There is a long tradition in literature and mythology of the "blind
seer" -- the person who can see the future but at the cost of the
ability to see the present. The irony was not lost on me, but I did
spend the first fifteen years of my life totally blind without any
compensating abilities, so the irony got old rather quickly.
My parents died in a fire when I was 12 years old. Somehow I managed
to escape that fate. I suspect a partial activation of my power but
I have never been certain, and it is not a night I care to recall.
My parents had been wealthy enough, and society was still regulated
enough, that I was able to live more or less by myself. My parents'
lawyer had been a family friend for years, and "Uncle" Samuel was
appointed as my guardian. He arranged for a housekeeper and companion
who helped me look after the house and garden. My life was still
quite isolated, restricted to the world I felt safe in: my home, a
few local shops and parks, and little else. When I turned 15 I
couldn't understand what was happening to me when "things" started
appearing in my head.
I know now it was my mutant power awakening, but it was most
disconcerting to be aware of a perception that seemed like it might
be what everyone else described as sight, though of course I had no
relevant grounds for comparison. I knew for sure that my eyes were
not involved as, technically speaking, I don't have eyes - the optic
nerve never developed properly.
They say that you can never explain sight properly to a blind person
and it's true: there are too many aspects of it that can't be
translated into any other context and analogies can only go so far.
I found it a lot easier to imagine that I was dealing with a totally
new sense, which just happened to have a visual component. I still
find it difficult to describe what I am seeing in purely visual
terms.
The "vision" inside my head always seemed blurred at first, and
whilst it took me a long while to understand the concept of
sight-based depth perception, it actually took me a lot less time to
realise that I could not only sense depth and distance, but time as
well.
As an analogy, try to image describing a rainbow without being able
to use the names of any colours or even wavelengths of light. It
would be possible, but would seem woefully inadequate to most people.
I'm afraid until the English language manages to create a
four-dimensional tense structure it will remain that way.
I had never had many friends, partly through my parents'
protectiveness, partly through a natural reticence, so it was
difficult for me to make some of these adjustments. Mercifully I did
have one friend who was always there for me. His name was David
Michaels and he was, literally, the boy-next-door. We had been
friends for years and told each other everything. I believe I was the
only person he ever trusted enough to reveal his homosexuality to.
Times were different then -- well, maybe not so different -- and such
a thing could be the ruin of a man if it were ever revealed. He was
so scared, and I think -- I hope -- I helped him through his fear.
With a relationship based on that much trust I knew I could tell him
about my strange abilities, and I thank God that I did. He was the
one who provided me with a frame of reference about what sight was,
that allowed me to decipher the images in my head. His patience was
limitless, we'd sit and look out the window for hours, with me trying
to describe all the futures that I saw and him supplying me with a
more normal visual description for comparison.
Thanks to him, words like "colour" had true meaning for me. I hear
his voice whenever I watch a sunrise, or the leaves in autumn,
describing the tones and visual textures to me. In return I tried to
convey the delicate strangeness of clouds when seen in four
dimensions: each timeline's sky is always subtly different from all
the others, thanks to the vagaries of unpredictable weather patterns.
The changes that resulted from my appreciation of my gift were
profound. Always a little hesitant moving around before, as all but
a few blind people are no matter how calm their facade, I now strode
through the world with confidence, knowing exactly where to put my
feet so that I would never stumble. That simple fact alone gave me
more confidence than you can probably imagine. I developed the grace
and poise of a dancer, and I did dance, on my own terms, for the
first time.
I never needed to study Braille again, the sheer "certainty" of the
written word allowed me to see books quite easily, and there were
vastly more books in normal print than translated into Braille --
having someone read to you is pleasant, but nothing compares to
reading what you want, when you want, just because you want to.
Actually, the concept that a mere variation of black and white tones
might convey words, ideas and meaning took more getting used to. At
least with Braille there was a tangible element (I still thought
mainly in tactile terms back then), but the written word had no
depth, nothing you could touch.
Handwriting was strangest of all to get used to. Print was regular
and predictable whereas handwriting was not. Sometimes I would ask
David to write something for me, and I would become absorbed in
seeing all the different letters that might flow out of his pen as
he made up his mind about what to write. It was a unique form of
performance art that only I could see.
