Friday, October 12, 2012

No Ordinary World, final.



14


Lex Luthor leaned against a exterior stage wall, his bent posture communicating that he was not himself. Puffs of hot air escaped his mouth, a thick coat layering his body and wrapped around him like a protective blanket.

It was cold.

Laying at his feet was the reporter he hired only days before to reprise a role his father had condemned. It took Lionel Luthor almost thirty years to build these walls, this wall as Lex leaned against it. And after a sum of only weeks, Lionel's son had brought it all down. With the help of her, of course.

Chloe, face bruised and hair frayed, looked up at him from her knees. But even through the discoloration of her blue cheeks and raw lips, she was still a beauty. It was a different type of beauty Lex had seldom crossed. There wasn't a stitch of make up left on her face, tears and rain washing all that away. She didn't need that. And it wasn't an admired appearance one was born with. This was something cultivated, grown and kindled like an internal flame. This beauty was inside of her, and had bloomed since Lex  last laid eyes on her. She appeared stronger on her knees than she did the first day she walked into his office. The woman had been demanding then, and even after all he had put her through, she was demanding something from him now.

Her hair, light yellow, like a fabricated halo.

What was she saying to him? he watched her lips move succinctly even though he was sure they stung from where their crevasses bled. He detested what those lips could do if he ever let her out. He wanted to shut them, for good. And she knew it. She had to have known it. But she was saying those words anyway. She was stronger than him somehow, and they both knew it.

"You shouldn't be afraid of his strength..."Chloe warned, dried tears on the sides of her cheeks that became crystals, "His courage... its more powerful than all of us. You can't kill him."

Lex leaned towards her, his cold, dialated eyes burying her deeper into the ground.  What she had was hope. Even after they dragged her from the stage and back here where the only light was from a heat lamp. She held onto hope. For Clark. For herself. And for everything that was outside of this place.

Lex was very careful with his words. He was never positive he could ever terminate Clark, but she didn't need to know that. She didn't know, because as far as Lex could read behind that hope in her hazel eyes, there was also fear.

"I don't have to kill him," Lex explained, "I only have to kill his spirit."

Lex stared down at her, watching as her pretty lips quivered between words. He looked down at them, thinking how Clark loved her. He would kill that too.

She no longer spoke about statistical data or the scientific value of the project. That was all gone. The only value left, was whether or not he survived. If they all survived.

"Can't you see that we need him?" Chloe plead, "His life, stands for our future."

He looked at her again, seeing the love for him, in her eyes.

  There was nothing to be done about that...

"Mr. Luthor..."

The voice came from within a small passageway behind stage, one of the few remaining sections that hadn't been lost in the fire and flooding.

A shiver passed through Lex, his shoulders wriggling in discomfort. The weather conditions had worsened since the generators died. There was no controlling the air temperature, the moisture, and they experienced a major malfunction with the rain fall last night...

Smallville had been hell, and then it froze over. And nearly everyone had evacuated the premises after that.

Lex turned towards the boy who had walked up from nowhere. He looked familiar to Lex, but that wasn't important. Lex lost interest and realized the reporter had fallen silent, uncharacteristic. He glanced over his shoulder and saw how her face was turned away, pressed into the ground. When had that happened?

"Mr. Luthor," the stage boy said again, his eyes wandering across the still form of Chloe's body laying at Lex's feet. Perhaps he was too young to understand, or maybe his news was just more important at the time, "there's word from outside. There are tanks outside. Big, army tanks!"

Lex leaned against one of the props, "Oh yea? What do they want? A show? A grand finale?"

The boy, the boy who had delivered newspapers to Clark's door, Lex suddenly remembered, looked at Lex, and very solemly said, "they want to kill him, Mr. Luthor."

Lex only nodded, sick of having people looking at him that way, and then straightened as if preparing for war, "So do I."

