Cherreads

Chapter 3 - Chapter 2

Twenty minutes later, Marcus stood in their adoptive mother's bedroom, methodically rifling through Dorothy D'Ancanto's jewelry box while his mind raced through the implications of what the system had just revealed.

**[POWER ABSORPTION SYSTEM - DETAILED ANALYSIS]**

**[ABSORPTION MECHANISM: SKIN-TO-SKIN CONTACT WITH ENHANCED INDIVIDUALS]**

**[ENHANCED DEFINITION: ANY INDIVIDUAL WITH SUPERNATURAL/SUPERHUMAN ABILITIES]**

**[INCLUDES: MUTANTS, MAGIC USERS, ENHANCED HUMANS, COSMIC-POWERED BEINGS, ALIENS]**

**[SELECTION PROCESS: UPON CONTACT, USER PRESENTED WITH MENU OF TARGET'S ABILITIES]**

**[LIMITATION: ONE ABILITY SELECTABLE PER TARGET]**

**[EXAMPLE: SPIDER-MAN CONTACT WOULD OFFER - PROPORTIONAL STRENGTH, SPIDER-SENSE, WALL-CRAWLING, WEB-SHOOTERS*]**

**[*TECHNOLOGICAL ABILITIES ONLY AVAILABLE IF BIOLOGICALLY INTEGRATED]**

**[POWER PROGRESSION SYSTEM:]**

- **INVENTORY:** UNLIMITED STORAGE FOR UNASSIMILATED ABILITIES

- **ACTIVE ASSIMILATION SLOTS:** 3 MAXIMUM CONCURRENT

- **STARTING POWER LEVEL:** 1% OF ORIGINAL POTENCY

- **PROGRESSION METHOD:** PRACTICE, COMBAT EXPERIENCE, EMOTIONAL RESONANCE

- **MASTERY THRESHOLD:** 100% = PERMANENT INTEGRATION + SYSTEM PERFECTION

- **SYSTEM PERFECTION:** REMOVES ORIGINAL WIELDER'S LIMITATIONS AND FLAWS

Marcus paused in counting the rolled-up twenties he'd found hidden in Dorothy's sock drawer. "So if I absorbed Cyclops's optic blasts..."

**[SCOTT SUMMERS - OPTIC BLAST ABILITY ANALYSIS:]**

**[ORIGINAL LIMITATIONS: UNCONTROLLED WITHOUT RUBY QUARTZ, EMOTIONAL INSTABILITY AFFECTS POWER]**

**[SYSTEM PERFECTED VERSION: COMPLETE CONSCIOUS CONTROL, VARIABLE INTENSITY FROM MINIMAL TO MAXIMUM OUTPUT]**

**[ESTIMATED MASTERY TIME: 6-8 MONTHS OF REGULAR PRACTICE]**

"And the three-slot limit means I need to choose carefully what I'm actively working on," Marcus muttered, moving to Dorothy's dresser and finding another stash of cash tucked behind her mirror. The woman apparently didn't trust banks, which made sense if she was actually Mystique laundering money from terrorist activities.

**[STRATEGIC RECOMMENDATION: PRIORITIZE VERSATILE, FOUNDATIONAL ABILITIES]**

**[SUGGESTED FIRST ABSORPTION: TELEPATHIC RESISTANCE OR ENHANCED DURABILITY]**

**[RATIONALE: SURVIVAL IN X-MEN UNIVERSE REQUIRES MENTAL DEFENSE AND PHYSICAL RESILIENCE]**

"Marie!" he called out, stuffing what had to be at least three thousand dollars in cash into his backpack. "How you doin' with that packing?"

"Almost done!" came her muffled reply from down the hall. "Found some of Mama's old leather gardening gloves in the shed. They're a little big, but they'll work for now."

Marcus nodded approvingly. The gloves would let Marie function normally without worrying about accidental skin contact. It was a temporary solution at best, but it would buy them time to figure out long-term control.

**[SYSTEM QUERY: FAMILY RELATIONSHIP WITH MYSTIQUE]**

**[ACCESSING MARCUS D'ANCANTO MEMORIES...]**

**[RESULTS: ADOPTIVE MOTHER - DOROTHY D'ANCANTO]**

**[ADOPTED AT AGE 6 FOLLOWING BIOLOGICAL PARENTS' CAR ACCIDENT]**

**[SUBJECT HAS BEEN KIND, ATTENTIVE GUARDIAN FOR 10 YEARS]**

**[BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS: GENUINE AFFECTION DETECTED, PROTECTIVE INSTINCTS CONFIRMED]**

**[WARNING: MEMORIES MAY BE ARTIFICIALLY IMPLANTED]**

**[COUNTER-WARNING: EMOTIONAL RESONANCE SUGGESTS AUTHENTIC ATTACHMENT]**

That was interesting. Either Mystique was a much better actress than most comic versions suggested, or she genuinely cared about Marie and Marcus beyond their strategic value. The implications of that were staggering—a reformed Mystique could be an incredibly powerful ally, but a Mystique with genuine emotional attachments could also be exponentially more dangerous if those attachments were threatened.

