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A mother and son try to subvert a utopia... sort of
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He's in her head.

She could shield her mind completely from newborn Nephilim or recently-transformed miraclefolk, but her nemesis is The First Of His Kind and he can read her thoughts and feelings like an open book.

(Can he even read the not-quite-thoughts that dart in and out of the edge of her awareness? Maybe. Maybe not. Don't think about it, Ambrosia. Don't think about it. Don't think.)

"Comfortable, but at reduced liberty." She'll make conversation. It's easier (not to let the secret not-thoughts spill over) to maintain some meager degree of composure if she makes conversation. "Doesn't that describe the position of every human on Earth, at this point?"

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He nods. "Interesting question. I'd be happy to discuss it at Olympus." He looks over at Peggy, mumbling a prayer to every god she can think of. "You can stay, Mrs Gravel."

The other woman nods. "Sorry, Amber."

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She steps back from Miracleman, turns slowly and walks back to the kitchen table.

Her world feels simultaneously sticky and ephemeral. Like her prior life is a web that she's still stuck to, but she'll get snatched away from it at any moment.

"Take care of yourself," she says to Peggy. "And carry out our Lord's work as best you can."

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Peggy nods sharply. "You too."

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Ambrosia then returns her attention to Miracleman.

She doesn't say anything to him. Doesn't reckon she needs to.

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He takes the woman in her arms, and takes off into the sky.

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I don't think he's following us anymore.

About three thousand kilometers off the coast and about two kilometers underwater, Jess eases up on her quantum exertions.

She's tired, in a new and daunting way.

And, also, something disconcertingly close to scared.

If he were, he definitely would have caught up by now.

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Summer slows down as well, his quantum only working hard enough to keep the ocean current from carrying him away from Jess.

I don't think he was following us at all.

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Yeah. That makes sense.

She recalls the last coherent thought she gleaned from Summer's incubator before she burst through the cottage window and out across the beach behind it. ('if he wants to give chase, he'll have to be willing to splatter me--')

They're safe. Alone except for each other and the local sea life, too deep for satellites to pick up and too long gone for their quantum trail to be traced.

 

So, um, what do we do now?

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We do what she said, keep working on the plan.

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Recruit an army. Change hearts and minds. Topple the regime. Us? Two newborns in an ocean full of bigger fish?

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It's what we were both born for.

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But that sounds Really Hard, and with our powers Literally Everything Else has become Really Really Easy.

 

We could visit Saturn. Or other stars. Or other dimensions. We could be pioneers or royalty or hedonists.

 

What's so great about Earth, anyway? It's the one place in the whole galaxy where people like us could be in any sort of real danger, so why stick around?

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But if we don't do anything, people like Amber and Peggy won't be free. And we won't be able to make our own destiny because we'll be stuck taking care of humans forever.

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She cares. Despite herself, she cares about their incubators.

But her Nephilim mind can suppress any emotions it finds inconvenient.

She does so.

We wouldn't be stuck taking care of them if we just left and never came back?

But she can already feel the fault in her argument forming.

If she really didn't care about a life of solitude, she would just leave on her own. The fact that she's trying to convince her brother to come with her demonstrates trivially that she strongly wishes not to be alone.

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We'd just be leaving it to our brothers and sisters. And I enjoy being with you. I think you enjoy being with me. Wouldn't it be nice if we could enjoy being with more of us?

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Okay.

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Thank you, sister. Summer surveys the dark, wet void they have found themselves in. Almost like the womb down here, isn't it? But cold.

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What is it with you and Wombs?

Whatever their present surroundings resemble, she finds them quite boring.

So, if we aren't fleeing the planet, I guess we'd better come up with someplace planetside to set up. I vote not-here.

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Summer takes a moment to suppress some of his more untidy emotions.

The ocean is a better place to visit than live, yes. And no one will take us seriously without a decent lair.

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(Mentally humming to the tune of 'Under The Sea')

 

Oh, absolutely. How are we going to sucker any impressionable youth into our clutches without a Proper Lair?

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But where...

Images flash through his mind. The Amazon, artificial islands, castles in the sky, Antartica...

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...what, like the Fortress of Solitude?

Images of comic panels flash through her minds eye.

(Not comics she's read herself, admittedly, but she'd read baselines who had read the comics which is nearly the same thing when you think about it.)

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Maybe. The 60s version preferably. The crystal motif is limiting.

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I'd always wanted to grow up to impersonate Jesus. But I suppose impersonating Superman is pretty much the same thing.

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