Chapter 4
It’s an innocent
game of jump rope. We are about ten or eleven
years old at the time. I hold one end of
the plain white rope, and Aurora the other, while Autumn skips rope in the
middle.
I think the rope that we’re using was meant
for something else. We don’t have a lot
of toys on the base. Even though the
entire property was built around and for four children, it had more of a
military setting than anything. It’s probably
because the majority of the staff viewed us Alphas as little soldiers in
training, rather than children. I think
maybe Espi and Autumn’s caretaker, Charlene, might have been the only two who
would encourage us four to have a little fun.
It’s Charlene who gives
us the rope, and shows us three girls how to play. We must have skipped rope for at least three
hours straight.
I don’t know if he
was just being mean, or if his feelings were somehow hurt by not being asked to
join, but Astro finds us three girls having fun, and he looks upset. I hadn’t noticed him sitting there on the
front porch of Charlene and Autumn’s home.
He kicks up dirt as he marches right up to Autumn, leaving a trail of
small, dust clouds behind him. Autumn
stops skipping when he stops in front of her.
She smiles, but he’s still glaring.
He says not a single word, and shoves her hard, knocking her to the ground. The poor, brown-eyed girl immediately begins
to cry.
I instantly drop
my end of the rope, and get in his face.
I shove him, and he shoves me back, and an instant wrestling match
ensues. Speed hears the commotion. Suddenly he’s trying his best to force
himself between us two, as he shouts for us to cut it out. “God damn you two! This is the third time this week!”
Aurora and Autumn
help him out. Aurora grabs a hold of
Astro, Autumn of me, and the two manage to yank us off each other. I fall backwards, and land on my butt. At first, I think it’s just the heat of the
hot pavement on a summer day, as my hands touch the ground. But when I look down at my hands, I see that they
are illuminated a faint green color. My
eyes grow wide as I see this, and then in that instant, the glowing disappears.
I look up as a
shadow passes over me, and see that Speed is standing directly above me. He’s staring down at me with a weird, almost
judgmental expression on his face. I
don’t know if that look is because he is angry at me for fighting, or if it is
because he saw how my hands glowed that strange green color. He never says a word, and I’m always left to
wonder: Just what did he see that day?
***
I awake from my
dream about this childhood memory, hearing voices outside my window. I glance at my alarm clock and see that it is
just a little past two in the morning. I
lay awake in bed and listen hard, trying to place whose voices I hear.
“Why
do you hate the kid so much?” It’s
Professor Walden.
“Why do you
like her so much?” Ugh. That’s Speed for sure.
“Have you ever
stopped to think that maybe all Angel needs is a little special attention? A little—“
“God dammit! I am sick
and tired of hearing people describe
that brat as special!”
I climb out of bed
and quietly but quickly walk over to my window to get a peak of what’s
happening. They’re walking down the open
road outside, I’m guessing to their homes.
The Professor has Speed’s arm draped over his own shoulder, as he’s
hunched over a bit, looking as if he’s trying to steady the guy as he walks
alongside him. Speed holds a bottle in
his hand, and he’s staggering pretty badly.
It’s obvious how he’s apparently spent his Sunday off—getting completely
wasted.
“Special?!”
drunken Speed continues. “Special ain’t what she is. That’s just sugar coatin’ the truth! That kid is anything but special. She’s a mistake. Something that should have been fixed a long
time ago. A waste of time, space, and
money. It’s time to cut our losses, I
tell ya. That kid is good for nothing.”
Professor Walden
doesn’t say anything in response. I’d
like to think it’s because he just doesn’t want to bother with the ridiculous
drunk, and not because he’s swayed by what Speed has just said.
A sharp pain hits
me, and my hands erupt into flames, illuminating the room in an eerie green
glow. Not this again. I panic and
drop to the ground, sitting on my hands, trying my best to hide the sudden
bright light, which I’m sure is visible to the two men outside. Thankfully, the fire disappears within a few
moments. I hold my breath as I use my
X-Ray vision to look through the wall.