Lex placed his hand upon the cold of the stage door, and wrapped his coat up to his chin. He knew what they would say tomorrow morning in the papers, he knew they would either rejoice or curse his name. They would say Lex Luthor was a maniacal tyrant that destroyed his father's name, work, and dynasty. But what they didn't know, was the lies Lionel Luthor had built that dynasty on.

That the world turned farther away from its dying son.

That the world itself, was dying. And that Lionel Luthor had built his dream world, a picturesque home for a son that was not his own. And to think that the world was depending on a son that was not theirs, to rely on his fate as if twined with their own...

Lex grew up watching the world welcome Clark into their homes with cautious arms. They nurtured him, groomed him to become something he would never be.

The day the world looked to an outsider for help, was the day humanity lost faith in themselves. Lex was going to restore their faith, and he was going to do it with his own hands.

Lex wasn't an actor, but as he crossed the threshold of the stage door and pressed it open, the stale light behind it hit his face, blinding him like theater lights. Suddenly, and strangely, Lex felt a lightness in his stomach. Nerves.

Perhaps he couldn't kill Clark. And what if he didn't? Would it be his life?


Lex entered the staged realm, cracking the door open unleashing the  blinding, white light that bounced  to his retinas and forced him to close his eyes. Flood lights played havoc with the sheen ice that had formed over the soggy terrain. Everything was a shade of gray, or crystallized version of itself. There was no color. There was no sun. A permanent winter thrown across Smallville forever.

Paper white, paper thin skies. The sky dome that was once an array of illuminating chroma panels were all dead, denied of power and life. It's wrinkled state resembled wall paper, aged and torn by neglect and fire.

Walls in a abandoned home.

There was a tear in the sky.


All was quiet in Smallville.

The rains had stopped, once the fire had, and now there was only a fine mist of smoke rising above the snow.

Snow.

And ice.

Without power, and with the gaping hole in the dome, controlling the temperatures was impossible. And so the snow drifted inward, along with the chilling wind from the outside. The Earth had been in long arctic cycle now, and in its third decade.

Lex saw Clark Kent emerge from a hill of snow in the distance, his carbon crusted jacket still red enough to pin point in the storm of white.




**


It wasn't real, Clark muttered to himself, trying to understand it all.

His eyes longed upward at the tear in the sky. So fragile, and lost like a sheet of paper blown upward, and stayed there. He could see the crispness of a color he hadn't known before. Could it have been, blue?

For so long, Clark had thought his home had been too small.. this town, too small. Now he feared the world was too small. He looked up at the hole in the sky. Light danced beyond it, a blue light. Was he staring at a portal, an opening to somewhere else? Was that where she had gone? And how would he get there?

Clark looked down at the axe in his hands, something he had borrowed from the fire station. Of course, he had borrowed other things, like the engine and a few hundred gallons of fuel. All of it was parked behind the barn and strewn towards the cellar where Clark was now. If Martha were there, she would have raised cane about the mess.

But Martha wasn't there. Neither was Lois.

They weren't real, she promised. And vanished like waking from a dream. She had never lied to him, but he had hoped she was still here. He hoped, she was real, and somewhere out there.

Clark swung his upper body with the axe, and slammed its force into one of the supports of the cellar in one mighty blow. He reaped the earth, and planks of the cellar ceiling like harvesting a golden crop, or digging a large grave. Either way, Clark worked until he thought it might have been sundown. But the smoldering, black ball laying in the distance told him he would never see another sunset.

Clark unearthed the cellar, and shed light on the large, tarped object that lay hidden underneath. Today was as good a time as any.

Quickly, he siphoned the fuel from the fire engine's tank and ran a line from it down to the cellar...

That's when he saw it.

A man.

No ordinary man, and certainly no one he had ever seen before.

 "You're Lex Luthor."

The man watched him, dressed as if he were expecting this sudden winter. He certainly hadn't expected Clark to know his name.  "And how would you know who I am?"

