

Winner - Round 6





Title: Persistence of Memory
Author: cardinalgirl
Rating: TEEN
Disclaimer: I don’t own the show, but I do own a nice replication of a Crashdown apron! hehe.... Anyhow……. I also don’t own Salvador Dali’s the Persistence of Memory, though I’m sure that shocks you all. BTW... I've never been to New York, and my fic will probably show that, so anybody who's actually familiar with NYC, please forgive me....
Summary: Future Fic, post Graduation. The gang’s set a three-year limit on living in any one place, and this next move manages to quiet down some of the worries and answer some of the questions that they just haven’t been able to get out of their heads, even since leaving Roswell. Couples are all CC, but you'll have to see exactly what I mean by that! lol No worries, though!
Author's Note: The narrative will jump from place to place with different parts, at first, but they tie in very quickly. A couple of things: 1, the group is NOT in imminent danger from the FBI in this story. More about what they’ve lost and left behind, but never forgotten. And 2, I might add a few things in from the books, just little things like what the aliens can/can't do, etc. Uh… I guess I should also mention this is my first fic.
And thanks to Anniepoo98 for the amazing banner!
Part 1
2012
Ava Spencer stepped out of the New York City taxicab and shuddered. She’d sworn she’d never return here, but she had been offered a job as a curator at the Museum of Modern Art. It had been the opportunity of a lifetime, likely to never arrive again, and she hadn’t been able to resist. It was her dream, after all. All she had worked for for the past ten years.
She realized that that almost sounded like nothing. Most people worked their entire lifetimes for an opportunity like this. Then again, most people didn’t have the… abilities that Ava Spencer did. Or the genes, rather.
Her inborn talent to absorb information was the only one of her otherworldly talents she used on a regular basis anymore.
She headed up to the new apartment the museum had arranged for her. That’s how badly they had wanted her, they’d arranged an apartment for her. She checked in at the desk, showed her ID and was presented with a key. It was that simple. To think that there had been times in her life when she wouldn’t have even been let into the doors of a place like this…
At the elevator the bellhop asked for her floor. A bellhop. She felt like she could die.
Not bad for a self-educated former street urchin.
The apartment was newly furnished, and nicely too, so even though all she had were a couple of small suitcases—she meant to go shopping the first chance she got—the place was quite homey. After spending the first eleven years of her life on the streets—she’d been around six when she and the others had gotten out of the pods—anything with a roof was incredibly homey.
She was all but wide-eyed as she walked through the main room of the apartment, the living room. There was a nicely-sized television along with an L-shaped couch, a desk for a computer, and a dining table, and despite all the furniture, the room was large enough to not feel at all crowded. On the table there was a note from one of the directors at the museum.
Ms. Spencer~
Welcome to New York City! A bit more impressive than your Albuquerque, I’ll bet!
She skimmed the rest of the welcome letter, which said that she’d be provided with a laptop through the museum along with other things, and she was welcomed to the museum, of course, etc, etc.
After finishing with the letter she went on into the bedroom. There was a king-sized bed with satin sheets, and a print of Salvador Dali’s famous melting clocks painting, Persistence of Memory, which of course, was displayed at the Museum of Modern Art. It had been the first piece to interest her in the arts.
She quirked a half-painful smile. It had interested her because of the title, mostly. Persistence of Memory. Memory was the only thing that had persisted in her life.
The world called her sort of memory “photographic.” Whether she wanted to or not, she remembered everything she had ever read, heard, or seen. It was part of the reason she had worked so hard these past ten years, always looking forward, never back. Always concentrating on the future, because the past was always too close for comfort.
Turning away from the painting, she went to look at the bathroom, which was equally impressive. On seeing herself in the mirror, though, she was almost shocked. From the moment she’d stepped out of the cab she had felt as if the last ten years hadn’t really happened, and that she was back to that seventeen-year-old girl with her outrageous appearance. She was back in New York after all, and she couldn’t help but feel, just for an instant, as if nothing had changed.
She had almost been looking for them as she’d crossed the sidewalk into the foyer of the apartment building. Surely they had been there somewhere… watching. But then this was the nice part of New York. She’d never seen this side of it before, not in real life.
She began to examine herself in the mirror. She looked so different now than she used to. When she’d first gotten to her “native” Albuquerque so many years ago, she’d gotten a picture of herself at one of those little photo booths. She could barely look at it anymore without blushing. She’d had purple and black streaks in her hair and more than one piercing… now if anyone saw the picture by accident she explained easily that it had been a high school Halloween costume. Her entire life history erased and replaced with a Halloween costume.
