Scion (aka John Jacob Astor VIII)

On the cold, clear night of 14 April 1912, at 23:40, the RMS Titanic struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic as she neared the end of her maiden voyage. Two hours and 40 minutes later the great ship took her final plunge to the bottom of the sea. Less than two hours after that the RMS Carpathia arrived to begin rescuing the few survivors, adrift in lifeboats. But one of those lifeboats, Lifeboat No. 4, was never found and for a long time its fate remained one of the great mysteries of that tragic night to remember.

One of the things that so captured the public’s fascination concerning the vanishing of Lifeboat 4 was the fact that aboard her were Col. John Jacob Astor IV and his young wife Madeleine Talmage Astor (neé Force), one of the wealthiest couples in the world at the time. Along with with Mrs. Astor’s maid Rosalie Bidois and nurse Caroline Louise Endres, the famous couple escaped the doomed ship, but according to eyewitness reports it was a near thing. Second Officer Lightoller at first refused to let Col. Astor board the boat, relenting only at the last minute under the piteous pleas of the the man’s 5-months pregnant wife. Lightoller drew the line at the valet, Victor Robbins, however – Col. Astor was prepared to rejoin his man aboard the doomed ship, but between his wife’s urging and Robbin’s insistence, he remained, reluctantly, aboard the lifeboat… and vanished with the 40-odd other occupants less than two hours later. It would be 91 years before the world learned the truth of that fateful night…

–––––––––––––––––––––––– ♦ ♦ ♦ ––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Less than an hour after the great ocean liner took her final plunge, Lifeboat 4 was drifting some way apart from the other boats. It was a cold, clear night, and the stars shone sharply above them and reflected brightly in the glass-smooth waters around them, as the cries and pleas for help of those in the water slowly faded into silence. They had pulled half a dozen people from the freezing waters in the first few minutes, but it was now clear that there were no more souls to be saved.

Nonetheless, Col. Astor continued to peer into the night, and strained to hear anything that might be a living person. But he whirled around at the sudden, terrified shrieks of many of the women, and a horrified cry from Second Officer Lightoller, positioned at the opposite end of the boat, and like the colonel staring into the  night “Dear God, it’s a sea monster!” the young officer cried, pointing aft.

Out of the smooth waters a great dark shape was rising, close behind them and coming on at speed. Like a great sea beast indeed, it loomed over them, and an immense mouth gaped open as if to swallow the boat whole! After an instant of near heart-stopping shock Col. Astor, at least, recognized that it was not a living creature at all.

”Look closer,” he called out, his firm, authoritative voice demanding calm. “It’s merely a craft of some sort… perhaps a submersible boat such as Mr. Verne has written about! Let us not panic!”

Calming and reassuring Astor’s words might have been, but it was a bit much to ask. Even he felt a moment’s trepidation, and the terrified passengers shrieked again and cringed away from the looming apparition as its gaping black maw swallowed the lifeboat whole. When nothing else happened immediately, beyond the total  darkness which now engulfed the lifeboat and its 43 occupants, the screams soon faded to quiet sobs and muttered questions. Then electric lights flared to life all around them, and the shadowy figures of men could be seen beyond the glare, moving on a catwalk some feet above, which seemed to ring them.

“You have nothing to fear, my friends,” a deep, booming voice above them called out, speaking English, but with a strange, not immediately identifiable accent. Astor thought it sounded like something between Greek and Russian, although clearly not either, and had an odd mechanical quality to it.  The silhouetted shape of the voice’s owner, positioned between two of the great light sources above them, was large and thickset, though the colonel could make out few details… wait, was that a glass helmet around the man’s head?

”You are now the honored guests of the Imperial Realm of Great Atlantis,” the voice went on, and the man leaned forward to grip the railing in front of him. Now the light illuminated his head and upper body, and Astor could see that he indeed wore a glass helmet – and that it was filled with water! “We have saved you from a fate far worse than death, surface dwellers, and I am only sorry we could not save more of your people this terrible night.

”But there will be time for explanations later… and for mourning. For now, let us get you out of that boat, dried, warmed, and fed. Once that is accomplished, and you are all made comfortable, I will answer all your questions.”

As the commanding figure had been speaking the water had been draining away around them, and now the lifeboat was resting, tilted to port, on a glistening floor of black metal. More light poured out from a large doorway  behind them, and a dozen men in strange, scaled suits of some body-hugging silver material approached. Each of these men also wore bowl-like helmets on their heads, completely filled with water…

“Which rather lends credence to their claims of being citizens of the fabled underwater city of lost Atlantis,” Col. Astor murmured quietly to his wife as he helped her over the side of the boat. She only shook her head in shocked and frightened bewilderment.

Once the Titanic survivors had indeed been warmed and fed, in a largish chamber  dominated by a curving glass wall that showed black ocean beyond, the commander of the strange vessel introduced himself in his strangely accented English.

“I am Thar Holthorus, a scientist and explorer of Great Atlantis.” His manner was assured, his presence and deep voice commanding and confident, even through the mechanical speakers which allowed his watery speech to be heard by the air breather guests. “I assure you again, you are all safe now, and will remain so as long as it is within my power to assure it. But the news I must bear now to you is not at all good… for I must tell you of a terrible foe who even now threatens us all.”

He then spoke for some time, telling the surface dwellers of the ancient enemy of humankind, the Saurians, the fabled Serpent People of Lemuria. These fiendish, evil creatures had, this very day, launched a massive and long-planned attack on the major lands of the surface world, of which the sinking of all ships at sea was but a part.

“Even now great armadas, long prepared, are assaulting the great cities of the surface world,” he said sadly. “While you ate, we have had reports that New York is burning, as are New Atlantis and Boston.

Once the shock and anger had died down amongst his audience, the Atlantean scientist (“Thar” was apparently a title, much like “doctor” or “professor”) explained that his ship had been on a scientific study of the area when they learned of the attack on the Titanic, and had rushed to render wait aid they could. “Unfortunately, we are but a small science vessel, ill-equipped to fight the Serpent People’s war ships. We saved what we could…”

“We return now to an outpost, far from the heart of our realm, and we offer you, out drylander cousins to join us there.”

”But why go to some outpost?” Colonel Astor spoke up. “Why not go straight to Atlantis itself, which surely must be much safer than a small outpost in your hinterlands?”

”Ah, I wish that were so,” Thar Holthorus sighed. “Sadly, once the surface cities are fully subdued, and your peoples enslaved, the Saurians will quickly turn their slavering jaws on their oldest, and most hated enemy, Atlantis herself. It will take some weeks, no doubt, but I greatly fear the capital, and our other major population centers, will eventually become targets.

“You see, the one great advantage those savages have over the people of my land is their ability to breath in both the oceans and on the dry land. Once they have the resources of the surface world at their command… as primitive as your industry may be in comparison to ours, its scale is more vast, by an order of magnitude, than that of Atlantis. When combined with the Saurian technologies, and other forces they wield, we will be… hard pressed.

”But all is not yet lost, and there remains great hope amongst us. It may be that our rescue of you will prove fortuitous, my new friends, and not just for yourselves. It is possible that you yourselves may be the key to depriving the Serpent People of their major advantage – for if Atlanteans can discover a way to breath in the surface air again, as well as under the waves, we can take the fight to them!”

Most of the others seemed to absorb this last statement without any real concern, but Colonel Astor found himself unsettled by the implications. Surely the man couldn’t mean that they intended to experiment on the rescued “drylanders,” could he? No doubt there was a more benign meaning to his words, he assured himself… he suppressed the feeling of uneasiness as an artifact of his exhaustion and stress.

Over the next several days the Atlanteans faithfully reported to the survivors what news their wireless intercepts could provide… Washington, D.C. overrun, much of the Eastern seaboard in flames, slaver parties of Serpent People rounding up humans and marching them away in chains… Europe overrun, only England holding out… then a report that London had fallen, destroyed in a single tremendous ball of fire…

By the time they reached their refuge, even the most skeptical were convinced, and very grateful to have been spared such a fate. They gladly accepted the offer of succor offered by Thar Holthorus and his crew. Their new home turned out to be a remote scientific outpost called Kenyon’s Reef, far from the centers of Atlantean civilization. Thar Holthorus explained, as they disembarked into a section already sealed off from the water, that some of their equipment and techniques required a dry environment, making it much easier to quickly accommodate the atmospheric requirements of their new friends.

Assured that the Atlanteans would find a way to return them home once the war was over, most of the survivors began to relax and to start processing their grief at the double tragedy they had just lived through. Life began to settle into a routine, and the Atlanteans were soon asking for volunteers to undergo medical exams — nothing invasive or dangerous, of course, merely to learn more about air-breather anatomy.

Not everyone was totally convinced by the Atlantean’s story, however… certainly not Col. Astor, and young Lightoller harbored a lingering suspicion of their hosts as well. But with the consensus so strong among their fellows, and in any case with no way they could see to immediately disprove anything, both men concealed their doubts — Astor not least for the sake of his wife and her “delicate condition.”

Truth be told, Astor, while dubious of the fantastic confabulation of the Atlanteans, was also absolutely fascinated by the advanced technology all around him. A bit of an inventor himself, with several patents to his name, he was also a writer in the new genre of science fiction (his first novel had been rather well received, in fact – although he suffered a painful doubt that it was his name, not his talent, that garnered the accolades). This was almost a dream come true… except for all those deaths, of course. And those niggling doubts.

The Atlantean doctors had managed to save all but one of the half-dozen passengers, pulled from the frigid waters, who had suffered from hypothermia. They also seemed particularly interested in Mrs. Astor and her unborn child. Under her husband’s strong admonitions at what he deemed their unseemly interest, however, they tempered their enthusiasm and desisted, for a time. But they eventually managed to convince the couple to let them treat Madeleine, after she showed early signs of vitamin deficiency.