"I know everyone in this town," Clark replied, "I know everyone's face, except yours. You're not from here. I wasn't sure how long it would take to find the man that matched the name... but now that I see you here, I know, that you're him."

Lex narrowed his gaze, "You know my name, you know my face. But do you know who I really am? Or who you are?"

"My name is Clark Kent," his eyes steadied like a calm, blue ocean, "and you're the man who tried to destroy me."

Lex curled his lip, "You are the man who almost destroyed the world, Clark.. Do you want to know how?"

Clark blinked, but said nothing. He looked at his feet, and then at the torn sky.

Blue.

 This was the final test.

"Your world here," Lex waved at the stage around them, "it almost promised my world a better future. A future with the likes of you in it. But there is no world for us there. Do you know why? Because relying on a  man like  you is about as reckless as soaring into the Sun."

 "Do you know where Chloe is?" Clark answered.

Lex paused, "What? Is that all you have to say?"

 This was the final test.

 Lex faced Clark, ten meters away. He reveled in the way Clark's nostrils flared in impatience and anger. He was beginning to understand now. Consciously or not, Clark understood what this meant.

"Chloe!" Clark yelled, "Where is she?"

Lex's nostrils flared larger with the sharp odor of fuel in the air, "Is that all you care about?"

Clark frowned, his chest rising higher and harder, "What am I supposed to care about when everything is gone?"

He watched as Clark turned from him and walked towards the revived prop plane he had watched him tow from the cellar. Lex was unaware of its presence on the Kent farm, but given the lack of surveillance in the last days, he supposed Clark had scavenged it from somewhere. It's wings were of different parts, but they were elongated like a glider, and glinted in the reflected white light. It hardly looked like a plane more than it looked like scraps. It wouldn't fly. It couldn't.

Clark couldn't fly.

Clark's hand took hold of the propellers in his two hands.

"What's the matter with you," Lex shouted suddenly, "Don't you want to face the man who took her away from you?" The anger he felt was directly more at himself than towards Clark. Clark made no moves against him, no act of aggression. It wasn't normal, or human...

It was a brief moment before Clark turned around, but when he did, he saw the glint of Lex's pistol aimed at him.

Clark froze, hands in the air, but his eyes looked warningly at the other.

"You wont make it out of Smallville, Clark." Lex said, looking at him through the sights, "You were never meant to leave."

Fuel spilled from Clark's siphon tube and onto the ground.

The cold breeze from above mixed with the fuel and spread the mixture around them. The smell, made both men tear.

"Don't fire, " Clark warned, and then grabbed the axe laying in the ice.

Lex tightened his grip and took a step back. This was what he wanted, wasn't it? For Clark to confront him like any red blooded man. But as Clark moved towards him, he felt the vibrations over the ice with ever heavy foot fall of Clark's boots. Clark was no longer an image in a screen. He was no longer a subject in an experiment or a summary of numbers on a spreadsheet.

Clark was real.

Clark Kent was real, and he was moving towards him with an axe.

Lex stumbled backwards.

This was the final test.

Lex squeezed his finger against the trigger, and as he did he saw Clark's eyes widen and then--

There was an explosion, small at first, a tiny spark at the end of Lex's specialized weapon. A small combustion contained within the muzzle of a pistol. The green tinted round spiraled from its long mouth and rocketed towards Clark's direction.

But in that moment, the small, contained combustion met with the furl of fuel vapors in the air. The mixture was uneven, but enough to feed the flame long enough for it to become out of control.

The blast send Lex flying backwards, with a wave of fire spreading out like sunrays.

Clark took cover in the exposed cellar, his body shielded by his father's old plane.

Clark winced, his hand gaining purchase against the cold metal of its wings. Blood trickled down his sleeve and left a bloody imprint. That's when he knew.

