LUTHOR'S GIFT
Lois once said she never met a man under sixty who wasn't full of
cracker crumbs. Her language was always more scatological than mine,
of course, but rarely more colorful. I'm a colorful guy.
It took Lex Luthor and me longer than sixty years to reach our wisdom.
Colorful guys have more to deal with than most. In the process of
getting my own act together, though, I figured out human
relationships. No, I'm not going to explain them here. They are
uniformly complicated beyond the ability of a mere superhuman such as
myself to express in standard English. Someday I may come across or
perhaps devise a language that adequately deals with the concepts and
probability matrices I would have to chart in order to quantify the
giving and taking and peculiar emotional conservation laws that
determine human interactions. I will put my analysis into a capsule
and toss it through a space warp to some talented scribe on Earth as I
have done with this opus you now read, and the person who understands
what I explain - and maybe there will be one but certainly not two -
will rule humanity and do it well.
Meanwhile, this is a story about the relationships that once inhabited
the closed universe containing Lois Lane, Lex Luthor and me and the
people who touched our lives. It is complicated enough for English and
the common human sensibility.
I don't think that before she met Lex and me - and she was only
twenty-four when she did - Lois ever had a serious relationship with
any man less than twice her age. When, rarely, she mentioned her early
male friends they were all people who'd written this or been elected to
that or discovered something or other. As far as I can determine, four
Nobel Prize winners - one in economics, one in physics, one in
literature and one in both peace and chemistry - as well as three heads
of state, the founders of two nations, one "Voice of His Generation,"
one "Conscience of His Time," one "Father of Modern Philosophy,"
various idols of millions and I all had Lois in common. So did Lex.
They're all gone now: Lois, Lex, all the presidents, kings, popes and
saints we ever knew. Even I'm gone, careening through space like a
self-sentenced Lucifer in eternal free-fall, looking for whatever made
me happy in those days when I frolicked on Earth righting wrongs and
stunting sociological development by my very presence. Now the
millions idolize new mortals whose deeds and discoveries no doubt
overshadow the meager accomplishments of my Twentieth Century friends.
And certainly somewhere among the human community today there is
another brilliant and beautiful young woman or man whose comfort with
life in a giant shadow inspires the mortal great to accomplishment. I
hope there is someone like that today, and I send that person my best
wishes and my pity: there is no more Superman to take you away from all
of that.
The relationship among us, this triangle, was one that had a fourth
side. Also there was Clark. He was as real as we other three,
certainly as real as Superman was. I have no idea when Lois and Lex
finally lost all doubt as to Clark Kent's true nature, but by the time
they did it made no difference. He was more than just a part of who I
was. We were different men with different experiences, different
abilities, different knowledge. Clark was much wiser than Superman
was: he needed to be.
When we were kids, neither Lex nor I was an angel. The difference
between us was that my parents were saints and his were monsters. He
was still my hero in those days. I was Clark one day when I was
thirteen and he was seventeen and I found him sitting in an empty
corncrib on his father's back lot trying to control the weather. It
was early spring, mud season, and the corncrib seemed to own the only
solid ground in town.
"What're you doing, Lex?" I wanted to know.
"What's it look like I'm doing, Squirt?"
"Not sure."
"Picking plums off a chestnut tree."
"No," I said, "looks more like it has something to do with growing the
chestnut tree, though."
He peered up at me with one eyebrow raised the way he did when he was
suspicious which was almost always. His raised eyebrow got lost under
the bumper crop of curly red hair that lived on his forehead at the
time. "What do you know about what I'm doing?"
I had seen three or four acrylic balloons float off into a high cloud
carrying little payloads with them. Then I had traced the trajectory
of one of them back toward this field. I just figured Lex was doing
something interesting.
"I suppose it has something to do with cloud seeding because of the
canisters with the 'silver iodide' label that's clamped on those big
firecracker-looking gizmos, right?"
"Crude but accurate," Lex said of my observation, and that was high
praise.
He was sitting on the ground fiddling with a mess of wires and
circuits. Lex was the kind of guy, even at seventeen, who could sit on
the ground in a corncrib and look like he was sitting on a throne. On
one side of him were arrangements of chemicals and little rocket
systems and reflector dishes and in front of him was an apparatus of
transistors and printed circuit boards. In his lap he held a console
half the size and twice the weight of a desk top. The console was
riddled with switches and dials and a mess of cables came out the
bottom of it between Lex's legs. There was not much in the way of
labeling on the switches and dials, but Lex had a memory like mine and
he would prefer not to have anyone else figure out what he was up to.
"Trying to work up a late snowfall, are you?" I said and he threw the
thing off his lap and stood over me snorting like a bull moose.
"Who've you been talking to?" he wanted to know.
"No one. What do you mean?"
"I mean I haven't told a living soul what this project is about. I
mean I told my father I was trying to invent an improved milking
machine, which is the only way I could get him to give me the money for
all this stuff. You want me to believe some pimply kid like you trots
in here and figures it all out just by looking at it?"