Though I had always admired art in the forms of music and sculpture,
now I came to appreciate painting with a positive vengeance. I had
always had a penchant for tales of medieval times-- the chivalry, the
sheer legendary quality of it all. I had always loved the story of
Arthur and Guinevere, Merlin and Morgan, Cair Paravel and Fair Avalon
and now I could see it represented in life.
It must have seemed strange to many to see a woman so obviously blind
(the scar tissue around my eyes made concealment almost impossible,
even behind the largest pair of dark glasses) wandering through art
galleries looking at the pictures. David often accompanied me on such
trips, as a "cover".
My parents had left me well provided for, though I was greatly helped
by the fact that I did not need nursing care or readers. I might have
drifted through life quite contentedly, had I not met Raven. I had
been visiting Paris when I first saw her. I was in the Musee Picasso,
trying to come to terms with the concept of surrealism-- in my
innocence I could see no real reason for picturing the world any way
other than it was, surely it was beautiful enough?
My unaccompanied presence drew the usual murmurs and whispers, but
few had the courage to say anything, and those who did I saw coming
towards me well ahead of time, and was able to avoid.
It was just then that I "saw" a woman whose features seemed blurred
and uncertain depending on which future I looked at. My curiosity
piqued, I simply had to find out more about her... or him, it was
hard to say at that point.
The woman must have noticed me watching her. If she found that
strange in a blind woman, she didn't show it. She tried to slip away
in a variety of guises, but I could still see her. She was always the
blurred face in a range of crystal clear images. Thus, before we had
ever exchanged a word, we had both realised that the other was also
"gifted". The word "mutant" was new to me as a term for what I was,
and besides "gifted" has always seemed so much more positive. I may
_be_ a mutant, but I possess a gift.
I caught up with her in a side street some distance away, and I have
always suspected that she might have been prepared to harm me if she
thought I was going to reveal her secret. Luckily I was able to find
the right words to take her more or less completely off guard:
"If you're going to turn into the dark haired man in the suit, go for
charcoal grey, but if you're going to be that blonde woman, try a
floral print dress, not the stripes, it'll be far more flattering for
her." I paused to let the words sink home before continuing. "I'm a
little different too, you see."
And so Irene Adler met Raven Darkholme. Not exactly a nexus point in
terms of global causality, but at least a major personal juncture for
me.
In Raven I found a focus for my life and my vision. I could never
work out who was the older of us. I was not particularly young, but
some things she said suggested she was older than I could possibly
understand. That could have been a result of her life, however --
which, from the little I learned about it, had been a lot harder than
mine. When I saw what her true appearance looked like, I understood
why she was bitter. I can't imagine what it would be like to have to
grow up with blue skin and yellow eyes.
Raven was wild and daring, in ways I couldn't imagine. She had come
to the museum to see some of the paintings that Picasso had done of
her; his surrealism and his references to his "Blue period" were more
literal than most people imagine. Her life invigorated mine, and I
hope I was something of a moderating influence on her as well, for
even then she was prone to self-destructive urges. In me I like to
think she found the ultimate example of someone to whom outward
appearances truly meant nothing. In time we found love with each
other. Having spoken to David so often about such things, I found
nothing strange or wrong with our relationship -- we loved one
another, what more did we need. She gave me my "other" name, and I
gave her hers. On one occasion she told me that I was her destiny,
and it sort of became a running joke. Another time, I told her that
I liked her unpredictability: that it added to her mystique. It was
not a word she'd heard before, and she liked the sound of it. Again,
not perhaps earth shattering as naming ceremonies go, but it had
importance for us.
I was always sad that David and Raven never liked each other, though
each tolerated the other in my presence. Just barely, though, and
it's very lucky I was able to defuse many an argument with a little
foresight. He thought she was thoroughly dangerous, especially to me,
and she thought he was a boring stick-in-the-mud, though her exact
phrase was a little more "earthy" than that.
I have to admit that David was right about some things though: there
were secrets in Raven's life that I never learned about, although I
had my suspicions. I learned not to probe certain subjects too
closely, nor ask questions when she would disappear for days at a
time.