Marcus grabbed Dorothy's emergency road atlas from the nightstand drawer and flipped to the section covering Mississippi to New York. It was going to be a long drive, assuming they could figure out transportation that didn't involve stealing a car or hitchhiking with strangers who might recognize them from inevitable missing persons reports.

**[TRANSPORTATION ANALYSIS REQUESTED]**

**[SCANNING LOCAL AREA...]**

**[GREYHOUND BUS STATION: JACKSON, MS - 47 MILES]**

**[AMTRAK STATION: JACKSON, MS - 47 MILES]**

**[REGIONAL AIRPORT: JACKSON, MS - 47 MILES]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: BUS TRAVEL - LEAST IDENTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS, CASH PAYMENTS ACCEPTED]**

"System, what about our adoptive mother? When's Dorothy supposed to get back?"

**[ACCESSING MARCUS D'ANCANTO MEMORIES...]**

**[DOROTHY D'ANCANTO SCHEDULE: MONTHLY BUSINESS TRIP TO ATLANTA]**

**[DEPARTURE: THIS MORNING, 6:47 AM]**

**[EXPECTED RETURN: THURSDAY EVENING, 6-8 PM WINDOW]**

**[CURRENT DAY: SATURDAY]**

**[TIME ADVANTAGE: APPROXIMATELY 4.5 DAYS]**

Perfect. They'd be long gone before Dorothy returned, which would hopefully give them enough head start to disappear completely before she could track them down. Assuming she even wanted to track them down, which was anybody's guess when dealing with Mystique's motivations.

Marcus finished his systematic search of Dorothy's room, finding a few more stashes of cash along with some interesting documents in a locked box under the bed. The box itself was easy enough to open—Marcus's borrowed memories included knowledge of where Dorothy kept the spare key—but the contents made him pause.

Birth certificates for Marie and Marcus D'Ancanto, completely legitimate-looking but clearly recent forgeries. Social security cards. Vaccination records. School transcripts going back to elementary school. Everything necessary to create completely fake identities, except they were so well-crafted they might as well be real.

But underneath the forged documents was something that made Marcus's blood run cold: a manila folder labeled "WEAPON X - SUBJECT TRACKING" in neat, professional handwriting.

**[SYSTEM ALERT: HOSTILE DOCUMENTATION DETECTED]**

**[SCANNING CONTENTS...]**

**[WARNING: GOVERNMENT CLASSIFICATION MARKERS IDENTIFIED]**

**[SUBJECT FILES: MULTIPLE ENHANCED INDIVIDUALS]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: IMMEDIATE DEPARTURE ADVISABLE]**

Marcus didn't need to open the folder to know what it contained. Weapon X was the program that had created Wolverine, and if Dorothy—Mystique—had files on it, that meant she was either working with them, against them, or gathering intelligence for some third party. None of those possibilities were reassuring.

He stuffed the folder into his backpack along with the cash and fake documents. If they were going to survive in a world where their adoptive mother might be a terrorist, they'd need every scrap of information they could get.

"Marcus!" Marie's voice carried a note of urgency that made him drop everything and run. "Come here! Right now!"

He found her in the living room, standing by the front window and peering through the curtains with barely controlled panic. She was wearing jeans, a long-sleeved shirt despite the Mississippi heat, the leather gloves, and an expression that suggested their worst-case timeline had just accelerated significantly.

"What is it?"

"Sheriff's department," she whispered, pointing toward the road. "Two cars, maybe three. And they're not just drivin' by, Marcus. They're slowin' down. Like they're lookin' for our house."

Marcus joined her at the window and immediately understood why Marie was panicking. Three patrol cars were indeed approaching, moving slowly like they were searching for a specific address. The lead car had its spotlight mounted, which meant they were prepared for a nighttime search operation.

**[SYSTEM ALERT: LAW ENFORCEMENT DETECTED]**

**[ESTIMATED ARRIVAL TIME: 2-3 MINUTES]**

**[SCAN COMPLETE: NO ENHANCED INDIVIDUALS DETECTED IN VEHICLES]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: IMMEDIATE EVACUATION VIA REAR EXIT]**

"Jenny," Marcus muttered, feeling a surge of disappointment that was equal parts Marcus's betrayed trust and CJ's frustrated understanding of teenage psychology under stress. "She called faster than I expected."

