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While You Were Out
08. House Sitting
Author: OriginalCeenote
Summary: There’s something dark over the horizon as Scott tries
to take his life back, Logan and Ororo sort through their feelings for
each other, and trouble comes knocking on their door.
Author's Note: I pictured the scene at the end of this in my head out of
the blue and had to use it. Hate me if you want.
The next two weeks brought mild
weather (thanks in part to Sean Cassidy’s arrival to
the Institute, relieving Ororo of her literature and
history classes and quelling some the panic that
usually brought cloudy skies) and an improvement in
Scott’s mobility and spatial awareness. His first
foray back into the students’ routine found him
coming down to breakfast and practically knocked
down in a flurry of hugs and questions. Engulfed in
the snug knot of arms and smiles, Scott peeked over
their heads to catch Hank and Ororo’s shared knowing
look: Aren’t you glad you stayed? He still
felt that empty pang whenever he went back to his
and Jean’s suite at the end of the day and let his
gaze roam over her belongings and the pictures; it
was a work in progress. She still haunted his
dreams: Beautiful, fierce, and crying out to him to
save her. The first rays of sun across the horizon
always reminded him of the halo of fire radiating
out from her hair that afternoon at Alkali, and he
felt that funny little ache inside.
He occupied himself at the school; teaching an
ethics class that Ororo suggested and helping Hank
make the needed upgrades to the campus security
system and the Danger Room. Kitty found a willing
fellow gearhead in Scott when she suggested he help
her reinstall the GPS and communication software in
the bikes and the Blackbird, and after hours, he
found himself keeping more frequent company with
Hank and Peter, playing the occasional game of
billiards or chess and just enjoying “male bonding”
that he often put aside while he was a “promised
man.” He’d forgotten what good taste Hank had in
alcohol, and they had a good laugh at how the brandy
“helped his aim” as he re-learned how to line up his
shots on the pool table without using his eye beams
on the cue ball.
If he had to name the biggest fly in the ointment to
his recovery, it was the headaches.
Just twinges, really. A little pain around the
orbits of his eyes, like what you got from reading
too-small print, that gradually shot to the back of
his head and just sat there. His complaints to Hank
elicited a raised eyebrow and being rolled into the
cavernous scanner for an MRI and CT scan study.
“What’s the verdict, Doc?”
“You’re fit as a fiddle. I have one suggestion,
though.”
“Lay it on me.”
“Start wearing your goggles again.”
“Come again?” Scott fixed him with a scowl as he sat
up from the table.
“I’ve been going back over your file from when you
first came to the school, Scott. The Professor made
some eye-opening – excuse the pun – notations
regarding your condition when you were released from
the orphanage. Right before you left, you were taken
to an ophthalmologist to study your vision and some
headaches you were experiencing, correct?”
“Yeah. I kinda remember it. Vaguely, anyway.” He
bowed his face a moment and pinched the bridge of
his nose, exhaling gustily through his nostrils.
Hank saw the tightness around his mouth and tsked
with concern. “What are you thinking, Hank?”
“Your eye doctor had marked your headaches up to
vision changes, puberty, and all of the usual
growing pains that an adolescent goes through, and
he indicated that you were the first patient he’d
ever encountered that he needed to prescribe the
lenses for. He felt it was significant enough to
indicate in your patient files that the headaches
disappeared once you began using the lenses.”
“I hate them,” Scott grumbled. “There’s nothing else
I can use in the meantime to help this?”
“It’s the most feasible solution I can come up with
for now, Scott. There is so much we don’t know about
your powers –“
“What’s there to know? I don’t have them anymore,”
Scott snapped.
“You mean you haven’t accessed them since you
returned,” Hank corrected him, leveling a sober gaze
at his friend. “When you were younger, you had the
headaches like this during a time when your powers
were dormant, but slowly emerging. This isn’t
something as mundane and uncomplicated as not
wanting to admit you’re nearsighted for fear of
wearing “geeky Coke bottle glasses,” Scott, it’s
serious. Your powers may still exist. You may still
be a mutant.”
“Or I might be normal for the first time in my life
since the damned beams first tore everything apart,
including my life. Hank…do you think I want to go
back to that phase of my life? Being out of control?
Wearing those damned glasses is like wearing a mask,
Hank! It’s not just an ego thing. I’ve been called a
Boy Scout all my life; d’ya think I care if anyone
thinks I look geeky? The goggles…they hide the real
me. No one can see my eyes behind them. You can tell
a lot about a man by looking him in the eye, buddy.
I’m tired of intimidating and freaking people out.”
Scott’s shoulders were round and knotted with
tension, and Hank literally sniffed out his sour
mood.
“Sometimes it’s a necessary evil to take precautions
like these, Scott. You know as well as I do how
powerful you were. With one glance, you can punch a
hole through a tank. This is a school. There are
children running around these halls twenty-four
seven. Every last one of them is a moving target if
you don’t get over yourself and put the goggles back
on.” Hank’s tone was sober and brooked no bullshit.
“Children. Moving targets. This discussion is over.”
Hank felt Scott’s stony glare on his back as he
turned to tuck Scott’s file back into the cabinet.
“Let me know if you need another pair of them
commissioned any time soon.”
“I’ll manage,” Scott sighed, rubbing his nape and
tugging futilely on the short, crisp waves of hair
as if to scrub away the truth in Hank’s words. “I’m
crippled again.”
“Only if you choose to see it that way. And the next
time you try to tell me how hard it is to intimidate
everyone all the time with the way you look…try
being big, furry and blue, all right?” Hank shot him
a sympathetic smile that Scott sheepishly returned.
“C’mon, man, let’s go upstairs and eat. And clear
your schedule for the next few hours.”
“Why?”
“We’re taking Peter’s suggestion to see the latest
art exhibit at a museum that he recommended. A
Buddhist traveling troupe is in town creating a
gorgeous sand painting on the main floor. It’s only
fair that one of the last things you see without the
damned goggles is something beautiful and unique.”
“Maybe just a brief look. I kinda had something else
in mind, preferably in high heels and a g-string,”
he winked, chuckling at Hank’s dumbfounded
expression. “Remember what I said about intimidating
people, Hank? That includes ‘beautiful and unique’
visions spinning down poles at this bar that Logan
once recommended. Might not have to tip so heavily
if they quit mistaking me for some anonymous pervert
in kooky glasses.” He wiggled his eyebrows wickedly
for emphasis, making Hank realize that he would miss
that gleam in Scott’s eye.
“I’ll just dust off my image inducer; the exhibit
closes at eight!” Hank clapped Scott on the shoulder
as they made their way into the elevator.