I often wonder what would have happened with our lives if subsequent
events had not taken place. Would Raven have found an outlet for her
anger against the persecution of mutants we both felt building up
amongst the normal humans? Would she and I have continued as we were,
or would we have become something more, or even something less?
I shall never know, because an abomination swept across the world,
tainting entire continents with his evil.
I had seen the result of Hitler's grotesque efforts at eugenics but,
compared to this, Hitler was a child playing with an ant farm. Raven
and I both lost dear friends there, so I mean no disrespect to those
lost in the Holocaust, but Apocalypse cast a far wider, darker shadow
than the Nazis ever did. Never has a being been more accurately
named.
Raven and I watched on in horror, both uncertain what to do, the
sheer scale of it all leaving us reeling. However, on the day my
powers saw down all the depths of time available to me and saw only
devastation and horror on all sides, I made my choice. I recall the
day with perfect clarity. We had come back to my hometown, thinking
it might be isolated enough to afford us some small measure of
security until we could sort out a plan.
Instead we arrived to find that Apocalypse's troops had swept through
the town two days previously en route from New York to the heartlands.
Parts of the town were little more than ruins, and David had been one
of those rounded up and publicly executed as a "genetic undesirable".
David's mother told me about it with tears in her eyes -- maybe she
still really didn't know what they had meant or, more likely, had
blocked it out. I couldn't bring myself to tell her the truth, not
like that. Even Raven wasn't sure what to say, and made do with a
mumbled word of sympathy.
I mentioned this meeting to Raven, who turned icy cold with fury in
a way I'd never seen before. She may not have liked David much, but
that was not the point. The following day, Mr Harris was seen by
several people frequenting a cafe, the one which was generally known
to be the local discreet haunt for gay men and women. Over the next
few days he was seen publicly denouncing Apocalypse all over town.
He was taken away by Apocalypse's forces shortly after that and was
never heard from again. I never asked Raven where she had been going
when she had slipped away over those few days, but, then again, I
didn't feel inclined to tell Apocalypse's troops that I knew for
a fact that Harris had been at home during at least one outspoken
diatribe either. I'm not proud of that last part, but I've never lost
sleep over it either.
What I did to Raven was another matter. It was a combination of
losing David and realising that I had deliberately, if unconsciously,
manipulated Raven into doing what I was too scared to do, that led me
to make one of the most important decisions of my life.
I decided to shun my power totally and withdraw from the world around
me. I decided I would sooner be blind for life than see the horrors
that were still to come. I should have been stronger perhaps... I
know that Raven never forgave me for that choice, but she was always
stronger than I.
That was the start of the rift between us. Raven set out to survive
as best she could in this bleak new world, and left me behind. She
said that she would have no more dealings with someone who chose to
close their eyes to the world around them without trying to make a
difference. Perhaps she also resented being used as my personal angel
of vengeance, but part of me knows that Raven might very well have
acted as she did anyway, without my unspoken prompting.
She told me she was going to go and seek out her mutant son. (There
was something about the way she unconsciously stressed the word
"mutant", that made me suspect there may have been other children,
who were not mutants and who were presumably therefore in less
danger.) The revelation came as a shock to me as I had never even
known she had a single child, never mind more than one. She had
always previously hinted that changing appearance all the time made
it impossible to carry a child to term. She told me that his name
was Kurt, and that she had had to abandon him in Central Europe,
leaving him where he would be found by a local Romany tribe. The
way that the world was being torn asunder, families ripped apart by
Apocalypse's whim, had clearly made her only child uppermost in her
mind and she was determined to find him one way or the other.
I couldn't go with her, I wouldn't go with her, I just wanted to be
left alone, I said.
"Fine," was Raven's final word to me as she left. It was the last
word she said to me for many years. Perhaps she cried, perhaps she
didn't, I never knew. I was only a blind woman after all.
I sought peace, but my times with David and Raven had left me unused
to absolute solitude. Eventually, when I dragged myself out of the
well of self pity I was wallowing in, I realised that there must be
other people like myself, human and mutant alike. Those who sought
a different life to what the reign of Apocalypse had brought. I was
like an old time preacher preaching of a different way of life, a
life of peace.
