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Winter Days in Westchester
By Katt
Disclaimer: The X-Men belong to
Marvel.
Story:
A second-person
narrative following a day in the life of Remy LeBeau.
E-mail: orchydd@hotmail.com
Rating: R
You've
always awakened with a start. Contrary to popular belief you are neither a
sloth nor a slug-a-bed. In fact, the term "insomniac" would be a better
fit. The first rays of winter sun, eager to escape the heavy cloud cover, jab
through your sleep-- never too deep to begin with-- like a spear through fat. Your
entire body jerks, your fists nearly ripping the pillow sham as, with your
heart thumping slowly but powerfully, you take careful measure of your
surroundings.
The cloth
under your cheek only vaguely smells of sweat and drool and scalp. The chemical
equivalent of daisies is predominant as was advertised in the fuzzy,
bunny-filled, wild flower-infested TV commercial. You start to hum the jingle
but snort and turn over instead. The pillow is comfortable but firm. You've
never liked the suffocating sensation of sleeping on overstuffed, goosedown
pillows. You have not one but two blankets; a cotton sheet in the same striped
pattern as the pillows and a thick comforter of bold sapphire on top and a dark
crimson underneath. You approve of the colour combinations thoroughly. Not for
the last time, you consider the possibility that Xavier has cluttered about in
your head for your preferences. You're still not sure if you mind it. You see
the clock flashing 7:14 and decide that it's still to early for thoughts like
that.
You turn
over again.
As you lie
on your back, you wonder if anyone else has caught on to your sleeping habits. There
had to be someone with super-sensitive hearing who would know that when
you're truly asleep, you don't move a muscle. Scott might know; but then again,
maybe not. After all, he has a few dozen other kids to take care of. Why should
he remember the sleeping patters of a kid he knew for less than a month sixteen
years ago? With that self-admonishment, you switch to lie on your right side
again.
The thought
of Scott makes you smile. Though you address him only as "Summers" in
public, you think of him as "Scott," that tall, skinny protector who
shone such promise. There were times way back in the past when you would finger
a deck of cards and remember the boy who taught you the basic tricks. You feel
a slight shame that you'd forgotten him so easily when he had searched for you
for so long. That is dismissed a second later; your pragmatism tells you that
you had far more important things on your mind back then.
You curl up
to lie half on your stomach.
You prod at
the memories until they throb like an abscessed tooth, pulling back just in
time to keep from crying out. Then, with the morbidity of a child with a
scabbed knee, you return to pick at the healing wounds.
As always,
the first of the memories to come to the fore are the needles. As an adult, you
know that they weren't fifteen feet long and five feet wide but you can never
get rid of that mental image. You wonder why the man in your head always looks
like a reanimated corpse out of a bad horror movie-- dead white skin and stiletto-like
fangs. You figured out long ago that the teeth were thus shaped because of your
fear of needles but you can never figure out the pale skin.
You shift,
lying full on your stomach with your face away from the window.
The thought
of talking to Xavier about the memories doesn't even enter your head. That lady
doctor, Jean, flickers in your mind's eye but is just as quickly dismissed. Then
there's Scott-- but no, you push him away, too. If he's as sharp as he seems to
be, he already knows more about you than anyone else alive. You don't see any
sense in giving him more of an advantage.
Sunlight
seems determined to enter your world. You intend to ask Xavier for black window
shades as soon as your body gets hungry enough to get out of the warm, fluffy covers.
You glare at the single beam that has forced its way through a crack in the
drapes and is currently casting shadows of you and the bed on the opposite
wall. You stare at that wall, decide that the shadow looks like Elvis' profile
and grin. Your lip curls up and you imagine that you are singing with the
King's distinctive voice. You would never do that in public; you can't sing a
note. Or, more specifically, you can only sing in one note, a discordant
D flat in the middle octave.
That
handicap doesn't prevent you from thoroughly enjoying music of course. Your
eyes close again as you remember the dance club in Manhattan that was the cause
for your coming home at five o' clock in the morning. You are, you admit
without any humility, a fantastic dancer. Should the opportunity ever arise,
you would do another stint as a stripper. Quite frankly, you like the
attention. The men are more vocal with their praise but the women tip bigger
especially if you act in love.
