X Men 1 & 2 Novelization html

























X Men


ebook:guid-6ee87e609abd4b88a67e9ddb318c6003
Rusc_0345466519
X-Men; X-Men 2
Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith; Chris Claremont


en



0345466519



























 





A novelization by




Kristine Kathryn Rusch and

Dean Wesley Smith



Based on the story by

Tom DeSanto & Bryan Singer



Screenplay by David Hayter



BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK





This is a bundled book. You may experience changes in navigation
functionality, but the content has not been affected.







X-Men







Table of Contents




Cover Page


Title Page



Dedication



Acknowledgments



Prolog



Chapter 1



Chapter 2



Chapter 3



Chapter 4



Chapter 5



Chapter 6



Chapter 7



Chapter 8



Chapter 9



Chapter 10



Chapter 11



Chapter 12



Chapter 13



Chapter 14



Chapter 15



Chapter 16



Chapter 17



Chapter 18



Chapter 19



Chapter 20



Chapter 21



Chapter 22



Chapter 23



Chapter 24



Chapter 25



Chapter 26



Chapter 27



Chapter 28



Chapter 29



Epilog



About the Authors



Copyright




 






X-Men 2




Title Page



Dedication



Chapter 1



Chapter 2



Chapter 3



Chapter 4



Chapter 5



Chapter 6



Chapter 7



Chapter 8



Chapter 9



Chapter 10



Chapter 11



Chapter 12



Chapter 13



Chapter 14



Chapter 15



Chapter 16



Chapter 17



Epilogue



Acknowledgments



Also available from Del Rey Books



Copyright








 





For Keith DeCandido






 






Acknowledgments




We would like to thank J. Steven York, John Ordover,

Merrilee Heifetz, and Ginger Clark for their help.

And a special thanks to Steve Saffel,

who went far beyond the call of duty.





 







Prolog





Poland—1944




The hard, cold rain pounded out of the sky, soaking
clothes, changing the dirt to slippery mud, beating the life out of
everyone it touched.



Eric Lehnsherr stood in the mud beside his parents, his
coat wet clear through to his shirt, his small hand grasping the back
of his father’s wool pants just above the knee. His child’s
eyes were wide at what was happening around him. His mother and father,
both strong and sturdy people, held him close, tried to comfort him,
shelter him, but the events of that hour were like the rain: impossible
to avoid.



The mass of people scared him, making him want to run
away. The guards made him want to cry. But he did neither. Instead he
focused on the twisting spirals of barbed wire that covered the tops of
the fences in front of and around them. Through the rain the points of
the wire seemed to sparkle, calling to him.



Suddenly the German guards shoved everyone forward,
making them walk between two tall wire fences with more twisting barbed
wire lining the top. Eric didn’t want to stare at all the faces
watching them from the other side of the fences. Those people were all
terribly sad and tired, and many were crying as they watched. Some
clutched their arms, as if trying to cover the numbers that had been
tattooed there.



Instead he traced the curved barbed wire and its shining
points as he and his parents continued, slowly moving forward. It was
as if that wire were his only friend.



At one point he slipped in the mud, but his father held
him up. His mother clutched both him and his father. Together they
moved almost as one, following the wet rows of people in front of them,
trying to not look at the guards.



Eric told himself he would be strong, for his parents. Strong like the wire.



Ahead of them people were screaming now, and Eric
didn’t want to get any closer, but his father and the guards
moved them along, without saying a word. The people behind them crowded
in tight, sometimes bumping him.



A woman behind Eric was crying softly.



The barbed wire on the top of the fence seemed to spin
along with them, twisting and sparkling in the hard rain. There had
always been something about metal that he loved. The fence and the
sharp points of the wire didn’t seem dangerous to him. He wished
instead that he could climb up there and touch them.



Suddenly, ahead of them, the people moved out of the way,
and from where he stood Eric could see that the path turned into two
paths, both of which were lined with tall weaved-wire fences. The
guards were opening and closing the gates as people went through.



A big guard in a German uniform shoved into them, poking
at Eric’s mother with a rifle, speaking much too fast for Eric to
understand.



His father understood, though, and shook his head. “No.” His mother held on to Eric even tighter. So tight it hurt.



The guard poked at them with the rifle and began shouting.



Eric clung to his father, not knowing what was happening.



Then his mother screamed.



“No!” his father said again.



Suddenly two more German guards appeared and yanked Eric
away from his parents. With a quick turn they shoved him along after
the other children who were being pushed and carried down one of the
paths between rows of fences. Many of the children were screaming and
shouting and crying. Others were strangely quiet.



The guards then turned their attention to Eric’s parents and shoved them down the other path.



Eric started back to them, crying now. He wasn’t going to leave them.



He wasn’t!



They couldn’t make him!



But the two guards picked him up and carried him back
along the fenced path. Their hands were rough and hurt his skin through
his wet coat.



He kicked at them, screamed at them, but they ignored him. They took him through the weaved barbed-wire gate and closed it.



He could still see his parents through the gate, his
mother reaching out for him despite the restraint of a guard, screaming
his name. His father just stood there, a guard’s rifle pointed
squarely at his chest.



Eric tried to fight his way back to them, but the guards wouldn’t let him down.



He glanced at the fence. A thought flashed across his
mind. He needed to be like metal, heavier. He needed to be much
heavier, so the guards couldn’t carry him anymore!



His feet touched the ground, and he planted them hard in
the mud, focused on stopping. He wasn’t going anywhere without
his parents.



He was going to rip down the fence between them, so they could go with him.



He focused all his anger and fear on the wire gate—and it started to shake.



The guards pulled at him, but now they couldn’t
move him. He was like the heaviest of metals, too heavy for the guards
to budge. They yanked on his arms, hurting him even more, but he
didn’t care. He wouldn’t go with them, not without his
mother and father.



He took a step back toward his parents, dragging the guards in the mud with him.



The metal gate twisted and bent in front of him. Some of
the strands of barbed wire began breaking, like weak string. Eric knew
that gate couldn’t stop him.



One guard tried to pick him up and failed, swearing so fast that Eric didn’t understand.



All Eric wanted was to tear down the fence and let his
parents come with him. If the Germans wanted him, then his parents
would have to come too.



Another guard came up, swearing angrily at the other two.



Eric just focused on the fence, ripping it apart, making
it go away. The coiled strands of sparkling barbed wire along the top
started to uncurl, whipping about in the air like angry serpents.



The entire compound suddenly got very silent. Only the
sound of the rain remained, pounding down in the mud, accented by the
snaps of the breaking wire.



More strands broke, and the entire weaved-wire gate bowed
toward Eric. It was as if something massive pushed from the other side.



Suddenly the rain stopped hitting Eric as the third guard
loomed over him. The other two still were pulling on Eric’s arms,
futilely, hurting him, making him madder and madder.



And the angrier Eric got, the more the gate and the fences shook and broke apart.



The new guard swore again, then raised his rifle.



Eric could hear his mother’s scream cut through the silence and the rain.



His father took a step toward him, wide eyed, only to be stopped.



Then the butt of the guard’s rifle came down hard.



For an instant—just an instant—the wonderful feeling of metal closed in around him as he slumped into the mud.



The last thing he saw was the gate falling, his parents on the other side, trying to get to him, held back by guards.



It was an image he took down into blackness.



It was the last time he would ever see them.




Southern California—1986




The rough, water-colored mural of the blue sky, white
clouds, and distant horizons hung on hooks from the ceiling of the gym,
just behind the basketball backboard, vibrating to the loud music. The
bottom third of the large painting was a crude drawing of a city
skyline, with silhouettes of buildings in gray paint and black outline.
The most recognizable shape was of the Statue of Liberty. Someone had
even cut a hole where her torch would be and had put a light bulb
there.



In front of the painting, high school kids danced, ate at
tables, and shouted over the music at the annual “Rhapsody in
Blue” prom. The tablecloths were blue, the napkins were blue, and
most of the girls had on far too much blue eye shadow. Over half the
boys’ tuxes were powder blue, though under the blue lights that
filled the air and lit the background of the gym, the tuxes looked dark
and faded.



Scott Summers stood facing Selena Ki, his date, just to
the right of the dance floor. He was thin and lanky, with thick brown
hair. His smile and friendly personality made him popular among most of
the kids. So far, in all the years of high school, he’d made
every official dance. At seventeen, this was his second “Rhapsody
in Blue” prom.



Selena was considered one of the best-looking girls in
the school. One of the school’s cheerleaders, she pretty much
could have gone out with anyone she wanted. Scott felt lucky she had
said yes when he asked her the first time.



He and Selena had been going out for at least a month.
Scott liked her, but he was having trouble with her jealousy. Two of
his friends had warned him about that problem, but he hadn’t
listened. Now he wished he had. If he even looked at another girl she
got angry. And right now she was really, really mad.



“I don’t ever want to talk to you again!” Selena shouted at Scott over the music.



“But—” Scott tried to say. Too late.
She had already turned and stormed away through the crowd, her full,
blue-and-white dress skirt brushing dancers out of the way.



He went after her, ignoring a few friends who stood to the side, shaking their heads.



Scott couldn’t believe this was happening, not
during the prom. So what if he’d talked to Bonnie yesterday after
class? He was here with Selena, wasn’t he? He didn’t even
like Bonnie. She’d just come up to him, said “Hi.”
But then, worst of all, she had given him a hug, right in front of
Selena.



Was it his fault that Bonnie was a hugging kind of person?



It seemed Selena thought it was. She wasn’t even
allowing him the opportunity to explain. Or talk to her at all. And the
night was still young. They still had dancing to do, plus two other
parties.



This was so stupid. And it was beginning to make him mad.



She stormed out into the hall and stopped, with Scott
right behind her. At least out here the music level was almost
bearable. Maybe out here she would let him explain that nothing was
going to come between them.



He had almost reached her when she spun off and slipped into the girls’ room.



He stared after her and set his jaw grimly. That wasn’t going to stop him. Not this time.



He started for the door.



“Scott?” a voice said, bringing him up just before he was about to enter.



He glanced around and found Mr. Daniels, his math teacher from third period.



Daniels pointed to the men’s room, just a few steps
away. “Don’t you think you’d be more comfortable in
there?”



“Yeah,” Scott said. “But I have to talk to her.”



Daniels nodded. “I understand that. But just not in there. Trust me, eventually they all come out.”



Despite the logic of what Daniels was saying, Scott was so mad he didn’t know what to do.



And he was frustrated. Why was she doing this to him?
What had he done to deserve having his night ruined, all because of her
irrational fit of jealousy?



Suddenly, a jabbing pain shot through the back of his head and into his eyes.



“Ahhhh,” he said, bending over, covering his eyes as they started to water.



“You all right, Summers?” Daniels asked.



Scott managed to nod, then quickly headed for the
men’s room. The pain was intense. So intense that his eyes felt
as if they were trying to explode out of his head.



Inside the men’s room about half a dozen others
were smoking and laughing. The room was filled with the gray smoke.
Scott bumped against a wall near the sink. The agony seemed to echo
around inside his head.



Stan Hensey moved over and stood beside him as Scott
pressed his eyes, trying to will the pain away. Stan and Scott had been
friends for years, even though Stan hung out most of the time with the
druggies.



“Selena, huh?” Stan asked. “You need to lighten up, dude. She’s just a girl.”



Scott shook his head. “Not her. My head. My eyes!”



“What’s wrong with your eyes?” Stan
asked, putting a hand on Scott’s shoulder. “I got some
contact lotion. Might help.”



“Thanks.” Scott stood and carefully opened his eyes.



“Holy—” Stan said, stumbling back. The look on his face was one of complete terror.



Scott wiped the tears away as the pain got worse and
worse. “What’s wrong?” He could still see Stan, but
everything seemed strange, as if he were peering through a red haze.



“Your eyes, man,” Stan said, still backing away. “They’re red. Really red. Pupils and all.”



Two other guys in the room glanced over at Scott, then jerked back.



Suddenly Scott could feel the pain come together at a
point above the bridge of his nose. And then it vanished, as if it
hadn’t been there at all. Instead there was energy, flowing in
his head. Energy he could feel like water running through his fingers.



Energy that wanted out.



For an instant it felt as if the entire inside of his
head was flowing out his eyes. The energy burst out through them,
smashing into the wall in front of him in a bright red beam of light.



The wall exploded.



And then a massive hole appeared. Scott could see inside
the girls’ rest room. Selena and three other girls screamed and
jumped away from the mirror.



The wall on the other side of the girls’ rest room exploded outward.



At that moment Scott realized he was the one who was doing the damage. His eyes were.



He closed them, jamming his hands over them, and dropped to the ground.



Once again the energy seemed to flow around and around
inside his head, calm now, but waiting to be released again when he
opened his eyes.



Well, he wasn’t going to open them.



Around him the screams and shouts and yelling started.
Shortly after that there were sirens. He never did get the chance to
tell Selena he was sorry.




Kenya—1988




The deep blue of the sky made the sun look almost white.
The heat came off the ground in waves, so even the scant shade under
the thin trees seemed useless as shelter.



The tribal village filled an open area along the edge of
the sparse forest; the dirt around the tents was baked dry and hard. A
dozen children of different ages played a game of tag, touching each
other with sticks, then running to avoid the one who was
“it.”



Ororo, a young girl of twelve with a white streak running
through her dark hair, played with them. Ororo was proud of herself
because so far she had been able to keep from getting tagged. Sweat was
streaming off her head and arms, but she didn’t care. She was
having fun.



And Ororo loved the warm air, the slight breeze that
dried her sweat, the bright sun. She just loved being outside and had
for as long as she could remember. To her the sun, the rain, the winds
had always been things of joy and pleasure. This game with the other
children just provided another chance to play in the sun.



The game continued until suddenly she was in the wrong
place at the wrong time. The tap of the stick on her arm was like an
insect sting, and the laughter of the others told her she was it.



Ororo could feel fear grabbing at her stomach. The last
time she had been tapped when they played this game, she hadn’t
been able to tag anyone else and had ended up being laughed at for
days. She was used to being laughed at. She was different from the
others, and they all knew it somehow. Though except for the white
streak in her hair, she didn’t know how she was different. But
she too knew it.



Usually she didn’t mind not playing with the
others, staying apart and alone. But this time, since she was playing,
she was going to make sure the laughing didn’t happen again. She
would tag someone else.



Two younger boys and a girl her age were standing a short
distance away, taunting her to get them. She knew that all three of
them were faster, far faster than she was. It would be a waste of time
to chase them.



So she turned and headed the other way, running around one tent as fast as she could go, hoping to surprise someone.



The idea didn’t work. The other kids there saw her coming and ran, faster than her.



All the kids in the village were faster than her, and they all knew it.



But she could still tag one of them if she got lucky.



For the longest time she kept trying, chasing, not giving
up. The heat was making her pant. She knew she should stop and drink,
but if she did the game would end and she would be laughed at again.



They were already starting to laugh, and to call her names. And the more they laughed, the harder she tried.



Then things got worse. As she lunged to try to catch one younger boy, she tripped.



Ororo put her hands under her to catch herself. The sound
of her stick snapping was like a slap from a tribal elder against her
cheek.



Ororo pushed herself back to her feet, the brown dirt
sticking to her sweating arms and legs. Her stick was broken in half.
Now there was no way she could win. No way at all.



One of the kids saw what had happened, and in a moment,
before she could even look up from her broken stick, they had all
surrounded her, laughing, poking at her with their sticks.



“Stop!” she shouted, but that just made them
laugh even harder, taunting her that she was too slow to make them
stop, that she had broken her stick. And with her stick broken, how
could she tag them?



Ororo was getting angrier and angrier as the others kept poking at her. Then one of them hit her.



The hit stung like a bee.



It sounded like someone had snapped their fingers. She could feel the pain of it coming off her shoulder.



She tried to move away, but they wouldn’t let her, keeping her surrounded, hitting her more and more.



Snap! Snap!



Each hit hurt really bad. “Stop!” she shouted. “Stop it now!”



They laughed and hit her again and again.



And each hit hurt her more and more, until it became one big stinging pain on her back and shoulders and arms.



They were all hitting her with their sticks, telling her to run. They wanted to see her run.



But Ororo knew she couldn’t outrun them, so she
just stood there, turning to avoid the hits as best she could, as she
would avoid the stings of swarming insects.



They laughed and yelled at her to run. It had become a new game of sorts, and she had become the object of the game.



Snap! Snap! Snap! The sticks whipped at her skin, drawing blood in places, raising welts in others.



Her voice was getting louder and louder. “Stop it! Stop it!”



But that, too, just made them hit her harder and harder.



Why were they doing this to her?



All Ororo wanted them to do was stop.



Why couldn’t they just leave her alone? She could feel her face getting hot from the anger.



All she wanted to do was hit them all back, show them how it felt.



How it hurt.



But they kept on, and it seemed to go on forever.



As Ororo got angrier and angrier, she could feel the air around her clutching at her, pulling her.



Snap! Snap-snap-snap! The hits were coming even faster now, the laughter less and less.



She spun and moved, trying to get out of the way of each hit, usually failing.



She cried, and the nightmare continued.



Between sobs, she yelled at them to stop.



They kept going.



She wished for something to stop them.



Then everything changed. The hitting slowed, then
stopped, as the other children looked up in awe at what was happening
around them. The sky was falling, in big white flakes.



White, cold flakes in the heat of the afternoon, out of the blue, cloudless sky.



They fell slowly at first. Then faster, harder.



But none of the snow was falling on her. She was so
angry, so racked with sobs, that she didn’t notice, didn’t
care what was happening. Her shoulders and arms still stung where the
other kids had hit her, and she wanted the sky to keep falling on them
all, to hurt them all.



Gradually the white flakes falling from the clear, blue, cloudless heavens turned heavier, then became small chunks of ice.



The kids picked up the ice, looked at it. They laughed, staring upward as it pounded down.



It was still fun for them.



She dropped to the dry ground, sobbing as around her the falling ice got larger, still not touching her. Just them.



She stared at the other kids, the force of her anger more
overwhelming than any she had ever felt. It had built up in her for
years, like water behind a dam. And now the dam had burst, and she was
letting all the anger flow. She had wanted, more than anything, for the
sky to fall on them. It was doing just that, but she wanted more.



She wanted them to hurt as she hurt.



The ice chunks coming from the cloudless heavens got
larger and larger. Soon the other children began shouting in pain. They
scattered, trying to run for the tents.



But now the chunks of ice were so large that they began
knocking the kids down, smashing into the tents, breaking off limbs
from the trees.



She cried even harder as the kids shouted and screamed for it to stop.



Now they knew how she felt.



Maybe next time they wouldn’t torment her again.



Ororo looked around, and it dawned upon her that the flakes of sky and ice hadn’t hit her.



She put her head down in the dirt, feeling the ground and
the comfort of the solidness. Every part of her back and arms hurt, yet
the anger was ebbing. In its place was a deep feeling of knowing the
winds and rains, of understanding the clouds and the sky. She could
feel the water in the earth and the energy of the sun. All felt
comforting. Deep inside she understood them, knew them all, as if they
were her friends.



And as if she were theirs.



It wasn’t until much later that she learned that, at that moment, her hair had turned as white as the falling sky.




Mississippi—The Not-Too-Distant Future




Marie traced the line on the map while pointing with her
other hand to the picture of the Statue of Liberty on her bedroom wall.
She had spent hours staring at that statue, and at the map, dreaming of
traveling there, seeing the sights. Now she was sharing her dream with
David.



David was from her school, and at sixteen, the same age. They had just started to date.



“I want to spend time in New York City,”
Marie said, smiling at David. He was sitting on the edge of her bed.
Her parents were downstairs watching television and the door was open,
but it still felt odd to have him in her room. Exciting, too. Only a
few of her girlfriends had ever seen the inside of her bedroom.



“You going to live there?” David asked.



“No,” she said, tracing the map farther
north. “Niagara Falls, then into Canada. Toronto, west to
Calgary, then on to Anchorage.”



“Wow,” David said, clearly impressed. He
stood and moved over beside her, staring at the map. “Won’t
it be kinda cold?”



“Of course it will,” she said, laughing. “Otherwise it wouldn’t be an adventure.”



She could feel his closeness, his shoulder rubbing against her shoulder.



“When are you gonna do this?”



Marie shrugged. “I don’t know. After school, but before college.”



He reached over and rested his hand on her shoulder. She
could feel it, almost like a hot iron touching her, yet it didn’t
burn. It excited her, made her stomach twist like it had never twisted
before. She had never been this close to a boy before. Not like this.



Not in her bedroom with her parents downstairs.



“So,” she said, turning to face him a little, “what do you want to do now?”



He looked right into her eyes. Then he smiled, sending shivers down her back.



“I don’t know,” he said. “What do you want to do?”



He moved closer to her, and she could smell him. She was
having trouble breathing, yet there was no way in the world she wanted
him to move away.



“I don’t know,” she managed.



He turned her slightly so they were facing each other, then slowly he moved forward until he was kissing her.



It was as if a surge of electricity shot through every nerve cell in her body.



A thousand thoughts flashed through her mind.



He tastes good.



My parents are downstairs.



What will my friends think?



His lips feel wonderful.



I can’t breathe.



I want to kiss him harder.



Then suddenly it all changed.



As she put her arms around him, kissing him back, suddenly his mind opened up to her.



She knew what he was thinking, knew what he liked, what he hated, what he liked to do with the guys, what he wanted them to do.



David’s eyes snapped open.



His hands locked around her in a terrifying grip.



She tried to pull away, but it felt as if he were pouring his every thought, his every wish, his every dream into her head.



Energy crackled around them, until finally she managed to pull away.



He dropped to the floor, his eyes open wide.



The next thing she knew she was screaming. The images of
David’s life were still tumbling in her head, filling her mind,
mixing with her own until she almost couldn’t tell which were
hers and which were his.



He lay on the floor, twitching. It didn’t look like he was breathing.



Had she killed him?



She hadn’t done anything!



Her parents slammed into the room behind her as she
realized she was still screaming, backed against the wall, staring at
his body. She tried to push his memories away without success.



Her father immediately dropped to the floor and checked David, then started CPR.



Her mother came to her, but Marie didn’t want her mother to touch her.



“I didn’t mean to,” she said softly.



Inside her head, his memories fought with hers. His
images of her fought with how she saw herself. What he had wanted to do
shocked her.



“Honey, what happened?” her mother asked desperately.



“Call a damned ambulance!” her father shouted.



Her mother jumped, then ran for the door as her father gave David mouth-to-mouth, then pumped his chest.



Marie pushed herself against the wall. She so wanted
David to be all right. So wanted his memories and thoughts to leave her
mind.



“I didn’t do anything,” she said, softly. But inside, she knew that she had.



She just didn’t know what.





 







Chapter One





Washington, DC—One Year Later




The cold of the winter day was long forgotten inside the
Senate Hearing Room, as the packed bodies in the gallery and the heat
from the television lights forced the temperature in the room up far
above normal. Several of the senators, despite the intense media
scrutiny of these hearings, had taken off their jackets. Many viewers
in the balcony were fanning themselves with notebooks or loose paper.



Professor Charles Xavier sat in his wheelchair near the
center of the room, watching patiently. He could tell that the crowd
was a very hostile one. He didn’t need to read their minds to
sense that. Their hostility clearly emerged with every action of the
hearings’ chairman, the flamboyant senator Robert Kelly.



Kelly was a white-faced, white-haired man who was clearly
using the hearings on mutant registration to propel his own career
closer to the White House. And it seemed as though he had other demons
that were driving him, though it wasn’t quite clear to Professor
Xavier what those demons were. At least not yet.



In front of the hot room, at the witness table, sat Dr.
Jean Grey. Even alone at the long wooden table, she had a commanding
presence. A strong, good-looking woman in her early thirties, she had
been called upon to explain to the Senate Hearing the basic science
behind the emergence of mutants.



Professor Xavier had helped her extensively with the
drafting of her presentation. They had gone over it time and again so
that it would be clear not only to the senators, but to the audience on
the other side of the television cameras.



And considering the hot-button interest the public had
taken in the mutant registration law, there was no doubt her
presentation would make the news. To many, mutants had proved ripe for
persecution based on the long-standing tradition of fearing anything
unknown. So the best defense, Jean and the professor had determined,
was to help the regular people from middle America understand mutants
and what they really were. The bigots like Senator Kelly would fold
like wet tissue if public opinion shifted against them.



But for the moment, the public was squarely against
mutants. And the public was scared to death. Senator Kelly was a master
of playing that to the hilt.



“Lights, please?” Jean said.



A few people murmured something about that helping the heat, at least.



As the lights dimmed around him, the professor
didn’t need to shift in his wheelchair to watch the show. Instead
he focused his gaze straight ahead and opened his mind, to let the
feelings of those around him flow in, but only a little. Not enough to
read their thoughts—just enough to gauge how reaction to the
presentation was going.



He could feel boredom and hostility. Jean had a very deep
hole to climb out of, it seemed. They all did, if they were ever going
to be accepted by society and defeat this registration law.



“DNA,” Jean said, spacing each letter as she
started her presentation. “It is the basic building block of
evolution. Changes in our DNA are the reason we have evolved from
single-celled organisms to Homo sapiens.”



Figures on the screen showed the various stages of
evolution, along with a graph displaying a diagonal line that indicated
the ascent of the human animal: the evolution of man.



One image took over the screen, focusing attention on the lowest order of humanoid: Homo habilis, a primitive apelike humanoid covered in thick hair.



Around him, Professor Xavier could feel the crowd’s
interest increase, ever so slightly. And some revulsion emerged, as men
and women confronted images of what they were descended from.



“Within our DNA,” Jean said, explaining what
was happening on the screen, “are the genes that decide our
physical characteristics. When these active genes mutate, we see
changes in the body.”



The image on the screen began to mutate, and the apelike humanoid slowly started looking more and more human.



The professor could tell many of the people around him
were becoming fascinated. Perfect. It was just what he and Jean had
hoped would be their reaction at this point.



“These evolutionary changes are subtle, and normally take thousands of years.”



The image of the now-human man on the screen froze, and
his body went transparent. Twenty percent of it was marked in blue,
representing moving, active genes. The remainder of the image of the
man was marked in red, showing static, dormant genes.



Now the people around the professor were really caught
up. The room fell silent, except for a few whispers coming from a
couple of the senators who clearly were not paying any attention and
didn’t want to.



One of them was the chairman, Senator Kelly.



“Within each of us,” Jean said, “lie
not only the millions of genes which dictate our physical makeup, but
millions upon millions more whose purpose has been completely unknown
to us.”



She paused for a breath, then went on. “These
unused genes have traditionally been referred to as ‘junk
DNA.’ In fact, over eighty percent of our genetic structure is
made up of this so-called junk DNA.”



The words PRESENT DAY appeared on the screen, as a number of the red, dormant genes began to move, slowly at first, then faster and faster.



“In recent years,” Jean said, “and for
reasons which are still a mystery, we have seen this latent DNA in our
bodies mutating. These mutations manifest at puberty, and are often
triggered by periods of heightened emotional stress.”



With a glow of pride, the professor knew that—at
this moment—with the exception of a few of the closed-minded
senators, Jean had her audience. Despite the heat, they were paying
rapt attention.



“The new DNA strands caused by the mutations are
producing some admittedly startling results. In other words, this
previously unused DNA is not ‘junk’ DNA at all, but rather
a vast storehouse which contains the almost limitless potential for
human advancement.”



Suddenly the graphic on the screen showed the man
performing amazing feats. First he grew in size; then he moved an
object with his mind; then he changed the color of his skin.



“Ladies and gentlemen, we are now seeing the
beginnings of another stage of human evolution. Not a new race of
creatures to be feared, but rather the opportunity to find advancement
within us all.”



The lights slowly brightened.



Scanning the room once again, the professor could tell
that Jean and the presentation had accomplished what they had hoped.
With understanding, the perception of mutants seemed to have begun to
shift ever so subtly. The professor began to pick up feelings of
uncertainty, of people rethinking their positions. And the level of
hostility was clearly lower. But now came the hard part. Jean had to
hold this hard-won ground against Senator Kelly.



Kelly turned from the man he’d been talking to and
smiled at Jean, like a father might smile at a small child who had just
done something cute. “Thank you for the wonderful cartoon, Ms.
Grey,” he said in a vaguely patronizing tone. “It was
quite—how should I say it?—educational.”



Some of the crowd snickered.



“However,” Kelly went on, “it failed to
address the larger issue which, I might add, is the focus of this
hearing. Three words: Are mutants dangerous?”



There was a low rumbling among the crowd, and the professor could feel new and increased uncertainty flowing among the people.



“Well, Senator Kelly,” Jean responded,
“don’t you think that’s an unfair question? The wrong
person behind the wheel of a car can be dangerous.”



“Well,” Kelly countered, “we do license people to drive.”



The professor listened carefully to the murmurs of the
crowd as Senator Kelly’s aide, Henry Guyrich, moved behind the
panel and handed Kelly a black folder filled with documents.



“But we don’t license people to live, Senator,” Jean said.



Kelly said nothing.



“It is fact, Senator,” Jean said, pressing
her point, “that mutants who have revealed themselves publicly
have been met with fear, hostility, and even violence.”



The professor could feel that things were again turning
against Jean. This time, though, as he scanned the crowd with his mind,
he felt a new presence, a powerful and familiar one. He turned around
in his wheelchair and studied the back of the room, which rose above
him.



There, by the door, in the shadows where he couldn’t be seen, stood a dark figure wearing a very expensive suit.



It was his old friend Eric. What was he doing here?



The professor nodded, and Eric did the same. The professor turned back to face the front, his attention again on the crowd.



“It is because of that ever-present
hostility,” Jean said, “that I am urging the Senate to vote
against mutant registration. To force mutants to expose themselves will
only further subject them to unnecessary prejudice.”



Senator Kelly smiled and wiped a drop of sweat from the
side of his head. The professor could tell he was going to attack Jean,
and attack her hard—as they had expected.



“Expose themselves?” Kelly asked, his voice
calm and strong over the silent crowd as he played to the television
cameras. “What is it that the mutant community has to
hide?”



“I didn’t say they had anything to hide,” Jean said. “What I did say—”



“Let me show you what’s being hidden,”
Senator Kelly said, talking over Jean without hesitation. He raised a
blown-up photo of a car on a freeway. The car appeared to have been
melted. “This was taken by a state police officer in Secaucus,
New Jersey. A man in a minor altercation literally melted the car in
front of him.”



Professor Xavier set his jaw. The crowd was again turning
fearful, and hostile. More and more fans were back at work trying to
cool the heat.



“May I see that photo, Senator?” Jean asked calmly.



He ignored her question and spoke to the cameras and crowd. “This is not an isolated incident, Ms. Grey.”



Kelly picked up the folder filled with documents and held
it up for the crowd to see. “I have a list of names here.
Identified mutants, living right here in the United States.”



“Senator Kelly!” Jean said, her voice becoming more forceful.



But he just ignored her. “A girl in Illinois who
can walk through walls. What is to stop her from walking into a bank
vault? Or even the White House?”



Senator Kelly, an intense look of concern pasted on his
face, pointed out at the crowd and the cameras. “Or your
house?”



Professor Xavier knew, right at that moment, that they
had lost. The crowd’s anger and hostility were back in full
force. Heated discussions and scattered debates erupted throughout the
chamber. Senator Kelly was getting them to ignore the facts and focus
on their own fears of the unknown.



Jean tried to shout over the noise, to engage the senator. “You are not being—”



“And there are even rumors, Ms. Grey,” Kelly
said, turning to stare directly at her, “of mutants so powerful
that they can enter our minds and control our thoughts, taking away our
God-given free will.”



A number of people actually gasped at that statement.



“Ms. Grey, Americans deserve the right to decide
whether they want their children to be in school with mutants. To be
taught by mutants.” Kelly leaned forward. “You’re a
schoolteacher. I would think that the rights of parents and students
alike should be of paramount importance to you.”



“They are,” Jean said firmly. “But this is not the way to help them. I would like to see that folder.”



“Why?” Kelly asked, pounding the folder, then
waving it in front of the crowd. “All I’m saying is that
parents have the right to know the dangers to their children.
That’s the purpose of registration.”



“It is not the purpose,” Jean shouted,
clearly angry now. “Your purpose is to discriminate and torture a
group of citizens, just because you are afraid of them. Now I would
like to see your so-called list and evidence.”



She held her hand out.



Suddenly the folder flew from Kelly’s grasp toward Jean’s open hand.



Realization swept across her face, and Jean instantly
closed her hand and let her arm fall to her side. But the professor
knew the damage had been done. The folder dropped to the floor, photos
and papers spilling out.



Around him, the professor could tell that everyone was
uncertain what had happened. And they were very afraid at the same
time. It was clear to all of them that something unseen had come into
play in this hearing, though none of them knew what it might be.



The professor sighed and closed down his mind, shutting
out the sensations of the people around him. They had lost this battle,
that much was clear.



“Ladies and gentlemen,” Senator Kelly said,
now more than ever playing for the cameras. “The truth is that
mutants are very real and that they are among us. We must know who they
are, and above all, we must know what they can do.”



The crowd broke into cheering around the professor as he
turned and moved his wheelchair up the ramp toward the exit. It had
been a long shot, and he knew it.



From the almost-empty hallway outside the Hearing Room,
the professor could hear the debate continuing as a few friendly
senators tried to jump in to help Jean. But they were quickly
overwhelmed. It was clear that this bill would leave this hearing and
make its way to the main floor of the Senate. That would be the next
point at which it might be stopped. But he was going to have to do
better, if that was to happen.



In front of the professor, a man walked toward the main entrance. Eric Lehnsherr.



“What are you doing here?” the professor asked, just loud enough for Eric to hear.



Lehnsherr stopped and half turned, smiling.



“Why do you ask questions when you already know the answer?” Lehnsherr asked.



The professor moved up closer, until they faced each
other there in the high-ceilinged, tiled hallway. “Don’t
give up on them, Eric.”



“What would you have me do, Charles?” he
asked. “I’ve heard all these arguments before. Used very
well, if I remember.”



“That was a long time ago,” the professor said. “Mankind has evolved since then.”



“Yes,” Eric said. “Into us.”



The professor paused a moment, musing, then decided to seek out what he wanted to know. Slowly and carefully, he reached out.



Eric put a palm against the side of his head, then smiled. “Are you sneaking around in here, Charles?”



Eric clenched his fist, and the professor’s chair
pressed inward, as if it had suddenly been gripped by a giant hand.
Then the chair seemed to lift ever so slightly off the ground, as if in
a subtle warning.



“Whatever are you looking for?” Eric asked, still smiling, but adding an edge to his words.



“Hope, Eric,” the professor said calmly. “I’m looking for hope.”



The chair settled back to the tile floor, as if the hand had released it.



“I will bring you hope,” Eric said. “And I only ask one thing in return: Don’t get in my way.”



Eric Lehnsherr turned and walked away. Without looking
back, he said, “We are the future, Charles. Not them. They no
longer matter.”



Behind him the professor could hear the debate continuing
as his former ally pushed open the door and left. He hadn’t
responded to that last comment, because there was nothing left to be
said. He didn’t agree, and Eric knew it.



Regular people did matter. Now more than ever.





 







Chapter Two





Alberta, Canada




The snow was falling steadily, a light powder—the
only kind that could fall in such extreme temperatures. Even though it
was still daylight, the spotlight over the front door of the
Lion’s Den Bar and Grill was on. It cut through the snow but did
little to illuminate the few cars in the lot, the four
eighteen-wheelers that had been parked along the road, or the beat-up
camper that was sitting axle-deep in a small drift. Attached to the
back of the camper was an old trailer full of cord wood and a rusted
motorcycle. A small hand-lettered sign on the trailer read,
“Firewood for Sale.”



The inside of the Lion’s Den was as anyone might
expect from the outside: low lighting, smoke filled, far too many
calendars decorating the walls beside old signs, and animal heads
covered in dust and grease. This place was divided between a cafe on
one side and a bar on the other, with dirty bathrooms through doors in
the back.



Logan had been in a hundred places just like this one.
They all had decent food that the locals liked, served in large
portions. The drinks were strong, and the regulars didn’t much
like strangers. In every one of the places, Logan had been a stranger,
stopping to eat and have a few drinks, then moving on. He
couldn’t imagine ever settling down long enough to become a
regular anywhere.



He had just finished eating on the cafe side of the
joint, sitting in a booth, downing three cups of coffee with his steak.
Now he was at the bar, two stools down from an old, very unused
jukebox. A few drinks and he would be headed down the road again. There
was still plenty of time left in the day to make some miles. He had
nowhere in particular he was going; he just liked to keep moving. It
felt better that way.



Unlike the cafe side, with its smell of French fries and
chicken-fried steak, the bar stank of stale beer and too many
cigarettes. The floor was a dirty tile, and the tables were all scarred
with carved-in initials and epithets. At the moment there were four
patrons sitting at two tables, staring at him. They were clearly
regulars.



Drunk regulars.



He had ignored them when he came in, and he did the same
now, sitting with his back to the main room and the main door. He knew
he looked weird to most people: too much hair, an animal-like face. He
got a lot of stares and had long since given up caring.



The bartender, a man with a round, scarred face, moved in
behind the bar. Logan was just about to motion him over when some loud,
foot-stomping truck drivers came in. There was a grimy mirror set in
the wall behind the bottles of booze at the bar, and Logan could see
that there were four truckers, big gutted and no doubt smelling of too
many miles on the road. Logan was glad he wasn’t close enough to
catch that odor.



The four were escorting a girl. Clearly she had been
riding with them. They were all laughing, paying no attention, but
Logan watched as her eyes quickly sized up the place. No smile ever
crossed her face. He guessed that she was a runaway, and she was
dressed in rags, head to toe, with almost every inch of her skin
covered. Only her face and hands showed any exposed skin. He wondered
what she was hiding—then reminded himself to mind his own
business.



For Logan, minding his own business was what kept him going.



He tapped his after-dinner cigar in the ashtray, then motioned for the bartender.



“Yeah?” the scarred man asked. He moved
toward Logan, while nodding to the truck drivers over Logan’s
shoulder. “What can I get you?”



“Something on tap,” Logan said.



“What kind?”



“Surprise me,” Logan said wryly.



The bartender turned away without so much as a blink. He
was a big guy who nonetheless moved smoothly, which gave the impression
he was moving slowly instead. Logan had no doubt the bartender had
taken care of himself in more than one fight in this place.



The truck drivers crowded into a booth, with the young
girl sitting on a chair facing them. Logan could hear them laughing
again, but he paid no attention at all to what they were saying.



In front of him, a TV was bolted to the wall in the corner above the back bar. The news was on.



“Preparations are nearly completed for the upcoming
United Nations World Summit,” the announcer said. “With
nearly every invitation confirmed, the event promises to be the largest
single gathering of world leaders in history.”



Logan watched as the image on the screen changed from the
announcer’s bland face to an aerial shot of Ellis Island, with
the Statue of Liberty and Liberty Island close by in the background.



“The leaders of over two hundred nations will
discuss issues ranging from the world’s economic climate and
weapons treaties, to the mutant phenomenon and its impact on our world
stage.”



Logan snorted, then shook his head. This mutant thing
really had people spooked if it was coming down to discussing it at a
world conference. And scared people had a habit of becoming dangerous.



The bartender put Logan’s beer down in front of him, then turned to move away.



“There anything else on?”



The bartender shrugged and headed for the television. “Satellite’s busted. Only got two channels.”



He changed it from the news to a fuzzy image of a rerun of some stupid sitcom.



“That all right?”



“Perfect,” Logan said, taking a swig of his
beer. It was cold and tasted fresh. At least places like this usually
had good local brews. Good food, good beer—what more could a guy
ask for?



“Hey, Joe,” one of the drunk-sounding regulars shouted.



The bartender looked up and frowned.



“You ever seen a mutant, Joe?” the regular asked, pointing at the television and slurring his words.



Joe casually tossed the towel over his shoulder as he
moved to take the truck drivers’ order. “There’s no
mutant dumb enough to walk in here.”



“Got that right,” the drunk agreed.



Logan watched in the mirror, sipping his beer and smoking
his cigar, as the bartender talked with the drivers. He asked the young
girl if she wanted something. She shook her head, then stood and came
toward Logan and the bar.



He masked his curiosity as she moved in close to him. He
could smell her unwashed odor. Clearly she had been on the road for
some time and hadn’t been out of the clothes long enough to clean
them.



He could also sense the fear in her. Deep fear.



“Listen, can you help me?” she asked quietly.
“Please? I was hitchhiking and these guys won’t let me go.
I think they’re gonna try to—”



“Hey!” one of the truck drivers said loudly.



Logan watched him in the mirror. He was a big guy, and he
stood and moved toward the bar. This guy moved like a lumbering
elephant, though. Logan sized him up and decided that even the girl
could take him.



“I thought you were just going to the
bathroom,” the trucker said to the girl. The tone of his voice
clearly indicated that he had decided the girl was his property.



The girl looked at Logan, panic showing clearly in her
eyes, the smell of fear spreading from her like a wave of sickness,
choking the air.



Logan just sipped his beer, trying to ignore her. Minding
his own business was how he managed to get along, and minding his own
business right now was exactly what he was planning to do. He had his
own troubles, and she had hers.



Life was just tough that way.



“Come on, honey,” the truck driver said. He reached out and grabbed her arm.



She pulled back, hard. Freaked. “Don’t touch me! I told you, don’t touch me!”



He grabbed at her again, catching her hand. “I said come on. Do as I say!”



The instant he touched her hand, there was a flash. Not much of one, but enough to surprise Logan.



Then the trucker’s eyes went wide, as if he was in
shock. An instant later, he collapsed with a thud into a heap on the
floor.



Logan glanced down at where the trucker lay twitching.
His mouth and eyes were open, but his expression was blank. Then Logan
turned his attention back to the girl, who was shaking in fear and
anger. “Nice job,” he murmured.



“I told him not to touch me,” she said softly.



The other three truckers had realized what had happened, and they moved fast for an overweight bunch of middle-aged rednecks.



“Hank?” one of them said tentatively, kneeling beside the twitching body on the floor.



The girl instinctively stepped closer to Logan, standing between the bar stools. Her stink was putting him right off his beer.



“Get his head up,” one of the other truckers ordered anxiously.



Logan laughed inwardly. That was always good advice if a person might have a broken neck. It would kill them instantly.



“I’ll call an ambulance,” Joe the
bartender said in an almost bored fashion, then he turned to the phone
on the back bar. Logan was starting to like good old Joe more and more.



While two of the big guys tried to get their friend
breathing regularly again, the third stood and moved up to Logan.
“You wanna tell me what happened?”



Logan shrugged, tapping his cigar in the ashtray and
glancing down at the still-twitching trucker without turning fully
around. “I don’t know.”



“What do you mean you don’t know?” the guy demanded.



Logan watched the guy’s hands clench up into fists.
Clearly the man wanted a fight. This just might turn out to be a good
day after all.



“Maybe he’s sleepy,” Logan said sarcastically. “How would I know?”



The trucker grabbed the back of Logan’s shirt and
spun him around on the stool. “What? Are you trying to be funny?
Come on, just give me an excuse to stomp your ass.”



Logan put his cigar down in the ashtray. It still had
half way to burn, and he didn’t want to waste it. Then with a
quick spin, he drove his elbow directly into the trucker’s face.
The feeling of smashing flesh and the sound of the guy’s nose
breaking were beautiful. Pure poetry.



The trucker dropped to the tiled floor faster than his
friend had. Logan shook his head. These guys were big, which meant they
had more weight pulling them down. And clearly they had no threshold
for pain.



“That excuse enough for you?” Logan asked the driver as he lay there, clutching at his nose.



The other two were on Logan quick, considering their
size. He let them pin his arms, let them think they had him, as they
held him one on each side. If they really wanted a fight, he might as
well enjoy himself a little. Might not get this chance again for a
while.



The guy with the busted nose slowly climbed to his feet
and faced Logan, who was now pinioned between the trucker’s two
friends. Blood streamed down the guy’s chin and dripped on his
fat gut, turning his already stained shirt dark.



Logan just smiled.



That infuriated the guy even more, and he reared back. He put his anger behind his fist and hit Logan square in the face.



Logan moved his head slightly, timing the turn with the
punch. The blow hit him solidly across the chin. He’d felt worse
before. Not only was this guy fat, he was weak on top of it.



The guy looked surprised, and held his hand as if he had hurt it. More than likely the idiot had.



The two who thought they were holding Logan clutched tighter.



Logan shook his head from side to side. “That was pathetic,” he said.



The broken-nosed trucker took another full swing, this time hitting Logan in the gut.



Logan doubled over, pretending the guy had actually hurt
him. As he was bent over, he clenched his fists and pushed the knuckles
of each hand against a leg of one of his captors.



Then he popped his claws.



Twelve-inch metal claws shot from behind his knuckles.



Six razor-sharp claws stabbed through cloth, skin, and muscle as if it weren’t there.



The sound of metal echoed across the room.



Logan pulled his claws back in quickly. Both truckers suddenly shouted in pain and let go, each grabbing his leg.



The bloody-nosed trucker stared at his two friends as
they collapsed to the floor and screamed in pain, blood flowing from
their legs.



“What did you do?” he demanded, panic beginning to edge into his voice.



Logan stepped toward the man. He was no longer grinning. “You always ask the same stupid question?”



The guy backed away, slowly, grabbing glasses off of
tables and throwing them on the ground between them. Then he picked up
a metal bar tray, holding it between himself and Logan.



Logan’s fist shot out. His claws extended again and
skewered the tray. He yanked it out of the trucker’s hand and
tossed it away.



Then Logan grabbed the man’s bloodied shirt,
shoving the guy’s head hard against the rough wooden wall. He was
going to scare this guy, and scare him good.



While holding his opponent against the wall, he held up
his fist, claws extended. Then he reared back and made a forward
motion, as if to punch the guy, claws and all.



Behind him, the girl screamed as his claws sank into the
wall on both sides of the guy’s neck. His middle claw had
withdrawn just enough so that it only pricked the surface of the
guy’s neck.



The trucker looked as if he might faint, or be sick.
Either way, this just wasn’t fun any longer. What Logan really
wanted to do was fight. So he withdrew his claws.



“Run,” he said into the trucker’s face.



The man tripped over himself as he scrambled for the
door, clearly not caring about his friends, who were still writhing in
pain on the floor.



Logan took the moment to glance around. The girl also was
gone, and the bartender looked terrified now. The other drunk customers
were still sitting at their tables, petrified with shock.



Logan moved back up to the bar. “Sorry about the
mess, but they started it,” he said, nodding at the men on the
floor. “Add the repairs to their check.”



He picked up his half-finished cigar, put enough money on
the bar to pay for his beer, and headed out into the snow. There was
still time to make some miles.



Outside, he stopped and looked around. The girl was nowhere to be seen.



Too bad for her. He might have offered her a ride if she’d waited around long enough for him to get finished with his fun.



He shrugged and climbed into his camper, turning the key
and gunning it to life. Then he drove hard and fast through the snow to
get it out onto the road. He was a half mile down the highway when the
odor reached him.



He took his cigar out of his mouth and sniffed again,
just to be sure. Then he sighed and hit the brakes. No one was going to
hitch a ride without his permission. He didn’t care how young she
was.



Or how much trouble she was in.





 







Chapter Three





Alberta, Canada




Marie huddled under the tarp, shivering next to the cold
metal of a motorcycle, as the camper slid to a stop on the slick road.
For an instant she thought about making a run for it as fast as she
could. But where would she go? Back to the truckers? The bar? It was
snowing—she’d freeze to death before she got very far.



Maybe the guy was stopping for another reason. If she could just stay in here until they reached a town, then she would get out.



She still had the memories of the trucker swirling around
in her head. She had a clear picture of what he had planned on doing to
her. It disgusted her.



But the realization that he was planning on killing her,
just as he had done to two other girls, scared her even more. She
hadn’t been this terrified since she had run away from home.



She knew what he had done to those girls, where their
bodies were buried. Now she wished she had held the bastard longer,
drained everything from him, so there would be no chance of him ever
recovering. Just as his victims had not been given a chance.



Just as he hadn’t been planning on giving her a chance.



There truly were some animals in this world, human
animals, and she knew she was going to have to learn to deal with that
if she stayed on the run.



She held her breath, trying not to move at all as the intense quiet of the Canadian wilderness closed in around the camper.



She sat there, scared and cold, waiting.



Ever since what happened to David in her bedroom, her
life had been a waking nightmare. She had been scared more than not.
And very lonely.



At first she had tried to pretend that nothing had really
happened. She had pretended she hadn’t been cursed with his every
thought and memory. She had tried to convince herself that it had all
been her scared mind, making things up.



And after a month or so, she had succeeded. David’s
memories and thoughts had faded from her consciousness, and David had
recovered. Since everyone thought it was something wrong with David, no
one said much, and the incident was kept quiet around school.



She had even come to think the same thing, fooling herself that it was something wrong with David.



Then, a few months later, she had ended up with Sean at
the dance, caught in the moment, forgetting David and her first kiss
altogether. For an instant the kiss with Sean had been wonderful,
exciting. Like nothing else she had ever felt. Her heart had been
pounding, her every nerve wound tight.



Then, just as with David, everything about Sean had
seemed to flow into her, as if she were draining him, like drawing
water from a sink.



The next thing she knew, Sean was on the floor, his eyes wide. He was hardly breathing.



And she knew everything about him: his strengths, his habits, his loves.



She had stood over him saying over and over, “I didn’t do anything. I didn’t do anything.”



The rest was a nightmare. People scrambled around her,
trying to help Sean, get him to the hospital. She had tried to go back
to school a few days later, but Sean’s friends hadn’t let
her. They blamed her. Then, in defending herself, she had touched
another person, and she had stolen more thoughts and memories.



And she’d left that person with eyes wide open, almost not breathing, lying on the floor.



She had hurt someone else.



Again.



At that moment she had realized, with terrifying clarity,
that when she touched a person, she actually absorbed that
person’s thoughts, their memories, their life, even their
abilities—everything about them. She hurt them, even though she
didn’t want to hurt them.



From that moment on, she couldn’t stand the looks
she was getting from people, even from her parents. The word
“mutant” was starting to be whispered loudly when she
passed. So the night after she had tried to go back to school, she had
packed a few things, covered her body completely so no one could
accidentally touch her bare skin, left her parents a good-bye note, and
run away.



Now here she was, hiding in the stinking bathroom of a
man who clearly had strange abilities, just like she did. She
didn’t know why she had gone to him for help in the bar.
Something about him, even though he was the hairiest person she had
ever seen, had seemed to draw her. He looked almost more animal than
human, and when those claws had popped out of his fist, it had scared
her.



So why was she here?



How he had easily dealt with the three truckers—that had scared her even more. While he finished the fight, she had run.



Outside in the snow she had seen the camper, supposing it
must be his, figuring he would be leaving right behind her. She had
thought it would be her best choice to get away from there. She could
hide until he stopped in a town, then jump and run away.



But now, with the camper stopped on the side of the road,
a good distance from anywhere, it didn’t seem like such a good
choice after all.



The door to the camper opened, and the trailer rocked as
the hairy man climbed out. She could smell the biting odor of his
cigar. Maybe he was just getting something, then would go back to
driving.



She held her breath, not daring to make a sound.



“Get out!”



His voice seemed to come down on her like a sledgehammer. Her heart pounded. He knew she was here.



She eased back the tarp slowly and climbed out. The man
with the black hair and claws stood there, facing her across the small
space. The door to the camper was still open, and all around she could
see dimly the white road and the shapes of trees through the falling
snow.



“Where am I supposed to go?” she demanded with faint defiance.



“I don’t know,” the man said. “Get out.”



She moved past him, the cold air biting at her face. “You don’t know, or you don’t care?”



“Pick one,” he said. “Get out.”



She stepped down into the snow and walked a few steps away, stopping behind the trailer.



The hairy man turned on his heels, got back into the
camper, and slammed the door. A moment later the truck’s tires
were spinning as the camper pulled away.



She watched it for a moment, then glanced around. There
was nothing out here. And the cold was already starting to bite at her.
She was going to be lucky if she could even make it back to the bar.



At least they would blame him for the fight.



The camper’s taillights were almost invisible in
the snow when suddenly the brake lights flared. After a moment, a voice
came though the snow.



“I can’t wait forever.”



She smiled. She had known there was something about this
guy. For all his gruff exterior, he couldn’t leave her to die out
here.



She walked to where he was parked on the road and climbed into the passenger seat. “Thanks.”



He didn’t say anything as he shoved the camper back into gear and spun back into motion.



The silence in the cab was tense.



She sat, pushed against the door, grasping her seat belt,
as he smoked his cigar and drove. The windshield wipers barely cleared
the blowing snow, and she doubted he could see more than a car’s
length in front of them. Considering that the two-lane road was tree
lined and had sudden curves, he was driving far too fast. But at this
point, she certainly wasn’t going to say anything.



“So, what’s your name?” she asked tentatively.



The man chewed on his cigar for a moment, focusing all
his attention on the road. Then he finally answered. “Logan.
What’s yours?”



She almost said Marie, then decided to stick with the name she had been trying to use since she left home.



“Rogue.”



They sat in silence again for a long few moments. The snow seemed to be coming down even harder, and the slap, slap, slap of the windshield wipers counted the time as it passed like the blurry outlines of the trees.



Finally he said, “What kind of name is Rogue?”



She liked the name Rogue. She felt it suited her perfectly at the moment. “What kind of name is Logan?”



He nodded, chewing on the now-short stump of his cigar. “Good point.”



Slap, slap, slap. The silence continued. Rogue wasn’t sure if she should even be trying to talk to the man.



After a moment he tossed his old cigar butt into a full
ashtray, then pulled a new smoke from under the seat and, while driving
with his leg pressed against the steering wheel, lit the tip. The cab
filled with clouds of fresh smoke, and he sighed. She wanted to open
the window, get some fresh air blowing in here before she got sick to
her stomach, but didn’t know if she should even do that.



Finally she decided that trying to talk was better than sitting in frustrating silence.



“How long have you known?” she asked.



“Known what?” he asked back, glancing at her.



“That you were, you know, like me?” Rogue had
heard that there were others with special powers like hers. Mutants.
She just hadn’t believed it.



“I’m not like you,” the guy said,
blowing a large cloud of smoke between his face and the windshield. She
had no idea how he could see the road, but he seemed to be managing
just fine.



“Right,” Rogue said, laughing, “you’re just a normal, everyday claw guy.”



“Listen, kid,” Logan said, “right now
the only thing you’ve done to endear yourself to me is to get
three big truckers to attack me. Now granted, that was kind of fun, so
I’m cutting you some slack. Any more chatter and the slack runs
out.”



She smiled, staring through the snow at the faint outline
of the mountain road. Then she said, “You know, you should wear
your seat belt.”



“What did I tell you?” he asked.



But she could tell he was almost smiling. Almost.



The next instant the world seemed to end.



Something big toppled in front of them from Logan’s side, falling directly across the road.



He reacted, but he had no chance of success. The camper came to an almost-instant stop.



Rogue was smashed against her seat belt. Her head snapped forward, then backward, banging on the panel behind her.



Logan was tossed hard through the windshield, bouncing and tumbling down the road like a rag doll.



Out her side window the trailer full of wood and the
motorcycle shot past, tumbling end over end, the trailer’s
contents scattering like leaves in the wind.



To Rogue it seemed as if everything in the camper
suddenly piled around her, shoving her forward. She could see
Logan’s body through the broken-out windshield. Snow swirled in
and around her face as everything finally came to a stop.



They had hit a massive falling tree. The force of the
impact had shoved it forward and to one side. From where she sat, it
was clear that this truck wasn’t going to be going anywhere again
anytime soon. The hood and front end were wrapped around the log.



The silence now seemed almost heavy. She sat there,
trying to catch her breath, trying to stop her heart from pounding out
of her chest. It was the first time she had ever been in an automobile
accident. It had happened so fast.



Then through the snow she saw movement.



Logan was alive. How was that possible?



In the road ahead, he climbed to his feet, brushing himself off. “Damn it!” he said.



She sat there, staring at him in shock. No one could live
through being tossed through a truck windshield, then bouncing down the
concrete like he had done. He had to be dead, or at least seriously
injured. Yet here he was, walking toward her, swearing under his
breath.



As he got closer, she could see that there were gashes in
his cheek and forehead. Deep, bleeding cuts that were going to need
treatment quickly.



Then, as she watched, the gashes stopped bleeding and began to heal up.



That wasn’t possible.



Logan didn’t even seem to notice, or think anything
was out of the ordinary. Then she realized that her ability—to
take someone’s thoughts, abilities, everything—also
wasn’t possible. Yet she did it.



“You all right?” Logan asked, stopping in front of the truck and staring at her through the windshield.



“I’m fine,” she said, still not really wanting to move to check that claim out completely.



Logan nodded and studied the tree they had hit, walking
along it toward the shattered trunk, shaking his head. From what Rogue
could tell, the tree had come off the side of the cliff, probably
brought down by the heavy snow.



She was still shaking so much that she didn’t even
want to try to move. Instead she just sat, trying to get herself to
relax.



As Logan climbed up to check the base of the shattered
tree, a hand punched out of a large snowdrift right beside him: a huge,
clawed hand that grabbed him by the back of the jacket.



Rogue screamed as a snow-covered monster rose up,
towering over Logan. It picked him up and swung him around, tossing him
into the cliff side with enough force that Rogue could feel the ground
shake even from where she was.



The creature stood there, staring at where it had thrown
Logan. Rogue saw that it wasn’t actually an animal, but a large
man with long yellow hair, wearing animal hides. He had sharp teeth and
cat’s eyes, and he was the ugliest thing Rogue had ever seen.



As the creature stepped toward Logan, Rogue tried to
move. The seat had been shoved forward and was jammed behind her by the
camper. Her legs were trapped under the dashboard. The more she fought
to get them free, the more it hurt.



She tried shoving the passenger door open, but it, too,
was stuck, so she went back to feeling around her legs with her hands,
trying to find anything she could move to get free.



Then behind her she heard a slight crackling sound.



She twisted around, expecting to see another creature, but what she saw through the cracked camper was something far worse.



Fire.



The camper was on fire.



She went back to fighting to free her legs.



Through the windshield she could see Logan emerge from
the snow, clearly angry. With one backhand slap, the fur-covered man
smashed Logan into a tree. How strong was this thing?



Logan came up rolling, his claws extended. “You want a fight? You’re going to get a fight!”



Logan slashed at the man.



Missed.



Slashed again.



Missed again, as the man-creature moved quickly out of
the way. The thing grabbed Logan’s wrist and, using Logan’s
own forward momentum, picked him up and swung him 360 degrees, smashing
him into the log.



The log shattered.



Rogue fought even harder now. She had to get away from the fire, from this mockery of a man.



Logan was stunned, but he still tried to stagger to his feet.



The huge man-creature picked Logan up like a pillow, held
him in the air, then tossed him twenty feet back through the remains of
the truck’s windshield.



Rogue managed to cover her face and turn slightly in the seat as Logan smashed into her, unconscious.



Behind her the fire spread, smoke pouring through the cab and up into the falling snow.



The man-creature stood, staring at her with its cat’s eyes. They almost seemed to be glowing.



“Mister,” Rogue said, shaking Logan. “Mister, wake up, okay?”



She shook him harder, making sure to touch only his clothes, while still trying to pull her legs free.



“Come on, come on,” she said as the man-creature stepped toward the burning camper. “Please wake up.”





 







Chapter Four





Alberta, Canada




Storm shifted awkwardly in the X-Men jet’s seat,
trying to get comfortable. Beside her in the pilot’s seat,
Cyclops dozed lightly, his visor strapped firmly to his face. The last
two hours had dragged inexorably past, the white snow around them
falling hard, covering everything. On the tracking monitor, their
subject, Sabretooth, was still a half mile away, stopped.



Waiting. They had no idea for what, but he was clearly waiting. And so were they.



Sabretooth was a mutant whose abilities had manifested
themselves as animal strength, speed, sight, and smell. From what Storm
had learned in their premission briefing, Sabretooth had been helping
Magneto. Why the professor had wanted them to track Sabretooth out here
into the Canadian wilderness was anyone’s guess. He certainly
hadn’t bothered to tell them, if he even knew.



But Storm didn’t know a lot about the relationship
between the professor and Magneto. All she had gleaned was that they
seemed to be old friends, fighting in different ways for the same
cause.



She and Cyclops had just been told to trail Sabretooth
until something happened. They would know when it did, the professor
had said.



She certainly hoped so.



Storm glanced around at the raging blizzard falling
around the jet. She could see the nearby outline of a highway and the
snow-covered trees and rocks. She could stop the snow around them if
she wanted. But at the moment she didn’t mind it at all. It was
soothing, almost relaxing. She had a feeling about weather, could touch
it, and almost any type of weather was good as far as she was
concerned.



This snowstorm was certainly a far cry from the arid heat
of her native Kenya. The first time she’d ever seen snow there
was the day she had caused it.



The day the other kids of her village had tortured her.



The day she had come into her powers.



Thank heavens Professor Xavier had found her, or there
would have been no telling what her people would have done to her after
she had destroyed their village. She certainly had had no idea what to
do with herself at that point.



No mutant did, when first coming into his or her powers.
There was no way any of them could. It was something completely
unexpected, and in this world that feared mutants, certainly none of
them had been trained to cope.



Until now. She had been lucky. The professor had found
her, and had offered her the training and education she had needed. She
knew there were thousands of others out there who weren’t getting
the breaks she had recieved. She was determined to help them, at least
as much as she could.



The sound of a hard crash echoed through the trees,
waking Cyclops from his light sleep. He glanced at her, his powerful
energy gaze contained and controlled by the visor covering his eyes.



“What was that?”



“Darned if I know,” Storm replied.



They both studied the scope. Two other blips were now
stopped where their subject was located, just down the highway.
“Seems Sabretooth found a way to stop traffic.”



Cyclops laughed. “What traffic? We haven’t seen a car in hours.”



“Let’s go,” Storm said.



As they climbed out of the jet, she created a warm breeze
around them that held most of the snow back. Better they face whatever
was going on fresh and dry and ready to fight.



Within a few seconds they were headed at a fast walk up
the road, her breeze and their form-fitting X-Men uniforms keeping them
warm and comfortable, despite the subzero temperatures of the Canadian
forest.



It wasn’t long until they saw exactly what was happening.



As they moved around a slight curve in the road, they
could see where a camper had hit a downed tree, smashing the camper and
scattering the contents of a trailer it had been pulling. The camper
was on fire, with one person trapped inside, on the passenger side of
the cab.



Sabretooth was fighting with another man, and as Storm
watched, Sabretooth picked the man up and smashed him through the
windshield. Judging from the force of the throw, that person was going
to be lucky to be alive.



But it was clear the woman in the camper was still alive,
and she was struggling to get out—clearly trapped. And now she
had a dead weight on top of her.



Side by side, Storm and Cyclops moved up and stood twenty
paces behind Sabretooth. The hulking mutant started toward the camper;
then he must have sensed them.



He turned, then growled with a low, mean rumble, like an
angry animal. He even looked like one, with the skins and long yellow
hair.



“Seems we aren’t welcome company,” Cyclops said.



Sabretooth charged at them, moving quickly on the snow-covered road.



Storm stepped aside as Cyclops fired a hot red beam from his eyes. The beam hit Sabretooth square in the chest.



Hard.



Sabretooth roared as the beam picked him up and flipped
him through the air, end over end, smashing through the high branches
of the trees and disappear-ing in a snapping of limbs and brush.



Storm nodded. Their foe wasn’t going to be coming back anytime soon.



The only sound now was the crackling of the fire in the
camper. Storm ran over to the passenger side, seeing instantly that the
intense flames were almost to the camper’s propane tank. She
kicked up a swirling wind filled with snow and rain to douse the fire,
but it wasn’t going to work quickly enough. The flames were just
too close to the tank and too hot to be put out easily.



Cyclops had also run to the passenger side and yanked open the door.



“Don’t touch me!” the girl shouted. “Just help me get the seat loose. I can’t move my legs.”



Storm focused on the fire, but the propane tank was going
to explode, and soon. There wasn’t a thing she could do to stop
it.



“Cyclops!” Storm said. “Hurry!”



Cyclops focused carefully and used his optic beam to dislodge the seat behind the trapped girl. The seat snapped and came loose.



The girl quickly climbed out and over the hood of the
camper, dropping to the ground. At the same time, Storm pulled the
unconscious man free.



Suddenly she heard the valve on the propane tank blow off.



It was now or never.



She brought up a massive wind behind them, forcing it in
low and hard along the passenger side of the camper. The wind caught
her, Cyclops, the girl, and the unconscious man and slid them all down
the road on the slick surface, as if they were sliding down a ski
slope. All of them were knocked from their feet, and the unconscious
guy was rolled like a limp doll. If he wasn’t already dead, that
hadn’t done him any good at all. But Storm hadn’t had a
choice.



She was just climbing back to her feet when the camper
exploded, sending flames and debris into the air, lighting the falling
snow with bright orange and yellow colors.



Beside her, the girl and Cyclops stood and stared at the flames. Then the girl said softly, “Thanks.”





 







Chapter Five





Magneto’s Headquarters




Mortimer Toynbee laughed when Sabretooth came through the tunnel in the rock and into the laboratory. He was alone.



The lab was a massive space, with towering cliffs of
rock, trees, and a giant meadow filled with the machine.
Magneto’s machine. It sat like a modern statue in the middle of
the clearing, its polished metal thrusting toward the invisible roof
above. Toynbee had been painting the bottom of the machine, carefully,
so as not to miss even the slightest spot.



“Weren’t you supposed to bring somebody back
with you?” he asked sarcastically. Toynbee was more often called
Toad, due largely to his agility, his ability to leap great distances,
and his superhuman strength.



Sabretooth paused and turned to face Toad, who only
sneered and went back to work. With a growl Sabretooth moved on into
Magneto’s personal office, through another tunnel in the rock.



Magneto watched him come, shaking his head. Around him
the walls of his large office were stark, made of cold, polished stone
and metal, just the way he liked it. The space at one time had been a
cave, but he’d changed it for his own purposes, placing a massive
desk under a single light source, covering the floor with polished
tiles.



“My instructions were simple,” Magneto said,
keeping his voice low and level, not letting his anger seep into the
words. “In fact, I made them that way especially for you. And yet
you were unable to retrieve our friend.”



Sabretooth moved across the room through the shadows and
stopped in front of Magneto’s desk. The smell of the hides he
wore carried over to Magneto, but he ignored it.



“So what happened, brother?”



“Xavier’s people,” Sabretooth said, his voice low and almost a growl. “They knew.”



Magneto nodded and sat back in his chair, musing. Charles was going to be a little harder to beat than he had at first thought.



“Good for you, Charles,” Magneto said to himself. “Good for you.”



Then Magneto caught a glimpse of the metal dog tags
hanging around Sabretooth’s neck. He held out his hand, summoning
the tags to him.



They snapped off Sabretooth’s neck and flew through
the air, dropping into his hand. He inspected the tags, staring at the
one word at the bottom that didn’t seem to belong: Wolverine.



“Strange,” Magneto said to himself. Then he looked up at Sabretooth. “Where is the mutant now?”



“With Xavier’s people,” Sabretooth said.



Magneto nodded, tossing the tags across the desk back to Sabretooth.



Then he pushed himself away from the desk, stood, and
headed around the desk. “I have made the first move. That is all
they know, because that is all you know.”



He headed for the door. “Come. We only have three days.”



Sabretooth shrugged, grabbed the tags off the desk, and turned to follow.




X-Men Mansion—Westchester County, NY




Logan slowly came back to consciousness, like a swimmer
twenty feet down, stroking for the surface of a lake. The light got
slowly brighter; then his hearing returned. Then his sense of smell.



He kept his eyes closed, kept his breathing paced,
letting his mind clear, giving himself some time. The last thing he
could remember was the ugly beast picking him up and tossing him
through the window of his truck. The guy had been strong. Very strong.
But in a rematch, Logan knew he would get the best of him.



Logan could tell that he was lying on his back on some
sort of padded bed in a very sterile place. Some sort of hospital or
lab, more than likely. And a very fresh-smelling woman was working
nearby.



He let his eyes slit open just a fraction as the woman
moved toward him. The room was white and was filled with modern-looking
equipment. A box behind her floated off a shelf and came to rest gently
in front of her on a tray.



For a moment he was puzzled; then he realized that she was a mutant also.



The woman opened the box and pulled out an IV needle,
then turned to him. He kept his eyes in the same position, his
breathing consistent, even though her wonderful scent was almost
overpowering.



With a gentle touch she picked up his arm, then a moment
later he felt the slight prick of the needle. At least she was good at
what she did.



Instantly he reacted, sitting up and grabbing her around
the throat. The needle broke in his arm, and the box was knocked to the
white floor.



For an instant he was unable even to think as he stared
into her beautiful face. He couldn’t remember ever having this
reaction to a woman before. But now was clearly not the time. The way
he was holding her, she wouldn’t be able to talk, that much was
for sure.



She just stared at him, calm and collected, as if his
threat meant nothing really. Or as if she was convinced he wasn’t
going to carry it out.



Disgusted, he let her go, shoving her backward and to the
floor. He jumped off the table, realizing he was dressed only in his
underwear. And there was something besides his clothes missing: His dog
tags were no longer around his neck.



Logan pulled the broken needle from his arm and tossed it
at the woman sitting on the floor. She just rubbed her neck and said
nothing.



He turned and ran for the nearest door. The sooner he found some clothes and got out of here, the happier he was going to be.



The hallway on the other side of the door was much like the lab he’d just left—sterile, white tiled, and very quiet.



Deathly quiet.



Where the hell was he?



He ran down the hall, away from the lab, letting his full senses bring him information.



The walls were soundproof beyond anything normally done.
He couldn’t hear anything at all—no sounds of people,
machinery, distant traffic, nothing.



The first door he came to was open, so he went through.



It was a fairly large room, also very clean. One side of
the room contained lockers, with a padded bench sitting in front of
them. The other wall was full of black uniforms hanging side by side,
each tagged with a strange “X” insignia.



He quickly rummaged through the lockers, coming up fairly quickly with a pair of pants and a shirt that almost fit.



Behind him in the hallway he could hear the sounds of
someone’s footsteps. Quickly he finished dressing and headed out
another door on the far side. He had no idea how to get out of this
place, but if he kept going through doors, eventually he would find the
exit.



This door led to another hallway, almost exactly like the
first. Logan stopped for an instant, trying to decide which way to go.
But then his decision was made for him. A door slid open with the faint
ding of an elevator. With the footsteps coming across the locker
room he’d just left, he dashed into the elevator and let the
doors close. The elevator started upward instantly, clearly running
automatically.



He got ready to attack whoever might greet him when the
elevator door opened, but as it turned out, he didn’t need to.
The door slid open on a very empty, very plush hallway, exactly the
opposite of what he had found below.



He sniffed, taking in the sights and smells. He was
clearly in an older mansion, with a large number of people living in
it. This hallway was wide and stately, with a high ceiling and
expensive furniture along the walls. Plush carpet softened his
footsteps, and the smell of furniture polish seemed to dominate.



From down the hall to his right he could hear a voice, so he headed that way, staying to one side and moving silently.



In a moment he could hear exactly what the voice was saying.



“The Roman Empire, for centuries, persecuted and
ostracized the Christians, to the extent that they were fed to lions
for sport. Then, almost overnight, their religion rose to become the
dominant faith in the empire.”



“What the hell?” he said softly.



He moved to where the door was slightly ajar and looked
through. Inside he could see a strikingly beautiful black woman with
pure white hair standing in front of a dozen or so fourteen- to
seventeen-year-old children.



Logan studied them, noting that even though they all looked basically normal, it was clear they were all mutants.



An entire class of mutants.



Where was he?



“Does anyone know what caused the Christians to
suddenly become accepted?” the woman with the white hair asked
her students.



“Yes,” one of them said.



The woman nodded for the student to go ahead.



“The emperor suddenly became one,” the kid continued.



“That’s right,” the teacher said. “Which made for some very relieved Christians, I can tell you.”



The children all laughed.



Then the woman turned to face the door where Logan was watching through the narrow crack. “Can I help you?”



All the students turned to stare at him.



Logan just shook his head and moved away quickly, heading down the hallway toward a brighter area.



The hallway expanded into a sort of foyer, with a high
ceiling and massive antique chandelier. Beside the hall, which led off
in both directions, the main way in and out of the foyer was a double
oaken door.



Down the hall the elevator he had used dinged faintly again, warning him that someone was coming up—most likely after him.



And from the other direction he could hear the sounds of two people’s footsteps on the carpet. He clearly had no choice.



He sprang for the oaken door, opened it silently, and stepped inside, closing it just as silently behind himself.



“Good morning, Logan,” a voice said.



Logan spun around and came face-to-face with a
middle-aged bald man sitting behind a large mahogany desk. There was a
blackboard set up beside the massive desk, and four students were
sitting in front of the blackboard, clearly in some sort of class. They
all now turned and stared at him.



“Give me a moment, please,” the man said to
Logan. Then he turned back to his students. “I think that’s
enough for today, don’t you? Off you go.”



The four kids all stood and filed past Logan, out the door, looking at him curiously.



Logan didn’t know what to do. He knew there were
people after him outside that door. Yet this man knew who he was and
didn’t seem surprised at all that he was here.



Suddenly one of the girls turned back around and ran to the desk. “Forgot my book,” she explained.



She grabbed it off the man’s desk, then ran for the door.



“Bye, Professor,” she said. But the oaken
door beside Logan already had been pulled closed. The girl didn’t
even slow down. Instead she simply ran through the door as if it
weren’t there.



Logan stared at the hard wood where she had disappeared, then back at the man she had called “Professor.”



The man held up a textbook as if it explained everything.
“Physics,” he said. Then, “Would you like some
breakfast?”



Logan just stared at him. He had been prepared to fight
his way out, not to be offered something to eat. What the hell was
going on here? He needed some answers, and he needed them fast.



“Where am I?” he demanded.



“Westchester, New York,” the man said.
“You were attacked. My people brought you here for medical
attention.”



“I don’t need medical attention,” Logan
said. He was still hurting slightly in a half dozen places, but he
certainly wasn’t going to admit it to this guy.



The man smiled. “Yes, of course.”



The man turned and wheeled himself out from behind his
desk. For the first time Logan realized the man was confined to a
wheelchair.



The bald-headed guy moved toward Logan, extending his
hand. “I’m sorry. Let me introduce myself. I’m
Professor Charles Xavier. You’re at my school for gifted
children. Actually, mutants, as the press calls us. You’ll be
safe here from Magneto.”



Logan shook the man’s hand, then, puzzled, he asked, “What’s a magneto?”



The professor chuckled. “A very powerful mutant who
believes that there is a war brewing between us and the rest of
humanity.”



“So?” Logan asked, glaring at the professor. “What does that have to do with me?”



“I don’t know yet,” the professor
admitted. “I wish I did. But I believe Magneto is planning some
kind of preemptive strike. I’ve been following his actions for
some time. The mutant that attacked you is an associate of
Magneto’s called Sabretooth.”



“You knew he was going to attack me?”



The professor shook his head. “No, I just tracked
Sabretooth, and he led my people to you. We need to keep you out of
Magneto’s reach until we know what his interest is.”



At that, Logan decided he had had enough. “Sorry,
pal. I’ve got to get back to my—” Suddenly he
realized he didn’t have any idea where his camper and belongings
were.



“Sorry,” the professor said. “It’s gone.”



Logan stared at him. The guy couldn’t mean his
camper. Granted he had smashed it up pretty badly, but it still had to
be somewhere.



“Your truck was destroyed,” the professor
said. “A fire started in the collision and ignited the propane
tank. We barely got you out in time. There was nothing left.”



Logan said nothing.



“Logan, it’s been almost fifteen years, hasn’t it? Since you woke up?”



Logan wanted to turn and run, but he didn’t.



“Woke up?”



“Woke up,” the professor said, “with no
knowledge of who you really are. Living day to day, trying to piece
together what happened to you. You know how to fight, though. You
always have known, haven’t you? And your nightmares are vague
clues to a past that isn’t completely erased from your mind. But
now that everything has been destroyed, where will you go?”



“How—?” Logan asked. “How did you know all that?”



You’re not the only one with gifts, the professor said. It took Logan a moment to realize that the professor’s lips hadn’t moved at all.



Behind him the door opened, and three others came in,
with Rogue, the girl who had been in his truck with him. One was the
black woman who had been teaching the kids, the other was a guy with
strange-looking sunglasses, and the third was the beautiful woman from
the lab.



“Ah, thank you,” the professor said aloud. “Dr. Grey, allow me to introduce Logan.”



The beautiful woman from the lab, the one he had choked
in his escape, smiled pleasantly and stepped forward, her hand
extended. “Yes, we’ve met. Call me Jean.”



Logan looked into her eyes as he took her hand. In all
his life he had never seen a woman so beautiful. Or one to whom he had
been so attracted. Her hand was soft, yet strong in his. Her grip was
firm. And he didn’t want to let go.



Professor Xavier continued with the introductions.
“This is Scott Summers, also called Cyclops. Ororo Munroe, also
called Storm. They are the ones who saved your life.”



Logan glanced at them, but he turned his attention to the young Rogue and said nothing.



“Don’t mention it,” Cyclops said.



Logan noticed that Dr. Grey put her hand on the Cyclops
guy’s arm. It was clearly the action of a girlfriend. Subtle, but
not something Logan would miss. He wasn’t going to like this
Cyclops, he knew right away.



“What are you going to do with her?” Logan asked, moving closer to Rogue, but careful not to touch her.



The professor smiled at Rogue with real warmth. And in
that smile Logan saw a clear expression of understanding.
“Rogue’s been on her own now for some time, searching for a
home. A place to belong.”



Rogue nodded, clearly happy to be here. And that was all fine and good, as far as Logan was concerned.



Xavier turned back to face Logan. “We’re going to give her that.”



Rogue nodded, confirming what was clear to Logan.



“So,” Logan said, glancing at the others,
“this place is sort of a dog pound for unwanted mutants, is that
it?”



“It’s a school,” the professor said calmly.



Logan shrugged. “I don’t really believe what
you’re doing here, but, lucky for me, I don’t care.”
He started for the door. “Thanks for the ride.”



“Hold on,” the Cyclops guy said, stepping toward him.



That was when the anger Logan felt, toward the guy they
called Sabretooth, about losing his camper, all came boiling up at
once. He felt as though he just had to take it out on someone, and the
guy with the sunglasses seemed like the perfect target.



Without hesitation, Logan slugged the guy, knocking him back into the wall.



Cyclops hit hard, one hand blocking his fall while the
other shot up as he checked to make sure his sunglasses were still in
place. Vain dude, Logan thought contemptuously.



Cyclops scrambled to his feet, clearly angry.



Logan was impressed. This guy could take a punch.



Cyclops started back toward Logan, but Logan stood his
ground, just hoping the guy would charge. He really needed to pound on
someone right now.



“Cyclops!” Jean said in a crisp, loud voice.



Logan’s claws came out as the kid kept coming.



“Logan, stop!” Jean said. “Please?”



She stepped between Cyclops and Logan, moving toward Logan, right at his extended claws.



“Jean!” Cyclops said.



Storm stepped forward and stopped the sunglass kid before
he could move any farther. Smart of her, as far as Logan was concerned.



Logan kept his claws extended, and Jean, her beautiful
eyes staring straight into his, stopped right as their tips nudged her
throat. He had to admit, she was brave.



“I know you think none of this is your
concern,” Jean said. “But Magneto will find you. And a lot
of lives could be in danger, including your own.”



He slowly retracted his claws, but he didn’t turn
away from her calm, deep gaze. He could stare into her eyes forever, as
far as he was concerned.



Then Xavier stepped in.



“Logan, I’ll make you a deal,” he said.
“You give me forty-eight hours to figure out what Magneto wants
with you, and I will give you my word that, no matter what happens,
I’ll use all my power to help you piece together what
you’ve lost. And what you’re looking for.”



Logan, still staring at Jean, nodded. His claws finished
retracting, his fists opened, and his shoulders relaxed.
“Forty-eight hours, old man,” he said. “Cross me, and
I won’t feel any guilt about what I do.”



Jean smiled. “Thank you, Logan.”



At that he could say nothing.





 







Chapter Six





Washington, DC




Senator Kelly smiled and clapped his heavy hands together
as the limousine pulled onto the tarmac of the airport. “Looks
like we have some supporters.”



Henry Guyrich, his aide, nodded, but he wasn’t
really looking at the supporters, or at Kelly. Kelly didn’t
really care what Guyrich thought. Or, for that matter, what anyone
thought—except for the pollsters. And right now, the polls showed
that his antimutant stance was getting him a lot of attention, perhaps
even votes. And he was going to keep riding the issue until it no
longer yielded those benefits.



The limo came to a stop beside a large government
helicopter, the pilot already waiting in his seat. The path between the
limo and the helicopter was lined by a cheering crowd, barely
restrained by a short rope.



Senator Kelly stepped out into the cold and pulled his
overcoat tighter around his stomach, then turned toward the crowd,
waving and smiling. He could see there were at least two hundred people
there, many brandishing antimutant signs. One even had a stuffed mutant
hanging from a pole. A few reporters had cameras set up and were doing
a live remote.



He moved along the crowd, shaking hands, smiling, giving
the thumbs-up signal that was becoming his trademark. Around him the
crowd cheered even more enthusiastically, encouraging him to keep
going, to stop those mutants. He loved this attention. He could feel it
fueling him, giving him the extra strength he needed to keep going.



He finally reached the bottom of the stairs that led up
into the helicopter. He climbed three steps, then again paused and
waved, making sure the cameras had time to catch him fully. Then, with
one last quick thumbs-up, he moved inside.



Behind him his aide, Guyrich, followed carrying the
senator’s briefcase. As he climbed aboard, he glanced toward the
pilot, who nodded in acknowledgment.



No one noticed anything out of the ordinary. Not even the senator.




X-Men Mansion




The bright winter sun flooded the large solarium, warming
the air around the students and Storm. Rogue sat near the back, a pile
of books on the floor beside her, watching as Storm lectured.



This was all so new to her. She had never expected to be
included in a class again after what had happened in her old school.
Yet here she was, with people who knew what she could do and
didn’t care. It was going to take her some time to get used to
that.



She also had new clothes that fit over a very light body
stocking that had been provided to keep anyone from accidentally
touching her. It was wonderfully soft and comfortable.



Storm stood in front of them, her skin almost radiant in
the sunlight, her white hair flowing like a waterfall around her head.
She and Dr. Grey were the most beautiful women Rogue had ever seen.
Someday, she wanted to be like them. She had already decided that.



“So, the barometric pressure begins to drop,”
Storm was saying. “Precipitation begins, and the air starts to
move more rapidly. Now lightning strikes occur when strong thermal
updrafts cause water droplets and ice crystals to collide, creating
positively and negatively charged particles.”



A student named Frederick, who sat in front, raised his hand.



“Yes?” Storm said.



“Are you sure about this?” Frederick asked, smiling.



“Don’t tempt me to demonstrate,” she
said, shaking her head with a hint of amusement. Then she turned back
to the board.



Rogue smiled at another boy who sat in front of her. His name was John. He was the cutest boy she had seen in a long, long time.



Kitty, who was sitting beside Rogue, whispered.
“So, that guy you came in with? He’s really got steel claws
that come out of his hands?”



Jubilee, who was sitting on the other side of Rogue, whispered back. “No way. What kind of mutation is that?”



Rogue just shrugged, watching John as he pulled out a
lighter and clicked it. Then he held his hand under the flame and
pulled the lighter away, keeping the flame in place, hovering over his
hand.



Despite all that she had experienced, Rogue was astonished.



He just smiled, and the flame grew into a ball the size of an orange.



“Showing off again,” Jubilee said, shaking her head, but John ignored her.



Now the fireball over John’s hand was even bigger,
almost the size of a grapefruit. Then suddenly the flame was engulfed
in a ball of ice. Glancing around, Rogue found another
student—Bobby—holding out a crystal rose for her. Though
beautiful, it was already beginning to melt.



Then Rogue glanced at Storm. She didn’t look happy.



“John, what did I tell you?” Storm asked, frowning.



“Sorry,” John said.



Storm shook her head, then turned to finish what she was writing on the board.



John glanced back and smiled at Rogue. Right then and there, she knew she was really going to like this place.






Twenty minutes later the class ended. Rogue picked up her
books, watching as the other students left, some stopping to talk to
Storm about some topic.



Bobby took his time, until Jubilee and Kitty had moved
off, then smiled again at Rogue. “You want to meet me for
dinner?” he asked. “I’ll show you around.”



Rogue could feel her heart jump. She was flattered and scared at the same time. “Okay, sure.”



“Great!” he said. He headed for the door with a happy, “See ya.”



Rogue finished picking up her books as Storm moved toward her. “So, how are you doing?”



Rogue looked around in wonder, at the glass-walled room
and winter gardens beyond. “This place is so beautiful. And
everyone is so nice. I just—”



She didn’t know what to say, so she just stopped.



Storm nodded. “How long have you been on your own?”



Rogue stared into the eyes of the beautiful teacher.
“Eight months. I’ve just been hitchhiking, trying to get as
far away from home as possible. Get away from anyone who would know
what I was.”



Storm nodded. “That I understand.”



“I didn’t know there was anyplace for us to
go,” Rogue said. “But this is wonderful. I’ve felt
kind of alone, you know.”



“Well,” Storm said, “you’re not alone anymore.”



“And the professor?” Rogue said, looking into Storm’s eyes. “He can actually cure me?”



Rogue watched with surprise as the smile suddenly drained
from her teacher’s face. After a few seconds, Storm sat down in a
chair and motioned for Rogue to sit across from her.



There, over the next hour, Rogue learned things she
didn’t want to know. And understood that maybe she would never,
ever be able to touch another person again, as long as she lived.



And that no one would ever touch or kiss her in return.



Suddenly she felt even more alone than she had on the road.





 







Chapter Seven





X-Men Mansion




Logan was getting the official tour from Professor Xavier
himself. He wasn’t sure why the old guy was spending the time
with him, but whatever the reason, Logan figured to be gone in less
than forty-eight hours, so it didn’t matter in the slightest.



Logan walked slowly, pacing the professor’s
wheelchair as it moved silently along the floor. They were in a wing of
the mansion that Logan hadn’t seen before. The place was massive.
He had already been shown a huge solarium and more rooms than he could
count. And everything was distinctly first-class. Clearly there was
some money behind all this.



Of course, if the professor could read minds—as it
seemed he could—there certainly wouldn’t be a problem
getting money.



“The dining rooms, kitchen, and parlor are found in
the other wing,” the professor said, going on with the tour.
“As you can see, everything on this floor and above has been
designed to be viewed by the general public. As far as they know, this
is merely a school for ‘gifted’ students.”



The professor led Logan to a panel in the wall and stopped. A hidden elevator door opened with a ping, and they got inside.



“The subbasements however, are an entirely different matter.”



“So how’d I get in here?” Logan asked. “You didn’t bring me in through the front door.”



The door of the elevator opened, revealing the lab corridor that Logan had run down during his attempted escape.



“Come on,” the professor said. “I’ll show you.”



They moved down the corridor, turning twice before
reaching wide doors that opened automatically onto a massive hangar. It
was bigger than anything Logan would have imagined. More than likely it
could hold an airliner or two. But at the moment, it seemed to be
primarily dedicated to a modernistic, shiny black jet like none that
Logan had ever seen.



“Vertical takeoff and landings,” the
professor said, motioning toward the jet. “Instruments that allow
it to fly in any weather.”



“Amazing,” Logan said, moving out into the
hangar and looking around curiously. He pointed to the large doors at
the end. “Hidden entrance?”



The professor nodded. “Perfectly hidden.”



“So why all this?” Logan asked, motioning at the equipment and the jet.



“Everyone here has abilities,” Xavier said.
“Powers. Curses, until they can be controlled. All of us have
hurt and been hurt. And none of us asked to be the way we are.”



“I hear you there,” Logan said.



“When I was fifteen years old,” the professor
said, “I began to hear people’s thoughts. At first I
thought I was going mad. One day I read the mind of one of my teachers
and saw that he was going to fail me, simply because he didn’t
like me.”



“I bet that pissed you off,” Logan said.



“It did at that,” the professor commented.
“I was so mad I put a suggestion in his mind that he was having a
heart attack. He nearly died.”



Logan looked down at the old man with a little more
respect. It hadn’t dawned on him that reading someone’s
mind could have other uses. Dangerous uses, it seemed. “So
what’d you do?”



“I was terrified,” the professor said,
“as most everyone here was when something first happened to them.
I withdrew from everything, fearful that I might hurt someone else. I
thought I was alone.”



“But you weren’t.”



The professor nodded slightly. “That was when I met
Eric Lehnsherr. Eric, too, had a power. He could create magnetic
fields, enabling him to manipulate metal. He helped me understand what
I was. And to find ways of controlling my power. Eric also showed me
that there were others like us.”



“How long ago was this?” Logan asked.



The professor smiled. “More years ago than I care
to think about. As the years went by and our numbers increased, so did
the prejudice and fear of ordinary humans. Our world changed, and Eric
changed with it. He believed that humanity would never accept us, that
a war between mutants and humans was inevitable. He was angry,
vengeful. That’s when he became Magneto.”



“And you could no longer stay with him?” Logan asked.



“Exactly,” the professor said, clearly still
sad about it despite all the years. He moved on, toward the stables and
the garage. “I opened this school, a place where mutants could be
safe from persecution. This is a place where they could not only learn
to focus their powers, but also learn that mankind is not evil. Just
uninformed.”



“You still didn’t answer my question,” Logan said. “Why all this hardware?”



The professor continued. “There are mutants out
there with incredible power, Logan. I knew that a day would come when
some of them might use that power against the rest of humanity. And
that if there was no one to challenge them, humanity’s days would
end.”



“So you are the challenge,” Logan said, nodding.



“Evil men succeed when good men do nothing,”
the professor said. “A famous quote that Eric taught me
once.”



Logan nodded again. This was a much, much bigger
operation than he had first thought. It was going to be great to get
out of here and let them fight all their good fights for as long as
they wanted.



“Now,” Professor Xavier said, turning his
chair back toward the hallway. “If you wouldn’t mind, Dr.
Grey would like to examine you.”



Logan laughed. Having Dr. Grey do anything to him was just about his idea of heaven.




The East Coast—Above Washington, DC




Senator Kelly hung up the phone and sat back in the soft
chair of the helicopter, staring out the window at the ground flashing
past. The drone of the motors faded to background noise in the
extraordinarily luxurious interior. Kelly loved traveling like this. He
considered it one of the God-given rights of his job. And he used his
rights as often as he felt he needed, which was often.



He stared at the phone. That call with the president had
gone almost exactly as he had expected. Sometimes things went well,
sometimes they went poorly, and other times they just didn’t go
at all.



“Well,” Guyrich said, “what was his opinion?”



Kelly shrugged and leaned forward to pour himself another
glass of scotch. “He’s the president of the United States.
He doesn’t have an opinion. He smiles, he waves, he shakes
hands.”



“Isn’t that what you do, sir?” Guyrich asked.



Kelly shot his aide a sharp look across the table, then
put the scotch bottle back between them. Guyrich had been acting
strange lately. If he didn’t shape up, Kelly would have to have a
talk with him about his attitude. The last thing Kelly needed right now
was a problem with his staff.



“Well,” Kelly said, leaning back and sipping,
enjoying the smooth taste of the expensive scotch, “this time
it’s not up to him. It’s up to me and Congress.”



“Have you thought about a demonstration of some
kind?” Guyrich asked. “Maybe use the UN Summit to our
advantage. The whole world will be watching.”



“I’m only interested in Americans,”
Kelly said, his voice harsher than he intended. He caught himself.
“Let the rest of the world deal with mutants in any damn way they
please. Besides, only Americans can vote for me.”



He laughed and took another sip, then decided to go on.
“This is the sort of problem that liberals just beg you to
ignore, until it crawls up and bites them in the ass. And guys like us
are left to clean it up.”



He stared into the eyes of his aide. “You know, this situation, these mutants, are the reason people like me exist.”



Kelly glanced out the window as the helicopter crossed
out over the cold, dark gray waters of the Atlantic. They weren’t
supposed to be over water on this flight, especially not the ocean.



“Hey, where the hell are we?”



Kelly glanced back at his aide, waiting for an answer.
Instead he witnessed a horror story. Right before his eyes, Guyrich was
changing. His face was shifting, his clothes seeming to draw inward,
until finally, where Guyrich had been sitting, Kelly found a beautiful
woman covered completely in iridescent blue scales. She had solid
yellow eyes that made her look more like a cat than a human.



She just smiled, and said nothing.



It took a moment for Senator Kelly’s mind to
register what he had just seen. Then he realized that he was facing a
mutant. A mutant who had been posing as his aide.



Instantly he jumped for the cockpit door.



But the blue woman was faster. A lot faster. As he moved past her, she planted a solid kick to his stomach.



The air rushed out and he doubled over, sliding toward
the door. As quick as he could, he climbed back to his feet and yanked
open the cockpit door.



“Pilot! Help!”



The pilot leered at him through grotesque features. A long tongue flicked briefly at him.



The copilot seat was empty.



It shouldn’t be empty, he thought frantically. There are always two pilots on these flights.



Kelly turned back to the blue woman, who was standing behind him.



She took a step toward him, and he swung at her. He wasn’t going to let any damned mutant take him without a fight.



It was as if he were moving in slow motion. She caught
his hand and hit him five or six times with kicks and punches before he
could even fall down.



He coughed, trying to catch his breath as he lay
face-down on the carpet-covered floor. Suddenly strong hands grabbed
him and flipped him over on his back. The blue face and yellow eyes
came right down over him like a nightmare that he couldn’t seem
to wake up from.



“You know,” the blue woman said,
“people like you are the reason I was afraid to go to school as a
child.”



She stood and kicked him solidly in his stomach, forcing what little was left of his breath out of him.



He worked to breathe, choking and coughing as he stared up at her through water-filled eyes.



She started to turn away, then, almost as an
afterthought, she raised a foot and brought it down solidly on the side
of his head.



Merciful blackness took him almost instantly.



It would be hours before he awoke. And then he would be very sorry he did.





 







Chapter Eight





X-Men Mansion




Jean leaned against the edge of the doorway of
Logan’s room and watched, smiling, as he took down the pictures
from the walls and put them in drawers. The two of them had talked off
and on, through his medical examination and then through the entire
dinner. She had then offered to show him his room, and he had gladly
accepted. Any excuse to spend more time with Dr. Jean Grey was just
fine with him.



“So why do so many mutants end up coming through here?” Logan asked as he slammed a drawer shut.



“Most mutants leave pretty ugly situations behind
them,” Jean said. “People find out what you are, so a lot
of mutants have to start out with a new identity. We not only help them
with their control of their powers, we help them with the new
identities and starting new lives, as well.”



Logan nodded, sorting through the clothes someone had put
on his bed. They all looked as if they would fit, but some he just
wouldn’t be caught dead in.



“So,” Logan said, turning to face her. “You move things with your mind?”



“It’s called telekinesis,” she said.



“Right,” Logan said. “You move stuff with your mind. Anything else?”



“I also have some telepathic abilities.”



Logan stared at her suspiciously. “You mean like the professor?”



She shook her head. “My telepathy is nowhere near
as powerful as Professor Xavier’s. But sometimes, if I make a
strong connection.”



“So,” Logan said, noting her obvious
discomfort as she revealed things about herself. “Why are you
just plain old Jean Grey?”



“What do you mean?”



“You couldn’t think of some cute mutant nickname? Seems that just about everyone else has one.”



She laughed. “Honestly, I haven’t chosen one yet.”



He pushed the pile of clothes he liked into the middle of
the bed and sat down, feeling the unaccustomed softness under him.
“How about Mrs. Cyclops. You guys are a couple, right?”



Again, she laughed and nodded.



“He seems kinda tense,” Logan commented, “for a woman like you.”



“Oh,” she said, smiling, “is that so?”



“Seems that way to me,” Logan said.



“When Professor Xavier found Scott, he hadn’t
opened his eyes in two months. Awake, asleep, not at all in two
months.”



“Why?” Logan asked. “Didn’t like what he was seeing?”



“No,” Jean said. “Even with his visor,
it’s very hard for him to control the energy that comes from his
eyes. Without the visor, if he opened his eyes, he could easily punch
through a mountain as simply as you could crush a beer can. He has to
be in control every minute of every day.”