Clark emerged from the cellar and saw the scorch marks on the ground. The explosion neutralized the fuel in the air, and seemed to neutralize Lex as well. Clark found him laying flat on his back in the snow. Face burned and blistered, and clothes burned away down to his flesh. Whatever hair Lex had before, it was definitely gone now.

Clark knelt down to him, and took a handful of snow and pressed it into Lex's chest to stop the burning. It was rudimentary, but it was something. He saw Lex open his eyes, and one of his arms swat Clark's away.

"Don't.. help me," Lex coughed.

"You'll die like this."

Lex coughed again, "I wonder which will be first."

Clark blinked, and then should down at his chest. His wound was dark, and wet. The coldness of the outside was slowly seeping into his body. He knew.

"Why don't you... just kill me?"

Clark looked at Lex as he panted in the snow, "Killing you wouldn't bring her back."

Lex flicked his eyes, the swelling constricting them, "You fool! She's not real. She doesn't exist."

Clark swallowed down a sense of nausea, fighting if it were true. He bit down his doubts, and turned away from the pain in his chest. His shirt, soaked with the evidence.  "Guess I'll have to find out for myself."

Lex watched as he left him and made for Jonathan Kent's old prop plane, waiting for him in the distance. Above them was the gaping hole in the sky, a blue tear, a painfully beautiful color that had been absent from this world.

Lex laid helpless in the smoldering earth, his fingerings clutching at the snow as he watched Clark spin the propellers, once, twice...

The engine hummed to life, a miracle.

"They're waiting for you.." Lex mumbled, knowing that Clark could not hear him over the sound of the engine, "They're waiting for you Clark Kent."

Clark graced the exterior of the plane, with his fingertips, a faint trail of blood smearing across the metal. He climbed into the cock pit of his father's plane, and began his taxing across the snow. His body felt light, elated, his mind with it in the sky. He anticipated the wings taking on air, for his feet to finally be off the ground. He had waited for the moment since he was born. He couldn't remember that far, but he could feel that this was what he was born to do.

As he worked the instruments and changed the degrees of his rear flaps, he looked over at the small brown box he had ordered from Metropolis weeks ago. Slowly, he opened it and revealed a snow globe of the city. A futuristic place, a place of Tomorrows and the place where he was going.

She was there, he knew it in spirit. And no matter how much other men promised that his ideals were foolish and unreal, he knew that all his life that he loved her.

That was real.

Clark's body felt lighter now, the center of gravity falling away as the wheels departed the earth and he felt the plane fight the forces that kept it grounded for so long. His hands felt weak as he squeezed the yoke, pulling back higher and higher...

He looked down briefly at Smallville, a white mass now. He could barely see the barn, the house, and the black sun resting in the field. They were small. Gone, forever.

Instead, Clark focused his eyes ahead. He saw the blinding light above him. He imagined it from some greater world than his own, a powerful force that he desperately wanted to see. He could feel its warmth even through the plane's windows, his chest rising with every labor breath he had left.

Clark smiled, the blue turning deeper, and richer... the tear in the sky becoming wider and then--


And then Lex closed his eyes for the last time. At the fine, white smoke, in a stream above the sky, in the air, drifting away.





























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4 comments:

