Life Ore Death - DC Feruchemy [Young Justice]

Filtering - part 3
Life Ore Death
Filtering - part 3
* August 8 [Aqualad PoV]

Miss Martian pulled away from the prone assassin and reverted to her fully human form, appearing to be at least as disturbed as I felt. The gauze-white sleeping patch was stark against the skin of Cheshire's neck, and her chest rose and fell in a slow, stable rhythm. I found it almost admirable, the way she had held out against her terror to the very end.

I wondered why I had not realized that our positions had somehow reversed.

I should have asked for our report, but even the least-phased, Ferris, seemed to accept a need for us to recover in quiet.

"Ferris," Miss Martian finally began, staggering back as Artemis stepped over to our prisoner's side, "has anyone ever told you that your mind is very scary? Because please, let's- can we never do that again."

"I agree," said… said Ferris?

"This was your idea, and you're willing to admit it was wrong?" I asked, surprised.

"Yeah, you talked us through that f___ing script and now you're just backing off? What the heck?" Artemis snarled, pulling her hand away from Cheshire's form to point an accusation. Ferris blinked at the finger; she appeared to be confused.

"No. Um… Yeeesssss… I not… What is the question?" she asked slowly.

"Where do you get off, making us do that, and then-!" Artemis trailed off incoherently.

"I believe the rest of us are merely… surprised," I attempted to convey. "After you suggested this course of action, something that most heroes would be uncomfortable with, I had expected to have a difficult time persuading you that we should not do so again in the future."

"But… I didn't?" In a moment of frustration I made her 'keep going' gesture back at her, to which Ferris obliged. "I did not… make you?" she hazarded. 'Oh all the times for her to run low on language magic…' "I had an idea, I asked, and we all-!" She twitched at Miss Martian. "Please no!"

[Sorr-!] "Sorry, sorry," Miss Martian apologized, backing away. "I was just trying to clear it up." Ferris twitched and I saw her fingers quiver once more.

"Ooookay," she sighed heavily, "but fast." Miss Martian re-established the group telepathic link. Ferris could speak more clearly and quickly through telepathy while using less magic. She had acceded to an earlier link to quickly explain, plan out, and argue her suggested course of action, but it had taken a visible toll on her composure.

[Ferris, I think we're all surprised that after you talked us all into this plan against our better judgment you would be the first one to back away from it, not that we're complaining because, Hello Megan!, it's usually the other way around and we thought you'd be even more rabid for this type of thing after it worked, and yes I got most of the information we wanted guys, but while it's a nice surprise it's a surprise and we're wondering why you're agreeing with us when we didn't expect it.]

There was barely a moment of processing before Ferris responded.

[Is that what you felt like I did? I was never certain, that was why I asked about it and got everyone's opinion! You said it was okay, even if it wasn't a comfortable option, and I was glad I was beginning to get the hang of your rules! If I really upset everyone that much then why did we do it? There weren't many other ideas that I heard but anyone could have walked over and just slapped the sleep-patch on her at any time! I asked questions for why it was wrong, then you all said we should after I brought up my reasons!] Mental silence hung between us al for a moment more. Ferris declared dismissively, [Democracy: it must be where we all go against our better judgment, instead of against the shortsighted masses. I am sorry, next time I will just do what Aqualad decides.]

It was arguably a correct path, but at the same time her dismissal of her own unnerving success rankled; I also did not want to become the kind of autocratic leader that she had just expressed willingness to accept.

Remembering what I had learned from her previously, I considered the problems of cultural and experience differences.

[No,] I sent, [I believe I understand the problem. Ferris did not suggest an idea that she supported, but a possible idea that would have worked in her history, but she was uncertain about with us, yes?] She nodded slightly. [We shot it down, and she began asking questions to ascertain why it was a bad idea, because she is still learning our methods and rules of engagement, yes?]

[More because Harmony taught me asking questions and discovering why something is wrong will lead you closer to what is right – I mean correct-right, not left-right, and have I mentioned how confusing your language is – but in essence yes.]

[And we forgot her background and interpreted her genuine questions as rhetorical argument,] I finished, [and none of us felt strongly enough about it stand up for our beliefs-]

[Even though standing up for that was exactly what I thought the Justice League was supposed to do,] Artemis finished with a bitter laugh. [What a fiasco. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.]

[I don't know what you guys are going on about,] Kid Flash's mind interjected from out of the room, [but people might get shot in more than just the foot if you guys don't find out what the Shadows' next round of plans are.]

[Oh, right!] Miss Martian remembered.

"Ow-ow-out loud pleeease," Ferris all but whimpered

"Let us reconvene. Leave the assassin here for now," I ordered. We all filed out of the room, down the hall, and into the computer lab. "Doctor, what progress have you made?"

"The piece of old junk is a mess, but I'm managing. I'd give it less two hours if we can keep going uninterrupted."

"That may not be possible. Miss Martian, what did you discover about the reinforcements?"

"There are at least two of the special agents with powers nearby: Black Spider can cling to walls and shoot a sticky web to capture people; Hook is big and tall and strong, and he has a hook on a chain instead of one of his hands. She didn't know if any civilian contacts or regular agents were in the area because she only arrived less than two days ago, chasing Red Arrow. They should follow up if Cheshire doesn't contact them to declare the job done."

"How? Can we fake that?" Ferris asked once more.

"Not without making the doctor stop her work tracking and working on the virus," I informed them, sharing a look with Kid Flash to ensure that my knowledge of computer technology was correct. He nodded as well.

<Robin to Aqualad. >

"We read you," I replied. "What is your situation? Have you found the Shadows' target?"

<Yes, it was the Philadelphia STAR Labs, but we took too long to find it. The building is totally destroyed, the Fog decimated it, and STAR Lab's cutting edge technology is in the hands of the Shadows now. > Kid Flash uttered a rude blasphemy, Ferris frowned, and I bowed my head beneath the weight of our duty as I considered our next move.

<What now? > Superboy asked.

'If one Shadow knows where we are, it may be best to relocate the doctor and… yes, Miss Martian's shape shifting would make her an excellent distraction, especially if we are able to run the scanning program on its own in a different location. Red Arrow had a good idea when he left the doctor in this unused facility, despite the risk. At this time of night, there should be several other sites in the local area where the doctor can have access to potentially superior resources…'

"We scan for the Fog. Find it. We're moving the doctor." Everyone nodded, except for Doctor Roquette herself.

"Yes, of course, because interrupting my work is going to make this go faster when I already have improper tools and no perfect way to transfer this much data… not including moving time, I'm going to spend a while just double-checking that there are no bugs," she complained.

"It is unfortunate, but the Shadows are aware of this location," I reminded her. "You should have some time to find a stopping place and arrange for more proper transfer, as I will need Kid Flash and Miss Martian," I turned to them, "to scout the area for computerized places where the Doctor can continue her work. I need at least two, one of which I want to set up as a decoy."

"Righty-o, Aqualad, I'll be back in a flash! C'mon, Miss Martian." Miss Martian rolled her eyes slightly and flew away after Kid Flash's trail.

"Robin, Superboy, continue doing your best to follow the Fog's trail if you are able. Ferris, Artemis, secure the prisoner for transport. At the least, we can drop her by the police station instead of leaving her to wake up and pursue us." Ferris looked like she wanted to say something, but she nodded and led the way for a surprisingly hesitant Artemis. "Doctor Roquette, I do not pretend to understand the mechanics by which your work operates, but I wish to run several possibilities by you for ways that we may arrange a blind to distract the League of Shadows by running the tracking program separately in another location." She groaned, but began to explain details, and we exchanged suggestions towards an eventual solution.

Just over five minutes later, as we were finalizing the details for setting up the separate systems, Artemis pushed a visibly uncomfortable Ferris into the room and made an announcement.

"She just did it again."
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* August 8 [Artemis PoV]

I desperately made sure that I wasn't shaking as Ferris led me down the hall, and back toward our prisoner.

Back to the League of Shadows assassin, Cheshire.

To my sister, Jade.

'Talk about a fucked up coincidence. Wait, would she have heard about what I was doing and volunteered to come so she could find me on the side? No, no, I thought I'd learned not to get my hopes up, because it will always come crashing down and the wreckage will leave me bruised and bloody. Jade made clear that she didn't care about me eight years ago, and she kept making that clear every single silent day of every one of those years. She doesn't love me.'

Ferris opened the door on my sist- on the assassin, who was still asleep or unconscious. The white patch was stark on the assassin's neck, and according to the others it would keep her harmlessly out for about three hours, or for half an hour after removal unless we dunked water on her.

Ferris.

Ferris had been still but very attentive when she questioned Robin, Kid Flash, and me about the practices of the League of Shadows in their operations and training methods. I'd been unnerved by the way Robin listed off a more detailed account of their training practices than I'd known, and rubbing the fact that I was here to stay in Kid Flash's face- 'I can't believe I ever looked up to him. Friendly, hah! Talk about a pretty face for pretty girls and cameras. I wanted to earn respect, and he's done nothing but spit fire at me.' -had been a nice distraction.

Watching him seethe in impotent offense was quite therapeutic. He wasn't as bad as some of the assholes at Gotham North, but he hadn't had a year or two of exposure to learn that wolf whistles and upfront insults would be rewarded with immediate and unyielding pain.

Dad had 'No. Not Dad. Not with Mom back now, no matter how different she is.'

Sportsmaster had, the one and only time I'd come home from school with a split lip, threatened to keep me home the next week for remedial training if I couldn't tell him that I'd given the guy responsible at least ten times worse in exchange.

I'd told him no, because I'd seen a teacher coming so I'd cried crocodile tears instead, but I knew his address and intended to track his suspended ass down over the weekend. It was what he wanted to hear, even if it was also true.

We went out to eat that evening, and on Monday morning I'd found a polymer-plastic switchblade that wouldn't set off a metal detector. Sure, he'd disguised it as a bright pink pen, but it was still cooler than any birthday gift he'd never bothered with.

I still had it in one of my drawers.

'I should… I don't need that type of thing anymore, and I don't need him to be any part of my life either. I should get around to throwing it out.' I ignored the memory of when Dad had let me drink from his glass of wine while we split a slice of celebratory cheesecake. 'Next time I see it, I'll toss it out, but I can't waste time searching for something I haven't found when I've already got this on my plate. If nothing else, Mom reinstating her spring-cleaning tradition will tease it out eventually.

'Spring-cleaning, wow, I don't think I've done that since… before Mom got put away…
'

I abruptly came back to the present, untying some of the knots that bound my sister to the desk on autopilot. Ferris had asked me something.

"Sorry, what was that?"

"I asked why we were changing locations," she said carefully, retying some new bindings around my sister's leg.

'My sister. Cheshire, the assassin. And now I'm helping make sure that she's going to go to jail for a long time.

'Just like mom.
'

"Because the Shadows know that we're here now." I glanced down at Ja- at the assassin's slack face and quickly up again. It reminded me too much of when I'd climbed into bed with her when I was too young to even have started school.

"Well, yes," Ferris agreed, gesturing to J- the assassin. "But they will know when we are there, for the same reasons, yes? Was it something other than the tracking spell?"

"Tracking program," I corrected. She shrugged. "Here, you're tying those knots badly. You untie and I can retie?" She acceded and we switched positions. I kept mulling over what she had mentioned, because my brain was trying to throw something up in front of my eyes, and it didn't feel quite the same as her last- 'demented, chilling, horrifyingly successful how did she even think of that to start with?' -odd suggestion. "What… were you saying?" I asked. Ferris hesitated.

"I am not understand something again," she said awkwardly. "Shadows will find us in everywhere place because of the program, yes?"

"Yes-," and I could see what she was getting at, "-but they already know we're here. If we move, we can control when they find us, make it on our terms by waiting until we're set up with Aqualad's decoy idea to start the programming again."

"Though it will take longer," she said, and it didn't sound like an argument, but now I was thinking about it too, and it sounded like a prompt.

"Yes, that's a risk, since we need the Doctor to finish the program to… uh… win, but the new location will be harder for the Shadows to find than here." Ferris still looked off, when I glanced at her, and I felt it as well.

"Ah, I see! So, it is… total gain to move? We lose time, but they lose more time than we do?"

"Yeah, that's it," I agreed uncertainly.

'Isn't it? We need thirty to sixty minutes to set it all up, but the Shadows won't even start to check until an hour or so has passed, and it will take them… no. Jade showed up less than an hour – a lot less than an hour – after we started broadcasting. And that hour deadline is a maximum, running from when she last checked before we caught her. We won't gain that much time, and the trouble, and… and defenses! This is a big, confusing building with halls we know the layout of, and no bland office or internet café will be anywhere near as easy to defend if someone sends in a bazooka strike or something!'

"We need to talk to Aqualad," I told her. "Urgently. Leave her here and we'll go." And no, I was not hoping that J- the assassin would manage to escape in the time it took to talk to Aqualad.

I practically dragged an oddly uncomfortable Ferris down the hall and all but shoved her into the computer lab.

"She just did it again," I announced.

Everyone stopped for a moment.

"I did what?" "Ferris has done what?" She and Aqualad looked at each other.

"Look, her idea worked on, on Cheshire, and she was right even though I never would have thought we could freak out and break a Shadow's mind guard like that. It's not her fault we didn't say we were uncomfortable when even Robin admitted that he's seen Batman do worse and Shadows suffer way worse. And now she's got me thinking and we have a new plan!"

Aqualad raised a hand and cut off my babble.

"Artemis, has Ferris convinced you that we should not move locations?" he asked.

"Yes! Well, no, she wasn't sure before, but I thought it over and now I am because it makes- look!" I took a moment to get my collision of thoughts in order. Then I listed out my points:
  1. We had less than an hour due to check in times, travel times, and would lose more time doing the set-up than we would gain.
  2. The school was big and had solid walls, unlike an internet cafe or most public libraries.
  3. We could double bluff and build up more defenses by keeping the doctor here and setting up another decoy, without taking time from her work!
I panted into the silence. Aqualad looked at me appraisingly, then at Ferris, and then back to me.

His brows furrowed in thought.

"Doctor, is that feasible?" he asked.

"Um, yes? Yes." She threw up her arms. "Yes! I've been saying this entire time that interrupting my work to move around will only make this slower. There is no reason why I need to be present to set up a decoy, which would rather defeat the point of it all," she explained, rubbing the bridge of her nose. Perfectly timed for a headache, the one-minute wonder rushed up.

"Hey, Aqualad, I've got three places that should work for your plan and Miss Em ought to be back in another minute. How's that for speedy delivery?" I felt a splash of that deliciously angry warmth in my chest and formulated my barb.

"Don't you mean Red Arrow delivery?" I needled triumphantly, only for Ferris to frown and step between us. Oops.

"Enough," Aqualad put in. "Artemis, your assessment is correct. Kid Flash, there has been a change of plans, but your information is still well timed and necessary. Doctor, please run through once more the methods for setting up our decoy tracking beacon."

Miss Martian floated in through the doorway, and we all huddled up to plot.
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Author's note: More violence again next chapter, but it's the kind where people can fight back so that's more acceptable anyway. Teens do stupid things when it's late and they're stressed and no one wants to be the nail that sticks out. They will get chewed out for it, later, don't worry.
 
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Filtering - part 4
Life Ore Death
Filtering - part 4
* August 8 [M'gann PoV]

Wearing Doctor Serling Roquette's shape, I typed a few more lines of script into the computer and set the tracker to begin again. "We are online," I reported out loud to Aqualad. He nodded. [It's running, so we should get the Shadows in a little bit.]

"Kid Flash, Artemis, Miss Martian, run your perimeter searches," he said out loud. [Kid Flash, run along the path so that Ferris can inform the doctor to begin again, then turn on the secondary distractions and return. Artemis, find some appropriate areas and give the signals that will tell any watchers that 'Miss Martian' is flying around under camouflage. Miss Martian, maintain the telepathy link and make it look like you are working. I doubt the Shadows will look for that, but just in case.]

I nodded. 'Just in case' was the watchword of this particular mission: it was why we were talking in both telepathy and speech when we weren't supposed to be under observation, and it had probably saved Kid Flash's life as well as intercepting Cheshire's attack early.

When we originally organized our guard rotations, no one had been happy that Ferris once again wanted to be exempted from the telepathic network. I had been disappointed that she still wasn't trusting me if not only was Superboy willing to give it a shot, but Ferris and I had already been experimenting with the ways her magic mixed to enable or resist telepathy.

Aqualad had moved to look her in the eye when he asked that she reconsider, and Ferris had jerked back like she was stung and acquiesced so frantically that none of us felt comfortable with taking her up on it.

'I still don't know what that was about… did it have to do with the Amazo fight? I heard that Ferris accidentally helped Professor Ivo to escape, but compared to Superboy's reckless… well, compared to Superboy getting a little overenthusiastic and forgetting that the rest of us aren't as strong as him, or the way Robin apparently mishandled the teenaged girl civilian on-site, the Batman barely reprimanded Ferris about that in the debriefing.'

When Aqualad had backtracked after Doctor Roquette also didn't want to listen to teen-think, Ferris had volunteered to use her listening spell to watch for anyone who got past our perimeter.

I'd accepted it for the sake of peace and friendship, but – in hindsight – it had been really stupidly arrogant to think that I was just being a big enough person to pander to her when there was no way any assassins would get past our perimeter.

Especially since Cheshire's infiltration was probably my fault: yes, Artemis had caused a problem with what she thought at Superboy, but I was out of line to harp on her for sexual harassment when a) she was probably nervous enough on her first Team mission, and b) it was really just the same type of harmlessly forward flirting that Wally 'Hello Megan! We're on mission so call him Kid Flash, even in your mind,' indulged in.

Aqualad's message that Ferris had heard unfamiliar footsteps and breathing, meaning we should be ready to fall back to reinforce, had been a rude wake-up call.

Kid Flash had sent his updates during his brief chase through the mentioned coordinates, and then he'd barely had time to send a distress call before going quiet. I'd still been able to feel his mind, so I knew he wasn't dead, but he'd been far from coherent enough for consciousness. I'd been flying after him even before Aqualad finished telling me to reinforce his position.

Mouth-to-mouth had been mentioned on Hello Megan in that beach episode with the lifeguard (instead of the beach episode with the barbecue), and other than a brief joke it had been treated seriously when they gave instructions, so I'd been rather put out with Wally when his idle thoughts leaned more toward kissing than the fact that he almost died.

'It isn't as though I don't like him as a teammate, but honestly! Can't he be more serious like Superboy?'

The two of us had arrived back after we received the news of the captured assassin, which had been Ferris and Artemis working together again. I'd felt as angry at my distraction as I was at Artemis for being more successful on this mission, but after our little script I couldn't manage the energy for anger anymore. I was too busy trying to not give in to my discomfort in this skin and shift back to my White Martian form, because that would lead to them never speaking to me again either for lying to them, or because I was a horrible freaky disgusting monster.

'Well, no, Ferris has already liked watching me shape shift, even into gross things that I wasn't comfortable looking like for long, but…'

'But I'm not sure that's a good thing. I mean, she's made comments, jokes even, about how people are right to treat her badly, like she could turn into a criminal! I thought she was just being patient until they saw the real her. Megan had to deal with that in episode two, and then helped little Alicia and book-loving Maude in episodes 11 and 19, and I was so glad that I could do the same thing for my friend.'

'She enjoyed it. I felt it and I felt it and what if the real Renka is the one I just saw, amused and eager at threatening death?'

Ferris had proposed a convincing act, even accepting my telepathy to quickly communicate an off-the-cuff script designed to discombobulate the assassin enough to get important information.

It had sounded horrible to us at first. But when we said that, she'd started asking questions about some other heroes' past actions (like the Batman, which had started me wondering about Robin as well), Atlantean law, and the damage that can be done from a brute-force mind crush compared to the more easily healed bodily harm Shadows are trained to resist. It had all started to make more and more sense.

'Especially with what the Fog can do, and Doctor Roquette's life on the line,' I remembered.

And yet...

And yet the problem...

The thing I couldn't let go of, and couldn't accept...

Ferris had enjoyed it.

The pain was just a tool to her end, but the resulting confusion that slowly gave way to shock and despair had felt like it whetted Ferris's emotional appetite. She had genuinely felt cheerful when she spoke in baby-talk to her captive, 'our captive, because I was a part of this too and it is my fault too,' and the unexpectedness of the finger-break, as well as the fright when she threateningly reached for more fingers… her smiles were not a mask when she did those things.

'And so help me, but I was paying enough attention that I felt her have fun, and I think I was only partly pretending too.' I tapped another few nonsense lines of 'virus code' as the tracking program ran.

Kid Flash raced back inside to report another uninterrupted round and raced out again. Aqualad nodded slightly.

We still had time to spare before anyone arrived and attacked. [Aqualad?] I prompted lightly. He did not turn, but he answered.

[Yes, Miss Martian?]

[I… am still disturbed by what we did earlier. You weren't feeling it… It worked; I got a lot of information without me doing any permanent damage to her mind,] including some nuggets that I was still mulling over and would bring up with the Batman or Black Canary or Uncle J'onn when I had a moment, [but aren't I still responsible for hurting and letting Ferris hurt Cheshire in both her body and mind?]

[As team leader,] he told me, [I had the final say on the plan, and its disturbing aspects were my fault for giving my approval. From past experience, I know that Ferris would have stood down and dropped the subject, had I ordered her to do so. Even if all of you had agreed wholeheartedly with the proposal, it would not have happened if I had withheld permission. You are not at fault. It is due to my miscalculations when I forgot that Ferris is still learning the specifics of our morality and code of conduct.]

[Yes, but…] As much as I was disturbed by Ferris's glee in the success of her scheme, I also remembered genuine exasperation and embarrassment, if not exactly shame, in our discussion after I applied the sleeping patch. [But wasn't it also… I mean, was Ferris right about this in the end? We did get the information we needed, and as soon as she wakes up and realizes that she's alive Cheshire will know that we were faking and I'm not a freaky man-eating murderer, so her mind might even get well faster than her fingers. And Ferris… I could feel her disturbingly well when we did the telepathy talks, and while she felt really scary when we did it, she was also feeling frustrated and confused and embarrassed when we all agreed afterwards that it had been a bad idea. And she was right, at any time one of us could have said "enough" and slapped a sleep patch on her, but none of us did. Doesn't-]

[Please keep your mind open and your senses alert, as we may expect to see the Shadows soon and you have not typed any code for nearly a minute now.] I quickly began typing again.

[Sorry.]

[We all are out of synch, after the… after. There is a term, Blue and Orange Morality, which may apply.] I sent a sense of curiosity. [Blue and Orange are alternate colors to the usual Black and White of evil and Good. They represent alternate values ascribed to, your pardon, alien species, or gods and mythical creatures. It is not that she cannot tell the difference, but that she draws the dividing line in a different place.]

[How so?] I asked, typing in more nonsense.

[As a general example …there is the Indian fable I have read, of a King who married a goddess. Their religion believed in reincarnation, with the eventual hope that a sinless life would lead to perfection and paradise in Nirvana, transcending the cycle of reincarnation. The king and goddess wed, and within a year or so, they were blessed with twin sons. The king would have been the happiest man in the kingdom that day,]

[But something horrible happened,] I finished, because old human stories were all so morbid.

[Yes. The goddess smothered her mortal sons in their crib that very night.] I snapped around to stare at Aqualad in primal, instinctive disgust. He nodded at me. [Mind your façade, please, 'Doctor Roquette'. Still, what you feel is precisely the Black and White response of a mortal perspective. But the goddess explained that it was because of reincarnation.]

[What? Just because those innocent babies might have been reincarnated from criminals-]

[That was the king's accusation as well, but the goddess explained that it was the other way around. The twins were the reincarnations of great heroes and sages, barred from paradise in Nirvana because of small, almost meaningless sins committed in past lives. By killing them while they were innocent babes, she freed their souls to ascend to paradise untainted, which to the immortal was the greater good. She knew that all mortals died, and by bringing that death sooner, her beloved sons were now eternally freed of the small pains and imperfections that were inherent to mortal life.]

I mulled this over.

[Please continue typing.] I immediately started typing a few more lines on code. [The error was: we did not truly need to know what Cheshire knew. We had no idea of what the first League of Shadows' assault would entail either, nor did we know that there would be a follow-up once it was over. If we had learned that there were no other assassins on their way, would it still have been justified? Could we not have continued our precautions and set up a dummy elsewhere as we kept guard, whether or not we knew when and who would pursue?]

"Oh," I said aloud by accident when I realized. 'I think I get it now.'

[Oh crud, oh crudohcrudohcrud!] Kid Flash sent in an echoing rush. [We've got Shadows on our backs near the park, heading this way, and one of them is Sportsmaster!]

[One of them who!] Artemis mentally shrieked, and I grimaced in sympathy for the emotional grinder that her first mission had rapidly become. The rest of Artemis's message was just a quickly hushed babble of mental gibberish.

[Sportsmaster, he's a guy we fought before at Santa Prisca. Ferris beat him pretty bad, but he was exposed to trace amounts of Kobra Venom, with the hulk-out that implies, and broke out of the prison. I'm not sure if he's working with the Shadows or here on his own for revenge, but he seemed to be pretty chummy with that Claw guy. No sign of Black Spider.]

"Ferris," Aqualad spoke into his radio, "we have identified Sportsmaster accompanying Claw toward our location, so Black Spider may be seeking you out. Be prepared."

[Kid Flash, can you reinforce Ferris?] he sent.

[Aqualad,] Artemis's mental voice pleaded, [can I go reinforce Ferris? I know just enough about Sportsmaster to think that I might be dead weight against him.] I could hear her fear, but I wasn't sure how well that translated to Aqualad's mind. He might have just written it off as first-mission jitters.

[Negative. Kid Flash can reach Ferris's position faster, and your ranged combat will be of greater assistance in crowd control against enemies in the open,] he decided. I couldn't argue against that, as much as I understood why Artemis was scared.

[Actually, Aqualad, Sportsmaster got me in one leg before I raced away into an alley. I'll need a minute to bandage it and my running speed might be down. Artemis might get to Ferris faster than I can.] To his credit, Aqualad listened to the rest of the team and considered it heavily before he shook his head.

[That does not account for Artemis's superior range and observational advantage in rooftops rather than in the closed halls of the school building.]

[I did just fine catching the first one!] Artemis objected, and I felt Aqualad's smooth temper stir.

[My decision is final. Artemis, try to get visual on Sportsmaster. Kid Flash, bind your wound and proceed with all haste to reinforce Ferris.]

