Until the End of Time
Copyright 5/15/2007
Disclaimer: All publicly recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their respective owners. The original characters and plot are the property of the author. The author is in no way associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media franchise. No copyright infringement is intended. No money is being made from this.
Summary: Superman gets news he never thought he’d hear.
Notice: I don’t do WAFFY, warm, fuzzy, or fluffy! And you should know by now I don't always put them back.
Cause if your love was all I had
In this life
That would be enough
Until the end of time
Justin Timberlake, Until the End of Time (Futuresex/Lovesounds)
* * *
Superman sat on the examining table in the STAR Labs medical center. He studied his hands, the floor, anything to give himself time to absorb what he’d just been told. Finally, he looked over at the young man who was now his personal physician – Bernie Klein had retired many years ago, but it still seemed like yesterday.
“You’re sure of the results?”
“Yes, sir,” Doctor Manning said.
“And nothing can be done?”
Manning shook his head. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be,” Superman said as he hopped off the table. He shook Manning’s hand. “Thank you.” He headed for the door.
“Sir, what do you plan to do now?”
Superman stopped and looked back over his shoulder. “I plan to go home. Then I think I shall take my wife out to a nice dinner and maybe dancing.”
“Your wife?”
Superman just grinned at him as he shut the door behind him.
* * *
“You’re awfully chipper tonight,” Lois Lane-Kent commented as she put on her earrings. A touch of arthritis made it more difficult than is used to be, but reaching a hundred-ten years old wasn't for sissies either. “What did Doctor Manning say?”
“Same old, same old,” her husband of eighty-two years said. “Stay away from kryptonite. It can kill you,” he quoted with a chuckle.
She watched as he checked his tie in the mirror. Age hadn’t done much damage to him. His face had laugh-lines and crows-feet, but he was still as trim and muscular as he had always been. His hair was white now, instead of the black of his youth, but still thick, soft to the touch. His eyes were still bright behind his old-fashioned glass frames.
“Did he tell you when your powers might come back this time?” she asked. She smoothed out her hair. It was as white as his and her wrinkles were only a little deeper. She suspected his invulnerable aura had protected her from the worst ravages of age. They both looked far younger than their real ages.
He gazed thoughtfully at her reflection in the mirror. “Would you be upset if they never came back?”
“It would be one way to get you to retire,” Lois commented as she put on her lipstick. “It’s not like there aren’t enough part-Kryptonians to pick up the slack. Beth’s baby takes us to five generations now.” She laughed. “And to think we thought humans and Kryptonians were genetically incompatible when we first got together.”
He kissed her neck, just above her diamond necklace. “Do you have any regrets?” he asked.
“Only that we didn’t get our acts together sooner, Farm Boy,” she responded.
“Seriously honey, I haven’t been the best provider, and I certainly wasn't always as supportive as I might have been,” he said. “God only knows how many times I’ve had to leave you holding the bag, or the baby, while I went off the save the world.”
“I married Clark Kent, a damn good writer, who happens to moonlight as Superman,” she said, patting his hand. “If I wanted money, I would have married somebody with money. Of course, nearly all of them turned out to be either crooks or crazy.”
“Or both,” Clark laughed. His expression turned more solemn. “I love you so much. I don’t know what I’d do if I lost you.”
“Nobody lives forever, Clark,” she told him softly. “We both know that. Nobody knows how long they've got. And it's not the years that count. It's the moments. Right now. As they happen.”
“Well, right now, I intend to take my wife to dinner, and then, if she’s not too tired, dancing.”
“I’m never too tired when I’m with you.”
* * *
She’d fallen asleep almost as soon as her head hit her pillow. Clark propped his head up on his hand as he watched her slowly breathing. When he’d first decided to settle down in Metropolis, he had only hoped he would be able to find a way to use his gifts. And he did, donning the blue body suit and red cape of Superman. And she in turn had fallen for the alien superhero. Over time she discovered the man beneath the spandex and gave him more than he had ever hoped for – a home, a family, a sense of belonging. She was his soul-mate.
They’d had a nice dinner not far from their apartment, had gone dancing at one of the revival ball rooms that were so popular in Metropolis at the moment. He knew she was worried about him but he’d tried to keep up a cheery conversation even though it had eventually devolved to reminiscing about their days at the Daily Planet, Perry’s death, all their friends who were now long in their graves. At least they hadn’t outlived their own children so far.
Clark closed his eyes and promised himself to call the kids in the morning. He reached over and took her hand. And as he had every night since they were married, he kissed her. “I love you Lois Lane.”
She opened her eyes for just a moment, returning his kiss. “I love you Clark Kent.”
“Forever?”
“Until the end of time.”
* * *
Martha Kent-Olsen, the youngest of the Lane-Kent children, found them the next morning. She’d gotten worried when her mother didn’t call as she usually did after breakfast. Even though Martha was seventy years old and had grandchildren of her own, her mother had always made it a point to call her. Martha called her siblings.
“They went in their sleep, together,” she told them. “They looked content. Maybe even happy.”
“But Dad’s Superman,” Lara Kent-White complained. “The invulnerable aura…?”
“I called his doctor right after I called you,” Martha told them. “Dad was exposed to kryptonite again and his body had stopped repairing itself. Manning gave him a week at the outside.”
“Why didn’t he tell us?” Jordan demanded. “We could have found a way to help.” Jordan was a medical researcher, well respected in his field. His co-workers would hardly guess he moonlighted as a super hero.
“I don’t think he wanted us to worry,” Martha told them. Of all the children, she was the one who probably understood her parents best. Lane and Kent, the hottest team on the Planet. She was the one who had become a journalist. She was the one who was now editor-in-chief of the Daily Planet, like her father had been before her. “Their obituaries will be running on the banner,” she told them.
“Not Superman’s?” CJ asked. He was the lawyer, environmental law.
Martha smiled despite the tears running down her face. “Superman isn’t dead. Legends don’t die. But you get to tell Clark the third that he’s wearing the blue suit now.”
“I don’t think he’ll mind too much,” CJ said. “Legends don’t die, and Utopia lives on.”