Professor Walden
has stopped in his tracks. His eyes are
on my window and he wears a curious expression.
Speed is still ranting about how much he hates me, and doesn’t seem to
have notice the firework show. My heart
is pounding as I try to imagine what could be going through Professor Walden’s
mind right now. But just when I have
convinced myself of the worst, a slight smile sweeps his face. He smiles at my window for just a moment,
before turning around and continuing on his and Speed’s path for home.
***
The next morning,
I still feel sluggish. I think I’m
starting to see a pattern with the green fire thing. One, it seems to be happening more and more
frequently. Two, when it happens, it
seems to suck all the energy out of me.
Even after a full night’s rest, I’m still incredibly tired, as if I
didn’t get any sleep at all. Espi gives
me a weird look when I ask for coffee with my breakfast. I’ve only tried sips of the stuff before, and
have always complained about the taste.
But my eyes feel heavy, and I’m desperate to try anything to help remedy
this.
While I sit at the
dining room table, downing my third cup of coffee. Espi is leaving to do her weekly grocery
shopping off base. I walk with her out
onto our front porch, and watch as she gets in her car. She blows me a kiss before she drives away,
and I return a wave as she pulls out onto the gravel road. I stay outdoors until Espi’s car is gone and
out of sight.
As I watch Espi’s
little blue station wagon disappear, I remember how I used to give her a hard
time when I was younger. She used to
have to sneak away or trick me whenever she had to leave off base. I guess it’s not uncommon for little kids to
have separation anxiety from their parents when they are young. But I have to remind myself that Espi is not
my mother. She’s just the person who is
paid to take care of me. Or at least
that’s what our therapist, Dr. Diane, always reminds me that I should
remember. Still, even now while I’m
older, I still feel sad to see her leave.
It’s still very
early, and the sun is a bright red. Only
when the sun is low like this, is when the
base appears to actually have some color.
Every building, house and home on base is painted the same light grey
tone. But in this lighting everything
shines a shade of red, orange or yellow.
The dessert sand in the distance looks a deep red, instead of a muddy
plain brown. I won’t get to see these
colors again until sunset.
I go back inside,
and begin to pour a fourth cup of coffee.
Before I can finish, our house’s doorbell starts to ring loudly, over
and over again. It’s twenty-something rings
before I get to the door. I open it to
find Autumn standing there with an incredibly big grin on her face. It’s a little creepy.
“I had a vision!”
she exclaims with overwhelming excitement.
I motion for her
to come in, and close the door behind her.
“What is it?”
She doesn’t say
anything except for some weird, girlish squealing. She grabs me by my wrist and leads me down
the hallway to my bedroom. She quickly
shuts the door behind us and turns around and does more of that squealing stuff
that honestly hurts my ears. “What is it?” I repeat.
“You!”
“Me what?”
“You! You are going to be a hero!”
“You! You are going to be a hero!”
“…They’re not
going to retire me?”
“No!” She grins big, and now I’m smiling too.
“What did you
see? How do you know?”
“I saw me, you,
Astro and Aurora, on this stage, with all these people and cameras, and a big
banner that said: “The Alphas.” And
like Speed was there, and so were the Deltas, and the Chief announced all of us
as the new heroes! Including you!”
“Really?” I almost shout.
She nods really
big, grabs my hands, and does that squealing again. She’s jumping up and down, and I can’t help
but laugh. “OK, OK,” I say, “Relax!”
“I can’t!”
I just laugh. “You’re way too excited about this. I should be the one screaming, not you.”
“But there’s
more!”
“…More?”
“Yes! I had like three visions last night!”
Autumn tends to
have a lot of visions in her sleep.
She’s always described them to me as chaotic. She says their like a choppy, badly edited
movie with very short scenes or random images at times. “What else did you see?” I ask.
