... Alien in Metropolis (SV XO UC, Teen) Pt 4/4 Feb 12 2011
Posted: Fri Jun 25, 2010 4:38 pm
Title: A New Mexican Alien in Metropolis
Disclaimer: I don't own the rights to Roswell or anybody to do Smallville. This story is a not for profit fandom venture, and all rights remain with Fox/Warner Brothers/DC Comics.
Rating: Teen for now, can't be sure if that might edge up into Mature in later parts.
Pairings: References to Maria/Oliver, and looks like it's heading into possible Michael/Lana country! (I didn't entirely plan that one.)
Summary: After hearing that Maria is staying in Metropolis and dating some guy named Oliver Queen, Michael goes to the big city to try and figure out what's really going on, but he has no idea what he's getting into.
Author's note: This is currently my third Roswell crossover on the go, which is some kind of record for me. It's a sequel to 'Arrow through my Soul', which tells the story about Maria and Oliver: you can find that story here - http://www.roswellfanatics.net/viewtopi ... 40&t=20817
I didn't pay attention to the girl with the short blonde hair at first, when I bumped into her just outside of Oliver Queen's offices in the Queen Industries building. I was too focused on what I was in the middle of. Tried the handle of the door that she had just let close behind her - it wouldn't turn and it wouldn't pull or push open. From a quick examination of the lock, she must have deliberately activated the spring-lock while she had the door open. I automatically looked around to see if anybody would notice me exerting my powers, and realized that the girl was staring curiously at me, as if wondering what business I thought I had with Oliver Queen.
Dammit. If I couldn't scare her off somehow, I had no idea how I was going to be able to slip in unnoticed. "Who the hell are you?" I barked as intimidatingly as I could manage. "You don't seem to be wearing company dress code. Are you Missus Queen or something?" I have no idea why I asked her that, it was just the first thing that occurred to me - which is usually where I get into trouble, but this didn't seem to be a situation where I could stop to think things through either.
The girl blinked in surprise at that guess. "As in, Oliver's wife? Umm - hardly. Leaving aside the fact that - well, no, I won't get into all the reasons why. No I'm just a close friend of Mister Queen's, and what business is it of yours?"
"A friend, huh? Well, maybe you can help me out - I need to get in to see the bastard." What the hell, why not try and keep provoking her, anything that she wouldn't expect?
This time, the blonde couldn't entirely cover an amused giggle. "I'm certainly not in the habit of helping people who call my good friends names to get past security."
"Fine, then I'll get inside without your help!" I blurted out.
"And just how do you think you'll manage that?" the girl asked. I shrugged, feeling foolish about how much of my hand I'd tipped. She made a show of checking her watch. "In any event, I don't think it'll help you much. Mister Queen is on his way out of the building."
I looked up at the door that she had come through. "The hell?"
"He has a private express elevator down to the parking garage," she pointed out, sounding very pleased to be able to drop that tidbit. I turned and started to hurry back towards the elevator lobby. "You're not going to be able to catch up to him now, so why not stay and talk a bit longer with me? I do have the ear of the big man, after all. Whatever you need to see a busy man like Oliver Queen about, I might be able to help you get your appointment."
I turned back and glared at her. "You just want to find out what kind of trouble Queen is in, and see if you can get rid of me for good."
"Well, I can't deny that I'm curious," the girl admitted. "On the other hand, if you don't want to talk to me, then I do have other things to do today." She headed past me towards the lobby herself, but kept watching me out of the corner of her eye - this was a tactic to draw me out, and she wasn't sure how well it would play out.
Turns out, it worked rather well. "Sonuvvabitch stole my fiancee!" I blurted out, tailing along behind her. "Or ex-girlfriend, or whatever, it's complicated. I - I didn't come here to hurt him, really I didn't. Just wanted to look 'Ollie' in the eyes, see what I thought of him, and if he was the kind of guy who I could even tell..."
"Wait a second!" Abandoning her course towards the elevators, blondie scanned the nearby hallway doors. made a decision, and pulled me into one of them. A few seconds later, we were alone in a small office supples closet. "You're Michael??"
"Well, yes," I said, taking a moment to absorb the fact that she'd been able to guess my name. "Who are you, anyway? Do you know Maria too?"
"I - well, I've met her a few times now," she admitted. "And Oliver's told me some of her story, including the ex-fiance who she left behind in New Mexico. My name's Chloe, by the way." Chloe shook her head. "How do you know about Oliver, though? I mean, Maria and Oliver?? I thought that she couldn't communicate back to..." She broke off secretively, and I realized she wasn't sure how much she should say, even in this private-seeming place.
"She sent a note through to a few friends and I," I muttered. "Via one of her new fans."
"Ahh, I see," Chloe muttered. "I wonder if Maria thought of that trick herself, or if Ollie suggested it - but that can get filed under 'never mind.' Did this note say that you shouldn't come to Metropolis, that it was dangerous?"
"She said that I shouldn't try to meet with her, that she was being watched," I argued back. "The whole city - well, not in so many words, and anyway - you should know that I'm not wild about letting other people decide my risk management strategy."
Chloe rolled her eyes dramatically. "Meaning that you're too stubborn to let anybody else tell you the smart thing to do, huh?" She sighed. "Well, if you're bound and determined to meet with Oliver before leaving town, I might be able to arrange that, but this is not the right way. Tess Mercer probably doesn't have any outright spies in Queen Industries, but word about disruptive visitors might get around."
"Tess?" It took a moment before I realized that this was some very different person than the Tess I knew. "I wasn't *trying* to cause a scene," I mumbled. Really, I hadn't been, until Chloe got into the wrong place at the wrong time.
"Do you have a place to stay here in the city?" Chloe asked me, and the question confused me for a moment. "Hotel room, hostel, crashing on the couch of an acquaintance?"
"Yeah, I was just wondering why you asked," I told her. Chloe just kept looking at me, refusing to explain. "I'm booked into the Red Carpet motel on Brantford avenue. Should be able to hold out there for a few days with available funds - and then I'll figure out my next move. But that's not going to be heading back to Roswell before my business here is done."
"Yeah, yeah, I believe you," Chloe insisted. "Well - that's not my favorite neighborhood, but the Golden age cafe is three blocks away from your motel - or maybe four. Do you think you can find it?"
"Not hard, since I clearly remember walking by it last night," I shot back. "And I have an excellent sense of direction."
"A man of many talents, indeed," Chloe chuckled to herself. "Okay, I'll meet you there at quarter to four this afternoon. Oliver probably won't be easy to track down anytime soon, and I've got a busy day myself, but there should be news for you by then."
I stared at her face, realizing irrelevantly that it actually did look 'freshly scrubbed' - the first time that's ever occured to me when I looked at a girl. "What kind of news?"
"About whether or not Mister Queen will meet with you in person, and if so, where and when," Chloe said, with a good 'wasn't that obvious?' tone of voice.