Humble, Pa told me. I had to be humble. I had these powers, see, and
Pa thought it was important that I lead people to believe I was
normal. It was hard to appear to be anything but humble around Lex,
but I had to make a better effort at it than figuring out what he had
going by sight-reading the chemical and mechanical composition of his
gadgetry with my x-ray vision.
"Just a guess," I offered.
"Right," he declined.
Someday I would get better at this cover-up stuff. Now I tried
changing the subject. "I'm making a Van de Graaf generator for the
Westinghouse Science Contest," I tried.
"Yeah. And?"
"And it's going to generate static electricity and look real cool."
"But what's it going to do?"
"Make little bolts of lightning in the gym. It'll blow everyone away."
"Uh-huh," Lex said and flipped a few switches and jiggled a few dials
and pushed a button and the air around us rippled a bit.
And a bolt of lightning tumbled from the empty sky and thunder
shuddered the skin of the Earth and I thought the Lords of Karma were
stepping down from the heavens to demand my penance for living when the
rest of my race had died.
"Something like that?" Lex asked.
"No," I answered. "Smaller."
What Lex did with his time, and what he eventually did with some
success for a living, was come up with ideas: unexpected ways to mix
old ingredients and get new results. This day Lex had what turned out
to be a terrific idea. As it was, all my Van de Graaf generator did
was build up electrostatic energy in a little copper ball on a stand -
I had recruited an old toilet float for the purpose - until it sent a
little bolt of visible static electricity to another copper ball a few
inches away. What Lex suggested was that I use the generator to
stimulate plant growth. In an agricultural community this was an
admirable purpose to which to put an otherwise useless curio.
So I rigged up the copper ball to shoot its bolts into a flower pot
where I planted a marigold. I planted another marigold in an identical
pot, kept it in an identical setting and didn't periodically shoot this
one with little lightning bolts. The marigold with the electrostatic
charges grew more than twice as quickly and Lex's idea prompted the
school faculty to send me to the state finals of the Westinghouse
science contest that year. Jules and Arlene Luthor both kvelled; over
me at the little ice cream social that Ma threw to celebrate my
honorable mention at the state competition.
Meanwhile, Lex built his weather controlling device. By the end of the
spring it had evolved into a big solar dish with chemical sprayers and
helium balloon delivery systems. The balloons also carried gyroscopic
navigational equipment and cloud-finders. Lex designed the system to
sit on top of a forty-foot tower in an open field while he controlled
it by microwave from anywhere in a fifteen-mile radius.
Notwithstanding what it might do to the ecology of the rest of the
midwest, Lex was ready to extend the growing season of the general
vicinity of Smallville by several months. He took the idea to the
mayor, who got all excited and called the governor. The governor
called the Army Corps of Engineers who saw no reason not to go ahead
with a dry run. NBC got wind of the teenager who finally did something
about the weather and Chet Huntley himself was set to come to town to
tape a television documentary on the inauguration of Lex Luthor's
sunshine machine. Then Jules Luthor got wind of what his boy was up
to.
Jules was a big man, even bigger than Lex eventually grew. He worked
for a large dairy products wholesaler. Once upon a time a kindergarten
teacher in Brooklyn had told the Luthors that, on the basis of his
score on a non-verbal achievement test, their son was a genius. In
fact, many five-year-olds who scored as well on this test turned out
not to be geniuses, and many potential geniuses scored well below
average. Such tests were quite good at gauging the more conventional
talents of "normal" students but were most inadequate measures of the
skills of those either significantly above or below average. It was
only relatively average people who devised the tests, after all.
Unfortunately, in this case, the kindergarten teacher's evaluation of
the significance of the score was correct. The Luthors took the news
of their little Alexis' achievement test scores very seriously, and
they rejoiced and planned.
Seven years later, believing his son in danger of falling in with a bad
crowd in New York, Jules took a pay cut and a new job as his company's
wholesale acquisitions manager for Kansas. Hoping to raise a perfect
son who would change the world for the better, Jules transplanted his
family to a smaller town with smaller concerns. The Luthors spent
thousands of dollars on a library of books on physics, chemistry,
biology, meteorology, behavioral psychology, zoology; every -ology they
could think of and none of the -isms. These were the fabled Nineteen
Sixties, as it happened, and no one in this time period seemed to
equate "genius" with anything other than scientific prowess. There was
a significant shortage of the social sciences and humanities in Jules
and Arlene Luthor's hopes for their son's future. Maybe they expected
to provide the requisite human understanding in Lex's education from
their own expertise in the field. Maybe not.
"Milking machine, is it?" Jules threw a dusty shadow across his son in
the corncrib laboratory.
"Oh, hi Dad. Hand me those pliers, will you?"