"What do we do?" Marie's voice was steady, but Marcus could feel her terror through their empathic connection like a physical weight.

"Back door," he said, grabbing both their packed bags from where they'd left them by the stairs. "Woods behind the house, then circle around to the main road about a mile south of here. We stick to the tree line until we can flag down a ride to Jackson."

"What if they have dogs?"

"Then we move fast and hope we get lucky." Marcus slung both bags over his shoulders and guided Marie toward the kitchen. "Marie, I need you to listen to me very carefully. If we get separated—if something happens and we can't stay together—you head north. Find a place called Westchester County in New York. Look for Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters. Tell them you're a mutant who needs help, and that your brother is looking for you."

"Xavier's School?" Marie looked at him with confusion and growing fear. "How do you know about that? Marcus, what ain't you tellin' me?"

The sound of car doors slamming in their driveway cut off any possibility of explanation. Heavy footsteps crunched across the gravel, and the beam of a flashlight swept across the living room window.

"Later," Marcus whispered, easing open the back door and checking the yard for movement. "Right now we just run."

They slipped out into the humid Mississippi evening like ghosts, their footsteps silent on the wooden porch. The woods behind their house stretched for miles, thick with pine trees and summer undergrowth that would provide excellent cover as long as they could move quietly enough to avoid detection.

As they reached the tree line, Marcus heard the sound he'd been dreading: the front door splintering under the weight of a police battering ram.

"SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT! SEARCH WARRANT!"

**[SYSTEM UPDATE]**

**[HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT STATUS: CONFIRMED]**

**[CLEAN ESCAPE WINDOW: CLOSED]**

**[SURVIVAL MODE: ACTIVATED]**

**[NEW PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: REACH SAFE TERRITORY]**

**[ESTIMATED DISTANCE TO XAVIER'S SCHOOL: 1,247 MILES]**

**[ESTIMATED TRAVEL TIME: 18-24 HOURS BY GROUND TRANSPORTATION]**

**[RESOURCES: $3,247 CASH, FORGED DOCUMENTS, CLASSIFIED INTELLIGENCE]**

**[COMPLICATIONS: LAW ENFORCEMENT PURSUIT, POTENTIAL FEDERAL INVOLVEMENT, MYSTIQUE'S UNKNOWN REACTION]**

As they disappeared into the pine-scented darkness, Marcus D'Ancanto couldn't help but think that CJ Smith's old life of organized comic book collections and predictable Saturday nights was looking better and better by the minute.

But behind them, the shouts of searching officers and the sweep of powerful flashlights were a stark reminder that there was no going back now. They were mutants on the run in a world that feared and hunted people like them.

And somewhere in the distance, Marcus could swear he heard the sound of his system quietly updating their threat assessment to "extreme."

**[WELCOME TO THE X-MEN UNIVERSE]**

**[DIFFICULTY LEVEL: SURVIVAL MODE]**

**[GOOD LUCK]**

The Mississippi woods at night were a symphony of competing sounds—cicadas singing their electric songs, owls calling through the darkness, branches creaking in the humid breeze, and underneath it all, the distant but persistent sound of search dogs beginning to bay.

Marcus crouched beside a massive pine tree, Marie pressed against his shoulder, both of them breathing hard from thirty minutes of careful movement through underbrush that seemed designed to catch clothing, trip feet, and announce their presence to anyone within a quarter-mile radius.

**[SYSTEM ANALYSIS - PURSUIT STATUS]**

**[SEARCH PERIMETER: EXPANDING]**

**[K-9 UNITS: 2 CONFIRMED, ADDITIONAL UNITS INBOUND]**

**[HELICOPTER: ETA 15 MINUTES]**

**[CURRENT DISTANCE FROM SEARCH ORIGIN: 0.7 MILES]**

**[RECOMMENDED MINIMUM SAFE DISTANCE: 3 MILES]**

**[ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS: STREAM LOCATED 200 YARDS SOUTHEAST]**

**[TACTICAL ADVANTAGE: WATER WILL DISRUPT SCENT TRAIL]**

"System's right," Marcus whispered, so quietly that Marie had to lean closer to hear him. "We need to get to running water. Throw off the dogs."

"How do you know there's a stream?" Marie's voice was barely audible, but through their empathic connection Marcus could feel her confusion mixing with growing trust. She was starting to accept that her brother somehow knew things he shouldn't know, and that those impossible insights might be the key to their survival.

