. Robert Kelly, senator from Massachusetts, was ambitious enough to try again, young enough to wait, smart enough to bide his time. In the meanwhile, he continued to build a strong activist record in Congress, reaching out to conservative and liberal constituencies alike with a success that hadn’t been seen since the campaign of RFK.
Stryker, who was good with details, noticed that the senator was in much better shape than he recalled. The man had a tendency to indulge himself in just about everything and used to have a knack for making a custom-tailored wardrobe look rumpled and off the rack. Not anymore. There was a crispness to his appearance and manner that echoed Stryker’s own.
“I’m not sure if the two of you have ever officially met,” the President said. “Senator Robert Kelly of Massachusetts,
William Stryker—”
“Of No-Name, Nevada,” Stryker finished.
“Mr. Stryker,” Kelly said, smiling at the small joke as the two men shook hands.
“Call me William . . . Bobby,” Stryker replied, intentionally using the diminutive. Kelly didn’t appear to notice. His grip had improved, too. Used to be he’d close his hand around the other person’s fingers in what Stryker thought of as a sissy shake. This one was palm to palm, man to man, strong and secure.
“Mr. President,” Kelly said as he sat on the couch opposite, in a way that allowed him to relate to both McKenna and Stryker without moving. The President, in his chair, was able to do the same. Stryker, though, oriented as he was toward the President, was forced to turn right around to face Kelly, partially turning his back to McKenna. It was a superb tactical move, immediately putting Stryker in an awkward position. Stryker, who was far more used to doing this to others, wasn’t happy, but he’d be damned if he’d allow either man to see.
“I appreciate your allowing me to sit in on this meeting,” Kelly said.
“I value your input, Robert, as I do William’s. He’s with the . . . intelligence community . . .”
“Which element?” Kelly asked.
“It’s not important,” the President said.
“It’s just that I’m ranking member of the Joint Intelligence Committee—”
“Robert,” the President said, allowing the faintest edge to his voice, “it’s not important.”
“Yes, sir. Sorry, sir.”
“As I was saying, his task force has been studying the mutant phenomenon for us since . . . well, before my time in office.”
“So I’ve heard, albeit only as rumors. For a man as influential as you, William, you leave damn small footprints.”
“I must be slipping,” Stryker said with a smile. “The idea is to leave no footprints at all.”
“You definitely have some interesting ideas . . . and methods.”