Super Man
A/N: PAUL! is the shibble izzle. Hee. I luffs PAUL! Alright, for the sake
of sounding like a neurotic Remy fan girl, I will stop here. 'but it¡¯s PAUL! Anyways: rating is due to some typical
high-school language and subtle slash tonalities.
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The first time I met Scott Summers, I was about to get my
ass kicked by Duncan Matthews.
I had just moved to Bayville, straight from Iowa.
Wasn't I blessed with the best luck? Not only was I the new, pale, skinny kid
that was a freshman, I was the new pale, skinny kid that was a freshman and was
from Iowa.
And they say God doesn't have a sense of humor.
Here I was, about to grab the last bowl of tapioca pudding
in a nerd-like fashion and generally minding my own nerdy business, when Duncan
his cronies that are every bit as huge and stupid as he is come walking up to
me and says, "Are you going to eat that?"
This was the part where I would cut in one of my typically
sarcastic trademark Paul remarks that never really helped the situation, but
only gave me a worse arse kicking. It didn't really
matter in this case, because it was the first day of school, and I was a
freshman. In other words, I was meat, no matter what.
My brain whirled, trying to find a tactical way to get out
of the situation without walking around for two weeks wincing and rubbing my
buttocks, but I could find nothing; only some vocabulary words I had just
learned from AP English last period, and a Beatles song with vague lyrics that
I had had stuck in my head for days. Mentally, I cursed my short attention
span. Physically, I opened my mouth to at least say something -- anything
was better than just staring at them with glazed eyes and a half open mouth. I
hadn't gotten any farther than "I-" when Duncan
yanked up my Spider-Man briefs.
If you have ever experienced a wedgie,
then you know this would cause a body extreme discomfort. However, Duncan
was the school football star. He went to the gym seven days a week. He actually
lifted weights for fun. (Why anyone would want to physically hone their
body for fun, I don't know. This is me, the skinny, pale kid who had the
horrible asthma in 5th grade, talking.) And the day I decided to wear undies instead of boxers like a normal person (not that it
makes much difference in pain, but just the fact that you have a little more
dignity spared), was the day Duncan Matthews gave me a wedgie
to remember for the decades.
I think I sort of mumbled something while being lifted in
the air two feet above the ground, but it came out as a strangled squeak. Like,
"Wedgies are so juvenile and immature." But my witty banter would not
save me this time, as it had done in the ... well, it never had. But I digress.
It was Scott who saved my ass from a whoopin', if you
pardon the hip lingo that is far too hip for you.
He just walked up to us, and calmly said, "Duncan."
As if it was the magic word of the day, the said person
dropped me like a potato sack and stepped forward, squaring his shoulders and
narrowing his thick, blonde Groucho Marx-esque eyebrows.
"Summers." Duncan
said throatily. I know 'throatily' is the adjective more commonly used when the
40-year old hooker lady is trying to seduce an inexperienced, idealistic youth
(and why doesn't that ever happen to me? I'm an inexperienced idealistic youth,
aren't I?), but you know what I mean. He said it in the gutters of his vocal
range; trying to act all manly and 'I'm-more-macho-than-you'.
But Scott's not the type of guy who cares about things
like that. He just lowered his head a tiny bit (Duncan's
about a milimeter shorter than him, if you'd believe
it) and said with his typical patronizing tone, "Leave him alone, Duncan.
He hasn't done anything to you."
Duncan
smiled a little bit; leered, more like it. "You're right, Summers. Hey, how was your summer, by the way?" (I
think I opened my mouth about here to crack a joke about the blatant pun that Duncan
had unintentionally made, but Duncan Crony A kicked me.)
"Fine."
Scott replied.
"That's great. Jean and I are going out to eat for
lunch to talk about eachother's summers,
ourselves." Duncan
said smugly. He's not smart, Duncan, but he always knew how to push Scott's
buttons - I'll give him that. Just like at that moment. It was as if Duncan had
planned it, for right there, Jean, a vision of red and ...uh, red, pushed open
the lunchroom doors and turned her head this way and that, obviously searching
for someone. Duncan
smiled and waved at her, and she waved back.
Scott's face tightened; his teeth were clenched, his fists
were ready to aim, his lips thinned, and ever so slightly, his cheeks turned a
different color.
"Well, wouldn't want to keep you." His voice was
audibly trying to be kept under control.
"No, you wouldn't." Duncan
quipped smoothly, and pushed past Scott. His clones kind of evaporated when
Duncan and Jean disappeared from sight. Scott stood staring after them, his
expression unreadable behind his glasses (well, is it ever?). Finally, he
sighed, and turned around to bend over and lend me a hand. I would've took it, but I was a bit suspicious of him. And I had every
right to be so - Scott was a sophomore, just like Duncan.
