Andrea: This is part of the
“Pegasus Flight” series. It takes place
a few months after “Family”. The first
stories can be found at www.oocities.org/ra_1013,
and I recommend you read them first.
Special thanks to PK, who both inspired this story in the first place
and then was wonderful enough to help me write it!
PK: Andrea has now officially joined the ranks of the plotweaseled. Blame me. And Stryfe, of course. He's a Summers; you can blame him for anything.
~text~ indicates telepathy
*text* indicates thoughts
Liked it? Hated it?
Please send feedback to ra_1013@yahoo.com
and persephone_kore@yahoo.com!
By Andrea
and Persephone_Kore
Peggy blinked a few times with her eyes shut before working up to a full-scale peek through the lashes. Something was wrong here. She didn’t remember getting into bed last night, yet here she was just waking up. It didn’t feel right.
She
opened her eyes the rest of the way and propped herself up on an arm to look
around. Not familiar, though at least she was able to move. Her vision started
swimming after a second, and she dropped her head a bit and groaned. "Is
it just me, or do I keep getting kidnapped lately?"
"It's
the family," said a dry voice. She thought at first it was Nathan's,
especially as sarcastic as it sounded -- had they gotten kidnapped together again?
This was embarrassing! -- only as it went on, it didn't sound... quite...
right. "There seems to be a propensity for kidnapped or otherwise missing
offspring. Of course, you can't have acquired it genetically -- but I suppose
if you're adopted in, you're fair game."
Peggy
blinked her eyes furiously and tried to figure out where she was and what was
going on. The room was too dark for her
to figure much out, but she thought she could detect a figure standing a few
feet away. "Nathan?" she called out uncertainly. If he was free, why hadn't he released her
already? "I--I can't get free.
What happened?"
There
was a low chuckle, and Peggy was struck with the sudden certainty that this was
not her brother. "Oh, I
know, my dear.” There was, however, a
gleam that looked an awful lot like his eye. She averted her eyes quickly, then
squinted just to the left of the glow, where the right half of his face ought
to be if he was facing her. And if it was Nathan. Which apparently it wasn't.
"Of
course you can't." The light flared brighter for a second, wildly, and the
smooth amusement cracked and fell on the floor in pieces as the voice went on.
"And I'm not Nathan!"
Okay...Peggy
swallowed hard. *Please don't let it
be who I think it is. Please don't let
it be who I think it is,* she thought desperately.
"Stryfe?"
she asked, proud that her voice quavered only slightly.
"Oh,
very good. I'm actually surprised they bothered to tell you about me. Was
that... our... dear parents, or has Nathan been telling stories?"
"I-I've
read about you. You did try to
kill the X-Men several times," Peggy retorted, a bit of dry amusement
sneaking into her own voice.
"No
I didn't," the voice -- Stryfe -- retorted, sounding rather indignant.
"I'd have done better than try. I just... made life more difficult.
Once or twice." The light from his eye came closer, and then the entire
room brightened, slowly. Peggy saw a glimmer of golden light around her calves
and on the table around her wrists -- apparently loose enough she'd been able
to sit up a bit, but not very. Then it vanished. She blinked.
"Made
life more difficult?" Peggy repeated, cautiously stretching her legs a
bit. "You shot the Professor in
the head."
"He
lived, didn't he?" Stryfe folded his arms and regarded her defiantly. He
wasn't wearing the helmet -- it was, in fact, sitting on another table across
the room.
"So
he lived, and you say you weren't trying to kill him. Sounds like you're just trying to admit you're not a
failure." Peggy regarded her
captor defiantly, hoping that he shared Nathan's temper as well as his
looks. Lesson number one was that anger
made you sloppy. It wouldn’t be much of
an edge against Stryfe, but it would still be an edge.
Stryfe
glared at her. "I could have used a normal bullet."
"You
tried to kill Dad and Jean too. And
Nathan. Is it my turn now?”
Stryfe
folded his arms and answered in a very cold voice, "Nathan and I have been
trying to kill each other or, alternatively, make each other's lives miserable
for the past several decades of subjective time. Of course, you seem to get
along quite, quite well with him."
"It's
amazing how well you get along with people who aren’t trying to kill
you," Peggy replied flippantly. As
long as he was talking, he wasn't killing her, and she thought that was a very good
thing.
"You're
a bit hung up on that, aren't you?"
"Hey,
until a few months ago I'd never had anyone try to kill me! Now it's happened...four times. I'm sorry, but that's just not normal!"
"No,
it isn't," Stryfe said thoughtfully. "At least not for the family you
seem to have joined. You should have started much earlier, I think. Infancy,
for this generation."
"You're
a bit hung up on that, aren't you?" Peggy retorted, echoing his earlier
comment. "You keep talking about
me joining the family. I feel like I'm
in the Mob or something."
Stryfe
snorted at her. "Well, what would you call it? Of course, I must
congratulate you; you're doing quite well. I was -- I can't quite say born, can
I? -- brought into existence as part of it, but no one ever seems to have been
interested in acknowledging this...."
"Thank
you." The sarcasm oozed from those
two simple words. "It's good to
know I'm good at something." Peggy
paused for a moment, then added, "I don't mean to keep harping on this,
but don't you think that if you just would stop attacking us all the
time--"
"Selective,
weren't they?" Stryfe hissed. "I see they told you enough of what I’d
done, but left out their own part -- such as what my first 'sister' did?"
He brought his voice under tight control. "It was her idea to clone Nathan.
They left me to die, did you know that? At best I was a backup copy for their
precious Chosen One. At worst? I was a decoy!"
His
voice broke into a snarl at the end, and Peggy tried not to flinch as he leaned
down into her face, their noses practically touching, and grabbed her hair at
the back of her neck. "They left me to die. Or for Apocalypse, which is worse."