"Oh." I wasn't too pleased with the way the conversation was going now. "If his decision is 'not,' then..."
"I understand, you're not about to give up," Chloe agreed. "I can't commit Oliver to something like this, but my suggestion will be that he should go ahead, if only to get it over with because he isn't going to be able to get rid of you more easily another way." She chuckled softly. "The psychology should work."
"Alright." I sighed and turned towards the door of the supply room. "So what do I do until later this afternoon?"
"Well, there's always the hop-on, hop-off bus tour," Chloe suggested. I glared angrily at her. "Not a bus fan? Well, 'The Seafarer' is playing down on Orion street, it's supposed to be great. I never manage to find time to go out to see a play myself. Or there's always the riverboat cruise." I realized that I was tapping my foot and softly snorting in disgust. "Lest you miss the point I'm making, Michael Guerin - do whatever you'd do if you were visiting Metropolis by yourself and you didn't have this specific agenda. And - I won't say for sure, but somebody may be watching you. Be careful."
"Thanks," I said. "Don't worry about me. I know how to act normal and blend in with the crowd. Should even work on the big-city crowds around here."
And with that line, I slipped out and made my way back to the elevators, not looking back at Chloe whatever-her-name-might-be.
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I knew that I wasn't any good at playing tourist.
It was hard for me to act as if I hadn't come to Metropolis to meet Oliver Queen, because if it hadn't been for that mission I really couldn't imagine what could have brought me to the Big Apricot - at least, not on my own like this. Maria might have dragged me along on some trip together - that was the way it should have been, maybe - or Isabel perhaps, but otherwise... I just couldn't even figure out what I was supposed to do. Museums, restaurants - even the Riverside Casino didn't hold my attention for long, not after Vegas. Then again, the fact that I didn't have much money to spend was a consideration nearly anywhere. If my pockets had been flush, I could probably have found some way to distract myself and buy a good time.
I ended up waiting at the cafe for my appointment with Oliver's 'friend' nearly an hour early, just because I couldn't think of anywhere else to go. As I sat out on the patio with my iced cappucino around ten minutes to five o'clock, a commotion started half a block down the sidewalk, and I ended up going over to find out what was going on. It didn't turn out to be anything very interesting - some old pedestrian had had a minor medical emergency - there were conflicting explanations offered, from a broken hip to a heart attack, but the ambulance was on the scene only a few seconds after I walked near, and the paramedics drove the guy off towards the hospital in good time. I hoped that he would be okay, whatever had happened.
As I watched the rest of the crowd disperse and decided to go back to his own coffee, a man in an official blue uniform hurried down the sidewalk in my direction. I was so surprised that an paramedic on the scene would be leaving on foot, and not in an official vehicle of any kind, that I was slow in getting out of the way, and the other man hardly even seemed to see me until after we bumped into each other.
As my hand touched the paramedic's, I felt a trace of alien power discharge and cursed under my breath. I'd been trying so hard to keep my abilities under control, despite all of the stress of this situation with Maria and Queen. The last thing I needed was for somebody in Metropolis notice something suspicious. But - well, there was really no help for it now, and probably it wouldn't be so bad. At least I was a stranger here, and maybe the other guy wouldn't even pay attention to the momentary flash or whatever else he experienced.
But the tall, imposing man turned towards me incredulously and hissed in a horrible kind of a whisper. "I... I know that touch somehow. You're Antarian!"
I immediately felt a surge of hot rage and fear wash through me, and struggled to keep them both bottled up. Getting into a shouting match, or worse, with this character on the sidewalk would not do anybody any good. Part of me wanted to walk away, to lose the ambulance man if I had to, but finding out more details could be important.
"Not many people know about Antarians," I whispered back as pleasantly as I could manage. "Do you want to, umm, to go sit down and have a cuppa?"
"What, like we're on that ridiculous sitcom and hanging out at Central Perk?" the paramedic snapped. "I'm not your friend."
I stared at him for a moment, trying to figure out my next move, and then gave up. "Alright. Goodbye, whoever you are." Making sure to stay well out of the way of the paremedic, I circled around to walk away.
"Sorry, I didn't mean to be such a - well, an ass," the paramedic said, but I didn't stop walking immediately. "It's been a rough day for me, and I think I'll be needing something stronger than coffee. I'm Davis Bloome, by the way."
Somehow that got through my defences, and I stopped and turned around. "I don't drink, actually," I said, feeling like I needed to apologize for my genetic sensitivity to alcohol. If Davis knew something about Antarians, did he already know that detail about our metabolism? "But the Golden age has drinks on the menu. If you want to talk or just hang out while you grab your brew, that's good enough for me. And otherwise is fine too - I sure don't want to intrude on your privacy if that's what you need to get through the day."
Davis tried out a weak smile. "So you're just a coffee guy, huh?"
"I'd love to knock back a beer, but I can't handle it," I explained.
"Oh - are you recovering? Or allergic to alcohol??"
"More like the second," I explained. "Oh, and I didn't give my side of the introductions. Michael Guerin, from Roswell."
"That so?" Davis said, walking over and offering his hand to me for a shake.
I looked down at the hand. "Umm, maybe we'd better not. That's what got us into this mess in the first place."
Davis looked confused. "What do you mean, what mess?"
"You know, the, umm..." I lowered my voice. "The Antarian thing?"
"What's an Antarian?"
Now it was my turn to be perplexed. Could Davis have forgotten the circumstances of our meeting or his first words to me so quickly? Just what did he think about why I had asked him out for coffee, then? But I didn't really want to either jog Davis' memory, or bail out of the arrangement that we'd settled on quite yet. "It's, umm, it's a word for people who don't like being touched," I blurted out. "Sorry, I thought that you realized."
"Oh - umm, okay." Davis shrugged, and made sure to give me more than enough personal space as we walked back to the cafe. Once we were there, I drank the rest of my cappucino down quickly before it could get any colder and ordered another while Davis selected a brand he liked out of the beers that were available on tap. Getting a conversation going took a bit of effort, but when I started to talk a bit about work back home as a security guard, apparently that was close enough to an ambulance man's job for Davis to relate. From there, the topic shifted to incredible but true stories about work colleagues and after-work guys' mornings out, (because we were both familiar with the graveyard shift.)
"Umm - what are you doing here?" I looked up, and saw Chloe standing a few yards away from our table, wearing a bright red coat open over the same casual wardrobe she'd been wearing that morning to Queen Industries.
"Well, you told me to meet you here," I told her, feeling flustered. "What are you doing here? Umm, this is..." I waved at Davis, and then something added up in my head. "Davis, Chloe, do the two of you know each other?"
"Well, you could say that, yes," Davis said with a guarded smile. "The details get a bit complicated. Well, now that you're here with us, Missus Olsen, are you going to select beer or coffee?" He paused as Chloe stepped slowly closer to the table. "Or do the two of you have something private to discuss?"
