THE ARCHETYPE ASSOCIATION
CHAPTER TEN The next day was cloudy, overcast, and somewhat dreary. Everyone who
came down to breakfast that morning was somewhat dejected as a result of the weather.
Everyone, that is, but Archetype.
"Good morning, everyone!" he declared as he bounced into the kitchen.
"Whats so good about it?" Warren groused. "Its gonna be a
downpour today. Didnt you hear that thunder before?"
"Of course I did. Isnt it great? What are the breakfast orders today?"
"You like weather like this?" Bobby said incredulously.
"Like it? I love it! Cant any of you feel it?"
"Feel what?" Warren said in exasperation. "The rain in your face? The
feeling you get when your underwears wet?"
"Theres no romance in you, you know that?" Archetype said accusingly.
"Oh, I wouldnt say that," Betsy replied with a sly smile.
Archetype went on as if he hadnt been interrupted. "A thunderstorm is the
manifestation of a multitude of natural forces - a pure form of the energies which are the
stuff of life itself. Its both destructive and cleansing at the same time, clearing
out the deadwood and debris thats been gathering. Think of it as Mother
Natures dishwasher."
"Id rather take a shower, thanks," Logan replied.
"I have to agree with his opinion, Logan," Ororo put in. "I dont
often think about it, because Im so accustomed to the sensations, but his assessment
of the dynamics of a thunderstorm are quite correct."
"Thank you for the vote of confidence, Storm," Archetype told her. He was
interrupted by a low rumble in the skies outside. "Thats my cue," he
announced, walking towards the back door.
"You dont mean youre actually going out in that?" Betsy asked him
as the rain started to spatter against the window.
"You got it," he replied as he left the room. A moment later, they heard the
back door open, then close.
"Im starting to think that Scotts right," Warren said.
"Maybe he is crazy."
"Well, if he is sensitive to natural forces," Henry mused, "then
a thunderstorm would be an ideal way for him to recharge his batteries, so to speak. It
might be a good idea to talk to Meggan in Excalibur. Her powers are based in nature as
well, so maybe..."
CRACK-BOOM!!!
The sound of a thunderclap made everyone jump out of their seats.
"What the hell was that!?" Warren, now fully awake, exclaimed.
"It was a lightning strike, just outside," Bobby said. He looked at Ororo.
"Did you have anything to do with that?"
Ororo just shook her head. She seemed as stunned as the rest of them. A moment later,
Rogue flew into the kitchen.
"Uh, guys," she said hesitantly, "I think youd all better look
outside." They all got up out of their chairs and went to the window just in time to
see the next lightning bolt strike.
Right where Archetype was standing.
The bolt of lightning struck his outstretched right hand, passing through his body and
entering the ground through his left hand. His entire body was bathed in witchfire, and
small streamers of electricity danced over his frame.
"Shit!" Bobby said. "Hes being electrocuted!"
Rogue shook her head. "I dont think so. He got hit once before, and it
didnt seem to do anything to him."
"Whats that sound?" Betsy asked.
Logan listened intently. "Hes.... laughing."
"Just what the hell did you think you were doing?" Henry asked Archetype when
he had returned to the mansion.
"Recharging my batteries," was Archetypes answer. He was grinning
broadly, and pacing all over the room, not staying in any one place for long.
"Why didnt you just put your finger in a light socket and get the same
effect?" Bobby asked sarcastically.
"I wasnt dealing with the electricity as much as the natural forces which
caused it to occur. They passed through me on their way back into the earth." He
paused for a moment, frowning. "The scientific explanation just wont work.
Lets try a systems theory approach. The atmosphere and the ground are just part of
the larger Gaian system."
"Gaian system?" Rogue asked.
"The Gaia theory postulates that all of the natural systems of the earth function
in the same manner as the different systems of a living organism. Basically it says that
the earth itself is a giant super-organism, and that everything on it, from rocks to
people, has a function within the system."
"Sounds pretty mystical to me," Warren replied doubtfully.