She
felt the telekinetic grip that still surrounded her... waver.
Stryfe suddenly found
himself nose-to-nose with a great white horse, clutching a handful of white
mane. ~Don't. Touch. Me,~ Peggy
sent very slowly. She jerked her head
up and out of his grasp. ~So you
were left a helpless little baby. Poor
you. Yes, you went through something
terrible, but it was hardly Nathan's fault!
He was a baby too!~
~And
Dad and Jean barely got out with their lives that day! I -have- read the history. They didn't know you existed, so you can't
blame any of -them- for what happened!
Get off your pity party!~
Just
what he needed, a telepathic flying horse. Stryfe realized his mistake and
hastily seized on her legs and wings with his mind, squeezing just enough to
hurt, eye flaring. ~Can't I? They must have known -- or else Rachel didn't
bother TELLING them, and how exactly do you plan to exonerate her?~
Peggy
cried out in pain and reared up. ~I
don't know! But -I- didn't do it! I never even met you before today! Why are you taking it out on ME?~
~You
were there.~
~And
you're insane,~ she retorted, rearing up and striking him with her front
hooves, half-blind from the painful grip he had on her wings. She spun around and tried to kick in the
door with her back hooves, desperate to GET OUT!
Stryfe
took a half-step back under the force of her kick against his armor, and
renewed the grip he'd obviously been careless with again, throwing the pegasus
to her side on the floor and pinning her wings flat. "Was that ever in
question?"
"It needs repeating," Peggy said in resignation
after she'd shifted back to her human form.
"So...what are you going to do with me?" She tried to sound brave, but she knew it
came off more as bravado.
Stryfe
began to answer, then paused and, with what Peggy viewed as somewhat sarcastic
courtesy, walked over and offered her a hand up off the floor. "I haven't
decided yet."
*Not much of a pre-planner, are you?* Peggy bit back the sarcastic retort, but
pointedly ignored the offered hand. She
stood on her own and brushed her pants off self-consciously. "You could let me go?" she
offered, perfectly reasonably.
"I usually do plan more than this," he answered
her thought, a little absently. "The opportunity in this case was
fortuitous, though. A chance to snatch you away from under Cable's and the
X-Men's very noses, and not even have them notice."
"They'll
come for me."
"What makes you think that?" he inquired
solicitously, with a faint, maddening smile.
"B-because
they will," she faltered.
"Dad will always help me." She raised her chin in
defiance. "And I'm an X-Man. X-Men
always help each other."
"Ah,
yes, Cyclops is so very skilled at keeping track of his offspring."
"He'll
come." Peggy's voice was hard and
implacable, her expression no less so.
“Peggy,
my dear girl. He doesn't even know you came home. You and Nathan slipped the
security system to avoid waking anyone up, remember? Nathan thinks you're with
them, they think you're with him, and he's not the most communicative sort. And
no, you won't get anywhere by screaming mentally until someone hears you. I
shield better than that.”
Peggy
seemed to wilt like a week-old flower, her eyes sinking back into her
head. "It doesn't matter,"
she said, but she didn't sound convincing even to her own ears. "They'll find me."
"Well,
perhaps eventually. I'll grant that they probably won't be twelve or thirteen
years about it; they seem to be relatively fond of you."
*They'll
find you!* she told herself firmly.
*Nathan's mission won't take -that- long, and even if it does he's
bound to check in soon.* She
ignored the niggling doubt that reminded her Nathan was hardly regular about contacting
the mansion, and she was supposed to be with him for days yet...days before
anyone else would worry.
"Nathan's
almost as secretive as I am," Stryfe pointed out. "More so in some
ways." He shrugged. "At any rate, I should have the pleasure of your
company for some time. After all, once they notice you're missing they have to
figure out where you are."
"They've
always managed to beat you before.
You're just making them mad this time."
"They
don't know it was me, now do they? Although I suppose Nathan might guess -- but
they do have so many enemies." He gave her another infuriating smile.
"In the meantime, I suppose I can find out whether you're preferable to my
other 'sister.' And perhaps even what exactly provokes Cyclops to choose
a child."
“I
don't know," Peggy said quietly.
"I never understood why he did.
But I am a Summers now. This is
the fourth time someone's tried to kill me in barely a year, remember? I can take care of myself."
"Really.
And what exactly would you do to protect yourself if I decided to set you on
fire telekinetically? Or make you shift to pegasus-form and tear your wings
off? Or simply turn off your mind?"
Peggy paled even further, until the only bit of color
about her was her bright blue eyes.
"If you were going to do that, you'd already have done it,"
she answered, praying she was right.
"Very
good." Stryfe patted her on the head. She resisted the impulse to duck.
"Unless, of course, I were sufficiently provoked -- but I believe we're
clear, now, on the fact that if I were trying to kill you you would be
dead?"
Peggy
remained silent. If he was just trying
to get under her skin - well, it was working but she didn't have to show
him that!
He
sighed. "Are we also clear on the fact that I'm quite as nosy as your
average telepath, with fewer scruples than the ones you've met tend to
claim?"
Peggy
thought something very rude she'd heard from Remy when she wasn't supposed to
be listening.
“That
was mild. I can tell you what some of Nathan's mean, though, if you like."
If
she wasn't in the middle of a kidnapping situation, that would actually be
intriguing. Nathan had taught her a few
phrases in Askani after she'd asked once, but he'd never tell her the good
ones.
Stryfe smirked and she abruptly remembered (again) that
he was nosy. "Or my own. Then I
really might have to let you go, just to see his reaction when you actually
used one...."
"Okay,"
Peggy agreed quickly.
Stryfe laughed. Somewhat to her surprise -- and
apparently his own, judging from a very brief flash of expression as he
finished -- it actually sounded amused, rather than mirthless taunting.
"No promises, of course."