You are
very good at acting, too.
The clock blinks
7:41. You stick your tongue out at it and burrow your head under the pillows. This
time, however, even the false darkness wont' let you rest. You wish for a
hammer with which to conk yourself out with but later decide that (a) it would
hurt and (b) the hammer was probably in the garage (of all places!) and by the
time you went down two flights of stairs, through five halls to get to the
garage, found the damned thing and walked all the way back to your room,
someone would have found you and rendered the use of the hammer futile.
You peek
out from under the pillow. The clock greets you with a cheerful, green 7:42. You
scowl at it then wonder if you've hurt its feelings. At that moment, you're
sure that once you start feeling empathy for inanimate electronic objects, you
definitely need more sleep. You force your breaths to come slower; you've read
somewhere that a person takes only eight breaths per minute when he's asleep.
Faking
sleep was one of the first things you learned to do. Hardly anybody disturbed
dirty, scrawny, sleeping kids and remaining immobile was necessary when all
your litter corner of the street was from pimps, junkies and other such urban
wildlife with only 2 layers of cardboard. On the other hand, you've always
learned to take catnaps in the most uncomfortable positions if you absolutely
had to.
::So why
isn't it working now?:: you demand of yourself.
You lift
your head minutely to check the clock again. Your eyebrows rise when you see
that it's actually 10:03 and you've lost two hours. That rankles your spine. One
of the reasons why you're an insomniac is because you dislike not knowing where
your time has gone. You hate that feeling of your consciousness disappearing
out of control-- your control-- never to be recovered.
In any
case, seeing that it's close enough to noon that no one will go into an
epileptic shock should they see you strolling down the halls, you kick your
covers off and roll out of bed. Literally. You purposely fall head-first, catch
yourself with your hands and push off into a back flip then tuck into a forward
roll singing, "Ta-daa!" as you lift yourself to your feet.
"Please,
no need for a standing ovation," you tell your penis, "but if you
insist."
You both bow.
As you
relieve yourself, you hope that the furry blue doctor was the one who cooked
breakfast (or brunch or lunch). Despite that fact that he uses all four limbs
to chop, slice, sauté and serve and that he cooks his sauces in Erlenmeyer
flasks, you've found his culinary skills exemplary. Then again, the point is
probably moot; the appetite that some of these kids possess have you
half-believing that they'd all been starved prior to coming to this school.
You turn
the hot water on at full blast and step in without hesitation. Your hands and
feet are always cold. Whoops... feet. You take off your soggy socks and dump
them on the fuzzy blue rug. You pour a dollop of shampoo in your palm and
decide that you're going to have a dozen beignets, a peach and coffee, hot,
black and sugar-sludged, for breakfast. You introduced Dr. Grey to beignets the
week before. She is now considering leaving Scott for the baker. You chuckle as
you recall Scott going on and on about icing sugar and crumbs in their bed. You
had suggested several creative ways to get rid of them and left your erstwhile
protector looking dazed but intrigued as he mounted the stairs back up to his
and Jean's suite.
You smirked
at his expression the day after.
You smirk
now just because.
When you
finished scalding yourself and scrubbing off dead skin cells with those
tree-bark-sponge things, you shake off the excess water from your hair. You are
inordinately vain about your hair. Thick as your wrist when tied back and soft
as kitten's fur with just the tiniest of waves when it's short, you know
it's your best feature. Deciding that, no, it doesn't need conditioning, you
grab your towel and dry off as quickly as possible. You go through the normal
motions of the rest of the bathing ritual completely blind since the mirror is
completely fogged up. You decide that your stubble isn't that bad and forego
shaving. Besides, it would royally piss off that uppity Mississippi bitch.
It's not
that you don't like her, you tell yourself as you spit out the extremely minty
toothpaste. It's that she doesn't like you and you don't see the
point in wasting your energy to try and change her mind. Maybe you're a bit put
out as well that she isn't swooning over you but you insist on believing that
that is only a small part of it. You end that argument with yourself as you tie
your hair back and head for the door.
Steam curls
out after your heels as you dash for your closet. You yank out the first thing
that comes to your hand--- jeans and a shirt in a shade that the salesperson
called "saffron." You think it's orangey-yellow. You pull them on as
you hop around to keep warm. Yes, you have your own tiny ensuite but your
heater is constantly on the fritz. The fairness of the trade off depends on the
time of day.
