“Chloe, she’s nowhere to be found. I’ve checked all over Smallville, all over Metropolis… I’m beginning to think something happened to her.”
“Clark, breathe. I got a text from her saying she just needed a little space. I’m sure everything is fine,” Chloe said, typing something into the computer at Watchtower.
Suddenly, Clark’s phone began to ring. “It’s Oliver,” he said, seeing the caller ID. “Oliver?” Clark answered. “What’s going on? Have you seen Lois?”
“Um, she’s with me. Sort of.”
“What do you mean? What’s happened?”
“Clark, she said she needed some space, so I took her with me on a business trip to L.A.”
Clark cringed, fearing the worst – that Lois had made her decision and chosen Oliver after all. “Is she there? Can I speak with her?” he asked, trying to mask his fears.
Oliver hesitated on the other line. “That’s the thing, Clark… Lois—“ Oliver paused. “She’s not well, Clark.”
That sent a shiver of fear of a different sort down Clark’s spine. “Oliver, just tell me what’s going on.” In his head, Clark imagined all sorts of things. That Lois had gone ballistic, had decided she hated him, or worse -- was thinking of getting back together with Oliver. But none of that mattered if something had happened to her. He just wanted to see her. They could remain friends, if that’s all she wanted.
“Clark, she’s been having these – seizures.”
“Seizures?” Clark asked in alarm, causing Chloe to give him a questioning glance.
“Yeah, she’s in the hospital, at the L.A. Med Center. The doctors have run all sorts of tests… but here’s the thing… they can’t find a cause. And, uh, when she dreams… she’s saying all kinds of weird things. I think it has something to do with you and, you know, your---“
“What do you mean, Oliver? What has she been saying?”
“She murmurs all our names, as if she’s reliving something. Something traumatic for the most part. But the strangest thing is, she’s mentioned this guy, Zod.”
“Zod?” Clark said in disbelief, meeting Chloe’s surprised glance.
“Yeah, it sounded like one of your, you know, Krypton peeps, and I – I didn’t know who else to call. Clark, you’ve got to figure out what’s going on here.”
“I’ll be there as soon as I can,” Clark said, and then hung up the phone.
“Zod? This has to do with Lois’ trip to the future, doesn’t it?” Chloe asked.
Clark nodded, mulling over what Oliver had told him. “She—she’s having seizures. She’s in L.A. with Oliver.”
“What?” Chloe said, suddenly turning to her computer for some quick typing. “It will take me a minute, but let me see if I can access her medical file… Meanwhile, why would Lois run away with Oliver?”
“You think I want to know the answer to that, Chloe?” Clark said dejectedly. “But that doesn’t matter. She needs my help – our help. Oliver sounded pretty worried…”
“OK, here we are… “ Chloe said, squinting to read the small-print file she was able to pull up. A few more clicks of the mouse and she had it so both of them could read it. “Whoa. Her blood pressure has gone through the roof… Though now it’s leveled off… or maybe that’s just when she becomes conscious again. Clark,” she said, turning to him. “Every time she has these seizures, it puts her body through some kind of trauma… She’s a tough girl, but her body can only handle so much. We have to do something, fast.”
“This is all my fault,” Clark mumbled.
“No, don’t do that. You didn’t know Lois would find the ring. And who knows why her bolt reflex kicked in and rocketed her towards Oliver. It may have been mere panic. But the point is, we have to figure out how to shake Lois from these seizures.”
“If only there was a way to get inside her head… Chloe, if I knew what she had seen, then maybe I could stop Zod.”
“Well. Whatever you do, you better do it quick. Lois is holding on, but who knows what more of this trauma will do to her.”
~L&C~
A few moments later, Clark supersped across half the country, arriving at L.A. Medical Center. He found Oliver sitting in the lobby, his head between his hands.
“Oliver. How is she?”
“Not much has changed since I spoke to you. Look, I’m sorry—“
Clark sighed, preparing his concession speech he had thought of on the way over. “Oliver, it’s okay. If she’s chosen you—“
“No, Clark, you’ve got it all wrong. I took Lois out here just to think through some things. She was pretty freaked out by what happened the other day.“
Clark looked guilty. “She’s not mad at me?”
