PDA

View Full Version : Consequence



Anita Stern
Dec 18th, 2008, 02:30:55 AM
<o:smarttagtype namespaceuri="urn:schemas-microsoft-com<img src=" forum="" images="" smilies="" blush.gif="" border="0" alt="" title="Blush" smilieid="2" class="inlineimg"></o:smarttagtype><o:smarttagtype namespaceuri="urn:schemas-microsoft-com<img src=" forum="" images="" smilies="" blush.gif="" border="0" alt="" title="Blush" smilieid="2" class="inlineimg"></o:smarttagtype><!--><xml> <w:WordDocument> <w:View>Normal</w:View> <w:Zoom>0</w:Zoom> <w:Compatibility> <w:BreakWrappedTables/> <w:SnapToGridInCell/> <w:WrapTextWithPunct/> <w:UseAsianBreakRules/> </w:Compatibility> <w:BrowserLevel>MicrosoftInternetExplorer4</w:BrowserLevel> </w:WordDocument> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if !mso]><object classid="clsid:38481807-CA0E-42D2-BF39-B33AF135CC4D" id=ieooui></object> <style> st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } </style> <![endif]-->[I]Here, apologies won't undo what you've done
The echoes linger on, the backlash has begun
Feigned indifference, your least convincing mask
But deep down inside, it's forgiveness that you ask



-Consequence - Assemblage 23



That feeling had been bothering her. She didn’t think it would ever come back, that nothing would ever evoke it again, but sometimes feelings… sometimes the darkest of feelings cannot be avoided. It had been a few weeks since it occurred to her. Michael Stern had been in and out to visit within a flash on a whim, and they even went on an outing together, a small date. While he was nice enough (dearer to her each day), there were other things occupying her consciousness that were beginning to push him out and demand incapacitating amounts of her time. Things that had been there longer than the almost ten years she had been living in the States, and things that were not quite as old, but remained with her since the time before her tenure at the Cullen’s Institute for the Gifted. Things like her feeling at her father’s death during her high school graduation trip to Australia, things like the appearance of her powers and her mother’s subsequent withdrawal due to that death, and (Anita suspected for a long time now), the advent of her powers coming into play in her life. The woman hadn’t allowed Anita to touch her in any fashion or allow herself the same to Anita, either. Not even when Daniel vanished, when Anita had drained her eyes of tears and made herself hoarse from the sobbing and fighting to push words through the grief. Without so much of a word, he had been gone. No clues, not a trace of his physical self remained save for telltale traces of DNA within his studio apartment, and other places he frequented. A body never surfaced. No reports of his person. It was as if he evaporated into thin air and the trail didn’t even exist to get cold in the first place. The authorities did their best to help, but they were just as stumped as she. The thoughts of abandonment came first, followed by other more furious options occurring to her as semi-formed acceptance of his missing presence set in. No stone was left unturned, no option left unconsidered. Every crevice the known and more unknown aspects of his life were looked in to. Every line came up blank, and still Annette Florence offered no comfort beyond words.

After six months, the first of those involved in the search for Daniel Hartford began to drop off from the task. Within the first year, everyone save for Anita herself had given up. Fourteen months in, she reluctantly gave it up. The lack to sleep was taking a disastrous toll on her physical health and sanity, and was beginning to show in her papers and dissertations. Taking on her second set of two full master’s degrees since the middle of her high school days, she had many supporters who helped set her back on track, get her the help she needed, and nursed her back to health. Until the very last, she tried to push them away, but as true friends, they wouldn’t relent. In the end, they succeeded in all their goals, as did she. Then they vanished, too. This time, it was simply life pulling lives in all directions. That feeling was still bothering her. The return of things she thought long gone in her heart and soul, coupled with an eerie recurring twinge that traveled down her spine, a cold crawling over her skin, that when she thought on it, seemed to point to things yet to come – things that were never good. Such was the case with the letter she received one day in July.