“Charlene is
getting me these really, really cute shoes I’ve wanted for like ever for my
birthday tomorrow!”
I laugh. “OK. That’s
great, Autumn.”
“I know!”
“What was the
third one?”
“You!”
“What? Me again?”
“Yes! You and Aurora!”
“Me and Aurora?”
“Yes! You and Aurora!”
“OK….” I wait for her to say more, but she
doesn’t. “What?”
“You and Aurora!”
she repeats, still bouncing up and down.
“Aurora and
I—what?” I ask.
She just continues
to stand there, with that big grin spread wide across her face. She’s nodding her head excessively as if I
should somehow know what she means. I’m
too tired to try to figure this one out, so I just stand there with a blank
look on my face.
The doorbell rings
again. I’m not used to this many
visitors on a Monday morning. Autumn and
I go to the door, and it’s Aurora.
Before anyone can say “hi” Autumn lets out another annoying, girlish
squeal. Both Aurora and I jump at the
sound.
“What’s with her?”
Aurora asks.
I shrug. “She’s being very vague about—Ow!” Autumn steps on my foot before I
can finish. “What’s that for?!” I shout
at her.
“It’s supposed to
be a surprise!”
“Then why would
you tell me? Or at least kinda tell me,
or whatever!”
“Because I thought
you already knew, or at least had a thought, but you don’t, which makes it even
more exciting, which is why it should stay a surprise!” She runs all the words together; I can barely
understand the sentence.
I shake my head at
Autumn.
Fine. Don’t tell me then. I look at Aurora: “What are you doing here?”
“I thought we
could walk to class together.”
Autumn squeals.
“You usually walk
with Astro though. I mean… he lives
across from you, after all.”
“I know,” she
says. “I guess I don’t really have a
good reason,” she says with a giggle.
I smile. I don’t know if it’s just ego, or that I like
the idea of Astro having to walk to class alone, but as soon as I show a slight
smile, Autumn erupts into more squealing.
“Will you stop that?!” I snap
at Autumn. I can’t help it. It’s annoying.
“I can’t help it!”
she doesn’t even break her smile. “It’s so exciting!”
“Well it’s
annoying to me, because I don’t know why
you’re squealing,” I roll my eyes. “So
either spill the beans, or stop screaming at everything!”
“OK, OK!” Autumn
says. “I’ll shut up! I promise!” She clamps her lips shut, and slides herself
through the door way. “In fact, I’m
gonna go! You two walk to class
together! Have fun! And, um, I guess I will go walk with Astro
today! Yeah!”
“But that’s
totally out of your way.”
“Doesn’t
matter! I’m walking with Astro, OK? So, bye!”
Aurora and I stand
there confused as we watch Autumn quickly disappear into her home, grab her
backpack, and zip away towards the other side of the base. Her behavior is strange, but I choose to
ignore it. I grab my backpack, and
Aurora and I head to our first class.
***
Aurora does most
of the talking during our walk. I’ve
never been much of a talker. She’s
telling me some story about her caretaker, Sara. Something about how she found an old photo
album of hers that had pictures of Sara and her deceased husband back when they
were young newlyweds. I’m not really
focusing on the details of what she’s saying, because honestly, I really don’t
like Sarah at all. Instead, I’m focusing
on new features of Aurora, I realize I have never noticed before.
When she talks,
her voice is the most expressive thing I have ever heard. The way her words flow is almost
musical. Her tone drops soft, serious
and low when she begins to retell an old war story Sara told her—the story of
how her husband was killed. Her blue
eyes are soft, and glistening, and she seems so involved in her words… as if
she can see the war she’s describing. I
don’t think I’ve ever seen her like this before. It’s strange, but impressive. I find myself being sucked into her every
word, only I don’t have the mind to comprehend what it is she is telling me,
because I’m too distracted by the raw emotion she’s showing me.
“Angel?” she says
it as if she’s already said it before.
“Hm, what?” I say,
snapping out of my almost hypnotized state.