While Astor remained uncomfortable with the Atlantean scientists’ attentions toward his wife, Madeleine herself became wholly convinced that their on-going concern was only for her health and that of of their unborn child, due to “possible complications of a birth under these pressures.” Certainly it all seemed on the up-and-up, the Colonel had to admit… and yet…

A month after their arrival, Holthorus called an assembly of the 42 survivors of Lifeboat 4 to inform them that the situation had become very grim above the waves – the Serpent People had apparently won, and were even now preparing for an assault on Atlantis. He assured them that they were still safe, even if Atlantis came under attack, as his facility was very remote, and known to very few outside his own scientific circle. But he now believed that they would never be able to return the survivors to the surface, and he urged them to accept this fact. He also used this news to emphasize the fact that there might be ways to help them adapt to life under the sea, as his own ancestors had done millennia ago.. and at the same time help the Atlanteans develop was to breath on the surface without their cumbersome, fragile helmets.

After giving the surface dwellers time to absorb this information, he came privately to the Astors. In the name of acclimation, and to set an example to the others, who clearly looked to Col. Astor as a leader of sorts, the Atlaneans wished to make the unborn child an amphibian. Both parents rejected this idea, the Colonel quite hotly, despite assurances that the procedure was quite safe when done in uteroHolthorus backed off, a bit coldly the Colonel thought, despite his seeming amiability.  Mrs. Astor continued to receive her injections of “vitamins” each week.

Four months after the sinking of the Titanic John Jacob Astor VII was born – entirely normal to all appearances. This fact, combined with their hosts’ seemingly unbounded willingness to teach him about their technology, finally lulled Col. Astor’s suspicions… as did the occasional reports still coming in from the surface.

These reports, always shared with the surface dwellers as soon as Thar Holthorus had seen them, were often accompanied by not only amazing color photographs but by a type of moving picture as well, displayed on glass screens. The reports showed images of the deteriorating condition of the world under Saurian rule. The survivors slowly came to grips with their new life, and eventually a score of them agreed to undergo the procedure to turn them into water-breathers. The Astor’s were not among them.

Young Jake, as his parents called him, grew normally as the years rolled on… at least until shortly after his eighth birthday. It was then that he began to show signs of what his parents at first assumed was asthma, something his father had suffered from as a child. But it quickly became clear that it was something quite different. He was actually developing lungs like the Atlanteans, capable of breathing underwater, while retaining his ability to breath air.

Col. Astor’s suspicions were instantly stoked to full flame from the ash-covered  embers where they had smoldered for years. While the Atlanteans claimed it was just a spontaneous natural adaptation to his environment, Astor became absolutely convinced that they had done something to the boy in utero to cause this change. The boy himself seemed thrilled with this new ability and the freedom it gave him to escape his parents watchful guardianship… he didn’t seem particularly to mind when he discovered that he could no longer spend more an hour or two our of the water without beginning to suffocate.

As it turned out, the Colonel was right about the Atlanteans. Although he would never learn the truth himself, they had indeed introduced an experimental serum into Madeline during her weekly shots, attempting to create a hybrid. They were somewhat disappointed in the result, as they had hoped that this hybrid would be able to last longer than a full-blooded Atlantean in the air without needing to return to the water. The boy seemed little better than a normal Atlantean in this regard, however. Still, they were in it for the long haul, and this was just the first round…

Despite his renewed suspicions, there seemed little that Col. Astor could do about the situation. The surface humans had the free run of the Reef, but as it was surrounded by abyssal depths on all sides, so deep that even the Atlanteans couldn’t survive them, they were trapped. While his “hosts” still allowed him every freedom in terms of equipment and research, they were always careful that neither he nor any of the other former surface dwellers ever had access to any vehicles or communication equipment without supervision.

And so the years passed, as more children were born, some with the better adaptations the Atlanteans hoped for, others apparently without; older people died, and occasional accidents took others – and after Lightoller’s tragic accident the Colonel was careful never to make his captors (as he now thought of them) doubt his own loyalty or unwavering, dim-witted belief in whatever fantastic story they told… and so managed to remain accident-free.

When he was 17 John Jacob VII, who had taken to spending most of his time with other water-breathers his own age, to his mother’s great grief, announced that he planned to marry L’alwa, 16-year-old daughter of Thar Holthorus. His parents objected, naturally, saying they were both much too young for such a step, but the Atlanteans seemed pleased, especially the girl’s father, and the ceremony took place in due course.

Eight months later a baby boy was born. The child showed traces of his mother’s people, having their pale blue-white skin, although the blue cast was noticeably fainter in him. Best of all, from his maternal grandfather’s point of view, he was a true amphibious breather, showing no signs of distress no matter how long he was in either water or air. He was stronger than his human progenitors, if perhaps not quite as strong as a native Atlantean. And as he grew older he also began to display amazing intellectual abilities, moving ahead of his peers in school at a tremendous rate.

His father, who had in truth never been terribly bright and was always much more interested in physical accomplishments, took little interest in his son beyond agreeing to name him John Jacob, the eighth of his name. But the boy’s paternal grandfather doted on him, and reveled in sharing with him all his interests, from science fiction to engineering. He would regale the child with stories of the surface world – a practice which Holthorus disapproved of, but made no move to curb – making the bond the two shared even stronger for having to be somewhat surreptitious.

After his grandmother’s death in 1940, when he was 10, his grandfather spent even more time with young John. Although now 75 years old, the Colonel showed few signs of slowing down, and the two worked tirelessly on their engineering projects, as well as writing numerous science fiction tales together.

The senior Astor also began to share his suspicions of the what the Atlantean’s were really up to with his grandson. Several years earlier Holthorus had claimed that Atlantis itself had fallen to the Lemurians – this shortly, and strangely conveniently, after growing demands from his restless “guests” to finally be integrated into mainstream Atlantean society.

JJ, as his grandfather called him, alerted by the old man’s warnings, began looking for clues, noticing the holes and cracks in the official story, and eventually discovered proof that the tale of the fall of Atlantis, at least, was an absolute lie. The two became convinced that everything else they’d been told was also a lie, but they bided their time. Both Astors now chafed under the certainty that they were prisoners, and little more than breeding cattle in the eyes of the Atlanteans.

When he was 13 JJ began to exhibit a strange change… he began discharging little bursts of electricity whenever he came in contact with a conductor. In the water, this seemed not to happen, but in the air it became increasingly frequent, and stronger. He could also dimly sense the flow of electricity within mechanical devices, and even in the very air (and water) around them. The Colonel quickly took steps to keep this development a secret from Holthorus – he had no doubt that the scientist would turn the boy into a lab animal in an instant in pursuit of his apparent quest to create “super Atlantean” hybrids.

For almost two years they succeeded in keeping the Atlanteans unaware of the boy’s growing power, and worked at devising some way to escape their captors and return to the surface world. During this period JJ’s full genius began to bloom, and he created a number of impressive, but ultimately (and purposefully) minor, improvements on Atlantean technology, to his grandfather Holthorus‘ delight. But he kept the extent of his true genius securely under a bushel… along with his greatest invention.

This was a type of techno-organic metal, based in part on Atlantean orichalcum, part on his own development of a unique type of nanite, developed after studying ancient wreckage the scientists had recovered from the ocean floor. His material responded only to his unique bio-electric signature, allowing him to shape it into almost anything… but in any other hands it became just an inert lump of slightly  malleable metal. His paternal grandfather called it his masterpiece… and possibly their salvation.

Under the beloved old man’s guidance JJ created enough of his miracle metal to cover his body in a protective shell that they hoped would protect him from the crushing pressure of the depths that even the Atlantean’s couldn’t withstand. JJ wanted to create more, enough for his grandfather to accompany him in his escape, but the old man was adamant that once the material was tested, the boy should flee immediately. Once free, he could alert the surface world, and bring help for everyone else.

Unfortunately, before they could get to the final testing stage JJ’s mother, L’alwa, witnessed one of her son’s involuntary electrical discharges. Delighted that her boy was showing signs of the sort of “improvements” her father was always looking for, she immediately went to tell him the news. She had always been a passive woman, cowed by her father, ignored by her husband, and physically a bit frail, perhaps due to the in utero and early childhood “treatments” Holthorus had subjected her to… electric eel DNA didn’t seem to agree with her as much as it did her son. She hoped her news would please the old man and maybe she’d get some reflected approval…

Please him it did, and enrage him too, when he realized the boy had been keeping this information from him, and who knew for how long? What other secrets were he and that odious old man harboring? He should have had the doddering fool killed along with the officer; but at the time it had seemed unwise to remove both leaders of the drylander cattle. Curse his kind heart and trusting nature! Well no more easy-going good guy, not this time…

• • •

JJ loved his time in the water, the freedom from the sometimes oppressive confines of the family quarters in the Reef. He’d never seen the open air, but he imagined swimming in the open waters around his home (well, prison, really) must be very much like flying, as his grandfather had described the ability possessed by some surface creatures. As much as he enjoyed it, however, he did try to limit his time as a water-breather, knowing how much it distressed his grandfather – not that the old man ever said anything, of course. But JJ could tell.

So he’d been particularly happy today, when Grandfather had suggested he take the latest build of his living metal armor out for a depth test. Evading his bored security detail had become a routine part of his swimming outings, even when he had no need to do so. That way, on occasions like this, when he really wanted to lose them, it would raise no suspicion… and after all, where could he go? Once he’d shaken Olop and KrenJJ mentally summoned his miracle metal, disguised as the ornate bronze belt he always wore, to flow across his body, encasing him in a shell of quasi-organic metal.