"Well, yes, umm, we do, but..." Chloe hesitated. "It's not so pressing that I can't make small talk while you finish your drink, Davis." She pulled up a third chair to the table. "And I think that after the day I've had, I need one of the Golden Age's famous raspberry-orange smoothies." I chuckled. "And to rephrase my original question, Mister Guerin, just how did you run into my good friend Davis?"
"Hey, he ran into me, literally," I replied, laughing as loudly as I could, though I was starting to think that something not-funny was going on. "It nearly became a fistfight, but I invited him to come back here and have a cup of coffee, and he started to get very insistent about beer."
"I see," Chloe said, and I wondered if she also saw that something had happened that wasn't being said. Davis did have a thoughtful, intent look on his rugged face, as if he realized that he didn't remember the very start of his encounter with me, and was trying to cover that up without being obvious about it.
At this point, the waitress came over. "Another capuccino, sir? Something for the lady?"
"Umm," I said, looking down at my empty cup and remembering the high prices on the menu - and the prominent mention of 'no free refills.' "What the heck, sure, fill me up again," I declared.
"Raspberry-orange," Chloe ordered crisply. "On my own bill, please."
"Sure, honey." The waitress paused after taking my mug. "I've seen you in here before, right?"
"Probably, yeah," Chloe agreed, nodding. "Been a regular since my university days."
"Do you mind if I try to guess?" the waitress continued. I wasn't sure what she was talking about, but after a moment Chloe shrugged. "Your... fiancee," she continued, pointing at Davis, "and this other gentleman is his - no, your old high school friend who he's meeting for the first time. Am I right?" She took the flabbergasted look on Chloe's face for stunned agreement. "Don't worry, sir, they don't have that kind of history," she said to Davis, and swept away for their drinks.
The waitress hadn't quite stepped through the patio door before Chloe burst out laughing, which set Davis off in a series of rich and deep guffahs. I chuckled a bit myself. "So the two of you really aren't..."
"No, no!" Chloe insisted. "I'm a married woman - not that I'm getting the usual newlywed perks at the moment." She paused awkwardly.
"Right - how's Jimmy doing, anyway?" Davis asked.
Chloe cleared her throat. "Really, umm, really well. The doctors say that he'll be strong enough to get transferred back to Metropolis General in less than a week."
"Umm, Jimmy's your husband?" I asked. Chloe nodded silently. "This is obviously a personal question, and you don't have to answer, but what is he under a doctor's orders for?"
Chloe looked over at Davis, acutely uncomfortable and possibly a little resentful for the direction he'd taken the conversation in. Davis just shrugged. "Somebody, or some - animal, attacked our wedding reception. Jimmy got beat up pretty badly. He - he might have died, if it hadn't been for Oliver's connections, and even though Metropolis has world-class hospitals, the particular medical specialists he needed weren't here."
"Okay, I get the picture," I told her. I'd gotten more than Chloe had said out loud, too. Chloe obviously understood something about aliens on Earth, and the kind of people who might be looking for them. Had that been part of what Jimmy had been caught in the middle of?
"Well, I'm sorry, I got us all off small talk," Davis said. "Sorry about that. Just about finished my beer, though." With a flourish, he put the mug to his lips and tipped it up to drain the last. "So I guess I'll be heading off and letting the two of get to whatever you need to be talking about." He rose to his feet, shaking slightly and holding onto the table to steady himself.
"You be careful, okay?" Chloe said, sounding a bit worried. "Arrive alive."
"It's one beer, killjoy, and I hadn't even been planning on driving."
"The way you're keeping your balance, even walking is worrying me," Chloe shot back, but she was obviously joking, and as Davis walked off he clearly made a point of sticking to a straight-line course, like the cops made people do at roadside stops.
"Okay, what's his story, really?" I asked Chloe in a whisper, once Davis seemed to be out of range.
Chloe just stared back at me silently for nearly a minute before she answered, even more quietly. "I - I'm not even sure yet, and I'd rather not repeat some of the suspicions I do have. Whoever else Davis Bloome might be, he's still a good friend. And we're here to talk about something else entirely."
"Yeah," I agreed. "Oliver Queen. I understand a bit more why you're protective of him, now, if his influence and clout saved your husband's life, but..."
"I'm not running interference for you with Oliver," Chloe insisted. "Really, I'm not. But I'm afraid I didn't have that much luck arranging your meeting. He's taken off, out of town."
"Oh, really?" I said, rolling my eyes upwards.
"Yes, and I didn't give him the hint to make himself scarce. Not sure avoidance is his style, even if he knew that you'd come to Metropolis anyway." Chloe sighed. "He did say that he'd be able to meet with you once he's done with this - trip, which will take two days." She sighed. "Do you want to stay in town for that long?"
"You should know better than to even ask," I told her firmly. "I said that I wasn't going anywhere until I settle things with Queen."
"Alright." Chloe sighed. "I'm afraid I can't be your personal concierge the whole time, but is there anything else I can to do lend a hand in the meantime?"
"Well, yes, actually," I said, leaning my head closer so that I could speak very quietly. "I'm starting to realize that I need a bit more info on the lay of the land. Starting with exactly who I need to worry about finding me here, and - well, I do understand that you might not want to talk much about what happened at your reception, but I think I need to understand if it's..." He hesitated, then mouthed the word 'alien', and continued in a soft whisper "...related or not."
Chloe's mouth dropped open. "It's... it's unsolved, seriously, though Oliver and I and some of our other friends are working on changing that very hard. One of - of those might have done it, but there are other possibilities too."
"Other possibilities?" I asked her dubiously.
"Yeah." Chloe sighed. "I guess I forgot that it was Maria who Oliver told the facts of life here in Kansas too, and that she couldn't possibly have conveyed all of that to you and your friends. I - I used to keep track of strange things that happened around here, when I was growing up in Smallville, and there's a lot of stuff that's wall-of-weird-worthy besides aliens and alien hunters."
"Wall of what-the-hell?"
"Oh, sorry." Chloe laughed nervously at my rather loud explosion. "The wall of weird - it was this big bulletin board that I filled up with news reports of oddities and unexplained phenomena, back in the newspaper office at Smallville High. The point is - well, it could be an alien, it might not be, but either way, it's bloody dangerous. And - let's see, what else do I need to tell you?"
"Hunters?" I reminded her quietly.
"Right. Basically, either lone crazy crackpts, or LuthorCorp. Lex Luthor was a man of many obsessions, and extraterrestrials among us was one of them. He's - well, Lex is out of the picture now, but the corporation is carrying on."
"Okay." I nodded. "I'll want some details, but perhaps this isn't the right place and time for them." Chloe nodded. "Nothing else that immediately comes to mind as important info?"
"Well, let's see." Chloe leaned close. "Can I trust you to keep things secret, even from your friends back in Roswell, until I say that it's okay to tell them?"
"That depends entirely on what kind of secret it is and if I think my friends need to know," I shot back instantly.