Logan nodded. She and the professor had been right.
Everyone here had a curse of one sort or another. He stared at her as
the silence between them grew slightly uncomfortable. On the perfect
skin of her neck he could see the bruises left from where he had
grabbed her earlier.



“Sorry about that,” he said.



“Sorry about what?”



He shrugged. “If I hurt you. Earlier. Sorry.”



She paused, smiling, and reached out to touch him. As she
did, her head jerked back, her face pale. There had been a clear
connection between them for a moment there, albeit an unexpected one.
Clearly she had gotten something from his mind.



“What did you see?” He fought to keep from reacting to the unexpected intrusion.



She took a deep breath and let it slowly out. What she
had seen had shocked her in some fashion or another. He waited until
she gathered herself.



Finally she said, “Just images. And pain. Lots of pain. What happened to you?”



“Bad things, darlin’,” he said. “Bad things.”



“Don’t you think it’s past your
bedtime, Logan?” Cyclops said as he stepped into the doorway and
stood beside Jean. “Or do you want Jean to tell you a
story?”



Logan snorted. “I bet she’s got a few you haven’t heard.”



Jean sighed and shot Cyclops a look of frustration.
“Let me know when you two start butting antlers. I’ll get
my camera.”



She turned and left, clearly flustered by what she had
seen in Logan’s mind. And, Logan guessed, because Cyclops had
stuck his nose in where it didn’t belong.



Logan stared at Cyclops and, despite the visor, it was plain he was staring back.



“You gonna tell me to stay away from your girl?” Logan asked, sneering at Cyclops.



“If I had to do that,” Cyclops said, “she wouldn’t be my girl.”



Cyclops stepped into the room. Logan stayed on the bed, not moving, but ready to if something warranted it.



“Rogue said you were like an animal in that
bar,” Cyclops said. “I think she meant it as a compliment.
She was very impressed. But fighting humans is very different from
taking on mutants. Especially Magneto.”



“You’ve fought him, have you?” Logan asked.



“We haven’t had to resort to that,” Cyclops said. “Yet.”



Logan laughed. “You’re prepping for a war,
and I’m not convinced you could handle yourself in a heated
discussion. I’m guessing I’m the only one here who’s
seen any real combat.”



“And when was that?” Cyclops asked.



Logan just stared. He wasn’t about to go over what little he remembered with this wet-nosed kid. “Previously.”



“Don’t like to talk about your past, huh?”



“Got it in one,” Logan said. “Especially to you.”



“It just must kill you that I saved your life,” Cyclops said.



Logan only snorted. He actually hadn’t given it much thought, but he wasn’t going to bait the kid with that.



Cyclops laughed. “Don’t worry. It won’t happen again.”



Logan only shrugged.



Cyclops turned and headed for the door. There he stopped
and looked back. “And Logan,” Cyclops said, his face hard
and very intense. “Stay away from my girl.”



With that Cyclops moved off down the hall, leaving Logan to sit on his bed and smile.






Jean Grey stood in the laboratory in front of the light
board, staring at the X rays posted there. To one side sat Professor
Xavier, and behind him stood Cyclops and Storm. All of them were in
their comfortable clothes. Storm had even had to get dressed to come
down, because this gathering was later than normal.



But when Jean had left Logan, she had still been too
wired to sleep, so she’d gone back to her lab to finish reviewing
his physical exam results. What she had found had caused her to call
the others immediately.



While they were on the way, she had taken the time to
gather herself, calm herself. She didn’t want to admit—or
show—how much that flash of mental contact had bothered her.
Especially to Scott. He was having enough trouble with her even talking
to Logan.



The X rays on the light board showed different angles of
Logan’s skeleton, from the skull down to his fingers and toes. It
looked more like a creation of a Deco architect than something natural,
that was for sure. Much of the skeleton was streamlined, refined in
many strange ways. Clearly manufactured.



And the claws running from the back of his arms down to
his knuckles looked downright mean. The design was brilliant, allowing
them to work based purely on muscle control.



Even after an hour of studying the X rays, she still
couldn’t believe what she was seeing. When the others arrived,
she started by pointing out the bones, bright white on the X ray, then
glanced at the professor. “The metal is an alloy called
adamantium.”



“You’re kidding,” Cyclops said.



“I didn’t think that was possible,” the professor said, staring at the X rays, his features calm as always.



“I didn’t either,” Jean said.
“Until today, I thought adamantium to be a myth. Impenetrable,
unbreakable. Supposedly indestructible.” She pointed at the white
on the X rays. “But all that is adamantium.”



“How in the world did anyone even work it into shapes?” Storm asked.



Jean just shook her head. “I’ve no idea. But
it’s been surgically grafted to his entire skeleton. Even around
his joints and over his skull.”



“Amazing,” Cyclops said.



“How could he have survived a procedure like that?” Storm asked.



“His mutation,” Jean said, glancing at the
professor to make sure she was on the right track. “Logan has
uncharted regenerative capability, which enables him to heal rapidly.
This also makes his age impossible to determine. For all we know, he
could very well be older than you, Professor.”



Xavier smiled.



Cyclops laughed, then asked, “Any idea who did this to him? Or why?”



The professor was about to answer, but Jean jumped in
ahead of him, basing her answer on her last conversation with Logan,
and the mental connection they had shared. “He doesn’t
know. Nor does he remember anything about his life before the operation
happened. But he remembers the pain.”



Professor Xavier stared at her for a moment, clearly
surprised that she knew what she did. Then he sighed. “This is
something I’ve feared all along: experimentation on mutants.
It’s not entirely unheard-of, but I’ve never seen anything
like this before.”



The idea that Logan had been the subject of someone’s inhuman experiment upset Jean more than she wanted to admit.



“So,” Cyclops said, staring at Jean for an
instant before glancing at the professor, “what do you think
Magneto wants with him?”



The professor pointed at the X rays on the wall. “I’m not entirely sure it’s him that Magneto wants.”



“The adamantium?” Storm asked.



The professor didn’t answer.



Jean knew he didn’t have to.





 







Chapter Nine





X-Men Mansion




Jean slowly, and as quietly as she could, went about her
normal bedtime routine. As always this late at night, the mansion
around her was quiet.



Scott was already in bed, lying on his back as he always
did, his visor secured to the back of his head so that it
wouldn’t accidentally come off in his sleep.



She couldn’t tell if he was sleeping or not, so she
simply slipped into bed beside him and turned off the lights. It had
been a very strange day. Much had changed. And she was still unsettled
with her glimpse into Logan’s mind, and worried about
Scott’s jealousy of him. That wasn’t like Scott at all.



In the dark, Scott’s visor was glowing softly. It dimmed slightly once when he blinked. He was awake.



“What’s wrong?” she asked.



“I hate him,” Scott said.



“Why?” Jean asked, startled at Scott’s blunt reply.



“The way he looks at you,” Scott said. “His eyes. I just don’t trust him.”



She smiled and curled up against him, putting her head on
his chest. “You know I love you, Scott,” she said.
“And you should trust me.”



She kissed him, and after that, there just wasn’t much to be said.



Outside, in the hallway, Rogue walked quietly, trying not
to wake anyone. She had on her nightgown and the body stocking that
protected others from her.



She had tossed and turned for the past hour, thinking about the day, worrying about the future and what Storm had told her.



There was no cure for being a mutant. Her only options were acceptance and control.



She had so wanted a cure.



She had held out hope since leaving home that she someday might find one.



That dream had been shattered, and she was more afraid
than she had ever been, even when on the road with the truckers. But
now she was afraid of the future, of what it held for her.



Rogue reached Logan’s door and slowly opened it, peeking inside.



“Logan?” she said softly.



No response.



She moved inside and closed the door behind her, staring
at him. He was sleeping fitfully, grunting and talking some in his
sleep. She couldn’t understand what he was saying.



She watched him for a moment, then moved over to the big
round chair near his bed. There, in the chair, she curled up and closed
her eyes.



Just being close to him made her feel safe.



After a few moments, she too was asleep.




Magneto’s Headquarters




Senator Kelly slowly came to, the pain in his head a
pounding drum, throbbing with each beat of his heart. At first he
couldn’t remember what had happened. Nothing around him, from the
trees to the clearing floor and rock cliffs, looked familiar.



When he tried to touch his head, he discovered his hands were tied behind his back. He was bound to a metal chair.



He looked down slowly, so as not to increase his
headache, trying to focus his eyes. He could tell that he was still
dressed in his suit and tie. Maybe he was being robbed? No, that
didn’t make sense, since he could still feel his wallet in his
back pocket.



Slowly but surely, the memory came back, like a bad dream
drifting in over the pain: Guyrich turning into a blue mutant. The blue
woman had beat him, kicked him in the head.



The memory sent a sharp stab shooting through his skull.



Had it really happened?



His vision slowly cleared a little more, so that he could
focus over the throbbing ache. He let himself move his pounding head
slowly, looking for anything around him that just might seem familiar.



Most of the space that surrounded him was shaded in
darkness. It was a clearing of some sort, inside a covered place. There
were trees and rocks and massive stone walls with arching metal
entrances. The sound of running water was a continuous background
noise. The air was warm, and there was almost no breeze. He could smell
a faint aroma of pine and ocean salt.



He had never seen anyplace like this before. Fantastic
architecture blended right in with the forest and rocks, as if the two
belonged together, yet it was clear that the man-made features were
dominant.



Then Kelly noticed a heavy man standing on one side of
the clearing, just in the shadows, staring up into a tree. A bird was
chirping there, jumping from limb to limb. The man watched intently
until something shot out of his mouth and grabbed the bird, pulling it
right out of the tree.



Kelly stared, not believing what he was seeing. It was the man’s tongue stuck to the bird.



One very long tongue.



The bird struggled but couldn’t get loose. The
guy’s mouth opened extra wide, as if his jaws had come unhinged,
and he took in the entire bird. Then, with his eyes closed as if
savoring a special treat, the man chewed up the bird, eating it alive,
bones and all. Senator Kelly could hear the smacking and cracking
sounds even from where he sat.



He wanted to be sick. He turned away as much as he could,
closed his eyes, working to keep his empty stomach from pushing up
through his throat. Never in all of his life had he seen such a
perverted act.



He struggled with his bindings, fighting to get loose. He had to get out of here, wherever here was.



Slowly another man—a powerful-looking, stately
man—emerged from one of the tubelike entrances in the cliff wall
and moved into the light. He smiled at Kelly.



“Who are you?” the senator demanded. “Where is my aide? Why have you taken me?”



“My name is Magneto, Senator Kelly,” the man
said, his voice rich and deep and in control, with just a hint of an
accent. “Your aide, Mr. Guyrich, has been dead for some time. But
I’ve had Mystique here keep you company.”



The blue woman stepped out of the shadows and wrapped her arms around Magneto, as a lover might, claiming territory.



Kelly pushed back, wanting to get as far away from her as
he could. But his bonds wouldn’t allow him to move at all, and
the chair was far, far too heavy to push. So instead he decided to
confront this Magneto.



“You know, don’t you,” Kelly said,
“that whatever you do to me will just prove me right? Every word
I’ve spoken will be confirmed.”



Magneto laughed, letting Mystique slip off and step back. “Gosh, I sure hope so.”



That wasn’t the answer Kelly had expected. He
watched as the man stepped closer. He didn’t look dangerous. Not
like the blue woman. But with mutants there was no way of telling. And
with a name like Magneto, he had to be a mutant.



“Are you a God-fearing man, Senator?”



Kelly pushed back, trying everything he could to get away from the man who just kept getting closer and closer.



Magneto laughed. “Seems you are certainly afraid of
something at the moment. But God-fearing man? Such a strange phrase,
don’t you think?”



Kelly said nothing, trying to catch his breath as Magneto went on. The throbbing in his head increased.



“I’ve always thought of God as a teacher. As a bringer of light, wisdom, and understanding.”



To his own surprise, Kelly found it was everything he
could do to keep from screaming. The man had moved even closer and was
almost leaning down in front of him. In the background, the man who ate
birds and the blue woman stood, watching, smiling. They were clearly
enjoying what Magneto was doing to him.



“You see,” Magneto said, coming right up into
Kelly’s face, “I think what you really are afraid of is me.
Me and my kind, the brotherhood of mutants.”



Kelly’s head felt as if it were going to explode. His entire body was shaking with fear.



Magneto smiled, looking Kelly right in the eyes for the longest time. Then, without blinking, he stood, turned, and walked away.



Suddenly Kelly’s chair moved, clearly being dragged along the ground behind Magneto by some unseen force.



“Oh, fearing mutants is not surprising,
really,” Magneto said as he walked, talking as if he and Kelly
were just engaging in a normal conversation while they strolled in a
forest. Only Kelly wasn’t walking.



“As a friend has pointed out to me often,”
Magneto continued, “humans have always feared what they
don’t understand. True?”



Magneto glanced back at Kelly, but Kelly stubbornly
refused to give the mutant the pleasure of an answer. So Magneto went
on, talking and walking, with Kelly’s chair bumping along the
ground behind him.



“And mankind has always made laws to protect itself
from what it doesn’t understand. Laws like your mutant
registration law.”



“The intention of the Mutant Registration Act—”



Magneto stopped and turned on Kelly, cutting him off in midsentence. Kelly’s chair slammed to a stop.



“Intention?” Magneto’s eyes flashed
with some sort of inner pain, and his voice rose almost to a shout. He
calmed quickly. “Senator, you and I both know all about the road
to hell and what it is paved with.”



Kelly said nothing, but he didn’t look away.



“We are not talking about intentions, Senator. We
are talking about mankind. Human fear. And trust me when I tell you, it
is only a matter of time before mutants will be herded into camps,
studied for weaknesses, and eventually wiped off the face of the
Earth.”



Magneto pointed to the faint blue numbers tattooed into
the inside of his arm. Nazi prison camp tattoos. Despite himself, Kelly
was shocked.



“Trust me, Senator. I know,” Magneto said. “I’ve seen it happen in my lifetime.”



Kelly shook his head. There was nothing he could say. Nothing he dared say at this point.



Magneto shrugged and turned. “Well, I’m much
more giving than that. I simply want to show you, to help you
understand.”



Magneto waved his hand, and the entire area lit up. It
became clear that Kelly was in a forest clearing, with towering cliff
walls all around. Something stretched overhead, from cliff wall to
cliff wall, enclosing the clearing, but Kelly couldn’t see what
it was.



Stonework and metal structures blended into the cliff
walls, almost as if they had been formed there. Tunnel openings
disappeared into the cliffs in a number of different places. Every line
was flowing, yet everything seemed stark and oversized.



The center of the clearing drew Kelly’s attention.



A machine?



A sculpture?



Kelly wasn’t sure. The metal seemed to flow upward
from a round base supporting three pillars that held up a platform
forty feet in the air. On the platform sat two curved, almost
tusk-shaped metal spires, arcing into the air twenty feet above,
pointing at each other but not touching. It all appeared to be made of
metal, and it seemed to shine under its own power.



It was the most fantastic thing, sculpture or machine, that Kelly had ever seen.



Magneto walked toward it, still talking.
“Don’t fear God, Senator. And certainly, most certainly,
don’t fear me.” Magneto laughed. Then he added, “At
least not anymore.”



“What is it you intend to do to me?” Kelly shouted at Magneto’s back.



“Let’s just say that God works too slowly,” Magneto said as he stepped up onto the base of the sculpture.



Suddenly Kelly realized that his first impression had
been right. It wasn’t a sculpture, but instead some incredible
machine.



Magneto stood facing Kelly, his feet apart. He placed his hands on two upright posts.



Magneto jerked as his hands seemed to be yanked solidly
against the posts; then he was whisked up the center to the top of the
machine, where he was locked into place under the two curving metal
shapes.



A set of metal rings rose up around Magneto, spinning slowly at first, then faster and faster.



The air around Kelly seemed to be charged with energy;
the light seemed brighter. A slight wind started to blow, swirling
around Kelly.



Everything gained in intensity as the rings moved faster and faster, forming a blur around the mutant.



Then the air started to ripple off the machine, like waves on clear water.



Kelly wanted to look away, but he couldn’t. Energy
seemed to pour from Magneto’s hands, through the post and into
the rings swirling around him.



The rings were now moving so fast that they weren’t
even a blur, but instead formed a ball. The air around the machine was
rippling away harder and harder. Magneto had his eyes closed. He was
straining with all his might to do what he was doing.



Then the rings began to glow.



Dull red at first, then brighter and brighter, until they
became almost a white ball around the mutant. Kelly wanted to shade his
eyes, but his hands were tied. He turned his head, the headache growing
again from the intense light.



Magneto was barely visible behind the light. Nonetheless, the strain was very evident on his face.



Where before it had been silent, now a whine came from
the machine. It started to grow. The light coming off the rings
vanished. Yet Kelly could still see the faint outline of the ball that
showed the incredibly fast rings.



Louder and louder the whine cut through the vast chamber.



The sound filled the space, bounced off the cliff walls, echoed back even louder.



The ground under Kelly’s chair was shaking.



Then, suddenly, everything seemed to just . . . stop.



Silence.



Dead, heavy silence.



Kelly was afraid to even breathe.



Then the entire top of the machine, Magneto and all,
appeared to vanish, leaving in its place a light that seemed to ooze
rather than radiate, a light that filled everything around it,
expanding outward.



Liquid light, creeping and unstoppable.



There was nothing like it in all of Kelly’s experience.



And it was coming right at him.



He tried to shove back as the white light reached him,
then washed up and over him, crawling into his eyes, his mouth, his
ears, and flooding his mind.



He tried to scream, but the light muffled everything,
filling his every pore, touching his every nerve with hot tips of agony
combined with ecstasy. His senses ran through the range of everything
he had ever experienced.



First every scent he had ever smelled, from baking bread
to an overused latrine. From a woman’s perfume to the smell of
fear when someone faced him in the Senate.



Then images started flashing through his mind, faster and
faster, like a movie on fast forward. He was able to see everything he
had ever done in his life. And then things others had done around him.



He saw it all.



Understood it all.



Then he heard over again what he had said. Everything,
clear and distinct, all at once. And then what people had said around
him. And about him.



He took it all in.



The touch of old girlfriends, of soft shirts, of burning plates.



He could feel every detail one moment, then nothing the next.



And then, far, far quicker than it had started, it was over.



The light just seemed to crawl back out of every pore, then vanish.



Inside the machine, Magneto slumped, clearly exhausted by
what he had done. He looked drained. Mystique ran to him and supported
him as he came down and slowly walked toward Kelly.



Kelly looked down at himself. His entire body seemed to
be glowing under his clothes. His skin was glistening, almost
luminescent.



“Oh, God,” he said, crying now. “What have you done to me?”



He wanted to push back the memory of all the sensations,
all the understanding, but they wouldn’t be ignored. He knew the
last few minutes could never be ignored.



Magneto stumbled over to a place in front of Kelly and weakly smiled. “Welcome to the future, brother.”





 







Chapter Ten





X-Men Mansion




As Rogue slept soundly nearby, the dream returned to Logan. The nightmare.



The dream Logan knew was real. Had been real. But he could only remember the dream. And the nightmare.



And, of course, the pain.



Flash!



The military lab loomed over him, crazy instruments, older-looking stuff. Bottles, machines, tanks of fluid.



Bright lights filled the ceiling over him.



Belts held him down, secure to the bed.



The images were there, but never anything that could tell him where he was. What was outside the walls.



Flash!



He was naked. Someone in a mask had drawn on his body
with blue pen, showing every branch of his skeleton. The person was a
man, but Logan could see only the eyes. Cold eyes.



Others came in as Logan fought against the belts that held him. Rubber gloves.



Masks.



White gowns and hats.



Cold eyes.



One rubber-gloved hand shoved a mask over his mouth and nose. He struggled but lost the fight.



The air from the mask tasted metallic.



The images swam before him.



He could no longer fight. His body wouldn’t respond to his thoughts.



They picked up the bed and lowered it, with him still strapped to it, into a tank of liquid.



It sloshed around him.



Scalpels flashed over him.



A black figure loomed in his vision.



The scalpels cut.



Pain!



And cut.



Pain!



And cut.



Unbearable pain!



Flash!



He screamed.



Beside him a figure loomed out of the shadows.



He reacted. Instantly. Instinctively.



His hands weren’t belted down as they had been in the dream. Yet he still thought he was in the nightmare.



Snikt. His claws cut through his attacker.



Silence.



His scream was long gone into the walls and hallways of the mansion around him.



He didn’t move.



His attacker didn’t move. Logan could feel the weight of whoever it was on his claws. And he heard the gasp of pain.



A familiar gasp.



His nightmare-fogged mind tried to wake up, remind himself where he was.



Suddenly his door burst open. Cyclops stood frozen there
for an instant until Storm and Jean shoved past him, flipping on the
light.



Logan was sitting upright in his bed. The claws from his
right hand were still extended through Rogue’s shoulder and out
her back.



She was frozen on the end of his fist, standing beside
his bed. He held her there, staring into her shocked eyes, not knowing
if he should move or not.



What had he done?



Cyclops jumped to help, but Storm grabbed his arm.



“Don’t touch her.”



Rogue nodded, then smiled at Logan. “You were having a nightmare,” she said, her voice raspy.



“I know,” Logan said.



Rogue eased one arm up slowly and gently touched his
face, as if he were a long-lost lover and this would be the last time
she would ever see him.



For a short moment her touch was light. Wonderful.



Then what felt like a blast of electric current shot through his body.



His claws instantly retracted, pulling through Rogue like a knife through butter.



Rogue staggered back, mouth open in a silent scream. Her eyes were wide with fear, with shock, with horror.



The electric charge stopped as suddenly as it had
started, the moment her hand left the side of his face. Blackness
threatened to swarm in from the sides of his mind and take him, but he
shoved it back.



Rogue stood staring at him, with Cyclops, Storm, and Jean
gathered around her but not touching her. And as they all watched, her
wounds healed, leaving not even the slightest scar. She stood for a
moment, a stunned look on her face. Then she bolted from the room.



His fuzzy mind wouldn’t let him understand what had just happened. He was just glad that she was okay.



Then he couldn’t hold the blackness back any longer.



This time he didn’t dream.






Twenty minutes later, Storm stood in the hall as Scott
came out, leaving Jean and Professor Xavier to deal with Logan. She
didn’t need to be a telepath to see that Scott was angry. Deeply
angry.



He nodded to her and stalked past.



“Scott, wait!” Storm said, moving to catch up with him.



He stopped, hands on his hips, daring her to say
something. She had never seen him like this before. His visor was
almost a bright red. Luckily he knew perfectly how to contain his
power, especially during times like this. The alternative would be
disastrous.



“You want to talk about it?” she asked,
keeping her voice low so they wouldn’t awake anyone in the rooms
nearby.



“Not really,” he said.



“Jealous of Logan, huh?” she asked, taking a chance.



Her words seemed to snap his head back as if she’d hit him.



“So,” she said, pushing, “someone in your past had a problem with jealousy, huh?”



“None of your damn business,” Scott said,
keeping his voice low, but very cold and forceful. “And I’m
not jealous. I just hate how Logan puts everything we’ve worked
for at risk.”



“So,” Storm said, “what would you do? Throw him out on the street like—”



“Yes,” Scott said, adjusting his visor. “I would. He’s hurt Jean, and now Rogue.”



“He didn’t mean to,” Storm countered.



“You tell yourself whatever you want,”
Cyclops said, “but the truth is this: We have a school here,
filled with children. We’re not ready to deal with this sort
of—”



Now he had gotten her angry. And he wasn’t going to
get away with it. “Scott, this has nothing to do with the
children, and you know it.”



Cyclops shook his head, the strength in her words surprising him.



“Frankly,” Storm said, pressing on and giving
him no chance to say anything, “I am amazed that you would even
put the children between yourself and the truth.”



“You really think this is about Jean?” Cyclops said.



“Yes, I do,” Storm said.



Cyclops took a deep breath and stared at her. His voice
was still low and cold, and downright mean. “Jean can do whatever
she wants. I am not in charge of her and have no desire to be in charge
of her. How dare you even imply that I am.”



At that, he turned and walked toward his and Jean’s room.



“Scott, for God’s sake . . .”



He stopped and looked back at her. “You saw what
happened, Storm. Whatever else I may feel personally doesn’t
matter. Magneto is coming. And people are going to die.”



With that, he stepped into his room. His door closed with a solid thump.



Storm forced herself to take a few deep breaths. That
hadn’t been productive. She and Scott had had discussions in the
past, and disagreements, but never an argument like this one.



She glanced back at Logan’s door. Maybe Scott was
right. Logan was hurting them in many, many ways. And this argument was
just a small example.



What would be next? Who would be next?






Jean stood behind Professor Xavier, a good number of feet
back from Logan’s bed. The professor had said he was going to try
to wake Logan up, to check if he was all right. He had told Scott to
leave and had asked her to stay as backup. Clearly Scott hadn’t
liked that.



She would deal with one problem at a time.



“Ready?” the professor asked.



“When you are,” she said.



You are perfectly safe now.



The professor was allowing her to hear what he was thinking.



Logan stirred and moaned, twisting on his bed like a child in the throes of a bad dream.



I want you to stay calm, and tell me if you understand what I’m saying.



Logan opened his eyes slowly and again moaned, reaching up and touching his head.



Do you understand me?



“Would you get the hell out of my head, cue ball!” Logan snarled.



Jean laughed, relieved. She could tell that the professor was also very pleased.



“Well,” Professor Xavier said out loud, “I’d say you are recovering nicely.”



The professor moved up closer to the bed, and Jean moved over and sat at the foot.



“How’s Rogue? Is she okay? And what did she
do to me?” Logan asked, holding his head. “I feel as if
I’ve been on a ten-day bender.”



“She borrowed your power,” Jean said.



“Pardon me?” Logan responded, blinking at her. It was as if he was trying to focus his eyes.



“Rogue is like a conductor,” the professor
explained. “Any physical contact can cause unconsciousness,
seizures, and even death to the one she touches.”



“Not a fun mutation,” Logan said. “And I’ve seen it at work before.”



“It is not,” the professor agreed.
“With mutants, she’s able to take on their gifts for a
short time.”



“In this case,” Jean said, “your ability to heal.”



“Well,” Logan said, still holding his head
with one hand, as if it might just fall apart if he let go. “It
felt like she almost killed me.”



“If she had held on any longer,” the professor said, “she might have.”



The professor glanced over at Jean, then back at Logan. “You should get some sleep now.”



The professor turned and wheeled his chair out into the
hallway. Jean stood and moved to stand beside Logan where he lay on the
bed. “You need something, you shout.”



Logan took her hand. His own hand was rough, hard, yet part of her didn’t want him to let go.



“You know,” he said, “I’d sleep better if you stayed with me.”



She laughed and pulled away. “Somehow I doubt that, Logan.”



“Yeah, so do I,” Logan admitted.



“Good night, Logan,” she said as she pulled his door closed.



She took a deep breath to settle her nerves, then headed
for her room. Now all she had to do was get Scott calmed down and just
maybe she could get some sleep. Maybe.





 







Chapter Eleven





Magneto’s Headquarters




Senator Kelly sat on the floor against the cold stone, wondering what to do, where to go, what was going to happen to him next.



He couldn’t believe how much had changed in the
last twelve hours. It almost seemed like a lifetime ago that he had
climbed into the government helicopter, enjoying the fruits of his
position. His public image had been rising in the polls, and the Mutant
Registration Act was going to garner him a lot more free air time
before it was finished.



Now this mutant—this Magneto—had done
something to him. Something horrible that Kelly couldn’t quite
figure out yet. But he knew his body had changed. He could feel it. He
seemed to be sweating all the time, even though he wasn’t hot at
all.



He stood and moved over to the cell’s only window.
The entire cell, including the window, had been cut out of the rock
cliff face. Thick bars were implanted in the stone. The bars were just
set close enough that when he leaned forward to stare at the ocean
pounding on the rocks far below, he couldn’t get his head
through.



The door to the cell was set in the opposite wall, and it
was also barred. The path to his cell wound around a far cliff wall, to
a long walkway that was now retracted, leaving the cell without an
exit.



He tried to think, make himself understand that he was
being held hostage. He had to be thinking all the time; he had to stay
on his toes, keep Magneto and his other mutant friends always wary of
him. And he also had to find out what the machine had done to him.



He glanced down at his pants, and the shirt under his
jacket. They were wet. His skin was wet. Yet he felt all right. Just
tired. What was Magneto doing to him?



Why?



He tugged on one of the window’s bars, then
another, hoping that one of them might be loose. They weren’t,
and he knew he could never chip the base of one of them out of the
stone—certainly not in time to help.



And even if he did somehow manage it, where would he go?



He pushed his face between two bars in frustration, desperately trying to look out and down, to see what lay below.



Suddenly it felt as if his skull cracked and got smaller. His head went a little farther between the bars.



He yanked back, shocked. He grabbed his head on both sides, feeling to see if something was wrong. If he had hurt himself.



What in the hell had just happened?



He could feel his head slowly expand back out in his hands, until it was a normal shape again.



“Okay,” Kelly said aloud, his heart pounding,
his breath coming in pants as he fought to keep himself under control.
“There has to be a perfectly logical explanation.”



He couldn’t think of one.



He stepped back up to the bars and once again carefully
leaned his head between two of them, letting the cold steel rub his
forehead just outside his eyes.



Nothing.



Water dripped off his head. His hands. Everywhere. He leaned a little harder against the bars.



This time he could feel his head sort of scrunch up.



He pushed harder and harder, expecting it to hurt at any
moment, until his head was halfway through the bars, with the steel
rubbing both his ears. The process had made a loud crunching sound in
his ears, and he could feel the motion, but it didn’t seem
painful at all.



He yanked back again, leaving wet marks on the bars.



Quickly his head returned to its normal size like a balloon filling with air.



He was losing his mind!



This couldn’t be happening to him!



He kicked off his shoes and pulled off his soaked socks.
Both shoes had standing water in them. Without the shoes he walked
around the cell, trying to think, his bare feet leaving wet footprints
on the rock floor.



Nothing made sense. Magneto had kidnapped him and had done something to him.



That much was clear.



But how could his head scrunch down enough to get between those bars, yet not hurt him?



Suddenly, across the gap outside the main door, Kelly heard footsteps on the stone. Someone was coming up the path to his cell.



He moved back over to the window. Then, out of pure desperation, he leaned forward and pressed his head between the bars.



It went more easily this time, and before he knew it, his
head was through. Below he could see the water pounding the rocks. The
fall would kill him, he was sure. But he had to get out of the cell,
give himself some more time before Magneto took him.



Kelly turned his shoulder and, with both hands on the stone ledge, tried to pull his body through.



For an instant it wouldn’t fit, then he heard the
crunching as his shoulders and his rib cage collapsed, and he pulled
himself through the small opening between the bars. He was halfway
there.



Far, far below, the crashing waves shoved water into the
air. There was a slight ledge just under the windowsill that seemed to
go around the cliff for a short distance.



He pulled his hips through the small opening, feeling the
bones smash down, then feeling them expand back to normal size as soon
as the pressure was off.



This wasn’t really happening to him.



From the pathway, he heard the extension ramp start
across toward his cell door. He didn’t have any more time. With
speed born of desperation, he turned around on the rock windowsill and
lowered himself down to the thin ledge. He’d never done anything
like this before. His heart was pounding so hard he thought it was
going to burst out of his chest.



He had read where people in stressful situations often
did things they would never dream of doing under normal conditions.
Well, this certainly qualified.



As the ramp stopped, the sound rang through the cell so
loudly it made Kelly freeze. Then, as the lock clicked, Kelly tried to
move to his right along the thin rock ledge, grasping for any handhold
to get himself away from the window. But with his fingers and hands so
wet, it felt as if he were holding on to a wall of ice.



“How are we feeling, Senator?” Magneto asked
as the cell door swung open with a clank. “Advanced, I hope?
Senator?”



There was a very long pause. Kelly tried to hold his breath, hoping they wouldn’t look out here.



Suddenly, over his head, the steel bars of the window were ripped inward, pulled out of the stone as if it were putty.



A moment later Magneto stuck his head out and smiled.
“Senator, did you actually squeeze through these bars? That is
very impressive.”



Kelly was barely holding on. His hands were wet, his feet
slick on the stone. “What have you done to me?” he croaked.



“Senator,” Magneto said, “this is
pointless. Where would you go? Who would take you in now that you are
one of us?”



Kelly couldn’t believe what he had just heard. Magneto had referred to him as one of them.



A mutant!



Then, in a flash, he understood.



“You changed me into a mutant?” Kelly asked in horror.



Magneto smiled. “Of course. What did you think I was doing to you?”



Then Magneto moved back out of the window and Kelly heard
him say, as if in a faraway dream, “Sabretooth, get the senator
off that ledge.”



A moment later an ugly face thrust out the window, and a clawlike hand reached for him.



Kelly, at that moment, no longer cared. He had become his worst nightmare. He had become the very thing that he hated most.



He pushed back away from the stone even as Sabretooth grabbed his hand and coat.



But Kelly felt his hand crunch down into something so small and slick that Sabretooth couldn’t hold on.



And then, looking back into the face of the monster with yellow hair, Kelly fell toward the water below.



It was a very, very long fall.





 







Chapter Twelve





X-Men Mansion




This time the nightmare didn’t carry Logan all the
way down into the pain and the cutting. He came awake, almost wide
awake, staring at the ceiling. He had been sweating, and the sheets
were soaking wet. It took him a moment to remember exactly where he
was.



Then he remembered.



Remembered what had happened last night with Rogue.



Remembered the feeling of death.



A noise snapped his head toward the door. A
strange-looking kid was peeking inside. His eyes grew wide when he saw
Logan turn. The kid made a little squeaking noise that sounded like
“Sorry,” and then ducked out, pulling the door shut behind
him.



Logan laughed. Then he rubbed his face and head, hard,
trying to shake the sensations, the memory of what had happened with
Rogue. And what he had felt when she touched him.



Then he realized he didn’t want to lose that
memory. In fact, it just might be one of the more important things that
had ever happened to him.



For the next thirty minutes he lay there, thinking.



Remembering.






Even though she wasn’t hungry, Rogue had a small
tray of food: a sandwich, a banana, and some milk. The day had turned
beautiful, almost springlike in its warmth. Four of the other kids,
including Kitty, were sitting on a stone wall above the garden, eating
and talking. She knew, after how all the kids had treated her this
morning, that she didn’t dare try to go sit with them.



Or with anyone else for that matter. She was back to
being alone. As alone as she had been hitchhiking. And for the same
reason. Her curse.



Her problem.



Or as they called it here, her power.



She walked past the group on the wall, looking for a
place to sit in the garden. But no space was open. Behind her she could
hear a few of the kids whispering loudly. She knew they were whispering
about her.



She moved out of the garden and toward the basketball
court. Some of the older kids were playing a pickup game. Jubilee stood
to one side with four others. She looked up and saw Rogue, then turned
away, making it very clear that Rogue couldn’t join them.



Yesterday they had all been so friendly. Today they hated
her. Feared her. Just as her friends and family at home had feared her.



Rogue moved away from the game, down a path leading into
the woods. There she found a small stone bench and sat, putting the
tray beside her. She could feel the tears trying to come up, but she
wouldn’t let them.



“Get a grip!” she said firmly to herself. She
had been alone before; she could be alone again. She knew she
wasn’t going to be cured. She had better get used to this, and do
it now.



“Rogue?”



She spun around to see Bobby moving up the path through
the trees toward her. She turned back to her food, pretending to be
interested in it.



“Rogue,” Bobby said, “what did you do?”



He had stopped and was actually talking to her. The first one all day.



“I didn’t mean to touch him,” Rogue
said. Her resolve slipped, and the tears started to come. “I
didn’t know what to do.”



“They’re saying you steal other
mutants’ powers,” Bobby said, standing a few feet away, as
if she had some terrible disease.



“That’s not true,” Rogue said. “I mean, not really—”



“You don’t ever use your power against another mutant,” Bobby said forcefully. Accusingly.



“But I had no choice,” she said weakly. She
knew she had had a choice. She could have died. And at the moment, she
knew that that would have been the better choice.



“If I were you,” Bobby said, stepping away even farther, “I’d get myself out of here.”



She looked up at the fear in his eyes. “What do you mean?”



“I mean the students are all freaked,” he
said. “So am I. And Professor Xavier is furious. I don’t
know what he’ll do with you. I just think it would be easier for
you on your own.”



Rogue just couldn’t stop the tears now. She sat there sobbing as Bobby slowly backed away.



“Rogue,” Bobby said before he turned. “You really should go.”



He turned his back on her and walked toward the sounds of
the basketball game. The kids there were laughing and shouting and
having fun.



She knew that that wasn’t going to be something she
would ever be allowed to do again. Just as she had done at home, she
had to leave. For her own best interests, and for everyone around her.



She forced herself to stop crying. She couldn’t afford to cry anymore.



She picked up the banana and put it in her pocket. Then
she took a large bite out of the sandwich, even though she still
wasn’t hungry. No telling when she would get anything to eat
again.



Then she stood, and without a look back, headed down the path into the woods, drinking the milk as she walked.



Behind her the sounds of the laughter slowly faded. And with it, all her hope for a better life.




Somewhere along the Atlantic Coast




Twenty-seven-year-old Bonnie Risk had decided it was just
too nice a day to stay indoors. She and her seven-year-old son Neal
needed to get out, especially since it was Saturday and Neal’s
father had gone in to work. They lived a short fifteen minutes away
from their favorite beach, and Bonnie had figured there wouldn’t
be many people there this time of the year, even on a weekend.



She had been right. Maybe only a dozen others strolled
the beach or sat watching the waves. The sun was just warm enough for
her to spread a towel and sit comfortably while Neal played nearby.
This was better than the summer, since there weren’t many people
and it wasn’t hot and humid.



“Mom!” Neal shouted. “Look!”



Something was coming up out of the water. A very strange
something. First there was a head, then shoulders, then arms—with
flippers.



Bonnie quickly scrambled over to Neal and stood, grasping his shoulders so he wouldn’t move.



The thing looked half fish, half human. It also had flipperlike feet, and a human face. A very familiar human face, actually.



She watched as the creature came up out of the water. By
the time it reached dry sand, its flippers had turned back into feet
and arms.



It was a man. A very naked man now, who walked forward,
clearly disgusted, clearly angry, dripping water. He veered toward
where she had been sitting, grabbed her towel off the sand, and wrapped
it around himself. She almost shouted for him to stop, but at that
instant he turned and looked at her and she realized who it was.



Senator Robert Kelly!



Just a few days before, she had spent most of a day
watching his Senate hearings on television. Senate hearings
investigating mutants. But if he was a mutant himself, why did he hate
the other mutants so much? More than ever, nothing in politics made
sense to her.



He glared at her as she clutched Neal close to her side.



“Mom?” Neal said, loud enough for Kelly to hear. “Is that a mutant?”



Kelly sneered contemptuously, then turned and started
toward the street and parking lot. Halfway there, he suddenly bent
over, clutching his stomach as if in extreme pain. Then she heard him
moan as he dropped to one knee, his head down.



“Stay here!” she ordered Neal.



She started toward Kelly to see what she could do to help
him. Mutant or not, senator or not, he was still human, and it looked
like he needed help. But before she could take two steps, he had
straightened up, stood, and started walking again.



She stopped, dumbfounded, as he moved away. Then, with a
shrug, she moved back to Neal, murmuring under her breath.
“Hypocritical politicians.”



There was no doubt about it—this was one trip to the beach they were both going to remember for a very long time.





 







Chapter Thirteen





X-Men Mansion




Professor Xavier held up the X rays and studied them
again, looking for anything that might give him a clue as to why
Magneto was after Logan. Clearly there must be a reason, and that
reason was somehow important to what Magneto was planning.



The door to the medical lab clicked and opened as the
professor put down one X ray and held up another. Without turning, he
knew it was Scott who had just come in. He could sense the anger in his
young team leader.



“What are you looking for, Scott?” he asked, still without turning around.



The young X-Man slipped up on top of a lab bed and shook
his head. “Nothing, really. Any luck finding Magneto with the
Cerebro?”



“No. And it’s strange,” Xavier said.
The fact that he couldn’t find Magneto bothered Xavier a lot.
Somehow Magneto was shielding himself against the Cerebro, which might
mean that others in the brotherhood could do so as well, if Magneto
wanted them to.



Xavier put down another X ray and picked up a third, continuing to study.



“There are far more powerful mutants than Logan,” Scott said. “Why is this one so important to him?”



Xavier turned and glanced at Scott. It was clear, even
without reading the young man’s mind, that he was very troubled.
“You don’t like him, do you?”



Scott almost snorted. “How can you tell?” he asked sarcastically.



Xavier smiled. “Well, I’m psychic, you know.”



Scott laughed.



“Logan could be a valuable addition here,” Xavier said, staring at the young leader.



“He’s not one of us,” Scott replied.



“But he is,” Xavier said, as forcefully as he dared. “Don’t ever forget that.”



“Fine,” Scott said. “But you put a guy
like that in a combat situation, there’s no way he’s going
to take orders.”



Xavier stared at Scott. “Give him an order worth following, and he’ll take it.”



Scott nodded, adjusted his glasses, still not happy. “He’s not a team player.”



Xavier laughed softly. “Neither were you, Scott, when you first arrived. Remember?”



Scott was about to respond when the door slammed open.
Logan stood there, clearly upset. Professor Xavier could tell exactly
what he was thinking, and it wasn’t good.



“She’s gone!” Logan said.



“Who?” Scott asked, dropping down off the table.



“Rogue,” Xavier said.



Logan nodded.



The professor stretched out his mind until he found who he was looking for. Storm. Jean. Meet us at Cerebro. Rogue has disappeared.



“Come with me,” Xavier said out loud to
Cyclops and Logan, moving his chair past Cyclops and toward the door.
Logan quickly stepped aside.



Xavier turned his chair to the right and headed for the
thick steel door at the end of the hallway. Beyond it was a room in
which he had spent much time over the past week, looking for Magneto
without success.



From the elevator, Storm and Jean burst into the hall.



“What are we doing?” Logan demanded, staring
at the others as they all approached Cerebro’s polished steel
door. “Why aren’t we looking for her?”



“We are,” Cyclops said.



Xavier moved his chair up to a panel positioned at his
eye level beside the door. The screen lit up, registering his presence,
and he let it scan his eyes and forehead. A measure to keep out those
who shouldn’t have access to Cerebro, including any of the
school’s inquisitive students.



A moment later the security computer recognized him and the massive steel door clicked loudly, then started to open.



“The brain waves of mutants are different than
average human beings,” Xavier said, explaining to Logan as they
moved along. “Cerebro is a device which amplifies my power,
allowing me to locate mutants over great distances.”



“That’s how you followed the Sabretooth guy,” Logan said, nodding. “And found me and Rogue.”



“It is.”



“Welcome, Professor,” the computer voice said as they all moved inside.



Xavier nodded as he caught a wave of amazement from
Logan, who was impressed at the size of the room in which they stood.
It was big, completely round, and had only one entrance and exit. It
was, the professor explained, simply described, a radio antenna for
brain waves.



The entrance had led them to a small platform at the
center of one wall. The platform was engineered to extend out so that
the operator was dropped directly in the center of the sphere.



“Well,” Logan said, looking around,
“this certainly is a big, round room. Why don’t you just
use this to find Magneto?”



“I’ve been trying,” Xavier said as he
moved into position. “But he seems to have found a way to shield
himself from it.”



Logan stared at him. “Just how would he know how to do that?”



“Because he helped me build it.”



Logan’s face registered shock that would have been
almost amusing at any other time. But right now they had to find Rogue.
And fast, before something happened to her.



“Would you excuse me?” Xavier said to the rest.



Jean quickly set a few controls on the main board; then
all of them moved back to the hallway. Slowly the door closed, blocking
them out—and blocking out all other thoughts from the mutants in
the building.



Xavier tapped a button on his chair, and a headset
lowered quickly from the ceiling. As it did, the room seemed to come to
life. The walls seemed to move away, slowly at first, then faster and
faster, until their movement was no longer visible.



The ramp and headset slowly extended into the center of
the large room, coming to a stop at the exact point where his head was
located—the exact center of Cerebro.



Suddenly, all around him, the wall seemed to move outward, away from him.



Exploding.



Until he was simply alone, sitting in a black void.



Then he let his mind climb, up out of the basement, out
of the mansion. The light above seemed bright, but he knew he
wasn’t seeing it with his eyes. Just with his brain.



Soon he could feel Rogue.



Jean had set the Cerebro to focus on Rogue’s brain waves, and it was taking him to her.



He felt like a bird, free of the wheelchair and of his
body, flashing over the trees, the roads, the houses. He let himself
go. Everything seemed like a blur of color, yet he knew he could stop
at any moment, to seek out any detail. The surroundings were more like
a movie in fast forward.



He could sense Rogue’s brain waves, the power of her personality, pulling him toward her.



Down he went—over a building, over other
people—until he finally saw her, sitting on a bench alone. He
eased into her mind, without letting her know he was there, until he
saw what she saw. He felt her fear, her sadness, and what had made her
run away.



He would take care of the other students after he knew exactly where she was. Once she was safe and sound.



As he carefully searched her mind for her location, she
helped him without knowing it. She looked up at an Arrivals/Departures
board, and he knew exactly where she was.



A moment later he was back in Cerebro, the ramp withdrawing, the door swinging open.






Logan stared for a moment at the closed door, then at
Jean. For the last minute or so no one had said a word. He had simply
paced. Storm and Cyclops had sat on the floor. Jean had stood near
Cerebro’s control panel, watching it intently.



“What’s it like?” Logan asked, finally
unable to stand the silence anymore. “This Cerebro thing
he’s using.”



“I’ve never used Cerebro,” Jean said. “It takes a certain degree of control.”



“And I’m not prepared to see your memory erased,” Cyclops said.



Logan looked at her sharply, and she nodded. Then she glanced at the panel. “He’s coming out.”



They all gathered around as the massive steel door
opened, like an ultramodern bank vault. Professor Xavier wheeled out
and looked up at Cyclops. “She’s a few miles up the road.
At the train station.”



“I’ll go,” Logan said, starting to turn away.



“You can’t leave the mansion, Logan,”
Xavier said. “It’s just the opportunity that Magneto
needs.”



Logan turned and faced the professor straight on. “Yeah, but I’m the reason she took off.”



The hard eyes of the professor looked back at him without blinking. “We had a deal, Logan. Forty-eight hours.”



Logan nodded. He had made that deal. But he felt responsible for Rogue.



“She’s all right, Logan,” Jean said. “She’s just upset.”



“Storm, Cyclops,” Xavier said, turning toward them. “Go see if you can talk to her.”



Cyclops nodded, and they both headed off at a run to the ready room, to change into the black uniforms.



“Jean, we have to talk to the rest of the students,” the professor said.



Jean nodded, and the two of them moved to the elevator, leaving Logan standing there, fuming.



A deal was a deal. He knew that.



He started to follow the professor and Jean, then
stopped. This was Rogue. And she could be in danger. He wouldn’t
allow that to happen. Besides, while Cyclops and Storm changed clothes,
Rogue might get away. Or worse.



To hell with the deal. Sometimes responsibility had to take precedence.



To hell with this Magneto character, too. What had happened last night to Rogue was more important to him.



He turned and moved quickly down the hallway to the door
that led into the mansion’s underground garage. Unlike the
hangar, with its one special plane, this garage was filled with all
sorts of vehicles, all painted black.



A black motorcycle sat to one side, a black helmet
sitting on the seat. He knocked the helmet aside and climbed on,
kicking the bike into life. He could feel the power of the machine,
clearly souped up and well tuned. Nothing like a powerful bike to give
a guy a sense of confidence.



He popped it into gear; then, with the back tire spinning, he headed out into the deepening night.



Behind him he heard faint shouting. And ignored it.





 







Chapter Fourteen





Westchester Train Station




Rogue moved down the aisle of the train until she found
two empty seats. She hoped the car wasn’t going to be crowded.
She didn’t want anyone sitting next to her. Across the aisle, a
young woman and child were playing together, laughing lightly. She
couldn’t imagine ever being that happy again.



Outside the window, people stood on the old wooden
platform, talking, saying good-bye to friends, or just waiting. They
all looked normal. More than likely they all led normal lives. She
wondered how she looked to them.



“Hey, kid,” a voice said.



She glanced up as Logan dropped into the spot beside her, smiling.



She turned back to face the window without saying a word.
There was nothing she could say to him. She had almost killed him last
night. She had no idea what he was even doing here.



“You runnin’ again?” Logan asked.



“How did you know I was here?” Rogue asked without turning her face away from the window.



“Well,” Logan said, “the professor put
on this metal head thing, and—” He waved his hand in
disgust. “Don’t ask.”



“Sorry I did,” she said.



“You even have a ticket?”



“No,” Rogue said. She had figured she would
deal with that problem once the train started moving. Even if they
kicked her off, she would still be farther from the mansion than she
had been.



“Then let me give you some free advice,”
Logan said. “When the ticket guy comes, hide in the bathroom. You
won’t have to pay that way.”



She nodded. She had no idea why he was helping her. Or if
he was even going to ride along with her. Finally she just had to know
what he knew. She turned from the window to face him. “I hear the
professor was mad at me.”



Logan half snorted. “Why would he be mad at you?”



“Because I used my power on another mutant,” Rogue said. “And I’m never supposed to.”



Logan looked at her, clearly puzzled. “Who told you that?”



“Bobby,” Rogue said softly.



“One of the other students?” Logan asked.



“Yes,” Rogue said.



“And you didn’t go ask the professor or Storm or Jean? Or even Scott?”



Rogue shook her head. It just hadn’t occurred to her. Bobby seemed as if he knew what he was talking about.



Logan sighed and said nothing.







X-Men Mansion




Bobby stood in front of the heavy steel door that led to
Cerebro, just staring at it as if it might open of its own accord. Of
course, it wouldn’t. He glanced around, making sure no one was
coming in either direction. Then he started to shift.



Quickly Mystique moved back into the shape of her own
body. She took a moment to draw a breath, then focused on what she
needed to do next. She had to remember the exact patterns, the exact
details. Everything needed to be perfect. Especially the eyes. Being
young Bobby had been easy. She had fooled the girl Rogue, just as they
had planned. But this shift had to be exact. And that was something she
hadn’t done often.



With her most intense focus, she started to shift again. This time just changing part of herself.



She focused on every detail in her mind, as she shifted from the shoulders up into a replica of Professor Xavier.



When she was finished, she keyed in a sequence that
opened the panel near the door, then knelt down slightly in front of
the retinal scanner. It lit up, scanning her forehead and eyes.



For a moment she thought it might not work.



Then, with a satisfying clanking sound, the door unlocked and slowly swung open.



She quickly shifted back to her natural form and stepped
inside. She turned and pulled the door almost closed behind her, making
sure it didn’t latch. She hoped anyone passing by would not
notice the slightly open door, but she also didn’t want to be
trapped inside this machine. That was for sure.



“Welcome, Professor,” the machine said.



She didn’t answer. Magneto had told her to be very
careful about that. He had no idea what safety features Charles Xavier
had added lately.



Mystique quickly moved to the console near the edge of
the platform. The massive round room remained completely dark around
her, but she had practiced hundreds of times what she was going to do
next. She didn’t need light.



She swung in under the console and with a small screwdriver opened the panel she found there.



A bright white light covered her. It came from a
beautiful, intricate, fiber-optic core that was suspended under the
panel. It seemed almost like a ball of energy.



Or a brain. More like a glowing white brain.



She studied it for a moment, then quickly jammed the screwdriver into it, again and again.



After a couple dozen hits, the light faded, leaving only gray tubes, broken wires, and dripping fluid.



She had killed it.



Ten minutes later, again in the shape of the student
named Bobby, she headed out one of the mansion’s side doors and
into the garden.



The real Bobby sat in his room, studying, wondering why
Rogue had left. Feeling vaguely guilty for not defending her, and
hoping she was all right.




Westchester Train Station




Cyclops glanced over at Storm as he brought the black SUV
to a halt in front of the train station. The black motorcycle Logan had
taken was parked there.



“Let’s hope he’s talking some sense into her,” Storm said.



“I’m more concerned about keeping Logan out of Magneto’s hands.”



“Yes, that too,” Storm agreed.



They headed inside the classic station house. It boasted
high, beamed ceilings; massive decorative windows; and a clock tower
that could be seen from the tracks and parklike grounds. At least a
hundred people were milling about, sitting on the high-backed wooden
benches or standing in groups, talking. Cyclops could see a train
sitting on the tracks just beyond the building.



“Split up,” Cyclops said. “You check
the ticket counter. I’ll see if I can spot her in the benches, or
on the platform outside.”



Storm nodded as Cyclops turned and headed into the crowd of people.






Logan leaned back in the train seat and let out a deep
breath. Things had changed so fast for him, and for Rogue, it was no
wonder she had believed the other student. She had nothing else to
believe, no one to trust. Neither did he, really. But there was
something about this professor and his people that Logan liked.



Now he had to get Rogue back there, for her own good.



“You know,” Logan said, staring up at the
ceiling as he talked, “I woke up one day in the woods, in the
middle of nowhere. I had no memories, no life.”



He turned and looked straight at her. She was watching
him, listening. He held up his fist, showing her the marks on his hands
where his claws were, just below the skin. “I didn’t know
where these had come from. All I had was the dreams of pain that
wouldn’t let me sleep.”



She nodded, so he went on.



“At first I couldn’t live with it. I
can’t even show you all the scars from all the times I tried to
kill myself, cause they just disappeared. I looked at this power of
mine as a curse.”



Again she nodded, agreeing with him there.



“When you touched me last night,” he said,
going slow and not looking at her, “I felt, for one brief second,
death. And right then I realized I didn’t like it. I realized I
didn’t want it anymore.”



A tear was slowly making its way down Rogue’s cheek.



“I just came to thank you for that.”



She nodded, saying nothing.



And there was nothing more he could say.



Around them a few other people came onto the car and took
seats, getting ready for the trip. Logan had no idea where this train
was even headed. He doubted Rogue did, either.



“You think I should go back?” Rogue asked softly.



“I think you should follow your instincts,” Logan said.



Slowly, sitting there, arms folded around herself, she began to cry. Soft sobs shook her small frame without making any noise.



He took his jacket off and carefully wrapped it around
her shoulders. She tried to pull away from his touch, even through the
leather, but he held her firmly. Finally she gave in and sobbed into
his shoulder as he held her.



After a moment the sobs slowed.



“There are not many people who will understand what
you’re going through, Rogue,” Logan said with
uncharacteristic softness. “But I think this guy Xavier is one of
them. And he seems to genuinely want to help you. That’s a rare
thing for people like us.”



The train whistle echoed down the platform, and the train
slowly jerked into motion. “What do you say?” Logan asked.
“We can still get off at the next station, hop a cab, give these
geeks one more shot.”



Rogue was clearly thinking about it, but not yet convinced.



“Come on,” Logan said. “I’ll take care of you.”



The words were out of his mouth before he’d even realized he said them.



Rogue looked up at him, her big eyes full of hope. “You promise?”



Logan took a deep breath. He actually did feel like
taking care of this girl. He wasn’t sure why. Partially, he felt
as if he owed her. But mostly it just felt right to care about someone
else besides himself for a change.



“Yeah, I promise,” he said.



Then he frowned at her.



“What?”



“No more heart-to-hearts, though, okay?” Logan said. “I can’t tell you how much I hate this.”



Rogue laughed, smiling. “Deal.”



Around them, people were talking and the car was rattling as the train slowly began to gain speed.



Suddenly everything lurched violently, and the train came
to an almost instant stop, as if it had hit something very, very large.



Logan tried to catch himself, but it happened too fast.
He went flying head over heels into the aisle, ending up flat on his
back with a man in a business suit sprawled across his legs.



What the hell had they hit?



People were screaming and moaning and trying frantically to get to their feet.



He got out from under the guy and stood up. At a glance
he could see that Rogue was all right. She looked as if she’d
bumped her head, but she was moving fine.



The car around them creaked and rocked again, sending more shouts and screams echoing through the air.



Then the train started backward down the tracks.





 







Chapter Fifteen





Westchester Train Station




Storm moved through the crowd, ignoring the looks her
black X-Men uniform elicited from the people. She was proud to be
wearing it, and she hoped that someday everyone would recognize it as a
sign of their goodwill and noble intentions.



For the moment, though, she moved up past three people
who were standing in line at the ticket counter. “Excuse
me,” she said to them. “Emergency.”



Then she turned to the ticket agent. “I was
wondering if you could help me? I’m looking for a young girl,
about seventeen. She’s my height and has brown hair. She may have
been upset.”



The guy in the cage hadn’t looked up at her until
she was finished. “Nope, haven’t noticed anyone like
that—”



Suddenly the guy’s eyes went wide with fear, and he quickly stepped back.



It took Storm an instant to realize that he was looking
over her shoulder, not at her. She spun around just in time to come
face-to-face with Sabretooth.



He was wearing a long trench coat to cover his furs, but
he still smelled like he’d come right out of a graveyard. Before
she could even move, he knocked a young boy aside, then grabbed her
around the neck and lifted her off the ground, choking her.



She couldn’t yell.



She couldn’t even breathe.



Around them people backed away.



“Scream for me,” Sabretooth said. Then he laughed. It was a vicious laugh.



Suddenly she could feel the professor inside her head.



Hold on, Storm. Fight! I’m with you.



She kicked at Sabretooth, smashing her foot right into his midsection.



One woman screamed, and people started to run as he took
Storm and smashed her backward into the glass of the ticket counter.
The impact knocked some of the wind out of her, and shattered the
glass, but it also loosened Sabretooth’s grip on her neck.



She took a quick breath before he tightened his grip again.



This time he held her far enough away that she couldn’t kick him.



Behind him she saw Cyclops fighting his way through scrambling people. Then she saw Toad jump up on a pillar behind him.



Try as she might, she couldn’t shout out a warning.



Toad’s tongue whipped out and snatched away Cyclops’ visor, yanking his head up and back.



A massive red beam of energy shot out of Cyclops’
eyes, before he could get them closed. Luckily it streaked upward. The
beam ripped a hole in the roof of the building.



“Everyone get back!” he shouted, his voice
carrying with authority over all the shouting and yelling.
“Storm!”



Bits of stone and concrete and wood rained down on the
crowd, sending people screaming and turning the panic up to a higher
pitch. Now people were fighting and climbing over one another to get
out of the building.



Sabretooth just laughed and choked her harder. If he held her like this too much longer he would break her neck.



Cyclops dropped to the floor, his eyes tight, completely blind. She was, for the moment, going to have to fight alone.



She reached out for the feeling of the weather around her. A moment later she could feel it bending to her control.



Lightning.



She needed lightning.



She could feel the professor in her mind, helping her, boosting her power.



Suddenly the lightning was there, and it was in her control.



She smashed the bolt down between them, bringing it in as close as she could to Sabretooth without touching either him or her.



The impact of the lightning and the resulting explosion
ripped her from his grip and smashed her backward over the ticket
counter. She rolled as she had trained to do, time and again in the
danger room, and came up hard against a wall.



Sabretooth flew through the air in the other direction,
smashing through the Arrivals/Departures board, shattering it, sending
clouds of dust and debris raining down over the remainder of the
crowds.



Storm managed to pull herself to her feet, trying to
catch her breath, just in time to watch Toad pick up the stunned
Sabretooth and stagger away toward the train platform.



Cyclops was still on the ground, his eyes closed tight,
his face pointed downward to make sure he would injure no one should
any stray energy slip free.



She had no idea what had happened to Logan or Rogue. And the professor was no longer in her mind to tell her.






The lights had gone out inside the train, and the sound
of metal buckling and folding surrounded Rogue. It was so loud it hurt
her ears. It was as if a giant was tearing apart the train car.



People were screaming and trying to shove their way
through the doors. She had braced herself between seats, and Logan had
done the same in front of her. The smell of burning wires and smoke was
starting to choke the car, as well.



She couldn’t imagine how the train was moving
backward. The ground was flat. Clearly something had to be pulling or
pushing them.



Suddenly, with a massive tearing sound, the entire back
of the car seemed to rip away. Everyone in the car except Rogue and
Logan scrambled to get out the front door.



As Rogue watched, the figure of a man floated up and
stood in the ripped-out area of the car. Rogue knew instantly it must
be Magneto. If the professor was right, he was here to take Logan.



Magneto floated toward them, the car’s metal walls and ceiling rippling like water as he moved.



Logan stepped into the aisle, his claws out.



“You must be Wolverine,” Magneto said. “I saw your tags.”



Before Logan could even say a word, Magneto held up a fist, and Logan just froze.



Magneto smiled, looking Logan over. “The remarkable metal doesn’t run through your entire body, does it?”



Magneto opened his hand.



Logan’s arms and legs spread out like a starfish. The pain was excruciating.



“I guess it does after all,” Magneto said, laughing.



“Cute trick,” Logan said.



Suddenly Logan started to sweat as Magneto pulled his claws out, more and more.



“Stop it!” Rogue shouted, and started toward Magneto. “Stop it now!”



“What the hell do you want with me?” Logan demanded.



“My dear boy,” Magneto said, laughing still, “Whoever said I wanted you?”



Magneto glanced over at Rogue. His eyes were cold and dark.



She couldn’t believe it. He was after her! Why? What did she have? What had she done to him?



“No!” Logan shouted, struggling futilely against the force that held him in its grip.



Magneto just shook his head and closed his fist.



Logan flew backward, smashing into the front wall of the train car. He slumped to the ground, unconscious.



“What did you do?” Rogue shouted, jumping out into the aisle and running toward Logan.



Suddenly she felt a sharp stabbing in the back of her
neck. Before she could even reach up and touch the syringe that had
jabbed her, the blackness swept over her.



She staggered two more steps and fell short of Logan, facedown on the train floor.



The last thing she remembered was hearing Magneto laughing, as if from a long, long distance away.





 







Chapter Sixteen





Westchester County, NY




Jean Grey faded the black Bentley Turbo into the corner,
half watching the road, half watching Professor Xavier. The tires
screamed and held as she accelerated out of the corner, pushing the car
as fast as it and the roads would allow.



The professor was belted securely into the passenger
seat, and his attention clearly wasn’t on her or her driving. She
knew it was at the train station, with Cyclops and Storm and Rogue and
Logan. She could sense enough to know that the four of them were locked
in the fight of their lives.



She took the next corner just a little too fast, and the
rear end swung around, but she recovered without losing any speed. They
were still a good ten miles away.



At this speed that would take them ten minutes.



Ten minutes too long.




Westchester Train Station




Magneto watched as Sabretooth and Toad quickly loaded the
unconscious Rogue into the cloth bag and pulled the top closed. That
would keep her from touching anyone if she woke up a little sooner than
he had planned.



Logan was still out cold.



“What shall I do with this piece of garbage?” Sabretooth asked, kicking him.



“Leave him,” Magneto said. “Bring the girl.”



Sabretooth growled, kicked Logan once more, then turned to follow.



They moved as a group across the platform, through the
edge of the train station, and out one of the doors that led to the
front area. He half expected to see Charles’ two flunkies appear
and try again to stop them. Instead what greeted them were at least ten
police cars, fanned out in front of them. Their flashers were lighting
the shadowy trees and train station with strobes of blue and red.



At least twenty police officers had their guns drawn and
were facing Magneto. Onlookers and the people who had been in the
station had been shoved back a good hundred yards, clearing the
parklike area in front of the station. Good, Magneto thought, because that was where he had planned to have Mystique land the helicopter.



“Seems they wanted to say good-bye to us,” he said wryly.



One cop raised a megaphone. “Put your hands over your heads.”



Magneto, Toad, and Sabretooth kept walking, with Rogue
secure in the bag slung over Sabretooth’s shoulder. Toad still
carried Cyclops’ visor, as if it were a trophy. Magneto
hadn’t expected this resistance, but it didn’t really
matter.



“I said raise your goddamned hands, asshole!” the cop ordered again.



Magneto shook his head. It seemed it was time again to
teach the poor humans a lesson in manners. And also show them just how
powerful mutantkind could be.



So he did raise his hands, but with them came two of the
police cars. The two vehicles flew into the air and smashed back to
earth with an impact that shook the ground.



The cops scattered, all guns still drawn and pointed at
Magneto. With his mind Magneto felt the guns, and with a smooth
downward snap of his hand he yanked all the guns out of every
cop’s hand. They flew toward him, and stopped.



He then turned the weapons around, still hovering in
midair, and held them there, each aimed at a cop’s face. A couple
of the cops tried to dodge, but each gun remained with its owner.
Pointed right between the eyes.



“You Homo sapiens and your guns,” Magneto said, loudly enough for everyone to hear. “When will you ever learn?”



He was about to start the lesson when a hand grabbed his
shoulder and spun him around. With his mind he maintained control over
the floating firearms.



It was Sabretooth.



The savage mutant grabbed him by the throat and lifted
him into the air. From his new vantage point, Magneto could see Toad
moving to help his clawed companion. The grip hurt and he was having
trouble breathing, but he knew it wasn’t as tight as it could be.



“That’s enough, Eric,” Sabretooth said, almost as a growl.



“Let the cops go!” Toad demanded.



Magneto knew instantly who his real enemy was. He glanced around, trying to spot Charles, but without any luck.



“Why not come out where I can see you, Charles?” he said hoarsely.



Sabretooth gripped his throat even tighter, cutting off his wind for a moment, then relaxing just enough so that he could talk.



“What do you want her for?” Sabretooth asked,
his voice an even lower growl, as if he was trying to fight
Xavier’s control.



Magneto reached up and tapped the side of his helmet.
“What’s the matter, Charles? Can’t read my mind? So
what now?”



“The girl?” Xavier asked through Sabretooth. “What do you want her for?”



“To save the girl,” Magneto said,
“you’ll have to kill me. And what will that accomplish,
Charles? You’ll let these humans have their way, and
they’ll have you in chains with a number burned into your
forehead.”



“It’s not going to be that way,” Xavier responded through his unwilling proxy.



“Then kill me and find out,” Magneto
challenged. He knew Charles wouldn’t do that. It wasn’t who
Charles was.



The seconds ticked past. Sabretooth’s hand didn’t move.



As Magneto had gambled, Charles would not kill an old friend.



“Release me,” Magneto demanded.



Still, Sabretooth’s hand didn’t lighten its
grip. It was starting to bite into Magneto’s throat and skin. And
his breathing was coming harder and harder.



“No?” Magneto said. “Then fine.”



The gunshot echoed over the silent park in front of the old train station.



A number of screams sounded in the crowd down the block.



Without letting go of Magneto’s throat, Sabretooth,
under Xavier’s directions, turned to see where the shot had come
from.



Magneto laughed throatily. He had fired at point-blank
range into the face of one cop, then had stopped the bullet just as it
touched the man’s skin. The bullet was still hanging there, the
heat from it burning the man’s forehead. The cop’s eyes
were huge, and Magneto had no doubt the poor fool had wet his pants
from the fear.



The sound of the shot echoed off into the distance, and again the area was deadly quiet.



Charles, through Sabretooth, still hadn’t let go of Magneto’s neck.



“You want more?” Magneto asked.



Every gun floating in front of every cop cocked.



Two or three of the policemen dropped to their knees. The guns followed.



Two others dove and rolled, trying to get away. The guns followed, pointing in their faces when they stopped.



“Care to press your luck, Charles?” Magneto
asked. “I can fire them all at once, but I don’t think I
can stop all the bullets.”



The man with the bullet pressed against his forehead looked as if he was about to faint.



Sabretooth let go of Magneto and staggered back.



Toad looked around, half stunned.



“Still unwilling to make sacrifices, eh, Charles,” Magneto said. “That’s what makes you weak.”



Sabretooth stiffened. “No, Eric,” Sabretooth
said, directed once again by Xavier. “That’s what makes me
strong.”



Then Sabretooth slumped as the professor let him go again.



“Feeling a little used?” Magneto asked Sabretooth.



Sabretooth only growled.



Magneto looked around him at all the cops. Their guns were cocked, ready to fire.



Over the trees on the other side of the train station his
helicopter flashed into sight. Mystique took it in a wide arc, then set
it down expertly in the open area beside where they stood.



Magneto kept all the guns pointed at the cops as Toad
loaded the sack containing their prize into the helicopter. Then he and
Sabretooth climbed in.



Magneto waved to the cops, smiling. Then he climbed in
and took the copilot’s seat, still maintaining his hold on the
guns. “Good-bye, Charles,” he said.



He had no doubt that Charles could hear him.



Then, as they lifted off, he waved again, letting the guns drop to the ground.



Half the cops slumped. Two started throwing up.



All Magneto could do was laugh.






Jean pulled the Bentley onto a short side road and turned
off the engine. The professor knew that his three people were just
coming out of the trees. He had directed them away from the station and
the authorities. They weren’t in any shape to deal with the
police, and the police weren’t in any mood to deal with any more
mutants at this point. Better to just let them think that Magneto and
his people were the ones who did the damage.



“You better help them,” he said to Jean as three figures stepped out from among the trees.



Cyclops was in the center, eyes still shut, with an arm
around Storm on one side and Logan on the other. Though he supported
them, Storm was directing him, acting as his eyes. He looked as if he
was barely keeping them all walking. The professor knew that was
exactly the case. Storm was very bruised, and Logan was barely alive.
Any other person would have been dead after the beating Magneto had
given him.



Jean climbed out and took Storm from Cyclops, helping her
into the backseat of the car. Cyclops supported Logan as he got in
beside her, then with Jean’s guidance he crawled in the other
door. Finally Jean got behind the wheel.



In silence they turned and headed for the mansion. There
was nothing any of them could say. They had faced the first battle with
Magneto and had come up wanting. They were lucky to be alive.



And they had lost Rogue.





 







Chapter Seventeen





X-Men Mansion




Logan’s quarters felt more like a tomb. The
school’s students were still all asleep, but Storm, Jean,
Cyclops, Logan, and the professor were all very much awake.



And Logan was mad. Madder than he had been in a long,
long time. He had promised Rogue he would take care of her, then
moments later he had been helpless. That ate at him, right in the core
of his stomach. He wasn’t going to rest until she was back, safe
and sound.



Logan stood near the door while Jean and Storm dropped
into chairs. Cyclops paced. Logan was becoming more and more disgusted
with this Scott Summers kid. And he wasn’t real happy with the
professor, either.



“You said he wanted me,” Logan said, sneering at Xavier, letting the contempt show in his voice.



“I’ve made a terrible mistake,” Xavier admitted, nodding.



“I’d say,” Logan said, showing no mercy.



“Magneto’s helmet,” Xavier said, going
on. “It is somehow designed to block my telepathy. I
couldn’t see what he was after until it was too late.”



“It’s not your fault,” Cyclops said.



“No?” Logan challenged. “Why blame the biggest brain on the planet?”



“Hey,” Cyclops said, turning to face him. “I sure didn’t see you stop him.”



“How could you, blind man?”



The hotshot’s face got red around his visor, and he charged like a bull elephant.



“Scott!” Jean shouted. But it was too late.



Logan laughed and ducked easily under Scott’s fist,
grabbed his arm, twisted it up behind his back, and slammed the kid
into the wall, face first. Then, holding him there, Logan extended a
claw right up to the back of Cyclops’ head.



“Logan!” Xavier said firmly.



A lock of Cyclops’ hair fell to the ground.



Logan flipped Cyclops around and sent him stumbling back.
Then he faced the professor, angry and disgusted. “See,
it’s this kind of thing that makes me wonder how you’re
gonna outwit Magneto.”



With that he turned and slammed open the door. He stormed
out into the hall and turned toward the front entrance. As far as he
was concerned, he would get Rogue back on his own, or die trying. It
was finally something worth dying for.



He started off down the hall.



“What are you doing?”



He stopped and turned to face Storm. Her neck was still
bleeding slightly where Sabretooth had held her. And her white hair was
streaked with black from the lightning strike she had brought down,
very nearly on herself.



“I’m going to find Rogue,” Logan said. “What’s it look like?”



“You can’t just leave,” Storm said.



“Why not?” Logan asked. “Should I wait
for good old Xavier and his fanatics—you included—to make
everything all right?”



“We’re not fanatics, Logan,” Storm said, her voice low and even and controlled.



“No?” Logan asked, glaring at her. “Then just what are you? Why are you doing all this?”



“Because humanity needs us,” Storm said.



Logan took a step back toward her. “Oh, humanity needs you? How have they lived all this time without you?”



“It’s a different world now,” Storm
said, standing face-to-face with him. “As a new species, we have
a responsibility to protect them, to teach human beings to accept our
presence here.”



Logan snorted and turned, then headed into the foyer.
Behind him he could hear Storm following. She wasn’t going to
give up, so in the foyer, near the front door, he turned on her.



“This is what pisses me off about you
hypocrites,” he said, moving back a step to be right in her face
again. “All your high-minded ideals, and you still hate them just
as much as they hate you.”



She started to object, but he held his hand up for her to stop.



“Look,” he said, going on. “I dislike
everyone equally, but you . . .” He shook his head in disgust.
“You talk about human beings like they’re children, waiting
for you to punish them for their ignorance.”



He stepped even closer to her, looking her directly in
the eye. “They did hate you, didn’t they? Hey, it’s
not like I don’t understand.” He raised his fist and
extended a claw. “They cut open my body and turned me into this.
What did they do to you?”



Storm looked flustered, but Logan wouldn’t let her
turn away. “I’ve overcome the trials of my past,” she
finally said.



Logan just sneered at her, retracted his claws, and turned toward the front door.



At the door he glanced back at her. “Good for you.”



He started to open the door, then stopped. “You
know, I think your professor’s right. I think there is a war
coming. You sure you’re on the right side?”



She looked at him, stiffly refusing to drop her gaze as the silence in the foyer seemed to stretch.



“At least I’ve chosen a side,” she said then.



Again they stared at each other, then, with a shake of
his head, he turned and opened the door. Rogue was out there somewhere,
and he had to find her. He was wasting his time here.



As he opened the door, Storm gasped.



Standing there in front of him was a man wearing clothes
that clearly didn’t fit, looking just about as pale and sickly as
a man could look and still stand. His clothes were soaked, and a puddle
had formed around his feet.



“What the hell happened to you?” Logan asked.



Storm stepped up beside Logan. “Senator Kelly?”



“The Senator Kelly?” Logan asked, actually shocked. “The guy who hates mutants?”



The man nodded, then, very weakly, he said,
“I’m looking for Dr. Jean Grey.” At that the
man’s eyes rolled up into his head, showing only whites, and he
pitched forward, right into Logan’s arms.



It was like holding onto the slime covering a Jell-O mold. Logan barely got him to the ground without dropping him.



“Professor! Jean!” Storm shouted.



Logan stood up. Well, he thought, it looks as if I’m not going anywhere just yet.






Professor Xavier glanced at the figure lying on the bed
as he entered the medical lab. It was clearly the same man who had
chaired that hearing just a short time before, yet it wasn’t the
same man. The man in that hearing had been healthy, cocky, sure in his
beliefs. This man looked as if he was burning up with a fever and
melting at the same time.



Logan and Storm were standing against a counter on the
other side of the bed. Cyclops was sitting on a second medical bed.
Jean was standing over the senator.



“So what has happened to him?” Xavier asked her.



Jean shrugged. “I can’t explain it, but he’s a mutant. Or better put, he’s become one.”



“What’s his mutation?”



“He’s extremely adaptable,” Jean said. “He can effectively change the shape of his body.”



“So why does he look like this?” Logan asked.



“Something’s wrong with his mutation,”
Jean said. “His cells are losing their integrity. They’re
liquefying. He’s literally falling apart.”



“Any way to reverse the problem?” Xavier asked.



Jean shook her head.



At that moment the senator moaned and opened his eyes.



Xavier caught fleeting feelings of fear, panic, and
extreme anger. He moved his chair up to a position head-high with
Senator Kelly as Jean lowered the bed.



“Senator Kelly, my name is Professor Charles Xavier. This is my school.”



Kelly nodded. “For mutants?”



Xavier glanced at Jean, then back at Kelly. “Yes.”



Kelly half nodded. “I was afraid that if I went to a hospital, they would—”



“Treat you like a mutant?” Xavier said. “We are not what you think. Not all of us.”



“Tell that to the ones that did this to me,” Kelly said.



Xavier nodded. Then he moved closer and looked directly
into the senator’s eyes. “I need you to try and relax.
I’m not going to hurt you. But I need to find out as best I can
what happened to you, to see if we can help you.”



Kelly nodded and took as deep a breath as he could.



Xavier looked into the man’s eyes, then put a hand
on Kelly’s wet forehead, letting Kelly’s thoughts pour out
and into his own mind.



The memories were jumbled, like flashes of light. Xavier
was used to it. It was the same with most people. Memories
weren’t clear, streamlike movies depicting logical sequences of
events, but were more like flashbulb images of scenes hooked together,
often not even in the right order. And they were always colored heavily
with perceptions and feelings.



Flash:



His aide turning into Mystique, her blue face and
yellow eyes clear, like the image of a monster. The pain from when she
kicked him colored the memory in red.



Thus Magneto had captured the senator. Mystique had done it.



Flash:



Vision fading in and out of pained awakening as
Magneto moved into the circle of light, illuminating what looked to be
a clearing in a type of cliff-surrounded forest.



Kelly clearly had no idea where he was. And Xavier didn’t recognize it either, from anywhere in Magneto’s past.



Flash:



Kelly sitting on the chair near a massive machine, fighting to get loose.



Flash:



Magneto rising up inside the machine. He is laughing down at Kelly, toying with him.



Xavier could feel the hatred for Magneto flowing from Kelly. Hatred like nothing he had ever felt before.



Flash:



The light, alive, is crawling over him, through him, inside him.



Flash:



Flash:



Flash:



Extreme bright light and pain, then nothing.



Flash:



Kelly dropping through the air into the ocean.



Xavier pulled back out of the senator’s mind as the
images began to repeat. He really didn’t want or need to see them
again.



Or feel that kind of hate again. Once was more than enough to disgust him completely.



Xavier wiped his hands and took a deep breath. It was clear that his old friend was no longer the person he had known.



“Well?” Logan asked as Xavier opened his eyes
and wiped his hands again, as if doing that was going to clean away any
of the filth he got from the senator’s mind. He felt as if
he’d touched something really dirty.



He had. The senator was a walking, talking ball of hate
and self-loathing, with more disgusting habits and deeds buried in his
mind than would be found in a war zone. Losing this man would be no
great loss to the world in general.



Xavier was surprised to feel that way.



“Professor?” Jean asked, stepping toward him. “Are you all right?”



He nodded. He was going to be all right as soon as some of the memories went away. “Not here. In my office.”



The senator’s head lolled to one side, and his eyes closed.



Jean quickly checked him. “He’s just sleeping, at least for the moment.”



Xavier nodded, then turned his chair toward the door. “Someone needs to stay with him.”



“I will,” Storm said.



Xavier could hear Logan, Cyclops, and Jean following him.



“Call me if something changes,” Jean said.



“I don’t think anything will,” Xavier said, “at least not for the better.”



He meant that in more ways than one.





 







Chapter Eighteen





Professor Charles Xavier’s Office




The mood was different, more focused than it had been,
only an hour before. It had been a long night, but Logan was far from
tired. All he wanted to do was get Rogue back, and this Senator Kelly
had given them their best clue. He was going to stick around until they
worked it out. And since the professor had been tap dancing around
inside the senator’s brain, Logan hoped there would be all sorts
of help forthcoming.



“So?” Logan asked as Jean closed the door and
the professor moved in behind his desk. “What does Magneto want
with Rogue? You get that much?”



“The senator doesn’t know,” Xavier said.



Logan waited, watching. The professor clearly looked
upset by what he had seen and felt in the guy’s head. But Logan
figured, you go dancing inside any politician’s head and
you’re not going to like what you find.



“It seems that Magneto has built a machine that
emits radiation that triggers mutations in normal human beings,”
Xavier continued. “And it seems to draw its power from
Magneto.”



“But the mutation is unnatural,” Jean said.
“Kelly’s body is rejecting it. His cells began to break
down almost immediately.”



“I don’t think Magneto knows that,” Xavier said. “Kelly escaped before Magneto ran any tests.”



“What kind of effect does the radiation have on mutants?” Cyclops asked.



The professor thought for a moment, then said, “None, from what I can tell.”



“But it will most likely kill any normal person
exposed to it,” Jean said, “if Senator Kelly is any
indication.”



Logan sat, listening, thinking. None of this made any
sense. If this Magneto had such a machine, why would he need Rogue?
Unless it was to store his own powers.



“Hey, Chuck?” Logan said.



The professor glanced up, and he almost looked annoyed.
Logan guessed that no one had called him Chuck in a very long
time—if ever.



“You said this machine draws its power from Magneto?”



“Yes,” Xavier said.



“What exactly did it do to him?” Logan asked. “Did you get that much from the senator’s brain?”



“It clearly weakened him,” Xavier said, then
paused for what seemed like a very long time. Then he went on.
“In fact, it nearly killed him.” Sudden awareness swept
across his face. “Oh, my God. He’s going to transfer his
power to Rogue, so next time, the machine kills her—not
him.”



“And his power will return to him naturally after a short time,” Jean said.



Logan froze there, stunned along with the rest. Now that
they knew why Magneto wanted Rogue, the situation seemed even worse.
Much worse, actually.






Storm stared in the mirror, dabbing some antiseptic on
the scratches on her neck. She was going to be bruised, that was for
sure. She was lucky to have come out of that fight with only a few
scratches and bruises, and she knew it.



“Is somebody there?” Senator Kelly’s voice came weakly from behind her.



She quickly moved over to his bed and smiled down at him,
trying to reassure. He was completly covered in viscous fluid, and
apparently he could hardly see her. As he moved, water seemed to run
from his skin and onto the bed in rivulets.



“Is somebody there?” Kelly asked again.



She picked up his wet, slick hand. “Right here, Senator.”



“Are you one of them?” he asked.



“Who is ‘them’?” she asked.



“I guess I don’t know anymore,” he
said, and then he actually smiled. Water ran from his face and around
his eyes. He didn’t even seem to notice.



“I guess it doesn’t matter,” he added. “Please don’t leave.”



“All right,” Storm said, giving his hand a very gentle squeeze.



“I just don’t want to be alone.”



“I understand,” Storm said. “Very much, actually.”



The silence seemed to stretch endlessly, and for a moment Storm thought he had dozed off again.



Then he blinked and focused a little bit, and looked directly at her. “Do you hate normal people?” he asked.



“Sometimes,” she said, being honest with him.



“Why?”



She paused for a moment, then decided to give him the
straight answer. He deserved that much at least. “I suppose
I’m afraid of them.”



Kelly laughed, then coughed uncontrollably. She calmed him as best she could.



After a moment he looked up at her again. “Well, I think you’ve got one less person to be afraid of.”



With that he closed his eyes, and his hand tightened
around hers. His breathing became shallower and shallower as his hand
seemed to be getting smaller and smaller.



So much water was running off of him now that it was
dripping in streams onto the floor around the table. The senator was
literally melting.



He coughed again, then seemed to settle into the table. His hand continued to shrink in hers, melting away.



She wanted to let go, to go wash, but she stayed. She had
promised him she wouldn’t leave him alone. She didn’t like
the man or his beliefs, but no one deserved to die alone.



As she watched, he just got smaller and smaller.



Finally he didn’t take another breath.



She was just about to put his hand down when it melted completely, slipping through her fingers.






Logan was getting more and more fed up. It seemed that
all they did was talk in circles, and talking wasn’t going to get
Rogue back. Only action was going to accomplish anything.



“So,” Jean said, glancing at Logan, clearly
sensing his impatience, “if Magneto wanted to turn a group of
people into mutants, where would he do it?”



The question was met with silence. Logan had no idea. Neither, it seemed, did any of them. The target could be any city.



“I’ll use Cerebro to try to find
Rogue,” Xavier said, breaking the silence. “That might help
us figure out where they are heading. Cyclops, would you and Storm
ready the jet?”



Logan pushed himself away from where he’d been leaning against the wall.



Finally some action.



“Jean,” Xavier said, “find Logan a uniform.”



“No,” Cyclops said. “He’s not coming.”



Logan turned. His temper flared. “You little—”



“I’m sorry, Professor,” Cyclops said,
ignoring Logan. “It’s not going to happen. He’ll
endanger the mission and my team.”



“Hey,” Logan countered, “I wasn’t
the one who gave the train station a new sunroof. So you can take your
mission and stick it. I’ll do this on my own.”



“Stop acting like children!” Xavier said
firmly, looking first at Cyclops, then at Logan. “Both of you!
People’s lives are at stake. Rogue’s life is at
stake!”



Logan couldn’t even decide how to respond to that.



At that instant the door opened and Storm came in,
looking shaken. More shaken than Logan had yet seen her look. She was
wiping her hands on a towel, over and over.



“Senator Kelly’s dead,” Storm said. “He melted. It was not a pleasant thing to watch.”



She wiped her hands again.



Silence filled the room again like a thick cloud, holding
everything still. Finally Xavier nodded, and moved his chair out from
behind his desk and toward the door.



With a quick glance at Cyclops, then Logan, he said, “Settle this.”



Then he wheeled himself out of the room.






Professor Xavier wheeled himself into position on the
extension ramp leading to Cerebro and let the heavy steel door close
behind him. He was angry at both Cyclops and Logan for continuing their
petty bickering. And he was worried. Deeply. The images from Senator
Kelly kept flashing through his mind. There was no doubt that Magneto
thought his device worked, and that he was going to use it on a large
number of people, forcing Rogue to act as his stand-in.



The question was where? And when?



Xavier keyed in the commands for Cerebro to track
Rogue’s brain waves, then wheeled himself into position and put
the helmet on his head. They didn’t have much time, that he was
sure of. He had to find her and find her fast.



As Cerebro started up, he focused on Rogue.



Almost instantly he knew something was wrong.



Horribly wrong.



Sharp pain stabbed through his head, spinning him around
and around inside, twisting his thinking, assaulting his mind like a
bad nightmare.



He screamed out in pain.



Fighting against losing conciousness, he hit the
emergency shut-off switch. Jean had insisted that it be installed on
the arm of his chair.



The shut-off switch also triggered alarms and opened the door.



He knew, with a tiny part of what was left of his consciousness, that those things were happening.



But the rest of him was overwhelmed by the pain.



And then the blackness arrived. Creeping, thick
blackness, like none he had ever experienced before, slowly filling his
awareness.



He wanted to get away from it, but it was inside his head.



He jerked as one more massive jolt of pain shot through
his mind. Like a distant object, he could see the light coming in the
now-open door. But the light wasn’t enough to hold back the
darkness.



He pitched forward, out of his chair, out of the helmet.



And the blackness had completely taken him before he hit the floor.





 







Chapter Nineteen





X-Men Mansion




Cyclops stood over Professor Xavier’s body,
watching his friend and mentor breathe shallowly. At least he was still
breathing. His wheelchair sat next to the bed. Electrodes were taped to
his temples and forehead. The monitors showed erratic brain wave
activity. Even Cyclops could tell that much.



“What can we do now?” Storm asked.



Jean stood on the other side of the table, and Logan was
leaning against the wall behind her. Jean shook her head. “We
just have to wait.”



Logan looked up. It was clear that Logan was upset, almost as much as the rest of them.



“I think we should get some rest,” Jean said.
“We’re not going to be making very good decisions this
tired. We’ll take turns watching over the professor.”



“And we’re going to need to take care of the students,” Storm said. “I’ll do that.”



“Rest,” Jean said.



Storm nodded as she headed for the door.



Logan pushed himself away from the wall and moved over to
stand by the professor. Then, as he passed by Cyclops, he put a hand on
Cyclops’ shoulder. “I’m sorry, Scott.”



All Cyclops could do was nod his thanks.



After Storm and Logan had both left, Jean looked at him.
“Go rest, then come back and relieve me later in the
morning.”



“Are you going to be all right here?” Cyclops asked. “You haven’t had any rest, either.”



Jean looked at the professor. “I’ll be fine
for four or five hours. I’ll wake you if there’s any
change.”



Cyclops kissed her, then headed for the door. Rest didn’t seem like it was going to be possible.



And over the next four hours it didn’t come easy.
But he did manage some sleep, and after a shower and some food he
returned to the lab to give Jean a much-needed break. He actually felt
better.



After she had left, he moved over and stood above the professor. “You can still hear me, can’t you?” he asked.



Of course the professor didn’t move. But over the
last few hours the monitor had shown some slight stabilizing of his
brain waves. Jean had said that that was a good sign.



“I just want to thank you for taking me in,” Cyclops said. “Actually, taking us all in.”



He stepped back, walked around the table, then continued.
“You’ve taught me everything in my life that is worth
knowing. And I want you to know that I’ll take care of
them.”



With that he moved back over to a chair near the monitor and sat down. There was nothing more to say.



And for the moment, nothing more to do.






After what seemed like an instant nap, but had actually
been three hours, Jean showered and returned to the medical lab. Storm
and Logan were both there, sitting quietly, waiting. She did a quick
check of the professor’s vital signs and reported that not only
were his brain waves slowly stabilizing, but his vital signs were
getting stronger. It was going to take some time, and he wasn’t
out of the woods yet, but at least he was going in the right direction.



“So what do we do now to save Rogue?” Logan asked. “If it’s not too late already.”



Jean glanced at the professor. “Well, Cyclops is
scanning all news and online reports as we speak, looking for any
unusual activity that might give us a clue that something is happening
somewhere.”



Logan nodded, clearly as satisfied as he could be.



“If one of you would stay with the professor, shift
off, and let me know if there are any changes, it would be really
helpful.”



“You got it,” Logan said.



“Gladly,” Storm said.



“I’ll be in back. I have another idea,” Jean said.






She had no idea if she could even fix whatever was wrong
with Cerebro. But over the last year she and the professor had worked
on the machine a great deal, and she felt she knew it—knew how it
worked, and why it worked. If anyone besides the professor could fix
it, she could.



It turned out that the main brain had been punctured and
broken. Someone had clearly sabotaged it. The questions as to why and
how someone could do this would have to wait until later. First she
needed to fix it.



Every hour she checked on the professor, then went back
to work. Luckily, whoever had sabotaged Cerebro had not known quite
what they were doing. The most vital sections had been missed.



Carefully, she replaced wires, tubing, and optic fibers,
checking and rechecking every connection to make sure it was not only
secure, but correct.



Suddenly, as she connected what seemed to be one of the last optic fibers, Cerebro’s brain began to light back up.



Two more optic fibers connected, and the brain’s light was as bright as always.



She climbed up out of the harness, moved to the main
control board, and ran diagnostic check after diagnostic check. Two
hours later, after a few tweaks and one more replaced fiber, everything
read completely green.



Cerebro was back and ready, as soon as the professor was well enough to use it.



She started toward the door to tell the others, then
realized the full implications of the thoughts that had just run
through her mind. It was going to be some time before the professor
would be well enough, strong enough, to use Cerebro again. And by that
time, Magneto would most certainly have carried out what he was
planning.



And Rogue would, from the professor’s account of
what had happened to Kelly, be only one of the dead. One of hundreds,
thousands, perhaps more.



She moved out into the hallway and glanced toward the
medical lab. Cyclops and Storm were both leaning against a wall, just
outside the lab, waiting. Logan must be inside.



She had to give it a try. There were far too many lives on the line for her to wait.



She turned to the control board as Cyclops looked up and
saw her. He started toward her just as she punched the button to close
the door.



The last thing she heard from him, as the door locked shut behind her, was, “Jean! No!”



She moved over to the position on the ramp where the
professor normally sat and knelt to put her head at the same height.
Then she fit Cerebro’s helmet over her head and punched in the
code on the control panel to search for Rogue’s brain waves. She
also set the power levels lower than the professor normally used. She
had nowhere near the ability he had. Frying her own brain wasn’t
what she had in mind here.



Faintly through the massive door she could hear Cyclops
pounding. She just hoped he didn’t do anything stupid like trying
to blast through that door. He might be able to do it.



She punched the start switch and then kept her head still
as the ramp extended and the walls of the massive round room began to
spin.



Suddenly the machine seemed to reach inside her head and
grab her brain, clamping down on it like a fist, squeezing harder and
harder as the walls around her vanished and her vision floated up and
out of the mansion.



She heard herself scream at the pain as the ground sped
by under her, until finally she was there, hovering above the tied and
gagged Rogue. And instantly, she knew where Magneto was taking her.



The minute that realization was fixed in her mind, Cerebro let her go.



The ramp retracted, the walls slowed and stopped, and the
door clicked open to reveal the worried faces of Cyclops, Storm, and
Logan. As they came running in, she tried to stand and pitched forward
into Cyclops’ arms.



“Jean?” Cyclops said, holding her tight. “What have you done?”



She managed to open her eyes and smile up at him with
what seemed like her strongest smile, but she wasn’t even sure if
she’d have the energy to move her lips. Then she managed to choke
out, “I’ve found out where they’re going.”



Then she closed her eyes again. It was just too much work to keep them open.





 







Chapter Twenty





Liberty Island—New York City




The entire harbor around Ellis and Liberty Islands
crawled with security as the leaders of every major nation gathered for
the opening ceremonies of the international peace conference to be held
on Ellis Island.



The night was lit with spotlights, and the water was
dotted with police boats. Underwater sensors guarded the islands, and
three different security satellites provided constant surveillance of
the entire area. The U.S. Secret Service and the FBI were responsible
for all the world leaders’ security, working with each
government’s security agency. As far as they were all concerned,
not even a fly could get near these leaders without them knowing about
it.



Liberty Island ground security had been given over to
almost fifty of New York’s finest, patrolling on a constant
basis. Both the FBI and the Secret Service had command posts set up on
the side of Liberty Island that faced Ellis Island, where the opening
ceremonies would take place.



The line of limos jammed the one road to Ellis Island
like a traffic jam at rush hour. The backup, of course, was exacerbated
by the intense security check each car had to go through just to get to
the island.



On the dock side of Liberty Island, away from Ellis
Island, a New York cop named Mike walked a set path. He was in his
thirties, and was pretty much disgusted at the night duty he’d
been forced to pull because of all the big shots in limos. He would
much rather have been home watching a game on television, or sitting at
Henry’s tavern, downing a few beers. Instead he walked a very
short, very monotonous beat of less than a hundred paces on Liberty
Island.



Mike was so focused on his cold hands that he
didn’t see the mutant on the stone ledge above him, didn’t
hear Toad jump, didn’t even know what hit him when Toad crushed
him flat, killing him instantly.



Another cop named Stan, on the next beat over, thought he
might have heard a crunch at the time Mike’s bones were being
smashed, but he couldn’t see anything.



Two minutes later, Stan met the same fate.



In the water just beyond the dock, a New York City police
boat slowly moved toward the Liberty Island dock. The pilot was a man
in his forties, standing behind the open wheel, taking the boat
carefully in.



On the dock another cop named Hank waved.



The pilot waved back.



Then Hank waved again, this time with his entire body,
his mouth open in a silent scream of shock as Sabretooth ran him
through, then picked him up. A moment later Sabretooth tossed
Hank’s body over the side of the dock and moved back into the
shadows, to take care of any other police who might come near the dock
at any point in the near future.



On the boat the pilot started to shift, changing quickly
into Mystique. At her feet the original pilot lay dead, his open eyes
staring up at her. On the back deck of the boat, under a heavy tarp,
rested the machine that would shortly change the world forever.



The boat bumped gently into the dock, and Mystique moved to quickly tie it off. Then she turned and said, “Clear.”



Magneto came up from below, followed a safe distance
behind by Rogue. She was wrapped in a tight-fitting jacket, her hands
tied together, a metal collar around her neck so Magneto could control
her completely.



He stepped up on the deck and took a deep breath of the
cold bay air, then looked up at the Statue of Liberty towering above
them. “Isn’t it magnificent?”



“I’ve seen it,” Rogue said.



Magneto took off his helmet and held it under his arm,
then looked back up at the statue. “I first saw her in 1949.
America was going to be the land of tolerance. Of peace.”



Sabretooth jumped down onto the deck and helped Mystique uncover the machine.



“Are you going to kill me?” Rogue asked.



Magneto looked from the statue to her, then nodded. “Yes.”



“Why?” Rogue asked.



“Because there is no land of tolerance,”
Magneto replied. “There is no land of peace.” He pointed up
at the Liberty statue. “Not here, not anywhere.”