As soon as the HUD was up and projecting data directly onto his eyeballs, JJ moved stealthily along the twisting canyon he’d discovered months earlier, which took him to the very edge of the sea mount atop which Kenyon Reef sat. Out of sight of any watchers, the teenager shot out into open waters of the North Atlantic, and dove down toward blackness of the abyssal plain. This was his third such test, and as he’d hoped, this latest configuration of his armor was withstanding the growing pressure beautifully. Within ten minutes he’d reached a depth more than 100 feet greater than any Atlantean vessel he knew of could safely achieve.

He was tempted to keep going, even after the first amber light began to blink, warning that he’d reached the theoretical crush depth they’d programmed into the system. He was sure it was a conservative number, but his grandfather had been insistent that they play it cautiously… reluctantly, he headed back.

As he swam he flexed his left hand, gratified that he felt no pain. He’d gashed his palm a few days earlier, a deep cut from a carelessly wielded blade. Stupid of him, but they had discovered a new property of his miracle metal as a result. A streamer of the metal had flowed up from his belt almost immediately, with no mental command from him (at least no new he was conscious of), and covered the wound briefly before seeping into his tissues. A strange tingling had quickly occluded the pain, and even as he and his grandfather watched, amazed, the edges of the wound began to slowly, but visibly, pull together. Toady, it seemed entirely healed!

Back at the lab he and his grandfather shared, a part of the suite of rooms assigned to them, JJ excitedly relayed the results of his test dive to the old man, who seemed very pleased. Until his other grandfather, the Atlantean one, burst in on them. Two guards (not his usual ones, JJ noted uneasily), weapons conspicuously held, if not actually aimed, flanked the door as the obviously angry scientist stalked through it.

”How long have you two been keeping this new ability of my grandson’s a secret?” he demanded without preamble. “Do not bother to lie, I know he has developed a bio-electric ability of some kind – although his mother was annoyingly vague in her description.”

Colonel Astor had tensed at Holthorus’ sudden intrusion, but now JJ saw his grandfather visibly relax, leaning hip shot on a workbench. “Oh we never figured we could keep it from you forever, Thar. We wanted to explore the extent of the ability ourselves before presenting you with it, but truth be told, it’s really nothing more than a pretty light show and a mild static-electric shock.”

”Do you really take me for such a fool, Astor?” Halthorus sneered. “What my daughter saw was more than a “light show.” But even if that had been the extent of what she saw, I’d never take your word for anything. No, the boy is coming back with me to my lab, now, so I can begin running tests on him immediately. Finally, a result such as we’ve dreamed of—“

His grandfather moved faster than JJ had thought him capable of. He lunged forward and delivered a roundhouse punch to the Atlantean’s jaw. Halthorus staggered back, as completely surprised as his two guards, hitting another workbench and scattering machine parts everywhere. He was more startled than injured, JJ suspected – the man was younger and physically stronger than the Colonel.

Halthorus was also deeply prideful, JJ knew. He couldn’t imagine that many people had ever dared to lay hands on him before. That the Colonel had very obviously enraged him. Halthorus was not a particularly athletic man, but JJ realized his natural Atlantean strength made him more than a match for the much older man.

As his grandfather grabbed a fistful of the scientist’s tunic and yanked him forward, JJ leapt to try and get between the men, to somehow calm the situation down. But Halthorus’  hand fell on a heavy spinner on the workbench… he brought the tool around and slammed it into the side of the older man’s head before JJ could reach them.

Colonel John Jacob Astor  dropped without a sound. The absolute stillness of his body, and the much-too-rapidly expanding pool of blood under his head told his grandson that he was dead. JJ went a little berserk then – he grabbed his murderous grandfather by the hand which still clutched the lethal tool, and let loose one of his bio-electric pulses, for the first time intentionally at full strength. Halthorus spasmed and collapsed to the floor. Dead, JJ savagely hoped, but by the bubbles still percolating in his breathing collar, probably only unconscious.

Everything had happened so quickly that only now were Thar Halthorus’ two guards reacting, bringing up their pistols, faces blank with surprise. JJ cursed the luck that had left his armor, now in the shape of his bronze belt, sitting on his lab bench on the other side of the room. Too far, curse it, but he had to try

The tranquilizer darts struck him in neck and buttock before he was halfway to the bench… he staggered onward, but the drugs took effect too quickly… even as he reached out for the belt… darkness overtook him.

• • •

When he slowly swam back up to consciousness JJ found himself restrained on a table in what he groggily recognized as his Atlantean grandfather’s main laboratory. For a moment he was utterly confused.. why was he strapped down? Why were his thoughts so scattered… and then it all came back to him in a rush, and grief swelled up again, this time unalloyed by rage. His grandfather, his TRUE grandfather was dead, murdered by his own mother’s father.

Who was still alive, JJ realized, with real disappointment, as he turned his head and saw the man bent over some piece of equipment off to his left. He would have thought his uncontrolled blast of bio-electricity would have been lethal… obviously the old shark was tough. Next time he’d just have to make sure…

He must have made some sound as he glared at his tormentor, for Thar Halthorus turned and smiled coldly back at him. Any pretense of the kindness or concern he occasionally affected towards his half-breed grandson was gone. JJ thought he looked relieved to be free at last to display his true face — the cold, dispassionate man of “science.” The boy shivered in sudden dread at that slight smile, as Halthorus lifted an instrument from a nearby tray and stepped up beside him.

”Now, let’s get started on that testing, shall we, boy?” The smile widened to an evil grin… and then the screaming began…

• • •

How long he had been in the lab JJ was no longer sure… days, certainly… maybe weeks? The agony was unrelenting during the testing and experimenting, almost as if his grandfather enjoyed tormenting the 15-year-old simply for the torment’s sake. His only relief came in the brief hours of the night, and it was during one of these respites that his mother, L’alwa, came secretly to visit him.

”Oh, my son, I am so sorry,” she whispered softly as she stroked his long dark hair back from his sweat-crusted forehead. “I had no idea Father would do… this. And your poor grandfather… I’m so sorry…”

Looking into her tear-filled eyes, he could almost feel sorry for her. She had never been a strong woman, he’d known that from a young age, but she had always been a kind, if ineffectual, presence in his life. Ignored by her husband, dominated and cowed by her father… he supposed she’d done the best she could. He had always vaguely pitied her, but after her betrayal of him to her father, he found that pity gone.

”If you… are truly sorry, Mother… then free me now,” he croaked through cracked lips and a painfully dry throat. Halthorus had been refusing him water for… days? Too long, in any case, and he was weak with dehydration. “Undo what you’ve done… or at least what… part of it… can be undone…”

“Oh, Janke,” she gasped, looking suddenly frightened. “I… I can’t. I just… Father would be so furious! But… but I will speak to him! I’m sure I can make him see reason, make him understand how he’s hurting you… I’m sure he doesn’t mean to , he just gets so caught up in his research— here, drink this, you’re so parched.”

She took a beaker of water which Halthorus had left, purposefully and tantalizingly close, yet just out of his grandson’s reach, and lifted it to JJ’s lips. He gulped it down and felt some strength returning. She continued to babble on quietly, making excuses for her father that even she must realize were weak to the point of absurdity.

”Mother,” JJ interrupted, able to speak clearly again, “just stop. You know what a monster he is… how could you not, after what he did to you, his own daughter, when you were just a child? And to me, now… never mind his murder of the Colonel. You must know my only hope is to flee, before he finally decides to dissect me!”

His mother broke down into sobs then, shaking her head and refusing to meet his gaze again. He realized she would never find the strength to defy her father, she was too terrified of him. But maybe she could still be of some use, if she wasn’t aware of what she was doing…

”Very well, Mother, I understand,” he said when her crying finally stopped. “Look at me… yes, that’s right. If I am to remain here, at least let me have some comfort in the familiar, as in the water you gave me. You know the bronze belt I always wear, the one I love, that Grandfather made for me… will you at least bring that to me. For my comfort and in his memory?”

He held his breath. If she had seen his miracle metal in action, seen him armored, as she had seen him use his bio-electric power, then she would understand what he was asking… and understanding, be too frightened to bring it.

”Oh yes, Janke, yes, I can do that,”L’alwa said, her face lighting up as the thought of being able to do something useful. That was the second time she’d used her childhood nickname for him, her thought, the one she’d stopped using when, by Atlantean custom, he’d become a man at age 14. Brushing her hand once more through his hair, she rose and went quickly from the laboratory.

The minutes dragged by for JJ in an agony of fear and anticipation. He didn’t know the hour, but his mother wouldn’t have dared to come to him except in the middle of the night… surely she could make it to his quarters and back without encountering anyone else? Just as he was beginning to think she’d lost her nerve and wouldn’t be returning, he heard her soft tread coming through the doorway.

”Here, my son, I have the belt,” she said, holding it out as she approached the table where he lay restrained. But before she could hand it to him the lights suddenly flared to full brightness and Thar Halthorus burst into the lab, raging. With no more than a glare of disgust at his daughter, he shoved her aside and towered over his grandson, making sure he was still —

JJ smiled ferociously at the man who was staring down in blank-faced shock at the several feet of razor-sharp metal which had just pierced his chest. Finally nothing to say, JJ thought in grim humor, as the man staggered back, pulling himself off the blade that had somehow appeared in the boy’s hand, and half collapsed against one of his lab benches. He hadn’t seen JJ grab the belt his mother had dropped as she’d fallen.

JJ enjoyed the look of fascinated horror on the madman’s face as the metal flowed and reshaped itself into a smaller blade, moving and twisting like a thing alive to cut easily through the restraints on JJ’s right hand. But there was no time to savor that look, he’d missed the bastard’s black heart and the old man wasn’t dead yet. As JJ cut away the restraint on his left wrist and bent to his ankles, he saw Halthorus, bleeding copiously, pull a weapon from his pocket.