***



<o>
</o>


<st1:date year="2008" day="25" month="7">The Cullen's Institute for the Gifted
</st1:date><st1:date year="2008" day="25" month="7">25 July 2008</st1:date>
1613 hrs

Wednesdays were always a relatively quiet day at the Institute. It didn’t matter what time of year it was, the midweek was always a little more relaxed what with a shorter day for the younger students, most of whom went home to spend that extra time with their parents, if they weren’t abandoned to the care of the Cullen’s faculty. If such was the case, they were often kept amused by elder students who had the time, in addition to supporting faculty who were not encumbered by the load of classes and other responsibilities that the teaching staff carried. Being that it was the summer, however, most every day in most corners of the facilities was quiet, each spot barren of the usual activity that occupied the entire place from fall through to the last vestiges of late spring. The silence was a welcome thing for the first month, but after that, many of the staff – herself included – found themselves wishing for the liveliness the students brought. On the other hand, it was somewhat of a relief having fewer responsibilities, to be able to devote their time to the more important matters of the safety of their student body and the occupants of Cullen’s as a whole. The world, each day, was a darker one than before. Everyone knew… they could see it and feel it, and it was difficult to ignore. Anita had her own minute experiences with it, what with Michael Stern returning just over a month before today in the state he had been in, and informing her of the entire story of the time he was gone. She wasn’t sure she entirely liked or agreed with his newfound demeanor, the roughness he had acquired during his time away. The determined anger surrounding the cause of his disappearance (technicalities aside), worried her sometimes. He never seemed to really express it straightforwardly around her, but she knew it was there… and she found she was distancing herself a little, again. Purposely keeping herself busy just the way she would have before she met him.
<o></o>
There were other things on her mind. Annette, her mother, had not emailed for a week and a half now, when she normally would several times a week. Usually these interruptions in communication came with prior notice, but this one had not. Monday morning, Anita attempted to call her mother, only to be met with the answering machine, and she had tried again this day, with the same result. Ever since that second attempt, Anita had left herself mostly locked in the library office, stewing in her worry, and attempting to self-distract with tidying of the organized mess her office had been in since the final examinations period. When she was in the deep of it, rediscovering things she had lost in the deep of the organized piles, one of the secretarial staff (a nice girl, Jeanette), came by with the mail, rat-a-tatting gently on the office door and causing Anita to pause hesitantly at the sound.
<o></o>
“Do come in. Please don’t mind the mess.” She called out, hoping her voice would reach well enough through the thick door. Within a moment, the small shifting of the door opening told her it had, and Jeanette peeked her head in.
<o></o>
“Miss Florence… You have mail.” The girl, just twenty, said softly. “I hope I’m not interrupting anything?”
<o></o>
Anita turned her head from her kneeling position on the floor on the opposite side of the office from her desk and gave a welcoming smile. “Oh, not at all, Jeanette. What do you have for me?”
<o></o>
Shuffling through the small pile of post, Jeanette pulled out a soft lilac envelope and held it out to her. Anita stood up slowly, smoothed her clothes and brushed hair from her face, tying it back with the elastic around her wrist before reaching out a hand to accept the single piece of mail. As soon as her hand touched it, transference from Jeanette happened that caused Anita to smile sweetly before the girl let go. Then something else from the envelope itself that caused the petite professor the need to hold back a reaction.
<o></o>
“Thank you, Jeanette.” She managed, just barely, keeping her voice from wavering to the slight shock of an unexpected feeling.
<o></o>
“Not a problem, Miss Florence.”<o></o>
<o></o>
“Please, Jeanette, call me Anita.”
<o></o>
The request caused Jeanette to smile. “Only if you call me Jeanie.”<o></o>
<o></o>
“Fair enough, then. Goodbye, Jeanie.”
<o></o>
“Later!” And the door swung shut slow.
<o></o>
When Anita was sure the girl was gone, she stepped over to her desk and pulled out the chair, seating herself in it with the uncomfortable letter in hand. Pulling away at one of the ends, separating glued paper, she neatly opened the security envelope (strange that Annette Florence would use such an envelope – stranger still that she could tell nothing of its actual contents on contact…), and pulled out a folded piece of lined paper with one finger and a thumb, and suddenly, a deeper dread set in, and that eerie feeling that sometimes caused her to want for a fleecy throw to pull about her shoulders crept over her. But when she opened the letter, and read the short contents, the feeling didn’t quite match the words expressed within. Something was not right. Something was terribly wrong.
<o></o>
Within seconds, she was on the phone to one of a few internationally flying airlines, and booking a ticket for the next available seat to <st1:country-region><st1>France</st1></st1:country-region>. By Sunday, she would be in <st1>Europe</st1>, ready to spill secrets from Annette Florence, without so much as a peep to anyone else she knew. The ‘so much to tell, that I should have said sooner’ told there was more to her parent than she thought she knew.
<o></o>
Maybe it would make this feeling go away once and for all. She could only hope.<o></o>
<o>
</o>