"Right." Chloe sighed. "Well, I'll just ask you to be cautious before spreading this information."
"Maybe you shouldn't even tell me," I muttered.
"Maybe not - but I'm going to anyway. I think it's the right thing to do." Chloe took a deep breath. "Oliver Queen is more than he might appear - several years he started to organize a team of - of freedom fighters, in a sense. Vigilantes in the best sense of the word." She took a deep breath, and dropped her whisper even lower. "He's not exactly the leader anymore, but Oliver's still very invested in the Justice League."
I blinked, trying to absorb all of this. "And why are you telling me this?"
"A lot of reasons," Chloe said. "There are - two aliens currently on the League roster, and a few others are humans who have been changed through exposure to alien artifacts and forces." She chuckled hollowly. "Including me. I'm a meteor freak and I was infected with an alien cellular computer for a while as well."
"So - so you're on this team of Oliver's?" I asked her.
"Yeah, I guess so - not a field player most of the time, but I'm a member, why?"
"I want to meet these alien vigilantes of yours, then," I announced. "As soon as possible."
"Oh, wow." Chloe sighed. "Maybe I should have expected that you'd ask that. It - it could be too dangerous..."
"You know, I'm starting to get a little tired of you telling me what's too dangerous, Missus," I grumbled. "Maybe I should just do a little bit of looking around for myself." And trying my best to make it look casual, I let my fingers brush against the back of Chloe's hand when I took my next drink of coffee.
By the time the momentary dizzy sensation of absorbing flashes from another person's mind had faded, Chloe was staring accusingly at me. "Don't think that I'm clueless about what you just did, Mister Guerin," she whispered back hotly. "Oliver told me plenty about your abilities. Again, that's something that could have been very dangerous for us all - if I hadn't been mentally disinfected lately. But whatever, that's all in the past now. Did you find out what you were looking for?"
"Enough," I grumbled, trying not to give away that I hadn't actually learned as much as I'd hoped to. "I may need to do a bit more looking around - like in Smallville, say."
"Oh, no, you c..." Chloe cut herself off at that point. "In Metropolis, at least you can hide in the crowds. LuthorCorp is watching Smallvile, too - and even the locals notice strangers there." I just kept staring at her, trying not to let the hostility that I was feeling boil over. "On the other hand for all the gratitude that I get looking after you, trying to keep your friends by making sure that nobody starts looking at them too closely, I don't know why I bother!" And with that, Chloe rose, sweeping up the smoothie cup into her hand with a dramatic gesture, and swept away from the patio without looking back.
I took a few minutes to finish the coffee, and then wandered back to my motel, trying to make sense of the imagery that I had flashed on from Chloe's mind and not having very much luck with most of it. One thing that was definitely clear was that Chloe had known one particular alien for many years. He was probably one of the ones who she now worked with in her Justice Bowl-a-thon, I decided, and possibly she'd found his secret while they were both back in high school - much as Maria, Liz, and the others had found out about us in Roswell.
And high school, for Chloe, had been in Smallville Kansas. Did her alien friend still live there, or had he moved away? Chloe herself had either left Smallville or was possibly commuting to the big city for whatever she did here all day. There were too many possibilities, too many unknowns as yet. Perhaps Jimmy was the alien, and they'd fallen in love and gotten married. Which suggested that Jimmy could have been targeted for the attack by someone or something that didn't like aliens, and that the 'specialist medical help' that Oliver Queen had provided would be obliged to keep secrets of alien physiology among everything else. But wouldn't Chloe have asked me for help if she had an alien husband who was still going through a difficult recovery? (Not that I could help that much himself...)
After thinking about it for a long time, Michael decided that for the time being, at least, I wouldn't go to Smallville after all. I stayed in the room as the afternoon stretched into evening, and then finally emerged for dinner, not liking the sudden sensation that Metropolis was full of hostile eyes on the lookout for aliens. I hadn't even wanted to call and check in with Max and Liz, partly because I didn't even know what to tell them. So staying out of touch was better for now.
My pickup truck had been unreliable lately, probably on account of how many times alien powers had been used to repair it over the years, so I'd come to Metropolis on the Greyhound, and gotten an interior second-floor room at the Red Carpet. So when I came out hungrily for dinner, I prowled down the hallway, took the stairs to the lobby two at a time - and was starting to push the doors open when I heard a soft coughing noise that made me stop still.
When I turned, I saw a young woman with short dark hair sitting in one of the red upholstered armchairs that had been set in the corners of the lounge area, and she was making that 'clearing my throat on purpose' gesture with her hand in front of her mouth. Then the hand dropped away, the mystery woman smiled, probably satisfied that she'd been able to catch my attention in such a simple way, and rose gracefully to her feet. I could see that she was slender, and dressed in a tight red sleeveless sweater, and a long black skirt, probably imitation leather. With her perfect cheek bones and smoky brown eyes, it didn't seem likely that she was the sort of girl who usually had problems attracting male attention - unless she thought of attracting too many men as a problem.
"Follow me," she said, stepping past me and through the doors, and somewhat to my surprise, I did. "I'm glad that you didn't try to leave through the parking lot - I wasn't entirely sure where to wait."
"What's going on here?" I asked. "Did Chloe Olsen send you?"
The striking young woman turned back to me once we were out on the sidewalk and her lips quirked with amusement. "Yeah, my best friend thought that it'd be a good idea if we got to know each other a little, Michael. By the way, my name is Lana - Lana Lang. And while we're on the subject of names, Chloe didn't take Jimmy's name, as far as I know. She's still Chloe Sullivan."
"Oh." I filed that away, wondering why Davis had called her Missus Olsen - maybe a joke about her newlywed status, if he knew that she didn't want to be called that. "So, are you supposed to take over where Chloe left off, making sure that I don't poke my nose where it doesn't belong?"
"Not in the least," Lana insisted. "Wherever you want to go, I'll just tag along and do what I can to keep you safe - both in terms of keeping your secrets secret, and your adorable self unscratched and free from captivity."
This was starting to sound truly ridiculous. "The only place I want to go is somewhere I can grab something to eat!"
"Are you sure about that, Michael?" Lana whispered, her voice slightly husky. I swallowed and couldn't think of an immediate reply. "Okay, you can think about that over dinner. Wherever you want to go this evening, in all Metropolis, I'm up for it."
"You - you should be careful about making open-ended promises like that, Lana," I stammered, trying to get my flirt on and catch up with this girl.
"I didn't say that I'd do whatever you wanted me to do when we get there," Lana teased back. "But come on - our dinner is waiting somewhere. How about you let me pick the restaurant, and treat you, since you're a visitor to Metropolis?"
"I should stand on male dignity and refuse," I said. "But when dignity isn't backed up by the pocketbook, it's a little..." I couldn't find the right word, and shrugged. "Lead on, Lana Lang."
"My pleasure, Michael Guerin," Lana said, and took my hand to drag me across the street through a gap in the whizzing traffic that seemed only just wide enough for the two of us.