Jules picked up the pliers and delivered them with an inexpert curve
ball pitch clear through the aluminum facing of Lex's parabolic
reflector dish and into a shelf full of chemical bottles. Those
bottles that did not break when the pliers hit, did so when the shelf
reached the ground.
"Dad, you idiot!"
And Jules' next move was with the back of his hand across his son's
mouth.
"You know where I found out what you've been doing back here with my
building and my money?"
"I can only imagine," Lex, on his back, said through the blood seeping
from his bottom lip.
"From that mush-mouth Jonathan Kent is where."
Chemicals mingled on the ground and a disconcerting puff of fumes came
off the helium tank.
"Love to stay and chat, Dad, but there's a small explosion due here in
a moment or two and I've got to make a dentist appointment."
"Hey where're you going?" Jules grabbed Lex by the collar as the boy
tried to leave, "I'm not through with you."
"Seriously, Dad, that bottle of hydrochloric that fell on the sulfuric
made an awfully nasty stench in here and it's all over the floor and if
it eats even a pinhole in the tank of helium it splattered on -"
"So old Kent, who's all het up over this Superboy nonsense anyway says,
'Looks like the networks won't have to make a special trip when they
come by to interview Lex, eh Jules?'"
"Dad - "
"So I said, 'Interview Lex?' and Jonathan says, 'Yeah, hear tell CBS
and ABC are getting in on it too what with the weather machine you two
are putting together.'"
"Dad, if you can let go of my neck and just hold on to my shirt collar
I can maybe rip it away and give you an excuse to chase me down the
hill so we can be fairly safe when -"
"Lot of foolishness anyway what with Superboy this and Superboy that
all over town."
"Superboy what? What's Superboy?"
"The flying kid. They gave him a name."
"Flying kid?"
Here, Jules was going to burst into laughter, realizing that his son
had been shut away in the corncrib so effectively that he had no idea
what was going on in the outside world. He had no idea that I had made
my public debut to a nationwide media frenzy and that for years people
would ask one another, "Where were you when you first heard about
Superboy?" Now there were two of us, Clark and Superboy. Soon it would
be Clark and Superman, and that was the way I would live for the next
hundred years or so.
It was a momentous time in general, and Lex was not even conscious of
these great events. Nor did Lex have any idea, for example, that
halfway around the world this week a South African doctor had planted a
dead man's heart in a sick man's chest and would keep his patient alive
with it for the next year. Certainly Lex would have found that piece
of information of greater interest than my own coming-out.
Jules recognized Lex's cluelessness in that moment and was about to
laugh about it, but the realization prompted him to loosen his
deathgrip on the nape of his son's neck for just a moment. Lex bolted
from the corncrib, away from the smoldering tank of helium, but not
nearly fast or far enough. Jules followed furiously behind him. That's
when I saw them.
I heard it first: the hiss, for just an instant, of helium escaping
through a microscopic flap near the base of the tank's lead casing. It
was a sound that did not belong in Smallville. In the instant it took
me to figure out where it was coming from and what it was, the pressure
of the escaping gas peeled the flap into a lesion along the underside
of the tank. The tank would explode in less than a second and spatter
lead shrapnel for a hundred yards or more and there were Jules and Lex
running away no faster than normal mortals can generally run.
I could save only one, and Jules, in pursuit, was the closer to the
center of the impending explosion.
I swooped from the sky in a streak of red and blue and scooped my
friend's father up in my arms, flying him far enough away from the
blast in less than a second that he suffered not so much as a scratch
from it. He did, however, have an instant windburn on all his exposed
skin as a result of the friction with the air that I gather when I fly
quickly. I would have to work on that.
Luckily, Lex found a big red rock to jump behind just in time. The
explosion bowled him over but the only shards of lead that came near
him bounced off the rock. A couple of them did leave impressive prints
in the hardened clay and I was thankful it was not Lex's skin.
Maybe he didn't see me; maybe he didn't realize his father had been in
more trouble than he was; maybe he just wasn't thinking. Maybe not.
What Lex did the moment the blast settled was scoot back up the hill to
the demolished corncrib to see what he could salvage from the disaster.
There was more than hydrochloric and sulfuric acid in that mess of
chemicals that jumbled together in the explosion. I didn't have time to
figure what-all they were, but Lex knew enough to pinch his nose and
close his mouth as he ran back into that hell. By the time I got to
him he was feeling his way with one hand through a cloud of noxious
fumes looking for who knows what. His eyes, shut tight, still teared
like a waterfall. I boosted him up by the armpits through the ceiling
just before it collapsed on a footprint of ground that included the
spot where he had been standing a moment earlier. He howled something
indecipherable and wriggled around in my arms like a squirrel and the
damage that would take place that day was already done.