"Same way I knew you could touch me without hurtin' me," he said, which was both completely true and utterly inadequate as an explanation. "Come on."

They moved through the darkness like ghosts, Marcus's borrowed memories of childhood games in these woods combining with the system's tactical analysis to guide them around deadfalls, through clearings, and past the kind of obstacles that would have slowed down their pursuers. Every few minutes, Marcus would pause and listen, cataloging the sounds of the search behind them.

The dogs were getting closer.

**[WARNING: CANINE UNITS HAVE ACQUIRED SCENT TRAIL]**

**[ESTIMATED INTERCEPTION TIME: 12-15 MINUTES AT CURRENT PACE]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: INCREASE SPEED, ACCEPT HIGHER NOISE RISK]**

"We need to move faster," Marcus said, taking Marie's gloved hand and pulling her into a jog. "They've got our trail."

Behind them, the baying of bloodhounds echoed through the trees with the relentless certainty of a hurricane making landfall. These weren't pet dogs playing fetch in a backyard—these were working animals bred for tracking, and they were very good at their job.

The stream, when they finally reached it, was broader than Marcus had hoped and moving faster than the system's analysis had indicated. Recent rain had swollen it from a gentle creek into something approaching a proper river, with muddy water that reflected the moonlight like polished metal.

"How deep you think it is?" Marie asked, eyeing the dark water with obvious reluctance.

Marcus consulted the system's environmental analysis. "Maybe four feet at the deepest part. We can wade across, but we'll need to go upstream first. Put some distance between us and where the dogs lose our scent."

**[TACTICAL ANALYSIS: STREAM CROSSING]**

**[OPTIMAL ENTRY POINT: 150 YARDS UPSTREAM]**

**[CURRENT STRENGTH: MODERATE BUT MANAGEABLE]**

**[WATER TEMPERATURE: 68°F - COMFORTABLE FOR EXTENDED EXPOSURE]**

**[RECOMMENDED IMMERSION TIME: 15-20 MINUTES MINIMUM]**

**[SCENT ELIMINATION EFFECTIVENESS: 94.3%]**

They waded into the stream at the point the system had recommended, and Marcus immediately understood why the water was moving so fast. The recent storms had turned the creek bed into something approaching rapids, with enough current to make staying upright a genuine challenge.

"Hold onto me," Marcus said, wrapping an arm around Marie's waist. Through their connection, he could feel her fear of the dark water mixing with relief at finally having a way to escape their pursuers. "We're gonna follow this downstream for maybe half a mile, then cross and head north toward the main road."

The water was surprisingly warm, heated by the Mississippi sun and summer storms, but wading through knee-deep current while carrying backpacks and trying to stay quiet was exhausting work. Every step had to be carefully placed to avoid slipping on the muddy bottom, and every few yards they had to pause and listen for signs of pursuit.

Behind them, the dogs had reached the point where their scent trail disappeared into the water. The baying changed tone, becoming more frustrated and confused as the bloodhounds cast about looking for where their quarry had emerged.

**[PURSUIT STATUS UPDATE]**

**[K-9 UNITS: SCENT TRAIL LOST]**

**[SEARCH PATTERN: SWITCHING TO GRID METHODOLOGY]**

**[HELICOPTER: OVERHEAD IN 8 MINUTES]**

**[THERMAL IMAGING: WATER WILL PROVIDE CONCEALMENT]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: REMAIN IN STREAM UNTIL AERIAL SEARCH PASSES]**

"Helicopter comin'," Marcus whispered, pulling Marie deeper under the overhanging branches of a willow tree. "We need to stay hidden until it passes."

They crouched in the dark water, backpacks held above their heads, listening to the growing thunder of rotor blades cutting through the humid air. When the helicopter finally appeared, it was like a mechanical dragon breathing searchlight fire, its beam sweeping back and forth across the woods they'd just escaped.

Marie pressed closer to Marcus, and through their connection he felt her amazement that they'd made it this far without being caught. Mixed with the amazement was something else—a growing sense that her strange, dangerous brother might actually know what he was doing.

"How did you know about the helicopter?" she whispered as the aircraft moved away, its searchlight probing a different section of forest.

"Lucky guess," Marcus said, which was becoming his standard response to questions he couldn't answer without sounding completely insane. "Come on. Time to get out of this water and find us some transportation."

