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Authors: Brian Clevinger

Tags: #General Fiction

Nuklear Age (94 page)

BOOK: Nuklear Age
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I had just about planned my course of action when I noticed something impossible. A lone heartbeat in the center of Antarctica. A heartbeat I’d heard for years without knowing it. It was Sparky. I watched him die just hours before, but there was no mistaking it. It was him. Call me selfish if you will, but I abandoned my plans and chose him before so much as considering another soul.

A week had passed before I finally extinguished the last flames and brought a semblance of order to the turmoil feeding off itself. Dr. Genius said it was time to deliver a message to the survivors. First, I’d have to put up a few satellites so that Avalondon and Mechapolis would be able to hear us, but that didn’t even take a whole afternoon. She’d prepared a speech. She said it would be best if I read it. So I did.

It consisted of “put aside our petty differences” this, and “trust one another” that. “Darkest hour” and other such like loaded phrases.

For the most part, they listened.

In the weeks that followed, Ima developed a plan that swept across the world and I executed it. Mostly, I’ve tried to be dedicated to terraforming. First repairing the scars of Man in the Amazon, plowing entire counties of farmlands in the American Mid-West, things of that nature. For the last few months I’ve been reseeding the Sahara. There now stands a forest where there was once a wasteland.

Finding the soil, that was the hardest part.

Getting the trees to stay up, that was
also
the hardest part.

But for about a month now, I’ve been up here, floating among the clouds above what used to be a desert, giving it a constant source of light. It’ll need a considerable dose of rain soon but that’s not my responsibility. I’m not the only one trying to heal the wounds of this world.

Ah, I can see him now, racing through the sky at twice the speed of sound wrapped up in the fireball of his soul. He’ll be here soon. I hope I can do this.

__________

 

Atomik Lad came to a stop in front of his mentor. He was followed by the sound of his approach a few seconds later. Huge, majestic clouds marched above them as winds caressed the treetops far below. Atomik Lad’s Field thrashed against the air with little crackles like static electricity.

“That’s a new look for you,” Atomik Lad said at last.

Nuklear Man ran a hand through his short dark blond beard. “I thought it might make me look more mature. What do you think?”

“I think I find it mildly terrifying that you could ever appear mature.”

Nuklear Man broke into a smile. The facial hair melted away. “You’re probably right.” An awkward silence. “I’m done here.”

“Oh? Great. What’s next on the To Do List Of Saving The World?”

Nuklear Man was silent. His golden eyes trailed away from Atomik Lad in response.

“Nuke?” Atomik Lad tried to catch his gaze.

“I’m done here,” he repeated, more quietly this time.

“What do you mean?”

“I have to go.”

“Go? Where?”

Nuklear Man looked to the clouds. “Away.”

“Nuke. What are you talking about!”

“I’ve been thinking it over. I have to leave the Earth.”

“What?
No! You can’t go.”

“I have to.”

“You
can’t!
We still need you here,” Atomik Lad pleaded.

He shook his head. “I’ve done enough. You don’t need me anymore.”

“Yes!” Atomik Lad said, his Field pulsed. “Yes I do.”

Nuklear Man shut his eyes.

“Nuke. I, you’re…” Atomik Lad let out a long sigh. “It’s safe to say that I have led a uniquely insane life. But you have always been the one constant in that madness. You can’t leave me. Not like everyone else. You can’t. Especially now. Not now.”

“You don’t understand.”

“You’re all I have left.”

“Things have changed.”

“Like
what!”

“Me.”

“Bullshit. Look. I don’t know what happened between you and Nihel and I don’t know what you think has changed, but I do know that you’re the same person you’ve always been to me. You’re the same man who took me in ten years ago. The same man who taught me everything I know about being a hero. Maybe you have changed, but you’re still the man who raised me. The same man who made me who I am today. That’ll never change.”

“You have to trust me. I can’t stay here any longer. I’m a danger to this world and everyone on it.”

“Is this about Nihel? No one blames you for that, Nuke. No one. You saved us from utter destruction.”

