Quite an Extraordinary Boy, a Smallville
tale by Glacis. Rated NC17, no copyright infringement intended. Spoilers for
the premier episode. Notes at the end of the story.
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One embarrassment too many, and here he was,
exiled in Nowhereville. Smallville was an appropriate name. Small town with
small people with small aspirations.
Not the place for Lex Luthor, regardless of
his father's displeasure.
It wasn't as if this distaste was a new
development in what passed for their relationship. He'd felt it since birth,
intensified since the Incident, growing with each perceived shortfall in
everything he accomplished. But this was ridiculous.
Exile to a fertilizer plant in the one place
on Earth that still had the power to give him nightmares.
Glaring impassively at the dull brown marble
facade of his tiny corner of the Luthor fiefdom, he muttered "Thanks,
dad."
It was no more than he'd come to expect. The
sooner he got on with it, the sooner he could figure out a way to get out of
it.
The day was as frustrating as he'd predicted
when he got out of bed that morning. The people were slow and irritating. The
business itself was disgusting. The books were impeccable, of course, because
his father expected no less, but that left nothing for Lex to do. By the
time he slammed the door of the Porsche between himself and the stultifying
mundanity that was the precursor for the rest of his life, he badly needed to
work off some steam. Since he couldn't actually kill any of the simpletons he'd
been forced to interact with all day, he contented himself for the moment with
driving as fast as possible from the plant to his mansion.
Not that there was anything worth rushing
toward there, either. But the speed felt good, the power of the engine
harnessed to his command. His cell phone rang and he reached for it, glancing
down at the keypad as he punched the button.
When he glanced up, it was too late.
He barely had time to identify the log
across the road as a bundle of barbed wire, his feet already stamping on clutch
and brake, his phone tossed aside as one hand battled the steering wheel and
the other clamped on the gear shift, before he was on it. Time seemed to slow,
his senses amazingly acute, as he could actually hear each tire as it exploded.
Then the Porsche slewed completely out of control. He had the impression of a
guard rail and, horrifyingly, the flash of a young man's startled face, huge
eyes, pale skin, a blur of dark hair, at the moment of impact. Their eyes met,
and he knew in that instant neither would survive the crash.
The man's face disappeared as the horizon
spun, Lex gripping the wheel uselessly in both fists as the car went over the
side, into the river. Then there was nothing but the rush of displaced air, the
implosion as the windshield gave, a brief sensation of cold and wet and pain in
his head, his chest, his wrists, his back, his ankles, then nothing.
No. Not nothing.
Flying.
He looked down, not as surprised as he
should have been, to see the young man kneeling over his body. They appeared to
be kissing. He smiled, then looked away. Smallville was spread out before him,
a beauty in the view that was invisible on the ground. There was a peace there
he'd never felt, and for the first time it struck him that there was more to
his life than his father's expectations. He simply had to reach out, gather it
in the palm of his hand, and savor it. On his terms.
Then the pain hit again, in his chest, in
his throat, and he was choking. Water bubbled out of his mouth, and he spat,
ridding himself of the filthy river water, if not its taste. He coughed again
and opened his eyes. The sky was bright, although not as bright as it had been
when it surrounded him. A face moved into his field of vision and he blinked.
It was the wet, concerned face of the young man he'd been certain he'd killed.
Of course, he'd been certain he'd die, too,
and that hadn't been right, either.
The next, overriding thought came to him
that the face was beautiful. Water trailed over sharp cheekbones, along a
strong jaw, dripped from wavy dark hair and caught on long lashes. His eyes
were blue. His mouth was -- Lex caught himself before he reached up and found
out how that mouth tasted. "I could have sworn I hit you."
"If you did, I'd be ... I'd be
dead." The words stumbled, as if he'd just had a thought and it wasn't
pleasant.
Lex's hand reached up of its own accord and
touched a thick clump of wet hair, curving over the young man's forehead. It
felt like silk under his fingers. The blue eyes widened, and confusion shared
space with concern in his expression.
"Are you all right?"
He had to think upon the question. 'All
right' wasn't quite the description he'd choose. Stunned, re-evaluating his
notion of the future, caught up in the unexpected magnetism of the young man
who'd saved his life, he didn't know what to say. So he said nothing.
They stayed there for long moments, Lex
staring up at the young man, watching the flush start in the pale cheeks,
thinking too many thoughts to make sense of any of them. A siren broke the
strange tension between them, and the young man shook his head, water flying
from his hair, resembling a chocolate lab coming in from the lake. With a shy
half-smile, he mumbled something too low for Lex to hear and scrambled from his
knees to start up the embankment, meeting the patrolman on his way down. Lex's hand
came up again, but fell back to his side. The young man didn't notice.