“I’m sure the professor doesn’t agree with you on that,” Rogue said.



“True,” Magneto said. “But Charles has
not seen what I’ve seen. Women and children, whole families,
destroyed simply because they were born different from those in power.
Well, after tonight, the world’s powerful will be just like us.
They will return home as brothers, as mutants. And our cause will be
theirs. Your sacrifice will mean our survival.”



“I’m thrilled,” she said.



“Granted, I understand that is a small consolation
to the likes of you,” Magneto said. Then he turned. “Put
her in the machine.”



He stepped off the boat and looked up at the statue.
“Tell me when she’s ready, and I’ll raise the machine
up into the torch.”




X-Men Mansion




Logan packed the clothes Xavier had given him into a
duffel bag. They were the only clothes he had at the moment, since his
camper had been destroyed. And now that he knew where Magneto was going
to attack, he was headed there, to save Rogue if he could.



More than likely he was going to die trying, but he had
faced death so many times already that it made very little difference
to him. He had promised her, and he was going to do his best to keep
that promise.



Storm knocked lightly and stepped into the room.



“What?” Logan asked, not looking up at her.



“Cyclops said he would like to see everyone down in the map room.”



“Yeah?” he asked.



“Everyone,” she said.



He nodded. So the kid was finally starting to do what Xavier seemed to think he could do. Take charge.



Storm turned and headed down the hall. Logan tossed the
bag on the bed and followed. Might as well see what Sunglasses Boy was
planning. That way they wouldn’t get in each other’s way.



The map room was something Logan hadn’t seen in
action before. It, too, was a round room, with a large, round table in
the center. Control panels lined the sides.



At the moment, the table was covered with a very detailed
holographic image of the New York City area, focusing on the bay with
Liberty and Ellis Islands. The three-dimensional Statue of Liberty was
startling to look at. Logan was impressed. They never seemed to be
lacking the latest gadget.



On the board he saw dots of different colors. Jean nodded
to him, then pointed at one of the dots. “Red shows New York cop
foot patrols. Blue shows the current location of police and other
security boats.”



He nodded. This was one very, very sophisticated map.
Clearly it was being fed by a direct link to a satellite of some sort.
The professor spared no expense for his team.



When Storm and Logan stepped up to the map, Cyclops was
studying it with intense care. Finally, without looking up he said,
“All right, we can go in here, at the George Washington
Bridge.”



Cyclops moved a control ball on the control panel in
front of him, and the map shifted, following the motion of a jet coming
in low under the bridge.



“We come around the bank just off of
Manhattan,” Cyclops went on, giving commentary that followed the
motion on the map. “We land on the far side of Liberty Island.
Here.”



The map showed the point where they would hit the island.
Patrols were light on that side. Actually, they seemed too light. But
Logan didn’t mention that.



For a moment they all stood there in silence. It was
clear to him that he was going to have a much better shot getting to
Rogue if he went with this group. And just maybe they could all get out
of it alive.



“So what about radar?” he asked.



Cyclops glanced up and actually smiled. “If they have anything that can pick up our jet, they deserve to catch us.”



Logan nodded. “Good enough.” Then he pointed
at the place where they intended to land. “Doesn’t that
look a little light on the guard numbers?”



Cyclops studied the area again, nodding slowly. As he watched, another red dot showing a New York cop winked out.



“It seems,” Cyclops said, “that Magneto
is ahead of us. We leave in ten minutes, people.” At that he
turned and headed for the door, without looking back.



Logan moved with Storm into the ready room off the
hangar. He glanced at the uniforms, then shook his head and started for
the jet.



“Hold on a second,” Cyclops said, strolling
into the room and stepping right up to Logan. “We do this, we do
it as a team. Are you going to have a problem taking orders?”



Logan stared into the visor of the man facing him. The
guy knew Logan could cut him down in an instant, yet he had the guts to
stand up to him like this. Challenge him. The guy had courage, Logan
had to hand him that.



“I don’t know,” Logan said. “Give me an order.”



They continued to stare at each other for a moment, then
Cyclops turned and moved to his locker. He grabbed a uniform and tossed
it at him. “Put it on.”



Logan caught the black uniform and nodded, following Cyclops’ order, trying not to smile.





 







Chapter Twenty-one





New York Harbor




The night was cold, star filled, and moonless. The lights
of Manhattan and the surrounding cities and towns shone like bright,
twinkling stars that framed the blackness of the bay and rivers.



Cyclops surveyed the jet’s instruments, making sure
everything was in perfect working order. Ahead he could see the George
Washington Bridge, and beyond it Liberty Island was lit up, the statue
dominating the bay. The line of cars stretching out to Ellis Island
seemed to have stopped. Or if it was moving, it was so slow that
Cyclops couldn’t see it from their current height of three
thousand feet, even with the monitors.



Beside him, Storm studied other screens. And in the next
two seats back, Jean and Logan waited. Shortly after they had taken
off, Logan had extended his claws—to customize the gloves of his
new costume. Otherwise the short flight had been tensely silent.



“All right,” Cyclops said, “there’s the bridge. I’m taking us in. Storm, some cover please.”



“You got it,” Storm said. Her eyes went milky white.



As if to mirror those eyes, below, around, and under the
G.W. Bridge a cloud of fog began to form over the calm, cold water.
Cyclops watched as it began rolling down the Hudson River, past midtown
Manhattan, then out toward Liberty Island.



He took the jet down quickly, almost in a straight dive,
dropping to just forty feet over the water and skimming along in silent
mode.



“You could warn a fella you’re going to make a move like that,” Logan said.



Cyclops glanced back and smiled wryly at the strained
expression Logan wore. He was gripping the armrest tightly. “Not
a good flyer, huh?” Scott asked.



“I can’t remember,” Logan said.



“Got me, too,” Storm admitted.



“Sorry,” Cyclops said, still smiling. “I’ll warn you both next time.”



“Thanks,” Logan said.



And somehow, Cyclops knew he was sincere.



“Going to tactical,” Storm announced as they entered the fog right under the bridge.



The windows seemed to darken slightly, then, as if it had
turned to daylight, the view of the surrounding area shifted to
startling clarity.



“Amazing stuff,” Logan said.



“Highly advanced version of infrared night vision,” Storm said. “Makes darkness a thing of the past.”



“I’ll say,” Logan said.



They reached the bay, and Cyclops slowed the jet down,
almost into hover mode, moving slowly toward the far side of Liberty
Island. There was no point in trying to save a few seconds at this
point, or in drawing attention to themselves. It was far better they
got there without being seen at all.




Ellis Island




Craig Downer, a seven-year veteran of the Secret Service,
stood on a tower overlooking the events unfolding below. He was in
charge of a small squad of six agents, and each squad commander
reported to a superior. It wasn’t often that the Secret Service
broke down into squads like this, but given the size of this particular
event, it was the best way to keep track of everything and everyone.



At the moment the U.S. Navy band was playing a selection
of different music from various countries. The bandstand was set up to
the west of the main stage area. The music seemed to echo over the
water, and to Craig it seemed out of tune more than anything else.



A bank of translators filled large booths that had been
set up just below his tower. They were constantly speaking into a bank
of microphones as the main public address system announced each head of
state, each dignitary, as he or she arrived.



Out over the water, the lights of the patrol boats moved
in a constant pattern that over the last few hours had become familiar.
Then suddenly, as he was just about to turn away, he thought he caught
a glimpse of something large and black blocking a portion of the
distant shore lights, moving about forty feet above the water.



He keyed his mike. “Can I get confirmation that harbor airspace has been cleared?”



“Roger that,” a voice responded.
“Nothing moving over three feet above that water. Airline flights
have been shifted to the north approaches, as well.”



“Thanks,” Craig said, staring intently at the area where he thought he’d seen the black form.



Nothing.



He scanned the horizon along the lit shoreline, all the way to the Statue of Liberty.



Nothing.



Maybe he was just getting too paranoid for his own good.
He was starting to imagine things. And in his job, that wasn’t a
good thing to do.



He went back to scanning the road that led onto Ellis
Island, and all the stretch limos still waiting to be cleared. This was
going to be a long night before it was over. A very long night.




Liberty Island




Magneto stared out of one of the observation windows set
in the head of the Statue of Liberty, watching the lights on the
distant Ellis Island. Behind him Sabretooth paced, back and forth, his
footsteps echoing in the metal space. Except for the pacing, the silent
statue felt like a tomb.



The two cops stationed in the torch above were dead, as
was every person who had had the misfortune of being stationed inside
the statue. Magneto deeply regretted having needed to take innocent
lives like that, but he had had no alternative. The survival of an
entire race came first.



After a moment, he keyed in the radio mike that connected
him to Mystique, who was located in the main area in the statue’s
base. She was stationed at a police monitor that showed all the
activities on Ellis Island. “How long?”



Her voice came back clear. “Ten minutes until curtain.”



Outside, a dense fog was rolling in over Liberty Island. That was odd. It took him a moment before he realized why it was odd.



He keyed his mike again, this time to everyone on his
team. “Stay sharp, people. We’re not alone.” He
smiled, then thought, You’re too late, Charles.



He got no response.



Sabretooth stepped up beside Magneto and looked out the window. Then he growled like a dog at an intruder, and turned to leave.



“Stay here,” Magneto ordered.



“But—”



“I need you with me,” Magneto said.
“Once I’ve given my powers to the girl, I’ll be
temporarily weakened. You will be my only defense.”



Sabretooth nodded and moved back to the other side of the
statue’s head, where the stairs curved up. He was following
orders, but Magneto could tell he wasn’t happy about it.




Ellis Island




Craig Downer got the message clearly through his earpiece. “John Henry has arrived.”



John Henry was the code name assigned to the president
and his party. Craig and the rest of his people were here to protect
everyone, but as always, their first priority was the president.



“Ladies and Gentlemen,” the public address
system announced. “The president and first lady of the United
States of America.”



On the red carpet leading into the main area, Craig could
see the president and his wife walking, smiling, waving to the cheering
crowds. They were surrounded by a full contingent of Secret Service.
And a dozen more were scattered up through the crowd ahead of them.



Craig scanned along the road, scanned the crowds in front
of the president, and then, as the president and first lady got to
their seats, he looked out over the black water where he had seen the
shape. The Statue of Liberty stood out there, brightly lit and standing
guard over the bay.



There was something odd about old lady Liberty. He couldn’t put his finger on it.



Craig shook his head. Why was he having such a bad feeling about all of this?



So far everything had gone smoothly.



Maybe that was worrying him. Maybe it had gone too smoothly.





 







Chapter Twenty-two





Liberty Island




Logan breathed an inward sigh of relief as Cyclops
brought the jet down smoothly into the water and cut the engines. The
sensation shifted to the gentle rocking action of water as the engine
ports closed up to function like pontoons.



Cyclops climbed out onto the wing and jumped to a nearby
rock, using special cords to secure the jet in place. Inflatable black
buffers protected it from striking the rocks. With luck, they were
going to need the jet to get away. And more than likely, it was going
to have to be a fast exit.



Logan followed Cyclops out, then helped Jean and Storm
reach dry land while Cyclops finished securing the jet. Logan
couldn’t sense any motion or detect the scent of anyone in the
immediate vicinity, but that didn’t necessarily mean anything.
Their enemies had shown remarkable ability when it came to masking
their presence.



He and Storm took up positions on the hill, waiting there
until Cyclops and Jean joined them. Storm’s fog was thick and
heavy, and the air had turned cold and biting. Above them Logan could
see the Statue of Liberty towering against a backdrop of the
night’s blackness, all lit up with spotlights that cut through
the fog. Across the bay he could see the gathering on Ellis Island, and
he could hear the faint sounds of the music drifting out over the
waves.



“Take a look at this,” Storm said from her
position to his right as Jean and Cyclops joined them. She was
indicating a huge, green, rounded object composed entirely of metal.



At first Logan couldn’t tell what it was exactly.



“The base of the torch,” Jean said, looking
up. There was a hint of awe in her voice. “Can you believe
that?”



It finally dawned on Logan just what she was talking
about. Above them, he could see that the base of Liberty’s torch
had been removed—replaced, more than likely, with the base of the
machine that Senator Kelly had described to the professor.



“Spread out and head for the main entrance,” Cyclops said. “Logan, take point.”



“Got it,” Logan acknowledged.



Twenty feet farther up the rocks, under a stone wall, he
came across the first body. The cop had practically been gutted, and
from the look on his face, he hadn’t died easily or quickly.
Logan could smell the scent of Sabretooth on the guy.



Two more policemens’ bodies had been tossed behind
the bushes near the main entrance. Logan waited there, in the shadows,
as Jean, Storm, and then Cyclops came up out of the darkness, appearing
like ghosts, moving silently and quickly. Logan had to admit the
professor had trained them well. They were functioning like commandos.



“Two bodies,” Logan said, pointing into the bush behind him.



Cyclops nodded. “Jean, keep scanning ahead. You and I are now on point. Logan, stay close to Storm. Watch her back.”



“Copy that,” Logan said.



So far the kid was acting like a real commander. And so
far his orders all made sense. He was going to owe Scott an apology if
they both got out of this alive.



Cyclops went in the right double door and continued right.



Jean took the left door and went left.



A moment later Cyclops’ voice said, “Clear.”



Storm and Logan moved toward the front doors the same way
as Cyclops and Jean. As they entered, Storm clipped her cape to her
wrists, keeping it closer to her body.



Passing through the doorway, Logan set off a metal
detector. With a look of disgust, he popped his claws and plunged them
into the machine, putting a stop to the strident alarm.



The inside of the statue’s main foyer boasted a
girdered ceiling, then a long hallway heading toward the center of the
structure. There was an empty security desk to one side and a metal
detector blocking much of the entrance.



Logan went around it on the right.



Storm on the left.



The two cops who had been manning this area were bleeding
behind the desk, their throats cut cleanly, their blood so fresh it
wasn’t yet drawing flies.



A six-foot replica of the statue stood guard on one side
of the hallway about halfway down. As Logan went past it, he paused. A
few feet farther on, he whispered to Cyclops. “There’s
someone here.”



“Where?” Cyclops asked.



“I don’t know,” Logan said. “Keep your eyes open.”



They continued down the long hallway—slowly, carefully—to where it opened into a two-tiered museum.



The sense was becoming even stronger. Logan glanced
around. Still nothing. They reached the center area that stretched
upward into the body of the statue. There they stopped, surrounded by
displays and side rooms, with a railing curving above them, concealing
a dark balcony.



Cyclops gestured, and they spread out, keeping under the overhang of the balcony.



Finally, Logan couldn’t stand it any
longer—the sense that someone was just behind them. “Hang
on,” he said to Cyclops, who nodded.



Logan headed toward the front entrance, moving quickly and silently.



Nothing.



He was about to turn back when he heard Cyclops’ voice down the hallway.



“Anything?” Cyclops asked.



“I know there’s someone here,” a voice
responded. A voice that sounded exactly like his own. “But I
can’t see them.”



At that he broke into a sprint, as fast as he could move, back down the hall toward the others.



Someone, or something, who looked, dressed, and sounded
exactly as he did, was standing in front of Cyclops. Then the imposter
extended his claws and went to swipe at the unsuspecting X-Man.



Logan leaped and tackled the doppelganger, square in the
back, sending them both tumbling head over heels into the steel wall,
then into a side room cluttered with exhibits.



Recovering from his surprise, Cyclops focused on both of
them as they came up, facing each other. Logan glanced at Scott.
“Wait.”



The imposter did the same thing.



Said the same thing.



Suddenly a massive metal door slammed down into place, cutting off Logan and the imposter from the others.



Logan spun for an instant, then turned back. But the imposter was gone.



Mystique. The blue woman was a fighting expert and could change her form at will.



Then the lights cut out.



“Ah, crap,” Logan said. He was certain he knew what was going to happen next.



And he was right. A boot slammed into his face, sending him crashing over backward.



He came up ready to fight, his claws fully extended,
using all his heightened senses to figure out where his opponent might
be lurking.



The blackness seemed almost too black.



A whisper of movement caused him to turn, just in time to
roll with another blow to the head. This time the impact sent him
crashing into a glass display case.



He rolled again and came up, moving toward the far wall.
There he found a switch and turned it on, bringing the lights back up.
He was in a gift shop.



Mystique was nowhere to be seen. Yet he still could sense
her presence. He moved slowly, with animal grace, turning, employing
every sense. She had to breathe, so he listened. She had a faint smell,
so he let his nose guide him.



He glided toward one side of the small gift shop.



Suddenly a mirror behind him seemed to move, and he slashed at it with his claws, smashing the glass.



But it had been a reflection.



Then the steel door flew open, and a shadow darted out into the main area.



“Damn, damn, damn,” he said, following her.






Jean stood beside Cyclops as he prepared to blast down
the door that separated them from Logan and Mystique. Suddenly there
was a sickening thud as Toad dropped from the balcony, bounced once,
and kicked Cyclops hard in the side, sending him crashing head over
heels into another side room.



Instantly the metal door to that room slammed down, cutting her off from Cyclops.



“Jean, watch out!” Storm shouted.



Jean twisted around to discover Toad, facing her head-on.
His tongue shot out and struck her face, coating her with a slimy
substance that congealed almost instantly.



He laughed. “Hate to kiss and run.”



It took Jean only a moment to realize that she
couldn’t breathe. The stuff was blocking her nose and mouth. She
clawed at it, fighting to free herself of it.



An instant later the metal door that had slammed down on
Cyclops melted under the heat of his energy beam. Scott came tearing
out, firing at Toad, who dodged out of the way, ricocheting off two
walls, gaining the momentum he needed to kick Cyclops back into the
room he’d just escaped from.



Then Storm attacked him, and he rolled over, finding the leverage to knock her up and over the railing into the balcony area.



Then Cyclops was back, and Toad leaped up and out of sight, also on the balcony.



Jean was starting to black out. She dropped to her knees,
then to her back, fighting the stuff that clung to her face, her
throat, and her nose. It had hardened until it felt like bone,
completely blocking her air.



“Jean!” Cyclops said, bending over her. “Hold still!”



He desperately tried to pry it off, but it would not yield.



She could feel the blackness coming in around her. She desperately needed air. She fought to keep her eyes open.



Finally Cyclops stood. “Jean! Stop moving!”



She didn’t understand.



“Stop moving!” he shouted.



She did as he ordered.



He fired an incredibly thin, extraordinarily focused beam
of energy from his visor. It struck the slime that had crusted over her
face. The energy smashed it to pieces.



Jean gulped in a sweet breath of wonderful air as Cyclops bent over her, holding her.



She held him back as hard as she could.



That had been just too damn close.






Storm moved quietly along the exhibits, searching for Toad. He was up here somewhere, and she was going to find him.



And kick his ass right out to sea.



As she came out from behind a display case, she heard the
elevator doors open. She glanced that way, only to find the doors were
standing open on an empty shaft.



What was going on?



Suddenly, something dripped on her from above.



She tried to duck but wasn’t in time. Toad swung
down and kicked her squarely, sending her careening across the floor.
An instant later he was on top of her, his scaly hands touching her
face, his legs pinning her arms.



“Such pretty skin,” he sneered, caressing her
cheek. She fought a wave of revulsion. “So perfect. I guess some
mutants were just born lucky.”



Storm kicked him in the back of the head. Then, as he
moved, she wrenched an arm free and drove a fist squarely into his ugly
face.



It was like punching a marshmallow covered with scales.



Instantly he leaped back up into the rafters.



“Nice try,” he said mockingly, “but you’re going to have to do better than that.”



She scrambled to her feet, ready to fight, as he swung
through the rafters like a gymnast on a high bar, using the force of
one such swing to kick her hard, right in the chest.



The blow knocked the air out of her.



She flew backward through the air and smashed directly into the back of the open elevator shaft.



Her head connected with the wall with a resounding crack.



The impact hurt worse than almost anything she’d ever experienced.



An instant later, she dropped into the darkness.





 







Chapter Twenty-three





Liberty Island




Toad perched on the railing, watching the two mutants
below. The one he had slimed was still alive, thanks to the mutant with
the visor. But that wouldn’t be the case for long.



He lined up, ready to drop on both of them at once. Sort
of a two-birds-with-one-drop kind of thing. The sound of their bones
crunching under the impact was going to be wonderful. With luck some of
their brains and guts would squirt out—like someone stepping on a
tube of toothpaste.



He loved it when that happened.



Behind him the elevator doors opened.



He twisted around just as wind blew up through the
elevator shaft, increasing in intensity, rattling the doors, then
knocking over tourist displays.



Slowly floating upward on the wind, the mutant with the white hair and the smooth skin rose into view.



“Don’t you people ever die?” he complained, jumping down from the railing to face her.



At that the wind around him picked up violently. Displays and merchandise began flying toward him, striking him.



The woman had cuts on her forehead, and her arms were
bleeding. Her eyes were solid white, shining like lasers, staring at
him. Her expression spoke volumes, and Toad began to wonder if he
should find a convenient escape route.



“Don’t like being dropped down an elevator
shaft, huh?” he asked, shouting bravado into the wind as he used
his webbed feet to hold himself to the floor. Slowly, even as the wind
increased, he inched closer to her, never letting the smile slip from
his face. When he reached her she was going to be sorry she had even
tried to mess with him.



His opponent’s white eyes opened even wider, and
the winds increased, pushing beyond hurricane force. Now he found
himself slipping, moving backward, no matter how firmly he tried to
hold on with his sticky feet.



Suddenly, a counter appeared and knocked against his leg, and his feet went out from under him.



He grabbed the carpet with his hands, but it ripped,
sending him tumbling into the air and out a large window that opened
onto an observation deck.



Beyond that, only the dark, open ocean waited for him.



But this white-haired witch wasn’t going to get the best of him yet.



He lashed out with his tongue, grabbing the railing of
the observation deck, holding on, flapping in the hard wind like a flag
in a breeze. His strength could outlast hers, he was sure of that. She
had to tire soon, then he would kill her. And take pleasure in doing
it.



The glass on the doors exploded outward as the
white-haired mutant walked out onto the observation deck, rising off
the ground, buoyed by the winds she summoned around her.



She didn’t look tired.



Then she raised her arms.



The air around Toad began to crackle and pop. He could feel the hairs on his head standing up even in the wind.



“Do you know what happens to a toad when it gets hit by lightning?” she shouted.



The pain in his tongue was intense as a massive bolt of
lightning struck the railing. The jolt of electricity moved up his
tongue and tore through his body.



The last thing he remembered was flying on the wind far,
far above the dark ocean, his now-worthless tongue trailing behind him
like the tail of a kite.



Then he blacked out. Luckily, this occurred before he hit the very hard surface of the water.






Back on the balcony, the wind died down and Storm smiled.
“Same thing that happens to everything else,” she said,
answering her own question.



“Same damn thing.”






Logan moved quickly down the hallway, keeping all his
senses alert. He knew Mystique was close by, but where? And how was she
going to attack?



Suddenly Storm burst through the doors just in front of him. “Is that you?” she asked, looking him over carefully.



Logan moved up close to her. “Shh, the other one ain’t far away.”



His nose caught the now-familiar odor.



Storm nodded. “Come on. We need to regroup.”



“I know,” Logan said, “but there’s a problem.”



As fast as he could move, he grabbed Storm’s wrist
and yanked it up. There were three claws protruding from her wrist.
Claws she had planned on using to run him through.



The claws reverted back as Mystique’s blue hand
returned to its natural shape. Logan spun and struck out with his
elbow, smashing her square in the nose as hard as he could.



She went down like a sack of flour. She wasn’t going to be moving again for a long, long time.



And it was going to take all her changing ability to fix what was left of her nose.



“Always remember,” he said, standing over her limp, blue body, “no two women smell alike.”



He turned and headed back to the main area of the museum.



As he entered the center room, Cyclops and Jean spun and took up defensive positions.



“It’s me,” Logan said, striding toward them.



“Prove it,” Cyclops said.



“You’re a dick,” Logan said, smiling at their visor-eyed leader.



Cyclops paused for a moment, then nodded and smiled. “Okay. Let’s find Storm.”



“Right here,” she said.



Logan glanced at where she stood on the balcony, clearly tired, and bleeding in a number of places.



“You all right?” Jean asked.



“Better than Toad,” Storm said, and smiled.



“And you’re much better looking, too,” Logan said.



“You sure know how to make a beat-up woman feel better,” Storm said wryly.



“Okay then,” Cyclops said. “Two down and two to go.”



“Why do I think the next two are going to be the hardest?” Logan said.



“Because you’re right,” Cyclops replied.





 







Chapter Twenty-four





Liberty Island




The statue’s interior was lit with a few
strategically placed spotlights; the stairs had lights directly over
them. It was a long climb, but it didn’t take much time for
Logan, with Cyclops directly behind him, to reach the upper platform.
Stairs led off in two directions: one into the arm, and the other up
into the head. The door that led into the arm was closed and locked
tight. Looking down, Logan could see all the latticework of the
statue’s body. Above, the opening stretched into the head.



“Looks like Magneto’s got the arm blocked,” Storm said, pointing at the door on one side of the platform.



“Can you blast through it?” Logan asked Cyclops.



“Not without tearing the whole arm off,” Cyclops said.



Above them, Logan could hear the sound of wind coming
from the head of the statue. Maybe there was a way to the arm from
there. He glanced up, then at Cyclops, who caught the meaning and
nodded.



“Follow me,” Cyclops said, heading up.



They all came up onto the platform inside the head and
scattered, ready for anything. The inside walls of the head and face
were covered with metal support beams and more latticework. Stairs
continued up to observation platforms in the statue’s crown.



Suddenly, Logan found that he couldn’t move. It was as if his legs were glued to the floor, his arms frozen in the air.



Magneto!



“Get out of here,” he said to the others. “Quick!”



“What’s wrong?” Cyclops asked.



“I can’t move,” Logan said.



In the next instant, he was shoved hard, back against a
wall. His fists were brought up and pushed into his chest, so that if
he extended his claws he would stab himself.



A band of metal curled up and wrapped around him, pinning
his fists to his chest. He tried to shove against the band, but it held
him tight.



Then the room erupted into something from a bad cartoon
nightmare as the metal bracing from the wall tore loose and flew
everywhere, dancing, attacking, as if each piece had a life of its own.



Cyclops managed to blast a few of the braces, but there
were just too many. One came up from behind and wrapped around his
neck, forcing his head back and pulling him to the wall.



Storm and Jean were both caught as well and yanked to the wall.



The metal shoved Jean face-to-face with Cyclops. Then two metal spikes came in and locked Cyclops’ head in place.



Storm looked more angry than Logan had ever seen her as four bands bent and pinned her to a wall near him.



Then, from the hole in the top of the statue’s
head, Magneto floated down, using the magnetic pull to support himself,
landing gently in the middle of the room. He was wearing a smile that
spoke of arrogant confidence.



“Welcome, my friends,” he said.



Sabretooth thumped down behind him. Logan noticed that
his dog tags were hanging around Sabretooth’s neck. If it was the
last thing he did, he was going to get those back.



Sabretooth moved over to where Jean and Cyclops were locked against the wall.



“You’d better close your eyes,” Magneto warned the young team leader.



At that, Sabretooth ripped Cyclops’ visor off his
head and put it in his pocket. Fortunately, Cyclops had heeded the
warning, though Logan knew that if he opened his eyes in the slightest,
he would destroy everything that lay in front of him—including
Jean.



Magneto laughed, then turned to Logan. “And I’m so glad you could make it.”



Logan’s only response was a growl.



“Storm, fry him,” Cyclops shouted.



Magneto laughed. “By all means. A bolt of lightning into a huge copper conductor. I thought you lived at a school.”



With that, Magneto stepped to the center of the platform
and spoke into a radio. “Mystique? Mystique, where are
you?”



Logan knew Magneto wasn’t going to be getting an
answer anytime soon, but said nothing. Magneto lowered the radio and
tossed it to Sabretooth. “Find one of the security bands, and
then find out if the ceremonies have started yet.”



“You can’t do this,” Jean said. “I’ve seen Senator Kelly.”



“Ah,” Magneto said, nodding, “so the
good senator survived his fall? And the swim to shore? He’s more
powerful than I could have possibly imagined.”



“Kelly’s dead,” Jean said. “His
body rejected the mutation and he simply melted. His cells fell
apart.”



“No, that’s not possible,” Magneto said, a hint of uncertainty in his voice. He glared at her.



“It happened,” Jean said flatly.



Magneto began to pace back and forth, saying nothing.



Logan could see that the news had shaken the man. Then,
suddenly, Magneto stopped and turned on Jean. “Can’t you
see what I’m trying to do? Why do you stand in my way?”



“Because you’re going to kill thousands of people,” Jean said simply.



But Magneto shook it off. Clearly, he refused to accept
her claims about Senator Kelly. Instead he said, “I’m doing
this for you. I’m doing this to put an end to the persecution of
my people.”



“Bullshit!” Logan spat.



Magneto turned and pinned him with a stare. But Logan refused to give in.



“One of your people is about to get fried in your
little flawed machine. I bet she’s feeling pretty persecuted,
pal. If you were so righteous, it’d be you in that thing.”



“Oh, yes?” Magneto asked, looking at Logan. “Who would lead them then? You? Charles?”



He turned and faced Jean again. “This is not the
time for politics and debate. It is time for strength. Our people will
need leadership.”



“Sure,” Logan said, planting as much disgust
in his voice as he could. “All hail Magneto, king of the new race
and all-around genocidal maniac.” He laughed. “You know, I
remember my history, and that sounds awfully familiar, don’t you
think?”



Magneto glared at Logan as the radio in Sabretooth’s hand crackled.



“Boss?” Sabretooth said.



Magneto turned as Sabretooth held up the radio. “Tapped in on one of their bands.”



Magneto nodded as the radio came to life. Even from a
distance, Logan could hear what the Secret Service guy was saying,
unaware that his security had been compromised. “The house is
full. Repeat, the house is full. Proceed to phase two.”



Magneto nodded. “It seems the party next door is under way. It’s time.”



He glanced around at Jean and Cyclops, then back at Logan. “Good-bye, brothers.”



With that, he floated up through the hole in the head of the statue.



Logan twisted, trying to fight his way out of the steel belt that held him, without luck.



Sabretooth just sneered at him.



More than anything else in the world, Logan wanted to wipe that sneer right off his ugly face.





 







Chapter Twenty-five





Ellis Island




Secret Service agent Craig Downer scanned the crowds
milling about below his tower, then he looked out over the water toward
Liberty Island again. He’d just been informed that they were
having radio trouble, and communications were down for the entire city
police contingent on the island. Nonetheless, he’d been assured
that it would be fixed shortly. It had better be, he mused
pessimistically. Four Secret Service agents were headed there now by
boat to check the situation out. He didn’t dare take any chances.



Down at ground level, the UN secretary general was finishing his speech.



“We must never forget,” the secretary general
said, “that the welfare of the smallest person, in the remotest
corner of the world, is connected by infinite links to that of the
world’s leaders, gathered here today. The alliance of the world
is coming, and tonight we have taken the first steps.”



Polite applause filled the air.



At that moment the fireworks started. Red and green
streamers shot into the air, the explosions echoing over the water. The
display was scheduled to last for six minutes—six very long
minutes as far as Downer was concerned.



He continued to scan the crowd and the distant Statue of
Liberty, now illuminated even more with the blues and reds and greens
of the fireworks.



Something was wrong. He could sense it.



He just didn’t know what it was, and calling an
emergency based only on his gut wasn’t something he could
do—not on a night as important as this one.



So he stood, watched, and stayed very alert.




Liberty Island




Logan watched carefully as Sabretooth moved to one of the
observation windows in the statue’s head to watch the fireworks
exploding out over the water. It was going to be now or never.



He took a deep breath. This was going to hurt. But pain
was something he had experienced a lot of in the past. He would survive
this.



As hard and as fast as he could, he extended the claw of his right index finger.



It shot through his chest with a stabbing pain and made
him suck in his breath. The claw went out his back and into the steel
band holding him.



Quickly, using his entire body for leverage, he twisted,
cutting the band. As he fell forward, he withdrew the claw, growling as
pain again waved through his body, twisting him, bending him over for a
moment.



But he was free.



And as always, his wound was healing quickly.



Sabretooth spun around and roared when he saw what Logan had done.



“Glad to see me, huh?” Logan said, and before
Sabretooth could react, he charged. With a flying kick, Logan planted
one foot in his opponent’s stomach, the other on his shoulder,
and sprang upward, using Sabretooth as a springboard that allowed him
to get up and out, to the observation area on the statue’s crown.



With one clean motion, he landed and rolled, then braced
himself and looked around. The arm was too far away for him to reach.
And he couldn’t see anything going on up there yet.



“What the hell do I do now?” he asked himself.



At that instant, Sabretooth shot up through the hole in
the statue and smashed into Logan at full tilt, sending him over the
crown of the statue and onto the spikes of the headpiece.



It seemed his question had been answered for him.



Logan rolled and came up fast as Sabretooth charged.



“Here kitty, kitty, kitty,” Logan mocked, crouched and waiting. “Come and get what you deserve.”






Rogue, for the past half hour, had been struggling to
loosen the cuffs that bound her to Magneto’s machine. Her wrists
were raw and bleeding, and the panel near her feet had been dented by
her kicks, but she had made no real progress at all.



Now fireworks had started out over the water. She knew time must be short. Very short.



Magneto stepped in through the door that led from the
observation area into the torch, where Rogue was being held. He was
smiling.



“No,” Rogue said. “Please don’t do this.”



“I’m sorry, my dear,” Magneto said.



He didn’t look sorry at all. He actually looked
excited, like a child on his birthday. She watched as he removed his
gloves, then took a few deep breaths, as if he were getting ready to
jump into a deep pool.



Then he moved up to her, his cold eyes locking with hers.
She tried to turn away, tried to pull her hands loose, but she
couldn’t.



With his bare hands, he touched her face.



Suddenly she felt the incredible energy flowing into her.



She could see everything that he had seen.



She knew what he knew.



She saw all the death, all the horror.



Abruptly, he let go and staggered backward, his face
white with shock. The machine around her came to life, shifting,
yanking her hands down onto the handles. The rings began to spin,
slowly at first, then faster.



She fought hard to let go, trying to use his power, his energy, to her advantage. And she failed.



Though she possessed his power, the machine was in
control. She knew, from the images that had coursed through his mind,
that he had thought of everything. He had planned it all—down to
the last detail.



And she knew she was going to die.



She also knew that, from this point forward, the process
could not be stopped. She knew that if Magneto had been standing here,
in her place, he wouldn’t have been able to stop it, either.



A moment later, something shifted. The energy he had
given her began to flow away, draining into the machine. Along with it
went her own life force.



It pulled at her, painfully taking everything she had and pouring it into the spinning rings.



In the distance fireworks lit the sky.



She used to love fireworks.



She could see the beautiful colors, hear the distant
explosions, as the machine pulled the blackness around her, covering
her in deep and intense pain.



She fought, with one last desperate burst of energy.



But the machine took that also.



And the blackness forced her eyes closed as the pain cut at her every cell.



Then she knew she would see no more.






Magneto watched as the young girl passed out in the
machine, and the rings sped up to the point where they disappeared. He
had never felt so tired, so drained. Another few seconds and her touch
would have killed him.



He moved out onto the observation platform facing Ellis
Island, and the firework display going on there. “Give me your
tired, your poor, your huddled masses,” he said. Then he laughed
bitterly and turned, waving at the door, willing it to close.



It didn’t move.



This time he laughed at himself. Of course—it was going to take some time for his powers to return.



As his machine gained speed around Rogue, he moved to the door and closed it by hand, latching it.



A moment later the flame of the torch above him was
shattered, bursting outward in an explosion that was timed to mix with
the fireworks.



Perfect.



The white light started to fill the sky, joining the greens and blues and reds of the celebration.



Magneto watched in wonderment. It was almost time for the world to change.



Almost time for his world to begin.





 







Chapter Twenty-six





Liberty Island




Logan crouched on one spine of the statue’s crown
and watched as Sabretooth charged him again. Logan’s claws were
extended; his every sense was on full alert. He could feel his own
blood pounding through his veins. It was payback time.



All he had to do was get the big guy into the air and over the edge. Gravity and the rocks below would do the rest.



But Sabretooth was too smart for that. Or he had the same damn idea.



The big mutant smashed directly into Logan, smothering
him, and the two of them tumbled backward, pounding and slashing at
each other as they rolled toward the tip of the metal spine.



As they came to their feet, Logan shoved himself away and
slashed at his foul-smelling enemy, narrowly missing his face. But as
Logan’s arm came around, he realized he had snagged his own dog
tags and ripped the chain off Sabretooth’s neck.



“This is mine,” he said, grabbing the tags
and holding them up. He stuffed them into a pocket as Sabretooth came
at him again.



“You’re not getting them back,” Logan said.



“We’ll see about that,” Sabretooth said, his voice a low growl—as if that was going to rattle Logan.



The force of the attack shoved Logan back, and pinned him
to the metal surface of the statue. He kicked upward, hard, catching a
soft spot.



Locked again, they rolled over twice, and Sabretooth
pinned Logan’s arms before he could get them free. He kicked
upward again, burying his knee in Sabretooth’s stomach, but that
didn’t break the hold this time. Sabretooth lifted Logan up until
he was staring directly into Sabretooth’s face, held there like a
small child.



Logan’s hands were pinned against
Sabretooth’s side. He could feel Cyclops’ visor tucked in a
pocket. With one hand he slipped it out and shoved it up the sleeve of
his new uniform.



Sabretooth was incredibly strong, and there was no way
Logan could yank free. So he did the next best thing. He spit in the
mutant’s face.



It seemed like the right thing to do at the time.



Sabretooth laughed viciously. “That all you got?”



Logan smiled. “Nope. How about a metal skull?”



With that he smashed his forehead directly into Sabretooth’s face. He could feel Sabretooth’s nose break.



The grip weakened, and Logan kicked free, tumbling away.



But he wasn’t fast enough.



And he was headed in slightly the wrong direction.



Sabretooth grabbed his wrist, and using Logan’s momentum, he swung him around and off the crown, into the air.



Logan spun around as he began to plummet toward the rocks
below, extending his claws. Before he’d dropped more than twenty
feet, he snagged one ear of the statue.



His claws dug into the metal.



One of them held.



Barely.



Yanked to a stop, he smashed into the cold metal surface.



The pain threatened to cause him to black out. He had
torn his right arm out of the socket, but he didn’t let go,
hanging there from one claw like a bad earring.



More fireworks exploded over the water in reds and
greens. Logan focused on them for a moment, letting the pain subside
slightly.



The slightest wrong move and his arm would give way, or
the one claw would slip from the metal. And thanks to the angle, there
was nothing below him but rocks. He might live through the fall, but he
wouldn’t be any good for a long, long time.



Slowly, he turned his body.



The claw held.



Carefully he raised his other hand. Then, gauging exactly
how much force he dared use, he stuck all three claws from his left
hand into the metal of the ear, then pulled himself up a little, using
the last of his strength to ease the pressure on his injured arm.



He pulled the one claw out and let the ripped-up arm drop
into a natural position. He could feel the pain subside as his healing
ability kicked in.



Over his head, the statue’s torch exploded outward, spewing an intense white light in all directions.



Rogue!



The thought sent another burst of energy flowing into him and he climbed, hand over hand, ignoring the pain.



Ignoring the shoulder.



He had to get up there, and get up there fast.






While the fight between Logan and Sabretooth raged above,
Jean had been trying to ease her way out of the metal trap, but
she’d had no success at all. She was pressed tightly against a
metal beam that rested between her and Cyclops, held against the metal
wall of the inside of the statue’s head so securely that it was
hard to breathe.



“Can you see Storm?” Cyclops asked.



“Yes,” she said.



Storm had been trying to slip upward, with just about as much success.



“Try mentally bending the metal away from her. Give her an inch to move.”



“Ready, Storm?” Jean asked.



“The one around my chest is the tightest,” Storm said. “Try it first.”



Jean concentrated, using all her training to focus her
attention down on the one beam. In her mind, she pictured it stretching
away from Storm.



“I can feel it moving,” Storm said, wiggling to move up.



Jean pushed, harder and harder.



The beam across Storm’s chest was shaking, but not bending.



Finally Jean could push no farther.



“No luck,” she said softly.



Cyclops nodded slightly, as much as the spikes against his temples would allow.



Overhead, the sounds of the fight stopped. Only the
sounds of the distant fireworks remained. Jean held her breath, trying
to sense Logan or Rogue.



She couldn’t find either of them.



Suddenly Sabretooth dropped into the middle of the room with a heavy thud. He was bleeding in a number of places, including his nose, and his coat and furs were ripped.



There was no Logan.



That meant he had lost.



“Time to end it all,” Sabretooth said. “I’ll make it quick, I promise.”



He walked toward Storm. Standing in front of her he raised his hand, claws out.



“No!” Jean said, focusing on his hand, freezing it in midair.



Sabretooth stared at his claws as if they were betraying him.



He stepped back, and Jean released his hand.



He turned and grinned at her. “Nice trick.”



Then he stepped toward her, his hand outstretched, reaching for her neck.



“No!” she said again, even more vehemently, focusing on his hand.



Willing it to stop.



And again it froze, just a foot in front of her.



He grinned even more viciously, and pushed. He seemed to be enjoying this.



She focused with all her strength, but she knew there was no chance she could hold him back for long.



Slowly he moved forward, never losing the sick smile on his face, until finally his claws were about to touch her neck.



“Hey!” Logan said.



Sabretooth jerked around.



Jean let his hand go and gasped for breath.



She had never been so happy to see anyone in her entire
life. Logan was standing there, cut in a dozen places, but healing. His
new uniform looked as if it had been put through a shredder. And he was
holding one shoulder a little lower than the other.



But he was alive.



He glanced at her and smiled. “What do you see?” he asked, then winked.



Suddenly she was in his mind, and she knew instantly what he wanted her to do.



“Scott,” she whispered, “when I tell you, open your eyes.”



“What?” Cyclops said.



“I know. Just do it and trust me.”



“You’ll be killed.”



“No, I won’t,” she whispered as Sabretooth took a step toward Logan. “Now trust me.”



“You know, you really smell,” Logan said to
Sabretooth. “And I think someone needs to change your kitty
box.”



Sabretooth growled a low, guttural growl, and took another step.



Logan reached into his sleeve and yanked out Cyclops’ visor, then tossed it into the air.



Jean focused all her attention on the visor, snatching it out of the air and bringing it to her.



Sabretooth reacted quickly, diving for it as it shot past.



But he missed.



Jean brought the visor into position in front of
Cyclops’ face, snapped it open with her mind, and adjusted the
control that focused the lenses.



“Now!” she said.



Cyclops opened his eyes.



The intense energy rushed into the visor. She could feel its heat, but none of it touched her.



The narrow red beam shot from the visor, went past her
head and hit Sabretooth squarely in the chest, smashing him backward
through the metal wall and out into the dark night sky.



“Eyes shut!” she ordered Scott. He closed his
eyes, and the visor dropped to the ground as she slumped against the
metal that still held her in its grip. Logan jumped to the
Sabretooth-sized hole in the wall and looked down.



“Bull’s-eye,” he said. “Right
through the roof of a boat.” He turned and smiled at her.
“Nice shooting.”



Jean was too tired even to smile back.



“We still haven’t won.”



“Rogue,” Logan said, moving quickly to cut them free.



“Rogue,” Jean said.



As Logan cut the metal away from her and Cyclops, she
could see the white light starting to spread. They had to stop Magneto,
and stop him fast, or thousands were going to die just as Senator Kelly
had died.



Maybe even millions, if that white energy reached Manhattan.





 







Chapter Twenty-seven





Ellis Island




Agent Downer couldn’t even begin to identify what
he was seeing coming from the torch of the Statue of Liberty. White
light.



A cloud of white light.



Or a cloud of something very bright that seemed to have no substance.



Just light.



It fascinated him and scared him to death in the same instant.



He keyed his microphone. “Any contact at all with Liberty Island?”



“None.”



“Damn,” he said softly, glancing down at the crowds below. He had no choice.



He flipped a switch and gave the order. “Code One. Evacuate.”



Below him Secret Service agents moved as a tight unit,
and not far behind them the rest of the security forces jumped into
action, each group taking charge of their heads of state. The president
was instantly surrounded and moved quickly with the first lady toward
one of the waiting cars.



Along the road that led back from Ellis Island and all
the way into the city, Craig knew all traffic was being cleared. The
cars were going to pour off this island far, far faster than they had
come onto it. The evacuation procedures had been worked out to the last
detail, practiced again and again. He just hoped it was going to be
fast enough.



Across the water, the cloud of white light continued to spread.




Liberty Island




Logan finished cutting Storm loose and moved quickly to
stand beside Cyclops and Jean. They were at the window, where they
could see the torch above them. The white light was just as the
professor had described it from the images in Senator Kelly’s
mind. It was pouring out of the torch and spreading toward both Ellis
Island and Manhattan.



“I’ve got to blast it,” Cyclops said.



“Not with Rogue still up there,” Logan responded. He turned to Storm. “I need you to lift me up there.”



“I can’t control wind like that,” she replied. “You could fly right over the torch.”



“If I don’t make it,” Logan said,
“then Cyclops can blast the whole damn thing.” He turned to
Cyclops. “You see another choice?”



Cyclops glanced up, then shook his head. “Try it.”



“In the opening,” Storm said, pointing to the
hole Sabretooth had punched in the wall on his way out. “Keep
your body flat until you’re ready to land. Then curl into a
ball.”



“Gotcha,” Logan said.



Logan jumped up to where she had indicated, then turned.
Storm’s eyes had gone pure white, and the wind was starting to
come up around him. Jean and Cyclops moved back against the wall and
hung on while Logan stood in the opening, gripping the edge, leaning
into the wind.



Suddenly he felt himself being lifted by the air, so he
let go. It was like floating on a fast river of water. One moment he
was in the opening; the next he was out over the bay and heading
upward.



Like a parachutist, he spread his arms and legs, trying
to stay flat, trying to give some surface for Storm’s wind to
work against.



And he was trying his best not to panic. He knew now that he really hated flying.



Above him, the torch and the white cloud of light were coming on fast.



He focused on his target. He was going to have to time this perfectly.



Just as he passed above the balcony that curved around the torch, he tucked into a tight ball, right over Magneto’s head.



The look on the old mutant’s face was priceless.



The wind stopped, and Logan’s speed and momentum sent him shooting directly at the machine.



There was Rogue. And there were the rings, spinning.



“Oh, shit!” he said.



Reacting instinctively, he extended his claws, and using
them like a diver uses his hands to break the surface of the water, he
went in.



The claws sheared through one of the rings, sending it
careening off into the night air. He was moving fast enough that one of
the other rings only took a nick out of one of his boots.



He hit the base of the machine and came up quickly,
wrapping himself over Rogue, careful not to touch any of her bare skin,
trying to protect her from any flying shards of metal.



Around him the machine continued to operate, but now it
was off balance and one ring short. The entire thing started to shake
as it built to full power, ripping itself apart at the same time.



Under him, Rogue jerked and twitched as the machine drained the life from her.



The white cloud of light had extended halfway to Ellis
Island and was still spreading toward the city. He had to do something
to stop it.



And to save Rogue.



Keeping her sheltered as best he could, he reached out
with his claws and thrust them into the blur of rings that spun around
him.



It was like sticking a finger into a high-speed fan.



Snap! His hand was smashed sideways as his claws
sliced through another ring. Once again, his shoulder was wrenched out
of its socket. New pain coursed through him, making him shout out in
agony.



Now the machine around him was really tearing itself
apart. The sound had changed from a humming into a massive roar, like a
jet engine straining to shove a plane into the air.



Only this was one very sick engine.



The shaking was like being inside a giant blender. It was everything he could do just to hold on.



The remaining rings had lost all semblance of balance.
Logan hoped fervently that the entire arm of the statue didn’t
fall off. It hadn’t been designed to take anything like this, he
was sure.



Then everything exploded around him.



The remaining rings on the massive machine tangled with a
shriek of ripping and tearing metal. Then they blew outward, sending
deadly fragments flashing across the bay. The air was filled with
massive explosions, far louder than the fireworks had been.



The white light stalled, then just seemed to vanish. Soon it was as if it had never been there.



Logan’s ears were ringing, and his arms and hands
hurt from holding on so tightly. He was cut in a dozen more places, and
he doubted his shoulder was ever going to be the same.



But he was alive.



And the light had been stopped.



He climbed out of the wreckage and stepped to the balcony level. Nothing much was left of the torch of Lady Liberty.



Magneto stood there, his face crimson with anger and
bleeding from a gash along his forehead. He stormed toward Logan.
“You have ruined it!”



“That was the plan,” Logan said, bracing himself. “Just not yours.”



Magneto waved his arm, and a few small pieces of wreckage went flying at Logan. But nothing big.



“Feeling a little weak, huh?” Logan asked. He
batted the small hunks of metal aside like annoying flies and stepped
right up into the face of the old mutant.



“You just disgust me.”



Magneto’s eyes went round, as if he were suddenly very afraid for his own life. And that disgusted Logan even more.



With one hand he gripped the old man’s vest and
lifted him in the air. Then he extended the claws on the other hand and
reared back, holding his fist up in front of Magneto’s face,
clearly ready to swing.



“Say good-bye,” Logan growled, his voice low and mean.



Then, just as he was about to run the man through, he
retracted his claws and just decked the guy with the hardest punch he
could throw.



Magneto’s head jerked around, his helmet flying off
into space. The old mutant slumped to the surface of the statue, out
cold.



Logan stood over him for a second, then shook his head. “That’s a lot less than you deserve.”



With a hard kick to Magneto’s side for good measure, Logan turned and moved back toward Rogue.



“Come on, kid,” Logan said as he dug her out of the wreckage. “Time to go home.”



Suddenly he realized that she wasn’t moving.



She wasn’t breathing.



She was gone, still strapped into the remains of Magneto’s machine.



“Oh, God, no,” he said.



He cut off the metal straps and let her slump into his lap.



She didn’t move.



How could this have happened?



How could he have failed?



He stared at her, then down at his own body. He was
bleeding in a dozen places, and even with his regenerative powers, it
was going to take him some time to heal. But that didn’t matter.



He looked out at the police boats streaming toward him
from Ellis Island and from the city. And at the ring of helicopters
hovering close around the island, waiting for the ground forces to get
into position. There wasn’t much time.



Then he looked back into the face of young Rogue. She
didn’t deserve to die like this. He had promised her he’d
take care of her. And he had failed.



He took a deep breath. Storm floated up on a wind and landed on the platform next to Magneto’s body.



Maybe, just maybe, he hadn’t failed yet. Maybe there was enough left for one of them.



He pulled off his gloves, reached down, and took Rogue’s face in his hands.



The shock jolted him, and he could feel his energy flowing into her.



On his chest, his wounds reopened, and his bleeding started to get much worse.



With his hands still holding the soft skin of her face, the blackness took him.





 







Chapter Twenty-eight





Liberty Island




Agent Downer climbed the last few stairs into the torn
head of the Statue of Liberty. The evacuation of Ellis Island had gone
fairly smoothly, all things considered, and now Liberty Island was also
secure. What had happened here was going to take some time to figure
out, if anyone would ever really know.



He had almost forty of New York’s finest dead, and
a national treasure had been trashed. The only clue at all as to what
had happened was a machine that lay in ruins where the statue’s
torch used to be.



And an unconscious man.



Craig moved to the center of the room and stared down at
the man. No one had touched him. Not until he got there. Those had been
his orders.



He knelt down, being careful to not touch anything.



A hypo lay on the floor beside him.



Craig straightened up and took a deep breath, looking
around. Hunks of metal lay everywhere. Some had been bent like noodles;
others were sliced like cheese.



It would take a lot of talking to pin all this death and
destruction on one man. He shook his head. It was a strange new world
they were all living in, that was for sure. And things like this
wouldn’t make his job any easier.



“Get him into a holding cell,” Craig ordered
the men standing nearby. “And for God’s sake, don’t
let him wake up until we get him into the right kind of place.”



Craig moved over to the window and looked across at Ellis
Island. They had come very close tonight to a disaster, that much he
did not doubt. That white cloud would have reached most of the
world’s leaders before the evacuation could have been completed.



What the white cloud would have done to them was unknown, but Craig doubted it would have been anything good.



But who had saved them?



Who had saved the world tonight?



Someday, he hoped to know the answer to that question.




X-Men Mansion




The blackness seemed to swim, then it began taking on form, taking on shapes.



He organized the shapes, pushed the blackness into patterns, then searched for the light.



“This way, Professor,” a familiar voice said.



So he moved that way, organizing, shaping as he went.



“This way,” the voice said again.



He followed.



And after what seemed like a short time, in a place where
time didn’t seem relevant at all, Professor Xavier saw a dot of
light in the far distance.



“That’s right,” the voice said. “Go to the light.”



The light grew as he focused on it, until finally it
surrounded him, flooding into his mind, his conscious thoughts. So he
opened his eyes.



“Welcome back,” Jean said, smiling down at him.



Xavier let himself smile. He felt surprisingly refreshed, almost as if waking from a long nap.



“I knew you could make it,” Jean said.



“I had a good guide,” he answered, taking her
hand and squeezing it. Then he remembered what had been going on when
he went into Cerebro.



He looked up at her. “What happened?”



“We stopped Magneto,” Jean said, smiling. She
stepped aside and looked over her shoulder. The professor could see
Logan on the table across the lab, tubes running from his arms.
“He’s not healing,” Jean said softly.



The professor nodded, then took a deep breath. “I think I have some catching up to do.”



“And resting,” Jean said.



“That, I’ve been doing,” he said. “I think I have enough energy for a story before my next nap.”



She laughed softly, wistfully, and pulled up a chair.



An hour later he knew it all.



An hour later he was prouder of his students than he ever could have imagined being.






Logan’s nightmare kept him, held him, like the straps holding him to the table.



The same events, over and over.



Strapped down, his skeleton drawn on his skin.



Lowered into the vat of fluid.



Scalpels cutting at him, over and over.



The pain.



Intense pain.



And then it would start again.



Until finally it changed.



As they lowered him into the vat, he tried to fight
back, just as he always did, to attack those around him, even though he
was tied down.



But a strong voice said, “Logan.”



A friendly voice.



A firm voice.



Logan looked up into the face of Professor Xavier.



“Logan, tell me what happened to you.”



So instead of being cut on this time, he broke the cycle.



Logan told the professor as much as he could, walking him through the nightmare like a guide.



And for the first time, he didn’t feel the pain.






Jean sat with Cyclops, Storm, and about two dozen of the
older students in the large recreational room, staring at the
large-screen television. Outside the weather was beautiful, the sun
shining in the big windows, warming the space. Yet all of them, Jean
included, were ignoring the weather for the moment. Instead they were
watching the news. She knew that their entire future, maybe the
world’s future, rested in no small part on what was happening
today in the Senate.



“Quiet now,” Storm said to the kids as the anchorman came back on.



“Even after last week’s terrorist attack on
the Statue of Liberty by suspected mutants, the outcome of the Senate
vote just moments ago was fifty against, forty-nine in favor of the
Mutant Registration Act. It has been defeated.”



Jean felt as if her heart were about to explode out of her chest.



Around her the children shouted and cheered and stamped their feet, hugging and even crying.



She thought she might cry, too, the relief was so great.
She couldn’t believe the bill had been defeated. After what had
happened at the Statue of Liberty, she had just assumed it would pass.



“Quiet!” Cyclops ordered. “Everybody quiet!”



The anchorman continued with his report. “Many feel
that this narrow defeat was due, in large part, to the disappearance of
Senator Robert Kelly, who until this last week, provided the loudest
voice in the cry for mutant registration. No sign of Senator Kelly has
yet been found. Police fear foul play.”



Jean stood, wiping her hands on her pants as if that
would finally clean off the entire distasteful subject of mutant
registration. She wished it would, but she knew, as did everyone in the
room, that the attempt to control mutants was far from over.



With a glance at Rogue, standing near the window, Jean
left the talking and cheering group and headed down to the medical lab.
Rogue had come through everything just fine; the only outward sign of
her ordeal was a streak of white hair.



But Logan wasn’t faring as well.



A minute later she was beside Logan’s bed in the
medical lab. Having had a few sessions with the professor, he seemed to
be resting easier.



She uncapped a new IV and started to put it into Logan’s arm.



Suddenly, just as had happened the first time she had
treated him, Logan raised his hand up and grabbed her. But this time
his touch was gentle, and he grasped her arm instead of her neck.



“Hey,” he said, opening his eyes to look at her.



“Hey, yourself,” she said, smiling down at him. “How are you feeling?”



“Fantastic,” he lied.



She laughed. Clearly he was in deep pain. But it was just like him to say he was fine.



She checked under one bandage on his arm. His wound was healing now, and healing quickly. It looked as if he was coming back.



“That was a brave thing you did for Rogue,” she said as she replaced his bandage.



“Did it work?” he asked.



“She’s fine,” Jean said, holding his
hand. “She took on a few of your more charming personality traits
for a few days, but we lived through it.”



Jean leaned in close and whispered. “I think she’s a little taken with you.”



“Well,” he said, smiling, “you can tell her my heart belongs to someone else.”



Jean stared at him. There was no doubt the two of them
shared a unique connection. And she admired him a great deal. But her
love was with Scott.



“You know,” she said, “you and I—”



Logan smiled. “How’s Xavier doing?”



She laughed. He had let her off the hook.



“He’s good.”



“Good,” Logan said, and Jean could tell he actually meant it. Then he closed his eyes.



A moment later he was snoring.





 







Chapter Twenty-nine





X-Men Mansion




Professor Xavier rolled his chair up and activated the
holographic map table as Logan watched, still amazed at the gadget. The
images of rugged, tree-covered mountain ranges appeared. Logan could
see the roads, the streams, the old fire burns. Every damned detail of
the area.



Flatout amazing.



The two of them were alone in the big room, so Logan moved over to a position beside the professor, standing over the display.



Using the controls on the side of the machine, Xavier
focused down on a high pass, and Logan followed the focus, feeling as
if he knew the area, yet not remembering it at all.



“There is an abandoned military compound at Alkali
Lake, in the Canadian Rocky Mountains,” Xavier said, pointing at
the pass and a small lake that sat a distance off the main road.
“It’s not far from where we found you. There’s not
much left of it, but you may find some answers.”



Logan studied it for a moment, logging it all in his memory. Then he looked over at the professor. “Thank you.”



It seemed like such a small thing to say for what the
professor had done for him. But at the moment it was just going to have
to be enough.



“You’re welcome,” Xavier said, flicking
the map off and rolling away from the now-empty table. “You know
there’s always a place for you here.”



“I know,” Logan said.



Jean and Scott and Storm had also made that very clear.
And for the first time since he had woken up in that meadow, his only
memories being nightmares of pain, he felt as if he had a place to
go—a place he almost belonged. This mansion was now his home. It
was a wonderful feeling.



“Are you going to say good-bye to the rest?” Xavier asked.



“No,” Logan said. Then he smiled. “I suspect they already know I’m going for a little trip.”



Xavier laughed, a twinkle in his eye. “I suspect you may be right about that.”



Logan moved to stand in front of the professor and extended his hand. “I’ll be seeing you.”



Xavier shook the hand, holding it tightly, then nodded. “Good luck.”



Ten minutes later Logan was headed down the front steps
of the mansion, toward the driveway. The professor had said there would
be transportation waiting there for him to use. What he found was
Cyclops’ wonderful black motorcycle, the same one Logan had
stolen to get to the train station.



The keys were in the ignition, and there was a note taped to the gas tank. Good luck. Scott.



He laughed and kicked the motorcycle to life. If he
couldn’t say anything else for old Visor Boy, he had good taste
in women and motorcycles. And he was a pretty fine leader to boot.



Logan sat on the bike, letting the smooth rumble of the
engine surround him for a moment. The day was gorgeous—not too
hot, not too cold. Perfect weather to start a trip.



Without even a look back, he headed down the driveway. He knew he’d be seeing the place again.



On the big front lawn a bunch of the students were
playing soccer, Rogue among them. He pulled over and stopped, letting
the engine idle as he watched her run and play and laugh, being what
seemed like a normal kid.



She deserved that much at least, while she still had some childhood left.



After a moment she looked up and saw him. With a wave she
ran his way, smiling, looking happy and flushed from the exercise. He
put out a gloved hand and took hers.



She nodded, seemed about to say something, then let go of
his hand and looked down into her palm. He’d given her his dog
tags.



She stared at them for a moment, then looked up at him, tears appearing in her eyes. “Thank you.”



“No,” he said, smiling. “Thank you.”



She had no idea what she had done for him. Maybe, ten years from now, she would understand. They’d talk about it. Maybe.



With that, he straightened his back, clicked the engine
into gear, and with a smile for Rogue, headed down the driveway. He had
some of his past to find, some answers to dig out of some ruins in the
Canadian Rocky Mountains.



Then he could come home.



Now he had a future.





 






Epilog




Xavier smiled across the chess table at his old friend,
Eric. They hadn’t played chess in years, and Xavier hadn’t
realized how much he’d missed it until now. Maybe they would have
to make this a regular occurrence. Maybe.



Xavier moved a pawn.



Eric nodded. “Doesn’t it ever wake you in the
middle of the night, the feeling that someday, someday very soon, they
will pass that foolish law?”



He also moved a pawn to counter Charles’ move, then
kept talking. “Or maybe a law like it. And they will come for you
and your children, and take you all away.”



“It bothers me very much indeed, Eric,” Xavier said, moving a knight.



“And what will you do when you wake up to that happening?” Eric asked. He moved a rook two spaces forward.



“I will feel a great swell of pity,” Xavier
said, “for the poor soul who comes to that school looking for
trouble.”



He made a pawn move; Eric countered with another rook.



“You know this is war, don’t you, Charles?”



Xavier nodded. The board was beginning to look like a
one-sided war, as well. He had all his pieces in position, and it
didn’t even seem as if Eric had noticed.



“And I intend to fight this war by any means
necessary,” Eric continued. He aggressively moved a knight, again
ignoring what Xavier was doing.



“And I will always be there, old friend,” Xavier said.



With that he moved his queen two spaces, taking away one of Eric’s knights.



“Check,” he said. He didn’t add the word “mate.” There was no need.



He pushed his plastic wheelchair back from the board and smiled at his old friend. “Thanks for the game, Eric.”



Then he turned to the clear plastic door. Beyond that
were nothing but plastic walls. There wasn’t an ounce of metal
within a half mile of this cell. It was a very special jail, designed
for one very special occupant.



“Why do you come here, Charles?” Eric asked as Xavier reached the door and the guard on the other side opened it.



Xavier looked back. “Why do you ask me questions to which you already know the answers?”



“Ah, yes,” Eric said, smiling. “I forgot about your continuing search for hope.”



The two looked at each other for a moment. Then Eric said, “It could be our world, Charles.”



“It’s always been our world, Eric. It’s only when we lose sight of that that we imprison ourselves.”



He wheeled out, and the plastic door slid shut behind
him. His old friend was left studying the board. And wondering what he
had done wrong.





 






About the Authors




DEAN WESLEY SMITH was a founder of the
well-respected small press Pulphouse. He has written a number of
novels—both his own and as tie-in projects—including Laying the Music to Rest and X-Men: The Jewels of Cyttorak.








KRISTINE KATHRYN RUSCH is the Hugo and World Fantasy Award–winning former editor of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. She turned to writing full-time two years ago. She, too, has written a number of original and tie-in novels, including the Fey series and Star Wars: The New Rebellion.





 






A Del Rey® Book



Published by The Ballantine Publishing Group



TM and copyright © 2000 by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.






All rights reserved under International and Pan-American
Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine
Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and
simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.






Del Rey and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.






X-MEN character likenesses: TM and copyright © 2000 by Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved.






www.delreydigital.com





Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 00-190322





e-ISBN 0-345-46490-7





First Edition: June 2000





v1.0










 











A novelization by

Chris Claremont



Based on the story by

Zak Penn and David Hayter

and Bryan Singer,

screenplay by

Dan Harris and Mike Dougherty








A Del Rey® Book

BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK





 





Table of Contents




Title Page



Dedication



Chapter 1



Chapter 2



Chapter 3



Chapter 4



Chapter 5



Chapter 6



Chapter 7



Chapter 8



Chapter 9



Chapter 10



Chapter 11



Chapter 12



Chapter 13



Chapter 14



Chapter 15



Chapter 16



Chapter 17



Epilogue



Acknowledgments



Also available from Del Rey Books



Copyright





 






to Beth





 







Chapter

One





Mutants. Since the discovery of their existence, they have been
regarded with fear, suspicion, and often hatred. Across the planet,
debate rages: Are mutants the next link in the evolutionary chain . . .




. . . or simply a new species of humanity fighting for their share
of the world? Either way, one fact has been historically proven:
Sharing the world has never been humanity’s defining attribute .
. .




—Charles Xavier



“ ‘We are not enemies, but friends,’ ” the tour guide said as she led the group through the East Wing entrance of the White House. “ ‘We must not be enemies,’ ” she continued, pausing to let them gather inside the foyer beneath one of the presidential portraits that lined the wall. “ ‘Though passion may have strained, it must not break the bonds of our affection.’ Abraham Lincoln.”



Alicia Vargas had made this speech hundreds of times, yet
she had a knack of making it sound as though she’d just thought
it up. She was a short young woman who looked barely out of college,
with big, wide-spaced eyes, an open face, a ready smile. That way,
you’d miss the fact that those lustrous eyes never stopped moving
from person to person among the group she was shepherding along, or
that the drape of her blazer masked the Sig-Sauer pistol resting in its
snap-draw holster at the small of her back.



Alicia Vargas was Secret Service, just like the tall,
broad-shouldered, stone-faced men in business suits who stood at
intervals along the walls. At the reception desk and at the doorways
leading to the interior of the White House were their equally imposing
uniformed counterparts in the Executive Protection Service. When the
decision was made to continue public tours, in spite of the
ever-present threat of global terrorism, the Secret Service had
insisted that its people take over the job of guides. They understood
the political and public relations realities of the office, but their
job was to protect the man who held that office, and from that
perspective, they argued, you could never be too careful.



Offering up another smile, Alicia indicated the portrait
that hung behind her, the sixteenth in the line of chief executives
that began with George Washington and culminated today in George
McKenna.



“President Lincoln said that in his first inaugural
address. It’s one of my favorites. I like to think, especially
with all that’s happening in the world, that those words are more
important than ever.”



With an apologetic gesture, intended to put the tourists at ease, she led them toward the security desk.



“I just want to repeat what you were told at the
Main Gate. Obviously, with the President in residence today, we want to
be especially careful. One at a time, please approach the desk, present
a photo ID, place your bags and purses on the conveyor
belt, and pass through the metal detector. Your possessions and all
cameras will be returned to you when you leave. I know that sounds
harsh, but I hope you understand.”



One man in the back caught her eye. He was wearing a Red
Sox baseball hat, pulled low. He wasn’t doing anything wrong; far
from it. His body language was totally relaxed and easy. Maybe that was
it. Most people visiting the White House came through the door excited,
upbeat, impatient, and impressed. Then, seeing the airport-style X-ray
console and the metal detector, even the best of them got nervous,
wondering if they’d inadvertently brought something that would
sound an alarm and get them into trouble.



Red Sox didn’t seem to have a care in the world.



Quickly, as she ushered the first woman in line through
the cage, Alicia recalled the scene at the Pennsylvania Avenue gate,
where the tour had been admitted to the grounds. She’d watched
them come through on the surveillance screens and now that she replayed
the scene in her mind’s eye, there had been no Red Sox hat in the
group.



Turning back to look for him, she registered a faint sound, the bamf of imploding air, like when a balloon pops.



Red Sox was gone.






From the East Wing entrance, a broad hallway—called
the Cross Hall—runs lengthwise through the heart of the building.
Originally, this had been the area where the everyday work of the
household was done—the rooms housed butler’s pantries,
closets, and the like—but successive renovations and the growing
need for space had transformed them into formal receiving rooms: the
Roosevelt Room, the Vermeil Room, the China Room. At the moment, none
of them was in use, which is what caught Special Agent Donald
Karp’s attention when his peripheral vision registered some kind
of movement in one of the doorways.



When he turned to peer down the corridor, all he saw was
shadow inside the deep alcove—that was one of the problems caused
by the comparatively low, vaulted ceiling, it made the hallway hell to
light properly. He knew it was probably nothing, but he was bored and
in the mood for even a minor break in routine. Once before he’d
opened an office door and found a couple of midlevel staffers behaving
far too friskily for their own good. They’d been lucky they
weren’t fired on the spot, but they really should have known
better.



To his surprise, as he stepped closer to take a proper look, someone was
there—though for some reason he wasn’t sure until the
figure stepped clear of the shadow, a lean-bodied man whose
stoop-shouldered stance belied the fact that he was roughly
Karp’s height, wearing nondescript clothes and a Red Sox baseball
cap. Boyoboy, would he have fun roasting Alicia’s ass for being
so careless as to let a tourist stray from the group.



He reached for the man’s shoulder.



“Excuse me, sir, are you lost? I’m afraid you can’t leave the group—”



The man rounded on him—and Karp gasped,
goggle-eyed, to find himself face-to-face with a demon. Skin so dark a
blue-black it was as if the man were cloaked in his own personal
shadow, the only points of color his gleaming yellow eyes. The ears
were pointed, the teeth had fangs, and the hand that grabbed
Karp’s wrist possessed two fingers instead of the normal four.



Training took over. Without a conscious thought, Karp
went for his gun—and a forked tail wrapped tight around his
throat, cutting off his cry of alarm. The tail spun him like a top into
the alcove, and he felt a blinding pain as the side of his head cracked
hard into the arched stone. After that he never felt the blow to the
side, chop to the neck that finished the job of knocking him
unconscious.



It was all over in a matter of seconds, but those seconds made the difference.



From the East Entrance came Alicia Vargas’
shout—she was already through the hallway doors, coming at a dead
run with sidearm in hand, ahead of the other agents and uniformed
officers.



Karp’s partner was closer. He lunged for the
intruder, who tripped him up with a sideways sweep of the
legs—ditching his shoes in the process to reveal elongated,
weirdly articulated feet with a two-toed configuration that matched his
hands. The intruder leaped across the hall for the opposite wall,
somehow grabbing hold of the falling agent’s gun and pitching it
clear. His leap landed him up by the ceiling. To Alicia’s
astonishment he stuck there, three-quarters upside down, as though
fingers and toes were tipped with Velcro.



Above the chandeliers, he was suddenly hard to see, and
Alicia realized with a shock that he was blending with the ceiling
shadows. Against a dark background, the intruder’s indigo skin
made him functionally invisible.



With a snarl, he was gone, scampering faster than her eye
could swallow, around the corner toward the executive offices of the
West Wing.



Alicia had a mini-mike clipped to her sleeve; she used it now.



“Code Red,” she cried. “Code Red.
Perimeter breach at visitors’ checkpoint! Agent Vargas in the
Cross Hall, ten meters in from the East Entrance. Intruder is hostile,
two agents are down. Threat to Braveheart!”






At the rear of the mansion, in the opposite wing,
President George McKenna was working the phones, applying a measure of
charm—with just the faintest edge of threat—to a senator
hoping to make some political ink by throwing a monkey wrench into the
latest administration initiative. The President was a rancher by
temperament and wished, as he found he often did since assuming the
Oval Office, that he could solve the problem by simply hog-tying the
man and planting his brand indelibly on that arrogant posterior. He
liked cows better than legislators. At least they knew their place.



He looked up with irritation as the door to the outer
office burst open and Sid Walters, the head of his protection detail,
strode inside. He was about to lose his temper—which was
legendary—when he realized that Walters had his gun in hand and,
from the look on his face, he wasn’t going to be interested in
any comment the President had to make.



“Say again,” Walters snapped into the
mini-microphone clipped to the cuff of his shirtsleeve, “how many
are there?”



“What the hell—” the President began,
but all questions and any thoughts of protest evaporated as a halfdozen
more agents rushed into the room to form a living shield around his
desk. The two biggest stood on either side of him. Four of the team
were in suits, with pistols in hand, but these last two were in full
combat gear, helmets and flak jackets, with MP5 submachine guns in
their hands. McKenna had been to war, he’d been shot; he knew at
a glance that this was no drill. These men believed he was in deadly
danger, and they were prepared to give their lives to save him.



McKenna heard a tinny voice demanding attention, belatedly realized he was still holding the phone.



With a calmness that astounded him, that he never dreamed he possessed, the President raised the receiver to his ear.



“Trent, I’m sorry, I can’t talk right
now, something’s come up. I’ll call you back, soon as I
can, all right?”



Without waiting for an acknowledgment, McKenna hung up.
He sounded so normal, not scared at all. The analytical part of him
knew that fear would come later and that it would be very rough indeed.
If there was a later.



He looked at the pictures on his desk, thankful now the
first lady was in San Francisco and the kids were at school. Nobody
home but him.



“Sid?” he said.



“You’ll be fine, sir. You have our word.”






The West Wing was a madhouse, agents trying to evacuate
the presidential staff at the same time they were hunting down the
intruder. There was no pretense of order; that had vanished with the
first gunshot. The guards weren’t polite and they weren’t
gentle. Their goal was to get everyone clear as fast as possible. Thing
was, they were just as scared as the civilians.



Internal surveillance cameras were proving worse than
useless; their quarry moved too fast, with an agility that put monkeys
to shame. By the time the guys watching the monitors could yell a
warning, it was already too late.



Toby Vanscoy found that out the hard way. He was clearing
a suite of offices, herding people toward the Press Room because it had
a clear route to the outside, when a scream right next to his ear
alerted him to the danger.



He reacted as he’d been trained: He took a split
second to confirm the target, then opened fire. His weapon was a
Sig-Sauer P226, one of the finest handguns in the world, and like every
agent in the President’s detail, he was rated expert. As fast as
he could pull the trigger, he emptied his fifteen-round magazine, and
impossible as it was for him to admit—in the heartbeats he had to
do so—not one of his rounds came close.



The intruder bounced off the walls, he leaped from floor
to ceiling, he ran as easily upside down as he did on the floor, he
almost seemed to dance around Vanscoy’s shots until, so smoothly
that it seemed choreographed, he hurled himself through the air in a
somersault that ended with both feet hammering Vanscoy full in the
chest.



It was like being hit by a battering ram. Vanscoy flew
backward through the air, holding on to his gun but losing the
replacement magazine he’d been trying to load, to crash through
the set of double doors that led to the main suite of offices.



The intruder followed, straddling Vanscoy’s body
only to find a half-dozen agents blocking his way. He glanced over his
shoulder to see a half dozen more taking position behind him. Scarlet
dots flared all over his torso as he was illuminated by their laser
sights. The agents all had good cover; he was wide open. They could
fire at will with minimal risk to their colleagues. They pinned him
with pistols, with automatic weapons, with a sniper rifle centered
right on his head. It was a drop-ceiling overhead; if he tried to stick
to it, the removable panels would simply collapse. They figured they
had him.



The intruder looked down, almost in surprise, at the
grating sound of Toby Vanscoy’s voice. Battered and broken as he
was, the agent had his own weapon in a two-handed grip, aimed right up
at him.



“Hands behind your head,” Vanscoy ordered. “Get down on your knees! Right now!”



“Right now!” repeated the lead agent from the group ahead of them. “No tricks, or we’ll fire.”



The intruder snarled, baring fangs. Vanscoy pulled the trigger, hammer falling uselessly on an empty chamber . . .



. . . and the intruder vanished.






“Mr. President,” snapped Sid Walters, one
hand pressing against his earbug in a vain attempt to make sense of all
the chatter jamming his radio, “we’ve gotta go!”



Hank Cartwright, his deputy, grabbed Walters’ arm.
“We don’t know the sitch, Sid. We don’t know how many
there are. We’ve got a solid defensive position, we’ve got
the firepower. We’re better off staying put!”



Walters turned on the other man in a fury. He was boss,
he called the plays, there wasn’t time for debate—but
before he could say a word, both entrances to the Oval Office crashed
open to admit the agents who’d been stationed outside. They were
coughing and choking, shrouded in gouts of thick, oily smoke.



That same instant, the intruder appeared in midair, right
in front of Cartwright. Without missing a beat, the assassin lashed out
with a powerful kick to the chest. Even with Cartwright’s flak
jacket and equipment blunting the force of the jackhammer blow, it was
enough to throw him off his feet and into the agents behind him.



Walters managed to snap off a shot, but his target
disappeared. Before he could react, he felt the intruder’s tail
around his neck, and then he was flying himself, tumbling over one of
the couches and in among the agents who’d fallen in the doorway.
As he struggled up, searching desperately for a weapon, one part of his
mind kept repeating over and over, like a mantra: He’s got a tail! He’s got a tail! Even with the creature right in front of him, real as life, he still couldn’t believe it. He’s got a tail!



Again and again and again, the intruder disappeared, to
materialize somewhere else in the office, turning the confined space of
the room to his advantage as he made mincemeat of the President’s
bodyguard. It all happened so fast Walters would have to register the
events in retrospect. At the moment, sick at heart, he simply realized
he was too slow. There was nothing he could do to save his President.



Alone now, with no one to protect him, George McKenna sat
in his seat of power and stared into the inhuman eyes of his assassin.
The eyes were strangely drained of color, and it struck him that they
were dead. What little hue they possessed was an afterthought, lacking
anything resembling humanity.



The intruder had a knife, big and gleaming. Wrapped
around its hilt was a brilliant red ribbon marked with flashes of gold.
Poised on the edge of the desk, he rose above McKenna. The President
had never been more scared, and yet never more calm. A line from
somewhere or other popped from memory: “When the end is all there
is, it matters.” If this was his end, he’d do the office proud.



The gunshot made him jump in his chair.



The intruder cried out, dropping the knife as he clutched
at a shoulder suddenly turned scarlet from the impact of a 9mm shell.
Instantly, his expression changed. He looked suddenly shaken, confused,
and as McKenna watched, the creature’s eyes changed, gaining
color and vibrancy and . . . awareness.



Absurdly the thought came to McKenna: He doesn’t know where he is. He doesn’t know what’s happening!



The intruder looked around and saw Alicia Vargas standing in the doorway, pistol leveled.



Before she could take a second shot, he was gone—with the same characteristic bamf
that came from air imploding inward to fill the empty space left by his
body when it disappeared. And also, the President realized, the
faintest scent, reminiscent of sulfur and brimstone.



“Sir?” Alicia asked as she hurried over to
him, avoiding the bodies of her fellow agents, her eyes never at rest
as they swept the scene for the assassin or any like him, her gun
cocked and ready. “Are you all right, Mr. President? Are you
hurt?”



“I’m fine, Alicia, I’m fine.” It
was a lie and both of them knew it, but he was the President and this
was the time for lies like that.



“What the hell was that?” he wondered aloud.



“Damned if I know, sir. But I sure hope he doesn’t come back.”



“Amen.” The knife, superbly balanced, had
landed point first, its weight stabbing deep into the wooden desktop.
As he touched the ribbon, McKenna realized that the black flecks were
writing.



“What the hell is this?” he asked aloud.



On the ribbon, printed in black, was a demand—or perhaps, he thought, suddenly heartsick, a declaration of war: MUTANT FREEDOM NOW!







Interlude




He came in to Alkali Lake the back way, over the
mountains from the north. He cut through a saddleback notch and made
his way down to the glacier by a trail so poor even a bighorn sheep
would think twice about trying it.



Before reaching the base of the escarpment he went to
ground, taking cover in a jumbled pile of scree and rocks that gave him
a superb view of the glacier and minimal chance of being seen himself.
The last stretch was open country; he’d have to wait for the
right moment to make his approach. He didn’t mind. When he had
to, he could be inhumanly patient.



There was a road up to the complex from the south, as
miserable in its own way as the path he’d followed. Blacktop
asphalt, barely two lines wide, beat to shit by the pounding of too
many heavily laden trucks over too many years with hardly a thought
given to maintenance. It wound its way better than seventy miles
through the snowy mountains, with a decent-sized town at the far end
that catered mainly to the hunting and camping crowd who wanted
something wilder than Lake Louise or even Jasper. There was a hamlet
some fifty miles farther that consisted of a saloon, some gas pumps,
and a batch of cabins that rented by the hour.



Trouble was, if he took the road, they’d know he was coming.



He was a short man, with a stocky, powerful physique,
as though the frame of an athletic six-footer had been squashed down to
five and change. To look at his face, you’d think him a young
man, his features weathered by a life spent mainly outdoors. His
dress—jeans as worn as his boots—marked him as an itinerant
wrangler or cycle bum, blue collar for sure. This was a man who worked
with his hands, not his mind.



His hair was dark, sweeping back from his forehead in
a wave that looked natural on him but somehow . . . wrong for a human
being. He wore his sideburns long, right down to the line of his jaw,
in a fashion more in keeping with the nineteenth century than the
twenty-first.



His eyes were the giveaway. Like his hair, they were
right for his face, yet at the same time they had no right belonging to
one so apparently youthful. These eyes missed nothing and had seen too
much. They were the eyes of a hunter. A predator.



His name was Logan, but the only reason he knew it was
that it was printed on his dog tags. A name, a serial number, a blood
type. No indication of nationality or branch of service. The only clue,
if you could call it that, was that the information was printed in
Roman letters. Not Arabic, not Cyrillic, not Chinese or Japanese kanji. He had no past worth the name, only a present filled to bursting with questions. Here was where he hoped to find some answers.



But first he needed a storm.



He got a beaut.



It came in during the night, boiling off the
Continental Divide with winds and snow to spare, a howling monster that
seemed bent on scouring the landscape down to bare rock. The rocks
afforded a fair measure of protection from the wind, but there was
nothing he could do about the cold. The temperature was close to
freezing before the storm. Once the blizzard started, it quickly
dropped past zero. His jacket was fleece lined, but against this kind
of elemental fury, that was no help at all. Hypothermia set in almost
immediately. It was a pain, but he’d endured far worse. As often
as he froze during the night, his healing factor kicked into gear and
brought him back to life.



The weather system proved to be as fast-moving as it
was intense. Toward morning, a shift in wind velocity told him it was
time to get moving. Timing was perfect. The fury of the storm had
probably nailed any of the installation’s remote sensors
positioned to watch the “back door.” And any living
sentries were just as likely to be hunkered down in their bunkers,
dreaming dreams of “Baywatch.”



He was in place by dawn, a spectacular sunrise that
went hand in hand with the equally impressive—although far more
bleak—vista that spread out below him. Dominating the scene was
the dam, a thousand feet high, three times that across, holding back a
lake that stretched for miles. A huge generating station at its base
told the reason for its existence, to provide an inexhaustible source
of hydroelectric power. Thing is, there were no towering pylons
marching away downriver to carry all this energy to a hungry populace.
What was generated here stayed here, to be used by the Alkali Lake
Industrial Complex.



There was a fence blocking access to the crest of the
dam, but it was no obstacle. The poles and links were so rusted and
twisted by the fierce mountain weather that he simply stepped over. He
found an older sign than the first, barely held to the fence by a scrap
of wire, informing intruders that this was a government installation, a
military base, and top secret besides, and warning of the most dire
consequences if anyone was of a mind to trespass.



Below the dam, the forest had been cleared for the
better part of a mile to allow for the construction of the base. The
layout of the complex was circular, like a defensive laager, and the
scale was as impressive as the dam itself. This place had been built to
last.



So why had it been abandoned?



The whole base was covered with snow, drifts piled
over doors and windows. What roads he saw were cracked and blistered,
with weeds and flowers and the occasional small tree sprouting to
reclaim the land that was rightfully theirs. Windows were mostly
broken. No vehicles. No tracks in the snow save his own.



Once he made his way inside, it wasn’t any
different. Long hallways and empty offices. They’d packed up the
incidentals but left a fair amount of furniture, all of which had
suffered from the assault of the elements, summer and winter. But the
basic structure of the buildings—thick metal walls—was
surprisingly sound. It was composed of a succession of strong points,
compartments that could become individual fortresses all their own,
almost as if the builders were as worried about an assault from within
as from without.



He wandered without obvious direction, trusting his
feet and his instincts to lead him. Most of the time he trusted them
far more than his intellect. To him, thinking was a
liability—took too long, led down too many wrong paths. His body
was a much more dependable instrument.



He caught a strange scent but wasn’t worried. It
was only a wolf, which seemed as curious about him as he was about the
buildings. They stood watching each other from opposite ends of the
room for a few moments before the wolf calmly turned tail and padded
down a nearby flight of stairs.



Intrigued, Logan followed, into a darkness so complete
even his extraordinarily sharp eyes weren’t of much use. He
pulled a mini-Maglite out of his jacket pocket, which revealed a large,
circular room, as bare and nondescript as everywhere else in the base.



Suddenly the wolf howled, the noise amplified and
echoed by the cavernous space. It was a primal sound that went straight
to Logan’s back brain, as it was intended to, as it had since men
and wolves first shared this wilderness, and he reacted accordingly. He
spun into a crouch, ready for a fight, and bared his teeth in a flash
of familiar pain as three gleaming metal claws, each as long as his
forearm, punched out of the body of his clenched right hand. They made
a distinctive snikt sound as they emerged, like a rifle bolt
being engaged. They were forged of a metal called adamantium, and they
could cut steel as easily as air. The claws had bionic housings built
into each forearm; his healing factor handled the wounds they made each
time they were used. That same metal was laced through his skeleton,
creating an amalgam with his bones that made them virtually unbreakable.



He hadn’t been born this way. Someone had done
this to him. His whole life since, the parts he remembered, anyway, had
been devoted to finding out who, and why.



The wolf was sitting in another doorway, but as Logan
swung his light around he lost all interest in the animal. He crossed
to the wall and raised his right hand to chest height. There were three
marks in the metal, deep, parallel gashes, as though someone had
slashed at the steel.



He placed his fist by the doorjamb. His claws were a perfect fit.



He had an answer. Once upon a time—a very long time ago—he had been here.



He looked down, but the wolf was gone, with a fast-paced click of claws on concrete to mark its hurried exit to the surface.



With an equally distinctive snakt sound, his
claws went away. Reflexively he wiped the little bit of bloody residue
from between his knuckles and took one last look around the empty room.



He wasn’t done searching, but he was done here. Time to go home.





 







Chapter

Two




Against a backdrop of barren, snow-swept rock, a mother
wolf faced off against a hunter. She had young to protect and the blood
on her muzzle spoke eloquently of her determination and ferocity. The
hunter was short by modern standards but powerfully built, wrapped
snugly in layers of fur that afforded protection both from the elements
and the wolf’s fangs. His low forehead and prominent brow marked
him as Neanderthal man. He had a spear in one hand, a club in the
other. The sharply pointed stone tip of the spear was likewise flecked
with blood. Each combatant had taken the measure of his foe; neither
would back down until the other was dead.



It was a typical weekday afternoon at New York’s
famed American Museum of Natural History; the bulk of the visitors were
schoolchildren on a variety of class trips. A clutch of them were
gathered before the diorama, only half-listening to their teacher as
they made whispered comments and comparisons between themselves,
choosing sides as to who would win this reconstructed fight.



The teacher herself was, in her own way, as striking as
the display. It wasn’t just her height, six feet even, or,
surprisingly, the dramatic shock of hair that fell straight as a
waterfall to the middle of her back, colored so pure an arctic white
that it gleamed like silver, providing a stark contrast to her
coffee-colored skin. What marked her most was her carriage, a bearing
and manner so naturally graceful you couldn’t help but think of
her as royalty. She had a beauty that was breathtaking, but remarkably,
she didn’t seem to notice. There was no posing to her
presentation, no posturing, no flaunting of the gifts nature had so
amply bestowed; she was a woman totally at one with herself. She had a
ready smile, and although her voice seemed soft, you had the immediate
sense that when she spoke every child in her charge would hear her and,
more importantly, would listen. And lastly, there were her eyes, which
were a rich, cobalt blue, the same as the sky just before it goes
purple at sunset. She was a mass of contradictions whose individual
elements should all have been at odds with one another; yet, when
combined, the end result was the closest thing to perfection that could
be imagined.



“Contrary to popular belief,” she said to the
children, “Neanderthals are not the direct ancestor of modern-day
humans, but rather distant cousins who died out some thirty thousand
years ago. . . .”



With a sweep of her hand, which seemed to leave a
distinctive puff of breeze in its wake, she ushered her class along to
the next diorama, presenting a scene of Cro-Magnon hunters ganging up
on a towering woolly mammoth. They’d backed the mammoth into a
corner, where it couldn’t easily maneuver. Already a couple of
stone-tipped spears were stuck in its flanks; all the men looked poised
to hurl more. The mammoth had put up a powerful fight—a couple of
hunters lay broken on the snow—but barring a miracle, the giant
creature was doomed.



“They were replaced,” the teacher continued, “by a more advanced race called Cro-Magnon man, also known as Homo sapiens, also known as human beings. In other words, children, they were replaced by all of us.



“It was once theorized that Neanderthals were wiped
out by years of conflict with these successors, but new evidence found
in our own DNA suggests that these two species may have interbred,
eventually evolving into modern humanity. In effect, they became us.”



One of her kids, a twelve-year-old named Artie, flashed a
smile at a little girl standing nearby. She was with her parents and
she didn’t look at all happy. Her dress was stained with ice
cream and Kool-Aid, and she was far more interested in getting some
more snacks than in looking at boring old statues and such. When Artie
smiled, she responded by sticking out her tongue.



He did the same, only his tongue was black and forked like a snake.



The girl stared goggle-eyed for what seemed like forever
before jumping back against her mother and, to that woman’s
surprise, burying her head against her leg and whining in fright.



“Artie,” the teacher said quietly, looming
over him. He tried his best smile; she wasn’t interested.
“Not here.”



“I didn’t mean any harm.”



“You scared her.”



“She started it!”



“She’s a little girl, you’re almost a teenager. I expect you to know better.”



“That is so bogus, Miss Munroe.”



“I beg your pardon?”



“Hiding what we are.”



“Yes, in a way. But also necessary. That girl
doesn’t know you, Artie, or any of the other students in the
class. She didn’t react to who you are, but to what she saw. And
it was different and it was scary. It’s very easy, almost
natural, for people to react to the surface presentation of things;
it’s a survival instinct that some believe is hardwired into our
genes. It’s why people have problems with different cultures and
different faiths and different skin colors and different ways of
behavior. What’s ‘same’ is comfortable. What’s
different could be a threat.”



“Are we a threat, because we’re mutants?”



“Am I a threat because I’m black? Or that little girl because she’s Hispanic?”



Artie shrugged. “Of course not.”



“Exactly. As Martin Luther King said, we want to be
judged, not by the color of our skins—or, in our case, the makeup
of our genes—but by the content of our characters. Artie, mutants
are only people with some extra, unique genes. We’re still
human.”



While she was talking with Artie, the bulk of the class
had moved on to the next diorama, and as Ororo Munroe, known to the
other teachers as Storm, strode after them she sighed inside that
she’d allowed herself to be distracted. This was a presentation
she’d wanted to avoid.



Although the museum had been assiduously upgrading its
collections over the years, to stay current with advances in the
evolutionary and archaeological sciences, this was one of the exhibits
that had been left over from the old days. Against a panoramic
background of what was meant to be the Great Rift Valley of eastern
Africa were a succession of mannequins and visual presentations,
tracking the development of mankind from the apelike Homo habilius
all the way up the evolutionary line to the present day. Along the way,
however, there was a diversion to a second grouping of figures, labeled
Homo mutantis? Some were based on informed speculation, while others were clearly purest fantasy. But they were all awful to look at.



A few of the younger students, grouped around Jubilation
Lee, exchanged some gently rude banter about ancestry and the obvious
resemblance between the display figures before them and some of their
classmates. Their way of coping was to hurl wisecracks, but a couple of
others just stood and stared, making the obvious connection between
past and present, the one perhaps being prologue to the other. Mutant
powers tended to catalyze at puberty, and while all of them had been
cataloged as carriers of the active gene, not all of them had
manifested their powers. They were clearly wondering now if
they’d end up looking anything like these nightmares.



“The tribe where I used to live called this part of
Africa ‘the forge of Heaven,’ ” Storm told them all,
standing right before the diorama but staring past the figures,
ignoring them in favor of the vista that lay beyond. In her
mind’s eye there was no painted backdrop but a stark, sere
landscape that stretched far beyond the visible horizon. It was mostly
grassland, when there was rain, not much in the way of anything larger
like trees. Those were found in the higher elevations, toward Mount
Kilimanjaro. “It’s a harsh and unforgiving country where
anthropologists believe that life on Earth was born,” she
continued. “Only the strongest, the most intelligent, the most worthy
of creatures can survive here. That’s nature’s way. She
tries all sorts of possibilities—dinosaurs great and small,
mammals much the same—until she finds a species that works. At
the same time, we have to accept that some things . . .
don’t.”



“Old news,” Artie said flatly, end of story.



“Precisely,” Storm responded cheerily.
“What you see here is our snapshot of the world tens of thousands
of years ago. What they were has no more relevance to what you are than
that Neanderthal does. What matters is who you choose to be. The kind of person, the kind of life you want to live.



“Come on, class,” she finished, shuffling them along, “let’s go rejoin the others.”






Around the corner, down on the main floor, some older
students from Professor Charles Xavier’s School for Gifted
Youngsters were checking out a reconstructed skeleton labeled SABER-TOOTHED TIGER.
Their comments were mostly about a notorious mutant who’d adopted
the same name and was currently the object of a hugely unsuccessful
worldwide manhunt.



The teacher responsible for watching them was only partly
paying attention. His eyes and the bulk of his focus were on a slim,
striking redhead who stood across the hall. She was a head shorter than
he was, which made her about five-foot-seven to his six-plus, with legs
that went on forever, a figure to die for, and a face to match. Her
eyes were the green of a spring forest and had a sparkle that would put
the finest emerald to shame.



His own eyes, she had never seen. He kept them hidden
behind specially designed glasses whose lenses were made of a ruby
quartz so dense the crystal seemed almost opaque. Sometimes he
wasn’t even sure there were proper eyes at all within their
sockets anymore, although he had perfect twenty-twenty vision. Instead,
there were beams of pure force that Xavier had labeled “optic
blasts,” powerful enough to knock a tank end over end or punch
holes through mountains. Unlike the others with their powers, Scott
Summers had no control over his. He couldn’t shut off his beams;
they blasted away 24/7, as they’d done since he was a teenager.
Even closing his eyes didn’t help. For some perverse reason, his
eyelids—or his hands—were able to block the beams; he
couldn’t do damage to himself. But the beams themselves were so
powerful they’d take advantage of the slightest gap. A twitch of
the eye, the slightest relaxation, meant instant disaster. So, to keep
from devastating his surroundings, he had to wear these
glasses—or a visor that even allowed him to manipulate the
strength of the blasts—constantly.



The eyes, so the saying goes, are the window to the soul. He didn’t like to think how that might apply to him.



Aside from that, Scott Summers was a fair package. Good
lines to his face, the kind of clean-shaven, handsome features that may
have started out slightly pretty but which improved markedly with age.
His hair was brown, with a hint of auburn, and when he spoke there was
a faint echo of Nebraska in his voice. He was a natural leader, the
sort of young man who would seem at home taming a frontier, although he
himself would scoff at the description.



He was hopelessly in love with the redhead, Jean Grey, and had been since the moment they’d first met.



She saw him watching and flashed him a smile that made
his heart sing and ache all at the same time, and wish they were alone.
Then her eyes slipped past him and the students they were minding to a
clutch of tourists just down the gallery, and her lips tightened, her
smile quickly becoming a work of fiction and artifice. Scott
immediately intuited what was happening. Once more her mental barriers
had turned porous and Jean was finding herself caught in a rapidly
rising tide of thoughts and emotions. That was how she described it to
him, late at night, usually with wine, on the increasingly rare
occasions when he could get her to relax. The hardest part about being
a telepath, she explained, wasn’t “reading” other
peoples’ thoughts, it was keeping them out of your own head. If
your control slipped, if the shields failed, it was so easy to be
overwhelmed, like standing in a puddle one second and being lost in the
middle of a raging ocean the next.



But Jean had another problem. She wasn’t simply a
telepath, but a telekine. She could manipulate physical objects with
the power of her thoughts and will. And when she was stressed, like
now, that second aspect of her abilities as a mutant gave the conflict
within her a tangible, material dimension.



Just like now.