Peggy
had a brief flash of Nathan saying almost the exact same thing, and before she
could think better of it, blurted out, "You two are more alike than you
think."
"Are
you trying to be provoking again?" Stryfe inquired rhetorically,
eyes narrowing. "And yes, I know. It's a useful thing to remind him of
occasionally, as he finds it cause for horror, whereas I simply resent
it."
Peggy
winced. She really hadn't meant
to say that. "Uh, sorry."
"Now
that's a new one."
"Huh?"
Peggy asked in confusion.
“I
believe that's the first time any of... our relatives have actually apologized
to me for anything."
"Well,
as you keep pointing out, I am adopted."
"That might explain it," he replied sourly.
"So might the fact that except for that, you're the only one I've actually
encountered who hasn't DONE anything significant to me."
"Well,
I'll kick your head in if I get a chance."
Stryfe sighed.
"You won't." He held
out his hand and the silver helmet floated across the room to him. "Try not to break anything," he
said dryly, strolling out.
Peggy
glared at his retreating back. "I
might kick your head it. Well, I
could," she grumbled.
*****
“I
certainly hope you’re enjoying my hospitality, my dear,” Stryfe said pleasantly
as he entered Peggy’s cell later. A
shoe came flying across the room at him.
"That was uncalled for," he said, sounding almost hurt as he
deflected the projectile effortlessly.
"What
kind of kidnapper are you?" Peggy retorted angrily. "Don't you know
any of the rules? You don't just walk
off and leave! You're suppose to
hang around gloating or start torturing or something horribly cliched like
that."
"Would
you prefer I torture you?" Stryfe asked, his eye glinting
dangerously.
"Well
try something! Don't just leave
me here to starve!"
Stryfe
looked at her in bemusement. "It's
only been three hours."
"And?"
she shot back, glaring. "If you
don't know what you're going to do with me, you could at least feed
me!"
He continued to stare at her, and took off the helmet,
apparently in order to stare more efficiently. The recently projectile shoe
floated off the floor and into the other metal-gloved hand. "I suppose
that would be an option, yes. I did kidnap you before breakfast."
"Well." Peggy wasn't really expecting him to
aquiese so quickly. "So...do you
have a kitchen?"
Stryfe
gave her the sort of look normally reserved for those who asked whether rain
fell downwards. "Yes, I have a kitchen. I also have an automated unit that
might remind you of Star Trek, but it's not in this base," he explained, a
bit condescendingly. "Would you like an omelet, or hay?"
"That depends," Peggy replied cooly. "Are
you making the omelet?"
"It's
a gas stove. I try not to let captives near anything explosive."
"I
promise not to try to kill you until after I've eaten," Peggy promised
firmly as her stomach gave an embarassing rumble. "I just know that hay is preferable to...some people's
cooking."
"And
whose would that be?"
"Bobby,"
she said instantly, starting to tick off the numbers of her fingers. "Rogue, if it's not fried. Jubilee, Betsy, Warren..." She broke off, shuddering. "Honestly, it's safer to fight Magneto
than eat anything Warren's cooked."
She
looked up from her hands to see Stryfe shaking his head and laughing quietly.
"Well, he was Apocalypse's Angel of Death. I suppose that makes an odd
sort of sense." He gestured resignedly with the shoe, glanced at it, and
tossed it back to her. "Don't throw that at me again, either." He
turned and swept out the doorway, cape brushing the jambs, and raised a hand
above shoulder-height to beckon to her.
"You might as well come along."
Peggy slipped her shoe back on, blushing a little at the
fit of pique that had inspired her mad throw.
Honestly, who threw a shoe?
"Thank you," she said quietly, tagging along in his wake.
He cast her a mildly surprised look over his shoulder --
past the spikes -- and guided her to... what looked like a relatively normal
kitchen, with a table in the middle of it. "Sit down. And don't
move."
Peggy
sat. Stryfe proceeded to disappear. He
had some misgivings about forgoing his usual image, but she already knew what
he looked like and while it was certainly possible to cook in full
armor, it wasn't the most practical alternative unless actually in the
field. Not that the armor was
particularly uncomfortable -- he was entirely accustomed to it, and it was
designed not to restrict motion (except for obvious things like avoiding
putting one's eye out on the spikes) -- but it wasn't designed for
cooking.
Peggy
looked up in considerable surprise when he returned to the kitchen in sweats.
For one thing, it was entirely contrary to any mental picture she'd ever
associated with Stryfe. For another, it was warm enough in this 'base' of his
that she was perfectly comfortable in her shorts and tank top.
"Uh...A-are
you cold?" she asked inanely, trying to blank her mind. All she could think of was that with him
dressed like this, she could easily picture herself having breakfast with
Nathan in any of his safehouses.
"No."
He gave her another odd look -- she could start a collection -- and calmly
de-shelled a dozen eggs while a pan meandered out of the cabinet and in his
general direction. Apparently Jean was not the only telekinetic who
occasionally ignored the usual order of cooking, such as getting a container
for the eggs before breaking them.
First
Nathan, now Jean. What was wrong with
her? She was being held prisoner. She had to concentrate on what was important
now, not start getting homesick! She
tried to think of what Scott would do in this situation. Of course, she doubted Scott had ever been in
the situation of having Stryfe cooking an omelet for him, but that was beside the
point. Her stomach rumbled again and
she flushed. "Um...do you need any
help?”
"No."
He turned and raised an eyebrow at her. "Not working fast enough for your
tastes?" He would have to mention taste, she thought plaintively.
"I'm
just a little hungry," she said, trying for tartly and ending up with
plaintively instead.
"So
I hear." Peggy watched him add all her favorite things to put in an
omelet, and wondered whether this qualified as being nice, or cruelly taunting.
"Fast
metabolism," she added defensively, wondering why on earth she was
defending her appetite to her kidnapper.