  1. I've certainly got mixed feelings about this chapter, both because it's the last one of the story and because it's not the uplifting/happy ending I was hoping for. I feel we've been left with more questions than answers, and that doesn't sit all that well with me. I understand that it's not reasonable to expect all our questions to be answered, but it feels like the answers we got only led to more questions.
    Case in point, the world outside of SV was in the grips of a decades-long ice age? I'll admit that's a great twist, but I would've like to have seen more of the outside world or gotten an explanation as to how and why the earth was in an ice age. I mean, how did humanity manage to survive, and what was life like outside of SV? Was everyone constantly inside of a man-made structure? What did everyone do for food? Living conditions aside, how was Clark supposed to save humanity from an ice age? For that matter, why would Lionel keep Clark locked away in a fake world for so long? I mean, according to Lex, SV was supposed to prepare Clark to save the world, but how? Clark had no idea what the real world was like, and he had absolutely no idea that he wasn't human or that he possessed extraordinary powers, let alone how to utilize them.
    And what happened to Chloe? From the sound of it, she may have been beaten by Lex, but it also sounds like she died, most likely from exposure to the cold. If that's the case, I'm extremely upset and heartbroken. I had hoped that she would've been by Clark's side as he ventured outside of SV for the first time, that she would've helped him embrace his destiny and even shared in it as his wife.
    My disappointment with Chloe's fate aside, I love that she was pleading with Lex for Clark's life, trying to convince Lex that Clark was earth's only hope, that he should be embraced for what he could do to help, not feared for his potential to destroy them all. I also enjoyed the fact that Lex realized that Chloe was stronger than him, even as she begged for him to spare Clark's life. I don't think Lex ever really experienced or witnessed the kind of strength, love, devotion and beauty that possessed, and I think he both envied and despised Chloe because of it.

    **more to follow**

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  2. I'm also curious as to why the military would come to SV in order to kill Clark. I mean, it seems the whole world knew about Clark, who and what he was, that he had the potential to save the world, so why would they want to destroy their only hope for salvation? Seems counter-intuitive if you ask me, but fear has a way of blinding you and making you do things that aren't in your best interests.

    I'm curious, how did Chloe get Clark off the mountain? Last we saw, Clark was dying, and Chloe promised to save him. Clearly, they both got off the mountain, but they did it separately, otherwise Clark would've been with Chloe as she pleaded with Lex for Clark's life.

    I'm also curious as to why Clark was walking around at normal speed and using an ax to gain entry to the storm cellar. Were his powers not working, or did he simply forget that he had them and/or not know how to use them? I get that the world was experiencing an ice age and that most of SV's dome was intact and therefore blocking the sun's radiation, but his powers should've still been active. Speaking of his powers, why didn't he use them to evade Lex's kryptonite bullet? He could've easily side-stepped the bullet, unless he didn't know how to control his speed. Also, why didn't he use his power of flight instead of the homemade airplane to escape from SV?

    Also, did Clark actually make it out of SV? If he did, did he survive his gunshot wound? Did the sun's radiation heal him, or was the bullet still lodged in his chest? Perhaps those tanks on the ground shot him down? I sincerely hope he made it out alive and healed from his wound, but even if he did, I'm surprised he just left Chloe behind. She may have been dead, but I would've thought that Clark would've looked for her, made certain one way or the other of her fate. After all, he really and truly loved her, and she was the only person who ever truly loved him and never lied to him or treated him like a freak or experiment. Granted, after getting shot he didn't have a lot of time, but I still expected him to refuse to leave without Chloe.

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  3. Anyway, I loved the descriptiveness you used to detail what became of SV, how it looked, literally, like a shell of its former self and how it was crumbling before Lex's eyes. I also love the encounter between Clark and Lex. I especially love Clark's calm and measured response to Lex and everything Lex said and did. I could tell how much Lex hated Clark, was frustrated by Clark's lack of anger and hatred toward him despite the fact that he was responsible for keeping Clark locked in a prison and taking the woman he loves from him. It felt like Lex was trying to prove, to himself at least, that Clark was dangerous and needed to be destroyed, but Clark didn't oblige him, which made Lex hate him even more. I could really feel Lex's hatred for Clark when Clark tried to help him after he'd shot Clark and been horribly burned in the process. I don't think Lex could comprehend how anyone could be so caring and compassionate in the face of the evil that had been done to him. Lex wanted to prove that humanity didn't need Clark, that Clark wasn't anything special, but all Clark succeeded in doing was prove that Clark was indeed unique and special and definitely nothing to be feared.