The glass wall of the display behind her was trembling,
displaying visible ripples like the surface of a pond being stirred by
an autumn breeze. As Scott stepped forward, he could see the window
warp in its frame, the metal creaking quietly in futile protest. In
another moment it was sure to shatter—and Jean hadn’t
noticed. The interactive display TV monitors flashed with static.



“Hey,” he said gently, slipping his arm in hers.



“Hey,” she said, visibly relaxing as she
reacted to his presence, before her eyes widened, her mouth pursing in
tired frustration, as she realized the reason. The glass behind her was
still once more, and solid. The voices had silenced in her head. For a
while.



Scott didn’t need telepathy of his own to sense
what she was thinking, although her face masked that fury superbly. She
had an impressive temper and, from God knows where, a wealth of
profanity that beat anything he’d ever heard. She was a doctor,
and she was proud. She didn’t like being weak or vulnerable.



“You okay?” he asked.



Her eyes were half-closed, which undercut what she told
him in answer: “Yeah,” she said, giving him a reassuring
squeeze. “I’m fine. It’s just a headache.”



Scott felt a tug on his other sleeve and turned to see one of the students holding up a sketch she’d made of an iguanadon.



“Scott,” she reminded him, “you were talking about the extinction of the dinosaurs. . . .”



He nodded and indicated the tiger display. “I need
to talk to Dr. Grey real quick. Can you draw me a picture of that big
cat?”



She sniffed, hugely uninterested. “It’s a saber-toothed tiger.”



“Right.”



She took his cue and scampered off to join the other kids. Scott looked back to Jean, who chose to look anywhere but at him.



“It’s not just a headache, is it?” he challenged.



She didn’t want to talk about it, but this time he found he didn’t want to hold back.



“I wasn’t sure how to say this,” he
began, and then he paused, concern vying for dominance with his prairie
rectitude. He understood her desire for privacy. In the orphanage,
growing up, you played every emotion, every thought, tighter to your
chest than a winning poker hand. But she was in pain and it
wasn’t getting any better and that was more than he could bear.



“Look, Jean,” he began again, “ever since Liberty Island you’ve been—”



“Scott,” she tried to interrupt. He didn’t let her.



“—different.”



“My telepathy’s been off lately,” she
confessed. “I can’t seem to focus. I can hear . . .
everything.”



He shook his head, ruthlessly exploiting the opening
she’d given him, hoping she’d understand, praying it would
pay off. “A month ago you had to concentrate just to levitate a
book across the room. Now when you have nightmares the entire bedroom
shakes. It’s not just your telepathy.”



She left her arm in his, her grip tightening around his
fingers, while she splayed her other hand against the glass in front of
her, as if to reassure herself that she hadn’t done it any
lasting damage. At the same time, as she watched the room behind them
both in the window’s reflection, he was reminded of how science
teachers used to warn about looking at a solar eclipse. The only safe
way to gaze at the sun was through a reflection; do it directly,
you’ll go blind. Jean had that same apprehension about people.
And it was growing.



“The dreams are getting worse,” she told him.
“I keep feeling that something terrible is about to
happen.”



She leaned her forehead against the glass and spoke so
softly Scott couldn’t tell if the words came from her lips or
from her thoughts.



“I don’t want to lose you,” she said.



He wrapped his free hand around her and pulled her close against him.



“I’m not going anywhere,” he told her.



She relaxed against him, but only a little bit, leaning
her head into the junction of his neck and shoulder but keeping her
eyes open and on the glass, with a stare that seemed to go on forever,
as though she was searching for something.



He wondered, and hoped she had grace enough not to pry,
if what she was searching for had a face. Handsome and hairy and
Canadian, Logan had rolled into their lives like an avalanche and
wreaked just about as much havoc. It drove Scott a little crazy to
think that, only a few months ago, there’d been no Logan to
complicate their lives—and yet, without Logan, he and Jean and
Storm wouldn’t have stood a chance when Xavier’s former
colleague and friend, who now called himself Magneto, had tried to
reshape the face of the world. All as part of a misguided attempt to
guarantee the future safety and prosperity of mutantkind.



He believed as an article of absolute faith that Jean
loved him. It was the keystone of his world, as he hoped his own love
served for hers. But he could also see what happened when Jean and
Logan came near each other. That kind of primal attraction was
impossible to hide, and trust Logan not to even try.



They hadn’t heard from him since he left the
school, to follow some leads Professor Xavier had provided about his
mysterious past. And Scott knew there hadn’t been a day since
when Jean hadn’t thought of him. The questions he had were, how did she think of him? And what was she going to do about it?



And when that moment came, what would Scott do?



“Are we interrupting again?” Storm said softly as she came around the corner and into view.



Because the two women were best friends, Jean
didn’t react to her arrival as any sort of intrusion. She took a
moment to gather wits and self-possession, gradually disengaging from
Scott—her hand staying closed around his right to the
last—using her telepathy to partially cloud the perceptions of
the kids so they wouldn’t easily recall how vulnerable she
looked.



“So,” Storm continued cheerily, “how was the giant squid?”



“The children liked it,” Jean replied. “Scott was bored.”



“It was boring,” he agreed wholeheartedly.
And then, taking refuge in responsibility, “Guys, if we
don’t want to get stuck in rush-hour traffic—”



“We should get moving,” Jean finished.



Storm absently acknowledged their decision. She
wasn’t quite paying attention, though, as she finished a quick
headcount of their charges. She didn’t look happy.



“Wait,” she said in a tone that made clear
she wasn’t really surprised, just disappointed.
“We’re short.”



Jean concentrated, and Scott know she was casting a mental net across the whole of the museum.



“We should find the professor,” she said.






In the museum’s basement was the food court, with
seats galore and offering a surprisingly eclectic collection of items,
ranging from burgers to sushi. Off in a corner all their own, polishing
off the remains of a modest feast, were Xavier’s three missing
students. Two boys and a girl, all in their midteens.



One of the boys was slightly taller than the other, both
their bodies built pretty much the same, both of them slightly taller
than the girls. The taller boy had pleasant, regular features, with
curly blondish hair that looked like he generally used his fingers in
place of a comb, in a vain attempt to establish some kind of order. His
companion’s face was sharper, a little more technically handsome,
thick brown hair swept straight back from his face. He had a Zippo
lighter in hand, and the way he kept snapping it open, igniting a
flame, snapping it closed, to the beat of a doo-wop song only he could
hear, went with the hair and manner to present him as a reincarnated
fifties rebel.



The girl was southern; that was obvious the minute she
said a word. She was pretty, on her way to beautiful, with eyes green
enough to put Jean Grey’s to shame. Her shoulder-length dark hair
had a dramatic streak as purely white as Storm’s that rose from
the peak of her forehead, in absolute contrast to the rich auburn that
covered the rest of her skull. Unlike the others, she wore gloves at
the table, and long sleeves and a high collar, and the coat that was
slung back on her shoulders had a hood so that when it was pulled up
the only part of her body that showed any skin was her face. She also
sat a little apart from the others, as if she was wary of touching or
being touched.






“So I’m asking,” said the dark-haired
boy with the lighter, John Allardyce, “what would be worse, to be
burned to death or frozen?”



The girl made an appropriately dismissive face, this was so not
why they had snuck away from the crowd, but John could be worse than a
mastiff with some topics. Try as you might, there was no way to get him
to back off.



In any event, Bobby Drake wasn’t in the mood. He
looked intensely perplexed, facing a problem that taxed his obviously
meager mental resources, while Marie fidgeted under John’s stare,
and Kitty wondered how big a fight she’d start if she just
snatched that damn lighter away. The boy loved that Zippo more than she
did her stuffed snugglies! Too totally creepy for words.



“Gosh,” Bobby began, which made John chuckle
because only a lamoid straight would use a word like
“gosh,” “I dunno, John. Seems like being burned would
be awfully painful. . . .”



John flicked the lighter again, his eyes momentarily
caressing the flame before returning to Marie, who tried to look bored
to tears as she met that gaze but knew she wasn’t quite pulling
it off.



“It is,” John said.



Marie turned her eyes away and knew the moment she did
that she’d made a mistake. There was another crowd of teens
sitting at the next table, a little bit older, taking advantage of this
out-of-the-way alcove to sneak some smokes. One of them looked up at
exactly the same moment, and for that moment their gazes locked. He
smiled, Marie let the edges of her mouth quirk in response, then she
turned back to her friends in time to hear Bobby start to turn the
verbal tables on John.



“But you know,” Bobby said,
“there’s something pretty agonizing about freezing to
death. You don’t just drift off to sleep like most people
think.”



“Damn,” Marie muttered, “I was so hoping for a nap!”



“Enlighten us, snowman,” John instructed.



“It all starts with shivering. Just a little at
first as the body struggles to keep warm. Your skin turns a pale
blue.”



“Guys, not again,” Marie pleaded. “Change of topic, okay?”



Being guys, they ignored her.



“Then,” Bobby continued, “the moisture
in your lungs starts to freeze, so that even breathing is
painful.”



“This conversation,” she tried again, “is painful!”



Marie snuck another sidelong glance at the other table,
to find two pairs of eyes staring back. They looked nice, they looked
interesting, they were a pleasant change to this pissing match she had
heard too many times before. So when they smiled, she didn’t try
to hide her response.



Neither of the boys at her table even noticed.



“Those shivers,” Bobby said, “turn into violent convulsions as your blood begins to crystallize.”



The other boys got up from their table.



“Wouldn’t you be, like, so dead by then, Bobby?” asked Marie in a tone that broadcast boredom.



“Worse,” he replied. “Your brain starts
to scream for oxygen and you can’t stop yourself slowly,
inexorably sinking into complete and utter . . . insanity!”



John looked wholly unimpressed. Marie actually yawned.



“Insanity, huh? I s’pose that might be considered an improvement over this little colloquy.”



“Hey,” said one of the boys from the next table.



All three of Xavier’s students looked up. Marie turned around in her chair to find the boys standing over her. This was so not what she wanted. It had never occurred to her that they’d take a little bit of flirting as an outright invitation.



“He said, ‘Hey,’ ” said one of the others, after an uncomfortable silence.



“Hey,” Bobby replied with a grin, hoping to defuse the situation.



But it didn’t work. The others had responded to
what they thought were a set of definite cues. When Marie didn’t
greet them enthusiastically, they weren’t happy to discover
they’d perhaps made a mistake, and adolescent pride
wouldn’t let them back down.



The second boy spoke again, jabbing a thumb toward his
friend, who took a drag on his cigarette—ostensibly to show how
cool he was, but more likely to hide a sudden attack of nerves.
“He was talking to her,” the boy said, meaning his friend and meaning Marie.



“What’s your name?” the first boy asked.



She had more than one, but the situation was making her a
little bit nervous as well, and the boys were crowding her awfully
close. So she answered with the name she’d chosen for herself,
rather than the one with which she’d been born.



“Rogue,” she said.



That prompted a snort from the third newcomer.



“Cool,” he said, meaning exactly the
opposite, as in “look at these prep school jag-offs throwing off
street names, figuring we’ll be impressed.” “This is
Slash,” boy number one, “And I’m Bobcat! Nice ta
meetcha!”



He finished by reaching for Marie’s arm.



Bobby intercepted him, placing his hand on the older
teen’s wrist and speaking as easily as could be. “You
really don’t want to touch her.”



“Excuse me,” said Bobcat.



“Or what?” echoed Slash, “you gonna hurt him?”



Bobby shook his head. “Nope. But she might.”



The two teens looked at him, looked at Marie, looked at
each other—and burst out laughing. To them, it was such an
outrageous idea, there was no other response, which was precisely what
Bobby had in mind. It made the Xavier’s students look a little
silly and gave these guys a way out without losing face. Crisis
averted, no harm done.



But John Allardyce wouldn’t let it go.



“You know,” he said, his voice dripping unmistakably acid contempt, “there’s no smoking in here.”



That was a challenge. No way would the others back down now.



“No shit?” Slash sounded incredulous,
returning an equal measure of insult. “Really? You got a problem
with that?”



John flicked his lighter—open, closed, open, closed—while never taking his eyes off Slash.



Slash gestured toward John’s lighter with his
cigarette. “Got a light?” Challenge, served and returned.
Another opportunity for all concerned to back off.



John wasn’t interested. He was enjoying himself.



“It’s a simple question,” Slash said,
finishing with the silent but unmistakable comment
“asshole.”



John shrugged, so bored. “And I’ll give you a
simple answer.” Suggesting, just as plainly, that these mooks
were too damn dumb for anything better.



Slash let his temper show, spacing his words for emphasis: “Do . . . you . . . have . . . a . . . light?”



John kept flicking the cap of his lighter. “Sorry, pal,” he said, “can’t help ya.”



Marie sighed.



“Knock it off, John,” Marie hissed at him.



“Please,” Bobby echoed in frustration,
figuring that before this was through he was going to have to grab his
friend and hustle him bodily out of here.



“Yeah, John,” Shadow chimed in, “listen to your girlfriends.”



John, not about to yield center stage, winked at Marie.



“I’m sorry, guys,” he told them all.
“Besides the fact that this is clearly marked as a nonsmoking
environment”—he pointed to a sign—“I
couldn’t bear knowing that I contributed to your collective slow,
tumor-ridden deaths.”



For final emphasis, he flicked his lighter shut. But he’d miscalculated as Slash snatched it away.



“What’s this?” he demanded, spinning it between his own fingers. “A fashion accessory?”



His pals laughed and smirked, enjoying how the tables had
suddenly turned in their favor. John, all humor gone from his face,
lunged for the lighter, only to be shoved hard by Bobcat back into his
chair.



Slash struck a flame and lit his cigarette, making an exaggerated show of blowing a lungful of smoke into John’s face.



Later, much later, they all told themselves they should
have seen this moment coming, they should have been prepared, they
should have stopped him. Truth was, though, they never imagined it could happen. John, of all people, knew the nature of his mutant power and how important—how essential—it was to use it properly. They didn’t think he was serious, and once it started, there was simply no time.



John was a pyrotic. His mutant ability was to control
flame. Before any of them could stop him, before they realized the
danger, he amplified the tip of the burning cigarette to white-hot
incandescence and sent it flashing all the way to the boy’s
fingers and beyond. Instantly what was left of the cigarette was
reduced to ash. Slash opened his hand, even as the tips of his fingers
blistered from the sudden, scorching heat, but it was far too late as
raw flame raced up his sleeve to ignite his jacket and hair and set him
aflame from head to toe.



Slash screamed—mostly in terror, there hadn’t
been time yet for any pain to register—and reeled away from the
corner, slapping at himself in a doomed attempt to extinguish the
flames. A succession of other screams were heard as patrons of the food
court reacted to what was happening, scrambling to get clear of the
young man or pull their own children to safety, calling for fire
extinguishers, starting a stampede for the sole exit.



John stayed where he was, watching with a smile.



With a curse, Bobby leaped to his feet, reaching out to
Slash with his right hand, which suddenly turned transparent, as if the
skin had turned to crystal-clear ice. The temperature in the corner
dropped so low, so fast, that every breath around their table left
clouds in the air, but more importantly a stream of frost embraced
Slash like a blanket to smother his flames.






Marie stood, but before she could get clear of the corner
the second boy—Bobcat—made a grab for her. In her hurry,
her coat had slipped off her shoulder, baring a stretch of bicep. Bare
hand closed on bare arm, flesh made direct contact with flesh, and all
of a sudden Bobcat looked like he’d just been hit in the belly by
a battering ram.



His mouth opened wide, but he couldn’t find the
air—or even the will—to shriek his heart out as veins
distended on his head and throat and Marie bared her own teeth in a
grimace of sympathetic pain, giving voice herself to the raw terror the
young man felt. In midscream, she wrenched free of him, breaking
contact with such force that Bobcat collapsed forward onto the table,
and Marie stumble-spun into John’s arms, which made his day.



Bobcat pulled himself up and cocked a fist to deliver a blind-side punch to John’s head.



The punch was never thrown.






The three Xavier students looked around in amazement to
discover that every person in the food court was frozen in place. They
looked accusingly at Bobby, but he only shrugged in helpless demurral:
This wasn’t his doing.



Then the penny dropped, and four sets of eyes turned as
one to the doorway, where Charles Xavier sat grim-faced in his chair.
Clustered close behind him were Jean, Scott, and Storm, and, farther
back, the rest of the tour group. One look at the faces of their
teachers told the students how badly they’d just screwed up.
“The next time you feel like showing off, don’t!” the
professor said curtly.



Standing, Charles Xavier would have matched Scott
Summer’s height, but he was in a wheelchair and had been for as
long as the young man had known him. He was twice Scott’s age and
more, but he carried those years easily, and the wiry strength of his
body made no concession to his disability. He spoke with a rich English
accent he’d acquired as a student at Cambridge and although he
possessed a smile as generous as his nature, he generally presented
himself in a manner as formal as his attire. When he looked you in the
eye, he gave the impression that your whole being had suddenly gone
transparent. Scott was one of the few who knew that wasn’t
hyperbole. Xavier was a telepath, perhaps the foremost on Earth. He
could read minds as easily as anyone else might read a book. Jean was
his prize pupil.



He had founded his school to provide a venue where young
mutants could learn not simply to use their powers properly and safely,
but also responsibly. The core curriculum was as much about the ethics
of being a mutant as the practicalities. At the moment it was plain
that he was wondering why he even bothered.



As the students gathered their gear and trudged across
the court, a look suddenly swept across Jean’s face, as if
she’d heard something from outside the building. Xavier’s
concentration was occupied keeping the patrons of the food court
“off-line”; he hadn’t noticed what she had.



There was a television set suspended from the ceiling,
turned off. A faint flicker of energy appeared around Jean’s
eyes, and the set came on. The channel quickly changed to Fox News as a
title banner at the bottom of the screen announced the news that the
midday anchor was breathlessly repeating aloud: MUTANT ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT.
Behind the anchor there was a secondary window showing a live shot of
the White House, surrounded by Secret Service and a detachment of
Marines in full combat gear.



“. . . we repeat,” the anchor was saying,
relief as palpable on her face and in her voice as terror, “the
President is unharmed. We are awaiting confirmation from the White
House, but informed sources have told Fox News that an attempt was made
on the President’s life less than an hour ago by an assailant who
has been tentatively identified as a mutant!”



No one said a word for what seemed like the longest time. Scott finally broke the silence.



“Professor, “ he said quietly, “people, I think it’s time to go.”



Xavier drew a deep breath and nodded his head.



“I think you’re right,” he agreed.



A moment later, the food court came back to
life—with a startled yelp from over by the soft ice cream machine
as the attendant found his hand covered with chocolate/vanilla twist.
Slash couldn’t recall why he was on his hands and knees—or
why he smelled like he’d just walked through a smoke
factory—as he sucked on a set of scorched fingertips, but right
then and there he made a silent vow that he and cigarettes were done.
As for the rest, they had no idea that a minute was missing from their
lives, or that the table in the corner had been occupied by a pair of
boys and a girl. Or that those three teens had ever even existed.



Outside, Scott pushed Xavier’s chair while Jean and
Storm kept the children in line as they hurried past a succession of
momentarily “frozen” patrons on their way to the parking
lot.



Marie had her coat wrapped close around her, her hood
pulled up to hide her face, and while she kept pace with the group, she
kept a definite distance between herself and everybody else. Bobby
tried to walk beside her, but she made it clear she wasn’t
interested, and he had sense enough to back off.





 







Chapter

Three




A straight line from Xavier’s School on Graymalkin
Lane in the town of Salem Center to the Empire State Building runs
forty-five miles. An hour by Metro North from Grand Central Station,
generally two by car at rush hour.



Scott made better time than that. There wasn’t much
traffic on the roads, everyone seemed to be glued to the nearest TV,
waiting for word from Washington on the President’s condition and
what might happen next. Lacking definitive hard news—beyond the
initial announcement of the attack and the fact that the President was
alive and unharmed—talking heads filled the airwaves with blather
and speculation, almost all of it fixated on the as-yet unconfirmed
report that the assailant was some kind of mutant, and almost all of it
hostile. Was this a follow-up, people wondered, to the recent mutant
terrorist attack on the World Unity Conference on Ellis Island? Had any
other nations been attacked? Was the President the only target? Was
this a conspiracy? Was it a declaration of war?



The questions fed on one another like a brushfire. Even
the President’s hurried appearance and brief statement from the
White House Press Room didn’t make much difference. It was as if
there was this incredible reservoir of anxiety where it came to
mutants, held back by a dam of faith and hope that the government had a
handle on the situation, that maybe mutants weren’t so bad. With
this one terrible blow, the dam had cracked and people across the
country, across the world, were venting their fears about what would
come next.



As more details about the attack were revealed, this
proved a far more damaging blow to the national psyche than the Ellis
Island incident. That had involved some incredible machine whose
fantastic energies had lit up the New York skyline more vividly than
any fireworks display. No one had really understood what was going on,
save that official spokesmen said it was really dangerous.



This, though, was a man with a knife, who’d
penetrated one of the most secure locations in existence. If mutants
could get that close to the President, where only a miracle had saved
him, nobody was safe.



The irony was, the mutants—young and old, students
and teachers—driving through the wrought-iron gates that marked
the entrance to Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters felt just
the same. Fearful that a suddenly uncertain present was giving way to
an ominous and threatening future.



Xavier’s ancestors had settled this part of
Westchester County when Salem Center itself was little more than a
tavern and trading post. They’d laid claim to a five-mile stretch
of land along the north shore of Breakstone Lake and held on to it ever
since. Some generations prospered, others struggled, as what began as
the wilderness frontier gradually evolved into one of the wealthiest
counties on the globe, home now to billionaires and ex-presidents. But
the enduring constant for the family was that they never let go of
their land.



The original mansion had been Georgian in style, two
stories high with pillared porticos offering a magnificent view down
the sweeping lawn to the lake. A century or so later, it was replaced
by the current structure, a late Victorian stronghold of dark, gray
stone, meant to look as solid and eternal as the lake itself. They
built big in those days, so what was entirely excessive for a family
residence became ideal for a school. There were wings and battlements
and turrets galore and a layout so eccentric every new arrival was told
suitably spooky stories about kids who’d gotten lost, never to be
seen again. The newbies scoffed, of course—until one of them
actually did get lost. Then they paid more attention to the maps and
the rules.



Classes had already been canceled for the day because of
the field trip, which left the students free to find their own ways of
coping with the news.



Theresa Roarke angrily stormed out of the common room,
snarling to everyone within earshot how fed up she was with the doom
and gloom that filled every channel and radio frequency. She’d
grown up in Northern Ireland; terrorism was a fact of life for her. She
learned early to cope with the moment but not to obsess. Feel angry,
fine. Feel scared, fine. Wallow in it, not on a bet. Especially on so
beautiful an afternoon. Especially if that afternoon could be shared
with a certain boy.



Tracy was everything her name and antecedents implied:
sandy red hair and aquamarine eyes, pert features, a dusting of
freckles across a classic peaches-and-cream complexion, a face and
figure that nicely mixed cute and pretty. She was a girl of big
gestures and big emotions. She had a voice like an angel, if that angel
liked to hang out in honky-tonks and sing Motown, and she could dance
everyone else in the school, teachers included, into the ground.



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.”



“I get the job done, that’s true. I’ve
followed your career with interest for years, Bobby. As I recall, you
were a staunch supporter of the registration act. I must confess
though, your ideas on the mutant problem appear to have . . . changed
recently.”



“For the best, I trust.”



“Myself, I trust in God.”



“Since Senator Kelly has been at the forefront of both sides of this issue,” the President interjected, “I thought his perspective would be worthwhile.”



“You’re the commander in chief, sir,” Stryker said.



“So, what are you proposing, Mr. Stryker?” Kelly asked directly.



Stryker didn’t answer at first. His pause, and the
look he gave the President, made plain that he considered this a
need-to-know matter and that Robert Kelly wasn’t on his personal
list. The President frankly didn’t care.



“You spoke about a special operation, William,” prompted McKenna.



With a curt nod, acknowledging and accepting the
President’s authority even when he bitterly disagreed with it,
Stryker opened his case and spread a set of glossy surveillance photos
on the table, right at the end where the President could see them but
Kelly could not.



“Working with the National Reconnaissance Office,
my people have gathered these surveillance photos of a mutant training
facility near the town of Salem Center, in Westchester County, right by
the Connecticut border.”



“How did you develop the information?”



“Discover the installation’s existence, you
mean? Primarily through interrogation of one of the terrorist prisoners
captured after the Liberty Island incident.”



“Eric?” Kelly asked sharply. “Eric Lehnsherr?”



“Code-named Magneto, yes,” Stryker replied.



“You have access to him?”



Intrigued by Kelly’s surge of interest, Stryker
nodded. “My group developed the technology that built his plastic
prison when, I might add, Mr. President, your defense department
couldn’t find room for the allocation in their own budget.”



“At the time,” the President said slowly, “the need didn’t seem pressing.”



“Priorities, sir, I do understand. Threats are
easily identifiable in hindsight. The challenge for a prudent and
responsible leader is identifying clear and present dangers to the
nation and dealing with them before there’s a disaster.”



He indicated another set of photographs.



“It appears,” he said, “I’m not
the only one with access to the prisoner. This man”—he
pointed to a bald-headed figure in a
wheelchair—“we’ve identified as Charles Xavier. The
leader of this training facility and a longtime associate of Mr.
Lehnsherr. Apparently Xavier has . . . friends in the Justice
Department. Since Lehnsherr’s incarceration, he’s paid
several visits.”



Kelly leaned forward for a closer look at the pictures. His tone and manner were discreetly skeptical.



“What is this place?” he asked.



“Ostensibly, a school,” responded Stryker
with a humorless chuckle. “For ‘gifted’
youngsters.”



He tossed a fresh set of photos on the table, for both men to see.



“We retasked a keyhole spy satellite to get
these,” he said. “I believe you’ll agree the results
are worth the expense.”



For pictures taken from two hundred fifty miles above
Manhattan, with camera lenses powerful enough to read the lettering on
a pack of cigarettes and enhancement technology that allowed them to
work as effectively at night as during the day, the results were
extraordinary, and devastating.



“What’s that?” asked McKenna.



“A jet.”



McKenna gave him a sour look. “What kind of jet?”



“We don’t know—but as you can see, it comes up out of the basketball court.”



In a sequence of images, as the President passed the
eight by ten sheets across to Kelly, they saw a court behind the main
house slide apart to allow an elevator platform to rise to the surface
from what had to be an underground hangar. The plane that was revealed
was unlike anything the President had ever seen, twin engined and twin
tailed with forward-swept wings. It rose into the air on vertical
thrusters, shifted to horizontal flight, and was quickly gone from
sight, as its flight path and the satellite’s orbital track took
the vehicles in opposite directions.



“I’ve talked to the Air Force,” Stryker said. “I’ve talked to DARPA”—the
Defense Advanced Research and Planning Agency. “They don’t
even have aircraft with capabilities like this on their drawing boards.
And it clearly represents the ultimate in stealth technology as well.
We examined every radar record we could find, civil and military, for
the time and course indicated. Not a trace.”



Stryker waved his arm to encompass the Oval Office, with
a pointed look at one wall where the bullet holes from the attack
hadn’t yet been patched.



“You gentlemen ask yourselves: How could this have happened?” he snorted in disgust. “How could it not have?”



Kelly held up another photo. “These are children.”



“Being trained, being indoctrinated, for what
purpose, Senator?” retorted Stryker. “How many miles of
news footage are there from the Middle East, showing children dressed
up as terrorists?”



“These are American citizens, none of whom—that I’m aware of—have committed any crime.”



Stryker turned to the President: “Sir, if we had been allowed to do our jobs before this attack—”



“What would you need?” McKenna asked.



“Just your authorization.”



“To do what precisely?” Kelly demanded, because he knew the President would not.



Again Stryker ignored him, concentrating solely on
McKenna. “Don’t misunderstand my goals, Mr. President. I
just want to go in there—to see precisely what they’re up
to. If they have nothing to hide, they have nothing to fear.”



“It’s illegal,” snapped Kelly.



“Not if they’re terrorists,” replied
Stryker calmly. “For over a year now, we’ve been tracking
this mutant in particular. His origins are European, but we believe
there is a possible affiliation with this institution.”



He pulled a last photo from his case and held it out to the President.



“This was taken three months ago,” Stryker
finished, but there was no more need for him to make his case. The
moment McKenna saw the picture, his decision was made.



The figure in the picture was humanoid—that is, two
arms, two legs, central trunk, bilateral symmetry. Two big digits on
hands and feet, skin of indigo blue, hair a slight shade darker.
Gleaming yellow eyes, fangs, pointed ears, and a long, pointed tail all
combined to give him the look of a modish gargoyle come to life. He was
snarling.



He was the assassin who’d almost killed this President.



“Listen to me, William,” said McKenna, in the
same still tone of absolute command he used with the joint chiefs.
“You enter. You detain. You question.” His voice took on a
faint but unmistakable edge. “But the last thing I want to hear
is that we’ve spilled the blood of an innocent child, mutant or
otherwise. You understand?”



“Absolutely, Mr. President,” Stryker replied.






The meeting over, Stryker had already reached the hallway
outside the President’s suite of offices by the time Kelly caught
up with him. Repairs were much more evident here, as were armed guards.



“You made a powerful argument, William,” he said.



“The evidence made the case, Bobby.” Stryker
indicated a lovely Asian woman who’d obviously been waiting for
him. She wore a discreet but attractive business suit and carried
herself in a way that made Kelly think, Bodyguard. She wore
light sunglasses that allowed a view of her eyes but not of their
color. “Please allow me to introduce Yuriko Oyama. She’s my
director of . . . special projects.”



They shook hands. But when Kelly relaxed his grip, she tightened hers, just for a moment, enough to mean business.



Kelly obliged her with a wince, and once his hand was
free he shook it a few times, wriggling his fingers to make sure they
still worked.



“That’s quite a handshake,” he told her.



As Stryker and his assistant started for the exit, Kelly
matched their pace. After a couple of steps, Stryker—eager and
determined to be rid of him—stopped and confronted the younger
man.



“What can I do for you, Senator?” he asked.



“Eric Lehnsherr’s prison” was
Kelly’s quick reply. “If possible, I’d like to
arrange a visit.”



Stryker snorted. “It isn’t a petting zoo,
Senator. In this conflict, he’s the enemy. You’re just a
spectator. Do us both a favor, and sit this one out, all right?”



“Are you trying to turn this into some kind of war?”



Outside the Oval Office, Stryker didn’t bother to
hide his deep contempt. “Senator”—and the way he said
it turned that title into a profound insult—“I was piloting
black-ops missions into the jungles of North Vietnam while you were
suckling your momma’s titties at Woodstock.”



“Am I supposed to be impressed? We lost that one—Billy.”



Contempt turned instantly and completely to fury, but
Stryker kept it confined to his eyes and his voice. He moved in close
to Kelly, speaking in a clipped, parade-ground cadence that no one else
would hear, jabbing his thumb right to the base of the other
man’s breastbone hard enough to hurt. If looks could kill, the
man facing him would have been burned to ash. Kelly, though, paid no
attention to either.



“Don’t you dare presume to lecture me
about war, Senator. You don’t want this to turn into a war? Sonny
boy, we’re already there. The trouble is bleeding hearts like you
who are too damn dumb to realize it!”



“I appreciate your concerns. I’m simply suggesting that perhaps your operation deserves a second thought.”



“And I’m saying that you have no idea at all
what’s going on around you. I really do hate to break this off,
but I’m afraid you’re making me late for a rather pressing
appointment. Good day, Senator.”



He and Yuriko strode quickly away. As Kelly watched them
go, his expression darkening with every step, a cloud seemed to pass
across his eyes. Iris and pupil disappeared as the whole substance of
his eyes suddenly, and momentarily, turned chrome yellow, the same
shade as the assassin’s.



Then, with a blink, they were back to normal. No one around him had noticed.



His own steps were hurried and purposeful as the senator took his leave. He had some pretty urgent appointments himself.





 







Chapter

Four




In the 1950s, with the world perpetually poised on the
brink of Armageddon, strategic planners had to devise a means for the
government of the nation to survive a global thermonuclear war. The
presumption was that Washington and its environs, which included the
Pentagon and a whole host of major military installations, would be
prime targets. What was required, therefore, was a location
sufficiently far away to escape the brutal impact of multimegaton
hydrogen bombs, yet convenient enough for the President and senior
members of the civilian and military hierarchy to get there before the
region was destroyed.



The choice was the Appalachian Mountains, due west of the
capital, along a stretch of peaks that formed one wall of the
Shenandoah Valley and also demarcated the border between Virginia and
its neighbor West Virginia. The installation was built using the same
principals employed in the construction of the headquarters of the
North American Air Defense Command, inside the heart of Cheyenne
Mountain, Colorado. A couple of mountains were hollowed out at the
base, so that the ancient stone itself would provide the bulk of the
protection for the people sheltering within. The compartments that
filled this newly emptied space rested on gigantic shock absorbers. It
was guaranteed by the designers and builders that only a direct hit
would do any substantial damage. It was outfitted with state-of-the-art
technology and hardware, together with resources to sustain the
survivors for years if necessary.



Thankfully, it was never used.



With the ongoing collapse of the Soviet Union, and the
consequent lessening of the traditional nuclear threat, this secret
haven became gradually less important in the strategic scheme of
things. It was considered an icon of a bygone age, like the battleship.
Most in government simply forgot about it.



Not William Stryker.



As it became increasingly clear in recent years that the
mutant situation, which he’d been addressing with increasing
passion and vehemence, was something that had to be taken seriously,
the question then arose: What to do with the mutants if things went
bad? Where could the government possibly incarcerate a mutant criminal?



Mount Haven was Stryker’s answer.



And Eric Lehnsherr became its first inmate.



As befit a man who styled himself the “master of
magnetism,” his cell was plastic, suspended by pliable plastic
cables and beams in one of the chambers of the mountain that had been
hollowed out but never fully converted. What had been left was a
monumental box of a space, easily a thousand feet square, buried more
than a thousand beneath the surface. The stone of the mountain itself
was nonferrous, and the chamber’s walls had been lined with
molded plastic that was as strong as steel. The cell was transparent,
as was all the furniture. The only opaque items were the inmate’s
clothes and the sheets and blankets on his bed, as well as the few
items of reading material allowed him.



He was under constant surveillance, scanned by a vast
array of cameras and electronic sensors and a full complement of
guards. Their orders were strict and absolute. No metal of any kind was
to be permitted into the stone chamber, much less the cell itself. No
significant amount of metal—whether furniture or vehicles or even
weapons—was to be permitted within a half mile of his cell. One
positive surprise effect of his incarceration was a quantum leap in the
practical design and technology applications of plastics.



The prisoner’s clothes were a form of wearable
paper, fastened with Velcro. As a condition of employment, guards had
to have their metal fillings replaced by porcelain. You violated the
rules, you got fired. No exceptions.



No one knew the true extent of Lehnsherr’s power.
No one wanted to find out the hard way. Better to conceive of the
worst-case scenario and take all precautions from there.



Thing was, the man himself didn’t look so fearsome.
In person, the face possessed a dignity and a humanity that the
holographic image Scott beheld at Xavier’s lacked. His
intelligence and his commitment were immediately clear. He was a man
whose soul had been tempered by the most inhuman furnace, the great
kilns of Auschwitz that had claimed his parents, his family, the life
he knew and the one he’d dreamed of. He had survived there. He
would survive here. Of that, plainly he had no doubt.



Access to his cell came through an umbilical walkway, a
plastic tube that extended like an airport’s jetway from the
nearer wall. He didn’t set down the book he was reading, T. H.
White’s masterwork about the life of King Arthur, The Once and Future King, until he heard the bolts cycle and the docking port at his end slide open.



Close up, the bruises on Lehnsherr’s face were
evident. The look on the face of the man entering the cell made it
plain that he was the one who had inflicted them and was looking
forward to delivering more. Mitchell Laurio had been chosen
specifically to look after the prisoner at a time when it appeared
certain his next visit to a prison would be as an inmate rather than a
guard. Two felony indictments had been quashed to bring him
here—for brutality, of course—and the day he started he was
told the recorders would be turned off whenever he was in
Lehnsherr’s cell. He wasn’t allowed to break any bones, he
couldn’t kill the old man.



Outside of that, he was told, anything goes.



This was nothing new to the prisoner. He wasn’t yet
even a teenager when he received his first beating from an SS guard. He
also remembered what he’d done to that guard, years later, to
repay him.



He met Laurio with a level gaze, eyes as deep and unreadable as an ocean abyss.



“Mr. Laurio,” he said almost pleasantly, in
his rounded, cultured voice that had its own distinct touch of England.
“How long can we keep this up?”



Laurio cracked his knuckles. “How long you in for?”



“Forever.”



“Not necessarily forever,” Stryker said
pleasantly from the walkway as he followed Laurio into the cell.
“Just until I have what I need.”



“Mr. Stryker,” Lehnsherr said, his tone
giving no sense of how he felt, his body language almost relaxed.
“How kind of you to visit. Have you come back to make sure the
taxpayer’s dollars are keeping me . . . comfortable?”



“Simply a case of the punishment fitting the crime.
Heads of state don’t take kindly to being attacked. Quite a few
of them wanted you killed. Without, I might add, benefit of a
trial.”



“How fortunate for you that, merely by labeling me
a terrorist combatant, the government removed all need for such legal
niceties.”



“The ACLU is still filing briefs on
your behalf. You never know, they may find the right judge, he may
accept their writ of habeas corpus.”



Both men knew that day would never come. Lehnsherr was here until he died, or found another way. The same rules as Auschwitz.



“In the meantime . . .”



Lehnsherr’s eyes narrowed fractionally as Stryker
withdrew a plastic case from an inside pocket of his suit jacket, and
from that a small pipette of glowing yellow liquid. The prisoner
started up from his chair, a reflexive gesture of resistance, which was
just what Laurio was waiting for.



A swift, sharp application of his billy club to the back
of the legs collapsed Lehnsherr’s knees out from under him; an
equally cruel jab to the side made the prisoner gasp. Laurio grabbed
Lehnsherr’s right arm in a brutal hammerlock, forcing the trapped
hand almost all the way up to the other man’s neck, clearly
disappointed not to hear even a whimper of pain as he did. With his
free hand he forced Lehnsherr’s face flat against the table and
held it there as if gripped in a vise, turned so that the base of his
skull was exposed to reveal a scar right at the brain stem, in the
shape of a perfect circle.



Lehnsherr bared his teeth, ever so slightly, his sole
gesture of defiance as Stryker leaned forward and delicately,
carefully, placed two drops directly on the scar. They bubbled, like
hydrogen peroxide foaming away bacteria on a wound, and were absorbed.



Lehnsherr’s face relaxed, his eyes wide, pupils
dilating to their limit. Stryker nodded approvingly: After the initial
exposure, results were virtually instantaneous.



Laurio yanked Lehnsherr up by the collar and deposited
him back in his chair. There was no readable expression whatsoever on
the prisoner’s face; but for the metronomic rise and fall of his
chest he might have been a mannequin.



Stryker put away the pipette and its case and perched
himself on the corner of the table, reaching down to catch Lehnsherr by
the chin and tilt the other man’s face up to his. Lehnsherr
didn’t react to him at all. Perfect.



“Now, Eric—may I call you Eric? Course I can,
’cause thanks to my little serum here, we’re the best of
friends. And friends have no secrets from one another, am I right? So
while we have this special time together, I’d like to have one
final talk about the school that you and Charles Xavier built. And
especially that wonderful machine you both call Cerebro.”






Back at the school, Bobby Drake was flirting. He’d
started with a shared Dr Pepper, to go with popcorn and a mix of
Skittles and M&M’s in Marie’s favorite colors, while
they gathered with a clutch of other kids in a corner of the common
room to watch some DVDs. They tried broadcast, but most of the networks
were still showcasing their in-house talking heads with more pointless
blather about the attempted assassination.



She wasn’t in the mood for talking, she never was
after one of those encounters she called “imprinting,” so
he handled most of the conversation himself. He was a Boston boy and
proud of it and didn’t mind sharing. He talked of baseball at
Fenway and how like every true believer he dreamed of the day the Red
Sox would reclaim the World Series for their own, or at least stomp the
hated Yankees on the way to a pennant. He talked about rowing on the
Charles and sailing out of Marblehead and giant dunes that filled the
shores of Cape Cod. Every now and then he’d pause, offering her
an opening to talk about her home in return, but she wasn’t
interested.



She didn’t seem bored, either, which he took as a good sign.



Somewhere along the way, their fingers brushed. Marie
flinched, even though she was wearing gloves and there was no danger,
but Bobby was ready for that. He covered the gesture by challenging her
to a bout of thumb wrestling. She didn’t believe her ears at
first, who the hell thumb wrestles anymore? When Bobby assured her it
was the done thing in Beantown, she muttered, “That
’splains a lot.” But when he waggled his hand at her,
cocking his thumb in challenge, she responded with a grin, shifted
herself on the couch to face him, and held out her own hand.



She trapped him in a heartbeat. She was faster than she
acted and way stronger, easily able to wiggle free whenever he tried to
pin her and then turn the tables. He kept coming back for more, though,
and she continued to let him, stifling the occasional giggle.



Neither of them realized they were being watched or,
worse, recorded. Catching a nuance of expression, Peter Rasputin
applied his eraser to paper and then tweaked a couple of pencil lines
to make art more like life. He was sketching, which is what he did
every chance he got, which was a strange sight to see in a young man
the size and build of a small mountain. He stood six-foot-eight, with a
physique and the natural athletic talent that would make any NFL
head coach weep for joy. He played passable sports—not because he
wasn’t any good, but because he wasn’t interested. His
great and abiding love was the images that flowed down his arm from eye
to pencil and from there to paper. He’d started drawing almost as
soon as he could hold a pencil. It was what defined his life.



Right now he was having some fun with the lovebirds.



“Is that them?” asked a much smaller figure
craning over his shoulder. Flea was on the short side to begin with, so
when the two of them were together it was like parking a toy airplane
beside a working 747.



Peter grunted. He was usually nonverbal when he was working, which was pretty much all the time. The other kids were used to it.



The picture was recognizably Bobby and Marie, even though
Peter was intentionally erring on the side of caricature. They were in
the early stages of a kiss. From the expression on Marie’s face,
she looked embarked on a course of major league passion. Bobby may have
had that idea at the start. Right now, he was being electrocuted. Arms
and legs akimbo, hair extended to full length, eyes bugging from their
sockets in a classic Tex Avery pose, his body surrounded by a corona of
shock waves and speed lines and appropriate other pyrotechnics.



“This,” Flea chortled, “I would pay to see.”



Peter blinked, shifting mental gears to reengage himself with his surroundings, and shook his head.



“No,” he said, origins immediately revealed
by his Russian-accented English, “because it would be
wrong.”



“Then you better say something, big guy,”
Flea said with irrepressible glee, “ ‘cause they’re
goin’ for the gold!”



No more thumb wrestling. The couple were just holding
hands now. Neither was initiating the move; they were moving together
of their own accord as fascination overcame common sense.



Peter opened his mouth, aware they’d likely hate
him for it, but never got the chance to do any more as the roar of an
unmufflered Harley rumbled over the house. The sound rose in a steady
crescendo as the bike raced up the long drive toward the house and just
as suddenly went silent, right outside.



By then, Marie was on her feet, the bowl of popcorn and
treats flying off her lap, Bobby completely forgotten as she charged
the front door with a cry of “Logan!”



“Miss me, kid?” the Canadian growled as he sauntered inside.



She answered by hurling herself into his arms, and for
that first minute, they just held each other, before she pushed against
him just enough to clear some room between them, assumed what she hoped
was a languid and uninvolved expression, and drawled, “Not
really.”



Logan laughed, and her expression immediately changed as
she intuited that he hadn’t done that in quite a while. Before
she could ask about him, though, and perhaps as a way of deflecting
those questions, Logan jutted his chin toward the boy standing just
inside the foyer.



“Who’s this?” Logan asked.



“This is Bobby,” she told him, with just
enough of a hitch to her voice to make his eyes crinkle with amusement.
Along with his healing factor, Logan possessed exceptionally acute
physical senses, and they told him volumes about Rogue’s feelings
for the boy, probably more than she admitted to herself. A faint flush
to the skin, a change in pulse and respiration, the faintest of goose
bumps at the hollow of her throat said there was something serious at
work here.



The cues radiating off the boy were even less subtle.



“Her boyfriend,” Bobby said flatly, looking the older man in the eye.



Logan held out a hand, Bobby took it, and immediately
there was the faint crackle of ice and a burst of frozen vapor into the
air between them. Rogue muttered under her breath, but Logan sensed she
was also pleased. The two men in her life were fighting over her. Cool!



“They call me Iceman,” Bobby said, unnecessarily.



Logan looked totally unimpressed. He flexed his hand to
shake free the last bits of ice clinging to his skin hair and looked
toward Rogue.



“Boyfriend?” he inquired innocently. “So, ah, how do you two—”



Rogue blushed crimson and turned away, and Bobby colored a little bit himself.



“We’re working on that.”



“Ohhh-kay,” Logan said. “Lemme know how it turns out. Meantime, I need the prof—”



“Well, well, well,” called a throaty contralto from the stairs. “Look who’s come back.”



Logan returned Storm’s smile, hers unrestrained, his much more guarded.



“Isn’t that what the prodigal son does?”



“We certainly won’t fault your timing.”



“Eh?” Logan wondered.



“We need a baby-sitter.”



“I’m outta here, darlin’.”



“No, you aren’t, my friend.” She gave
him a proper hug and a kiss on the cheek. “It’s good to see
you, Logan.”



“Likewise,” he replied, but he no longer had
eyes for her. She didn’t need to be told who’d followed her
down the stairs.



“Hey,” he said to Jean.



“Hi,” she told him. “Welcome home.”



Storm picked up the cue that neither of the others were
aware they were broadcasting and flicked her fingers in the general
direction of Bobby and Rogue. A puff of breeze whirled across the foyer
to give them a gentle push back toward the common room. They took the
hint, with all manner of semisecret giggles at how the tables had
suddenly been reversed.



“I’ll go preflight the Blackbird,” Storm said, but she might as well have been speaking to herself.



“Bye, Logan,” Rogue called out as Bobby pulled her through the double doorway.



“Later,” Logan replied absently.



“Nice to meet you, sir,” said Bobby.



“You, too, kid.” Then, at last, once they were alone, to Jean: “You look good.”



“You, too,” she said, descending the last few
steps to the foyer. They kept a distance between them because the
signals their bodies were giving were pushing hard to bring them
together. She took refuge in business. “You heard about
what’s happened in Washington?”



“Haven’t stopped except for gas since
morning,” he answered with a nod. He’d pushed the bike to
its limits, on back roads and interstates, covering better than a
thousand miles over the course of the day.



“Storm and I are heading for Boston,” she
continued. “Cerebro has tagged the mutant who attacked the
President. Professor Xavier wants us to try and make contact. We
won’t be gone long.”



“I just got here.”



“And you’ll be here when we get back—unless you plan on running off again.”



“If this hitter’s the real deal, you could use some muscle taking him down.”



That made her laugh. “We can handle ourselves, thank you very much.”



He shrugged, posing nonchalance. “Then I guess I can probably think of a few reasons to stick around.”



“That’s my guy.”



“Find what you were looking for, Logan?” called Scott, entering the foyer and catching sight of them both.



Logan didn’t spare him a glance. “More or less,” he said.



Jean broke their eye contact and strode across the floor
to Scott, hating the moment and hating her reactions even more. She
didn’t like being out of control, of herself, of situations. She
was a doctor, with a doctor’s abhorrence of surprises and chaos.
Logan was the personification of chaos. Sometimes she couldn’t
stand the little runt, he couldn’t hold a candle to Scott in any
respect—or so she told herself. Yet she couldn’t get him
out of her thoughts. And the thoughts she had of him made her nervous.



“I’ll see you later,” she said to Scott.



“Be safe, okay?”



“Always,” she said, and gave him a powerful,
passionate kiss that was undercut a moment later as she couldn’t
help looking back at Logan. “You, too,” she said, telling
herself she was talking to them both, while both men knew that
wasn’t quite true.



Logan tossed Scott the keys to the bike.



“Good wheels,” he said. “Needs gas.”



Without missing a beat, Scott grabbed the keys out of the air and tossed them right back.



“Fill her up, then.”



“If you say so, bub,” Logan muttered under
his breath. He watched the taller man walk away and permitted himself a
grin while jumping the keys up and down in his palm. He liked
surprises, and Scott was proving more full of them than he’d ever
imagined.



I’m downstairs, Logan, came a familiar voice in his head.



He didn’t move at first. He stood in the foyer,
breathing in a slow, deep cadence, filtering out the myriad scents
filling the air around him until just one remained. She favored
Folavril, Annick Goutal. He’d know her anywhere and, more
importantly for him, find her anywhere.



He knew he was keeping Xavier waiting. Didn’t bother him a bit.



He found the professor in what was literally the heart of
the underground complex, buried deep beneath the mansion proper and
extending for hundreds of yards under the estate. He’d wondered
from the start how something this big could have been built in complete
secrecy, but when he considered the capabilities of the man
responsible, it no longer seemed like such a mystery.



At the end of a main hallway stood a circular door that
would have done justice to a Federal Reserve bank vault. Its diameter
was twice Logan’s height, and it was easily a couple of feet
thick. Through that portal, a gallery walkway led out to a circular
platform in what he assumed was the center of the room, but there was
no way of knowing if that was really true. The curvature of the
interior walls near the doorway suggested that the room was a great
globe, but a wicked trick of design and lighting made it impossible for
anyone, even Logan with his enhanced senses, to perceive its true
dimensions. He couldn’t see the far wall, or the summit, or the
base, and the anechoic properties of the tiling deadened sound to such
an extent that there wasn’t even a ghost of an echo. He thought
of pitching a penny but suspected he wouldn’t hear it make
contact.



Psychically, this was a “clean room.” The
only thoughts that entered were the ones Charles Xavier permitted or
sought out himself.



Xavier was seated in his wheelchair on the central dais,
adjusting the controls of the main console. There was a skeletal helmet
on the panel, connected to it by a pair of umbilical cables that ran
from either ear flap. That, Logan knew, was the receiver. The room
itself was a focusing chamber for Cerebro, a titanic array of sensors,
daisy-chained multiprocessors, and resonance amplifiers all intended to
magnify Xavier’s already considerable telepathic abilities to a
quantum level.



Without looking up from his work, Xavier said aloud:
“Logan, my repeated requests about smoking in the mansion
notwithstanding, continue smoking that in here . . .”



Idly Logan took the cigar from his mouth and looked at
it. He hadn’t indulged during the entire last leg on the cycle;
he’d lit it up on the walk downstairs without a second thought to
the propriety—or the consequences. A man with a built-in healing
factor doesn’t have to worry about lung cancer.



Xavier finished silently, mind to mind: . . . and you will spend the rest of your days under the belief that you are a six-year-old girl.



With the thought came an image: Logan in a frilly party
dress, something out of the Barbie collection, with layer upon layer of
silk and crinoline petticoats, bows galore, ankle socks, and
patent-leather shoes.



Both men registered the snikt of his claws extending, from the hand that held the cigar, but Logan made no move.



“I’ll have Jean braid your hair,”
Xavier said aloud, and mentally tweaked the image to match, in a way
that was so ridiculous and over the top that Logan couldn’t help
snorting in rough, rude humor.



They’d each had their moment and taken the measure
of each other. Xavier probably could impose his psychic will on Logan,
but he also now knew that, either right at the start or some inevitable
time down the line, the berserker in Logan’s soul would square
accounts—and he would likely die for it.



Logan thought then of the kids upstairs as he put his
claws away and crushed the burning embers against the palm of his left
hand. The students didn’t have a healing factor.



“Please, Logan,” Xavier said, “come in.”



“What’s the phrase? ‘Enter freely and of your own will’?”



“Dracula to Jonathan Harker, welcoming him to his castle. Is that how you see me?”



“You’re the telepath, you tell me.”



“I don’t go into other people’s minds on a casual basis.”



“You don’t like to pry?” Logan didn’t believe him.



“It’s not as easy as you think, or as pleasant. The danger is, it could be: easy and pleasant. To play the voyeur, to play the puppet master.”



“Power corrupts.”



“Power should breed responsibility. That’s why I built this school.”



Xavier rolled his chair into place at the console and set the helmet on his head. At once the chamber itself began to hum.



“You sure I should be here, Prof?” Logan
asked. From the way the others talked, Xavier didn’t allow
visitors when he used his toy, but the door had closed behind him.



“Just don’t move, all right?”



He did, though, the couple of steps remaining to take him
to the platform just behind and beside Xavier, following the push of an
instinct that had never played him false. He gasped as the fabric of
the platform seemed to dissolve beneath him. There was a sensation of
falling, like going over the top of the first riser at the ultimate
roller coaster to start the plunge straight down to oblivion—or
something even wilder.



Then, just as suddenly, he was at rest again, in the same
position with Xavier as before, in the center of a giant
three-dimensional representation of the world. Dotted across the land
masses, lightly dusted here and there over the oceans, were uncountable
numbers of white and scarlet lights that reminded Logan of fireflies or
stars blazing in the heavens. There were a fair number of red, but they
were no comparison to their counterparts.



“These lights,” Xavier said with the same
hushed reverence reserved for speaking inside a cathedral,
“represent the whole of humanity. Every living soul on
Earth.”



“Lemme guess,” Logan said. “The red ones are us.”



Obligingly the white lights faded away. Only scarlet remained.



“These are the mutants,” Xavier acknowledged,
impressed by Logan’s quick insight. “Many of them
don’t even realize yet who they are, what they will become.
We’re not quite as alone as some of us might think.”



“I found the base at Alkali Lake.” He thought
of the slash marks on the wall, and decided to keep the thought to
himself, partly to see if Xavier was peeking. “There was nothing
there.”



Surprisingly, as far as he could tell, the other man didn’t even try.



Around them, the globe appeared to rush toward them,
giving them a vastly expanded bird’s-eye view of the northeastern
seaboard of the United States, the fabled BosNYWash megalopolis. Then
Xavier blanked all the extraneous signals as well, leaving just a small
scattering, which Logan deduced, from their placement and intensity,
were himself, the professor, and the others who qualified as X-Men.
There was also a jagged scarlet line running from Washington all the
way to Boston.



“That trail,” Xavier pointed out, “represents the path of the mutant who attacked the President.”



“Jean said you were sending her and Storm after him.”



Xavier nodded. The scene above them resolved even more
tightly on the Boston metropolitan area. Here, though, the trail, the
contact waypoints, became more scattered and indistinct.



“I’m finding it hard to lock in on him,” he confessed.



“Can’t you just . . . I dunno, concentrate harder?”



“If I wanted to kill him, certainly.”



“You can do that?”



Xavier spared him a long and measured glance. “Easily.”



“Guys I know would pay a fortune for a skill like that.”



The scene changed again, zooming in again to a neighborhood in the South End.



The single scarlet light was blinking. After a moment,
latitude and longitude points were displayed and, a moment after that,
the appropriate cross streets.



“There,” Xavier said. “It appears our quarry has finally stopped running and gone to ground.”



He closed his eyes, and—presto!—the illusion
vanished, and Logan found himself once more on the central platform
with Xavier. An eddy of fresh air told him without looking that the
door had cycled open. He wasn’t interested.



“I need you to read my mind again.”



Xavier took his time before replying, and Logan ignored the fatigue that caused it.



“And I told you it isn’t that easy,” he
said at last. “I’m afraid the results will be no different
than before.”



“We had a deal.”



“Logan.” Xavier spoke more sharply than
he’d intended, and he took a pause to dial his irritation back a
notch. “The mind is not a box to be simply unlocked and opened,
its contents parceled out willy-nilly for the world to see. On one
level, it’s a beehive, with a million separate compartments. Yet
on another, all those compartments are bound together, interconnected
in a multidimensional holographic maze that would put the Gordian knot
to shame. One moment of your life, one image of your memory,
doesn’t lead in sequential, linear fashion to the next. It
splinters off into a thousand different directions, each valid, each
needing to be investigated. That takes time, that takes care.



“And that’s just a normal mind.



“The problem with yours is, someone’s already
taken the Alexander the Great approach to untangling the
mysteries—or perhaps to tangle them beyond all recovery.”



“I’m messed up. So what else is new?”



“Logan, sometimes there are things the mind needs
to discover for itself.” As Xavier placed the helmet back on its
pedestal, Logan felt a faint tap on the inside of his consciousness,
akin to someone rapping a knuckle on his forehead. You have a healing factor, he “heard” Xavier say without speaking aloud, a most remarkable ability. Trust it to do the same with your psyche as it does so well with your physical body.



“Don’t be in such a hurry,” Xavier finished aloud. “You might make things worse.”



There was a fresh scent in the doorway: Ivory Soap and
Old Spice, with a faint Armani chaser that had to come from Jean. Scott
was standing there expectantly, dressed for the road. He wasn’t
pleased to see Logan in here, any more than he had been to see him with
Jean. As if Logan gave a tinker’s damn.



“I promise you, Logan,” Xavier said as he
wheeled himself from the chamber, “we’ll talk more when I
return. In the meanwhile . . .”



“You need a baby-sitter, Storm mentioned.”



“If you would be so kind as to chaperone the
children tonight, Scott and I are going to pay a visit to an old
friend.”



“Yo, Charley,” Logan called as Scott pushed
the chair down the hall. He knew Xavier hated such familiarity, but he
figured, since he’d backed down over the smoking, he was
entitled. “When you see Magneto, give him my regards. Tell him to
rot in hell. For what he did to Rogue, he got off easy.”





 







Chapter

Five




As she strode a bit too briskly into the hangar, almost
fleeing the exchange that had just taken place in the foyer, Jean Grey
couldn’t help but take a moment to admire the magnificent
aircraft waiting for her.



It was black as deep space, a paint scheme perfected by
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to make a plane visually
undetectable once the sun went down. The lines of the great jet were so
sleek she seemed to be cutting through the air even while standing
still, the slightly canted nose flowing aft past where the fuselage
flared naturally into the main body of the hull above air intakes for
the tremendously powerful ramjets. These engines were so powerful that
Jean could stand upright in the intakes with room to spare. The wings
themselves were swept sharply forward, in defiance of traditional
design philosophy, creating an airframe that compensated for its
inherent instability with the ability to perform combat aerobatics over
a breadth of speeds and altitudes that its nearest rivals
couldn’t hope to match. If it had any rivals worth the name.



They called her the Blackbird, as a tribute to the
greatest achievement of one of the premier designers in aviation
history, the justly famed Kelly Johnson, head of the equally renowned
Skunk Works aeronautics team of Lockheed Aircraft. In the early 1960s
the Skunk Works built an aircraft that was a generational leap ahead of
anything else in the air. Only in retrospect, as years turned into
decades, did the flying community realize just how spectacular an
achievement that was. For the whole of its operational life, which
extended right to the dawn of the twenty-first century, the SR-71
regularly flew higher, faster, and farther than pilots had ever gone
before.



This vehicle was what came next, the product of a bunch
of geniuses with a crazy idea and a man with the wherewithal to
bankroll it to fruition. The geniuses were aeronautical engineers,
downsized with their industry as the Cold War gradually came to an end.
The money, of course, came from Xavier, who required something quick
and stealthy, with a host of revolutionary capabilities, to transport
his prospective team of heroes.



As before, the gearheads built far better than they realized. This Blackbird
could take off like a helicopter and punch her way into a suborbital
trajectory at velocities that would take her from one side of the globe
to the other in barely an hour. Even better, the same structural
integrity that allowed her to traverse the atmosphere to near-Earth
space and back again also permitted a moderate immersion in shallow
water. She couldn’t move well beneath the surface, but you could
definitely hide her there.



Jean was a competent pilot, but Scott and Storm were the
ones who loved to fly. It was a toss-up which of them could handle the
plane best. Scott had the knack for teasing the best out of the
machine, but Storm’s elemental powers gave her an awareness of
the atmosphere the others could only imagine, allowing her to
instinctively find the ideal path through the air.



She was in the left-hand pilot’s seat as Jean climbed aboard, pulling the hatch closed behind her.



“Where we at?” Jean asked, taking the
copilot’s seat and locking her four-point harness closed.
They’d both changed for the flight, into their X-Men uniforms,
snug-fitting suits of what looked and felt like designer leather but
which also served as highly effective body armor. For some reason,
Storm had chosen to accessorize hers with a cloak that Jean had to
concede looked pretty damn good on her and didn’t seem to hinder
her movements in the slightest. Jean had left her own outfit as is. It
made her smile to recall that Logan had hated his on sight, though he
didn’t look half bad in it, either.



She caught Storm staring and blushed, realizing she
hadn’t heard a word the other woman had just said to her, or
sensed a thought.



“Checklist,” Storm repeated, shaking her head
in amusement. In all the years they’d known each other, Jean had
never let herself become so flustered.



They were a well-practiced team, and their work was
quickly done. After making sure there were no planes in their vicinity,
they damped the interior lights and cracked the surface hatch.
Overhead, the basketball court in the athletic yard split in two and
slid apart, allowing the great aircraft to rise almost silently into
the night sky. Both women gave a wave to the kids they knew would be
watching from their upstairs bedrooms, and then, as they cleared the
surrounding trees and the roof of the mansion, Storm turned the nose
toward Breakstone Lake and shifted to horizontal flight mode.



In less than a minute they were a mile high and miles
removed from the school, slipping into the stratosphere at a speed that
would carry them to Boston in a quarter hour, tops. The shape of the Blackbird
made her as impossible for a radar to detect as the paint scheme foiled
visual sighting. This meant plane and crew had to be extra vigilant for
any other aircraft sharing the increasingly crowded Northeast sky.
Occasionally that meant taking a more circuitous route, to avoid even
the risk of contact.



Immediately after takeoff, both women felt the familiar presence of Xavier’s thoughts among their own.



I’m sending you the coordinates of your target’s current location, he told them telepathically. Scott
and I are en route to Mount Haven Prison. We’ll be incommunicado
until we leave the facility. Once you land, you have to rely on your
own skills to track him.



“We’ll be fine, sir,” Storm assured him aloud.



“Let’s hope he cooperates,” Jean
muttered, thankful for the refuge of potential action as she struggled
to keep her conflicted thoughts to herself.



Storm engaged the autopilot, but Jean paid no attention
as she stared out the canopy window. For all she actually noticed, a
blank wall would have served just as well.



Storm’s eyes narrowed as the tempo of the great
ramjets increased, the surge of power making itself felt as vibration
through the body of the aircraft as well as through sound. She checked
the throttles and the flight dynamics liquid crystal display for a
status update on the engines.



The airframe shuddered slightly as they passed the sound
barrier, and miles below, amid the hills that crowded the Connecticut
and Massachusetts border, she knew people would be looking around in
surprise at the distant thunder of their sonic boom.



Storm disengaged the autopilot, shifting to manual flight
mode, and retarded the throttles, but that did no good; their speed
continued to increase, and at the rate they were gaining altitude, the Blackbird
would be suborbital in mere minutes. Great for a hop over the pond to
London and the professor’s Scots associate Moira MacTaggart;
utterly useless for a short-haul trip of a couple of hundred miles to
Beantown.



The problem, she realized, wasn’t with the
controls. Someone was bypassing them to manipulate the airframe and
mechanical systems directly.



“Jean,” she said, and when her friend
didn’t reply, she repeated herself, a little more loudly,
accompanying her call with a touch of Jean’s arm that carried
with it just the gentlest shock of lightning.



Jean jolted awake like a student who’d been caught
napping in class, denial vying visibly on her face with embarrassment
for prominence.



“Sorry,” she said quickly, “I’m
sorry,” shaking the cobwebs from her brain and releasing every
hold her teke powers had placed on the aircraft.



This time, when Storm slowed down the engines, they complied, and she turned the Blackbird into a sweeping descent out over the Atlantic that would quickly bring them to their destination.



“You okay?” Storm asked Jean, who at first didn’t seem quite sure how to answer.



“All of a sudden,” Jean replied, trying to make what had just happened a joke, “damned if I know.”



“Something wrong?”



“It’s nothing.” Jean shook her head,
wriggled in her sheepskin-covered seat to make herself more
comfortable, even though both of them knew it was anything but.
“I was thinking, y’know, if only we could make the flight
go faster. I guess my wish fulfillment kinda got . . . carried
away.”



“Ah” was Storm’s only comment. It spoke volumes.



“What?” Jean demanded.



“Nothing. I asked, you answered, end of story.”



“What, Ororo, for God’s sake!”



The other woman shrugged. “Maybe it’s just that Logan’s back in town.”



Jean slumped in her chair, as much as her harness would allow. “Oh, God, it shows.”



“Jean,” Storm said flatly, “the sun ‘shows’ every morning when it rises. It has nothing on you.”



“Why me?” Jean muttered, covering her eyes with her hands. “Why him? It isn’t fair.”



“You annoyed or tempted?”



“Truth, both.”



“Ouch!”



“Tell me something I don’t know.”



“He has the look,” Storm agreed with a throaty chuckle.



“Then take him off my hands, please, before
there’s a disaster.” To illustrate her point, she waved her
hands to encompass the flight deck and remind Storm what had nearly
happened mere minutes before.



“Grown woman like you, grown man like him, you saying you can’t set a proper example for the children?”



“You’re gonna bust my butt forever about this, aren’t you?”



Storm turned serious. “I like him, Jean. But what I feel, it’s minor league. You two, you’re the show.”



“It’s pure chemistry,” Jean told
herself as much as Storm. “I’ve never experienced anything
like it. I see him, and the brain disengages completely.
It’s”—she searched for the right
word—“primal. And I can’t hide it from him, I
can’t bluff that nothing’s happening—or that
nothing’s going to happen. And then there’s Scott . .
.”



Her voice trailed off. Storm reached across the center
console and gave her friend’s hand a squeeze, but she knew that
was scant comfort.



“Have faith, Jean. You’ll find a way to work things out.”



“I hope so, Ororo. Really I do. For all our sakes.”



The radio crackled with Xavier’s voice. Storm answered.






Washington is a company town, that “company”
being the federal government. And despite the promises and strenuous
efforts of both political parties and numerous national administrations
over the past few decades, the sheer size of that government has grown
well beyond the physical capacity of the District of Columbia.
Nowadays, working Washington is considered anything inside the Capital
Beltway, with associated office parks springing up even farther out
from the city itself, in such bedroom communities as Rockville and
Gaithersburg and Reston.



In Rockville, Maryland, there was a new clutch of
moderate high-rise buildings, ostensibly associated with the National
Institute of Standards and Technologies, a couple of miles and one town
over. Impersonally modern, they looked just like a score of similar
structures scattered across the nation. Midlist government glass boxes.



This time of night, the only staff on duty were the
security officers and the cleaning crew. Even in an age of terrorist
threats and heightened awareness, these weren’t considered viable
targets. The bulk of the surveillance was handled remotely, at a
central office keeping watch through a phalanx of cameras slaved to a
computer monitor system. There was a manned reception desk in every
ground-floor lobby, another couple of uniformed security guards to
patrol the floors, but that was it. Big Brother was responsible for the
bulk of the work.



The officer at the desk didn’t think twice when
Yuriko Oyama strode through the doors. Her group were the odd ducks
among the building’s federal tenants, working all hours of the
day, all days of the week; something to do with auditing, they
explained. The guard didn’t figure he was paid enough to be more
curious, especially since all their credentials were in order. He did
figure this was his lucky day, a treat for the eyes just before his
shift changed.



Yuriko flashed her ID and strode to the
waiting elevator, totally aware of how intently the desk guard was
staring at her backside. She was a fine-looking lady, and the guards
had eagerly added the many sequences of her coming and going to their
pirate surveillance disk of local hotties. The guard paid her the
compliment of never taking his eyes off her, waiting till the elevator
doors were closed to pack up his station and prepare to hand it off to
his replacement.



On the top floor, Yuriko passed the cleaning crew without
a second glance. At the end of the hallway there was a single door as
nondescript as the building itself. No lock, only a hand scanner. She
pressed her right hand against the plate and the door obligingly
unlocked.



Inside was a suite of offices that could have belonged to
any midlevel bureaucrat working for any midlevel agency. The only
personality to the rooms was that there was no personality whatsoever.



As she proceeded to her destination, she passed behind an
opaque glass wall divider, and a remarkable transformation occurred.
With each step, Yuriko’s features began to ripple and flow like
wax exposed to direct heat. Black hair took on the color of flame,
amber skin darkened to a blue that was almost midnight. Features that
were pleasantly Asian became haughty and aristocratic and altogether
Caucasian, a face as predatory as a hunting eagle yet possessing beauty
enough to launch the thousand ships of fabled Ilium. The clothes seemed
to flow into the body until what was left seemed mostly naked, save for
an arrangement of ridges and scales that afforded a measure of
protection and the illusion of propriety.



Her eyes were chrome yellow. Her name was Mystique.



In William Stryker’s office, she sat in
Stryker’s chair and activated Stryker’s computer monitor.
On its screen appeared the legend >VOICEPRINT IDENTIFICATION PLEASE.



In Stryker’s gravelly voice, Mystique replied, “Stryker, William.”



Obligingly and instantly, the monitor flashed >ACCESS GRANTED.



Working fast, because that was her nature and because she was on a clock, Mystique called up the directories, selecting RECENT ITEMS from the main menu and then a folder labeled simply 143. That in turn led to a series of files: FLOOR PLANS, LEHNSHERR, INTERROGATION SUMMARIES, AUGMENTATION . . .



She read quickly, printing everything on screen. As she
proceeded through the documents, the set of her mouth tightened and her
eyes narrowed. This was worse than she’d ever suspected.



Downstairs, a second Yuriko strolled into the lobby,
barely acknowledging the man at the desk. Since he’d just come on
duty, he had no idea there were two of her loose in the building.



In the office, a few minutes later, Mystique looked up suddenly at the faint klik of the door locks disengaging. Her time was up, right on schedule.



The real Yuriko walked to her desk and began to hunt
through the main drawer for something, seemingly unaware of the other
presence in the room. Then, without warning and with a speed that
defied description, she whirled around to level a Glock 19 at the
intruder.



“Who are you?” she demanded. “What are you doing here?”



A uniformed janitor stirred into view, hands waving before his body, fear plain on his face. He wanted no trouble.



“Lo siento, a puerta fui abierto!” he said.



Yuriko reached out for the man’s ID,
hanging from a lanyard around his neck, comparing face to photo. Then
she used her own terminal to access the night’s crew roster to
make sure both were legitimate.



With a wave of the hand, she dismissed the janitor and
returned to her desk without giving the man another thought. It never
occurred to her to wonder what a janitor was doing in her office
without his cart of supplies.



Mystique considered that as she strode quickly down the
outer hallway, right past the man whose face she was using. The real
janitor stared at her in disbelief—it was like watching your
mirror image pass you by—and reflexively crossed himself.
Mystique was thinking about Yuriko. This caper had gone down far more
easily than she’d anticipated. That gave her hope, an emotion she
hadn’t allowed herself since Magneto’s capture. Before
long, if all went well, maybe it would be Stryker who was on the run.
And the society he championed that lay in ruins.






The Blackbird approached Boston low and late,
literally skimming the surface of the harbor at an hour when they had
sea and sky all to themselves. Their objective was a stretch of
waterfront near the Marine Industrial Park that was in the nascent
stages of urban renewal and gentrification, a city planner’s
attempt to upgrade this part of the South End into a reasonable
facsimile of the more respectable neighborhoods across I-93.



They found a derelict slip with more than sufficient underwater clearance for their needs and gentled the Blackbird
to a landing. They disembarked first, then signaled the autopilot to
submerge the jet to its resting place on the bottom. There was a good
ten-foot clearance to the top of the vertical stabilizers, the
aircraft’s tallest point. Even at low tide, there was little
chance of contact with the kind of small surface craft that cruised
these waters, and even less of being seen.



Hopefully, the women wouldn’t be around here long
enough for either to become a problem. They both put on trench coats to
cover their uniforms.



As they made their way through the deserted and randomly
derelict streets, Storm played with the atmospheric balance around them
to roll a dusting of mist over this part of the city. She didn’t
want a real fog, that would be too blatant, cause too much disruption
to the local community; her goal was just enough to make it easy for
them to slip out of sight if they had to.



The coordinates Xavier had provided led them to a church.



In better times, this had been a house of worship worthy
of its parish. Constructed to last by stonemasons and old-world
artisans who were building more for their children’s children
than for themselves, it still presented a proud and dignified front to
the desolation that surrounded it. The spire towered over the scattered
clumps of row houses that remained and the long-abandoned factories
that gave their owners and tenants work. Much of the stained glass,
produced by contemporaries of Louis Comfort Tiffany, still remained,
although it was probably only a matter of time before it was looted or
destroyed.



The wall of one of the buildings opposite had been tagged with some fresh graffiti: CLEAN THE GENE POOL! KILL MUTANT SCUM!



Storm didn’t appreciate the sentiments.



“They’ll never let us lead our lives,”
she said, and this time she let her anger show. She clenched her fist,
and from off in the distance, out to sea beyond the entrance to Boston
Harbor, came the kettledrum beat of thunder.



They circled the church without approaching it, and Jean
used her teke to try every doorway they passed. To their surprise, all
of them appeared to be stoutly locked.



“Somebody taking care of this old place?” Storm wondered aloud.



“I caught a couple of thought flashes from that bar up the street.”



“From the guys we saw through the window?” Storm made a face. “You’re a braver woman than I am.”



“Tell me about it,” Jean agreed, matching her
tone to her friend’s disgust. “Thing is, this church has a
rep. It’s supposed to be haunted. By its very own demon.”



“Get out.”



“No lie. They believe it. Even the local tough guys steer clear of St. Anselm’s.”



“I’ve never met a demon.”



“After you, then.”



An artful combination of telekinesis and a push of wind
popped the bolts on the main doors, which swung wide to their stops,
creating an echoing boom throughout the body of the church.
From the rafters, coveys of pigeons exploded into view, startled from
their nighttime slumber.



The women said nothing as they made their way down the
nave. Most of the pews had either been taken or were trashed in various
corners, leaving a large open space leading to the transept and the
altar. Up in the shadows below the vaulted ceiling, a pair of chrome
yellow eyes watched their progress. And then, in a faint bamf of imploding air, they disappeared.



Just as suddenly, Storm stopped, looking steeply upward and to her right.



“What?” Jean prompted.



“A shift in the air,” she replied quietly, matter-of-factly.



“Movement?”



“More than that. A sudden vacuum there.” She
pointed to where the lurking figure had been. “And an outrush of
air from something popping into being.” She turned her arm to the
altar. “There.”



“Gehen sie raus,” came a whisper from
the deepest darkness ahead of them, in a voice calculated to chill the
soul. They saw a lit candle set beside an open Bible. As they watched,
the flame flickered from a sudden breeze and the topmost pages stirred.



“He’s gone again,” Storm said, and Jean nodded as they both heard from a balcony high overhead: “Ich bin ein Bote des Teufels!”



“We’re not here to hurt you,” Storm called out. “We just want to talk!”



Even as she spoke, she turned in response to another
faint and distant shift in the air patterns, so that she started facing
one way and finished having turned right around toward the entrance.



“Ich bin die ausgeburt des Bösen,” the lurker cried in something close to a primal howl.



Storm had a sudden, awkward thought. “You
know,” she told Jean, “we’re assuming he speaks
English.”



“Not a problem,” Jean assured her. “He’s a teleporter.”



“I noticed.”



“That must be why the professor had so much trouble locking on to him with Cerebro.”



“Will it be any easier for us to catch him?”



“Not a problem.”



Another howl, much closer, although try as they might neither Storm nor Jean could see him in the gloom of the church.



“Ich bin ein dämon,” he called.



Jean rolled her eyes and shifted her stance into a picture-perfect ValGal Barbie.



“Are you bored yet?” she asked Storm.



“Totally,” was the reply.



“You want to bring him down, or shall I?”



Storm narrowed her eyes in momentary concentration and
snapped her fingers. Obediently, a bolt of lightning erupted from her
hand, sizzling up one of the support columns and into the rafters of
the church’s single spire, where it struck with an explosion of
light and sound, a clap of thunder that pounded the air and stone
around them like a hammer.



They had a momentary glimpse of a vaguely human shape
before it vanished. But when it reappeared almost instantaneously, at
the far end of the nave, right above the altar, Jean was ready. As soon
as she had a sense of his mental signature, she reached out with
telepathy and telekinesis together, freezing his thoughts at the same
time she locked him in place a dozen feet above the rubble-strewn
floor. Trapped, he still fought her, defiant to the core.



“Got him?”



“He’s not going anywhere.” Jean brought
him closer. Then, to the prisoner’s surprise, she
smiled—genuine, winning, friendly—and held out her hand.
“Are you?”



“Please don’t kill me,” he pleaded in
English, with a soft German accent that marked him as an educated man.
It had a mellow timbre, the kind more suited to cabaret songs than
playing the matinee-movie monster. “I never intended to harm
anyone!”



“I wonder how people ever got that impression,” Storm remarked wryly. “What’s your name?”



“Kurt. Kurt Wagner.”



“I’m Ororo. Call me Storm,” she told him. She flashed a sideways look to Jean to complement her thought. This is our assassin?



Appearances are deceiving, Jean projected back at her. But—which way?



Your call.



With that thought from Storm, Jean cut loose the
prisoner. He dropped lightly to the floor, landing on the balls and
toes of his outsized feet. He looked poised to bolt, but Jean took it
as a positive sign that he hadn’t immediately teleported. She
kept her hand held out to him.



“I’m Jean Grey. We’re here to help.”






Kurt Wagner followed Quasimodo’s lead and lived up
in the spire, on the level below the belfry. The walls were solid
there, and he’d replaced the panes of broken stained glass with
the precision and craftsmanship used for the originals. By day, when
the sun was shining, both women recognized, the room would be ablaze
with color. He used candles for illumination instead of electricity;
their light was less likely to be spotted from the street. The height
of the steeple gave him a panoramic view of the neighborhood. He had
privacy and a decent chance of spotting any intruders. For a
teleporting acrobat like him, whose natural coloration made him
invisible in shadows, this was an ideal hideout.



The furnishings were spartan, a function more of choice
and aesthetics than of poverty. True, the pieces were mainly scavenged
from the derelict and abandoned homes nearby, but they’d been
restored with the same painstaking care and attention to detail as the
windows. A bed, a table, some chairs, a pantry, a bookshelf. Dried food
mostly in the pantry, chosen for ease in storage and in preparation.
The books were an unexpected mix. Religious works mainly, a
well-thumbed Bible sharing space with a copy of Rafael Sabatini’s
Captain Blood and George MacDonald Fraser’s classic pastiche, The Pyrates.



Above the headboard, a Catholic crucifix. On the table, a
set of rosary beads, polished from handling. Icons and images galore,
of Christ himself, of the Blessed Virgin. The beads were lying on a
pile of newspapers, all headlining the attack on the President and
showing an artist’s sketch of the assassin that was a
devastatingly faithful likeness.



On the wall, though, something completely
different—a series of circus posters, from venues all over
Europe: Paris, Florence, Barcelona, Munich, Prague, Krakow. They all
were pictures of Kurt, showing him on the trapeze, celebrating the
performances of the INCREDIBLE NIGHTCRAWLER! As well, a couple of movie one-sheets: Burt Lancaster in The Crimson Pirate, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in Sinbad the Sailor, and almost in a place of honor, Errol Flynn’s film adaptation of Captain Blood, the role that made his swashbuckling career.



Jean shook her head. A man of obviously deep religious
faith who loved classic pirate stories. Didn’t fit any profile
she’d ever read of your basic assassin. He picked up the rosary
as she asked if she could examine his wound, but even though she knew
she was hurting him—she couldn’t help it—the only
sound she heard from him was a cadencelike muttering that she soon
realized was a prayer: “Our Father, Who art in Heaven, blessed be
Thy Name . . .”



The 9mm shell had missed the bone as it passed through
his shoulder, but it had still done its share of damage. Kurt had
administered some decent first aid; he’d stopped the bleeding and
applied sufficient antiseptic to prevent any major infection. Without
proper treatment, however, his athletic ability would be crippled, and
she told him so in a way that also told him she was willing and able to
provide it.



“You’ll be fine,” Jean told him as she
finished suturing the wound and began wrapping it in the necessary
bandages. “The worst you’ll have is a small scar.”



“You are not the authorities,” he said with a hint of a question.



Storm snorted, “Not hardly.”



“You wear uniforms.”



“We like to look cool,” Jean told him. “I’m sorry if I’m hurting you.”



“I know it cannot be helped.” He shook his
head, a little bit of misery, a lot of confusion. “I just
don’t understand—any of this. I could . . .” He
paused, glancing at the papers on his table, trying to come to terms
with images and memories that made no sense to him, yet could not be
denied. “I couldn’t stop myself,” he said
desperately. “It was all happening to someone else, like a bad
dream. That would be nice. But then—I move my arm and realize
that is a lie. It was real. It was me!”



He twisted and rolled the rosary beads in his
two-fingered hands until he held the crucifix that anchored the strands
together. On his face was a terrible and haunting desolation.



“I fear He has left me,” he said with a
grief, a sense of loss, that was palpable. “I even found a mark,
perhaps like the mark of Cain. See? Look here!”



He tilted his head, sweeping aside the thick indigo curls
to reveal a mark at the base of his skull. It was a scar, Jean
recognized, that reminded her of kinds of insect bites or the welt left
by some topical irritant akin to what was found on poison ivy or oak.
It was placed right above the brain stem, and it formed the shape of a
perfect circle.



“What do you think?” Storm asked Jean.



“Let’s get him back to the professor,”
she replied, her concern and worry as plain for Storm to see as the
intricate markings that covered Kurt Wagner’s body.







Interlude




Normally he sleeps without dreams. A quiet time,
restful, a relief from the cacophony of input assaulting his physical
senses every waking moment. So much to process just to determine the
appropriate levels of threat. Every person he meets, a potential enemy,
to be sorted into its appropriate box in that split second of initial
contact.



Lately, no peace, anything but, no chance to recharge
his batteries, psychic or physical, forcing him to stay awake to the
point of absolute exhaustion, when he doesn’t have any choice
about it anymore. Yet that carries its own price, because it leaves him
with fewer defenses against the nightmares that invariably come.



He hears himself scream with rage, giving himself completely to the berserker in his soul.



He’s fighting fighting fighting, against what he
never knows. People? Things? Demons? Monsters? Fate itself? All of
that? None?



He has no clothes, the better to see the marks drawn
on skin that’s been stripped of hair, the better to see the livid
scars that follow the marks as he’s opened from crown to crotch,
shoulders to fingertips, hips to toes.



He sees himself in the reflector overhead, lying on a
table, dissected like a frog, skin peeled back, organs laid bare,
watching his heart beat, his lungs pulse. He hears voices, dissecting
him as clinically as their scalpels, hears a voice, his voice,
asking over and over what was happening, why were they doing this?
Hears laughter, they aren’t interested, they don’t care,
they think this is funny. Hears threats of bloody vengeance give way,
impossibly, to words he never imagined saying, begging, pleading for
mercy.



He can’t wake up. He has to watch.



Knowing that he was conscious through whatever was
being done to him. They didn’t use anesthetic, they wanted him to
experience every bloody moment.



They took lots of notes.



Someone holds up a set of claws.



He pops the claws from his hand—snikt!



He slashes the claws into the wall, making an
indelible mark on the armored plating too thick for him to cut all the
way through.



He’s in a tank, lights are flashing red and
green, the lights resolving into what’s supposed to be a pair of
eyes in a face too terrible to be remembered except as repeating images
of pain and horror. The tank is filled with liquid, covering him,
drowning him, turning bright yellow as the face spits venom at him like
a cobra, burning him inside and out.



Rage now, beyond comprehension, beyond control.



He’s fighting fighting fighting



No more yellow anymore, but lots of red



He’s alone



No more floors beneath his feet, only earth, then rock, then nothing but air as he tumbles from a precipice



Then water as a cataract sweeps him away



Then earth and rock again as he grabs for salvation and pulls himself ashore



Then, miraculously, mercifully, snow, falling fast and hard, burying the world, burying him, allowing him to sleep, to heal, to



forget






Snikt!






Snakt!





 







Chapter

Six




Logan woke up on the floor, amid the ruins of yet another bed.



Reflexively, he started to raise his hands to rub his
face, smooth his hair. Then he paused in midgesture and opened his eyes
to see if his claws were still extended. No fun to accidentally slice
open your own scalp, even if the wounds healed in next to no time.



His hands looked normal, with only the damage that
surrounded him and the dull and familiar, and fading, ache between his
knuckles.



He spit some feathers from his mouth, plucked scraps of pillow off his chest.



The bed was basically splinters, the mattress and linens
shredded. The floor was badly scored as well. His flailing hands had
cut through the parquet to expose the joists beneath. He moved
carefully as he shifted his weight to sit up and determined which
sections of the floor were still capable of supporting him. He wondered
a moment why no one had come to investigate, then remembered that he
was the only adult left in the mansion. Considering the looks
he’d gotten from the students, and the stories Rogue had no doubt
been telling, any kids close enough to hear what had happened in here
more than likely had sense enough to make themselves scarce.



That made him grin, although there was little humor in it.



He’d left his clothes on the far side of the room.
They were untouched by his unconscious berserker outburst, but as he
approached to get dressed he had to admit they didn’t look much
better than the room. He made it a point to travel light. Anything that
couldn’t be carried was expendable, and he wore his clothes to
their limit before replacing them. The boots and the leather jacket had
some mileage left; the jeans were near the end. That didn’t used
to matter to him, because he never used to care what others thought
when they saw him.



He took his time under the shower, muttering darkly that
the spray wasn’t as powerful as he liked. Truth was, what he
liked was a fire hose at full pressure, enough to scour his flesh the
way it could be used to flay paint off a wall. He started as hot as he
could bear, which wasn’t quite hot enough to burn, then went for
cold. That wasn’t satisfactory, either, for a man used to
mountain rivers and lakes where the water was usually a degree or two
shy of turning to ice. The immersion left him tingling all over,
totally raw and feeling better.



He’d known the moment he awoke what time it was.
Another instinct, an uncannily accurate awareness of time and space and
of his self. It was almost impossible for him to get lost, and he
always knew immediately if something had changed around him while he
was unconscious.



Past 3:00 A.M.



Silently despite the boots, he prowled the empty halls of
the mansion, registering the photographs and paintings and antiques
displayed along the walls even if his mind took no active notice of
them. Quizzed, he could have described his environs perfectly, but the
objects themselves meant virtually nothing to him. Tools he understood,
but he had no use for ornamental artifacts.



The sound of a television led him to an upstairs common
room. He’d assumed at first that somebody had left it on, but as
he approached he registered an active presence, early adolescent and
male, and wide awake.



Before going to bed, Logan had used Jean’s terminal
to review the files of every student in the school. He told himself he
was simply being responsible, but he acknowledged that it was also
another way of getting close to her, which made him shake his head in
dismay. This wasn’t like him, yet the impulses and the emotions
were too primal, too powerful to be ignored. Or denied. Guaranteed
trouble, no doubt about that. No hope of a happy ending. He
didn’t care.



Anyway, if Jean was going to entrust him with the kids
here, he’d do his best to be worthy of it. That meant putting
names to faces, and powers to names.



This one was Jones. He had a first name but nobody used it, Jones included.



He was sprawled on the couch, picking at a full bowl of
popcorn. He’d watch the big plasma screen until he got bored,
then he’d blink his eyes. The channel would obligingly change.
Watch a while, repeat the process. It happened often. Jones had a low
threshold of boredom.



He noticed Logan’s reflection in the screen but
didn’t look around. He didn’t much like what he was
watching, but he wasn’t about to miss a moment of it.



“Can’t sleep?” he asked.



“How can you tell?” Logan retorted.



“ ‘Cause you’re awake.”



No arguing with that ironclad logic, that’s for sure. Kid had a mind like a steel trap.



“What’s your excuse?” Logan asked.



“I don’t sleep.”



“Your loss. You guys got any beer?”



“Try the kitchen.”






He did, and found one of the professional Sub-Zero
fridges filled with all manner of healthy food: yogurt and greens,
fruits and eggs and meats. Primarily organic, the produce of local
farms and green markets. Minimal snack food. He grimaced, recognizing
the influence of both Jean and Storm, and wondered how often the
students made a break for the local Mickey Dee’s.



The other one held fruit juice, mostly fresh squeezed, bottled water, and dozens of cartons of chocolate milk.



Grumpy now, Logan shut the door,



He wasn’t alone in the kitchen anymore. Bobby Drake
sat at the table, methodically excavating a quart container of ice
cream.



“Hey,” the youngster said, making an effort
to keep his voice steady. Logan had sensed him coming, but clearly
Bobby hadn’t realized it was Logan in the room until the man had
closed the refrigerator door, and by then pride wouldn’t allow
for even the thought of flight.



“Hey,” Logan replied offhandedly, poking through cabinets and the walk-in pantry. “Got any beer?”



Drake’s laconic response brought an amused twist to Logan’s lips. “This is a school,” Bobby said.



“So that’s a no?”



Bobby smiled broadly and pointed to the fridge. “We have chocolate milk.”



Logan growled and emerged from the pantry carrying a
six-pack of Dr Pepper bottles. He pulled two from the cardboard holder
and took a chair opposite Bobby. He made a small gesture with one
bottle.



“Want one?” he asked. When Bobby nodded, he added, “They’re warm.”



Without a word, Bobby reached across to take the
proffered bottle in hand. Air crackled and frost formed on his fingers
and the fluted glass. He gently blew on the neck.



“Not anymore,” Bobby said as he handed back the ice-cold Dr Pepper.



Logan popped the cap and took a long swallow. Just the way he liked it.



“Handy,” he conceded.



Bobby gave a nod of acknowledgment as he repeated the process with his own bottle.



“So,” Logan asked bluntly, with a sidelong
look to the boy from beneath lowered brows, as he held up his right
hand and, for show, popped the middle claw out, snikt, and in, snakt.
Bobby’s response was a choked spit-take that sent soda bursting
from his mouth and nose, followed by a desperate grab for paper towels
as he struggled to regain his self-possession. Through it all, Logan
hardly moved, apparently engrossed in an examination of his knuckles
for any sign of the blade’s extension.



When Bobby had settled back into his own chair, Logan
gave him his most dangerous smile and administered the coup de
grâce: “What’s with you and Rogue, eh?”






Xavier didn’t like Mount Haven. It gave him a headache.



He knew the reason: ultralow frequency harmonics whose
pitch was specifically calibrated to inhibit any form of extrasensory
perception, including his own telepathy. He could overcome it, of
course; that was no problem. It just took a little more effort and
exacted a more than equivalent cost. Far easier, while he was here, to
keep his thoughts and his powers to himself.



What disturbed him was the notion that the designers knew
what they were doing. It suggested a far greater familiarity with
mutants than most people realized. Over the past months since
Magneto’s incarceration Xavier had made discreet inquiries to
learn as much as possible about the government department responsible
for the establishment of the prison, but painfully few of those
questions had been answered. Perhaps the time had come to dig deeper.



Following the security protocols, his wheelchair had been
exchanged for a plastic counterpart back at the main entrance. Under
escort, he and Scott had proceeded to the cell block for the final
series of identity and security checks, this time under the supervision
of Magneto’s warder, Mitchell Laurio.



With the peremptory manner of a man used to instant obedience, Laurio waved Scott back from Xavier’s chair.



“I’ll take it from here,” he said.



Scott didn’t like the tone, didn’t like the man, and for a moment the two men bristled with challenges.



“Scott,” Xavier said quietly, forcefully, to
defuse the tension, “it’s all right. I won’t be
long.”



“Nice coat,” Laurio said to Scott over his
shoulder as he wheeled the chair toward the hatchway leading to the
umbilical tunnel.



“Thanks.” There was a little more of a flat,
prairie Nebraska twang to Scott’s voice, the kind you expect to
hear from a gunfighter marshall whose job was to bring order to a
lawless frontier.



“Nice shades.” Meaning “I’d like to take them away from you, pretty boy.”



“Thanks.” Meaning “You’re welcome to try.”



The hatch opened onto a small platform where both men had
to wait while the tunnel unfolded toward the cell itself, suspended in
the middle of the room. Even through the translucent walls of the tube,
it was possible to get a sense of the chamber’s immensity, and
especially the tunnel’s height above the floor. It was designed
to make visitors uncomfortable as they realized their lives depended on
the strength and integrity of the network of rings and cables that held
the tunnel aloft. Most quickened their pace. Laurio slowed his down,
his own way of emphasizing that he was in charge here. He was the man! He left Xavier alone with the prisoner.



Lehnsherr had his back to Xavier and didn’t turn around when he spoke.



“Have you come to rescue me, Charles?”



“Not today, Eric. I’m sorry.” There was
a quality of genuine regret to Xavier’s voice, as though someday
that circumstance might change and there would be a rescue.



“To what do I owe the pleasure?” Lehnsherr asked, and he sounded genuinely amused.



“The assassination attempt on the President. What do you know about it?”



“Just what I read in the newspapers.” He
turned to face his friend. “You shouldn’t even have to
ask.”



Xavier couldn’t hide his revulsion, he didn’t
try, as he beheld the bruises on Lehnsherr’s face. The way the
other man held his body revealed more eloquently than words that the
damage wasn’t simply confined to his face.



“What happened to you?” Xavier asked, aghast.



“I . . . fell,” Lehnsherr said without irony. “In the shower.”



“This isn’t funny!”



“No.” For emphasis, a shake of that leonine head.



“This is unconscionable.”



“I’m a terrorist, Charles. An enemy of
humanity. Given that status, and the circumstances of my capture,
it’s been made repeatedly clear to me that I should be . . .
grateful for my treatment.”



“Told by whom?” Xavier demanded, already
formulating his protests to the authorities. “Who is responsible
for this outrage?”



“You remember William Stryker?”



“I haven’t heard that name in years.”



“I’ve had frequent visits from him lately. His son, Jason, was once a student of yours, wasn’t he?”



“More a patient than a student. Unfortunately, I
wasn’t able to help him. At least not the way his father wanted
me to.”






At the mansion, Jones donned a set of Bose headphones and
cranked the volume, his flickering eyes changing channels faster than
ever.






The assault force closed on the mansion from three
directions, two by silenced helicopters flying a map-of-the-earth
profile that had the wheels of their Sikorsky Blackhawks literally brushing the treetops while the third unit used SCUBA
sleds to approach from the lake. The teams had been handpicked by
Stryker himself, culled from the finest special operations cadres on
Earth—American SEALs and Army Rangers, Great Britain’s Special Air Service, Russian Spetznatz,
German GSG-9, Israeli Pathfinders, and some Vietnamese. They’d
trained for this op for months, not only familiarizing themselves with
the layout of the mansion but also exhaustively learning how to protect
themselves from the myriad of powers and abilities they might
encounter. Now, with all the adult staff of Xavier’s School
absent from the estate, the time had come to put that preparation to
the test.



In quick and practiced succession, as the first units
rappelled to the ground from their hovering aircraft, all the
mansion’s power and communications lines were interdicted and the
security network neutralized. On command, the school would be
completely isolated. Even cellular and radio communication would be
off-line. From high overhead, an orbiting C-130 Hercules kept the
entire estate under constant electronic surveillance, using thermal
imagery to mark the position of the students. Only a couple of
signatures indicated contacts who were awake. For the rest, it was
already too late.






In the observation booth at Mount Haven, Scott leaned
closer to the phalanx of monitor screens. He’d seen the bruises,
too, and Xavier’s reaction to them, but there was no sound.



The guard at the console shrugged apologetically.



“It happens,” he said, by way of explanation, not for Magneto’s condition but for the lack of audio.



“Here?” Scott asked pointedly. “With this prisoner?”



“We got backups on backups,” Laurio growled.
“You got nothin’ to worry about. Joey, put in a call for a
techie. Let’s get this fixed before Movie Star here makes a
federal case.”



Both guards laughed, and Scott felt the hair prickle on
the back of his neck. This was wrong, and he called out to Xavier with
his thoughts as loudly as he could. He yelled inside his head, but the
figure he could see plainly on the screen gave not the slightest
indication that he heard any of it.






Lehnsherr picked up a pawn from the plastic chessboard on his cupboard, then exchanged it for a knight.



“And now you think that taking in the Wolverine will make up for your failure with Stryker’s son?”



He placed the pieces back on the board and turned slowly to look at his friend.