He sighed heavily and drew one water-bearer, listening to a radio communication from either Robin, Superboy, or Ferris. "Do not worry, doctor," he told me, slipping into character, "we are the heroes who will replace the Justice League. You are safe in our hands."

[S-sportsmaster and Claw are closing in on you, Aqualad. They are less than two blocks away and they aren't even bothering to hide mu- ohgodohgodohgod did he see me!]

[Were you seen?] Aqualad asked.

[God, I hop- I mean, I don't think so. Sportsmaster glanced up near me, which might be enough for him, but he hasn't reacted or changed his path and I was concealed and far enough away.]

[Attempt to maintain visual from behind them, and line up for a shot when they approach. Kid Flash, have you left to reinforce Ferris yet?] No response.

[He's out of telepathic range,] I confirmed. I had my suspicions that he might have felt sorry for Artemis's obvious terror and tried to lie about his leg wound. It would have been the type of chivalrous but thoughtless deed he favored.

[Artemis where are the Shadows?]

[Less than 70 meters Northeast and closing South. They'll turn right and head straight down the street when they reach the corner of this block.]

"Ferris, have you encountered any-? Ferris has engaged Black Spider and is having very little success," he murmured to me. "I hope Kid Flash can navigate to her soon."

I swallowed and nodded, continuing to type as I opened my mind to search for the presence of approaching minds. I knew where Artemis was, and Sportsmaster and Claw would probably be in the area between us…

[Spo- okay, Sportsmaster is walking straight down the street thirty meters away. Claw has taken to the rooftops and is going ahead. Should I go after him?]

[Continue to observe for the moment. Keep alert to tell us when they will begin the attack.]

[Um, yeah, I think Claw is about to jump through the roof without back up.]

I felt my shape shifted anatomy want to twitch and tense, but I kept it still all the same. I typed in another line of code, just barely feeling around with my mind until I located the tightly focused blood-thirst that was the assassin.

Plaster pummeled my head and shoulders as the ceiling exploded, and I let Aqualad tackle me out of the way of the descending metal hook. I remembered to scream in terror, but I kept my disguise capable enough to scramble away and free up Aqualad for the fight. He rushed to parry a second strike with his water-bearers, transforming one of the blades into a whip that the assassin had to lean back from.

"Doctor," he grunted, "flee out the back now!"

"R-right!" I stuttered, running in the hopes that I was not leaving Kaldur to his doom. We had not planned this specific part out, but I had an idea. [Artemis, do you have a clearer shot at Claw or Sportsmaster right now?] I remembered again her terror at the thought of facing Sportsmaster. [No, get Claw off Aqualad's back and I'll try to lead Sportsmaster on a wild goose chase..] "I need to run," I babbled aloud. "I need to get away from here. Safe- Safe-house in three blocks," I improvised, knocking over a trashcan as I stumbled through the alley before I broke into a run out the other side.

I could feel Sportsmaster's cold attention on me, keeping pace. He stalked me like a Tr'maalak of myth, and his mind focused on my location with razor keenness.

He pursued me down a side alley, and he let me hear his footsteps when we began to run down the open street. I dove down another alley, hoping no dead-end would end the distraction and leave me dead. He said nothing, and I did not turn to look as I ran, but I heard his dauntless pursuit and caught snatches of mirrored reflections in the storefronts.

I rounded a corner two-thirds of the alley-length ahead of him, and had an impulsive idea. Out of his sight, I telekinetically jumped higher onto a rusted fire escape than Doctor Roquette could have easily climbed, and I began to make my way up at her ordinary, untrained human pace.

The metal was old and rusty, but it was solid, even if the heels of my disguise weren't much good for climbing. I was making good progress out of his range.

Below me, Sportsmaster laughed, and there was a metallic clang as an impact almost shook me down the stairs.

"Not bad, but not good enough," he rumbled, and I looked down.

Sportsmaster was three stories below me. He had jumped up, caught, and begun to climb the railings of the escape.

He was huge.

It was nothing like the Kobra Venom cultists, but the once large man had swelled six inches taller and broader. His skin was discolored in the moonlight, and I saw at least one tear in the flesh of his neck.

I could feel his absolute, casual confidence.

He climbed higher with ease, content to take his time with the prey that had obligingly caged itself. I climbed faster. I reached the top with less than three seconds to spare before he would follow.

I shape shifted my body into Artemis's, without changing the outfit. A body-double, I hoped he would assume.

"Surprise," I chimed, attempting a running a jump kick at Sportsmaster's head as it came into view. He caught the foot and threw me halfway across the roof with one hand.

"…So I wasn't imagining things," he rumbled. "Drop the shape, Martian."

"I don't know what you're talking about." 'I just need to keep him talking and buy time for the others to finish Claw and catch up. I wasn't able to hurt the Kobra Venom cultist, and I doubt I can hurt him, but together-!'

I ducked under a discus I hadn't even seen him throw. Sportsmaster was in arm's reach immediately, and a left straight to my jaw tossed me off the building. I tumbled in the air and floated up before I fell too far.

'I didn't meant to do that. Hello, Megan! I should have fallen and played dead or something.' Caught, I floated back to the roof and shifted the abused flesh and jawbones back into wellness.

"So you caught me. Now what?"

"Now we fight until the rest of your team arrives," he invited. I paused in surprise and a swipe from his hockey stick nearly took my nose off. "Now, now, no running, greenie." He produced several other discuses, tossing them to the corners of the roof as well as into nearby buildings. "Those are all explosive, and these apartment building are old, and deserve to be condemned. If you try to run away, I'll do my civic duty and demolish them, inhabitants and all."

I flinched. "What! Why would you do that? We still aren't going to give you Doctor Roquette!"

"Fortunately," he laughed, "I'm not here for the Doctor. After the League of Shadows lost a major business deal because of your interference, the guys upstairs wanted to see exactly what you were capable of. I'm doing this as a freebie on my own initiative, because I want to see exactly what I am capable of, with these changes.

"So this is what will happen," he nearly purred, swinging the enlarged hockey stick menacingly. "I am going to fight you, until either one of us wins, or your friends arrive. If they arrive, then I will fight them too, and the cycle will continue. If you win, obviously, I'm going to need to break out of jail again. If I win and you are still alone, I'm going to take you prisoner and make your friends fight for your freedom. I may or may not also blow up mines, as I so choose.

"Do you accept the terms of this duel?" he asked, retrieving a shiny coin.

"It's not like you're giving me a choice," I spat, knowing that the lives of everyone asleep in the buildings around us depended on the good nature of a professional killer and my ability to keep him entertained.

I felt ill.

"You chose to get into this life, and you can choose to live with it, or to walk away. Say yes, and we'll use this as our starting signal." He balanced the coin on one thumb. His other thumbed a detonator. "Say no, and I will let you walk away unharmed. The explosions should be enough to attract a real hero's attention."

"Yes," I hissed, feeling more cornered and pressured than the time those bullies caught me returning from a visit to Uncle Ma'al. I desperately tried to calm down, to think, to plan, but I couldn't manage.

'What do I need to do? I need to win. I need to hold him off for the others. I need to not be captured. I need to not set off the bombs and kill people. I need to get that detonator.'

Sportsmaster's thumb flicked the coin into the air, and he readied his hockey stick as it arced.

'Okay. He's probably going to come charging at me when it starts. How do I keep him busy without keeping him bored? Just let him hurt me? No, he might get bored if I don't fight back, which is why I can't fly away. Can't fly high away.' I remembered sharply when Ferris and I had floated silently only a few inches off the ground, before the first time we met Sportsmaster.

'I wish I'd done more experiments with trying to heal.' *Clink!* The coin bounced.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________​
 
Filtering - part 5
Life Ore Death
Filtering - part 5
* August 8 [M'gann PoV]

Sportsmaster's thumb flicked the coin into the air, and he readied his hockey stick as it arced.

'Okay. He's probably going to come charging at me when it starts. How do I keep him busy without keeping him bored? Just let him hurt me? No, he might get bored if I don't fight back, which is why I can't fly away. Can't fly high away.' I remembered sharply when Ferris and I had floated silently only a few inches off the ground, before the first time we met Sportsmaster.

'I wish I'd done more experiments with trying to heal.' *Clink!* The coin bounced.

Sportsmaster rushed me, scything his hockey stick toward my head. I ducked and slid forward. Literally slid, as I floated a few inches above the ground and flew smoothly. At the last second I rolled to the side to avoid his feet, only for him to turn and quickly hit me halfway across the roof once more.

"Feeble," he dismissed, closing in as I tried to recover.

I melted, just like Ferris had suggested when I was asked to envelop Cheshire. I had no eyes, and no ears, but my unstable body barely felt it when the stick and then his feet impacted my flesh. I pulled almost the whole of my body mass out of phase, but he tore himself away before I could hold him down.

I shifted backwards and resumed my shape of Martian Megan, and a discus exploded in my face.

Blind. I was blinded, deafened, concussed, and thrown backwards. I heard his voice but no particular words. Without waiting for my eyes to recover, I made new ones above them on my forehead.

My telekinesis caught the javelin Sportsmaster threw, and he didn't bother to dodge after I threw it back. Instead, he walked out of the explosion smoking, but unscarred.

I hurled bits of debris from the roof at him, tearing away rusted metal and chunks of cement, hoping to disguise my real telekinetic target. He laughed, kept walking forward easily, and redrew his hockey stick.

I flew backwards as he struck, floating easily as I tore up tile and bricks from nearby buildings as ammunition. Then I zoomed forward as he paused to draw another javelin, and my body dissolved once more.

I nearly screamed in pain when his strike separated part of my biomass from my body, but I didn't have a mouth to scream with. No bones to break. No organs to rupture.

I was, for a few seconds, only nerves and muscles and meat.

I splashed against his chest, throwing tentacles at his face as I focused more on reaching down. He slammed something onto the part of me over his chest as I claimed my target.

The charge exploded, painfully burning away a part of my body again. I pulled away, screaming in blind agony as I forced my body back into a human form.

"Not nearly good enough. If you'd hung on, you might have choked me out. Air loss is one of the few things I think I'm still susceptible to," Sportsmaster analyzed. "Kids. You have no idea of what it means to be determined, or to devote yourself to a goal. No idea of what it means to suffer, or to withstand suffering."

"Tell me more," I snapped furiously. 'How dare he make killing sound noble!' I brandished the detonator I had stolen from his belt, and through the searing ache in my body and mind, I carried the discs my telekinetic strikes and grips had targeted into a tight circle around him.

I refused to give that man any more words. I pressed the trigger.

The blast almost blinded and deafened me for a few seconds. When my senses recovered, I saw that Sportsmaster still stood, but was similarly stunned. He staggered, and I did my best to lift him with my telekinesis, reaching out with effort to pull him against gravity.

I can't lift only part of an object; it has to be all or nothing. Any force applied other than my own makes it more difficult. Very young Martians are often given a smooth, flat board and a set of light, low-friction tiles to begin stretching their telekinesis by shoving the tiles from side to side.

When I lifted the Kobra Venom victim at Santa Prisca, I was fresh, and he was too mindless to struggle quickly.

Sportsmaster had torn off pieces of my body, of my biomass, and I had psychic injuries slowly bleeding out. I wouldn't die, but by the Sorcerer Priests I ached. It was a horrible, draining throb at the edges of my attention. Sportsmaster spasmed, and he dropped back to the roof.

I reached out with my telepathy desperately, as he stood up again.

"More ruthless than I would have credited you for," he complimented. I grimaced, trying to summon up the strength to fight both gravity and his strengthened struggles enough to throw him off the roof. "I still have more charges," he boasted.

"And I have arrows," Artemis announced from the next roof over. We both turned. She had strung and drawn three arrows at once, all aimed at Sportsmaster. "I sug-… Back off."

"Well, well, little girl. What are you doing here?"

"My job, criminal. I signed a contract with the Justice League and everything. Not sure if that's normal for sidekicks, but who cares?" she rallied back fiercely.

"You can't honestly suggest that I feel threatened?" he asked her.

"Two of these are knock-out gas arrows, but the gas is flammable, and the last is explosive. Even if you don't get hurt, it will still get the attention of everyone else. Besides, you're too late. Doctor Roquette already finished her virus, and the Fog has dissipated. You lose."

"I'm not here for the Doctor. I don't have a contract on her head," Sportsmaster rumbled, his hand inching for another weapon.

"Th-then who are you here for?" Artemis managed.

"You," he menaced. She flinched backwards. Sportsmaster charged; he hurled his body at the gap between the buildings. Artemis shot her arrows, and they flew true, but Sportmaster plucked the odd one out – the explosive – from the air as it neared and tossed it away. He bent his legs to jump the gap as the other two arrows bounced off his armored chest-

-and released their electric charges. Sportsmaster staggered, his muscles spasmed, and I shoved sideways, pushing the tile off the edge of the board.

The man howled as he fell over the edge and toppled eight stories, out of my sight.

"Ohmigod! Ohmymy Gooooodd," Artemis moaned, almost dragged to the edge of her roof by morbid worry. "Is he… he isn't going to be happy, if he survived that."

"Kobra Venom makes humans tough. I think he'll be fine," I managed. 'Fine, but not okay if there's anyone up there with any sense of mercy.' I dragged my feet over to the edge. Artemis whimpered, and I looked down into the alley. Below us, the man stood up slowly, having landed on a pile of garbage. His outfit was smeared with filth, and a banana peel hung from one shoulder.

Just looking at him, knowing what I knew of the man, made me want to vomit and cry, all the way from down there.

Sportsmaster looked up at both our faces, hanging over the edges. He removed his mask, and opened his mouth.

Sportsmaster laughed.

"Brah, hah ha-ha-ha-ha-ha hah haaaah, hoo-ha ha-ha-ha-ha hah haaa."

"What the-?" Artemis hissed.

"Well played, little girl. And you too, greenie. Cunning and ruthless in the places that you couldn't be strong. I haven't had a trash bath like this since the last time I told my woman that she needed to lose weight. Hooooo-boy! Does that ever take me back. Listen up, both you kids!" he yelled. "I'm gonna leave you alone tonight, but I've got no doubt that we will meet again. Personally, I don't think you have what it takes to stay on that side of the fight, and we'll be side-by-side in a fight soon enough. But," he growled, "you ain't got enough life experience to listen to your betters yet. So I'm gonna warn you: next time we meet, it'll be no holds barred against you and your friends, and this level of tricks won't cut it unless you intend to kill! So get deadly, or get dead, because you won't get another warning."

Tossing the banana peel over his shoulder, Sportsmaster replaced his mask and trudged down the alleys and out of sight. Artemis and I stared at each other, slumped on opposite roofs. Eventually, I watched her begin to laugh. I tried to smile.

Eventually, I watched her begin to cry. I wished I knew what to say.

We stayed there for a long time.
________________________________________________________________________________________________​

August 8 [Renka PoV]

"Is that safe?" the doctor asked as I stabilized the bookshelf into its new position.

"Is- Why not?" I asked, examining my work. 'Yes, the window is completely covered.' "Kid Flash," he said into the radio, "run around the school and look at the windows, please."

<Roger that, > he replied.

"If the assassins figure out that you blocked this particular room's windows, won't that tell them we're hiding here?" She glanced up briefly from the screen, and the patter of her inscripting broke before it continued.

"Yes," I agreed. "Because of that, I did this one-two-three-four-five-six-seven other rooms. That way, that way, three there," I listed pointing at the sides and then up to the floor above us.

"I get it, I get it. That's where you were before Aqualad left. Thank you," she grunted out as an afterthought, having bent her head back to finishing the banishment spell program.

<There are a few rooms with lights on, and some with blinds drawn, and others… you do that on purpose? >

"Yes," I answered. "Thank you."

<No problemo. Just be careful; we're at the end of our estimated safe time now. >

"I understand." I quickly ran through my available metal-minds. 'I still have enough weight in my iron-mind to break through this floor, I think. My stores of steel-mind speed are excellent, so I should try to rely on those for quickly finishing a fight. I have enough strength in my pewter-mind to bend metal or break bones for ten or twenty minutes. But my tin-minds are low, especially hearing. I've been relying on that a lot to track friends and enemies, but now that I don't have reinforcements yet I've already run down my reserves. That was not wise,' I chided myself.

<Guys, if you can finish this quickly, we really need you to! > Robin radioed, sounding the most alarmed I'd heard.

<Problem, Rob? >

"How long?" I asked the doctor. She hissed out a frustrated breath.

"As long as I am not distracted, one to three quarters of an hour, depending on how many typos I need to fix."

<The League is going to be siccing the Fog on Wayne Industries! In theory its computer systems could be used to hack the-, >

<The what? > I heard Superboy ask.

<Not important, > Kid Flash answered. 'And if two of the veteran apprentices are this worried, I will need to ask what Wayne Industries is.' <Rob, how close are they? >

<I'm not sure, but Wayne Industries operates a twenty-four seven full staff! We'll never be able to evacuate the building in time. How long until the viruys is done? >

"Sixteen to-," 'No wait, they have a different number of "minutes" in each hour.' "Fifteen to forty-five minutes," I answered.

<I think I see the guy. Let's bring this party over to them! >

<Superboy! >

I heard Kid Flash sigh as they presumably engaged the enemy. <Good luck, guys. All quiet with you, Ferris? >

"Quiet," I agreed. Reminded, I turned off the radio and tapped tin-mind hearing, as well as a zinc-mind to better sort through the noises I heard. I heard flowing air currents, the rattle of 'heating and AC' systems, and the faint skitter of small animals, but no human-sized pulses, breaths, or footsteps.

I released both metal-minds and assessed. 'Plenty left in my zinc-mind, but those five seconds ate up almost 25% of my auditory tin-mind. Can I safely spread 3-4 more of those pulses over… not over that much time. Scent? Indoors with bad airlow. Sight? Walls. Touch for footstep vibrations? Not a bad idea, but I have almost nothing in my tactile tin-mind because I use it to store and ignore pain, and only rarely at that.' To undistract myself I slightly increased my tap rate from my bronze-mind to refresh and re-awaken my mind, and I shoved more heat into my brass-mind to keep from being lulled by the warm air.

'Bronze and brass have hours' worth of use, but they're not very useful in this situation. Whatever poison was on those knives took about 1/3 of my gold-mind to purge, but I can still heal several gashes and broken bones with the remainder. Electrum-mind is full of determination, but that's not terribly useful here either.' I snapped my head around and tensed at a sound on the edge of hearing. I was tempted to tap a tin-mind again, but it had been less than two minutes, and I needed to conserve.

'Probably just my imagination, maybe not. …Oh, I'm an idiot. I covered the windows, but since we just want to keep them out there's no reason to keep the door unblocked for us to escape.' An image sketched across my mind, of an assassin toppling a bookshelf as he burst through the window, and Doctor Roquette unable to flee from the fight. 'Maybe not. At least I know to guard in that direction.' The only other metal-minds I had were one aluminum-mind and a duralumin-mind for easier communication: not helpful. 'Preferred strategy: close range with speed immediately and attempt to break something or pin them with strength and weight. Check that Black Spider hasn't made the floor sticky, and don't let Hook's claw near the doctor.'

I nodded, eyed the clock, and settled in to wait.

The minutes ticked by, and I tapped another pulse of hearing shortly after the ten-minute mark, leaving me with less than half remaining. We were firmly in the danger zone, and rapidly approached the doctor's earliest potential completion time.

<Ferris, I see movement in a park. Stay on guard, > Kid Flash sent. I sent no reply, but drew my two weapons and began to pace. Experience had taught me to step softly, and when I stored my weight in an iron-mind my movements were almost silent.

I circled the edges of the room with nary a whisper. I didn't move the shelves to look out a window, nor did I crack open the door to the hall, but I listened with my baseline hearing.

At the end of my seventeenth paced circle, I heard an unfamiliar, dull, metalic clink. I tapped half of my remaining tin-mind reserves. I spun, and the world slowed to a crawl as I tapped speed from my steel-mind and drew back my arm.

'Breathing,' I identified through the slowed world. 'The tense press of clothed flesh against metal. A fluid thwup of something soft splatting against metal. Metal, metal, metal beginning to whine before it screams and bends. From there!' I had been in the worst position possible, and I still made it halfway across the room to shield in between the assassin and the doctor when the metal AC grating was brutally shoved from the wall.

<Ferris-, > Aqualad's voice blared from the radio and drove a hammer into my enhanced ears. I tapped my electrum-mind to work through it with raw stubbornness, but my reflexes hitched just enough that I rethought my idea of throwing one of my rods as a covered figure jettisoned out of the vent at the top of the far wall.

<-we have identi->

I slid my weight back for a more defensive stance as a net was thrown from the assassin's left hand. I brought one of my-

<-fied Sportsmaster accompanying C->

-batons up at an angle to intercept, accepting that it would probably be torn from my grip. The odd net impacted as the-

<law toward our locatio->

-assassin's other hand 'so its not Claw,' lashed out in a motion I had seen frustratingly many times, when an overseer lashed the whip down on a plantation skaa's back, and the metal grate-

<-n, so Black Spider may->

-arced out in a path that would take it past me to split the doctor's skull down the middle and the netted webbing yanked one baton which I-

<-be seeking you out.>

-surrender so I could lean back with enhanced speed and strength and deflect the grate with my remaining rod. The-

<Be prepared. >

-impact rang like a gong down the bones of my right arm, and the rope of webbing began to pull the grate back to Black Spider's hand for another attempt. The first round of our engagement had begun and ended faster than he could finish falling to the ground. With his feet as high as my shoulders and falling fast I tapped the largest charge I could manage from my zinc-mind.

'Because plans always go wrong in unexpected ways. Why do I even try anymore?' I grumbled mentally. I'd forgot the distance measurement units Earth used, but Black Spider's feet had dropped from the height of my shoulders above the floor to the height of my elbows. At my mind's enhanced speeds, though, he appeared to be dropping as slowly as a downy feather.

I had gained precious time to revisit my plans. I did so with all due speed.

'I need to stay between him and the doctor. That webbing can keep her from finishing the work even if it doesn't harm her, and he has the grate and my baton as weapons as well. I need to stop him from breaking the computer. I need to stop him from getting closer. I need to stop him from webbing me up to do these other things.'

Black Spider's feet were as high as my navel.

'If I keep distance I won't be able to control his movemen- control! Get close, get a little webbed, and use it to stick the both of us together! That should work, and I can tap weight to grapple and pin him. Steel will let me get close enough without-,'

Black Spider's feet slowly dropped to and below the height of my knees, and I read his intent in the redistribution of his weight and the drawing of his arms.

'-no more time to plan movemovemove!' I tapped speed from my steel-mind and flew forward, entering melee range juist before his toes touched the floor. Tapping strength, my remaining baton swung around and smashed ringingly into the grate he had prepared to throw again. I'd released my tin-mind, so the sound no longer deafened me, and I had enough presence of mind to call "He here!" into my still active radio.

I swung my arms back to my torso and out in an attempt to grapple, and I suffered a moment of horrified realization when my foot squished down. I didn't need to look to know I had trod on a loop of the webbing, sticking it and my foot to the floor. I surged my weight forward to bear Black Spider down to the ground, and he rolled with me, tangling the both of us.

'If he brought a partner, the doctor is going to die,' I knew. All I could focus on was the netting flayed between us, and trying to wrap a struggling, strength-enhanced, reflex-enhanced assassin in it while my strength and weight lasted.

My left ankle twisted viciously as it tried to keep the rest of me in place. Black Spider's left knee and fist pummeled my ribs and stomach to force me off. I grabbed another of his sticky ropes, never mind that my hand would be glued to it, and I did my best to entangle my enemy in it as well.

We had struggled in a writhing manipulation of weight and leverage and limbs for almost two minutes, and no second assassin had entered to end my charge's life. My nose and lip were bleeding, it was more than likely that he had cracked at least one rib despite my wonderfully strike-stopping armor, and in addition to my stuck left foot and guled right hand my left elbow had also been tied to my chest.

'I'm going to have to cut this stuff out of my hair,' I knew, 'but it is totally worth it.' I had attached webbing to Black Spider in several spots, including one loop around his head like a gag, and there was no imaginable way he could escape.

He heaved again and I thrashed back. Agony spiked through my abused ankle, 'Not yet, I don't need to tap my gold-mind yet,' but I managed to thump him with the baton. I didn't have it held in either hand, so I wasn't quite certain how I managed it, but it was incredibly satisfying.

We both slumped in mild exhaustion.

"Almost, almost," and the clicks of rapid typing were the only sounds in the room other than our breathing.

'Heal my ankle? Don't think I need to yet,' I decided, releasing most of my metal-minds. My gold-mind belt plate seemed almost to pulse with its inviting store of revitalization, but, 'Unless someone else comes, I just need to wait out the clock for my reinforcements to arrive.' Over the pounding in my head, I heard a man's voice – Black Spider's – say something.

It was probably better for his health that I didn't process whatever the foul words were.

"Juuuusst," the doctor hissed as the pace of her fingers picked up. Black Spider stilled, and I felt his muscles tense beneath me.

I raised my own weight, strength, speed, and acuity in response.

I was still in no way prepared for his act.

Pain speared my ankle as he grabbed me and twisted, using our bonds as leverage. I tried to tighten the gag around his face, and it took me too long to comprehend that he had slid his skull from his mask.

Glove, pants leg, mask, boot, belt – his clothing all but came apart as he squirmed free from the bonds, leaving me-

"Sent!" the doctor shouted triumphantly.

-tangled and trapped as he lunged to his feet.

'Nonononononononono!' I mentally screamed in frustrated fury, tapping all of the zinc-mind stores remaining I had to find a way out before a good woman ended up dead.

Black Spider seemed almost frozen, perched on three limbs on the floor, slowly inching to his feet just out of my grasp.

'First: free my Rusting foot!' I decided. With an audible *snap* of dislocation, I tore it free of the stuck boot and began to tap my gold-mind. 'Second: get off the floor.' I tapped as deeply into my pewter-mind as was possible, and had to force down my visceral disgust as my body swelled with the influx of raw, physical power.

I leveraged the unbound parts of my body against the floor and shoved. The bindings stretched but did not snap as Black Spider's momentum slowly carried him to his feet and toward his target. However, my raw brute force tore the floor asunder where the webbing had stuck to it. I was hobbled by my ties, but I was able to rise.

'Good enough,' I decided as my bare foot realigned to support my weight and I stood. The doctor was slowly passing through the middle of her turn as she reacted to the sound of Black spider slipping free. The assassin had already passed the halfway point of his lunge at her throat, fingers outstretched to reach her.