Hurucan
Dec 21st, 2008, 10:39:03 PM
It had been years since it had happened; since rage and pain and sadness had shattered his heart into pieces and scattered them across time and space so that it might never be repaired. Despair had filled his every waking moment since then, burning through his mind every time he closed his eyes and his mind dredged up an image of her face. He had done everything he could, trying to scour those painful memories from his mind. He had tried to cope, tried to remember only the happy times; he had even tried to forget. That last attempt had at least had some success, although it had not been what he wanted: his sadistic mind had clung onto his memories of her, and sacrificed everything else. The man he had been - the man she had loved - had ceased to be: all that remained now was a wounded husk.

He read that mutant abilities manifested during periods of heightened emotional stress. His ordeal certainly qualified. When they first manifested, he had surrendered himself completely to them, allowing his pain to fuel them to new heights. That was when he left everything about him behind, and became his new self. Many mutants chose names for themselves without considering the meaning; that was not his way. When he surrendered himself, he became Hurucan, the Mayan god of storms. His rage fuelled his inner tempest, and he unleashed it upon the world.

Here he was then, standing close to the entrance to the library, preparing to complete the final stage of his revenge. His rage would never die - he knew that now - but at least he could make everyone else suffer as much as he had.

The doors swung open, and a young girl emerged. Her eyes swept the lobby, seeking out the figure two had sent her on her errand. Affixing a warm smile to his face, Hurucan stepped forward from his partially concealed location.

Jeanie returned his smile, a little relief mixing into her expression. "I gave the letter to Miss Florence, just like you asked," she said, somewhat proudly.

Hurucan allowed his smile to increase. He gestured vaguely towards the window. "Yes, I saw," he revealed, his voice gentle, with the slightest hint of gravel at the edges, strangely soothing as it wrapped itself around the formal English accent of his words. He offered the young lady a slight bow to punctuate his words. "You have my thanks, Jeanette."

Jeanie looked pleased beyond words at the phrase: not an uncommon reaction to the sickly charisma and charm that Hurucan had learned to wield over the years. She looked at him expectantly, and then down at the letters she had yet to deliver, slight disappointment flashing across her expression. "I had better finish delivering these."

Hurucan nodded, his warm smile still in place. "Quite right," he agreed, letting his reassuring gaze linger a few moments later before he turned back to the library window. His smile fell away completely. Anita stood, phone pressed to the side of her face. Something tightened in his chest where his heart used to be; something so familiar about her, and yet...

The sound of the door behind him closing snatched him from his reverie. His eyes fell away. All in due time, he assured himself, flexing his hands to fists and then forcing them to relax. The smile on his face had none of the warmth his earlier expression had displayed, and something in his eyes revealed that happiness was in no way responsible.

"Until we meet again, Miss Florence," he said softly, and then in an instant was gone, faster than sound, the slightest hint of a blurred outline blurring along in his wake.

Anita Stern
Jan 22nd, 2009, 12:52:50 AM
Anita jolted awake, sitting up from the recline of the seat on a jet airliner en route to France. A hand to chest, breathing in-out-in-out-in-out, the book that had lay across her torso having tumbled to the deck. A bare film of sweat had formed on her forehead, that she dabbed at with her sleeve, still a long way from calming down. Most everyone around her slept. The older man next to her snored lightly.


"Michael..." The petite woman whispered, wavering.

She was afraid. And the best she could do was push on through, alone. Thoughts of 'Why didn't I tell him what I was doing?' floated into her head, and then she would remember the letter. The letter that felt ominously wrong, telling her to come alone. That her mother couldn't bear to say everything she had to say with others around to hear. Still, something didn't feel right and it wasn't until now, when it was much too late to turn back, that she started to feel more fearful than apprehensive. She found herself wishing that Michael Stern was there, right next to her to hold her hand or even just comfort her somehow. Although Anita found it stranger still that a man she had known only so many months figured so prominently in her thoughts, even with everything that had happened.

"Miss, are you alright?"

Hand on chest, incrementally becoming calmer, Anita slowly turned her head to look at the stewardess, and nodded. "Yes, thank you. I'll be fine. Just a bad dream (http://sw-fans.net/forum/showthread.php?t=18600)."

"Can I get you anything?" The dark haired, asian featured airline employee queried, smiling, the previous look of concern on her face easing.