Not a dart gun this time, the boy realized as he sawed frantically at his leg restraints, but a lethal needle gun. He wasn’t going to make it, curse his luck… the man was coughing blood now, but the gun was aimed right at him… but as Halthorus pulled the trigger,  L’alwa leapt in front of him, shielding her son… and taking the full blast of needle-like razors in the head. As she collapsed, her face a bloody ruin, unquestionably dead, JJ broke the last of his restraints and flew at his grandfather.

The older man, momentarily stunned at his daughter’s foolish, unnecessary death, was slow to raise his weapon for a second shot. It proved his undoing. JJ knocked aside the needler, wrapped his hands around Holthorus‘ neck, and unleashed all the rage and grief and hatred that had built up in him during his torment. This time, in the greatest surge of bio-electric energy he’d yet produced, his hated grandfather died instantly, sparks flying from his melting eyes.

Dropping the smoking corpse, the 15-year-old turned to look down at the body of his mother, a storm of emotions wracking him. She hadn’t been a particularly good mother, certainly, but she had loved him as best she could. And in the end she had sacrificed herself for him… maybe.  He would never be completely certain if that was truly her intent, or if she’d simply believed that her father wouldn’t shoot her.

His is brief delay as he stood, exhausted and bewildered over his mother’s body almost proved to be his own undoing. Although it was the middle of the night, the violent encounter had roused Holthorus‘ security, who now rushed into the lab. Seeing the smoldering corpse of their leader and L’alwa’s still, bloody form, they turned their weapons and outrage on JJ.

His miracle metal, still in the form of a knife in his hand, instantly began to flow over his body at his almost unconscious command for protection. As it did, he dodged one of the energy blasts, and the second was absorbed by the forming armor… but a third blast took him in the belly. He dropped to the floor, curled up around the pain… but his metal continued to complete his armor.

The Atlantean’s stalked over to him, but as they reached down to haul him up, the transformation was complete — his metal now sheathed him from head to foot in golden-bronze protection. While the burning paint in his gut was strong, he was able to stand and throw off his would-be captors… already he could feel the tiny elements of the metal infusing and  holding closed his wound.

The armor could do doing little for his pain, beyond the numbness, but he had to move. With the armor amplifying his strength, JJ backhanded the nearest man into his partner, and charged through the others that had suddenly appeared in the doorway. Energy blasts struck him several times as he fled, but did no further damage – indeed, he was hardly aware of them.

He thought he had made it, as he swam away from Kenyon’s Reef, but the Atlantean’s were not quite so willing to let such an asset escape them. The ship that had rescued his grandparents and the others from the wreck of the Titanic rose from its berth and pursued. He dove deeper, hoping to lose them at depths they would fear to attempt… assuming his armor could protect him, of course, which was still something of a question. But JJ had faith… and no other choice.

Hi faith seemed to be justified, as they approached the crush depth for the Atlantean ship. His armor was taking the tremendous pressure, although he was beginning to feel a little warm. But before giving up, the vessel blasted him with its main energy cannon, preferring to destroy him if they couldn’t recapture him.

The armor absorbed the brunt of the blast, but the residue was nonetheless too much for the already injured youth. As consciousness faded, JJ felt himself sinking into the blackness of the abyss… he’d been so close…

–––––––––––––––––––––––– ♦ ♦ ♦ ––––––––––––––––––––––––––

The next thing young John Jacob Astor VIII knew, he was sinking to his knees on a cold marble floor, dizzy and weak, in a large, dimly lit room.  He was naked, and his hand went instinctively to his belly, where the pain had been… but there was no pain now, and no sign of a wound beyond a faint raised scar. Head still spinning, JJ looked up to see two strangely garbed people staring down at him.

One was a man in a form-hugging white and blue garment, with black hair and eyes that glowed with an actinic light so bright that it was hard to see his features. The other was a woman, dressed in an equally tight outfit of black and gray, her face covered in a garishly painted half-mask. She was semi-prone at the feet of the man, hands apparently bound behind her and a cloth bag on the floor next to her, with colorful gems spilling from it.

“Where – where.. am… I?” JJ managed to rasp out, though his throat felt drier than he’d imagined possible. He tried to stand, but his legs wouldn’t bear his weight, and he collapsed to the floor again. The man and woman looked at each other in surprise, and then back at him, as he faded out again…

When he next woke JJ was in a large, strange bed and feeling considerably better, if still weak and disoriented. He had no idea where he was. The architecture was unlike anything he’d ever seen, far more bland and unadorned than the Atlantean decor he’d grown up in. Could this be surface world construction. There was no portal to see outside, although perhaps behind that wall of fabric dripping one wall…

His questions were soon answered, although those answers quickly raised a slew of new questions. In the end it was the man he had seen in that darkened room who answered them all. Dressed now in still unfamiliar but more ordinary looking garb, he smiled as he stood by JJ’s bed and offered his hand.

“My name is Kevin,” the black haired, blue-eyed man said as they shook – a surface world custom the Colonel had told JJ of many times. “I have a great many questions for you, but first I imagine you have at least as many for me. So why don’t you go first?”

It took quite a lot of asking and answering on both sides, but eventually the whole story was pieced together. By the end JJ couldn’t tell which of them was more amazed at the result.

It turned out he was in Portland, Oregon, a city on the West Coast of North America, and had been there for several years. Apparently his armor had gone into some sort of hibernation mode, keeping him alive, healing his wounds, but unable to revive itself while sustaining him. He lay wedged in an outcropping below Kenyon’s Reef for a very long time… the current year was 2003 CE!

His entombed form had been found in 1995, when a movie maker, James Cameron, had been using experimental technology to discover and film the wreck of the Titanic for his next film. He had stumbled across the ruins of what must have been the Reef, long abandoned, and in searching the area found what everyone assumed was a crude statue. Bringing it up to the surface, it caused a brief stir in certain historical circles (there was considerable debate on whether it was ancient or modern Atlantean, or as a minority posited, late Roman). Eventually the interest faded, and after using it as a prop on the opening night of his movie Titanic Cameron donated it to the Hunter Museum in New Atlantis, where it sat in a sub-basement for several years before being loaned out to the Portland Art Museum in Oregon.

There the statue had sat on display for almost two years, until a criminal, the jewel thief and cat burglar Columbine, attempted to steal a valuable array of kundalini stones from the museum. A superhero named Stormfront had thwarted her, but in their fight a blast of electricity from the hero had struck the statue. Apparently it had been enough to jump start the living metal, and it had flowed away from JJ, releasing him after 58 years in its embrace.

After Stormlord had handed Columbine over to the authorities he had flown the unconscious, naked young man to the nearby Oregon Health Science University, which was where they were now talking. The hunk of metal, an inert blob for all anyone could tell at that point, had been taken into custody by SHADE – apparently a government agency dealing with these sorts of things Kevin explained. Kevin who turned out to be that same Stormfront, who had rescued JJ.

“I wouldn’t worry,” his new friend had assured him when JJ looked anxious at the news that a government had his miracle metal. “SHADE eventually always remembers that they’re the good guys… they’ll return it eventually, once it’s deemed safe. And you said no one else besides you can activate it, right?”

”Well, it’s keyed to me, yes,” JJ had admitted. “So I guess I’ll just have to trust you…”

For the next week JJ suffered the ministrations of the hospital staff, endured the questions of SHADE, FBI and AFT agents, and enjoyed the frequent visits of his new friend. It was during these last that he began to catch up on what had happened in the world since 1912. He eventually told Kevin his own story, and at his urging, the authorities as well. Soon enough it had leaked to the press (not through Kevin, he was sure), and the whole world knew what had happened to him and his family.

Overnight, JJ became an international sensation. All of a sudden the Lost Scion, as the press dubbed him, seemed to be all anybody was taking about. Lawyers came out of the woodwork, urging him to sue for his share of the Astor family fortune. But his goal, once he learned that such a course was possible, was instead to sue, and hopefully inflict some damage on, the Atlantean’s for what they had done to him and his family.

This, unfortunately, proved to be an unrealistic goal. In point of fact Holthorus and his group were renegades, outlaws attempting to fulfill an ancient prophecy and overthrow the rightful royal government of Atlantis. But the prophecy was fulfilled by others before they could succeed, and not long after JJ’s escape the illegal operation was finally uncovered and destroyed by the Atlantean’s themselves. Most of the surface human-Atlantean hybrids were killed in the raid, and the few survivors were adopted into Atlantean civilization. The surviving conspirators were executed by royal decree in 1947. Current relations with Atlantis were delicate enough these days, and the US government promised to quash, with prejudice, any attempt at upsetting that particular apple cart.

As for the Astor money, JJ had little interest in pursuing it, although he would need some way to support himself eventually. He couldn’t “crash” on Kevin’s couch forever. In the end representatives of the Astor family approached him and offered a tidy sum if he would quit all other claims on the family interests and go quietly away. He took the money and never looked back.

He got his miracle metal back from SHADE with only a little trouble, eventually smoothed over and sorted out by Stormfront. The hero encouraged him to think about getting into the “truth and justice” game, assuring him that with his physical abilities and technical genius, plus the miracle metal, he was a natural… but only after he went to school and got caught up on everything he’d missed over the years. Despite his birthdate, he was still only about 15 years old physiologically and emotionally, after all. Unsure about the whole “superhero” thing, JJ was absolutely onboard with the education idea. His curiosity was voracious.

Fascinated by flight – he’d fallen in love with it the first time Stormfont took him flying (well, the first time he was conscious for it), and even more so after his first trip in a plane – he applied to the US Flight Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado (which also had the benefit of being far from any ocean). He easily made the cut, and discovered the wonders of mountains as well as of flying. In three years he graduated at the top of his class… he could’ve done it in two or less, but he couldn’t enter the Air Force until he turned 18, although the exact nature of what “18” meant in his case was a matter of some debate.