“I saved you from myself. Besides, Nihel was only the beginning. There will be others. I have angered beings of incredible power by my actions here.”

“So? Let them come. We can defeat them. We always win.”

“But at what cost? It will be decades before this world can ever return to its former way of life, and many of the scars left by Nihel will never heal. I cannot be responsible for more needless suffering. Not when it can be avoided simply by my absence.”

Atomik Lad felt like he was losing control. Things were slipping away from him. Desperation was taking hold in its place. A minute of silence passed. “Take me with you,” he said at last.

“You know I can’t. Your people still need a Hero. They need you.”

“I’m no Hero. I’m just a sidekick.”

“It’s your time.”

“I can’t do this alone.”

“You won’t be alone, Sparky.”

The clouds rumbled heavily above them.

“Why do you have to leave me?”

Nuklear Man shook his head. “Things have become too grave. We were living in a dream world, you and I. But now the dreamers are awake. We must have the courage to face this reality, as harsh and unforgiving as it may seem.”

Atomik Lad stared at his feet. “Don’t talk like that,” he said barely above a whisper.

“I have to. It’s the truth.”

The sidekick looked him in the eyes. “No, I mean don’t talk so seriously. It scares me.”

“Worse than the beard?”

“Yeah.”

“It scares me too. I’m not sure if I like what I am.”

“Why can’t things be the way they were?”

Nuklear Man nodded in agreement. “I have asked myself the same question many times in recent months. I don’t know if there is an answer.”

Atomik Lad looked over Nuklear Man’s shoulder to the clouds that lurked above them. He brought his gaze back to the Hero. “Who’s going to stop you from trying to take over worlds populated by weakling non-overpowered creatures, hm?”

A small smile appeared on Nuklear Man’s face. “You don’t have to worry about that anymore.”

“No?”

“Naw, it’s a matter of scale. I’ve set my sights on entire galaxies now.”

“Beware, mortals of the universe.”

They laughed little nervous laughs. These were their last moments. There had to be a way to prolong them.

“This is it, isn’t it?” Atomik Lad asked.

“Yes.”

“Are you coming back?”

Nuklear Man paused. “You will see me again,” he said finally. “I promise.”

“I can hardly imagine life without your bungling.”

“I was just thinking the same about you.”

They embraced. No masculine back patting. Just a simple mosaic of respect, admiration, and unconditional love. Like father and son.

“I’m going to miss you, Big Guy,” Atomik Lad said with a catch in his throat.

Nuklear Man gave him one last squeeze with arms that could move planets. “You may just be the one thing I’ve done right,” he said.

They released one another, Atomik Lad’s Field reluctantly unraveled itself from Nuklear Man. The Hero floated back a few feet. In a flash, he was at the end of a golden arc that pierced the clouds and tore through space.

Atomik Lad watched until Nuklear Man’s luminous trail faded. His gaze fell to the world below. “From this height, everything looks so small.”

__________

Sort of an Epilogue or The End of the Sequel I Never Wrote

 

I remember this one episode of the Twilight Zone.

It was this TV show where I come from.

Don’t even ask about TV.

It was about this man who had been sentenced to solitary confinement on a planet far from Earth and how he started to go crazy because he didn’t have anything to occupy his time. I suppose we were meant to sympathize with his lonely plight but I never understood it. The idea of being utterly alone was nothing new to me. Perhaps it was a symptom of being an only child, or the only child within a twenty mile radius, or the only child in the world quite like me.

Or maybe it was more a symptom of the world I came from. It was so obsessed with distraction. I think they were simply terrified of themselves. Terrified of finding themselves lacking they never looked for their own worth in the first place. Thinking about it always made me a little sad. Even in the end, I don’t think they could face themselves.

I used to worry I accelerated the process. But as the years reached closer and closer to infinity, it became more and more clear to me it didn’t matter. I don’t remember how long I waited there all alone on a barren world, but I do remember when the Sun it revolved around died. The violence of it was beautiful.

I’d recommend watching a supernova if you ever get the chance, but it’s too late for that now. It’s too late for anything now.