I had very little time left before my zinc-mind ran out.

'How do I breaking these rusting bonds?' I snarled mentally as I tried to charge forward through the sludgy air. 'They're resisting all the strength I can bring to bear; I might be able to over whelm their tensile strength with weight, but I'd need a second anchor point, I might break the floor, and I don't have the time! No. No, no, no no nonono! Could I melt them or burn my way free by tapping my brass-mind? Maybe but that would take too long.'

The doctor had seen black spider by now, and the assassin had almost reached her. She could never react in time.

'Wait, heat! Brass-mind! Freeze! I could store my heat, freeze them brittle, and break them! It would work but it would take too long. Store. Wait. Weight. Okay!'

I shunted most of my body-weight into my iron-mind and pushed off the floor with all of my enhanced strength and speed. I lifted off the ground, hurled by my own force at the other two. Black Spider's fingers latched around the doctor's throat and pulled the two of them together.

'Can't tap weight for extra impact or else I'll mess up my aerodynamics and risk hitting the doctor,' I decided as I felt the last of my zinc-mind run out. 'Just have to buy time and try to latch the webbing to his skin again!'

The world accelerated back to its usual pace as Black Spider positioned his arms to snap the doctor's neck.

My skull smashed into the back of his.

Glimmers were sketched across my eyes, but it staggered him enough for her to break free.

I didn't have my weapons, but I had speed, and strength, and weight. I swung a kick at him through my dizziness and Black Spider, curled around his lower belly- 'I think the doctor hit him there. Good for her.' –retreated. The doctor fled in the opposite direction, keeping me between herself and him. 'Except now he's between us and the door.'

I lunged in an attempt to get the doctor a path to escape. Black Spider retreated further toward the exit, flicked his wrist, and threw another net of webbing at my face.

I ducked and skidded, prepared to lunge into another tackle if he approached his target again, when he pulled his rope taught.

The doctor screamed over a crash and I spun. She was trapped, helpless, half-crushed beneath the bookcase her back had been pressed to before the assassin toppled it onto her.

The assassin who, I realized to late, I had turned my back to.

He threw me by the arm through air and into-

Wood splintered and I slammed spine-first in plaster.

-and through the door, into the hall wall.

The last of my gold-mind reserves mended all but a dull, full-body ache. Unfortunately, this left me stuck to the wall by his webbing and perfectly conscious to watch helplessl as he stalked over to the injured and insensate doctor.

Footsteps pattered like rain.

A blur of color.

A rush of wind.

Kid Flash's flying, two-footed kick slammed Black Spider and a second bookcase through the window and out into the night. He spared me a glance and a nod before he knelt to inspect our charge.

I sighed in gratitude, relaxed in relief, and smiled back at my friend.
________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________
AN: Hope everyone enjoyed my first really involved fight scenes. When writing my first draft I originally just had Artemis and M'gann v Sportsmaster, and Renka's fight wouldn't have been seen or discussed until later. I wanted her to lose, ish, but I didn't have a good visualization of how I wanted that to go and was originally just going to have it mentioned in the follow-up (which will be next installment).

But then I got a better idea of how it would go, what would happen to Doctor Roquette, and what a fight against an assassin less nice/reasonable than Cheshire would be like. So I wrote the second half of this literally lat night and earlier today. Hope it worked well.
Float him off the ground!! Make him stick to range.
Good idea, except if Sportsmaster gets bored she's worried he'll blow the bombs for fun.
Interesting fact, those bombs weren't actually high enough yield to collapse the buildings, which is why Sportsmaster is still alive, but M'gann doesn't know that.

Over eight years since I read these books... who the hell is Renka? I thought she was Vin with some upgrades at first, but apparently not.
A random oc or an actual character from the books? I googled her name but nothing came up... except this thread.
Pkease enlighten me, because this uncertainty was really frustrating and ruined my reading experience by a fair by.
Thanks in advance.
She's a total original character, but I've tried to weave her into Mistborn's continuity, which will be explored as we go.
Renka is one of Tindwyl's children. Tindwyl, from The well of Ascension, who was the breeder that Sazed had been in love with. Renka ran away from home to avoid being put in the breeding program as well, and spent the three-four years leading up to Well of Ascension's end In the Farmost, Southern, and Eastern Dominances sliding progressively lower and lower down the slippery slope, thanks no small part to Ruin. She survived to Sazed's ascension as Harmony, was the only living full Feruchemist like Spook was the only Mistborn, but 'died' about three years later so she didn't have a huge historical impact. That's the bare bones of her backstory, at least.

If anyone has ever played the Mistborn RPG and is interested, I've actually statted up her character at a few different points in her life, too.
 
Filtering - part 6
Life Ore Death
Filtering - part 6
* August 10 [Superboy PoV]

Her back hit the floor of the ring hard.

<Winner: Superboy. >
<Artemis: Status: Fail. >

"You know, I'm not used to people with your strength being good at dodges and trips like that," Artemis admitted as I helped her to stand. We weren't exactly putting the new girl through her paces or hazing her, but Black Canary had insisted that we needed to get her used to how we each fought and vice-versa, so Artemis was currently fighting each member of our team 1-on-1 in a row, with matches between other team members for her to watch as she caught her breath in between.

Artemis had beaten Kid Flash; she'd also beaten Aqualad, which was more impressive, but he wasn't using his water-bearers. Then again, Artemis hadn't used her bow either. It was sparring, so no one was fighting at top-form.

I was rather proud of myself, having used a trick Black Canary taught me to take the win with skill instead of brute strength. I could tell that she was proud too, from her smile and the quick hand on my shoulder as we left the ring.

"Not many people with my strength bother. But I'm going to be the best." I couldn't exactly say whether I wanted to be the best weapon, or the best fighter, but I sure wanted to be the best in our fights.

Maybe then, I could prove that I was worth the attention of Earth's best hero.

"We all are," Robin agreed as he and M'gann stepped into the ring.

Robin beating the pants off Artemis had been expected, and he'd hopped into the ring for the first fight boasting that he might as well just get her humiliation over with quickly.

Artemis had put up a respectable fight, but he'd still won in the end.

The big surprise had been when M'gann won, making her body more fluid to lock Artemis in a hold, and I was really proud of her. I'd been letting her try her telepathy on me too, a few times, and while Ferris had patrolled in Metropolis I'd watched over her shape shifting experiments and bandied around some ideas for her. A lot of them she'd brought to her uncle, and he'd reported that most of them were possible with enough practice.

A few, I was proud to be told, he had never before considered. Martian Manhunter had forbidden us from experimenting with those until he'd asked around on Mars or tried them out on his own, but if they panned out… it would probably be awesome.

Artemis's last single match was coming up, and from the way she'd been eyeing Ferris all day, I bet it was one she'd been looking forward to. I'd been eyeing Ferris too, in infrared, and she kept changing temperatures by ten or twenty degrees. I was pretty sure she did that as a sign of a nervous habit or something, but I couldn't get why, when she always complained how her magic ran out quickly, she would use it so randomly.

'Nervous, huh? I wonder if Ferris upset Artemis somehow, or if it's something else. She was the friendliest with Artemis at the start, but she also took Kid Flash's side later… I dunno.'

"Looking forward to your last match? Well, last one-on-one match," I amended. After we finished with those, Black Canary was going to have us do tag-team fights and finish with a free-for-all.

"A bit," Artemis hedged. "Is it true that Ferris beat Sportsmaster before? That she turned him into… whatever that was?"

"Oh, yeah. I didn't see it, because I had my hands full with a Kobra Venom Cultist, but Kid Flash says she basically tackled him, threw one of his Frisbee explosives back in his face, and then threw him onto a burning helicopter."

'That would explain it. She wants to see how Ferris measure up after running into Sportsmaster herself.'

"She beat Sportsmaster, but then Black Spider kicked her ass? Seems a bit…?"

"A bad match-up?" I huffed lightly. 'Sort of nice to know even she can get those.' "Ferris can be really strong, but she knows that she's got some big weaknesses too. In a serious fight, M'gann and I beat her almost all the time. She can't do that much against anyone outside of melee range or someone too tough. So she got caught in the webs and wasted a lot of power just to break free."

"Power? You know, I'm not sure I know what her powers are. What can she do?"

"Ferris uses magic." Artemis glanced at me, then back to Ferris. "She calls it Feruchemy and it makes her stronger and faster and smarter, but it runs out pretty fast, apparently."

"But she fights in melee? Aren't wizards usually fire-and-forget ranged casters?" Artemis asked.

I grunted. "I don't know; Ferris is the only one I've met. But she says her spells only work on her, so…" I shrugged.

"Well," Artemis huffed. In the ring, Robin knocked M'gann onto her back.

"Artemis, Ferris, you're both up!" Black Canary called. Artemis stalked, while Ferris casually strode, and the two ended up facing each other in the ring.

"Hey," Artemis challenged, "I'm pretty sure you threw the fights with Robin and Kaldur before, so do me a favor and take this fight seriously. Use your Feruchemy and hit me with everything you can." I nearly choked.

"""NO!""" we all yelled.

Artemis winced. Ferris looked the rest of us with a frown.

"I know it," she called. "You do not need to scream."

"Um," Artemis began.

Balack Canary explained: "Ferris isn't supposed to ever fight one-hundred percent seriously unless her opponent is invulnerable, like Superman or Wonder Woman. Because Ferris doesn't have a limit on how much her magic-,"

"Feruchemy," Kid Flash called

"-makes her stronger. Just how long she can make it last. When I told her to do the same thing, she knocked me across the room in one hit, and yes I'm still fine and you're still not in trouble for that," she reminded Ferris, who had cringed.

"You're really that strong?" Artemis asked uncertainly.

"Not for very long," Ferris answered.

<Brreeeeeep! >

Ferris slid back half a step as Artemis moved forward, and then snapped up a high kick. Artemis dodged back and tried to get in range with her fists, and Ferris countered by rearranging her feet and grappling.

It took the longest yet of the matches, and while Artemis won in the end, Ferris made her work ten minutes straight for it. Both were laughing by the end.

"Later, would you mind telling me how your spells-,"

"She calls it Feruchemy! It has rules and it makes sense!" Kid Flash reminded us again.

"-work? I'd like to get an idea for what you can really do."

"Ferris, you want a spar with me after all this?" I called. Even if I couldn't fly, I was still tough enough that she couldn't hurt me much even when she brought everything she could to bear. "Artemis, you might just ask Robin, since he'd be better at explaining the things Ferris is willing to talk about." I meant it as much as a dig as a recommendation, and Ferris stuck her tongue out at me before she answered any of us.

"Maybe! I will think," she said.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________​

* August 12 [Wally PoV]

"Thank you for coming, everyone," I began, marching around the room like a general at a war council. "I have called you all here today for a very important reason."

"No doubt, since you didn't even notice that one of the team is missing," Artemis commented. Which, since I'd actually said, 'good, now everyone is here,' after we finished waiting for her to arrive, got on my nerves.

"No, newbie," I condescended, which was my right as her senior to keep her head deflated. "I waited until Renka was away in Metropolis for this on purpose. We can hardly plan Renka's surprise birthday party with her here to overhear us."

"Ooh! Renka's birthday is coming up! She didn't say anything," M'gann considered cutely. She was such a sweet and caring friend. "How old will she be? Is this going to be a sweet sixteen?" There was probably a comment I could have made about how wonderful M'gann was, but Rob opened his mouth first.

"A bit older than that," he laughed. "She's going to be… twenty, right?"

"Yeah, she was a bit uncertain about how the math with our calendar worked out, but she said it was about that age, so we're going to go with twenty. But her age is less important, than the party." I looked around the room. Superboy had soured briefly when he heard that she was in Metropolis, but now he was paying attention again.

'I'll have to remember to get one of these ready for him, too, eventually. Are we going to call his birthday the Fourth of July? Eh, I'll ask him to make sure later. And I definitely need to ask M'gann about how Martians count and celebrate their birthdays. She probably has a sweet sixteen coming up sometime this year.'

"So why is it so important that we throw her a surprise party? Are you sure she even wants one?" Artemis asked.

I grinned, because that was the perfect feed line. "I don't know, for the same reason that it is important." I looked everyone in the eyes in turn. "Renka has never had a birthday party before." Rob and Kaldur nodded, but everyone else looked appropriately surprised. M'gann looked horrified.

"Never? Really? That's horrible! I thought that parties with cake and presents and piñatas were traditional here on… oh," she finished.

"Yeah, 'oh,' is right," I agreed. Artemis glanced around.

"Um, Renka might just be one of those people who doesn't celebrate her birthday," the new girl tried, "or it might be a religious thing." The rest of us shared a look.

"You do not know Renka's backstory, do you?" Kaldur realized.

"I don't really know anyone's backstory," Artemis grumped unfairly, since she'd made sure that none of us knew her backstory either.

"Yeah, well, usually you need to give a little to get a little," I reminded her justly, "but in this case Renka doesn't feel that she has a secret identity, so you get it for free. Renka comes from an alternate dimension."

"Bull," Artemis called immediately. "Robin, what's the real story here, or does she just not want people to know? Because I can totally be good with that, too, I just want to know." Superboy, of all people, chuckled. Well, he snorted and it sounded like a laugh, so close enough.

"Alternate dimensions are the real deal," Robin declared. "The Justice League has had at least run in with a group called the Justice Lords in a dimension where they all went evil, so this isn't the first time it's happened. Have you noticed that her looks are a bit off? She looks half Zambian, half Indian, with some facial traits like her tawny eye-color that just don't fit any ethnicity you can think of? She has gene sequences that are human, but not found in humans on Earth because they never developed or were bred out. She's got antibodies in her blood for diseases not found on Earth, too. And since the League had experience with the Lords, they tested her for the radiation from traveling between dimensions, and that came up positive."

"Hah. There are more amazing things in our world than you would ever believe, rookie," I taunted. Artemis threw a pillow at my face and I ducked. I stood back up, and the pillow plonked against my head in the grip of M'gann's telekinesis.

"Oops! I'm sorry about that Wally. I was just trying to get it back," she giggled, sharing a look with Artemis as the pillow floated over.

'Great. The girls are teaming up on me. At least Renka has my back… usually… unless she thinks it would be funny. Ugh. You know, I'm not sure if this means that Artemis is corrupting M'gann, or if M'gann is just being too nice in humoring the new girl.'

"So. Did they just not celebrate birthdays in this Scadrial place?" Artemis asked. The humor drained out of the room.

"For details, it would probably be best to ask Renka herself," Kaldur suggested.

"Basically, she grew up as a farming villager in a medieval feudal system," Rob summarized. "I'm not quite sure if her powers were a good or bad thing, but her world was a bit of a wreck, and we've been bandying around the possibility that a lot of her off moments are because she has PTSD from running away from home and getting caught up in a bloody civil war when she was about my age."

"Aaaaand we shouldn't tell the new girl anything else that Renka might not want more widely known," I hurriedly intervened, "but the important part is that she has never had a real birthday celebration, or at least not since she was really little. And since M'gann is right like always, and parties with cake and presents and piñatas are a must here, we should totally throw her a surprise party to celebrate her first birthday here on Earth! And I've been getting party streamers and stuff on the sly, but we have less that a week to finish getting this set up because the big day is August sixteenth."

"Three days?" Artemis asked. "Geez, way to give a girl short notice for present shopping."

"Four days, oh mathematically challenged one," I corrected.

"No, three, because I'm not going shopping on the day itself when we'll be setting this all up," Artemis retorted.

"No, it's still four, because you've got the rest of today, unless you plan on doing nothing all the time?" 'Hah!'

"It's not nearly a whole day, and some of us have plans and practice!"

"Is it really important?" Superboy snapped.

"No, they just like arguing," Rob answered.

""We do not!"" Artemis and I shared a shocked look when we realized we'd said that together, then we opened our mouths, and I at least stopped because I certainly didn't want to do that again either. She obviously just recognized my good idea and copied me.

I turned back to the gang, ignored whatever stupid comments Robin was making about old, married couples, and got back to the issue.

"So, we have four days to plan, arrange, and set up Renka's surprise party. I've already got streamers and decorations, and I know what I'm getting for her presents, so does anyone else want to bring anything up?" Aqualad raised one hand.

"I am not sure… Renka has been uncomfortable with me recently, due to a mistake I made during our mission with Professor Ivo's Amazo," he admitted. "If I can overcome this discomfort, then my idea for her present should also keep her out of the mountain for most of the day, allowing time for set up and decorations."

"Oh, Aqualad is making a move," Robin crowed, and he ducked my attempt to cuff him about the head.

"My feelings for… there is someone in Atlantis who I am interested in, and I will say no more on that subject," he said. "However, Renka has repeatedly expressed interest in learning about Atlantis. Its history, its magic, and its culture have all drawn her attention, as well as the unique fact that it is beneath the sea. I will need to speak with My King, and to The Batman," and yes, I could totally hear the capital letters, "but I should be able to arrange a visit to tour Poseidonis by the sixteenth, which would keep her busy for most of the day."

"Sounds like a plan," I agreed. "M'gann, do you want to try cooking a birthday cake?"

"Oh, yes!" she agreed. "But, uh, I will need someone to give me a recipe for it."

"If you can't I can get someone else to try, and I can definitely get you the recipe," Rob volunteered.

'Oh heck. A choice between Miss M's cooking or Alfred's, and I have no idea who to support.'

"Is there anything else, or do we just need to find presents?" Superboy asked.

"Just presents. I'm getting her a bunch of those Discover Encyclopedias with colorful pictures and easier words, so no one had better steal that idea," I announced.

"You mean like those books that are still on your shelf from when you were in third grade? You're giving her second-hand presents meant for elementary school students? Smooth, dude," Robin mocked, and Artemis sniggered.

"Hey! They are great encyclopedias, and my mom has been talking about donating them to a charity. Not that a charity wouldn't be good, but I think Renka will appreciate all of them more. Besides, I don't have all of the issues, so I'm still going to be buying a few new ones I never had but I think she would like," I finished in a huff.

"Um, I don't really know her that well. What would she like? Jewelry? I noticed she has that earring and a bunch of studs, finger rings, and bangles that she wears." At least Artemis had the right ideas about teammate appreciation.

"Not as good an idea," Kaldur suggested.

"Yeah, Renka uses her jewelry to cast spells-,"

"Feruchemy!" I reminded them all again. 'Would it kill them to respect her skills enough to use the right name? It's not like we call M'gann's telepathy "thinking out loud" or Superboy's super hearing, "extreme eavesdropping".'

"-but she needs the metals to be very specific mixes to work as metal-minds," Rob explained. "I can get you the list of metals and alloys that she and Green Lantern gave to Batman, but you'd have trouble buying anything that had the right mix. Books or DVDs are probably the best choice, since you can't have missed her devouring Wally's borrowed books or the movies she watches with M'gann."

"We watch all kinds of things," M'gann agreed. "I like learning more about human cultures, and she likes learning about how the English language is used in them too. I'll probably get her some movies too."

"Right. Books and movies. I guess she isn't a big clothes person?" Artemis hazarded. I snorted.

"Nope. When she first moved into the mountain from wherever they had her rooming before, I needed to go back on a second trip with her because she forgot her clothes in her previous room, since she just didn't care about them." I decided to take pity, and added, "She's learning to cook, so some simple cookbooks could work."

"Right. Thanks," Artemis said distractedly.

"Eh. I'll just look around the Happy Harbor stores and see if I find anything," Superboy decided.

"Oh! Can I come? If it's not too much trouble," M'gann asked. "I wouldn't mind looking to see if something else seemed right for her."

"Hey, you're always welcome to go shopping with me, Miss Martian. I know all sorts of cool little stores," I volunteered, "and I can find more in a flash." Superboy shot me a look, and Robin sniggered.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
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AN: Hey everyone. Enjoy.
 
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Inspire, Respire, Expire ___ Episode 06
Life Ore Death
Inspire, Respire, Expire - part 1
* August 14 [Superman PoV]

"I need to speak with Ferris," Batman announced, stepping out of the shadows near Metropolis's Zeta Tube. I frowned.

We'd had an uneventful afternoon, and had spent most of our rounds discussing philosophy, legality, and Ferris's frustration that several of the villains she'd captured had broken out of prison.

She'd struck me as a little too supportive of the death penalty, but when I brought up rehabilitation programs she'd brightened up and affirmed her preference that villains mend their ways rather than be killed. Further discussion had not swayed her from her stance, but she expressed the view that the punishment of villains was supposed to stop them from hurting people, in her mind. If they could be convinced to do good, and rehabilitated, that was even better.

I couldn't say I disagreed.

She'd further admitted that she would be a hypocrite otherwise, as it was what she was trying to do herself. I'd pressed a little more about what she had done in her past, and she answered that she had told it to their ruler afterward, and he had forgiven her and helped her work to fix their world and people as much as she could.

Renka had also repeated something she'd said to Batman: that killing evil people should be done to stop them from hurting people. I argued that there were better ways, and she agreed that those ways should be used first, but countered that defeating and imprisoning Sportsmaster had not stopped him from escaping and hurting more people.

I'd asked her why she felt she had the right to make that decision, and she stated that she did not, and would not try to kill him if she could avoid it. But she wanted to better understand our laws and courts so that she could understand how people who were supposed to make those decisions made those decisions.

I did not and could not support the implications that she would make choices like that after she had learned, but with her recent revelation of computer capability, I gave her the web address of a site that was, essentially, a For Dummies book about the subject of legal proceedings.

'And now this.'

"What is this about, Batman?" I asked. "I haven't heard of Ferris getting into any fights recently, and she's been with me this afternoon."

"You can come along, but I need to run a few medical tests," he answered.

"Am I sick?" she asked.

"No, that is not what I'm worried about." The Zeta Tube hummed into activity. "If you would follow me to a more secure location." We walked through and ended up at an isolated branch of STAR Labs. I considered asking him why not Wayne Tech, but Renka didn't know Batman's identity, obviously.

"What is this all about?" I asked instead.

"Just a moment. Ferris, if you would step onto this platform." She hummed and did so. "Thank you. Do not move while it is active."

"Well?" I asked.

"One of my safe-houses in Gotham suffered an almost untraceable break-in last week," Bruce answered as the machine hummed and sensory wands rotated around Renka.

"And you believe she was responsible? I don't believe Ferris has even been to Gotham in her life!" 'He really is taking her paranoia too far when he suspects her of things that his tests said she couldn't be involved with.'

"I wish to double-check a hypothesis and eliminate her as a suspect before I do anything else," Bruce retorted coldly. "Truth be told, I hope that she is involved, knowingly or not. It would be significantly better than the other possibilities."

"What other possibilities?"

Bruce grimaced behind his cowl. "The safe house had very trace signs of activity and use, but none of the security systems that monitored for break-in attempts were triggered, and I could not find how the culprits entered or left. It was a low-use site, and did not have access to sensitive information, but the event was disturbing. When I had Jordan scan it earlier today, he turned up very small traces of a unique form of radiation."

"Dimension-jumpers?" I worried, remembering our difficult and disturbing encounter with the Justice Lords several years ago.

"Yes. I am checking both to see if the radiation on Ferris has continued to decay at a stable rate, without spikes from re-use, and to see if the dimensional signatures are from the same origin. If they are not…" he trailed off.

"Do you know if they will be the same Justice Lords, or from another alternate dimension?" I asked.

"I do not. But it may be alternate members of the Team, instead. The retrievable recordings suggest that the ones who broke in were not adults."

"Alternate dimensional teenage rebellion and hijinks?" I suggested. I rolled the odd turn of phrase around my head.

"That would be the best scenario. Until we find further information, I have to assume that this may be a prelude to larger-scale action. You can step down now," he added to Renka.

"What next?"

"That was the only important thing. You are free to return to the mountain. The dimensional radiation is receding at the expected rate." She raised an eyebrow.

"I am happy to hear that. You can ask me for help," she added.

<Recognized: Ferris, B06 >

"I think she was hinting about something there, Bats," I suggested. 'Not that I know what, but they've presumably had talks I don't know about.'

"I'm not the only one she's hinted to. Or was I wrong, and she hasn't been suggesting that you spend time with Superboy?" I frowned.

"She mentioned it, but then she had the good manners to not push me when I said I didn't want to discuss it with her."

"But have you thought about it? The boy needs you in his life."

'Everyone always needs Superman. How many people ever need Clark Kent, or Kal-El? Am I never allowed to need things or people or time?'

"No, he doesn't. In fact, what he needs is not me in his life! He needs to not have people reminding him every day of what he is not, and weighing him down with burdens that he can't carry! He has people in his life already."

"None of them are his-,"

"If you say what I think you are going to say I'm leaving," I warned him, hammering down a lid on my frustration. 'Bruce always wanted to be a father, and he chose to bring a child into his life. Why must he project onto me?' My annoying friend remained silent. "Please keep us all updated on the Justice Lords possibilities," I finished.

"There was one other thing," he added as I moved to the Zeta Tube.

'There's always just one more thing. It's never enough.'

"What?" I asked.

"Ferris will be celebrating her birthday on the sixteenth. For Aqualad's present, he has arranged with Orin and I to offer her a civilian tour-day in Atlantis. If she is amenable, they expect to return and begin her surprise party between five and six. If she declines the offer, you may be recruited to keep her occupied during the party set-up. Either way, you are invited to join, as her sponsor on the team."

This was substantially more cheerful than the other subjects of the afternoon, enough that I could almost feel my mood lifting, and I paused to consider a few present ideas. 'Possibly some books about famous court cases? She also expressed an interest in psychology, and in the history of superheroes.'

"Are you planning to attend?" I asked.

"No. There is distance between us which she appreciates, and we both intend to maintain this state of affairs at the moment." I gave him a look as odd as that statement deserved. "Diana and John Stewart both said they would try to find time to attend. Of course, you would be in the mountain with all of her team as well, for however long you attend," Bruce emphasized. I narrowed my eyes, but he didn't pursue the subject.

"Do you have any ideas about presents?" I asked instead. "I had a few books ideas, but they might be beyond her unaided English skills at the moment."

"Kid Flash is giving her encyclopedias, and Miss Martian has expressed interest in DVDs. Superboy," I held back a twitch, "is so far undecided, but Robin is giving her a book of famous quotes, and a set of jewelry-smith's tools to repair or alter her own metal-minds. Aqualad is providing the tour, and will no doubt fund the purchase of a souvenir. Diana has not discussed the subject with me, but as I doubt she would make efforts toward citizenship papers without greater consultation, she will probably offer either more militant gifts, or money. I would also recommend cash as a good gift."