“Did you hear what
I said?”
“Uh, yeah. Well, not the last part, no,” I lie. I haven’t really heard most of it.
She laughs a
little. “I said, ‘I hope we never have
to experience a war like that again.’
Don’t you agree?”
I nod. “Yeah.”
She smiles, and I
smile, too. We continue walking in
silence for a little while. As we walk,
I notice Autumn and Astro in the distance.
Autumn seems to have noticed us too, and she’s doing that squealing
thing again.
And then I realize
what she must have seen.
“You and Aurora,” is what she said.
Aurora and I. That girlish squealing. She does that same thing every time she
shares some sappy romance story she’s read or seen in a movie.
“You and Aurora.” She must have seen the two of us together… as
in romantically together. That had to be
it.
I stop in my
tracks as this idea occurs to me. Autumn
predicts the future. That would mean
that what she saw had to be true. Or at
least would be true….
“You OK?” Aurora’s
voice is soft, and concerned. I don’t
hear it though until she says it a second time, while she places her hand on my
shoulder.
I jump at the
sudden contact, and I can feel my face turn a bright red. “Yeah, I’m fine. Why?”
Her hand is still on my shoulder, and I feel as if the longer she leaves
it there, the brighter red my face become.
“Nothing. You just seem distracted today, that’s all.”
“Am I?” I
say. I pull away from her touch, and try
to laugh casually but I know I sound panicked.
I am panicked. “I guess a little. Maybe.”
She just returns a
smile, and walks ahead of me, into the building where our first class is
located. Astro follows after her, and
then Autumn, but I stop her before she can step foot through the door. I grab the short girl by her arm, and demand
a little too loudly: “What did you see,
Autumn?”
A giant grin
sweeps her face. “So you do know!”
“Know what? I know nothing! You’re the one who saw it! So tell me!”
“No, no,” she says
shaking a finger at me. “You must
know. Because before you acted like you
didn’t care. That’s when you really didn’t know. But now you know because you’re obviously
freaking out!” she giggles.
“It’s not funny!” My face is still red. I can feel it. “Just tell me!”
She doesn’t. She just smirks, as if she’s beaten me in
some game, and continues on her way to class.
I’m so embarrassed, frustrated, and confused. It’s all her fault. I could strangle her right now.
***
Monday mornings
are lectures by Professor Walden. His
lectures are every other Alpha’s least favorite classes, but have always been
my favorite. My eidetic memory really
helps me succeed with our studies. I may
not be the best at training, but at least I can remember any date you throw at
me.
Professor Walden
is our main teacher who teaches all of the history stuff. He is also a famous, award-winning scientist,
who is actually the one responsible for my creation, as well as the other
heroes.
Professor Walden
is the one man entrusted with the formula behind our super powers. He was the man to create Generation X,
Generation Delta, and Generation Alpha.
You would think that a man with such talents would enjoy spending his
time in a laboratory, creating and designing more amazing things. However, when I ask him why he’s teaching us
history, he tells me that there’s nothing he’d rather be doing than expanding
our young minds.
He’s definitely my
favorite teacher here on the base. He’s
the most light-hearted and funny person on the staff. He’s a short, fat man, with a messy beard and
messy grey hair. His eye glasses are
thick, and I honestly can’t really tell what color his eyes are because of the
heavy glare on his lenses. He dresses
very plain; always dark colored slacks, and a dark colored button-down,
collared shirt.
Lately, his
lectures have been about Super Villain History.
There aren’t very many super villains out there, and I find this subject
to be the vaguest compared to the rest of Walden’s lectures. I can also tell from his voice that he is not
as enthusiastic about what he is teaching, like he normally is. The whole thing is a little awkward.
Today we are
reviewing everything we’ve learned since our final is next week. He
passes out a study guide for us, and begins to recover everything very briefly. The guide is only two pages long, compared to
past study guides that are usually pages thick.