**[NAVIGATION UPDATE]**

**[CURRENT POSITION: 2.3 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHEAST OF ORIGIN]**

**[MAIN ROAD: 0.8 MILES NORTHEAST]**

**[TRAFFIC DENSITY: MINIMAL - RURAL ROUTE]**

**[RECOMMENDED STRATEGY: INTERCEPT NORTHBOUND TRAFFIC, REQUEST RIDE TO JACKSON]**

**[RISK ASSESSMENT: MODERATE - DEPENDS ON CIVILIAN COOPERATION]**

They emerged from the stream muddy, soaked, and exhausted, but alive and free. Marcus consulted the system's navigation data and led them through another stretch of woods toward what his borrowed memories identified as State Route 18, the main north-south highway that would take them to Jackson and the Greyhound station.

The road, when they finally reached it, was exactly as lonely as the system had predicted. Two lanes of cracked asphalt cutting through pine forests and farmland, with the occasional set of headlights appearing in the distance like earthbound stars.

"Now what?" Marie asked, wringing water from her hair and trying to look like something other than a fugitive who'd just waded through a creek in the middle of the night.

"Now we hitchhike," Marcus said, trying to project more confidence than he felt. "You stay back in the trees, out of sight. I'll flag down the first car that looks safe, spin some story about engine trouble and needing a ride to Jackson. Once I get them talking, you come out and we play the part of innocent teenagers who just need help."

"What if they recognize us? What if Jenny already called in descriptions?"

Marcus considered this. In the comics, news traveled slowly in rural areas, but this was 2024, not 1994. Cell phones and social media meant information could spread at light speed.

**[THREAT ASSESSMENT: CIVILIAN RECOGNITION]**

**[PROBABILITY: LOW TO MODERATE]**

**[FACTORS: RURAL AREA, LATE HOUR, LIMITED NEWS DISSEMINATION TIME]**

**[MITIGATION: ALTERED APPEARANCE, COVER STORY, EMOTIONAL APPEAL]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: PRIORITIZE SYMPATHETIC DEMOGRAPHICS - FAMILIES, OLDER INDIVIDUALS]**

"We'll deal with that if it happens," he said. "Right now, walking to Jackson isn't an option. It's forty-seven miles, we don't know these roads well enough to avoid the search grid, and we need to be on a bus heading north before they expand the manhunt statewide."

The first car that approached was a pickup truck traveling south, away from Jackson—wrong direction and probably local. Marcus let it pass. The second was a sedan moving fast enough to suggest someone with somewhere important to be—also not ideal for their purposes.

The third vehicle, appearing about twenty minutes after they'd taken position by the roadside, was perfect.

**[TARGET ANALYSIS: NORTHBOUND VEHICLE]**

**[TYPE: FAMILY MINIVAN, LATE MODEL]**

**[OCCUPANTS: 2 ADULTS, 2-3 CHILDREN - FAMILY UNIT]**

**[SPEED: MODERATE, SUGGESTING CAUTION WITH CHILDREN ABOARD]**

**[LICENSE PLATE: OUT OF STATE - TENNESSEE]**

**[ASSESSMENT: OPTIMAL TARGET FOR ASSISTANCE REQUEST]**

Marcus stepped into the road's shoulder and waved both arms, the universal signal for "please help, I'm not a serial killer." The minivan slowed, then pulled over about fifty yards down the road.

"Marie, showtime," he called softly. "Remember—we're brother and sister from town, our car broke down, we just need a ride to Jackson so we can call our mama to come get us."

The driver who got out of the minivan was exactly what Marcus had hoped for—a middle-aged woman in a floral dress who radiated the kind of maternal concern that made her constitutionally incapable of leaving teenagers stranded on dark roads. Her husband stayed behind the wheel, but Marcus could see him watching carefully through the rearview mirror.

"Are y'all alright?" the woman called out, her voice carrying a Tennessee accent that was cousins with their Mississippi drawl. "What in the world are you doing out here this time of night?"

"Ma'am, I'm Marcus, this is my sister Marie," Marcus said, letting his natural charm and Southern manners do most of the work. "Our car broke down about two miles back, and my cell phone's deader than a doornail. We were wonderin' if you might could give us a ride into Jackson so we can call our mama."

The woman looked them over with the practiced eye of someone who'd raised children and knew the difference between genuine distress and teenage delinquency. Marcus could see her taking in their muddy clothes, Marie's obvious exhaustion, and the way they were both clearly trying to be polite despite whatever had happened to them.

"Broke down, did it?" She looked back toward the empty road. "Didn't see any car back there."

"We, uh..." Marcus let genuine embarrassment color his voice. "We might've left it in a ditch when we tried to get it started again. Wasn't our finest moment, ma'am. Papa's gonna have our hides when he finds out."

Behind the woman, her husband leaned out the driver's window. "Everything alright, Linda?"