“You haven’t told him about his past, have you?”



Reluctantly Xavier shook his head. “I’ve put him on the right path, but Logan’s mind is still fragile.”



“Is it?” Lehnsherr obviously thought
differently. “Or are you afraid you’ll lose one of your
precious X-Men?”



Xavier didn’t reply at once. He looked distracted,
brow furrowing, head cocked slightly to the side in concentration as
though trying to make sense of some noise or other right at the edge of
his awareness. He blinked, marshaling his telepathic resources against
the low-frequency harmonics and the realization that the headache that
was merely infernal now would be brutal by the time he was done. But
this increased psychic sensitivity didn’t give him the answer he
sought. Instead it gave him insight into something far more serious.



“Eric,” he cried, shocked at the scraps of
memory he was perceiving and all their terrible implications,
“what have you done?”



“I’m sorry, Charles,” Lehnsherr
replied, swinging his hand across the chessboard to knock down both
kings at once. He was a proud man who had sworn long ago never again to
become a victim. That he had failed, utterly, was a hard admission to
make. “I . . . couldn’t help myself.”



“What have you told Stryker?” About my school, Xavier thought desperately, about my X-Men?
He recognized the source of that burr in his awareness that had been
bothering him, and called out a warning to Scott in turn, with all his
own considerable strength.



“Everything,” Lehnsherr said with the simple finality of a death sentence.



Both men reacted to a faint hiss from all around them.
From apertures on every wall a cloud of mist could be seen flooding
into the cell.



Xavier had time for one last, desperate outcry—“Scott!”—before oblivion claimed him.






On the monitors, Scott saw Xavier lunge forward in his
chair, heard a faint echo of that call in his thoughts, watched his
mentor collapse. It was over in seconds.



“What the hell?” he cried.



He looked up, heard an almost inaudible pop, and
reacted to the impact of something small striking the middle of his
chest. He didn’t know what it was, but that didn’t matter
as his body reacted of its own accord to this sudden and unexpected
ambush.



He quickly registered a new presence in the room. A young
woman, Asian, beautiful, wearing a guard uniform and carrying a dart
pistol. That told him they wanted him alive. In that same instant, he
also assumed that the dart hadn’t done its job, working on the
presumption they’d want to neutralize him as quickly and
efficiently as they did Xavier. It probably hadn’t been strong
enough to penetrate his leather coat and his uniform beneath. He knew
they wouldn’t make that mistake twice. He had to act first.



All these thought processes occurred in the split instant
it took him to complete his turn. He identified the woman as the
primary threat, and he wasn’t overly gentle with his response. He
tapped a control on the wing of his visor, the ruby quartz depolarized,
and a beam of scarlet force exploded through the lens.



For the woman, it was like being hit by a battering ram.
He caught her full in the belly, doubling her over and hurling her into
the wall behind her. The whiplash of the impact cracked her skull
against a projection and she dropped to the floor, bloody and
unconscious from a nasty scalp wound. The same beam shattered the
pistol and knocked off her lightly tinted sunglasses.



The guard at the console made a grab from behind, but
Scott elbowed him in the face, used the same fist to deliver a sharp
jab that dropped this adversary from the fight. That left Laurio and
his partner.



A snap shot of optic blasts took care of the partner, but
Laurio proved a lot faster than Scott expected from a man of his bulk.
He tackled Scott before the young man could bring his eyes to bear.
Laurio had seen how Scott manipulated the beams, and he was doing
everything he could to keep the mutant’s hands away from his
visor. Without the power, Laurio likely figured this to be an easy
fight.



Now, though, it was his turn to be surprised.
Scott’s slim and rangy figure was as deceptive in its own way as
Laurio’s. There was a wiry strength to him that matched the
guard’s, and a willing ability to take punishment. Laurio
delivered a couple of hard shots to the body that were usually good
enough to take the fight out of anyone, but all Scott did was wince
with the shock and hit back just as hard.



Unnoticed in the struggle, the woman—Yuriko
Oyama—stirred. Her wound had stopped bleeding and, covered now
with fresh skin, was healing with a speed reminiscent of Wolverine.



Scott used a knee to lever Laurio aside, quickly rolling
the other way to yank a nightstick from the belt of the guard. Both men
came to their feet together, but Scott had the advantage as he hammered
the handle of the stick into the pit of Laurio’s gut. The bigger
man staggered, gasping for breath, and Scott followed up with a
roundhouse swing to the jaw that drew blood from mouth and nose as it
threw the guard against the wall.



Instinct warned of another attack, a fresh threat;
training prompted an instantaneous response. But quick as Scott was,
Yuriko was quicker as she slapped the nightstick from his grasp. Scott
gasped in pain as if he’d just been hit by a bar of steel. In
blinding succession, she struck him in the hands and forearms and body,
leaving him unable to defend himself actively with his own martial
skills or his optic blasts. He wasn’t sure how this had happened;
he knew how hard he’d hit her, was certain when she fell that she
was out for the duration. Yet here she was, attacking him, seemingly in
better shape than ever.



Without pause, she set herself and launched a sweeping,
flying kick for his head. He saw it coming, tried to avoid it, watched
her compensate impossibly in midair, felt a murderous shock to the side
of his skull as her boot connected. On the way down, she gave him
another kick for good measure.



She reached down to check his throat pulse, satisfying
herself that it remained strong, then turned to the monitors to check
on Xavier. With a smile of triumph, she threaded her fingers together
and cracked her knuckles. Mission accomplished.






Inside the cell, Eric Lehnsherr watched his old friend
fall. The gas had been specially mixed for Xavier’s genetic
structure. It was effective against Lehnsherr, too, but it just took a
little longer.



He coughed, thinking as he did about every time he had
seen the white cloud pour from the vents of the “showers”
that claimed so many at Auschwitz, remembering the feel of lifeless
flesh still warm beneath his fingers as he and the other Sonderkommando
dragged the dead from gas chamber to crematoria. The hair was cut from
their heads, the gold was pried from their teeth. Everything that was
perceived to be of value was taken from them, before their wholesale
murder and afterward. Especially their dignity.



Never again, he had sworn then.



He knew his captors thought that the most hollow of boasts.



He also knew he would live to make them regret it.



“I’m sorry, Charles,” he said with his
last conscious breaths. “You should have killed me when you had
the chance.” Then he looked toward the distant observation booth,
but the face that marched into his mind’s eye was
Stryker’s. “So should you,” he finished, and then he
let his own consciousness go.



* * *



At the mansion, the cavalcade of images cascading before
Jones’ eyes suddenly and unexpectedly paused. Something else had
caught his attention, an image on the screen but having nothing
whatsoever to do with it. Jones peered closely at the screen, then
clambered up the back of the couch to see who’d entered the room
behind him.



It was a man dressed just like the commandos Jones watched on TV.
Black from head to toe, face decorated with camouflage paint and a knit
wool balaclava. Battle fatigues, combat boots, weapons and equipment
harness, night-vision goggles. His name, though Jones didn’t know
it, was Lyman. He was in command of the assault force.



Finding himself facing a boy who was barely a teenager, Lyman wavered.



Wondering if this was some prank, or test, or maybe a new
teacher, Jones swung his legs over the couch and padded, barefoot and
in pajamas, toward the stranger.



“Hi,” he said. He wasn’t afraid. In this mansion, he truly believed he had nothing to be afraid of.



His eyes widened slightly in disbelief as, without a word in response, Lyman pulled a pistol from its holster and fired.



Jones felt a sting in his neck, grabbing at it
reflexively in time to pull free the tranquilizer dart but not before
the drugs took effect. He collapsed to the floor, his eyes fluttering,
the TV changing channels so fast behind him that the flickering images registered more like static.



Lyman used hand signals to motion the rest of his team forward. Silently, weapons leveled, they spread throughout the mansion.



* * *



In the kitchen, Logan sat slumped deep in his chair.
Until tonight, he hadn’t slept since leaving Alkali Lake, and the
nightmare that had sent him wandering through the mansion had been
worse than a knockdown, drag-out bar fight. As a consequence, his
healing factor was so busy fixing the damage that, even though he
looked awake and was carrying on a decent conversation, he was mostly
in a kind of hibernation. Whatever enhanced awareness he possessed
right now was limited to this room and the boy across the table. Even
that was pretty piss poor.



They quickly polished off one six-pack of soda, Logan
chugging four while Bobby was still nursing his second, at the same
time picking at the mostly melted remnants of his container of ice
cream.



“My parents think this is a prep school.”



“Hey,” Logan said pleasantly, amused that he
was coherent since he was speaking through a mental haze that put a
pea-soup fog to shame, “lots of prep schools have their own
campus, dorms, kitchens.”



“Harrier jets? The Blackbird?”



“It’s a free country.”



Logan leaned back in his chair, establishing a balance so
precarious that Bobby was sure he would fall. He thought of saying
something, thought better of it. Logan struck him as the kind of guy
who always knew precisely what he was doing.



“So,” Logan growled, “you and Rogue, eh?”



“Marie,” Bobby corrected.



“Whatever.”



“It’s not what you think.” Logan
quirked an eyebrow, making Bobby wonder with a suddenly racing heart
just what the man thought. “I mean,” he stammered, closing
his eyes in misery, “I’d like it to be. . . .”



Which, from the look he got now, could not have been more totally the wrong thing to say if he’d tried.



“It’s just,” he explained hurriedly,
sure that he was making things worse with every word, but having no
idea how to stop or make things right, “that it’s not
easy—when you want to be closer to someone, but . . . you can’t
be. Y’ know?” He paused, utterly miserable as Logan’s
expression changed and sharpened before his eyes. He’d screwed
up, big time, no doubt of that at all. “You probably don’t
understand.”



Logan wasn’t listening to the boy anymore, and he
wasn’t in hibernation, either. He knew exactly what was happening
and he was furious at himself for allowing it.



There was a green dot right in the center of Bobby’s forehead. The boy hadn’t noticed.



Bobby yelped in terror and sprang back from the table as
one set of Logan’s claws extended and slashed through the air
right in front of where he sat. They both heard a small clink, and a dart, sliced perfectly in two, dropped into the ice cream.



The targeting laser shifted at once from Bobby to Logan
as Logan erupted from his chair. Too late the intruder realized his
fatal mistake. He’d been thrown off by Logan’s size,
especially slouched so deeply in the kitchen chair. He assumed he was
dealing with a pair of students.



He had a submachine gun, a Heckler & Koch MP5, and
managed to squeeze off a round before Logan reached him. Good shot,
too; the bullet grazed Logan’s shoulder. He barely noticed as he
grabbed the weapon’s barrel, forcing it upward as the intruder
squeezed the trigger on full auto. Bullets peppered the ceiling and
walls. Bobby sensibly dived for cover beneath the table, and the
temperature of the room turned Arctic.



Without realizing what he’d done, Bobby generated a
cold so intense that it overwhelmed all the heat signatures in the
room. Aboard the circling Hercules, the remote observers suddenly
couldn’t tell what was happening there.



Logan wrenched the gun from the other man’s hands
and flung it aside. They traded punches, to no effect, but the man was
able to grab a combat knife from its scabbard on his vest. He was
bigger than Logan and possibly stronger. Their struggle had given him
the advantage of height and leverage, and he used both to push the
gleaming blade straight for Logan’s eye. The man’s gaze
flickered slightly, to acknowledge the sight of the gash across
Logan’s shoulder—which was healing rapidly. But mainly he
concentrated on the task at hand: Kill the enemy.



Then he realized he could see that same flat, utterly
merciless expression in Logan’s eyes, and he knew in that awful
moment that it was over, that he’d never had a chance, that up
till now, Logan had been trying to take him alive.



He heard a snikt from the hand he couldn’t see and felt an awful, stabbing pain in his chest that reached all the way to his heart . . .



. . . and felt no more.





 







Chapter

Seven




In Kitty Pryde’s dreams, the Cubs were sweeping the
Yankees for the World Series in straight shutouts, Sammy Sosa was
making people forget that Babe Ruth had ever existed, and she and her
mom and her dad had front-row field-level seats for every game, right
behind the Cubs dugout. Her folks were together again, they were a
family, and her life was back the way she wanted it. She watched Derek
Jeter whiff a fastball straight up into the air. She knew from that
moment of contact it was coming for her, and she leaped to her feet,
eyes on the ball, glove poised to grab it.



But she started to lose it in the sun. She squinted her
eyes as she’d been taught, but she couldn’t filter out that
wicked glare. She also couldn’t understand why the sun was
turning green. Then, to make matters worse, somebody grabbed her across
the face, a gloved hand covering mouth and nose, choking off her cries
of excitement as they turned to protests, choking off her air.



She lashed out at him, still determined to catch the
ball, but the emerald radiance was brighter, unbearably so, and next to
it in the sky, bigger than anything she’d ever seen up there, she
saw a gun.



Her dream popped like a soap bubble and she came
instantly, totally awake, one part of her mind automatically cataloging
everything around her while her active consciousness came up to speed.



She was in her dorm room at Xavier’s, which she
shared with Tracy Cassidy. It was night. The lights were out, except
for right around the two girls, and they were no longer alone. Two men,
one looming over her, the other over Tracy. Both wearing combat gear,
full commando rig with night-vision goggles and laser sights on their
weapons. The laser was what she’d reacted to.



Both men were bringing their pistols up to shoot.



Tracy screamed.



In terms of raw decibels, a military jet on full
afterburners would have been quieter. The cry covered the full range of
the ultra-high-frequency spectrum, and it went through the surrounding
ears like a shower of white hot needles. Glass shattered throughout the
room—not only lightbulbs and mirrors but the focusing lenses of
the soldiers’ lasers and their goggles as well. Siryn was living
up to her name and then some, generating a sound so powerful it
overwhelmed the anechoic baffles built into the walls of her room to
protect the rest of the school and students from just such an incident.






Down the hall, where the boys lived, Peter Rasputin and
Jamie Madrox found themselves jolted awake. Alone in the room he shared
with Bobby Drake, John Allardyce flailed so wildly against unseen
enemies that he pitched himself out of bed. The same went for Marie and
every other student in the school.



Nobody yet understood the reason for Tracy’s
outcry, so in these first moments of alarm and confusion, the general
reaction wasn’t charitable. Yes, Tracy sounded terrified. So what
else was new? That was why her room was sound proofed. That was also
why Kitty was her roommate; her own phasing power gave her a measure of
protection against Siryn’s sonic powers.






As for the assault force, they knew then they’d
lost the element of surprise. No more time for subtlety. Time to shift
into overdrive and apply brute force, to take down the kids before they
could muster sufficient wits to resist. The problem for them was, even
with ear protectors, they found themselves almost as incapacitated by
Siryn’s outburst as their targets.



The difference was only a matter of moments here, moments there. But that difference proved critical.



As suddenly as the sound began, it stopped—Siryn had run out of breath.



Before she could draw another, one of the commandos
snap-fired his dart gun. The drug’s effect was instantaneous; she
was out cold before her body even began its collapse back onto her bed.



Both men turned as one to Kitty, who pitched herself
right through her bed in a clumsy dive that sent her staggering toward
and then through the floor and nearest wall. They had no shot against a
target who’d turned intangible, and then, just like that, it
didn’t matter, as the door to the room burst open to reveal the
bare-chested Peter Rasputin.






Peter’s big brother was Russian Air Force, part of
the Federation space program, and more than a few neighbors’ sons
had served their tour in Afghanistan; he knew soldiers, and he knew how
to handle himself when there was trouble.



The moment he registered the armed intruders in
Tracy’s room, even as the two commandos raised and fired their
weapons, he triggered his own power. In the doorway, before their
shocked and disbelieving eyes, he grew, quickly becoming too big for
the opening. His pajama shorts, which he wore loose and extrasized for
this very reason, stretched to the breaking point. Beneath his feet,
the floorboards groaned as his mass increased to match his new size.
His skin changed in color and texture, acquiring the sheen of polished
chrome. More importantly, however, his flesh took on the actual density
of metal, until it was transformed completely into a kind of organic
armor that possessed the tensile strength of steel.



For all the good they did, the darts that struck his chest might have been spitballs.



With gleaming gunmetal eyes he looked to where Siryn lay
sprawled on her bed. He looked back at the two commandos as they
grabbed for their submachine guns.



No one heard the sound of firing, and thanks as well to
the soundproofing and thickened walls, none of the bullets left the
confines of the room. That couldn’t be said for the commandos
themselves. Peter’s code name was Colossus, and with strength to
rival his classical namesake, he put both men right through the wall
and into the hallway outside.



A moment later Colossus himself emerged, Siryn cradled
protectively in his arms so that they formed a steel shell around her.
He heard voices and commotion, registered bare feet instead of boots,
and turned a corner to find a couple of the younger students huddled in
an alcove. A brilliant light speared through the windows just beyond
them, and the glass panes shuddered under the force of the downdraft
from the rotors of a Sikorsky AH-64 Apache attack helicopter as it
muscled into position right outside.



For a moment, Colossus and the kids just stood there,
striking a classic deer-in-the-headlights pose, none of them sure
whether the spotlight would be followed by gunfire, all of them fearing
the worst. Colossus reacted first, leaping forward to put his body
between the gunship and the youngsters, wondering as he did so if even
his armored form could withstand the impact of depleted-uranium
“tank buster” shells from the Apache’s fearsome 30mm
chain gun. That cannon could shoot right through the mansion, punching
holes as big as he was as easily as through rice paper.



“This way!” he bellowed, cursing
himself royally as the kids looked at him, uncomprehending. In all the
excitement, he’d spoken in Russian. “This way,” he
repeated in English, gesturing for the nearest set of stairs.
“Go, go, go!”



The light behind him didn’t move, but that provided
little solace. He’d already marked at least three more from
directions that told him the mansion was surrounded. Common sense told
him there had to be more troops. There was no safety above ground. And,
he feared, precious little chance of reaching the escape tunnels below.
But he had to try.






In the kitchen, Bobby Drake refused to move, refused to
breathe, refused to think. If he didn’t do the first, maybe Logan
wouldn’t remember he was here. If he didn’t do the last, he
wouldn’t have to face what he’d just seen.



He heard the snakt of claws being retracted,
watched Logan lower the man’s body to the floor. The claws had
left their bloody mark on the refrigerator door, and the body left a
trail before forming a puddle on the floor.



He’d never seen this in real life, only in movies
or on the tube. Even when he was watching the news, it didn’t
seem real. They were just images, without any tangible impact.



But he’d heard the huff of the man’s
breath as Logan struck and knew with awful finality that the man would
never draw another. He’d watch the tension flow out of the
man’s body until he had no more substance than a rag doll and,
worse, had watched Logan’s face while it happened. He saw no
mercy there at all, and suddenly what he wanted more than anything was
to be in his bed at home, cradled in the eternal security of his
mother’s arms while she sang him to sleep with a tune she’d
made up for him alone.



He was crying, ashamed to show such weakness, yet
strangely thankful that this was his body’s only instinctive
reaction. The tears blurred his vision, and when he wiped his eyes,
crumbling the frozen water off his cheeks as they formed an icicle
mustache, he saw only the body of the soldier. Logan had gone.



He didn’t jump when Logan placed his hand on his
shoulder, but the face he turned to the older man had lost any pretense
of adulthood. It was a child’s face, desperately scared.



“We’ve gotta go,” Logan said simply.



Again without a thought, never knowing how high his stock
was rising in Logan’s opinion, Bobby pulled himself out from
under the table and fell into step behind his companion.



Without running, they moved quickly through the ground
floor. Bobby had no idea whether they were simply trying to escape or
rescue the others. Logan didn’t offer any enlightenment, and
Bobby understood that his job right now was to follow Logan’s
lead and do as he was told. End of story. He heard the sounds of booted
feet all around them, men shouting orders counterpointed by the
higher-pitched cries of kids in a panic. He thought he heard shooting,
he knew he heard a crash that sounded to him like a wrecking ball
making contact. Then suddenly, at the short hallway leading to the
servants’ back stairs, Logan slapped him to a dead stop with an
arm like steel rebar across his chest.



“Stay here,” Logan snapped, and then he charged.



Bobby couldn’t resist a peek, and yielding to that temptation made him more scared than ever.



Two troopers were carrying Jones down the stairway. Another few waited below in the hallway.



Logan turned the scene into a demolition derby. A fist
backed by adamantium bones smashed one man’s face and hurled the
man aside, blinded and broken and bloody. Momentum carried him into the
main body of the group, and a piercing shriek of surprise and pain told
Bobby that Logan was using his claws.



There was nothing he could do to help Logan, not here,
not in this kind of scrap, short of maybe freezing everybody in place.
But then what would he do if more bad guys showed up, with Logan
occupied?



At the same time, he wasn’t prepared to hide
anymore, the way he had before in the kitchen. One of the
school’s rules—written and unwritten—was that the
older kids looked out for the youngsters.



He didn’t think about what he was going to do; that
would have iced him in place more effectively than his power. He lunged
across the hallway, straight for the servants’ elevator,
expecting with every one of the three steps it took him to feel the
shock of a bullet to the back. He was so totally out of breath when he
made it, and squeezed so deeply into the recessed alcove, that when the
door slid open behind him he tumbled flat on the floor and almost
couldn’t get up.



At the other end of the hall, Logan was peppered with
anesthetic darts. They didn’t even slow him down. From above on
the stairs, one of the men carrying Jones opened up with his sidearm, a
10mm automatic, but only managed to fire a couple of rounds before
Logan took off the barrel and his forearm with a single sweep of his
claws.



Logan never stopped moving, shifting from one adversary
to the next with quick and deadly efficiency. He was a born scrapper,
and in a crowd like this the advantage was all his. Everyone he faced
was an enemy, whereas the soldiers had to be careful lest they cut down
some of their own. The smart play for them would have been to withdraw
and try to cut him down with automatic weapons or explosives, but they
were boxed in by the tight confines of the hallway and there was no
time for them to do more than react purely on reflex and training.



His reflexes were better by far, and their training didn’t begin to prepare them for what they faced tonight.



He didn’t care if they cut him, if they shot him;
he’d bleed a while and then get better. By contrast, the blades
that were part of his hands cut body armor and flesh and bone with
equal facility, and if he chose not to use the blades, his unbreakable
bones would do almost as much damage.



The fight didn’t last a minute longer. When it was
done, Logan was the only one left standing, one of a precious few left
breathing.



He saw a dart sticking from his arm and pulled it out,
flexing his fist and clenching it to make sure there were no ill
effects. He found another in Jones and plucked it free as well. He
pressed his fingertips to the boy’s neck to confirm what his
other enhanced senses had already told him. The pulse was slow, but
strong and regular. The boy was asleep, otherwise unharmed.



He didn’t bother looking back to where he’d
left Bobby; he knew the older boy was gone. Hearing told him the
elevator was engaged, scent told him which floor he’d gone to.



Logan hauled Jones off the stairs by an arm and pitched
him across his shoulders in a fireman’s carry. Before the boy was
settled in place, Logan was moving up the stairs, two and three at a
time. His senses had also given him a pretty decent picture of the
opposition’s numbers and general location. There was no time to
waste, no margin for mistakes.






On the third floor, Bobby stepped out into chaos. The
youngest kids, and some of the older ones, were panicking as wind
pounded the roof and windows around them. Someone was screaming that
the glass was going to shatter; another collapsed to his knees on the
floor, face upraised and howling, certain a plane was going to crash
right through the wall and bring the building down on their heads. The
helicopters were perched outside the windows, using their million-plus
candlepower spot lamps to light up the interior of the house in
absolutes of black and white. The glare was so intensely bright that
everyone was forced to close their eyes, just to keep from being
permanently blinded.



Bobby grabbed for the first figure within reach. It turned out to be John Allardyce.



“What the hell’s happening?” John
demanded between racking coughs that doubled him over. Somewhere
he’d swallowed a lot of smoke, and he didn’t much like it.
Smoke was useless to John without a flame.



“Guys with guns,” Bobby said, because that was all he knew for sure and trusted himself to say.



“No shit, Sherlock. We got a war here, we’re being invaded!”



“We’re a school!” Bobby protested.



“Try telling them!”



“We’ve got to help the kids!”



“Peter’s up ahead. They’re gathering around him.”



“John, where’s Rogue? Have you seen her?”



“I don’t know. Man, I didn’t see you till you grabbed me!”



“I’m going to find her.”



John opened his mouth to protest, but Bobby was already
two rooms down the hall. He didn’t want to follow. He saw no
percentage in being a stupid hero, especially under these
circumstances, but he liked even less the idea that Bobby might think
him a coward. The fact that Bobby would never conceive of such a thing
didn’t enter John’s head.



Muttering and grumbling, he set out after his roommate, bulling his way against the tide of frightened schoolchildren.






The floor was trembling under the approach outside of a
Sikorsky Blackhawk. It took station a dozen feet above the roof, and
another assault team rappelled to the target. They weren’t
playing nice anymore. They used shotguns and shaped-charge grenades to
blast skylight windows from their frames, and shock-wave charges to
stun everyone in the rooms below.



The troopers burst into the hall like sharks attacking a
school of baitfish. One triggered a taser at the closest student, a
young Asian girl, and sent a burst of electricity down the double wires
into her back. To his surprise, Jubilation Lee didn’t fall. She
pivoted on one foot, dropping into a shooting crouch of her own with
her right arm outstretched, and shot that jolt of electricity through
the air right back at him. The blast hit the trooper like the impact of
a semi, throwing him back against the wall so hard he left an indent of
his body deep enough to hold him upright. Out of the darkness nearby
came the sound of a dart gun as another trooper returned fire from
cover, and Jubilee dropped, unconscious.



In the neighboring wing, Peter Rasputin opened a hidden
panel in the hallway wainscoting, revealing a passage and stairwell lit
at intervals by emergency glow globes. Handing off Siryn to one of the
older students, he began ushering his charges inside. Speed was the
essence here. He had to clear the corridor before they were discovered
by any of the intruders.



“Hey, shorty!” he heard from behind him. He
thought at first it was one of the enemy and turned, ready to fight,
only to find himself facing a figure barely half his size. Without
another word, Logan handed over Jones.



“I can help you,” Colossus called after him.



“Help them!” came the reply. “You got your responsibilities, bub.”



Logan paused at a junction of the hallway. The beams of
two flashlights and a set of green targeting lasers splayed across the
wall. He waited a moment, then stepped out of sight around the corner.
The lasers went out, and Peter heard a couple of grunts, plus the sound
of falling bodies. One flashlight beam vanished as well, and the other
skewed wildly sideways before rolling into view along the floor.



“I have mine,” Logan finished quietly, stepping briefly into view. “Get going.”



Peter didn’t need to be told twice. There were no
other students in sight. He’d been running a head count of the
kids he was shepherding into the escape passage, and he knew he was
well short of the total. Who was just missing, who’d been
captured, he had no idea. He also knew, although this left him sick and
angry at heart, that he couldn’t go looking for them. As Logan
said, he had his responsibilities, and he would not abandon them.



He stepped through the doorway and locked it closed behind him.






Kitty Pryde didn’t bother with doors. She
didn’t need them. Intangible as a ghost, she raced through the
mansion, down to the main floor, where she found soldiers . . .



. . . through one of the classrooms, more soldiers . . .



. . . through the arboretum, more soldiers . . .



. . . through the billiard room where Cyclops would shoot
nine ball using his optic blasts instead of a pool cue, more soldiers .
. .



. . . through the hallway beyond, and right through the
body of one of the invaders before either of them knew quite what was
happening.



Kitty’s power allowed her to slip the molecules of
her own body through the valences of other physical objects. The
process was so quick that it had virtually no effect on the molecular
cohesion of those nonorganic solids, any more than the passage of
baseline human bodies would affect the air through which they travel.
Or, more accurately in her case, the vast emptiness of open space.



That wasn’t the case with electrical fields. Any
transit by Kitty created a momentary skitz in a power circuit, causing
a blink when it came to household wiring, leading to the occasional
disaster when she interfaced with higher-order electronics. She was
death to hard drives.



There was one other by-product, which her studies with
Xavier had only recently begun to explore, and that related to the fact
that the human body’s central nervous system is one huge
electrical network, linked to a supremely powerful biological computer.
Whenever she ghosted through a person, she caused much the same shock
with them that she did to a power circuit. The consequences depended on
how quickly she was moving and where the contact took place.



For the trooper, it was like being momentarily jammed
into a light socket. His world went white, just the way he’d read
about folks who’d survived lightning strikes, and for an instant
after it was over he thought that was what had happened. As a matter of
fact, he wasn’t altogether sure what had just happened. He had a vague sense of a girl popping out of a wall, then diving right through him.



His own reaction was automatic. Even as shock threw him
into a vertiginous spin toward the floor, he managed to snap off a
taser round after the girl. It was a spectacular shot, especially
considering the circumstances. He caught her dead center between the
shoulder blades—only the prongs at the end of the taser wires
didn’t strike living flesh at all. Instead they buried themselves
in the wall of the house, at the very instant the girl herself vanished
inside.






Upstairs, Rogue had found another girl to add to her
collection. Terrified, of course, huddled in a heap, face gleaming with
silent tears in the random splashes of brilliance thrown by the
circling helicopters and their damn spot lamps. Marie found herself
wishing, fervently, for some powers more appropriate to the name
she’d chosen for herself, Rogue—something akin to
Cyclops’ eye beams, or Jean’s telekinesis, or Storm’s
command of the weather. She wasn’t feeling picky; she just wanted
something to even the odds and maybe tear those gunships from the sky.



“Come on, honey,” she said instead, in her
best baby-sitter voice, projecting a strength and calm she didn’t
have as she gathered the girl to her breast, taking care to always keep
a layer of clothes between her own skin and the girl’s.



She was glad now that one of the first things she had
done on arrival at Xavier’s School was memorize the network of
hidden passages that honeycombed both the mansion itself and the
grounds. At the time she was just staying in character; after all, a
girl has to know how to slip away unnoticed for a night of private fun,
even if she never found the opportunity to try. Now that work was
paying off with interest, the passages enabling her to elude pursuit
and scoot her share of students to safety.



“In you go, girls,” she told them, “just like Storm taught us, ’kay?”



The girl in her arms was clinging like a limpet,
whimpering now along with her tears. Rogue was her lifeline, and she
couldn’t bear to be parted. Rogue didn’t have time for
this. They were too close to one of the upper floor’s big bay
windows. The longer they stayed, the greater the chance of being
spotted when one of the helicopters did a flyby and trained its
million-candlepower lamp into the house.



“Aren’t you coming?” the other girl asked. She was a Scots redhead of barely thirteen named Rahne Sinclair.



“I have to find someone first,” Rogue told
her. With a winning Highlander grin, Rahne pried the other girl’s
hands loose from Rogue’s neck, offering reassurances of her own
as she led the way into the passage.



“When you come out of the tunnels,” Rogue
told them both, “run straight to the first house you find. Tell
them there was a fire. Tell them to contact your folks. Whatever you
do, though, you don’t tell anyone you’re a mutant.
Okay?”



The girl nodded uncomprehendingly, but Rahne knew the
score. She’d take care of her classmate just fine. Rogue leaned
forward to brush a wisp of hair from the younger girl’s face. In
return, she got a brave attempt at a smile.



“Okay,” the girl said.



“You’ll be fine,” Rogue told her, and closed the secret panel behind them.



Quickly she scooted the length of the hallway. The walls
and floor, the very air, were trembling again as the helicopters made
another run on the mansion. She had to find cover before she was nailed
herself.



Through the infernal din, suddenly, unexpectedly, she
heard a familiar voice, someone she thought would be long gone from the
mansion by now.



“Rogue,” called John Allardyce.



“Rogue!” bellowed Bobby Drake, determined to make himself heard.



“Bobby,” she cried, startled to realize how
out-and-out delighted she sounded to see him safe and free. John had to
make do with just a nod of greeting.



“There anyone else?” she asked.



“I’m not sure,” Bobby replied.



“Petey Pureheart was looking after a crowd of
kids,” John said. “Outside of them, nada. Bad guys
galore.”



“Where’s Logan?” Rogue demanded. “He was s’posed to be looking after us!”



Bobby’s face twisted. She knew the look. It echoed
her own reaction to some of the things she’d seen Logan do in a
fight.



“What’s happened?” she said, grabbing
Bobby by the shirtfront. To save her life, Logan had let her imprint
him and his healing factor. Most of the memories that came with his
powers had thankfully faded over time, but under stress she still
manifested occasional residual flashes of his personality. “Where
is he?”



Bobby didn’t need to be asked twice. “He was downstairs,” he told her.



“This way,” she told them, intending to lead them back toward the secret passage.



Before she could move, an exterior lamp turned the hall
brighter than noonday. They saw two shapes vaguely outlined in the
glare, hanging outside the window. Immediately Rogue grabbed John,
Bobby grabbed Rogue, and they all tumbled around the corner in a heap
as an explosion shattered the leaded glass to bits, spraying the
corridor with splinters and debris. Right behind the blast came the
soldiers, targeting lasers tracing lines through the smoke, fingers
ready on the triggers. Each door they passed got the same treatment:
shotgun blasts to the hinges followed by a shot from a battering ram to
punch it open, a couple of stun grenades to incapacitate anyone inside,
sustained bursts from submachine guns to finish the job. Each room took
only seconds to clear, and they did the job with murderous, methodical
precision.



Without a word, the three young mutants decided that they
didn’t want to find out what would happen if they were found.
When the soldiers reached the corner, the kids were long gone.






Up aboard the Hercules, the technicians staffing the
sensor consoles were not happy. At the start of the incursion,
they’d had a clear picture of the mansion’s interior. They
knew precisely where the kids were.



Now, after a span of too few minutes, nothing was certain anymore.



They had troopers down all across the board, with varying
degrees of injury, and more than a few deaths. Worse for them, they had
gradually lost contact with a significant number of potential targets.
It didn’t take a rocket scientist to determine the reason: the
mansion must possess a number of sections that were comprehensively
shielded against remote sensing and imagery. The only way to be sure of
cleaning out the place would mean finding the access points and sending
teams into the tunnels. Trouble was, given mission parameters, that
wasn’t an option.



The only alternative would be to widen the search
parameters and try to pick the mutants up when they emerged onto the
surface. But that would mean significantly degrading the resources
available to monitor the prime target, Xavier’s mansion. Again,
given mission parameters, not an option.



Barring a miracle, any kids who’d escaped into the tunnels were pretty much free and clear.






Unaware of this, Peter Rasputin led his party into one of
the long tunnels burrowed deep beneath the estate. Its terminus was a
thick stand of woods outside Xavier’s holdings, a nature
preserve. He had no idea what would happen after that, or what would
become of a score of terrified, bedraggled children in their
nightclothes, with no money between them and no one close at hand they
could trust.



Right now, though, for Peter, that didn’t seem so
important. He just wanted to get them, and himself, out of danger, to a
place where no one would chase them or threaten them with guns. He
wanted a breather, time enough to gather his wits and take stock of
both the situation and his resources. Of the ultimate outcome, though,
he had no doubt.



Awful as things seemed now, in the end he was sure they’d work out all right.






In that regard, Bobby and John would give him the
argument of a lifetime. For them, as they hurried with Rogue down the
nearest flight of stairs, the order of the evening was that things that
were bad were constantly getting worse.



The mansion was crawling with troops, and from the sounds
they heard all around, they quickly realized that nobody was using
tranquilizer guns anymore. The bad guys were shooting bullets now, and
they weren’t being stingy with their ammunition.



Abruptly, Rogue stopped in her tracks, so suddenly the
others slammed into her from behind. Harsh words were formed, but none
were spoken. The sight before them wouldn’t allow it.



Rogue was standing amid a pile of bodies, all soldiers.



“Logan was here,” John commented unnecessarily, but even he felt small and vulnerable in the face of this carnage.



“This is old news,” Bobby said, reaching for
Rogue’s gloved hand. “We can’t stay here, Rogue,
we’re sitting ducks. We keep running after him like this,
we’ll just get ourselves in trouble.”



She didn’t reply, she didn’t move a muscle, so Bobby edged forward to look her in the face.



She was staring down at her chest. It was covered in
green dots. He looked up, following the beams of light to their source,
and found a team of soldiers in the far doorway, weapons leveled.



They never got a chance to fire. Logan saw to that.



He was on the gallery above them, and with a primal
scream that was so much more animal than human, he dropped on them like
the wrath of God unleashed, arms held wide, claws extended.



The soldiers didn’t stand a chance. Bobby
couldn’t watch this time any more than the last. Rogue
wouldn’t turn away. Logan was a part of her now, and would be
forever, the same as with everyone else she imprinted. She felt her own
fists flex just a little and felt an echo of the wild and untamable
creature she saw before her.



Something tweaked her attention. Her eyes flicked to the
side, and she caught a glimpse of a smile on John’s face and a
look to his eye that made her sad and scared all at the same time. John
was enjoying this. He wanted a piece of it for himself. It would be
fun.



A brace of lights hit the entrance from outside and
above, pinning Logan in their beams as the helicopters responded to
frantic calls for help down below. They didn’t wait for orders,
they wouldn’t have cared anyway; the moment their guns came to
bear, they opened fire, pockmarking the lawn with craters and
shattering the stone entrance to the mansion to powder. But their
target wasn’t there anymore.



“Go,” Logan told the kids, pushing them deep into the house. “Go, go, go!”



John found the nearest escape passage, opened the door,
then he and Bobby went leaping through at once. Rogue held back.
Imprinting Logan had left her own senses with a faint residue of what
Logan himself possessed, and she could hear soldiers closing on their
position from every side.



She called his name.



“Keep going,” he told her, and shunted her none too gently over the threshold.



“Logan,” she pleaded.



He shut the door in her face. And she was glad.



He figured at least twenty close at hand as he put his
back to the wall, but only a dozen of them lit him up with their
lasers. They didn’t fire right away, he didn’t care.



He popped both sets of claws, but their fire discipline held. Nobody pulled a trigger.



“You want a piece of me,” Logan raged, his
face twisted with a wild, untamable grin. “C’mon, boys,
take your best shot. You know you want to. Shoot me! And see who gets
to walk out of here alive!”



“No,” said someone new, with quiet authority.



“Not yet,” the figure finished, approaching
through the darkness. The voice was familiar, Logan recognized that at
the start, but he couldn’t find a name or face to match it.



“Wolverine? Is that you?” the man said,
closer still, the soldiers reluctantly moving apart to allow him past.
He was important to them, but also, and just as obviously, the man in
charge. They couldn’t refuse. Kill him, Logan sensed
instinctively, and this fight could well be won. “How long has it
been?”



The man paused, as if expecting an answer to his
greeting, his voice showing some good humor as he continued:
“Fifteen years? And you haven’t changed a bit. Me, on the
other hand . . .”



With that, William Stryker stepped into view. He wore
combat gear, just like his men, and in that attire his true calling was
more than plain.



“Nature.” He made a deprecating gesture. “It takes its toll.”



The scent rang bells, far more so than the face, yet try
as he might Logan couldn’t find the labels that would give these
random flashes of remembrance proper meaning.



The claws withdrew into their housings.



“What do you want?” Logan asked of him.



Stryker replied with a smile that would have done the Cheshire cat proud.






On the other side of the wall, Rogue stood unmoving in
the entrance to the secret passage, bitterly ashamed of the surge of
emotion that had swept through her as Logan closed the door. He’d
been a stand-up guy for her from the start, and this was how she repaid
him, by being happy that he stayed behind—because she felt an
echo in her own soul of the berserker rage and madness that possessed
his. It made her want to run away from him, more powerfully than any
impulse she’d ever felt. But being his friend, being true to her
name, she defied those expectations. She spit in their eye. Logan would
have done the same, but this response was purely hers, and that, too,
was why she chose to stay. They were alike, but they weren’t the
same.



Hands grabbed her arms. She shook them off.



“Wait,” she told the boys, who couldn’t believe their ears. “You’ve got to do something.”



“Damn straight,” John said hurriedly. “Run like hell while we’ve got the chance!”



“They’re going to kill him!”



That argument fell on totally deaf ears. Both boys had seen Logan in action. Neither believed such an outcome remotely possible.



“Yeah, right.” John scoffed for emphasis. “He can handle himself, Rogue. Let’s book!”



“Bobby,” she pleaded, “please!”
She was desperate now, determined, because when she said,
“They’re going to kill him,” the part of her that
resonated with him suggested that was something he desired.



All Bobby knew was that Logan was the scariest creature
he’d ever encountered. He was every nightmare that had ever had
come to life, and if he never met Logan again, he’d be haunted by
these memories for as long as he drew breath. In a way, he blamed Logan
for all that was happening tonight. The first time he came to the
mansion was when they were attacked by Magneto; now, the night of his
return, the Army. He was a walking invitation to disaster, and nothing
good would come of hanging with him. He also saw the way Rogue looked
at him, spoke of him, cared for him, and he hated him for holding the
place in her heart he wanted for himself.



Leave him. Let him find his own fate. That was the smart play. It was what he’d told them to do.






Stryker took a step closer to Logan, the men behind him
making adjustments to their stance and position so that he didn’t
block any shooter’s line of sight. One twitch from him, that
would be their cue to cut loose on full auto, with enough firepower to
turn anyone alive into hamburger. Another man, whose manner and bearing
marked him as an officer, put aside his rifle and set himself to make a
grab for Stryker and try to yank him clear if things went sour. Given
all Lyman had seen tonight of Logan’s handiwork, he suspected
that was a forlorn hope. He’d try regardless. That was his job,
to look after Stryker, and most likely die with him.



Logan saw the action. Loyalty like that couldn’t be
bought, he knew. His estimation of the other man went up a serious
notch.



If Stryker was a fraction of the man Logan judged him to
be, he had to know the danger, but he made no acknowledgment of it. He
played the scene as if they were two old companions, possibly even
friends, reuniting after a long and enforced separation. No denying his
courage, that was sure, and Logan’s assessment of him went up
another notch as well.



“I must admit,” Stryker continued, carrying
on this eerily incongruous conversation, “this is the last place
I thought I’d ever see you, Wolverine. I didn’t realize
Xavier was taking in animals.” A pause to let the barb sink in.
Logan didn’t react. “Even animals as . . . unique as
you.”



“Who are you?”



“Don’t you remember?”



Logan blinked, wondering what was wrong with the air. A
mist was forming between him and Stryker, the temperature plunging so
rapidly that one breath was normal, the next gusting a cloud of icy
condensation.



On the other side of the mist, Stryker reached out a hand
to encounter a wall of gleaming ice that divided the hallway from floor
to ceiling, wall to wall, forming a protective bulwark between the
mutant and Stryker. The men around him stirred, suddenly anxious that
they might become entrapped in ice themselves. But nobody broke ranks.



Logan considered using his claws. No matter how thick the
wall, he could speedily turn it into ice cubes. But first he had to
deal with the damn kids.



The look on his face caused John to take a reflexive,
cautionary step backward and made Bobby thankful he was inside the
passage, his hands held flat against the wall to generate and sustain
his ice field. Rogue didn’t flinch, didn’t fade. She met
him eye to eye with a will as stubborn as his own.



“Logan,” she said. “Come on.”



“Do as you’re told, girl. Get outta here.
I’ll be fine.” He used a tone and manner that had always
gotten instant results. She returned both in equal measure.



“But we won’t.” Then, more quietly, “Please!”



Stryker wasn’t sure what was happening. The wall
was translucent enough to suggest to him that Logan was no longer
alone, but it didn’t allow him to see how many others had joined
him or who they were. With swift, decisive movements, he plucked a
penetrator grenade from Lyman’s harness and jammed it into the
ice. Lyman immediately pulled him back and around, to shield his
commander’s body with his own. The other troopers shielded
themselves and scrambled for cover as best they could in the seven
seconds that passed between Stryker pulling the pin and the bomb
detonating. The shock resounded through the confined space, leaving
those closest to the blast partially deafened, their bodies feeling
like they’d just been pummeled by jackhammers. The force of the
shaped charge went straight into the ice, filling the air with frozen
splinters as it punched through the wall like a spear.



When the mist cleared, the wall lay in broken chunks, filling the hallway and partially covering some of the men.



On the other side, though, was empty floor. Of Wolverine, and the others Stryker had seen, there was no sign.






John led the way, even though Logan could see a lot
better in the dark. The boys wouldn’t admit it aloud, but both of
them preferred having him between them and the bad guys.



At the first junction, John went left.



“John, no,” Bobby called after him.



“This is where Petey and the others went.”



“I’ve got a better idea. This way.”



The other direction ended at the garage. Like everything
else about the mansion, there was a public space and a private one.
Upstairs, in a carriage house set a little apart from the main
buildings, was the usual group of SUVs and vans, plus
the professor’s vintage Rolls-Royce. The basement held a far more
eclectic and personal assortment of vehicles, including Scott’s
collection of bikes. Some looked normal, others were as wildly modified
and revolutionary in conception and design as the Blackbird.



The choice for tonight was a sports car, blindingly quick
but so well crafted and balanced that it could handle the local
roads—which were narrow and wickedly winding—as though it
were traveling on rails. The confines would be cramped, but it would
carry them all.



John dropped into the driver’s seat with the announcement, “I’m driving.”



Logan yanked him clear as though he weighed nothing.
“In your dreams, smart-ass,” he growled. “Boys in the
back.”



Rogue rode shotgun, Bobby making sure to sit behind her.



“This is Scott’s car,” he said.



“Oh, yeah?” Logan didn’t sound impressed, but actually he was.



“We’ll need keys.”



Logan’s reply was the snikt of a single claw
extending. He stabbed it through the ignition, twisted some wires
together, got a spark, got a start, and they were on their way.



There was an evacuation tunnel for vehicles as well,
giving them access directly to Graymalkin Lane, the road that ran along
the estate’s border. A left turn would take them to the
neighboring town of Purdy’s Station and the interstate, 684, that
linked New York City with the main east-west
highway—I-84—that bisected Connecticut and the southern
tier of New York State. Turning right put them into the heart of
Fairfield County, lots of woodland roads so gnarly and poorly signed
that even the locals got lost occasionally. It was hilly country,
constantly dropping into little ravines and hollows, which made it
difficult to establish sustained radio or cellular communication.



Logan went for it like a shot, taking the turns at speeds
that made the three passengers grab for their seat belts and then hold
them tight. He drove without lights.



“Uhh,” Bobby tried, swallowed, tried again. “You could maybe slow down, you know.”



“Like hell,” John retorted. “Go faster, dude, get us the hell away from here, please!”
He finished in savage mimicry of Rogue’s plea, both to Bobby and
to Logan himself. “Jesus wept,” he said, more to himself
than anyone else, “what the hell was that back there?”



Rogue caught a flicker from Logan’s eyes, his
fingers working the leather-wrapped steering wheel and making it creak
with tension.



“Stryker,” he said after a while, as at least one penny dropped in memory. “His name is Stryker.”



“Who’s he?” Rogue asked.



His mouth stretched ever so slightly into a wry grimace, his head shook the smallest fraction.



“I don’t know,” he confessed, to her alone. “I don’t remember.”



She huddled deep in her seat, and he noticed that she was
playing with something on her wrist: his old dog tags. He’d given
them to her as a keepsake before leaving for Alkali Lake.



Seeing his look, following it to her hand, she unwrapped them from her wrist and held them out to him.



He took them, rubbing his thumb over the embossed letters
like Aladdin did his lamp, hoping for his own kind of genie and three
wishes to unlock all the secrets of his life, never
considering—now or ever—that perhaps those secrets
weren’t something he should see.



He shifted gears and heard a yelp of shock and protest from John as his elbow clipped the boy in the cheek.



“What’s your problem, kid?” he growled
as John wriggled his head and an arm between the front seats, reaching
for the center console.



“What are you doing, John?” Rogue demanded in
that clippy voice that meant she’d been pushed too far and was
ready to do some real damage.



“Too much silence, dudes. Majorly uncomfortable. Don’t like it.”



He pressed a button and the speakers erupted with what
passed for music from a techno band that none of them had ever heard of
and, after the first few seconds, didn’t want to. The car’s
sound system was as superb as its engine and handling, the choice of
cds was truly deranged, inspiring impassioned and derogatory comments
galore from the kids. Logan didn’t say a word. His own tastes ran
mainly toward roadhouse R&B and classic jazz, with one exception
that he’d never been able to figure out, an affinity that went
back as far as his memory for the Japanese koto.



Of course, being the ultimate gearhead, Scott had built
himself a system only he could understand. The damn controls
weren’t even marked. Probably had an operator’s manual the
size of the Manhattan phone book. The more John tried to kill the
music, the louder it became. Finally, when Logan was on the verge of
ending their torment with a swipe of his claws, the boy managed to find
the eject button. Only this switch had nothing whatsoever to do with
the music. Instead, a tray popped into view, revealing an oval-shaped
disk about as small as your basic computer mouse.



With a grumble of righteous exasperation Rogue pressed another switch on the console . . .



. . . and they heard only road noise once more, and the wind rushing past.



She and Logan exchanged looks, he offering silent thanks
for her saving the day, while she thanked him in return for his
forbearance. Her fist, the arm that had worn Logan’s dog tags,
was tightly clenched, the same way he held it when he popped his claws.
If she’d had claws to go with the residue of Logan’s
personality and powers she still possessed, John would have been shish
kebab ages ago.



John noticed none of this. He was too engrossed in his
new toy. He found another button and when he pressed it found himself
holding a two-way communication device.



“Guys,” he announced, “I don’t think this has anything to do with the CD player.”



Logan plucked it from the boy’s hand. John’s
survival instincts were working overtime. For once he didn’t
protest as Logan examined the device. Whatever the infuriating
idiosyncrasies of the car’s sound system, this at least made some
sense to him.



“Where are we going?” John asked after awhile, totally lost.



“Storm and Jean are in Boston” was Logan’s terse reply. “We’ll head that way.”



“My folks live in Boston,” Bobby said.



“Good,” said Logan.



Rogue heard him, but she wasn’t really paying
attention. She was looking at Logan’s hands, skin covered past
both wrists with what could easily be mistaken for dried paint, caked a
layer or two more thickly between the knuckles, where the claws went
into their housings. Her eyes saw more than she wanted, her sense of
smell revealed more than she could bear, and she looked down at her own
hands, wondering suddenly how her sleeping gloves had gotten so badly
shredded. Too much skin showing, she thought, I have to be really careful about touching anyone. Her hands were trembling with the memory of what she’d seen him do.



“Don’t worry, darlin’,” she heard
him say, again in that quiet, private voice that was for her alone,
“it’s not mine.”



When their eyes met, she gave a start of surprise, her
mouth forming a tiny O of amazement. She was so used to feeling
residues of his own ferocious—and murderous—passions, she
found it hard to believe when she saw reflected in his eyes an echo of
the pain and misery she felt. And strangely, she found that reassuring.
It made her feel better—to know that he wasn’t a monster
after all. That man Stryker had called him an animal, had called him
Wolverine instead of by name, but Rogue knew different.



His name was Logan. And he was human to the core.





 







Chapter

Eight




The mansion itself was the tip of the proverbial iceberg.
The bulk of Xavier’s School was hidden below ground, in a complex
that stretched deep into the earth and sprawled every which way beneath
the estate, employing technology as revolutionary as the design of the Blackbird.
The schematics of the power source alone made the physicists on
Stryker’s analysis team weep with frustration. More than
anything, they wanted to get their hands on this equipment, and none of
them was happy to discover that their employer had other priorities.



A significant amount of space directly beneath the
mansion was devoted to something Magneto referred to as the Danger
Room. It was here that Xavier conducted the bulk of his explorations
into the practical dynamics and limitations of the powers possessed by
his students. Of equal significance, it was also where he trained his
personal assault force, the X-Men.



Technicians began swarming through the building as soon
as Lyman’s troops reported it secure, but they quickly found
themselves frustrated by command protocols keyed to retinal and voice
prints they didn’t possess and computer codes so deviously
encrypted they couldn’t begin to make sense of them.



Stryker didn’t much care. To him, all that was of
peripheral interest. As far as he was concerned, once his plan reached
fruition, they could deconstruct the school and all of its tech at
their leisure.



Under escort, he made his way down the main elevator to
the uppermost level of the underground complex. Troopers with digital
cameras recorded everything, to be downloaded into the main database
once they returned to headquarters—more grist for the
analysts’ mill. Chances were, this would leave them in pig heaven
for years to come.



They passed a locker room, and Stryker paused a moment to
finger one of the uniforms hanging there. Another marvel of structural
engineering. The material looked and felt like leather; it fit like a
biker’s speed suit, almost a second skin. But it was
extraordinarily resilient, protecting the wearer from extremes of
temperature and environment—snug in winter, cool in summer, dry
in a monsoon—and, most practical of all in Stryker’s
opinion, better than Kevlar as body armor. Projections suggested it
could survive a point-blank round from a Barrett .50-caliber sniper
gun, the most powerful rifle made, one small step below an actual
cannon.



He turned away from the uniform as Lyman hurried up to join him, calling his name.



“Tunnels,” he reported to Stryker, standing
briefly to attention and giving the older man a salute.
“That’s where all the kids went. And damn well shielded,
too, better than this!” He indicated the circular corridor around
them, with its ergonomically cool colors and lighting, the epitome of
sensible industrial engineering. “From the way targets kept
popping off our scopes, the house must be riddled with them, the entire
compound, too! We used a sonic imager to find some of the entrances,
but there were deadfalls right inside, sealing the escape routes tight.
From the way they booked out of here, they had to have practiced escape
and evasion techniques. I don’t know if we can catch them at the
exit points.”



“Very prudent of them. How many did you get, then?”



“Six, sir. What should we do with them?”



“Pack them up. We’ll decide later.”



As the two men spoke, they approached Stryker’s
true destination, right at the end of this main hallway. It was a
circular door that intentionally resembled the entrance to a bank
vault, or to NORAD’s command center deep inside
Cheyenne Mountain, built to protect the chamber within against any form
of hostile incursion. Stryker doubted he had any tools in his arsenal,
short of perhaps a baby nuke, capable of breaching this barrier.
Fortunately, none were needed.



At his command, a pair of troopers stepped forward and
set up the device they were carrying, placing it on a tripod in front
of the doorway. To the right side of the door itself was a scanning
plate, in which was embedded a multifaceted blue crystal, as pure a
sapphire as any had ever seen. They set the lasing crosshairs dead
center on the crystal, at the height of a tall man seated in a
wheelchair.



The device was activated, the laser immediately
refracting into a score of lesser beams that struck the crystal,
replicating the retinal pattern they had recorded from Xavier’s
own eye.



It only took a moment.



“Welcome, Professor,” said a gentle feminine
voice with a hint of a highland Scots brogue. Stryker recognized it
from Xavier’s primary dossier; it was his collaborator, fellow
geneticist and onetime lover, Moira MacTaggart of Edinburgh University.



Without hesitation Stryker strode along the platform to
Xavier’s console in the center of the great globe of a room. The
others held back, just a little. To them, this was the heart of the
darkness that was their enemy, the place where Xavier supposedly honed
and worked his incredible powers. From here, so Magneto said, he could
reach out to every mind on the planet. Stryker hoped that was true,
hoped the old mutant wasn’t exaggerating. Because that made this
room the key to his ultimate victory.



He reached out to the gleaming chrome helmet on its stand
but couldn’t quite bring himself to touch it. This was
Xavier’s toy; let the mutant mental play with it. Stryker would
watch. “Take what you need, gentlemen,” he said as the
soldiers entered Cerebro.






Saturday night. And Mitchell Laurio, creature of habit,
was where he could be found every Saturday night he wasn’t
working. Fourth stool from the end at the Dew Drop Inn. It wasn’t
a great bar, but then he wasn’t a picky guy. It had televisions
to spare and, if the cash was right, a fella could persuade one of the
waitresses to join him in a booth and provide a semiprivate show. Most
nights, the video choice was sports or sex, but for some reason the
bartender had switched the TVs over to some damn news show where two
mooks were blathering on about mutants, as if anyone in the world
actually gave a rat’s ass about their opinion.



Laurio wasn’t aware he was speaking those sentiments aloud but wouldn’t have cared if he had realized it.



“. . . the Mutant Registration Act provides a sense
of security similar to Megan’s Law,” said a middle-aged guy
whose title card identified him as Sebastian Shaw, the latest tycoon
turned politico. “A list of potentially dangerous mutants living
in our communities.”



His counterpart was half his age and twice his size, and
Laurio remembered him from college ball. An All-American who passed on
a pro contract to go to Stanford for a doctorate, the first of a whole
bunch, it turned out. His name was Henry McCoy. People magazine said he preferred Hank.



“Megan’s Law is a database of known felons,
Mr. Shaw,” he responded heatedly, “not innocent people who
haven’t committed any crime and may not even be likely to.
It’s akin to registering every member of a religious or ethnic
group in the nation, on the presumption that some of them may be terrorists.”



“Some might not consider that so bad an idea, McCoy.”



“Some, Sebastian,” McCoy shot back, “might consider America a better place than that.”



“A damn mutant almost killed the President!”



“A person, who happened to be a mutant, made
the attempt, yes. If he was a Lutheran, would you automatically condemn
every Lutheran in the land?”



“If the knife had said ‘Lutheran Rights Now,’ I’d damn sure consider it.”



“What people seem to forget is that mutation is evolution in action. In a sense, we’re all
mutants. If not for past mutations, for past evolution, chances are
we’d all be sitting in trees, picking bugs from one
another’s hair!”



“Goddamn it, Lou,” Laurio snarled,
“turn that shit off. Bad enough I got the godfather of muties in
my face the whole damn day long without I got this raining on my head
after!”



“I’m sorry,” he heard a woman say
behind him, in a voice that went down his spine like a shock,
“it’s my fault. I asked Lou to turn the channel.”



He rolled his stool around and found himself facing a
woman who put the dogs who usually haunted this place to shame. She was
no stick-figure woman, he had no taste for that, she had curves on her
and then some, big rack, cute butt, and a waist that made his hands
ache to enfold her. She had some mileage to her, but she had a look to
the eye, a quirk to the mouth, and a way of looking him up and down
that told him she knew how to use it. Her lips were liquid scarlet,
sassy, her eyes so deeply shadowed that all he could see were some
glints reflecting the neon behind the bar, which gave them a weird
yellow cast. She was blond, and taller than he usually liked, but he
figured that was due to her stilt stilettos, and as she strode closer
he had to admit he loved what those shoes did for her walk.



“You sound like a man with a lot on his
mind”—she paused to sneak a peek at his
badge—“Mr. Laurio.”



He smelled scotch on her breath and noted the half-full tumbler in her hand.



“I’m Grace,” she said.



He didn’t know what to say. Really, all he wanted
to do was sit and stare. She let him. It was obvious that she enjoyed
the attention.



“Want another beer, Mr. Laurio?” She didn’t wait for him to answer. “Course you do.”



“Mitch,” he said. “My name’s Mitch.”



She gave him that dazzling smile again, shifting position
beside him so that her skirt rode high enough on her thigh to flash
some skin above the top of her stocking and her breasts brushed against
his chest. She seemed to lose her balance just a little, forcing him to
catch her with his arm suddenly tight around her waist, and she giggled
like it was all a big joke and he laughed, too, because this was the
kind of moment he only dreamed about.



He didn’t see what her free hand was doing behind
him as she gathered the beer mug close, dropping a pair of white pills
into the foam, where they quickly dissolved.



After a couple more beers, it took only the vaguest hint
to propel him off his stool and into the ladies’ room. It
wasn’t much different from the men’s room in layout and
wasn’t much cleaner besides. As they stumbled over the threshold,
Laurio tried to take a swallow of beer and grab a kiss on her lips all
at the same time and failed in both. That made them both laugh,
especially since most of the beer had landed on him. He was stinko, a
lot more than was usual after a few beers, but he didn’t give it
any thought.



“I never hooked up with anyone like you before,” he told her, making like the guys on TV.



“I know,” she said. “Your lucky night.”



She gave a little push, and he dropped onto a toilet seat.



“Kinda dirty, ain’t it,” he said.



“That’s the idea,” she replied, leaning
forward to tease him with a glimpse of her breasts before squatting
down in front of him. Her legs were splayed wide apart, but there were
too many shadows, his eyes wouldn’t focus right, he
couldn’t see enough to make it worthwhile. Then, as she unbuckled
his belt, he gave up trying to look. Tonight was getting better and
better.



“Velcro,” Grace muttered as she opened his pants. “Nice.”



“Bottoms up,” he toasted her, raising his beer high.



“I certainly hope so.”



She smiled one last time, and the last of his beer
cascaded out of the mug and across his face and chest. His mouth was
open, but he made no attempt to drink. He was way beyond that. As his
head lolled back against the tile behind him, his pupils dilating to
their limits, his suddenly nerveless arm dropped, the mug falling from
useless fingers to shatter on the floor.



Grace pressed two fingers to his carotid pulse,
satisfying herself it was firm and regular, then used the tips of her
fingers to close his mouth and stop the beginnings of a snore. There
was no sloppiness any longer to either manner or movement as she
snapped the lock shut on the door behind her, then reached down to grab
Laurio around the waist and flip the big man over so that his head was
somewhere behind the bowl and his butt poked up in the air.



She opened her purse and removed a syringe, tapping the
barrel with a lacquered forefinger to clear any air bubbles. It
wouldn’t do to give the slug an embolism. She pulled down his
boxers and pressed the plunger. As she did, the skin on her hand
darkened to the same indigo shade as her nail polish. The
transformation raced up her arm, across her body, which became longer
and leaner, much less the kind of blowsy Reubens woman that Mitchell
Laurio dreamed of in favor of someone much stronger and more sleekly
muscular. Her hair became a dark autumnal russet shot through with
midnight. Mystique bared teeth that were startlingly white against her
blue-black skin and patted Laurio where she’d made the injection.



“Bottoms up, darling.” And then she was gone.






Lyman met Stryker en route from the landing pad.



“The men are nearly finished, sir,” he reported.



Stryker nodded approvingly. “Ahead of
schedule,” he noted approvingly. “Strip down at source,
transport, and reconstruction. I am very impressed, Mr. Lyman. The
crews are to be commended.”



“You trained ’em, sir. They’re just following your lead.”



Stryker continued to nod. This was going better than he’d hoped. A good omen for what was to come, perhaps.



“How does it look?” he wondered.



“Flawless.”



They passed a reception cubicle where Lyman saw one of
the troopers tending to the prisoner Cyclops, fastening a metal band
over the mutant’s eyes.



“Good,” Stryker said, meaning both what Lyman
had just told him and what he saw in the cubicle. “Now for the
main event.”






When he woke, groggy and pummeled, as though every cell
in his brain had been given its own personal, enthusiastic beating,
Charles Xavier had no idea where he was. Far worse, he had no sense
whatsoever of the thoughts around him. He couldn’t help a
moment’s panic, finding himself imprisoned for the first time
within the walls of his own skull. As a clinician he’d often used
the term “headblind” to describe nontelepaths and had even
fantasized about the sensation. Unfortunately it was like trying to
imagine being dead; the act of imagination itself effectively
invalidated the concept.



This was so much worse. He felt hollow and . . . alone.
The background noise, the susurrus of other thoughts that was a
constant presence and an occasional annoyance, was gone. His inner
cries couldn’t even provoke an echo. He could only perceive the
world from a single perspective, his own, and it was unbearable.



He was bound into his chair, his wrists tied with duct
tape to the armrests. He felt a dull burning pressure around his head
and thought of the torture instruments of the Inquisition.
One—particularly nasty—was strapped around the skull and
gradually tightened until the bone shattered. From how he felt, Xavier
assumed that had long since happened. If he let his head loll forward,
perhaps he’d see his brain flop out onto the floor. At least that
final oblivion would be better—anything would be better—than the gnawing emptiness that was consuming him.



He tried to take refuge from his misery by taking
inventory of the purely physical. He wasn’t in Mount Haven, that
was a sure bet. The room was dark, as were some in the prison, but the
walls were dank and pockmarked with age. The prison environment was
strictly maintained; this was so chilly he was already starting to
shiver, a damp cold that ate into his bones. This place had been
abandoned long ago, and even though he could hear faint sounds of
activity, it was clear to him that no one was planning a lengthy stay.



Reflexively, he stretched his thoughts toward the sounds
outside. Big mistake. The Inquisition analogy suddenly took on an
agonizing relevance as he felt as if barbed spikes were being driven
into him. The sleet storm of pain doubled him over, pulling a hoarse
grunt from the pit of his belly. Worse had happened; he could smell and
feel the consequences as his body lost all control, and the beginnings
of tears burned his eyes at the loss of his dignity.



“I just had to see that work for myself,” said Stryker as he entered the room.



Xavier didn’t bother to respond at first. Better to
take as much time as possible, to gather what few resources remained to
him before facing his adversary. He worked his tongue around his mouth,
tasting the familiar gunmetal taste of adrenaline, remembering another
time and place where his telepathy had been no use to him. A wayward
step on a jungle trail, the shock of a land mine that, fortunately, was
on the other side of a tree. The encounter had won him a Purple Heart
and taught him a valuable lesson: Just because it doesn’t have a
brain doesn’t mean it can’t kill you.



Stryker was a patient man, especially when he was winning. He waited until Xavier was ready before continuing.



He hadn’t come alone. Standing in the doorway,
obviously a bodyguard, was a lovely young woman of Asian extraction.
Something about her gaze caught Xavier’s attention; there was
animation in her eyes, but no sense of real life. She seemed awake, yet
totally asleep.



“I call it the neural inhibitor,” Stryker
continued. “The more you think, the more you hurt.
And”—he tapped his own forehead—“it keeps you
out of here.”



“William,” Xavier said, and he wasn’t
surprised to how hard it was to speak even that single word. The
inhibitor not only crippled his psychic functions but a degree of his
basic cognitive ones as well.



“I’m sorry we couldn’t find you more .
. . comfortable quarters,” Stryker said. “My old home here
is about to undergo some rather major renovations. Much like
yours.”



Xavier felt stupid, which made him feel angry. He
couldn’t make the connections, couldn’t see the
implications of what Stryker was saying, even though the other man was
acting like they were blindingly obvious. He fastened on to the only
one that came to mind.



“What have you done with Scott?”



“Don’t worry, you’ll be seeing him
soon. I’m just giving the boy a little reeducation.” He
paused. “But you know all about that, don’t you? Altering
thoughts and perceptions must be as easy for you as rewriting codes of
software.”



“There’s no need to involve anyone
else!” Xavier protested desperately, with more vehemence than
Stryker expected.



“No need to involve anyone else?” Stryker sounded genuinely incredulous. “You run a school for mutants, Professor! What on Earth do you teach those creatures?”



A question requiring a conceptual answer. That took
effort, which brought him pain, but Xavier persevered nonetheless,
calling on the same focus and discipline that had enabled him,
self-taught, to master his burgeoning telepathy.



“To survive,” he hissed through gritted teeth. “To coexist peacefully in a world that fears them.”



“I’ve seen what’s buried beneath your
house, Xavier. It doesn’t look very peaceful to me. I also
know—firsthand—the kind of creatures you’ve gathered
to live there. Some species can never coexist. I learned that from
you,” he finished offhandedly, turning away.



“You wanted me to cure your son. But, William, mutation is not a disease.”



“Liar,” he snapped. When Stryker looked
around, his mask of affability was gone. The pain was real, the grief,
the rage, and he used his words on his prisoner like a lash.



“You’re lying, Xavier,” Stryker said more slowly, more forcefully. “You were more afraid of him than I was! He was too powerful, and you couldn’t control him.”



The Asian woman laced her fingers together, cracked her
knuckles. Stryker noticed more than Xavier did. The gesture amused him,
but only for a moment that quickly passed, the feeling subsumed as
always by his relentless fury.



“You know, just a year after Jason returned from
your school, my wife . . .” Stryker’s voice trailed off,
and he stood up. His own right hand was clenched into so tight a fist
the knuckles were white, and Xavier guessed from his posture that he
wanted to use that fist, on Xavier himself. “He resented us, you
see, he blamed us for his . . . condition. He was my son. I loved him more than my own life, we both did. How could he feel such things about us? How could he . . . do . . . such things?



“He would . . . toy with our minds, you see. He would project images and scenarios into our brains.”



As he spoke, the woman’s breathing became erratic.
Her hands began to tremble enough to finally catch Xavier’s
notice. There was a gradual but growing look of confusion to her
features, a distinct change to the quality of the animation he’d
seen in her gaze. She was no longer placid; she was waking up.



Stryker paid her no attention. His focus remained entirely on Xavier.



“Unfortunately,” he said, making an effort to
hammer the emotion from his voice and thereby revealing the terrible,
haunting depth of those feelings, “I had my work. I was overseas,
serving my country.” His subtext was plain. He hadn’t been
there to share his wife’s ordeal; he couldn’t do for her
what he felt his job required him to do for the nation—save the
day. He had survived and was glad and guilty of it.



“My wife couldn’t escape. She was around him
all the time. We had to keep him at home, you see. After you sent him
away, we didn’t dare risk allowing him to attend a school. Can
you imagine what he’d have done to all those impressionable
minds?”



“I . . . didn’t know.”



“How convenient for you. My wife, over time, she
became easily influenced . . . unable to tell the difference between
what was real and what was a part of his warped imagination. In the end
. . .” he paused, confronting the memory like a warrior facing
down an adversary. “She took a power drill to her left temple, in
an attempt to bore the images out of her mind.”



The woman swayed, shaking her head once or twice to clear
it, reaching up with one hand to steady herself. Absently, Stryker
stopped the gesture and lowered the arm back to her side. He was aware
of what was happening to her and wasn’t bothered in the
slightest. Everything was under control.



“My . . . boy,” and in that one word were all
the dreams and heartbreak of a father’s life. “The great
illusionist.”



“For someone who hates mutants, William, you certainly keep strange company.”



“It has its uses,” Stryker replied. “It serves a purpose. As do you.”



In his hand he held an ampoule of yellow liquid. With the
same gentle gesture, which reminded Xavier of the way a trainer might
move a horse, he bent the woman forward from the waist until her head
was on the same level as Xavier’s. He swept her hair aside to
bare the back of her neck, revealing a scar identical to the one Xavier
had seen on Magneto.



With practiced ease, Stryker applied two drops. The
effect was instantaneous. Her breathing returned to normal, she stopped
trembling, and when she straightened once more to her full height,
Xavier saw no more sign in her eyes of an independent personality.



Stryker whispered something in her ear. She nodded and left the room.



“It was you,” Xavier said suddenly, in a
burst of intuition that left him shocked. “You arranged the
attack on the President!”



Stryker actually laughed out loud. “And you didn’t even have to read my mind,” he said approvingly.



“You know,” he continued, “I believe
I’ve been working with mutants almost as long as you have, but
the final solution to the problem continued to evade me. So I guess
I’m in your debt. I have to thank you, Xavier, because you gave me Magneto. And Magneto gave me the answer.”



“You can’t eradicate us, William. New mutants are born every day.”



“And once I’m finished, they’ll be born
into a very different world. What are you thinking, that I’ll end
up like Rameses or Herod or poor old Heydrich? Nice try at genocide,
but no cigar?



“Guess again. You see, in all my years of . . .
research, the most frustrating thing I learned is that nobody really
knows how many mutants exist in the world, or how to find them.”



He leaned close, putting his face directly in front of Xavier’s. “Except you.”



He held up the vial of yellow liquid and waggled it before Xavier’s eyes.



“Sadly, this little potion won’t work on you, will it?”



He straightened himself, backed up a step, and returned the drug to his jacket pocket.



“Nope, you’re far too powerful for that. Instead, we’ll go right to the source.”



With crisp, military moves that were almost a flourish in themselves, Stryker opened the door.



“Allow me to introduce Mutant 143.”



Beyond was a chair, and in that chair sat something that
could only charitably be called human. At first glance, because the
body was so shriveled and emaciated, the presumption was that it was
someone extremely old. The limbs were arranged so neatly that Xavier
knew at once they couldn’t move of their own volition; the way
the head lolled to the side was further evidence of the lack of any
effective musculature. There was a water tube close by his mouth, which
he constantly licked, but that was just so he could keep tongue and
lips from going dry. Fluids and nutrients flowed into him
intravenously, through permanent junctions in the major blood vessels
of the leg up close to his groin. The site was mercifully hidden
beneath a blanket, but Xavier assumed that permanent catheters were
likewise employed to deal with all his waste products.



The man’s head itself was macrocephalic, swollen to
half again normal dimensions, and marked with a cruel scar across the
temple as though the skull itself had cracked apart under the pressure
of the growing mass within. A grotesque array of tubes and connections
sprouted from implants in the back and base of the skull, draining a
continuous volume of what had to be cerebrospinal fluid into clear
containers mounted on the back of the chair. The fluid was an electric
chrome yellow, and Xavier knew at once it was the substance Stryker
used to control the woman, and Magneto, and Lord knows who else.



The man in the chair had one eye of a brilliant
robin’s-egg blue, the other an equally rich shade of green,
Xavier noted, as the Asian woman and another trooper wheeled the chair
directly in front of him. It was what Xavier saw in those eyes
that struck him like a body blow: a look of cruel and feral cunning,
representing an intelligence worthy of respect. The man knew exactly
what he was, and he hated it beyond all levels of sane comprehension.



Xavier, who thanks to his own gifts forgot nothing, knew
the man at once, from the shape of the jaw and especially those unique
eyes.



“Jason . . .” he breathed in a voice that
barely registered as a whisper. And then, in that same hushed,
horror-struck tone, to the father: “My God, William—what
have you done to him? This is your son!”



“No, Charles. My son is dead.”



The look Xavier received from Stryker’s blue eyes was a match for the emotions that emanated from the young man.



“Just like the rest of you.”





 







Chapter

Nine




Past Hartford, Logan abandoned the back roads for the
interstate, figuring a sports car in the middle of nowhere would draw a
lot more curiosity than one more amid the many that cruised between
Boston and New York. For him, the perfect place to hide now was in
plain sight. He timed it perfectly, joining the morning rush-hour crowd
as it crawled through Connecticut’s capital, thankful that Scott
hadn’t indulged in a stand-out color like canary yellow or
Ferrari scarlet. To the casual eye, this seemed like just another
generic speedster. Stay with the flow of traffic, stay close to the
speed limit, there shouldn’t be any trouble.



They made decent time and rolled into the Boston suburb
of Quincy just past noon. Nice streets, respectable houses, the
sidewalks shaded by trees that had been here since before the
Revolution.



They’d left the mansion with a full tank of gas,
and Logan hadn’t made a stop anywhere along the way. He was too
much of a mess and the kids were all in pajamas, it was asking for
trouble. The downside was, they were all pretty hungry and in desperate
need of a bathroom and, being teenagers, weren’t at all shy about
letting him know how cranky they were becoming



Bobby gave directions, and Logan eased the car up the
drive of a lovely two-story home. The garage was locked, so they had to
leave the car exposed in the driveway.



Same went for the house itself. They were on the porch only a moment before Bobby found the key and let them inside.



“Mom?” he called. “Dad? Ronny? Anybody home?”



Logan could have told him the house was empty, his senses
had reported that while they were all still outside, but he decided it
was better to let the boy establish it for himself. He was itching to
move on, instinct telling him that staying put anywhere guaranteed
trouble, but he shoved those feelings aside. By nature he was a loner,
but also by nature he understood the concept of responsibility and
obligation—although for the life of him he couldn’t have
told anyone where he’d learned them. These kids had been placed
in his care, and he wouldn’t abandon them.



“We’ve got the place to ourselves,”
Bobby said. He looked to the phone and started to reach for it.
“Maybe I should call—”



Logan covered the phone with his hand and shook his head.



“Leave it for now,” he said. “You never know who might be listening.”



“What, you saying those guys tapped my parents’ phones?”



“I’m saying we need to be careful. This
isn’t a game, Bobby.” Logan swung his head around to allow
his gaze to encompass them all. “Those troops were serious, and
they were good. If we want to have a chance of coming out of this
clean, we have to deal with ’em on that level, clear?”



Bobby nodded, his lower lip between his teeth a sure sign
of how worried he was. Still, when he turned to the others, his voice
was under control.



“I’ll try to find you some clothes,” he
said to Rogue, and then, to John: “And you, don’t burn
anything.”



Being guys, they immediately traded gestures—a finger from John, a retorting smirk from Bobby.






Upstairs, Bobby gave Rogue use of his own room and first
crack at the shower. She turned the water as hot as she could bear and
let the spray pound her like a monsoon, standing with her eyes closed
in the vain hope that when she opened them once more this would all
turn out to be some dream or another bogus training scenario.



Wrapped in a bath towel, she swept her hair back from her
face and tied it in a loose ponytail. The decor here echoed his room at
school—emphasis on snowboarding posters and the obligatory Red
Sox pennant. One surprise, an autographed football that made her eyes
widen when she realized that it was from the 2001 Super Bowl that the
New England Patriots had won.



She was flipping through his CDs,
singularly unimpressed by his choice in music—was she the only
person in the school with any taste?—when he backed in carrying
some clothes. He must have thought she was still in the shower, because
he went as pale as the blouse in his arms when he saw her. Suddenly she
was conscious of how small the towel felt, of how much skin was
showing. At the same time, though, she found herself wondering what he
thought: Did he like her legs? Her figure wasn’t much compared to
some of the other girls, especially Siryn, but his eyes kept coming
back to her, so there had to be something in the package that he liked.



Was his mouth as dry as hers? Was his heart pounding the
same fandango? Usually he was easy to read. Now he looked as cool as
the ice he generated.



“Hey,” he said in greeting.



“Hey,” she responded in kind.



“I hope these fit.”



“Thanks.”



“They’re my mom’s. From before I was born. But I think they’ll fit.”



“Groovy,” she replied lightly, grabbing at a similarly ancient word.



He handed her the clothes but made no other move until
she motioned for him to do a U-turn and scoot. All at once, his
composure vanished, so much so that he collided twice with the door
trying to make his exit. He didn’t close it all the way, though,
and took up station just outside while she got dressed.



Downside was, the blouse he found was short-sleeved. He had a solution.



“These were my grandmother’s,” he
explained, holding out a pair of pristine opera gloves. The cloth would
cover her almost all the way to the sleeves. Not a perfect answer, but
one that touched her.



But when she reached for them, he tried to catch her
hand, almost making contact before she snatched hers back as though
she’d been scalded. She stepped back, a gasp rising in her
throat, her other hand held defensively, palm toward him.



“You know I’d never hurt you,” he said, inching closer.



“I know,” so quietly she was just mouthing
the words. She ached to take him in her arms, it had been so long since
she’d felt anything as simple, as basic, as the stroke of someone
else’s skin on hers. She’d told him about her power right
from the start—everyone knew the prohibition about touching her,
that came from Xavier himself—but she suspected nobody really
believed it.



Right now, she didn’t want to.



He moved his hand close to her face, and tears sprang
from her eyes as static electricity made the fine hairs of her cheek
stir. She clenched her fists, feeling her body tighten from head to toe
as though she were being stretched on a medieval rack. His breath
touched her mouth—first warm and tempting, then chill enough for
her own breath to leave a cloud of condensation in the air between
them, then warm again, so inviting that she couldn’t hold back
any longer.



She pressed her lips to his, arms around his neck as his
went around her body, and felt a sweet spark of contact as their
tongues touched, and she giggled as a burst of frost rolled across her.



For a moment, it was bliss.



Then she imprinted.



The warmth between them became fire, a torrent of raw
lava coursing along her nervous system, agony for him, ecstasy for her.
The shock of contact made the veins bulge and pulse on his forehead,
across his chest, eyes going cloudy and rolling up in their sockets. He
spasmed once, twice, pinned on the verge of a grand mal seizure as she
pushed against him with all her might to separate them before it got
any worse. The initial stage of imprinting was physical, the equivalent
of giving a car a jump-start or throwing a jet engine into
afterburners. It delivered a jolt of energy to her system that would
keep her going at peak levels for days. Break contact then, that was
it.



Hold longer, the second stage kicked in, where she
absorbed the parahuman abilities of the person she was touching. Months
earlier, on Liberty Island, Magneto had used her as the power source
for his great machine, even though he’d known the process would
kill her. He’d considered it a necessary sacrifice. Logan had
destroyed the machine, but not before its infernal energies had
inflicted mortal injuries on her. He’d initiated contact himself,
trusting her power to kick in automatically and do the rest.
She’d imprinted him completely, and his healing factor had
literally brought her back from the dead. That was where she’d
gotten the skunk-stripe forelock on her hair. That was also why she
never tried to hide it. It was her personal badge of
honor—acknowledging what he’d done for her and reminding
her of what she’d done to him in turn.



Because there was a third component to her power, one
that wasn’t temporary. The energy boost faded with time, and so
did the powers she absorbed—but if contact lasted long enough,
she took into herself the mind and memories of her imprintee. A residue
of the other’s personality moved into her own psyche and, she
thought, she feared, maybe she gave up a portion of herself to the
other as well.



They’d made jokes about it after the fact, about
how she’d taken on some of the more salty aspects of
Logan’s personality while she was healing. In time, as she got a
handle on this new part of herself, it seemingly went away. She
returned to what passed for her as normal. Only she knew the truth,
that Logan would be a part of her forever.



And if she held on to Bobby for much longer, so would he.



With a cry, she pushed him away, collapsing onto the bed
as he reeled back into the corner formed between the open door and the
wall. She couldn’t bear to look at him. The glimpse of pain and
terror on his face while he was in her grasp was haunting enough.



“I’m sorry,” she sobbed, feeling a
different kind of ache through her body at how inadequate her words
sounded.



“It’s—okay,” he said.



She heard him shuffle around the door with the moves of
an old man. She stared at her hands, hating what she could do, hating
how glorious it made her feel, hating most of all the fact that she
couldn’t control it, that she couldn’t put back what
she’d stolen. She sat there with the gloves on her lap, smoothing
her palms across the sleek fabric over and over and over again, like
she was ironing, desperately seeking something she could put right.






John heard Bobby stumble downstairs but didn’t
bother to see if he needed any help. He was in the family room,
flicking the lid on his lighter, staring at the crowd of pictures on
the wall, on shelves, on the big TV. A happy family, just what you’d expect to find in any part of America.



He hated it.






In the kitchen, Logan knew everything that had transpired
upstairs. Too late, he’d sensed what was about to happen, had
been on his way to the stairs when he heard Rogue’s faint outcry
and the thump of Bobby’s body against the wall. He held position
for the few moments necessary to reassure himself they’d done
each other no lasting physical damage, then turned away. He
hadn’t a clue how to help either of them, and the only advice his
own instincts and experience could offer was to give them space. Let
them lick their wounds and regain their inner equilibrium in private,
as he would.



What he needed, he knew, was a trained professional. What they needed was a real teacher.



He slid open the communicator he’d taken from John Allardyce in the car.



“Hello,” he said into its tiny grille,
feeling like twelve kinds of idiot. “Hello? C’mon, Jean,
pick up the damn phone! Where the hell are you, woman? You’re
s’posed to be a telepath—if you can’t hear my call,
what about my thoughts? Where are you?”



Nothing but static from the radio, silence within the confines of his head.



He found a beer in the fridge, that was good. Miller
Genuine Draft, which was acceptable. He drained half the bottle in one
extended swallow that brought forth a comforting burp.



He crossed to the sink and turned on the water, hot and
hard, using dishwashing liquid to clean the blood off his arms and
hands. He flexed his right hand and popped the claws to see if they
needed any cleaning. At the same time, a house cat leaped up on the
counter to see if he was offering any food. A big marmalade tabby,
whose relaxed manner told him she ruled this roost. He held his hand
still while she approached to give him an assessing sniff. She must
have liked what she found, because she started licking up across his
knuckles, cleaning him the way she would herself after a scrap. Her
ridged tongue rubbed across his skin like a rasp, with the same kind of
sound. This was why he liked animals, preferred the wild to
civilization. Life was a lot less complicated; the animals either
trusted you or they didn’t. If they didn’t, they either
attacked or ran away. People could come at you every which way,
whenever they pleased, for no reason whatsoever. They created
entanglements, which wrapped you up so tight you couldn’t think
straight or found yourself thinking about the wrong thing.



Case in point, as he realized with a start that another
car had pulled into the driveway and three scents that carried common
elements with Bobby Drake’s were approaching the front door.



He retracted the claws, which made the cat yowl in
surprise and hiss as she sprang clear. A moment later, William Drake
stormed over the threshold, followed by his wife, Madeline, and
Bobby’s younger brother, Ronny.



“Who the hell are you?” Drake demanded.



Logan had no answer right away that would improve the
situation. so he bought himself a moment by finishing his beer.
Clattering feet from upstairs and the other rooms diverted
Drake’s attention before any more angry words could be said, and
Bobby led the three Xavier kids into the kitchen.



“Dad!” he said brightly. “Mom! You guys are home!”



His father looked from Bobby to Logan, and Logan knew at
once the situation was more serious than ever. Drake had seen the
circles under his son’s eyes and assumed that Logan was
responsible.



“Honey,” said Madeline, “aren’t you supposed to be at school?”



“Bobby, who is this guy?” Drake demanded of the boy, indicating Logan.



“Professor Logan” was the reply. His dad didn’t believe a word.



Madeline wasn’t interested in Logan. She was
glaring at Rogue, and especially at the white opera gloves that covered
almost the whole of her arms.



“What is that girl doing wearing my clothes?” she asked. “And—are those Nana’s gloves?”



Bobby stammered a reply: “Mom, uh, guys, can I talk to you about something?”






Mitchell Laurio was whistling as he came on shift. He
couldn’t remember many of the details of what had happened in the
ladies’ can, but he’d never felt better in his life than he
had after it was done. Just the memory of Grace’s farewell kisses
was enough to stir his blood and put a spring in his step, and the fact
that she’d left a whispered promise to meet him again tonight
made him wish as he never had before for the day to end.



The guard at the final checkpoint was the latest to offer comment: “Mitchell Laurio, what is that on your face, man?



“Sa-tis-fac-tion!”



He’d heard the story and didn’t believe it
any more than had the man who’d told it to him. Lard-ass Laurio
actually scoring on a dame with a pulse? His trysts were few and far
between—the man was such a piece of work the pros charged double
for a quickie. He wanted more, they got a headache. And by all
accounts, the broad had halfway decent looks, which made the whole
thing even more incredible. Had to be drugs, was the general consensus,
or somebody with a major twist to her psyche.



The only thing that couldn’t be denied was that it had actually happened. The bartender was a witness, his oath to God.



Now of course Laurio had to provide his own chapter and
verse of the evening. It wasn’t a bad story, even the way he told
it, which was why neither man noticed a blip on the scanner that
indicated the presence of metal. It wasn’t a significant glitch;
it barely lasted a fraction of a second before the system registered
clear. If the guard had been paying attention, he probably
wouldn’t have noticed. But he wasn’t, and from that moment
Mitchell Laurio’s fate was sealed.



“You’re clear,” the guard said, and cycled the umbilical out to the cell in the center of the room.



Eric Lehnsherr was asleep until Laurio stepped over the
threshold. Then, just like that, he came completely awake with a rush
he hadn’t felt since his capture.



“Sweet dreams, Lehnsherr?” asked Laurio, his
mockery plain. Just because he’d had the best night of his life
didn’t mean he was going to pass on the morning beating. The one
gave him just as much pleasure as the other.



Laurio set the tray on the table. Lehnsherr hadn’t
moved, beyond sitting up on the bed. There was something different
about his expression, though, like there was a big joke being played
here that only he was privy to. But at the same time, there was a
predatory cast to his eyes that made Laurio suddenly wish the internal
monitors were active and that he were somewhere else.



As was usual for him when he felt ill at ease or
threatened, Laurio got aggressive. This time, he decided, he
wasn’t going to stop until the old man begged him.



“There’s something different about you, Mr.
Laurio,” Lehnsherr said with a slight question to his voice, as
if he couldn’t quite credit what he saw.



There was something different about the old man, too.
They’d done variations on this dance before; Lehnsherr had to
know what was coming. Before, he’d faced it with a stoic
resignation. Today, though, he was alert, watchful—almost amused.
Where his strength had presented itself in his passive endurance of
Laurio’s beatings, now it was active, a coiled spring tensing
inside his body. It occurred to Laurio that maybe this time the old man
intended to fight back. That would give Laurio sanction to do pretty
near anything in retaliation, which would make his day.



He said as much in reply: “Yeah, I think I’m havin’ a pretty damn good day.”



Lehnsherr came to his feet with a grace and ease he hadn’t shown in months, that belied the age apparent on his face.



“No,” he said, “no, it’s not that.”



“Sit down,” Laurio told him. He didn’t
like the way this was going, that he and his prisoner seemed to be
reading from two different scripts. He made a show of putting his hand
on his billy club. Lehnsherr knew firsthand how quick he was with it
and how formidable. One snap of the wrist to the gut would have a
prisoner doubled over, gasping desperately for breath; after that, it
would be Laurio’s choice, his pleasure, where to administer the
follow-up hits for maximum impact. Every word, every gesture from
Lehnsherr would only make matters worse, yet the old man clearly
didn’t care. He wasn’t afraid of Laurio. He’d never
been afraid of Laurio.



They’d put the tiger in a cage, but they hadn’t broken him. They hadn’t even come close.



“No,” Lehnsherr said.



Laurio started to move. . . .



“Sit your ass down, or I’ll—”



And then he couldn’t.



“Well, well, well,” Lehnsherr said in a tone of detached bemusement, a professor considering a problem.



He flicked his fingers, and the billy club dropped from a numb and nerveless hand.



“What could it be?”



Laurio wanted to call for help, but his jaw
wouldn’t work, either. His whole body had become frozen. And with
the monitors disengaged, nobody outside had the slightest clue anything
was wrong. The guard in the monitor room at the far end of the
umbilical wouldn’t have a clue; from his perspective, he’d
just see the two of them standing across the cell from each other, and
he’d be looking at Laurio from the back.



Laurio wanted to beg for mercy. Lehnsherr knew that.



Instead he made another slight upward motion with his fingers, and Laurio rose six inches off the floor.



“Ah.” Lehnsherr had found what he was looking for. “There it is.”



Like a conductor summoning his orchestra to play,
Lehnsherr made a sharp, slashing gesture toward his body, and Laurio
arched as much as was possible against his invisible constraints as a
fine scarlet mist exploded from every pore of his body.



“Too much iron in your blood.”



For Mitchell Laurio, it was as if barbed hooks had been
sunk into every square inch of his skin to flay him naked, then salt
scattered on the raw and exposed nerves of his body to sear him as
fiercely as acid. He wanted to die right then and there, anything to
stop the pain, but Lehnsherr wasn’t in a forgiving mood.



The mist fell away to form a glittering film on the floor of the cell, leaving a cloud of metallic silver behind in the air.



Lehnsherr made a fist and the particles of iron coalesced
into three perfect spheres, each the size of a marble. The Nazis had
taught him to make ball bearings; it seemed only fitting to adopt them
as the talisman for his power.



Their size was deceptive as the last few droplets of
Laurio’s blood were squeezed out of them by pressure. Lehnsherr
used his power to bond the atoms together far more tightly than nature
would have, so that they massed as much as depleted uranium. Unaided,
he doubted a champion weight lifter could pick up even one.



The balls began to move, forming small orbits over his upheld palm.



“A word of advice, Mr. Laurio,” Lehnsherr
said with a smile, as though their relationship had been a genuine
pleasure, “a little something . . . else to remember me by. Never
trust a beautiful woman. Especially one who’s interested in
you.”



He cut the ties of power that held Laurio aloft and the big man collapsed, a limp and bloody heap in the corner.



Lehnsherr flung the balls at the plaster wall of his cell and watched it shatter under the impact.



He heard alarms, he knew they’d be trying to track
him with the defensive remote-controlled miniguns mounted in the cavern
walls, knew they’d be flooding the space with nerve gas. But it
was a huge space, and the guards had grown lax over time. They assumed
he was no longer a threat. That gave him more than enough time.



The umbilical retracted immediately. He paid it no notice.



He concentrated on one of his spheres, and it obediently
flattened itself into a paper-thin silver disk that was easily wide
enough for a man to stand on, which he did. Under his direction, it
rushed him across the chasm to the main exit. He could see the guard in
the monitor room calling for help. One sphere for him, the other for
the door itself.



They struck with the force of armor-piercing cannon
shells. He stepped over the guard’s ruined body into the monitor
room and found the hardwire link that led from his computer into the
prison’s central network. He bared the cable and set his spheres
to spinning until they produced an electrical field worthy of a
mainline generator, and then, backing it with all the passion and rage
and hatred he’d kept ruthlessly in check all these wretched
months, he pushed that power into the cable. Sparks galore exploded all
around him, and every monitor screen in the room dissolved into static,
then went dark. The lights went out as well, although they were
replaced at once by the emergency spot lamps.



This place was controlled by computers, and with this
surge of energy Lehnsherr had just killed them all. The electronic
doors wouldn’t work; neither would the electronic sensors, or the
defenses. They wouldn’t know where he was until he revealed
himself, and then they’d have precious few resources to try to
stop him.



They liked to mock him with the name he’d chosen
for himself. Now he would remind them why Magneto was a force to be
reckoned with and an adversary to be respected, and especially feared.





 







Chapter

Ten




Jean Grey wasn’t a happy woman.



“Professor Xavier, come in, please?” she
spoke aloud, repeating the same call, far more loudly, with her
thoughts. “Scott, are you there, are you receiving, over?”



Static.



She tapped a new number on the speed dial, switching
functions on her headset from radio to cellular phone, and tried all
the lines at the mansion.



Static.



She tried Scott’s cell and the phone in Xavier’s Rolls-Royce.



Static.



For the hell of it, she ran a full-spectrum diagnostic on the Blackbird’s
communications array, wondering if a day’s immersion in the water
of Boston Harbor had somehow degraded the antennae. The computer told
her everything was fine, just as it had the previous two times
she’d executed the program.



She changed channels and listened a minute to WBUR, changed them again and eavesdropped on local and federal law enforcement frequencies.



End result, they were sending and receiving perfectly.
The problems lay at the other end. Nobody was picking up, not even
voice mail.



She covered her face with her hands, then swept them up
and over her head, smoothing her thick, occasionally unruly hair into
momentary submission before clasping her fingers together behind her
neck and bending her head forward to rest her chin on her collarbone.
She flexed her shoulders outward and stretched as long as she could up
the full length of her spine to ease the aches that tension and worry
had planted there.



She caught a wisp of a thought, a sense of movement, that
told her Storm had stepped up to the flight deck, and then felt her
friend’s hand cover hers from behind. Without opening her eyes,
Jean clasped Storm’s hand in both of hers and held it, smiling as
a cool breeze insinuated itself through the collar of her uniform and
washed all over her.



“Ohhhh.” She groaned in delight. “If you could package that in a bottle!”



“It wouldn’t be anywhere near as much fun.”



Storm was just as concerned.



“How long has it been?” she asked.



“Too long. No land lines, no cell, no radio, no indication from the news of any disaster in the area.”



“Send an e-mail?”



“Too risky. Anyone capable of knocking the mansion
so completely off-line could back-trace a computer link. I’m
pushing our luck with the com devices.”



“No telepathy, either? From the professor?”



“Nope.”



“So?”



“I was going to wait till dark before heading home. I’m starting to reconsider.”



“This may be the ultimate in stealth aircraft, Jean, but we can still be seen.”



“That, Ororo, is where I figure you come in.”



“I’ll see what I can do.”



“Thanks. Whatever it is, make it quick, okay?”



“I’ll see what I can do.”



“By the way, how’s our passenger?”






Nightcrawler was praying.



He’d tucked himself into one of the highback chairs
in the passenger compartment, legs folded into lotus position, hands
clasped in his lap, eyes closed. Storm half expected to find him
hanging from the ceiling. He stood six feet tall, but you never noticed
because he spent most of the time in a crouch, rarely straightening to
his full height. He seemed just as comfortable upside down as not,
using his big toes or his tail, or both, to anchor himself in place.



He had a good face, especially now that Storm could see
it relaxed, in repose. Much younger than she’d first suspected.
Now that she could get a closer look at him, she saw that his indigo
skin was covered with a series of tattoos.



“It’s an angelic alphabet,” he told
her, and she raised her blue eyes to meet his yellow ones,
“passed on to mankind by the Archangel Gabriel.”



“They’re beautiful,” she told him
truthfully, even though the black etchings on blue-black skin were
almost invisible, like the man himself when he stepped into shadows.



“How many are there?”



“One for every sin. So”—a quirk of his full lips that might have been a smile—“quite a few.”



“That, I don’t believe.”