Maybe he’s going easy on us since this will be our last final before the
Deltas arrive. Still, I can’t help but
wonder why we’re not spending more time on villains, when I can imagine that
they are probably the biggest threat to us as heroes.
He reviews the
material just as it’s laid out on the page.
There are only two
bad guys in the nation that can be classified as “Super Villains.” That would be Strummer and Siren. These two villains were once super heroes
themselves—members of Generation X. They
are dangerous, insane, and hell-bent on taking over the nation.
Strummer was the
first to turn. At age sixteen, Strummer
was drafted into the military to fight in the Civilian War. The Civilian War was like that of the Civil
War fought long ago in our nation’s history, in that our country was completed
divided politically. The main political
disagreement that sparked the war was over the nation’s new Net Zero Law. A law, not of the people, but of the
politicians, put in place to help the nation contain its booming population
rate. Based on the population growth of
one’s zone, or area in the nation where they live, that zone was designated a
number. They called it the Replacement
Rate, or RR. Depending on how overly
populated your area was, would depend on how many children you were legally
allowed to have. The RRs ranged from 1.0
to 4.0. An RR of 1.0 meant that no
female in that area was to have more than one child. After their first pregnancy was completed,
they were to be sterilized. The intent
of the nation was to have the Net Zero Law only in place temporarily, until the
country stabilized and regained control over the population.
The Civilian War
lasted three years, and ended when the nation produced its first super
hero—Sonic. During the war, Strummer
fought for the nation. He received many
awards, badges, and recognition for his heroism. Three years after the war, and after passing
a long series of evaluations and tests, he and Speed, who also fought in the
Civilian War, were entrusted and enlisted as new additions to the nation’s
Super Hero Program. They would be called
Generation X. Speed was twenty-six,
while Strummer was just twenty-two years of age.
Strummer was a
faithful super hero up until the last years leading up to his retirement. He began to disobey or refuse orders. I wish I could list more details of this, but
this is one of the vague areas of the lecture that Walden fails to
specify. All we are taught is that he
was once a very noble and cheerful man who suddenly became very mean and hard
to work with. At thirty-one years old,
on the day of what was supposed to be his retirement, he disappeared before he
could be given the formula which would extract his super powers. When he remerged, he did so as the nation’s
first Super Villain.
“How long was
Strummer missing before he reappeared to the public?” Professor looks up from his copy of the study
guide, and asks the class.
I know the answer,
but I stay silent. I try to let the
others have a chance, first. But when no
one answers, I raise my hand.
“Angel,” he nods
in my direction.
“Two weeks,” I
answer.
“And what was the
crime he committed, announcing his new title as Super Villain?”
“He killed Sonic,”
Aurora answers.
“He was a
traitor,” Astro adds with a scoff.
Autumn timidly
raises her hand, and Professor Walden acknowledges her with a slight nod in her
direction. “Yes, Autumn?”
“Professor,” she
starts off with a soft, quiet voice, like she’s almost afraid to ask. “Why did he do it?”
“Because he’s a
villain,” Astro interrupts, before Walden can even begin to answer. “That’s what they do. They kill.”
“But there has to
be a reason!” Autumn persists. “Killing
is bad. You just don’t do it for no
reason!”
“Not for
villains,” Astro says. “They just don’t
care. They have no hearts! He
has no heart! He killed a former
teammate of his, and there was no reason!
He did it just because! Right,
Professor?”
Professor Walden
sets down the study guide, and adjusts his glasses before he begins: “Well, Astro, the only person who would truly
know the reasoning behind the act, would be the killer himself. We can’t very well ask him this question, so
I don’t think we’ll ever know why he did what he did.” He looks to Autumn, “That’s unfortunately as
much of an answer that I can give you.”
Autumn looks
saddened by this. I don’t think she
likes the idea of someone being inherently bad.
I glance over to Aurora who sits to the right of me, and she looks
equally disheartened. I raise my hand.