I always found astonishing the variety of responses of people to their
first encounter with me in full regalia. Ma, though she had helped
make the costume, started back in surprise. Pa swelled with pride and
grinned and talked effusively for the rest of the week. Lois snapped
at me angrily, then fainted. The mayor sputtered, then called the
governor, which was his response even to mundane surprises. The
governor changed his glasses, peered, grabbed a yellow legal pad, asked
lots of questions and took copious notes. The President squinted,
struck that neat-faced, posing-for-a-stamp stance that he affected at
press conferences when a question threatened to stump him, then he
popped out his contacts, put on a pair of glasses and called in an aide
to take copious notes on a yellow legal pad while he asked lots of
questions. Jules Luthor jumped to his feet, spun in the air and ran
until he slammed the door of his house behind him. Lex just demanded
that I put him down, broke an elbow hitting me angrily in the chest and
jumped up and down with his teeth clenched until he fell on the ground,
out of breath. I think his response to the situation would have been
identical even had I not been there, assuming he somehow survived the
day in my absence. He was wholly uninterested in me except as a vent
for his anger.
By the time I set him on the ground and he unwisely shattered his
elbow, every lash on his eyelids was gone and his thick red eyebrows
had a dull, washed-out look. Something in the fumes in the corncrib
had delivered a massive insult to the follicles of his epidermis. By
his twentieth birthday not a single hair grew from the surface of his
body.
For a time, he insisted that this premature hair loss was my fault.
Certainly he could have found a means to grow it back, to the benefit
of bald men everywhere. He wasn't interested in hair, though. What he
was interested in was an excuse to hate me.
Here I was, a boy apparently from his own home town, who was the only
thing standing in the way of his being the greatest man on Earth. The
greatest scientist, the greatest industrialist, the greatest conqueror,
the greatest doctor, the greatest restorer of bald men's hair, it
didn't matter what. There remained the perception on his part and on
that of everyone else with whom either of us had even the slightest
contact that, whatever he chose to do, I could do it better. I
couldn't help it: I was a strange visitor from another planet with
powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men. That's what he
hated me for. So he decided to be the world's greatest criminal.
Needing to do something I couldn't do better, however, was not the only
reason.
For awhile the hairlessness served Lex well. It made him appear older
to the bankers and investors who were the tools he used to turn the
minor fortune the insurance company gave him upon his parents' death
into a major fortune. There was a lot of talk all his adult life on
Earth, and I expect a significant amount of talk since, that Lex did in
his parents for the million-dollar policy he had taken out on them a
year earlier. I have never seen any evidence of Lex's guilt, nor did
he ever confess such guilt to me. He confessed quite a bit in our time
together, things he had done that might have been worse, but never
that. In fact, he suffered some hardship to pay those huge insurance
premiums for the year before Jules and Arlene careened off an icy cliff
on their way back from a holiday in Denver. He couldn't foresee the
future any more than I could, and you can't indict a man for murder
just because he wishes his parents dead.
Lex moved to the city the day a buyer closed on the Luthor home in
Smallville, less than a month after his parents' death. When Lex
turned twenty-one his personal fortune was within throwing distance of
ten million dollars. By the time he hit thirty Lex was leaving more in
tips in the course of a year than he was worth at twenty-one. That was
the year Lois turned up in our lives. Lex immediately contrived to
make her dependent upon him.
By this time, Lex had spent a night in prison a total of twice: once in
Smallville when at fifteen he took a shot of whiskey for the first time
and found to his horror that he liked it, and once a few days after I
first moved to the city. As Superman, I embarrassed him by turning up
evidence that he had negligently - maybe purposely - overlooked safety
violations on his yacht the night he staged a harbor party for some
local dignitaries including several of his business competitors. He
was more careful after that.
I supposed the same yacht was a safe enough place to be that night when
Lex unveiled to the press a painting by Whistler he had just bought
from a Japanese corporation. Clark Kent had been kicking around town
in the freelance reporting trade for a few years and the unveiling was
my first staff assignment for the Daily Planet. Lois was almost as new
at the Planet as I was, less than a year out of the journalism school
at Columbia University and wearing her attitude like a cloud of cheap
perfume.
"Y'know, Clark, a lot of people wouldn't have the guts to show up at a
do like this wearing a homburg," she let me know.
"Well, I'm a reporter and all."
"And Luthor's an exploiter of the downtrodden and disenfranchised but
he probably isn't going to be wearing knee breeches and a ruffled
collar."
"Just playing my role."
"Lose the hat, okay, Clark? And fix your trouser cuffs. One's up and
one's down. Hasn't anyone ever taught you how to dress?"
"Come on, Lois. This is a two hundred dollar suit."
"Looks like a two hundred dollar suit wrapped around a hayseed from
Iowa."
"Kansas."
"Terrific, Kansas. Pleased to meet you. I'm Iowa."
"How do you do, Iowa?"
I loved Lois from the day I met her and I never stopped. A hundred
years to the week after I met her I lost her, the love of my life, and
I never returned to Earth. By then, she was the only reason that I
stayed.
The tops of her cheeks shined, just under her lower lashes, with
whatever light reflected off her face. Sometimes I could catch the
blue of her eyes bouncing off those cheeks, like the glow from a
buttercup a child might hold under her chin.