"Of
course," he replied dryly. "Especially with the mass-change involved
in your shapeshift, I'm sure."
"If
you're trying to say I eat like a horse," Peggy responded with equal
dryness, "go ahead."
"Well,
that's another possibility." He was sure she heard that particular joke
quite often enough, and was under no delusions about it being remotely
original. Although he was involuntarily amused by her suggesting it that way.
"If you want instant oatmeal in the meantime, however, go ahead. Regular
wouldn't be done before the eggs anyway."
She
eyed him warily, trying to figure out if he was serious, but when the packet of
instant oatmeal and a bowl floated out of nearby cupboards, she took the
opportunity. She jumped up and began
mixing the oatmeal quickly. She
repressed a smile. She'd never thought
of him as an apple-cinnamon person.
This girl, Stryfe decided, was strange. So was the fact
that he was cooking for her, except that without the automated setup the
alternative was letting her starve, and even if he did decide to kill
her that wasn't his planned method. And she was surprisingly polite, except for
the shoe. And the accusations, of course. And the loyalty to Cyclops. Then
again, he'd probably be fairly loyal too if Cyclops had ever actually treated
him as a son.
Peggy's
expression was sheer bliss as she took her first bite of steaming oatmeal. "Mmmm," she moaned
involuntarily. She took a few more
bites, then smiled sardonically and looked up at Stryfe. "I didn't think you were one for bad
puns," she commented idly, spooning up another bite.
Stryfe
glanced up from the omelet at her. "Hmmm?"
Peggy
took another bite. A big one. "Oatmeal. Oats," she explained, licking off a bit of oatmeal on the
corner of her mouth. "Eat like a
horse."
"Ah,
that. Well, it seemed more fitting than toast."
"I
like toast," she replied idly.
"Quit
complaining," Stryfe growled at her, "or I'll eat the omelet by
myself."
"I
wasn't complaining, I was commenting.
You're not much on conversation, you know."
"Do
you habitually try to engage your captors in conversation?" he inquired a
bit sarcastically, bringing the pan over to deposit about half the omelet on
her plate.
Her
eyes lit up at the wonderful-looking omelet.
"Yes, actually." She
shrugged. "I figure, why not try
to make the best of things?"
Stryfe kept the other half of the omelet, studied the
table for a moment, and decided that the missing component was a fork. Or two
forks, since Peggy was using a spoon. He remedied this before looking at her
oddly again. "You're a very strange girl."
“You're
a very strange kidnapper," she countered, finishing the rest of her
oatmeal with gusto and moving on to the omelet. "Most wouldn't make me breakfast." She took a bite of the omelet and her eyes
closed in pure rapture.
"Ohhhhhhh," she moaned.
"You really made this? This
is incredible!"
Stryfe
swallowed his own bite of egg concoction while eyeing Peggy with considerable
suspicion that she was making some sort of bizarre joke. She was, apparently,
perfectly sincere. Well... that was
nice. Irritation gave way to a rather flattered feeling and amusement.
"Peggy, you watched me make it," he pointed out. "At
least, until you were entranced by the oatmeal."
Peggy's
cheeks colored slightly. "I was trying
to pay you a compliment. This is very
good. Honestly. If you ever decide to give up trying to
ki--uh, making our lives difficult, you could try your hand at being a
chef."
Stryfe hesitated over this for several bites, discarding
several sarcastic comments that didn't quite seem to fit (given that he had
just been complaining about being left for Apocalypse, and they tended to
involve the irony of said High Lord's prince turning his hand to professional
cooking), then relented. "...Thank you."
Peggy
almost dropped her fork. Stryfe
was thanking her? She stifled an
automatic urge to look out a window for flying pigs and instead shoveled a huge
bite of omelet in her mouth. It really was
good.
"I
don't think I've ever seen anyone elevated to minor levels of ecstacy by
breakfast before, though, unless they were actually starving prior to
that...." He considered for a moment, then added, "On the other hand,
Wildside was occasionally known to compose doggerel odes to pizza
toppings."
"Why
eat if you're not going to enjoy it?" Peggy retorted. "And why learn to cook so well if you
don't want to be elevated to minor levels of ecstacy by breakfast?"
"To
your first question, because starving to death is unpleasant. To your second,
cooking is a survival skill, especially if you don't trust anyone else to do
it."
"But this isn't just some gruel I'm choking down to
survive. This is an amazingly good
omelet, so I'm going to enjoy it. And
you didn't answer my second question.
Cooking is a survival skill.
Cooking well is not."
"...Granted,
but why bother doing it badly?"
"Oh,
now I see."
Peggy
applied herself to the omelet for several minutes, as Stryfe waited
impatiently. Finally he gritted his
teeth and asked, "What do you see?"
She
smiled at him. "You're a
perfectionist."
"Well,
yes." He shrugged. "And as I generally am the one to eat my own
cooking, there's no particular point in making it unpleasant."
"A
perfectionist and a hedonist?"
Peggy's eyes were dancing with laughter. "Not your usual combination.
"Just
because Nathan's masochistic...."
Peggy
couldn't help it. She burst out
laughing. Stryfe gave her a look
somewhere between aggrieved and satisfied, and continued eating his half of the
omelet. Still giggling a bit, Peggy
finished her omelet with a few neat bites.
"He does take himself too seriously," she admitted. "But I think it runs in the family."
"Oh,
really." Most people who had spent any length of time around Stryfe would
have recognized this as a dangerous tone.
"Look
at Dad," she said simply, grinning as she piled her bowl on her plate and
carried them both to the simple sink set into the countertop.
Stryfe
stared at her back for a second, and had worked up a stone-faced yet ferocious
expression and was approximately doubling the ambient light on his own by the
time she turned around. "Did you just compare me to Cyclops?"