“Yes. Angel,” Professor Walden motions with his
hand for me to speak.
“Well,” I begin,
“I think I have a theory about it,” I say.
“About why
Strummer killed Sonic?” Aurora blinks at me.
“Yeah,” I say.
Professor Walden
smiles a little. He picks up his cup of
coffee on his desk and takes a small sip, nodding for me to continue.
“Well, we learned
that he fled the base before he could be given the formula. I think he was scared to be mortal again,” I
say. “I mean, won’t we all be when we
have to retire? And because he left,
they delayed the retirement of the rest of the heroes, right? So that they could find him. What I think is that maybe Sonic found him
first, and I think that’s when Strummer killed him. I don’t know if he meant to, or if he was just
trying to get away maybe… but I think what it comes down to is that he just
didn’t want to give up his powers. I
think that’s why it happened.”
I look to Autumn,
but she still looks displeased, but Aurora is smiling, which causes my face to
turn red again.
“Hold up,” Astro
says, sitting up in his desk. He’s
sitting directly behind me, so I have to turn around in my seat to see
him. He looks at me with a raised
eyebrow. “What do you mean you don’t
know if he meant to kill Sonic?”
I shake my
head. “I didn’t mean that he didn’t mean
it. I just said maybe he didn’t. Like the
Professor says—we’ll never know.”
“Yeah, but to even
think that it might have been an accident or something!” Astro sounds almost
offended by what I’ve said. “How could
you argue something like that? The man
has killed thousands since that day,
and you’re trying to argue that maybe he
just didn’t mean it?”
“I’m not arguing
anything!” I raise my voice now. “I just
said maybe!” It’s just like Astro to twist my words like
that. He’s always looking for when I
screw up.
“Alright,
Alright,” Walden stands from his chair and raises a hand. “Let’s calm down, everyone.”
I turn around in
my chair again, to face the front of the class room. Professor Walden looks at his wrist
watch. “That’s enough for today. We’ll go over the second half of your study
guide on Wednesday. Please, everyone,
remember to study hard and train hard.
Your training with the Deltas will begin about two weeks from now, but
first you have to pass your final exams, right?
So work hard!”
We begin to gather
our things and leave the classroom. The
Professor stops me before I can walk past his desk. “Angel, do you have a moment?”
“Sure,” I say.
Walden waits for
everyone else to clear the classroom, before he begins. This makes me nervous. It’s not uncommon for him to want to chat
after class, but he usually isn’t this careful about waiting for everyone else
to leave. I think about what happened
earlier that morning, and how it looked like he might have seen the green light
coming from my room. What if I’m in
trouble? What if he knows?
He walks around to the front of his desk, so
that he’s standing directly in front of me.
“How’s it going, Angel? I hope
you’re not discouraged from how your evaluation went this past Saturday.”
I frown. “Well, yeah….”
“Don’t be,” he
says. “But don’t slack off either.”
“Of course not,” I
say. “Actually, Aurora’s helping me
train on Sundays. For Speed’s courses.”
“Really?” he
raises an eyebrow. He reaches for his
coffee cup on his desk again and takes another sip. “And how is that going?”
“It’s fine,” I
say. “It’s just….”
“What?”
“Well,” I
hesitate. “It’s just that she can’t
really show me how to heal. And that’s supposed
to be my special power….” I frown. “I
don’t know how I’m supposed to pass if I can’t do it.”
He sets down his
coffee and smiles at me. “You just focus
on the other areas of your training—the things that Aurora can help you
with. If you prove yourselves in those
areas, you will be fine. I’ve already
begun to do some talking with the Chief, and he agrees that if you can improve
in everything else, when the Deltas arrive, you will have Dante as a mentor to
help with your healing powers. As the
healer for the Delta Generation, he would be the one to know, right?”
I smile. “Right.”
I’m relieved that he’s not
mentioning anything about the green light.