"When youre dealing with things on the level that systems theory does, the
line between science and mysticism tends to get blurred a bit. The interaction between
individual entities in systems theory is comparable to the quantum mechanics view - that
everything that exists is a system of connected energy states, and that everything that
exists is connected, in some way, with everything else. What I just did was essentially a
way for me to strengthen the bond between myself and the earth. Since the human connection
with the earth is one of the most intimate relations within the Collective, it allows me
to enhance my own abilities."
"Are you talking about the collective conscious or unconscious?" Henry asked.
"Im starting to get the idea that the line between the two is nowhere near
as discrete as we like to think. For now, Im going to refer to them as a single
unit."
"How do you feel?" Rogue asked.
"A little wired, to be honest. Its going to take me a while to wind down.
What do we have on the agenda today, and can I see the morning paper, please?" He
took it from Warren, and started leafing through it very quickly. When he reached the
financial section, he flipped to the stock section, took a pen out of his pocket, and
started circling certain listings, while at the same time crossing out others.
"What are you doing?" Warren asked him.
"Deciding what to buy and what to sell." He frowned for a moment. "Do
you own any stock in Dynastar Computing?"
Warren thought for a moment. "I think so. Why?"
"Dump it, today. Tell Xavier to do the same."
"Any particular reason why?"
"Ive just got a bad feeling about it today. If you take a big loss because
of it, Ill pay the difference." He looked at Warren pointedly. "Trust me
on this."
Warren blinked twice, then went to Xaviers study.
"In the financial world, the Dow plummeted earlier this morning when Dynastar
Computing announced that its new operating system, anticipated for several months, will be
delayed until next year. The company president resigned at the request of the board of
directors."
Warren turned to Archetype as a commercial came on the television screen.
"Okay," he asked, "just how did you know that the stock was going to drop
today?"
Archetype frowned. "Its not something that I can put into words. I just got
a flash that investing in that company was a bad idea. I get those sorts of impulses
sometimes, and Ive just learned to trust in them over time."
"Have you been getting any about us?" Bobby asked.
He shook his head. "No. I doubt that I will until something is about to happen. I
usually get a few hours notice. "
"Is there any pattern to them?" Xavier asked.
"No, theyre totally random. Well," he said, "whats on the
agenda for this afternoon?"
"You said that earlier," Logan pointed out.
"Repetition is the soul of wit."
"Your group session will be at two," Xavier told him. "Please try
not to kill anyone this time."
Archetype gave him a look of pure innocence. "Now do I look like the type
whod do that sort of thing?"
Warren looked at Xavier. "You do have a copy of my will, right?"
"The game which you are about to play could best be termed reverse
tag " Xavier announced over the loudspeaker in the Danger Room. "In
this case, the person who is it has to avoid the other players for as
long as possible."
"Does contact with powers count," Archetype asked, "Or will only
physical contact be allowed?"
"Physical contact only," was the reply.
"I suppose I get three guesses as to whos it," Archetype
replied dryly.
"Hope youre well rested," Bobby told him with a smile.
"By the way, Archetype," Scott added, "the lights are now
shatterproof."
"Thats all right, Mister Summers," Archetype replied brightly, "I
make it a point not to repeat myself." He cocked his head for a moment. "Maybe this
will be more appropriate."
The change was almost unnoticeable at first. Archetype crouched a bit lower onto the
ground, covering his face with his crossed arms. When he raised his head again, the grey
in his eyes was so predominant, they appeared almost to be glowing. The air around him
seemed to darken, becoming thicker. His form became cloaked in shadow, leaving only his
glowing eyes clearly visible. When he spread out his arms again, his gloved hands extended
like claws, powerful and deadly. He radiated a menace which was as dark as the stars were
bright.
He stood up slowly, ponderously, weighed down with a bulk that seemed to have appeared
out of nowhere. When he spoke again, his voice was deeper, growling, and thunderous. It
was the voice of a god.
"Now," it said, "whos first?"
"I cant believe what just happened," Henry told them ten minutes later
in the debriefing room. "How could you just surrender to him?!"
"Are you kidding, Hank?" Scott said incredulously. "I had to think about
the safety of the team. He would have made mincemeat out of us. You saw what he looked
like."