He looked at her with a disconcertingly level gaze. “You know, outside of the circus, most people are afraid of me.”



“I’m not afraid of you.”



He swallowed and looked away, and she could tell by the
minute shift in the heat gradient of his cheeks that he was blushing.
He took refuge from the moment in an examination of the cabin, his eyes
taking in the sleek configuration of the interior hull and furniture
while he ran his hands over the material of the chair itself.



“You and Miss Grey—Doktor Grey—you’re both . . . schoolteachers?”



“Is that so hard to believe?”



He actually chuckled.



“Yes,” she told him, “we are. At a school for people . . . like us. Where we can be safe.”



“Safe from what?”



“Everyone else.”



“You know, outside the circus, most people I met
were afraid of me. But I never hated them. I actually felt sorry for
them, do you know why?”



Storm shook her head.



“Because most people never know anything beyond what they can see with their own two eyes.”



“I gave up on pity a long time ago.”



“I’m sorry to hear that.”



He reached up and placed his fingers against her cheek
with a gentle caress that sent a burst of heat rippling beneath her
skin, together with the surprised thought: He’s flirting with me.
She didn’t move away, because along with that realization came
the discovery that she liked it. She liked him. There was a serenity to
his soul that was totally at odds with his outward features, as though
a demon incarnate might have in him the makings of a saint.



“Someone as beautiful as you shouldn’t be so . . . angry,” he said, simply as an article of faith.



“Sometimes anger can help you survive.”



“So can faith.”



“What did you do in the circus?” she asked,
remembering the posters from the church. Before leaving, he’d
carefully taken them down and packed them away in his single case.



“I was—” he began, and then both of them reacted to a shout from up front.



“Storm!” Jean called. “I think I’ve found an active com unit!”






Logan would have played things differently, but this was Bobby’s house, Bobby’s family; he let the kid take point.



The kid then proceeded to tell his parents what he was.



Now they were all gathered in the living room, and the
general atmosphere would have put a session of the Spanish Inquisition
to shame. The layout of the room put a couch on either side of a coffee
table. Mom, Dad, and Ronny Drake sat on one, Bobby and Rogue on the
other. John Allardyce hung out behind Rogue, his butt perched on the
edge of an antique side table in conscious oblivion to the sharp
glances that occasionally came his way from Mom. He had his lighter out
and was, as usual, playing with the lid, as if the sound of the ticking
clock weren’t intrusion enough.



Logan stood in the doorway to the kitchen, nursing a new
beer. His casual attitude was a deception. He was covering the room,
ready to act if there was trouble of any kind. He’d expected Dad
to be the flashpoint, but the man had proved to have a lot more in
common with his eldest son than first impressions had suggested.



“So, uh, Bobby,” Madeline said, utterly lost,
“when did you first know . . . that you were a . . . um . .
.”



“A mutant?” John finished for her, flicking his lighter open, then closed, open, then closed, open—



“Could you please stop that?” said Madeline
with some asperity. This was her house, and she’d had enough of
his insolent behavior.



“You have to understand,” William said slowly, “we thought Bobby was going to a school for the gifted.”



“He is gifted,” Rogue interjected,
prompting a small smile of gratitude from the boy sitting beside her,
who otherwise looked like someone en route to the guillotine.



“We know that,” William conceded. “We
just didn’t realize that he was—” Then, without
warning, a flare of anger toward his son that was compounded in equal
measures of confusion and a very real pain that bordered on grief.
“Why the hell didn’t you tell us? What were you
thinking, Bobby? We’re your parents, for God’s sake! How
could you keep this to yourself, how could you not trust us—how
could you lie?”



“Dad.” Bobby sounded helpless, strangling on his own guilt and shame. “You don’t understand!”



“Obviously.”



“Dad!”



“You lied, Bobby. Xavier lied. To my face. He kept
your secret. What am I supposed to believe about him now, or this
precious school of his? Or you? How many other secrets are
there?” He turned to Logan. “Just what is it you teach my
son, ‘Professor’?”



“Art,” he said sarcastically. “And it’s just Logan.”



“You show up without a word of warning or
explanation. Apparently without even clothes of your own to wear.
What’s that supposed to mean?”



“We still love you, Bobby,” Madeline said,
starting to reach out to him but holding back right at the last, the
same way people did around Rogue. She looked at her hand, at her son,
at her hand again, as though it had suddenly become some alien part of
her. The thought behind the hesitation was plain to the room. Am I suddenly afraid of my own baby?
She tried to find some explanation, some rationale, in words:
“It’s just that the mutant problem is very . . .”



“What mutant problem?” Logan asked. She didn’t pay attention, she hadn’t heard him.



“. . . complicated.”



Rogue tried to lighten the mood.



“You should see what Bobby can do.”



Everyone looked. He stretched out his hand to his
mother’s teacup, ignoring how quickly she snatched her own hand
clear, and touched it with a fingertip. Instantly a layer of ice
crystals formed around the rim and down the sides.



He turned the cup over and the tea within, frozen completely solid, dropped onto the saucer with a quiet clink.
The marmalade tabby wound its way around Rogue and him and used his
thigh as a springboard to the table, where she proceeded to lick the
tea.



“I can do a lot more,” he said.



There was a light in William’s eyes, a dad’s classic and instinctive My boy did that! What hurt him about all this was being cut out of the loop.



Mom wasn’t anywhere near as amused, and she
wasn’t proud in the slightest. As for Ronny, he got up from the
couch and bulled his way out of the room, deliberately giving John a
shoulder check as he passed.



He made a lot of noise pounding up the stairs, and he shut his door with a slam that resounded through the house.






Ronny Drake had a teenager’s obsession with privacy
and personal space. He’d marked his territory accordingly, with a
huge sign on the door that said RONNY’S ROOM. STAY THE F**K OUT!
Mom had wanted to tear it down, but Bobby had defused the situation by
hijacking a pair of anime panda stickers—so cute they made
Powerpuff Girls look hardcore—and using them to cover the middle
two letters. Ronny hated him for doing that, Bobby got to play the damn
hero as always, but at least he got to keep his sign.



All he could see, though, in the center of his room was a
torn and bloody T-shirt. Not his. Not Bobby’s, ’cause he
had his own room. That meant a stranger had been in here.



The TV monitor caught his attention,
turned to Fox News Channel—more proof that his privacy had been
violated. This was a channel he had never watched, until now.
It wasn’t the reporter, doing his stand-up from the White House
lawn, that caught his attention, but what the man was saying.



“. . . in the wake of the assassination attempt on
President McKenna, there are unconfirmed reports of a raid on what is
believed to be an underground terrorist mutant organization based in
Westchester County, New York . . .



“Authorities refuse to comment, but it’s
believed that a national manhunt for several fugitives from the
facility is now under way . . .”



Watching, listening, looking from the screen to the
sodden shirt on the floor, Ronny’s expression changed. Bobby was
his big brother, but he didn’t know anything about the people who
were with him, except that they creeped Ronny out, big-time.



He picked up the phone, hoping he was doing the right
thing, terrified of what might happen if those other mutants found out.
Half expecting his brain to be incinerated at any moment, he pressed
911.






Downstairs, Madeline Drake put her head in her hands.



“Oh, God, this is all my fault.”



Before Bobby could even try to make things better, John Allardyce jumped in to make them worse.



“Actually,” he said, “they’ve
discovered that males are the ones who carry mutant genes and pass them
on to the next generation, so I guess that makes it”—he
jutted his thumb toward Bobby’s dad—“his
fault.”



William Drake ignored the comment, although his son looked ready to make the other boy eat the words.



Madeline tried again to be the gracious hostess:
“And you,” she said to Rogue, “you’re all
gifted?”



Rogue shot daggers at John, who returned them as a grin.
“Some of us more than others,” she replied tightly.
“Others who shouldn’t ever be allowed out in public.”



“What’s that?” William said, reacting to a beep.



Logan had the little com unit in his hand.
“That’s mine,” he said. “ ‘Scuse
me.” And he slipped through the kitchen to the backyard porch,
with Madeline’s next line to her son to speed him on his way.



“Bobby,” she said, “dearest, have you tried . . . not being a mutant?”



Bobby sighed. John laughed out loud.



“Charley,” Logan said, and his face lit up at the voice that replied.



“Logan,” cried Jean, “thank God it’s you! We couldn’t reach anyone at the mansion.”



“No one’s left,” he told her bluntly. “Soldiers came.”






Aboard the Blackbird, Jean sank into her chair.
They’d speculated about the possibility of some kind of hostile
action, they’d made what they hoped were adequate preparations,
but none of them really took it seriously. In a way, they believed too
much in their own press: Xavier’s was a school. How could anyone perceive that as a threat?



But then again, she considered, Islamic madrasas were schools as well, and many in the intelligence community believed them to be the spawning ground for terrorists.



“What about the children?” she asked.



“Some escaped,” he reported, “but I’m not sure about the rest.”



Jean created sparks as she shifted position, and she shot
a warning glare at Storm, whose anger was supercharging the air inside
the plane with electricity. Not a good thing, generating a bolt of
lightning inside a plane loaded with jet fuel and other combustibles.



“We haven’t been able to reach the professor
or Scott, either,” she said. The conclusion was obvious to both
of them: In all likelihood, they were lost, too.



Storm spoke into her own headset: “Logan, where are you?”



“Quincy,” he said. “Outside Beantown, with Bobby Drake’s family.”



“Do they—” Jean started to ask, provoking a snort of amusement from the other end.



“Oh, yeah!”



“All right,” she said, leaning across to the
center console to initiate the engine start-up sequence,
“we’re on our way.”



“Storm?”



“Yes, Logan?”



“Make it fast.”



The two women looked at each other, both recognizing the subtle change in Logan’s voice.



“Five minutes,” Jean told him as she locked
her harness closed and mentally told Nightcrawler to grab his chair and
do the same.






“Make it fast,” he repeated, and signed off active audio, leaving only the carrier signal for them to home in on.



The picture of nonchalance, he patted his pockets for a
smoke, sighed loudly when he didn’t find one, and reentered the
house in two quick steps. Without turning his body, he snapped the lock
closed on the door and took the next two steps into the living room.



“We have to go,” he said without preamble.
“Now.” The kids took their cue from him and leaped to their
feet.



“What?” William asked.



“Why?” Rogue echoed.



“Now,” he said simply, as sound and scent
told him they’d run out of time. One assault team at the back,
another out front, boxing the house. Bobby’s parents jumped,
William grabbing his wife into his arms, as Logan extended his
right-hand claws.



“Logan,” Rogue demanded, “what’s going on?”



John mouthed an answer: “What d’ you think?”



“Follow my lead,” Logan told them.



There were two cops waiting on the front porch, flanking
the door with guns drawn. They locked on Logan as the primary threat. A
police cruiser was parked on the lawn, another partially blocking the
street, its patrol officers taking aim from behind the cover of their
car. Sirens closing in from the near distance told them all that more
were on the way.



Bobby’s face tightened with anger. He knew what had brought them here.



“Ronny!” he fumed under his breath.



Directly upstairs, Ronny watched the officers take
position, anxiety quickly giving way to excitement. This was cool,
better than TV.



“You,” barked the cop to Logan’s right, “get down on the ground.”



“What’s going on here?” Logan inquired calmly.



The kids were scared, and rightly so. This was the second
time in a day they’d been threatened by guns, only these
didn’t fire stun darts. This was the real deal, 9mm, Glocks with
fifteen-round magazines, and one of the cops in the street had
unlimbered his shotgun. Logan heard the frantic click, click, click of John’s lighter. The cops heard it, too. They didn’t know what to make of it, and that made them even more jumpy.



“Put the knives down slowly,” the same cop
said. “Slowly. Then down on your knees, cross your ankles, and
raise your hands in the air. You kids do the same. Right now!”



“Hey, bub, this is just a misunderstanding,” Logan replied.



Inside, Bobby’s parents were only just starting to
comprehend what was happening on the porch when the glass of the
kitchen door shattered under the impact of a nightstick. They barely
had time to turn their heads before a trio of uniformed officers rushed
into the room, guns leveled, all of them yelling at the top of their
lungs: “Police!” “Nobody move!” “On the
floor, on your knees, keep your hands where I can see ’em!”



Madeline screamed, William tried to protest, Bobby
reacted like any son. He turned to help. The cop on the left shifted
aim. His partner screamed louder: “Put down the goddamn
blades!”



“I can’t,” said Logan, and raised his hands to show they were a part of him.



The gunshot took them all by surprise.



The left-hand cop had fired, straight to the temple. The
point-blank impact blew Logan off his feet, twisting him as he fell so
that he landed on his face, partially sprawled down the steps.



Rogue screamed and the three kids all dropped, Bobby
trying to shield Rogue’s body with his own, yelling as loud as he
could for the cops to stop firing. “Don’t shoot,
don’t shoot!”



A crowd had begun to gather on the sidewalk across the
street, drawn by the flashing dome lights and the commotion. The sharp
report of the officer’s gun startled those close enough to see
what had happened. They ducked as well. But mostly, folks kept milling
about, confused, intrigued, like rubberneckers passing an accident,
blissfully oblivious to the danger.



The cops were just as startled, just as scared. The one
who’d fired had made himself a statue, his weapon centered on
Wolverine like he expected the man to leap up and charge him. Or maybe
he was praying for him to do precisely that, to take back the action of
the last half minute.



“Easy,” his partner yelled, in a voice meant
to be heard inside the house as well as out to the street.
“Everybody take it easy. Get a grip!” That last was
directed mainly at the shooter. His partner knew this was bad, every
shooting is for the officer involved, but under his breath he thanked
God and all the saints they hadn’t popped the kids as well. After
that kind of mess, there’d be hell to pay.



“Okay, kids,” he told them, “same as before. Stay cool, we’ll get out of this just fine.”



“We didn’t do anything!” Rogue shrieked at him.



“On your knees, girl!”



She yelled at him some more, partly to purge her own
terror, but most of all to keep attention away from Logan. She knew the
adamantium interlaced with his skeletal structure meant that his bones
couldn’t be broken. All that bullet had likely done, aside from
breaking the skin—which was decidedly messy—was give him a
royal headache. More importantly, though, his healing factor would be
speedily dealing with both the wound and the headache. She didn’t
know what he could do once he recovered, but it would be one more asset
than the kids had right now.



Bobby gave her a hand as they both did as they were told. John had other ideas. He stood up.



“Don’t be stupid, kid,” the left-hand
cop said. “This is no time to flash attitude. We don’t want
to hurt you!”



John’s attitude was plain: Like I care, he seemed to be saying. Like, you could?



“Hey,” he said, “you know all those
dangerous mutants you hear about on the news?” He paused a moment
to let the implications sink in.



“I’m the worst one.”



He popped the lid on his Zippo, but this time, he ignited a flame.



From the wick grew three distinct streamers of flame,
which whirled sinuously around him like the fearsome salamanders of
medieval tales. One shot right, the other left, the third burned its
way through the door to scorch across the main floor of the house.



The cops on the porch dove desperately for cover as flame
roared past, close enough to leave their uniform shirts smoldering.
Those inside weren’t quite so quick, or so lucky. One was struck
head-on, with force enough to hurl him into his companions, who had to
scramble to save him as his clothes caught fire.



John turned his focus to the cars. It all happened so
fast, the attack was so savage and shocking, that the cops on the
street didn’t know how to react. Those news reports
notwithstanding, none of them really believed in mutants; they
couldn’t believe a kid was doing this.



They’d get over it real quick, John knew, if he gave them the chance.



He had a better idea.



While the two main streamers he’d manifested kept
them occupied, he snaked a pair of much thinner strands along the
surface of the lawn and underneath the cars to their tailpipes. This
would be fun.



He ignited both gas tanks at once, pitching the cars up
into the air and flipping them over like they were sandbox toys. A
third car had just then rolled onto the scene, and John grinned as he
surrounded it with a cataract of fire. The driver threw the gearshift
into reverse, but John melted the tires to the street. The cops tried
to bail from the unit, only to reel back inside as he turned the flames
around them into a wall so thick and hot they’d be crispy
critters before they took a decent step. He saw one of them calling
frantically for help on the radio.



This would be the best. He’d let ’em cook
slowly until the fire department arrived. He’d allow them the
illusion of hope. Then—kaboom! Instant inspector’s funeral, film at eleven.



Logan’s eyes fluttered as the shattered remains of
the officer’s bullet fell from the healing wound. Rogue was
right; his head was murder. This was a great power, no argument there.
But the downside was that all the sensations of the process of natural
healing were compressed into a fraction of the time and, as a
consequence, hugely intensified. Yes, he had long ago learned to endure
the pain; yes, it passed relatively quickly; but it always remained a
brutal experience, to be avoided whenever possible.



Some of the other cops, the mutants on the porch
forgotten, tried to save the two who were trapped. John played with
them a little, letting them almost break through before generating a
flash furnace to force them back.



He never felt Rogue’s hand on his shin as she
grabbed him from behind. She wasn’t holding back this time, as
she had with Bobby, trying to control a power that seemed as untamably
rebellious as her name. She couldn’t have done better if
she’d clipped him with an iron bar. Without any warning or
preamble, John’s eyes simply rolled up in their sockets, and he
dropped to the porch. The lighter skittered from his grasp.



Rogue’s mouth twisted with disgust as his psyche
rolled over hers like an oily tide. She wanted no part of it, so she
called up a burst of flame within her own head to torch the images as
they appeared.



At the same time, now that she’d successfully
imprinted his power, she held up a hand in a summoning gesture. She was
breathing very hard, almost panting, in and out to the same metronomic
pattern John established with his lighter. Her visual perceptions
skewed far away from normal to embrace the infrared. Her world became
defined by the heat it generated; she could actually see the primary
states of being on a molecular level, she understood instinctively how
to sustain and manipulate fire itself.



The raw passion of it left her breathless, because by playing with this elemental force, she became
it as well, tasting an insatiable hunger that made her want to ignite
the whole world. It would be so easy—so much energy to torch a
tree, so much for a vehicle, so much for a person. To her, they were
all becoming mere objects, without any value or purpose other than as
fuel. It was a temptation, a glory, she’d never known, nor
imagined could even exist.



But she had picked her name for a reason. Rogues
don’t play by anybody’s rules unless they choose to, and
they never ever do what’s expected of them.



She called the fire home—not merely the streamers
that John had initially created but all the conflagrations they’d
ignited. On the street, the trapped car whose metal surfaces had been
glowing red hot became amazingly cool to the touch. The other cars were
likewise smoldering wrecks.



For that instant, Rogue herself burned, shrouded in
flames from head to foot, so hot—hotter than a blast
furnace—that Bobby quickly pushed himself clear in a frenzied
crab scuttle, dragging John with him, to keep from being blistered. The
fire faded at once, without leaving a mark on the girl, although the
porch wasn’t as fortunate. The planks beneath her feet were
deeply charred, as was the roof overhead.



She swayed a little with fatigue, and Bobby leaped at
once to her side. John stirred as well, the shock of her imprinting
wearing off. As he shook off the effects, he grabbed reflexively for
his lighter and looked sour to find his flames all gone. No doubt he
would have said something, done something, very foolish—except
that Logan also got to his feet.



The boys had never seen him shot before. They
didn’t believe it any more than the watching cops did. They were
so caught up in the aftermath of the moment they didn’t realize
their danger.



The cops knew now what they were up against. They were
shaken to the bone. As far as they were now concerned, it was their
lives or the lives of these . . . monsters. They were ready to shoot
and keep shooting until the threat was over.



That’s when Jean landed the Blackbird, maybe a minute ahead of schedule.



Storm announced their arrival with a clap of thunder that
shook the very air and a gust of gale-force wind that forced both cops
and onlookers to flee from the scene. Jean made a combat approach, a
vertical descent straight down to the street in front of the house.
Between the wild weather and the sleek, dangerous-looking aircraft, the
cops didn’t know what to think. Maybe the military, come to the
rescue?



As soon as the wheels touched down, Storm dropped the
boarding ramp and beckoned Logan and the kids inside. Nobody needed to
be told twice. The kids went with a rush, Logan more slowly.



A flicker of movement revealed one of the cops from the
porch, the one who hadn’t fired, who’d tried to keep the
situation calm. He looked a mess, uniform scorched and torn, some hair
burned off, soot all over his face, but he held his Glock in an
unshaking grip, determined to do his duty.



Logan looked at him, held his hands open at his sides to
show they were empty, no claws. He didn’t want a fight, never
had. But the implication was clear: You know now what’ll happen
if one starts. Is that what you really want?



They held the pose for a few seconds, but to those watching it seemed an eternity.



Then, with a tremble, the cop shifted his gun barrel upward.



Logan nodded and made his way up the ramp. Jean gave him
a smile he’d never tire of; he gave her back a wink. Then, while
he was giving the kids a quick once-over to make sure their harnesses
were secure and that Rogue had come through her ordeal okay,
Nightcrawler popped up from the row behind. Rogue and John
yelped—too many shocks, too little time, they were way over their
limit.



“Guten Morgen,” Kurt said.



“Guten Abend,” Logan corrected. “Who the hell—”



Nightcrawler bowed, with a circus performer’s flamboyance. “Kurt Wagner, mein herr. But in the Munich Circus I was billed as ‘The Incredible Nightcraw—’ ”



“Whatever. Storm?” he called.



“Ready to roll, Logan,” came back from the flight deck.



“Not yet! We’re one short!”



Bobby stood in the hatchway. He hadn’t boarded yet;
he was looking back at his house, thinking of the life he’d lived
there, realizing that perhaps he could never go home again, not to the
way it was. He’d never considered being a mutant in those terms,
never imagined the consequences of possessing these fantastic powers
might cost him his family.



He knew at that moment that every memory of this house
and his life here would be defined by this scene, the stink of burned
rubber and metal and plastic, the groans of the wounded and the cries
of the terrified, the sight of scorched wood on the porch where
he’d played, the burn hole where the front door had been.



He saw his parents and his brother in the upstairs window
and knew their faces would remain to haunt him always. His father,
shocked and hurt—not just by what had happened, but by his own
sense of responsibility; if his son had come to this, then he had
failed as a father. His mother, sobbing, like he wasn’t her son
anymore but had become, now and forever, a stranger.



He wondered if he could forestall all that by going back.
Like that old Cher song said, “If I Could Turn Back Time”!
He had to laugh a little at the yearning: Where was a mutant with a
truly useful power when you really needed one?



He gave his family a final wave, and closed both ramp and hatch behind him.



Descent to dust-off, maybe a minute. Engines shrieking, the Blackbird
hovered above the rooftops for a few seconds, then oriented itself and
shot up and away at an incredibly steep angle and a speed those
watching couldn’t believe.



The cop on the lawn holstered his weapon, then thumbed
the call button on the walkie-talkie handset clipped to his shoulder to
make sure the unit was working.



“Dispatch,” he reported when he got them to
calm down enough to hear him speak, more than a little amazed himself
to discover that he could speak, “all units are down. We have casualties. We need fire and rescue units onsite, ASAP.
Perps positively identified as mutants and hostile. They’re
mobile, escaping aboard some kind of high-performance aircraft, heading
west and climbing fast. You’d better notify Hanscom Air Force
Base. If we want these guys, they’d better scramble some
interceptors right now! An’ you tell ’em from us, good
hunting.”



But he had to wonder, as he picked his way across the
lawn toward his ruined squad car, against adversaries like this, if the
Air Force would have any better chance of success.





 







Chapter

Eleven




Charles Xavier never tired of the view from his office.



The main floor of the mansion was built up a level from
the ground, creating a distinct separation between the reception areas
of the house and those rooms and areas where the household staff
actually did their work. He could turn from his desk and look out
through the big bay window, across the tiled expanse of the terrace to
the lawn and formal gardens beyond. In summer, the garden caught the
eye, with its cavalcade of flowers and shrubs. In autumn, once the
flowers faded and the leaves began to turn, the trees beyond took over,
painting the distance in a riot of fiery orange, scarlet, and gold. In
winter, if he arose early enough after a snow, he was usually assured
of about an hour to look on the yard in an unmarked, pristine state, as
nature intended. Then, of course, his students—regardless of
age—erupted from the house to embark on an endless succession of
sled races down the far slopes, the construction of various animals,
and the obligatory snowball fights. By sunset of that first day, the
snow had become so trampled it resembled a beach under the onslaught of
midsummer bathers.



The moments he cherished best, though, came in spring.
The air, still crisp with the bite of a winter reluctantly passing, was
filled with the promise of new life and new hope. The garden was
scattered with dots of brightness and color, teasing the onlooker with
hints of the coming glory.



A breeze riffled the treetops, creating that shushhhing
sound he loved, and stirred his senses as it brought a sharp and heady
mix of smells through the open window. The pleasure was acute, but for
some reason it brought to his face not a smile, but tears. In the midst
of this natural wonder that was so familiar and usually so comforting,
he felt an inexplicable and aching sense of loss.



On the windowsill, he saw a chess set, arranged to
suggest he was playing someone outside, although the terrace and
grounds beyond—indeed, the entire school—were empty. No
sound of voice, of movement, when usually the challenge was to create
some small semblance of peace amid the constant clatter. Not even a
hint of a stray thought.



He’d never known such silence, nor felt so utterly
alone. For as long as he could remember, there had always been someone
or other’s thoughts to reach out to. He rarely did, he liked to
be as respectful of the privacy of others as he was protective of his
own, yet it was always reassuring to know they were there.



Now, nothing.



He looked again at the chess set. He was white, and
he’d lost almost all his pawns. His king was in jeopardy,
virtually checkmate, and while his queen remained on the board, she was
sufficiently threatened to prevent her coming to his aid. His only
effective ally was a knight.



Thinking about the game made his head ache. Rubbing his temple didn’t help. Perhaps a walk . . .



That made him pause.



He was standing.



He looked over his shoulder at his office, unwilling yet
to make a move that trusted these newly functional limbs. He saw only
normal furniture and a desk that made no provision for the presence of
a wheelchair.



Xavier closed his eyes, reaching deep into memory for the
exercises he’d first learned to help him focus his abilities, the
way he’d taught himself to stay afloat against the riptides of
outside thoughts crashing against the shores of his own conscious
awareness. Gradually, as he gained an increasing measure of control, he
had crafted a series of psychic levees to guarantee the integrity of
his own personality, no matter how many minds he interfaced with.



Evidently, all those meticulously constructed defenses
had been subverted. He didn’t like that and liked even less the
struggle he went through to keep that anger from showing.
Instinctively, he knew the source of his troubles.



“Jason.” He spoke aloud, severely. “Stop it.”



Jason had other ideas, so Xavier returned once more to
his most basic mantras, building upward from that essential psychic
foundation. The first thing to change was his own personal perspective.
The view out the window lowered somewhat, dropping by more than
one-third to the level of a tall man sitting in a chair. Carved stone
morphed into Sheetrock, painted in institutional greens and beige and
looking very much the worse for wear. Natural sunlight gave way to the
passionless radiance of overhead fluorescents. His favorite things went
away, to be replaced by his prison cell . . .



. . . and the demented monstrosity that Stryker called Mutant 143 and who Xavier remembered as a quietly frightened little boy.



There’d been only the one consultation. The boy’s DNA
contained markers for the mutator gene, and Stryker’s contacts
within the American intelligence community had led him to Xavier. He
had no idea then that Xavier was himself a mutant, only an acknowledged
expert in the field. And while Xavier could confirm that the boy
possessed the requisite gene matrix and that in all likelihood he would
be active, there was no way to determine the type and extent of
abilities the boy would manifest. Xavier suggested admitting the boy to
the school, but Stryker would hear none of that. He wanted the mutantcy
removed. When Xavier told him that wasn’t possible, the other man
lost his temper. He took away his son, and that was the last Xavier had
heard of Jason, even though, in the years following, he made a number
of his own discreet inquiries to try to determine what had happened.
Finally word came that the boy had died.



Sitting across from him, Xavier couldn’t help thinking, Would that he had.



The buzzing in Xavier’s ears, radiating through his
skull with the annoying fury of a bone saw, was murder, leaving his
teeth bared and clenched in a perpetual grimace of pain.
Stryker’s neural inhibitor, doing its job.



The hell with that man, the hell with his toys.



“Jason,” he said, speaking with care to avoid
triggering further retaliation from the inhibitor, “you must help
me.”



No response, so he tried again. And again, his eyes
meeting the mismatched gaze of the poor creature in the other
wheelchair, ignoring the seething cauldron of emotions that were so
nakedly displayed.



“You must help me,” Xavier repeated,
ruthlessly crushing the surge of elation he felt when the boy’s
mouth began to move in concert to his words. No distractions, not till
the job was done.



“You must help me,” he said once more, and this time he could hear the words from Jason, a beat behind.



Gradually, with each repetition, Jason caught up with Xavier until their speech was totally in sync.



But at the same time, Jason’s withered arms were
struggling upward from his lap, his face contorting with effort and
with rage as he extended them toward Xavier. His chair moved forward as
well, bringing him within reach. Jason’s hands came to rest on
Xavier’s shoulders, those burning eyes, pulsing with inner light,
filling his vision. He felt them on his neck, so little strength in
them it was more like being grasped by a toddler. Tears burned at the
corners of Jason’s eyes, sympathetic counterparts squeezing from
Xavier’s, but he couldn’t read the emotions behind them,
save that they were powerful and primal.



“Stand,” Xavier said simply, putting the full force of his will behind that single injunction.



“Stand,” Jason repeated, same tone, same inflection. And they said it again until they were one.



His mouth forming a great O of astonishment and protest,
Jason levered his body forward and pushed himself erect. With
disturbingly liquid popping sounds, the junctions on all his connectors
pulled free of their housings, allowing cerebrospinal fluid to leak
from the port in his skull. His legs were as spindly and apparently
useless as his arms, but he gained his feet with far more ease. His
hands rose with him, up from Xavier’s throat, to catch hold of
the circlet of sophisticated electronics that rested on his head.



A quick tug, followed by a clatter as the circlet slipped
from Jason’s fingers to the floor below, and the buzzing was
gone, the pain as well.



Xavier exhaled in relief. “Thank you, Jason.”



“Thank you, Jason” was the boy’s mumbled response.



For Xavier, it was like staring down at the world from
some Olympian height and watching all the lights come on. First one
thought came to him, and then a multitude, the same way the first few
drops of rain in spring herald the approaching monsoon. Most would
drown in such an onslaught.



For Charles Xavier, it was a rebirth. Of self, of purpose.



He felt Jason touch him once more, gently, on the cheek,
and used that momentary contact as the physical link to release the
controls he’d established over the boy. He might as well have
thrown a switch. All expression immediately faded from Jason’s
features. As the boy lowered himself to his own chair, Xavier assumed
that the passion he’d seen earlier was merely a reflection of his
own.



“This should not have happened,” he told
Jason. “I don’t know what can be done, my boy, but you have
my word, I’ll find some way to help you.”



His mind was on other things, flush with the excitement
of his reawakened telepathy. He didn’t see the flash in the
boy’s eyes that belied the quietude of his behavior.



Xavier wheeled himself toward the locked door, making
sure to roll across the inhibitor, taking a rude pleasure in the sound
of its delicate workings crushing under his wheels.



“Mr. Smith,” he called, aloud and with his thoughts, “are you there?”



Of course he was; his mind was as plain to Xavier as the
sunrise on a clear day. In short order, the door was unlocked, and
Xavier’s arms were released from their restraints. His companion
guard simply stood where he was, as Xavier told him to, watching
disinterestedly.



“I arrived here with a friend,” Xavier ordered. “Take me to him.”



Scott Summers had a cell all to himself, his optic blasts
restrained by a high-tech inhibitor of their own. He was also shackled
to the bed, to keep him from getting ideas about unleashing his beams
himself.



“Remove his restraints,” Xavier told the guards.



While Smith did as he was told, his partner hurried
forward with Cyclops’ visor. Taking great care to keep his eyes
tightly closed and his face turned away from any living targets, Scott
donned the visor.



“Thank you,” Xavier said to the soldiers, and
then to Corporal Smith: “What is the quickest way out of
here?”



“The helicopter, sir” was Smith’s reply, at attention, as if to a general.



“Take us there, now.”






Two-thirds of the way eastward across the continent, in the passenger cabin of the Blackbird,
on its way to the mansion, Bobby Drake wasn’t happy with his
roommate. John Allardyce, cheerfully flicking his lighter cap open and
shut, open and shut, couldn’t care less.



“You think it’s funny,” Bobby fumed,
refusing to let up even though he’d been speaking to deaf ears
since they went airborne. “Let’s go set fire to your house next time!”



“Too late,” John said cheerily.



“You almost killed those cops, John,” Rogue told him.



“So?” John turned toward her. He spoke with
exaggerated patience, as though explaining the most obvious facts of
life to the terminally dim-witted. “Logan would
have”—he gave a pointed look at the man across the
aisle—“if he hadn’t gotten shot in the head.”



Logan ignored the boy. He wanted no part of this
argument, because in this one instance, both sides were right. John was
right. Given the circumstances, he would have charged those cops and
likely used lethal force. But he also sided foursquare with Rogue. Just
because he was prepared to shoulder that karmic burden didn’t
mean it was right for these kids to do the same. Hell, it probably
meant precisely the opposite.



Mercifully, Jean gave him a high sign from the flight deck, and he clambered up the aisle to join her and Storm.



“They’ll be all right,” she assured
him. Unconvinced, he growled, crouching down behind the cockpit seats
and occupying himself with an examination of the dials and display
screens. Jean was staring at him, first at his reflection in the
windscreen, then straight on as she swung around in her chair to look
him full in the face. He thought he’d welcome such attention, but
her direct gaze made him distinctly uncomfortable.



She must have picked up the cue, from body language or
his thoughts, because she reached out and used her thumb to wipe a
smudge of blood off his forehead, from where the bullet had struck back
in Boston. She didn’t move her hand away, though, but stroked him
again with her thumb, a quick caress right over the now-healed wound.



More than anything right then, he wanted to take that
hand. He wanted to kiss those lips, he wanted to lose himself in the
scent of her hair. He wanted—



Too many things.



“So,” he said, taking refuge in the
proprieties, “any word from the professor?” Seeing a faint
quirk at the edge of her mouth when she shook her head, he remembered
to add, “Or Scott?”



“Nothing,” she told him.



“How far are we?” he asked.



“We’re coming up on the mansion now. Once Storm whistles up some cover—”



“I’ve got two signals,” Storm interrupted, “coming in fast.”



Accompanying her announcement, a proximity alarm sounded.
Warning lights flashed on the main console, and the main display
shifted channels to a radar field. Two blips, rising and approaching
from behind, identified by the plane’s onboard computer as F-16s.
They were armed and trying to paint the Blackbird with their target acquisition systems.



The Blackbird shuddered in wake turbulence as the
Falcons shot past to announce their presence, then throttled back to
pace the bigger aircraft, taking up flanking positions on either side.
Each of the pilots was making a downward gesture, telling them to land
at once.



They made the same point over the radio:
“Unidentified aircraft, this is Air Force two-one-zero on guard.
You are ordered to descend to twenty thousand feet and return with our
escort to Hanscom Air Force Base. Failure to comply at once will result
in the use of extreme force. Do you acknowledge?”



When there was no reply, the fighter pilot repeated his instructions.



“Somebody’s angry,” Storm commented.



“I wonder why” was Logan’s pointed response, with a glare over his shoulder at John Allardyce.



Logan hung back in the shadows so that the fighter jocks
could only see the two women at the controls. Nightcrawler had started
mumbling prayers again, and the kids aft were demanding to know what
was happening; they weren’t shy about sounding scared, either.



Jean looked at Storm, then at Nightcrawler. She’d already come to her decision.



Logan was about to ask, “What now?” when the lead fighter told them.






“We’re marked!” Storm cried as the Blackbird’s systems confirmed the worst. “They’re going to fire! Seat belts!”



She slapped the throttles to their firewalls and pointed the big black aircraft toward the stars. The Blackbird
surged forward as though it had been launched from a catapult, and
Logan had his hands full grabbing hold of the back of Jean’s
chair with one hand and catching Nightcrawler with the other. Strangest
damn feeling for Logan, and then some, to find some guy better than a
head taller wrapping himself like a monkey around his arm and using it
to climb up to his torso.



They felt another minor shudder as the Blackbird
broke the sound barrier. In their wake, the F-16s went immediately to
afterburner and rocketed after them. Alarms and displays on the main
panel revealed two minor blips separating themselves from the pursuing
fighters and beginning to close the gap at a significantly greater
speed.



“Who are these guys?” Bobby yelled from the
back. “What the hell is happening? Why won’t they leave us
alone?”



Nobody up front paid him any attention. They had enough to worry about.



“What’s the threat?” Logan demanded.



Jean pointed at the display: “Sidewinders.
They’re heat seekers. We give them minimal profile with our
exhaust, we can lose ’em.”



“Everybody hang on!” Storm yelled, and she and Jean together swung the wheel hard over.



The Blackbird peeled off to the left, pitching up
and over into a barrel roll that allowed them to reverse direction
without needing a wide turn. The missiles, closing on where the plane
had been, triggered their own proximity sensors and detonated, creating
a minor fireball too far behind the Blackbird to do any damage. In response, both pursuing fighters split in opposite directions to come in on them from either side.



Storm jinked them the other direction, turning headlong
in the direction of one of the fighters and forcing both of them to
maneuver to prevent a collision. Nightcrawler wedged himself into a
corner, holding on with hands and feet and tail while praying for all
he was worth. Aft, John Allardyce had no smart comments, just a lot of
sweat as he grabbed for a barf bag.



“They’re not backing off,” Storm said.
“And they’re not giving me a decent opening to outrun
them.”



“Don’t we have any damn weapons in this
heap?” Logan demanded as the fighters struggled for position. The
women were good, but these guys were trained professionals at the top
of their game. No way would they lose a dogfight.



Jean shot a glance at Storm, who released hold of her controls. Jean had the aircraft now.



Storm’s eyes burned white, occluding iris and
pupil. The air around her became supercharged with electricity, and
Jean flicked a line of switches to disengage the systems on her side of
the panel. Even so, performance on the main displays began degrading
markedly, the screens becoming more and more crowded with static.



Through the canopy, Logan saw clouds darkening the sky
ahead as puffy cumulus crashed together and built themselves before his
eyes into a towering series of thunderheads. Lightning announced the
storm, and he knew down on the ground people would be picking up the
pace, cursing the weatherman for getting the forecast wrong yet again,
as they hurried toward shelter.



On the radar, despite the electronic interference Storm
was creating, he could see the shape of the storm up ahead. To his
uneducated eye, it looked nasty. Without hesitation, Jean sent the Blackbird rocketing into its heart.



The Falcon drivers couldn’t know what to make of the freak weather. They didn’t care. They followed.



On radar and to the naked eye, wisps of cloud began to
swirl, faster and faster as Storm manipulated pressure gradients and
temperature to create air effects within these clouds more common to
the great plains than the northeast. Great rams of high-pressure cold
bludgeoned hot low-pressure air, generating maelstroms of tremendous
force that found expression as airborne tornados.



Aboard the Blackbird, despite the best efforts of
both Jean and Storm, it was a rough and rocky ride, akin to thundering
over potholes the size of New Jersey. Wind smashed at the hull; one
minute they were in clear air, the next the canopy was covered with
sheets of rain, the next, completely occluded by ice. The only constant
was that visibility sucked and maneuverability was worse.



Hard as it was for them, though, Logan didn’t want
to imagine what it was like for their pursuers. He counted over a dozen
whirlwinds, writhing impossibly across the sky both vertically and
horizontally, creating an atmospheric gauntlet no aircraft could
possibly survive.



Still, they tried, using every ounce of courage and skill to close to the point where they could establish a solid lock.



“We’re marked,” Jean cried out . . .



. . . and Storm responded by sandwiching the nearer fighter between a pair of tornados.






They literally tore the plane to bits, scattering
wreckage across the sky in pieces no larger than a Zip disk. In the
blink of an eye, the pilot found himself cast out of his vehicle and
into the teeth of weather more ferocious than he could imagine, much
less recall. He’d never had a plane disintegrate around him
before, prayed never to endure the experience again. But most amazing
of all to him was what happened afterward.



He thought for those first awful moments only of his wife
and kids, but then it was as if the hand of God had reached out to
enfold him. Yes, he was falling from miles in the air, but from the
moment he separated from his aircraft, it was as if the storm had lost
all interest in him. He might as well have been falling through a clear
summer sky on some training exercise. Not a breath of wind touched him,
nor rain, either, even though he fell for miles through the darkest and
most terrifying pile of cumulo-nimbus thunderheads he’d ever
seen. His parachute opened without a hitch, and he descended to a
smooth landing somewhere close to Syracuse.






His wingman knew none of this. He only saw his fellow
plane disintegrate, heard a final, frantic squawk of shock and terror
over the radio before contact was lost. He made the logical assumption,
and just like that the fight became personal.



The tornados came looking for him, and he skated around
them with a daring and skill that pushed his interceptor well beyond
the envelope of its flight and combat dynamics in his determination to
nail them. He wouldn’t give up, he wouldn’t back off, and
as the increasingly desperate maneuvers progressed, he gained height on
them.






All Jean wanted was to break off the engagement, to use the Blackbird’s
far superior power plant to put so much distance between them that he
couldn’t follow. But if she ducked to the side, if she turned
tail, the Falcon would have a shot. If she bulled down his throat, he
had a shot.



Storm let her temper get the better of her. Logan jumped
as small flickers of lightning crackled from her eyes and the interior
of the flight deck resounded to the kettledrum riff of thunder.
Outside, all the subordinate funnels coalesced into one, that
megatornado expanding until its cone engulfed first the Blackbird, and then the Falcon on its tail.






Quick as she was, the pilot got tone before she could
grab him. This time, before his plane went the way of his wingman, he
popped a pair of slammers: AIM-120 AMRAAM
“fire-and-forget” air-to-air missiles. Even as he bailed,
even as the storm around him abated to give him an equally smooth and
safe descent to the ground, he knew he had the target nailed.



Explosions high in the atmosphere confirmed it. When he
was picked up, over the Canadian border in the woods above Lake Huron,
that’s what he reported.






Jean kicked the Blackbird through the whole regime
of missile avoidance maneuvers. She pulled a vertical rolling scissors,
snapping back and forth across her base course violently enough and
often enough to break the radar lock the slammers had on them. She
tried a high-speed, high-G barrel roll to flip up and over the missiles
and come in behind them. For all the good she did, the damn missiles
might as well have been tied to the Blackbird with wire.



Without a word, using a slap to the arm to get the other
woman’s attention, she handed the controls back to Storm. They
were leaving her storm well behind, although the air, and the ride,
remained bumpy. The missiles were too small, too close, too fast for
Storm’s power to do any good. Their survival was Jean’s to
decide.



One small blessing: As Storm scaled back her power, the
radar cleared up. Jean had a clear electronic view of their tormentors.
All she had to do now was slide her consciousness down that invisible
line connecting the Blackbird to the missiles . . .



Storm cleaned up the Blackbird’s flight
profile, exchanging maneuverability for raw speed as the
variable-geometry wings folded close to the hull, creating an airfoil
ideal for high-mach hypersonic flight. Given a small fraction of a
minute, they could outrun the damn missiles, stretching out the pursuit
until the missiles ran out of fuel. But the missiles were already going
hell for leather, far faster than the planes that launched them, and
the time the Blackbird needed to accelerate was time they didn’t have.



As the missiles struck the unseen barrier that she threw
up in their flight path, Jean’s body reacted to an invisible
impact and she gritted her teeth, hurling another telekinetic boulder
at them. Again and again they plowed through her obstacles, the impacts
psychically translating themselves into physical terms so that each one
felt like a heavyweight punch. But this succession of hammer blows only
made Jean that much more determined to prevail. She wasn’t trying
to finesse the intercept by manipulating the missiles’
flight-control surfaces or even just grabbing hold of them and throwing
them away; there was too much risk of losing her telekinetic grip, and
no time to recover if she did.



She vaguely registered a cry of elation from the seat
beside her and felt a sudden, pronounced wobble on the trajectory of
the nearest missile. She hit it again, and again, and again, cursing it
in terms that would impress Logan, furious with herself for not having
the raw power necessary to do the job in a single shot.



She felt her body flush with a heat unlike any
she’d ever known, not a physical sensation at all so much as a .
. . spiritual one. She heard something faint in the distance, like a
carillon fanfare, a call to glory that made her ache to answer, a sense
of a window opening onto possibilities beyond number. It registered to
her as music, but she knew it was so much more. It spoke to her as
fulfillment, but of what she did not know.



“Jean,” she heard Storm call, from as great a
distance one way as the fanfare was the other, and for that moment was
torn between which one to answer. “How are you—”



The last shot did the trick, sending the missile straight
up so that its proximity fuse, mistaking its fellow missile for the
target, detonated. She was aiming for a twofer, a double kill.






Aft, at the rear of the passenger cabin, John Allardyce
had long since run out of barf bags, long since ruined his borrowed
clothes. Bobby Drake didn’t feel much better,
although—since his uncle was a Gloucester man who made his living
fishing the Grand Banks and enjoyed taking his favorite nephew for the
occasional jaunt—he’d acquired a cast-iron stomach long
ago.



Rogue, unfortunately, was in real trouble. The Blackbird
didn’t use standard seat belts; all the seats were fitted with
four-point military-style restraints. Procedure mandated that
passengers lock themselves in at takeoff, but she’d been talking
with Bobby, who was really rocked by how wrong things had gone back at
his house. He wasn’t even sure anymore whether or not he could
even go home again. In addition, she’d been so upset—still
and probably for a while to come—with John for the stunts
he’d pulled during the fight that she never got around to
buckling herself in. Once the dogfight started, she found to her
increasing dismay that she couldn’t.



All the Blackbird’s wild and unpredictable
moves forced her to spend most of the time just hanging on, to keep
from making like a hockey puck against the walls and ceiling. Every
time she got hold of a damn buckle, it wouldn’t lock into the
mechanism. She’d think one was anchored, but then when she tried
to close another, the first would pop out. It happened so
often—making her so frustrated she was ready to cry—that
she believed the plane was doing this to her on purpose.



She knew she was getting upset, so she followed
Jean’s training. She forced herself to take big, slow, calming
breaths. She was still scared but tried not to let that matter so much
as, one by one, she gathered the buckles and slugged them into place.



This was going to work. She was going to be okay.






Up front, three pairs of eyes—green, brown, and
blue—stared transfixed at the radar screen and the big blotch way
less than a mile behind the Blackbird that represented the exploding missile. Things were looking good. They were going to be okay.



The panel beeped an alarm, and the second missile raced free of the debris field, locked and closing.



They had seconds to save themselves.



Jean threw everything she had into its path, focusing her
concentration so tightly that the shape and fabric of the world around
her began to fade. She didn’t perceive herself anymore as being
surrounded by the solid structure of the Blackbird; instead,
she beheld the glittering atomic and molecular matrices that composed
it. The world for her became a panoply of brilliant pinpoint lights and
colors, shot through with vistas of unfathomable emptiness, almost as
though reality was no more than an illusion, with all the tangible
substance of a dream.



She closed her eyes, tasting the harsh gunmetal of blood from her nose.



The proximity beeps of the radar were coming closer together as the missile closed the range. She took a final roundhouse swing—and missed.



The missile’s course never wavered.



“Oh, God,” she breathed.



Inside the hull, it felt as though the Blackbird
had just had its back broken by a baseball bat. The big plane bucked
downward under the impact of the pressure wave. Shrieking metal matched
shrieking voices as shrapnel punched a score of holes in the roof.



Decompression did the rest, blowing out a major section,
the plane’s own velocity wrenching the piece away. Instantly the
cabin was swept by winds far greater than any hurricane. Rogue’s
harness held for all of a heartbeat, and then, to her absolute horror
and disbelief, her buckles disengaged and she was swept screaming up
and out the hole, into the sky.






Everyone saw what happened, only one was able to act on it.



Nightcrawler vanished in his distinctive bamf of imploding air and the faint stench of sulfur.






Rogue didn’t know what to do or think. She’d
never fallen out of a plane before; this was the kind of thing that
only happened in movies. She remembered what she’d seen about
skydiving and spread her arms and legs to try to stabilize herself. At
the same time, she was laughing hysterically inside, demanding to know
what the hell good that would do because she didn’t have a
parachute and sooner rather than later gravity was going to reintroduce
her to the ground, the hard way. She doubted after that happy moment if
even Logan’s healing power would make much difference.



It was really cold, too. She’d hardly begun falling
and already she couldn’t breathe and she’d likely pass out
and freeze to death before anything serious happened. It was so unfair.



That’s when the demon caught her, indigo skin
making him hard to see against the darkening sky that was left over
from the storm. He rocketed out of nowhere with a grace and skill that
told her he knew all about skydiving and wrapped himself around her,
arms, legs, and tail. And teleported.



She didn’t know where they went for the split
instant they were in transit, and for as long as she planned to live
she never wanted to find out. There was a cold that chilled her to the
marrow, more completely than Bobby could. There was a silence that had
nothing to do with the absence of sound. There was a raging
disorientation that made her wonder if her insides and outsides had
been transposed. There was an awful sense of nothing.



And then she was whole once more. And the pair of them were dropping the last couple of feet to the wind-ripped deck of the Blackbird’s main cabin. Which, in Rogue’s estimation, was not an improvement, because the plane was falling just as out of control as she had been.



Storm yelled their altitude, diminishing rapidly, as she
and Jean fought to pull the plane out of a flat spin. The explosion had
crippled the flight controls, they had minimal hydraulics, which made
the act of turning the wheel or pulling on the yoke or pressing the
rudder pedals akin to bench-pressing a fully loaded semitrailer. They
had a flameout on one engine, possible shrapnel damage and a
fire-warning light from the other, which they ignored as they rammed
its throttle past the firewall in an attempt to stabilize their
descent.



Logan braced himself in position and laid his hand beside
Jean’s on her yoke, using his strength to buttress hers. They
were into the breathable atmosphere, that was good. But they were fast
running out of sky, that was way bad.



Storm’s eyes went white again as she fought to
bring a wind into their path, to use it to check their headlong fall.
But for all the passion of her indomitable will, she was still
constrained by natural forces. She could generate a wind to cushion
their landing, but not in the space they had left.



“You can fly,” Jean told her. “Grab the kids, get them clear!”



As she spoke, Jean once more turned to her own teke, but
that well was too dry to be of use. She had will to spare, but no
strength to match the terrible momentum of their descent.



Without thinking, responding solely to a surge of emotion
that caught them both by surprise, she placed a hand over
Logan’s. The look he saw when he met her eyes was a revelation
that he knew would break both their hearts. And yet, it was a moment
and a memory he’d carry with him to the grave.



Storm cleared her harness and shoved herself past Logan, calling to the kids.



Strangely, it was Nightcrawler, holding tight to Rogue, who responded.



“Uh . . . Storm?” He was pointing to the roof.



She followed his upraised finger and didn’t bother
hiding her astonishment as the fabric of the hull came alive before her
eyes. Dark threads of metal alloy polymer laced their way across the
hull spars as though they were being spun from a loom. The spars
themselves that had been twisted and broken politely straightened
themselves. The roar of wind through the hull gradually lessened to a
whisper, then to silence.



Around them, the hull righted itself, returning to level flight.



Logan looked questioningly at Jean, wondering if this was
her doing. As mystified as he, she shook her head, but she also
didn’t move her hand. Indeed, she tightened her grip, interlacing
her fingers with his.



They were a couple of hundred feet in the air, but their
velocity had dropped to less than a hundred knots. With each ten feet
or so they lost another ten knots until, ten feet off the ground, they
stopped.



They sat there, floating just above the ground, for maybe
a minute before anyone had the presence of mind to mention the landing
gear. That provoked more than a fair share of nervous chuckles as Jean
broke contact with Logan to slap the big landing lever from the top to
the bottom of its cradle. A quiet whine and a dull thunk told them what the status lights confirmed: gear down and locked.



The next sensation was an equally understated thump that told them they were once more on the ground.



The kids in the back, being kids, let out a cheer.



On the flight deck, the first flush of relief had been
cast aside by the sight of what was waiting for them. They had
descended into a forest clearing not much bigger than the Blackbird
itself. On the edge of the clearing, parked under the sheltering
evergreens, was a black limousine, not the sort of wheels normally used
for a camping trip. But then, the couple using it wasn’t the sort
you’d expect to find out here roughing it, either.



Mystique gave Jean and Logan a wave from where they stood midway between the nose of the Blackbird
and their car. Magneto, once again properly clothed in his signature
black and gray, held out his hand in welcome. Mystique stood at his
side.



“If I set you down gently,” he offered in a
pleasantly companionable voice, the kind you’d want in a favorite
old-country uncle, “will you hear me out?”





 







Chapter

Twelve




It was a good place to hide, even without the stealth
netting that Storm and Logan quickly spread across the hull. Jean
wanted to help, but her psychic exertions in the air had taken a
physical toll—which she’d discovered when she tried to
climb out of her pilot’s chair. The spirit was willing, the flesh
had other ideas. She didn’t have strength to move, and Logan had
to carry her out.



Magneto had set the Blackbird down hard against a
nice-sized escarpment, part of a line of large hills—baby
mountains, really—that formed a valley with a mainly north-south
orientation. It had been carved out of the landscape by the great ice
ages, when the advancing glaciers had plowed troughs in the earth like
a plow. This was still technically wilderness, with no roads to speak
of for fifty miles in any direction, pretty rough going on foot through
the forest. Magneto had brought his limo in the same way he saved the Blackbird, with his power.



For Storm and Jean, that had proved a daunting
revelation. The plane had been designed with Magneto’s abilities
in mind, to make it as impervious to him as possible, and yet
he’d grabbed hold of it and repaired it with frightening ease.



The cliff formed a wall at their back. Every other
direction, they saw only trees. Old-growth forest, timber that had
never been cut, thick stands of fir that towered thirty meters and more
in height. This was rugged country that made no concession to modern
man or the amenities of modern society, as the kids learned when they
decided to go exploring and almost immediately got themselves lost.
Logan found them without any trouble but wasn’t happy about it,
and he made it clear to them that next time they were on their own.



“Think they listened?” Jean asked him.



He snorted derisively. “That’ll be the damn
day. Especially John. He’ll do it again just to spit in my
eye.” His expression sobered. “How you doin’?”
he asked her.



“Pretty much fine, thank you,” she replied,
interlacing her fingers and stretching her arms till the joints
cracked. “Just being lazy.”



“You’re entitled.”



“Absent the circumstances, and the company,”
she added, with a pointed flick of the eyes toward the limo,
“I’d agree with you. I’ve been monitoring GUARD.”
She meant the military command frequencies. “Both pilots are
okay.” Logan made a face. He understood her impulse to save the
two men, but frankly he couldn’t have cared less. Guy tries to
kill him, the guy takes his chances. No bitching, no tears.



“The second pilot’s reporting us as a probable kill,” Jean finished.



“They buying it, the brass?”



“Well, Ororo didn’t entirely disperse her
storm. It’s raining pretty hard over the probable crash site,
zero-zero visibility, no hope of flight operations until it clears,
which she assures me”—ghost of a
grin—“won’t be for a while. System seems to have
stalled. Meteorologists are baffled.”



“I’d keep looking if it was me, till I knew for sure.”



“Hence our precautions,” and she indicated
the netting, shrouding the plane and the car. “Even enhanced
imagery won’t spot the plane, and our heat and electronic
emissions are close to zero. By the time we finish setting up,
we’ll look like a camping party, nothing more. There should be
nothing here to merit a second glance.”



“Except for him,” Logan noted, jutting his
jaw in the general direction of Nightcrawler, who was carrying a tent
pack over to where Mystique had begun to lay out their campsite.



“Whatever happens, Logan, we’ll deal.”



“So tell me, Jean, just how many people are there in the world with that color skin and those color eyes?”



She shrugged. “How many are blond and blue, or redheaded with green eyes?”



“I don’t believe in coincidence.”



Her tone sharpened. “And I don’t believe in
judging someone without giving them a fair chance. You of all people
might appreciate that.”



With a grunt of effort, deliberately ignoring, then
waving away, his offer of help, Jean pushed herself to her feet and
strode toward the open hatch of the Blackbird. Logan fumed as
he watched her go, but he was mostly angry at himself. He had nothing
against the German, couldn’t help liking him in some ways. But
the attack on the mansion, and now finding himself in close proximity
with a man he’d cheerfully slaughter, had put all his combat
instincts on high alert. Jean was too much like Xavier, always
determined to see the brighter angles of human nature. Logan had walked
too long, too far, with killers. Trust came hard for him because he
knew, deep down to his soul, the cost of betrayal.



He felt as if he’d already failed once, by being
caught by surprise at the mansion. He wasn’t going to let that
happen again.



Mystique was supervising the layout of the camp, and
Logan had to admit the woman knew her stuff. She knew he was watching
and if that bothered her, she didn’t let it show. Quite the
opposite, in fact; she seemed amused by his attention.



Logan smelled a faint acrid wisp on the wind, the
detritus of a striker generating a spark, over and over, in an
unsuccessful attempt to ignite a flame.



That made him grin. The kids were going all Boy Scout. How cute.






Bobby Drake didn’t share that amusement as repeated
attempts to use John’s lighter to torch some kindling led to a
huge amount of frustration. He tried paper, he tried twigs, he tried
dry leaves, but nothing would catch. All the time he was conscious of
John, sitting behind him with his back to a tree trunk, silently
laughing at his failure.



“You could help, you know,” Rogue snapped to
John. There was no expression on the boy’s face as he looked up
at her. His eyes were cold and unreadable.



Forcing himself to ignore everything but the need to
generate some fire, Bobby followed a couple of sparks as they landed on
a leaf, pursing his lips and giving them a gentle puff of air to excite
them into a true flame as they burned through the leaf and left a
glowing boundary that quickly expanded outward in their wake. The more
Bobby breathed, the brighter the embers glowed, until he saw the ghost
of a flame. Stifling a cheer, he grabbed for some more tinder to feed
the baby fire.



Then, with a speed that surprised and saved him,
Rogue’s hand caught him by the scruff of the neck and yanked him
clear, his own muscles engaging that very same moment in kinetic
response to a threat his conscious mind wasn’t yet even aware of.
In that selfsame instant, the tiny flicker of flame exploded into a
pillar of raw fire, hot as a blast furnace, that reared up better than
ten meters before fading to a happy little campfire.



Bobby scrambled around to confront the boy behind him,
but he lost his balance as he did so and sprawled awkwardly on the
grass, which kept John from being on the receiving end of a roundhouse
punch to the face. He glared at John, so did Rogue, but all they got in
return was the most innocent of smiles.



John held out his hand, gesturing for the borrowed
lighter. Bobby wanted to throw it away or, better yet, encase it in a
block of ice that would last as long as a glacier. Instead, remembering
all he’d been taught at home and at Xavier’s, he mastered
his rage and dropped the lighter into John’s open palm. Then he
and Rogue turned their backs on him and walked away. Once they were
back at the school, assuming there was a school to go back to, Bobby
determined to insist on a new roommate. John had crossed too many
lines. Bobby wanted no more to do with him.






After the fire came dinner. Nothing fancy, nothing that
needed cooking. The campfire was mainly for psychological comfort, to
give the scene an air of companionability that was lacking on the faces
of most everyone present.



It was an adversarial setting, Magneto and Mystique on
one side of the fire, Jean, Storm, and Logan on the other. Everyone but
Logan was seated. He stood behind the women and a little to their side,
with a clear shot at Magneto. His stance appeared casual, but nobody
was fooled. The question that lingered unspoken between them all was
whether or not he could reach the older man and deal with him before
Magneto could bring his own powers to bear.



Magneto sat in a camp chair, with a presence that made it
seem more like a throne. Mystique hunkered down beside him in a crouch,
her movements so fluid it was hard to believe she had a skeleton
beneath her indigo skin. There was a snap to the air, a harbinger of
the fast-approaching winter, that made the heat of the fire welcome.
Magneto had hated the cold since Auschwitz and had bundled himself
inside an open greatcoat to keep it at bay. Mystique, by contrast,
didn’t seem to mind a bit. She walked naked, using a decorative
scattering of bony ridges across the chest and hips as a minimal
acknowledgment of propriety, and dared the world to make a comment.



Jean sat on knees and heels, a very Japanese stance that
amply demonstrated her natural grace. She, too, was playing a role,
presenting herself in an apparently submissive posture that was in fact
anything but. Like a samurai, she could stay this way for hours, yet
remain constantly ready to spring to her feet faster than anyone might
have guessed. She rarely looked at Magneto, yet Logan knew her focus on
the man was as intent as his own.



Of them all, Storm looked the most natural as she tended
the fire, feeding it the occasional length of wood while using her
control of the winds to channel a constant breeze through the base of
the blaze, keeping it hot. She sat cross-legged, in a position
she’d learned as a child out on the Great Rift Valley, wandering
with the Masai.



The kids, showing more sense than Logan expected, were keeping their distance, as was Nightcrawler.



Logan told the story of what had happened at the mansion. Magneto told them of Xavier’s and Scott’s capture.



“Our adversary,” Magneto said at the end,
“his name is William Stryker. He is very highly placed in the
national intelligence community. Specializing in clandestine
operations. Ostensibly accountable to the President, but it’s
clear now he has an agenda all his own.”



“What does he want?” Jean asked.



The look Magneto gave her made his feeling plain: Shouldn’t that be obvious, child? But Logan spoke before he could repeat those sentiments aloud.



“That’s the question we should be asking Magneto,” Logan challenged.



Magneto inclined his head, very much the monarch holding
court, the civilized man confronting a band of barbarians. Or worse,
children.



Storm had as little tolerance for being patronized as
Logan did. “So,” she demanded curtly of the older man.
“What is it, Eric? What do you want?”



Magneto’s expression tightened so fractionally only
Logan caught the change. He wasn’t used to being spoken to like
this, and he didn’t like it. He knew his priorities, though.
He’d leave any response for later.



“When Stryker invaded your mansion, he stole an essential piece of its hardware.”



“Cerebro?” Jean asked, shaking her head in
denial. She didn’t want to believe that that was what had
happened. “Stryker would need the professor to operate the
system,” she said.



“Precisely,” Magneto agreed. “Which is the only reason I believe Charles is still alive.”



“What’s the deal?” Logan asked sharply. “Why are you all so scared?”



Magneto answered him. “While Cerebro is working,
Charles’ mind—amplified by its power—has the
potential to connect with every living person on the planet. If he were
to concentrate hard enough on a particular group of
people—let’s say mutants, for example—he could kill
us all.”



“You’ve gotta be kidding,” Logan said.



“Charles and I built Cerebro as a tool,”
Magneto continued, “one I believed, we both believed, would unite
the world.”



Flatly, a statement of fact, like announcing there are stars in the sky, Storm said, “Liar!”



Magneto met her gaze and saw in her eyes the character of a woman who had faced down lions bare-handed.



“You wanted to use Cerebro as a weapon against
nonmutants,” she continued in that same calm, devastating
reportorial tone. “Only the professor wouldn’t let
you.”



He didn’t try to defend himself. “Now, I fear, he has no more choice in the matter.”






“Can you hear anything?” Bobby asked Rogue from the opposite end of the campsite.



“Excuse me?” she asked him back, with a look that said she thought he was nuts.



“I dunno, I thought, y’know, since you imprinted Wolverine—”



“His name’s Logan,” she retorted
in a fierce whisper. Even though she couldn’t hear what the
adults were saying, she knew Logan could hear the kids just fine if he
wanted, and suspected Jean could pick up their thoughts just as easily.
“And I can’t, okay?”



“Okay,” he said hurriedly in a placating tone. “Sorry I asked.”



John, busy staring at their campfire, snorted.



“I beg your pardon,” said Nightcrawler, his
yellow eyes the only part of him that could readily be seen against the
background shadows, “but I can get a closer look.”



Bobby and Rogue nodded in tandem, and the yellow eyes vanished, leaving behind a faint bamf of imploding air and his distinctive scent of smoke and brimstone.



“Nice,” Bobby said in admiration.



John waved his hand in front of his face. “Oh, yeah. Mutant teleport farts. Real nice.”



Nightcrawler didn’t catch the last remark, but if
he had, he wouldn’t have thought anything of it. There
wasn’t a joke or comment that could be made about the by-products
of his power that he hadn’t heard already. Some of them actually
made him laugh. Regardless, he always made it a point to smile. Grace
in adversity was an article of faith with him.



His destination was a fir tree just beyond the
adults’ campfire. The challenge was getting close enough to reach
a branch—without materializing impaled on one—and to avoid
making so much noise when he grabbed hold that it would draw the
attention of anyone down below.



Using hands and feet and tail, he clambered silently down
the trunk until he found a vantage point that kept him hidden but
afforded a decent view of the others. Then he simply wrapped his tail
around a branch, hung upside down, and listened.






Storm was speaking to Magneto with an almost
prosecutorial manner: “How would Stryker know what Cerebro
is—or where to find it?”



Magneto didn’t answer right away. He laid his right
hand for a moment on the inside of his left forearm, where he’d
received his identification tattoo from the SS guards at Auschwitz,
rubbing his thumb absently back and forth across his sleeve as though
he could feel the marks left in his skin through the thick, heavy
cloth. Then, his expression strangely unreadable, he lifted his hand to
the back of his neck, to the scar left by Stryker’s injections.
He’d now been branded twice in his life. As a boy, there had been
no way he could fight back. As a man, he’d thought there was no
way he would allow such a thing to happen again.



Vanity, he thought, remembering the ancient Roman injunction to their Caesars: All is Vanity.



“I told him,” he said at last, an admission dragged from the depths of his soul.



He looked from Storm to Jean, both women in the eyes, not
bothering to hide the rage and shame that roiled within him like magma
beneath the caldera of a dormant volcano, and was impressed that
neither flinched. “I helped design the system, remember? I helped
Charles build it.



“Stryker has undeniable methods of . . .
persuasion. Effective against me. Effective even against a mutant as
strong as Charles. Believe this, if Stryker has Charles, he will find a
way to break him. And suborn him to his purposes. If he weren’t
absolutely certain of that fact, he wouldn’t have acted.”



“Who the hell is this Stryker?” Jean asked.



“He’s a military scientist with considerable
ties to the clandestine intelligence community. He has spent his
professional life looking for a solution to what he considers the
mutant problem. But if you require a more . . . intimate perspective,
why don’t you ask the Wolverine?”



“His name is Logan,” Jean said, coming too
quickly, too sharply to Logan’s defense, in a way that made
Magneto smile very thoughtfully as he turned his attention back and
forth between them.



“Of course it is,” he said. “But what’s in a name?



“William Stryker,” he continued, “is
the only other man I know who can manipulate adamantium. The metal
laced through the Wolverine’s bones, it bears his signature.



“Are you sure you don’t remember—Logan?” In return, he got a blank look. “What a pity.”



“The professor—”



“The professor trusted you were smart enough to
discover this on your own. He gives you more credit than I do.”
Logan’s eyes flashed, but beyond a subvocalized growl, he offered
no other reaction to Magneto’s insult.



“So Charley knew,” he said.



“ ‘Charley’ has always known.”



Jean looked sharply at Logan, but his face was as still as his thoughts.



Logan didn’t react.



“Charles has always known.”



“Please understand,” Storm spoke calmly from
the fireside, “if we don’t take this all purely on good
faith. You went to some trouble to save us—for which we’re
all quite appropriately grateful. The question is, why? What do you
want, Magneto? Why do you need us?”



“Mystique discovered plans of a base where
Stryker’s had his operations for decades. Unfortunately,”
he shrugged, “we don’t know where it is.



“However, I suspect one of you might.”



“The professor already tried,” said Logan.



Magneto sighed. “Once again, you think it’s all about you.”



Then his eyes lifted to the branches above.



Nightcrawler’s first impulse was to flee, but he
took strength and comfort from the smile of greeting that Storm gave
him, the wave of invitation that followed to join her at her side. He
came down as a circus acrobat, swinging lithely from branch to branch,
ending with a triple somersault that landed him right where Storm had
indicated. He held the pose for a moment, out of habit, before
reminding himself that this wasn’t an occasion, nor this an
audience, for applause, and he squatted close beside her.



Her hand across his shoulders was reassuring.



“I didn’t mean to snoop,” he apologized.



Storm gave him a squeeze that told him it was all right, and Jean said, “Relax.”



She rose to her feet, with a smooth grace that almost matched Mystique, and took position in front of Nightcrawler.



Jean spoke aloud again, but also with her thoughts,
telling him again, “Relax.” He heard far more than the
simple word, however. She used telepathy to enfold him in a great
psychic quilt that left him all warm and snuggly and safe in ways he
should be able to recall from childhood, if he had the happy memories
for it. She gave him a window into her own soul to reassure him that
these sensations were true, that she meant him no harm, that she
genuinely liked him and cared for him. In turn, she found a soul that
had weathered the tempests of life with remarkable success.



Her mouth made a small O of astonishment. Strangely,
Nightcrawler represented something she’d never considered, a
purely physical mutation that manifested at birth. Herself, Scott,
Storm, virtually all the mutants who’d been gathered at the
mansion, they were outwardly indistinguishable from their nonpowered
brethren. Their powers had manifested at puberty, that’s when
their lives had changed; but before then everything had been
wonderfully normal.



Not so with Kurt. He’d never been able to hide.
That was why he’d ultimately taken refuge in the circus, even
though he’d spent his earliest days there as part of the freak
show. Soon, though, with the natural exuberance of childhood,
he’d discovered that he could climb faster and better than anyone
else he knew, and that his tail provided opportunities for performance
that left the others gasping. He was more at home in the air than on
the ground, and he quickly became one of the arena’s chief
attractions. Despite the evident skill, despite the tumultuous cheers
from every audience that ever saw him, he was never invited to join the
great world-class circuses. A scout from Ringling Bros. came once and
quickly conceded that he’d never seen anything like Nightcrawler.
He brought Kurt to the States for an audition. The bosses reacted the
same as their scout: Nightcrawler was unique. Unfortunately, that was
the point. No one at their level had ever knowingly hired a mutant, no
one was willing to take the risk of a backlash. Better he should stay
in a regional show.



Truthfully, Kurt himself didn’t mind. He liked the
smaller scale of his own shows, the more intimate relationship with his
audience. In the far brighter lights of the big cities where the big
shows toured, he wouldn’t be able to continue his own personal
quest for meaning, for enlightenment. He found a measure of release,
and comfort, on the trapeze, but no answers to the questions that had
haunted him since he was old enough, aware enough, to frame them: Who
am I? What am I? Why am I? What kind of God would create a creature like me? What purpose would it serve?



Jean expected to find a person bludgeoned and tormented
by his appearance. In stark contrast, she embraced one of the most
gentle and secure and stable beings she had ever encountered, who was
surprisingly at peace with himself—even if he was still working
on his place in the scheme of things.



He trusted her, wholly and unreservedly, and in the face
of that innate nobility she felt humble. It was a faith she would
cherish, and it made her absolutely determined to keep him safe as she
stepped into the vaults of his memory.



The images were broken and scattered: flashes from every
direction, strobes without number as every camera in the circus tried
to take his picture. He was used to it.



The scout and his bosses gave him a ticket home, but he
decided to stay a while, to visit in person this country he knew only
from the movies.



He found himself the abandoned church in Boston to use as
his home. He did most of his sightseeing at night. He had no thought of
danger. What would anyone want with a circus aerialist?



Ambush. Bodies slamming into him from every direction,
men in uniform, hitting him first with a shot of pepper spray, then
mace, screwing with his concentration so he couldn’t teleport,
covering his mouth so he couldn’t yell for help. . . .



A spray hypo . . .



Oblivion . . .



Vague recollections of soaring high above the ground, wind in his face, a whuppawhuppa noise that he belatedly identified as a helicopter . . .



He saw trees and a wall of gray concrete that filled his
vision to the horizon on either side and up to the very top of the sky,
which vanished as he was rolled on a gurney into a long tunnel,
plunging as deep into the bowels of the earth as he’d been
carried above it in the aircraft flying here. . . .



An annoying itch on his neck, where he wore a sedative
patch to keep him tractable, no energy to do anything about it, a room,
a man holding a syringe . . .



Soldiers held him down, and he felt acid fire at the base
of his skull. He wanted to scream, to curse, to plead, to die, but
he’d forgotten how. He was empty, and only the man’s voice
could fill him. . . .



He remembered the White House, the Oval Office, the
gunshot, running for his life, teleporting until he couldn’t go
any farther. . . .



He found his church, claimed it now as his sanctuary. . . .



And Jean found him. . . .



She broke contact, cradling his upturned face in both her
palms, wishing she could borrow some of the peace and tranquillity she
saw within him for herself. She gave him a kiss of thanks. She’d
never felt so drained, not even after the aerial dogfight aboard the Blackbird.



“Stryker’s at Alkali Lake,” she told the others without looking at any of them.



“I’ve been there,” Logan said. “That’s where Charley sent me. Nothing’s left.”



“There’s nothing left on the surface, Logan. The base is underground.”






They talked a while longer, with Magneto leading the
debriefing, delicately mining Jean’s memory for every possible
nugget of information before turning his attention to Logan. He proved
a surprisingly skilled and patient interrogator, turning the smallest
nuance of dialogue or gesture into a means of extracting even more data
than the subject, more often than not, was even aware he (or she) knew.
Watching him, listening, Jean beheld the man that Charles Xavier had
befriended, a vision of what might have been had Magneto not embraced
the inner demons of his childhood. He was just as inspiring a leader,
just as intuitive a teacher. He recognized her interest and her nascent
insights and for a moment between them there were no barriers.



The tragedy she saw then was that he knew it, too. All
that could have been, perhaps even should have been. All that might yet
be. Knew it, and rejected it. Charles Xavier was a man energized by
humanity’s potential; his life, his purpose, had always been
defined by hope. Magneto refused hope. His heart had been broken too
many times. Long ago, his spirit had been pared down to its essence,
brought to white heat in the most awful of crucibles and then pounded
by adversity into the shape of a weapon. The metal of his being had
been folded a thousand thousand times, as the classical sword smiths of
ancient Japan forged their samurai blades. Thanks to that cruel
tempering, he could bend without breaking. But regardless of what
happened, he would never lose his edge, would never be anything other
than what he was. There was a greatness in him, that was undeniable. He
was the living embodiment of the primal forces that formed the
foundation of the universe. And as a consequence, he was just as
terrible as he was glorious.



She found she couldn’t bear to be near him anymore.
The bleak hollow at the center of his soul was like a whirlpool; to
wander closer was to be dragged to a similar oblivion.



She broke from the campfire and took refuge in the Blackbird, returning to the purely mechanical tasks that had filled the afternoon and evening,






Watching her leave, Logan decided he was done with
Magneto’s Q&A. Brusquely excusing himself, he strode after
her through the campsite to find her standing underneath the wing of
the Blackbird, with her head and shoulders hidden inside an
open belly hatch. She was muttering to herself, in a tone and using
words he didn’t expect from her. It made him suspect she’d
been hanging around him too much; Xavier and Scott would accuse him of
being a bad influence. Outstanding!



“How bad is it?” he asked her.



“I’m running fluid through the hydraulics. If
the test passes, it’ll still take four to five hours to get off
the ground. Like it or not, we’re stuck here for the night.
Fortunately,” she continued in a rush, “our stealth netting
should hide the Blackbird pretty well from any casual
reconnaissance. As for the rest, the passive scanning array says
we’ve got clean sky to the horizon, and according to the infodump
on the main computer, there shouldn’t be any surveillance
satellites overhead, either. That means minimal risk of
detection.”



“That isn’t what I meant.”



“I know what you meant, Logan. This is how I choose to answer. Okay?”



He said nothing. He had a hankering for a beer, but he knew there was none aboard the Blackbird, and Magneto struck him as more of a wine guy. A case of five-star premier cru, not a problem; God forbid the man even consider a can of Molson’s.



From Mystique he expected nothing less than poison. It
didn’t matter to her that his healing factor made him immune.
Quite the contrary. It struck him that the fun for her would be in
seeing how much it would hurt him to recover and how long it would
take.



After a while, conceding to herself that Logan wasn’t going to go away, Jean allowed herself a sigh.



“I’m worried,” she confessed. “About the professor. About . . . Scott.”



“I know,” he said.



He stepped under the shadow of the aircraft and reached
out his arm to her. In flats, she was his height, but her uniform heels
gave her an edge. It amused him to have to look a little bit up to her.
At his touch, she folded against him to rest her head on his shoulder,
allowing him to take the full weight of her body, which he did without
any effort. There was no separation between them, physical or
emotional, and his nostrils flared as he realized the implications.



“I’m worried about you,” he told her softly. “That was some display of power up there.”



She snorted dismissively. “It obviously wasn’t enough.”



He turned his head to look her in the eyes. She kept hers
downcast, using her lids to shroud them, to keep him at a distance. But
he didn’t need eyes to see what was so obvious, or to sense the
depth of the attraction between them. He’d known it from the
start, that first moment when he’d awakened in the mansion
infirmary to find himself staring up at a face that would haunt him
forever.



He was barely breathing; he didn’t want to do
anything to break the moment. She felt the faint touch of air across
her face, and her mouth opened in response, as if it were life itself
to her, her head tilting just so against him to give him freer access.



The kiss was there for the taking.



Any other time, he wouldn’t have hesitated. Any
other time, he wouldn’t have cared about the consequences. Now,
consequences were everything.



“I love him,” Jean said, mostly to herself,
because she still wouldn’t look at Logan. He knew she believed
that with all her heart, so why didn’t she sound convinced?



“Do you?”



She looked confused, as if she didn’t understand
the question. For those few seconds it took to answer, he saw her throw
off replies the way a pitcher would reject signs he didn’t like
from the catcher. The one she settled on satisfied nobody, least of all
her.



Now she looked at him. “People flirt with the bad
guy, Logan. But they don’t take him home.” She pulled her
hand away. “They marry the good guy.”



“Is that enough?” he asked quietly. And then,
in response to her silence: “I could be the good guy,
Jean.”



“Logan, the good guy sticks around.”



He threw caution to the winds.



He laid a palm lightly against the slim column of her
throat, fingertips tucked behind the knob of her jaw while his thumb
caressed her chin. Her skin was the softest, smoothest surface he could
remember touching, and the contact between them was electric. He felt a
flush of heat against his hand, saw color rise beneath her skin to give
it a roseate glow that was a pale echo of the fire of her hair. Her
breathing quickened in concert with her pulse, her heart pounding so
strongly he could feel it against his own chest, even through the
armored fabric of her uniform.



She trembled as if her body were being swept by a
succession of microquakes. And he held back a smile at realization that
her skin was puckering all over with goose bumps.



They were balancing on edges of passion and emotion that
put the keenness of his adamantium claws to shame. And yet, because
both of them recognized the seriousness of the moment, they both felt
perfectly in control. They were poised on the crest of the perfect
wave—for him, one of snow, part of an avalanche; for her, one of
surf. No effort at all would be required to bring it to an end, to call
this quits before they went too far. She didn’t need to say a
word, to make a gesture; he’d take his cue from the primal
signals that weren’t under her volitive control.



She caught him by surprise, covering his hand with hers,
reaching out at the same time with her telekinetic power to close the
miniscule gap that remained between them.



Now it was his breath that was caught up by a sudden
gasp, his own heart that skipped a beat amid its own increasing
trip-hammer riff, as her lips brushed his.



That first contact was fleeting, tantalizing with
possibilities, but he didn’t give her a chance to pull away as he
opened to her, meeting her mental strength with that of his body. He
heard a small noise that mingled desire and satisfaction, but
couldn’t tell whether it came from him or her as they pulled each
other closer, and he came to understand the incredible strength that
lay hidden within this lean, whipcord figure.



He lifted her off her feet, shifting his own stance just
enough so that he supported her against the whole hard length of him,
and now there was no question. He was the one who moaned as
barriers collapsed between them and Jean gave him access to her own
mind, her own sensations, her own emotions.



His nostrils filled with a rich woodland scent, and he knew this was how he presented himself to her.



The world blurred around them, took on a new shape as her
desire caught up both of them, laying them bare to their souls. As
their thoughts merged, it struck him that he should be afraid. There
were memories here that he fought to keep hidden from Xavier, two
volumes to the book of his life. The first, which he believed had been
stolen from him, which Magneto now suggested was intimately involved
with William Stryker, and which Xavier apparently had known about from
the start. But the second, everything that had happened to him since,
had more than a few moments that weren’t pretty.



Yet he didn’t even try to hide any of them; she was
too important. He wanted her to see the whole of him; he wanted to give
her every excuse to run away, because if she chose to stay, if she
accepted what he was, then this was real. It would last.



What surprised him was the discovery that she was just as scared, just as determined.






He saw her playing in a yard, a fragment of her thoughts
providing the date and setting: her parents’ home at Bard
College, an hour upstate from Xavier’s, where her dad taught.
Jean was eight and hanging with her best friend, Annie Malcolm. Annie
tossed a Frisbee for her dog, but a wayward puff of breeze hooked the
plastic saucer off over the fence. The dog bolted through the gate,
Annie chasing after, heedless of the danger posed by this stretch of
River Road.



Jean saw what Annie hadn’t, a car speeding around
the blind curve. There wasn’t even a screech of brakes, before or
after, just a sickening thud and the sound of tires skidding on asphalt as the driver struggled to regain control before he sped away.



She found Annie against the stone wall by the gate, her
body folded at impossible angles, blood—so much blood, too much
blood—splashed everywhere. Jean wanted to scream, to shriek, to
howl, but some part of her that refused to relinquish control forced
her lips to form proper words, forced her lungs to provide air for
sufficient volume to make this a proper shout as she called for her
mother.



Annie couldn’t speak, the only thing moving about
her was her chest, desperately striving—broken as it was—to
draw another breath. As well there were her eyes, bright with confusion
as her brain struggled to make sense of what had just happened. Jean
couldn’t stop her own tears. They poured silently from her eyes
as she knelt beside Annie and wrapped her arms around her friend.



She found herself in a vast space of light, filled with
sparkling clusters of energy. She touched the closest and was filled
with an awareness of a specific time and place, together with a torrent
of associated emotions, and in a sudden burst of insight realized that
each of these clusters represented one of Annie’s memories. With
a directness only a child can muster, she concluded at once that she
was inside Annie’s head.



But her delight at this new adventure was short-lived.
Even as she watched, she became aware that the brilliance of the
individual clusters was fading, along with their background radiance,
which suffused this apparently infinite space. It was like looking at
the daylight sky, only in this case it was chockablock with stars of
every conceivable color and magnitude, and realizing the gradually
encroaching presence of night.



To her horror, Jean saw that the clusters closest to the
darkness exploded apart in a fireworks shower of sparkles, and just
like fireworks, these flaring embers vanished before they reached what
she thought of as the ground. But unlike sunset, where the night came
from a single horizon, this darkness closed on her from every side, not
simply along a horizontal plane but lowering from above and rising from
below. She tried to catch hold of the memory clusters, to carry them to
some place of safety, but couldn’t find one. With each that
vanished, she found that less and less of a cohesive sense of Annie
herself remained.



She called her friend’s name, but the word echoed
through a space where it had no more meaning. Annie was going, and
there was no way Jean could call her back.



Jean embraced the final cluster, her own heart so full of
grief she thought it would explode while her noncorporeal cheeks burned
with tears. She thought if she could push her own strength, the essence
of her own will and soul, into this last fleeting scrap of her friend,
she’d still be able to save her.



The last of the light went out. All around her, save this last scrap of Annie’s self, was darkness.



But paradoxically, as this final night fell, the cluster
that Jean embraced blazed more brightly than before, more brightly than
any radiance Jean had ever seen, so bright it put the sun to shame. She
beheld colors she had no name for, that reached out to all her senses,
manifesting themselves as tastes and scents and textures. It was a warm
and welcoming light, pure in a way that poets strive for and only
lovers attain, and that, rarely.



The last cluster, the last scraps of Annie, broke apart
in Jean’s grasp and slipped through her fingers, rushing away
into the core of this new light. There was such peace and such beauty
that Jean’s first impulse was to follow so that her friend would
not face this new place by herself.



That would be so easy. No more pain, no more fear. She
could avoid the crushing weight of grief that awaited her the moment
she opened her eyes for real, the memory of her friend, the awareness
of the bloody rag doll she’d become.



Someone was yelling, in a voice raw with horror and with
fear, and Jean was a little bit shocked to realize that she
wasn’t simply hearing the words her mother spoke as she
cradle-crushed Jean in her own arms as Jean had done Annie, as
heedlessly as her daughter had been of the blood that soaked them both.
She could feel her mother’s emotions as well, and her thoughts,
relief that it was Annie lying there and not Jean, shame at that
acknowledgment, fury that either girl had been so careless, a terrible
and welling rage at the driver for not stopping.



It’s okay, Mommy, she remembered saying,
sure for years afterward that she’d spoken aloud, which was why
she was so startled when her mother fell backward in stark and visible
shock. There’s no need to cry, I’m okay. Only much
later did the understanding come that she hadn’t said a word with
her voice but had spoken directly, mind to mind.



And much later after that, the comprehension that
she’d been quite wrong in what she’d told her mom: Nothing
for Jean after that fateful moment when her psi catalyzed into being,
years before it was supposed to, would ever be truly “okay”
again.



“It’s okay, darlin’,” Logan said
softly, brushing tears from her cheek. “There’s no need to
cry. You’re okay.”



She shuddered again, as though the surface temblers had
given way to a deep and lasting tectonic shift, from the kind of quakes
that level buildings to the ones that reshape the face of continents
and raise mountains to the heavens.



She kissed him on the lips, on the cheeks, and he stifled a smile at the realization that he was crying, too.



She took a deep, calming breath but said not a word.
Logan followed her lead. There was nothing that needed saying between
them, not now, perhaps never again. It would be easy if her heart told
her one thing and her head another; scientist though she was,
empiricist to the core, she knew she’d follow her heart.



But her heart felt equally, passionately torn between them, and she couldn’t see any way yet to heal the rift.



It made her head hurt and her soul ache, and she knew she
wasn’t likely to feel better anytime soon. Logan wanted to kiss
her again, so much and so hard it was an ache within him. He wanted her
more than his life, more than his past.



But she shook her head and pulled away.



“Logan, please—don’t.”



Against every instinct and every desire, he nodded assent
and did nothing but watch as she strode away. That wasn’t like
him at all. His solution to every problem was direct and invariably
physical. No hesitation, less regrets.



Until now. Until her. Somehow she brought out the best in
him. Even more, she fanned in him a desire to be better, to transcend
the person and life he was accustomed to. That would be a lot easier if
he knew that at the end he’d have a shot, a chance to gain her as
the prize. What made him smile at the wicked joke fate was playing was
the realization that winning her wasn’t guaranteed. It
might not even be possible, no matter how he proved himself. Whatever
they felt for each other, her love for Scott was just as strong and
could not be denied.



Knowing that, why make the effort?



Knowing that, he found himself wanting to try anyway. Because, even though it made him crazy, he liked the way it made him feel.






Nightcrawler couldn’t take his eyes off her, but how she reacted to his interest Logan couldn’t tell.



“They say you can imitate anybody,”
Nightcrawler said to Mystique as the shape-shifter’s gaze
followed Logan across the campsite. “Even their voice?”



She looked over her shoulder at him and replied, in perfect mimicry, “Even their voice.”



Nightcrawler couldn’t help a grin of delight that
stretched from ear to ear, and he clapped his hands together in one
performer’s appreciation of another.



“In your case,” she told him, speaking as
herself now, “the voice is easy. The tail, now, that might take
some work.”



“It would be like mine—ach, what is the word—”



“Prehensile,” Logan said.



“Ja, ja, ja, that’s it, like a monkey!”



Mystique searched once more for Logan and thought back
briefly to their battle on Liberty Island. Her morphing ability had
allowed her to generate a set of facsimile claws that were almost as
good as the real thing. As well, it had enabled her to survive three of
his own adamantium blades that had gone right to her heart.



“It isn’t polite to ask a woman’s secrets, mein herr,” she said gently. “Or expect the woman to give them up, just for the asking.”



“Forgive me,” Nightcrawler said hurriedly,
recognizing the undercurrent of emotion flossing through the other
mutant without knowing quite what it represented, “I did not mean
to offend.”



“Not even close,” she assured him.



“I was wondering, though,” he continued,
“with such an ability, why not stay disguised all the time? You
know . . . look like . . . everyone else.” What he meant, and it
was heartbreakingly plain to see, was “like normal people.”



Her answer was direct: “Because we shouldn’t have to.”



His expression showed that he liked that. He just as
obviously liked her, for reasons that had nothing to do with her
appearance.






Logan should have been sleeping, but he didn’t even
try. From the moment he crawled into his tent, he’d been
fingering and staring at his dog tags, as though physical
contact—or glaring at them—might inspire some miraculous
revelation. Charley had told him to be patient about his past, that his
mind demanded the same opportunity and time to heal as his body would.
Clear implication: This was a journey they’d take together. Now
Magneto comes along to imply that Charley knows more—a lot
more—than he’s let on. Truth? Or was the bad guy just
screwing with Logan’s head?



The faint scent of Folavril—her
perfume—announced her presence a moment before Jean opened the
tent flap and crouched inside. Suddenly, his heart rate kicked into
high gear, and he could see from the pulse on her throat, the faint
flush to her skin, that the attraction was as undeniably mutual.



He started to speak, without the slightest idea of what
he wanted to say, but she stopped him with a finger against his lips.
Her eyes were laughing with anticipation and delight as she crawled
closer across his sleeping bag. His own eyes couldn’t help but
follow the line of her shirt, more open than she usually wore it, to
the shadows between her breasts. She straddled him and settled her
weight on his hips. The touch of her was electric, the scent
intoxicating, as she slid her hands across his chest, up the thick
column of his throat to take hold of him along the line of his jaw and
bring his lips to hers.



There was no hesitation this time. The kiss was dynamite,
fulfilling all the promise of the first, and he returned better than he
got, moving his left hand up to cup her neck and his right beneath her
shirt to caress her across the ribs and belly. She trembled against
him, catching her breath with the sparkling overload of physical
sensation.



That’s when he popped his claws. The outsiders from
his left hand, to bracket her throat right beneath her chin, forcing
her to hold her head erect and at attention, or risk slicing
skin—and likely bone—on the razor-keen adamantium blades.
The middle claw was the kicker, the final incentive to behave: One
false move, she’d be done.



At the same time, he tore open her shirt to reveal three
scars right below her left breast, the indelible legacy of his claws
stabbing through her rib cage to her heart.



“Busted,” Mystique said, sounding not at all
dismayed. If anything, her smile was broader and livelier than ever, as
was the light in her eyes. She danced with danger, it gave life spice
and meaning. As he watched, green eyes turned chrome yellow, that color
expanding to subsume the entire eyeball. Then, in the kind of dissolve
animators love to use, the transformation spread outward from her eyes.
Her hair shortened and turned a darker, more angry shade of red; her
clothes faded into her skin, which in turn morphed from pale to indigo
blue.



As an acrobat, she was in Nightcrawler’s league.
Logan knew from experience she could give and take a serious punch.
Whatever her appearance, her strength demanded respect. Now she used
that strength to gently but firmly push his blades clear of her neck.
She did a good job; with barely a millimeter to spare, the edges never
touched her skin.



At the same time, she melted against him, as Jean had beneath the Blackbird, kissing her way from mouth to ear.



“No one ever left a scar quite like you,” she said.



“You want an apology?”



She chuckled, much as he might. “You know what I want.”



She bit him, on the lobe, hard and sexy, and when she sat
straight up before him she shifted position just that little bit needed
to make her intentions and desires unmistakable.



“But what is it,” she continued, her voice going as sultry as her manner, “you want?”



She changed in his arms, skin turning brown, hair turning
silver, eyes turning blue, gaining height and majesty until it was
Storm sitting there, spectacularly naked. She lifted her arms to spread
her hair wide across her shoulders, allowing him an unobstructed view .
. .



. . . and then she changed again—shrinking in size
and stature, skin paling, eyes turning green, hair going brown with its
distinctive skunk stripe down front, covering her nakedness demurely
with crossed hands as she presented herself as Rogue . . .



. . . and then she was Jean again.



He’d had enough. He hit her, palm of the hand, flat
to her chest, with force enough to pop her off his lap and almost to
the opposite wall of the tent. He’d caught her off guard, and
there wasn’t time for her to recover. She landed in an inelegant
sprawl, which only made her more amused than ever as she rolled over
onto her belly and levered herself up on her hands.



By the time her arms were at full extension, Logan was staring at William Stryker.



“What do you really want?” Mystique asked him in Stryker’s voice.



Face and body carved from stone, claws held in a
defensive fist between him and the shape-shifter, Logan replied,
“Get out.”



She shook her head with a sneer and did as she was told.



Only when he was alone did Logan withdraw his claws. He
hadn’t been fooled from the very start—there was more to
Jean’s scent than her perfume, and elements of Mystique’s
that couldn’t be hidden, more differences between them now than
the other woman could possibly suspect. He told himself there were all
manner of sensible reasons for indulging in the fantasy, but he knew
they were lies. It was a glimpse of what might have been, if life were
more fair.



Problem was, he’d already made a commitment and he
would be true to it, no matter what, to the end. He’d been
betrayed many times in his life. He swore he’d never be party to
betraying another.



He rubbed his left hand with his right, over the space
between the knuckles where the claws extended, while the pain of their
use faded away. There was never any visible scar, his healing factor
saw to that, but each time the claws came out the pain was as fresh, as
shocking, as the first. On one level they were as much a part of him as
his natural senses. He accepted their presence wholeheartedly. But on
another, they were close to the ultimate violation. Someone had put
them inside his body, someone had stripped him of even the pretense of
humanity by making him a hybrid cyborg construct. A literal machine.



From a man like Stryker, if he was indeed responsible, it
was no less than Logan expected. But if what Magneto said was true, if
Xavier knew the truth and kept it from him, how could Logan trust the
man ever again? Because the answer to that question begged an even
darker one—was Xavier somehow involved in the process? Was he
somehow responsible?



What then, he wondered. And with a thought, triggered his claws once more.



Snikt!



What then, indeed?





 







Chapter

Thirteen




The ladies worked straight through the night, and by morning the Blackbird
was ready to go. As Logan finished zipping his uniform closed, he
caught Rogue and Bobby eyeing him discreetly. They’d spent the
night together, tangled up with each other in a pose that managed to be
incredibly intimate while remaining wholly innocent. Rogue had taken
great care to make sure no stray skin showed, other than her face, and
she pulled her hood close around her head to minimize the risk of
contact. Bobby wore his own gloves. Nightcrawler hung batlike from a
branch above, as though he were the kids’ very own swashbuckler
gargoyle saint.



Only John Allardyce remained awake the whole night,
sitting opposite Bobby and Rogue, staring at them across the campfire,
continually flicking his lighter open and closed, open and closed.



The kids weren’t interested in their classmate,
though, which Logan knew was part of John’s problem. It was the
uniforms they wanted.



“Where’re ours?” Bobby demanded.



Logan responded with a gruff snort that was echoed (in
his ears or in his thoughts, he couldn’t tell) from up front by
Jean.



“On order,” he told them. “Should arrive in a few years.”






Logan supervised the breakdown of the campsite, mainly to
keep tabs on Magneto and Mystique. Magneto boarded the plane as if he
owned it, but Mystique paused just a moment in passing and flashed
Logan a secret little smile to remind him of what had happened during
the night. As Logan closed the hatch, she made sure he caught her
flashing the same smile at Jean, most likely to make him wonder if
she’d pulled the same trick with her. And, of course, to imply
that Jean had fallen for the masquerade.



Even as their allies, she and Magneto were always trying
to play the X-Men, to find the edge that would give them a tactical
advantage. You could never let down your guard with them, on any level,
because every encounter had to be some kind of challenge—and they
always had to win.



That’s what Rogue discovered right after takeoff,
as she made her way back to her seat from the bathroom. Magneto was
sitting across from John Allardyce, and he smiled at her as she passed.
It was a genial smile, the kind you’d expect from family.



“Rogue,” he said, by way of greeting, but
when she didn’t respond, when she tried totally to ignore him, he
continued without missing a beat, “we love what you’ve done
with your hair.”