The kitchen was already noisy and heavily occupied
as Kitty tiptoed through squirming students, lifting
the plates up to her chest to avoid dropping them as
she had near misses bumping into everyone. Peter
resumed his customary perch by the stove, lading up
chicken noodle soup and pulling loaves of fresh
garlic bread from the oven. Scott took in the
scuffle with a wistful look.
“I’m gonna miss this.”
“You won’t miss anything.”
“It was really neat being able to see everyone the
way they look now, Hank. Eye colors, hair colors,
skin tones, all the little gradients and hues that
don’t mean much when everything is just different
shades of red.” He spoke in a hushed murmur, as
though everything were unfolding before him in slow
motion, and Hank was a fellow spectator to what he
was seeing. “It’s just…a luxury, seeing everything
through new eyes. I hate to give it up.” Jimmy
strolled by and smiled widely at him, his crystal
blue eyes full of satisfaction when he noticed that
his new favorite teacher came to join them for the
afternoon meal. Scott briefly waved hello, noticing
that the faint twinge of a headache that he felt
coming on again vanished as quickly as it came as
Jimmy nudged past him to get some juice. Hope
briefly flared in his chest…only to be dashed just
as quickly.
What was he going to do, walk around with Jimmy tied
to him all day like they were in a three-legged
race? He stifled a laugh as he pictured Marie taking
the same tack, for similar reasons. Yup. The
goggles, as Hank explained, were the only feasible
solution to the problem.
New York City, Stryker Building, former
headquarters of the Evangelical Stryker Crusade:
“Let’s go over this again. You’ve made excellent
progress, my dear. I just want to make sure you’re
ready.” Stryker sat back in his tilting swivel chair
and stared across his desk at his brooding charge.
“My name is Jean. Jean Grey.”
“Doctor Jean Grey,” he corrected her. “What
specialty?”
“Genetics and physiology.” He nodded briefly in
accord.
“Where do you live?”
“Here,” she replied dispassionately.
“This is your temporary home; tell me where you
really live, Doctor Grey.”
“At a school.” Her bottle green eyes burned with
something akin to rebellion as she continued to
parcel out fragments of the answers he demanded.
“A school for what?”
“Gifted youngsters. That’s what it’s called in the
morning paper,” she clarified. Stryker’s nostrils
flared in annoyance, and he saw the faint hint of a
smile quirk in the corner of her mouth. The Delilah
was toying with him. The smile never reached full
fruition; her eyes shuttered, small furrows
appearing between her brows as she lifted her hand
to massage her temple in discomfort. She met his
gaze again, shooting him a surprised look. “Jason
went there,” she murmured, so low that he almost
didn’t hear her.
The effect on him was like being slapped across the
chops.
“Never, ever say that name to me, wicked
woman! I won’t tolerate it, do you understand me?”
His face was twisted and savage as he leapt up from
his seat, nearly tipping it over as it was relieved
of his weight, and Jean could see the whites of his
eyes and a faint fleck of spittle spray from his
lips with the sanction. BANG! “Do you hear me?!”
Jean felt as well as heard the hollow-sounding echo
of his fist banging against the old desk, hammering
the point home.
“Yes,” she muttered. His breathing pattern
momentarily settled itself, and he leaned forward on
the heels of his hands, staring intently at her.
There was caution scribbled over her features, but
not fear. He really needed to remedy that, and
quickly.
The old headquarters had seen better days. The
building was previously a towering hive of activity,
but the dissolution of his crusade, once more widely
celebrated and followed than Billy Graham’s, had led
to a large portion of the building’s top floors
being sealed off or leased to other business
tenants. His former chauffeur, a devout follower,
eagerly provided him with security codes and a pass
key into his old office and a means of coming in
through the basement entrance. It wasn’t a
multi-million dollar research and development
complex with corporate funding, granted, but it
would have to do. Stryker placed furtive, encrypted
calls to Lord Darkwind’s legal contacts, and was
appalled when his administrative assistant abruptly
informed him that his previous attorney who drew up
his will and executed it died a grisly death; his
body was found disemboweled and hanging from the
rafters of his cabin in the Rockies two days after
Stryker and Jean made their escape from Oyama Heavy
Industries via private jet. His gut twisted itself
in knots when he terminated the call.
Yuriko was taking back her inheritance, with a
vengeance.
Stryker turned his attention back to Jean, her face
a study of confusion and resentment.
“Time for your next dose,” he pronounced with forced
cheer, reaching into his blazer pocket for the tiny
zippered case. He extracted the tincture and moved
behind her, grasping her by the crown of her head
and tipping it forward. She grunted with the
slightly awkward position, with her chin pressed
tightly against her chest as he moved her thick hair
aside and dribbled the clear narcotic liquid into
the porous flesh of her nape, applying it to the
round scar to absorb into her vessels. She winced,
both at the burning sensation and beneath the faint
echo of his angry thoughts.
The most she could stand was to skim the surface,
picking up occasional impressions and random
feelings. If she delved any deeper, she was thrown
into the melee and cacophony of too many voices,
enveloping her…making her forget whose thoughts were
hers…
It was absolutely maddening. If she gave an inch,
they took miles and miles. So she shut the door. At
least for the moment.
Stryker circled her chair, peering into her eyes,
watching them adopt the slightly milky green hue
that indicated the successful absorption of the
drug.
“Let’s run through the basic things again, just as a
precaution. Who gave you the ring?”
“Scott. A teacher.” She paused, licking her dry lips
as she stared off vacantly, focusing on the grimy
office window behind him. “An X-Man.”
“A mutant,” he added.
“Yes.” It hurt to think too hard; it was so much
easier to agree. Her hand crept up to twist a lock
of hair around and around her finger, just to have
something to do.
“And therefore, a sinner. A sinner who must die.”
A heartbeat-long pause followed, before her ripe,
tourmaline pink lips murmured “Yes” once more.
Visions of a chiseled, saturnine face came to her,
making her shiver. A sinner.
The quizzing continued for the next half-hour until
Jean rattled off the answers he expected with
remarkable precision. He dug in his blazer pocket
for the tiny slimline phone and snapped it open,
barking into it that they were ready now for the
next phase. Jean’s face was faintly bewildered as
two men clad in white labcoats smiled blandly and
took her by the elbows, leading her out of Stryker’s
dismal office suite. Stryker turned away to stare
out at the cityscape, shivering for a moment within
the warm space when he felt a faintest brush of her
thoughts reaching out to his.
Why are you doing this to me?
He shook it off.
Westchester County, back at the School for Gifted
Youngsters:
“That all ya got, Tin Man?” Logan drawled, assessing
Peter’s neat bank shot that sent the red striped
seven ball into the left side pocket. Peter smirked
easily at him as he ground the tip of his pool cue
into the blue block of chalk, pursing his lips to
blow off the excess.