Lex took several shallow breaths, forcing
himself back to reality, and very carefully sat up. His head swam and nausea
threatened, but he refused to give in to either, and after a few minutes they
subsided before his will. When he looked up again, an ambulance was pulling in
behind the patrol car, and the young man was leading the patrolman back down
toward where Lex sat.
His head was beginning to pound, but he fell
back on a lifetime of training and didn't let it show. The accident was plainly
that, an accident, and if he found out who the fool was who'd dropped barbed
wire in the middle of the highway he'd have the man beaten with it. A medic
checked him and wrapped a blanket around him, and he watched the same efficient
procedure take place with the young man who'd saved his life. Then the
patrolman took out his pad, and Lex forced himself to listen, to take care of
the technicalities. It took very little of his attention. He finished the
straightforward recitation of the facts, staring with bemusement at his rescuer
all the while, and the patrolman thanked him. The sound of frantic shouting
caught Lex's attention, drawing it reluctantly from the young man.
A scruffy, middle-aged, blond farmer-type
scrabbled down the embankment, heading for the young man like a homing pigeon
spotting its roost. The man's hands were shaking as he reached out, cupping the
young man's shoulders through the blanket as if to reassure himself the boy was
real.
"
"Who's the maniac who was driving that
car?"
So protective. He wondered what it might be
like to have a protective parent, then dismissed the thought as irrelevant.
Holding his hand out to the man, he answered, "That would be me. Lex
Luthor."
A fierce glare raked him, then the man
stripped off his jacket and tenderly placed it around
"I'm Jonathan Kent, and this is my
son."
"I'm sure you would've done the same
thing." He sounded completely sincere. And innocent. Lex watched Jonathan
help
Not wanting the strange interlude to be over
yet, he once again fell back on training. Always turn a disadvantage to an
advantage. Never be in debt to anyone. Always reverse an obligation to be on
the strong side. When you find something of value, obtain it.
Unfortunately, the father stood in the way
of the son. Lex said quickly, "You have quite an extraordinary boy there,
Mr. Kent. If there's any way I can repay you -"
Jonathan didn't let him finish the sentence.
He leaned in close, and Lex could see from the heat in his eyes that the words
that came out were severely edited for content. "Drive slower."
It was better than 'rot in hell,' the phrase
he had a feeling trembled on Jonathan's tongue. And it left the door open for a
different approach. Lex watched the pair leave, the father's hand on his son's
shoulder, affection evident between them.
They'd survived.
Thoughts of
He called his secretary and gave her
instructions. By
Dear Clark, Drive safely. Always in your
debt. The Maniac in the Porsche.
It was one way to make an impression.
His sleep that night was restless and
plagued with dreams. They had a kaleidoscope quality, surreal images and sounds
swirling around him. His father's voice stabbing into him as he turned away,
closed his eyes, hid his face. The peace of the sky, clouds surrounding him,
the future spread out below. Wide blue eyes in an innocent face, and a warm
mouth closing over his, pulling him back to the earth. Sending him soaring in
altogether different ways.
The dream took an erotic turn from there.
Clark's body under the drenched clothes trembled as Lex drew the wet fabric
away. The strong hands that had pulled him from the river were gentle on his
skin, and the angled face fit perfectly framed by his own hands. There was
innocence and wonder between them, two emotions he'd never felt. He stroked
against Clark as Clark moved against him, and he woke with a start as his body
convulsed. Staring at the mess on his stomach, he absently wiped himself with
the corner of the sheet and decided Smallville had its charms. And he was going
to enjoy them.
Thoroughly.
The following day at the plant nearly
undermined his newfound determination to enjoy himself. As a result, he left
early. Called his fencing master and had her fly in from Metropolis. Went home
before lunch and worked off his adrenaline overload in the dusty grand ballroom
of the mansion. As usual, he fought as hard as possible. He lasted a little
longer this time, but also as usual, she eventually prevailed. Irritated with
himself at his failure, ignoring his father's snide voice in the back of his
mind, he drew back his arm and let fly with the foil.
Taking off his mask, he looked over to where
he'd flung it. The tip was imbedded in the wall next to the door to the depth
of nearly an inch. Less than three inches from it stood Clark, eyes wide again,
staring unblinkingly at Lex over the quivering length of the foil. Were the
boy's eyes ever anything but wide? The adrenaline he'd worked off all afternoon
flooded back with a vengeance. He found himself nearly vibrating with nervous
tension. Striding over to yank the foil from the wall, he said, "Clark? I
didn't see you."