Who knew what kind of horrible things he had done to poor, defenseless
creatures similar to myself in the past?
"Need a hand?" Scott said, and with my train of
thought was interrupted, I drifted back to the real world, where I'm a complete
idiot that doesn't think. So, the idiot that I am, I took it.
"Sorry about that. Duncan
can be kind of a jerk sometimes."
I brushed some imaginary dirt off my shirt idly. "Really? I thought he seemed nice. Great
conversationalist, too."
By Scott's blank look, I took it that he had not been
around sarcastic types very much. I could've figured that on my own, too. He's
so serious and detached from the world - the few people he lets inside his
circle would never be able to tell if he liked them or not. Scott's just not a
very affectionate person, though --
except with his teammates. I've seen them hang around eachother. They act like this one, big family that's lived
together forever. Scott even gives that one kid noogies
occasionally. I kid you not. Noogies.
I always kind of admired Scott.
Sure, he was practically a freaking brick; never laughed or anything - at least,
when around me, of course he did around his Institute mutie
friends - God, I sound like one of them, like Duncan, AND jealous - but I'm not
jealous, and - okay, shutting up.
I admired Scott. He was athletic and popular and
attractive to girls, but despite all this, he was such a boy scout.
Seriously, I can not put it in any other words. He always had good intentions;
never a hidden motive. He never cheated, drank, smoke, did the wild monkey
dance (and probably never will 'til he's in a ripe old age and married), or
anything. Some called him a prude, but he was simply a guy with morals - the
kind of morals that you never see around today with real people that are real
friends. It was almost creepy how - perfect - he acted. But creepiness
doesn't matter, really. The important fact is, he
always cared. He defended the weak and unprotected like some kind of Superman.
It's almost cheesy, but it isn't, because I'm not talking about a little girl
who's about to be eaten by a giant purple blob monter.
I'm talking about a guy who's been called 'pizza face' since the age of 12,
with a thick set of glasses and headgear, and the giant purple blob monster is
a good-looking highschool guy who's had his share of
girlfriends and drunk parties. Superman never had ruby quartz sunglasses,
but... hey.
He told me he had sensitive eyes.
And to think, this guy who I thought was perfect and
admirable in every way, has been lying to me from day one. This was the guy who
had been my best friend for more than four years. Hell, he's been my only, real
friend that I can truly count on, no matter what - and all in the blink of an
eye, everything changes, and I have to hate him now, because everyone else
does. But I don't want to. But I have to. Because I'm the weak,
unprotected guy, and without any protection, I can be swept off the map with
the blink of an eye. It's every man for himself. Do I
hold a grudge against 'muties'? Yes and no. I
actually think it's kind of cool that they have these nifty abilities that no
one else has, and by DAMN, some of them have the coolest powers that seem like
they're straight out of a Fantastic Four comic book. But everything that comes
with being cool comes with a flaw as well. I mean, come on. The popular kids of
highschool are rich, pretty, athletic, and maintain
mediocre grades. So of course, most of the time they're awful people with
practically no ethical morals and rude to anyone they don't like. So all the
mutants with the nifty-keen powers, of course, lied to everyone.
I hate liars. I always have, ever since 2nd grade, when
Kyle McClaun told me that not only did Jessica Perez
like me, but wanted to kiss me after school. Probably the biggest humiliation
of my life, and all at the tender age of seven-and-a-half. Is it a wonder that
I'm a rejected, nerdy outcast of highschool society?
My childhood was lacking. Someone get me a shrink.
But then, the most philosophical side of my brain (which
isn't very philosophical at all, but it makes do) argues that Superman lied. He
had to, or else all the bad guys would be after him nonstop, costume or
no costume, and even worse, they'd go after his loved ones. Which makes me
think Scott is perfect, once again, but - no. Nobody's perfect. But, the
Socrates in me argues again, Superman was a foreign alien from another planet,
albeit a very good-looking, human one, that ended up being one of the most
famous superheroes of all time. And even though I still like Spider-Man better
because he was the one with more brains and strategy, Superman's morals and
strong sense of caring came before all, and that's why the guy always
triumphed. That pretty much describes Scott down to a knot, except for maybe
the other planet thing. Geez; Scott is
Superman. So what if alien is really just another word for a mutant? Or just
someone that's... different?
Was Superman a hero, or a disgraceful product of mankind?
'You already know the answer to that', Socrates-Paul says.
Damn. What next? Spoons are really forks?