"Just some kids whose car broke down, Harold. They need a ride to Jackson." She turned back to Marcus and Marie. "Y'all look like you've been through the wringer. What happened? Did you try to drive through high water?"

"Something like that," Marie said softly, and Marcus felt a surge of approval through their connection. She was playing her part perfectly—tired, embarrassed, grateful for adult help.

Linda's maternal instincts clearly won out over any lingering caution. "Well, come on then. We've got room, and Jackson's right on our way. But you're both soaked! Did you fall in a creek or something?"

"Yes ma'am," Marcus said gratefully. "Tried to take a shortcut through the woods to find help, and I guess I led us straight through every mudhole between here and the Gulf of Mexico."

Linda laughed, the kind of warm sound that suggested she'd been dealing with teenage misadventures for decades. "Well, live and learn, I suppose. Harold, move those grocery bags so these kids can sit down."

As they climbed into the minivan—Harold turned out to be a soft-spoken man who sold insurance in Nashville, Linda taught third grade, and their two children were sound asleep in car seats—Marcus felt a wave of relief so powerful it nearly overwhelmed their empathic connection.

They'd made it. The first phase of their escape was complete.

**[OBJECTIVE COMPLETE: ESCAPE IMMEDIATE PURSUIT]**

**[CURRENT STATUS: EN ROUTE TO JACKSON, MS]**

**[ETA: 35 MINUTES]**

**[NEXT PHASE: SECURE TRANSPORTATION TO NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES]**

**[RESOURCES: $3,247 CASH, FORGED DOCUMENTS]**

**[THREAT LEVEL: REDUCED TO MODERATE]**

"Y'all are mighty kind to help us like this," Marcus said as they pulled back onto the highway. "We really appreciate it."

"Oh, don't think nothin' of it," Linda said, turning around from the front seat to look at them with genuine concern. "Harold and I have kids about your age. We'd hope somebody would help them if they were stuck on the road somewhere."

Through their empathic connection, Marcus felt Marie's emotions shifting from fear and exhaustion toward something approaching hope. For the first time since her powers had manifested, she was sitting in a car with normal people who were treating her like a regular teenager instead of a monster or a threat.

It was a small thing, but Marcus understood its importance. Marie needed to remember that not everyone in the world would fear or hate her for what she was. Some people—maybe most people—would just see a scared kid who needed help.

"Where in Jackson you need to go?" Harold asked, his eyes meeting Marcus's in the rearview mirror. "Bus station? Train station?"

"Bus station, if you know where it is," Marcus said. "Mama's gonna drive down from Memphis to get us, but she won't be able to leave until morning."

It was a plausible story, and Marcus could see both Harold and Linda accepting it without question. Two teenagers stranded by car trouble, calling their mother for help, planning to wait at the bus station until morning—it was the kind of minor family crisis that happened every day.

What they couldn't know was that by morning, Marcus and Marie would be hundreds of miles away, traveling north toward a school that might be their only chance for a normal life.

**[SYSTEM NOTIFICATION]**

**[ESTIMATED ARRIVAL JACKSON BUS STATION: 11:47 PM]**

**[FIRST NORTHBOUND DEPARTURE: 6:15 AM - MEMPHIS/ST. LOUIS/CHICAGO]**

**[TICKET COST: $127 EACH TO NEW YORK CITY]**

**[JOURNEY TIME: 18 HOURS, 4 TRANSFERS]**

**[WARNING: EXTENDED TRAVEL TIME INCREASES DETECTION RISK]**

**[ALTERNATIVE: FLY TO NEW YORK - HIGHER SPEED, HIGHER SECURITY RISK]**

Marcus weighed the options as the lights of Jackson grew larger in the distance. Bus travel would be slow but anonymous—cash tickets, minimal ID requirements, the kind of transportation favored by people who wanted to disappear. Flying would be faster but would require going through airport security, showing identification, and creating an electronic trail that could be followed.

Given that they were technically minors traveling without adult supervision and potentially the subject of an active missing persons investigation, the bus was definitely the safer option.

"There it is," Harold said, pointing to a modest building with a Greyhound logo illuminated against the night sky. "Jackson Bus Terminal. Doesn't look like much, but it'll get you where you're going."

As they pulled into the parking lot, Marcus felt the weight of the moment settling on his shoulders. This was it—the point of no return. Once they bought those bus tickets, they'd be committed to a course of action that would take them hundreds of miles from everything they'd ever known.

"Thank you again," Marie said as they climbed out of the minivan, her voice carrying genuine gratitude. "Y'all probably saved our lives tonight."