Clark finally blinked at him. "I, uh
... I buzzed, but no one answered."
So much for security. "How'd you get
through the gate?" Not all his visitors would be as harmless, nor as welcome,
as Clark.
"I kinda squeezed through the
bars." The words were muttered and rushed. Lex looked at him. Clark
hurried on. "If this is a bad time -"
"Oh, no. No, I think Heike has
sufficiently kicked my ass for the day." He was ready for action of
another sort entirely. He tossed his mask to his fencing master and returned to
Clark, like an iron filing drawn to a magnet.
"This is a great place."
He sounded as if he meant it. But then, he'd
been raised on a farm. Lex smirked at him. "Yeah? If you're dead and in
the market for a place to haunt." He walked past Clark into the hall.
"I meant it's roomy."
Now Clark sounded as if he was trying to
reassure Lex he'd meant no insult. Lex found the whole situation amusing. He
found Clark more than a little arousing. He pivoted to face the young man,
spreading his hands to indicate his 'grand' surroundings. "It's the Luthor
ancestral home. Or so my father claims." He headed for the stairs, intent
on the bar in the weight room. Fencing parched him and lust made his mouth dry.
The two together provoked a raging thirst. "He had it shipped over from
Scotland, stone by stone." Clark was still gazing around the hall.
"Yeah, I remember the trucks rolled
through town for weeks, but nobody ever moved in."
Lex paused on the steps and looked over at
Clark. "My father had no intention of living here. He's never even stepped
through the front door." The question he expected inevitably followed.
"Then why'd he ship it over?"
He gave the inevitable answer. "Because
he could."
It might as well be Lionel Luthor's personal
motto. One of the few things Lex would cheerfully emulate about his father, and
he did. He ran lightly up the stairs. Clark followed, of course. Once in the
weight room, Lex began stripping off his gear, heading for the sideboard.
Taking a bottle of water, he called over his shoulder, "So, how's the new
ride?"
Clark hovered in the doorway. "That's
why I'm here." He dug in his pocket for the keys.
That didn't sound promising. Lex looked at
the plastic bottle top, bending under the force of his grip, and deliberately
relaxed his fingers. "What's the matter? You don't like it?" He
turned and walked over toward Clark, taking a long drink of water.
"No, it's not that." He made an
abortive movement, a shrug stifled before it could break free. "I can't
keep it."
Ah. Daddy dearest. Not Clark's choice. Lex
turned on the charm. "Clark. You saved my life. I think it's the least I can
do." Clark stared at his feet. Lex decided he looked edible when he did
that. "Your father doesn't like me, does he." It was a statement, not
a question. Clark's mouth started to open and Lex gently overrode him.
"It's okay." He ran a hand over his pate and turned to look in the
mirror. "I've been bald since I was nine. I'm used to people judging me
before they get to know me." The truth, if not the whole truth.
"It's nothing personal. He's just not
crazy about your dad." More reassurance. The boy was priceless.
"Figures the apple doesn't fall far
from the tree? Understandable." He watched Clark in the mirror. "What
about you, Clark? Did you fall far from the tree?"
He was intrigued by the strange mixture of
emotions that crossed Clark's face. Some anger, some pain, a lot of confusion.
None of them were given voice. Eventually, Clark gave that odd little stifled
shrug again.
"I better go." He handed the keys
to Lex. "Thanks for the truck."
No. That wasn't the end of it. Lex called
out to him as he reached the door. "Clark." The young man turned to
look at him, all wide-eyed innocent inquiry, and for the first time in his life
Lex Luthor fell in love. On impulse, he asked, "Do you think a man can
fly?"
Clark supplied what he thought was the punch
line. "Sure. In a plane."
Lex couldn't quite suppress his tiny grin.
"No. I'm not talking about that." He stared intensely at Clark.
"I'm talking about soaring through the clouds with nothing but air beneath
you."
The look he got made it clear he was being
humored. "People can't fly, Lex."
He didn't know how to make Clark understand,
but it was imperative that he did. He said quietly, "I did. After the
accident, when my heart stopped. It was the most exhilarating two minutes of my
life. I flew over Smallville, and for the first time, I didn't see a dead end.
I saw a new beginning." He moved about the room as he spoke, memories from
the previous day and the pure shock of life moving through him making him
restless. He looked back at Clark. "Thanks to you, I have a second
chance." He stepped closer. "We are the future, Clark." Hesitant
eyes looked up at him from a downcast face. "And I don't want anything to
stand in the way of our friendship."
He wouldn't allow it.
