ChasNicollette
Allons-y Means Let's Go.
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2007
- Posts
- 16,135
Lex
Lex looked at Lionel long and hard, but decided time was of the essence and he really didn't have time to argue, and strode to his desk.
He pressed the buzzer on his deskphone. "Ready the chopper for flight to Metropolis Airport. Stat."
The helicopter had returned after the coast was clear, after the shower had ended, having gotten a number of Lex's staff to safety. It had returned for Lionel, but Lionel had wanted instead to visit The Cave, and thus the helicopter remained, unused. Fortunately for Lex.
"It turns out I've been funding the search for The Elements through LuthorCorp Foundation," Lex murmured, "and one of the parties for which this funding provided was headed by Princeton University's Edgar Cole. I've been monitoring his e-mails through a bug in his laptop. He found more than even he realised; he discovered that Rodrigo Angelo, the mysterious Spanish rogue known as 'El Diablo,' was set to sell the piedra de la estrella to interested parties in Shanghai."
Lex drew a fresh clip from the desk drawer, and switched out the clip in the gun for that fresh one.
"What Cole failed to realise," he murmured, "was that these were not mere intellectuals, but a cabal of mystics attempting to unite The Elements before the appointed time. And they couldn't very well do this unless they had a stone already in their possession."
He smiled thinly, a tiny little languid darksome smirk of a smile.
"Air is in China," he declared, shoving the gun into the holster concealed under his black suit coat at the small of his back.
He made quickly for the doors, but stopped just before passing through them. He stopped with one hand on the doorframe, and glanced back at his father.
"I don't know who this 'Zod' is," he murmured, "or what connection you have to him, but he was wrong about one thing, and one thing most of all. Humankind is not an infestation on this planet. We are this planet's immune system.
"Maybe we're an overactive immune system," he allowed, knowing a thing or two about immunology, "more white blood cells than the bloodstream can handle. Maybe at some point we'll have to thin the immune system out a little. But any alien presence here is an infection, and rest assured the people of Earth won't stand for it. Humankind takes care of its own."
He smiled that thin smile again, that nonsmile.
"You ever talk your musical mystical alien language to 'Zod' again," he suggested, "you tell him I said that. His stay on Earth is naught but borrowed time. Humankind won't stand for it. And neither will I. This is our planet, and we don't intend to share."
He walked from the room, eyes as hard as stone.
He walked straight from there to The Contemplation Room, walked straight through the room as the lights came up around him, walked straight to the case that contained The Map, contained the page.
He typed in the code and killed the alarm, lifted the case and tossed it aside, taking the framed page very carefully in his hands.
He tugged his Blackberry out of its holster at his hip, and he pressed a speed-dial.
It rang, and the other end immediately picked up.
"Prep my private jet," he demanded, "I'm choppering in momentarily, I want immediate clearance for takeoff. We're going to Shanghai."
He paused, gazing at The Cross of Coronado.
"And when you get a chance," he suggested, striding now out of the room and down the hall towards the back where the chopper waited, "arrange for The Cross of Coronado to be donated to The Coronado Heights Castle Memorial in Lindsborg, Kansas. Much as I've appreciated the piece, it really does belong in a museum."
He strode out into the moonlit dark of his backyard, where the chopper's rotors were already powering up.
An administrative staffer ran up behind him, carrying a packet.
"Sir," she panted, "this came just before The Shower started, just before you got back. Courier dropped it off for you. I didn't have a chance to--"
Lex plucked it from her hands. "I'll have a look at it during the flight. Thank you."
She nodded quickly, politely, and returned to the house.
Hurriedly, Lex climbed aboard the helicopter, and it lifted into the air.
Lex looked at Lionel long and hard, but decided time was of the essence and he really didn't have time to argue, and strode to his desk.
He pressed the buzzer on his deskphone. "Ready the chopper for flight to Metropolis Airport. Stat."
The helicopter had returned after the coast was clear, after the shower had ended, having gotten a number of Lex's staff to safety. It had returned for Lionel, but Lionel had wanted instead to visit The Cave, and thus the helicopter remained, unused. Fortunately for Lex.
"It turns out I've been funding the search for The Elements through LuthorCorp Foundation," Lex murmured, "and one of the parties for which this funding provided was headed by Princeton University's Edgar Cole. I've been monitoring his e-mails through a bug in his laptop. He found more than even he realised; he discovered that Rodrigo Angelo, the mysterious Spanish rogue known as 'El Diablo,' was set to sell the piedra de la estrella to interested parties in Shanghai."
Lex drew a fresh clip from the desk drawer, and switched out the clip in the gun for that fresh one.
"What Cole failed to realise," he murmured, "was that these were not mere intellectuals, but a cabal of mystics attempting to unite The Elements before the appointed time. And they couldn't very well do this unless they had a stone already in their possession."
He smiled thinly, a tiny little languid darksome smirk of a smile.
"Air is in China," he declared, shoving the gun into the holster concealed under his black suit coat at the small of his back.
He made quickly for the doors, but stopped just before passing through them. He stopped with one hand on the doorframe, and glanced back at his father.
"I don't know who this 'Zod' is," he murmured, "or what connection you have to him, but he was wrong about one thing, and one thing most of all. Humankind is not an infestation on this planet. We are this planet's immune system.
"Maybe we're an overactive immune system," he allowed, knowing a thing or two about immunology, "more white blood cells than the bloodstream can handle. Maybe at some point we'll have to thin the immune system out a little. But any alien presence here is an infection, and rest assured the people of Earth won't stand for it. Humankind takes care of its own."
He smiled that thin smile again, that nonsmile.
"You ever talk your musical mystical alien language to 'Zod' again," he suggested, "you tell him I said that. His stay on Earth is naught but borrowed time. Humankind won't stand for it. And neither will I. This is our planet, and we don't intend to share."
He walked from the room, eyes as hard as stone.
He walked straight from there to The Contemplation Room, walked straight through the room as the lights came up around him, walked straight to the case that contained The Map, contained the page.
He typed in the code and killed the alarm, lifted the case and tossed it aside, taking the framed page very carefully in his hands.
He tugged his Blackberry out of its holster at his hip, and he pressed a speed-dial.
It rang, and the other end immediately picked up.
"Prep my private jet," he demanded, "I'm choppering in momentarily, I want immediate clearance for takeoff. We're going to Shanghai."
He paused, gazing at The Cross of Coronado.
"And when you get a chance," he suggested, striding now out of the room and down the hall towards the back where the chopper waited, "arrange for The Cross of Coronado to be donated to The Coronado Heights Castle Memorial in Lindsborg, Kansas. Much as I've appreciated the piece, it really does belong in a museum."
He strode out into the moonlit dark of his backyard, where the chopper's rotors were already powering up.
An administrative staffer ran up behind him, carrying a packet.
"Sir," she panted, "this came just before The Shower started, just before you got back. Courier dropped it off for you. I didn't have a chance to--"
Lex plucked it from her hands. "I'll have a look at it during the flight. Thank you."
She nodded quickly, politely, and returned to the house.
Hurriedly, Lex climbed aboard the helicopter, and it lifted into the air.
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