“No, Clark… she’s--- man, look, we just need to help her. Clark, I’ve never seen her so weak before.”
Clark nodded in understanding about the change of subject. “What room is she in?”
Oliver gestured down the hallway. “Room 105. I made sure she had a private room. Go on. I’ll wait here.”
Clark nodded and headed down the quiet hallway. When he got to room 105, he gently knocked and called, “Lois?” But no one answered.
He stepped inside the dimly lit hospital room. Lois seemed to be sleeping, though he could see that her blood pressure was still high, and that she was still being closely monitored.
She looked paler than he had ever seen her. And Oliver was right. She looked weak. She’d never looked this weak a day in her life, and it scared him. He sat by her bedside and gently took her hand, which was surprisingly warm. “I’m sorry, Lois. This is all my fault…”
“Clar…” she murmured.
“I’m here, Lois,” he answered quietly in response, trying to speak through the choked sensation in his throat. He squeezed her hand gently.
Clark searched her face, hoping against hope that she’d suddenly sit up and give him one of her snarky remarks. Lois was the strongest woman he knew. He couldn’t bear to see her like this.
Clark shook his head, glancing around the room as he tried to think what to do. He noticed her purse on a visitor’s chair, just on the other side of her bed. A piece of paper was sticking out of it. With an almost apologetic glance at Lois, he let go of her hand and walked over to read the conspicuous paper.
A red sun
Chloe on the ground – dead??
Oliver—burying someone?
Clark—
Clark felt a chill go up his spine, more horrified than ever of what kind of world Lois had seen of the future. And it was all his fault. How could he fix this?
His own name had been stricken through. He wondered what horror he had done. What had she seen that so terrified her, she couldn’t even write it on paper?
Suddenly, Lois started trembling, sending her vitals all over the place. “Lois,” he said, stuffing the paper in his pocket as he rushed back to her side.
“Nurse!” Clark called over his shoulder, terrified. “It’s going to be all right, Lois. Everything is going to be fine,” he tried to say calmly, hoping that by speaking the words, he’d make it happen.
A short brunette stepped in. “The doctor is coming, sir. I’m afraid you’ll have to leave.”
He felt desperation sinking in, needing to stay with Lois to see that she’d be all right. “I can’t—I mean she’s—“
“She’s what? Your wife?” the woman asked bluntly.
Clark sadly shook his head, just as the doctor entered with a team of nurses.
“Just as I thought,” the nurse responded. “Come with me, please. She’ll be fine. This has been happening all day.”
Helpless to do anything else, Clark allowed himself to be led out of the room. He stood just outside the door though, and unabashedly used his x-ray vision to see what was happening. Within moments, they had her vitals back to normal levels and were filling out her chart. Clark waited until the doctor left her room to speak to him.
“Will she be all right?” he asked.
The doctor sighed irritably. “I’m sorry, are you part of her immediate family?”
“No, but—“ Clark said, his heart painfully full of all he felt for the woman in the other room.
The doctor nodded understandingly. “I don’t know what’s causing this. We’re looking for the reason, and then we can start thinking about the cure. I’m sorry.”
Clark moved to go back in the room, but the doctor stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. “I’m sorry, son. She’s sleeping now. You’ll have to come back tomorrow, during visiting hours.”
Clark nodded and headed back down the hallway to where Oliver was still sitting.
“What do you think?” he asked.
Clark shook his head, still in shock by what he had seen. It terrified him, reminding him of when Brainiac had had Lana under his control. He was sick to death of being the reason that those he loved suffered.
“Are you all right, Clark?” Oliver asked again.
“Yeah, sure… I—I don’t know what to do, Oliver. The worst part is, I need to know what she’s been having visions of.” Clark paused, and took the paper out of his pocket. “I found this in her purse. It’s a list of some pretty horrific things. Oliver, I think it’s the future that Lois has been to. I have to know what she knows… It may be the only way to stop Zod…“
Oliver read the short list she had written, noting it was on the hotel letterhead of where they were staying. “Do you think this has happened more than once?”