Clark gave him a quick, shy smile, gone
almost as soon as it appeared, then turned and trotted down the stairs. Lex
listened to his footsteps until he heard the front door close. Then he turned
to his weights and worked out for two solid hours. It was punishing and when he
finished he could barely drag himself into the shower, but it worked. When he
fell into bed, he went right to sleep.
No nightmares.
Only wet dreams. Twinges in his thighs from
fencing and in his arms and shoulders from the weights worked into his sleeping
mind. He was back in the weight room again, and Clark was there as well, but
this time events went as they should, not as they had.
Words echoed between them. Nothing would
stand in the way of them being together. Lex raised his hand and cupped Clark's
chin, drawing his face up, moving closer to touch their mouths together. Clark
tasted as sweet as fine Belgian chocolate, dark and rich, swamping Lex's
senses. They stumbled to a nearby bench, lips together, hands busy. Details
were fuzzy, and time was honey-slow, as it was in the best dreams. They were
clothed, and then they weren't. They were kissing, and then they were stretched
along the bench, Lex lying over Clark, pinning him against the supple leather.
He broke the kiss and looked down into dazed eyes, huge again, always, but with
a fire in them to match that burning Lex from the inside out.
He laughed, and Clark smiled up at him. Then
he was kissing Clark again, and he wanted to kiss Clark for the rest of his
life. His mouth, his throat, the ridge of his collarbone, the rise of his
nipple, the line of his rib. The definition of muscle giving way to the
softness of skin lightly furred and furnace hot, as sweet in its way as Clark's
mouth had been. Then Lex had Clark's erection in his mouth, and Clark was
moaning, and Clark's hands were sliding over Lex's head, the thin skin there
sensitized to the point that Lex nearly came from the light touch. That, and
the taste of Clark coming on his tongue, and the broken sound of Lex's name
strangled in Clark's throat.
Sliding back up Clark's body, relaxed over
the bench, his head thrown back, Lex paused again. Caught his breath. Stared
down at the man who had given him his future. Who would be his future.
Woke himself up when he came.
From looking.
He didn't sleep the rest of the night. The
next day at the plant was pure hell. His skin felt too small for his body. His
persistent half-hardness rubbed raw, even in silk boxers. He couldn't drink
enough water to moisten his mouth. He imagined it must be what a junkie felt
like, needing a fix, but refused to admit even to himself that he could be that
pathetic. He'd only met Clark two days before. Surely he couldn't be that weak.
Of course, he'd never been in love before.
Perhaps it was supposed to feel like he was dying from some mutated form of
bubonic plague.
He tried to do as he'd always done, hold his
personal life at bay until business was over. Except business was never over
for a Luthor, and his personal life had always been subsumed into business,
even if his father would disagree. The pull between business and Clark, the
distraction of unexpected emotions and his inability to confine them, made the
day longer than it should have been. It was fully dark by the time he climbed
into his new Porsche and left the plant.
That made it easy to see the trespasser
leaving the grounds. His headlights picked out a figure crouched next to the
wire fence he'd had constructed around the corn field where the Incident
occurred. He stopped the car and started to step out, intent on challenging the
intruder. The man turned toward him, and his memory played a trick, dealing a
card fraught with anxiety. The clock turned back twelve years, and the man he
saw was the boy he'd seen, tied to a cross, blood on his chest, pain in his
voice as he begged for help. Help Lex had been unable to extend, as he ran for
his life before the fury of the meteor shower.
He shook his head, and the vision faded. The
figure had disappeared as well, leaving Lex unsure if he'd actually seen a man
or if his mind was playing more tricks on him. Turning back toward the car, the
wind caught at his collar, and he heard a noise.
A voice.
A whisper. Crystal clear, filled with pain.
"Help me, please."
This time, he could, and he felt compelled
to try. Reaching into the glove box he dug out his flashlight and ducked
through the fence. The corn seemed as high as it had when he was a child, an
alien landscape about which he still had nightmares. His feet knew where he was
going even if his mind didn't, and he found himself nearing the place where the
boy on the cross had frightened him.
The first thing saw was a tiny green glow
against bare, goose-pimpled skin. Coming closer, he saw that the shadowed
figure half-hidden by cornstalks was a man, his body stripped to his boxers and
tied to a post with thick rope. He wasn't moving. Lex shone his flashlight from
top to bottom of the still figure and his stomach clenched.
He'd read about things like this happening.