Linda smiled at her through the window. "You just be safe, honey. And call your mama as soon as you get inside, you hear? She's probably worried sick."

As the minivan pulled away, Marcus and Marie stood in the parking lot of the Jackson Bus Terminal, two teenagers with backpacks and a bag full of cash, about to disappear into the American transportation system.

**[PHASE ONE COMPLETE]**

**[PHASE TWO INITIATING: LONG-DISTANCE TRAVEL]**

**[DESTINATION: WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NEW YORK]**

**[OBJECTIVE: LOCATE XAVIER'S SCHOOL FOR GIFTED YOUNGSTERS]**

**[WARNING: EIGHTEEN HOURS OF VULNERABILITY AHEAD]**

"Well," Marcus said, looking up at the Greyhound logo with a mixture of anticipation and trepidation, "ready to see what's north of here?"

Marie squeezed his hand through her leather glove, and through their empathic connection he felt her fear transforming into something that might eventually become excitement.

"Ready as I'll ever be," she said. "Lead the way, big brother."

And with that, Marcus D'Ancanto and Marie D'Ancanto walked through the doors of the bus terminal and into their new lives as fugitive mutants seeking sanctuary in a world that didn't know it needed saving.

The X-Men Universe had officially gained two new players.

Time would tell whether they'd survive long enough to make a difference.

The Jackson Bus Terminal at midnight was exactly the kind of place where people went to disappear. Fluorescent lights hummed overhead like dying insects, casting everything in a sickly yellow glow that made even healthy people look like they were coming down with something terminal. The waiting area smelled like industrial disinfectant, stale coffee, and the particular brand of desperation that came from people traveling at odd hours with limited options.

Marcus approached the ticket window where a middle-aged Black woman sat behind bulletproof glass, reading a romance novel and occasionally glancing up at the security monitors. Her name tag read "DOLORES" and she had the expression of someone who'd seen every possible variety of human drama play out in this terminal over the years.

"Help you?" she asked, marking her place in the book with a coffee-stained bookmark.

"Yes ma'am," Marcus said, letting his natural Southern politeness do the heavy lifting. "I need two tickets to New York City. Soonest departure you've got."

Dolores looked him over with practiced eyes, taking in his muddy clothes, his exhausted sister hovering nearby, and the way they both clearly wanted to be anywhere other than a bus terminal in the middle of the night.

"Y'all running from something, or to something?" she asked with the directness of someone who'd stopped bothering with small talk somewhere around her tenth year on the job.

"Family emergency," Marcus said, which was technically true from a certain perspective. "My sister and I need to get to our aunt's place in New York. It's... it's pretty urgent."

**[SYSTEM ANALYSIS: TICKET AGENT ASSESSMENT]**

**[DOLORES WASHINGTON - GREYHOUND EMPLOYEE 12 YEARS]**

**[PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILE: MATERNAL, PROTECTIVE, SUSPICIOUS OF AUTHORITY]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: HONEST APPROACH, APPEAL TO PROTECTIVE INSTINCTS]**

**[WARNING: EXPERIENCED WITH RUNAWAY SITUATIONS]**

Dolores's expression softened slightly, but her eyes remained sharp. "How old are y'all?"

"Eighteen," Marcus lied smoothly. "Both of us. Twins."

"Uh-huh." Dolores leaned back in her chair. "And you got ID to prove that?"

Marcus pulled out the forged documents they'd taken from Dorothy's room, hoping the quality was as good as it had appeared. The birth certificates and driver's licenses looked legitimate to him, but Dolores probably saw fake IDs on a weekly basis.

She examined the documents under a bright desk lamp, holding them up to the light and checking for watermarks. After what felt like an eternity, she handed them back.

"These look real enough," she said finally. "But honey, I been working this window for twelve years, and I can smell teenage runaways from three counties away. Y'all got that look."

Marcus felt his heart sink. Through their empathic connection, he sensed Marie's growing panic.

"Now," Dolores continued, "I ain't saying you are runaways. Maybe you really are eighteen, maybe you really got family business in New York. But if you ain't, and if somebody's looking for you, they gonna check the bus stations first thing."

She leaned forward, her voice dropping to a whisper. "So if you're in some kind of trouble—and I mean real trouble, not just teenage drama—you might want to think about taking a route that don't go straight where you're headed."

**[SYSTEM ALERT: TACTICAL ADVICE DETECTED]**

**[ANALYZING SUGGESTION...]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: INDIRECT ROUTING TO AVOID DETECTION]**

**[MULTIPLE HOP STRATEGY: JACKSON→MEMPHIS→CHICAGO→PHILADELPHIA→NEW YORK]**

**[INCREASED TRAVEL TIME, DECREASED DETECTION RISK]**

"What would you suggest?" Marcus asked, recognizing wisdom when he heard it.