Clark shook his head. “I don’t know. All I know is that I can’t stand to see her suffer like this,” he said with a glance over his shoulder towards Lois’ room. His eyes narrowed, and his vision easily peeled away the things obstructing his view. She was still resting peacefully.
“There has to be something you can do, Clark,” Oliver said forcefully. “One of your gadgets or – Jor-El? Something. We can’t just leave her like this, Clark. She’ll—“
“Don’t say it,” Clark interrupted. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe Jor-El can somehow get into Lois’ memories… But if I take her to the Fortress, she may learn who I am—“
Oliver crossed his arms, clearly irritated. “Then that’s a risk you’re going to have to take, Clark. Look, I did the whole hide-who–I-am thing with Lois. And things didn’t end up so great. I regret not being honest with her. You should consider that. Besides, I think she’d understand. You need to give her more credit.”
“It’s not that she wouldn’t understand, Oliver. Her knowing the truth about who I am would only put her in more danger.”
Oliver pointed down the hallway. “And you think she’s in less danger now? Clark, if she understood what was really going on here, she may have been able to tell you something about this sooner. We might have been able to prevent coming to the hospital at all. Come on, Clark. Grow up.”
Clark sighed with a nod, accepting Oliver’s tirade. “Fine. How do we get her out of here, then?”
Oliver shrugged, clearly still irritated at Clark. “I’ll make up something about my personal physician, blah blah blah… I’ll take care of it. Just whisk her out of here and see if your ice palace father can help her.”
Clark suddenly whooshed out of sight. “Clark?” Oliver called. His eyes wandered down the hallway. He could see that Lois’ room was open.
He walked towards it, seeing that Clark had already taken Lois. With a heavy sigh, he turned to the nurses’ station, preparing an excuse as to why their patient had suddenly disappeared.
~L&C~
The shortest way to the Fortress was through the portal in the Kawatchee caves. Clark sped home with Lois in his arms, grabbed the Kryptonian key and was standing before the stonewall entrance to the Fortress within moments.
He paused to check on Lois. She seemed to be in a deep sleep. Listening closely, he could hear that her heart rate was elevated, but steady.
“I’m so sorry, Lois,” he whispered, pushing her hair back from her face. “I can’t seem to avoid hurting those I love,” he said. His mind focused on that last word – love. Of course he loved Lois. She drove him to distraction, but she pushed him and supported him as well. She was everything to him, and he was just beginning to see it.
“I can’t lose you now,” he said, leaning down to kiss her cheek.
Clark turned towards the entrance of the Fortress, touching the Kryptonian etchings in sequence as they lit up, yellow, red, and blue.
With a whisk of wind, they were suddenly in the Arctic, and Clark held Lois closer to him to keep her warm.
“Jor-El?” Clark called, surprised by the catch in his throat. He realized that he had to trust his Kryptonian father, a father who wasn’t always cooperative or well-intentioned. But he had no other options to save Lois.
“I’ve come to ask for help. It’s Lois. She—she’s having visions of the future. She put on the Legion ring, and now those memories are threatening her life.”
“You want me to clear her mind of the memories of the future, Kal-El?” came Jor-El’s incredulous voice from somewhere above them.
“Yes. But I need to learn what she has seen first. It may be the only way to stop Zod.”
“Keeping your secret from Lois Lane has its consequences. Until you can tell her the truth about yourself, she will always be in more danger,” Jor-El said, with just a hint of condescension.
“How is that so? Everyone who knows my secret has been hurt by it in some way. I would never wish that on Lois.”
“You refuse to see her strength, Kal-El. I will not allow you to play with destiny on a whim. Lois has made her own decisions, and now you must make yours. You must decide if you trust her. I will take away the damaging effects of her memories, but she will still retain glimpses of the future. It’s up to you if she will tell you what she knows.”
“How can I protect her if she knows my secret?”
“Kal-El, you are trying to protect yourself, not Lois.”