I’m also happy to hear that the
Professor has gone out of his way to convince the Chief of this much. After all, the Chief has final say over
whether or not we are fit to be heroes or not.
“Thanks, Professor.”
“Of course,” he
smiles. He pauses for a moment before he
starts to walk to behind his desk again.
“One more thing.”
“Yeah?”
I watch as he
opens the bottom drawer to his desk. He
begins to shuffle around stacks of paper and books, before pulling out a small
paperback. He hands it to me, and I
study it in my hands.
The book has a
plain black cover with the title written in white: “Villain.” At the bottom, it says that it is written by
a Joseph S. Soto. I turn it over and see
that the back of the book has no information.
I flip through it quickly and see that it is only about a hundred pages
long.
“If I lend this to
you, you have to promise not to let anyone else see you with it, alright?”
“Why?” I stare at
him. “What is it?”
He walks around
his desk, so he’s in front of me again.
He takes the book from my hand and looks at it once more. He sighs, “This is an autobiography written
by Joseph S. Soto,” he says. “Otherwise
known to the world today as Strummer.”
My eyes go
wide. “Strummer? Strummer wrote that?”
He nods. “He did,” he says with another sigh. “And as your teacher, I’m not allowed to
teach you or give you any unapproved materials… such as this book.” He hands me the book again, and I take
it. “So, nobody can find out about this,
understand?”
I nod. “I understand.”
“Good,” he smiles.
I take my backpack
off from my shoulders and bury the book deep inside. The Professor has sat down again at his desk,
and begun to shuffle through some papers.
I start to leave, but stop before I do.
“Can I ask you something, Sir?”
He looks up from
his work, and adjusts his glasses.
“What’s that?”
I hesitate. “Do you think I’ll be a good hero?”
He smiles at me
for a moment before saying: “A hero is
someone who sacrifices everything for the greater good of humanity. A hero protects the weak and defends the
downtrodden. A hero has courage, and a
hero has heart.” He stops and
smiles. “You will make an excellent
hero, Angel.”
***
Our next class of
the day is Forcefield Training with Speed.
I wish I could say that Professor Walden’s words of encouragement gave
me the self-confidence I need in order to prove myself in Speed’s class. But, of course, it did not.
Force Fields have
always been my worst subject, but today, I’m doing particularly awful. Maybe it’s because in order to conjure, and
hold a force field, it requires two main things—focus and stamina—and today I have
neither.
The Alphas and I
sit in an evenly spaced row. Astro on
the far right, then Autumn sits several yards away from him, Aurora is next and
spaced the same, and lastly is me on the far left. We’re in the stadium, which is a massive,
empty arena. This is where Speed teaches
most of his classes. We’re in the middle
of the field which lies in the center.
The field is a rectangular space, about a thousand yards long, just
short of a mile in distance, and another several hundred yards wide.
We sit at the very
end of the field, and in the far distance are a dozen cannons. They only shoot bags of sand, but at the
speed they fly, they still hurt like hell when they hit us. The sandbags travel at about 3,000 feet per
second, which means that it only takes about a second before they reach
us. It’s just as fast as most bullets
travel. It would kill anyone else, but
thankfully we’re built stronger than that, but they can still injure us on
impact.
Speed is standing
alongside the field, in a safe area, clear from the cannons’ paths. He takes the whistle that hangs from around
his neck and blows. “Close your eyes,
and focus!” he shouts at us. The others
listen, and I take a deep breath before I do, too. “Focus hard!” he shouts again. “Do not break that focus! If you break it, it will hurt!”
I try to concentrate
as best I can. I can feel my hands begin
to tingle, as an electricity builds in my hands. It kinda feels like when you rub your feet
against the carpet too much, and you get that light tickle just at your
fingertips. I can feel the static increase
and I hold my hands in front of me, to try to conjure my force field.