“Still my turn. Don’t write me off yet.” He lined up
his next shot, mentally crossing his fingers, but
his good gris-gris wore off, no matter how hard he
wished on the shot. The green striped ball bounced
off the corner bracket of the table. Logan grinned.
“Looks like yer buyin’ the beer tonight at Harry’s,
bub,” he chuckled, sinking his next three shots. He
was just lining up the eight ball when two new
scents in the doorway of the study tickled his nose.
His hackles went up when he recognized one of them
as Scott’s. He didn’t look up from his shot even
when he heard his and Hank’s respective footsteps
approach. Peter shot them an engaging smile.
“Here comes the cavalry,” Peter joked. “You two just
saved me from losing my shirt in another pool game.
Logan’s on fire tonight.”
Logan cocked an eyebrow at his opponent, who was
already making good his escape, reaching for the
brown leather bomber jacket he’d laid over the arm
of the poker chair in the game room earlier. “Wuss,”
he muttered under his breath.
“Don’t be a party pooper, Wolverine,” Hank
suggested, running a clawed hand over his hair,
smoothing the unruly indigo waves. “Join us. We’re
planning to paint the town red.” Behind him, Scott
ruffled and bristled uncomfortably, his lips
tightening around the corners on the heels of Hank’s
invitation. Scott and Logan had given each other a
wide berth, and Bobby had joked that it wasn’t him
making the air colder when those two occupied the
same space.
“What’s goin’ on?” Logan inquired politely, chafing
Hank slightly as he re-racked the balls and shuffled
them along the surface of the slick green felt
before neatly lifting off the triangle. He laid it
on the rim of the table and lined up the cue ball,
looking for all the world like a man who didn’t plan
on budging from his perch for the rest of the night.
Peter shrugged more deeply into his bomber jacket,
clearly tense.
“Art exhibit. Sand paintings. A little highbrow
entertainment,” Hank announced silkily.
“Eh.”
“Might partake of a little liquid refreshment.”
“Got a case of Molson in the fridge. Think I’m
good.” He wasn’t in the mood to act flattered that
“the cool kids” invited him to their kegger while
their parents were out of town, thank you very much.
His friendships with the veteran members of
Charley’s fledgling class were still tentative and a
work in progress at best. He didn’t give his trust
easily or quickly.
The only one of ‘em who’d given him reason to open
up at him at all was still pissed off and sulking
outside, planting the last of her fall bulbs and
plotting his death. He stifled a sigh, wishing she’d
stuck around the steam room long enough to see if
her tiny bikini looked equally sexy lying in a heap
on the floor.
“Want us to bring back any souvenirs? We were headed
to that trendy little bar in the city opening up
down the block from Harry’s,” Peter grinned.
“What, that little yuppie juice bar and champagne
lounge?” Just thought of it made his sac shrivel
between his legs.
“Nope. Down on the other block. Skintights,”
Hank chirped, his expression cajoling Logan that
yes, he did too know the place, so quit shamming. A
light went on in Logan’s hazel eyes for a moment,
before he recovered himself. His glance skittered
over Scott for a millisecond. Scott was studiously
ignoring him, but he could tell by the set of his
shoulders and the way he hovered on the periphery of
the room that he was interested in his answer.
“That’s a tittie bar,” he muttered, meeting Hank’s
amused gaze.
“Fancy that. It is,” he replied innocently. “I
prefer the term ‘gentlemen’s establishment,’ but
sure, let’s go with that.” Hank reached into his
pocket and rummaged until his hand emerged,
brandishing a tiny, gleaming device with a flashing
red light. He depressed the button, filling the
gaming room with a low thrum.
“What the flamin’ hell – HANK?!?!” Logan backed away
from the pool table, throwing his hand over his eyes
to protect them from the stark blast of white light
that bathed Henry, picking out his fur in a blinding
blue glow that gradually shimmered and shifted. The
light swelled, then dimmed, changing to a rosy gold
before it finally receded…
…revealing a, olive-skinned, saturnine-looking man
with intelligent dark blue eyes and short black
hair, adjusting his spectacles and smoothing his
lapel before he placed the device back into his
pocket. Scott and Peter stood gaping at the stranger
in their midst, stunned to hear him chuckling with
Henry’s voice.
“What do you think? Be honest,” Hank urged. “Too
tall? Too chunky? Should I be going a little more
‘boy band singer’ or ‘Wall Street stock trader?’
Does this say ‘dashing’ or ‘desperate?’”
“What did you do to yourself?” Scott drew closer,
circling him and staring at the change, taking in
the mute details. Just to satisfy his curiosity, he
reached out and stroked Henry’s cheek.
“Still furry,” Scott remarked, snatching his hand
away.
“Of course. Still the same old lovable genetic
physicist underneath these fancy trappings. This is
a solid light inducer. That young Sage is as much as
a prodigy with electronics and software as our
Shadowcat; isn’t she something? She worked with me
on the most recent upgrades to the Danger Room, and
derived this from the same technology.”
“’Kay. So ya look like any other Tom, Dick or
Scooter,” Logan reasoned out loud, feeling the
diluted scowl that Scott shot him boring into his
back, “but what happens when someone cozies up to ya
and gets all touchy-feely?” Logan’s nose confirmed
for him that Hank’s transformation was indeed only
cosmetic; he could smell the distinctive, musky tang
of his fur that was his “signature scent.”
“I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it,” he
huffed, straightening his shirt cuff. “We still
can’t persuade you to join us?”
“Naw. Go ahead. Yer already all gussied up an’ ready
t’go. I ain’t in a social mood. Feel like punishing
a few more pool balls before I turn in.” Hank and
Peter waved their goodbyes to Logan’s back. Logan
counted their retreating footsteps and realized that
there were only two sets.
“What’re ya waitin’ for, Summers?” Logan lined up
his next shot, studiously ignoring Scott as he
leaned his backside against the billiard table’s
bumper. “Party train’s pulling outta the station
without ya.”
“I’ll catch the next one.” He leveled a searching
look at his one-time teammate, crossing his arms
across his chest in a protective gesture before he
could stop himself. “Hank told me what you did at
Alcatraz.” Logan’s hands paused a moment before he
drew back his cue, treating Scott once again to his
patented quirked brow. “I know how Jean died.”
Logan straightened up and stepped back from the
table, drilling the cue’s handle into the marble
floor as he leaned on it like a walking staff. He
briefly weighed the possible ways of dealing with
this new revelation, after he’d been avoiding it the
past few weeks:
A) He could play dumb. Distract him with some beer.
Nope. Coward’s way out.
B) He could nudge him out the door to follow Hank
and Peter.