"Scott, I was watching him through the monitor, and I saw nothing that suggested
that he was a threat to any of you."
"Henry, that is absurd," Ororo objected. "We were right there,
and...." She stopped suddenly, her eyes narrowing, and turned. "Archetype..."
she said dangerously.
Archetype turned to her, raising one eyebrow. "Yes?" he asked in a long
drawl.
"Did you use your mental abilities against us back there?"
"No," he replied, "I used yours."
"Mine?" she asked, surprised.
"Yours. And Bobbys, and Rogues, and Wolverines..."
"Wait a minute," Logan interrupted him, "I dont have any psychic
abilities."
"She was asking about mental abilities, not psychic abilities."
"So whats the difference?"
"That fact that youre talking with me at all means that youve reached
a certain level of mental development. This means that, to some degree, you are in contact
with the Collective. When I did what I just did, I wasnt aiming for anything too
specific. I just had a basic goal of intimidating all of you into submission. I have no
idea just how that intention manifested itself in each of you. What did you see
back there?"
"I dont want to talk about it," Logan grumbled.
"Suit yourself," Archetype replied, shrugging. "Does anybody want to
speak up? The floor is open."
"I saw Slaymaster," Betsy put in, her voice dead.
Archetype looked puzzled. "Who?"
"The man who blinded me."
Archetype shook his head in exasperation. "Could someone explain all of this to
me?"
"Later," Xavier told him. "Does anyone else have anything to say?"
"Not in public," Rogue muttered under her breath.
"All right, thats it for now," Xavier said. "Why dont we
clean up and take a break before dinner?"
"Oh, shit!" Archetype cried, standing up suddenly. "Dinner! I
havent had a chance to start anything yet! Things may be running a little late
tonight," he said, and disappeared.
"We might want to consider giving him an occasional break from the cooking,"
Ororo mused. "The meals that he has been making have been somewhat complicated."
"I think we can blame that on his training," Henry supplied. "He went to
cooking school, so hes probably constitutionally incapable of making something
simple."
"Well, whatever he makes," Logan said, "Its one less time you guys
have to put up with my cooking."
"Thank God for that," Henry muttered.
"What was that, Hank?"
"Oh, nothing."
Dinner that night was a stir-fry concoction which Archetype admitted had been thrown
together at the last minute. "Theres really not much in the refrigerator. Is
there a store around here thats open twenty-four hours?"
"Not around here," Bobby said, "but there are quite a few in
Manhattan."
"All right, Ill go there then." He glanced at a pad and pencil in the
next room, which appeared in his hand. "Any requests?"
Several suggestions for snacks were bandied about in the next few minutes. "Now,
what about dinner?" Archetype said to himself. A cookbook appeared in the air in
front of him and remained there, suspended. He opened it up and leafed through the
pages.
"Um... Archetype?" Henry asked in an uncertain tone.
"Yes, Doctor McCoy?" Archetype replied absently.
"You arent a telekinetic, are you?"
"No, why?"
"Whats holding the book up?"
"Hmm? Oh," he said, looking sheepish. "I forgot that you havent
seen this trick yet." He glanced at Ororo, who was sitting at his right.
"Whats underneath the book?" he asked her.
Ororo bent down slightly in her chair, looking up at the underside of the book.
"There is nothing down there," she reported.
"All right, now look at it from my point of view," he instructed her, taking
the book into his hands and lifting it up. Suspended in the air was a rectangle of
dark-colored wood, surrounded by a blue aura.
"That is one of your Doors, isnt it?" she asked.
"Yes. The other end is on the desk in my room. I use this method if I have to keep
something suspended in the air. How does chicken tetrazini sound for Tuesday night?"
"That will work," Xavier said. "By the way, we want to talk to you about
your cooking."
Archetype looked up at that, a worried expression on his face. "Is something
wrong? I know that this meal was somewhat rushed, but...."
"No nothing like that," Xavier replied hurriedly, "its just that
youve done most of the cooking over the past few days. We thought that you might
appreciate an occasional break."
Archetype frowned. "All right. Why not Friday? That way, I can take care of
whatever business I have to do."
"That reminds me," Warren cut in. "Ive been meaning to ask you how
you manage to keep track of your money."
