#i should also say that baron is refusing to say where he took warren to besides 'somewhere in italy'
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Penny has died.
āā¦..has died.ā finish it in my ask. || Accepting
ā¦ when turned fifty degrees past calibration, will result in a polariāĀ
Snap. Warren frowned down at the broken pencil lead. Ah, well. Thatās what he had extras for. He grabbed one of the two spares from the corner of his workspace and resumed his note-taking. Every now and again, heād glance up at the blackboard. While some people might question his teaching methods, nobody could say Medulla didnāt know what he was talking about. He was a supergenius, after all.Ā
Heād been in the middle of double-checking his spelling of the inventor of the first shrink ray (Russian phonics were different than any heād worked with, before) when a knock on the door stopped the lecture. Warren only spared it the barest glance.Ā
āYes?ā Medulla sounded annoyed. Warren could relate, but decided to salvage the situation. As Medulla stepped outside to speak with whoever it was - offering aĀ āone moment, classā over his shoulder - Warren reached down to rummage through his bag. Heād scrounged together enough spare cash to buy a set of highlighters from the dollar store, so, depending on how long this took, he might be able to get a head start on colour-coding his notesā
āMister Peace.ā He looked up. People were looking at him, now. A glance to the side showed him Will quickly averting his eyes. As Warren sat up, he returned his own gaze to the door. Mr. Medulla stood with a decidedly unreadable expression on his face. Beside him was one of the office attendants. The, uh, the jumpy one, what was her nameā¦ Mrs. Springer.Ā
āā¦ Yeah?ā He said when the silence stretched.Ā
āYouāre being requested at the office.ā Warren rolled his eyes almost before Medulla had even finished speaking. Of course he was. He shot an irritated grimace at the desk as he pushed himself to stand, bracing his hands on the smooth wooden surface.Ā
āAnd, Mister Peace?ā Medulla spoke again. Warren straightened with a huff of breath and an arched brow.Ā
āYeah?ā He repeated. Mrs, Springer shot an anxious glance to Medulla. Warren felt like he wasnāt supposed to notice, but he did.Ā
āYou- Might want to bring your bag, dear.ā She said it in the sort of tone youād expect a grandmother to have. That didnāt make this any less of a headache. He was fluent in teacher, by now. That meantĀ ādonāt expect to come back, kidā. He shoved his book into his bag, briefly wondering who heād have to ask to copy their notes. Probably Will. Speaking of-Ā
āWhat did you do?ā He asked, voice barely over a whisper. Warren shrugged and shook his head, doing his best to conveyĀ āI donāt know!ā in a gesture. He hauled his bag up by one strap and walked through the silent classroom and out into the hall. As he passed, Mr. Medulla looked like he wanted to say something. Warren paused. A beat of silence, before Medulla shook his head and closed the door. As it clicked, Warren could faintly hear him returning to the lecture with an apology for the interruption. Damn. He hoped this wouldnāt be on the test - or maybe he could ask for a make-up lecture at lunch? ā¦ Probably not. Especially not if he was in trouble. Guess he could always check the library.Ā
The walk to the office was silent. So silent, in fact, he could hear his sneakers against the tiled floor just as well as her heels. Springer seemed more nervous than usual. She wouldnāt stop fiddling, either with her glasses, a stray piece of hair, or the manila folder of paperwork she seemed to have perpetually clutched to her chest. ā¦ She seemed scared. Of him? Did she honestly think heād attack a teacher? (Or- secretary?) ā¦. Scratch that. Baron Battleās kid. Of course sheād think something like that, never mind the fact heād never done that kind of thing in his life. (Thanks, Dad.) He decided to think about something else. Like what they could possibly be pinning on him, this time. He honestly had no idea. He hadnāt gotten into any fights, or even any arguments lately, didnāt make a headache of himself in classā¦ Didnāt cheat on tests or plagiarize his work, and ever since sixth grade had made a point of keeping his rough drafts and research notes to prove itā¦ Didnāt destroy any more property than normal in STC (and had not, thank you very much, set Boomer on fire again). Yeah, he had no idea. He figured he had to be getting blamed for someone elseās handiwork. Again. Whatever. The nice thing about having friends (or, one of the nice things) was that, hopefully, at least one of the others would be willing and able to vouch for his innocence. That should speed things along. Maybe heād be able to catch the tail end of the lecture, after all.Ā