C) He could just take it on the chin. Least he could
do…wasn’t it?
D) He could get good and defensive and make an ass
out of himself.
“Whaddya want me ta say, Scooter?” His hackles were
up and twitching as Scott’s tension leeched off of
him and doused Logan full-strength; they stared each
other down like two alpha males competing for
dominance of the pack. “I’m sorry. I know it ain’t
enough, bub. That don’t even begin ta make it
right…it ain’t like I can make it up to ya.”
“No shit. Taking a life isn’t just something you
‘make up for,’ Wolverine.”
“I know that. And I can’t take it back.” Heaven only
knew, he’d taken a few. He was slightly surprised
when he felt a small tug on the back of his pool
cue, stilling it as he levered it back for his next
shot. Scott retrieved another stick from the rack
hanging against the wall and chalked it carefully.
“I want stripes.”
“Suit yerself.” Logan grunted under his breath;
Scott hadn’t phrased it as a request. That was new.
Scott sized up the possibilities before making a
sweet little trick shot, sinking the nine and
thirteen balls neatly and with little effort. “Not
bad.”
“Easier when I used a low-powered blast to line up
the cue ball. Doesn’t mean I forgot my basic
geometry. Not like we live in a school, or
anything,” he reminded him, twisting Magneto’s taunt
to his own purposes.
“Eh.” Logan watched Scott make his next shot, then
scratch by nicking Logan’s four ball, nudging it
into the right side pocket.
“They can’t all be winners,” he mused.
“Where’s the fun in that?” Logan took another pull
from his beer, savoring the cool bite of hops. Four
bottles through the case found him enjoying this one
as much as the first.
“What did she say, Logan?” He’d been about to take
another sip of Molson when Scott’s low voice, tinged
with a hint of bitterness, made the bottle hang
halfway to his mouth. “When she…what did she say to
you?” He winced at Scott’s inability to say the
words. When she died. When you killed
her.
“Scooter…” Despite the drinks he’d already finished,
his mouth went dry. He tried to school his
expression but failed miserably.
“Quit calling me Scooter, damn it!” BANG! The bridge
bruised the lip of the table bumpers as Scott
slammed it down. “A little fucking respect. From day
one, you blew in here, snarling at everyone,
treating me like some amateur, like I was your
chump? Huh?” He jerked the butt of the cue up
into the air, lining up a shot where logan scratched
and froze. CLAACCK! The clatter of enamel surfaces
smacking together underscored his words. “You
figured that a guy like me who follows the rules
instead of playing the bad ass won’t take exception
to you chasing my fiancée? Was it fun?” He
white-knuckled his grip on the cue, and Logan
couldn’t turn away from his eyes, which were dilated
and rife with pain. “What did she say?” he repeated.
“She asked me if I’d die for them. She wasn’t the
same Jeannie, bub. Ya don’t know the half of it. She
was gonna take out Alcatraz just as an opener. The
whole world was next. Ya weren’t there, Summers,” he
reminded him, swallowing around a lump.
“Guess I was indisposed,” Scott snapped.
“Then I guess I gotta make ya understand, then. I
was there, and what I saw – shit, what I did – is
gonna haunt my sleep for the rest of my life, and it
ain’t like I slept all that soundly ta begin with.
Ya don’t wanna get inside my head. But during those
last moments, Jeannie sure as hell did, and I hate
what she had ta see. Ya wanna know what she said?
She begged me ta save her. Not just at Alcatraz.
When we brought her back here.” He nodded to the
beer. “Ya might wanna sit down and have one of
those,” he suggested, “cuz ya’ll need it.” Scott
reached for one of the proffered beers and slapped
the cap off of it using the table rim. He didn’t sit
down, instead taking a gulp, keeping his eyes on
Logan’s the whole time.
“Go on,” he demanded quietly.
“We brought her back here. Blue mighta already
filled ya in. We found her the worse for wear at
Alkali, unconscious and looking like death warmed
over. Summers, all we found were yer friggin’
goggles. Do ya know what went through our heads? We
came out there ta find ya, Summers. I won’t lie;
when I think of Alkali, I’ll always remember that
moment right before she threw us clear of the dam.
I’ll always hear her voice in my head, tellin’ us
all goodbye. But when we found her, and when I found
nothing but yer glasses on the shore, I knew
something wasn’t kosher, and ‘Ro knew it, too. She
zipped her lip the whole ride home. The Professor
couldn’t find yer thoughts; in light of the fact
that there was no other physical sign of what
happened to ya, what else could we do? And Summers,
I’m gonna fess up. Jeannie and I talked, when she
woke up in the infirmary. The Professor warned me
about her. He’d already dug around in her head and
found that other personality…”
“The Phoenix,” Scott muttered. Logan’s brows knitted
themselves together in surprise.
“Hank?”
“No. I just know. The Phoenix was the last thing I
saw before I…you know.” He waved his hand in a
futile gesture, unable to explain it, and unwilling
to try. “I felt her in my head. That’s what she
called herself, in my thoughts.”
“I talked to her. The Professor warned me ta keep my
distance and just to let him work on restoring
mental blocks.” He couldn’t keep the anger out of
his voice, and his body was rigid with the effort to
stay calm. “I was pissed about that. I know a little
something about mental blocks, and they ain’t
pretty. It ain’t fun having someone tryin’ ta
control yer mind, Summers.”
“I know,” he admitted. “Stryker, remember?”
“Yeah. I guess ya do, then. Summers, when I asked
Jeannie about ya, and I tried ta get her ta tell me
what she did to ya, she freaked. Petey fixed the big
dent in the wall downstairs, so ya didn’t get ta see
how big it was after she threw me into it. Red was
pretty strong.”
“What did she say in the end? What were her last
words?” He blew off Logan’s attempt at lightening
the moment.
“She just looked me in the eye and smiled. She said
‘That’s better.’ She died right there in my lap,
with this smile that I can’t get outta my head. It
hurts, Summers. Back when ya left, ya didn’t want me
ta tell ya that I knew how ya felt, losin’ Jeannie.”
Scott stared into his beer bottle a moment before
closing his eyes against the truth in his statement.
He did remember his parting shot the day he
sped off on the bike. “But I did know how it felt
back then, and I know it now. An’ I ain’t healed
from it. Don’t know if I ever will. Ya think I liked
watchin’ her die again, knowin’ it was the only way
ta stop her from killin’ us all, and knowin’ I had
ta kill her, when I loved her?”
“You didn’t love her like I did, don’t even try to
give me that bullshit!” Scott hissed.
“Think whatever helps ya ta sleep at night, Summers.