Clark looked down at Lois, who was still sleeping, as he considered Jor-El’s words. Was he trying to protect himself? Faora had come back from the future to tell him that he would destroy the planet… yet Clark knew Zod was the real threat – wasn’t he?
What would Lois remember? Would she be frightened of who he was? Would she trust him?
Could he trust her?
“I want to, Lois,” he whispered. Maybe Jor-El was right. He was more concerned with protecting his own heart, and his secret. He feared telling Lois the truth, because he feared risking losing her.
“All right, Jor-El,” he called out against the crystalline caves around them. “Bring Lois back. I’ll accept the consequences.”
The cave suddenly flashed with a warm, bright light. It diffused all around them, and then gradually disappeared.
Lois started to stir awake…
For one panicked moment, Clark considered whisking her out of there before she could fully wake up. He thought of taking her to Smallville or to the Planet, or even back to Oliver, and just make up something about how she had been sick.
But he knew if he did that, he’d never stop running from her. He’d continually make excuses and continually lie to her.
Not only would he never know what she knew about Zod, but he’d keep her forever at a distance.
He suddenly realized that he didn’t want that. They may have more to learn, but they would do it together.
If he could face Lois here, in the full truth of who he was, then nothing would stop them.
Clark knew, it was time to stop running.
~L&C~
“Smallville?” she whispered as her eyes fluttered open.
“Lois,” he began, his voice strained. “I thought I’d lost you.”
He helped her stand up, and then took her in his arms in a warm hug.
“Where are we?” she asked, taking in their surroundings.
“It’s a lot to explain… and I want to tell you everything,” he said, his eyes meeting hers. “Do you trust me?”
“Clark, what is this?” she asked, suddenly wary. She pulled away from him, her arms wrapping around herself for warmth.
“Lois, we need to talk,” he said, regretting his choice not to at least bring her back to the barn first.
“First we need to find a way out of here,” she said practically, starting to look around for an exit. “How did we even get here?”
“Lois, please, just stop a moment. I need to tell you something.”
“Well, hurry it up, Smallville, cause I’m freezing.”
“Lois, I’m—“ he began, but words caught in his throat. How did he explain himself to her? Did he just tell her straight out that he was the Blur? That he wasn’t even from this planet?
Would she ever trust him again, knowing how long he had lied to her? He felt ashamed about how he had turned to her so freely as the Blur, often putting her at risk, and yet withholding his true self from her. He longed to face her as Clark and have her know the full truth – yet he feared that whatever love was between them would disappear in the face of his lies.
His father’s words came back to him. “Kal-El, you are trying to protect yourself, not Lois.” It was true. He was afraid of losing her if she knew the truth.
But what if Oliver was right? What if Lois would understand? What if she loved him enough that it wouldn’t matter? Could he risk not telling her simply because he feared a bruise to his pride?
“Clark, what is it?” she asked, her hazel eyes seeking his. She was visibly cold, in nothing but a t-shirt and sweatpants. He had on a light jacket, and quickly took it off to swing over her shoulders.
“Clark, you’ll freeze,” she said, even as she snuggled deeper into his offered coat.
“No, I won’t,” he said decisively, working up the courage to tell her exactly why he wouldn’t freeze. “But we need to get you out of here.”
Clark touched the panel of the Fortress, holding Lois’ hand, and they were suddenly back in the Kawatchee caves.
“What—just happened?” she asked, disoriented.
“Hey, I remember these caves. You were quite obsessed with them a few years ago…” She raised her eyebrows, impressed. “I suppose I can sort of see why… Though, I’m still a little lost on how you have a secret passage to an ice cave…”
“Lois,” he began, and then hesitated again. “Walk with me?” he asked, offering her his hand. She took it, and he led her out of the cave.
The sun was beginning to set, and the golden fields of Smallville stretched out before them.
Clark glanced over at Lois, and she seemed puzzled about something.
“What is it?” he asked.
She shook her head, “Nothing… just… um, remembering something, I guess.”
Clark looked around them, the sun almost red in its golden cast over the landscape. He swallowed his fear, wondering if Lois was recalling the red sun of her visit to the future. He had to tell her the truth. It was now or never.