Ironically enough, to start on this path required an act of violence.
I faked my own death in a house fire, so no one would connect my
future actions with my past self. From what I can tell no one was too
surprised when a blind person's house suffered such a horrific
accident. Saddened, but not surprised.
Though I was frequently rejected violently by those I spoke to --
they were too busy scrabbling for survival to entertain dreams of
peace -- I began to gather converts too, most notably Cain, a giant
of a man who was literally as solid as a mountain, but who was
amongst the most gentle souls I have ever met. I have found it
difficult to imagine that there was much truth in his claims to a
violent past -- difficult, but not impossible.
As I gathered support, I realised we needed somewhere unique to found
our enclave, somewhere that the tyrant could never find us. The world
is quite small and his reach vast, so we needed somewhere special. No
country could accept us without incurring the wrath of the Destroyer,
and we might well find ourselves sold out by politicians or mob rule.
We needed secrecy above all else.
I even went as far as to approach Magneto himself for assistance,
but he could not help, being too busy organising his new resistance
movement, the X-Men.
I didn't actually meet him of course, but his daughter, a charming
young woman called Wanda. She conveyed an invitation from her father
for me to join his team in an advisory capacity if I would allow my
powers to return to me. Though I respected their aims, and she and
her father respected mine, I suspect we all knew our paths were too
different for it to work. It was not to be my destiny to be a
costumed adventurer. Wanda and I parted on good terms, though I
understand she was killed not long afterwards, a terrible loss both
to Magneto personally and to their cause. I can only console myself
with the thought that even if my power had been functioning, I
wouldn't have been able to see far enough into the future to warn
her.
I often hear about Magneto from newcomers. He's married now, and I
hear his wife is a lovely young woman. She must be quite a remarkable
person to have earned a place in his heart. Maybe I will meet her
someday.
My followers and I searched for a place of our own, but could only
find annoyingly vague references to obscure and strange locales that
might suit our needs: a lost city in the Himalayas where an advanced
people dwelt in self-imposed seclusion; a city in Brazil that seemed
like Ancient Rome and was protected by a powerful sorceress; a
strange "Savage Land" in the Antarctic where the climate was as balmy
as the tropics. They all sounded equally improbable, but the
improbable was rapidly becoming the norm.
It was Cain who believed the Antarctic Savage Land was real. He
claimed to have spent many years as a mercenary and recalled that
a... colleague (with the frankly unlikely name of "Parnival Plunder")
claimed that it was quite real. He was so convinced that perhaps we
all started to believe it; our only problem remained how to find it.
One of my first followers was named Amelia. A mutant, her ability to
transform herself and others into an insubstantial mist-form allowed
her to travel unobserved and over vast areas with minimal risk of
discovery. She searched the Antarctic for months for us, before
eventually finding the Savage Land.
Amelia returned to show us the way to a sheltered valley she had
picked out for us, but the cost of her search was high. She had spent
so long as a mist that she could no longer remain truly solid
herself. She managed to transport us to our new locale but after that
she could never reintegrate properly and knew that she would soon
drift apart forever.
Amelia and I grew very close in her last months, talking with each
other long into the night, and I still miss her company. She was an
intelligent, forthright woman who was not afraid to speak her mind.
She spoke eloquently about the potential of peaceful co-existance. I
use many of her lessons myself, to teach newcomers the rules we live
by. At last she could no longer stay together, and dissipated into
an evening breeze. I sometimes wonder, in my more fanciful moments,
whether she is still present in any form around us.
It was shortly after Amelia's death that I learned that I had my own
price to pay for my decision to cut off my second sight. My gift
tapped into chronal energy, and I was still sensitive to time in a
unique way. However, with me consciously focussing on not seeing the
future, the future sought another outlet through me. I eventually
found that my powers were no longer sight based, but triggered by
touch. I was no longer strictly precognitive, but psychometric -- I
could see the future (and sometimes the past) of anything or anyone I
touched.