I loved her. I ain’t gonna lie. But yeah, she
loved you. She told me she loved ya back when
we headed to Alkali, and she couldn’t face the fact
that she’d killed ya when I called her on it. She
didn’t just want me ta save her. She wanted ta join
ya.”
Scott’s beer bottle hit the hardwood floor with a
hollow thunk, falling from nerveless fingers.
“Shit!” Logan cursed, frantically looking for
something to mop up the foaming spill. He jerked his
flannel over his head without unbuttoning it,
leaving himself in a white wifebeater as he rounded
the table and began to sop up the liquid. He didn’t
want to be on the other end of a blistering from
Hank or Pete if they saw the ruined floor, on top of
all the other repairs they’d finished on the complex
after Stryker tore his way in. Scott scrubbed his
face with his palms. “Summers?” Logan looked up from
his task. “She wanted to be with you. Even at the
end, she was smiling, because was going to be with
you. I might have kept her from doin’ something that
she couldn’t live with, but she was so damned glad
that she was gonna see ya again. Wherever ya were.”
“God,” he breathed, raking his fingers through his
hair until it was as unruly as Logan’s.
“Ya ain’t got the monopoly of lovin’ Jeannie,
Summers. You were just the one she loved best.”
Logan chucked the empty bottle into the trash can
next to the foosball table and retrieved another
full one for Scott. “Here,” he offered gruffly. “I
know all ya wanted were last words, Summers, but in
the moment, she didn’t hold anything back. Thoughts,
feelings, words…it was all about you.”
“I should have been there. When she died.” He took a
comforting pull from his Molson. “But I’m glad she
wasn’t alone.” He nodded to Logan, his anger
replaced by a bleakness that didn’t feel any better
to witness, but they could work on that. “And I’m
damned glad she didn’t take all of you with her.”
“Me, too. Go ahead an’ hang that up,” Logan barked,
motioning to Scott’s cue. “Let me grab my coat.”
“You said you weren’t in a social mood.”
“Didn’t stop ya from interruptin’ my game. But if ya
wanna argue with me, then fine; don’t expect me ta
chip in fer a lap dance. And as uptight as ya are,
Summers, ya damned well need one.”
“Prick,” Scott huffed, but his mouth twisted into
something resembling a smile. Logan held out his
hands in a gesture of concession. Logan snagged his
weather beaten leather jacket and met Scott
downstairs just in time for him to finish off his
beer.
“Sticks an’ stones, bub.”
The sky had just darkened to a deep sapphire when
they left the house; the sun was just coming up,
chasing away the last of the stars when they got
back. Logan parked the Jeep and locked up the garage
as Hank, Scott and Peter waved their bleary “good
mornings” and staggered into the mansion. Logan took
the long way around, lingering outside long enough
to enjoy a smoke. There almost wasn’t any point to
going back to bed; he’d only have to get up again in
three hours, anyway. There was nothing worse than
that first hefty slug of sleep when your body hit
the sheets, only to have to jerk yourself awake
again before you had a good taste.
The morning was chilly; his breath billowed out from
his lips in frigid little white puffs as he stomped
back inside. On his way back, he took a quick peek
at Ororo’s flower beds. The last of the season’s red
begonias were still vibrant and bold, much like
their mistress, and they caught his attention while
he was looking at the freshly turned earth where
Ororo had planted her new bulbs. He didn’t know
where she found time to do it all. A funny little
voice in his head muttered So why not ask her
what ya could do ta make it a little easier fer a
change? He mentally shuffled his schedule and
realized that he could relieve her of another
self-defense training class to cut her a little
slack. He’d heartily approved when she hired on that
new Cassidy guy, and he seemed decent, even though
he’d just about blown his eardrums when he
demonstrated his power in the Danger Room on his
first day. With his enhanced hearing, that shit
didn’t tickle. But then Ororo went and gave him a
piddly two classes to teach, still leaving herself
overburdened. He intended to speak with her about
that.
He found the opportunity earlier than he expected.
The scent of freshly brewed coffee greeted him as
soon as he entered the kitchen through the back
door. He turned to reach for the pot on the counter,
but stopped when he saw Ororo silhouetted in the
window over the sink, her hair and body outlined in
the rosy glow of the sunrise.
Damn. She was one helluva beautiful woman. Her hair
was still loose and slightly tousled, with random
curls and waves falling every which way. She’d just
finished selecting a coffee mug from the dishrack
when she turned to face him, pausing in her actions
as though she felt herself being watched. Those
velvety brown eyes measured him carefully, crinkling
at the corners when she smiled.
“Long night?”
“Mornin’,” he grumbled, still not ready for coherent
speech yet. She was clad in black satin pajama
bottoms that were slightly loose, but still draped
her curves lovingly, leaving pleasant things to his
imagination. Her top, on the other hand, did no such
thing; the snug ribbed cotton sheathed her torso,
leaving no inch of her gorgeous figure a secret.
“Yes. It is,” she confirmed slyly. “Coffee?”
“Yeah. Sure.” He resisted the temptation to tell her
not to budge from the glow of that sunny window so
she wouldn’t wreck that perfect moment. Her creamy
caramel skin and snowy white hair were meant to be
bathed in the sunlight like that. Then he reminded
himself that she was up ridiculously early, and she
probably needed a cuppa joe. She poured for them
both, serving his in a Chicago Cubs mug that Kitty
brought home from her last trip home to Deerfield
when she visited her mother.
“Hank, Scott and Peter were a sorry sight when they
dragged in here a little while ago,” she remarked.
“They all looked guilty.”
“Ya don’t wanna know,” Logan admitted, shooting her
a little knowing look that made her grin back.
“Probably not. You didn’t get arrested?”
“Nope,” he grinned back. “Not this time.”
“Okay. Then we’re good.” They sat across from each
other at the butcher block table, companionably
sipping their coffee. A growing aroma of toasting
bread crept into his nostrils as it filled the
kitchen, and the familiar pop of the extra-wide,
four-slice toaster woke up his stomach. Ororo
laughed at him with little pity when she heard it
growl.
“That’s pitiful. You gripe at my not taking care of
myself, then drink your dinner and come traipsing in
at dawn. Shame on you,” she chastised. She retrieved
the cream cheese from the fridge, setting it in
front of him while she set the still-hot bagel on a
small plate, playing “hot potato” with it as she
bounced it between her hands to keep from burning
them.
“Scooter drank more than me,” he whined.
“Liar.” She spread the bagel thickly with cream
cheese and slid it in front of him, stopping his
offer to make his own with “Sit. Take that one. You
shouldn’t even be conscious right now.”
“Thanks, darlin’,” he murmured. He took a hearty
bite of crunchy bagel and chewed it thoughtfully as
she began pulling together a more substantial
breakfast. “So what’s yer deal? Why’re ya up so
early?”