A hate crime, a nasty vicious act by stupid, dangerous bastards who deserved to
be gutted and left to bleed out. A year or so before, in another state, a young
man had been lured to a remote spot, robbed, beaten horribly, tied to a fence
and left to die of exposure. This young man looked dead, his head hanging down,
blood smeared across his chest, his skin blue in the dim light from the moon
and the flashlight. Hatred speared through Lex, at the animals who had done
this, and he forced himself to step forward. To help, if it wasn't already too
late.
Close enough to make out details by then, he
flicked the flashlight up, illuminating the boy's face. His stomach unclenched
and rolled, and he nearly lost his dinner. The only saving grace of what he
found was that the body wasn't dead. The red smear wasn't blood.
"Clark?" He ran forward the last
few steps. "Oh, Jesus. Who did this to you?"
Ducking behind the frame to which Clark was
bound, Lex made short work of the knots. Before he could make it back around to
help him down, Clark fell face-forward onto the ground.
"Doesn't matter."
It was a ridiculous thing to say. Of course
it mattered. He had to know who did it so he knew whom to punish. Lex watched
Clark scramble in the corn for his clothes. He was moving well, and that
relieved some of Lex's worry. He couldn't have been tied there very long if he
could move that fast. Still, he should be checked out. "Clark, you need to
see a doctor!"
Clark turned to face him, crouched over in
the corn, his clothes bundled against his chest. The red paint, as Lex could
now see it was, smeared, and he wondered what the 'S' stood for, and who had
painted it, and how long it would take to find them. He wanted to hurt them.
Now. For hurting Clark.
"I'll be okay." He sounded like he
meant it, but then, Clark had been reassuring Lex since they'd met. He gave Lex
a brief, crooked smile and disappeared into the field.
"At least let me give you a ride!"
Lex called to his retreating back, but Clark was already gone.
Lex started back the way he'd come, playing
the flashlight ahead of him, and stopped when the beam picked up a dull green
stone. He knelt to pick it up, turning it over in his hand. There was no trace
of the bright glow it held when it had been lying against Clark's chest.
Slipping the necklace in his pocket, he made his way back to the Porsche and
drove home much more slowly than was his wont. His mind was busy, his emotions
numb. It had been a long day topped by a disorienting experience in a corn
field that already held extremely disturbing memories. He had too many
unanswered questions.
How had he, and Clark, lived through an
accident that should by rights have killed both of them? Why had Clark reacted
strangely when Lex asked about his father? How had he heard Clark calling for
help and known where to find him? Why did the green stone sparkle when it was
around Clark's neck, and not in Lex's hand? Who had done such a vicious thing
to Clark, and why? Was it because Clark was gay? Another crime with no motive
but hate behind it? Or was there something else about Clark that made him a
target?
Rage burned coldly at the realization that
someone, or several people, had hurt Clark. They would pay. Severely. It wasn't
a matter of debt, but of principle. No one damaged what belonged to the
Luthors, and Clark was Lex's.
But as he went through his evening routine,
stretching, working out, showering, his mind replayed the events in the field. The
anger and fear filtered away until all that remained was the visual imprint of
Clark. How he'd looked, and how he might look, if he was stripped with erotic
purpose, not criminal intent. If the bow of his head was the result of a
different sort of fatigue. If his nipples were pebbled from lust and the
pinpricks drawing his skin up were from shivering with arousal, instead of cold
and fear.
Lex stood under the hot water, closing his
eyes against the spray, the better to appreciate his fantasy image. He decided
that one day he would see that image in reality, absolutely certain that it
would happen. No one ever told a Luthor 'no' and made it stick. There was
always a way. He simply had to find it.
There was more to Smallville, more to his
second chance, and more to Clark Kent than he expected. He looked forward to
uncovering it. All of it.
Particularly Clark Kent.
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end
Note : In canon, Lex is twenty one. Also in canon, Clark's a freshman, but
he must be the school's oldest freshman (I thought at first they meant a
freshman at college, and that I'd believe). He's probably seventeen or
eighteen in Earth years (twelve years since he was found, and he was at least
five then by the size of him); who knows how old he'd be on his home planet,
but there's no way he's fourteen. I figure his parents passed him off as an
early bloomer, or started him late in school with some excuse for the missing
birth certificate, but he still looks older than everyone else in school.
Including the football players. Perhaps those around him are simply used to
seeing him as they expect to see him, a slow-moving, geeky kid with his nose
buried in a book. From an outside observer's perspective, Lex is reacting to
him as an adult to an adult. He's gay, not a pedophile. At least, that's how
I'm writing them. I have the same perceived-age problem with the characters on
Dawson's Creek. All the 'teenagers' look like they can legally drink, and have
for the past three years. Of course, that doesn't make Pacey any less cute.
Quite the contrary ...