By the time
you find a clean pair of sock, your boots, and your jacket and finished combing
your hair, it's quarter after eleven. You are halfway down the hall when a
blast of sunlight reminds you that you don't have your shades on. Apparently,
they'd decided crawl behind the bedside table.
When you go
out again, the halls are beginning to stir as the kids leave their morning
classes. A few of them wave to you, the younger ones more enthusiastically. One
of them comes up to you, zipping down the halls at 250 klicks. He skids to a
stop and pushes up his glasses. You lean against a table so that you can speak
with him eye to eye.
"HeyguesswhatRemy,Dr.GreysaidthatIhaveanaptitudeforbiologythat'sgreatformyageandIsaidcool
butIdon'tknowwhatapitudemeansdoyou?"
You pause,
replay the message in slow motion, and then reply, "It means you real good
at it."
The boy,
Pietro, beams. "Ohthat'swhatIthoughtbutIwasn'tsureandIdidn'twanttoaskjustincaseshe
decidedthatIdon'thaveanapituteanymoresothanksfortellingmeheycanweplaycardsagain'causeWanda
doesn'tbelievethatIknowanytricksandIwanttoshowherthatIdoso--"
"Mais
sho', mon frere," you say, "but not tonight. Scott might get his
panties in a twist."
"AllrightI'llseeyoubye!"
And he disappears in a streak of blue and black. You try to calculate how much sugar
that child would need to support his energy expenditure. The results frighten
you. You decide to buy stocks in sugar.
You've been
told that there are currently forty-eight students in Xavier's School For
Gifted Youngsters. A third of them only have physical mutations-- crocodile
skin, webbed hands and over-zealous hair follicles. Others had minor mutations
such as phasing through solids, immense strength and various psychic abilities.
Once in a while, there is a dangerous one. Mississippi Mud Pie is the current
one.
Speaking of
dangerous, you spot Scott overseeing the lunchroom. If there were a poll on who
was most likely to be an insomniac, you would choose him hands down. The
man was a machine. He sees you a second later, nods and smiles in greeting then
continues on his way. You like that about Scott; he leaves you room to breath
but never ceases to let you know of his presence.
"Hi,
Remy!" It's the firecracker with the bubblegum. Jubilee.
You smile
your most melting and bow to kiss her fingertips. "Bonjour, ma 'ti.
An' how you doin' t'day?"
She
titters. "Well, my day's just' starting to look up." She winks.
You
overhear a long-suffering sigh. The mud pie is behind her, tapping her foot and
clutching her tray as though she would love to break it over something. You
guess that the something starts with "Remy," ends with
"head" and has several unprintable expletives between it.
You draw
out the flirtation just long enough to send her stomping away in disgust. Jubilee
doesn't even notice.
"You
know, you shouldn't do that," she says in mid-flutter.
All right,
maybe she did notice. "Do what?" you inquire, feigning ignorance.
"Bait
her like that."
"Y'mean
the mud pie?"
She rolls
her eyes at you. "Her name's Rogue as if you didn't know. I think you're
just majorly pinking over her." Her fire-truck-red smile widens as the
boot is stolen from your foot and jammed onto hers.
You
contemplate denying the accusation. No, that would just convince her of her
mistaken conclusion. "So what if I am? All boys want toys they can't
have." Then before she can add to her argument, you kiss her cheek and
head for the lunch line.
"Did
you bring your lunch stub?" Scott asks you in a deadpan voice.
You slap
your forehead. "Dieu, I forgot it in my cigarette case. Mind
waitin'?"
"Only
if you bring me down a cigarette."
"Will
do." You don't know if he's joking. He's never smelled like tobacco but
you never know. You decide to buy an extra pack just in case.
Dani and
Bobby are doling out the food today. You wink at them both. "Who
cooked?"
"Mr.
Summers," replies Dani.
Looking
over your head, Bobby deliberately pitches his voice at a higher tone. "And
my, isn't today's selection a veritable feast!"
Scott has
his back to you but you can imagine his expression as he answers back,
"You still can't get your grade boosted up, Bobby."