Super-scent is one of the powers I have always had a lot of trouble
turning off. I am particularly sensitive to people's smells and Lois
always smelled wonderful. Odors do not offend me easily, or else I
would never have been able to stay on Earth within a thousand miles of
any frightened skunk, but sweet smells delight me. Wild animals can
smell fear and so can I. Besides being a vestigial reptilian emotion
left over from a flaw in the process of natural selection, fear is a
pheromone thrown off by the sweat glands. Lois had all the hardware to
produce the pheromone - I checked - but none of the fear. Not before I
met her and not after, not even in the face of encroaching age or the
death it finally brought long after it arrived, was she ever afraid of
anything.
I am gifted and cursed to remember everything: every nuance, every
implication, every tilt of head or limb. Nearly a century after that
day we met, I knelt beside her bed, held her hand and brought her back
from the dead three times. I really believe I did that, and that
anyone even without such temporal powers as mine can do it as well.
She was a hundred twenty-four and the only original organs she carried
were her brain and her stomach. Her skin, even though it was soaked in
silicon, was sagging and flaccid. It had no shape of its own over
brittle bones. But her eyes still shone, reflecting the light of
genetically reproduced optic nerves inside. She was just used up like
the one-hoss shay. Three times her spirit drifted away and her body
approached the pallor of death. I have seen life leave often, and
occasionally I have seen it return. Each time this happened to her I
would take her hand, let my own bend to its shape and contain it gently
in mine. Then I would meditate on her, and love her, and need her.
And life returned.
The first time this happened it was at home, in the penthouse of the
Empire Earth Building, and afterward she asked to check in to the
hostel. I took a room adjoining hers and in virtually no time dozens
of journalists from all over the settled solar system began to haunt
the hallways. Lois insisted that I treat them politely, though I
surely would have done so even without her admonition. They were our
colleagues.
Two days after we arrived she slipped away again and I brought her back
again. We repeated this psychic ballet a third time, four weeks later.
Then she told me she had seen her parents and our first daughter, Kara,
and her sister Lucy. She said that it was all right, that it was time
for her to go with them, and that I should not hold her back any more.
"But it will be so long before we are together again," I said.
And she answered, "Only for you, my love. Please let me do this
thing."
So I did.
My hair was still jet black and dropped over my face in a rakish curl.
My skin was still clear and smooth. My voice was firm and resonant. I
filled my uniform as well as I ever had. When my union with Lois
became common knowledge, the onslaught of young women was hardly
bearable. Beautiful, delicious young women: all colors and conditions
of them appeared in my path at my every turn. Why this began to happen
especially after they all knew I belonged to Lois I did not understand
at the time. I do now, of course.
I left Lois' room to tell the folks in the hallway she was gone. The
doctors did not need to tell me; I knew better than they did. I came
out wearing my oblivious mood for them and they cleared me a space
anyway, but the questions began before I had a proper chance to speak.
As it happened, I never did speak.
"How is Ms. Lane today, sir?"
"Have you spoken with her?"
"Has she spoken with you?"
"Has she been conscious?"
"What has she got that I haven't got?"
I winced at that last question and maybe the young hellcat from the CNN
national desk who asked it saw the moisture behind one of my lower lids
when I glared at her. Maybe she only stepped back because of the look
on my face, but the first whiff of sweat rolling off her skin hit the
walls of my lungs like a thunderhead.
In answer, I simply pointed at myself, lifted up through the ceiling
and did not set foot on the planet again.
Lois had never feared to lose me, so she never did.
"Miss Lane, is it?" Lex said that night on the yacht. He had not seen
Clark since he left Smallville and certainly he recognized me, but he
shoved past me through the crowd as though I were a dozing cow.
"Ms. Lane, actually. Nice to meet you, Mr. Luthor."
"It's Lex," he told her. "May I freshen your drink, Lois?"
"As I said, it's Ms. Lane, and no I'm fine, thank you."
"I can use some more club soda, actually, Lex," I extended my
half-filled glass between them toward the bar.
He looked me up and down for a moment in the way he might look over a
bug on the windshield of the pace car of human evolution. He lifted my
arm out of his way, casually spilling my drink on a bystander. "Nice
suit, Kent," he said.
"Gee thanks, Lex."
"Ms. Lane, can I get you anything else? Pretzels? Hors d'oeuvres? A
villa in the Pyrenees?"
"Perhaps another time," she said.
"A time like Friday?"
"Sorry. Got a date." Of course everyone nearby was pretending not to
listen to the conversation but no one else was making a sound, and
everyone out of Lex's line of sight was unabashedly craning his or her
neck to hear better.
"With who? I'll give him a job. Double his salary. Station him in
Bulgaria."
"I'll convey your offer."
"Triple his salary?"
"So why do you suppose Mr. Kabayashi resigned so suddenly just before
his accident?"