Springer opened the door for him, and he gave her a small nod of thanks. Received a watery, shaky smile in return. Geez, she looked like she was about to cry. Was she really that scared of him? Theyād barely ever even spoken, before! It didnāt put him in the best mood as he stepped into the office. Principal Powers was at her desk. For some reason, she looked older than she had when heād passed her in the hall, that morning. He wasnāt really sure why. Didnāt think about it long after he saw the person sitting beside her. A man, broad in the shoulders, in a formal black suit. Short hair, dark glasses, ear piece. A Fed, by the looks of it. It took a concentrated effort not to scowl. Had to be about Dad. Because, you know, a fifteen-year-old highschooler in California absolutely had control over what happened up at NAPSE. Heād handled this before. Just give him your statement, get your alibi verified, get back to class. Hopefully it wouldnāt take as long to process as it had, last time. The suit started to ask a question -Ā āAre youāā but clammed up as soon as he saw Warrenās face. Just nodded to himself in silent confirmation. Warren warily set his bag down by the door and crossed his arms over his chest, hovering by the door.Ā
āUhm-ā Mrs. Springer broke the silence. All three sets of eyes - Powers, Warren, and the Suitās sunglasses - turned to her. She gulped, stared at the floor, and shut the door with a nervous laugh before scurrying off down the hall. Warren furrowed his brow. Sheesh, and he thought he was bad with social situations.
āWarren?ā Principal Powers spoke, and he looked up. First names? Weird.Ā āThis,ā she continued, gesturing to the suit,Ā āis Mr. Stern, from the Agencyās head office.ā Warrenās brows raised, and he blinked. The Agency? What the hell did they want? No Agent had tried to get in contact with the Peaces since Mom went inactive. Were they trying to hire her, again? To hire him?Ā He wasnāt even licensed, yet. That couldnāt be it. ā¦ It looked like they were waiting for him to say something.
āHey.ā Warren greeted lamely. He kept studying the Agent, trying to get a read on him. No luck. Not surprising.Ā
āWould you take a seat, son?ā The Agent - Stern - said, nodding to a chair opposite the desk. Warren glanced to the chair, leaning away to get a better look at it and swallowing a comment about how Stern wasnāt his dad. Probably better to not make this worse. Instead, he said nothing and did sit down, but kept his eyes on the two adults. This was so weird. It only got weirder when Stern reached into his suit jacket and pulled out a huge, white rectangle that almost reminded Warren of an overgrown bar of soap. He flicked a switch on the side, the box made a short whirring noise, and Powers gave the Agent what Warren thought would have been an exasperated look, if sheād had the energy. (Why was she so tired? Did the staff coffee machine break, or something?) She didnāt stop him, though. There was a brief moment when the air felt charged with static. It faded quickly enough, but not before piquing Warrenās curiosity. He wanted to reach over to the box and see what it was. He decided against doing so and kept his arms crossed, hands tucked in. Stared silently at Stern, waiting for an explanation.Ā
āSon,ā Stern began again, shifting to a more comfortable position in his chair. Warren leaned back slightly in his.Ā āIām afraid I have some bad news.ā A part of Warren very much wanted to be sarcastic. It was drowned out by the chill that raced down his spine.Ā
āā¦ What kind of news?ā He sat up slowly. His hands gripped the armrests of his chair a bit tighter than he realized. Stern sighed.
āItās about your mother.āĀ
Warren felt the school rock beneath him. Mom?
āWhatā¦?ā The air was suddenly too thick for him to get any other words out. In the corner of his eye, he could make out Powers standing up, but he was too focused on Stern to care. No, no, no no noā¦.
āThis afternoon, at 1:45 PM, your mother was on her way home from work.ā
No.
(It was so cold.)
āā¦ Am I correct to assume youāve seen the news? About Voltage?ā
No.
(Yes.) (He didnāt answer.)
āWe have reason to believe that your mother intervened in one of their attacks.āĀ
No.Ā
(Please, no.)
(This wasnāt real.)
(Not Mom.)