"It seems rather impersonal," I objected. Bruce raised an eyebrow at me behind the cowl.

"On the contrary: Ferris has no income, disposable or otherwise. She has a card to use for purchases, but the League provided it, and she has only used it on trips grocery shopping for the team, barring two small purchases. Money that she can, may, and is supposed to spend on frivolous, personal items… I do not believe she has possessed much in her life."

I frowned. "You may have a point there. And she's never had any graduations where she would receive it, so a birthday is right."

"Or a bat-mitzvah, if Harmonism has an equivalent to that tradition," Bruce added. I chuckled in agreement and resolved to ask.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________​

* August 14 [Renka PoV]

I flinched when Kaldur called out, "Renka, I would like to speak with you a moment," after dinner.

"Here?" I asked, twitching.

'Aqualad probably does not deserve this. He has known I am a fratricide for ten days now, and he has neither told the League nor gone out of his way to shun me. But that is also disturbing. He is the only one who knows this, and I cannot imagine why it would not be bad, and I do not want… maybe he has a memory spell he used to forget? No, or he would have wondered why I have been flinching these past few days.'

"Wherever you feel comfortable," he offered. I huffed a sigh.

"My room," I invited, leading the way. We entered, I locked the door from the inside, and I did my best not to curl up into a ball of self-consciousness. Sitting would have been counter to that, so I did not make myself comfortable. "So," I murmured, "I think I know what this is about. Our talk on the motorcycle." Kaldur grimaced.

"I am willing to discuss that if you desire, but if the League knows and still allow you on the team," I twitched at the emotional barb, "then I can take it on faith that you had your reasons. I am sorry for the way I - however inadvertently - violated your trust, and will not speak of it if you do not wish to do so." I eyed him carefully.

'So he does not know that they do not know,' I realized. 'I could leave him like this… until it comes up and he asks the Batman or the Superman and those lies all come tumbling out. Rusts. Might as well take care of this now. The worst that can happen is that they tell me to leave.'

"The League does not know," I snapped. "The Superman does not know. The Wonder Woman does not know. The Batman does not know. I do not want them to know. You are the only person here who knows I murdered my eldest brother."

Silence hung between us.

"Ah," he said softly. "I… would not have guessed." He wet his lips. "Renka, I know that people can make horrible mistakes, and that people change, and that families are not always perfect-,"

'My murder was not Marosh's fault!!!' I snapped forward and glared at him in furious frustration. Appropriately, he recoiled, and I bit back my most desired venomous responses.

"My brother should not have died," I hissed clinically. I would never let it be tolerated that Marosh be remembered as a criminal or villain. Kaldur raised his hands in a gesture to pacify.

"I did not say he deserved to die. I will not force you to discuss it. I do know that speaking about an old pain may 'bleed poison from the wound' and let it begin to heal, but if you spoke with other people in the past, then I will not force you to speak here," he assured me. I considered it.

"What did you wanted to speak about?" I asked instead.

"You have previously expressed interest in learning about and visiting Atlantis." I pricked up my ears. "The Batman and My King have arranged for that to be possible in two days. The day after tomorrow, if you desire."

"How would I breathe?" I asked. 'I've had more luck with tapping speed to store breath, but it's not a perfect system and I can't grow gills either. Can I?'

"Our magic includes spells and enchantments that would let you temporarily breathe underwater. The Batman has also been willing to provide protective clothing and technology to also help you breathe," he answered. I considered it slowly, enthused by… wait…

"How would I see?"

"While it stings for a few moments, humans can safely open their eyes under the water," he informed me. "Also, there are goggles that can protect your eyes. I can show you how everything would function tomorrow, if you are interested?"

"Very interested much, thank you," I assured him. I considered if I wanted to reach out and touch him, as physical contact was usually a reassuring act. Instead, I then considered what we had discussed before.

'I will never forgive myself for my brother's death, but I have had many people remind me that I did not want him to die, even if I wanted him to not stop me. I was a young, frightened, stupid child. I know what I would say to someone else in my position.'

"My eldest brother's name was Marosh," I told him. "He was the first child of my mother, Tindwyl, and he helped raise all of us as well. He was a farmer." I drew in a deep breath. 'Should I discuss the breeding program? It would explain… no, I do not want excuses. I will let him assume the worst if he wants, and then correct him later if I need to.'

"You do n-,"

"No, but I should," I told Kaldur. "I have told people at home, including my other brothers and sisters. I can tell you, please do not tell anyone else."

"I promise," he agreed. I smiled sickly and leaned back against the wall. I desperately wanted to fidget and distract, but I forcefully stilled my hands and met his eyes.

"Several of my brothers, but not Marosh, were trained at a young age as stewards for nobles. Butlers. One of my elder sisters, and two of the younger, would become handmaidens. I would have done that, or farm, or weave, or… many things. But two of my others sisters were taken for… other reasons." I cut off Kaldur. "I do not wish to say specifics. But I saw my sister Llewyndru taken for this when I was twelve, and heard that I would do the same thing when I was more old. Older.

"I was scared, and I decided to run away instead. It was… selfish." I caught myself agitatedly drumming my fingers in a rhythm. "If a skaa ran away, on a farm, his family was often killed by the nobles. We were under the church, not the nobles, but I did not know that my family would all be safe. If I was caught I would utterly die. But I was slow, for months, because I had years. I went more into forests to learn to hunt and find root plants. I looked at maps. I ran around carrying things to train. I stole metal for metal-minds and practiced… that was very dangerous. If the Steel Ministry knew I was a Feruchemist, and that my mother was as well, my family would all be killed."

"That is horrible," Kaldur told me. He moved to touch me, and I shifted my weight, but he paused before I felt the need to pull away. "I am sorry that your childhood was so hard."

"Hard? Yes, but I made it hard also. I had good family, food, home…" I reminisced over the early days when I was happy, energetic, and, once upon a time, innocent. "When I was ready, I ran away. Only, my brother found me at the start. He did not want me to run, and tried to stop me. Threatened to call the guards. Not tell them I run away from Terris, no, but from our home. Say that I planned to run live with neighbors or cousins in another village…"

"He wanted you to… did he not care about- about the... the fate you were afraid of?"

"He cared. He hated my fate. He loved me, and thought it was a horrible thing. But it was a horrible thing I would survive," I emphasized, and added in the hint, "just like our mother and sisters survived. He wanted me alive, and knew that if I ran, I would die horribly. 'You may always hope that life will improve, but death cannot'," I quoted.

"We have a similar saying: where there is life, there is hope."

"I like that," I decided, and exhaled. "So. My brother Marosh found me as I ran into the forest. He was a man mostly grown, and I was twelve, but I was a Feruchemist and he was not. I had never fought, but when he tried to grab me…" I trailed off, and pictures of my angry hate and terror and the feeling of power as I struck returned to me.

"You fought him?" Kaldur assumed.

"Fight?" I laughed. "Like I fought Black Canary. I tapped pewter and hit him in the head. It was my first fight, the first time used all that strength. His head was like an egg. I got yolk all on my hand." My fingers twitched as I remembered the rush of power, followed by the warm, sticky goop of brains and the few shards of bone. The hard-becoming-softness of the impact.

Neither of us said anything more at first.

"You were a child, untrained in fighting. That is why we train," Kaldur told me. He thought for a moment. "It is both to fight and hurt criminals, but also to only hurt them, to not kill people by mistake. You cannot be held responsible."

"You tell me nothing other people have not said," I diagnosed. 'On good days I can even bring myself to believe it.' "I killed my brother. I wanted him hurt and stopped, even if I did not think to want him dead. Then the noise when I screamed called two guards, and I killed them as well and continued to run. For all I knew, the next morning the church could have killed my family, but I did not know. Instead, I ran from guards, from soldiers, from priests, and from monsters. More things happened," 'including another few scores of murders,' "but that is the beginning," I told him heavily. "What do you think?"

"I think… it is a sad story, and I am honored that you have trusted me with this," he said solemnly. I smiled slightly. It did not look like he despised me. "You are not the first person to kill by mistake, because of fear. Especially with powers you do not understand. Know that you still have my support."

"Thank you," I told him evenly. I did not have any more tears to shed about this, and I wished I did, so instead I moved with my arms. It was not a tight hug, nor a long one, but we stepped apart with a nod.

'I do not think his good thoughts will last, if he knew how many people I killed, and for what reasons, in the years after I first ran away, but for now… right now, this is good. Someone has begun to understand, be it for better or for worse.'

"Just to be clear, tomorrow I will show you the ways you can breathe underwater, and the next day you will come with me to Atlantis?" he repeated.

"If I like the things to breathe, yes." I frowned, considering. "Is it safe to bring my metal-minds?"

"It should be. We have spells to prevent rust, and one day should not be long enough for damage to accrue. Occur. For damage to happen," he clarified. I nodded.

"Then if you will excuse me, I wish to meditate." I'd had some luck with using speed to increase the way I stored breath, and if I was going to be under the water, then I wanted as large a cadmium-mind or three as I could store for extra breath. Kaldur nodded and left.
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AN: Next episode, Renka travels to Atlantis. And meets some interesting people.
 
Inspire, Respire, Expire - part 2
Life Ore Death
Inspire, Respire, Expire - part 2
* August 16 [Kaldur PoV]

<Recognized: Aqualad, B02 >

I inhaled, feeling and reveling in the change as the ocean water fed and nourished me. The surface world was not so uncomfortable, but Atlantis was home.

A familiar man hung in the water near the gate.

"Greetings, young Kaldur'ahm."

"Greetings, Prince Orm," I replied respectfully, swimming forward to offer a salute.

<Recognized: Ferris, B06 >

"And this is our visitor, I assume. A member of your team on the surface world. Greetings, fair Ferris," he called.

"Indeed, although I must apologize, as Ferris does not speak our tongue." I turned back to Ferris- 'Should I call her Renka? She has never expressed a strong opinion either way. Ferris for today, then.' –and swam back to steady her. Ferris inhaled and exhaled very carefully, smiling as her materials continued to function properly.

She wore her same swimsuit, but under it she wore a jacket of enchanted flounder scales against her skin, and a separate, redundant choker of enchanted eel skin. Both let her comfortably breathe underwater, and while the spells could wear out within a week, they were more than sufficient for a one-day visit. A pouch held several compressed air canisters and re-breathers that The Batman had provided, just in case.

"Ferris, welcome to Atlantis," I told her in English. She stared at me for a moment, but our trials yesterday had ensured that the spells allowed her to speak and listen underwater as well. "The man before us is Prince Orm, brother King Orin. He offers you greetings."

"Ah," she murmured. Ferris offered a bow deeper than was formally required.

"I understand you only intend to stay for one day?" Prince Orm clarified. "I do not believe any particular events or celebrations are planned for today, but you have the run of the city. I hope you enjoy your visit." He swam away, no doubt bound to attend other, more important matters of state.

"May I show you the city? A museum? The school of sorcery?" I suggested. Ferris perked up.

"A magic school?" she asked carefully. I nodded. "Museum, then please magic?"

"Certainly? Can you swim on your own?" The city wards included enchantments that slowed some of the erosive effects of seawater, but I had been a little alarmed when had Ferris arrived that morning with more metal-minds than I had seen her wear before. I'd explained that the weight would pull her down, but she had stated that she wished to try.

"I think I can swim," she answered. Despite our practices, she was not a skilled swimmer even in comparison to the other members of our team, much less compared to Atlanteans who had been born in the water.

It was a little frustrating to keep pace beside her, but I had decided to view it as an exercise in patience. We slowly traveled the halls until we exited, and I was privileged to watch her face light up with honest shock and amazement.

"It is beautiful, yes?"

"Yes," she agreed, nodding slowly while her eyes jumped from building to building and attempted to drink in every sight there was. Atlantis was spread out in an array of smooth domes, elegant arches, proud towers, and all the colors of a coral reef. We could see people of every type swim along on their business, and while Ferris's eyes were drawn to the strange sights of a family of octopus-graft Atlanteans, and a group of the more stereotypical merpeople, she also watched a family with new babies, a group of workers repairing a building, and a field trip of young children who were approaching the palace.

"You said there were people like fish, but I did not expect," she mused.

"Perhaps I should have been more specific, but I hope you will not judge them."

"People think like people, feel like people," she answered calmly.

'That one sentence is a refutation of the entire pureblood agenda. I believe I may borrow it, if I can find an elegant enough translation from English,' I decided.

"Our royal museum is this way," I told her. I guessed that Ferris tapped into her strength and speed as I led, but whether or not she did she kept pace well enough.
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* August 16 [Ferris PoV]

I was not quite sure whether Kaldur knew or remembered that tapping connection would let me understand any pre-dominant language, and not only English, but I felt no need to correct him. Speaking to me in English when I could not cheat with duralumin was excellent practice, and I was never eager to waste a metal-mind's store.

'At best, I can make it into a prank. At worst, it is a mild inconvenience, or I can pretend it was a miscommunication,' I reminded myself.

Swimming was… difficult. Even after practice yesterday, the motions to grasp at the water and properly kick my legs did not come easily to me. My fingers occasionally slipped apart, and at times I lost distance when I brought my arms around for the next stroke, or veered in the wrong direction. When I had tried kicking, I repeatedly made motions like stomping before I got the hang of it, and it was hard to find a good balance between power and endurance. I ended up tapping into small touches of strength and speed to keep from slowing Kaldur down too much.

I could breathe, but I always felt to afraid to breathe deeply, for fear that suddenly water would be in my lungs. Truthfully, water was in my lungs, but it felt the same as air to me, and I could breathe it safely. There was a taste in my mouth that never went away, but it was not wholly a bad experience, and I was aware in a way I had never been of the pressure the water put on my skin.

Second to its diverse colors, the thing that struck me most about Atlantis was the additional space. Most cities are ultimately flat: they may have towers or rolling hills, but in essence everything important is on the ground, most especially the people. In Atlantis, there were roads, but when Kaldur and I traveled we swam up in an arc, over the roofs of many houses and stores, among fish and the stronger Atlanteans, while the eldest and youngest opted to stay nearer to the ocean floor.

The Poseidonis Royal History Museum was an awe-inspiring building. At its base was elegant marble in steps and pillars, which Kaldur informed me was the same as it had been prior to the sinking, when Atlantis still remained on the surface over two thousand years ago. Their home was older than the era-ending divine struggle that had wracked Scadrial, and more than the water, I felt the weight of that history press down like a comforting, if stifling blanket.

It still had steps and a floor like the Metropolis and Central City Museums I had been to, which was contrary to what I had expected, but the walls and ceiling fit my expectations with plaques and exhibits that would have been unreachable to anyone bound to the ground.

It was here that I finally reminded Kaldur that I was passable at Atlantean language if I tapped connection from my duralumin-minds, so that he didn't feel the need to clunkily translate everything I was interested in reading. It got an amusing stutter out of him, and I made a show of lamenting that I had missed the chance to play some wonderful prank on him.

He suggested that he could forget to mention my ability if we spoke to anyone who thought they could get away with bad-mouthing an ignorant surface-worlder.

"Do you really call them that?" I asked as we moved from the room that covered the Ekkritovalean Civil War to one about Atlantis's connections with the surface world, particularly with old-but-not-forgotten Themyscira. "I was under the impression that you would refer to people by the country they lived in."

'That is still a new idea to me. I mean, I guess Dominances and individually large cities were a touch similar, and I know from reading histories that there were plenty of different kingdoms before the False Ascension.'

"I love my home, but we are very… insular," Kaldur answered. "M'gann mentioned that there are diverse territories and unique local cultures on Mars, but you and I would not distinguish between two Martians from two different locales."

"I absolutely would, if they told me there was a difference to distinguish between," I countered. Kaldur chuckled.

"Yes, but so few surface-dwellers come to Atlantis, and so few of us go above, that there are almost no meetings where such discussion may occur. That is why King Orin joined the Justice League as the Aquaman: to foster stronger ties between Atlantis and the rest of Earth."

"And Mars?" I pointed out.

"And even Scadrial," he teased, which earned him a laugh.

We ate lunch at the Museum restaurant, and I took his recommendation of a seaweed salad and an array of fish flesh. It was surprisingly good; I had expected to eat it politely for the nutrition, but I decided at the end that I would like to have it again sometime.

One thing that caught my interest was the way some people spoke to Kaldur. It seemed that he was a public figure and people treated him with respect when they recognized him, especially the museum workers.

'Oh, yes, the Aquaman is also the King of Atlantis, and Kaldur is his apprentice. I suppose people would know him.'

"If you are the Aquaman's apprentice, are you also King Orin's apprentice? At being King," I clarified. Kaldur spluttered.

"What? No. No, there are no circumstances that would see me ever on the throne of Atlantis," he assured me with some relief. "When My King cannot fulfill his duties, it falls to his brother, Prince Orm, with input from Queen Mera. After them there are number of councilors and generals, distant noble relatives, the lesser Kings of individual city-states, and once given enough time the Atlantean Senate would simply elect a new King."

"You sound relieved."

"Fighting evil to make the world a better place is something that feels right to me, in my heart. There are other ways to improve the world, through charity work, and science, and politics, but I am less adept at them. Leadership is… amenable to me when I am working with our Team, but the actual work of ruling is something I have no taste for."

"Show me which weeds to pluck, and I will leave the growing to someone more adept," I quoted.

"Did you make that up?"

"It is a repurposed saying from before the Catacendre. It was recently changed after growing things became a more enjoyable activity, instead of slave work."

"Ah," he said softly. We moved to a room that outlined the building of more undersea cities, those that had not been among the original city-states of Atlantis, and then Kaldur led me on a detour to another room. "I wish you to see this."

I flinched when I saw some of the displays and exhibits in this new hall.

The History of Slavery and its Abolition in Atlantis

"How very interesting," I stated flatly, my eyes not quite shying away from the fishy men in chains. In one corner, done in white marble, an angular group of muscled, predatory Atlanteans (of the shark-type schema, he would inform me) bore down on a chained and screaming human-type Atlantean with spears, daggers, and teeth.

On the ceiling was tiled out a mosaic of a slave auction where were sold miserable, scarred, and naked prisoners; illustrations of capturing of the merchandise in attacks on other city-states, and of the punishments that enemy soldiers and disobedient thralls could suffer, were scattered about the edges where the mosaic neared the walls.

Statues of human-type Atlanteans stood in a row to brandish whips, swords, collars, and chains. They faced a display on the opposite wall where less humanoid Atlanteans fought in gladiatorial combat for their entertainment, as had once been popular in the Eastern Dominance.

I could not cry, but I wished I were more disgusted than I felt.

'Jaded,' I admitted dully. 'After everything I've seen and heard, I'm uncomfortable, but not surprised or shocked. I just don't have it in me anymore, do I? I'm used to this type of brutality from governments. I wish I could be more disappointed.'

"I wanted you to see this, because it is ugly, brutal, horrible, and disgusting," Kaldur told me. I looked at him for a moment, before I looked back through the room and reluctantly accepted that none of it viscerally repulsed me. I had to make the decision to find it anything more than wasteful or distasteful. "This is my history, and that of my people," he continued softly, "and I am not proud of it. But I am proud that we have learned from these mistakes, and I will fight these wrongs wherever I see them, now that I know what they look like and may recognize them."

"Yes," I huffed. "I understand that."

We stood in the doorway for a few minutes, in companionable silence, and then I swam away to review the new material. It wasn't even emotional masochism – I largely wanted to see what parts may have been different, better, or even worse than what I had experienced in Scadrial.

Learning what a culture looked like after it had successfully set aside that brutal history… seeing that such things would never be forgotten, but that they also never needed to define….

I became confident that my people on Scadrial would grow as well.

Even if that growth continued without me.

"Thank you," I told him when we met again at the doorway.

"Would you like a souvenir from the store?" he offered.

"A souvenir… like what Wa- Kid Flash takes from our missions?" I asked.

A robotic eye . . . an empty Kobra Venom injector . . . the Medusa Mask . . . a broken MONQI head . . . an arrow that may have belonged to Artemis (I was not sure where that came from) . . . the assassin Cheshire's mask . . .

Kid Flash had assembled a shelf of things he brought back as trophies from our missions.

"We have not been on a mission or defeated an enemy," I pointed out. 'Or do "souvenir" and "trophy" have other meanings?'

"Souvenir, in this case, is not a trophy, but an object with which we remember. It is something we can point to and say, 'I got this souvenir when ex and why happened at zee location.' So, 'I got this souvenir from the museum when I first went to Atlantis, and these are the exhibits it reminds me of and let me tell you why I remember those.'"

'I will need to ask more about what ex, why and… oh, he was using X, Y, and Z to represent things in general. I get it now.'

"I do not have any money," I admitted awkwardly. Kaldur had already bought me lunch of his own accord, and this was a private personal journey where I did not bring the League payment-usage debit-card. 'I begin to see why money from a secret identity may be desirable.' I had thought as long as I did important things I would not be terribly interested in material belongings outside of what I needed for the job, but now I began to remember that I might wish to buy objects for other people as well.

"It is my treat; I possess both private funds and a stipend from my studies under My King." I opened my mouth to object and Kaldur smiled threateningly. "If you do not wish to select something, I suppose I may always buy you a gift of my own choice, which may be far more expensive, and not to your taste, and you cannot refuse it for the sake of good manners."

I rolled my eyes, huffed affectionately, and thanked him… after I knuckled him in the shoulder, of course.

The gift store was an array of colors. In Atlantean style, there were bins and shelves and displays of water-proof posters, statuettes, books, photographs, decorated stones, and devices along all the walls, floor, and ceiling. Deciding to tweak him a little, I grabbed what was probably the most expensive thing present, a gaudy miniature of the museum in false-gold (I can tell at a touch if a metal is Feruchemically useable), and innocently suggested, "Can I have two?"

Either he was storm-serious about buying whatever I wanted, or more likely my innocent act was too overdone, because he didn't blink at agreeing to my request.

I pouted, stuck out my tongue, and put it back to look for a genuine keepsake.

I ended up torn between two options: the first was a surprisingly cheap plate of delicately carved stone engraved with sigils and images of Atlantean glory; my second choice was a small standing plaque that held a map of the Atlantean city-states.

There were books and posters that I would have picked before either of those, but I wouldn't be able to read the books outside of Atlantis because they were in their language (Atlantean Greek, he told me), and Kaldur had sadly informed me that the poster were made for underwater display and would degrade in the open air of my room.

I decided on the map, because I didn't want to carry the placard for the rest of that day, and on impulse grabbed the museum guidebook with the most pictures available.

Aqualad paid for both and bought a few more things that I didn't have a chance to see. One of them he showed me – a set of decorative stones with glowing enchantments 'and I really want to learn more about Atlantean magic now.' – and the others he deferred as secrets, for later revelation.

I acceded with (what I hoped was) good grace, and he next took me to the Royal Atlantean Academy of Sorcery.

"How do Atlantean… no, pardon, how does Atlantean magic work?" I questioned correctly. We were using English again to spare my duralumin-minds. I had stored plenty to spare – I may or may not have abused a bronze-mind to do an all night meditation session the night after he made me this offer – but conservation was always a watchword with me.

"In general," he mused, "our magic is predominantly focused on water and the things that live in it. War, pragmatism, and our environment have resulted in well-over half of all Atlanteans being naturally of the water element, and there exist many common spells of the other elements to take advantage of the water abundant in our home."

'Elements? I know the word can be used to mean the pieces of a whole, or conceptual ingredients, such as the elements of a plan being the pieces and steps needed to enact it…! Chemistry, yes! And they also refer to collections of type-pure construct particles as the Periodic Table of Elements! Except… wait… is water an element? I understood it only very roughly, remembering from my time in the Pool, but I had thought water was made of a two-to-one, small-small-larger arrangement of two of the ingredients in breathable air. I believe I have come across a new usage of the word. How confusing,' I lamented.

"Ferris?" Kaldur asked, and I jolted back to attention. We had risen even higher, trying to get above the buildings for a better view as we traveled, since the Academy of Sorcery was on the far side of a different quadrant. He probably expected a response. 'Did he say anything else? No, no, I wasn't thinking for very long.'

"Two things," I told him. "First an experiment, then a question." Swimming had been weighing me down a bit. I wore nothing easy to lose, but I still had on multiple anklets and bracelets of solid metal. I also wore a ring on every finger, and had even threaded more rings through locks of my hair before I put it up in today's ponytail. It would probably be a pain to undo, but I had felt very insecure about venturing into a world (city, place, whatever,) where, without help from workings that I could not perform or maintain, much less understand, even trying to breathe would kill me.

"An experiment?" he asked cautiously.

"I have an experiment about how my iron-minds store and tap weight. I do not think it is gravity that makes me heavier, because it is not gravity that makes iron weigh more than copper."

"No, it is molecular density," Aqualad agreed.

"So," I said, and stored away half my weight. Instantly I shot straight up in the water, feeling it press more firmly on my skin. I stopped when I was third of the distance below the ward dome around Atlantis, and, restored to my ordinary weight, I began to tread once more as my metal-minds tried to drag me lower.

Kaldur quickly caught up, having mastered his surprise, and offered an impressed nod.

"I see. Less weight means less density, making you more buoyant." I nodded in agreement, looking down over the magnificent view in still-new awe. The city was strange, the city was alive, and the city was beautiful.

I had seen similar sights, from the top of Mount Justice, and in the bioship, so I understood how Kaldur could have brought himself to leave this place, but I wanted to stay a little longer.

We watched the city in silence a few minutes more.

"How much time may we be allowed to stay in Atlantis?" I asked him.

"Atlantis is three hours ahead of the mountain," he answered, and it took me another moment to remember what time zones were and how they functioned. I had thought the timing of our lunch was a bit off, but nothing really stood out to me' breakfast had also been off-schedule at the mountain for us both. "If we eat a light, early dinner and stay until eight, we will return in time to eat dinner with our team as well and tell them about the day."

"Two dinners. I am beca-… I will become fat," I lamented with a grin. 'Another sign of how rich this land is, and how far Scadrial has to go. And I will no longer play a part in that, save that I deliver my discoveries after I die again.' I sighed.

Huffing and sighing were very strange activities when I was beneath the water.

"Do not worry," Aqualad replied seriously. "If you gain weight, I am certain Black Canary and I can develop more training to lose it again." I laughed at the joke when he added: "I believe running six hours of suicides up and down the mountain should burn off the additional blubber." I knuckled his shoulder again.