As it was, he didn’t really mind the extra time, since he enjoyed socializing with people his own age and learning from them all about his strange new world. During breaks he visited all the places his grandfather had talked about, most especially Egypt, the last place his grandparents had visited on their extended honeymoon before boarding the Titanic.

He also saw the poverty and hunger in many parts of the world, a shocking experience for one who had been completely sheltered from even the concept of such things. While in Africa on one such trip he spent a week developing a power system that the locals could build and maintain themselves to pump water up from deep wells and bring in educational broadcasts from outside. He donated the tech to the Quest Foundation, who quickly began spreading it across the impoverished areas of the globe.

After graduating from the Academy, JJ took his commission as an officer in the USAF, and was soon drafted into the test pilot program. It was a role that he was well suited for, given his enhanced physiology, and one he loved. It was during a disastrous test flight in 2008 that he first discovered that he could fly under his own power, at least when encased in his armor. When the chute on his ejector seat malfunctioned, he’d panicked and unconsciously summoned his armor (he always wore it in the form of a kind of “back brace” along his spine), and soon found he could ride the planet’s electro-magnetic lines of force, much as Stormfront had described his own ability.

After he finished his four year commitment to the Air Force in 2010 JJ decided not to reenlist, and instead traveled around the world on various Quest Foundation or Savage International missions, looking for his calling. But as much as he enjoyed helping others, it was always the designing, the engineering, the creating that he found most satisfying. And the one thing that could strike at the root of poverty and hunger he decided, was energy.

In 2012 he incorporated his business as Apergy Systems International, naming it after  the fictional anti-gravity energy in his grandfather’s one published novel, and began producing small, compact batteries and capacitors. Apergy units stored three times the energy of the next best commercial battery, in less than half the space, with triple the storage life, and sold for about 60% of what his competitors charged for theirs. And for worthy causes and in poorer countries he offered steep discounts even beyond that .

Founding the company absorbed almost all of the settlement money from his surface relatives, but within two years he had regained it all, and by 2016 he was worth at least $50 million. He briefly considered settling in Portland, but had decided instead on Astoria, not least for his familial connection to the city. It was also a major hub in high-technology research and production, well-suited to all the time he liked to spend at his high-tech work bench tinkering up “the next big thing.”

Stormfront continued to gently push him to take on the heroic role he seemed convinced that JJ was made for. In recent months Kevin had even been hinting that JJ would make a worthy successor when Stormfront eventually retired. But one of the reasons he’d chosen Astoria over other places was the lack of superhuman activity there. It made it easier for him to resist the lure (and he did feel the pull he had to admit, if only to himself) of the excitement and adventure of the superhero lifestyle and focus on his inventing and philanthropic work. Still, he did don his armor occasionally, to deal with some crisis that only he could handle, usually where lives were at stake… he’d refused, however, to take a superhero code name. It wasn’t like everyone didn’t already know it was him in the armor. He had no secret identity, so why did he need a code name? After several attempts by media figures to get him to name himself, the press gave up and just did it themselves, calling him Scion

And so, on a beautiful spring day in 2016, a generally contented John Jacob Astor VIII was at his workbench, contemplating the problems of large-scale teleportation, both technical and socio-economical, when his personal assistant Penny burst in with the news that there’s been some sort of plane crash on the Silver Mile. Casualties were being reported, and possible meta-human involvement. The Silver Mile was less than five blocks from his office, he could be there in seconds…

Totem (aka Cooper Ravenwing)

Before the coming of Europeans to the New World, the Haida people of the island chain that would come to be called the Queen Charlotte Islands were an aggressive and expanding people. Their war canoes were known and feared from the Aleutian Islands to the mouth of the Columbia River. It was said that they were often led in war by powerful Spirit Warriors, possessed of the mystical power of Bear, Eagle, Orca, Wolf or most dangerous of all, Raven.

With the coming of the Europeans, first the Russians, then the British, and finally their inheritors the Americans, the Haida faced a crisis unlike any other in their past, even the mythic past. This foe could not be defeated by the spirits of the Great Beasts, not in the long run, though they enjoyed some early victories. These invaders wielded weapons against which the First Peoples had no defense: epidemic disease and alcohol.

Like their cousins whom once they had raided and conquered, the Haida eventually fell into death, addiction, and despair. Fewer and fewer were left each year who knew the secrets of Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay, the mystical Island from which the Haida people drew their strength, and by the turn of the 20th Century there were none who remembered the truth… only distorted myths and tales remained, considered even by the Haida themselves to be mere allegory.

But the truth remained, even if forgotten by the People…

In the past, the Haida tribes of the Outer World would send promising young men to the hidden island of Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay for training as shamen. In that place time moved differently, and the Elders ruled all. No native of the island ever left it, and it was said that only those considered worthy and pure were allowed to find their way to it from the Outer world.

As the shaman of a tribe of the Outer World reached a certain age, he would find a promising youth and send him to seek the Island. If the youth succeeded he would spend a year under the demanding tutelage of the Elders. Some men would turn out to be less promising than others as wielders of the mystic forces, despite their “purity.” When this happened the Elders would further test such a man to see if he would make a Hero. If so, they would grant that man a tattoo of his totem animal (not necessarily that of his tribe, for one’s Spirit Animal is a very individual thing). This mark would, when invoked, cause the man to be possessed of the form, powers, and personality of that particular Warrior Great Beast.

There were other Great Beasts, of course, from Elk to Beaver to Squirrel to Hummingbird and many others, but if a man got one of these, he wasn’t a  warrior – useful to the tribes, perhaps, but such men seldom came into the Great Stories of war, conquest and tribute. And if a young man was found unsuitable for even this lowly honor, he was expelled from both the Island and his tribe, to either live in shameful exile amongst the Lesser Peoples, or make of himself a sacrifice to the Gods – the Haida were a harsh and unsentimental folk!

After a year of intense training on the Island the young man would return home, as either shaman (mostly) or Hero (rarely), to find that ten years had passed in the Outer World. Their relatively unaged appearance would add to the awe and dread that the people should feel for their holy men and mystic warriors. The newly trained shaman would then serve as apprentice/helper to the elder shaman of the tribe, deepening his knowledge of the shamanistic arts, until it was the older man’s time to “pass on and become an Elder of the Isle,” should their lives be deemed worthy.*

The Heroes were more of a problem – while chiefs loved having supernatural might at their disposal, it was sometimes a challenge to keep it at their disposal and not be disposed of themselves, and replaced. It was an inherent problem of the martial, might-makes-right philosophy of their culture, but they managed. Sometimes the Hero was brought to heel and served the chief and the tribe, other times they overthrew the old chief and ruled directly. Either way, the Haida felt they got the best leadership… and their continuing victories seemed to proved it.

There was never more than one Hero for each Great Beast living in the Outer World at any given time. The Warrior Great Beasts were:
Yáahl  [y’all]  aka Xhuuya [shoo-ya] or Nankil’slas [nahn-kill-stloss]** – Raven, the trickster and chief of the Great Beasts
Taán [tahn] – Bear, strongest of all, crusher of foes
Ts’áak [tis-awk] – Eagle, arrogant sky lord, keen of eye, sharp of talon
Kún [khoon] – Orca, fierce killer of the seas
Xúnts [zoontz] – Wolf, cunning tracker, stealthy hunter

In the year 1783 CE in the Outer World, a boy was born on Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay. His mother named him Kúng [koong], meaning “moon”, for he was born under a Blue Moon. It was not long after this that the number of potential shaman-candidates coming to the Island for training began to decline. By the time the boy turned 12 (around 1903 in the Outer World), the Elders were beginning to  to become concerned – there had been gaps in the past, but never more than two years of island time. They debated what to do, even as they felt their own powers slowly diminishing… and of even greater concern, was the fact that no child had been born on the Island since Kúng. The people of the Island were relatively infertile, which kept the population sustainable, but now they seemed completely barren.

It was around this time that the Outer World intruded on the idyllic peace of  this island outside of time. Dr. Benjamin Quinn, his son Danny, his ward Achak Dyami, and their  bodyguard / pilot / tutor Brad Canyon somehow found their way to Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay. How is unclear… was it the new dimensional probe Dr. Quinnn was testing, which utilized the strange, powerful kundalini crystals? Did the Elders allow it, perhaps to gain better knowledge of the Outer World? Or maybe it was simply Fate… and the weakening of the mystical wards around the Island.

In any case, the arrival of these strange, pale outworlders caused a great stir, as the then 19 year-old Küng would remember it. After some tense moments, however, the Quinns were able to convince the Elders of their peaceful intent and they were accepted as worthy and pure, at least ritualistically speaking. The Elders listened then to what the outsiders had to say, learning more of the fate of the First Peoples under European colonization than they had fully grasped before, particularly in regard to the spread of Christianity… and alcohol. They had heard something of these things, but had not realized how steep the toll had become on their children of the Outer World.

While the Elders conferred with Dr. Quinn and Canyon, Kúng approached the younger members of the party, curious to see people near to his own age for the first time. Danny, 16 at the time (it was 1974 CE), particularly fascinated him, with his blond hair and pale skin. Achak, darker and more like his own people, was 18, nearly his his own age. The three struck up a friendship during the two days of the Quinn’s stay, forging a strong bond for such a brief acquaintance. The young Haida was sorry to see his strange new friends depart, after Dr. Quinn had agreed to leave his device behind, both to ensure that no other outsiders could use it to pierce the mystical veil protecting the island, and as a means to perhaps strengthen the barrier with its unique energies.

Another four years passed on the Island, and for a time it seemed the device was indeed able to strengthen the mystic energies. But only for a time. Eventually their powers began to fade again, and still no Outer World Haida had come for training. The Elders decided that they had to act, while they still could. It was decreed that Kúng would be the first native Islander in their long memories to leave Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay, to investigate for them this strange new world and seek out ways to counter its effects on their people, particularly those of the terrible “alcohol.” And most importantly, to bring back worthy candidates to train, to keep their ways alive.

