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Author of 92 Stories |
Between Time and Space
The SHADOLibrarian PG
Submitted 9/2006.
Description: After 42 years, Lois and Clark are finally reunited.
The usual disclaimers apply, as always. I don't own any of them, but I do borrow freely and I don't always put them back where they belong.
She couldn't blame him for going to New Krypton, to accepting being made First Lord, bringing peace to a war-ravaged world. It had been her choice, too. So she lived with the pain, rebuilding her life, marrying a good man, having his children.
She'd been diagnosed with liver cancer only three months before her seventy-first birthday and had refused treatment. It was time to go.
"Clark, wait for me," she said. Her younger son moved closer, then realized she wasn't speaking to him, but to her first love, Clark Kent, Kal-El of New Krypton. She smiled and her face was transformed. She stopped breathing.
"I'll be there," Kal-El, ruler and savior of New Krypton, promised as his heart stopped.
She had been lucky to find Richard White, Perry White's nephew, to partially fill the void in her heart. He had been a good man, much like Clark in many ways. She had wept bitterly when he died, wept that she hadn't been able to love him as he had deserved. As he had loved her.
The funeral service was a quiet one. Lois had been a top newspaper reporter, but she had always abhorred media attention, especially media attention on her relationship to Superman and on the disappearance and presumed death of her partner and husband, Clark Kent.
Jon-El and his mother, Lady Zara, considered sending his father's body to Earth for burial, but decided against it. It was better for both planets if they forgot the other. Godhood was far too tempting, and Kryptonians became near gods when exposed to the golden radiation of Earth's sun for any length of time. Kal-El's body was consigned, in accordance with New Kryptonian custom, to the red sun of New Krypton.
"Honey, over here," Lois Lane smiled, holding out her hand to him. He was tall and handsome, dark hair slightly mussed in the way she had always loved. He smiled at her, chocolate brown eyes filled with love, and her world lit up.
"You are so beautiful, and I love you so much," he murmured, taking her into his arms. "I am so sorry I couldn't come back. I'm so sorry I couldn't be with you."
"We're here now, so shut up and kiss me," she said. They kissed and joined in the dance of eternity, one soul, divided in two, always searching to the other. Here in this space that was not a space, a time that was not a time, there was but one soul, whole for at least for a time as two bodies joined.
They walked through green meadows and gardens, ate golden apples, and drank ambrosia. They watched purple and orange sunsets and pink sunrises on golden beaches with others taking their rest in this place of eternal green summer.
"Did I make a difference?" he asked after a minute, or was it an eternity?
"Yes, on two worlds," she said. "But next time, stay in mine."
"What about Utopia?"
"There's time for humanity to create it for themselves," she said. "But you showed the way. Strength with compassion, honor and mercy."
"And you showed them truth, and love," he murmured. "We were the best. The hottest team around."
"We're still the hottest team around," she said with a smile. "And we'll be the hottest team wherever we are, so long as we're together."
"Is it time to go?" he wondered.
"We have two worlds to choose from."
"Earth will be okay without us for a while, I think" he said. "New Krypton can use our help."
"They'll never know what hit 'em," she said with a smile. "Don't forget me."
"Never, beloved," he said. "I'll be waiting for you."