TO BE CONTINUED...
Disclaimer: I don't own the rights to Roswell or anybody to do Smallville. This story is a not for profit fandom venture, and all rights remain with Fox/Warner Brothers/DC Comics.
Rating: Teen for now, can't be sure if that might edge up into Mature in later parts.
Pairings: References to Maria/Oliver, and looks like it's heading into possible Michael/Lana country! (I didn't entirely plan that one.)
Summary: After hearing that Maria is staying in Metropolis and dating some guy named Oliver Queen, Michael goes to the big city to try and figure out what's really going on, but he has no idea what he's getting into.
Author's note: This is currently my third Roswell crossover on the go, which is some kind of record for me. It's a sequel to 'Arrow through my Soul', which tells the story about Maria and Oliver: you can find that story here - http://www.roswellfanatics.net/viewtopi ... 40&t=20817
I didn't pay attention to the girl with the short blonde hair at first, when I bumped into her just outside of Oliver Queen's offices in the Queen Industries building. I was too focused on what I was in the middle of. Tried the handle of the door that she had just let close behind her - it wouldn't turn and it wouldn't pull or push open. From a quick examination of the lock, she must have deliberately activated the spring-lock while she had the door open. I automatically looked around to see if anybody would notice me exerting my powers, and realized that the girl was staring curiously at me, as if wondering what business I thought I had with Oliver Queen.
Dammit. If I couldn't scare her off somehow, I had no idea how I was going to be able to slip in unnoticed. "Who the hell are you?" I barked as intimidatingly as I could manage. "You don't seem to be wearing company dress code. Are you Missus Queen or something?" I have no idea why I asked her that, it was just the first thing that occurred to me - which is usually where I get into trouble, but this didn't seem to be a situation where I could stop to think things through either.
The girl blinked in surprise at that guess. "As in, Oliver's wife? Umm - hardly. Leaving aside the fact that - well, no, I won't get into all the reasons why. No I'm just a close friend of Mister Queen's, and what business is it of yours?"
"A friend, huh? Well, maybe you can help me out - I need to get in to see the bastard." What the hell, why not try and keep provoking her, anything that she wouldn't expect?
This time, the blonde couldn't entirely cover an amused giggle. "I'm certainly not in the habit of helping people who call my good friends names to get past security."
"Fine, then I'll get inside without your help!" I blurted out.
"And just how do you think you'll manage that?" the girl asked. I shrugged, feeling foolish about how much of my hand I'd tipped. She made a show of checking her watch. "In any event, I don't think it'll help you much. Mister Queen is on his way out of the building."
I looked up at the door that she had come through. "The hell?"
"He has a private express elevator down to the parking garage," she pointed out, sounding very pleased to be able to drop that tidbit. I turned and started to hurry back towards the elevator lobby. "You're not going to be able to catch up to him now, so why not stay and talk a bit longer with me? I do have the ear of the big man, after all. Whatever you need to see a busy man like Oliver Queen about, I might be able to help you get your appointment."
I turned back and glared at her. "You just want to find out what kind of trouble Queen is in, and see if you can get rid of me for good."
"Well, I can't deny that I'm curious," the girl admitted. "On the other hand, if you don't want to talk to me, then I do have other things to do today." She headed past me towards the lobby herself, but kept watching me out of the corner of her eye - this was a tactic to draw me out, and she wasn't sure how well it would play out.
Turns out, it worked rather well. "Sonuvvabitch stole my fiancee!" I blurted out, tailing along behind her. "Or ex-girlfriend, or whatever, it's complicated. I - I didn't come here to hurt him, really I didn't. Just wanted to look 'Ollie' in the eyes, see what I thought of him, and if he was the kind of guy who I could even tell..."
"Wait a second!" Abandoning her course towards the elevators, blondie scanned the nearby hallway doors. made a decision, and pulled me into one of them. A few seconds later, we were alone in a small office supples closet. "You're Michael??"
"Well, yes," I said, taking a moment to absorb the fact that she'd been able to guess my name. "Who are you, anyway? Do you know Maria too?"
"I - well, I've met her a few times now," she admitted. "And Oliver's told me some of her story, including the ex-fiance who she left behind in New Mexico. My name's Chloe, by the way." Chloe shook her head. "How do you know about Oliver, though? I mean, Maria and Oliver?? I thought that she couldn't communicate back to..." She broke off secretively, and I realized she wasn't sure how much she should say, even in this private-seeming place.
"She sent a note through to a few friends and I," I muttered. "Via one of her new fans."
"Ahh, I see," Chloe muttered. "I wonder if Maria thought of that trick herself, or if Ollie suggested it - but that can get filed under 'never mind.' Did this note say that you shouldn't come to Metropolis, that it was dangerous?"
"She said that I shouldn't try to meet with her, that she was being watched," I argued back. "The whole city - well, not in so many words, and anyway - you should know that I'm not wild about letting other people decide my risk management strategy."
Chloe rolled her eyes dramatically. "Meaning that you're too stubborn to let anybody else tell you the smart thing to do, huh?" She sighed. "Well, if you're bound and determined to meet with Oliver before leaving town, I might be able to arrange that, but this is not the right way. Tess Mercer probably doesn't have any outright spies in Queen Industries, but word about disruptive visitors might get around."
"Tess?" It took a moment before I realized that this was some very different person than the Tess I knew. "I wasn't *trying* to cause a scene," I mumbled. Really, I hadn't been, until Chloe got into the wrong place at the wrong time.
"Do you have a place to stay here in the city?" Chloe asked me, and the question confused me for a moment. "Hotel room, hostel, crashing on the couch of an acquaintance?"
"Yeah, I was just wondering why you asked," I told her. Chloe just kept looking at me, refusing to explain. "I'm booked into the Red Carpet motel on Brantford avenue. Should be able to hold out there for a few days with available funds - and then I'll figure out my next move. But that's not going to be heading back to Roswell before my business here is done."
"Yeah, yeah, I believe you," Chloe insisted. "Well - that's not my favorite neighborhood, but the Golden age cafe is three blocks away from your motel - or maybe four. Do you think you can find it?"
"Not hard, since I clearly remember walking by it last night," I shot back. "And I have an excellent sense of direction."
"A man of many talents, indeed," Chloe chuckled to herself. "Okay, I'll meet you there at quarter to four this afternoon. Oliver probably won't be easy to track down anytime soon, and I've got a busy day myself, but there should be news for you by then."
I stared at her face, realizing irrelevantly that it actually did look 'freshly scrubbed' - the first time that's ever occured to me when I looked at a girl. "What kind of news?"
"About whether or not Mister Queen will meet with you in person, and if so, where and when," Chloe said, with a good 'wasn't that obvious?' tone of voice.
"Oh." I wasn't too pleased with the way the conversation was going now. "If his decision is 'not,' then..."