Kúng was already a trained shaman, of course, and skilled in the use of his powers. But to aid him in his great task, and to ward him from the great dangers he would certainly face, the Elders granted him the tattoos of all five of the Warrior Great Beasts, something done only once before – and that, long ago even by Island standards. They gave him a new name, Sgwáansang [squaw-ahn-sang], meaning The One, and ordered him to first seek the aid and advice of the Quest family of trusted memory, assuming they still lived.

Feeling a little nervous, slightly afraid, and very excited, the Island’s Hero slowly paddled away from the only home he had ever known, piercing the eternal mists surrounding the Island. When he again saw the sun he was in the waters of Alaska, as he knew the land’s current rulers named it. He made for the mainland, and fairly quickly found the nearest town. It was strange place to him, and more than a little frightening with all the people – white, brown, copper skinned – all crowded together. There must have been 300 people in that strange town of “Rose Harbor!”

He sought out some of his own people, or at least what looked like they might be his people… and instantly got off on the wrong foot by speaking Russian. He had forgotten which of the two Outer World languages he knew was current here, and at first was confused by the reaction he got. But he quickly figured it out, and things went more smoothly after that, although it was clear that these odd people thought he, himself, was quite… odd.

He was eventually able to make contact with the Quinn Foundation, once people got it into their heads for whom he was looking. Daniel Quest and his husband Achak showed up themselves once he got through on the fascinating “telephone.” He was shocked  to find that little Danny was now a grown man of 56 years, and Achak 58! He had known time moved differently in the Outer World, but the reality still shook him. The two older men also seemed taken aback to find their old acquaintance looking little older than when they’d last seen him 40 years earlier.

Once they had convinced themselves of his legitimacy, and learned why he had been sent out into the world, Quinn immediately offered whatever resources the Quinn Foundation could provide. He flew them all down to Astoria, OR, where his operation had its West Coast headquarters, and set up Kúng with proper American ID – ID card and passport, in the name of Cooper Ravenwing, but no driver’s license. Several hair-raising attempts at teaching the young shaman to drive had convinced his patrons to quickly shelve that project. They also provided references,  a condo, and a small (by Quinn standards) trust fund. After nearly a month of helping their friend acclimate to this new world Daniel and Achak returned to Boston and the main Quinn Foundation HQ, with promises on both sides to stay in touch.

It was June of 2013, and “Cooper,” as he tried very hard to think of himself now, spent that spring and summer seeking out Haida people in Alaska, British Columbia and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. But time after time he was disappointed. Each person seemed terribly flawed in his eyes… many suffered from the scourge of alcoholism, and all seemed broken and dispirited. Nowhere could he find the noble, aggressive warriors he had expected to find. There was more than a bit of arrogance, and a definite lack of empathy, in his harsh judgement, but he was blind to his own failings.

He did encounter a few Haida who, he grudgingly admited to himself, might be made worthy, with proper guidance. But before undertaking the cure of his people, he needed to better understand the problem; and so that September he took up Daniel Quinn’s suggestion and enrolled at Astoria City University. He designed his class load to most effectively learn what he sought to know, heavy on biochemistry, medicine and psychology.

But in the course of immersing himself in this new culture, and being with people his own age, however strange to him, he stumbled. He knew, intellectually, the dangers of alcohol to his people, and by extension to himself… but youth, arrogance, and a barely subliminal contempt for “the weak,” combined with peer pressure he’d never known before… and led him to take that first drink.

By Christmas break he was partying with the hardiest, sleeping with all the blond, red-headed or African American women he could (which was rather a lot, being himself a pretty attractive guy), and seeing his grades slip as he spiraled, all too quickly, into addiction. As the end of the school year approached, he was on the verge of washing out, and was totally out of control with the booze. It was then he met Mary Emily Gerturde Halcyon, an aspiring journalist a year ahead of him, and the beautiful blond daughter of a wealthy San Francisco family… Meg to her friends.

Meg was instantly attracted to the broad-shouldered, muscled and very charismatic Native man, despite his obviously unhealthy relationship with alcohol. She attempted to pull him out of his spiral, and over the course of the summer, as she began to succeed, they fell in love. He still hadn’t quite built up enough courage to share his secret with her, or quite given up the drinking, but he was entranced by her beauty, intelligence and strength and wanted to do both of those things for her.

Then an incident on a hot August night changed everything. Drinking way too much, after a three-week dry spell and despite Meg’s disapproval, on a night out with friends, they were walking back to her car (he still hadn’t mastered driving) when they were accosted by several rowdy youths. They were rude and lewdly suggestive, but as Meg would later confirm, not really any threat – just an annoyance. But a drunken Cooper overreacted, and after a particularly nasty sexual comment by one of the equally inebriated youths, he transformed into Orca – and almost killed them all before a shocked (but not paralyzed – this is, after all, the World of Heroes) Meg could stop him.

Dead sober after reverting to his human form, Cooper fled the scene in horror at what he’d almost done, while Meg lingered to see to the youths’ injuries, and call for an ambulance. Before it, and the police, could arrive Meg decided she couldn’t explain all this without betraying Cooper’s secret, and departed as well. She was less shocked at her boyfriend’s secret than she might have been, having interviewed The Guardian for her high school paper several years earlier, and coming to be friendly with San Francisco’s main superheroic, mystical protector.

The events of that night shocked Cooper into getting serious about kicking the booze, and in the end actually brought the couple even closer together. He finally told her all about himself, Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay, and the tragedy he’d been tasked with setting right; about his disdain for his own people here in the Outer World; and how ashamed he now was for that arrogance. Meg was super supportive, and over the course of the school year she helped him stay on an even keel, come to grips with his own frailties, and gain a compassion for others he had previously lacked.

It was a good year, but when summer came again, Totem (the superhero name Meg had playfully given him in bed one morning… “geese, you’re like a living totem pole!”) realized he must again attempt to fulfill his duty. He would find and bring back the best of the Haida to the Island for training, forgoing his own judgments of worthiness. But this also brought him to the realization that he could never take Meg home with him, that their relationship would never be accepted by the Elders. His people were expected to marry outside their totem sept, certainly… but not that far outside!

In July 2015 he broke up with a tearful, angry Meg, and headed once again for Alaska, via British Columbia, gathering up the twenty full-blooded Haida he’d found who seemed most worthy, including two women. He had no interest in either female romantically, but knew women would be needed to get the population growing again on the Island. By August he had convinced his selected candidates of the truth of his claims (being able to turn into five different beings, each with magical powers, helped – plus, they knew their own people’s legends and myths, if not, until now, the truth behind them), and they prepared to go to Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay.

And soon the day came, paddling across the open waters in traditional canoes, that they saw a fog bank ahead… the moment was near now… they pierced the mists (which seemed rather thin and wispy to Totem, but he ignored it in his mix of excitement and anxiety for the future and sadness for what he was leaving behind)… and there before them was the Island!

But… it was not as he remembered it. Physically, down to the trees and rocks, it was exactly as it should have been, but there was no sign of the Elders, not a trace. Indeed, it looked like there had never been a settlement of any sort on the island. His companions were confused, at first, but still trusting – until they came across four kayakers camped out on the far shore. They claimed the island had always been empty, as it was part of a Federal Wildlife Refuge. It was a popular stop for kayakers and other boaters enjoying the Alaskan waters, who were the only ones to ever set foot on it. The candidates got angry then, suddenly sure that they’d been duped. Despite Totem’s protestations, they soon prepared to depart, to return to dull, sad lives made all the more dull and sad for having been briefly illuminated by hope. Indeed, violence might have ensued, but no one was ready to take on a clearly mentally unbalanced but very powerful meta, especially one who was clearly delusional.

Kúng stood and watched them paddle back into the mist, slowly fading from his sight, and spent the next week prowling the island, seeking some way back home. He summoned all of his Spirit Animal forms, but none, not even wise Raven, could find the way. He even began to doubt his own memories and sanity, and if there’d been any alcohol on the island, he’d have gotten shit-faced drunk. As it was, the lone bottle of wine he was able to bum off another group of kayakers barely dented his depression.

Eventually he returned to Astoria, having nowhere else to go. Daniel Quinn was able to reassure him of his sanity, at least, and that his memories were not false… but he could offer little in the way of help. His father never recreated precisely the same inter-dimensional device they’d used to reach the Island, as he’d promised the Elders, and his notes were badly damaged during the attack seven years ago by The Doctor on the Rockport, Maine compound that had also killed the senior Dr. Quinn. While Daniel was a competent engineer and materials scientist, he was not the polymath genius his father had been. Nonetheless, he promised to do all that he could to find some way to cross the dimensional barriers and return Kúng to his homeland and people.

In the meantime, Cooper Ravenwing returned to school, determined to at least carry out such parts of this mandate as he might – seeking a solution to addiction, particularly alcohol addiction. Even if he never found his way home again, perhaps he could help his people here in the Outer World to regain their strength and dignity and forge a new future for themselves from the wreckage of the past.

He also did his best to avoid Meg Halcyon, ashamed of his treatment of her in his zeal to “do the right thing,” and too proud (and afraid, if he were completely honest with himself) to try to reconcile. He continued to attend AA meetings, having been sober since that bottle of wine on that false Sgang Gwaay Llanagaay… but the temptation is always there, as is depression if he is not careful.

He has begun to wonder if he should be doing more with his powers… his addiction research is a years-long, maybe a lifetime-long, pursuit, and sometimes it doesn’t feel like enough. Certainly there are many examples of ways he could help others – the “superheroes” that this culture is so enamored of is one possible path. Not many metahumans here in Astoria, of course, but that might be good – if he could raise the public profile of his people by being a symbol, it might help them all in the long run. Of course the local Chinook and Clatsop tribes have little use for him, he’d found over the past couple of years, having long and not very happy memories of his own tribe’s history with theirs.