“Lois, you know how you sometimes get mad at me for not always being there? How I sometimes seem unfocused or, I don’t know…”
“Sure, Smallville. I’ve come to expect a little quirkiness from you. It’s one of your endearing qualities,” she said with a smile. “By the way, how did we even get out here?” she asked, apparently looking around for a mode of transport.
Clark sighed. “I’m trying to explain, Lois… This is difficult.”
She squeezed his hand. “Whatever it is, Clark, just tell me.”
He turned to her, one of her hands still clasped in his. He raised his other hand and stroked her cheek. Her eyes lit up under his gaze and he couldn’t help but smile back himself. “I can’t believe I almost lost you,” he whispered.
“What do you mean? All I remember is Ollie…” she glanced away, seeming even more puzzled.
“Lois, do you remember asking me what was my biggest secret?”
“Clark, it was a zombie apocalypse. I think I get a pass at trying to pry into your personal life…”
He gently stroked her cheek with his thumb and her eyes closed briefly with pleasure. “Though I’ll admit, you could confess anything right now and I’d be okay with it, Smallville,” she said in a sultry voice.
Clark leaned in towards her, remembering their kiss from the other day. He wanted to kiss her, even if it was a last time. Even if after he told her the truth, and she never wanted to speak to him again. They could still have this moment, in this glorious sunset…
His lips met hers, and her arms circled round his shoulders. Sweet moans of pleasure came from Lois as he took their kiss deeper.
But suddenly Clark pulled away. “I can’t…” he said.
She looked up at him, hurt and confused. “Why?” she whispered.
“Lois, there’s something I’ve been trying to tell you. I have no idea how…” he ran his hand through his hair in frustration. “All I know is, I don’t want there to be any more secrets between us.”
“Look, if this is about Oliver – I just went with him to try and clear my head.”
“You’re sure you don’t want to get back together with him?”
“No! Clark, if that kiss didn’t tell you that then—“ she threw her hands in the air. “I just freaked out a little. I was so afraid… that you’d walk away. So I guess I left first. But I realized, that I was merely running away… from my heart,” she glanced up at him, tears in her eyes. “I’ve been second string before, Clark. With Ollie… it was always so complicated. And I don’t want to be in that position ever again. I know you said we should keep secrets---“ She let out a heavy sigh, her eyes meeting his, still shiny with unshed tears. “For the first time in my life, I don’t mind if the whole story is out there… “
“What’s the whole story then, Lois?” he asked quietly.
“The truth is, I’m confused… I can’t help keep wondering about the Blur. And you… well, my heart feels like it’s torn in two,” she said, a tear finally slipping down her cheek.
“Lois, please, don’t cry. There is no need,” he said soothingly, stepping towards her. “You don’t need to feel torn, Lois. You see--- I’m—“ The words again stuck in his throat, and Lois watched him expectantly. He couldn’t say it, but perhaps he could show her. Clark suddenly got inspired.
He picked her up in his arms, and super sped them to the farm, setting Lois down on the front porch.
She stared at him quietly a moment, seemingly speechless, which was a first for Lois Lane. Her silence unnerved him and Clark began to pace.
“Please, Lois. Say something. Anything…”
~L&C~
Lois watched Clark pace on the porch, seemingly distraught over his revelation, though it was nothing compared to the roiling feeling in her own heart.
“The Blur,” she whispered in awe at last. “It was you?” she said, as a hundred little things clicked into place. “All those phone calls… all the time, it was you?”
She leaned against the rail of the porch for support. She should be ecstatic, over the moon with joy. Clark, the man she was falling in love with, and the Blur, her secret hero she worshiped from afar were the same man. And yet, she couldn’t help feeling betrayed and lied to.
“Why tell me now? Why not let the charade continue, Clark?” She could see the guilt in his eyes, and she relented just a bit. “I mean, maybe you lied to protect me. I certainly encouraged it,” she said ruefully. “A part of me always believed that I should never know the Blur’s identity, that it would be too dangerous. But knowing it is you… I guess I’m hurt that you didn’t tell me sooner.”