"Mr. who?"
"Shogiro Kabayashi. Late CEO of the Yamayagi Hotel Corporation from
whom you purchased the Whistler you're unveiling tonight."
"Ah, Mr. Kabayashi. Unfortunate business, that."
"And how is it you were able to repurchase the Whistler from Yamayagi
for less than half what they paid for it at auction just two years
ago?"
"I never released that information. You have no idea what I paid for
-"
"A covenant of the museum sale to the Japanese provided that the work
never be insured for less than its market value, Mr. Luthor. Lloyd's
of London says you paid eight point two five million dollars."
"And other valuable considerations. It's on the sales contract," he
snapped at her before he realized that, so doing, he confirmed her
allegation.
Everyone got quiet enough to hear the harbor surf lap the hull for a
few moments before Lois said, "So what did you have on Kabayashi,
Luthor?"
Soft. Controlled. "Eight point two five million dollars, Ms. Lane,"
he answered, "and other valuable considerations."
Lois did not betray a grin, did not nod, did not look away from his
gaze.
It was Lex who broke the stare, took a breath, smiled and said, "As
well as a chronic desire to return an American treasure to America.
Maybe next I'll liberate Whistler's Mother from the Louvre."
There was too much laughter from the company. Lois did not join in.
Neither did I, for that matter, though it would have been more in
Clark's character to do so.
"A saucy wench," Lex said. "I like that. Come, all, leave us go below
deck to cast our countenances upon this masterpiece."
The Whistler was magnificent, and Lex put on a good show. Everyone got
a chance to see the painting up close. Everyone ate and drank his or
her fill. Everyone wrote a glowing story about the return of an
American treasure to America. No one wrote about the exchange between
Luthor and the new girl in town, the latest object of his admiration
who would not be had for anything as meager as, say, eight point two
five million dollars and other valuable considerations.
Lois had made a strategic error, though. Lex was now committed to the
chase and would never give it up except on his own terms.
Meanwhile, she thought Clark was a zero and Superman was a freak. In
either case, it was probably because of the way I dressed.
I asked her out, or specifically Clark did. She declined and I supposed
that if I wanted to be her friend, then I would have to make friends
with her. Guys in the city, however, seemed different from guys in the
country with regard to their behavior toward women whom they considered
potential companions. In Smallville, when I asked a young lady to a
movie or to go with a bunch of kids to the lake or to a party, she
would either say yes and go with me or she would say no and I wouldn't
bother her again. Actually, almost always, she would say yes. Clark
was a popular kid in Smallville. I don't suppose he would have been
nearly as popular if Superboy had ever actually competed in the dating
pool: we invariably liked the same girls. But in the city I heard men
saying things like, "I started asking Linda out last night," indicating
a customary long, painstaking process of wearing down a woman's
resistance to the extent that she would allow a man to buy her a steak
and a bottle of wine. So Clark "started asking Lois out."
I asked her to a movie. She said she had a dental appointment. The
next day there was a bit less plaque on her teeth.
I asked her to the lakeshore for a concert. She said she had to meet
Benigno Aquino for an interview. The next day the Planet carried her
account of the exile leader's hopes for his return to the Philippines.
I asked her to a party. She said she was already going there with
someone. That evening, there she was on the arm of Lex Luthor, at the
charity reception honoring Bruce Wayne. And there was Clark, nothing
on my arm but a notepad as I settled for covering the event for the
paper.
That's when Superman "started asking Lois out."
Rather, Superman started behaving in a juvenile, showboating manner in
order to impress Lois enough to notice him. In fact, I expect I did
impress her and I do not see how she could have failed to notice me.
She was on assignment in Pakistan the day before the Soviet army
invaded Afghanistan. I discovered the impending crisis because I
checked out an unusual concentration of petroleum along the
Soviet-Afghan border and I found hundreds of troop carriers and tanks
all gassed up and ready to roll. So I hopped over to Pakistan and
advised Lois to grab a seat on the next bus to Kabul. Before the
embarrassed Soviet ambassador could get her repatriated a week later
she had the story that would win her first Pulitzer Prize. She was
grateful.
She was covering the conflict in Nicaragua when a company of insurgents
of indeterminate ideology misunderstood a translation of written
material she had in a briefcase and decided she was a spy. She spent
two hours tied up in the back of a pickup truck bumping over unpaved
roads to a secret encampment. The paper had not heard from her and
neither had the American embassy. I found her, tied up in a chair with
a flickering klieg light shining in her face as a lieutenant whose
English was worse than Lois' Spanish tried to figure out who she was.
I actually waited until he was about to slap her across the face before
I burst in through the wall, caught him by the wrist and flew her back
to her hotel. She was relieved.