"Probably the same way you do. I have a financial advisor."
"Does he know anything about us?" Xavier asked.
"No. As a matter of fact, he doesnt even know where I am at any given
time. Over the past few years, Ive cultivated an image of being a member of the jet
set. We do most of our communication over computer, so he thinks Im always off in
some exotic locale. I just check in to tell him what I want him to buy or sell at any
given time, and I pay him a surprise visit once every quarter just to keep him on his
toes. Most of my money isnt in stocks now, anyway. I deal mostly in antiquities and
precious metals."
"Which metals?"
"All of them, really. Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium. I deal in both coins
and ingots."
"Swiss Bank?" Warren asked.
"Of course. The banking laws in the U.S. make things too difficult for me. It may
be a prudent idea for me to vanish one of these days, and having my money in something as
portable and untraceable as gold gives me one less thing to worry about."
"What if you cant get to Switzerland?" Betsy asked.
"No problem. I have two bars hidden here."
"In the U.S.?"
"No, here in the mansion."
Xavier gaped at him. "You have two hundred pounds of gold hidden somewhere around
here!?"
"Yes. I wanted a cool million to play with if things got hairy."
Bobby looked at Henry. "Do you still have that metal detector you bought one
summer?"
"I can check."
"Dont bother, gentlemen," Archetype cut in. "I have already taken
steps to make the gold undetectable. Im keeping it a pocket dimension which is
accessible from a certain location in the mansion. The silver, however, Im more than
willing to share." He reached into his pocket, pulling out a silver coin. "An
American Eagle," he said. "I have a lock box full of them."
"What antiques do you collect?" Xavier asked.
"I do blades mostly - swords, daggers, and some of the more imaginative concealed
weapons from the past." He smirked. "I also admit to a weakness to some of the
James Bond type gadgets."
"You and Forge ought to get along very well, then," Ororo told him. "I
expect him to build a fusion-powered potato peeler any day now."
"I really dont go for anything too complicated. I just look for the item
that does the job most efficiently." He stood up and stretched. "Well, Im
stuffed. A warning to whoever does the dishes: that wok is made of seasoned cast iron. Use
only a paper towel and water on it when you clean it. If you use soap, you will
ruin it, and I will then be forced to ruin you. See you in the morning - Im
off to read myself to sleep." With that he left the dining room and ascended the
stairs.
As he turned the corner into the wing which housed the mens dormitory,
Archetype slowly sagged against the wall, removing his glasses and rubbing his temples as
he did so.
It was worst when he was fatigued. The link between the Chorus and himself was
unpredictable at best, and sometimes he found himself overpowered by their song. He needed
to get some sleep, he decided, before things got out of hand.
He opened the door to his room and clomped in slowly, kicking his shoes to the foot of
his bed. He hung his vest on the hat rack and closed the door, not bothering to put on the
light. He crossed the room and sat down in the leather high-backed easy chair which he had
purchased the day before. The chair was an antique, but had been refurbished by a local
furniture restorer. Archetype had liked the chair as soon as he had seen it. He had some
sympathy for something which, like him, had been brought back from the brink and stitched
back together.
Archetype was incapable of sleeping while sitting up, but he usually needed a few
minutes to wind down before nodding off. He let his eyes wander lazily around the room.
Suddenly, he found his eyes fixed directly on the open window across from him.
It had been closed when he had last left.
Straining to look casual, he slowly rose from the chair and stretched, scanning the
room as he did so. He found a heat signature against one wall of the room, by his desk.
Turning the light on was out of the question; because his eyes had adjusted to the
darkness, he would be as vulnerable as his opponent. He decided that a direct assault
would be best, and tensed his muscles for a jump.
He leapt over the side of the chair, balancing on one hand. Rather than landing on his
feet, he let his momentum push him forward onto the floor, where he slid on the uncovered
floorboards towards the heat aura in front of him. He readied for a strike and lashed out
with his legs.
His target moved... straight up?