“Lois, I am sorry. But I’m telling you now because -- I don’t want there to be secrets between us. Lois, you have no idea what it meant to me talking to you as the Blur. You were my only contact with the world for weeks. You kept me sane…I—“
“Why did you disappear?”
“I was supposed to train… The Fortress, in the Arctic, where we just came from?” He sighed. “Lois, this is the harder part to explain.”
She took a seat on the front step and patted a spot beside her. “We’ve got all night. I want to know everything.”
~L&C~
Hours later, Lois was still sitting on the porch step next to Clark. Her head was on his shoulder, after hours of pouring out his heart to her, explaining all the little things he had always wanted to tell her. It felt so good to unburden himself to Lois. He felt more peace in his heart than he had felt in years.
They watched the stars come out, and here in Kansas, the night sky percolated with points of light for miles. “You know, one of those stars could be Krypton,” she said. “I heard that stars will shine here on earth long after they’ve disappeared…”
“I’ve thought of that countless times myself. I used to sit in the barn with my telescope, poring over astrology books, trying to find an unmarked star, or one that was misnamed. But I never could figure it out.”
Lois suddenly yawned. “All this fresh air is getting to me, I guess.”
“Tired?”
“Mmm, a little.” She stood up and stretched, then looked down at Clark. “You don’t know what it means that you’ve trusted me with this, Clark.”
Clark stood and took her in his arms. “I’ve wanted to tell you for a long time, Lois. But I was always afraid… Afraid of what you’d think, or that it would put you in greater danger. Then I realized, I was putting you in greater danger without this knowledge.”
She laid her head on his chest, closing her eyes. They stood under the blanket of stars, just listening to each other breathe, to each other’s heartbeat.
“Lois… I have one other confession to make tonight.”
She lifted her head to meet his eyes. “Well?”
“Come, I’ll show you.”
He took her hand and led her to the barn. They climbed the wooden stairs to his loft, and he sat her down on the sofa while he rummaged through his junk drawer until he found what he was looking for.
He turned to face her, holding the Legion ring. “I need to explain this.”
She looked at it fearfully, then glanced warily at him. “All I remember was putting that on before my three weeks of blocked memory. And then… I reappeared on a monorail, wearing that ring.”
“Lois, it took you to the future,” he explained, putting the ring away. But he came immediately back over and sat down next to her on the sofa.
“Your memories of the future were causing you to blackout. Jor-El cured you of the ill effects of your time travel, but Lois – I’m hoping you can remember something about what you saw. The future of the world may depend on it.”
Coming from anyone else, or even the Clark Kent she had thought she’d known, she would have thought his comment trite. But given all the bizarre and extraordinary things he had explained to her tonight, she could only take him at his word.
Clark took a piece of paper out of his pocket and handed it to her. “You had written this yesterday, I think. Do you recall what any of it means?”
Lois stared at the list, the words conjuring vague memories of the dreams she’d been having. She touched the words one by one, her fingers stopping on Clark’s stricken out name.
“One of the Kandorians had come from the future, warning that I would be the one to destroy the planet. I feared that you were too fearful to write what I—I’m worried about what will happen in the future, Lois. Why would Faora say I would destroy the world?”
He laid his head in his hands, distraught. Lois recalled why she had stricken out his name, and though she was embarrassed by the passion her dreams had shown her, she couldn’t let Clark think he was some dangerous monster to be feared.
She gently pulled his hands down to his side, and made him look at her. “Clark, you didn’t do anything awful in my dream or, um, visit to the future. Quite the opposite,” she demurred.
“Then what do you remember?”
Lois closed her eyes, trying to recall the images of her dreams. She focused on the words she had written down, and slowly, events came back to her…
“There was a red sun. I think Zod and Tess had created it. It gave the aliens power,” she said slowly, her eyes still closed. “There was a fight… Something happened to Chloe.” Her eyes flashed open. “I remember that the tower was the key. Something about turning the sun yellow again and you would be our hope…” she finished slowly. “I hadn’t understood before. Is it the sun that gives you your powers?”
Clark nodded. “Yes, and the Kandorians are trying to get power as well. It’s the RAO Solar Tower, isn’t it? The one that Tess is funding?”