Anita narrowed her eyes and the sleep still abundant in them, managed a smile. "Just... do you have any chamomile tea?"

"Absolutely. Anything else?"

Anita shook her head. "No, thank you. That'll be all." And slowly relaxed against her seat, sighing deeply. She turned her head to look out the window at the cloud cover below and the stars above, while the stewardess went off to make the tea.

"I hope I'm wrong. I hope all this bad feeling is nothing at all."


*****

Aéroport Paris-Charles de Gaulle
27 July 2008
0833 hrs

The last couple hours of the flight had been uneventful, Anita finally finding herself able to properly relax as she woke at six a.m., received breakfast from one of the stewardesses and enjoyed the beauty of a clear sky and a bright morning sun. After that, the time was sent properly enjoying a book - gloves on - thrilling herself with the mystery by removing the interference of her power gaining the entire knowledge of the goings-on between the covers. The feeling was, honestly, the way she felt the most normal. She hadn't been able to read a book this way without precautions since her senior year in high school. Still, even with the precaution of donning gloves, it still felt the same as ever. As precious as any other old pastime.

At just after eight-thirty in the morning, Anita found herself disembarking the A380 Airbus into the Paris morning sun at Roissy, the warmth immediately bringing a smile to her face as the sun caressed her mostly bare arms. A knapsack was slung over her back, a piece of rolling luggage trailing behind her as well once she had gotten through into the airport lounge and picked it from the luggage carousel, walking further towards the exit. When she was out the door, she was about to take out her cellphone and call for a taxi, when her eyes flagged her to the fact that there were a few already idling, waiting for a fare. Of the ones there, she singled out one in particular, waved to the decently handsome, if graying, taxi driver within and approached the passenger side of his cab. Then she bent to peer into the cab, and address the cabbie.

"Oui?"

Anita smiled. "Ah..." She squinted, the morning sun reflecting off the shined top of a recent model car she did not recognize the make or model of that was near to the taxis. "...Hôtel Le Bristol, s'il vous plaît?"

Her french accent had never been the best, and it gave her away. The cabbie smiled back at her. "It is alright. My english is very good, miss. The hotel, then?"

"Yes, if you are available?"

"Oui, certainement."

It was then that another voice, distinctly not french at all, sounded behind her. A man.

"Excuse me..."

Hurucan
Jan 22nd, 2009, 03:13:35 AM
"Excuse me," Hurucan said with a breathless smile, fists against his hips as he halted his frantic jog towards her. He tried to speak, but it took a few gulps of air before he actually managed it.

Straightening up with an effort, Hurucan smoothed imaginary creases out of the front of his suit and attempted to restore his outward calm. He seemed fairly non-descript, not unlike the rest of the swarming around the taxi bay. His tie was fastened to perfection with a double winsor; that perfection of appearence seemed to be a common thread that tied his entire ensemble together, from the carefully shined shoes and neatly pressed pinstripe trousers all the way up to the polished gold chain that hung from waistcoat button to pocket, no doubt with a pocket watch to be found at the far end. His features were rugged, Scandanavian and a little intimidating - something not well disguised by his rapidly thinning hair - but the reassuring smile and the gentle English tones of his voice were far too disarming to worry about that. He seemed every inch the quintesential Brit; a carefully constructed appearence for this very scenario.

"I'm sorry," he appologised, "I'm afraid this is rather foreward." He turned his eyes skyward, deep-set eyes catching a few droplets of the coming rain as they tumbled downwards. For a moment his mask of calm confidence slipped, allowing a perfectly calculated flash of discomfort and embarassment to creep through. "I seem to have been separated from my business partner, and regretably he is the only one of us with any grasp of the French language at all. We agreed to meet up at our hotel, but I don't have the faintest idea where that might be."

Hurucan's brows twitched, conjuring images of something helpless and canine. "Would you be so kind as to point me in the direction of -" he fumbled with a scrap of paper in his pocket, squinting slightly as he made a murderous attempt at the pronounciation. "- Hotel lay Bristol?"