Archetype was, despite his abilities, still bound by a few of the laws of physics. He
slid right past where his target had been and crashed into the table by his desk. The stag
statue which he had purchased with Rogue flew off the table and sailed - rather
gracefully, Archetype thought - through the air to land, with a resounding thunk,
right on Archetypes head, eliciting a low groan from him. Before he could take the
time to get up, a hand grabbed him by the collar and lifted him off the floor, holding him
up off his feet.
Time to get serious, he decided. He flicked his wrist, and his dagger flew into
his right hand. He held it just below the chin of his opponent. His unknown foe did not
appear to be fazed by the prospect of becoming an unwilling blood donor, and he watched
the hand which was not currently wrapped around his throat reach towards his desk lamp and
turn it on.
His eyes took a moment to adjust to the light. "Rogue?"
It was obvious that she was not happy. The tension lines on her face were plain to see,
and the set of her mouth was somewhere between a frown and a snarl. Her free hand was
balled into a fist.
Archetype pulled his dagger back, replacing it in his sheath. "What the hell are
you doing?" he asked her.
"What am I doing?" she replied softly, half to herself. She strode to
the window, still holding him with one hand, and threw him outside.
Xavier, who was working with Henry in his office, heard a low cry, which seemed to fade
off into the distance. He looked at Henry. "Did you hear that?"
"Hear what?"
Xavier blinked once. "Never mind."
Rogue, who had grabbed Archetype just before he hit the ground, flew him across the
front lawn, keeping him about three feet above the ground. She then pulled up sharply,
zooming to a height of about ten thousand meters, at which point she hovered. "What
the hell was that stunt you pulled earlier!?" she demanded of Archetype as she
shook him by the collar.
It should have been difficult for Archetype to even breathe, given the constriction
which Rogue was placing on his throat. He was, however, able to say three words:
"Let.... me....go."
"You arent going anywhere until..."
"I said.... LET-ME-GO!!!" Archetypes eyes became twin stars of
silver for a moment, and Rogue rose up two feet higher when she found that she was holding
an empty turtleneck.
"Now," she heard behind her, "can we discuss this
reasonably?" She spun around to find Archetype standing on a small patch of lawn
which was floating in midair.
"Im safe in guessing that something that you saw during the Danger Room
session was disturbing to you in some manner," he asked with a raised eyebrow.
"Damn right," she spat.
He rolled his eyes. "Look, I told you earlier. I have no idea what you saw,
and couldnt control what was going to happen. That stunt was a first for me."
She looked at him suspiciously. "You mean youve never done that
before?"
"Never," he said harshly. "I had no more of an idea of what was going to
happen than you did."
"You could have warned us."
"I was treating you as enemies for the purposes of the scenario. Would you warn
Magneto if you were going to punch his lights out?"
"No," she admitted. "But I still think it was a pretty sneaky thing to
do."
"I have to be sneaky, Rogue. If Im not, I may as well paint a target on my
chest and change my code name to Cannonfodder."
Rogue had to smile. "I think Sam may have something to say about that."
Archetypes mouth curled up at one corner, resulting in a sort of half-smile.
"I suppose so. Can we go back down now?"
"Yeah. Hang on," she said, reaching for him.
He held up one hand. "Wait. Are you willing to help me with an experiment?"
She gave him a dubious look. "What kind of experiment?"
"Itll be easy. Drop down about one hundred feet."
"All right," she said, doing so. "Now what?" she yelled up at him.
"If this doesnt work," he replied as he stepped off his patch of
ground, "catch me!" He dropped straight down.
Rogue gasped and maneuvered herself so that she would be in a position to grab him.
When he was about three feet away from her, however, he disappeared, and showed up again
about ten feet higher, falling up. His speed decreased gradually, and when he was
almost at a full stop, another patch of grass appeared below him, which he landed on
easily.
He stood there for a moment, breathing hard. "I wasnt entirely sure that
would work. Thanks for the backup."
"No problem." As she watched him, Rogue saw that his attention became distant
for a moment. "Whats wrong?"
He shook his head as if clearing it of something. "The Chorus is just getting a
little loud, thats all."
"Whats the Chorus?"
"Its what Ive decided to call the voices in my head. Ill explain
on the way down. Can we go now?"
