There are very few times when Jonathan Kent feels this scared of a
teenager. He fears as Chloe - pale and shaking -walks in his front door
with a thick manilla folder, that this may be one of them.
It is
weird how his fears have changed since he was her age. He used to fear
blowing his knee out in a football game and never make it into college.
Feared never winning Martha over and feared loosing her again. And about
Clark. He's feared about Clark for as long as he could remember and right
now it feels as if fear has taken away his legs to move, his voice to
speak, and sometimes-- his will to live.
Jonathan Kent knows fear
by name. He's looked it straight in the eye and he's not exactly sure who
won the staring contest but he's starting to realize that it's probably
not him as his biggest fear comes about as Chloe starts showing off paper
documents. He somehow finds it ironic that he can handle an invincible boy
but not a 5'4" normal human girl.
There are very few times when
Jonathan Kent goes back on his word. Picking up a surveillance photo
stolen from Lionel Luthor by his son's best friend, he thinks that this
might be one of them.
Anyone in this little town could write
volumes on how he would do anything but kill to protect his home, his
family. How he was honest and true but god help the man who tried to take
way his biggest treasures -- his wife and son. Who would say if anyone got
too close, if anyone set him off would be looking down the wrong end of a
shot gun.
Looking up, he doesn't see Martha who is pale and grim,
but Chloe who is thin and frail and crying. Who suddenly has lost any
pretence of being anything other than a scared teenager who is in over her
head and looking for the way out. Who is looking at him for the answers as
if he knows how to escape the mess she's in.
There are very few
times when Jonathan Kent feels the pain of bringing Lionel Luthor into
Smallville so acutely. Seeing Chloe at his kitchen table, crying and
surrounded by information on his family, is one of them.
He has
rarely felt a connection to this girl; he's been amused by, entertained
by, and even wary of her before. He had pushed Clark away from her with
now-unfounded reason and a gut-feeling that he once couldn't identify.
Right now, he is pretty sure that he can label it. Looking at her sobbing,
torn between her love for her father and of his son, he sees that she is a
lot like him.
She's bold. Rash. She loves too strong, too deeply,
too much. Her pain is more private than public and the guilt she caries is
often masked by a predictable turn of phrase. She's too trusting and too
moral to be caught up in this, he thinks, but he feels very much like the
proverbial pot when thinking this when he has fragments of a metal ship to
punctuate his own deal with the devil resting on his dresser.
There
are very few times when Jonathan Kent feels shaken to the core. Lying in
bed, Martha talking about what to do about the blonde editor, instinct
tells him that this is one of them.
The phrase that 'she's just a
kid' keeps running through his head, knowing that Clark was running wild
as if he weren't one killing him as well. When did kids become targets to
be manipulated and when did he suddenly feel so old as if he was simply
useless to everyone?
In the morning he packs their bags on auto
pilot, still shocked that fear had won. And angry, but that was familiar.
Anger was comforting in some respects because fear was going to have a
rematch; packing and planning. He was more than ready when the small
convertible pulled up.
There are very few times when Jonathan Kent
feels like he's winning and not just loosing again. And while maybe he did
take part of that phrase from a Gordon Lightfoot song, he wants to believe
that this really is one of them.
Packing their bags in the trunk
and letting Martha enter the teenager's automobile first, he sees the sun
come up over his lands. Taking off in the middle of summer was a risk; so
was trusting Chloe. But her green eyes sparkle when she hears his idea and
he can't help but feel that Gabe should be proud of his daughter. Or that
he would be proud if she were his or if Kara had grown up to be like her
as well.
The car is racing towards Metropolis, Martha and Chloe are
laughing in an unexpected ease, and he's coaxed Chloe to put on a classic
rock station. The road and hope is before them, and there are very few
times when Jonathan Kent has felt quite like this. It's scary and
exciting; it finally feels like he's in charge of his life again. He grins
unexpectedly feeling a dead weight slip off his chest.
If there
ever was a turning point in life, he thinks that this must be one of them.