Still, these are the thoughts that occupy him on a beautiful spring morning as he strolls up the Silver Mile after his early AA meeting, cup of decent coffee in hand (the local AA always makes sure they have good coffee… nothing has driven more people back to booze like a bad Starbucks coffee), when he was stunned by a flash of golden light and a roar like thunder…

———————————— ♦ ♦ ♦ ––————————————

*That’s not how it really worked, of course – they just died. But it was a myth encouraged by the Elders as another means of control.

**It is typical of Haida culture for men to acquire several different names in their lifetimes– especially powerful and distinguished men– so no Haida people would be confused by Raven’s many names.

Quanta (aka Kyle Steiner)

Twenty-seven-year-old Kyle Steiner, lanky at 5′ 11″ and 165 pounds, with wavy brown hair and blue eyes, was born 1 October 1990 to adventurous socialite parents Nico Steiner, Jr. and Lily Steiner of New York. Although the young Kyle loved and admired his dashing parents, and they certainly loved him, if in their own distracted, absent-minded way, it was his paternal grandmother, Ellie Steiner, who was closest to his heart. And he to hers.

Turning 71 the year her first and only grandchild was born, Ellie Steiner (neé Campbell) was always a free spirited and determined woman, following her own course no matter what “society” might think of it. At the age of 18 she decided to do the Grand Tour, a rite of passage still common in that day, but one usually restricted to the sons of the wealthy and upper middle class. An indulgent father and supportive mother, however, saw her off on 15 May 1937, sailing from New York aboard the SS Arandora Star for Southhampton.

Ellie enjoyed her months of touring the great cities and historical regions of Europe, but it was when she reached Austria that she fell in love. She had always intended to pursue an education in chemistry after her Grand Tour, but her fascination with Austria and its people, and the chance to study under the renowned chemist Hans Fischer, led her to apply to the University of Vienna. She was accepted as a chemistry major for the fall term of 1937, much to the surprise of her bemused parents.

During her first year at University Ellie met and fell in love with an Austrian philosophy major, Nico Steiner, and they were soon inseparable. Both of their courses of study went well that first year – in fact Ellie became a star pupil of Herr Professor Fischer. But storm clouds were beginning to gather over Austria and the world, beginning with the Anschluss, in March of 1938. The most immediate concern for Ellie after the German annexation of Austria was the takeover of the university administration by Nazi shill Dr. Gerhart von Richter. She took an instant dislike to the man, as did Herr Professor Fischer.

But their period of discomfort under von Richter’s rule was short-lived. Just before her second year at the university was to begin Ellie found herself, along with Fischer, Nico and hundreds of other students and teachers, dismissed and barred from the school. Aside from everything else, it enraged Ellie that all her notes on the work she had been pursuing under Prof. Fischer were confiscated by the Nazi von Richtor, apparently himself a chemist of some sort.

Watching the unfolding events in Europe, Nico and Ellie shared a growing unease. Although only half Jewish, on his mother’s side, Nico doubted the Nazis would appreciate such distinctions. Ellie’s own liberal leanings, as well as being a foreign woman, left her in a vulnerable position as well, and her family was urging her, quite strongly, to come home. For months they dithered, as Ellie and Dr. Fischer attempted to recreate their work in his private lab, but in the end the handwriting on the wall was too clear to ignore – it was time to get out.

Fischer returned to Munich, and Ellie prepared to sail for America. But she was not willing to leave Nico behind, and so she proposed to him. After his surprised but instant acceptance, the two arranged a hasty ceremony at St. Rupert’s Church. They sailed for America a month later, in March of 1939, as husband and wife. The Campbells were surprised to find they had a son-in-law, and a little dubious at first, but quickly came to appreciate Nico’s virtues. Being themselves indifferent Episcopalians, at best, they weren’t bothered in the least with Nico’s Semitic roots and quasi-agnosticism.

Ellie found a place at Cornell University, and in 1943 she graduated with a Doctorate in Organic Chemistry. Nico pursued his interests in philosophy and ethics, publishing papers in various academic and not-so-academic journals. In 1945 his first book, a collection of essays, was published by Signet Press. After several years learning the ropes at Houghton Chemical Corporation, Ellie went on to found her own company, Steiner Pharmaceuticals, and over the next seven years patented a number of her discoveries.

As time passed she and Nico had been worried that they would not be able to have children, since none had come to them, despite serious, if enjoyable, energy expended in the attempt. So when, at age 31, Ellie gave birth to a son the couple were overjoyed. The next year Ellie decided to finally sell her company to Sovereign Industries, who had been after her for years with increasingly tempting offers, and in December of 1951 they signed a deal that included both cash and Sovereign stock worth many, many millions.

The Steiners sold their Long Island home a few years later, and by 1958 had completed construction on their estate in upstate New York, on land bordering the Shindagin Hollow State Forest. The sprawling mansion and its outbuildings included a state-of-the-art laboratory for Ellie to continue her private chemical researches, and one of the most respected private libraries in the Northeast for Nico. Eventually Ellie took a faculty position at her alma mater, Cornell, while Nico continued to be published in numerous journals and to write books that sold moderately well.

Nico, Jr. grew up on the Steiner estate, and while he attended public school he also enjoyed private tutors. Having the run of the great state forest behind his home, he came to think of the Shindagin Hollow as his own private adventuring domain, at least until he moved to New York City to attend NYU. He had wanted to attend the Tesla Institute of Science in New Atlantis, but both his parents were opposed – not least because they found the dangers of metahuman activity in that city too great a risk for their only child.

Nico, Jr. soon found that New York suited him just fine after all, and he fell quickly into the lifestyle of the young, rich and good-looking that only New York can provide. It was in his junior year at NYU that he met Lily Chapman, a beautiful model and rising star. The two fell for one another, hard. But Lily’s career stalled at the age of 21 when she lost a million dollar Revlon Cosmetics contract to Lauren Hutton. It had been a close call, she later learned, and Hutton’s agent was rumored to have used chicanery to tip the scales. Lily never forgave Hutton for “stealing” what should have been hers – in later years Kyle never heard his mother refer to her former rival as anything other than “that gap-toothed hussy.” He was also never quite sure if her career had really stalled at that point, or if she had just given up in a petulant snit. As much as he loved his mother, even as a child he’d recognized the latter possibility was likely.

Whatever the truth, after Nico’s graduation she threw herself full force into the jet-setter lifestyle that they both loved. They were married in 1979 at St. Ruperts in Vienna, a nod to Nico’s parents and family history. That was the last time for many years that Ellie and Nico, Sr. were really happy with their son.

Despite desultory attempts at a few business ventures involving his Geology degree, Nico seemed content to live off his trust fund and travel the world seeking excitement and adventure. He had always been fascinated by Doc Savage’s many adventures back in the 30’s and 40’s. The one thing he did work hard at was ingratiating himself with Savage International, the foundation set up by Clark Savage in the mid-70’s, and he and Lily often traveled with SI missions around the world, especially to Africa.

By 1989 Nico, Sr. and Ellie were becoming concerned that they would never have grandchildren, and after a heated exchange and the threat of being cut off, the jet-setting couple agreed to settle down. They moved into the west wing of the upstate mansion, and less than a year later Kyle was born – Nico, Jr. was 40 and Lily was 37. He would be their only child.

Although they seemed to make a real effort, parenthood was not Nico and Lily’s strong suit. While they loved their son, they also loved the adventurous and glamorous lives they’d lived for so long. Having kept the condo in New York, they alternated between lavishing Kyle with gifts and sporadic bursts of attention, and disappearing for months at a time. Having Ellie and Nico, Sr., not to mention the mansion’s staff, on hand as replacement guardians probably made those choices easier for them.

But Kyle loved listening to his dad’s stories of his travels and adventures, and absorbed his fascination with the adventurers and “mystery men” of the early 20th Century. He would sit enthralled and quiet, so as not to be noticed and sent away, when his father’s exotic and exciting guests would visit, talking for hours about far-away places and mysterious events. He also loved the trips downstate to NYC with his mother and the time spent together at the condo there gave him both a love of live theater and a taste for fine clothes.

Sadly, this idyllic (at least in his memory) time came to an end just after the turn of the new century. The summer before his 11th birthday, Kyle’s father disappeared while traveling in Africa. He was to have met up with an SI group in Buranda, but apparently never arrived. SI itself instituted a search, but nothing was ever conclusively learned about Nico Steiner, Jr.’s disappearance. Lily, who had decided at the last minute not to go with her husband, so as to attend Kyle’s Little League playoff game, took the news poorly. She spent increasing amounts of time at the condo in NYC, and although Kyle would visit occasionally, the visits never seemed to go well. Lily’s drinking also seemed to increase, but this was something Kyle wouldn’t really understand until looking back years later.

The immediate result, however, was clear enough — the boy spent most of his time over the next year with his grandmother. She had always really been his primary maternal figure, and as he got older they had begun to find a shared a love of pure science. Ellie had encouraged him towards chemistry, which was her own main passion, and he liked it well enough. But when his passion for theoretical physics became obvious she was quick to help him grow in that direction as well. By the time he turned 12 he was spending almost all his free time in her lab, working on various projects in both chemistry and physics.

On the night of 21 June 2003 Kyle’s world again took a sharp turn into tragedy. He was awakened in the early hours of the morning by his grandfather, who was crying and obviously distraught. He was forced to tell the confused boy that his mother was dead, killed in a car crash somewhere between the city and Ithaca. Kyle was never able to get much in the way of details from his grandparents, but over time he began to suspect she had been drunk. He then began to worry that maybe she had killed someone else in the accident, forcing his grandparents to admit that it had been a single car accident.