Still, losing the Sun presented me with a problem. Without a Sun, without an Earth, there weren’t any more years. It’s just as well, they were becoming too cumbersome anyway. I mean, four billion years. You lose all sense of perspective when you say a number like that, even if you lived through it. Toward the end I wasn’t even really paying attention anymore. They simply passed me by as I thought and watched the stars from my dead world.

But, if time was a thief, I was going to keep a running tally of what it took from me. I decided to use gamma ray bursts to keep track of time. I remember our scientists thought they were dead stars giving off pulses like clockwork. The truth was much more interesting. A story for another time. It didn’t take much effort to find one that still occurred at regular intervals back then. They’d light up the entire sky with energy if you knew how to see it. That’s when I began to mark my hours by years. You can’t imagine how taxing it was to keep track of the more frequent bursts. As if individual days mattered in light of the time I’d spent living. I could afford to let time keep the change.

Ah, yes, I should explain that shouldn’t I?

I was once a man. I was once mortal. I’ve been called many names. My name there was John but everyone knew me as Atomik. It was the kind of name you had to grow into. I have some interesting stories about Earth. It was always such a strange place. But then again, so was everywhere else in those days. Realizing that reminded me of when you think you’re the only crazy person in the world but then as you grow up you realize that everyone is crazy. And so it was with the Earth. I thought it was the only world that was crazy. But as I grew up amongst the stars I learned that the entire universe was strange. But now I’m getting ahead of myself.

I was a hero on Earth, or so they told me. I can’t say that I ever felt I got it quite right. I don’t know. Maybe I just felt that way from living in the shadow of the man who had the job before me. Whatever the case, I served my fellow man to the best of my abilities. I can say I made that world a better place. But looking back, I wonder if that ever mattered.

And then one day, one ordinary day, I died.

Or so they told me.

After all the villains, their schemes and machinations, all the social ills, genocides, and all the things we did to destroy one another, it was a simple meaningless asteroid that threatened the existence of our little world. We had teetered on the brink of destruction once before. I was at the forefront of it then and I was powerless to stop it. I lost everything I loved that day. But we had Nuklear Man back then so we won in the end. This time…this time they all had me to look up to, me to depend on. I had to be their Hero.

And I was powerless once more.

Everything I’d fought so hard for, everything that mattered, everything I cared about was going to die all over again.

I was infuriated.

I’m not sure how it happened, but they told me that my Field expanded to encompass the globe. The asteroid was pulverized. The world was saved. They never found my body. It was apparently consumed in the process that saved them. All I remember is waking from a nightmare of nothing. I remember screaming against oblivion. I remember staring into the abyss and declaring “I am.”

And I was.

My flesh had been vaporized, but my powers remained. Dr. Genius said there was a precedent for this sort of thing but I had no idea what she was talking about. I was a being of pure energy, pure will. I could be anything I wanted, I could effect any change upon the world I wished. I was beyond human, beyond mortal. They resented me for it. Nothing I did could make it up to them. They grew to hate me. As always, I did what had to be done and in this case I disappeared. But I couldn't leave. I still don’t know if it was sentiment or cowardice. Back then I labeled it as a responsibility to protect them, but in any case I never strayed from my world. I watched them from afar. Watched their trials and triumphs, their successes and setbacks, their beauty and their vulgarity.

I was alone, but I took solace knowing they were there and that I could still help them, though I could only do so without their knowledge. I diverted solar flares, intercepted a wayward comet, adjusted Jupiter’s orbit—that one was Nuke’s fault, don’t ask—and adverted cataclysmic natural disasters. I never interfered with the world they built for themselves, I only protected them from the one they lived in. Looking back, I should have done more, should have risked their resentment. But in time, I came to realize it didn’t matter. They hated me for being what they wished they were. Their fear at what they thought I might do to them was more telling of their own cruelty than anything else. All I wanted was to help them.

Then they were gone. I no longer had any distractions, nothing to keep me from looking at myself. I realized I was as scared of myself as any of them were. Scared of what I had become, of embracing my potential. My will was my power, my imagination was the definition of my limits. The freedom was horrifying.

BOOK: Nuklear Age
3.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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