I open one eye and
peak at Aurora who sits beside me. Her
ball of electricity has already formed a solid, round sphere in her hands. The sphere grows bigger and bigger, and she keeps
it steady, floating before her. She
lowers her hands to her sides, and with her eyes still closed, the sphere grows
so big, it begins to encompass her. She
is completely surrounded by a protective field of electricity. Nothing will penetrate it.
I look to my own
pathetic sphere, and it’s still the size of a tennis ball. Staring at it directly stings my eyes, and
I’m forced to shut them again. Only when
I do so, I break my concentration and it disappears. I open my eyes and see that it is gone, while
the rest of the Alphas are all perfectly encased in their protective fields.
Speed begins to
countdown: “Ten… nine… eight… seven….”
I panic and close
my eyes quickly, trying my best to will the electricity back into my
fingers. The light tickle returns and—keeping
my eyes closed this time— I hold out my hands to form my force field.
“Six… five…
four….”
Just when I begin
to feel the sphere grow and shape between my hands, my panicked state is too
much for me. I’m also tired, and it’s
starting to hurt when I’m focusing this much energy all at once. I begin to feel the sphere grow smaller,
rather than bigger. I panic more.
“Three… two….”
I feel the
electricity disappear, and I open my eyes to see I have absolutely no
protection before me. I shut my eyes
quickly again, and scramble as best I can to force the electricity back. Please,
no….
“One!”
I keep my eyes
shut tightly as I try my best to conjure something. Anything!
But nothing happens. I instantly
feel a hard smack to my forehead, and I begin to get pelted by the sandbags
shooting at us. I throw my hands up in
front of me and try my best to shield myself that way. I know better than to get up and run
away. I’ve tried that before, and all it
gets me is an extra hour of “after class tutoring” with Speed, which translates
to just another hour of being assaulted by bags of sand. The pelting lasts for a good minute before
Speed blows his whistle again, and his assistant shuts off the cannons.
I look to the
others, and they’re completely unharmed.
Whereas, I look like I was just mugged.
I touch my lip and see that it is bleeding, and I’ll probably have at
least one black eye by tomorrow. I can
feel a hard knot forming on the left side of my head, where I had turned and
received most of the blows. But most of
all, my hands now ache terribly from where I tried desperately to deflect everything
as best I could.
“You
OK?” Aurora frowns from where she sits several yards away from me.
I
just nod, but don’t look at her. I feel embarrassed,
especially with her sitting next to me.
Speed has made his way over to us, and of course, he stops in front of
me first. He glares down at me, and,
even with the sun in my eyes, and one eye beginning to swell, I can tell that
he’s pissed. He doesn’t say anything
directly to me, but mutters to himself: “Just
give it up.”
That’s the end of
class, and I don’t hesitate to rush out of there. It’s our lunch period, and I need to get home
to clean myself up before our last class.
Aurora is shouting after me, as I leave, but I don’t stop until I’m
outside of the arena.
“Angel! Wait!”
she shouts again and again.
Finally, I turn and face her.
She stops before
me, and tries her best to smile. “We’ll
work on force fields next, OK?” she says.
“Don’t worry about it! We’ll work
on it until it’s perfect! I promise!” She pauses for me to say something, but I don’t.
I keep my head
lowered, with my hair in my face, and my hand held over my lip. I don’t like that she’s seeing how beat up I
look, and I’m trying my best to disguise it.
“And, you shouldn’t
worry,” she adds. “Because, you see,
everything is like riding a bike. It’s
hard at first, but once it clicks, it clicks!
And then it will be easy!
Remember? Just like Sunday! Once you got it, you were on a roll!” she
grins big. “We just gotta get you to
that point with this, OK?”
I try my best to
smile, because I know that’s what she wants to see, but I just can’t. I’m in pain, I’m tired, and I just want to go
home. “Sure,” I say simply and start to
walk away.
I don’t know why I
expect her to chase after me again, but I do.
It’s only when I’m halfway home, that I realize that she hasn’t. And I don’t know why, but this makes me feel
a little sad.
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