"I understand, you're not about to give up," Chloe agreed. "I can't commit Oliver to something like this, but my suggestion will be that he should go ahead, if only to get it over with because he isn't going to be able to get rid of you more easily another way." She chuckled softly. "The psychology should work."
"Alright." I sighed and turned towards the door of the supply room. "So what do I do until later this afternoon?"
"Well, there's always the hop-on, hop-off bus tour," Chloe suggested. I glared angrily at her. "Not a bus fan? Well, 'The Seafarer' is playing down on Orion street, it's supposed to be great. I never manage to find time to go out to see a play myself. Or there's always the riverboat cruise." I realized that I was tapping my foot and softly snorting in disgust. "Lest you miss the point I'm making, Michael Guerin - do whatever you'd do if you were visiting Metropolis by yourself and you didn't have this specific agenda. And - I won't say for sure, but somebody may be watching you. Be careful."
"Thanks," I said. "Don't worry about me. I know how to act normal and blend in with the crowd. Should even work on the big-city crowds around here."
And with that line, I slipped out and made my way back to the elevators, not looking back at Chloe whatever-her-name-might-be.
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I knew that I wasn't any good at playing tourist.
It was hard for me to act as if I hadn't come to Metropolis to meet Oliver Queen, because if it hadn't been for that mission I really couldn't imagine what could have brought me to the Big Apricot - at least, not on my own like this. Maria might have dragged me along on some trip together - that was the way it should have been, maybe - or Isabel perhaps, but otherwise... I just couldn't even figure out what I was supposed to do. Museums, restaurants - even the Riverside Casino didn't hold my attention for long, not after Vegas. Then again, the fact that I didn't have much money to spend was a consideration nearly anywhere. If my pockets had been flush, I could probably have found some way to distract myself and buy a good time.
I ended up waiting at the cafe for my appointment with Oliver's 'friend' nearly an hour early, just because I couldn't think of anywhere else to go. As I sat out on the patio with my iced cappucino around ten minutes to five o'clock, a commotion started half a block down the sidewalk, and I ended up going over to find out what was going on. It didn't turn out to be anything very interesting - some old pedestrian had had a minor medical emergency - there were conflicting explanations offered, from a broken hip to a heart attack, but the ambulance was on the scene only a few seconds after I walked near, and the paramedics drove the guy off towards the hospital in good time. I hoped that he would be okay, whatever had happened.
As I watched the rest of the crowd disperse and decided to go back to his own coffee, a man in an official blue uniform hurried down the sidewalk in my direction. I was so surprised that an paramedic on the scene would be leaving on foot, and not in an official vehicle of any kind, that I was slow in getting out of the way, and the other man hardly even seemed to see me until after we bumped into each other.
As my hand touched the paramedic's, I felt a trace of alien power discharge and cursed under my breath. I'd been trying so hard to keep my abilities under control, despite all of the stress of this situation with Maria and Queen. The last thing I needed was for somebody in Metropolis notice something suspicious. But - well, there was really no help for it now, and probably it wouldn't be so bad. At least I was a stranger here, and maybe the other guy wouldn't even pay attention to the momentary flash or whatever else he experienced.
But the tall, imposing man turned towards me incredulously and hissed in a horrible kind of a whisper. "I... I know that touch somehow. You're Antarian!"
I immediately felt a surge of hot rage and fear wash through me, and struggled to keep them both bottled up. Getting into a shouting match, or worse, with this character on the sidewalk would not do anybody any good. Part of me wanted to walk away, to lose the ambulance man if I had to, but finding out more details could be important.
"Not many people know about Antarians," I whispered back as pleasantly as I could manage. "Do you want to, umm, to go sit down and have a cuppa?"
"What, like we're on that ridiculous sitcom and hanging out at Central Perk?" the paramedic snapped. "I'm not your friend."
I stared at him for a moment, trying to figure out my next move, and then gave up. "Alright. Goodbye, whoever you are." Making sure to stay well out of the way of the paremedic, I circled around to walk away.
"Sorry, I didn't mean to be such a - well, an ass," the paramedic said, but I didn't stop walking immediately. "It's been a rough day for me, and I think I'll be needing something stronger than coffee. I'm Davis Bloome, by the way."
Somehow that got through my defences, and I stopped and turned around. "I don't drink, actually," I said, feeling like I needed to apologize for my genetic sensitivity to alcohol. If Davis knew something about Antarians, did he already know that detail about our metabolism? "But the Golden age has drinks on the menu. If you want to talk or just hang out while you grab your brew, that's good enough for me. And otherwise is fine too - I sure don't want to intrude on your privacy if that's what you need to get through the day."
Davis tried out a weak smile. "So you're just a coffee guy, huh?"
"I'd love to knock back a beer, but I can't handle it," I explained.
"Oh - are you recovering? Or allergic to alcohol??"
"More like the second," I explained. "Oh, and I didn't give my side of the introductions. Michael Guerin, from Roswell."
"That so?" Davis said, walking over and offering his hand to me for a shake.
I looked down at the hand. "Umm, maybe we'd better not. That's what got us into this mess in the first place."
Davis looked confused. "What do you mean, what mess?"
"You know, the, umm..." I lowered my voice. "The Antarian thing?"
"What's an Antarian?"
Now it was my turn to be perplexed. Could Davis have forgotten the circumstances of our meeting or his first words to me so quickly? Just what did he think about why I had asked him out for coffee, then? But I didn't really want to either jog Davis' memory, or bail out of the arrangement that we'd settled on quite yet. "It's, umm, it's a word for people who don't like being touched," I blurted out. "Sorry, I thought that you realized."
"Oh - umm, okay." Davis shrugged, and made sure to give me more than enough personal space as we walked back to the cafe. Once we were there, I drank the rest of my cappucino down quickly before it could get any colder and ordered another while Davis selected a brand he liked out of the beers that were available on tap. Getting a conversation going took a bit of effort, but when I started to talk a bit about work back home as a security guard, apparently that was close enough to an ambulance man's job for Davis to relate. From there, the topic shifted to incredible but true stories about work colleagues and after-work guys' mornings out, (because we were both familiar with the graveyard shift.)
"Umm - what are you doing here?" I looked up, and saw Chloe standing a few yards away from our table, wearing a bright red coat open over the same casual wardrobe she'd been wearing that morning to Queen Industries.
"Well, you told me to meet you here," I told her, feeling flustered. "What are you doing here? Umm, this is..." I waved at Davis, and then something added up in my head. "Davis, Chloe, do the two of you know each other?"
"Well, you could say that, yes," Davis said with a guarded smile. "The details get a bit complicated. Well, now that you're here with us, Missus Olsen, are you going to select beer or coffee?" He paused as Chloe stepped slowly closer to the table. "Or do the two of you have something private to discuss?"