She stood in a crowd of reporters at a gate at the John F. Kennedy
Spaceport after millions of people up and down the coast of Florida saw
a space shuttle explode in the sky minutes after it lifted off. I
floated out of the sky half an hour later carrying the seven shivering
astronauts in a rubber liferaft over my head. Lois was the one I
scooped up out of the crowd for an interview with the crew even before
their debriefing. I had to raise the shuttle commander's body
temperature with my heat vision before his blood pressure was high
enough to enable him to speak with her. She was flattered.
It was not long before every broadcast commentator, every magazine
writer, every newspaper in the country except for the Daily Planet
began routinely referring to Lois Lane as "Superman's Girl Friend,"
with capital letters as though it were a title conferred by the Queen
of England or someone of comparable eminence. What no one other than
our friends at the Planet realized was that she spent all her free time
with Lex Luthor. Lois kept senior centers and children's shelters all
over town smelling of flowers with the lavish bouquets from Lex that
appeared on her desk every morning she arrived at the office. She wore
elegant clothing and tastefully understated jewelry that, even with a
Pulitzer and a couple of book contracts, she could never have afforded
on her income. Clark was friendly with her and once in awhile when we
drew an assignment together we would grab a burger or a coke for lunch,
but Superman still called her "Ms. Lane." I could not figure out what
had gone wrong, why the most wonderful woman on this mudball Earth was
dating that bald, paunchy, arguably crooked rich guy and not colorful,
infantile me.
As it turns out, the reason for the situation was not that
complicated. I had never dated in costume before. I had no idea how
to go about it. There were no rules for falling in love when you were
a superman.
Lex knew how to go about it: the customary long, painstaking process of
wearing down Lois' resistance to the extent that she would allow him to
buy her a steak and a bottle of wine. And a pair of tickets to the
opening of a Coppola film. And an evening gown. And a diamond
necklace. And enough flowers to keep every senior center and
children's shelter in the city looking like Eden. And maybe a villa in
the Pyrenees, for all I knew.
I was unaware of the private processes that accompanied the transition
from "So what did you have on Kabayashi, Luthor?" to the flowers and
the clothes and the villa that kept assaulting my attempts at sleep.
For all my efforts to walk among the mortals, to grow an elaborate
fiction into the reality of Clark Kent, I was no more capable at this
point of living as a man than was a duck decoy of laying eggs.
Lois was looking for the perfect man. Perhaps I was nothing of the
sort, despite my press. Perhaps she had found him in Lex.
Lex knew what had happened that afternoon that Lois died. He knew more
than I had ever given him credit for.
I was sitting alone on the far side of the Moon around the time night
fell over the American east coast when a Lexcorp two-passenger cruiser
crested Luna's far horizon. I remember thinking it came from much
further west than it should have been if it had taken off from
Armstrong City, which had the only viable skybase on the Moon at the
time. I thought it was lost and in trouble and old reflexes clicked
into place. I got to my feet, ready to rescue whoever had wandered so
far from home. Then I remembered my new status as an exile and sat
back down to see whether anyone would really need me. Somewhat to my
surprise, the cruiser landed close enough to kick half a ton of gray
surface dust in my face and one of the hatches slid back. I sat as
still as a moon rock.
I could not hear in space, of course. Even my ears cannot pick up
sounds where there is no air to vibrate. I have become rather good
over the years, however, at translating nearby vibrations that I feel
through the ground of an airless planet into the sounds they would have
made if there had been air.
The sound that this spaceman made against the inside of his helmet,
which I picked up through the faintest vibrations of the soles of my
boots, was the simple imperative sentence: "Take me to your leader."
"I should take you to the nearest penitentiary, Luthor," I told him
when finally I gave the occupant of the pressure suit a once-over with
my x-ray vision. I knew he could read my lips.
"Given the current relative positions of the Earth and Moon," Lex said,
"that would be somewhere in Singapore. Unless you count the brig on
the spacecraft carrier parked in the null-gravity pocket where G.E. is
building its industrial colony."
I grunted. He didn't hear me.
"I'm afraid I wouldn't have much trouble breaking out of either one,
old super-stick." He sat down next to me on the dusty rock.
He looked like a prune these days, all withered and frail, but he was
unnaturally spry. He flexed his thighs to take a seat as easily as a
twenty-year-old went up for a rebound. I admired this survival
capacity of his and I always had. By now the company he had founded,
Lexcorp, was a publicly owned multinational, on the edge of becoming
the first miltiplanetary, corporation. Lex himself owned quite a bit
of stock in it, but he had not been allowed an active hand in managing
things since before the end of the Twentieth Century. He was, after
all, the most reviled and celebrated criminal the Earth had at the
moment. He never was much for mincing words, either.
"You look pitiful," the old prune told the superhero at the end of the
worst day of my life.
"How would you know?" I snapped. I did not hate him, had never hated
him, no matter how much trouble he caused. At best, he had been a
boyhood friend; at worst, he was a good workout. He had never, to my
knowledge, killed a living soul, and he had done more good for me than
he had done harm to Earth. Maybe he had done some good for Earth as
well. He had spent the better part of the Twenty-First Century,
though, using the mere fact that I existed to justify terribly
anti-social behavior. So I responded in kind, at least in
conversation, if only out of courtesy.