"Nonsense," I announced haughtily, "I am quite thin. Put me on a scale, and a feather is more heavy." I stored weight to shoot up several body-lengths. When Kaldur quickly made his first push to follow me, I tapped my iron-mind and dropped on him like a stone.

"Oof!"

We tumbled to an equilibrium less than ten times my height lower in the water, and laughed together.

"To the magic academy?" I suggested. He led the way once more.

"Your experiment was with weight and density," he mused to me. "What question did you wish to ask?"

"Oh! Yes, thank you for remembering. What did you mean water is an element? Like gold and iron and tin, or is it something else? I thought water was a mix of…" and here my Earth-level science skills ran out, "of two ingredients in the air?"

"No, air is… ah! I see where we miscommunicated. Before we," he swept his arms to indicate either Atlantis or Earth in general, "could identify the molecular," I didn't recognize that term but I mouthed it silently and resolved to look it up later, "elements, we believed in the five classical elements. Our system of magic still divides spell craft by the states of being and traits signified by the five classical elements: earth, water, fire, air, and æther."

"What is eather?"

"Æther," he corrected, "is the default form of magic that is less recognizable in our world. It deals with spirit and soul, and the will that shapes the magical energies."

"Spiritual. I see…" I muttered, as comparisons to the spiritual and cognitive realms, and to the forms of Investiture, ran through my head. Then I realized, "I see water, and earth, and ether, but there is no fire or air here."

"There is, but not in their traditional forms," he informed me. Kaldur patted at his chest and then extended an arm. "For fire, there is the warmth in our blood, and the power in our bodies. Electricity and light are often generated, that is, made through our fire spells, and ice can be made by removing the fire and heat from water."

"Ah. Thank you, I see." Idly, without breaking pace as we swam, I fidgeted with storing and tapping heat in my brass-mind. It was the metal-mind I was most skilled with, and easily among my favorites to use. The flushed warmth and chill felt nice.

"Similarly, oxygen is mixed into the water that we breathe," Kaldur continued, "and through clouds and weather air has come to be used for the violent motions of watery tempests. It is also used for water bubbles and barriers in places where we do not wish to be wet, and the spells in your breathing materials are of the air element."

"That makes more sense," I agreed.

Kaldur asked, "Is there a particular way that you divide up your magic? The way you use your metal minds?"

I hesitated. Not only were my instincts telling me not to give away the workings of my Feruchemy, for fear I would be taken advantage of, but I also was not advanced enough to translate the terms well. Additionally, I knew that I could use either or both as an excuse, and Kaldur would accept these matters and drop the line of questioning without any further comments. He was very reserved and diplomatic in that regard.

I knew that it could still be an act – I had even used the same acts in the past and pressured people out of their comfort zone with the "no pressure, I mean it, really," tactics on a smaller scale. All the same, I wanted to trust them all.

I tapped connection from the smaller of my two duralumin-minds.

"We have something called Realmatic theory," I answered in more fluent Atlantean Greek. "It divides the existence into… well, there are debates whether it is into two, or three, or four separate but overlapping Realms."

"Realms?"

"Planes of existence. Like pieces of paper stacked and held up to the light, each with some parts of a picture drawn to make the whole of creation," I replied quickly. I didn't expect to run out of duralumin, but I was bad at accumulating it and prone to inaccuracy when I tried to measure the size of my stores or how deeply I had exactly tapped.

"And there are disagreements about the number of sheets of paper in the stack? What are the differences?"

"It is a sloppy comparison. If there are two realms, then they are the Physical and Not-Physical. People who argue for three Realms state that there is one Physical Realm, but divide the other into Spiritual and Mental," 'No, that isn't the right concept translation.' "Sorry, Spiritual and Cognitive Realms. Three is the most common belief."

"I see. Is it your belief?"

"No, I follow the argument of four Realms, but I don't bother to subdivide the physical. So, it might be better to say that I believe there are three Realms, but the Physical Realm is equal to the combination of the Cognitive and Spiritual Realms," I clarified. "Some people prefer to argue for a Temporal Realm, instead, but that is based in Allomancy."

"Allomancy?"

"The only other form of magic on Scadrial," I lied, omitting Hemalurgy. I had every reason to believe that Hemalurgy could still function in this universe, and the idea of koloss running around on Earth repulsed and terrified me to almost unspeakable extents, especially considering the large number of criminals and villains who would happily use it. "It is more complicated and different, too much to explain quickly, but part of it lets Mistings see the past and future."

"Divination," Kaldur identified. "It is not usually considered a trustworthy magic among humans, but when prophecies are handed down by the gods they can have greater repercussions." I scowled in distaste.

"Prophecies. I do not trust in prophecies," I all but spat. I would have hoped that my feelings had not insulted his religion, but if he did take umbrage I was fully prepared to argue my points, even though I would not enjoy it. "I have dropped my spell," I added in English, cutting off whatever response he was going to give.

"Ah. Yes. I would ask about what history you have with prophecies, but with the trouble caused for those they spoke of, I agree." My shoulders and jaw relaxed a bit. "Our general theory is to treat prophecies as either warnings, or instructions, rather than absolutes. But, we are at the Conservatory."

"At the Academy? The school?"

"Yes. Conservatory means the same thing."

"Too many words," I lamented yet again, still smiling. It occurred to me that Kaldur had lived here and attended this school in the past, and I saw some people about his age or older. "Do you know anyone here? A favorite teacher?"

"Yes. I have only been Aqualad for moderate time, and living on the surface for even less. I know many of the students and teachers here, especially Queen Mera."

"The Queen is a student here?" I asked, caught off guard. 'Either I misunderstood something, or they teach people much longer than I am used to, or… I do not think the respected Queen would be a child that age married to the adult King.'

"No, no. Queen Mera was a teacher here before she married My King, and she still enjoys teaching classes and seminars. I was privileged to have studied briefly under her with Garth and Tula, my two closest friends, before I became Aqualad. If you are interested," he added astutely, "I had planned to sit in if my Queen was teaching a class, and to introduce you after."

"Please, yes please!" I agreed immediately. 'A respected ruler who actually does a good job, who takes on and fulfills multiple responsibilities, and is also a knowledgeable (probably powerful) magic user? Four dozen times yes!'

Several people greeted Kaldur (and I was reminded that his full name was Kaldur'ahm) as we navigated the halls. This was an old building at the base, with ground-bound architecture, but it became more oceanic, with doors to classrooms in the ceiling, etc., as we progressed further.

An Atlantean student Kaldur seemed to also be good friends with spoke for a while, both to catch up and give directions to the Queen. I listened in with some duralumin-mind connection and extended an arm when we were introduced.

'I have befriended multiple kandra, despite their dietary habits and actual appearance, and I have spent several days with clans of koloss on three separate occasions,' I reminded myself. 'I will not be so petty as to flinch at a young boy's cheerful touch just because he has tentacles.' I made a particular point to hold on a little longer than was strictly necessary, and to smile with my eyes as well as my mouth; judging from the cheerful babble that Topo erupted in, I had made the right decision.

We had easily five hours before Kaldur and I needed to return to the mountain, so I was perfectly content to stay and indulge his reunion with his friends.

When Topo brought up his recent idea to make something in commemoration of Kaldur's achievements in becoming Aqualad, I jumped in.

"I don't believe I've heard that story. Kaldur, how did you become Aqualad?" I asked intently. 'It's either an impressive story worth hearing, or an embarrassing story worth seeing him squirm over,' I knew.

Kaldur shifted, but before he could fully display either reaction, Topo jumped in.

"Oh, it's a wonderful story!" He spat out something black that I shied back from, wondering if I was supposed to comment on the stain or, like leaking scent, politely ignore it.

Instead, the blackness I would learn was octopus ink resolved itself into clouds of rough outlines.

"On one bitter day," Topo announced in a bard's tone, "our great King Orin, the Aquaman, was in danger. Ocean Master had dispatched his lackey, Black Manta, in an attack on the city of Poseidonis to cover the kidnappings of several citizens. The Aquaman learned of this from his brother, Prince Orm – as the Ocean Master had been seen as he fled like the coward he is – and pursued. But he ordered that his soldiers stay to protect the city from Black Manta's thugs, and thus there was no one to reinforce him when the Ocean Master sprung his trap in a cave system and attacked!"

I winced and reconsidered the so-called wisdom of having a nation's greatest warrior also be their political leader. Even if it was great for morale, and the leader was not a violence-loving muscle head, there was the problem of juggling the military and political battlefields. 'Even the Lord Ruler had his original nine Mistborn to aid him in combat,' I remembered.

"No one," Topo continued, "except for two brave students who had struck out on their own. Garth and Kaldur'ahm had valiantly pursued when they saw the hostages being taken on their way home. They had become caught in the same caves that Ocean Master used to isolate the Aquaman, but the sound of combat caught their attention, and they came upon the brutal fight!"

"We were more lost than valiant, but this is more true than most versions of the story," Kaldur confessed quietly.

Topo carried on: "The Aquaman had been ambushed, and was at the mercy of the foul Ocean Master! But brave Garth and bold Kaldur'ahm saw their liege in dire straights, and with their skills and strength they ambushed the Ocean Master in turn! Forced onto the defensive, he could not hold against the warriors, and the Aquaman recovered his strength and triumphed!

"So impressed was he, that the Aquaman offered to take both warriors as his students. Noble Garth honorably declined, for he felt his place was beneath the ocean's waves. But brave Kaldur'ahm dreamed of the surface world and accepted this offer, taking up the title of Aqualad!" The black cloud finally dissolved, thankfully; its shape had been completely incoherent by the end.

All the same, it was an impressive story of what those with the courage to try could achieve.

I clapped, which had a diluted effect underwater, but got across my message all the same.

"I look forward to seeing what you create from that story," Kaldur assured him. They clasped hands once more. "Now, you said that Queen Mera was speaking in the White Reef Hall?"

"Yeah, she's giving a lecture on… um… I forget, but I think it's the same one from last year that Professor Koire gave that time? But Queen Mera's teaching won't have made half the class fall asleep."

"Thank you, my friend."

"Thank you for the story," I recited with a quick bow before we began to swim away. Topo remembered something else and called after us.

"Oh, Kaldur'ahm! Both Garth and Tula are part of the group that Queen Mera teaches personally now, so don't forget to congratulate them about that too!" Kaldur looked back and nodded before we rounded a corner.

"He was nice," I commented in English.

"Topo," and his name sounded oddly different in English, "is one of the gentlest souls you may ever meet. But few people ever realize that, either because he is shy and runs away, or because they disdain his shape. Thank you for treating him well."

"We live with M'gann, and I have known several kandra," I answered. "I would be a hypocrite to let looks decide me."

It took a few more minutes for us to arrive and find room to float in the back. There were a number of carefully arranged branches and pillars of coral that sprouted into arrangements of desks where students took notes. Each and every one was occupied, with a few hosting two people squished together; some other students floated in the back and took notes beside us.

I almost tapped connection to understand what the speaker (Queen Mera, presumably) was saying about the glowing diagrams on the large wall of glass. Kaldur beat me to it with an explanation that she had finished her lecture and was outlining the practice work assigned in preparation for future classes.

"We will be able to speak with her once the class has been dismissed and the students with questions have dispersed." In lieu of eavesdropping on assignment requirements, I simply spread out my attention and did my best to get a general idea.

'Intelligent, authoritative, and attractive,' I assessed of the queen. Of course, Atlantean standards of beauty and fashion could be expected to have differences from what I was used to, but by what I generally knew of Earth standards, at this distance she appeared both attractive and impressive. 'I wouldn't have expected that a married woman, to say nothing of a monarch, would wear less than M'gann did on our beach day. No, that's unfair – a swimming suit or similar makes sense under the water, and… yes, it's gauzy, but there is more cloth, or whatever it is there, than it originally appeared.'

It took me a bit longer to realize what had really caught my attention.

'The queen isn't just slim, or even fit, but actively athletic,' I analyzed. 'Her muscles are toned, her clothes provide free motion, and she moves with smooth confidence and certainty. Now that I look again, that crown looks less decorative and more like a cut-off piece of a helmet. Not just a courtier or a scholar, but she's seen at least some active combat, like the noble house Mistborn who jockeyed for power in Luthadel.'

"Kaldur," I murmured as some of the students began to leave while a few drifted to the front of the class. 'I'm also surprised at how informal they appear to be with her. Certainly they're using deferential body language, but the students are barely bowing to the Queen, much less fully genuflecting.' "Was Queen Mera a warrior?"

"Almost all the students here will be warriors. Not everyone will see live combat, but all Atlantean citizens spend a minimum of two years enrolled in the military, and our military also runs most middle-level educational institutions."

"Middle education?"

"More complicated than the reading and counting young children learn, but less than the specialized branches of scholarship found in universities. Middle and high schools, but not elementary or college." I nodded, mostly getting the gist.

We began to drift toward the front as the Queen turned to the second to last student in line. I tapped connection, aware that my current ring would soon run out and I would need to shift to another soon.

She had just parted from the last student when she saw us. Her face immediately lit up with a genuine smile.

"Kaldur'ahm! It has been too long. What brings you back to our depths?" He offered her a salute, but smiled as well.

"Greetings, my Queen. I am here escorting a comrade, Ferris, who has begun to learn under the Superman in the Justice League. She is also a magic user of an unusual style, with a unique history, and she has previously expressed interest in what I have told her of Atlantis. Ferris, this is Queen Mera."

She offered me a nod, and with my hands on my thighs I bent into a deep bow.

"I greet you, Queen Mera. Your home has been both hospitable and beautiful; I cannot speak my gratitude that I have been allowed the honor of visiting." The queen laughed like a bell.

"Your words warm my heart," she replied. "You speak our language very well, although not with the Themysciran accent I have come to expect. From where, pray tell, do you hail."

"From the Elendel Vale on Scadrial," I answered. I knew it wouldn't actually tell her anything meaningful, but explaining the alternate dimension thing was a bit ridiculous to attempt, and I'd since decided it was simpler to let more eloquent and believable people give the explanation. In this case: Kaldur.

"Ferris comes from another world, my Queen," he interjected. "Not like Mars, but more like the incident with the Justice Lords." Queen Mera snapped her attention fully to me. "Her world is even more foreign, with different continents and gods, and different magic. She expressed some interest in learning about Atlantean magic-,"

"And more importantly," I cut in, because wasting a Queen's time with the bare basics would be insulting, "I especially wanted to know what you might make of my magic, with your different perspective. Not that I usually call it magic. Truth be told," I joked, "compared to the logical function of my Feruchemy, I have spent half my time on Earth terrified of my inability to make sense of the limits and methods of things such as Zeta Tubes, the Superman and the Wonder Woman's ability to fly, and the capabilities of nanotechnology." Queen Mera tilted her head.

"With the exception of Wonder Woman's flight, which I believed had a different source than Superman's, everything you just named is a result of technology," she pointed out.

"As I have told Kid Flash, there is no difference from my point of view." I shrugged. "When we faced a mission to stop a swarm of nanotechnology, from my perspective, it all began when the Doctor used her magic to create a Physical Realm demon capable of destroying things, and in the end she created an array of mystic runes to work a banishing spell that targeted its undefended Cognitive Realm presence to unmake it."

"Ferris is referring to the Doctor writing a virus and downloading it into the nano-swarm," Kaldur added. An odd look was on Queen Mera's face, and I increased by (I guessed) a third again the rate at which I tapped connection.

"I grew up with what you call twelfth-century technology," I complained to Kaldur. "Allow me my foibles. With what you told me about Atlantis and five elements, your magic makes more logical sense to me than the Zeta Tubes."

"Those terms you used – Cognitive Realm and Physical Realm – are those related to your 'Feruchemy's' usage schema?"

I smiled at Queen Mera's astute question. 'As Kid Flash has said: line, hook, and sink her.'

"Yes!" I exclaimed, genuinely excited now that I was getting somewhere. "May I please borrow that?" I asked pointing to the brush in her hand. One end of the rod was blunt and the other was a lump of sponge, which I assumed was how it wrote on the glass. "Thank you very much. Now, the base of our magical belief is Realmatic Theory, which… ah…?"

I poked the glass with the sponge again.

"The sponge end is used to erase, and the blunt end is enchanted to write," Queen Mera informed me kindly. "Also, I believe you meant to use a term like thaumaturgical philosophy. It isn't important, but it will sound more impressive."

"Thank you," I repeated gratefully. I sketched a circle. "Let us say that this circle represents all of creation. Different schools of Realmatic Theory…."

~

I finished the rundown I had practiced on Kaldur rather quickly, diagrams included, and found Queen Mera nodding along thoughtfully. I followed up by explaining the side-by-side overlaps bits by drawing separate lines and curves that I then redrew together as a very rough stick figure.

"So that is Realmatic Theory. I would not say it disagrees with most of the way we organize magic, although it seems rather tangential to our approach," she assessed. "You said you call your style of spell craft Feruchemy? Is that any connection to alchemy?" I chuckled.

"You are not the first to ask me that," she was the third, "but no. The closest is the use of chemically pure metals, but they are storage vessels only. The mana, although our term is Investiture, comes from me."

"Chemically pure metals? Is that why you are wearing so much jewelry? They are enchanted?"

"Yes," I agreed.

"Would you mind if I cast a minor diagnostic spell on them? I would like to try to figure out what they do before you tell me, just to see if I can. It is very rare for me to come across a genuine puzzle in recent years."

"I-…" could not think of how that could go very wrong, as long as it was not my spike, and extended my hands, "-suppose so, if it is just on these ones." I was wearing eight rings and four bracelets, which all were metal-minds with a variety of charges.

"Of course," she acceded. She placed her hands over mine, not quite touching, and light gathered as she chanted a series of syllables. The glow remained for a few minutes, and I had the odd experience of feeling my stores ripple like water, though they did not change in size or nature. "I see."

I said nothing, wondering what she had understood. I had read enough fantasy – mostly borrowed from Wally – to imagine several ways her magic might have worked, but I really had no idea about the function of actual magic.

Queen Mera thought carefully, and then she spoke.

"Your pieces are all made of a single type of metal, some of which are pure, and some of which are alloys. The steel rings, as well as the zinc bracelet and ring, contained mana of the same types, so the nature of the spell depends on the store.

"The mana was malleable, rather than rigid or incremental, so you should be able to control the rate at which you store and withdraw the energy. It was gathered like a pool, but with almost a twisted and coiled nature to its history? I am less than certain, but I theorize that you do not build up a large store of energy and deposit it at once, and instead pour in a steady flow over a large amount of time.

By this point, I was both no longer certain that she remembered I was present, and too enthralled in her words to care.

"Following your Realmatic Theory, certain types are designed to affect one realm or another specifically, but still with overlap. Iron very heavily affects the Physical Realm, while steel has slightly greater overlap into the Cognitive… is that because it is an alloy, or am I seeing causation where there is only correlation? No way to tell yet," she mused. "Zinc is cognitive while brass is… physical? But bronze is cognitive with a touch of physical, while tin is physical with some cognitive…"

I almost flinched when I practically felt her mental carriage veer off in the wrong direction, misled perhaps because I wasn't wearing any copper. All the same, she was drawing what felt to me like frighteningly accurate assumptions with little and somewhat misleading data. I'd never bothered to put into words some of things that I was hearing, although none of it was new to me either. Yet. I felt that given more time and guidance, she might begin to understand my Feruchemy better than I did.

'I've shaped quite a fright, alright.' I shook my head. 'Well, now I really hope that I'm not about to run into an evil hero secret conspiracy, or else being "circled by the steel ravens" will be an understatement. I will need to step up my experiments and practices if I don't want to be outstripped in my own specialty.'

"I still don't have enough data to be certain of anything," she eventually concluded, getting out of the trees and onto the path. "Still… ah-hah! Efficiency! Each type of metal is practically a different spell, so you have varying levels of skill and efficiency with them. Jewelry means that you require bodily contact to use them, and… Regarding the vessels, the mana is evenly distributed through the entire body metal. Breaking it would divide the mana in the same pieces, but not disperse it.

"Each piece is coded to you specifically. I couldn't do much of anything to affect or use the mana itself, and I doubt anyone else with Feruchemy could use them either, no?" She looked up, and my face must have been a sight, because the Queen burst into laughter. "We-hehehe-ell? Sorry about that magic-babble, dear; I haven't done that since… not since I got a look at Orin's anniversary present, the year before last," she reminisced. The Queen sighed and returned to the matter at hand. "Well, Ferris? How much of that was wrong?"

"Very little. I once more find an example of why the people on Earth are very, very scary," I told her seriously. Her mind would be a threat in an enemy, but more importantly, it was a challenge that I nearly ached to meet. "You were right about most of the Realmatic effects of the metal minds, and confused due to my dislike for copper as well as a celestial joke," I continued. Then I turned, sketched out the Metallic Wheel, and added the names of the sixteen metals (the Green Lantern knew them all anyway) in Atlantean Greek, which was an odd experience to read and write so naturally.

"Four realms, each with four metals," Queen Mera recognized.

"Yes," I agreed. "The details of each metal-mind differ a little depending on the specific trait it holds, but overall you were much more right than wrong about the realms, the ways I store, my ability to accumulate when I tap, and the way that each is locked to me personally. Shall I start with iron?"

"Start wherever you desire. I haven't been this excited… no, no, I was far more excited just two weeks ago, but this is the second most excited I have been in years," she chuckled throatily.

"Very well. The first four physical metals are iron, steel, tin, and pewter. Iron is, largely, the most physical metal, and I did an experiment to learn about it with Kaldur less than an hour ago. I use my iron-minds to store weight."

"Weight? How? Does it make you more susceptible to gravity?"

"Technically, no," I allowed, and I stored iron, shooting up to the ceiling. Then I tapped it, plummeting back down. I released the iron-mind a little too early, but I still floated down just enough with the added weight of my additional metal-minds. 'If anyone asks, I will pretend I planned it that perfectly.' "I use iron to store density. If I am half my weight for one hour, I can be half again my weight for a later hour. Or double my weight for half an hour. Or double that for half that time."

"And density can make you more or less buoyant in the water," she realized. I nodded enthusiastically and turned to begin sketching a graph to illustrate storing varying amounts of weight over an hour, and then dividing up the areas to show how I could accumulate it for later, more intensive use.

"Kaldur'ahm," I heard the Queen say as she swam up beside me with a second wand, "I would usually meet Garth and Tula for a combined lesson in half an hour on the roof. Please find them and bring them here, instead."

"Yes, my Queen," he answered as I began outlining my area measurements. Queen Mera began writing down a formula as she asked a question about my absolute versus relative storage rates: e.g., if I weighed 100 units of weight and stored half of it for an hour, then if I gained twenty units and tapped that 50% for an hour, would I spend the hour at 150% of a) my weight at storage, or b) my weight at the time of tapping.

"I would gain half of my weight at storage added on to my weight at the time of tapping, so I would spend one hour with a weight of one-hundred seventy units," I clarified, and I sighed in satisfaction. "Like with what you said about different spells, I am only mediocre at using iron-minds, but it tends to be my default for general calculations because it is so easy to measure it and divide it into units, as opposed to speed, or strength, or determination."

Then the moment was gone, and we were once more on a race of magical babble, formulae, and glowing sketches.
________________________________________________________________________________________________
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AN: I'd originally though of having actual diagrams to go with some of Renka's talks. Give me a few days to work out the kinks in my computer graphic skills and I might.

If anyone has any advice, I'm horrible at computer graphics.
 
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Inspire, Respire, Expire - part 3
Life Ore Death
Inspire, Respire, Expire - part 3

* August 16 [Kaldur PoV]

"Yes, my Queen," I answered as she joined Ferris at the show-pane. I swam out into the halls and back toward the dormitories, satisfied.

'It appears my gift to Ferris will prove a rousing success. She is getting along splendidly with Queen Mera, and the feeling appears to be mutual. Her Majesty always was a scholar as well, and Ferris is certainly enthused to find someone she can explain her powers to without any shame or paranoia of betrayal. Or perhaps she has since overcome those feelings, and this is the first opportunity she has had to show it.'

I wondered briefly if my gift to her was self-serving – I was taking advantage of this opportunity to also further my own interests by visiting the people I had left behind in Atlantis. Garth and Tula especially had been plaguing my thoughts. I was beginning to wonder about the things I had left unsaid between us, and in particular I wished to speak with Tula.

'No, I am not taking advantage of Ferris's interests to return to Atlantis for my own reasons,' I determined. 'Even if I were to learn that all the people I knew were away from the city, this visit still would have been worthwhile to strengthen her trust in me and for me to teach her about my home.

'Similarly, I did not need to bring Ferris if I wished to return to Atlantis. I have been thinking, ever since I first arrived on the surface, that my time above as Aqualad must be an all-consuming commitment, but that is not so. There are no laws or restrictions on authorized use of the Zeta Tubes, and Wally, Robin, and Artemis regularly use them to return to their homes and live their lives. The fact that I do not have a secret identity does not bar me from doing the same. At the least, I should be able to return to my parents and friends once a week without creating a clash between the Aqualad and Kaldur'ahm.
'

I looked at what was no longer a familiar hall, and frowned. With the start of a new academic cycle, the student dormitory assignments had changed, and I no longer knew where Garth and Tula's rooms were.

There was also the question of who I should ask directions to first. A young man seeking a young woman's room might have connotations – and not all of those connotations were the type I hoped might become true – but at the same time part of me wanted to see Tula first, alone, and to clear the waters.

'I am being obtuse,' I chided myself.

"Pardon me," I said to a passing second year. "Could you direct me to the third year residences? I am looking for Garth and Tula, with a message for them from Queen Mera." It was entirely true, and I had not invoked my status as the Aqualad, but a part of me still argued that it felt like an abuse of power.

'Perhaps,' I considered as I followed the directions, 'because I have been gone from Atlantis for so long, and because I left so soon after becoming King Orin's apprentice, I lack the time and exposure to understand what has changed in my position. Half of me arrogantly expects the guards to attend when I am alone the same way that they do when I am with My King. The other half fears that the people I grew up with will lose sight of Kaldur'ahm in favor of Aqualad.

'I should speak with My King,' I determined. 'No, this is embarrassing to bother him with… immediately. First I will, sometime soon, consult the court protocols to see what additional rights and responsibilities, if any, I have gained as the Aqualad.'

I came to Tula's door first, and my chest grew lighter even as my shoulders grew heavier. I tasted the water once more. I calmed my beating pulse as I imagined what I would say when I saw her.