āAndā¦ā Stern trailed off. Warren kept staring, unaware that he was shaking his head in silent denial.Ā
Please.
Stern sighed.Ā
āIām so sorry, son.āĀ
Sorry?! What did that-?! He didnāt even remember standing up, but the chair that clattered to the ground behind him let him know that he mustāve. It wasnāt true. It wasnāt. It was some sick joke, some sort of- Some- It wasnāt-! It couldnāt be, not Mom-!Ā
āYouāre lying!ā He wasnāt aware of the break in his voice. He was aware that there was no fire in his hands. Tried again. Nothing. Powers and Stern were standing now. If heād been more coherent, he might have realized his lack of abilities came from that box. But he wasnāt thinking about that. Only about getting the truth out of Stern.Ā
To the Agentās credit, he didnāt flinch when Warren shoved him against the wall. Didnāt fight back, didnāt struggle, didnāt even react aside from re-adjusting his glasses when they got knocked askew.Ā
āWhere is she?!ā Warren demanded, yanking on fistfuls of Sternās jacket collar.Ā āWhereās my mom?!ā His vision blurred. It had to be from adrenaline, right? Not from how much he was crying. (āBoys arenāt supposed to cry, Warrenā a voice from first grade whispered.)
āDiana.ā Stern held up a cautioning hand over Warrenās shoulder. Warren glanced back - Powers. It looked like sheād been reaching out to them. He exhaled a shaky breath, then roughly dropped Stern and took a step back. His lungs drew in air at a ragged, irregular rate and he sniffed but didnāt wipe his eyes. Only stared, hands still flexed against the humming white box, as the Agent calmly dusted himself off.
(āItās okay, sweetheart.ā Said a voice heād never hear again.Ā āEverythingās gonna be okay. We still have each other, right?ā)
Wrong.
He tried another gulp of air and failed. Squeezed his eyes shut, His voice sounded so small when he spoke.
āWhereāes my momā¦?ā A hand on his shoulder. Warren flinched back. Stern was in front of him, looking down through impassive glasses.
He didnāt even care.
āCome with me.āĀ
ā¦
He felt numb.Ā
Theyād taken him off in an Agency aircraft. Theyād sent someone to collect his things and he hadnāt said a word since theyād left the office, only clung to himself desperately like it might offer some form of comfort and it didnāt. (She was gone. She was gone she was gone why was she gone?) Theyād landed in a secure location and heād asked if they were going to a hospital but Stern had said thereād be no point. No point? Nobody would even tell him what happened. What didĀ āno pointā mean? Sure, hospitals were expensive, but- But he wouldāve given the shirt off his back if it meant she was okay. Heād have spent every day for the rest of his life at work, heād cut down on food, heād- Heād take a page from Dadās book and rob a bank, anything as long as sheād be around at the end of the day, but- But there was no point. He shouldāve been there. He shouldāve saved her. He shouldāve died, instead. Sheād always been there for him. Sheād done everything for him, and he couldnāt do one damn thing for her. Walking home from work, theyād said. She wouldnāt have needed that job if he hadnāt been around. She wouldnāt have lost her old one if she hadnāt needed to take care of him. It was his fault she was dead. It was his fault he lost the only person who ever really gave a damn. His mom was gone because of him.
āWeāve contacted your next of kin,ā Agent Stern said. Warren numbly looked up from the chair he was in. At some point, someone mustāve put a blanket around his shoulders. He didnāt remember it getting there.Ā āYour uncle has agreed to take you in.ā The gentleness sounded alien and forced in the Agentās voice. A thought broke through the grief:
I have an uncle?
Warren didnāt say anything, though. Only stared.
āNicholas Peace?ā Stern said, as though expecting that to jog some memory.Ā āYour motherās brother?āĀ
Mom had a brother?
Had. Past-tense. Mom had a brother. Just like Warren had a mom. Where had thisĀ āuncleā been for the past forever? Why was he stepping in now? A man came into the room behind Stern. Neatly combed brown hair, blue eyes, a suit that looked like it cost more than Warrenās entire apartment. Dress code aside, he looked a lot like Mom. Warrenās chest constricted painfully and he looked away. Swallowed a lump in his throat that mightāve been a sob if he let it. Mom was gone. His mom was gone and it was his fault and now he was being shoved off on someone who wouldnāt want anything to do with the kid who killed his sister. Warren wouldnāt want anything to do with himself, either. He just wanted everything to stop.