It was both a potent new gift and a curse. If I touched a living
thing flesh-to-flesh I could not control the cascade of unwanted
images that would flood my perception. Imagine never being able to
touch another living person without getting lost in their thoughts.
It's not something I would ever wish on anyone. Inanimate objects
were less problematic, but still could carry impressions of those who
had been in contact with them.
I believed that by withdrawing from interaction with the world I
removed my ability to see how my interaction might change the future.
I no longer saw multiple visions of possible futures, I saw with
absolute certainty what would occur. Now, I wonder whether that was
mere cowardice, and my constant refusal to act meant that I resigned
myself to the most likely future and ignored the others.
Despite this, Avalon was now established, but we soon realised that
we were now _too_ isolated, and it was not possible for others to
find their way to us. Having sought secrecy for so long, we realised
we might selfishly have cut off our only means of long term survival.
We were still discussing plans of action some time later, when a
young woman simply appeared out of thin air in a flash of, so I am
told, silver fire. She was barely skin and bone and was near death
from exhaustion, and accompanied by several children who were in
little better condition.
Her name was Jemaine Szardos, a young gypsy woman (barely a girl,
really) from a long family line of sorceresses. She told us that
Apocalypse had launched secret attacks against many mystics around
the world in the weeks before his first major offensive. The scope
and unscientific nature of their abilities made them too much of a
wild card for his tastes. Her mother Margali had been an accomplished
sorceress who died in a conveniently spontaneous plague outbreak that
sounded like the work of Apocalypse.
Jemaine herself had barely escaped. Knowing she was dying, Margali
had used the last of her magic on a shielding spell for the children,
and Jemaine had used her nascent skills to teleport them to safety.
She had hidden them from the clean-up crews that Apocalypse had sent
in, refining her powers as best she could on her own to find them
food and clothing.
Then something she said made me start. Her adopted brother was a
mutant, a boy who was a physical mutant with blue skin and yellow
eyes. She told me that a similar looking woman calling herself
"Mystique" had come to claim him, threatening to hand them over to
Apocalypse if she didn't get to take him away with her. Jemaine never
did find out how this woman had tracked her down, but she saw little
choice but to agree to the idea and Kurt seemed willing enough,
perhaps sensing a real familial bond between them.
I was appalled at the thought that Raven would endanger children to
achieve her ends, but I hoped it was just a bluff. Now I am not so
sure. I was surprised when Jemaine told me that "Mystique" had told
her to try and find Avalon as there the other children might be safe,
but it did suggest that Raven was not a lost cause.
I will never know what good fortune allowed her spell to locate us or
transport her to us safely. She says it has something to do with
being a witch: "If you play with Fate, then Fate will occasionally
play with you." That was enough of an explanation for me.
Her magic bolstered the protective shields that some members of our
population maintained to protect us from most forms of detection that
Apocalypse could conceive.
In the outside world, word of Avalon spread a little at a time,
whispers of a haven for all who sought peace, and in time Jemaine
took on the role of Ferrywoman, preferring her own company and
shunning most human contact except her former charges from the tribe.
I think the loss of her brother hit her hard. Sometimes she would
slip and say "brothers" instead of "brother", and I sensed unspoken
tragedy in her past, but that was the norm in this Age of Apocalypse
and I chose not to pry. Jemaine was eager to play her part in
maintaining Avalon; in some ways I think we reminded her of her
old tribe.
Though she usually worked on the last stages of the passage to Avalon
that the refugees took, I know that Jemaine would sometimes use her
magic to vanish and reappear with individuals who never needed to
take the Devil's Gallop. No one ever commented on her choices, but
they always seemed to be timely and appropriate. I suspected some
form of magical divination, but that was Jemaine's business and I
never argued with the results.
Those of us who were the first arrivals knew we could never leave,
lest one of Apocalypse's tame psi-rippers tear its location from our
thoughts. The Ferrywoman has proven immune to all forms of psionic
coercion, but even she has to be careful as Apocalypse has far less
subtle methods of interrogation available to him.