Peggy
winced, put the dishes in the sink, and started to run the water without
turning around. "I compared Nathan
to Cyclops. You did the rest."
"I
beg your pardon."
"Don't
you have any soap?" Peggy grabbed
a sponge and started scrubbing away oatmeal fiercely.
"That
is not what you said the first time." Stryfe took the bowl away
from her telekinetically and deposited it back in the sink, then turned her
around by the shoulders.
"No,
it was a question. It's hard to wash
dishes without soap." Peggy tried
very, very hard not to tremble. He was
strong; she could feel it in the iron grip on her shoulders. "And what I said the first time was
that I compared -Nathan- to Cyclops, not you.
If you'll recall, we had just observed that Nathan was a masochist while
you chose to learn to cook well. But it
helps if you have -soap- to clean up afterwards."
"Persistent, aren't you? Stop trying to change the
subject." Peggy blinked hard and tried to focus on something that didn't
give her purple afterimages. "I'm Nathan's clone, remember?"
The loathing in that, oddly enough, didn't seem to fall mostly on Nathan's
name.
"And?"
Stryfe
stared at her as if she'd suddenly grown an extra head. "What do you mean, 'and'?"
"Nathan
can't cook to save his life. X-Force
banned him from the kitchen entirely.
And he doesn't like omelets. He
lives off coffee and I haven't seen you drink any yet. While you’re both stubborn and entirely too touchy
sometimes, I'm not seeing a whole lot of similarities. You don't have the same lives. Just because I say something about Nathan
doesn't mean I'm saying it about you!"
"So
you'll deny me any connection to the family as well, is that it?"
Peggy
stared at him in disbelief. "Will
you make up your mind?" she growled. "Being part of a family doesn't mean being exactly like
everyone else in it! That doesn't stop
you from being family! My
God!" She threw up her hands in
disgust - or at least as much as she could with his hands still gripping her
shoulders so tightly. She was going to
have bruises, she knew it.
"Sometimes
you're just related to who you're related to, and that's that. Deal with it. You think I like claiming any relationship with my
father?" Despite all her best
efforts, tears sprung into her eyes.
"But I've still got his nose and his chin and his blood in
me for the rest of my life. We're
family, as much as I hate to admit it.
But sometimes you can choose your family too."
Stryfe
hesitated, unexpectedly disconcerted by her reaction. "And I'm sure you'd
have left me out of your adoptive one, given the option," he remarked. She
continued her slightly damp glare at him. "What did yours do to you?"
She
shrugged, trying to look casual.
"Not much. Experimentation,
torture, maiming, too early of a curfew."
"You're
being flippant."
"You're
being nosy."
"I
don't have to let you tell me."
Peggy
paled and slammed up every last vestige of telepathic shielding she'd learned
since joining the X-Men.
"No," she said softly, not sure if it was a command,
statement, or plea.
Stryfe
narrowed his eyes and very delicately tore the shielding down, painlessly and
indeed imperceptibly, until her mind was laid wide open. Then he let her see
what he'd done, and smirked. "You need to work on that."
Peggy
trembled and shut her eyes, never truly afraid until now. She whispered something very softly. It might have been "please". She opened her eyes and looked into his
eyes. "He was an evil man. I don't use that term lightly."
"So am I."
"If
you were evil, you wouldn't have made me breakfast," she replied
steadily. "You're not nice, but
you're...not like him."
"Your
logic obviously also needs work," Stryfe replied, rather bemused by this
point. He let go of her shoulders to cross his arms. "Legacy."
She
rubbed her shoulder, her gaze never leaving his. "I never said you weren't insane. Just not evil."
"I
assure you, I was well aware of what I was doing." This wasn't technically
true of the point of release, as it had been on a psionic dead-man's switch. It
applied to his setting it up, though.
"Then
why haven't you killed me? Or hurt me
at all?" Her hand brushed
unconsciously over her scarred cheek.
"And why have you restricted yourself to just making life more
difficult for the X-Men instead of actually trying to kill them?" She
threw his own words back in his face.
"You're a sick, sadistic person sometimes, but I still don't think
you're evil."
"I
think your definitions need work," he retorted.
"Give
me a break. I'm 17 and haven't even
finished high school yet. My
definitions make perfect sense to me, and you're not evil."
"Tell
that to Nathan. Or Colossus."
"I'm
telling it to you." She finally
broke his gaze and turned back to the sink.
"Why does it matter to you if I think you're evil or not,
anyway?"
"That's
a good question," he muttered. "And the detergent's in the upper
cabinet nearest your left."
"Thank
you," she said stiffly, reaching up into the cabinet and pulling down the
soap. "Can you bring me your plate?"
The
plate nudged her elbow lightly in passing, then settled into the sink without
so much as a clink. Peggy scrubbed the
dishes firmly, rinsing off the remaining food particles. She worked in silence and Stryfe seemed
content to let her, though she could still feel him looming just over her
shoulder. "Thank you for
breakfast," she said finally.
"I
wasn't planning to starve you."
She
shrugged, putting the frying pan upside-down on the sideboard. "I appreciate that."
"What
were you expecting?"
"Sinister
didn't feed me. My--the Friends of
Humanity barely did. I didn't have a
lot else for comparison."
"Sinister
is an idiot," Stryfe declared, casually dismissing what was usually
acknowledged as a brilliant if generally amoral and frequently sadistic
scientific intellect. "Your what?"
"My
what?"
"You
said 'my,' then switched to the Friends of Humanity. Your what?"
"Oh. I didn't realize I..." She shrugged, rinsing the forks off and
turning off the water. "My
biological father worked for the Friends of Humanity."
"Ah.
Hence the experimentation, torture, maiming, and early curfew?"
"You're
quick," she said acerbicly, brushing past him and sitting back down at the
table. "Now what?"