“Yes, that’s it! Clark – how do we stop it? It goes live in… a matter of days. This Wednesday, I think.”
“Yes… I can stop it. I’ll find a way… is there anything else you remember, Lois?”
She looked away, her cheeks turning slightly pink. “Nothing for the front page, Smallville.”
He watched her a moment, but let the topic go.
After a while, he stood, as if he had made his mind up about something. “Will you stay here a bit? There’s something I have to do.”
“What? Like save the world?” she half-kidded.
He smiled slightly. “Actually…”
“Go,” she said softly. “And let me write the story about it tomorrow. Meanwhile, I’ll be here when you get back.”
Suddenly, Clark whooshed out of sight. The movement caught Lois off guard a bit. Her eyes tried to follow where he had gone, but he moved faster than anything she had ever seen before.
She laid back on the sofa with a sigh, slightly overwhelmed by all she had learned tonight. After a while, she got up and changed into Clark’s old high school football jersey and climbed into his bed.
She still couldn’t believe it.
Her mild mannered Smallvile was also the Blur…
As she settled into the covers, a calm filled her, surrounded by things that reminded her of Clark. She wanted to stay up and wait for him, but she was exhausted from this evening’s excitement. Soon enough, the pull of sleep took her away.
But she knew she would only have peaceful dreams tonight.
Clark – the Blur – was hers for keeps.
~L&C~
Clark stood on the top of the Daily Planet building, surveying the RAO Solar Tower. It was set to go live in just a few days, as Lois had said. If he could stop them from starting the tower, then he could gain the upper hand on Zod.
He would have the leverage he needed to help his people assimilate, and not conquer the world, as Zod wanted to do.
Sometimes the ends justified the means, didn’t it? He wanted peace for his people, for them to find a place.
Would it really be wrong to burn down the RAO Tower, considering the danger it presented?
Clark normally would deliberate over something like this. Destruction wasn’t in his nature. He would normally hesitate until he was absolutely certain there was no other way. But he felt confident in trusting his instinct in this matter. He trusted Lois’ belief in him. Her open spirit had buoyed his own, wiping away his doubts about his place and purpose in the world.
He felt confident about taking action. It was the right thing to do.
Clark suddenly let his heat vision fly across the buildings, over to the distant RAO Tower, setting the symbol of Zod’s power aflame. He felt some relish in doing so, and yet he felt the responsibility of it as well.
The consequences of not burning it down were too dire, though. Whatever games Zod would now play, Clark knew that he also had an unshakable ally in his corner in Lois. And with her by his side, he felt that anything was possible.
~L&C~
Clark sped back to the farmhouse a short time later. It was after midnight, and though he didn’t expect Lois to be awake, he hoped she would be. He looked forward to writing up the story with her about how the RAO Tower mysteriously burned to the ground -- with her name on the byline, of course.
He went to the loft, and found Lois asleep on his bed, wearing his football jersey. She looked so restful, so at peace, and incredibly beautiful.
Quietly, he changed into a t-shirt and boxers and climbed into bed beside her.
“Clark?” she murmured, snuggling easily into his embrace, even as she drifted back to sleep.
“I’m here, Lois,” he whispered back, planting a gentle kiss on her brow.
As Clark settled into bed, Lois fast asleep in his arms, he looked out into the night sky.
Hundreds of stars, like tiny diamonds twinkled back at him. He happened to just catch a glimpse of a shooting star cross the sky, and he held his breath, thinking. Could that have been Krypton, falling out of the night sky? He would never know…
He settled into the bed, spooning Lois, thinking how lucky he was to have her in his life, and to have her know the truth about him. Despite all the heartache and pain. Despite losing his father, and despite being so wrong about Lana.
Despite all the troubles with the Kandorians ,and what may lay ahead in dealing with Zod, Clark felt at peace.
Holding Lois, he felt all was right in the world.
He kissed her hair gently again, whispering, “Good night, Lois.”
They both had stopped running…
And whatever tomorrow would bring, he knew that they would be able to face it – together.
THE END