Her lips, her whole body, went tight as a drawn bow, but
she kept walking. She wouldn’t look back, she wouldn’t give
him the satisfaction. The device he’d intended to use months ago
on the United Nations delegates had required his specific power to
activate it. But doing so would have killed him, so he came up with
what he felt was a far better idea: Allow Rogue to imprint his
abilities, thereby enabling her to wield magnetism and take his place
as the catalyst. Regrettably, she would have to die in the process. A
tragic but necessary sacrifice for a noble cause.



She didn’t see it that way. He didn’t care.



Logan had saved her, first by destroying Magneto’s
device and then by allowing her to imprint his healing factor. But the
energies that had burned so fiercely through her system had left a
lasting mark, her skunk stripe, the distinctive widow’s peak of
silver hair springing from her forehead.






John watched her strap herself into her chair, realized
that Logan was glaring back at Magneto from the flight deck, and turned
to observe that Magneto wasn’t bothered in the slightest by
Logan’s fury. Indeed, he seemed to enjoy it.



John was impressed, though he made sure not to show it.
He sounded almost bored as he noted, “They say you’re the
bad guy.”



That amused Magneto, who kept his gaze on Logan.



“Is that what they say?”



John started flicking his lighter, the reassuring click going almost unheard against the sound of the Blackbird’s swift passage through the morning sky.



“That’s a dorky-looking helmet,” he said. “What’s it for?”



At last he’d caught Magneto’s
attention—an interest, though John didn’t know it, that
he’d had from the start—and as that noble head turned
toward him, he suddenly wished he hadn’t.



“This helmet,” Magneto informed him quietly, “is the only thing that’s going to protect me from the real bad guys.”



He snapped his fingers, and the lighter flew from John’s hands to his. With a practiced flip, Magneto ignited a flame.



“What’s your name?” he asked.



“John.”



“What’s your name, John?” he
asked again. John almost made the mistake of thinking the old git was
deaf or senile, or stupid, asking the same question twice, until a
flash of intuition told him it was some kind of test.



John reached across the aisle, extending the tip of his
forefinger to touch the small flame and lift it from its cradle. Fire
never burned him; the most he ever felt from the flames he manipulated
was a warmth that reached deep inside his body. In his imagination
he’d tell himself that it was the same kind of glow the sun felt
high in the heavens. It was his secret, his special pleasure, and
he’d always resented the fact that Charles Xavier’s
telepathy might have pried it from him without his knowing.



“Pyro,” he said, absently rolling the flame between his fingers like a coin.



“That’s quite a talent you have, Pyro,”
Magneto said. The way he said John’s code name gave the boy a
thrill of pleasure, like it was a title of some kind. But outwardly,
his mouth twisted downward in irritation.



“I can only manipulate the fire,” he confessed. “I can’t make it.”



He closed his hand around the flame, and it was gone.



“You are a god among insects,” Magneto said. “Don’t let anyone tell you different.”



With that, he opened his own hand and used his magnetic power to float the lighter back to its owner.



John didn’t flick the cap anymore, he just held the
lighter and stared at his blurred reflection in the stainless-steel
surface. Xavier had never said such things to him. At the school, the
endless official mantras were “responsibility” and
“control.” He was almost a grown man, yet when it came to
his mutant powers it was just like being in kindergarten. The teachers
weren’t impressed with the things he could already do with fire,
they were more concerned with ethics and behavior. They were afraid of
what they were, they wanted to hide.



He snorted—helluva lot of good that did. Maybe, if
the soldiers had known what he could do, what Bobby could do if he
weren’t such a terminal wuss, what any of the kids could do,
they’d have backed off and left them alone.



Magneto wasn’t scared. That was obvious. He was
ready to fight for what he believed in. Even though Charles Xavier was
responsible for his capture and imprisonment, he was flying with the
X-Men to the rescue. How, John wondered, Pyro wondered, could that possibly make him one of the “bad guys”?



And if Xavier were wrong about him, maybe the kids were wrong in their assessment of Xavier.






At Alkali Lake, William Stryker reviewed the security
procedures from the control room. He wanted nothing left to chance.
Electronic sensors were on line, video surveillance active and
tracking, sentries posted, fast-reaction combat teams armed and ready.



He couldn’t employ an AWACS here as
he had over Westchester, but he had sufficient ground radar capability
in place to create a secure airspace better than a hundred miles in
diameter, backed up by Doppler imaging systems that would detect the
heat signatures of any jet engine or the ripples in the air caused by
its wake. He was confident nothing could approach them undetected, even
so advanced a stealth airframe as Xavier’s.



He didn’t acknowledge it as the door opened behind
him. He didn’t have to. As Lyman and his escort entered the room,
Yuriko Oyama stepped out of the background shadows to put herself
between them and Stryker, poised on the balls of her feet, her fists
clenched.



“Sir?” Lyman called to announce himself.
Stryker shook his head ever so slightly at the faint tremolo to the
man’s voice. Yuriko had that effect on people when she was at
ready to fight. They didn’t know what to make of her, only that
she was supremely dangerous.



Stryker spared a glance at their reflections in the
inactive display screens mounted on the wall before him. He
didn’t reply at once, while he and Wilkins, the duty officer,
continued through the checklist, and when he did his tone was curt and
dismissive.



“Your men can wait outside, Mr. Lyman.”



“Sir,” Lyman acknowledged, and the others took up station outside. At a cue from Stryker, Yuriko stood down as well.



“The machine has been completed to your specifications,” Lyman reported.



“Good.”



“If I may ask, sir . . .” Lyman paused as
though he’d come to a kind of inner crossroads. “Why are we
keeping the children?”



In quick succession, Stryker activated the monitors. Six
screens, six holding cells, six mutants, none of them very happy to be
where they were. By contrast, Stryker was almost jubilant.



“I’m a scientist, Mr. Lyman,” he
replied. “When I build a machine, I want to know that it’s
working.”



Lyman didn’t understand.



“Consider them a . . . control group. Our living
benchmarks. What happens to them shows us what’s happening
outside. If necessary we can adapt settings and protocols according to
their reactions, for greater efficiency, greater potency.”



“Sir, they’re children,” Lyman blurted
out, a reflex that was more surprise than actual protest, and the
instant Stryker met his eyes he regretted every word.



“They’re mutants, Mr. Lyman,” said the older man. “And this is war.”






At that moment, the plane Stryker was so concerned about
was sitting within a few miles of where he stood, in a patch of snowy
woods. Yes, he’d modified his systems to compensate for the Blackbird’s
stealth capabilities, but he hadn’t taken into account the fact
that Magneto’s power deflected the radar pulses long before they
reached the aircraft. Or Storm’s control over the weather, which
allowed her to smooth the air behind them and counteract the heat of
the jet’s exhaust.



They’d come in low and slow, taking the notion of
nap-of-the-Earth flying to its extremes as they skimmed treetops when
they had to and dropped beneath their branches when they could.
Helicopter pilots would have thought twice about some of the maneuvers
they employed. Jean spent most of their approach with her teeth gritted
with determination—and her fair share of delight—because
they were in violation of so many fundamental flight safety protocols
that the computers refused to handle the approach. She was forced to
fly the plane manually. At the same time, she’d cast her
telepathy ahead of them, much like her own personal form of radar, to
prevent them from stumbling over some stray sentry or other.



Once they were down, the stealth netting was once again
deployed to cover the plane, to hide them from both visual and
electronic detection. Internal systems were kept to a minimum to guard
against any stray emissions. Given the terrain, the likelihood of them
being spotted was minimal, but recent experience had inspired them all
to be prudent.



Aboard, they integrated the data stolen from
Stryker’s offices by Mystique with the information Logan had
brought back from his visit to construct a three-dimensional map of the
installation, then projected it as a hologram for all to see.



There was nothing aesthetic about the dam, no attempt at
the grandeur of Grand Coulee or Glen Canyon or Hoover. Engineers had
thrown a massive wall across the valley, and that was that, although
they’d constructed the dam in the shape of a shallow L. There
were two active spillways along the long face of the dam, and another
on the short leg, pouring a continual flow of water downriver. As well,
two huge concrete trenches had been dug on each bank. One was dedicated
to the hydroelectric generators that had originally provided power to
the base; the other, which began where the short leg of the dam ended,
was for safety, to allow for a controlled release in the event of a
significant snowmelt.



The X-Men turned some of the government’s
technology to their own purposes by tapping into one of the same
keyhole surveillance satellites that had spied on the mansion and
downloading current pictures of Alkali Lake. Presumably, when the
complex had been abandoned, the emergency spillway had been intended to
bleed off the excess capacity of the lake behind the dam. However, over
time, it had become blocked by an accretion of broken timber and
boulders from a succession of rock falls. Water hadn’t flowed
down that trench in a long time, and as a consequence, Alkali Lake
itself had risen to dangerous levels.



The power trench looked clear, but the depth of snow that
was visible made it plain that nobody had opened those gates in quite a
while, either. Beyond, in an oval of land that had been stripped bare
of trees, lay the surface structures of the Alkali base that Logan had
explored only days before. As with every other aspect of the valley,
there was an obvious air of abandonment.



“Surface scans are cold,” Storm reported.
“No electronics emissions, no power, no heat signatures. As far
as the keyhole is concerned, this place is dead. Apparently for
years.”



“We’re shielded,” Jean pointed out.



Storm shrugged, tapped the control keypad, and the scene before them changed, presenting a different perspective of the base.



“The first image was a topographic representation
of the area. This one”—she indicated various points on the
display—“shows the density changes in the terrain. The
lighter the coloration, the heavier the repetitive activity.” To
the naked eye, the right-hand spillway, the power trench, was covered
with virgin snow. Under the enhanced imagery of the spy satellite,
however, a vastly different picture emerged. The trench was covered
with literally hundreds of colored lines, running the length of the
spillway and up a ramp to the single road that terminated at the Alkali
base. It didn’t need a glance at the legend for everyone to
realize that this was extraordinarily heavy activity, not simply in
terms of raw numbers of vehicles but of their weight as well.



“Somebody’s been very busy,” murmured Jean.



“And it’s fresh,” Storm echoed.



“That’s the entrance,” Logan told them.
When both women looked at him in curiosity, he shook his head. “I
remember, okay? Sue me.” Instead, they chuckled along with him.



Once more, Storm switched perspectives and focused on the
spillway. Below the dam, the trench was displayed in varying shades of
blue, whereas the surrounding landscape appeared in those of white.



“The legend tells us the depth of snow and ice that
cover the ground,” she said. “There’s been recent
water activity.”



Jean sounded worried as she leaned close to the image. “If we go in there, Stryker could flood the spillway.”



Storm looked to Nightcrawler. “Kurt, could you teleport inside?”



He shook his head. “I have to be able to see where I’m going. Otherwise, I might materialize inside a wall.”



Logan stretched, cracking his joints in sequence.
“I’ll go,” he said as casually as anyone else might
announce they were going out for a carton of milk. “I have a
hunch Billy will want me alive.”



At last Magneto strolled into the cone of light thrown out by Storm’s holograms.



“Logan,” he said with so natural an air of
command that all present automatically gave him their full attention,
“whoever goes inside that dam needs to be able to operate the
spillway mechanism and neutralize any other defenses. What do you
intend to do, even if you knew what to look for and where to find it?
Scratch the box with your claws?”



Logan almost told him—he almost gave the man a
practical demonstration—but decided against both, contenting
himself instead with hunching his shoulders and glowering, precisely
the wounded response Magneto would expect from him. Magneto’s
game, he knew, was chess. Logan preferred poker, and he’d yet to
meet anyone he considered his equal. He knew when to play a hand and
when to keep his cards well hidden and needed no thought at all to
decide which choice fit this moment best.



He glared defiant fury and growled, “I’ll take my chances.”



“But I,” Magneto told him in a tone that brooked no argument, “won’t.”






This time Logan didn’t try to hide as he made his
approach to the base. He took a leaf from Magneto’s book and
walked up to the ruined and broken gates like he was monarch of all he
surveyed, without a care in the world and with even less fear. He
followed the ramp down to the base of the spillway and headed for the
mouth of the tunnel they’d seen on Storm’s hologram. The
spillway followed the same brutally practical design scheme as the dam
itself. There was no consideration of the surrounding environment: this
was man imposing his rule on nature without regard for any
consequences, only for the fulfillment of his desires. The spillway
itself was as wide as a four-lane highway; you could drive a quartet of
semis side by side with room to spare. The walls themselves rose as
high as a small skyscraper, better than thirty meters, a hundred feet,
and their appearance was more in keeping with a fortress than any dam
Logan had ever seen. He’d never seen a more perfect killing
ground.



He saw no sign of any cameras.



“Stryker,” he called at the huge entrance to
one of the tunnels. It reminded him of the Jersey entrance to the
Lincoln Tunnel as his voice echoed and reechoed into the darkness.



He called Stryker’s name again and added, “It’s me, Wolverine!”






In the control room, Wilkins dialed up the speaker volume
in time to catch the name and played with the controls on the panel in
front of him to bring the intruder into focus. He turned two additional
cameras to catch alternate views of the X-Man, and immediately started
a diagnostic sweep of the external monitors to make sure he
hadn’t brought any friends.



“Look who’s come home,” Stryker
murmured from above and behind Wilkins’ chair. “The
prodigal son returns—what is he doing?”



Apparently, from the evidence of the cameras, he was strolling down the entry tunnel.



“Is he alone?” Stryker demanded.



“Appears to be,” Lyman replied. “All our scanners are clean, camera fields, too.”



“Keep looking,” Stryker told him, and then,
“Send your team to collect him.” He rounded on Lyman,
poking him with a knuckle to the chest for emphasis. “Don’t
allow him inside until he’s shackled—knuckles to chin! Once
he’s secure, bring him to me in the loading bay. Carefully, Mr.
Lyman,” he added, stopping his subordinate before Lyman had taken
more than a step. “Very carefully.”



Lyman nodded, remembering what had happened at the
mansion. He’d do as he was told, he was too good, too well
trained, a soldier to do otherwise, but if it was his call, he
wouldn’t have gone near the little man in the tunnel until his
troops had shot him to pieces.






Ten meters ahead of Logan, a section of the tunnel wall
suddenly opened and three troopers broke into view, leveling two HK
MP5s with laser sights and a Smith & Wesson automatic assault
shotgun with the big thirty-round box. He heard more movement behind
him as another fire team took position, the troopers setting themselves
in a triangular formation, with him in the center, allowing them clear
fields of fire. Less danger of shooting their own guys. The shotguns
were there to knock him off his feet, with a rate of fire comparable to
a low-end submachine gun. Once he was down, their tactics told him, the
others could finish him at their convenience.



He smiled. These guys were good, they’d learned from their last encounter with him.



“Don’t move,” yelled one of the troopers in front of him. “Stand where you are, hands in the air!”



Logan was impressed by their fire discipline and what
that told him about their commander. Tone and body language made clear
to Logan these troopers did indeed remember the fight at the mansion,
the comrades and buddies they’d lost to his claws. They were
itching to pull the trigger. All they lacked was the slightest excuse
to justify it.



Instead, to their surprise—and disappointment—he did as he was told.






The troopers weren’t gentle with him. Even though
he offered no resistance, he collected a share of surreptitious punches
and kicks as his hands were shackled together with his knuckles pressed
up tight to both sides of his neck. The idea here was that any use of
his claws would essentially cause him to decapitate himself.
Stryker’s curiosity was leavened by his malicious sense of
humor—could Logan’s claws, forged of pure adamantium, cut
through his own skeleton, which was an amalgam of adamantium and bone?
Could they slice through his vertebrae? He actually found that amusing,
the tradition that worked for vampires possibly doing the same for this
otherwise unkillable mutant.



The vehicular entrance to the loading bay was blocked by
a set of sliding blast doors more appropriate to a bank vault, armored
steel better than a foot thick. That’s what Logan had noted
during his initial reconnaissance, that the base had been designed as
the ultimate prison. And that whatever had been incarcerated here
during its heyday represented a serious threat. Couldn’t have
been Magneto, though, way too much metal. Or anyone like Cyclops, who
could project beams of force. This place dealt with purely physical
strength or—and here Logan’s eyes flicked sideways to his
imprisoned hands—weapons. That was the constant with these doors,
they were all thicker than the length of his claws. He might be able to
cut them, but not easily cut through them.



Custom built, perhaps, for one specific class of
mutant—and then abandoned when the manifestation of other kinds
of powers had rendered it obsolete?



The floor of the loading bay continued the same oversized
scale of the rest of the installation, with room to spare for a convoy
of full-sized semitrailers. A dock ran across the length of the wall
opposite the entrance, allowing access to the interior corridors of the
base. A couple of military-painted Humvees were parked flanking Logan
and his escort. Both vehicles carried powered miniguns, whose
six-barrel Gatling configuration allowed them to unleash five thousand
rounds per minute. They were manned, and the tension on the gunners was
obvious. One false move, they’d fire until the barrels melted.



Their laser sights were aimed right at him.



Waiting on the dock were Stryker, Yuriko, and Lyman,
whose hand rested on the butt of his holstered Beretta. He wasn’t
taking any chances, either.



Stryker was grinning broadly as he approached the
prisoner, but with each stride his expression changed, triumph
gradually giving way to confusion. His eyes narrowed as he began to
examine Logan more and more intently.



He nodded, then asked, “Who do you think you’re looking at?”



The troopers had no idea what he meant. The answer was obvious to them.



“Sir?” asked Lyman.



Stryker shook his head. “The one thing I know better than anyone else . . . is my own work.”



He turned his back and said, “Shoot it.”



By rights, the troopers with the miniguns should have
opened fire—but their buddies were in the kill zone!
Logan’s escort started to respond, backing up to give themselves
a better shot. In each case, though, there was a moment’s
hesitation, born of surprise, as the soldiers processed the unexpected
order.



By the time they reacted, Logan was way ahead of them.
Before their disbelieving eyes, the prisoner’s features blurred
like watercolors in the rain. He grew taller, slimmer, changed color,
changed gender. With blinding speed, the prisoner—a woman—Mystique—lashed
out to either side, kick to the chest, kick to the head, to deal with
the flanking guards. Hands slipped free of shackles configured to
wrists twice their size, and while she was still in midair from the
second kick, she hurled the cuffs into the face of the guard behind her
with force enough to turn his features bloody and smash him to the
ground. As he fell, his finger spasmed on the trigger of his automatic
shotgun, spraying the ceiling with round after round of magnum
buckshot. His shells hit some lights as he fell, and apparently some
power cables, too, because the remaining lights started flickering like
strobes.



Mystique was far faster than the troopers expected, and
incredibly agile—the gunners couldn’t keep up with her.
With Stryker in the room, they dared not open indiscriminate fire. She
knew that, she used it, landing in a spider crouch before leaping for
the dock. Take him prisoner, the whole game changes. Kill him, it might
even be over.



She never even came close. Yuriko intercepted her in
midair with a speed and agility to match, and a strength that left
Mystique breathless. She caught Mystique by the arm, twisted, and the
moment her feet touched the floor she hurled the blue-skinned invader
all the way to one of the parked Humvees.



Mystique heard yelling behind her, Stryker ordering
everyone present to start shooting. The gunner on the Humvee, realizing
his own danger, abandoned his post and dove frantically for cover.
Yuriko’s intention had been to bounce Mystique off the vehicle
hard enough to leave her stunned. Even if it was just for a moment,
that would be enough to give the others a target.



But just as Mystique had underestimated Yuriko, so, too, had Stryker’s bodyguard made the same mistake.



Mystique pivoted in midflight so that she landed on her
feet, touching down just long enough to use the hood of the Humvee as a
launch point to hurl herself back onto the dock. Before a single
trigger could be pulled, she disappeared down the adjoining tunnel.






Throughout the complex, alarms sounded; the halls and
tunnels resounded with running feet and shouted commands as
Stryker’s men rushed to their stations. The airwaves filled with
queries and orders, everyone demanding a fix on the intruder’s
position.



In the control room, Wilkins was trying his best to
comply, using the computer to handle the search through one set of
monitors while he controlled the second set manually along the tunnel
Mystique had used to escape from the loading bay.



He caught sight of a familiar—and now very
welcome—figure coming down the corridor and spun his chair around
to face Stryker as the commander entered with an escort.



“Sir,” Wilkins asked anxiously, “what’s happening?”



Stryker glared hawklike at the monitors. “We have a
metamorph loose,” he said with a growl of barely suppressed rage.
“She could be anybody.”



“Anybody?” Wilkins found that hard to accept.
And then his eyes widened as a second Stryker appeared on screen,
accompanied by Lyman and Yuriko and a trio of troopers.



The Stryker standing beside him elbowed his escort in the
belly. A second shot—a palm thrust to the face—put him down
hard even as Stryker wrenched his MP5 off his shoulder. Wilkins was
just starting to react, rising from his chair, grabbing for his
sidearm, when the butt of the submachine gun snapped toward him at the
full extension of “Stryker’s” arm, connecting like a
baseball bat with force enough to upend the chair. Like the guard,
Wilkins was unconscious before he hit the floor.



Approaching the control room from outside, the real
William Stryker watched in futility as his double blew him a kiss. Then
the doors slammed shut in his face.



Inside, Mystique reverted to her baseline physiognomy and
took a seat at the main console. Above her on the wall display were
images of the captured children from Xavier’s.



She paused a moment, looking at them one by one, as if to
imprint their faces on her memory. That done, all business once more,
she donned a communications headset and tapped a set of commands into
the keyboard. The children vanished from view, replaced by a
three-dimensional schematic of the base.



Then she made a call.






Ever since she’d left the Blackbird, all the
others had heard over her com channel was a carrier wave of static,
telling them she was off-line. Ever since she’d left, Logan had
paced the length of the aisle, back and forth like a caged tiger. No
one said a word to him, no one got in his way. He was convinced from
the start this was a mistake, and each additional minute of silence
made him that much more certain.



Until Mystique’s cheery voice stopped him in his tracks.



“I’m in,” she reported.



Magneto smiled proudly, and even Logan had to admit he had reason.



“She’s good,” he conceded.



“You have no idea,” Magneto replied.



While the three X-Men finished their preparations, John Allardyce stood up.



“Let us help,” he said. Behind him, Bobby and Rogue nodded assent.



Storm put a stop to that notion.



“You’re not helping with anything,” she told them.



John started to protest but said nothing as Storm held up her hand.



“If something . . . happens to us,” she
continued, speaking to them all, “activate the escape-and-evade
flight sequence that’s programmed into the autopilot, just the
way we briefed you. Don’t touch any of the controls, on the
ground or in the air. The Blackbird will take care of you just fine. The autopilot will fly you home.”



“Then what?” Bobby demanded. He didn’t
hide his thoughts. Like any of us have a home to go to anymore. Or a
school!



“You’ve all got superpowers,” Logan told him. “Figure it out.”





 







Chapter

Fourteen




Outside the control room, Stryker wasn’t a happy
man. He tried his key card on the electronic lock; no joy. Same for the
manual combination, punched into the keypad. Same for the override. He
tried the backdoor codes that only he knew, that were hardwired into
the system and guaranteed unbreakable.



The door didn’t budge, and as he pounded his fist
on its steel face in righteous frustration, he swore he could hear that
blue-skinned shape-shifting mutant bitch laughing at him with every
failed try.



“It’s . . . a very thick door, sir,”
Lyman said, and Stryker stared at him incredulously, wondering if this
was some lame attempt at humor or if the man was a total idiot.



“Yes,” Stryker told him, giving vent to his
rage with such vehemence that his men backed off a step. Even Yuriko
looked anxious. “But she’s in there—and I’m out here!”



He took a breath, then another, forcing himself to calm down.



“Isolate the systems and transfer operations to the
backup command center,” he ordered. “Chances are
she’s locked you out, same as she did with the door, but you
never know. We might get lucky. Meanwhile, she’s locked in. Get
some charges, and blow the damn doors! Do it quickly, Mr. Lyman, and
kill whoever’s inside. No questions, no hesitation, no mercy. I
want them dead, I don’t care who they look like.”






Inside, Mystique had indeed locked out all the secondary
command nodes. For what it was worth, the computers and systems
controlling the physical plant of the base were hers to control. Pity
the intruder net wasn’t operational anymore; life would have been
so much simpler if she could just flood the tunnels with knockout gas.
As well, time and neglect had taken their toll. There were entire
sections of the complex she couldn’t access.



Fortunately, that didn’t apply to the external
doors. She called up the loading bay on the menu and pressed the
appropriate button. Obligingly, the monitor flashed the legend SPILLWAY DOOR OPEN.



There were still a handful of troops in the loading bay,
and they reacted with surprise as the double doors separated and slid
apart. Seeing who was standing on the other side, they went for their
weapons. Mystique, watching on the monitor, shook her head: They had a
lot more courage than brains.



Any one of the intruders could have dealt with the
situation. Between Logan, Jean Grey, Storm, Nightcrawler, and Magneto,
the troopers didn’t have a chance. Not one got more than a step,
did more than begin to move, before he was rendered unconscious.



In passing, Magneto looked up at the ceiling-mounted
camera—his awareness of magnetic fields allowed him to sense the
location of any power conduit or video link—and smiled. Mystique
smiled back. This was going to be fun.



Payback was a bitch, and so was she.



She had no view of the hallway outside her door. One of
Stryker’s first orders must have been to disable all the external
cameras covering the approaches to the control room. She could guess
what was happening now.



A team of demolition experts were in the process of
attaching C4 plastic explosives to the doorway, spiraling them outward
from the central locking mechanism.






There was a crackle from one of the walkie-talkies, the faint sound of gunfire, and screams.



Lyman raised his own radio and said, “Post five, report.”



He looked at Stryker, who nodded. They both knew what this meant.



Guns were leveled at the sound of running feet, forcing
the two troopers racing around the closest corner to come to a quick
stop, their hands raised clear of their weapons. Everyone was jumpy,
but Stryker had trained them well. Discipline held.



“Sir,” one of them reported,
“someone’s opened the loading bay doors. More mutants have
entered the base.”



“How many?” Stryker demanded.



“We don’t know.”



“Who are they?”



Both soldiers shook their heads. Anyone close enough to
discover that crucial information hadn’t been allowed to escape
to report it.



“Should we engage them, sir?” Lyman asked



Stryker looked thoughtful.



“No,” he said. “Have the rest of your
troops meet us outside the machine, with all the heavy ordnance they
can carry.



“Keep working on the doorway,” he told the
demo team, and then, to the new arrivals, “You two are with
me.” He motioned for Lyman and Yuriko to accompany him as well as
he strode briskly down the hall. “They can’t stop
anything,” he said as an absolute statement of fact. “In
fifteen minutes, they’ll all be on their knees.”






It was a morning to write home about, the sun still
hidden below the horizon as the helicopter skated along the crest of
the fog layer that shrouded the hills and hollows of the Hudson Valley.
To anyone watching, this was just another corporate helo, taking care
of one of the many moguls and high-ranking politicos who made their
home in this part of Westchester County and neighboring Connecticut.



They’d made a quick and uneventful flight from
Alkali Lake to the coast, but the closer they came to their
destination, the harder it was for Charles Xavier to mask his
impatience. Or keep tight rein on the niggling sense of dread that
wandered the outermost regions of his awareness, where he rarely went.



At Xavier’s mental direction, the pilot made a
combat approach to the back lawn, swift and certain, popping over the
surrounding trees and down to a safe landing in a matter of heartbeats.



Just as quickly, Cyclops helped Xavier from his seat and
into his wheelchair. As Scott pushed him up the ramp to the terrace,
Xavier had the pilot shut down the engines and then fall asleep.



Using telepathy, he’d been calling out to his
students since they departed Alkali Lake, expanding his mental
awareness as widely as possible in hopes of hearing an answer, no
matter how faint. From Jean, at the very least, he should have received
some response.



Now, at the mansion, he again felt that disquieting absence of contact.



“I don’t like this, Professor,” Scott
said as they entered the foyer. He called out as loudly as he could,
but all either man heard was the fading echo of their voices through
the empty rooms and hallways. “Where is everyone?”



“See if you can locate the Blackbird,
Scott,” Xavier told him. “Use the transponder, try to raise
the onboard computer. Find some way to contact Jean and Storm.
I’ll use Cerebro.”



With a nod, Scott took off down the corridor, while
Xavier turned his chair toward the elevators that gave access to the
mansion’s underground complex. It never occurred to him that
Scott was violating protocol, not to mention common sense, by leaving
him alone in a potentially hostile environment. And since he was
resolutely ignoring that pernicious sense of dread that just
wouldn’t quit, he never turned his head to see Scott vanish
behind him into thin air.



The hallways underground were as empty as those above as
the elevator doors opened and he rolled out onto the polished floor.
Until his ears caught the sound of crying.



He did a slow pivot at the main junction, where the two
sets of corridors came together in front of the elevator to form yet
another of the ubiquitous Xs that popped up throughout the complex.



“It’s all right,” he called, wondering
why he couldn’t pinpoint her location, either by sound or
thought. “You can come out now.”



He found her hiding in a corner of the computer room on
the main floor of the mansion. She was far younger than any mutant of
his experience, not yet of middle-school age, with blond hair and blue
eyes and a classic peaches-and-cream complexion. Her eyes were very
large and wounded and brimming with tears, and she wore a nightgown.



“Are they gone?” she asked tremulously, and
Xavier knew she meant Stryker’s invasion force. It didn’t
bother him in the slightest that a violent invasion of his school had
left it in pristine condition. That wasn’t important. Only this
girl mattered, and his lost students.



“Yes,” he replied. “Where are all the others?”



She shrugged.



“Then I guess we’ll have to find them, won’t we?”



He held out his hand. She took it. Together, they moved
down the hallway toward the vaultlike door that was the entrance to
Cerebro.



Xavier stopped in front of the retinal scanner, and once
it had confirmed his identity, Cerebro greeted him politely.
“Welcome, Professor.”



The door cycled open, revealing the great spherical chamber beyond.



He smiled at the girl, she smiled back, but when he turned to wheel himself inside, she called out in a panic.



“Please don’t leave me!”



Her cry went through him like a knife! How could he be so
unthinking, uncaring? What sort of teacher was he, to abandon a
child—especially after the traumas she must have suffered?



“Don’t leave me,” she begged. “Please!”



“All right,” he said, projecting comfort and
reassurance with his thoughts to complement the smile on his face, the
gentle tone of his voice. “You can come inside.”



With a grateful smile of her own, so radiant it made Xavier’s heart sing, she followed close behind him.






He never looked back. He never saw the polished floor of
home fade to cracked and filthy concrete, never saw the twisted
nightmare shape of Mutant 143 keeping pace with the girl whose image he
was projecting into Xavier’s mind or the pair of armed troopers
standing with guns ready at the doorway, just in case.



Xavier thought he was free, but in truth he’d never
left Alkali Lake. He was more a prisoner than ever, and for Jason
Stryker, he was the best toy he’d ever have to play with. A mind
of sublime grace, of infinite possibilities, that when he was done with
it would be a wasteland.



This would be such fun.






Stryker had just reached Xavier’s location when he
got a call from the demo team. They were ready. He was curt with
them—they had their orders, what were they waiting for? Blow the
door and slaughter that shape-changing bitch before she caused any more
trouble.



The hallway was crowded with Lyman’s fire team, a
reinforced squad of a dozen men, carrying automatic and heavy weapons.
Given their equipment and position, they were a match for ten times
their number and more.



“Mr. Lyman,” Stryker told his subordinate, “position your men.”



Leaving Lyman to do that job, trusting him to do it
right, Stryker followed Xavier’s path into the hollow chamber,
along the gantry extension to the circular platform at the end, which
was a makeshift replica of the original back at Xavier’s.



The control console wasn’t pretty to look at, none
of this was, but what mattered was that the stolen components all
worked here precisely as they did in the true Cerebro chamber. Xavier
sat in his proper place before the console, with 143 behind him and a
little to the side. Neither mutant responded to Stryker’s
presence, and that made the older man smile. The greatest mutant mind
on earth was aware of nothing beyond what Stryker allowed. Charles
Xavier, reduced to the level of a performing seal. It almost made
Stryker laugh.



That would wait till later. He was here on business.



He leaned close to his son’s ear and whispered his instructions.



Xavier thought he heard something—damn that
buzz in the back of his head, why wouldn’t it go away?—but
thought nothing more of it as the girl touched his arm and whispered in
his ear.



“Is it time to find our friends?”



Xavier’s heart leaped as though he had been empty
and now had purpose. He’d never felt such glory, it was almost
rhapsodic.



“Yes,” he said, and meant it with all his heart.



Stryker whispered to his son . . .



. . . and Mutant 143, through the image of the girl . . .



. . . whispered to Xavier.



“All of the mutants,” she asked. “Everywhere?”



“Oh, yes,” Xavier replied. Before him the path to fulfillment was laid out, as straight and clear as a highway. And yet . . .



Always “and yet.” Try as he might to embrace
this wonderful moment, something kept holding him back, trying with
ferocious persistence to pull him away. It refused to be ignored, it
wouldn’t be denied.



Fortunately, the girl’s voice was stronger.



“Good,” she said.



“Good,” said Stryker, all to himself. He
started to lay his hand on 143’s shoulder, came so close they
almost touched—then pulled himself away and curled his fingers
into a protective fist. For that moment, he had seen 143 not as a tool,
a weapon in the fight to defend humanity, but as his son.



That was uncharacteristic of him. It was weak. Now, more
than ever, that was an emotion he could not afford and would not
countenance.



With military bearing and precision, Stryker turned on
his heel and strode from the chamber. He didn’t look back. He
would never have to see Mutant 143 again. The images of his son that he
would keep with him would be from before, the mahogany-haired boy with
round cheeks and a ready giggle who loved to ride on Daddy’s
shoulders and who Stryker loved more than his own life.



The world that was, the world that should have been, but
for Xavier and those like him. The world he would pay any price to
restore.



If Jason knew any of this, he didn’t seem to care.
What fascinated him was his new toy, and his mismatched eyes began to
dilate and glow as he began to play.



Xavier finished his preparations and smiled at his companion.



“Just don’t move,” he warned the girl, speaking gently so as not to frighten her.



He donned the helmet, settling it comfortably on his head and himself comfortably in his chair.



The walls around him fell away, and just for a moment, as
his perspective and perceptions expanded outward to encompass the
chamber, he jumped. Because on the platform with him wasn’t a
girl at all but the twisted horror that was Jason Stryker.



No, he was wrong. It was only the girl. Strange how he
never noticed her eyes before. One green, the other blue. Almost
hypnotic in their brilliance.



Around him appeared a holographic representation of the
globe, just as he’d manifested for Logan only days before. He and
the girl floated in its center, at the heart and core of the world.



He exhaled, and as his breath rushed from his body it was
as if he’d separated into a million million versions of himself,
racing through fire and stone and steel and concrete, through earth and
water and air, to every point on the planet where a mutant could be
found. And not just the active ones, the comparative few who had
manifested their unique abilities or were on the cusp of doing so, but
the latents as well. Every person who possessed the mutator pairings in
their genome, even if it was only potential and unlikely to be
activated for one or two generations yet to come, was revealed to him.
He’d never dreamed there could be so many.



He found one sitting in a poker game in New Orleans,
another wandering the Scots highlands picking heather to serve as a
decoration at Moira MacTaggart’s dinner table; he found a
spectacularly beautiful woman serving as a lifeguard on Bondi Beach and
an ancient aborigine sitting cross-legged at the summit of Uluru, the
sacred rock of his people. He found a young boy who looked like a bird
and a quintet of ash-blond psychics who were perfect copies of one
another yet wholly unrelated. He found telepaths and telekines, he
found energy casters and others who absorbed energy as sustenance. He
found mutants with strength, and mutants with skill, some who could fly
or run like the wind or who made their home in the ocean. He found one
who could fold herself flat as paper and another who could transform
into any substance in the periodic table simply by tearing off her
skin. He found some born to be predators, others who were prey, and a
vast majority who hadn’t yet come to that crossroads.



He saw a world ready to tear itself apart, poised on the
cusp of what was and what might yet be—and knew in that blinding
flash of insight that in his hands lay the responsibility to manage
that change, to help determine whether the future was one of bright and
infinite possibilities or one where the planet was covered pole to pole
with graves.



Each mutant was a scarlet candle against the darkness of
forever—yet beside them glowed the golden candle of those who
weren’t mutants, equally bright, equally to be cherished. They
were inextricably bound, these children of Mother Earth, and Xavier
found here the proof of what he’d always known in his heart, what
he’d always been unable to present to Eric Lehnsherr, that you
could not safeguard the one without protecting the other.



At his direction, Cerebro came fully on-line and up to
speed, making its presence known with a deep and resonant hum that
gradually increased in intensity.



Hearing that hum, Stryker allowed himself a smile. He laid his hand on Lyman’s shoulder.



“Guard this post, Mr. Lyman. That’s the order.”



“Yes, sir.”



“From this point on, kill anyone who approaches. Even if it’s me.”



“Yes, sir.”



“God bless you, men. God give us this day!”



Stryker returned Lyman’s salute as though they were
on a parade ground at West Point, trooping the colors before the massed
corps of cadets, did an about-face, and strode away, Yuriko marching
alongside in cadence.



Lyman watched them until they were both swallowed in
darkness, then turned back to his men, to review their positions and
their ammo loads. This would be a bear fight, he knew, but this was
also what he and his men had trained for. They’d be ready, come
what may, and they would prevail.






The explosion caught Mystique by surprise: the demo team
was quicker than she’d anticipated. The door buckled inward as if
it had been punched by some monstrous fist, and her ears rang with the
shock wave of the blast. She dove for the MP5 she’d set on the
console. She had few illusions about her chances for survival, but she
also had three full magazines and a couple of grenades. At the very
least, she’d give Stryker’s bully boys a fight. She
couldn’t help wishing to be a little more like Rogue, though, so
that when she manifested another’s form and features, she also
assumed their skills as well. Namely Wolverine’s. Now would be a
nice time to possess the runt’s healing factor.



The first detonation didn’t do the trick, it just
warped the door in its frame and slightly popped one of the hinges.
Mystique wondered what would come next and assumed it wouldn’t be
pretty. Any explosive strong enough to breach this door would create a
blast effect capable of squishing every living thing inside the room to
jelly. Cheerful.



Unexpectedly, the door started groaning as it was
subjected to stresses well beyond its design tolerances. Like a cork
from a bottle of heavily shaken champagne, it popped from its frame,
outward into the corridor, to land against the opposite wall with a
crash so resounding it shook this whole section of the complex.



She didn’t need to be told who was responsible, and
when Magneto stepped over the threshold, she greeted him with a round
of heartfelt and appreciative applause.



The demo team and the guards, Mystique saw when she
peered outside, were safely in Jean Grey’s custody, squirming
upside down in midair where her telekinesis was holding them. Their
weapons, the young woman had separated into component parts and
scattered. As Mystique watched, Jean tossed her prisoners against the
wall. She didn’t do it so very hard, they couldn’t have
been much hurt, but from the way they collapsed to the floor Mystique
assumed she’d used her mental powers to render them unconscious.



She reentered the room to find Magneto staring at the console.



“Eric,” she said to greet him as she joined him by his side.



The look he gave her in return told her how glad he was to see her alive and unharmed.



“Have you found it?”



She called up the power grid on the main display.



“The hydroelectric net is still functional and has
been reestablished by Stryker, with a large portion of it being
diverted”—she pointed to one of the sectors of the complex,
an area where she had no video capability—“to this chamber.
It’s new construction.”



“My fault, I’m afraid,” Magneto
conceded as the X-Men joined them. “Can you shut it down from
here?” he asked Mystique.



“No.”



Logan held back, his attention caught by familiar figures
on one of the active security screens: Stryker and Yuriko, both in a
hurry. He opened his mouth to report the sighting, then reconsidered
and tapped a location query into the system. He looked toward Jean,
then back to the monitor, and his dilemma was obvious: Should he go for
Stryker or stay with the X-Men? He owed Jean the world, but Xavier?



“Come,” Magneto said to Mystique. “We have little time.”



Jean blocked him. “Not without us.”



Mystique tapped the keyboard, and the kidnapped students appeared once more on their respective monitors.



“My God,” Storm exclaimed, “the
children! Kurt?” She didn’t need to ask any more than that;
he knew what she wanted, and he answered with a nod.



“Will you be all right?” Storm asked Jean,
who was staring straight at Mystique. Jean knew exactly what was
happening here, that Magneto had a private agenda, that Mystique had
acted to divide the X-Men’s forces and limit their ability to
forestall his plan, whatever it was.



“Yeah,” she told her best friend.
“I’ll be fine.” Because she had Wolverine as backup.
“Logan?”



No answer.



“Where’s Logan?” Storm demanded when a look around the room and the hallway outside revealed no sign of him.



Jean had to confess to herself she wasn’t
surprised, but there was disappointment in her voice as she replied,
“He’s gone. We’ll have to manage without him.”






For Xavier, thanks to Cerebro, the psychic links
he’d established with the world’s mutants were solid, had
been from the first moment of contact. He’d never run Cerebro at
such a level, nor stretched his power to such a degree, as much because
of the risk to those he contacted as to himself. He knew already that
the cost to himself when this session was over would be considerable,
he already could feel the initial stages of what would be a killer of a
migraine.



He’d done what had been asked of him, what he knew
was necessary, yet he couldn’t bring himself to tell the little
girl.



“That’s odd,” he temporized. “I
can’t seem to focus on anyone.” That was true. With all the
contacts he’d made, none had been with any of his missing X-Men
or with his students. He knew they were out there, he just
couldn’t see them—which bothered him, considering how clearly he could interface with all the others.



“Maybe you have to concentrate harder,” the girl suggested.



Xavier increased the gain, and the hum from Cerebro grew deeper and more intense.






“Wait,” Jean told her companions, holding out
her hand to bring them to a stop. She, Magneto, and Mystique were deep
inside the complex, a section that had been hollowed out of the rock
right beneath the dam, which accounted for the dank air and
never-ending seepage down the seams in the walls. She shut her eyes and
concentrated a moment.



“I feel something,” she said. And then brightened with a smile. “I think it’s—Scott!”



Her call was answered with fire, a beam of glittering
scarlet that erupted out of the darkness ahead to shatter a chunk of
wall between Jean and the others with force enough to scatter shards of
stone like shrapnel. As she dived clear of the beam’s path, Jean
threw a telekinetic cloak over her companions, to deflect the brunt of
the debris clear of them, trusting the body armor components of her own
uniform to protect her.



“My dear,” she heard Magneto call from
behind, “this is the kind of lovers’ quarrel we cannot
afford right now.”



“Go!” she snapped over her shoulder. “I’ll take care of him.”



She had sight of him now. His face showed no expression,
no reaction whatsoever to the sound of her voice calling his name. She
tried reaching him with her thoughts but encountered a void whose only
awareness was of an icy oblivion that radiated outward from a point at
the base of his skull. She didn’t need to see the circular scar
on his neck to know that what had been done to Nightcrawler and to
Magneto had now been done to Scott. Until the drug wore off, or she
somehow broke its hold on him, he would keep fighting, without remorse
or mercy.



Magneto and Mystique started to back away, and their
movement caused Cyclops to fire again. This time Jean was ready,
deflecting the optic blast to one side so that it gouged a shallow
trench along the far wall. At the same time, she gestured with her own
hand, radiating her telekinesis outward to slap him invisibly in the
chest, hard enough to throw him off his feet.



She started running toward him, pushing him up and back
through the air, increasing his speed as she did her own, gritting her
teeth with the effort as he struggled—harder and with a lot more
purpose than the soldiers earlier—to break her hold on him.
Whatever control Stryker established allowed him to access all his
victims’ skills and training. Scott and she had often practiced
how best to use her powers in combat, in part by figuring out how to
compensate for them. Now he was turning that knowledge against her.



The corridor ended in a wall. She slammed him into it as
hard as she could. Trouble was, he was wearing his uniform, and it
protected him from the impact same as it had her from the shrapnel.



He fired again, forcing her to duck, and he hit a Humvee
parked in an alcove, flipping the four-ton vehicle over onto the one
parked next to it. As she scrambled up, she lost her hold on him, and
Scott flipped himself over the balcony railing.



She rushed after him and found herself overlooking
darkness, a room whose dimensions were totally hidden in shadow.
Muttering a string of passionate curses that would have impressed
Logan, she started to contact the others, to warn Magneto that
she’d lost Cyclops. Only then did she realize that in the chaos
of the moment, she’d lost her com set.



She stepped back from the railing and hunkered down to
reduce her target profile while she considered her next move. She still
had a sense of Scott’s thoughts, enough to know he was unhurt and
mobile, but she couldn’t pinpoint his position. Worse, she still
couldn’t reach him, and the sound of gears and motors grinding
from below would make the hunt downstairs even more difficult.



“Oh, Scott,” she sighed. He was the
strategist, the natural combat leader. It was more than training; it
was something he excelled at, that he was born to do. She was the
doctor, her role had never been more than backup. Every time
they’d ever sparred, loser buys the beer, she was the one who
ended up buying.



Slowly she got to her feet. It wasn’t as if she had any real choice.






The kids were scared. The kids were bored. The kids were
angry—at being left behind, at hearing no word, at not knowing
when (not if, but when) some mook of Stryker’s was going
to find them. The grown-ups had promised to keep them in the loop, but
all they heard from the radio was static.



John decided he’d had enough.



“That’s it,” he announced, and pressed the switch that extended the main ramp.



“Where d’you think you’re going, John?” Bobby challenged.



“Where d’you think, moron? I’m tired of this kid’s table shit.”



Bobby started to his feet: “You’ll freeze,” he said, “before you make it to the spillway.”



“I don’t think so,” John retorted.



“John, they told us to stay here,” Rogue protested.



For a moment the two boys glared, ready to take out their
tensions and frustrations on each other. Rogue wondered if Bobby really
would use his ice power to stop John, and how hard John would use his
flames to fight back.



“John!” she called, pleading, deliberately stepping between them.



That broke the moment. The look John gave Bobby was ugly
and filled with warning, but what he offered Rogue was a grin, just
like the Johnny of old, complete with a wink.



Then he was gone, at a trot across the hard-packed snow,
defying the arctic temperatures. Rogue stepped past Bobby to the
controls, but she made no move to raise the ramp. She knew how John
felt, and a large part of her wanted to follow.






Jean descended the staircase at a run, hitting the floor
in a roll that took her to cover amid the ranks of hulking, spinning
generators, each the size of a modest one-story house.



She knew he’d be waiting and had an idea where he’d be. Most of all, she was fairly certain what he’d do.



He didn’t disappoint.



There were two ways down to his level: either pitch
herself over the balcony, as he’d done, or use the stairs.
He’d want a position that gave him a ready line of sight of both
options. Taking her on the fly was risky. Better to wait until she
landed and was trying to get her bearings.



As she came up into a crouch, he fired, from off to her
right. For anyone else, the time you saw his beam—moving at the
speed of light—was the time it hit you. In Jean’s case, her
parry occurred at the speed of thought. Concept and execution happened
instantaneously, so that Cyclops’ optic blast crashed against the
invisible barrier of her telekinesis.



The problem was, since his beam was trying its best to
make like an irresistible force, she needed a way to brace the wall
that protected her, to make herself the next best thing to an immovable
object.



Didn’t work. The telekinesis held, her feet didn’t, and she felt herself slide backward along the floor.



Cyclops advanced on her, implacable as an automaton, adjusting his visor to hone his beam to maximum intensity.



The point of intersection where his energies met hers
began to glow, like steel in a furnace, generating a radiance so bright
Jean had to cover her eyes.



She was screaming, not in fear but in defiance, calling
his name over and over again, trying every way she could imagine, with
voice and thought, to reach him.



“Scott,” she bellowed, as into the teeth of a hurricane, “please! Remember who you are! Who I am! Don’t do this!”



She could feel his optic blast gnawing away at her
shield, shattering the bonds of energy that kept her safe. There was a
way to beat him, by splitting her teke and hurling it into him like
worms, to burrow into the vulnerable places of his body. She was a
doctor, she knew precisely where and how to do the most damage—to
incapacitate or worse. She could block his airway or one of the valves
of his heart or possibly interdict the smooth flow of neural
transmissions along his central nervous system. But the initial attack
had been too quick and too wild for her to make the attempt. She had
had a chance when he came at her here on the floor, but she held back a
fatal moment, afraid of her control—or lack of it. One thing to
try this maneuver in the controlled conditions of the danger room, with
sensors monitoring every conceivable aspect of the subjects’
physiological condition and a full-spectrum medical facility only steps
down the hall. Another to do it in the field, in a fight, where a
single mistake could prove fatal.



She knew now how right that last was, only she was the proof, not Scott.



He’d upped the power ante faster and farther than
she’d expected. She couldn’t spare even one iota of teke to
strike back at him, he’d break through her shields for sure. Yet
doing nothing would have the same result.



She couldn’t kill him.



She refused to be beaten.



And something awakened within her. A chord of celestial
music that she’d always been aware of on the outermost edges of
her being, from the moment she first used her powers, only now it
wasn’t a faint trill of notes but a full-throated symphony, a
crescendo that rolled through her like a tsunami. She thought at first
it would overwhelm her, but instead, with a joy so pure it could never
be described or even remembered in full measure, she found herself
riding the crest of this impossible wave, surfing creation the way she
always yearned to do on water.



The air rippled around her as though it were a pool
she’d just fallen into, and it began to glow, a roseate corona
that flowed swiftly to her outstretched hand and beyond, to crash
against the pinpoint needle of energy that was Cyclops’ optic
blast.



Jean bared her teeth and pushed herself to her knees,
bracing one foot under her as she struggled upright, the raw emotion on
her face in stark contrast to the total absence of any on
Scott’s.



The nimbus around her changed aspect as she fought,
creating a suggestion more of fire than light and the sense of wings
flaring outward from her back—not so much like an angel, although
that would be an easy and understandable mistake. This was more akin to
some predatory bird, a raptor, rising to the attack.



Between them though, the very fabric of reality twisted
under their combined onslaught. Cyclops’ power was considerable,
but ultimately it was tangible. He actually had limits. So did Jean,
but where his were physical, hers were solely of her imagination and of
her will.



She took a halting step forward, pushing with her
thoughts as well as her body, and cheered to herself as she moved
Scott’s optic blasts back toward him.



Her triumph was short-lived. These two combatants
weren’t the only elements in this battle with limits. The same
applied to the physical world that lay between them. They were battling
each other on levels from the paranuclear to the subatomic, and as
Jean’s resistance surged to new and unexpected levels, as the
energies employed increased exponentially, the heat and pressures they
unleashed triggered an equal and opposite reaction.



In effect, they created a molecular protostar, a localized version of the Big Bang.



For a fraction of a nanosecond, a time so small it was
virtually immeasurable, they had a taste of creation. Luckily for them
and for their world, the fabric of reality—already weakened by
their struggle—tore wide open under this incredible onslaught,
allowing the bulk of the energies to vent into some other, wholly
unfortunate plane of existence. All the two combatants were aware of
was an impossible radiance that reduced the brightness of the noonday
sun to the level of a very dim bulb, and an explosion more impressive
in every respect than one of Storm’s pet thunderclaps.



The concussion sent both of them flying. Scott, dazed and
shaken, went skidding and tumbling along the floor for pretty much the
length of the room. Jean wasn’t so fortunate. Her flight was
shorter, her landing harder, and she cried out as her leg caught on a
corner of pipe and snapped like a dry branch.



The effects of the explosion radiated outward from the
source, making themselves felt in every corner of the complex. The
generator room itself shook like it was in the middle of an earthquake,
the big machines rattling and groaning as they tried to cope with
stresses that pushed the limits of their design specs. Dust and more
fell from the ceiling, and off in the distance there was a resounding clang as a stretch of iron railing gave way.



High up in the shadows, unnoticed, a seam opened in the wall . . .



. . . and water began to leak through.






The shock knocked Stryker off his feet and would have
left him bloody had Yuriko not been there to catch him. He muttered
darkly as he brushed the dust from his clothes, then stopped cold as a
drop of water splashed onto one lens of his glasses. He looked up to
behold a spidery network of cracks in the ceiling, from which water was
now falling in a steady drip. He actually shuddered at the sight.



A quick walk brought him and Yuriko to the one of the
dam’s monitor stations. A glance at the rusted, decaying, but
still functional dials on the wall told him all he needed to know.



Early in his career, before Jason, before marriage,
he’d been a field agent. Black ops. He’d attended a course
in sabotage, a seminar on how to blow a dam. There were basically two
ways to do it. You either dropped a really big bomb, or succession of
bombs, in just the right place—as the British did to the Germans
in World War II—or you set off a much smaller bomb, also in just
the right place, and let the dam itself do the rest. The key to a dam
is its structural integrity, because the pressure of the water
it’s restraining is relentless. That’s why public safety
mandates that all such structures be scrupulously maintained. The
slightest flaw, if unchecked, could lead to disastrous consequences.



This dam had essentially been left to rot. No one was
interested in dismantling it, so the secondary spillway had been left
open to drain the lake. Over the subsequent years, in part to hide what
had happened here, the dam had been filed and forgotten. No one came to
check on its condition, no one realized—until Stryker arrived to
reopen the facility—that the open spillway had become hopelessly
clogged and Alkali Lake itself had gradually filled almost to
overflowing.



Now this explosion, whatever its cause, had provided the
final, fatal catalyst. Because of the weight of water pressing on the
dam, these cracks that now appeared miniscule would quickly grow and
spread until the entire structure collapsed.



The complex was doomed. The only question was how long
they had. He did some fast calculations, couldn’t quite make them
fit. Too many unknowns. So he decided then, as an act of will, that it
would last until his work was done. He’d come too far, worked too
hard, to accept even the possibility of failure. Or of defeat. His
cause was just, therefore he would prevail.



“Time to go,” Stryker told Yuriko, and they did, quickly.



* * *



Jean heard him coming, boot heels striking the floor in a
steady, robotic cadence that was totally unlike him, and she wailed
silently to herself. He wasn’t unconscious and he wasn’t
free and he was on his way to finish her off.



She tried to shift position, but her broken leg was
agony. She couldn’t muster concentration enough to neutralize the
pain or to stop her lover.



Screw that, she thought, and tried again,
marshaling her strength of body and will, first dampening the pain in
her leg to a dull but manageable ache and then calling out to Scott,
not with her voice, but with her mind.



She said his name, but what reached out to him was so
much more. It was the sense of her, the emotions he stirred in her
heart and those she sensed in turn from him. She took the world as it
was when they were apart and then what it felt like when they were
together, and it was the difference between a wasteland and a paradise.
There was passion and comfort and need and joy, there was a strength
that knew no boundaries, a sense of kindred souls made one, and that
whole being far, far greater than the sum of its parts.



She opened her soul to him, holding back only that part
of her that even now thought only of Logan, and realized as she did so
that this was the part she would call upon if worst came to worst and
she found herself with no other option but to kill.



Through the impenetrable fog of his mind she sensed him
reaching for his visor and remembered absurdly the night they’d
spent watching one of Scott’s favorite movies, Robert
Wise’s classic The Day the Earth Stood Still. She
remembered the climactic moment when Patricia Neal had been cornered by
the robot Gort and how his visor glowed like Scott’s as it opened
to reveal the deadly beams within.



Scott, she called with her thoughts, please—



Scott!






His hand trembled, his mouth working as he struggled to
speak. His breathing quickened, his hands clenched to fists, and there
were flashes of light within his mind as he fought his way through the
fog, calling out himself in answer to her cries.



Then, suddenly, he was crying aloud, desperate incoherent
sounds like a man might utter clawing his way up from some abyss of the
spirit, culminating in a great and awful scream that made her own pain
insignificant by comparison.



He collapsed to his knees and sobbed, taking in breaths
of air in huge, noisy gulps, a drowning man who’d finally reached
the surface long after he thought all was lost.



He flinched when she touched him, curling in on himself,
startled and terrified, too much like a dog who expected nothing but
beatings. That made her angry, because this was her man and he was none
of those things.



She touched him lightly once more on the face, but with
her thoughts she enfolded him in warmth, in strength, in passion. She
let him see reflected in her vision of him the man she knew he was, who
made her complete.



It’s okay, Scott, she told him telepathically and said the same aloud: “It’s okay, it’s me. It’s me!”



And as he looked up in relief, she took him in her arms,
burying her face in the hollow between neck and shoulder so he
couldn’t see her. That made her smile inside, although there was
no humor in it. It was easy to be strong for others but when it came to
herself—well, that was a different chapter entirely. But she
didn’t want him to know what had happened, not yet. Let him heal
just a little more, let him come a bit more wholly back to himself,
then he could handle it.



“You’re hurt,” he said.



“You’re right,” she grimaced. “Help me up, please.”



“I’ll carry you.”



“Like hell. I’m a telekinetic, remember? I can make myself a splint and crutches all in one.”



“Really?”



“If I’m wrong, sweetie, you’ll be the first to know.”



“Jean,” he said, and then, haltingly, “I—I’m sorry.”



She kissed him on the edge of his mouth, glad that the difference in height between them allowed her to keep her face shadowed.



“It’s okay. It’s okay. I . . . I was so afraid I’d lost you.”



“Thanks” was all he said, but she could see the emotions that went into that single word, and she hugged him for it.



A moment later, her expression changed and she looked around the room in alarm.



“Scott,” she said urgently, frustrated that she couldn’t tell him why, “something’s wrong!”






Mystique had printed out a map, showing the route to
where the children were imprisoned. Storm and Nightcrawler covered the
distance in record time. Nightcrawler was right at home, racing as
easily along the walls and ceiling as the floor, as limber crouched on
all fours as standing erect on both legs. Storm wasn’t anywhere
near as confident, physically or emotionally. She didn’t like
being underground or in confined spaces. She thought she’d put
those childhood fears behind her long ago and didn’t appreciate
discovering she might have been wrong.



At last they came to a room that was essentially the lip
of a broad and deep pit. Surveillance cameras were mounted at intervals
around the circular ceiling, allowing an unrestricted view of the hole.
She’d seen on the control room monitors that deep parallel
slashes had been gouged in the walls, at a height that suggested a man
Logan’s size. Such a person couldn’t climb out, he
couldn’t jump out, there were no doors to be seen; the only
possible mean of ingress or egress to the pit was a hoist on a sliding
boom set in the ceiling. The room itself had a single doorway, and it
was ringed by the ruins of a rubber gasket, which meant that in better
days the entrance could have been sealed airtight. Alternating with the
camera mounts around the ceiling were ventilation grilles. It
didn’t take much imagination to realize that gas could be
introduced to the room instead of air, to deal with any prisoners who
decided to get rowdy.



If this was a holding pen, it was designed by people who took no chances.



Damn them, she thought with unusual vehemence. What did they want from him? What did they do to him?



And then, more ominously, What does Stryker intend with us?



“Who’s down there?” she called.



“Jubilation Lee,” came the immediate reply. “Is that you, Ororo? Can you help us?”



“Hey, would I have come all this way if I
couldn’t?” She looked sideways at Nightcrawler.
“Kurt, could you—” She didn’t have to finish,
he was already gone.



The kids, of course, had no idea who he was. Two girls
took one look at him and shrieked in terror, backing all the way across
the pit while Jubilee and Artie, one of the boys, took station between
them. The boy was ready to fight—he even stuck out his forked
tongue to try to scare Nightcrawler, which he actually found quite
amusing—but Jubilee looked more curious than defiant. She assumed
that if Storm was up top, then this had to be one of the good guys. If
it wasn’t, since Stryker had given them some kind of drug to
inhibit their powers temporarily, they were all pretty much screwed
anyway.



Nightcrawler gently motioned her aside and spoke to the frightened pair of girls.



“My name’s Kurt Wagner,” he told them.
“Although in the circus ring I’m better known as
Nightcrawler. Perhaps you’ve heard of me?”



Blank looks all around.



“Ah, well. Some other time, perhaps. Come to me,
please,” and he waved his fingers to urge them closer.
“It’s all right. You’ve nothing to fear from me,
I’m just going to take you for a little jaunt.”



“Can’t Storm do this?” one of the boys asked.



“Don’t be an ass,” Jubilee told him.
“There isn’t enough volume of air in here for her to
generate sufficient wind. What’re you going to do,” she
asked Nightcrawler, “climb the walls?”



“Not exactly,” he replied. He wrapped arms
and tails around one of the frightened girls, who’d responded to
his call and stepped up close to him. “Now,” he told her,
“close your eyes.”



Bamf.



He was gone.



And a moment later, with the girl’s excited cries echoing down from the floor above, he was back.






Logan didn’t need a map, he just followed his nose.
He had Stryker’s scent, and since she was the only woman in the
place, aside from Mystique and his fellow X-Men, he had no problem
isolating Yuriko’s scent as well. He could follow and find them
anywhere now, no matter how cold the trail.



Suddenly he stopped. Another scent, one he never thought anything about, because it was a part of him.



He turned and thought about his first visit and the wolf
he’d followed downstairs. This was a whole different section of
the base, and a lot deeper. Nothing about the surroundings was
familiar, and yet . . .



Snikt!



There were three slash marks in the wall, at the top of a
flight of stairs. They reminded him of a book he’d read wintering
up North of Sixty, waiting out a storm in a trapper’s cabin.
Jules Verne’s Journey to the Center of the Earth. The
explorers there had followed a trail left by their predecessor, a man
named Arne Saknussemm, who’d blazed the way by leaving three
parallel slashes in the rock.



He held up his claws. They fit as perfectly here as they
had in the marks he’d found up top. He heard screams, but only in
memory, and smelled blood that strangely seemed as fresh as if it had
just been spilled. He’d fought his way out of here, of that he
was certain.



Why hadn’t they ever tried to find him? Why had he been brought here in the first place?



He clenched his fist, keyed the trigger in his nervous system, and put the claws away.



Snakt!



Only one man with the answers.



Moving fast, Logan descended the stairs.






Artie was the last. He looked a little wobbly as
Nightcrawler let him go, but then so did the indigo-skinned mutant
himself, and Storm caught him by the arm as he swayed on his feet.



“It’s harder with a passenger,” he confessed. “And when I transport six—”



“I’m proud of you,” she said. “Consider this a good deed to counterbalance all those sins.”



He smiled in gratitude, but only for a moment as Artie protested, “I think I have to throw up.”



“It’s hard for my passengers, too, I’m afraid,” he confessed further. “But the nausea will quickly pass.”



Not soon enough for Artie, who bent double and promptly
expelled all the food he’d ever gworfed in his life. Storm held
his head until he was done, then manifested a tiny cloud of rain to
wash his face clean. That’s when the room shook around them, and
when she decided the quicker they were quits of this awful place, the
better for all concerned.






The stairs led Logan to a lab that, like the rest of the
base, had seen better days. It was circular, with massive cylindrical
columns supporting a large ring in the center. Unlike most of the other
sections of the base, however, this one hadn’t been stripped to
the walls. It looked almost . . . operational.



In his mind’s eye, the room wasn’t empty. He
counted at least a dozen ghouls on hand for every session, wearing a
freakish kind of armored surgical moon suit that was designed to
protect the wearer not only from biological contamination but from
physical attack as well. By sight, he couldn’t tell men from
women, young from old. They all had the same face, and that was the
visor of their helmets. Scents were how he told them apart, except for
Stryker. He remembered now that Stryker was the only one unafraid to
show his face. It was important to him to be seen, and Logan wondered
now if that was why Stryker had seemed so disappointed when Logan
didn’t recognize him at the mansion.



This was a surgical suite, and as he circled the room,
unconsciously keeping well clear at first of the tank in its center, he
noted the carts on which the nurses had piled the necessary medical
instruments. The usual collection of scalpels and hemostats, scissors
and retractors and clamps, but that wasn’t all, it wasn’t
even close. There were tools he couldn’t name, whose purpose he
didn’t know, but the mere thought of them sent an unaccustomed
thrill of horror up his spine.



Along the wall there was a bank of light boxes, where
they would clip the X rays before going to work on him. They always let
him see what was there, they always told him what they planned to do,
they wanted him to know . . . they wanted him to know . . . they wanted
him to know . . .



All that care and effort and . . . consideration—for nothing.



One of the X rays had been him. Some of them looked like
monsters, all of them were of mutants. Maybe all of them were him?
Maybe he was the monster? He didn’t know.



He remembered what Xavier had told him—maybe he didn’t want to know? Right now, that didn’t seem like so bad an idea.



Finally he forced himself to the tank. He’d thought
it was empty, hoped it would be empty, but he was wrong. It was filled
with an oily amber liquid and above it, suspended from the ring, a
battery of instruments more appropriate to a slaughterhouse than a
hospital. On pedestals beside the tank were what appeared to be molds:
one with a set of three channels, needing no explanation, another with
five, longer and slimmer and altogether quite elegant.



Next to the tank, at its head, was a large cylinder whose
shape reminded him of a home hot-water heater, only this was made of a
thick, transparent polymer that had the same transparent qualities as
glass, but clearly much stronger. It had to be, since it was designed
to hold molten adamantium, which came into the vat as hot as the core
of the Earth. Attached to the cylinder were a number of long, snakelike
tubes that ended in wicked-looking syringes built to punch through
bone. The tank was half full of a silvery liquid.



He looked at that tank, at the cylinder, at the tubes, at the instruments—and knew at last where his nightmares came from.



“You know,” Stryker said from across the
room, though his presence came as no surprise to Logan. He’d
scented the man’s approach minutes ago. “The tricky thing
about adamantium is that if you ever manage to process its raw, liquid
form, you have to keep it that way. Keep it hot, keep it molten.
Because, you see, once it cools, it’s indestructible.”



He paused a moment to let the implications of his words
sink in, but Logan wasn’t bothered. He’d already figured
out that part. That had to be why they needed someone with a healing
factor.



“But,” Stryker continued, “I can see you already know that.”



He was being very careful, keeping the full width of the lab, and as much equipment as possible, between himself and Logan.



“I used to think you were one of a kind, Wolverine. I truly did.” He shook his head. “I was wrong.”



Logan charged him and ran straight into Yuriko, who
caught him by the arm and—using his own momentum as
impetus—slammed him as hard as she could into one of the support
columns. Stone cracked and powdered with the impact, but Logan
wasn’t even staggered.



Stryker caught Yuriko’s eye, looked deliberately
from her to Logan, and when she nodded, he took his leave, out a
different doorway from the one he’d entered, taking time to lock
it behind him.



Logan rose to his feet and extended both sets of claws.
He had no interest in her, only her boss, but if she wanted trouble,
he’d make it short and final.



In return, her own face looking bored, as though this sort of confrontation happened every day, she spread her fingers wide.



Logan was used to the reaction he got from other people
when they saw his claws for the first time. Now, surprisingly, he
learned how that felt as Yuriko’s fingers elongated into
eight-inch spikes. He didn’t need to be told what they were made
of, and he wondered how they’d managed the implantation. If she
had a healing factor as well, this could be trouble.



“Holy shit,” he said in amazement. She
smiled, but it wasn’t a human expression. In fact, nothing about
her seemed human or connected; it was like she was some different
species entirely, forever gazing at the world from the outside. She was
predator, all others were prey. That was the natural order of things.



Her hand flicked out, faster than he could follow, and he
felt a hiss of pain along his jaw, felt blood where she’d cut a
shallow gash across his cheek.



He retaliated with a roundhouse swing that missed her by
a mile as she ducked beneath it and came up like a jack-in-the-box,
unleashing a powerful side kick to the belly that pitched him backward
through trays of equipment, upending them on top of him as he tumbled
to the floor.



With a banshee screech, she leaped after him, slashing at
him with both hands, only to find her attack blocked by his own claws.
Adamantium struck adamantium, creating its own unique brand of sparks
as each of them fought to break through the other’s guard and
instead only managed to wreck the lab.






Stryker heard the sounds of battle and permitted himself
a smile as he quickened his pace. Time, now more than ever, was of the
essence.






Yuriko swung hard, but Logan slapped her aside. Before he
could take advantage, she hurled herself clear of him, running straight
at the wall and using it as a springboard to flip herself up and over.
However, she made a slight miscalculation in her maneuver: As she
twisted in midair, her finger claws ripped through a cluster of power
cables fastened to the ceiling. They exploded with sparks, they were
live and carrying a significant amount of juice, and they dangled and
twisted in the air like manic snakes. That contact threw her
fractionally off balance; she didn’t quite land where she wanted
to, or as smoothly.



It was the opening Logan had been waiting for.



Logan tackled her, and together they crashed through a
glass wall into some kind of lounge. X-ray light boxes, equipment,
computers galore crashed and shattered around them as they struggled.
Logan had strength and a fair share of agility, but Yuriko possessed
speed he couldn’t hope to match. For every blow he landed, he
took a dozen, and his uniform proved as effective at stopping her claws
as a suit of air. Worse, her own healing factor seemed every bit as
effective as his, only he was giving it a lot less work to do.



As they’d tangled on the floor, he’d caught a
glimpse of the back of her neck, saw there the scar that marked both
Nightcrawler and Magneto, and realized in that instant there could be
no reasoning with her. In her own way, she was as berserk as he, and he
knew she wouldn’t stop until she killed him.






She hit him again, and again, using feet this time more
than claws, choosing her blows with care so that she connected with
soft tissue instead of bone. She wanted to wear him down, to strip him
of the ability to defend himself, to remove all hope before she came in
for the kill. That was what Stryker had asked of her, and she could
deny him nothing.



She sent Logan crashing backward into the tank, and he
tumbled into it, rearing up immediately only to collapse against the
opposite end, eyes wide as his nightmares rioted up around him. He was
clumsy and dazed, he had to be at the end of his rope.



With a ballerina’s grace, Yuriko sprang onto the
lip of the tank, striking a Kali-like pose, the fingers of both hands
spread out before her like a pair of bloody fans.



Logan showed fear in his eyes, which was exactly what she wanted to see.



She struck, and as she made her move . . .



. . . so did he.



She slashed empty air, registering surprise and disbelief
as Logan leaped straight up from the tank. Using all his formidable
strength to defy gravity, he grabbed for the rack suspended above the
tank and slashed through the wire tether that anchored it to the
ceiling.



It dropped like a guillotine. He rode it down to crash on
top of Yuriko and pin her to the bottom of the tank. She struggled and
screeched, using her claws on the steel and concrete members that
imprisoned her. It would only be moments before she was free.



They were moments Logan wouldn’t let her have. On
impact, he pitched himself clear of the rack and grabbed the syringes
attached to the cylinder of adamantium, using the same movement to open
the access valves. He spared her a quick and final thought—I’m sorry—and plunged the barbed needles between her unbreakable ribs and into her heart.



She screamed as the molten metal flowed into her body.
She raged and struggled in a last desperate bid to escape, but she was
doomed the moment Logan stabbed her. Adamantium oozed out her eyes and
out her mouth, it burned through the very pores of her skin until she
was coated from head to toe. Unable to maintain even a semblance of
balance, she fell backward into the tank, creating a splash that
emptied the vessel of half its volume of amber liquid. Her fingers
twitched spasmodically as she sank to the bottom.



And then she was still.






Logan watched her, half expecting her to crack the shell
and emerge more powerful and deadly than before. By rights she should
be dead, from internal burns if nothing else, as the raw, fiery metal
cascaded straight into her heart. God knows what kind of damage had
been done to allow the adamantium to emerge from her eyes and mouth.
Covered as she was, she couldn’t breathe. Perhaps that would do
the trick?



He hoped so, prayed so. She was as much a victim as he,
and more. At least—and here he touched his fingers to the back of
his neck to make sure—he wore no scar to brand him as
Stryker’s slave.



If he hadn’t escaped, would that be him lying
there? Or taking Yuriko’s place by Stryker’s side, as his
pet assassin?



One thing more that Stryker owed him.



Time to collect.



He turned his back on this unholy place, and all it represented for his life, and started after Stryker’s trail.



Nothing would stop him now.





 







Chapter

Fifteen




“You think they’ll come?” one of the troopers, Grierson, asked Lyman.



Lyman nodded, automatically checking the other
man’s disposition. Grierson was hunkered down behind a concrete
abutment, spare magazines at hand, spare weapons as well. He was on the
young side for one of Stryker’s men, but he had a superb
personnel jacket, topped by a year spent as a platoon sergeant in the
82nd Airborne, humping the boonies in Afghanistan.



“They’ll come,” Lyman said.



“Can we stop ’em?”



“Those are the orders.”



“No offense, but from what I saw on the video—”



“Those are the orders.”



Grierson shrugged. “First time for everything, I
guess.” He hefted his long gun, a Barrett .50-cal sniper rifle,
whose depleted uranium shells could punch through tank armor a mile
away. “I get a decent shot with this!”



Lyman nodded again, aching for a cigarette. He never
smoked at home, only in the field and only before a fight. Had to be
nerves. Thirty years in the service, combat tours all over the world,
and he still got nervous. He figured that was the difference between
him and Stryker; the commander had no nerves, or at least none that he
ever showed his men.



One more time, for reassurance, and to give himself
something to do, he made the rounds of his fire team, checked their
sight lines and kill zones, made sure everyone had an abundance of
weapons and ammo. In a fair fight, against an adversary like
themselves, no matter how well trained and disciplined, he would have
called the outcome no contest. His guys had ideal ground, anyone
advancing up this corridor wouldn’t even come close.



As it was . . .



He’d broken the cardinal rule of clandestine ops:
He’d brought along some personal items. Only pictures—the
wife, the kids, the grandchild-to-be. His dogs. He’d raised them
from pups, a pair of mixed-breed shepherds that kept his wife good
company when he was away. With the kids building households of their
own, his own home was too empty too often. He knew she was lonely; he
hoped the dogs made it easier to bear.



He wondered what they’d say, his kids, seeing him
here? He thought of the children they’d taken from the mansion
and how cavalierly Stryker had condemned them. Funny, even though he
understood the broad outlines of Stryker’s ambition, he always
assumed—no, he always chose to assume—that the targets would be adults. Full-grown mutants.



He did a dangerous thing for a soldier. He put himself
for a moment in the other man’s boots and considered how he might
react if they were his children who’d been stolen.



He took a breath and then another, even deeper, because
the first was way too shuddery and he needed his men to see him
completely in control. He had to take a third, because this time the
fear wouldn’t be banished so readily; it had its hooks deep in
him, and he had to pry them loose one at a time. Lyman wasn’t a
brilliant man; he wasn’t into concepts. His skill was execution.
Give him a mission, and you were guaranteed to see it accomplished.



“I gotta go, sweetheart,” he whispered to the
pictures in his hand, and he kissed each one in turn. One daughter, and
her baby he knew he’d never see, three sons, his two dogs, and
the woman who was the center of his life. He clasped his hands in
prayer, bracing his wife’s picture between thumbs and fingers,
staring at it with such intensity that by force of will alone he could
almost make it real.



That’s when they heard the hum from inside
the Cerebro chamber, a deep pulsing groan as if the world itself were
stretching sore joints. It wasn’t so much heard as felt, a
frequency so low it made your insides quiver. At the same time, the
floor beneath them, the rock around them, trembled, and every man in
the fire team looked around nervously, half expecting some monster to
come burning through the walls or the walls themselves to come tumbling
down.



“Remember the briefing,” Lyman told them.
“This is part of the process. You guys may think this feels bad,
but I guarantee you it’ll be worse for the muties. Stay chill,
people, stay alert.”



“Five bucks says the gizmo nails ’em before we fire a shot!”



“Save your money, Manfredi,” Lyman shot back. “I’d rather take it from you over poker.”



He didn’t get much of a laugh from his men, but it
was enough. Lyman tucked away his photos and checked his own weapons.
If the muties had half a brain between them, that first pulse should
bring them on the run. They’d know the stakes now.



It wouldn’t be long.



“I have a valid target,” Grierson announced, leveling his sniper rifle.



Lyman whipped his binoculars to his eyes and brought the
approaching figures into focus. Magneto and Mystique, at a range of one
hundred meters. The old man was a half step in the lead, marching up
the hallway like he was leading a whole army into battle. He
didn’t seem to mind Grierson’s laser sight resting right
over his heart.



“You’re cleared to fire,” Lyman said,
and immediately a resounding boom filled the hallway around him, so
loud he couldn’t help flinching.



The shell didn’t hit its target; it never came
close. Without lifting a finger, without a gesture of any kind, Magneto
simply stopped it in midair.



The rest of the team opened up, and the air around Lyman
filled with the stink of cordite and the sound of spent casings
rattling off the walls and floor. Every man here was a crack marksman,
and this was point-blank range. The only pause in the murderous volleys
was when someone had to replace an empty magazine. In the space of a
few frantic minutes, they expended better than half their munitions . .
.



. . . and found themselves with absolutely nothing to show for it.



Not one of the bullets came closer to their targets than
an arm’s length. It didn’t matter that they were forged of
nonferrous materials, that some were super-dense plastic. If Magneto
couldn’t manipulate the shells directly, he warped the magnetic
fields around them, and him, using force and pressure to accomplish his
goal.



Too astonished to be scared, the troopers gradually stopped firing. A couple looked to Lyman, hoping for a Plan B.



He couldn’t think of one; he was transfixed by the
scene down the hall. They’d thrown literally thousands of rounds
at the two mutants, and now Magneto was reshaping them to his own
requirements, pressing them so tightly together they formed a wall that
completely obscured him and Mystique from view.



Why would they need a shield, Lyman thought. He knows there’s nothing we can do to him—



He heard a faint click, followed the noise, and had his answer.



The bastard had just pulled the pin on his grenade.



Lyman grabbed for the bomb and pitched it clear, thankful
for the seven-second delay on the fuse, but even as he did he knew it
was a useless gesture—because those same fateful clicks
could be heard all around him. They had a whole case of grenades, each
man carried his standard allotment, and every one of them had just been
triggered.



He saw his wife in his mind’s eye and reached for her . . .



. . . and he was done.






Of course the explosion of the grenades ignited what
remained of the rifle ammunition, which created quite a fireworks
display outside the chamber. Mystique tucked her body close around
itself at Magneto’s feet, placing her back right against his
metal shield as strays ricocheted all around them.



When the pings and whistles and pops and crackles
and booms had all faded, leaving Mystique coughing from the smoke and
the stench of ruined flesh, her ears ringing from the shock waves,
Magneto set aside his shield, and they proceeded on their way.



There wasn’t anything left of the defenders worth
looking at. Magneto paused a moment at the entrance, standing by a
bloody mess that was unrecognizable as a man. Oddly, a photo had
survived the slaughter, a little singed at the edges, a handsome woman
of middle age and two bright-eyed dogs. Mystique kneeled for a closer
look, but Magneto shook his head. He opened his hand, which was filled
with the pins he’d pulled from the grenades, and let them fall,
burying the photograph in steel.



Then his head jerked up and he staggered as if he’d
just been physically struck, Mystique hissing in agony as a phantom ice
pick went straight through her brain, as the hum radiating from inside the room got louder, grew deeper and more intense.






In front of Charles Xavier, a light appeared. In terms of
the holographic globe being displayed by Cerebro, it was located at the
core of the world. From that point, radiant spears stabbed outward to
connect with each and every one of the scarlet dots that represented an
active or potential mutant.






“Oh,” Jean cried suddenly, and then she cried
out in real pain as her concentration slipped and the teke splints
vanished from around her broken leg. Psychically damping the pain
didn’t make it go away, it just made things feel worse every time
she had to notice. But her injury was the least of her concern as her
hand tightened on Scott’s shoulder so tightly he winced, half
wondering if she was going to crush his bones.



“Jean,” he demanded, placing an arm around
her waist, pulling one of her arms across his shoulder so he could
better handle her weight, “what’s wrong?”



“Voices,” she gasped, “so many voices,
can’t you hear them, of course you can’t what am I saying
oh Charles oh Charles what have you done?”



“Jean!”



“Scott, it’s Cerebro,” she cried, and
for the first time since he’d known her, Scott heard genuine
terror in her voice. “We’re too late!”



She screamed. He’d only heard its like once before,
when he was young and hunting. It was one of the few memories that he
knew dated from before the orphanage where he’d grown up. He was
in mountains, so many they filled the horizon on every side, and though
his dad carried a gun for protection, they were there to shoot
pictures. Some poor fool in another hunting party had stumbled into a
bear trap, and the metal jaws had nearly taken off his leg.



Jean collapsed to the floor, clutching at her head and
howling. Scott knelt beside her, struck through the heart to see her in
such pain, yet utterly helpless to alleviate it.



He heard a deep, basso profundo thrum that sounded
to him like tectonic plates grinding, and then, just like that, he lost
all ability for rational thought as his own head was overwhelmed by a
sleet storm of pain. His eyes were burning and his brain with it, the
fire coursing down his spine and along every path and linkage of his
nervous system.



His last, desperate, marginally conscious act was to
throw himself clear of Jean, to wrap his arms around his head and tuck
his body in as tight upon itself as he could manage. His beams
couldn’t punch through his own flesh; this way, he hoped, he
prayed, he wouldn’t unleash them on anyone else. He
wouldn’t hurt Jean—any more than he already had.






Storm and the children were making good time through the
bowels of the complex. For once, even Artie was behaving. No smart
remarks, no haring off on his own, he held her hand tight and kept
pace, even though her legs were twice the length of his and she was
walking fast. Nightcrawler was on point and so far, thankfully, the way
ahead was clear.



She sensed the psi wave before actually hearing it, in
the same way she sensed changes in the weather. The shape of the air,
the energies coursing through it, bulged and rippled as though they
were being shunted aside by the approach of a power far more massive
than themselves.






Nightcrawler felt it, too. He dropped from the ceiling,
bracing a hand against the wall to steady himself. He looked dizzy and
felt far worse. In his whole life he’d never suffered from
vertigo and now, suddenly, he was glad for what he’d been spared
all these years. He tried to focus his eyesight, and when that failed,
he realized it was getting harder to form coherent thoughts as well. It
was as though every cell in his body had acquired the ability to
teleport independently of one another, and they’d all decided to
go their separate ways.



He started to turn, to warn Storm, to cry out to her for
help, but that simple action proved beyond his capability as he
stumbled over his own feet and flailed desperately for a handhold to
stop himself from falling.



“Storm!” he cried with the frantic desperation of a drowning man, but she was in no position to help.






She was already on her knees, hands clutched to her head,
caught in her own whirlwind and shot through with lightning that
exploded from her eyes and circled right around to strike her back.
Always before she’d been immune to the elements she wielded, but
that was no longer the case as wicked arcs of electricity exploded over
and through her. She writhed with every impact, and while the
winds attacking her swept away the smoke raised by these repeated
attacks, they couldn’t dispel the quickly rising stench of burned
uniform. Or the certain knowledge that in very little time, her flesh
would be burning, too.



The children were screaming now, howling like souls being
tormented by demons, Nightcrawler’s eyes going wide with horror,
his mouth forming the words—part demand, part
prayer—“Stop it! Please, stop it! For the love of God—stop!” But no sound emerged. He was beyond the ability to speak.






He knew, as Storm did, that this was just the leading
edge of the nightmare coming for them, the merest prelude to what lay
ahead. He prayed for mercy, not only for himself and his companions,
but for the souls of those responsible.



He forced one hand in front of the other, climbing along
the floor as he would up a vertical rock face, determined to reach
Storm, to give her what shelter and comfort he could so that together
they could try to protect the children. There’d been no one to
protect him growing up. He’d learned early how to fight and, far
more importantly, how to defuse a fight, and he’d sworn afterward
he would never allow anyone to be without a protector.



He stretched his right arm forward, a distance that
seemed to his disoriented eyes to be miles. It was so hard to move, to
think, there was a tremendous numbing pressure right behind his eyes
that threatened to pop them from their sockets and he was sure his
brain was swelling from the onslaught of the energy pulse.



Then the hum enveloped them, and all that came before faded to insignificance.



Nightcrawler’s last conscious thought was of
wonderment. He’d always believed you had to be dead before you
went to Hell.






Logan tried to snarl, but it came out more like a scream.
Claws emerged from both his hands, but they extended no more than an
inch before retracting. This time, though, Logan’s healing factor
didn’t close the wounds behind them, and blood sprayed from the
open cuts. Indeed, it appeared that all the wounds he’d ever
endured were coming back to haunt him as a score of gashes opened
across his flesh, splashing the floor around him scarlet. Some were
random and messy, the legacy of knives or bullets or the cruel vagaries
of nature, but many were neat and purposeful, the incisions of careful
men who’d abandoned all allegiance to the Hippocratic oath
they’d taken as medical students to do no harm. They’d laid
Logan open to the bone and now, in the place Stryker implied he had
been born, it was happening all over again.



* * *



Magneto staggered under the onslaught of the psychic
pressure wave, standing against it as he would against the full force
of a hurricane’s winds. Step by determined step, he advanced on
the doorway to Stryker’s version of the Cerebro chamber.



“Eric,” he heard from behind and to the side,
Mystique’s voice, shattering between one syllable of his name and
the next, between that word and the one which followed. “Hurry!” Feminine for one, masculine for another, plunging from soprano to bass and back again.



He didn’t look back, he couldn’t spare the
effort—and besides, he could imagine what was happening. Somehow
Cerebro was attacking them through their very powers, turning what made
them unique against them and consuming them with it. Mystique was a
metamorph, a shape-shifter, able to mimic any conceivable human form
perfectly. Size, age, gender, none of these were obstacles.



Now, as with Logan, her past came back to torment her.
Cerebro made her flesh pliable, like soft wax, and then like mercury,
as she underwent change after involuntary change, revisiting every face
and form she’d ever copied. Even though she made it seem easy, it
really wasn’t. Her apparent speed came with years of training, of
practice, of preparation. Each transformation was an effort, and the
more she executed, the faster she did them, the greater the toll. If
she needed to grow taller, she had to bulk up to provide the raw
material. Shorter required burning off mass. Flesh was comparatively
easy to sculpt, bones less so, and internal organs the most demanding
of all. That’s why most gender shifts were cosmetic.



None of that applied now. The shifts came so fast that
she presented herself as multiples. Her own coloring, Jean Grey’s
face, Robert Kelly’s torso, Rogue’s legs, Xavier’s
face, Rogue’s hair, Jean’s torso, Wolverine’s hands,
claws sprouting from fingers, from between her toes, Magneto’s
face rising from her belly, someone else’s from each breast, arms
becoming legs and feet growing fingers, all these mad alterations
accompanied by a rising chorus of howls from mouths that popped into
view all over her body, each capable of independent speech and all of
them shrieking in agony under the relentless and crushing pressure of
the wave.



Soon, terribly soon, the transformations would come so
quickly, the pain would grow so great, that Mystique’s
consciousness—her sense of fundamental self—would shatter.
In effect, on both a cerebral and a cellular level, she would forget
who and what she was. Most likely, she would genetically discorporate
into a muddle of mindless cells, and that would be the end of her.



Magneto knew all that, knew she was but one victim of far
too many, knew something similar lay in store for him—unless he
stopped it.



He lifted a hand and a new sound rose to challenge the hum
of the Cerebro wave: the basso groan of metal finding itself subjected
to stresses well beyond design tolerances. He couldn’t do this at
Mount Haven; the part of the complex where he’d been incarcerated
had been constructed of nonferrous materials and revolutionary
plastics. But Alkali was much older, built in a day when the likes of
him hadn’t been a factor. There was a lot of metal for him to
play with, and even though the Cerebro wave presented a
significant—for some, insurmountable—obstacle, he was
determined to prevail.



He had survived Auschwitz. He had lived to see his
captors in their graves, had helped deliver more than a few of them to
that end by himself. This would be the same.



He flashed teeth with the effort, almost a snarl, and metal started to warp and tear around him. The timbre of the hum emanating from inside faded ever so slightly, and the pulse of the Cerebro wave . . . slowed.






Charles Xavier was aware of none of this. He stared up at
the globe circling around him, transfixed by the firefly display of
scarlet dots, paying not the slightest attention to the trickles of
blood from nostrils and ears and the corners of his eyes as stress
ruptured the pinpoint capillaries that fed his brain. These were the
most minor manifestations of being at the wave’s source, of being
the focal point of the power being unleashed, and at this moment they
represented no lasting physical trauma.






That wouldn’t last, of course. Mutant 143 knew
that, somewhere in the deepest recesses of his own twisted psyche. In
short order, as the pulse built to its peak, the greater vessels would
burst, and he would be consumed by a massive and all-encompassing
cerebral hemorrhage. He would die from the ultimate stroke—but
not before bearing witness to the brutal and merciless slaughter of
every person on earth who Cerebro considered a mutant. This was
Stryker’s revenge—not only would Xavier himself die, and
all his precious students, but the future they represented. The murder
of his dream would be the death of him, and before his own end Mutant
143 would make sure that Xavier realized the full import of what he had
done.



And then, of course, 143 would die. Stryker appreciated
the neatness and elegance of this resolution; it was ideal for a covert
operation, one of his hallmarks. He didn’t like loose ends. In
one stroke, this eliminated not only the threat to the world but the
weapon used to deal with it. As for 143 himself, the realization of his
fate didn’t bother him. Partly, he didn’t really believe it
would happen to him. He still retained a child’s absolute faith
in his own immortality. He couldn’t conceive of coming to an end.
What mattered for him now, as always since the manifestation of his
mutant powers, was playing with his toys. They were mortal, they were
fragile. He was God. And He had work to do.



So 143’s eyes pulsed, casting their demented light
into the core of Xavier’s being. Around them, what was normally
heard as whispers, the background susurrus of all the myriad thoughts
Cerebro allowed Xavier to perceive, rose to a chorus of screams.






Cyclops wrapped his hands as tight as he could across his
eyes, but he was sick at heart at the realization that he
couldn’t hold back his optic blasts much longer. Already they
were reaching the containment capacity of his ruby quartz visor and
little flashes of energy were beginning to pop through the spaces
between his fingers, too small to do much damage but serving as
eloquent harbingers for the devastation soon to follow.



Jean wasn’t doing any better as she clutched her
hands to her ears in a vain attempt to block the same threnody of
desolation that enveloped her teacher. She swung her broken leg against
a stanchion, not caring about any lasting damage she might be doing,
praying instead that the pain she caused herself might serve as a
bulwark against the assault from outside.



And she succeeded, although not quite in the way she had
planned. Her teke slugged into high gear, stealing a page from
Logan’s book as her body remembered on a cellular level what it
was like to be whole and set her power to work bringing that about. All
the shards of bones, large or small, visible or microscopic, were
plucked from where they’d landed in her leg and pressed back into
their proper position.



She thought she’d experienced pain in her life,
either directly or vicariously as an aspect of her power, when she
synced into the minds of patients to ease their suffering, but she
realized now that she’d never even come close as all those pieces
of bone tore their way through her flesh to set themselves. She howled,
thankful for the respite from Cerebro, struggling to find a way to
reach Charles through this nigh-unbearable sleet storm of acid, to join
her own strength to his and together find a way to neutralize the wave.



There was a fire within her, and she assumed that it had
to do with her leg, that her power was somehow finding a way to fuse
the bone back together, but as it grew, as her thoughts splintered and
the fear blossomed that she wouldn’t be equal to the task before
her, it became a radiance too astounding to be described, too powerful
to be measured, as though she were witnessing within herself the primal
moment of creation, the lighting of the first spark within the infinite
firmament.



With a cry of joy and longing, Jean Grey spread wide the arms of imagination and reached out to embrace the stars.



She knew then she was mad, but she refused to yield, to
the pain or the madness. If this fire represented power, then she would
find a way to harness it, to use it to save those she loved. If she was
truly dying, she would find a way back from the ashes. She would never
go quietly into the dark night of eternity.






Aboard the Blackbird, Rogue was struggling to
reach the controls, to do as Storm had told her, but she couldn’t
make it. She couldn’t even rise from the deck where she’d
collapsed. Tears on her face, she couldn’t stop Bobby from
grasping her by the hand—in a grip that froze her to the
shoulder, as he’d coated every visible surface on the plane with
a sheet of glittering hoarfrost. His skin was transparent, she could
see right through him, with him looking like a three-dimensional X
ray—only this one was made entirely of ice. She could see his
skeleton, and faint hints of what must be his heart and lungs and other
organs. No sense of blood, no visible nerves, and he crackled faintly
with every move, with every breath. His voice was arctic, biting and
cold and nothing like he usually sounded.



Ice shattered as he wrenched her glove off her arm, she
begged him to stop—at least in her mind—but nothing emerged
from her mouth, there was this huge crowd crushing in around her, all
the people she’d ever imprinted rising up inside her skull in
rage at what she’d done, ignoring her apologies, her attempted
explanations, demanding instead that she yield control to them. She
knew he was trying to save her, offering his strength to give her a
better chance of surviving, no matter the cost to himself. She
didn’t want that, she couldn’t bear her own survival at the
cost of his, and she knew as well that he didn’t care.



He held her bare hand in his, deliberately initiating
contact—and imprinting—and her eyes bugged wide as it
turned to ice the same as his, while his started to look more and more
normally human.



“Bobby, stop it!” she shrieked, and
from lips that tasted chill as the pole came a voice that was a match
for his, cold and remote and unhuman as space itself.



And from her eyes, as she saw from his, fell tears that froze to both their cheeks.






Thunder rocked the tunnel around Storm, wind howled, rain
fell, and lightning continued to strike. She wasn’t moving,
sprawled on her face as bolt after bolt crashed against her body.
Nightcrawler, by contrast, couldn’t stop as he teleported in
place again and again and again, faster and faster and faster, until he
flickered like a strobe image.






John Allardyce hadn’t made it to the entrance of
the complex, hadn’t even come close, before the wave dropped him.
He hadn’t moved from where he fell as breath kept coming in an
ever-greater rush. He was hyperventilating, gulping huge amounts of air
to fuel the raging conflagration within him, so much so that his skin
was glowing—and the snow around him quickly melting away.






Henry McCoy was in his lab, measuring coffee grounds into
a beaker while a nearby Bunsen burner had the water merrily boiling.
Using gloves, he added the water to the grounds and savored the heady
smell. This was what made every morning worthwhile, because a superb
cup of coffee was for him the precursor to a successful day of
research.



Without warning, his hand twitched so violently that the
beaker went flying, shattering glass and steaming hot water across the
worktable. McCoy convulsively threw himself back from the table with
such force that his stool upended and he crashed head over heels
against the wall. His body spasmed as though he’d plugged himself
directly into an electrical outlet, and he cried out in horror and
disbelief, and no little pain, as nails bulged from the tips of his
fingers into cruelly hooked claws. His arms doubled in width, splitting
the seams of shirt and lab coat, the pigmentation of his skin turning a
deep blue as he sprouted hairs of the same color all over his body.



He tried to call for help, but what emerged from his mouth was a roar, like a lion’s.



What he saw reflected in the polished steel of his
refrigerator was no longer anything that resembled a man. Hank McCoy
was now a beast.






Kitty and Siryn were shopping for food, as much as two
kids could buy with the handful of bucks they had between them. In the
blink of an eye, Kitty found herself at the far end of the aisle from
her friend. Another blink, she was through a wall and across the
street. Another blink, she was inside a tree and partially sunk into
the ground. She tried to move, but hands and feet could find no
purchase, and with a wail of horror she realized that she wasn’t
the one who was moving. She’d suddenly become so intangible that
gravity itself had no more effect on her. The Earth was spinning on its
axis and leaving her behind. Worse, it was also revolving in its orbit
around the Sun. How long before she found herself floating in space,
while the world that was her home went on its merry celestial way?



Siryn didn’t know quite what had happened to her
friend. She heard a yelp of surprise, caught a glimpse of Kitty
disappearing ghostlike through the back wall of the store, and then she
was shrieking across the full range of her accessible frequencies,
calling forth a lunatic choir of howls from every dog within earshot
as, at the same time, she managed to shatter every piece of glass in
the store.






In a back room at Delamain’s on the Rue Rogue in
New Orleans’ Vieux Carre—the French Quarter—the usual
high-stakes game of poker was well under way, in defiance of the
paddle-wheel casinos moored along the Riverwalk at the foot of Canal
Street. The casinos had the flash, this game had substance, not so much
because of the size of the bets but because of the quality of the
players.



Remy LeBeau was a regular and one of the best. The cards,
it was said, loved him the way he loved the women who invariably went
out of their way to mix with his life, which could be a wild and risky
thing. He was a thief by trade, and better at it than at cards, which
was saying quite a lot. Stealing hearts was for him far more
interesting and a whole lot more fun than stealing jewels or whatever,
especially since the trick was always to make sure the stolen heart was
never broken. In that regard, he had no equal. When the affair was
over, his ladies loved him more than when they met.



This had been a fair night thus far in terms of winnings,
but only because he’d been taking his measure of his fellow
players. Now was the time to get down to business and make a killing.



Alas, this time, no joy. It was not to be.