“Couldn’t sleep,” she shrugged. “Nothing new.” She
tried to keep her tone light. He heard the
underlying tightness, anyway.
“Penny for ‘em.”
“They aren’t worth that much,” she scoffed.
“Try me.” He took a sip of coffee, savoring the bite
of Peet’s Viennese Blend as she pulled out a small
loaf of honey ham and the carton of eggs. She
sighed, letting the sound speak volumes. He sensed
the change in her mood, from casual and drowsy to
pensive and melancholy all at once, and he fought
the urge not to pull her onto his lap to kiss it and
make it better. Never in a million years, bub.
She’d never go for it. He could already feel her
freezing back up, resuming her throne as Her
Highness, Queen Icy Britches.
“I’m just glad Scott’s back,” she replied. Now it
was Logan’s turn to set down the bagel half that
he’d just lifted to his mouth.
“That all yer glad for?” Her back was still turned
as she cut slices of the rich ham and laid them into
the hot skillet. The faint sizzle made his mouth
water, but he ignored it. The unwanted vision of
Ororo looking good enough to eat in her bikini,
practically draped over One-Eye…Summers on the
massage table entered his mind again and made him
want to drag what else she was “glad for” out of her
very, very slowly, with exquisite torture. Hell,
he’d show her something to be glad for.
“I still miss them,” she explained, cracking three
eggs into a bowl, then glancing back to him before
she cracked two more. His gut clenched. “Sometimes I
don’t know if I can do all this by myself. Teach,
fight, run the school…and I don’t have Jean to lean
on anymore. It’s not the same without them here.
Scott being back has helped.”
“Yeah. Bet it has.” He went back to his bagel, but
with only half an appetite. “He ain’t the only one
ya can lean on, though, Ororo.”
“I’m not going to dump my troubles on your doorstep,
Logan. That’s not your style, to be my sounding
board and listen to me bitch and moan.” The
vulgarities sounded foreign coming out of her mouth.
“Excuse me fer givin’ a damn. And thanks fer the
vote of confidence,” he complained. She turned away
from the skillet mid-scramble, the egg-smeared
wooden spatula going still in her hand. Her face was
serious as she stared at him.
“What?”
“Ya heard me just fine. I’m not Jeannie…an’ I ain’t
Scooter, but I can’t handle a little bitchin’ and
moanin’ when ya need a little help? Have a little
faith in me, Ororo. D’ya think I don’t care?”
“I…I don’t know what to think.”
“I’ll tell ya what ta think, then. I do care.” A
lot. “Yer still pushin’ yerself too hard. Even
if ya don’t feel like talkin’ and keep blowin’ me
off when I ask ya what’s wrong, I can still help
with yer workload. What’s the deal with only givin’
Irish two classes?” She frowned slightly at his
derogative nickname for Sean Cassidy before rolling
her eyes and planting her hand on her hip.
“I only needed him to take those two. I’m not
handing over all of them; there’s only so much you
can delegate when you’re expected to run a school,
Logan. Not that I expect you to know what that’s
like. You come and go as you please.”
“I’ve been doin’ more stayin’ than goin’ lately,
though, if ya haven’t noticed yet. Goes back to that
snappy little lecture of yours, which ya seem to
love givin’ me, yet ya hate it when I dish it out.
Ya have a self-defense class ya don’t need on yer
plate. I’m takin’ it from ya.”
“There’s no need,” she argued, but inwardly she
breathed a much needed sigh of relief. Her load felt
lighter for a change, even as she stuck to her guns.
“I ain’t gonna wait til there’s more of a need, when
Hank’s confinin’ ya to yer bed again, this time for
runnin’ yerself into the ground, darlin’. Just nod
your head and say ‘Thank you, Logan.’ Go on, nod
already!” She met this announcement with a cocked
eyebrow.
“Fine,” she sighed with all of the put-upon
exhaustion of someone who knows that she will be
overruled anyway. “You may take my class.”
“You’re welcome.”
“Get a plate. I’m feeding you now.”
“Yes, ma’am.” He retrieved the orange juice from the
refrigerator too, as well as the sugar-free jam and
the bagel bag.
“How was he last night?” she inquired as they tucked
into their breakfast. She studied Logan quietly and
enjoyed what she saw. His eyes weren’t even
red-rimmed or bagged from the night’s exploits. He’s
shucked his jacket and slung it over the back of his
chair, revealing his bare arms and smoothly muscled
physique emphasized to perfection by the white
ribbed tank. The morning sun shifted, picking out
auburn highlights in his thick, dark hair and
revealing tiny golden flecks in his hazel eyes. His
skin was always close to the same burnished tone,
just more darkly tanned in the summer. Dark hair
peeked out over the neckline of his shirt and
covered his forearms in a fine layer.
Once again, she kicked herself for staring too long.
Their eyes met across the table, and every muscle
that she hadn’t been previously aware of below her
waist instantly woke up. She cleared her throat
needlessly and sipped her juice.
“Fine, I guess. Havin’ a decent time. Semi-chatty.
Not as bored at the museum as I was, at least.”
“Museum?” Her voice was incredulous.
“Yup. Hank’s idea. And no, I wouldn’t have if there
wasn’t gonna be booze afterward.”
“Poor baby,” she mocked, not the least bit
sympathetic.
“It was a funky sand art exhibit that Peter raved
about. Scott seemed impressed with it, mumbling
something about the colors bein’ almost worth the
trip.”
“I’m not surprised. Henry told me that Scott’s going
to go back to wearing his goggles.” She toyed with
the remnant of her scrambled eggs, tweaking a bit of
ham and popping it into her mouth.
“No kidding? Shit.” Logan picked his bagel apart,
shredding crumbs from it idly as he listened. “What
gives?” He found himself pitying Scott, even though
he’d never admit it out loud, and Scott wouldn’t
want him to.
“Scott came back to us, seemingly without his
powers. Hank suspects that they may only be dormant.
We have no way of telling if he can still fire his
optic blasts, or if they could fire involuntarily.
With Jean and the Professor gone, we have no means
of using Cerebro to scan for Scott’s psionic
signature to see if it registers as mutant or
baseline.” Ororo and Hank had discussed the options
and come up empty. They needed another psi, or they
needed to adapt the console to read something else
besides psionic energy and brain wave patterns. The
Stepford triplets who had arrived at the school the
previous fall were not ready; Jean had been a more
powerful and skilled telepath, and using Cerebro had
nearly overwhelmed her. Ororo wasn’t going to risk
the well-being of novice students. She’d been just
as upset on Scott’s behalf, knowing what a normal
life meant to him after so many years of having to
be so cautious and controlled. She knew something
about control.