"Cheer
up. Your adoptive one isn't likely to try to possess you."
Peggy
blinked. "Huh?"
"Well,
I may not be fond of him, but I can't see Cyclops going that route...."
Peggy
jumped to her feet and slammed her hand against the table, her expression
absolutely furious. "Of course
he wouldn't! He would never hurt
me! Don't even--"
Stryfe
blinked at her. "I just said he wouldn't. What are we arguing
about?"
"Well--nothing,
then." Peggy coughed uncomfortably
and sat back down.
"How
did you meet him, anyway?"
"He
was a prisoner."
"You're
not feeling forthcoming today, are you?"
"Most
big brothers looking for a little family chat don't resort to kidnapping,"
she retorted.
"Would
you have talked to me otherwise?" he inquired, perfectly reasonably.
"Depends
on how you asked." She sighed and
blew a strand out of her hair in exasperation.
"He was a prisoner at an FOH compound. I lived there.
Happy?"
"Not
especially."
Peggy
closed her eyes and pursed her lips.
"My biological father was a researcher. He was experimenting on mutants.
Scott was one of his subjects. I
helped him escape. End of story."
"Obviously
not."
"Look,
can we just get on with it? Whatever
you have planned? I don't really feel
like discussing this with you."
"It can
hardly be the end if he adopted you afterwards, can it?"
"You're
right. I helped him to escape. He adopted me. End of story."
“Based
purely on comparative obstinacy, I admit I'd never have guessed you weren't a
genetic relative."
Peggy's mouth twitched up at one corner. "I guess there's a reason he adopted me
after all."
Stryfe
snorted. "There has to be more to it than that." He turned and left
the kitchen. Peggy thought she remembered something like a living room in that
direction.
After
waiting a few moments out of sheer obstinacy, she stood and followed. Stryfe was sitting in a very
comfortable-looking chair, watching her with an unreadable expression. She sat down calmly across from him.
The
chair she'd picked, somewhat to her surprise, was exactly as comfortable as
Stryfe's looked. She snuggled into it. Stryfe finally raised an eyebrow at her.
She
mimicked his expression exactly and crossed her arms.
There was a very faint twitch to Stryfe's mouth, and his
eye flared slightly as he proceeded to fold his own arms as well. After a few
more moments of standoff, he turned to look at the bookcase and tugged a volume
to his hand, apparently ignoring her.
Peggy
leaned back in the very comfortable chair and closed her eyes. Just to be perverse, she started singing bad
French songs Remy had taught her very loudly in her head.
Stryfe did look at her. Then he raised shields and went
back to his book. A short time later, he peeked at her mind again. She was
still at it, of course. She couldn't tell when he wasn't listening. He considered
the situation briefly and then countered with one of Wildside's previously
mentioned odes to pizza toppings. The one that compared feta cheese in
consecutive lines to starlight in autumn, and the inside of a slug as enjoyed
by a turtle.
Only by virtue of long practice schooling her expression
did Peggy manage to keep a straight face when Stryfe's mental voice entered her
head with the ode to pizza. She thought
he'd've just put up shields by now. She
started humming "This is the song that never ends" very softly.
Stryfe
determined that the situation was quite ridiculous enough as it was, and making
it more so would be superfluous but not especially detrimental. He joined in.
Peggy
fought to keep her expression bland.
She opened her eyes to look at Stryfe, but he was apparently absorbed in
his book. She smirked inwardly, and
began to sing, "I love you, you love me..."
Stryfe
looked up at her and said gravely, "You do realize you're delusional,
child."
She
smiled at him in perfect innocence.
"And your point is..?
Stryfe
tapped one shoulder where the spikes would usually be. "Not wearing any
right now." He then went back to his book, wondering why in the world he
was in a better mood than he had been in weeks. Especially considering that any
song bringing up associations of happy, loving families or small children
usually made him grumpy, whether they'd evoked the level of popular disdain
that particular one somehow did or not.
Peggy stared at him for a second, then started
laughing. It started out as a muffled
choke, then grew to a polite giggle, but soon was bursting out in a roaring,
full-bellied laugh. Stryfe looked up at
her again, rather mystified. Of course, this only exacerbated matters.
Peggy
laughed until she could barely breathe.
Every time she started to get control of herself again, she would make
the mistake of looking up at Stryfe's puzzled face and would lose it
again. Eventually it mostly faded to
silent shaking, and she finally managed to stop. Carefully not looking at him again, Peggy leaned back
against her comfortable chair again.
She stared intently at her hand, as if her fingernails held the key to
the secrets of the universe.
Stryfe
was pretending to read again -- well, he was reading; he was pretending
to ignore Peggy again. In fact, he was carefully monitoring her progress. At a
carefully calculated moment, just when he thought might be the most propitious
one, shortly after she had settled down and was endeavoring to remain calm, he
looked back over at her and said mildly, "It wasn't that
funny."
Peggy
struggled desperately not to laugh, but it was too late. She laughed until there were tears in her
eyes. Finally she leaned over the chair
and attempted to glare at the mutant across from her. The effect was spoiled by the occasional chuckle that managed to
get through her control. "Oh yes
it was."
Stryfe
looked pleased with himself. "Was that a horselaugh?"
"Was that a joke?" Peggy asked in
amazement, still giggling. "Oh,
come on! Even an Evil Megalomaniac has
to think that was funny."
"I
thought you said I was insane, not evil. Although why the two would be mutually
exclusive is beyond me...." He caught himself halfway to grinning at her
and managed a slightly off-kilter smirk instead. "What, am I not supposed
to have a sense of humor?"
"Only
when you're torturing people," Peggy informed him solemnly. "And since my thinking you were evil
seemed so important to you, I thought I'd play along."
"Well,
if I do let you go I'll have to pin a note to you suggesting Cyclops do something
about this evaluating people based on whether or not they feed you...."