Anita Stern
Feb 1st, 2009, 12:38:34 AM
Anita lifted herself from the bend over the open window, catching a short glimpse of the sun making its last plea through the raindrops before the clouds shut it off from view. One hand remained on the door, her head turning to meet the face of the man who had jogged up behind her. His image - a well constructed one of a businessman, one she was fairly familiar with - managed to bring the lightest of smiles to her soft face when coupled with his slight troubled demeanor. A light smile, no more. The subject matter at the forefront of her mind, that which she was in this very country for, made showing anything towards a resemblance of joy or happiness rather difficult. For the sake of not seeming troubled herself, so that others would be less likely to pry, she pushed those thoughts out of the way, and endeavored to appear genuine. Her smile widened, and there was a small laugh to her words.

"Funny you should ask..." She started, turning more fully towards him and leaning against the cab, crossing her arms, her backpack poking into the cab's open window. "...I happen to be heading that way myself."

Then she actually laughed. Funny the way life works.

"You're welcome to... um... " She felt awful funny making such an offer to someone she didn't know at all, but being with Michael had been making her more open and approachable. "...well, you can share on the cab with me. I really don't mind."

Hurucan
Feb 11th, 2009, 01:25:04 AM
Hurucan flashed her the warmest smile he could. "Very much appreciated," he said, bowing his head slightly in thanks. He scanned her briefly, a frown tugging slightly at his brow as a thought wandered through his mind. "Perhaps I can help you with your luggage?"

Hefting the backpack around to the rear of the taxi, he felt around for the lock. Static electricity sparked between him and the vehicle; her shot a suspicious look in Anita's direction, wondering if she'd seen, but fortunately she seemed to be busying herself with clambering into the back seat. The trunk clunked open and closed as he loaded her bag into the rear, before slipping himself gracefully into the car beside her.

Folding his long limbs into the minimal legroom, he flashed her an awkward smile. "My appologies for this," he said, gesturing vaguely about him. "I'm afraid I've been completely inadequate in my preparations for this trip. Normally I would make a point of learning the basics of language but, well -" He feigned embarassment. "Suffice it to say that this trip has been somewhat last-minute."

He turned his attention to her, brows realigning to soften the usual harshness in his eyes. "Thank heavens for the kindness of strangers," he said warmly, resurrecting his earlier smile. "I am very much in your debt, Miss -?"

Anita Stern
Feb 11th, 2009, 03:32:47 PM
The door shut behind him and Anita was fastening her seatbelt. It had been a while since she was a passenger rather than the driver, so sitting back and relaxing and not having to worry too much about the process of getting from point A to point B was a nice change. She didn't know foreign roads all that well, in any case.

"Florence." She replied. "Anita."

Anita looked to him pleasantly. It was nice to have a small bit of company to take the edge off of why she was in Paris in the first place. Being able to take a breath and settle would help her deal with whatever it was her mother had to say, good or bad. It was all so confusing. What could be so important that she had to come all the way across the Atlantic to receive information face to face? The unsettled feeling she acquired from the letter returned and the petite mutant set a warm smile on her face to bury it.

"Might I ask the name of the man I am sharing this ride with?"

Hurucan
Feb 19th, 2009, 11:58:38 PM
A thought coursed through Hurucan's mind at supersonic speed, dancing from conception to memory to language to speach, before his eyes had the opportunity to show the slightest glimmer of hesitation. "Hugh," he said with a casual smile, a separate thought chastising his reflex imagination for conjuring such an absurd - if mildly amusing - alter ego. "Hugh Ruecan."

His faux persona now endowed with a name, his attention turned to the kind of small-talk that he supposed - and more importantly, Anita would expect - a businessman of his apparent age and demenour to engage in. He glanced out of the window a few times, feigning distraction at the various sights that the Parisian architecture had to offer. Finally mustering an expression that would hopefully be percived as a mix of embarassment and awkward curiosity, he glanced back towards her.

"If you don't mind me asking," he asked gently, expressive brows furrowing to express the apparently innocent reason for his query, "What brings you to Paris?"

Anita Stern
Apr 22nd, 2009, 02:50:13 PM
Anita smiled back, a mild comfort for the awkwardness.

"My mother." She granted him with an answer, searching her mind to amend the response with reason. "She thinks to retire and figures she has to come all the way here to do it. The countryside of Québec would have been more than enough."

Apparently, Anita seemed to be in some mild disagreement about the false decision. Really, she would be happy with whatever decision her mother made about her own life, within reason. The petite woman stared out the cab window at the passing buildings and people, taking in the sights of Parisian life. It was something she found attractive herself.

"I'm sorry." She apologized. "I really don't mean to broach on the subject of my troubles. What sort of business are you in?"