“So it’s back to square one,” he mused.
“If you like. There’s always a chance that Scott
came back to us without the original defect in his
powers that interfered with restraining them
himself, but until we know more about his headaches,
it’s best if he uses them again. Scott will be
teaching full-time again for a while, until he
decides what else he wants to do.”
“Cool. Whatever floats his boat.”
“Logan?”
“Yeah, darlin’?”
“Will you stay with us?”
“I told ya I would be there if ya needed me, and I
meant it.” His eyes narrowed, burning into her and
making her stomach do a funny little leap.
“Only if that’s what you really want.” She got up to
clear their plates. “I know that with Jean gone, you
might not have as much reason to stay.” She hated
the way it sounded as soon as it came out of her
mouth. Cheap shot, Ororo. Rub it in, why don’t
you.
“Bullshit.” She felt him approach and shivered when
strong, warm fingers clamped around her upper arms,
pulling her away from the edge of the sink. She was
hauled against his chest, and his heat seeped into
her back. His breath stirred her hair as he growled
in her ear. “Quit assumin’ I don’t have a reason.
The biggest reason on that list just made me
breakfast without naggin’ me ta death about where I
was all night long.” He freed one arm long enough to
reach up and sweep her hair off the side of her
neck, breathing in the sweet scent of her skin,
still tinged with sleep. “And she feels just right
too, darlin’, when she lets me get this close.” Her
knees nearly buckled at the nibbling of his lips
along her throat; she arched back into his embrace
even as she gripped the counter. Dampness pooled in
her center, and she restrained a moan. “She doesn’t
do that often, though. She’s a stubborn broad that
way.”
“Scoundrel,” he accused. She fought against the
desire building within her and was ready to wave the
white flag when he caught her lobe gently between
his teeth.
“I have plenty of reason ta stay. The school and the
kids are growin’ on me. I cared about Jeannie, but
she made it plain that she loved Summers. Kinda
makes a guy rethink what’s important. I miss her.
She was an amazing woman,” he admitted before
sucking the silky flesh of her neck into his mouth
and swirling his tongue over it. The heady rush of
her scent came to him more strongly this time,
infused with arousal and need. Coupled with her
taste and the tiny ragged sounds escaping her when
he wrapped his arms around her waist, splaying his
palm over her flat belly, Ororo had a bigger hold on
him than he could even explain. He could think of
better things to do with his mouth than try to
explain anything right now, though. She just tasted
too damned good.
“The best. She was the best friend a girl could
have.”
“Uh-uh. You were. You knew she couldn’t
handle all that power going in. You reminded me of
what I had to do, even when I didn’t wanna see
reason. Ya saved all of our hides, even when ya knew
we had ta let her go. That makes you pretty amazing
yerself.” He clamped the thin strap of her top
between his teeth and yanked it down the slope of
her shoulder for better access, making her squirm as
his tongue laved it in greedy circles. “So are ya
part of Scooter’s harem?”
“Excuse me?” She craned her neck to better face his
hooded gaze. His lips feathered her cheekbone and
temple.
“You’ve been asking me an awful lot about Scooter.
Spending a lot of time with the guy. That my cue ta
back off?”
“Back off from what? This is…unexpected.”
“No it ain’t,” he insisted. “Ya know I want ya. Real
bad.” He punctuated the statement with another
leisurely nibble. “And I know ya want me.”
“I’m not involved with Scott. He’s my friend. An old
friend. Nothing more.” He was pleased when she
didn’t dispute his claim.
“Didn’t look that way the other day.” It sure
didn’t.”
“You can’t trust everything you see,” she hissed,
writhing under his touch as his fingers skimmed the
underside of her plump breast. “We don’t feel that
way about each other. We’re too much alike.” He
paused in nipping a sultry trail down her jaw to
consider what she said.
“Don’t see how.”
“Trust me. We are. And kissing Scott is like kissing
my brother.”
“Too much information, darlin’,” he grumbled.
“Sorry,” she chuckled, before he turned her in his
arms and kissed her smile, feeling her lips soften
against his, matching his hunger. She twined her
arms around his neck, indulging in the sensual feel
of his luxuriantly wild hair as she combed her
fingers through it. “Mmmmm…” He kissed her
breathless, and she toppled back against the edge of
the counter, nearly taking him with her.
“And no more damned back rubs!” he snarled. Not
for Scooter, anyway, he amended to himself. She
didn’t protest one way or the other. Her hands
roamed his muscles and stroked him with intimate
knowledge and promise, and her vantage point changed
as he grasped her waist and hoisted her up onto the
counter.
“Logan!” she gasped. His look was so full of heat
and yearning, and she nearly melted in a puddle when
she realized that it was for her. All for her. He
stepped between her thighs, wanting to get closer,
and Ororo framed his face with her palms and drank
from his mouth. Her tongue stroked his with wild
abandon, and she felt the sunbeams brightening and
warming her back. Her internal voice of reason
prodded her that they could get caught by Henry, or
Peter, or any early-rising students. She silenced it
when Logan’s fingers crept under the hem of her tank
and caressed her. His touch was ticklish and light
at first, before he flattened his palm and skimmed
it along her ribcage, acquainting himself with her
contours and the charming little dip of her navel.
She nearly came out of her skin when he found her
breast. He cupped it reverently, exploring its silky
weight before letting his thumb graze her nipple. It
puckered at his touch, thrilling him
“Someone could come down here any moment,” she
whimpered around his lips.
“Well, damn it, I’d better move things along,” he
countered. His voice was ragged with the effort to
stay in control. She just had that effect on him,
and that was dangerous. He was addicted to
“dangerous.” Lord help him. The kitchen was warm
from their cooking, but the air still felt cool when
it bathed her bared breast, right before Logan
worshipped it, lapping it in a decadent spiral until
he reached its taut peak. He groaned into her flesh.
“Goddess!”
“Don’t know who yer prayin’ to, darlin’ but say one
fer me while you’re at it.” She felt the pulling and
tugging of his mouth all the way into her womb, and
her legs betrayed her, wrapping themselves wantonly
around his waist. He pressed himself into her, and
the tell-tale bulge in his jeans grew and hardened,
craving a nest in her softness.
Footsteps.
“ACK!”
“SHIT!” Ororo winced as he pulled his mouth off her
nipple – she imagined she almost heard it – in their
mad rush to separate, and he backed away, letting
her scramble down from the counter. Thankfully she
wasn’t wearing shoes, so he was hurting more from
interrupted passion than real pain when she landed
on his foot on the way down. “Ooooh! Watch out…” He
did a mincing foot shake before he helped her to
straighten herself out. She looked at him with wide
eyes, guilt written all over her features, but he
couldn’t help but feel a little pleased at her
swollen lips as she tried to smooth her hair. She
managed to yank it up into an halfhearted ponytail
with one of those elastic scrunchie things women
were always wearing around their wrists like a
bracelet, binding it up in an attempt at neatness.