"It's
a perfectly rational system," Peggy protested, a bit miffed. "The people who've kidnapped me never
feed me. The X-Men let me eat as much
as I wanted when I first came. Anyone
can release a virus or attack the mansion or kidnap people. Only the real sickos will starve you while
they do it."
Stryfe put a hand to his forehead. "I am so
glad I am not responsible for you."
"Well..."
Peggy's voice trailed off.
"Well what?" Stryfe asked
impatiently.
“I was just thinking...this is your place and you did
bring me here. You could say
you're responsible for me now."
Stryef waved a hand dismissively. "Not in any
obligatory sense. Nor for your education, or ability to survive attacks from
anyone else in the event that I let you out of my sight."
"Oh,
so you'll protect me from attacks as long as I'm still in your
sight? How gallant."
"If
I feel like it."
"I'm
honored."
“You
should be. At this point I probably would."
Peggy
blinked, actually surprised by that. If
he was trying to throw her off-balance, it was working. "Want to make sure someone else doesn't
get the credit when Dad and Nathan find me?"
"They
won't."
"They
will," she asserted calmly.
"See,
I told you you were delusional...."
"Isn't
there a saying about how crazy people shouldn't question other people's
sanity?" she replied, gritting her teeth.
"Probably,"
he agreed amiably.
Peggy rolled her eyes and muttered something under her
breath.
"Seriously,
though, I think I would." He sounded a little surprised by this.
"Which is rather odd."
Peggy
looked at him curiously. He actually
seemed serious. "Yes, it is,"
she agreed slowly, "but I'm glad you would."
It was, Stryfe reflected, even stranger that he'd
actually decided to tell her this. Possibly it was a result of not having
either the MLF or Zero around to talk to -- not that he'd tell the MLF anything
too interesting or that Zero was much of a conversationalist, but apparently he
was in the habit of saying things to someone.... He'd have to go back to
keeping a journal; that was dangerous. "Oh, good. You do have a sense of
self-preservation."
She
raised an eyebrow. "That's a
stupid thing to say. Of course I
do." Her mouth quirked up a bit
and she added, "It might not always work very well, but it's there."
"Ah,
of course. You should try to have it tuned; those things are useful."
"I'm
training," she protested defensively.
"Ah."
"I
didn't exactly plan on being a superhero growing up, you know. I have a perfectly adequate sense of
self-preservation for anyone who isn't a Summers."
"But
that's nowhere near good enough once you are," he pointed out.
"Although, if any young idiot shows up with a golden bridle, I promise to
incinerate him for you."
"You're trying to make me laugh again, aren't
you?" Peggy accused, grinning.
"I didn't picture you as a mythology buff."
"I
try to be at least somewhat culturally literate. Although reading Greek myths
was primarily an act of useless rebellion."
Peggy
tucked her tongue firmly in cheek.
"Rebellion? You?"
"Apocalypse
never liked the language...."
Peggy
nodded, remembering how she'd taken up art one summer just because her father
derided painters so often. It had been
all the rebellion she could handle at the time. "I know the feeling," she said quietly.
Stryfe
was about to make a scathing retort when he caught a glimpse of the memory and
realized there was a parallel. "Do you."
The mask drew back into place over Peggy's face,
smoothing out all expression. She was
quiet for a long moment, then shifted in the chair and hugged her knees to her
chest. Her expression was startlingly
open for a brief moment. "No one
can know exactly how someone else feels, even if they're a telepath. But...sometimes there are similarities."
"I
suppose so." Stryfe looked away from her for a moment. "You know, I
finally realized why he never bothered to teach me to behave, or let Ch'vayre
do it. Even if it might have been less of a nuisance. It wasn't simply that he
didn't care. He didn't want there to be anyone who'd be bothered once he took
over."
"You mean when he took over...you? He didn't want you to have anyone close
enough to you that they'd try to stop the transfer?"
"Or
object afterwards, I suppose. Although I'm not sure what they could have done
at that point."
"Seems
logical. I mean, logical to someone
who'd raise someone for the sole purpose of taking his body over later."
"I
suppose."
"Well,
at least you got some good Greek lessons out of it." She smiled slightly and admitted, "I
never was a very good painter."
"You
could try switching styles, I suppose."
"No,
I'm really bad. My stick figures don't
even look like stick figures." She
sighed theatrically. "I haven't
painted since I came to the mansion, actually.
Without someone to annoy, it didn't seem to matter."
"What
do your stick figures look like?"
"Like...bad
play-doh sculptures."
Stryfe
considered this. "I'm not quite sure how you would manage that."
"I've
never been quite sure myself."
“Well,
that's no help." He shrugged and settled back in the chair. "What do
you do as hobbies that aren't prompted by annoying people?"
"Cook,"
she replied with a grin.
"I'll
have to assume you're good at it, then. Either that, or you don't
share...."
"Yes
to both. I'm very good, but I rarely
share."
"Neither
do I. Feel special."
She
grinned again. "You share your
cooking with me, you offer to incinerate mythological figures for me...I'm
going to start thinking you like me."
"I
don't like anyone."
"That's
too bad."
"Why?"
"It
just sounds lonely, that's all."
"So?"
He tensed.
"It's
a little like eating bad cooking. Why
be lonely when you don't have to be?"
"Who
says I don't?"
Peggy
shrugged. “Well, if you insist.” She blew a bit of hair out of her face again
and looked around the room. “So are we
going to just sit here and snipe at each other all day?”
“Did
you have something else in mind?”
Her
eyes lit on a chessboard on the far side of the room. “As a matter of fact…”
*****
“Check,”
Peggy said triumphantly, moving her bishop into position and grinning at her
partner.
Stryfe
moved his knight to block absently, studying the girl across from him
meditatively. She’d been his “guest”
for three days now. For three days,
he’d had Cyclops’ daughter and Cable’s beloved little sister at his mercy. And what had he done?