He was dealer and from the deck came the joker, the jack
of hearts, to complete his full house. But as he flicked it from his
hands a spark popped between his fingertips, igniting the card not with
fire but with some kind of energy that made it blaze brighter than a
maritime searchlight and strike the table with force enough to split
the thick wood right across the middle. At the same time, as the other
players reeled back in shock and alarm, the other cards he held
likewise ignited.



He had a split second to look at the others, his face
marked with confusion, his free hand reaching out for help—but
all they saw were his eyes blazing red as fresh blood, and so none of
them reached back. Then his cards exploded, shattering the remains of
the table to kindling and scattering everyone to the walls.






Mystique wasn’t moving anymore. That wasn’t a good thing. Like the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz
after Dorothy splashed her with water, she was melting. Flesh was
liquefying, puddling beneath her, the shape of her skeleton starting to
stand out in sharp relief. Soon, very soon, the bones would be exposed.
Would she be aware of that? Would she be conscious to the end? She
didn’t believe that Stryker had an ounce of mercy in him, only
that he was thorough. Whatever it felt like, the process would be
final.



Magneto was still on his feet, glaring hawklike at the
sealed door before him. He wasn’t interested in the door any
longer; he could breach it at his pleasure, with hardly any effort. His
focus was on the configuration of the energy patterns that made up the
Cerebro wave. Manipulating energy was what he did best. All he had to
do was nail down the frequencies and signal characteristics of the
wave. . . .



He set up a countervailing pulse and watched the two collide. Close, but not quite there.



He made the necessary modifications and repeated the
process, creating in effect a wall of white noise around the entire
chamber, a resonance field that utterly neutralized the Cerebro wave at
its source.



Just like that, all around him, there was silence.



Blessed silence.





 







Chapter

Sixteen




Inside Stryker’s Cerebro chamber, Charles Xavier
sat straighter in his wheelchair as the globe around him stopped
spinning and the entire system progressed through its shutdown cycle.



“That’s strange,” he muttered, and
paused a moment to consider why that simple phrase seemed to have two
meanings for him. The obvious related to what was happening around him
and to why Cerebro suddenly seemed to acquire a mind of its own. The
other, disturbingly, also seemed to relate to that nagging, persistent
sense of wrongness that had plagued him ever since his escape from Alkali Lake.



He looked suddenly and sharply at the little girl, as
though to catch her by surprise. She looked apprehensive, indicating
that the shutdown wasn’t what she’d expected, either.
Xavier made a comforting gesture, spoke some comforting words, to
reassure her that he was still in control, that everything would be all
right. That appeared to help, although her mismatched eyes of green and
blue still glowed disconcertingly bright.



To work, he decided. Identify the problem and resolve it, that was the ticket.



Still, as he reached for Cerebro’s controls, he
found himself hesitating, he found his eyes returning to the girl, his
thoughts reaching out to her through the veil that surrounded him.
Something about her . . . felt . . .



He shook his head, dazzled by the afterimage of her eyes
like blinkers in his mind. He knew what had to be done, and his hands
moved with practiced skill over the controls. Someone was jamming the
scanning wave. He had his suspicions who was responsible and, from
there, what was necessary to break free.






Seeing him hard at work, the girl looked away, toward the
massive door at the end of the gallery. This wasn’t part of the
program, and she didn’t like it.






Magneto needed a little time to gather his strength. The
battle against the Cerebro wave had been as hard for him as for the
others and, in its way, had taken as great a toll.



At last he turned, and because she couldn’t see
him, wasn’t aware of anything beyond herself, he allowed his face
to show the sorrow Mystique’s pitiful condition brought forth in
him. Over their time together, he’d grown used to having her by
his side, strong and utterly fearless, indomitable in will and
surprisingly indestructible in form. He hated to think of her being
vulnerable, and hurt.



He knelt beside her, unsure of what he’d find. Her
eyes were opaque, as blank and lifeless as a doll’s. She looked
like a wax figure who’d been exposed to raw flame, so much of her
lay in congealed folds beneath her body.



Then an aspect of her eyes changed. Still opaque, but no
longer blank or lifeless, they took on the otherworldly depths of a
shark’s eyes.



She blinked, and color returned to those eyes, as it did to the whole of her body.



She flexed her muscles and stretched, to remind herself
of how the parts of her all properly fit together, and flowed upward to
a sitting position to look her companion in the eye.



He didn’t say a word, nor did she. There was no need.



He stepped over the threshold and along the gallery to
the scanning platform, roving his gaze until he’d taken stock of
every part of the huge, circular space, impressed at the degree of
accuracy that Stryker had achieved.



Xavier sat on his dais, facing a creature that made
Magneto’s lip curl in reflexive disgust. It had nothing to do
with outward appearance. In his time, Magneto had seen more than his
share of mutants who did not conform to baseline norms of human
physiognomy. In his time, Magneto had also come face-to-face with
living embodiments of what he chose to call evil, and that was what he
was responding to here. The creature in the other chair, whatever his
origins or upbringing, would have been right at home working by the
side of Josef Mengele.



Under the circumstances, given what he had in mind, Magneto thought that quite appropriate.



“Hello, Charles,” he said companionably.






The celestial song had ended. Jean was herself once more.
She was whole, she was alive, more fulfilled than she could ever
remember, and yet hollow and aching with a need more keen and primal
than she had ever known, without the slightest clue how to answer it.



Instead, she woke up.



She looked toward Cyclops, who was lying nearby,
telepathy revealing instantly that he was fine—battered but
fundamentally unbroken—and she welcomed him awake with a radiant
smile. As he gathered himself, she continued taking stock. The
substance of the walls within the complex had been designed to inhibit
telepathic communication, so she found herself pretty much isolated,
with only a vague sense that the others were all right and a growing
disquiet whenever her thoughts turned to Xavier. Whatever had happened,
they weren’t out of the woods yet, not by a long shot.



She shifted her broken leg and winced, the lance of pain
up the length of that limb making her breath hiss through her teeth.
Her subconscious had done a superb job, every piece had been placed
precisely where it was supposed to be—but the task wasn’t
quite finished. The bone bits still had to knit themselves together,
and with a doctor’s inherent caution, she didn’t want to
rush the process, even though she suspected she could.



That automatic realization gave her pause. She
hadn’t magically acquired Logan’s healing factor, but
somehow she’d tapped into a part of his psyche that allowed her
to mimic it on her own terms. She had done consciously what he did as
an autonomic function of his own body, and
that—disturbingly—implied a measure of rapport between them
she didn’t care to think about.



She shook her head in dismay. If she’d wanted
complications, she’d have gone into psychiatry. Oddly, but
understandably for some whose powers were wholly invisible to the naked
eye, she preferred tangible solutions to tangible problems. Like fixing
a broken leg.



Push the process now and she risked messing up all her good work, leaving herself functionally lame.



Thank Heaven, she thought of Scott, for having you to lean on, baby.



And immediately felt a rush of shame, as though she’d been caught cheating on a commitment that wasn’t even formal!



Worry about that later . . . if there was a later.






Nightcrawler was praying, curled into a ball of indigo,
borderline invisible where the dim light from the corridor bulbs ran
out of energy, hands curled protectively around his head, which, in
turn, lay against his knees in a pose of abject supplication.



“What’s he saying?” Artie asked.



“Our Father,” Storm replied, “Who art in Heaven . . .”



“That’s not what it sounds like.”



“He’s praying in German, and French, and in Latin.”



Storm winced as she rose to her feet, trying to ignore
the rude smells rising from the back of her uniform where the lightning
had struck. Her nerves were a mess, as though a legion of fire ants
were roaming beneath her skin, leaving a trail of itches the size of a
superhighway that she couldn’t scratch. She moved gingerly, like
an old woman, taking care with every step and gesture—especially
any that required turning her head—lest she lose a precariously
maintained balance. She envied the children their resilience and used
that as a goad to maintain a confident and solid facade.



She knelt beside Nightcrawler and stroked her hand down
his back from neck to the middle of his shoulders, enjoying the richly
delicious sensation of his luxurious skin. She’d never felt
anything so smooth or plush, even the fur of newborn lion cubs.



He caught her with his tail, taking a couple of wraps
around her palm and giving her a gentle squeeze of thanks and
reassurance that he was all right.



She turned to look at Artie and past him to the others.



“Everyone else okay?” she asked. Whether they
were or not, they’d be moving in a minute, faster than before.
The sooner they were quit of this place, and far away, the happier
she’d be. Unless, in departing, she could scourge the landscape
with her lightning right down to the bare rock, wiping away all trace
that the Alkali Lake installation had ever existed. That would be a
real pleasure.



And if William Stryker happened to be inside at the time, so much the better.






Stryker’s escape tunnel ended at a small clearing
on the periphery of the main complex, about a mile downriver from the
dam. A helicopter was waiting, gassed and ready to go.



Quickly, because he was never a man to waste time,
Stryker released the chains that anchored the vehicle to the landing
stage. He pulled the safety flags free of all the flight control
surfaces, cleared the air intake of the twin jet engines, and at the
last, removed the wooden chocks from the landing gear.



In a matter of minutes, he would be safely away, and not
long after, if his mental estimates were correct, the dam itself would
eliminate all evidence of what had happened here.



Perfect.






Magneto spared Mutant 143 a momentary glance and smiled humorlessly at the creature’s evident frustration.



He tapped his helmet and said, “You can’t come in here.”



Then, drawing a magnetic field close about him, he rose
into the air to the core of the holographic globe, doing a slow
pirouette and letting his excitement show as he beheld all the mutants
revealed on the display. He’d never dared dream there were so
many, and he remembered how people felt in the internment camps after
the war—on the one hand, cut to the soul by the realization that
so many had perished in the camps, and yet at the same time restored by
the discovery that, despite the Nazis’ best efforts, there were
survivors. Enough to form the bedrock of a nation. He thought then of
Moses, standing on the shores of the River Jordan, gazing across a
promised land that he would never reach.



How would posterity judge him, he wondered.



If that posterity was mutant, he didn’t mind. That
he had succeeded, that they survived and prospered, was satisfaction
enough. If it wasn’t, he didn’t care, because that meant he
had failed. Either way, he would do today what needed doing.



Xavier paid no notice of him, so entranced was he by the glamour cast by Stryker’s pet mutant.



Magneto shook his head in sorrow. “How does it look
from there, Charles?” he wondered aloud, and while there was pity
in his voice for his old friend, there was also an edge to his words, a
contempt for the weakness that had brought Xavier to such a state. Here
was a rich irony. If not for Xavier, Magneto would not have been
captured and used by Stryker to crack open the secrets of
Xavier’s School—and most especially, of Cerebro. Yet, that
selfsame act had in turn presented Magneto with the means to deliver
his people forever from the threat of annihilation. Each act required
the sacrifice of the same man. To Magneto, that was a more than fair
exchange.



“Still fighting the good fight?” he mocked,
turning away from Xavier to examine the device around him. His
assessment completed, he used his power to begin a global
reconfiguration. At his direction, Cerebro began to deconstruct and
rebuild itself, the air filling with ceiling panels, metal braces,
conduits, cabling, every key component that went into the construction
of the machine, all moving swiftly and purposefully to their new
destinations.



“From here, old friend, it doesn’t look like they’re playing by your rules.”



The work finished to his satisfaction, he descended to the platform.



“Perhaps it’s time to play by theirs.”



On the far side of the doorway, Mystique smiled and
strode briskly into the chamber. By the third step, when she emerged
from the shadows, she was a perfect match for William Stryker.



She paused for a cruel and dismissive glance at Xavier,
still oblivious to everything other than what 143 was feeding him.
Then, she crouched beside 143, taking care not to touch him as she
whispered into his ear: “There’s been a change of plans. .
. .”



As she spoke with Stryker’s face, in
Stryker’s voice, 143’s eyes bulged and a measure of saliva
drooled from the corner of his mouth. He actually looked excited by the
prospect.



Still presenting her masquerade, Mystique returned the
way she came, reverting to her true form only after she was clear of
the chamber.



Magneto stood before his friend one final time and tried
to think of something to say. At Ellis Island, he’d been willing
to sacrifice a child—Rogue—to achieve his goals. Now it was
a friend. Nothing he could say, precious little he could imagine doing,
would ever make that right. Some scales simply could not be balanced.



“Good-bye, Charles,” he said.



Mutant 143, eager to begin, cocked his head to one side and glared once more into Xavier’s skull.



Around them both the great globe flared once more
brightly to life—only now, where its surface had been decorated
by a random scattering of scarlet icons, representing the mutant
population, now there was a multitude of pristine white ones, which
stood for everyone else. Magneto had given them both access to every
nonmutant sentient mind on the planet.



The better to destroy them all.






True to his nature, recovery for Logan was quick and
complete. He was a little unsteady on his feet, but that was due to
blood loss, as he could plainly see from the Jackson Pollock mess
he’d made all around him on the concrete. He popped his claws and
retracted them to make sure they were in good working order, and flexed
his limbs and back to smooth out any kinks.



He had one clue to Stryker’s trail: the man’s
scent, heavy in the air. That was all he needed. Without any specific
memory to back it up, he instinctively understood that a man like
Stryker would cover every contingency, including failure. He
wouldn’t want to be stuck here amid a whole passel of
superpowered mutants who hated his guts. He’d have a convenient
backdoor and waiting transportation. All he needed was time to make his
getaway. All Logan had to do to stop him was catch up.



Silent and purposeful as a hunting cat, only far more ferocious, Logan picked up the pace.



* * *



“Was ist?” Nightcrawler wondered as
they rounded another corner in what was turning into an endless series
of identical corridors—to find themselves confronting a
slaughterhouse of a battlefield. Quickly the two adults blocked the
children’s path and shunted them back the way they had come.



After stern injunctions to the kids—especially
Artie—to stay clear and, above all, not peek, Storm took another
look, taking stock of the circular vault door that had obviously been
ripped from its hinges, then just as obviously put back in place, much
like a cork into a wine bottle.



“What is this place, Storm?” Nightcrawler asked again.



“Cerebro,” she replied, and she didn’t
bother to hide her fear. Whoever had been here—and she needed no
hints to come up with that identity—clearly didn’t want
anyone else going inside. And if the ultra-low-frequency hum she could
feel as much as hear emanating from within was any indication, the
system was still very much operational.



Of Xavier there was no sign, and she knew then that
Magneto had remained true to his nature where the X-Men were concerned;
he had found a way to betray their trust. No doubt for the most
“noble” of reasons.



She sensed movement in the air that warned her of others
approaching well before they actually came into view, so that when
Scott helped Jean around the corner, Storm was there to greet them and
shoulder part of the burden herself.



“Jean, what’s going on?” she demanded.



Jean narrowed her eyes, holding her head for Storm as she had for Scott, so that her eyes were mainly masked in shadow.



“The professor is still inside,” she told
them, using both their shoulders for support as she hopped toward the
doorway on her good leg and tried not to relate to the gore that
surrounded them. “With . . . another mutant. Another psi, very
powerful, very twisted. Very dangerous. I’ve got to steer clear
of him, too much chance of being snared like Charles. There’s
some kind of illusion, Charles is trapped, he thinks he’s home,
at the school!” She focused some more, and when she spoke, the
words came in a rush. “Magneto’s reversed Cerebro, it
isn’t targeting mutants anymore.”



“Thank goodness for small favors,” Cyclops muttered.



“So who’s it targeting now?” Storm demanded at the same time.



Who do you think, Jean thought, and said aloud, “Everyone else.”



Of course Artie had ignored everything Storm told him,
and as a consequence had just heard what the others said. He had his
own instant solution.



“You’ve got your optic blasts, Cyclops,” he piped up. “So blast the door open!”



“I can’t,” was the reply.



To the other adults, as much as Artie, Jean explained,
“Once the professor’s mind is connected to Cerebro, opening
the door could kill him.” There was a moment’s pause as all
of them considered that as suddenly a very real possibility.



“We’ll have to take that chance,” Scott told them, even though he loved Xavier as a son does his father.



Abruptly, once more, Jean took charge: “Kurt, you have to take me in there. Now.”



Cyclops, true to form, protested: “Jean!”



Nightcrawler shook his head. “I told you,
it’s too dangerous. I cannot teleport blind. If I can’t see
where I’m going, I—”



“Who is this guy?” Scott demanded.



In part because he felt flustered and pressed and wanted
to defuse the growing tension of the moment, Kurt launched into his
spiel: “I’m Kurt Wagner, but in the Munich
Circus—”



“He’s a teleporter,” Storm said simply, holding up her hand to forestall Nightcrawler’s introduction.



“We don’t have time for this,” Jean cried urgently.



“Wait,” Storm said in a tone that
wouldn’t permit argument, backed by a will that was a match and
more for anyone present.



Something in what Kurt had said, in the way Jean carried
herself, caught Storm’s attention. She reached forward to take
her friend’s chin in hand and turn her head up and around to meet
her own eyes.



What she saw there broke her heart. “Oh,
Goddess,” she breathed, and didn’t know who needed comfort
more right then, Jean or herself.



“What’s wrong?” asked Nightcrawler.



“Jean’s blind,” Scott said.



“I’m a telepath, damn it! I don’t need eyes to see—” she began.



“Great,” Scott snapped back at her. “So
long as there are conscious minds around, you can tap into their visual
receptors as surrogate eyes. But you’ve got a bum leg as well,
remember?”



“I’ll go,” Storm said simply, and when
the others looked at her, she repeated it, an unassailable statement of
purpose. “I’ll go.” And then, with a look straight at
Nightcrawler, “We’ll go.”



“Storm,” he pleaded, “I can’t!”



“Kurt, I have faith in you.”



“Kurt,” Jean said, “if Stryker’s
replicated the Cerebro chamber, then where you’re going is
essentially a huge, empty room. I’m projecting a mental image of
the space into your head. Use that for your benchmarks. Stay clear of
the walls, stay clear of the platform, you’ve got room to spare.
Do you see it?”



Nightcrawler nodded and gathered Storm into his embrace, arms around her shoulders, tail wrapped snugly around her waist.



“One last thing,” Jean said,
“don’t believe what you see in there. Remember,
Charles’ adversary traffics in illusions.”



“This just keeps getting better and better,” Nightcrawler grumbled in Storm’s ear.



“If you’re not clear in five minutes,” Cyclops said warningly, “I’m coming in after you.”



Storm nodded, and so—reluctantly—did Jean.



“Are you ready, Kurt?” Storm asked him. He
wouldn’t meet her eyes, but not because he was avoiding her. For
the moment, his mind—and prayers—were elsewhere.



“Our Father,” she heard him whisper,
“Who art in Heaven, hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom come, Thy
will be done, on Earth—”



And just like that, they were gone.






“—as it is in Heaven!”



Just like that, they were somewhere else.



Storm had never jaunted, and after this ride never wanted
to again. She didn’t know how Nightcrawler could stand it. She
felt like she’d been turned inside out and left a trail of body
parts all the way back to where they started. It was like she’d
thrown up, horribly, but only inside herself, and was left feeling all
twisted and out of sync.



They’d materialized right where Jean had suggested,
in the air about half a body length above the gallery. Storm was in no
condition right then to notice, or do anything, so Nightcrawler
continued to hold her as they dropped to a landing.



They expected to find two figures: Xavier himself and the
mutant who was controlling him. But—surprise—no Xavier, no
command console, no command helmet.



The only other presence in the vast and empty room was a
young girl, standing right at the edge of the platform. She was all
peaches and cream, her hair a glorious gold blond, pretty as a picture,
sweet as can be, a dream made flesh. Her eyes, though, were an eerily
mismatched blue and green that seemed to glow with some intense inner
light, and her face was that of someone whose will was absolute.



Having no idea what to expect, but taking his cue from
Storm that something was wrong, Nightcrawler looked around, eyes
narrowing at the way the curvature and coloring of the sphere made the
room seem like a limitless space.



“Hello,” said the little girl brightly, as though she was welcoming guests to her house.



“Storm,” Nightcrawler wondered aloud, “have we come to the right place? Is this Cerebro?”



She nodded, her attention focused, not on the girl, but on the space a little beyond her where normally Xavier would be sitting.



“Is it broken?”



“No.”



“What are you looking for?” asked the girl.



“Professor!” Storm called. “Charles!”



The girl smiled sweetly, but there was a hollowness to
her eyes, an edge to her stance, and the whole shape of her face around
that smile, that made that sweetness a lie.



“I’m sorry,” she said, “he’s busy.”






For Charles Xavier, every time he synced Cerebro was as
marvelous and exciting as the first. It was the ultimate rollar-coaster
ride against a backdrop as varied and spectacular as the clearest of
night skies, if only the naked eye came with the range and sensitivity
of the Hubble telescope.



His eyes and mouth opened in amazement and delight as he
beheld the globe of the world from the inside; it circled serenely
around them, its surface covered with a multitude of white lights,
creating a display more crowded and, in its way, more beautiful than
the stars. There were more than he could count, so he didn’t even
try.



He heard a great pulse from the heart of the machine, and
the lights on the globe grew brighter, in tandem with the deepening
pitch and increasing frequency of the pulses.



“Professor,” he heard from the greatest distance imaginable, “Charles!”



He heard her as a whisper among the multitude, just as he
had years ago during a trial run of the Cerebro prototype when his
questing consciousness discovered a long, lean whip of a girl sitting
on the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro, taking a break from herding cattle
by tossing snowballs and seeing how far her winds could take them.
(She’d already reached the Indian Ocean, now she was throwing the
other way and trying for the Atlantic.)



“Did you hear that?” he asked excitedly.



“No,” said the girl, shaking her head for emphasis.



It made Xavier’s heart sing to know Storm was
alive, but that awareness only increased his frustration when he
couldn’t lock in on her position. There was too much interference
from these other voices. He had to find a way to screen them out.






Storm stepped toward the little girl.



“Professor, do you hear me?” she called, more loudly than before. “Listen to me, Charles! Whatever you’re seeing, whatever you’re experiencing, it’s an illusion! You’re in an illusion!”
She heard no reply, and when she spoke again, there was a faint roll of
thunder to her voice. “You have to stop this—you have to
shut down Cerebro—now!”



The girl actually laughed.



“Who are you talking to?” she asked, in all innocence and rich amusement.






Xavier shook his head, as the word “now”
echoed and reechoed through the spherical vault of the Cerebro chamber.
For a moment he was sure Storm was right in front of him, close enough
to touch—but all he could see was empty air. Save for the little
girl, he was alone. His X-Men were lost, they were in deadly peril, he
had to find them, save them.



And yet . . .



Always, his thoughts circled like vultures back to this same persistent, nagging question.



And yet . . .



Suppose he was the one who was lost?



“I hear them,” he repeated, before voicing his own frustration. “But—I can’t find them.”



“Then concentrate harder,” the little girl
replied in a firm and commanding voice, in that special way that girls
have that makes them sound as if they’re merely stating an
irrevocable natural law.



How could he be lost? He was in the heart of his mansion, of his school. He knew what had to be done.






Storm thought for a moment that she’d gotten
through to him, but then the breath gusted out of her in a huff as she
met the girl’s gaze.



She wondered for a moment why the girl wasn’t doing
something more serious to stop them and answered her own question just
as quickly. She probably needed most of her energies to maintain her
hold on Xavier. As far as the girl was concerned, they posed no
significant threat. All she needed to do to win was delay them long
enough for Xavier to finish his work. After that, it wouldn’t
matter.



Nightcrawler started forward, intending to confront the
girl physically—perhaps considering teleporting her out of the
chamber—but Storm stopped him.



“Kurt, don’t move,” she told him. There were better ways to tempt the Gorgon.



“She’s just a little girl,” he said.



“No,” she said flatly, “she’s
not.” Because any entity capable of suborning Charles Xavier had
to be considered as supremely dangerous as Magneto.



“Oh.”



“Good advice,” said the girl.



She breathed a small prayer of thanks that her own
elemental powers—mainly her ability to wield
lightning—created a level of background “static” in
her own head that made it virtually impossible for a telepath to pick
her thoughts. The first times that Xavier tried he came away with a
devil of a headache.



With any luck, her adversary would have no idea of what
was happening until it was too late. But this would be an
all-or-nothing play. Once she acted, and revealed herself as a
legitimate threat, the girl would have to strike back just as
ruthlessly.



The girl smiled. “I’ve got my eyes on you!”






Stryker had his hand on the door handle when
Logan’s fist caught him upside his face. It was worse than being
hit by an iron bat. Stryker dropped, stunned, his thoughts reeling
before a fresh avalanche of incredible shock and pain, blood thick in
his mouth from a broken lip, and he thanked whatever fates there were
that Logan’s punch hadn’t shattered teeth and jaw as well.



He didn’t wonder why the mutant hadn’t used
his claws. That reason was made plain when Logan rolled him over on his
back and dropped beside him in a duck squat, almost daring Stryker to
make a move to defend himself.



“Now,” Logan said, with an edge of threat to
his voice, “you were about to tell me something about my
past?”



Looking up at him, William Stryker began to laugh.



“Why did you come back?” he asked, spitting blood.



“You cut me open! You took my life!”



“Please,” Stryker said, and for the first
time he looked actually disappointed. “You make it sound as
though I stole something from you.” He smiled suddenly,
acknowledging a sudden surprise memory, or perhaps inspiration.
“As I recall, it was you who volunteered for the
procedure.”



“Who am I?”



“Just an experiment,” Stryker told him,
playing every card in his hand, “that failed. If you really knew
about your past, what kind of person you were, the work we did
together—” He took a breath, wondering if he’d pushed
Logan too far, if this would be his last. “People don’t
change, Wolverine. You were an animal then, and you’re an animal
now. I just gave you claws.”






Throughout the control room, there wasn’t a green
light to be seen. The telltales on every console were flashing red,
with alarm chirps and honks and sirens to add to the din. A set of
displays showed the inside of the vast generator room, and a secondary
phalanx of monitors presented data to show how dire the situation was.



The initial cracks had grown exponentially, in perfect
concert with the original computer stress model. The jammed spillway
had caused Alkali Lake to fill to the danger level, placing the dam
under tremendous stress to begin with. Given the circumstances, it was
already only a matter of time before it failed. The blast in the
generator room had served to accelerate the process. Now, thanks to the
relentless and incredible pressure of all that water, the worst-case
scenario was about to reach fulfillment.



The complex shuddered—not very much, hardly enough
to notice, just enough to stir some dust into the air—as blocks
of stone the size of sofas crumbled from the ceiling. Then, as water
jetted across the room with the force of a high-pressure fire hose,
masonry fell in chunks the size of cars. Pipes, wrenched from their
mountings, ruptured. Gas lines failed, filling the air with a heady mix
of steam and other elements. Severed electrical conduits showered the
room with sparks. Hydrogen ignited, setting off thunderclap blasts that
only added to the chaos and destruction.



A torrent of water and stone and reinforced rebar
cascaded onto one of the generators, jamming the turbine blades, which
not only shattered but tore the whole assembly loose from its axis.
Those blades flew every which way like scythes, and in their wake came
a chain reaction of explosions that nobody in the complex failed to
notice.






There it was again.



“Professor!”



Storm.



He still couldn’t find her. Hardly surprising,
considering the din. Voices in his head, the hum of Cerebro deafening
in his ears, this was proving far more challenging and arduous than
he’d ever imagined.



“Professor!”



Strange that the voices he was hearing seemed to be in
pain. That couldn’t be right. Cerebro was never intended to cause
anyone harm. That was where he and Eric Lehnsherr had had their final
falling out: What Charles Xavier saw as a tool, a means of bringing the
human family together, Magneto wanted to use as a weapon, to cleanse
the planetary genome once and for all. Having lived through one Shoah,
he had vowed never to allow another, by whatever means were necessary.
He understood the irony full well, this child of the Holocaust using
the same methods as his own oppressors, the murderers of his family.



But somewhere along the way, he’d decided not to care.



He wasn’t right, then.



This . . . wasn’t right now.



Could anything be done about it?



“Professor!”






The chamber that housed Dark Cerebro shuddered from the
tremendous shock wave. Overhead, the smooth curve of the dome came to
an abrupt end as the vicious torque sheared through a line of retaining
bolts and rivets. With a shriek of tortured metal, whole sections of
ceiling plating collapsed, some falling straight past the gallery
platform to and on the floor below with a resounding crash, while
others tumbled lazily through the air as potentially deadly chunks of
flying debris, especially dangerous for those like Nightcrawler and
Storm who were essentially oblivious to them.



For that fateful moment, though, all of 143’s
illusions slipped—the setting reverted to its normal dimensions
while the integrity of the holographic globe spasmed with static.
Xavier coughed and started to raise his hands to remove his helmet.



But the moment was all the time he had, and it
wasn’t enough. The creature in the other wheelchair once more
became the girl. The globe once more grew to the size of the planet
itself. The room remained whole and intact, with none of those present
allowed to have the slightest inkling of their danger while Charles
Xavier unwittingly continued to bring about the annihilation of the
human race.



The lights on the globe burned far brighter than before; Cerebro’s hum was louder and more pervasive. Mutant 143 had accelerated the process.






Logan felt the explosion before he heard it, as a seismic
transmission through the earth and a pressure wave a fraction of an
instant ahead of the sound.



“What the hell was that?”



Stryker didn’t answer at once, mainly out of defiance.



“Damn you, Stryker,” Logan roared, grabbing
the man up by the shirtfront, “what’s happening? What is
it?”



“The foundation of the dam has been
compromised,” he told Logan. “Some kind of rupture. Started
in the turbines, and now it’s spreading to the intake towers. The
dam is releasing water into the spillway, trying to relieve the
pressure . . . tying to stop the process . . . but it’s too late! In a matter of minutes, we’ll all be under water.”



Logan looked back at the escape tunnel.



Stryker grabbed him, a drowning man to a life preserver:
“Still want answers, Wolverine? Like how old you really are? If
Logan is even your real name? If you have a family?” He knew the
words were having an effect, and he glared at the mutant, willing him
to listen, and to obey.



“Or,” he said forcefully, putting all his strength into this final ploy, “is she
still alive?” That one, that implication, hit the mark, dead
center. “Then why don’t we just get in the helicopter and
fly away. I give you my word, Wolverine, come with me and I’ll
tell you everything. You owe these people nothing. You’re a survivor, you always have been!”



Stryker gasped in pain as Logan delivered a wicked punch
to the kidneys, one that was meant to hurt. He yanked Stryker close and
tucked a fist under his chin, making his threat plain.



“I thought I was just an animal, Billy,” he said.



Stryker flinched at the snikt of the claws
extending from their housings and thought right then that he was dead.
When he realized a second later that he wasn’t, he had to face
the shame of tears staining his cheeks, and far worse staining his
trousers back and front. The outside claws bracketed his cheeks, close
enough to dent the skin but not yet break it. The middle claw remained
retracted.



Logan was smiling.



“With claws.”






In the hallway outside Stryker’s Cerebro chamber,
with the kids stirring nervously as the floors and walls trembled
enough to send a scattering of dust and some random splashes of water
falling from the ceiling, Jean found her right hand closing into a
fist. She felt a tension up her forearm, like a spring-loaded mechanism
about to release, and her teeth bared fractionally in delight.



“Logan,” she said, almost exclusively to herself, but mentally it was a full-throated shout.






He heard her, as if she were standing right beside him.



“Jean,” he said, speaking as quietly as she and just as sure of being heard.



“Just tell me what you need, Wolverine. Tell me what you need. Tell me what you want!”



It was a simple choice: his past, or—and here Logan
looked up toward the dam, which still showed no outward effects of the
series of explosions deep underground; to the naked, untutored eye, it
looked like it would stand forever—his future. To Stryker, the
two had to be mutually exclusive. Maybe that was true?



Logan raised his fist, forcing the other man to rise to
his feet, to tiptoes, both of them knowing that what he wanted more
than anything was to pop that third claw and use Stryker’s
severed head as a soccer ball.



Stryker winced again at the distinctive sound of metal on
metal, but this time the claws weren’t extending. They had been
retracted.



“I have what I need,” Logan told him.



Before he could fall, Logan pitched him up against a
nearby anchor post, where chains were used to hold the helicopters
secure against the worst of the local winter storms. In a matter of
seconds he had Stryker wrapped tight.



“If we die, you die.”



As Logan raced back to the tunnel, Stryker pulled angrily
on the chains and shouted after him: “There are no answers that
way, Wolverine!”



A sudden rattle of metal caught his attention, and his
eyes dropped to the chains. He thought at first it was some ground
tembler related to the explosions that were shaking the dam, but he was
wrong. His hands were trembling.



No big deal, he told himself, residual effect of his
confrontation with Wolverine. He was scared, now he could afford to
show it.



He sneezed, and the surprise outburst sent starbursts of
pain through his skull that were worse than when Wolverine had punched
him. He saw blood on the chains and snow in front of him. He wiped his
face on a sleeve and left a scarlet trail that looked as though
he’d used a decent and well-saturated paintbrush. But when he
stuck out his tongue, he tasted a steady flow of it from his nose.



His face went pale as the snow, and a chill colder than the absolute of space closed around his heart.



“Impossible,” he breathed, and found himself wishing the mutant had used his claws.



That end at least would have been quick.






Alicia Vargas sat trembling on the floor of the Oval
Office, her back against one of the two sofas that bracketed the
presidential seal that was worked into the carpet. Ten minutes ago
she’d been fine, and then it was as if she’d been knifed
and gutted like a fish. She’d never felt such pain and thought,
in that first rush of agony and terror, that all the nuns’
stories of Hell had reared up to claim her. She was dimly aware of the
President calling for help, of other agents and staffers laying her on
the couch, making way for the medics and doctors . . .



. . . and then, as suddenly as it had struck, the pain
went away. She felt fine. She was making apologies all around, her boss
insisting on a full debriefing, someone mentioning what they all
feared, that this was some new kind of mutant attack . . .



. . . and then, everyone around her dropped, pretty much
the same way she had. She felt fine, but they were dying, and that
staffer’s offhand remark about mutants took on a whole new
coloration that made her want to flee the building, that made her wish
she had died moments ago. She was dying, they were fine. Now
they were dying and she felt great. Did that mean, God forbid, she was
a mutant?



She decided then and there it didn’t matter. She
was an agent of the United States Secret Service, assigned to the
protective detail of the President. That made him her sole concern.



She drew her weapon from its holster and levered herself
across the floor, collecting a couple more guns along the way. She
couldn’t quite muster enough strength yet to stand. The President
had collapsed behind his desk and lay partially covered by his chair.
With a convulsive heave, Alicia shoved it clear and, bracing her back
against the wall, moved it to where she had a clean line of sight of
both entrances. As gently as she could, she gathered the
President’s head into her lap, keeping her own Glock in hand
while laying the other ones aside—but keeping them in quick and
easy reach—to use a handkerchief to wipe his face of the blood
that was now leaking from nose and eyes.



“Alicia,” he choked. “My God, what’s happening?”



“Sir, I don’t know,” she told him. “But I’m here, I’m okay, I’ll keep you safe.”






George McKenna didn’t care about himself in that
instant, because he knew Alicia’s words were a lie. He
didn’t matter anymore, not as President, not even as a man; the
only roles that had any substance were husband and father, and the
bitterness he felt at this terrible moment was at being so far from
those he loved. And even though he had no real hope of a miracle, he
prayed for his wife, he prayed with all his heart and those coherent
thoughts that remained to him for his children, that they be spared
this awful end. He asked for mercy. . . .






Below the pontiff’s balcony, three Vatican and
CitiRoma ambulances stood on the periphery of St. Peter’s Square.
Some among the crowd gathered below had apparently been taken ill just
before the pope’s appearance. He’d signaled a secretary to
make the proper inquiries, then proceeded with the day’s events.



Now that handful of people were the only ones left
standing, on the plaza and inside the Vatican itself. Elisabeth
Braddock, who was taking a free day before driving to Milan to showcase
Giorgio Armani’s couture line for the fall show, picked herself
up off the gurney and carefully stepped off the back of the ambulance.
There was blood on her face and on her new dress—linen,
expensive, designed exclusively for her by Kay Cera and now utterly
ruined—and her shapely lips curled as she saw more pouring from
the noses and eyes and ears of everyone in sight.



Bracing herself for what she knew was out there, Betsy
opened the gates to her own mind and cast a telepathic net out across
the plaza, hoping to find some clue to the cause of this mass
affliction. She staggered as if she’d been physically struck and
grabbed desperately for the handrail on the back of the ambulance to
keep from falling. It was worse, so much worse, than she had imagined.



This wasn’t just happening here in Vatican City. People were dropping throughout Rome itself.



She thanked her stars her mutant power had limits,
sensing that no matter how far she cast her perceptions she’d
just find more of the same.



Only the people in the ambulances appeared unaffected.
Yet initially, they’d been the ones who were struck down by what
was essentially the same effect. She knew one of the others was a
mutant. It didn’t take a rocket scientist to put the rest of the
pieces together. Someone had tried to take out mutants, possibly the
world over. And now those tables had been turned.



“No,” she breathed. “No, please no! Don’t let this be happening. For God’s sake, for mercy’s sake—stop!”



Her pleas fell on deaf ears, or perhaps they had just
been drowned out by the screams of the multitude as extinction reached
out to claim them.






This was Bobby’s fault, Ronny Drake knew that for a
fact. His brother must have figured out that Ronny had called the cops
and this was some kind of mutie revenge, only he never dreamed his
brother could be so cruel as to actually kill him. Brothers were
supposed to look out for each other, that’s what Mom and Dad
always said, that’s the way Bobby used to act before he went away
to that damn school. Ronny was sobbing through the pain, clutching at
his bedspread, calling weakly for his parents, why couldn’t they
hear, why didn’t they answer? He’d never been so scared,
he’d never understood before this moment how awful and
all-encompassing a thing real fear could be. He grabbed for every
breath, counted every heartbeat, cherished every thought, weighing them
all against scenes from the movies and TV shows
he’d seen, the video games he’d played. He knew this
wasn’t make believe, he knew there was no reboot, he didn’t
want to die, he said that over and over and over again, hoping
repetition would guarantee his supplication being heard by the
Almighty.



He was sobbing, and wailing, making hard, racking noises
that tore at his throat and gut as hard as the energy waves that caused
them. His face was streaked with blood, and it had splashed all across
his pillow and sheets and the wall beyond. His vision was smeared and
he expected to go blind before the end, he wished the end would come
quickly, anything to take away the pain.



He told his brother he was sorry.



He wished he was a mutant, too, so at least they’d
be together. And, with his life reducing fast to flickering embers, he
found the capacity to hate Charles Xavier with all his young and
passionate heart, blaming Xavier for stealing Bobby away from the home
that had raised him, the parents who loved him, the brother who so
desperately needed him.






On the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, hundreds of traders lay screaming. . . .






A thousand feet below the Pacific, the crew of the fleet ballistic missile submarine Montana lay screaming. . . .






A hundred fifty miles above the continental United States, the seven astronauts comprising the crew of the space shuttle Endeavor
stood in silence as their commander tried to reestablish contact with
the ground. They’d been in the middle of routine housekeeping
traffic with Mission Control at Houston’s Johnson Space Center
when they’d heard a succession of increasingly garbled outcries
and what sounded like screams.



After that, nothing.



“I say again, Houston, do you read? Endeavor
to Houston, do you read?” The mission commander switched channels
on the selector. “CapCom, do you read?” Switched again.
“Edwards flight control, do you read?” One more time.
“Cheyenne Base, do you read? NORAD ops, this is Endeavor,
please respond.” And finally, switching to 121.5, the
international distress frequency: “Any station, any station,
please respond. For God’s sake,” Peter Corbeau said,
“is anybody there?”



The only answer was the static of an open carrier wave.



As far as they knew, they were all alone. And possibly the only human beings left alive.






Stryker wanted to scream, to shriek, to howl, but he
couldn’t. His mind, his body, his soul felt like they had all
been snagged by monstrous barbed fishhooks that were now pulling away
in every direction, determined to tear him apart. Something had gone
terribly wrong. The only answer that made sense to him was that somehow
the Cerebro wave had been reprogrammed to affect not mutants, but
baseline humans.



All his work, all his planning, all his sacrifice—all for nothing.



With the whole world in his grasp, no power on earth
could persuade Jason to stop. Strange that, after all this time
referring to the boy as Mutant 143, Stryker could only think of him now
by the name he’d given him. His father’s name. It
didn’t seem . . . proper to call him anything else. As if this
moment, with Stryker himself facing death, compelled him to accord his
son the dignity, the identity, the . . . humanity that had been
denied through the whole of his adult life. And Stryker felt a pang of
grief, of misery, at the memory of the first time he’d held the
boy, less than five minutes old, and marveled at how small and precious
a gift he was. That had been Stryker’s moment of sublime hope,
when he had sworn to keep his boy safe, to stand by him no matter what.
There’d been no hint then of what was to come, just this small
and achingly vulnerable miracle who was the recipient of all the love
that William and Karen Stryker had to give.



Ironically, humanity’s only hope was now the dam.
The shocks that set the ground to trembling were coming faster and
stronger as water punched through the lowest levels of the complex like
a pile driver, each collapsing section further undermining the
foundation of the dam itself. Its collapse would destroy the complex
and bury Jason. Stryker was no structural engineer—he
couldn’t build things worth a damn—but he’d spent a
professional lifetime perfecting the art of destruction. Regardless, he
was doomed, but survival for the world could now be measured in
minutes.



Then a new but terribly familiar voice turned even that small hope to ashes.



“William,” Magneto said, greeting him as an
old friend, his rich and cultured English accent rolling the syllables
of his name like a tiger savoring its prey.



Stryker glared up at him.



“How . . . good to see you again,” Magneto continued as if he genuinely meant it.



Wolverine hadn’t searched him, hadn’t noticed
the backup gun Stryker wore in an ankle holster. Molded plastic with
plastic bullets that could kill a man as effectively as metal, designed
to be totally impervious to Magneto’s power.



Stryker grabbed for it, faster than he’d ever moved in his life.



Magneto let him clear the gun from its holster and
almost—but not quite—bring it to bear before he used his
power to wrap a length of chain around Stryker’s gun hand like a
whip, yanking it aside just as Stryker pulled the trigger. There was a
flat report, and the bullet went way wide, into the trees. Mystique
quickly stepped forward and wrenched it from Stryker’s grasp,
twirling it around her finger like a cowboy as she sauntered over to
the helicopter and climbed aboard, leaving Magneto and Stryker to make
their final farewells in private.



Magneto smiled.



“It seems that we keep running into each other,” he said. “Mark my words, it will never happen again.”



Another length of chain wrapped itself around
Stryker’s throat as Magneto pronounced his final sentence:
“Survival of the fittest, Mr. Stryker.”






Storm and Nightcrawler stood within Cerebro, and as far
as they were concerned nothing whatsoever was happening. The great
machine was silent.



But then Storm knew different. As the shock wave
thundered past, the girl had lost control of her illusion, allowing
them to see things as they truly were. Around them was a vast
holographic construct of the globe, festooned with an uncountable
number of blinding lights that Storm intuited at once represented the
nonmutant population of the Earth. Remembering what she had endured
when the Cerebro had been calibrated for mutants, she closed her eyes
in empathy. Even if they found a way to save everyone, what could they
do about the traumatic scars left on their memories? In some ways, that
would be far worse than death because with it would be the constant
terror that it could happen again.



That couldn’t be her concern right now. First and foremost, she had to save them.



The momentary disruption of the illusion had revealed one
thing more: the true identity of their adversary, not a little girl at
all but a misshapen creature in a wheelchair, whose mind had latched
onto Xavier like a lamprey.



Her initial, her main, reaction was sorrow that something
so damaged could come into the world and never find the help needed to
make it whole, in spirit if not in flesh. Much like Magneto, she dealt
with the primal energies of the world. It gave her perceptions far
beyond those of normal vision, and those in turn gave her an insight
into people that was almost as effective as Logan’s physical
senses. She had seen cruelty in her life and once, when she was very
young, had encountered a being that became for her the living
embodiment of evil. She had known that at first glance, the same way that her first awareness of Xavier told her that he was a man to be trusted.



The man in the other wheelchair was not to be trusted. There was a wrongness to his spirit that made the patterns of energy cast off by his body as twisted as his body itself.



And for the second time in her life, staring at the false
face of the little girl, Ororo Munroe knew that she was face-to-face
with evil.



“He’ll be finished soon,” she said in a
voice rich with satisfaction, a glutton enjoying the feast of a
lifetime. The agonies—the ones she remembered, the ones she
imagined—that tore at Storm’s heart only filled his with
delight. “It’s almost over.”



“This is not good,” Nightcrawler muttered,
looking up and around them nervously in the vain hope he might find a
way to pierce the veil that the girl had cast around them. It bothered
him to know that the place was collapsing about their ears and yet be
unable to see any part of it.



Storm nodded agreement. They were out of time.
“Kurt,” she told him, “it’s going to get very
cold.”



He nodded back to her, understanding that she was talking about more than the usual winter chill.



“I’m not going anywhere.”



“When the times comes, we’ll likely have to hurry—and there won’t be any margin for error.”



“In my whole life on the trapeze, I’ve never
missed a catch. Do what you have to . . . Ororo. Trust me for the
rest.”



She spared him a glance and a smile that had nothing to do with business. “I like the way you say my name.”



She couldn’t see him blush, not with his indigo
skin, and for that he was supremely grateful. “I like saying
it.”



As he spoke, he saw mist on his breath and realized
she’d started what she had planned. Her warning was no joke; the
room’s ambient temperature had already dropped enough to make him
shiver.



Her eyes were silver, highlighted in a crystalline blue,
the rich color of the Earth’s sky as seen from space, standing
out dramatically against her chocolate skin. Her hair stirred in a
breeze of her own creation, and Nightcrawler knew that this represented
the calm center of an increasingly powerful whirlwind.



“There are winds you find in the wastelands of both
poles,” he heard her say, as though she were conducting a
seminar. “Gravity grabs hold of cold, dense air and pulls it down
the slopes of mountains and plateaus. In a volcanic eruption, the same
thing happens with a pyroclastic flow. The air picks up an incredible
amount of speed and that speed makes it colder. It’s a dry wind,
there’s no precipitation. You can consider it a sandstorm of ice
and snow. This wind cuts. It can freeze you in a heartbeat, not by
coating you in ice but by turning the marrow of your bones to crystal.
You don’t fight this wind, you go to ground, you endure. You find
a way to survive.”



“What are you doing?” the girl wailed.



Nightcrawler, already shivering violently because Ororo
couldn’t spare the concentration or the effort to shield him,
clutched at her arm.



“Storm,” he cried, “she’s a child.”



“She’s an illusion.”



“Does that give you the right to condemn the being who created her?”



“Do we have a choice, Kurt? That mutant’s life for the professor’s, and likely the world!”



“That’s a decision Magneto would not hesitate
to make, I know. Nor have the slightest regret over it,” he
replied.



Storm said nothing, but her eyes blazed like silver beacons against the darkness.



“I’m freezing,” the girl
shrieked, her voice breaking, turning masculine and adult, then back to
a girl once more. “You’re hurting me. Make it stop!



“Stop it,” the girl cried. And then, in 143’s own voice, “Stop it!”



Just like that, the illusion flickered, faster and
faster, like a manic strobe. The girl vanished, as did the illusion of
the silent room and the deactivated Cerebro. They found themselves in
chaos, with chunks of scaffolding and shielding plate tumbling all
around.



Feeling frozen solid, Nightcrawler ducked as a piece the
size of a limo took out a portion of the gallery back by the doorway.
Storm ignored it all and stood her ground, her eyes fixed on her
adversary.



Mutant 143 sat hunkered deep in his chair, eyes radiant
with fury as he tried to grab hold of Storm’s thoughts, only to
discover what Xavier had learned years before—and just as
painfully. That when she was fully in tune with her powers, when they
were active on this level, it became virtually impossible to access her
mind. The energies she manifested created too much psychic
interference. To the unwary telepath, it was much the same as trying to
grab hold of a bolt of lightning.



Mutant 143 cried out, so staggered by the backlash that his leash on Xavier also slipped.






Xavier felt the chill and knew it at once for what it
was. He sensed the ripples of static on the fringes of his awareness
and understood at once what Storm was doing. He beheld the hologram of
the globe at life-size and the lights that blazed across its surface,
bright, so bright, like candles on the brink of going out forever.



And he knew, with a realization that would haunt him to the end of his days, what he was doing here.



His first instinct was to shut down the Cerebro wave at
once, but he held back. The process of disengagement had to be gradual,
to allow the afflicted bodies and psyches to decompress, lest the shock
of instant recovery do as much damage as the attacking wave itself.



To do that, though, he had to deal once and for all with—



“Jason,” he said quietly as he turned. He
didn’t ask Storm to temper her winds. The young man who sat
across from him knew too many pathways into his mind, he dared not
allow him another opportunity to reassert control.



“No,” the girl pouted defiantly, narrowing her eyes, shaking her head, fiercely trying to compel obedience.



“No,” she repeated.



There was no inhibitor on Xavier’s thoughts now;
with it in place he couldn’t operate Cerebro. That was why he had
to be completely under 143’s influence before he was allowed into
the chamber. The pathways that 143 had used to worm his way into the
core of Xavier’s being now provided equal access to their source.
The young man was gifted, and powerful, but Xavier acknowledged no
equals, especially with the survival of humanity at stake.



“No,” she cried again, with tears. “Stop! You’re hurting me!”



The air rippled outward from her, looking much like the
heat flow from a jet-engine exhaust, and in its wake the substance of
the room’s reality once again changed. It reminded Xavier of some
of the classic cartoons, where the animator would swipe his brush
across the screen, unleashing a cascade of color like a waterfall,
which in turn would transform the scene into something altogether
different from what had come before.



They found themselves on a battlefield, an image Xavier
recognized from his own past, before the X-Men, before he lost the use
of his legs, when he’d found himself cut off from his unit and
caught in the middle of a firefight that was rapidly turning into a
major pitched battle. Death came from all sides: It claimed men with
stakes buried in the grass, with bullets, with cannon shells, with
splinters blasted every which way by exploding trees, by a carpet of
bombs tumbling from planes that flew so high no one knew they were in
danger until the world erupted around them. They died from fire, they
died broken, they died in agony, they died weeping and screaming and
cursing and lost and lonely.



There were more images, none, thankfully, from
Xavier’s life, all of them skewed toward the cruel and the
painful. As Xavier had sensed during that first interview, there was no
empathy in Jason, no acknowledgment of the people around him as living,
sentient beings worthy of even the slightest respect. To him, they were
a different order of interactive toy. He took his pleasure from
“mounting” them as the practitioners of voodoo believed
their gods did when possessing their worshipers. He created scenarios
that literally put his victims through Hell and gloried in the agonies
that resulted.



There was nothing in him that responded to joy or that
even recognized its existence. He considered his life a misery, and by
sublimating those feelings through the torment of others, he made
himself feel not so much better as less awful.



Had Xavier worked with him from the start, perhaps things
might have been different. But Stryker had closed that door. Perhaps he
had been right. Perhaps Xavier had been afraid of Jason. Had he only
wanted those students at his school who could be saved?



“Get out of my head!”



“No,” Xavier said. All those years ago, when
he wasn’t so sure of his vocation, or his own abilities,
he’d made a terrible mistake. Could that be explained, could it
be excused? That didn’t matter to him now. Those options
didn’t exist today. He could no more abandon Jason now than one
of his own. Succeed or fail, he had to try now, as he’d refused
to then.



The ripples bounced off the wall, shunting all the images
they carried with them into an incredible collision that made it
impossible for a moment to tell which pieces of wreckage and shattering
realities were illusion, and which were actual pieces of the room that
was collapsing about their heads.



Through all the chaos, the only constant that remained
was the facsimile globe, but at long last even that seemed to lose form
and substance. Its outlines smeared, as transmitted images do when
overtaken by static. Unnoticed in the ancillary din, the hum put forth
by Cerebro gradually faded, as did the lights on the globe.



Xavier took a deep breath, mustering his strength for a
last effort, and sent a thought pulse of his own along all the linkages
that had been established between his mind and the rest of the world.
Deep down inside there was a part of him that was tempted to try a
global rewrite, something on the order of “love thy mutant
neighbor as thyself,” but it was an enticement easily resisted.
Storm was fond of telling him that nature moved at its own pace, that
some things had to be taught—and learned—in their own time.
Short-circuit the process, shortchange the result, little good would
come of it.



Having just endured firsthand what that meant, he had no
desire to compound the resulting mess, just to try as best he could to
set things right.



What he sent was a little bit of energy, or personal
grace. A psychic aspirin. He couldn’t banish the physical effects
of the Cerebro wave, but at least he could ameliorate the residual
pain. The victims might remember that pain, but they would no longer
feel it. Quite the contrary. They’d actively feel better, like
waking at the dawn of a fresh and beautiful day, whose sunrise
contained the promise that anything was possible. And that those
possibilities were good ones.



He reached up and removed his helmet, and with that
severed his direct contact with Cerebro, which obligingly completed the
full shutdown process. The globe vanished as if it had never been.



With it went Storm’s winds, her eyes reverting to
normal as Nightcrawler took her by the hand. Because the air was so
dry, there was no evidence of the terrible cold she’d created
beyond the residual chill itself.



Jean must have been monitoring the situation with her own
telepathy, because the moment the helmet cleared Xavier’s head,
the vault door blocking the entrance was blown wide open, taking with
it a fair chunk of surrounding wall.



Hot on its heels, Cyclops plunged into the chamber, only
to backpedal frantically as a new series of explosions deep within the
complex dropped another length of ceiling on the entrance, hopelessly
blocking it.



The room shook as if it were a ball being worried by a
playful puppy, and this latest assault proved far more than its
structure could bear. As the platform and gallery began to twist
alarmingly, Xavier chose to ignore the risk as he pivoted his chair and
pushed toward Jason. The young man, grotesque as he was, had taken on
the aspect of a waxworks mannequin. There was no expression on his
face, no emotion in his eyes. Xavier sent thought after thought to him,
but the harder he reached, the more defiantly Jason pushed him away.



He wanted no part of what Xavier had to offer.



A massive plate clipped the edge of the platform, and
Xavier looked up to see most of the upper hemisphere crashing down on
them. He knew what had to be done and lunged forward in his chair,
attempting to grab Jason by the body or the chair—by some part of
him—in hopes of creating a daisy chain of physical contact that
would allow Nightcrawler—whose capabilities he could see clearly
in Jean’s mind—to teleport them all out of harm’s
way.



Jason would have none of it. Using the motor controls of
his own chair, he backed out of reach just as the huge pieces of
wreckage smashed into the gallery.



Then they were all falling as the platform gave way.
Xavier felt Storm’s arms, and something else that he belatedly
realized was Nightcrawler’s tail, but he didn’t really
register their touch. He had eyes only for the tortured, and now
broken, semblance of a man whom he prayed had finally found his measure
of peace.



The next thing he knew, after a moment of altogether sublime misery—which Jean’s thoughts had not warned him about—he was in her arms, with Storm, Cyclops, Nightcrawler, and the stolen children crowded close around.





 







Chapter

Seventeen




While Magneto climbed aboard and settled into the
copilot’s seat, Mystique finished the start-up sequence. A rapid
press of three buttons in sequence was rewarded by the rising whine of
the twin jet engines coming on-line and spooling up to speed. She
checked the gauges, satisfying herself that performance was nominal
across the panel, and then engaged the rotors. Above their heads,
through the clear canopy, the big blades began to spin.



One hand on the control yoke, the other on the secondary,
Mystique was about to lift off when she nudged Magneto with an elbow
and thrust her chin off to the left. He followed her direction and
quickly found the figure of a boy standing on the tree line, face
expressionless as he watched the helicopter prepare to leave. The only
part of him that moved was his right hand, flicking open the lid of his
Zippo lighter and snapping it closed, over and over, steady as a
metronome.



Mystique looked at Magneto, wondering which way he’d jump.



He watched the boy for perhaps a minute, until Mystique
found herself about to remind him that it was past time to go. The
longer they stayed, the greater the risk of being caught by the dam
when it collapsed. Not a good thing.



As if intuiting her thoughts, Magneto nodded once and beckoned once.



The boy just stood there.






John was thinking back to Boston, to how Bobby Drake had looked on the Blackbird’s
ramp, staring up at his parents and his home as if he were saying
good-bye to them forever. He’d ditched his own family ages back,
and forgotten them, so for him the guy’s hesitation had no
meaning. Totally bogus moment. Now he found his cynicism and contempt
thrown back in his face as he came face-to-face with the exact same
choice. Walk away from Xavier’s now, he knew, there’d be no
turning back. Things would never be the same. The friendships
he’d made would probably come to an end. Rogue . . .



What did he care about Rogue, really? The girl had the hairy wow-wows for Bobbeeee,
for God’s sake, talk about your total lack of taste! That pair of
lames were made for each other, and both of them made perfectly for
Xavier’s. No way would John Allardyce turn out like them.



Pyro was made for better things.



He dropped the lighter into his pocket and headed for the open door of the helicopter.



The smile he saw from Magneto when he came aboard made it all worthwhile. He’d made the right choice.



As the helicopter lifted over the trees and Mystique
accelerated toward the nearest line of mountains, Pyro had no regrets.
And no worries, either, about the X-Men. He didn’t believe they
were in any danger. After all, they had their Blackbird—and
here he uncorked a wicked nasty grin—that is, assuming Rogue or
Bobby found enough gumption to fly that puppy to their rescue. Of
course, that would mean breaking the rules, disobeying Storm’s
order. Fact is, Pyro didn’t think they had it in them.



That thought didn’t bother Pyro at all.






Storm led the way, wishing there was sufficient volume of
air within the tunnels to generate a wind capable of carrying them all.
The complex hadn’t seemed so huge going in, but now the tunnels
seemed endless. Fast as they hurried, she knew this was taking too
long.



Nightcrawler was closest behind her, carrying Xavier in
his arms as if the X-Men’s mentor weighed next to nothing. Poor
Kurt didn’t look happy, either, probably because he wasn’t
altogether comfortable moving on two legs. He could make much better
time galloping upside down along the ceiling on all fours.



Next came the children, with Scott and Jean bringing up
the rear. She had one arm across his shoulders to take the burden off
her broken leg.



After what Storm decided was just shy of forever, they
reached the loading bay. They’d felt no more big explosive shocks
the past few minutes, but it was clear that something just as bad was
taking their place. Dust and small bits of debris were falling from
every surface.



Their plan was to leave the way they had come, out the
massive double doors at the far end of the loading bay and then along
the spillway to the forest and, ultimately, the Blackbird. It
wouldn’t take long, because the moment they were outside Storm
planned to take to the air and rocket her way back to the X-Men’s
hidden aircraft. She’d be there and back in a matter of minutes,
and they’d be free of this terrible place.



Ten minutes, she prayed to any diety who cared to listen,
that’s all they needed. Fifteen, max. Not so hard a thing to ask
for, was it? Hey, they’d just saved the world, that ought to be
worth a tiny break from the fates.



The doors were wide open, and as they crossed the broad
expanse of the loading bay, the kids commenting excitedly on the
smashed and burned-out wrecks they passed along the way, Artie and
Jubilation Lee raced ahead, ignoring Storm’s cross “Stop!”



There was a taste to the air she didn’t like, plus
a low-frequency rumble that reminded her of one of the great herds of
wildebeest on the African savanna suddenly going stampede. She could
see a violence to the eddies and currents around the entrance and
beyond that raised the hackles on her neck and made her break into a
dead run of her own, filling the room with a bellow that grabbed
everyone’s notice. This seemed like a voice that could very well
call down thunder.



“I—said—stop!”



And they did, right at the bottom of the approach ramp to
the doors. As Storm caught up with them, snatching them off their feet
and into her arms, her conscious mind caught up with the clues her
subconscious had been processing, and she felt almost overwhelmed by an
avalanche of despair. The air outside these doors was being assaulted
by the leading edge of an air ram, a pressure wave compressed to the
point of being an almost solid mass, by the force that was pushing it
down this channel. It wasn’t a stampede she was witnessing. The
gates to the dam had been opened. The spillway was flooding.



She saw Jean separate herself from Scott and take a
stance at the foot of the ramp, gritting her teeth as the air before
her started to shimmer. Her red hair stirred without the slightest
breeze and Storm knew that her friend was going to pit the whole of her
telekinetic ability against the unimaginable force of the water coming
down that huge funnel. Even if she could buy them time to escape the
loading bay, almost certainly with the sacrifice of her own life,
they’d still have to find some escape route from the complex
itself. And if the spillway was flooding, then the dam itself had to
have been compromised. Once it collapsed, dumping the whole of Alkali
Lake into this valley, no power on Earth—certainly none available
right now to the X-Men—would save them.



A great grinding noise filled the room, and everyone
first assumed it had something to do with the onrushing flood, building
its own runaway train crescendo outside.



Then the kids, and Storm, and even Jean, jumped as the double doors slammed shut.



“Trust me, darlin’,” she heard Logan
say, “you don’t want to go out there.” And she turned
to find him a short way along the wall, with one fist jammed up tight
against a sparking junction box that looked as big as his own chest.



Then an even more resounding BOOM shook the space,
knocking most of the mutants present off their feet as it made the room
shudder so hard it felt like a real earthquake. The doors bowed
slightly from the impact shock, and water spurted from the central seam
with the force of a high-pressure fire hose.



Snakt!



Logan retracted his claws, and the kids, who’d
never seen him use them, who’d only heard—and mostly
mocked—the stories they’d heard from Rogue, stared in
silent awe.



“Everybody here?” he asked. “Everybody okay?”



His eyes told him the answer to the first, his senses cataloged the rest, and he zeroed in on Jean.



She didn’t give him a chance to say a word but
turned her face to him, to show him her ruined eyes, and said,
“We’re fine, Logan.” The fingers of one hand were
interlaced with Scott’s. It wasn’t just that she was
leaning against Cyclops for support, it was the body language of the
way their bodies melted seamlessly together. Even in these dire
circumstances, it suggested a relaxed intimacy that spoke volumes about
their relationship and the true depth of their feelings.



“Please,” she told Logan, with a gentle
empathy and a plea for understanding that had nothing to do with the
words she was actually speaking, “help the professor.”



He nodded, and let Cyclops half carry her away. She’d made her choice.



Storm watched him, with full understanding of what had
just happened and how he might be feeling. He didn’t try to put a
brave face on the moment, or anything like that. His emotions were as
plain and primal as Jean’s; he’d never be ashamed of them.
Just because she’d chosen Scott as her go-to guy didn’t
mean Logan would care for her any less. Or that the decision was final.



“Come on,” he told everyone, maybe a little
more gruffly than he’d intended. The adults chose not to notice.
“There’s another way out.”






The spillway wasn’t enough to save the day or even
slow the process of collapse. Quite the contrary. The sudden and
tremendous rush of water had the same effect on the underground complex
as the earlier explosions. Wherever there was a weak bulkhead, wherever
access portals had been left open, wherever doorways failed, water
crashed into Stryker’s base, further undermining the foundation
of the dam itself.



The first spiderweb series of cracks began to splinter
the face of the dam itself, minute fissures that extended up from the
initial breach underground in the generator room. They didn’t
look like much, nothing very impressive at all, until it became evident
that the only way water could be leaking through them was if they
extended clear through to the lake. That meant a crack right through
better than ten meters of reinforced concrete.



Once more, the inexorable laws of physics and
hydrodynamics came into play. Water burst through the holes at
tremendous pressure, backed by the full weight of a lake miles long, a
mile wide just behind the dam, and hundreds of feet deep. This water
ground away at the concrete as it poured through the cracks. With every
passing second, as the very structure of the dam eroded, those cracks
widened. More water escaped. More of the dam was washed away. The force
of the water increased, thereby accelerating the process.



For all intents and purposes, though the X-Men didn’t know it yet, they were out of time.






Well clear of the complex, but still below the dam, the
team emerged from Stryker’s escape tunnel. Logan pointed them
over the crest of the hill to the helipad, and Storm hurried ahead to
prep the vehicle for takeoff.



They found her on the edge of the trees, staring at the empty platform.



“Logan?”



“Son of a bitch,” he growled, and charged across the clearing.



They caught up with him where he’d left Stryker.
Logan was kneeling by the body, tapping one extended claw against the
chains that had wrapped themselves so tightly around the man’s
throat he’d been virtually decapitated.



They didn’t need an explanation, but he provided one anyway. “Magneto.”



And again, with dark and deadly feeling, “That son of a bitch!”



“After what he’d done, Logan,” Xavier
said quietly, “small wonder he wouldn’t face me, or any
X-Man.”



“Charley,” Logan growled, “you don’t understand—”



“If you say so.”



Logan looked up and around, back in the direction of the
dam, reacting to cues only his enhanced senses could perceive. Well,
not quite his alone, because Storm was looking, too.



They started up the slope together, intent on reaching
the top of the hill and having their eyes confirm the disaster that had
befallen them. What they would do next was anybody’s guess.






At last a chunk of facing larger than a freight car
bulged outward from the body of the dam. Girders and rebar held it
somewhat in place for a span of seconds as the stream of escaping water
erupted into a raging torrent, but the stresses it endured went far
beyond the limits imagined by any of the design team. Steel snapped
like breaking strings, and these countless tons of concrete went
spinning along the crest of a brand-new waterfall as lightly as a flat
stone skimming the surface of a tranquil lake. It flew through the air
at a slight angle and shattered against one of the pump houses with the
force of a good-sized bomb.



In its wake, cracks as wide as roadways exploded across
the face of the dam, rapidly reaching all the way up to the summit so
that the next section to go involved a significant area of the wall.
All pretense of integrity was gone. One collapse triggered the next as
inexorably as a falling line of dominos, so that by the time Storm and
Logan, with the irrepressible Artie close behind, reached the crest of
the hill with its unobstructed view, there was virtually no dam left to
see.



Just countless billions of gallons of water, thundering down the valley straight toward them.



“What is it?” Artie asked in breathless disbelief.



“Alkali Lake,” Logan told him. “All of it.”



He turned to Storm. “How many can you carry?”
he demanded. She wasn’t sure, and said so. “How about the
damn elf, what’s-his-name? How many can he carry, how far can he
jump? And Jean, her mind thing, the teke, can she use it to make some
kind of boat?” He was speaking in a rush, hand on her arm,
Artie—who for once kept his mouth shut—tucked under his
other arm as he propelled her down the slope. They had maybe a minute
to act, and he wasn’t about to waste any of it.



“What about you?” Storm demanded of him.



He snorted with derisive laughter. He could take care of himself, even in a flash flood of such immensity.



The rescue was doable—it had to be; they all knew
that any other outcome was utterly unacceptable. They didn’t have
to go far, just clear of the wave front.



Just then, a tremendous wind blasted the clearing from
above. It was too soon for the pressure ram leading the flood to reach
them, and this downdraft was accompanied by the shriek of
high-performance jet engines that sounded definitely not in a good mood.



* * *



Skimming the surface of the treetops, when it wasn’t actually plowing through them, the Blackbird
sideslipped through the air toward them with a pale and terrified Rogue
doing her best at the controls. All around her in the cockpit, displays
flashed red and presented ominous messages in both text and voice,
telling her in unmistakable terms that she was not flying the big jet
at all properly or well. She couldn’t help herself, she yelled
right back at the telltales, agitation bringing her lower Mississippi
accent to the fore with a vengeance. “I’m doing the best I
can, damn it! Leave me the hell alone!”



They didn’t listen. They kept right on
yammering—about airspeed, flight profile, engine temperatures,
hydraulic pressure, ground proximity, the landing gear. At least the
last warning was something that made sense. She slapped the big lever
on the front panel, the same way she’d seen Storm and Jean do it,
and was rewarded by the hollow thunk of the struts lowering
from their wheel wells. Unfortunately, that also screwed up the
plane’s balance and performance, creating additional drag that
she wasn’t expecting and didn’t know how to cope with.



One of the main bogies snagged the crown of a fir,
creating drag enough to pivot the plane right around and tip it to one
side. Rogue tried to compensate, twisting the control wheel and
applying power to the throttles, but she overdid both elements so that
when the plane wrenched itself loose it slipped immediately into a flat
spin that overwhelmed the ability of the vertical thrusters to
compensate.



Fortunately, the plane only had about twenty meters to
fall, not a lot of distance for a vehicle whose length was close to
double that.



As everyone below scrambled for cover, the Blackbird
made about half a revolution—Rogue sensibly chopped the throttles
to zero—before the impact. It was a hard landing, and the only
saving grace was that it landed in deep snow instead of on frozen
earth. Even better, while the leading edge of the port wing buried
itself in a patch of ground that was fully exposed, that ground was
nowhere near solid. For this was where Pyro had collapsed when the
initial Cerebro wave had struck. His wildly out-of-control power had
melted all the snow for three meters and more around him. All that
water had soaked straight into the ground, resulting in a boggy
quagmire of mud.



The good news: The wing hit without substantial damage.



The bad news: Like any vehicle lodged in deep mud, it was likely stuck fast.



As heads all around the clearing cautiously poked up to make sure all was well, the Blackbird’s main hatch cycled open, and Bobby Drake emerged.



“What’re you waiting for?” he yelled. “The dam’s collapsed, we’ve got to go! Hurry!”



Storm was first in with Jubilee and the children. While the others came aboard behind her, she scrambled to the flight deck.



Rogue hadn’t let go of the yoke, she was sitting
stock-still, teeth chattering, pale as Storm’s own hair,
convinced that she’d doomed them all.



Storm took a moment she couldn’t really afford to
ruffle the young girl’s hair. “You did great, Rogue. I am
so proud of you.”



* * *



Aft, Cyclops helped Jean into one of the passenger seats, but as he reached over to fasten her harness, she waved him away.



“I’ve got it,” she told him, and
proceeded to buckle herself in without any hesitation or difficulty.
Cyclops spared a quick glance to make sure the others were doing the
same, then followed Storm to the flight deck. Rogue hadn’t moved.



He crouched down and took her by both shoulders.



“It’s okay, kiddo,” he told her.
“Storm and I, we’ll handle things. Grab yourself a seat and
strap in.”



Convulsively, she released her harness and popped out of
the chair, making sure not to touch either Cyclops or Storm as she
sidled past them and rushed to where Bobby Drake was waiting.



Cyclops took her place, fidgeting a moment as he
discovered that the sheepskin-covered seat back was so ice cold he
could feel it even through his insulated uniform. There was the
thinnest sheen of hoarfrost on the yoke as well, something he was used
to finding wherever Bobby Drake hung out.



“What the hell—” he muttered, then
relegated the concern to the back burner of his mind as something to
worry about and deal with later.



He didn’t waste time with preliminaries but
initiated an emergency hot start. The engines obligingly spooled up to
speed . . .



. . . and then went silent.



He started again, Storm gently manipulating the
throttles, both of them watching the displays like hungry hawks to make
sure that this time there’d be no loss of power.



“Thrusters four and six are out,” she
reported. It wasn’t anything Rogue had done; this was left over
from the Air Force missile that had knocked them from the sky.



“We should still be able to fly,” Cyclops told her.



“If we were level, absolutely. But we’re
stuck fast, and the thrusters we need to punch us loose are the ones
we’re missing. There’s not enough power available to pull
us out of the ground!”



“You got a better idea?”



She advanced the throttles, and the great aircraft began
to tremble violently. Seeing a clutch of tree trunks flipping toward
them through the air, Storm reflexively ducked her head into her
shoulders, whistling as they bounced harmlessly past. They’d been
torn loose by the flood and pitched on ahead. The mutants had only a
few moments before the water was on them. It was now or never.



Xavier sensed the children’s agitation and used his
telepathy to ease their fear. If this was indeed the end, he would make
sure that, for them, it would be peaceful and without pain.



Nightcrawler clutched his rosary and offered up the most heartfelt prayers he knew.



Jean closed her broken eyes and went to that place within
her where the celestial song could be heard. Now, more than ever
before, that strength was needed. In her mind’s eye she rose once
more from the ashes of creation and spread wide her arms, turning them
to wings of fire and glory, that the Blackbird might fly, that these friends—who she loved more than her own life—would live.






In the base’s loading bay, the closed doors finally
gave way under the onslaught of this latest and most terrible fall of
water, together with a major stretch of ceiling as well. Like starving
hounds after a deer, floods poured down every corridor.



Far below, Yuriko Oyama lay unmoving in her cocoon of
adamantium at the bottom of the augmentation tank. The room was mostly
in ruins, but there were redundancy systems galore, and that meant some
of the monitors were still active. The bionics that replaced much of
Yuriko’s purely organic components came with their own dedicated
suite of sensors, and even though the images on the screens were wobbly
and shot through with static, it was evident that she was still alive.



Not that it mattered. Encased in an adamantium shell, she
was wholly incapable of movement. She wasn’t going anywhere of
her own volition or under her own steam.



A few moments later, as the flood waves reached this
section of the complex, the whole question became moot. Walls shattered
from the torrential impact, and that, in turn, collapsed the entire
ceiling. In a heartbeat, the lab was filled with water, and the
augmentation chamber itself, together with the Weapon X tank, was
buried under hundreds of tons of steel and rock and earth.






Elsewhere, the same happened in the Cerebro chamber.






Outside, an avalanche of water hundreds of feet high cut
a remorseless swath through the valley below Alkali Lake, annihilating
every trace of the complex that had been constructed beneath the dam.
The pressure wave of air that preceded it made trees that were meters
thick bend almost double for the few seconds it took the water to reach
them and snap them like kindling. Mist and foam rose from that leading
edge of the wave, partially obscuring the awful fury of the event and
the devastation it was causing.



Directly in its path, mere seconds from destruction, lay the Blackbird.



No, Jean thought to herself. More than an article
of faith, this denial became for her its own irresistible, indomitable
force of nature.



On the flight deck, both Storm and Cyclops reacted with
surprise as switches and controls began to operate by themselves.
Before their eyes the plane once more set itself for vertical takeoff.



Realizing who had to be responsible for this, Cyclops
turned in his chair to call out, concern evident in his voice,
“Jean?”



He reached for the release on his harness, but Storm laid her hand on his arm to stop him. It was the only card left to play.



Jean raised both hands, her face eerily serene, revealing
none of the murderous concentration of will and effort this had to be
demanding of her. Xavier’s eyes narrowed. He couldn’t gain
access to Jean’s mind, to determine precisely what was happening
or assist in any way. The power she was manifesting created a
scrambling field around her thoughts unlike anything he’d ever
encountered, which he found himself unable to penetrate.



At Jean’s bidding, the vertical thrusters fired.
Mentally reviewing the plane’s schematics, she cast forth a piece
of her awareness to take a look directly at the problem, smiling to
herself at how much simpler it was to do the work this way than it
would have been with her hands. No more squeezing through impossibly
small spaces and getting cut and scraped by wayward outcrops of metal.
She identified the problem and, using telekinesis, fixed it.



Obligingly, the engines roared to full power.



“The thrusters are back on-line,” Storm told
Cyclops, grabbing her controls and pulling back on the yoke. He took
care of the throttles, advancing them to full emergency power, while
keeping a wary eye on their appropriate telltales.



Of course, it wasn’t quite that easy. Jean walked
the psychic image of herself underneath the hull, where the wing was
still stuck fast. Reminding herself to apologize later, she slipped the
throttles out of Cyclops’ grasp and eased back on the power to
minimize the risk of structural damage. Another asset of working this
way, she discovered to her delight, was that she could multitask at the
speed of thought, accomplishing a number of objectives in no time at
all, so that for her the onrushing wave appeared to be frozen in place,
like one of Bobby’s ice sculptures.



She set her phantom shoulders against the wing root,
planted her phantom feet firmly enough on the ground to leave an actual
imprint, and applied power in much the same way as Cyclops did by
advancing the throttle. She called it from this magical place within
herself, and reveled in the celestial song that enveloped her as she
mated imagination to will and found the place where there are no
limits.



The smile she gave, on her real face as on her phantom
one, as the wing slipped free of the ground, was as radiant as if she
were witnessing the birth of the very first star in the heavens.



The engines roared, gravity pressing everyone aboard into
their seats as Storm grabbed for altitude, racing ahead of the flood
wave at a steep upward angle that bought them the time they needed to
rise above the crest of the water. At the same time, she brought a wind
right into their face, to create an even greater amount of lift for the
wings.



At the back of the plane, Logan stood by the open ramp as the valley fell farther and farther behind. A light was pinging
insistently beside his head, Storm on the flight deck pointedly telling
him to close the damn door. He ignored it, for the moment.



He looked around suddenly, sharply, as if someone were
standing right beside him, and more slowly his gaze swept the passenger
section of the jet until his eyes came to rest on Jean. She
didn’t respond, but he knew she was aware he was looking at her.
He suspected she was aware of a lot of things, and capable of far more
than any of them even imagined. She’d need someone strong to walk
beside her, and he flicked a quick glare to the right-hand seat on the
flight deck. Cyclops better be equal to the task. Jean deserved the
best, and if she figured Logan didn’t fit that bill, he’d
make damn sure whoever she chose was worthy of her.



That made him chuckle, and he looked back toward what had
been Alkali Lake. The water was down by more than half, though with any
luck the flood would slacken over time and distance, and the towns
downriver would survive. Probably worth suggesting to Charley that the
X-Men help out, though.



Then his mood darkened. No more Stryker, thanks to
Magneto. Whatever secrets he possessed were lost to Logan now. Same
went for the base. If the past was indeed prologue, like Shakespeare
said, then all Logan was left with right now was a book full of blank
pages.



Stryker had called him an animal.



He looked at his dog tags and knew that wasn’t
entirely a lie, or even an exaggeration. But man was an animal. Did
that make what Stryker said true, the way that Stryker meant it?



Logan turned once more into the body of the plane until his eyes came to rest again on Jean.



Animals didn’t feel the way she made him feel, or
inspire the feelings he knew he did in her. Animals didn’t give a
damn about feeling . . . worthy.



A new movement caught his eye; Rogue had turned in her
seat to look from Jean to him. He gave her a smile, acknowledging that
his epiphany cut both ways, that much of what drove Rogue was the
desire to feel worthy of him. That had never happened before, either.



There was more to this new world he’d found than
Jean, no matter how signal a part of it she was. And some other parts
were just as precious.



He didn’t look back as he pressed the control that
raised the ramp and sealed the hatch. He didn’t look down as he
dropped the dog tags into his pocket.



He made his way forward, shaking his head in amusement as
he saw Jones curled up around Nightcrawler’s tail, playing with
it the way a kitten might a ball of string. Rogue and Bobby were
looking after the kids, most of whom had crashed the moment the Blackbird was airborne. No one said a word about John.



Logan had marked the boy’s scent on the tree line,
followed its trail to the helicopter pad where it mingled with
Magneto’s and Mystique’s. As best his senses could report,
they’d taken off together. The boy had joined up of his own free
will.



Then there was Charley.



They met each other’s eyes, but only for a moment.
They had a lot to talk about, and it had to be talk. Logan wasn’t
sure when he’d allow the other man inside his head, only that it
would be a while. And Xavier knew better than to visit uninvited. They
were both wary, they were both wounded; it made sense under the
circumstances to put things off until they’d had time to heal.



Not as if Logan was planning on going anywhere. Not solo, anyway. Not anymore.



He climbed up to the cockpit and slipped into the seat
that Scott had vacated, watching him tenderly begin to apply bandages
to Jean’s eyes, while Xavier leaned close, probably using his own
mental powers in concert with hers to determine the full extent of the
damage.



Storm was looking at him, and he was surprised to see
there was no sign of concern on her face. Made him grin to realize that
it wasn’t because she didn’t care, but rather because he
didn’t need it.



The book of his past was closed. Didn’t matter to
the X-Men who or what he was; he’d proven by character and
actions that he belonged. They accepted him wholeheartedly and without
question. Now that ball was in his court.



The book of his future was waiting to be written, and
wherever it might lead in days to come, Logan knew that for the present
his life was bound to theirs.



He reached out his left hand, and with a smile full of
promise and delight, Storm took it, indicating that he place his right
hand on the yoke.



Together they pulled back on the sticks and sent the Blackbird soaring toward the stars.





 







Epilogue




Ten minutes before, the news anchors of all the major
networks had solemnly introduced the President, live from the White
House in Washington, D.C. The graphic of the presidential seal was
displayed, and the image dissolved to George McKenna sitting at his
desk. The housekeeping staff had been busy in the week since the
attempt on his life, and the office looked good as new. The desk
itself, carved from the timbers of a British frigate captured during
the war of 1812, had been swept of its usual clutter. The only items in
view were a stack of files, in leather loose-leaf binders adorned with
the seal, and the knife with its scarlet banner: MUTANT FREEDOM NOW. And of course, the speech.



The copy he held was just for show. He was actually
reading from the TelePrompTer right in front of him, speaking to the
nation as he would to his own children. It was a good quality he had,
this ability to convey the most complex of issues in terms that
everyone not only understood but which also made them relevant to their
own lives.



He just wished—with all his heart—he had a different topic.



The office was crowded—broadcast technicians,
staffers, military, Secret Service. There was a palpable air of anxiety
to the room, and McKenna prayed that didn’t show on his own face.
He was asking a lot of his country, to in effect declare war on some of
its own children.



He had a bust of Lincoln on his desk, out of camera shot,
and a photo of John Kennedy. The one, because he led the Union in and
out of a Civil War; the other, because he had stood with the world on
the brink of nuclear Armageddon and brought it safely home. He thought
he knew now some of what they had felt during those fateful days and
weeks and, for Lincoln, years. He looked at the knife and wondered as
well if the road of his life would come to the same end.



Dying wasn’t such a horror; he accepted it as a
natural part of life. Being killed, though, especially having survived
a combat tour in a serious shooting war, that was something he’d
hoped he’d never have to worry about again.



There’d been no word from Stryker since their
meeting in this very office. No contact, in fact, with any of the
man’s senior staff. That was worrisome to McKenna, especially in
light of the reports that filtered out of Westchester, about military
helicopters and kidnapped and terrorized children. They represented
everything McKenna feared most about Stryker’s operation and his
methods, and he’d been on the brink of ordering him to stand down
when the whole of the human race had apparently come within a heartbeat
of extinction.



He couldn’t really recall much of what had
happened, beyond collapsing, and then finding himself cradled in the
lap of one of his female Secret Service detail, while she leveled her
pistol at the doorway. Today she was standing off in the corner, to his
left, back to the wall, where she had a clear view of everyone present
and an equally clear run at McKenna himself. If anything happened, he
knew that Alicia Vargas would give her life to save him, without
hesitation.



She hadn’t seen the speech, almost no one had,
although its substance had been the focus of scores of rumors ever
since he had asked for airtime. He’d worked on it with his
wife—who’d been with him most of his political career and
who actually served as his de facto chief speechwriter—and ended
up writing most of the text himself. There were no copies, other than
the one scrolling through the camera mount in front of him, and no
advance material had been released to the press. Whatever he would say
tonight would come to the nation as a surprise.



He thought of his children as he spoke, and of how
he’d feel if he were to discover one of them was a mutant. Could
he stand by and see them condemned? How fiercely would he resist? And
yet, it was only by the smallest yet most profound of miracles that the
world had survived at all. Did not the needs, the very survival, of the
many justify the sacrifice of a few?



Stryker’s indictment of mutantkind was damning, but
that’s what indictments were supposed to do, make the case for
conviction. McKenna would have felt better, though, if someone had been
able to mount a defense.



Maybe he needed one more bust on his desk, of Pontius Pilate. Or would old Ramses be better, condemning the Hebrew firstborn?



Movement caught his eye, but it was only his chief of staff pouring a glass of water.



“. . . in this time of adversity,” McKenna
read, “we are being offered a unique opportunity—a moment
to recognize a growing threat within our own population, and take a
unique role in the shaping of human events.”



He took a deliberate look at the pile of folders Stryker had given him.



“I have in my possession . . . evidence . . . of a
threat born in our own schools, and possibly even in our own homes. . .
.”



He jumped, just a little, as a surprise burst of thunder
rattled the room. Staffers moved quickly to the door and windows out of
camera view, to close the curtains. Unfortunately, the broadcast was
live; there was nothing to be done about the windows right behind him
as a sky that the Weather Channel had guaranteed would be clear
suddenly darkened with angry clouds from horizon to horizon. Lightning
flashed spectacularly and often, and the glass was pelted by a
torrential downpour of cold and driving rain. Nothing would be flying
today, not in the vicinity of Washington. If people had half a brain,
they wouldn’t even try driving.



“. . . a threat we must learn to recognize, in order to combat it . . .”



A display monitor was mounted to one side of the camera,
allowing him to see how he looked. But with another, even more daunting
burst of lightning and thunder like the wrath of God, that screen
abruptly dissolved into static.



“What the hell?” McKenna demanded, as
much a reaction to the atmospheric display outside as to what was
happening here. The lights had flickered as well. Just perfect, just
dandy, the most important speech of his administration gets skunked by
wild weather that just whistled up out of nowhere.



“What the hell?” he repeated, rising
slightly from his chair, because he’d just then noticed that the
red light atop the camera was no longer glowing. The camera was off, he
wasn’t broadcasting. He was about to call to the cameraman, only
to realize that the man was standing stock-still, as if he’d been
flash frozen.



He looked around the room and saw that the same applied
to every person present. They weren’t moving, not a one. And yet
it wasn’t time that had stopped, only the people—water was
still pouring from the pitcher Larry Abrahms was holding, overflowing
the cup and pouring over his leg to the floor.



McKenna grabbed for his phone but couldn’t find a
dial tone on any of the lines, not even the direct, secure, untappable
link to the National Military Command and Control Center in the
Pentagon. He pressed the crash button, to indicate an imminent threat
inside the Oval Office. By rights that should have set off alarms
throughout the building and brought armed agents at a dead run.



Nothing happened. In a room crowded with people, he was suddenly quite alone.



Something stirred over by the fireplace, but because of the bright TV lights right in his face he couldn’t quite make out what he was seeing until they stepped forward.



Six in all. Three men, three woman. One man in a
wheelchair, everyone but him clad in form-fitting leather that bore the
look of a uniform. He wore a suit, as conservatively respectable as
McKenna’s own.



“You,” he said to the man in the wheelchair,
immediately recognizing the familiar face from various news programs,
the networks’ go-to talking head when it came to the subject of
mutants. Stryker’s file had made the reason plain.



“Good afternoon, Mr. President,” said Charles Xavier.



“What are you doing here?” McKenna demanded, rising to his feet.



“We’re mutants,” Xavier said,
“but we aren’t here to harm you. Quite the contrary. My
name is Charles Xavier. These are the X-Men. Please sit down.”



“I’d rather stand.”



He had names for all of them, mainly from Stryker’s
files: the redhead, whom he’d met when she testified before
Congress, was Xavier’s associate, Dr. Jean Grey. The
silver-haired woman was one of the teachers at Xavier’s School,
Ororo Munroe. The younger girl had been referred to in Stryker’s
files only by a code name: Rogue. One of the men was also a mainstay of
the School, Scott Summers; the other, surprisingly, as McKenna
remembered from some particularly nasty CIA files, shared ops with, of
all organizations, the Canadian Special Intelligence Operations
Executive. He was Logan. He hung a little back and apart from the
others, his eyes never resting as they ceaselessly swept the room for
any signs of trouble. He was the team’s cover, just as Alicia
Vargas was for her President. If there was a problem, McKenna
understood that he’d be the one to deal with it.



Dr. Grey’s eyes were strangely milky, lacking iris
and pupil, and McKenna realized with a start that she must be blind.
She made a small gesture with a hand, and an imposing stack of files
floated through the air to McKenna’s desk, landing right beside
the folders already there.



“These are files from the private offices of William Stryker.”



“How did you get them?”



“Let’s just say I know a little girl who can walk through walls.”



“Where is Stryker?”



“Regrettably,” and Xavier sounded like he actually meant it, “no longer with us.”



“You killed him!”



“He was killed, yes. While trying to annihilate every person on this globe who possessed the mutator gene.”



McKenna’s eyes flashed to his left, to Alicia
Vargas, as he remembered how shockingly she’d collapsed, writhing
on the floor as if in the throes of a grand mal epileptic seizure,
blood gushing horribly from her mouth and nose and eyes and ears and
the pads of finger- and toe-nails, as though her whole body had
suddenly become obscenely porous. She hadn’t moved from her post,
but he could see that, unlike everyone else in the room, she was aware
of what was happening. She could hear Xavier and see him. She had her
hand on her gun, but she hadn’t yet drawn it. To his credit,
McKenna didn’t once doubt her loyalties. Mutant or no, she would
be true to her oath.



“I didn’t know,” he said. “My
God.” He shook his head, vainly trying to grasp the enormity of
Stryker’s ambition. “Do you think I would—do you
think I could—sanction such a thing?”



“If I did, sir,” Xavier told him, “we wouldn’t be here talking.”



McKenna flipped through the dossiers, speed-reading
enough to make him sag atop the desk, resting his full weight, plus
that of the office, plus that of the world, on hands and shoulders.
Atlas had nothing on him when it came to bearing burdens.



“I’ve never . . . I’ve never seen this information.”



“I know,” Xavier said quietly.



McKenna glared up at him from lowered brows.



“But I don’t respond well to threats.”



“This is not a threat, Mr. President, of any kind.
This is an offer.” He rolled forward in his chair and indicated
the bust of John Kennedy. “I remember those days, as you do, and
the fear that came with them, that through no fault or action of our
own, the world would end. It wouldn’t even be a matter of
someone’s choice. It could just as easily happen as a
mistake.”



McKenna nodded, thinking of how he’d helped his
father dig a bomb shelter in the backyard and how utterly futile that
shelter would have been if the worst came about.



“You and I, Mr. President,” Xavier continued,
“and the people we represent have had a taste of our own version
of doomsday. How close did we all come to the abyss? And what have we
learned from that terrible experience? John Kennedy and Nikita
Khrushchev found a way to lay the foundation for a lasting peace
between their two nations—or at least a way to lessen the
possibility of outright war. Can we not try to do the same?



“I realize”—he indicated the files
Stryker had provided—“you may have information about me.
About my school. About our people. Grown mutants like me, like the
X-Men, like . . . Magneto, are but a comparative handful. Most mutants
are children, and what are children but the promise of the future made
flesh? What shall we promise our posterity, sir? A world based on hate
and fear, whose ultimate outcome is a genetic Civil War that will
likely be the death of us all? Or can we find a better way?



“I’m willing to trust you, Mr. President, if you’re willing to return the favor.



“As we both have seen firsthand, there are forces
in this world, mutant and nonmutant alike, who believe that a war is
coming. That it is inevitable. You’ll see from these files how
diligently some have worked over the years to start one.



“If we wish to preserve the peace, to guarantee our posterity, we must work together. Do you understand?”



McKenna looked at his chief of staff. The pitcher was
empty, the flow of water reduced to a trickle of drops. Larry was such
a fashion plate, he was sure to go totally berserk when he discovered
his sodden trousers and ruined shoes.



Then he looked back at Alicia Vargas. There was such a
look of longing, and apprehension, in her eyes that—as father and
grandfather both—he wanted to take her in his arms and reassure
her that there really was no bogeyman in the world, nothing she need
ever fear, save as Franklin Roosevelt warned, fear itself.



“Yes,” the President said, after a long pause for thought. “I think I do.”



He held out his hand across the desk, and from his chair,
Xavier took it. He had a strong grip with calluses that told McKenna
that, like himself, here was a man who liked to work with his hands.
Clearly the man was a good teacher, and George McKenna hoped he
wasn’t too old and too set in his ways to learn.



“I’m glad,” Xavier told him. “We are here to stay, Mr. President. The next move is yours.”



McKenna nodded—and wasn’t surprised to see, when he looked up a moment later, that Xavier and his X-Men were gone.



He turned to the window and saw that the storm was
passing. Just as in the “Pastoral” sequence of
Disney’s original Fantasia, the gods of thunder and
lightning, having had their fun, were moving on, leaving a bright and
beautiful day in their wake. He wondered which of
Xavier’s—what had he called them?—X-Men was
responsible, and for no reason he could articulate, fixed on the image
of the black woman, Ororo Munroe, tall as he was, with the most
incredible blue eyes and hair of burnished silver.



Alicia coughed, ever so gently.



Larry Abrahms yowled with fury, just as McKenna expected, which made the President smile.



Immediately in the room, there was a ripple of surprise
and agitation. As far as anyone else was concerned, the President had
been making his speech and then—presto!—suddenly he was
standing where he’d been sitting, and everything was in a small
kind of chaos.



McKenna took his seat and waited for a semblance of order
to be restored, a matter of some hurried and small-voiced exchanges
between the camera crew and whoever was handling the network feeds. The
commentators and anchors had evidently been vamping like crazy since
the signal was lost.



Nobody noticed the new pile of folders on the desk, and
as McKenna took his chair, awaiting his cue to continue, he looked from
one to the other.



The stage manager held up five fingers, then quickly
folded them one by one into a fist. At the last, the red light above
the camera blinked on again, and the Oval Office was once more live and
broadcasting.



At first George McKenna didn’t say a word, a
silence that began to make those watching start to feel distinctly
nervous, unaware that he was marshaling thoughts and arguments and
rewriting frantically in his head. Nobody understood the quirky,
self-deprecating smile he made, or the look that accompanied it toward
the bust of Lincoln. Nobody, save perhaps Charles Xavier, caught the
wayward thought that came to him then: At least you had a train
ride and the back of an envelope handy when you wrote the Gettysburg
Address; me, I’ve got to wing this! Extempore and live to the
whole damn country !



But he had no doubts. He knew now what he wanted to say,
and as with all such moments, this was something best said from the
heart and from the soul.



Taking the files Xavier had given him, McKenna placed
them on top of Stryker’s and, looking straight into the camera,
and into the homes and offices of the American people and, he prayed,
especially into their hearts, the President of the United States began
to speak.






Along Pennsylvania Avenue, tourists and locals began
hesitantly to venture once more out of doors, commenting to one another
about the downpour and collectively grumping about the miserable state
of weather forecasting.



A family from Utah gathered on the grass of Lafayette
Square for what they figured was a spectacular Kodak moment, with the
White House as a backdrop and not another pedestrian in sight to mar
the photo. Dad gave everyone their cue, they all said,
“Cheeeeese,” with grins galore, he clicked the shutter . .
.



. . . and nobody moved. Not here, not anywhere within a
radius of blocks. Flags flapped in the crisp autumn breeze, fountains
burbled, birds fluttered through the air. All the mechanical elements
of life in the nation’s capital functioned as they were supposed
to. But none of the people noticed.



Then, apparently out of nowhere, a sleek ebony aircraft
rose into the sky from the helicopter landing stage on the South Lawn
of the White House. The Blackbird held position for a moment above the executive mansion, then rocketed silently away.



In its wake, Washington woke up and continued with the
normal course of what had started as a normal day. Only a few would
ever know the truth, of how a handful of heroes had stood between the
world and those who would leave it a wasteland, of how their struggle
would inspire a leader to achieve greatness and an immortality all his
own, to rival those of the predecessors he so admired.



Decent people, striving to do the right thing. That’s all it takes to save the world.



Some call themselves human, others mutant.



And some of those mutants are the X-Men.



Thanks to them, their world has a future.



With their help, that future may be glorious indeed.





 






Acknowledgments




Thanks to Stan Lee & Jack Kirby, for coming up with
the concept in the first place; to Len Wein & Dave Cockrum, for
revamping it and then handing over the writing reins to a young punk
who probably didn’t know any better; to Louise Simonson &
Brent Eric Anderson, for “God Loves, Man Kills”; to Eleanor
Wood, for reasons that need no explanation; to Betsy Mitchell, for
having faith; and Steve Saffel, for keeping both book and writer
superbly on-track. Sometimes, it takes a “village” to write
a book, and for that I am extremely grateful.





 






Also available from Del Rey Books:



X-MEN by Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith



SPIDER-MAN by Peter David



HULK by Peter David





 






A Del Rey® Book



Published by The Ballantine Publishing Group



TM & copyright © 2003 by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.








All rights reserved under International and Pan-American
Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine
Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and
simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.






Del Rey is a registered trademark and the Del Rey colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.






X-MEN character likenesses: TM and copyright © 2003 by Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved.






www.delreydigital.com





e-ISBN 0-345-46197-5





v1.0



eBook Info

Identifier:
ebook:guid-6ee87e609abd4b88a67e9ddb318c6003

Identifier:
Rusc_0345466519

Title:
X-Men; X-Men 2

Creator:
Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith; Chris Claremont

Language:
en

Identifier:
0345466519

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