Logan pouted; he loved looking at her when she was a
mess. She straightened her strap and resumed her
earlier place by the coffee pot as she heard Sam and
Bobby’s voices coming down the hall.
“Ororo?” She shot him a look that practically
screamed ‘I’m trying to be nonchalant, here!’ and
raised her brows.
“What?” she hissed.
“Barn door’s open,” he muttered. Her bewildered look
almost made him bust a gut, until she looked down
and saw her bare breast, nipple still erect, hanging
up the hem of her shirt and leaving her with a
distinct draft. Her hands flew up to right herself,
but not before Logan’s hands abruptly spun her
around so she faced the counter, and he shielded her
so that they were back to back as he called out
“Popsicle. Flyboy. Up early, arentcha?”
Ororo yanked her top back into place, probably
pulling the hem more firmly than she needed to. Her
cheeks were on fire. Her nipples were still standing
up at attention. And she was soooooooooooo not
wanting to turn around and face anyone in this
condition.
“Wanted ta nab some time ta shoot some hoops in the
gym before anyone else grabbed it,” Sam drawled.
“Aw, howdy, Miz Munroe, Ah didn’t see ya standin’
there, so quiet an’ all.” Logan moved aside as he
felt Ororo gently nudge him and wave a friendly
greeting over his shoulder.
“Have some juice. And bagels. We’ve got bagels.” She
cleared her throat, still trying to figure out how
best to ease back upstairs. Logan took the decision
out of her hands.
“I’m gonna head downstairs to the Danger Room,”
Logan grumbled, raising his mask gruffness to full
mast for the boys’ benefit. “Hey, Ororo, if yer on
yer on yer way upstairs, why don’tcha take this up
with ya?” He chucked his jacket at her once he
stepped away long enough to retrieve it. She caught
it deftly, along with the glance he shot her, full
of mischief. He’d noticed it, too, blast him! She
was of a mind to take him to task for his macho
little show, but she played along. For now. She
hugged his folded leather jacket against her chest,
abrading her aroused flesh even more, and she
inhaled the scent of him that rose up from it. At
least now she had a “shield” of sorts. More or less.
“My pleasure,” she told him breezily. “I’ll see you
two in class.”
“Bye, ma’am.” Sam poured himself some juice and took
a long swig, then wiped his mouth on the back of his
hand. “Sure was in a hurry.” Bobby had noticed that
her cheeks were red as a raspberry, but hey, if Sam
was oblivious, far be it from him to set him
straight. The fleeting thought of “Logan and ORORO?”
crossed his mind before he happily shook it off.
An hour and a half later, the upper level of dorm
rooms were buzzing with activity, and Ororo stopped
by to remind Jubilee that not everyone shared her
taste in music, and could she please turn the stereo
down a notch. She made her way downstairs, attired
comfortably in black slacks and a lightweight white
silk sweater. Logan and Peter were already on their
way downstairs to get ready for the self-defense
glass, leaving Scott in the foyer, preparing to head
out to the hangar to work on the Blackbird’s GPS
tracking system again. Hank was esconced in the
wing-backed chair in the front study, reading the
finance pages and occasionally humming with approval
over the stocks.
A hesitant knock sounded at the front door. Ororo
almost didn’t hear it. Must be a stranger,
she considered. They weren’t expecting any guests.
“I’ll get it,” Hank exclaimed. “It’s early for
guests,” he mused, echoing Ororo’s thoughts. He
disengaged the locking system and never looked at
the security camera’s monitor above the doorframe,
so he received a rude shock when he swung open the
reinforced plank.
“Oh, my stars and garters!” He hadn’t raised his
voice, but Ororo caught the emotion and disbelief as
she approached him.
“Henry, who’s…here? Oh. Oh, my Goddess!” Ororo’s
hand flew up to cover her mouth, and she clutched
Hank’s shoulder for balance. The floor felt like it
was spinning beneath her.
“Well, don’t you two just stand there and let out
all the heat, let whoever it is in,” Scott jibed as
he rounded the corner to tug Ororo aside for a look
at their visitor. Hank spun around, meeting his gaze
numbly, mouth agape.
“Good Lord, Scott!” Hank, for once, was at a loss
for words. Scott’s eyes told him nothing. His smile
was crooked but good-natured, until Hank moved away
to stand beside Ororo, revealing the woman standing
out on the front veranda.
Jean Grey stood outside, clutching her hands and
trying not to show how terrified she was to be
greeted at the door by a six-foot tall lion of a man
covered in blue fur. The morning light set her hair
on fire. “H-hello,” she stammered. Her eyes flitted
to the handsome brunet man with the odd-looking
red-lensed spectacles. Various strong emotions
played across his face, and it unnerved her
momentarily that she couldn’t see his eyes.
She knew they must be beautiful.
“Jean?” he choked out at last, urging himself
forward with leaden feet. He was afraid this was a
dream. If I reach out and touch her, I’ll wake
up. She’ll go away again. His soul roared in
protest at the prospect of losing her again.
“I know you. I know you,” she insisted. She
peered down at her hands, and Scott caught the gleam
of gold winking up from her left ring finger. She
eyed it nervously, twisting it before she peered up
at him. “I know you,” she repeated. “I…I think I
love you.” She was alarmed but not afraid when he
nodded, his face crumpling and twisting into a mask
of anguish. She hated to see him in pain. His
shoulders jerked involuntarily as he sniffed back a
cry.
“Jean?” he pleaded with her. “You’re here?”
“Yes,” she breathed.
“Oh, God! JEAN!” Scott’s strength left him, and he
simply fell to his knees after staggering that last
step that separated them. His arms snared her,
wrapping around her waist and clinging fiercely to
her. Her body absorbed the pain and wracking sobs
that tore loose from his lips. Fat tears rolled
freely down her cheeks, and she met Ororo and Hank’s
shell-shocked stares with a nod.
“I’m here,” she assured them. “I’m back.”
That was the scene that greeted Logan when he came
back upstairs to ask Ororo about the new Danger Room
routine that Hank said was ready for the senior
class to use. His heart nearly stopped as he
sidestepped Hank, peering at Ororo for an
explanation before he stepped out onto the veranda.
Scott’s whole body shook as he poured out waves of
soul-deep relief that his reason for living walked
back into his life, wrapped in his arms that craved
her presence and warmth.
“Jeannie,” Logan rasped.
“I’m back, she repeated, smiling weakly at him
through her tears before murmuring soothing sounds
into Scott’s hair.
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