I decided to avoid forwardness, but to not be reserved in my affection for a bosom friend of my youth. A greeting, a smile, and if Tula did not initiate a hug as per her usual actions, then I would have far greater worries in my heart other than whether she would accept any suit I made.

My first knock was feeble, and I in a moment of rage at myself I almost overcompensated next. Instead, I rapped out a *tap-tap, tap-tap*, which had been a childhood signal between the three of us.

Most likely, Tula would think that I was Garth, and I could offer a pleasant surprise when she discovered otherwise.

There was no answer. It was not unexpected, as Tula had other places to be than her room in the middle of the day, but it was a letdown. If nothing else I knew that my friends would eventually be on the roof, waiting for their lesson, but a part of me had challenged myself to locate them before that time arrived.

I rapped again: *tap-tap, tap-tap*. No response.

As a last attempt, I placed my palm on the entry plate.

The Conservatory of Sorcery is old, and many of its enchantments are old fashioned. The wards on the doors of private rooms possessed three settings: Only Me, used to keep the room locked when the occupant was either out or occupied with private business inside; Guest List, which allowed in a select few friends, who were trusted to fetch, borrow, or return belongings without theft; and Free Entry, which was the default for unassigned rooms, as well as to let in the Academy's cleaning and maintenance staff.

The glow of the plate was green, and I was happy to know that she had kept me on her guest list, but the locking crystal above was blue, symbolizing that no one other than Tula would be allowed in at the moment. I sighed.

"On to Garth, then" I resolved. If he were also not in his room, then I would try the more popular public areas, and ask of our other friends, before I went to the meeting place to wait for them. His room was in a different hall, on a different floor, but it was not a confusing trip.

*tap-tap, tap-tap*

I waited, and after a moment, a rustle, and a thud, I was rewarded with his voice.

"If you aren't on the staff, then go away," he called through the door. "I have a lesson on combat magic in twenty minutes, and I want ten more minutes to nap, so don't make me warm up for battle early." I chuckled at the threat.

I placed my hand on his entry plate, and both crystals glowed green. I pushed the door open.

"Such a sincere greeting. You are by all means welcome to try, my friend," I responded as I entered.

I saw.

I halted.

Two voices squawked in embarrassment.

When I had envisioned reuniting with my friends, I had made certain unconscious assumptions. We would all be at our best, and in fine humor. Garth would be lithe, cheerful, and dangerous. Tula would be radiant, joyous, and no less threatening toward her enemies.

Even when I had imagined meeting Tula or Garth alone, I had always imagined that we would be put together.

I might have imagined finding Tula in disarray, although I would strenuously deny the appeal of such a scenario if asked.

I might have imagined Garth caught off-guard, or with his hair mussed, especially if it was a result of a sneaky assault.

But…

Never in 1,000 years would I have expected Tula to bear a prominent hickey on her collarbone.

I stepped back outside, closing the door. My shoulders sagged.

'I suppose that life, truly, is stranger and more terrible than fiction.'

An appropriate quote came to mind, taken secondhand from Kid Flash's eclectic collection. In the brief moments I had before my old friends recollected themselves and stepped out, I decided to indulge my grief.

"Despair. I'm in despair."
____________________________________________________________________________________________________​

* August 16 [Overview]

"Why are you out in the hall?" Professor Kay'ekhem asked sharply. "The lecture is supposed to take place in the lecture hall, class. Get in!" The few students who had turned at the adult's voice shifted uncomfortably.

"Um, professor," one of them hazarded, "the room is sort of occupied."

"Occupied? Five or ten minutes I might believe, but the previous class cannot have run over by more than a quarter-hour. Let me through."

"It's not a class, it's Queen Mera," someone called as the eel-graph professor glared his way through the crowd.

"And some other person." The others were now chiming in.

"I've never seen her before. Who is she?"

"I think she's a pureblood, but she was adopted by sharks. It looks like she's wearing a fish skin jacket, see?"

"Hey," called one of the two shark-graph Atlanteans in the group, "that's an ugly stereotype! We don't do that anymore!"

"Um… Actually," corrected the other, "a bunch of the conservative warriors and nobles still do that over in the far South and Southwest, around Nanavue. I know King Sha'ark does, but his is also made of sharkskin so it's tough to notice."

"What's someone from that far away doing over here?"

"Maybe she came as part of Sha'ark's entourage."

"Maybe she's a specialist sorceress," called a pure-graph, "sent to help the crown out with something. I think I'd be lucky to understand half of those formulae, and they're still getting more and more complicated!"

"Maybe she was a shark-graph who figured out how to recreate the pure-graph spells to use on herself!" a gilled student suggested. "Now she's teaching Queen Mera how to do it and then the Crown can make everyone pure-graphs!"

"The Crown wants to take away our family heritage?!" exaggerated an angler-graph who liked to make trouble.

The onlookers erupted into a babble of excited-

"Maybe you should all let me through and I can just ask them!" Professor Kay'ekhem shouted, immediately clearing all the students who didn't want their grandchildren born into detention out of his path. The remaining three who still didn't get out of his way were dragged aside by their more alert friends, fortunately.

The professor entered the hall proper and paused.

The show-pane, which stretched from wall to wall and from ceiling to floor of the considerable room, already had a surprising amount of its space filled up with complicated formulae and graphs. Queen Mera and the unknown young women were swimming back and forth rapidly, adding new images, lines, and calculations as they jabbered. It was academic shoptalk in its purest form, and he felt that getting close enough to hear what they were specifically saying would somehow be… impious.

'Well,' he rationalized, 'I can count on my fingers the number of times I've seen Queen Mera enjoy herself so much. Besides, it's not like I could… well, no, I certainly could kick our reigning monarch out of the hall, and I would suffer no consequences at all. I just don't have the heart to ruin her fun.' He had just resolved to usher the class away and lecture in the Red Fin Hall instead, when a stretch of the graphs and formulae suddenly clicked in his head.

He swam forward, grabbed a glow brush of his own, and the battle was already lost.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________​

* August 16 [Kaldur PoV]

The three of us fidgeted in awkward silence in Garth's room. Finally, Tula sighed.

"Well, that was not the way I would have wanted you to find out that Garth and I had begun to court." She stood. "Still, ridiculously embarrassing meetings aside, I am so glad to see you again, Kaldur'ahm!" She swam over and wrapped her arms around me. I suffered a surge of painful longing, and I wondered if it would be inappropriate now to return the sentiment.

'No. Tula is my dear friend, and I want her to be happy. Garth as well.' I hugged her back gently, and then stepped back and around to offer my hand to Garth as well. He smiled in relief and returned the gesture.

"Kaldur'ahm, I am glad to see you again. It has been too long, my friend."

"You speak as though I have been gone for years," I complained, doing my best to put the awkwardness behind us, "but it has only been-,"

""Two months,"" they chorused plaintively.

"I had expected you to return, if only for a brief visit, within the first month so that you could tell us all about your adventures with King Orin on the surface world," Tula continued. "When you did not, I had to ask Queen Mera, for I feared that you had been injured in the above."

"I apologize Tula, Garth. You are entirely correct, and I have been making the mistake of allowing my new responsibility to those I work beside on the surface to interfere with my connections to our home. Truthfully, it would have been longer before I was first sensible enough to return, were it not for the interest of one of my teammates. I shall endeavor to do better in the future. In my defense," I added leadingly, "the adventures which have preoccupied my attention have indeed been rather exceptional."

"Well, we owe some gratitude to this teammate of yours!" Garth said. "What adventures have stolen you away from us, these past many weeks?"

"I want to hear more about this team you speak of," Tula added. "I had been under the impression that you were working solely under Our King, but has he been assigning you to work with other members of the League of Justice?"

"Not quite with members of the League, but King Orin is not the only member of the League of Justice to have taken on an apprentice. The Batman, The Superman, The Flash, The Martian Manhunter, and The Green Arrow all have students of diverse experiences, and the seven of us have been training together ever since our first, unassigned mission not long after I left."

"An unassigned mission?" Garth asked, and I settled down to elaborate.

"It all began," I told them, "Slightly more than one month past, when Robin, Speedy, Kid Flash, and myself were to be brought into the headquarters of the League of Justice. We all knew each other already, and had worked together before. However, our big day was interrupted by an attack, and the Justice asked us to remain behind, alert for further trouble, as they went to put down the attack." This was a slight fib, but ultimately harmless. "Their caution was wise, for Robin, disciple of The Batman, heard news of a fire at a science lab, and we went to investigate. We discovered that Superman had been cloned by the scientists there, and we freed Superboy. Together, the five of us fought our way to freedom, and after we defended our actions to the Justice League, they assembled us into a small, covert team so that we could gain experience in combat as the heroes who would one day succeed the League of Justice."

"Incredible!" Garth laughed.

"Oh, that sounds so exciting!" Tula agreed. "All we have been doing is continuing our boring studies."

"Not so boring," Garth began.

"Yes, I understand congratulations are in order, that you have advanced far enough to receive tutelage from Queen Mera herself," I told. "Speaking of Queen Mera-,"

""Queen Mera!"" they suddenly chorused in shock, having no doubt realized the time.

"Oh no, we have kept Our Queen waiting! This is shameful, after she took the time to instruct us this day," Tula lamented, whirling around the room to collect her equipment and materials.

"I apologize for leaving you- no, wait," Garth decided. "Do come with us, Kaldur'ahm. Queen Mera always speaks fondly of your work with King Orin, and she will be elated that you have returned. I doubt she would mind your joining our lesson, and if she allows it, we can compare our studies of sorcery with what you have learned from King Orin on the surface."

"About that," I chuckled, also embarrassed that we had lost track of time. "I have already been to see Queen Mera, and she had sent me to find you, and inform you of a change of plans. We are to return to the White Reef Hall for your lesson instead, assuming the Queen does not decide to reschedule entirely."

"The White Reef Hall?" Garth questioned as we passed into the halls. "What is Queen Mera doing there? A lecture?"

"If I am lucky, she and Ferris will still be discussing thaumic theory." I considered the situation, and added, "Although I could not say if such a case would be good luck or bad. I may have created a monster." Garth and Tula twitched.

"Kaldur, you are speaking in the figurative, are you not?" Tula asked nervously.

"There is not a reanimated deep sea trench demon at risk of rampaging through the school again, is there?" Garth asked. I balked, slightly.

"I am speaking in the figurative. Are you? Did such an event really occur?"

""And we will never speak of it again,"" both chorused in unison.

"I must hear this story," I needled.

"We can find you a newspaper article, but those of us involved swore a solemn oath to never speak of it again," Garth repeated, changing the subject. "So, what entirely metaphorical monster have you created in White Reef Hall?"

"And who is Ferris? A new paramour? A teammate?"

"My teammate," I assured them. "She has been sponsored by Superman to join the team, and she uses a unique form of magic known as Feruchemy. When I was sent to find you, Queen Mera and Ferris had commandeered the glow-pane in White Reef Hall to assist their discussion of the theory and function of Ferris's magic."

"And it appears that they are still using it, unless something else has occurred in that room," Garth noted. I turned my attention back to the front, and found myself at the back of a crowd spilling into the hall from the White Reef Hall.

Staring at the mass of people, I couldn't make out details of the whispers or chatter, but the few snatches I heard – regarding the visit of a shark-turned-pure-graph and the Crown's desire to undo Atlantean diversity – made no sense at all.

"Excuse me. Is Queen Mera still in the White Reef Hall?" I asked one of the students crabbing for a view in the back.

"Huh? Yeah, haven't you heard? Our Queen and a bunch of the professors are working on some big project with a visitor from Nanavue. People think someone has actually figured out a way to change type-graphs, but no one is really making gills or tails out of what exactly they're working on."

"From Nanavue?" 'Are they mistaking Ferris for someone else, or has a new researcher also arrived?' "I see. Well, Tula, Garth, and I were asked to report to Queen Mera, so please make way." It took an embarrassing amount of time, speech, and shoving, but the three of us worked our way into the lecture hall.

And stared.

"I… whoa," Garth managed. "I don't think I've ever seen the glass that filled up. I really can't get most of what it's even supposed to mean."

"Yeah," Tula added uncertainly, "I mean, there are like, three professors helping. And Queen Mera!"

My Queen had, indeed, manifested half-a-dozen ethereal tentacles, and each held a glow brush to inscribe sets of calculations and graphs. Her body was beside Ferris as both of them muttered and scribbled whatever problem they were working on. Three other professors swam around the edges, recording figurings of their own, and twice that many advanced students were seated at the foremost desk, taking copious notes.

"Um," Tula balked, "are we really… supposed to be here? I'm not sure I feel comfortable interrupting them."

"It does feel a shame, when Queen Mera appears to be having so much fun," I agreed. After I checked the time, I suggested, "How about we simply wait for them to reach a stopping point? To judge from how quickly the glow-pane has filled since I was here, it should not take too long before they run out of writing space," I joked. Both my dear friends chuckled.

"Only if you tell us about your adventures on the surface," Garth agreed.

I spoke to them of the first meeting of our team, where Speedy left and we were introduced to Ferris and Miss Martian. I passed over our fight against Mister Twister out of embarrassment, but they were impressed when I outlined the enemies and events at Santa Prisca.

I discussed our fight against Psycho-Pirate, who had inflicted rage and fear upon our hearts, and of the interference from Atomic Skull before we eventually captured them both.

The story of our fight against Ivo's MONQI and Amazo, who had copied the powers of the Justice League, had both my friends expressing awe, and Garth once again confirmed that he was glad he had stayed below the surface.

"I could never have succeeded in such dangerous combat," he demurred.

"Speaking of it now, I feel disbelieving that I could have participated in such dangerous events," I said. "However, if there were only one lesson I have taken away from my time in the surface world – and in truth there are many such lessons – it is that times of danger and strife my bring to light reserves of strength and resolve that we did not know we had. After all, Garth," I shared a look with him, "no sane Atlantean would have believed that two untested students could make a difference in a fight between Our King and the Ocean Master."

Tula sighed. "I still wish that I had gone with you two. I felt so useless, injured and forced to remain behind." Garth and I both reached out to console her. Remembering their relationship, I backed away at the last moment, but Garth shot me a look. He pulled Tula into a hug, and I placed a supportive hand on her shoulder.

"It is hardly your fault that you were injured in a fight with Black Manta's men, Tula," Garth reminded her.

"Indeed," I added, "if it were not for your reflexes reacting to the first assault, Garth and I would never have been uninjured enough to pursue the kidnappers."

"Even then, we only became hopelessly lost in the caves, and found Our King by luck," Garth chuckled. I laughed.

"Garth, my friend, I have learned not one, but many truths in my time on the surface. And the truth is that we often make our own luck in life. Were we fortunate? Yes. But we had the luck of the determined, the alert, and the adventurous, as opposed to only the luck of students. Had we never gambled in our pursuit, the risk could never have paid off."

The three of us were silent for a moment, considering.

"Let me tell you," I offered, "of our meeting with the newest member of our team, Artemis."

I spun the story of the nanotech fog, the rescued doctor, and the clashes of personality within our team. I spoke with shame of our interrogation of Cheshire, although Garth and Tula seemed to feel that we had been justified in our acts. I spoke of my own duel against Claw, and how Artemis turned the tides with her precise assaults.

Garth and Tula winced when I spoke of the injuries I sustained against Claw, and were appropriately awed when I related the story of Miss Martian's and Artemis's fight against the monstrously enhanced Sportsmaster.

I also spoke warningly of how close we came to failure: of the way Black Spider's webbing and unconventional tactics succeeded in maiming Doctor Roquette despite Ferris's protection, and how close to death they both were before Kid Flash arrived to reinforce their position and repel Black Spider.

"I wish to say that I envy your excitement, my friend," Garth said, "but I am also glad it is not me."

I laughed.

And, having run out of adventures that I felt comfortable relating, I looked back to Queen Mera.

I was once more taken aback.

"It appears I was wrong – running out of space has not stopped their progress in the least."

It was an impressive sight. The glow-pane was entirely covered in patterned formulae of light. Ferris and Queen Mera were treading near the upper right corner, scrawling more calculations in smaller script between the figures that existed already.

"I fear I must now intervene," I decided. "Wish me luck."

"Should we not go with you to report?" Tula asked.

"It depends: how accurate do you believe to be the rumors about Queen Mera's behavior when she is interrupted in her work?" To my surprise, Garth flinched.

"My friend," he said solemnly, "I now know that I cannot let you approach alone. I personally witnessed none other than Our King suffer her wrath when he interrupted one of Our Queen's lectures a month past. You are not so sturdy as he, and so it is my solemn duty to accompany you into this extraordinary danger. Tula, please watch carefully, so that the bards may sing of our suicidal bravery, should the worst occur."

"Oh no!" she snapped, shaking a finger in her boyfriend's face. "You are not leaving me behind! Black Manta's men have not blasted holes in my legs this time, and I am perfectly capable of swimming along your sides. If anything, I should be the one to interrupt, as Queen Mera is less likely to maim a fellow female than an ignorant boy."

'Perhaps I have spent too much time with Wallace and Robin, but I have a horribly cruel idea.' It was too good to resist, even if it should never work, and so I baited them.

"My friends, even if you are familiar with Our Queen's uncommon tempers, you have no experience with the rages of my teammate Ferris," I warned. "Might I suggest, then, that I distract the woman who began Our Queen's obsession, while you suture her temper. You merely face being maimed, and can protect each other, so speak well to my mother of my passing, and do not tell her how horribly I screamed."

"You think your teammate is so frightening?" Tula asked.

"Are not women more dangerous than men? But I know how to defuse Ferris's temper, and thus I should escape with only an impermanent maiming. I will go now, and as I draw away the center of attention, you two will have the opportunity to present yourselves to Her Majesty as ordered. We begin!" I announced, before they could think much more about our plan.

""Right!"" they chorused. We split up, with Tula and Garth approaching Our Queen while I curved around to Ferris's far side and approached.

"Ferris," I called, "I need to speak with you." She turned to look at me, a question in her eyes, and after finishing that line of numeric she broke away and approached.

"Kaldur," she said, her voice sounding odd for some reason. Ferris fidgeted and, to my surprise, what may have been a blush tinted her cheeks. "Oops. I… do not have any… language," she confessed in English.

"You ran out?"

"I ran out," she confirmed. "What did you say?"

"You have worked with My Queen for a long time," she checked the timekeeper on the wall, "and there are other things to do this day. I did not wish to end your fun, but-,"

""Your Majes- gurk!""

"Whyareyouinterruptingmywor- who? Garth? Tula? Oh my, have I been spending so long on this that our lesson passed by entirely! That was terribly careless of me," she apologized. Ferris began cackling.

"My Queen," I ventured mildly, shocked at what had happened. 'I truly did not expect that to occur.' "I believe my friends will explain how happy we were to see you enjoying your work, and that this time has been well spent, if only you would please, ahem, release them from your tentacular torture.

'I cannot believe that I said that with a straight face.'

"Oh dear! Yes, yes, I was terribly out of line with that."

The dozen ethereal octopus tentacles that had pinned my friends against the glass dissolved.

"And the carnivorously threatening fish summonings?" I pointed out.

"Of course, of course. I hadn't even realized I had conjured those," she muttered irately. The toothy swarm of barracuda, piranhas, anglerfish, eels, and lampreys dissolved back into component æther.

"And the-,"

"Do you wish to join them, Kaldur'ahm?" she threatened. I could not be certain that it was not an idle threat. Thus, I said nothing as the clothing-tight cage of instantly grown coral disintegrated. "And now I need the antivenin for the urchins. *Sigh* Because of course I spiked them with sea urchin. I always summon sea urchins when I'm caught off guard. What is it with me and urchins? I only know that one spell with them, and I learned it when I was in the Conservatory myself, and I just keep using it."

"Wh-wha-what did they say to deserve that?" Ferris asked in English through her throes of laughter. I very carefully did not smile as Queen Mera applied first aid to my recklessly valiant friends.

"Nothing. But interrupting My Queen's scholarship is a trial undertaken only by the brave."

"I can't believe you talked us into that," Garth groaned, floating towards us as the Queen turned to finish ministering Tula. "You silver-tongued-,"

"I was quite happy to undertake the suffering alone, until the both of you quite literally volunteered to suffer in my place," I pointed out, "for which I am quite grateful. You would have done the same thing in my position."

Twitching as numbness left his extremities, Garth considered my words.

"Okay, yes, I totally would have tried. I just never would have pulled it off."

Ferris's laughter finally died down as Queen Mera led a thawing Tula over to join us.

"Garth, Tula, I've completely missed your lesson, haven't I? Kaldur'ahm, why didn't you stop me before time ran away from us?" she scolded.

"Because, Your Majesty, at the time we arrived, you were so obviously enjoying yourself that none of us had the heart to intervene. We considered allowing you such fun to be of greater import than a single lesson. I must admit, however, that I am nearly dying of curiosity to know what these formulae entail. Your audience-," I gestured to the still-present mass of students, assistants, and a few professors. "-seems to believe that someone has developed a way to exchange type-graphs between Atlanteans, or some such."

'Which is a particularly ludicrous guess, as I'm not certain that exchanging or altering administered graphs was even possible before the spells used for the grafts were lost over a millennium in the past.'

"Ah… Well…" Queen Mera blushed, looked away from the staring eyes, and reviewed the board. "There was some work on that in the lower left quadrant," she confirmed, causing me to nearly choke on my own tongue, "dealing mostly with the imposition of prior, foreign, or malleable physical and spiritual identities wholly or in-part onto complete, damaged, and incomplete subjects, but it will require much more figuring out and a good deal of experimentation before we would attempt any actual procedures. Then the upper-left quadrant was somehow diverted into attempting to prove that magic is subject to the laws of thermodynamics through the supposition of unmeasured but not immeasurable reserves and flows of thaumic and psychic energy, which would be chambered in orthogonal planar wells. I have no idea how we got to that from discussing the storage and expenditure formulae of contextual traits and absolute Investiture in Ferris's variety of metal-minds, which is what occupies the central area as well as this quadrant." She looked inquisitively at Ferris, who shrugged and shot me an uncomprehending look.

"Later," I told her in English, to which she nodded.

"And then below us…?" Queen Mera craned her neck and peered down to examine the last section of the glass wall. "Ah, yes! I remember now. That was the section where we dealt with the chemical formulae of physical objects as thaumic mediums, and how such might influence the nature of elemental or conceptual magic that is channeled through it." She turned back to Ferris. "Are two of the traits you use really exchanged in position because one of your gods played a trick on the other?"

Ferris pouted at me and shrugged.

"Apologies, Your Majesty, but Ferris has exhausted the mana-,"

"Investiture," Queen Mera corrected automatically.

"-investiture of her translation spell. She cannot understand your speech at the moment."

"I see." Queen Mera frowned. "That would explain why I suddenly could no longer understand your commentary about using physical objects as fuel to catalyze mana transferals. Which… oh my, did we really work on that all the way back down there? We have been busy." She turned to the professors and assistants. "Copy this all down as exactly as you can, and send me several copies. Kaldur'ahm, inform Ferris that I will have copies sent to her when they are available, and that I would love to speak with her on these subjects again. As it is, I will be nearly late for a meeting. Clear the way!" she called, exiting through the rapidly dispersing crowd at the doors.

"Ferris," I told her in English, "the Queen thanks you for your time, wants you to return to speak with her further in the future, and wishes you to know that she will send copied records of this work to you later. I suggest that we have our early dinner soon, as it is already later than I would have intended. Also, these are my two closest friends, Garth and Tula."

Ferris smiled and extended her hand to each of them in turn.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________​

* August 16 [Renka PoV]

"Make my apologies to the other members of the team, please."

"Yes, very much yes," I assured Aqualad clumsily. My English was more than good enough that I knew better ways to phrase it, but after all the activity that day I was mentally tired and couldn't be bothered.

'Besides, I can make it into one of my tic things,' I'd considered.

"I will leave you here, then," he said, stepping back. Garth and Tula both drifted forward in that annoying Atlantean way that I would probably never get the hang of.

"It was to meet you nice," Tula chirped in staggered English. She was almost too sweet and nice, but that personality type was a pleasant change of pace to encounter, and refreshing in small doses.

Garth didn't know as much of the English language as Tula, but he offered a hand again, which I shook warmly.

Well, I didn't know any Atlantean Greek either, unless I tapped connection.

'Which is embarrassing. I'm… not certain I've ever had it happen to me like that. Sure, I've exhausted metal-minds before, and even done it in the middle of things I was doing – especially fighting and fleeing, and weren't those days nightmares – but to not even notice that I'd exhausted it until that hitch where the Queen and I didn't understand each other… well, at least the formulae and graphs mostly spoke for themselves.'

It was one of the few times I'd actually wished I'd had a copper-mind handy, so I could store away our workings and copy them down later. I had gone through some of the traditional Keepers' memory exercise training, so I might as well have used it.

'Still, Kaldur did assure me that he could bring the copies of it all when he returns from spending time with his friends and parents in two days. And I need to tell Robin that he's in charge for the duration. Palms pressed that we don't have an important mission in that time, but I wouldn't expect it.'

My escort and his two friends slid backwards. I resettled my mesh carrying pack with my souvenirs, offered a final smile, and clumsily paddled my way to the Zeta Tubes.

"I store these in water, yes?" I called, motioning to my jacket and choker.

"In salt water, yes. Filling a plastic bin should be sufficient. Tell the others that I want pictures," Kaldur added with a smile. I shot him a suspicious look, but he offered no further explanation. I nodded once and turned away.

<Recognized: Ferris, B06 >

I arrived in darkness. It should have been almost time for dinner, but the lights were out. Being that the mountain was inside a mountain, and we had no windows, it was absolutely dark. I thought I had seen something in the momentary flash from the Zeta Tube, but I had not had time to process what.

"I am at the mountain, yes?" I asked, tapping into zinc in case of an attack, but only expecting some technical difficulties.

""""""""SURPRISE!!""""""""

The lights turned on and I nearly jumped out of my skin. Colorful ribbons had been draped across the room, and colorful flakes of paper tumbled down artfully. Everyone-

'Oh, this is a birthday party,' I realized, recognizing the colorful cone hats that they all wore. 'I've seen these on a few shows… that one SpongePaul episode was even devoted to them trying to throw a surprise party. Wait. Is this a party for me?'

I flustered under the attention as everyone – my teammates except Kaldur, as well as the Superman, the Wonder Woman, the Green Lantern, the Black Canary, the Green Arrow, and the Red Tornado – all brushed in around me.