"Damn,"
the boy mutters but it's only half-hearted. Turning to you, he recites,
"We've got burgers or Sloppy Joes."
You take
the Sloppy Joe. Dani spoons a heaping pile of macaroni salad on your plate as a
side dish. You eye the raisins with distaste. You despise raisins.
As always,
you waver between sitting with the "kids" or the
"grown-ups." You are neither; too old for one, too young for the
other, you don't study nor do you teach. You like to split the wealth, so to
speak: whoever catches your attention first gets the honour of your presence.
This time,
John waves you over to their table. You nod and start in their direction,
manoeuvring nimbly around the other students milling about. You tell yourself
that the only reason Rogue catches your eye is because she's the person you
enjoying teasing the most.
John and
Kitty slide over to give you room. You sit and nudge Kitty closer to Piotr. The
boy's fair cheeks blaze red, confirming your suspicion that he likes her. The
sketchbook full of her portraits is a dead give-away by itself but combined
with the fact that he loses his mastery over English when she's around--- well,
never let it be said that you didn't help the path of true love.
You chat
about nonsensical things-- or more precisely, they chat and you enter a remark
once in a while. Jubilee and John have control of the conversation, making up
fifty percent of the noise level in the room. Rogue is almost directly in front
of you. She's picking at her fries and trying to look interested in the
conversation. You are surprised by her silence; usually, she speaks up more
that this. You tune into the conversation better. It's about having children;
right or wrong to bring them into this world such as it is? You don't know how
it got to be so serious--- the last time you opened your mouth it was to
comment on whether or not textured condoms really helped (not by much).
You can
easily guess what's on her mind. You aren't sure of the specifics of her power;
all you know is that she sucks people into herself and that she can't control
it. You also know that so far, she's sucked two mutants so deeply that she's
retained their powers.
You have an
utterly inappropriate but fantastically X-rated image about your last thought. Your
penis decides to applaud the notion, making you glad that your dusky skin won't
let anything but the strongest blushes show through.
You try not
to stare but you can't help yourself. You realise that her upper lip is a
perfect cupid's bow. You can see that stubborn lock of hair that she has in the
back, the one that insists on flipping up instead of in and your hand itches to
smooth it down. You would have, too, if you hadn't been so sure that she would
magnetically skewer your hand to the table with her eating utensils.
Mentally,
you shake the notion away. You tell your head-- both of them-- that you have
more than enough problems and that the last thing you need is an untouchable
river rat who hates you and is one of the favourite students of one of your
only friends. You only partially succeed.
You decline
a game of basketball in favour of some private time in the gym. They've set up
a complicated gymnastics course mainly for McCoy 's benefit but you've been
drooling over it for some time. After a quick change into a pair of shorts, you
start warming up. You visualise your routine as you stretch your muscles. You
won't necessarily follow it but it helps you make split-second decisions when
you ad-lib.
There are
several levels of bars and half a dozen pairs of rings hanging haphazardly from
the ceiling. There is even a trapeze. You barely contain a giddy giggle.
You'd never
live it down if someone heard you giggle.
You only
put a slight dusting of power on your hands; you've never needed more. In
keeping with the giggly theme, you start off with a couple of cartwheels. In
the middle of the third one, you make a quick half-twist in the air and start a
series of handsprings. McCoy told you that two or more handsprings are called
flik-flaks. You just keep calling them "lots of handsprings" since
saying flik-flak makes you feel stupid.
When you
get near the first set of bars, you jump up and catch it with your arms locked
straight at your sides. Your hips touching the bar and your body stiff, you let
yourself fall forward. The force of the swing brings you up to a full
360-degree circle. You continue to do this lazily, almost meditatively. It's
interesting the thoughts that appear when you're spinning around and around a
horizontal bar.
Not surprisingly,
Fr. Mac pops into your consciousness. You think of that funny little
Filipino-Scottish priest every time you have a chance to practice in a real
gym. He was, after all, the one person besides Scott who gave you something
without wanting anything in return. In this case, it was an introduction to
gymnastics and the freedom to practice the rundown gym that his parish
supported.