"Sure. Hold on." She let him support his weight by putting his left arm over
her shoulder as she wrapped her right arm around his waist and grabbed the waistband of
his pants. She slowly started to descend. "Let me know if Im going too
fast," she advised him.
"Drop like a rock, for all I care," he shrugged.
Rogue exhaled sharply, annoyed. "Whatever you say," she replied. She relaxed
her will, and her flight abilities were switched off. She and Archetype began to drop....
well, like a pair of rocks.
Rogue knew that she was being somewhat cruel, but she felt some small need for revenge.
"If youre nice to me," she yelled to Archetype over the howling wind,
"I might slow us down when we get close to the ground."
Archetype grinned suddenly, and the grin sent chills down Rogues spine. "No
need," he said. He then pushed himself out of her grasp and plummeted to the ground.
Rogue gaped at the rapidly diminishing figure of Archetype for a moment, then sped
after him.
"What are you, crazy?" she yelled as she made an approach which would
allow her to catch him without killing him.
"I dont think so, but then I wouldnt be the best judge of that, now
would I? Hey, watch this," he said as he flattened his arms against his sides and
angled his descent to minimize wind resistance. His speed quickly increased to terminal
velocity, and Rogue was forced again to try to catch up with him.
No need to panic, she told herself. Ill catch him with plenty to room
to spare. Then she saw him disappear, then reappear another two hundred feet in front
of her.
Okay, she decided, time to panic. She pulled her commbadge out of her
pocket and activated it. "Rogue to Phoenix!" she yelled.
"Phoenix here," was the reply. "Whats wrong,
Rogue?"
"Dont ask me to explain, Jean - there aint time. Archetypes in
freefall right above the lake. I cant get to him in time. Can you catch him?"
"Im over the lake now," Jean replied. "Ive alerted
everybody on the grounds. Warren and I are going to try and intercept him, and
Ororos going to use her winds to slow him down."
"Right," Rogue confirmed. She had gained enough distance on Archetype to be
able to see his face. He seemed passive, even tranquil, keeping his body loose and
relaxed. He glanced up at Rogue, raised one eyebrow, and closed his eyes.
"Rogue," Jeans voice came in over the link, "Warren and
I are in position. Well grab him as he passes by us."
"Gotcha, Jean. Ill stay as close to him as...." Rogue paused, noticing
a small rectangle of black appearing in the air below Archetype. "Hes opened a
Door," she informed the others. "He may be trying to slow himself down
again."
Bobbys voice suddenly cut in over the link. "No, hes not!"
"What do you mean?" Warren asked.
"A Door just formed RIGHT ABOVE THE LAKE!"
"WHAT!?" Rogue shrieked. She accelerated to her top speed in a desperate
attempt to catch up with Archetype.
She was however, too late. Archetype fell into the Door and hit the lake one second
later, causing a splash which sent water fifteen feet into the air.
"Oh my God," Rogue whispered to herself. Ten seconds later, she and the
others were at the lake, trying to locate Archetype.
"Ill find him," Bobby announced as his ice form became more abstract.
He plunged into the lake, reaching out with his powers to find any objects which had a
higher density than the lake water. He found Archetypes body a few seconds later. It
wasnt moving.
Bobby quickly created an ice raft just below Archetype. The buoyancy of the raft lifted
the body to the surface. When the raft broke the surface of the water, Jean carefully
cradled Archetypes body in a telekinetic field and carried him to the shore of the
lake, where she lowered him gently to the ground.
Henry, Scott and Xavier, who had come over land from the mansion, arrived a few moments
later. "Hank, check his vitals," Xavier ordered.
Henry shook his head. "There wouldnt be any point."
Archetypes limbs were broken and twisted in all directions. His head was craned
at an impossible angle, and the depression in the middle of his chest gave mute testimony
to the fact that all of his ribs had broken with the impact of his fall.
Rogue was in shock, stammering to Xavier, "I - I tried to stop him, Professor....
he would.... wouldnt let me.... oh God.... what have I done?...."
"Its not your fault, Rogue," Jean said soothingly. "You did
everything you could to save him."