'The traditional response is, "oh no, you shouldn't have," or "oh my, what I surprise, I', so happy",' I remembered. 'But… um… Okay, I have no idea,' I admitted mentally, feeling my cheeks warm. I made sure to smile so that they knew I was happy, but I just… I couldn't… I had no idea what to do.

Thankfully, someone seemed to get that gist, because people began singing, and all I mercifully had to do was listen.

"""""~Happy Birthday to you… ~ Happy Birthday to you… ~ Happy Birthday dear Renka… ~ Happy Birthday to you~"""""

My throat was knotted up, and I really hoped that joyous weeping was a thing on Earth too, or else the lone tear I felt dripping down my right cheek might have hurt the mood. Thankfully, all of them were still smiling, and I made extra sure that I was smiling too.

'I really really need some way to get across my point that I am really really happy and thankful. I mean, no, I don't care about my birthday and this isn't even my calendar, but they cared enough to remember when I didn't, and to throw a party for me.'

Kid Flash was the first one to get in my arm's reach, and he was probably going to say something, but this whole thing was probably at least half his handiwork and I already had my inspiration for getting the point across.

I stepped forward sharply, wove my arms under his, picked him up, and spun him around in a full circle.

Then I set him back down and targeted a startled M'gann next, who reciprocated. Artemis and Robin both apparently had touching-caring problems out the rhamue, to judge from the way they almost unnoticeably leaned back when I turned in their direction, so I nodded respectfully, purposefully stepped past them both, and wrapped up Superboy in a hug instead.

I considered whether it was worth tapping pewter-strength to spin him around, and opted simply to hug him harder and longer instead. I stepped back, making sure to give him a smile too.

Then I rounded on Robin and Artemis, scooping one up in each arm and squeezing them both. Hopefully the close contact might get some ideas through their heads – I knew that Robin already enjoyed poking fun at Artemis, and her Zeta Tube travel logs showed her going from the mountain to Gotham far more often than she directly went home to Star City, so I presumed they were meeting up for extra unpowered-people-training on the sly.

(The only reason I knew about Artemis's travel logs was because I opened the logs up that morning to find the code for the Atlantis Zeta Tube, and the logs automatically stored everyone's travel records to and from the mountain in the same list. I wasn't spying on her intentionally. That said, I was ecstatic that my previously-seemingly-only-lukewarm plan to see if they were interested in each other was having more success than I had believed.)

I spun, and before releasing the both of them I declared to the room at large: "I need more arms to hug people." I let Robin and Artemis have some air and freedom. "Thank you! Thank you. Who is next?"

Each member of the Justice League then got a hug of their own, with two exceptions: Green Arrow, who I did not know well enough, so gave him a handshake; and Green Lantern, who got a handshake and a kiss on the cheek.

He blushed exactly the same color as my brother Purdiin, and I laughed cheerfully even though my heart also ached at the reminder of my missing family.

'Or rather, I am the missing family member to them,' I realized. It must have shown on my face, because Wally had an arm around my shoulders in an instant, babbling something that I was too tired to translate. 'Well, I can fix half of that problem.'

I tapped bronze, and I became at once more refreshed and aware. Then I noticed that there was a green aura around me, and I was shocked to hear Green Lantern speak in my native language.

"I hope this will make things easier. I do still have translation records of your language in my ring," he reminded me. That earned him a one-armed hug and a light kiss on his other cheek.

"Thank you," I told him, relieved of the burden of dumbing-down and translating everything I said. "You're doing a very sweet and helpful thing, especially since my duralumin-mind been emptied out. You know, we do not spend enough time together, Mister Green Lantern. It is a shame, because I liked working with you for many reasons, and this ability is only one of the many. If you should happen to have a free moment, please do remember that I am always happy to see you."

"Wow, it feels a little weird to hear you talk like this," Wally said, and I nodded with a huff. I felt much the same way. By then my bronze-mind had washed away my fatigue, and I was alert and ready for a few more hours of social interaction.

"Thank you, everyone. I cannot express how glad and grateful I am to have such wonderful friends. And my birthday wish is to know what dates I get to return the favor for each of you, so don't forget to tell me."

"Oh, don't worry, I won't" Wally assured me. "But now that we can get this party started, we have party games, and food, and drinks, and games, and a couple movie options, and cake, and a piñata! And best of all, Robin, Artemis, and me all got permission to sleep at the mountain, so we're going to set up a bunch of sleeping bags and have a slumber party in the main room! How does that sound for a celebration?"

"Wonderful," I told him, and I hugged him extra hard.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________​
AN: Hey, I'm baaack! I hope you all enjoyed the warm fuzzies of this last breather episode. Comments? Questions? Concerns? Flames? Go wild.

... Waaaait a sec. If tapping a metal mind is dependant on your physical qualities from when you were storing in it, could you simultaneously tap and store multiple metal minds of the same type to compound the effect?

Say you weigh 100 units and store 50% for an hour. Would it be possible to tap that to be 150% and 150 units, while simultaneously storing 50% of your weight in another iron mind? So the second iron mind would be storing as if you were 150 units, and when you went to tap it alone you would be 175 units.

Each iteration of simultaneous storage and tapping would be less of a boost than the previous, since if you repeated the process with Iron you'd end up with 182.5 units in total, and in fact it would be more time effective to just do basic storing for longer. Unless you can store 100% of a given trait, in which case each iteration is a flat increase. 100 taps to be 200, store that and tap to be 300, store and tap to be 400. Overall, 100% store-and-tap would have the same gain rate as just flat storing.

I suppose she could just tap more and store more. Store 50/100 for two hours, tap 100 for an hour and store 75% (150/200). Thus, you've stored 150 for an hour, which is the same as 50 for three hours; more storage potency at the same time efficiency as regular storage. But then you're losing time, and your storage rates become unsustainable.

But even with smaller gains for time spent meditating, which is a problem, there's the benefit of having more potent storage. It seems like a silly thing to worry about when Renka can literally just ask for more metalminds if she needs more storage space, which is more time efficient, but it would probably be effective for her emergency stash and gold minds, both of which are limited.

But the big question is: could she do it? Would it work?

Nnnooooot the way you're thinking of. Even if that did follow the rules I'm using, after doing each step for an hour you'd end with the ability to be 175% for one hour instead of 150% for two hours if you did it the usual way. That said, I'm following the rule that Investiture (the actual mana carrying the trait) cannot be moved from one metal-mind to another.

So no, what you're thinking of wouldn't work. It was a possibility I played around with her figuring out when I was first brainstorming the story, but I couldn't get it to work and there were other ways I decided on instead.

The rate at which a Feruchemist stores their trait actually does not affect the rates and diminishing returns of tapping that trait. Renka thought it did when she was younger and never really lost that faulty visualization, even though she knows better now, in large part because some elements of Hemalurgy do work with percentage gains and losses.

When she thinks of storing away half her weight, it's not storing 50% of her weight, it's the absolute number of pounds of that is equal to half of her current weight. So, storing 75/150 lbs for an hour. If she weighed 200 lbs or 100 lbs total and stored the same amount of Investiture weight, she'd still be storing 75/200 lbs or 75/100 lbs, she'd just think about it as 38% or 75%.

I thought that Mera's clay analogy was a bit off, since it doesn't account for the ability to easily tap at a wide range of withdrawal rates.

It was a great way to do some exposition, but I feel it's a bit late in the story for that role, so it was simply an interesting scene.

Nope. You wouldn't get extra units because if you're tapping 50% from a filled metalmind and storing 50% in another you're effectively just storing 25% of your base. The "extra" is just being transferred from one storage to the other (assuming it's even possible to tap and store at the same time for the same attribute). You aren't getting any units surplus, just slowing the storage rate.

Basically, feruchemy stores energy directly, rather than buffs or percentage boosts.

It's a big thing in the lore that Feruchemy is end-neutral (does not create or destroy energy), while allomancy is end-positive (get more energy at the end than you put in, breaking conservation of energy), and hemalurgy is end-negative.

The metaphor is off, since as I mentioned a Feruchemist's stores and tap-rate don't vary by how quickly they store anymore than a tub would fail to hold 100 gallons of water depending on how far the faucet was turned up. It might fill slower or faster, but the amount is the same, and you can't tell which water was brought in when the faucet was gushing versus trickling.

Mera used that metaphor after using one spell to analyze an unfamiliar branch of magic. She's a little off, Ferris is a little off in her own way, eh...

To judge from "end-neutral" and your understanding of the lore, I'm guessing we have a fellow Sanderson fan here? What are your favorite works of his? I just finished the Steelheart Trilogy recently, and I highly recommend them, even if they aren't based in the Cosmere?

So, i gotta ask. All those "Dropped Plot" chapters. Are they dropped for real, or is it still worth reading through them? Because I am gonna read through them anyway, i just want to know if it's a waste of time because you rewrote it all in the next chapters, or if "Dropped Plot" might refer to the story arc.

It's an awesome story so far. I have no knowledge of Mistborn or whatever the series was called, but i do love Young Justice, and I find the powerset interesting. A lot can be done by storing physical and mental "stats" and then using them later on.

No these are actual chapters with actual plot. I personally feel that I dropped the ball on them because I dislike the episode they're based on, and I sequel into more character development/interaction, as well as people metaphorically "dropping the ball" in one or two ways, so I titled the arc that, but it's an actual arc with actual plot and developments.

And to PatrickDiomedes, Rocjaw Cipher, KrazyFan1, The Froggy Ninja, piano man, and lostgamer64, thank you for reading and leaving comments!
P.S. If you want to learn more about Feruchemy, Mistborn, etc, a link is down in my signature.​
 
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4 ways Ferris Abused her powers (Ridiculously)
OMAKE!
Four Times Ferris Abused Her Powers In Ridiculous Ways.

1) "You wanna practice one more times?" Wally asked with a grin. Renka frowned at him in frustration.

"You might as well just go for real and get it over with," Robin advised from further down the couch. "Kid Flash always wins the button mashing mini-games. Just take the loss and move on so we can beat his ass next round."

"Easy for you to say," grumbled Artemis, who hadn't placed first in any of the games yet. Renka thought it over, not moving for a few long moments.

"Fine. Real," she declared bluntly.

"Will do," Wally replied cheerfully. The timer counted down: <3, 2, 1, Go! > It sounded like a woodpecker race.

tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-taptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptaptap

<Briiiing! Winner: Player 4! > the game announced. The other three gaped.

"Did you... seriously just use a spell to super-speed tap?" Artemis finally asked.

Renka nodded with a smirk and hit the button to start her turn.

___________________________________________

2) <Brrrrrrzzzzzzt! >

"Rust and Ruin," Renka hissed as the oven timer rang. A quick circuit of the kitchen showed nothing.

She had gotten a bit ambitious, was attempting to juggle three different dishes at once, and couldn't find the mitts to pull the vegetables out of the oven.

"Fine, fine," she grumbled. 'I probably won't even need gold for this. Just store away my sense of touch, store away more heat in a brass-mind...' She stuck her bare hands into the oven, grabbed the metal tub, and ignored the sizzling sound as she pulled it out and found an uncluttered place to put it. "Not that bad," she assessed.

Angry red splotches covered her palms, and 'yup. Hurts like a bitch,' she affirmed as she released the tin-mind she'd used to dull her sense of pain. She flicked on the cold water from the faucet and ran it over her skin, soothing the prickles somewhat.

___________________________________________

3) "You should not drink that this late at night," Kaldur warned. Renka paused from pouring her glass of soda. "It has caffeine. It will make it difficult to go to sleep."

"This... will make me more awake?" she asked slowly.

"Yes. We are expected to be up for Black Canary's sun salutation at dawn tomorrow, and you will likely have to function on two hours of sleep if you drink that."

"Um, do I have to worry about that?" M'gann asked as she stepped into view with her own, almost empty glass in her hand.

"I... do not know," Kaldur answered. Martian physiology was, after all, potentially very different.

"One way to find out," Renka decided, and downed her glass. Kaldur looked at her steadily, unimpressed. "M'gann, first person to sleep gets to skip out on doing the dishes?"

"...Okay," M'gann decided, pouring the rest of her glass into the sink. "Aqualad, warm milk is supposed to help people go to sleep, right?"

"Too late," Renka sang as she dropped onto the couch. It took two moments to nestle into a comfortable spot, a third to focus on her bronze-mind ring, and then she was out like a light.

"...I forgot she could do that," M'gann admitted. She sighed. "Fair is fair; I agreed to that expecting her to have some trick. I just thought I could alter my body chemistry and be asleep faster."

"I will help you with the dishes," Kaldur offered, "and afterwards, please allow me introduce you to some games that surface-dwellers have been known to play upon their sleeping comrades." He plucked a sharpie from a drawer with a faint smile, and M'gann brightened as well.

Renka bore her new artwork with good humor the next morning, although the whiskers were enough to make Black Canary break down laughing for three minutes.

___________________________________________

4) "What are those words?" Renka asked Wally. Both were in civvies, exploring Happy Harbor.

"Price lists. Five dollars to enter if you're under twelve, ten dollars if you can show student ID for a Happy Harbor college, free for military service men and people over 65, and twenty dollars for the rest of us. I'm only carrying thirty, by the way, so it looks like the flower conservatory isn't in the cards today unless you have some."

"...I can change my age," she admitted slowly.

"Huh? Like with Feruchemy?" she nodded. "Cool? Could you use that to never get old and live forever?" It would be a long time before he could guess why that made her twitch.

"Not like that," she answered. "But would under twelve or over sixty-five be better?"

"We're gonna do this? Whichever you can hold longer, since you'll need to stay like that the whole time."

"Old," she decided. Before his eyes, Wally watched Ferris grow taller, and then shorter again. Her hair frizzed, grayed, thinned, and finally turned white. Her limbs slimmed and skin hung off of her in wrinkles. Her fingers knobbled and her face sank into itself and her back stooped, just a little. "How do I look?"

"Like the Hanging Gardens of Babylon." She blinked bleary eyes at him. "Ancient, but beautiful. Come on, grandma, let's go look at some pretty plants."
 
Filtering (Roquette) Debriefing
Omake
This was supposed to be posted between Filtering parts 5 & 6. I'm not sure if I just decided not, or got distracted and forgot, but it's the after-action debriefing in the aftermath of the mission to protect Dr. Roquette.

I'll leave it as a not-quite-cannon omake/side-story for now, until I decide if/how I want to incorporate it and how I would get the threadmarks to let me do it.

* August 9 [Overview]

"Overall, your mission was successful, and resulted in the capture of three dangerous criminals. Sportsmaster's escape is not unexpected, given his level of threat, and Doctor Roquette will, despite her serious injuries, eventually recover full mobility," Batman summarized at the end of individual reports. Ferris and Kid Flash sighed slightly in relief.

"However." He swept his gaze across them all, noting the uncomfortable reactions. "Several of you participated in a disturbing act, made arguably the worse for its success. Most of you have also recognized this wrongness and identified your various mistakes, stating unwillingness to behave this way again.

"Of this, I am glad. You have begun to learn lessons about where to draw your own lines and when to cross them. Having stepped on a mine, I expect that in the future you will be warier and veer further from this dangerous minefield. Either Black Canary or I will speak with you further as appropriate. Ferris, stay behind a moment. Everyone else, dismissed."

The team meandered off. Most of them would have passed some form of encouragement to Ferris, but she seemed sedate enough not to need it, calmly offering small waves to the others.

"Miss Martian. Was there something you needed?"

"Yes, sir. I wanted to talk to you about something during the mission."

Almost at the cave exit, Artemis stopped dead. 'What does she know what doessheknowwhatdidshelearn in Jade's head?' She turned around to wait and hopefully listen in, doing her best to formulate an excuse for why she would nee to hang around… 'Oh, no, wait, I ran into my Da- into Sportsmaster. Of course I want to talk about it to the man who actually knows my story, and about whether or not my cover… Oh God, what if he comes back? Mom might be in danger now! He was so different, with that drug and the toughness and-! Now I know I need to talk to him for real, too, and I don't need to mention Jade at all if I… but would it be more suspicious… would he think I gave away the mission… but with dad he might already think that and coming clean will convince him that I'm not a traitor…'

"You wanted to talk to Batman too?" Miss Martian asked. Artemis nearly jumped and screamed. She had to quickly abort a half-formed palm-thrust to her teammate's solarplexus.

'What is she-?' Artemis thought, before she looked around. Ferris was talking to Batman in conversational tones. She guessed the Batman must have asked for Miss Martian to wait until after.

"I-I, yeah, I wanted to talk to the Dark Knight about how my first mission went." Artemis forced a little cheer. "I figured I'd get it from someone unbiased before I had to own up with my own mentor," and Artemis reflected again on how odd it was to have someone to look up to who wouldn't beat out her weaknesses and keep her on her toes, and how quickly her life had seemed to have turned around.

And how much more often she had started lying to good people like Miss Martian since this whole shindig started.

How much more the changes had brought her: more trust, more friends, more happiness, and more hope

How much more she now had to lose.

M'gann offered her what looked like an honest, comforting smile.

"It's okay. I was terrified on my first mission too, and… you did just fine." Artemis tried to smile back. M'gann's smile softened with warmth and harmlessness

Without shape-shifting, Martians looked nothing like humans. The facial expressions and body language Martians naturally possessed had little to do with humanity's.

M'gann chose to wear her heart on her sleeve almost all the time because she did not wish to compound her guilt about big lies with guilt about little lies. That did not mean that she always had to do so.

'Artemis probably wants to talk to The Batman about running into her family again,' M'gann assessed. 'Not that I blame her. As long as I can make sure that The Batman really does know the truth already, I don't need to make her more upset by spreading it around. I know what stigma can be like for…'

M'gann shifted her mouth into another wider smile, put aside the memories of emotional rejection that had dogged her recent years on Mars, and offered Artemis a hand-on-shoulder that could turn into a hug if appropriate.

It made her feel a little dirty for deceit, but upsetting Artemis with the truth would probably hurt her worse. If one of the others knew about her real appearance, even if they didn't care, she knew that she still wouldn't want them to tell the others.

On the stage, a more sober conversation began.

"What do you understand about why the methods you used on Cheshire were inappropriate?" Batman asked Ferris. She frowned slightly.

"Less than I wish I did," she admitted. "I… a moment please?" Batman waited. Ferris tapped zinc-acuity in an attempt to quickly reorganize her thoughts. "I talked more with Kaldur about it. This was on the bioship, when we returned. He said… I am sorry, but I wish to begin again. There are times when it is acceptable to kill an evil person," she asserted. Batman opened his mouth and, tapping duralumin-connection, Renka hurriedly continued. "It is not because they are an evil person, or because killing is good, but because you cannot leave them alive without, through negligence, allowing greater harm to more people."

"That is not our decision to make," Batman growled. "No one person may take the law into their own hands and call it justice. That is why we have courts, judges, juries, and trials."

"And I respect that," Ferris agreed firmly. "I like it; I like not killing a lot. Because doing hurtful things like murder and torture hurt people doing them. I hurt myself very badly in earlier life, and I am now a hero because I want to keep more good in the world to replace what I took out of it.

"I have killed one person here – the cultist who I did not think I had a better option to stop from hurting others. If I did not risk his death, which happened, I thought I would have let the team die because I did nothing," she explained. "This was still wrong, and I never hided, ah, never hid it; I told you like this now that I did it, and why I did it, and I opened my arms to law and punishment if I was given it by your judges and courts." She paused, trailing off.

"You spoke of killing," Batman said, "but what do you think about torture?"

"Killing an evil person may be necessary as a more little wrong. Torturing them hurts the people who torture, too. My mistake… I am been hurt by my actions. They are… have not been hurt by those actions. They team. Long ago actions," she clarified. "I said we should do that …script? Do that because not doing it could make Doctor be killed. But I would not have done it… if the Assassin killed the Doctor before we caught her, we would not torture her. It would help no one. We must make the future better. And for me… the script was less. Little harm done at the end, done to a killer, and we would save the life of the Doctor. Compared to what has happened to me at young times, that was better than many endings.

"Now I remember that compared to what the Team has happened in before, it still is worse than their other endings. Does this make sense?" she asked. Batman considered her words thoroughly.

"I believe I understand. You do acknowledge that this was wrong to do?"

"Yes. But there is a but. A reason. I am… Kaldur told me that good and bad are like black and white… there is something about seeing in the dark… I do not…"

"May I try to put it into words for you?" Batman suggested. Ferris nodded gratefully. "You are responsible for the choices that you make, but not always the options which you may choose between. In your early life, you were given many bad choices, and you tried to choose the least bad." Ferris laughed chokingly.

"I wish it was like this way. When I was young, much I did not care. I did many bad things, and now I want to do more good than bad."

"But you are used to only having bad choices," Batman suggested. Ferris scrunched up her face in thought, and tapped a bit more into her metal-minds. "Now that you are here, you are picking choices as equally… choices the same 'less bad' as before, because you are not used to having better choices." Ferris began nodding slowly.

"It is… not quite right, but… yes," she murmured. Then she looked Batman in the eye once more. "I liked it. I liked choosing things not bad, because I wanted to do more bad, and less bad seemed like good. Is that a bad thing?"

"Yes, but it does not need to stay that way. Ironic- ah… What you did by asking is what you should be doing. I have done similar things to what you did with your 'script'. I consider these things I did to be mistakes that I want you to avoid, but… there is a saying: the burned hand teaches best. Touching a hot stove is a better lesson for children to be careful than telling them that they will be hurt if they touch a hot stove."

"I remember cooking with my mother," Ferris murmured sadly, and the two orphans shared a moment of respectful silence. "In the future, is there an easy way to tell?" she asked.

"If good and bad were always easy, they would be less important. Few people think of themselves as bad people, even when they are. That is why we have laws, judges, and juries. In the future, do not be afraid to ask for help. That is all." Batman paused, and Ferris noticed. She stopped her own turn away.

"Yes?"

"This may be inappropriate, but… I did say that you could tell someone not in the League your secrets, but please do remember that I am expert in keeping other people's secrets."

Ferris eyed him.

"Plain and unpleasant," she muttered. "I think I will think." She gave a slight bow and walked away toward the other two girls. She twitched at a telepathic message that M'gann sent to her and Batman.

[Ferris, I won't do this again but I'm going to talk about you out loud to Batman while I discuss my real problems telepathically, I just wanted you to know that I wasn't saying these things wholly behind your back.]

Her breath hitched and her walked stumbled, but Ferris righted herself and, with an unhappy look, inclined her head slightly as she passed M'gann. M'gann sighed gratefully and turned her full attention to the Batman.

"Sir, I wanted to talk to you about the state of Renka's mind this past mission." [Which is true, but I also need to talk to you about Artemis. I know more than she would want, I think.]

Pretending that she wasn't eavesdropping, Artemis all but sighed in relief about the subject matter.

"You could not bring this up with her in person?" [Speak.]

"I did, a little, and I will talk with her more, but I wanted to speak with you as well." [I know that she isn't really Green Arrow's niece. Her father is Sportsmaster, but I don't think she's a mole. I wanted to make sure that you knew the whole truth.]

"Speak." [I was aware of this, as her cover story was my idea, but how did you discover it? You did not report any in-depth telepathic contact with either Artemis or Sportsmaster.]

"Sir I… her mind is unnaturally open to telepathy, and I felt her emotions as well as Cheshire's during the interrogation. She… enjoyed it, sir. Not the pain, but putting the captured prisoner through emotional distress and making her believe lies. I found her satisfaction almost as disturbing as Cheshire's fear, and I will need Uncle J'onn to help me sort this all out." [Cheshire's real name is Jade Crock, though she goes by Nguyen now. She's Artemis's older sister, but from what I felt neither of them expected to see the other on the mission. They haven't seen each other in years. Artemis wouldn't sell us out. It feels like she loves her father as much as she hates him, and she hates herself more for loving him at all, but she desperately wants to not be like him and to belong.]

"I am not surprised. Ferris has admitted as much. She is mentally disturbed, but the Team is, among other things, acting as therapy to rehabilitate her through contact to people who have strong moral compasses." [I knew about Sportsmaster, but not about her sister. I have never worried that Artemis would betray the team. You were right to bring this to me, and I will deal with it as may or may not be needed. Is there anything else bothering you?]

"Sir, how much of her history do we know is true?" [I am worried about Ferris's mind too, but at the moment… why did you make her pretend to be Green Arrow's niece? The lie is hurting her. Should I tell her so she knows that we won't care?]

"It is less likely that her history is false than that it is true, by now. She bears unusual features, gene patterns, and antibodies in her blood. Her powers are unlike many ever encountered before. She tested positive for the radiation associated with inter-dimensional travel. And her willingness to leave a telepathic kill switch in her head that she knows we know how to use suggest that she does not have alternate agendas. It would be exponentially more difficult to fake these data than for her story to be true." [We know and are accounting for Ferris's instability. Regarding Artemis, do nothing. Never betray another hero's secret identity unless it is an immediate matter of endangered innocent lives. The niece cover story was never intended to be permanent, only to give her a reason to be allowed easily onto the team. I expect that she will admit the truth in due time. If you ever need to discuss Artemis's secret with someone else, Robin is also aware of her true identity. But be cautious, and be gentle. Both Ferris and Artemis have been wounded in different ways. Treat them as you wish to be treated, unless they state a desire otherwise.]

"Okay, sir. Do you have any advice?" [I understand.]

"If your uncle cannot help, remember that Black Canary and Red Tornado are also here for these types of problems. Regarding Ferris, do not expect progress to be quick, but you are already doing well in treating her as a friend. Dismissed."

"Thank you, sir."

"Artemis, you wish also to speak with me? Or were you practicing your espionage?"

"I need to talk with you, yeah," she admitted nervously. "Is this private enough? Because, if I could eavesdrop, then someone else could too."

"Activate Privacy Program," Batman commanded. The stage beneath them lit of and an almost opaque barrier rose around them. "I assume you wished to discuss your father?"

"Him too," Artemis admitted. She almost tried to glare before remembering that getting tough with the Batman would get her in deeper trouble. "It would have been nice to know that I might run into him since the team had before… and what was up with that… that change? He was bigger, and, and-!"

"You have access to review the mission reports," Batman answered, "but the short version is this: your father was exposed to trace amounts of a variant of the drug Venom that had a permanent effect."

"Do I… is there more to know?" she asked.

"We do not know Kobra Venom's long-term physical or psychological effects, especially when taken in unusual methods and doses," Batman said. "Continue."

"Cheshire is my sister, Jade," she blurted in a rush. "Jade ran away years ago after mom was locked away… I tried to run too, later, but dad found- but Sportsmaster found me."