    I really loved the snow globe of Metropolis and Clark's longing to go there because he knew he'd find Chloe there, in spirit at least. I also loved that Clark had always loved Chloe, that she and his love for her were the only true things in his life and that he'd loved her from the moment he met her. It was the one bright spot in an otherwise sad and kinda depressing ending.

    All in all, this is a great story. Sure it's had its ups and downs, but it's unique, inventive and highly entertaining. Stylistically, you've done remarkable things, including in this final chapter. The mood you created throughout the story was intense and palpable and really conveyed the emotions of the differing characters, particularly Chloe, Clark and Lex. I also love the descriptiveness and detail you used while talking about SV itself, particularly how it changed as events unfolded. And, much as I wish we'd gotten a happy ending, the ending we did get had a very dreamlike quality to it, particularly as Lex watched Clark fly away as the life slowly drained from both of them. Again, the ending wasn't what I was expecting or hoping for, but I think it worked with your writing style and fit the story. I really wish we could see more of this, but all good things must come to an end.

    Sorry for jumping all over the place with my review, but I had a lot of conflicting emotions and a lot of thoughts about what we did and didn't get in this ending. Plus, when I've got a lot to say, I tend to ramble. ;-)

    I can't thank you enough for writing this magnificent story and for extending and finishing it. For a while, I was kinda worried that you may not complete this or that it would end before it's time. You're a fantastic writer, Elliott, and I'm so glad that you're a Chlarker, because Chlark deserves the kind of love, caring and genius you put into your work. Thank you, Elliott!!!!! :-)

    PS - Here's hoping that Go By is the next fic on the list to get finished. ;-)

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    Replies
    1. I needed to take some time to reflect on your comments, and I feel guilty for not following up on previous comments so far. I especially feel the need to reply, since this story is finally completed.

      On the topic of the state of Earth and its ice age, I tried to complete the circle of helplessness Clark felt throughout the story, so much out of his control and without him knowing so. What if we were reminded how Earth is out of our control? We take for granted that he have a semi-healthy star warming us right now, but any century or decade that could change. Take, for instance, Clark's homeworld. Krypton ended as an ice planet, so to see the breaking of Smallville's bubble, and seeing the bitter edges of real Earth, was my attempt of foreshadowing/paralleling.

      The importance of Clark Kent to the rest of the world and its survival.. I could get really detailed, but knowing that Clark was an alien and with alien technology that survived a solar collapse would be beneficial to us in studying. That and Clark's super body. We would be defensive about integrating a superior, alien being into our society so openly, especially if this wasn't our first attempt.

      So, like any potential weapon, we would try to control it. Physically, mentally, psychologically...


      On the topic of Chloe's exit, I left her in an open ended situation.. Yes, in our last scene with her she is begging for reason, for hope. I think she was a true advocate for what human compassion was, inside of the project. But, she was pleading with Lex Luthor. I don't think Lex Luthor would let Chloe simply leave, but I thought at the end, his lapse of time and reasoning felt on par. He looks over at Chloe after he realizes she had become silent. Unanimated, and still. Turned off, as if he turned her off. But he doesn't remember having the power, or using his power to do so. I do believe he realized at the end, that her connection to Clark, and to hope, would prevail through any strength he used to pry it apart.

      And on the topic of Clark surviving, well... I wouldn't have written this story to be a pessimist and set us all for doomed ending. But I do believe that worlds have cyclical beginnings and ending. When I wrote Clark finally escaping through this cage men had built around him, and to FLY, from it, symbolically since the show never let him until it was too late, I felt it was the start to another beginning. To a different world, even if the world Clark was escaping to was even more challenging than the one he knew.

      Clark had hope, and a will of steel. And most importantly, he had a lot of heart.

      Which brings me back to the cross over I leaned on heavily on this story. The Truman Show. Truman had so many great qualities of man that we rarely see today. It's a great story about breaking one's boundaries, and the limitations set on you by others, finding yourself, and finding what's real, what's worth risking everything.

      I recommend it to everyone.

      And thanks :)



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