Lily was buried in Ithaca, NY, her hometown, and a second marker was placed next to hers for Nico, Jr., although there was no body to bury in his case. Nico, Sr. passed away a little over a year later… of grief, his grandmother always insisted. She herself was devastated by the double loss – for all that Lily sometimes aggravated her, she had loved her like the daughter she’d never had, and her son had been her great love, if not her great joy. Kyle was that joy, however, and she had to go on for him, if for no other reason.

As with his father, she insisted that he attend public high school, but she also tutored him herself and got him into science classes at Cornell in his junior and senior years. He took up the épée, as fencing had been the one sport his father had been both good at and enthusiastic about – Doc Savage had been a skilled swordsman, after all, he’d told his son. Kyle excelled in school, and that, along with his demonstrable aptitude for the sciences, got him admittance to the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was pleased to learn that the school actually had a fencing team, and he went out for it his freshman year.

Kyle’s grandmother died quietly in her sleep in the spring of 2011, near the end of his junior year This proved a grief to him greater than any of the other deaths in his young life. With his mother dead and his father long ago declared legally dead, Kyle was the sole inheritor of the remaining Steiner fortune. Although now a multimillionaire, Kyle had little interest in the material aspects of his inheritance, in the way that only the truly privileged and young, who have never really wanted for anything, can be uninterested. The only thing that really excited him was the fact that his grandmother had bequeathed to him all of her personal journals and research notebooks, many of which he had never seen before.

He spent that summer poring over the books, many of which were written in Austrian German, apparently as an added layer of security to casual prying eyes. While a little rusty, he quickly brushed up on the German his grandfather had taught him as a child, and was able to decipher the notebooks. He was shocked to find that his grandmother had been working most of her adult life on attempting to create a chemical formula to “die Menschheit verbessern.

At first horrified at what sounded like Nazi “übermensch” science, he was soon relieved to find that Ellie’s goals had been quite the opposite of the Axis mad-men who had unleashed such horrors on the world in their search for “Aryan perfection.” She had sought to truly improve the entire human race, to help it achieve its utmost potential, not to create super soldiers.

Kyle spent a feverish summer organizing the notebooks and attempting to continue and perhaps even complete his grandmothers work. In her final notes she had indicated she felt close to a breakthrough, and he longed to make it for her, in her memory. It was an expensive, and frustrating proposition, however, as failure after failure dogged him. With the beginning of the school year fast approaching, he began staying up for days at a time, only collapsing into an exhausted sleep when his mind and body refused to obey him anymore.

On the night of 16 August 2011 Kyle made his breakthrough. He had a non-toxic, non-quantifiable serum based on his grandmother’s organic chemistry and his own quantum mechanical inspiration. He was sure it would work, but he was out of lab monkeys, and he’d been awake for almost 70 straight hours… in retrospect, it’s the only explanation he could offer for what he did next. Kyle plunged the syringe into his own spinal cord, and collapsed at the searing pain, which thankfully faded quickly into unconsciousness…

When Kyle next opened his eyes he found himself in a private room at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, more than 200 miles from his lab and home. Confused and disoriented, he eventually learned that he had apparently knocked over a bunsen burner along with several flammable reagents in his spasms after injecting himself (that little bit of information he kept to himself – everyone seemed to think he had simply collapsed, again, from exhaustion) and started a fire. The servants, smelling the smoke, had rushed in to pull his unconscious body out, and extinguish the flames. Tobias, the estate’s elderly major domo, had called for an ambulance and, wise in the ways of the wealthy, the family’s lawyers.

The firm of Cooley, Breckinridge and Venn, LLP had served the Steiners for decades, and saw to having their client airlifted to the family’s preferred hospital (and the wing named for them) as soon as he had been stabilized. Doctors had initially been concerned about what he might have inhaled, but despite being in a coma for five days, they eventually had to agree that Kyle was now fine, and had suffered no lasting harm from his “accident.”

Nine days after injecting himself with his experimental serum, an event that had become terribly hazy and indistinct in his memory, Kyle returned to his mansion and the burned lab. As he had feared, it was a disaster. Tobias had had the experience and sense to not clean up, of course, knowing both Ellie’s and Kyle’s feelings about anyone intruding into the lab, but the fire had to be extinguished and the elderly servant hadn’t been able to do anything about the fire department or the police. Most of Ellie’s journals and notebooks were safe, of course, locked up securely as always. But the core notebooks and his own research were destroyed beyond recovery, and whatever mad inspiration had struck him in those last couple of days, it was also lost, in a haze of pain and fractured memories.

On top of the disaster, the experiment appeared to have been a failure. He was alive, which was good, but he didn’t feel in the least “enhanced,” much less like a superman. It seemed he wouldn’t be taking Ultra’s place in the pantheon of the country’s heroes after all. No call from the Liberty Alliance for young Kyle Steiner.

Emotionally exhausted and depressed, Kyle returned to school a week later, and attempted to put the whole disastrous summer behind him. He threw himself into his quantum physics studies, and as a stress-reliever pushed himself harder than ever at his fencing. And in doing so, surprised both himself and his coaches. Almost from the beginning of the term, he was practically unbeatable, and by Thanksgiving no one could touch him. He so impressed his coach that some strings were pulled, and he got a late tryout for the American Olympic fencing team.

Kyle won a slot on the team with no trouble, if maybe a little resentment from his new teammates. A complete unknown to the crowds at the 2012 London Olympic Games, he soared through his matches to victory at every turn, amazing the (admittedly small) part of the sporting world that cared. In his semi-final match he beat Rubén Limardo (VEN), going on to beat Bartosz Piasecki (NOR) in the Men’s Épée final and win the gold medal.

It wasn’t until he heard Limardo grousing to another fencer about Kyle probably being a meta, that he made the connection. Although he had passed all the drug and metahuman tests to get into the Olympics, the fact was they could only test for what they knew to look for – and whatever breakthrough Kyle (and his grandmother) had made, it apparently didn’t show up on current tests.

He tried to deny it to himself at first, but under the pressure of sudden fame and a seemingly constant media onslaught on his return to New York, his resolve began to crumble. When the US Olympic Committee approached him about his plans for the 2016 Games in Rio, he cracked. Abandoning his NYC condo, he retreated to his upstate mansion to think and consider his options.

Whatever else the formula had done, it seemed to have increased his speed, strength and endurance… beyond that, it was still a mystery, however. He felt terribly guilty over the whole Olympic fiasco, as he now thought of it, and considered confessing and relinquishing his gold medal. But he quickly realized that he would become a target for forces both relatively benign and horribly malign – the search for ways to create metahumans was an ongoing quest for both ends of the moral spectrum, and his life would never be the same if it was known he’d succeeded at enhancement in even this mild fashion.

Kyle had previously applied to Stanford for graduate school, and he followed through on those plans with added zeal now. Getting away from the paparazzi, media and metahuman centers of the East Coast could only be for the good! He would drop this whole meta-enhancement idea, and go on about his life. But the best laid plans… while his body seemed to have stabilized at a near-superhuman level, his mind had apparently also been changed. Whatever had increased the impulse flow in his nervous system extended to his brain as well, and he found his mind both clearer and stronger than he’d ever believed possible.

Which meant that he could have completed his doctoral work at Stanford in a year, maybe less. But realizing that this would only draw more unwanted attention to himself, he forced himself to stretch it out to a more reasonable two years. Even so, by the time he graduated he had been linked to the gold medal fencer and reclusive millionaire, and was now apparently a rising star in theoretical physics and quantum mechanics.

Wanting to avoid any more public exposure, and finding that being rude and surly to the paparazzi only encouraged them, Kyle arranged to quietly buy a penthouse condo in Astoria, Oregon. In researching where to go to avoid the spotlight, it had seemed the perfect choice – very low crime rate, very little metahuman activity, out of the mainstream, but with a very good high-tech infrastructure. He could pursue his private researches there with, hopefully, minimal hassle.

For the next few years his choice seemed to have been proven wise. He spent his time developing his theories about the quantum foam that underlies reality, and in so doing found that he had developed a truly superhuman ability after all. Apparently by virtue of his improved mind, he could not only understand quantum processes clearly, he could actually manipulate the quantum foam directly. He could create actual physical items from virtual particles of almost any substance on the elemental chart, although some where more difficult and tiring than others. By far the easiest, he soon discovered, were carbon nanotubes (CNT).

He found that he could create crude but strong physical structures, as well as hurl “blasts” of “bucky balls” of various sizes a fair distance and with considerable force, even ricocheting them off other surfaces. He could also use entanglement and quantum tunneling to “teleport” himself and/or objects between two points in space without actually traversing the intervening distance.  Not more than four miles, however, even if in line-of-sight, and even small distances left him exhausted and shaky for several minutes afterward. His ability to seemingly repulse gravity, and so fly, was at first a great joy to him, but he soon found that it was almost as tiring as quantum tunneling, took intense concentration, and he could never seem to travel faster than 30 miles per hour.

Still, he could fly!

His body remained extremely resilient and healthy – indeed, he’d never been sick, even with the common cold, since his “accident.” He did find that he needed to eat about twice as much as a normal human, and drink twice the amount of water each day to keep himself operating at peak efficiency. He also discovered that he could heal other people’s injuries by the laying on of hands and concentrating on their quantum structure. Only gross injuries or imperfections, so far, and not more subtle disease states, but he has hopes for the future in that area as he continues to practice and hone all his abilities.

And he has begun to think that it’s about time he steps up and begins to use his powers for something more than his own education. Maybe a move to New Atlantis and the world of superheroes? It’s very much on his mind as he sits outside a Starbucks Coffee on the Silver Mile with his mocha and cinnamon roll on a fateful, beautiful late spring day…