"I was the one who took him up there in the first place!" Rogue almost
shrieked in reply. "Of course its my fault!" She broke into tears,
dropping to her knees.
Hank, youd better give her a sedative before she goes into hysterics,
Xavier projected.
Understood. "Bobby," Henry said softly, "could you help me move
him inside?"
"Sure," Bobby replied in a subdued tone. He and Henry bent down to lift the
body, each of them taking a shoulder. As they heaved him up, Bobby tried awkwardly to
place one of Archetypes arms over his shoulder for better support by gingerly
handling the arm by the wrist.
The hand which the wrist was attached to apparently decided that it had other ideas,
because it grabbed Bobbys wrist in a crushing grip. Bobby yelled in both pain and
surprise, dropping Archetype like a hot rock. Henry didnt have time to compensate
for the lack of support, and tried to hold Archetype up and help Bobby at the same time.
The effort put him off balance, however, and the end result was that they all fell to the
ground in a heap.
Jean, Betsy and Xavier all gasped at once and grimaced in pain. Put up your shields,
both of you! he barked mentally, as he did so himself.
The non-psis, meanwhile, rushed in to help Bobby and Henry, who were trying to untangle
themselves. Henry managed to pry Archetypes fingers from Bobbys wrist, and
they both scrambled away from him.
Jean and Rogue rushed back to the others and joined the circle which surrounded the now
writhing body of Archetype. They all cringed as they heard a noise which sounded like wood
cracking apart. "His bones are knitting themselves back together," Xavier
marveled. "Not even Logans powers go this far."
Then Archetype opened his eyes. They were glowing silver again, and they were set in a
face which was contorted in agony. He slowly moved his broken arms and gripped the sides
of his head with his shattered hands. Slowly, he began to twist his head back into its
proper position. Bobby became ill and had to look away as Archetypes screams echoed
over the grounds, drowning out the crunch of grinding bones as a shattered ribcage rebuilt
itself and mangled limbs straightened.
It was all over in about two minutes. Archetype rolled over onto his hands and knees
and deposited the contents of his stomach onto the ground. He then rose up to his knees,
and finally stood up.
His face was etched in pain, and it was undeniable: he had aged. He had the face of a
man in his fifties, and the silver in his hair had become much more pronounced. He took
three steps, and fainted dead away.
They moved him to the infirmary, and placed him under monitoring. That didnt turn
out very well, however, because all they received on their instrumentation was
static.
"Its a by-product, or a side effect, of his powers," Xavier explained.
"Hes emitting so much psychic energy that the electronics cant cut
through it."
"But none of the rest of you do that," Scott mused. "Why him?"
"Most psis work within a specific band of psychic energy which fits in pretty
narrowly with the EKG pattern of the individuals brain. Because Archetype draws
energy from the collective consciousness, countless patterns overlap, and the end result
is static. The effect is somewhat like what youd get if you had a radio which
received all stations at once."
Scott nodded. "What do we do now?" he asked, turning to Henry.
"For now, we watch him and see what happens. Ive put in a glucose drip so
that hell have some nutrients to repair himself with. Beyond that, Im out of
my league."
"Ill take first watch," Rogue said quickly.
"No," Xavier told her sternly. "Youre going up to your room to get
some rest. Hank?"
Henry unlocked a nearby cabinet and removed a brown glass bottle, shaking out five
large pills. "Take these just before you go to bed," he told Rogue.
"Isnt this a bit much?" she asked him, raising an eyebrow.
"You know how quickly your body burns off medication," Henry pointed out.
"These should keep you out for eight to twelve hours. You need the rest," he
said, silencing her objections. "If anything happens, well let you know."
Rogue exhaled sharply in frustration and stalked off to her room. When she had closed
her door, however, she collapsed against it, shaking uncontrollably. She changed into one
of her favorite oversize T-shirts and took the pills Henry had given her. As she pulled
the covers back on her bed, she glanced at her bureau, which held an assortment of stuffed
animals which she had gathered over the years. She grabbed a large, overstuffed teddy
bear, burrowed under the sheets, and quickly fell asleep, clutching the bear as if it were
a lifeline.
Continued in Chapter Eleven |