They’d
played chess. Oh, not all the
time. They’d both sat and read
together, the silence oddly comforting.
They’d had lively conversations, so long as neither of them mentioned
their mutual family members. And they’d
eaten. The girl was rather insistent on
regular feedings, so he’d simply given in and cooked for them three times a
day. Yesterday he’d even allowed her
to make their evening meal. He’d kept a
careful eye out to make sure she didn’t try to cause mayhem in the kitchen, but
she hadn’t attempted anything but some sort of pasta concoction that was really
quite good.
Was
he losing his edge? By all rights, this
girl should be, at the least, a heap of gibbering terror on the floor right
now, not calmly facing him across the chess board. Why did he feel so reluctant to reduce her to that state?
“Checkmate.” He looked up in surprise to see Peggy
smiling smugly at him, then looked down to analyze the board. True, he hadn’t been paying much attention
to the game, but he still should be winning.
Yet she’d managed to manuever him so his king was alone and unprotected,
unable to make any move without falling prey to one of her pieces.
Stryfe
stared across the table for a moment, then reached out and turned his king on
its side. “I concede.”
*****
“Robert, if you ever again attempt
such a foolish action, I shall not be responsible for Rogue’s actions,” Storm
warned her teammate sternly as Scott walked into the kitchen for a drink after
his latest session in the Danger Room.
“What did you do now, Bobby?” he
asked curiously.
“Nothing!” Bobby protested
innnocently. “Rogue’s just…too
sensitive sometimes. She can’t take a
joke.”
Scott took a long drink of water,
then suggested, “If you have so much free time on your hands, Iceman, I could
always schedule you for a few extra sessions in the Danger Room. I think tomorrow morning’s free. At 6.”
“All right, all right!” Bobby
exclaimed, throwing up his hands in defeat.
“I’ll apologize to Rogue, okay?”
“In trouble again, Iceman?”
They looked up to see Cable standing
in the doorway, his uniform ripped and burned on one leg, his face scratched,
sooty, and very tired. “I hope you
don’t mind; I wanted to catch something to eat and some sleep, and you’re
closer than X-Force.”
“By the Goddess! You look terrible, Nathan,” Storm exclaimed.
Scott turned very pale and demanded,
“What happened? Is Peggy all right?”
Nathan looked confused. “What are you talking about?”
“Peggy. Your sister,” Scott said slowly, starting to turn red now. “You’re supposed to be looking after her,
remember?!”
“I’ve been in Mongolia,” Nathan said
tiredly. “Something came up. That’s why I brought Peggy back early. That would’ve been…Wednesday night.”
“You didn’t come back on Wednesday,”
Scott said in a low, dangerous voice.
“It was late and Peggy didn’t want
to wake anyone up, so we…snuck around the security system. It was…a challenge,” he finished lamely,
wanting to say “It was fun.”
But Peggy wasn’t here Thursday
morning.”
Scott and Nathan stared at each
other, horror slowly dawning on both their faces. “Then if she’s not with you…” Nathan said slowly.
“…And she’s not with you…” Scott
continued.
“…Where is she?” they
finished together.
*****
The mansion had swung into full
alert mode several hours later. Nathan
recounted every last detail of his time with Peggy, searching for any clues,
while Jean swept the area with Cerebro for the hundredth time. Scott’s expression was tightly controlled as
he searched the computer for information on villains with possible grudges
against him, Peggy, Nathan, or the X-Men in general. Unfortunately, it was a very long list.
“Whoa!” Warren exclaimed suddenly,
looking at the monitor more closely.
“Scott, something just popped up on the scanners. Massive energy burst just outside the
grounds.”
Jean’s head shot up as well, green
eyes wide under the silver Cerebro helmet.
“Scott! It’s her!”
Everyone rushed outside, to find
Peggy casually strolling up the main driveway.
“Are—are you all right?” Scott demanded frantically.
“Hi, Dad,” Peggy said with a bright
smile and a wave. “Hi, Nathan. How did your mission go?”
“Where have you been?” Nathan
growled.
Peggy opened her mouth, then
hesitated and finally laughed. “I’m not
sure if you’d believe me.” She reached
into her pocket and pulled out a neatly-folded piece of paper. “This is for you,” She said, holding it out
to Scott.
“What on..?” Scott muttered as he
opened the note.
Cyclops,
If
you insist on taking responsibility for this girl, at least teach her not to
judge a person’s character based on whether or not they feed her. It could get her into trouble. I may not be in such a good mood next time.
Stryfe
Scott stared at the note for a long moment, then looked back up at Peggy, dumbfolded. “He fed you?” was all he could think of to say.
Peggy nodded, repressing a
grin. “He’s a surprisingly good
cook.” Scott stared at her.
“Who is?” Nathan demanded. “What happened?”
Scott handed him the note
wordlessly. Nathan scanned it quickly,
then his eyes bugged out and he read it again.
“He let you go?!”
Peggy did smile now. “He thought it would annoy you.” She looked at Scott and added, “And confuse
you.”
“Let me get this straight,” Scott
said slowly. “Stryfe had you prisoner
and let you go because he thought it would confuse me?”
Nathan rubbed his chin, an odd
half-smile on his face. “Actually,
knowing Strfye, it actually makes an odd sort of sense.”
“I think I confused him, actually,”
Peggy said, still smiling. “He always
had the oddest expression whenever I was talking to him.
Nathan grinned ruefully. “I know how he feels.”
Peggy eyed him and said something in
an oddly lilting language. Nathan
whipped his head around and stared at her wide-eyed. “Where the flonq did you learn that?!” he shouted,
turning red.
Peggy smiled innocently at him and
walked calmly up to the house. She’d
almost made it when she started to laugh.