She had picked the last name Spencer because it sounded simple, clean-cut, and oh, so human. Generic. That was the image she had been aiming for. She would have changed her first name, too, but that would have been too much for her, and besides, she was around the age for the statement names anyhow, and Ava was perfectly acceptable. Not that Ava was her whole name, but it had always been a nickname of hers, even before…
Using her powers, she had taken the multiple streaks of color out of her hair, leaving it its natural golden blonde. The piercings were gone, too, and no holes left to speak of. She had taken the money Liz Parker had given her when she’d left Roswell—how long ago that seemed!—and changed it into larger bills, enough to get to the capital, and to pay for motels when she got there.
After failing over and over again to get a real job, she had gotten the idea of the public library, and she started checking out books for free, while saving the little bits of money she got from working at various fast-food restaurants. Every moment she was not working she spent reading, either at the library or whatever motel she was currently calling home. She only technically needed two or so hours of sleep per night, and so she was studying almost around the clock. She had her GED before she was twenty-one, and then worked her way through a junior college, after which she had applied for the big guns—Yale—and somehow been accepted. It was the first time she had felt completely secure since… since…
Soon after she’d graduated from there she’d been contacted by the Museum of Modern Arts. She didn’t want to return to New York. It was the one place she had nightmares of, other than… She still remembered terrible things. One night in particular. Zan being pushed right in front of her. Trying to scream with a hand clamped over her mouth—
That was the worst memory of all. The sight of the proud, impetuous man she loved being murdered by his own sister and best friend. She’d seen his face before he’d died, the primal fear and terrible hopelessness…
But it was a memory she would have to face if she ever wanted any semblance of a normal life. And so here she was.
Of course, her heart still hurt when she thought of Zan. She couldn’t help it. She’d finally gotten over blaming herself for his death, at least. And sometimes when she thought of it, she even wanted to find Rath and Lannie… her blood boiled at the idea that they had done that to him, and gotten away. Which was exactly the reason she had tried so hard to forget them all. Losing them had been tough on her, too, though. She had often smiled sadly at what Zan and the others would have thought of her going straight…
She shook her head as older memories tried to come to her. She didn’t want them. She didn’t need to remember that it hadn’t been the first time she’d seen her love die. She didn’t need that life. The only real thing missing in her life now was family, but as far as she knew, that was out of the question. Every instinct in her body told her that she couldn’t trust anyone that much, even now. She had gotten used to the fact that wanting something just didn’t justify having it all the time.
And now a life more than half a century old tried to taunt her with its glory.
Right now she couldn’t look at her life as an alien queen—oh yes, she still had those memories, too. Not all of them, of course, but she had always had a clearer picture of the past life than any of the other three. When she was younger, she would tell them stories of the life they’d had, and they’d listen to her, astonished at their past and future, while she had shyly smiled at Zan.
Then later, nothing had happened to make it look like that future was ever going to come true, and they had come to resent the stories. And the storyteller.
She had been the only one to continue to cling to the memories, until the whole summit disaster, which had ultimately set her free.
She hadn’t let herself be taken away by those memories since then, not while she was awake, at least. Sometimes when she was asleep, though, they would come back to her, and she remembered an idealized life.
She had been nobility, waited on hand an foot. She had attended extravagant dinners and socials… she even remembered the night she’d been introduced to Zan’s other self by Larek, a mutual friend.
She thought back to something she’d told Liz Parker years before, that Zan had always seemed to be waiting for something, someone. In the aftermath, she had allowed herself to realize that Zan had never really loved her—or Zanathan hadn’t, at least. He had been infatuated with her at first, but infatuation had died quickly after their marriage. He had at least cared for her, in his way. He had stayed with her, too, even after he had lost interest in her like that. Deep under his rough exterior, he was very gentle and noble. That was the man she had always loved, and that was the man she had never been able to reach in this life.
She wondered, not for the first time, if all that gentleness had gone to Max Evans, the third form of Zanathan she had ever known. She wouldn’t have been surprised…
She started as she realized she was still staring into the mirror. She had long stopped seeing her reflection, or anything at all, really. She shivered a little, and wondered why she felt cold all of a sudden. This was the beginning of a new life. So why did she feel as if she was about to be thrown into her old self? Why did she feel as some part of her other self—Avillia—was floating just beneath her surface, and trying to get out?