"Well, yes, umm, we do, but..." Chloe hesitated. "It's not so pressing that I can't make small talk while you finish your drink, Davis." She pulled up a third chair to the table. "And I think that after the day I've had, I need one of the Golden Age's famous raspberry-orange smoothies." I chuckled. "And to rephrase my original question, Mister Guerin, just how did you run into my good friend Davis?"
"Hey, he ran into me, literally," I replied, laughing as loudly as I could, though I was starting to think that something not-funny was going on. "It nearly became a fistfight, but I invited him to come back here and have a cup of coffee, and he started to get very insistent about beer."
"I see," Chloe said, and I wondered if she also saw that something had happened that wasn't being said. Davis did have a thoughtful, intent look on his rugged face, as if he realized that he didn't remember the very start of his encounter with me, and was trying to cover that up without being obvious about it.
At this point, the waitress came over. "Another capuccino, sir? Something for the lady?"
"Umm," I said, looking down at my empty cup and remembering the high prices on the menu - and the prominent mention of 'no free refills.' "What the heck, sure, fill me up again," I declared.
"Raspberry-orange," Chloe ordered crisply. "On my own bill, please."
"Sure, honey." The waitress paused after taking my mug. "I've seen you in here before, right?"
"Probably, yeah," Chloe agreed, nodding. "Been a regular since my university days."
"Do you mind if I try to guess?" the waitress continued. I wasn't sure what she was talking about, but after a moment Chloe shrugged. "Your... fiancee," she continued, pointing at Davis, "and this other gentleman is his - no, your old high school friend who he's meeting for the first time. Am I right?" She took the flabbergasted look on Chloe's face for stunned agreement. "Don't worry, sir, they don't have that kind of history," she said to Davis, and swept away for their drinks.
The waitress hadn't quite stepped through the patio door before Chloe burst out laughing, which set Davis off in a series of rich and deep guffahs. I chuckled a bit myself. "So the two of you really aren't..."
"No, no!" Chloe insisted. "I'm a married woman - not that I'm getting the usual newlywed perks at the moment." She paused awkwardly.
"Right - how's Jimmy doing, anyway?" Davis asked.
Chloe cleared her throat. "Really, umm, really well. The doctors say that he'll be strong enough to get transferred back to Metropolis General in less than a week."
"Umm, Jimmy's your husband?" I asked. Chloe nodded silently. "This is obviously a personal question, and you don't have to answer, but what is he under a doctor's orders for?"
Chloe looked over at Davis, acutely uncomfortable and possibly a little resentful for the direction he'd taken the conversation in. Davis just shrugged. "Somebody, or some - animal, attacked our wedding reception. Jimmy got beat up pretty badly. He - he might have died, if it hadn't been for Oliver's connections, and even though Metropolis has world-class hospitals, the particular medical specialists he needed weren't here."
"Okay, I get the picture," I told her. I'd gotten more than Chloe had said out loud, too. Chloe obviously understood something about aliens on Earth, and the kind of people who might be looking for them. Had that been part of what Jimmy had been caught in the middle of?
"Well, I'm sorry, I got us all off small talk," Davis said. "Sorry about that. Just about finished my beer, though." With a flourish, he put the mug to his lips and tipped it up to drain the last. "So I guess I'll be heading off and letting the two of get to whatever you need to be talking about." He rose to his feet, shaking slightly and holding onto the table to steady himself.
"You be careful, okay?" Chloe said, sounding a bit worried. "Arrive alive."
"It's one beer, killjoy, and I hadn't even been planning on driving."
"The way you're keeping your balance, even walking is worrying me," Chloe shot back, but she was obviously joking, and as Davis walked off he clearly made a point of sticking to a straight-line course, like the cops made people do at roadside stops.
"Okay, what's his story, really?" I asked Chloe in a whisper, once Davis seemed to be out of range.
Chloe just stared back at me silently for nearly a minute before she answered, even more quietly. "I - I'm not even sure yet, and I'd rather not repeat some of the suspicions I do have. Whoever else Davis Bloome might be, he's still a good friend. And we're here to talk about something else entirely."
"Yeah," I agreed. "Oliver Queen. I understand a bit more why you're protective of him, now, if his influence and clout saved your husband's life, but..."
"I'm not running interference for you with Oliver," Chloe insisted. "Really, I'm not. But I'm afraid I didn't have that much luck arranging your meeting. He's taken off, out of town."
"Oh, really?" I said, rolling my eyes upwards.
"Yes, and I didn't give him the hint to make himself scarce. Not sure avoidance is his style, even if he knew that you'd come to Metropolis anyway." Chloe sighed. "He did say that he'd be able to meet with you once he's done with this - trip, which will take two days." She sighed. "Do you want to stay in town for that long?"
"You should know better than to even ask," I told her firmly. "I said that I wasn't going anywhere until I settle things with Queen."
"Alright." Chloe sighed. "I'm afraid I can't be your personal concierge the whole time, but is there anything else I can to do lend a hand in the meantime?"
"Well, yes, actually," I said, leaning my head closer so that I could speak very quietly. "I'm starting to realize that I need a bit more info on the lay of the land. Starting with exactly who I need to worry about finding me here, and - well, I do understand that you might not want to talk much about what happened at your reception, but I think I need to understand if it's..." He hesitated, then mouthed the word 'alien', and continued in a soft whisper "...related or not."
Chloe's mouth dropped open. "It's... it's unsolved, seriously, though Oliver and I and some of our other friends are working on changing that very hard. One of - of those might have done it, but there are other possibilities too."
"Other possibilities?" I asked her dubiously.
"Yeah." Chloe sighed. "I guess I forgot that it was Maria who Oliver told the facts of life here in Kansas too, and that she couldn't possibly have conveyed all of that to you and your friends. I - I used to keep track of strange things that happened around here, when I was growing up in Smallville, and there's a lot of stuff that's wall-of-weird-worthy besides aliens and alien hunters."
"Wall of what-the-hell?"
"Oh, sorry." Chloe laughed nervously at my rather loud explosion. "The wall of weird - it was this big bulletin board that I filled up with news reports of oddities and unexplained phenomena, back in the newspaper office at Smallville High. The point is - well, it could be an alien, it might not be, but either way, it's bloody dangerous. And - let's see, what else do I need to tell you?"
"Hunters?" I reminded her quietly.
"Right. Basically, either lone crazy crackpts, or LuthorCorp. Lex Luthor was a man of many obsessions, and extraterrestrials among us was one of them. He's - well, Lex is out of the picture now, but the corporation is carrying on."
"Okay." I nodded. "I'll want some details, but perhaps this isn't the right place and time for them." Chloe nodded. "Nothing else that immediately comes to mind as important info?"
"Well, let's see." Chloe leaned close. "Can I trust you to keep things secret, even from your friends back in Roswell, until I say that it's okay to tell them?"
"That depends entirely on what kind of secret it is and if I think my friends need to know," I shot back instantly.
"Right." Chloe sighed. "Well, I'll just ask you to be cautious before spreading this information."