As you
twist and fall into some backward circles, you recall his quiet smiles of
encouragement when you felt frustrated at missing a twist and the way he would
bang his prosthetic leg with his cane when he tried to get his point across. You
can never forget how he slaughtered Cajun-French (which is extremely difficult
to slaughter) when he was trying to get across to you those two horrible months
that you went into withdrawal. You wonder if he's watching over you even now. You
also want to know if there could have been a more painful way for his murderers
to die than a knife in the gut.
Finally,
you fold your body so that your legs are parallel to your torso, swing up to
sit on the bar and push off to a set of rings. You perform a full circle on
these, spin and circle backwards before letting go. As you somersault in the
air, you think you spot a white and brown head peeking behind the doors. ::Yeah?::
you think as you grasp the parallel bars, ::What's she doing here?::
You let
your body go slack and rest your weight to your shoulders. When you swing up
again you let go at the peak of the upward lift, spread your legs to straddle the
bars and land with minimal wiggle on your feet. Your ego calls and you are
helpless to resist. So you shift into a bunch of difficult moves that have no
business on parallel bars: the windmill, usually performed on a pommel horse;
some flips and shoulder rolls that somehow defy gravity and end with a
flourished hip dismount.
You don't
see anyone when you land.
You
straighten your slumped shoulders and tell yourself to keep on playing. Which
you do until your breaths are little more than gasps and your muscles are
threatening to kill you. You are not looking for anyone as you leave the
gym.
Xavier
calls to you as you head for-- well, nowhere in particular. You turn and cock
your head to one side to show that you'd heard.
"May I
see you in my office for a moment?"
"I
didn't do it," you say only half jokingly. The steady whir of his
wheelchair guides you while you take stock of the decor yet again. You have no
idea why Xavier has some of this stuff out for display with all these kids
around. You think that hearing everyone's thoughts must have made him nutty. Because
you have easy access, the temptation to steal them isn't there. Well, at least
it isn't strong. You love the planning and execution more than the prize--
though that's fantastic, too.
The door
doesn't creak as it closes; you keep expecting it to, though, just because this
is officially the oldest and classiest house you've been in and something should
creak if only to add to the ambience. The chess game that you and he
started during your first "talk" is still set up. You pause before it
and move your bishop to B5. Xavier glances at the board from the corner of his
eye. You can feel his approval but brush it off as unimportant.
"I
have another job for you," he says.
You pick up
a cut crystal paperweight and nod. "What's y'poison?"
"A
certain sector of the government have some files in their possession," he
elaborates, "Files on mutants that my sources say are next in line for
black market experimentation."
You hope
the professor didn't see your hand clench around the paperweight ever so
slightly. "How much time do I got?"
"You
must retrieve them before the week is through."
He hands
you the usual package--files and pictures, some hard copies, others on CD--
from a hidden compartment. It's a damned good compartment; it took you three
days to find and crack. You mentally tally up the work and say, "It might
cost you extra this time 'round."
"I
expect so."
You assume
you mumbled a glib farewell but your mind is already preoccupied with the job
ahead. The electric high of a job is running through your veins, sweeter and
headier than quality cocaine.
You retreat
back to your room but only to pick up a heavier coat and the keys to your car. When
Xavier first approached you in person, you tested his faithfulness by demanding
that you get free passage in and out of the school grounds. You were surprised
when he complied, even more so when he handed you keys to a sleek charcoal
sports car "for your own personal use," he had explained with his
enigmatic smile. You brushed it for bugs of course but found it clean.
Your
destination isn't far: a motel just inside the borders of New York City. It is
neither too ratty nor too sophisticated. You park the car five blocks away and
change the license plate. You carefully put away your things in your rented
room, not that you brought much just yet. Your notebook computer is set up on
the table.
You
stretch-- you have another difficult routine ahead. Briefly, you speculate
Scott's reaction should he find out that you haven't turned a new leaf. Then
you wonder why you care.
Then you
stop wondering about anything except how to crack the government building. You
know Xavier will make excuses for your MIA status for the next few days,
probably further blackening your image. If Scott should disapprove, you figure
that it's his problem. You appreciate the reunion and the save but you have no
intention of turning into him. He has survived his way and you have survived
yours. And if it should cost you the friendship of a good man, then so be it. Survival
always takes precedence.
You are,
after all, a master thief. You are skilled enough to take the gambit.