"You may refer to him as your father if you wish," Batman said. "I will not think less of you."

"Yeah, well, he was barely worth the term," she grumbled. "But, please, I swear I hadn't seen Jade in years before the fight; I didn't sell out the mission and I had no clue she was with the League of Shadows."

"I believe you," he said simply. "I have some experience with the Shadows' operation, and even if you had been living with her, unless they gave you a recruitment you would not have been allowed to know. Your father may have trained you in some of the Shadows' techniques, but he is not a member either, and you are under no suspicion." Artemis sagged in relief, but the tension returned as she broached her most sensitive topic.

"Are mom and I going to need protection at home? Because, with him like that… I was nervous enough when Mom came home and kicked him out, because she has no way to make him stay out, but now that he's seen me doing hero things… if he comes back because I broke the first contract… because I betrayed the family…" She dragged off into an attempt to hold back tears. Batman laid one hand on her arm.

"I am making arrangements. Nothing is perfect, but now that I know that a mercenary like Sportsmaster lived in Gotham for years, I have notified the police to keep an eye out and I have placed alarms nearby. With this additional consideration, I will arrange for your building to get a new security system in the near future. I shall do my best to keep your mother safe."

"Thank you. And… I know she abandoned me, but what's going to happen to Jade?"

"She will be put on trial as a member of a proscribed organization, and for having committed assault and attempted murder. She will be protected from the League of Shadows' attempts at silencing her, if any are made, and offered a reasonable plea bargain if she exchanges information on what she knows of their methods and bases."

"Will I, um, I'mnotevensureIwantto, but if I do, andit'sabigifIswear, will I be allowed to visit her? Or mom?"

"Arrangements may be made, and prisons usually have visiting hours for exactly that reason."

"Thank you," she whispered.

Actual new chapter may be another day or two. Sorry! Stuff happens.
 
Rebuttal ___ Episode 07
Life Ore Death
Episode 7:
Rebuttal - part 1

* August 19 [Renka PoV]

"This is Kent Nelson. He is one-hundred six years old," Red Tornado informed us, projecting an image of the man. 'I'm glad Red Tornado is keeping it simple. Queen Mera's simultaneous identity-storage connection-tapping theory may make it easier and cheaper for me to keep up with understanding English, but I've been having too much fun with my friends the last few days to spend much time storing away connection.' "He has been missing for twenty-three days. Kent was a charter member of the Justice Society, the precursor to your mentor's Justice League."

I perked my ears at the reminder that I needed to study more about the past of the Justice League, and the news that there were other heroes operating before them as well.

Kaldur came to a realization as well.

"Of course. Kent Nelson was Earth's Sorcerer Supreme. He was Doctor Fate!"

"Another magic user?" I asked, even more intrigued now. I turned a little when Wally scoffed.

"Heh, more like Doctor Fake," he muttered to Artemis. "Guy knows a little advanced science, and Dumbledore's it up to scare the bad guys and impress the babes."

'I can't tell: is he trying to provoke Artemis, or seeking her agreement? Probably the former, but…'

"He is like the great sorcerer priests and priestesses of Mars," M'gann gasped. "It would be my honor to help him."

"I've got to sit this out," Robin admitted. "I've got a thing with Batman in less than half an hour."

"I would like to meet him too." Finding out more about Earth's Investitures was high on my list of things to do.

"Oh yes, so absolutely honored," Wally announced. He stepped closer to M'gann. "Who would have guessed that we both have such great reverence for the mystic arts?" I sighed at his insistence on using bad methods to get M'gann's attention.

'Changing for the sake of someone you care about is one thing, but just pretending to change is another deal entirely.'

I rolled my eyes, nudged a steaming Artemis, and dragged her with me over to Robin.

"Robin, Artemis, how common is magic? I thought it was rare, but all of Atlantis uses it… there was a person in the Justice League also. How much people may I find to talk with?"

They exchange an uncertain look at my question.

"I've never really had much to do with magic," Artemis admitted.

"Batman has run into it a few times… he had to fight off Dracula once," Robin muttered. "The only real League member to use magic is Giovani Zatara; I know he has connections in San Francisco, Vegas, and New York. There's usually a group of people in most old, big, cosmopolitan cities in Europe, and other forms are more common in Africa or Asia. But unless you guys find Kent Nelson, talking to Zatara or the people you met in Atlantis are probably your best bet."

"I want to. Will you help me find the Zatara later?"

"It's Mister Zatara, or just plain old Zatara. He doesn't have a secret identity, he just uses his name." I raised an eyebrow at Robin's correction.

"I think a lot of heroes do that. I will count them up, later," I muttered. Artemis shifted uncomfortably, and I wondered if, 'Oh, of course.' "Do not worry," I reassured her. "Robin has not told to us his secret identity, either. You have no pressure."

Oddly, it didn't help, and I turned back as I saw Kaldur take something from Red Tornado.

"This is a key to the Tower of Fate."

"Thank you for trusting us with this. We will not let you down," he assured our watcher.

~

"So, Wall-man," Artemis snarked when we were on our way in the bioship, "when did you realize your 'honest affinity for sorcery'?" I wondered if he had actually bragged about that at some point, and dropped my meditations to pay more attention.

"Well," he answered, sneaking a peek at M'gann, "I don't like to brag, but… before I became Kid Flash, I seriously thought about becoming a wizard myself." Given our tendency toward violent agreements about magic, in contrast with his and Artemis's violent disagreements about… well, about everything… I couldn't bear to let that lie.

"How would you do that?" I asked. "Is there a school I could visit?" It was both a serious question and a needle, and I smiled to have caught him off-guard.

"Oh, well, uh, you know," he mumbled, and then he rallied impressively. "I don't actually know how I would have become a wizard, since I was a kid and all, but I liked the idea of doing it when I grew up."

"Maybe you can get in touch with Zatara when Robin introduces him to Ferris," Aqualad suggested. I caught him with a faint smile.

"Wait, what? C'mon, man. Ferris was clear that her Feruchemy makes a lot more sense than magic! Why are you introducing her to- um- to a guy who won't be able to help her as much?" Wall- Kid Flash protested.

'We are on a mission, and I need to think that way too,' I reminded myself. I formulated my reply.

"Because my Feruchemy is magic that makes sense, does not mean it is not magic," I told him, offering the conclusion I had reached after reading a copious number of fantasy stories.

"Isn't the whole point of magic that you can't explain it?" he snapped, irate.

"Do you know why I can use Feruchemy?" I asked.

"It's… no… I sort of thought it was religious?" Kid Flash hesitated. "Did you study it? Undergo a procedure? Inherit it?"

"Inherit it from my mother," I confirmed.

"Hah! So it's genetic, coded into your DNA," he crowed.

"Coded into my spiritual DNA," I specified, staggering his success. "It is not tied to my physical body as much."

"Magical DNA? Oh come on," he groaned.

"I believe I understand," Aqualad interjected. "The thaumaturgical theory of the world that Ferris follows divides existence into separate, but overlapping physical and non-physical realms. She has an spiritual existence and body as well, overlapping with her real one, and both have forms of genetic inheritance that describe and define her existence." I smiled.

"String theory, beta brain waves, and pocket dimensions are all aspects of science, even if I haven't heard them used together in that way," Kid Flash countered.

"And it is all the same to me," I figured. "You use magic to describe things that you cannot explain yet," I emphasized, "but you also cannot use magic. Do you think that people who use magic their entire lives also cannot explain it, or is it just that you cannot explain it?"

"Look, one of the guys the Flash and I fought was this dude called Abra Kadabra, who pretended to be a magician. But," he emphasized, "the Flash beat his ass, and then proved that he was using futuristic technology – cybernetic implants, phasing, and opto-electronics – to pretend that he was using magic! It's all a big hoax!"

"And why are cybernetic implants, phasing, and opto-electronics," I repeated carefully, "different from magic? It all sounds the same to me."

"Yeah, this sounds a bit odd coming from the guy who can break the sound barrier in his sneakers," Artemis added.

"It's all science!" Kid Flash repeated. "I repeated the Flash's same chemistry experiment to develop the same Garrick Formula serum that gave the Flash his powers, and I got the same powers. It was systemic, and it could be replicated, and I followed the steps in the right order to get the right results. Science."

"So, you followed a recipe handed down from your forebears, and brewed a magical potion that gave you super powers," I rephrased.

"No!" he yelled, and I thought he was actually angry, but at least he was getting it out of his system. "It all made sense with step by step specific, logical requirements! It all. Can be explained. By science! Hey, you know? Back in some primitive cultures, fire was considered to be magic!"

"Well, it is one of the five Classical Elements," I pointed out. "When people didn't know about carbon, oxygen, and friction, I'm not surprised they didn't know how else to explain it."

"But then they learned about those things through scientific research, and the world began to make sense again," he finished triumphantly.

"Yes," I agreed, before I cheerfully pulled the rug out from under his feet. "When people study magic, they are able to explain, understand, and control it too. But people who don't, can't, and insist they must be making it up."

"That is not how it works!" He was nearly pulling his hair out now, and I wasn't certain whether I wanted to hum or laugh more at his condition. "Science makes sense, and it doesn't have ridiculous requirements like you have to be a virgin to use this magic wand or say this magic spell."

"I can explain that!" I jumped in immediately, because this was on my mind after I spoke with Queen Mera about it in passing, when we were discussing spiritual identity and physical identity and multi-Realm overlaps. "So, we have both spiritual and physical bodies," I continued, "and what changes one can affect the other. When you hug people, you leave your scent on them-," I'd learned that in a lesson on using strangers' clothes to cover my scent from hunters' animals, "-physically, and you also touch them spiritually."

"So why don't you lose your magical virginity from hugging people?" Kid Flash countered sarcastically.

"Because the physical body parts used for sex don't usually touch, and neither do the spiritual body parts." I made myself more somber to discuss this."Sex is a basic, primal act. Sex is the way you create a new life. Sex is the way you create a new soul."

He looked, I was pleased to note, appropriately serious for this part of the discussion. Boxings up on how long it would last, but for now….

"It is a very powerful act. I do not know why some spells have a magic fingerprint scanner, but they do the same way our locks on doors do," I continued. It wasn't quite accurate, but it got my point across. "When two people fornicate, they permanently trade a little touch of their spiritual DNA with their partner, like dripping red paint into a blue bucket and vice-versa. If they try to use something with that lock after that, it gets confused and thinks they are possessed by an enemy spirit, and locks them out."

"But-," Kid Flash attempted.

"Um," Miss Martian interrupted, "this discussion is getting a bit embarrassing now. But… Wally? Are you saying that you don't believe in magic?" she asked carefully.

"I- um, I mean," he stuttered. I turned to Superboy and Artemis.

"Honesty," I said seriously, "is the best policy." Superboy huffed, and Artemis cracked up as Kid Flash attempted to harvest the field he had already trampled across.

"As amusing as this is," Aqualad interjected, "I believe we have arrived in Salem." I glanced out at the window and around as the bioship touched down. Part of my mind was cataloguing any additional arguments I could bring to bear if need be – 'cloning versus natural child creation, radio waves and Zeta Tubes, the ethereal manifestations I saw in Atlantis_' – and the rest of my attention scanned around to see if we could find anything.

"So what do you think?" Artemis teased. "Micro opto-electronics and phase-shifting? Or are mystic powers at work here?" I still had no clue where she personally stood on the issue, but unless it became important I really didn't care.

Kid Flash humphed.

"I do not see anything, but it would make sense if the Tower were concealed from mundane perception. I will attempt to dowse for it. Superboy, Miss Martian, do either of you sense anything?"

"I don't see anything."

"My…telepathy is picking up some of things, but not anything specific."

"Kid Flash, begin cordoning off the field in a search pattern."

"Righty-oh, Aqualad," he agreed, zooming off to one side.

"Ferris, cycle through your senses and see if you can determine anything." My jaw twitched.

I didn't need to point out that I lacked huge or particularly useful tin-mind stores of many senses, I just needed to do it and tell him whether or not I found anything. 'It's not like I care much about tin-minds. I'm not sure why I wanted to protest that for a moment.'

I considered thinking about it more, but the stab of pain when I tapped night vision in broad daylight distracted me.

I waited a moment for my eyes to clear, and tapped hearing. I made out my team's muttering and their footsteps, and the sounds of more footsteps vaguely approaching from behind, but civilians in broad daylight wouldn't have been unexpected.

I blinked away the last tears of exposure, and the world went a bit strange when I tapped color-sensitive vision. Lovely, but strange.

I tapped scent and got an… odd response. 'Lightning discharge and burnt skin? But it's very faint, and coming from the theatre… A man had a wiring accident there in the past few days? Other than that, just my team's smell and the scents of a field near a city.' I released that tin-mind.

I tapped dynamic vision, and suffered another small headache. I could see painfully clearly everyone's motions, and my mind wanted to focus on them all at once. 'Right, tapping this without acuity to process is not a good idea.' I felt the hair at the back of my neck stand on end, and heard soft footsteps behind me.

"Excuse me?" a girl's voice asked. I turned and found two younger people, though only by a few years, walking up to me. "Are you… you're one of those heroes, right?" She was dark-skinned like me, her head bald, and her feet bare, but the rest of her outfit was a modest (if stylish) black and purple shawl, dress, and leggings. She carried two similarly styled shoes in her hands.

'Or maybe that shawl is an overdone collar. I can't tell. But it does look like the clothes are new, from how she's plucking at them. I wonder what she usually wears? And I why do I care?'

"Yeah, cous!" her companion chirped excitedly. "She's totally that hero with Superman who saved us from that bank robbery!" The boy was paler than Robin, with semi-short black hair gelled up in spikes. Or maybe it was a wig… 'Something about his face looks unnatural, but it isn't the smile. He seems honestly happy, at least.'

"Ahh." The girl - 'Was Cous her name or a nickname?' - was about Kid Flash's age, and she looked rather uncertain, while the younger-ish boy looked sharply eager and cheerful. He glanced at her, either to prompt or to request… "Please excuse my cousin Clarence. He thinks you look like someone who, um, rescued him when he was in Metropolis."

"Cous, I don't just think!" he complained, gesticulating aggressively between us. "She's not wearing the armor, but I recognize her super-chill earring! She's totally that new hero who was working with Superman, and I want her autograph!" He turned to me. "Can I have your autograph, pleeease?" He whined nasally. I fought back a grimace and smiled.

"Okay, you found me. But after this, please go somewhere safe. I am here on hero business, and I do not want you to be hurt." 'Hmm, I think this is the first time I've had a fan who wasn't… well, I did rescue him, but he recognized me way after that happened. How sweet.' I felt edgy around them, a bit, but there was also a draw as well. It was probably a draw from meeting fans, and worry that they would be caught up in something unsavory, I decided. "Do you have a paper and pen?"

Clarence produced a small notebook bound in pale leather from the inside of his suit jacket. His cousin, despite an oddly uncomfortable squeamish squirm, offered me a pen with an uncertain smile. I accepted the pen and Clarence opened to a clean page in his notebook.

"What should I write?" I asked gently.

"Ferris, what are you doing?" Superboy called.

"Talking to some civilians. Warning them to get away!" I called back. "You will go somewhere safe after this?"

"I promise," Clarence swore. "Hmmm… Can you write: 'I give this freely to Klarion'? Klarion is my nickname: Kay-el-ay-ar-eye-oh-en," he recited with a giggle.

I give this freely to Klarion. Stay safe, and never give up on heroes. –Ferris

Below that I signed "Renka" in the Scadrial language I'd grown up reading.

"Thank you so much!" He nearly sang, tackling me in a hug and taking back his book. "C'mon, we need to get going just like we promised. This way, Teekl!" He grabbed his cousin by the arm and dragged her down the street and around a corner, followed by a cat that trotted after with a crook of his free finger.

"Hey, what was that about?" Kid Flash asked, zooming up next to me.

"Civilians recognized me, so I gave them an autograph and got them to go away somewhere safe," I answered. "I have not find anything," I added to Aqualad, "but I get a feeling of… something. It reminds me about places on Scadrial."

It wasn't a comforting reminder. I'd stood in the chamber with the empty Well of Ascension, and I had crawled and scampered for safety through the caves at Hathsin.

Sunlight was different from a smoky forge, but both were hot to stand beside.

'What will we find here?' I wondered. 'And who left it for us to find?'

We all reconvened, to exchange what we had found: absolutely nothing.

Aqualad pulled out the key and examined it closely. He seemed to come to a decision.

"A test of faith," he announced, walking forward and holding out the key to the open air.

"We might, possibly, are in the not right field," I suggested weakly, because I wasn't certain how specific the directions Red Tornado had given us were. I was promptly proven wrong when a door manifested in front of Aqualad. "Oh. Sorry."

A squared stone tower manifested from around the door, reaching up five or six floors- 'One day, I will get a clear explanation on why people call them stories.' –into the sky above us.

"Hrm," Superboy grumped. "Hey, Aqualad, my infrared vision can't see anything inside the tower!"

"Lead isn't a healthy building material, but it isn't exactly tough to find, either," Kid Flash pointed out.

"I didn't say my vision was blocked," Superboy growled, "I said I can't see anything in there. I see nothing. Not a wall, just a gaping black void."

"Let us enter the tower and see for ourselves, then," Aqualad decided, opening the door. I felt increasingly eerie prickles along my neck, but I filed inside with the rest, and they mostly went away.

On the inside was a bear stone room, lit by smokeless torches, leading to another door.

"So, do we just keep going?" Superboy asked.

"Well, magic usually has some trick or test involved," M'gann considered, "but on the other hand, we do have a key."

<Yes, > answered a phantasm that appeared in front of us. It wore the face of Mister Kent Nelson.

I did not shriek and jump a foot in the air. Just jump, maybe, but the shriek must have been another member of the team.

<You have entered with a key, but the Tower does not recognize you, > the apparition continued. <State your identities and purposes here, please. >

Kid Flash opened his mouth to say something, paused when he caught M'gann's eye, and sagged. He turned to Aqualad, who stepped forward.

"We were sent by Red Tornado, because his friend Kent Nelson has been missing for more than three weeks. We were to investigate his whereabouts, and if necessary seek out and ensure the safety of the Helmet of Fate."

<Does this purpose hold true for each of you? > the phantom continued. <I must hear spoken confirmation. >

Each of us exchanged a look and then answered, "yes," in turn.

<Your petition has been accepted. The death of Kent Nelson has not been felt by the wards of the Tower, but there are protections in place to allow sufficiently virtuous and able champions to retrieve the Helmet in times of great need. Possession of a key will allow you bypass those most likely to endanger your lives, but certain challenges must still be overcome. After stating your names, those of you who wish to continue in this quest to ensure the Helmet's safety will be allowed to pass on to the next challenge. Those of you who do not may either remain here or leave, as desired. >

"Thank you. I am Aqualad, student of-,"

<Your real names are required to pass this exam. Names possess metaphysical power different than that of titles, and the Tower must ensure that no one is operating under false pretenses. >

Considering what I had read of Earth's magic, and my ability to store my own spiritual identity in aluminum-minds, it made sense to me. 'Then again, I don't have a secret identity to protect,' I realized, as the rest of the team exchanged uneasy looks.

I stepped forward. "My first name is Renka. My people do not use last names, but I would be called the eighth child of my mother, Tindwyl." The apparition and the others turned to me.

<Your mother is Tindwyl – what is the name of your father? >

I swallowed down a wash of rusted metal. "I have never bothered with the name of the man who begat me, but the man I consider to be my father is named Sazed," I told him sharply. The apparition nodded.

<That is sufficient. You may move forward at your leisure. Next? >

I turned to look at the others. Artemis in particular looked frightened, and Superboy was steaming.

"You do understand that we are superheroes, and some of us have secret identities?" Aqualad pointed out.

"Yeah, could I just… whisper my name, or something?" Artemis added.

<Trust and honesty among comrades are values integral to responsible use of the powers that lie beyond this test. An infiltrator, replacement, or mind-control user will not be permitted to pass by without speaking their own name, instead of the name of their victim. No matter what the name is, the Tower will not react if it is honestly spoken, but if it is not what their comrades believed it to be then the group as a whole must know. Any who value their own secrets more than their ability to aid their comrades should not be permitted nearer to the sensitive workings deeper within the Tower. You will face no penalties for honestly refusing to answer, remember, > the apparition explained in a mild tone.

I noticed that Miss Martian had also begun to look nervous, and though I wasn't sure why it was so, I thought it might be best to try to break the tension.

"At least Robin isn't here," I reminded the others. "He would never be possible to get past this room, or the Batman would be very angry at him, yes?" The chuckles were few, but people did chuckle.

"Artemis," Aqualad said, "I do not consider you obliged to continue with this mission anymore than I would Robin. Your identity is tied not only to your own secrets, but those of your uncle, Green Arrow, and you are bound not to reveal them." He turned to the apparition. "I am Kaldur'ahm, the son of my mother Sha'lain'a, and of my father, Calvin Durham."

The apparition's outlines shivered and blurred momentarily. <Repeat your parents' names, please. >

"I am Kaldur'ahm, the son of my mother Sha'lain'a, and of my father, Calvin Durham."

<…Very well, you are free to move forward at your leisure, > it judged. <Next? >

Kid Flash shot a dirty look at Artemis, but stepped forward. "My name is Wally West. Is that good enough, or do I need to talk about my parents as well?"

<That is sufficient. You are free to advance. >

"I… don't really have a name other than Superboy," Superboy told it. Which… what?

"What? You what?" I asked, surprised. "Really not?" 'I thought he just didn't want me to know. How does he not have a name?' He glared at me and I made the 'calm down' gesture. "I am sorry. Your words surprised me."

<I apologize, but Superboy is very definitely a title and ideal, more than it is a name. It is not unheard of for those without given names of their own to exist, at times, but it can be dangerous if they do not have enough sense of self to withstand corruption and suggestion from metaphysical forces. Traditionally, a new name can be given by another. >

"Superboy is all I am, and all I need to be!" he shouted, and stomped his foot tremendously.

"Um! How about Conner?"

We all turned to Miss Martian, who looked rather uncomfortable, but didn't take it back.

"Huh. Conner." Superboy rolled it around his tongue. "Opinions, guys? I'm not going to have to talk about who I was created from, am I?" he added to the phantasm.

"Conner is a good name," Aqualad said.

"Cute name for a cute guy?" Artemis managed.

"I like it. It reminds me of my brother Gunhuul," I added, setting aside memories of the boy four years my junior.

"Conner the Superboy. Not quite as cool as Kid Flash, but hey, we can't all be the best at everything," Kid Flash said, having thrown an arm around Superboy's shoulders. "Hey, since Superman's real name is Kal-El, are you going to be Conner El?"

!!!

'Why the Ash would he just tell them the Superman's name?!' "Kid Flash! We do not break people's secret identities!"

Everyone looked at me, even the very off-balance Superboy.

"Ferris," Aqualad told me, "the fact that Kal-El is Superman's Kryptonian name is not a great secret. It is not well publicized, but it has been broadcast on at least one newscast. It is only his human secret identity that is a secret."

"Kal-El is not his secret identity?" I asked, confused.

"You knew Superman's Kryptonian name?" Superboy asked. "All of you? You knew?! And you never mentioned it to me!"

"Hey, whoa, dude," Kid Flash objected, "it never came up!"

"It is like with my King, who is also Aquaman. His Atlantean name is Orin, but he also has a human name that he uses as a private citizen, because his father is not from Atlantis," Aqualad added. "I keep his human name a secret, but I do not go out of my way to mention his Atlantean name either."

'Oh. Okay, so he has another name that he uses in his secret identity job and friends, but Kal-El is also his name. Many names. and apparently names are a part of Earth's Investitures. Good to know.'

"Yeah. But you've got as much a right to the name as anyone," Kid Flash said. "I mean, that Ess on your chest doesn't actually stand for Super. He wore it because it was the family crest of the House of El, and people started calling him Superman because of that. So if you're Superboy, then you can use the El name too, right?"

"I-," Superboy huffed. "I will... We will talk, later. This. Is. Not. Over." He turned to the apparition. "So, is Conner El a good enough name?" he growled.

<Conner El will be sufficient, in this case. >

"Okay then! My name is M'gann M'orzz," Miss Martian told the apparition. It looked at her. It looked to the rest of us.

<You are all aware that this is not her actual body? > it asked. M'gann squeaked.

"Um! I mean- that is-!"

"Yes," Aqualad affirmed.

"Yeah, I'd pretty much figured," Kid Flash agreed.

"We know. Miss Martian can change shape," I told it. It nodded.

<You are free to move forward. >

Aqualad turned back to Artemis. "We will leave you here, to watch the door in case anyone else attempts to follow us." Artemis bit her lip as we filed toward the far door. Aqualad reached for the door.

"Wait! Wait, tower guy," she called. "My… my mom is filing for divorce, but it hasn't gone through yet. When it does, we're both going to change back to her maiden name. Can I get away that? With Artemis Nguyen?"

'So her father is probably Green Arrow's brother. Maybe a criminal, like I guessed before…? Bright brother, Bad brother? Well, it's not my business.'

<If it is genuinely how you intend to identify yourself, then yes. You may move forward, > it allowed. She sighed heavily and trudged over to join us.

"You actually gave us your real name on the first day?" Kid Flash asked incredulously. "Talk about a rookie move." She elbowed him.

"Shut up, Wall-man. You never would have known, and I got your name within a few seconds," she answered.

Aqualad opened the door.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
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AN:
This is great, Mistborn really doesn't get enough fanfic love. My one nitpick, which may not even be right because I'm not super familiar with the YJ cartoon is this

That is not true. They are almost as tough as Superman. They're basically Kryptonians with a fire weakness instead of colored rocks, with the addition of psychic abilities, shape-shifting, and phasing, and minus the full-spectrum eyesight (although it's still better than human sight). They also have a heat vision-ish ability called "Martian vision", the explanation for which constantly changes but is essentially laser eyebeams.

They're like the third or fourth most OP race in the entire DC universe, especially since MM figured out how to mitigate the fire weakness.

I've got my own opinions on the way Martians work. At the very least, M'gann is squishy enough in human form for it not to be an issue. I'm totally ignoring the Martian Vision and stuff, though. If new powers show up, it will be because foreshadowing and development, not because convenient-way-to-fix-plot. Hopefully. I'd hate to break my own rules about this.

Found this a while ago. Still catching up but really enjoyed it so far!

I'm glad to hopefully pick up another fan!
 
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