We grew in strength and confidence over the years, and Avalon
prospered. Life was hard work for us all, but none starved or went
without shelter. Those with mutant powers used them for the benefit
of all, as did those with purely human skills. Some used their own
names, others used nicknames or new names they picked themselves. We
never asked questions in that regard. Harmony was maintained by all
and for all.
For my part, I made sure the message was passed to Raven that she
would always be welcome in Avalon if she ever sought peace. She never
took me up on that offer, but I know she became involved in the
ferrying process and even had a base of operations elsewhere in the
Antarctic.
It took me a while to realise that there was now no one in the world
who knew what I looked like, other than Raven. My old life as Irene
really was over, but I still made some of the best friends of my life
here in Avalon; Jennie, who could turn herself as thin as paper, but
whose thoughts and dreams were deep; Lillian, whose diamond hard skin
hid a vulnerable soul, and the man who called himself Timeshadow, who
had been a loyal servant of Apocalypse once upon a time, and who was
able to shift backwards and forwards in time for a few seconds. Some
unspeakable experiment of the Dark Beast now forced him to forever
live a frustrating five seconds in the future, out-racing some
horrible agony that I could never, mercifully, perceive. I did try
taking his hand once, but the temporal feedback nearly burned out my
mind and his screams were louder than mine.
Then of course, there was Douglas. My adoptive son was one of
Jemaine's "special cases", but on first meeting Douglas seemed one
of the most utterly ordinary people I had ever met. I didn't even
suspect he was a mutant at first and very few people ever did unless
he was using his powers. He was as traumatised as many who came to
us, who had only ever known the reign of Apocalypse for his entire
life, but still with that independent spark burning inside him that
typified those who found their way here.
However, when I first took his hand in greeting (as I do all
newcomers), I was astonished to see how much our destinies would
intertwine, with each other and Avalon. He was a lost child and,
particularly as it was around the time of the anniversary of both
David's death and therefore Raven's departure, I was feeling very
alone. We would each fill a void within the other. There is a
certain, petty, part of me that wonders how much of the adoption was
me wanting to prove to Raven that I could be a better mother than she
had been, but I try not to think about that too much.
Douglas reminded me of David in some ways, not physically, certainly
-- David had been very dark with black wavy hair -- but in his
manner, his way of speaking and listening, and of asking questions
more eloquently with his eyes than he ever did aloud. The fact that
I could practically _hear_ him blush whenever certain of the young
women of Avalon were mentioned also told me he was different from
David in at least one other way.
As soon as he learned of my sensitivity to skin contact he always
wore overalls and gloves around me, even when it was uncomfortably
hot to do so, just so there would be no accidental physical contact
to disturb me.
Douglas never spoke about what happened to his birth parents, but
whatever it was had a lasting effect on him: the many nights he awoke
shouting their names in the months after arriving were testament to
that.
It affected him in other ways too; though mature in manner most of
the time, there were moments when he seemed to regress to a much
younger age, playing with butterflies and staring at the beauty
around him as if it were brand new and he'd never glimpsed it before.
A moment later he'd be back to his normal self. When I quietly asked
the mentalist -- known informally as "The Psi-chiatrist" -- about
this, he assured me it was not a serious problem. In many ways I
envied Douglas those moments of innocence.
Avalon had been starting to splinter into disparate factions because
there were not enough common languages to communicate properly. We
had been small at first so it wasn't a problem, but now we were large
enough for it to be a serious consideration. Without communication
such situations usually deteriorate swiftly and my dream was within
months of crumbling.
Douglas knew his powers were linked to language and did his best to
act as an interpreter, but he couldn't be everywhere at once. Over
time, and with training from several of the resident telepaths, we
discovered a new and unexpected aspect of his gift. It was likely
we'd never have found out about it if we hadn't been so desperate.
Rather than having to do all the communicating in person, we found he
could spread a psychic field around Avalon that allowed all residents
to tap into his power. Initially it allowed people to understand
whatever was being spoken by anyone else, but the power was
cumulative too: people started to learn each other's languages simply
by being near Douglas. He created, albeit indirectly, a new and
invaluable unity between our inhabitants.