"Maybe you shouldn't even tell me," I muttered.
"Maybe not - but I'm going to anyway. I think it's the right thing to do." Chloe took a deep breath. "Oliver Queen is more than he might appear - several years he started to organize a team of - of freedom fighters, in a sense. Vigilantes in the best sense of the word." She took a deep breath, and dropped her whisper even lower. "He's not exactly the leader anymore, but Oliver's still very invested in the Justice League."
I blinked, trying to absorb all of this. "And why are you telling me this?"
"A lot of reasons," Chloe said. "There are - two aliens currently on the League roster, and a few others are humans who have been changed through exposure to alien artifacts and forces." She chuckled hollowly. "Including me. I'm a meteor freak and I was infected with an alien cellular computer for a while as well."
"So - so you're on this team of Oliver's?" I asked her.
"Yeah, I guess so - not a field player most of the time, but I'm a member, why?"
"I want to meet these alien vigilantes of yours, then," I announced. "As soon as possible."
"Oh, wow." Chloe sighed. "Maybe I should have expected that you'd ask that. It - it could be too dangerous..."
"You know, I'm starting to get a little tired of you telling me what's too dangerous, Missus," I grumbled. "Maybe I should just do a little bit of looking around for myself." And trying my best to make it look casual, I let my fingers brush against the back of Chloe's hand when I took my next drink of coffee.
By the time the momentary dizzy sensation of absorbing flashes from another person's mind had faded, Chloe was staring accusingly at me. "Don't think that I'm clueless about what you just did, Mister Guerin," she whispered back hotly. "Oliver told me plenty about your abilities. Again, that's something that could have been very dangerous for us all - if I hadn't been mentally disinfected lately. But whatever, that's all in the past now. Did you find out what you were looking for?"
"Enough," I grumbled, trying not to give away that I hadn't actually learned as much as I'd hoped to. "I may need to do a bit more looking around - like in Smallville, say."
"Oh, no, you c..." Chloe cut herself off at that point. "In Metropolis, at least you can hide in the crowds. LuthorCorp is watching Smallvile, too - and even the locals notice strangers there." I just kept staring at her, trying not to let the hostility that I was feeling boil over. "On the other hand for all the gratitude that I get looking after you, trying to keep your friends by making sure that nobody starts looking at them too closely, I don't know why I bother!" And with that, Chloe rose, sweeping up the smoothie cup into her hand with a dramatic gesture, and swept away from the patio without looking back.
I took a few minutes to finish the coffee, and then wandered back to my motel, trying to make sense of the imagery that I had flashed on from Chloe's mind and not having very much luck with most of it. One thing that was definitely clear was that Chloe had known one particular alien for many years. He was probably one of the ones who she now worked with in her Justice Bowl-a-thon, I decided, and possibly she'd found his secret while they were both back in high school - much as Maria, Liz, and the others had found out about us in Roswell.
And high school, for Chloe, had been in Smallville Kansas. Did her alien friend still live there, or had he moved away? Chloe herself had either left Smallville or was possibly commuting to the big city for whatever she did here all day. There were too many possibilities, too many unknowns as yet. Perhaps Jimmy was the alien, and they'd fallen in love and gotten married. Which suggested that Jimmy could have been targeted for the attack by someone or something that didn't like aliens, and that the 'specialist medical help' that Oliver Queen had provided would be obliged to keep secrets of alien physiology among everything else. But wouldn't Chloe have asked me for help if she had an alien husband who was still going through a difficult recovery? (Not that I could help that much himself...)
After thinking about it for a long time, Michael decided that for the time being, at least, I wouldn't go to Smallville after all. I stayed in the room as the afternoon stretched into evening, and then finally emerged for dinner, not liking the sudden sensation that Metropolis was full of hostile eyes on the lookout for aliens. I hadn't even wanted to call and check in with Max and Liz, partly because I didn't even know what to tell them. So staying out of touch was better for now.
My pickup truck had been unreliable lately, probably on account of how many times alien powers had been used to repair it over the years, so I'd come to Metropolis on the Greyhound, and gotten an interior second-floor room at the Red Carpet. So when I came out hungrily for dinner, I prowled down the hallway, took the stairs to the lobby two at a time - and was starting to push the doors open when I heard a soft coughing noise that made me stop still.
When I turned, I saw a young woman with short dark hair sitting in one of the red upholstered armchairs that had been set in the corners of the lounge area, and she was making that 'clearing my throat on purpose' gesture with her hand in front of her mouth. Then the hand dropped away, the mystery woman smiled, probably satisfied that she'd been able to catch my attention in such a simple way, and rose gracefully to her feet. I could see that she was slender, and dressed in a tight red sleeveless sweater, and a long black skirt, probably imitation leather. With her perfect cheek bones and smoky brown eyes, it didn't seem likely that she was the sort of girl who usually had problems attracting male attention - unless she thought of attracting too many men as a problem.
"Follow me," she said, stepping past me and through the doors, and somewhat to my surprise, I did. "I'm glad that you didn't try to leave through the parking lot - I wasn't entirely sure where to wait."
"What's going on here?" I asked. "Did Chloe Olsen send you?"
The striking young woman turned back to me once we were out on the sidewalk and her lips quirked with amusement. "Yeah, my best friend thought that it'd be a good idea if we got to know each other a little, Michael. By the way, my name is Lana - Lana Lang. And while we're on the subject of names, Chloe didn't take Jimmy's name, as far as I know. She's still Chloe Sullivan."
"Oh." I filed that away, wondering why Davis had called her Missus Olsen - maybe a joke about her newlywed status, if he knew that she didn't want to be called that. "So, are you supposed to take over where Chloe left off, making sure that I don't poke my nose where it doesn't belong?"
"Not in the least," Lana insisted. "Wherever you want to go, I'll just tag along and do what I can to keep you safe - both in terms of keeping your secrets secret, and your adorable self unscratched and free from captivity."
This was starting to sound truly ridiculous. "The only place I want to go is somewhere I can grab something to eat!"
"Are you sure about that, Michael?" Lana whispered, her voice slightly husky. I swallowed and couldn't think of an immediate reply. "Okay, you can think about that over dinner. Wherever you want to go this evening, in all Metropolis, I'm up for it."
"You - you should be careful about making open-ended promises like that, Lana," I stammered, trying to get my flirt on and catch up with this girl.
"I didn't say that I'd do whatever you wanted me to do when we get there," Lana teased back. "But come on - our dinner is waiting somewhere. How about you let me pick the restaurant, and treat you, since you're a visitor to Metropolis?"
"I should stand on male dignity and refuse," I said. "But when dignity isn't backed up by the pocketbook, it's a little..." I couldn't find the right word, and shrugged. "Lead on, Lana Lang."
"My pleasure, Michael Guerin," Lana said, and took my hand to drag me across the street through a gap in the whizzing traffic that seemed only just wide enough for the two of us.
TO BE CONTINUED...