"You think you're the only one mourning today?" Lex asked me. "Well
here's a large flash for you, Kal-El, Man of Steel, Last Son of
Krypton, Mr. Truth Justice and the American Way, Champion of the
World. I've got something to mourn for too, and I'm an old hand
because I started more than ninety years ago."
"What are you talking about?"
"Lois, old Super-duper-man. Lois."
"That was over practically before it started and it was the lady's
choice as I recall."
"Then you recall wrong."
"I remember everything, remember? That's one of my problems."
"What did she tell you about why she stopped seeing me?"
"What is with you, Lex? I'm surprised you've already heard she's gone
and you're pulling out ancient history."
"Surprised I've heard already? They're talking state funeral for her,
Supes. Presidents, kings, popes and saints are booking air fare to
Iowa. There are going to be monuments. Buildings and cities are being
renamed for her even as we speak. Millions of pregnant women with
names like Ulrika and Imelda and Yang-Mi are planning on having
millions of baby girls named Lois. And no one knows what really
happened. Not even you."
"What really happened?"
"I fell in love with her, heaven help me."
"Lex, you hate me? So hate me. Let me sit here mourning for the loss
of the best part of my life and don't give me peace. But don't expect
me to gnash my teeth over the fact that the love of my life was
dalliance number twenty or sixty or two hundred eleven in your endless
string of dalliances a million years ago."
"I just thought," Lex stood and paced slowly, kicking up gray dust that
had not stirred in three billion years, "that now that you've lost her
too we finally have something in common."
"You've spent the last ninety years trying to prove you're better than
I am," I accused him, "and now you think you can treat me like an equal
because I'm in pain?"
"I gave her back to you, Superman. Back in the old days, I manipulated
her into falling in love with you."
"You think I've never been in pain before, Lex?"
"I isolated a pheromone that unlocks the comfort response in the
brain. I found love potion number nine, Supes."
"How about when I lost my parents? Ever think of that, Lex? Did you
come see me then, or were you off in the city building your empire?"
"I exposed her to it on an automatic stimulus-response program tied to
her nervous system."
"How about when I lost my best friend who went off to seek fame and
fortune and didn't so much as say goodbye? Think that didn't hurt?"
"Whenever she was in danger, the love response kicked in. And there
you were to save her."
"You were the only other human being I could talk to on anything like
my own level, Lex, and you went sour on me."
"You were so obviously smitten with her for years, and I was so bad for
her. She thought you were like a big puppy dog at first."
"When you started breaking the law just for the fun of it, I almost
began to think it was all right to do because you were doing it."
"She started thinking of you as a man. Then I stopped slipping her the
pheromone and she fell in love with you for real."
"What are you telling me?"
"After she left me, I didn't even make much of a show of trying to be
respectable any more. I threw in with costumed criminals, with deluded
lunatics, nearly became one myself. I broke the law because it meant
nothing to me. Nothing meant anything to me."
"Wait. You're saying that you tricked Lois into falling in love with
me?"
"No. I just made the suggestion to her brain. Chemically."
"Why should I believe you?"
"Go back Earthside and check the lab records. I'll tell you what safe
deposit box to look in. Besides, once you think about it you'll want
to believe me."
"Why would you do something like that for me?"
"I did it for her, shithead."
Why would I want to believe him, I wondered. Because if this is true,
I decided, then on the day I have lost a love, I have regained a
friend.
It does not generally take me very long to consider the implications of
a situation. The only time I usually need to sit still and think is
when I dream and when I brood. Both are good for my head. This time,
however, it took me nearly half a minute to reconsider the past hundred
years of my life in the perspective of what Lex revealed to me.
"I'm not going back to Earth," I told him.
"Neither am I," he said. "There's nothing there for me any more."
"You aren't going back?" I asked him. "What do you mean? Where will
you go?"
"The human cardiovascular system is much more efficient in space,
Superman. The skin doesn't tear as easily. The bones tend not to
break. Space is a good place for an old man to be. Want some
company?"
That was what we decided as dawn broke over the far side of the Moon
and a Terran eclipse swept across the sun. I lifted him under his
shoulders and two men ancient beyond belief floated off the northern
rim of the Solar System like bottles cast to sea, never to return.
For forty-four more years, as men measure time, he traveled with me,
argued with me, discovered with me. Somewhere in the vast desolation
of the far side of the Moon is a two-passenger Lexcorp cruiser. Maybe
humans have discovered it by now, perfectly preserved, untouched since
the day we left. I just hope that among the many monuments erected to
the halcyon days of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries that last
Earthbound object that Lex ever touched finds a place: a monument to
the most reviled and celebrated criminal hero of our time.
LUTHOR'S GIFT Copyright © 1991 Elliot S! Maggin