Ironically Douglas himself never has been much of a talker, often
going for hours without saying a word, simply because he felt he had
nothing worth saying. An inferiority complex is a luxury few can
afford these days so, partly out of respect for me, but mostly
because the inhabitants of Avalon truly valued and liked their young
interpreter, everyone went out of their way to involve him in
discussions. Gradually he came out of his shell and I customarily
took him to meet newcomers, so they would be sure of a welcome in
their native language, and he would be sure to expand his circle of
friends. It was the sort of thing a mother should do, I felt.
I recall the time that a large purple wildcat appeared with Jemaine.
It took Douglas more than a few minutes to establish that this was a
mutant werecat with a viable, if non-human language, rather than a
"mere" freak of nature. I can recall them yowling and hissing at each
other for so long that people thought he was being attacked and came
to help us. With the help of our telepaths and much patience
"McCavity", as we agreed to call her, became our best hunter of small
game, though she still rarely socialised, apart from with Douglas and
myself.
Mercifully for someone who has to translate so much, Doug has always
been a good listener (another trait he shared with David). Often he
was the only one who would spend time with Cain, as his constant
rambling about his dead stepbrother did tend to grate on people.
Again, I wonder how long things might have lasted if it weren't for
that thrice-damned monster Apocalypse and his insane schemes. Now
however, I know things cannot be the same no matter what happens
next.
Raven and her own son arrived in Avalon, seeking me. What I thought
would be a gloriously happy day -- and those are so rare now --
possibly proving wrong the prediction I had seen when I touched the
woman calling herself Switchback, instead brought about that very
chaos.
Even my joy at hearing Raven's voice again was curbed by the bitter
edge it had picked up, and our first words were harsh ones. I chose
not to mention to either of them the true identity of the Ferrywoman
-- if Jemaine had chosen not to reveal herself when they arrived, it
was not my prerogative to do so.
Her son was little better, belittling my efforts whilst knowing
nothing of the struggle that we had endured to make a life here. Had
I had the time I would have tried to make him understand, but there
was no time, no time at all.
A group of Apocalypse's killers had trailed Raven and Kurt. They
called themselves the Pale Riders: a walking corpse called Wade and
a psychotic killer called Damask, who spread destruction as soon as
they arrived. I guess there must have been others who didn't make it,
as surely even Apocalypse would not be so arrogant as to only send a
two-person assault team against a large gathering of mutants.
The damage they wreaked was enough, though; an explosion they caused
caught Douglas in its blast. Without thinking I knelt and checked him
for injury as best a blind woman can. I was relieved to find no
wounds but I was so caught up in that relief that I cradled his head,
and in doing so I touched his flesh. In that unspeakable moment I saw
the short and violent chain of events that will lead to his
inevitable death. I have seen that he will die saving me so that, in
turn, the world might stand a chance of freedom despite Apocalypse's
efforts, though at the cost of Avalon itself.
For the first time in decades I have truly tried to activate my
second sight again, to see if agreeing to leave now might in some way
change the path of destiny, but I have spent too long limiting my
power for me to be able to restore it at such short notice. Any
action I could take might make things infinitely worse for us all.
It also hurts knowing that Raven's son will say almost exactly the
same, hurtfully honest, things to my son that Raven said to me, just
before we parted. Douglas, though, will have the courage to
understand what is being said to him, and that understanding will
cost him his life.
At a deep level I know that, even if I could see a path of events
that saves him, I might not take it, because to do so would only deny
him the right to make the choices that he will make, and Avalon has
always been about freedom. I hate myself for that thought, but cannot
eradicate it.
I cannot see beyond Douglas' appointed death -- it was _his_ timeline
I was seeing -- but I know what I will do. I will leave Avalon and
its survivors behind me, probably forever. Magneto has sought my help
in arranging the ultimate defeat of Apocalypse and, even if it means
dying myself, if I can make that hideous creature suffer for even a
moment then I will do so. I will not waste the opportunity that Doug
will buy for me, for us all.
Humans say that the worst thing that can happen to a parent is to
outlive their child. For a precognitive mutant, I assure you there
are far more painful destinies.
Half an hour ago I saw how my son will die, and I can see no way to
change it. This gives one a strange perspective on life, but to
understand my problem you must understand my nature, and my life.