The funeral was small and quiet. The sun was shining, and Warren, from where he stood alone, idly thought that Mom wouldāve liked it. Sheād loved the sun. The marble headstone couldāve covered the Peacesā food budget for a month, easily. A simple epitaph graced its surface.Ā
Penelope Anne Peace
October 12, 1972 - November 4, 2005
Beloved mother, sister, friend.Ā
What a joke, Warren thought bitterly. He stared silently at the freshly-turned earth, blinking against tears that had long since been spent. Nobody else had come. Just him, and hisā¦ Uncle. Cousin and Aunt, too, but they were doing a poor job of disguising how bored they were. How dare they. How dare the three of them make light of this-? Mom deserved so much better. She deserved a better family than them and a better son than him and better friends than the ones who couldnāt be bothered to make an appearance. Not here, and not when they cleaned the apartment. Nicholas had sent people to do it, but Warren had insisted on being there. Had made sure to gather every single item of importance himself. ā¦ It had always seemed like such a cramped space, before. But now- It felt huge. It felt empty. It felt cold. It felt lonely. It was a feeling that followed him no matter where he went.Ā
Not school, though. Mainly because he didnāt go back. Not the next day. Not the day after that. (He couldnāt take it, any more.)
(Sorry, Mom.)
āHey, guys!ā Will said, weaving his way through the cafeteria to their usual table.
āHey, man!ā Zach reached up a hand for a high-five, and Will obliged, making sure not to drop his tray. He slid into a seat between Ethan and Layla.Ā
āHowād the history test go?ā Layla asked, popping a kale chip into her mouth. Will shrugged.
āI think I passed?ā He offered.Ā āI mean, I did study, and I think I did well, but-ā He glanced around, looking for a change of subject (the last thing he wanted to do was stress even more about that test. Heād been worrying all week).Ā āSo, uh- Has anyone seen Warren? Iāve still got his science notes from the last few classes, andā¦ā The table went silent. Will looked around.Ā āWhat?ā Everyone seemed to be staring at their food. Layla put a hand on his arm.
āWillā¦ā She began. Will frowned.Ā
āYeahā¦?ā It was Magenta who answered. (Sheād heard the news, first.)
āā¦ His mom died.ā She said, putting her fork down. Will felt the colour drain from his face.
āWh-? Oh, my godā¦ā
That was the first piece of news that would reach Sky High regarding the disappearance of Warren Peace.Ā
The second fact was that the lavish estate of Nicholas Peace, practicing attorney, had burned to the ground completely. Thankfully, no casualties had yet been discovered, but a few of the staff were suffering serious injuries.
Next, the student body learned that, some time ago, Baron Battle had escaped from NAPSE, leaving a trail of immolated corpses and chaos in his wake before apparently vanishing off of the face of the Earth. Nobody knew how heād gotten out. Nobody knew where heād gone.
All they knew was that, wherever he was,
it looked as though heād taken his son with him.Ā
#death //#death mention //#ask to tag#;school gossip (ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½)#;ignited (ļ½ļ½ćļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½
ļ½)#;r: strongest hero I know (ļ¼°ļ½
ļ½ļ½ļ½ćļ¼°ļ½
ļ½ļ½ļ½
)#;holy blank blankman (ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½
ļ½)#;r: miss you more than I should (ļ¼¢ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ćļ¼¢ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½
)#;v: but hey; that's high school (ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ¼ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½
ćļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½)#;r: of some assistance (ļ¼ļ½ļ¼ćļ¼ļ½
ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½)#;r: can't get them to stop talking to me (ļ¼³ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ćļ¼³ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ćļ¼§ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½)#;r: not wonder woman (ļ¼°ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ļ½ćļ¼°ļ½ļ½ļ½
ļ½ļ½)#Anonymous#So I redid this four times like four years ago according to my old tags#so i guess fifth time's the charm??#this is literally the first time warren's cried since he was seven jeezus#i should also say that baron is refusing to say where he took warren to besides 'somewhere in italy'#but for those concerned; don't be baron is oddly enough the safest person for warren to be around rn
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