Disclaimer: I don't own Sky-High.

For those who don't know, this is told from the point of view of Warren's mother.

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"If you have a heart, you'll know pain in your lifetime,

and if you feel pain, it will be because you have heart.

The seasons keep passing

through my heart."- Dil Se Re, Dil Se

----

"You know, I love you." she said as pushes her plastic cafeteria tray across what is supposed to be his table.

He says nothing, pushes the book up back and continues ignoring her.

"You not saying anything means you love me back." She picks at her Salisbury steak, and decides to eat her boiled carrots. One at a time.

His silence is more informative then most people's speech.

----

When she thinks back to her mother and that unborn baby, she thinks of her powers.

Why she's even graced with the same space as his in the first place.

Her mother grabs at nothing apparent, simpering and groaning. Crying. Her father stands over her, belt in tow.

The spark sits in her stomach waiting for that one volatile moment. Her feelings bubble over like a volcanic eruption, spouting noxious gases and rocks.

At age twelve she learned the smell of human flesh burning. Of agonizing screams, and of her triumph. Fire's triumph.

----

She believes in simplicity. In fire.

It is always triumphant, and so shall she be.

"Don't love me. You'll die." Baron tells her once during lunch. He says it simply as though he's discussing the weather, but she can detect the pain.

His words stilled her breath and shadowed her with a sense of foreboding.

However, she can't let go. She has to pause and think about this profound statement.

"Do you want me to die?"



Author's Note:
Dear Tigger101, I deeply appreciate your review. Thank you for the advice. One day I'll look at this and see how crappy it is and make it better. I'm not quite a big fan of Shah-Rukh either. I'm just waiting for a crappy hollywood remake of Dil-Se