Dolores pulled up her computer terminal and started typing. "Well, if I was trying to get to New York without leaving too obvious a trail, I might take the 6:15 AM to Memphis. Then catch a connecting bus to Chicago. Then maybe Philadelphia. Make it look like I was zigzagging around instead of heading straight northeast."

She turned her monitor so he could see the route options. "Takes longer, costs a little more, but gives you time to see if anybody's following you. Plus, if someone's checking passenger manifests, they'll be looking for direct routes."

Marcus studied the itinerary. Memphis at 10:30 AM, Chicago at 8:45 PM, Philadelphia at 6:15 AM the next day, New York by noon. It would add almost twelve hours to their journey, but it might also keep them alive.

"That sounds like good advice," he said. "Two tickets for the Memphis route, please."

"Cash or card?"

"Cash." Marcus pulled out five fifties, hoping it didn't look too suspicious for teenagers to be carrying that kind of money.

Dolores counted the bills carefully, then printed out their tickets. "Bus 1247, leaves at 6:15 AM sharp from bay 3. Driver's name is Earl Patterson, been driving for Greyhound longer than I been selling tickets. Good man, minds his own business."

She handed him the tickets along with a schedule for the connecting routes. "Y'all got somewhere safe to wait? Terminal don't really close, but it ain't the most comfortable place to spend six hours."

Marcus looked around the waiting area, taking in the hard plastic chairs, the vending machines with flickering lights, and the handful of other late-night travelers who all looked like they had their own stories to hide.

"We'll manage," he said. "Thank you, ma'am. You've been incredibly helpful."

"Just remember," Dolores said, her voice carrying the weight of experience, "when you get where you're going, you call somebody who cares about you. Let them know you're safe. Don't matter what kind of trouble you're running from—somebody, somewhere is probably worried sick."

As they walked away from the ticket window, Marie squeezed Marcus's arm through her glove. "She knew, didn't she? That we're not really eighteen, that we're running from something."

"Yeah," Marcus said softly. "But she helped us anyway. That's something to remember—not everybody in the world is gonna want to hurt us."

**[SYSTEM UPDATE]**

**[DEPARTURE: 6 HOURS, 12 MINUTES]**

**[CURRENT THREAT LEVEL: LOW - MINIMAL SURVEILLANCE IN TERMINAL]**

**[RECOMMENDED ACTIONS: REST, FOOD ACQUISITION, SITUATIONAL MONITORING]**

**[WARNING: MORNING SHIFT CHANGE MAY BRING LESS SYMPATHETIC PERSONNEL]**

They found seats in a corner where Marcus could watch the entrances while Marie tried to get comfortable on the unforgiving plastic chairs. The terminal's fluorescent lights never dimmed, creating a weird twilight zone where time seemed suspended between night and morning.

"Marcus," Marie said quietly, pulling her jacket tighter around herself, "what happens when we get to New York? I mean, you keep talking about this school, but what if it doesn't exist? What if we can't find it?"

It was a fair question. CJ's comic book knowledge told him that Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters was real, but comics weren't exactly reliable sources for real-world navigation. For all he knew, the school might not exist yet in this timeline, or it might be hidden so well that two teenage runaways would never find it.

**[SYSTEM QUERY: XAVIER'S SCHOOL LOCATION DATA]**

**[SEARCHING...]**

**[RESULT: LIMITED INFORMATION AVAILABLE]**

**[KNOWN: WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NEW YORK]**

**[ESTIMATED SEARCH AREA: 450 SQUARE MILES]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: SEEK LOCAL MUTANT COMMUNITY FOR GUIDANCE]**

"We'll figure it out when we get there," Marcus said, projecting more confidence than he felt. "New York's got to have other people like us. Maybe they'll know how to find the school, or maybe they'll know somewhere else that's safe."

"And if there's nowhere safe?"

Marcus thought about that. Through their empathic connection, he could feel Marie's fear—not just of their current situation, but of a future where they'd always be running, always be hiding, always be afraid to touch other people.

"Then we make somewhere safe," he said finally. "We find other people like us, and we help each other. That's what family does, right? They take care of each other."

Marie smiled at that, the first genuine smile he'd seen from her since David had collapsed in her bedroom. "When did you get so wise, big brother?"

"Must be all that brain damage from getting my head caved in by a baseball bat," Marcus thought, but what he said was, "Just been doing a lot of thinking lately."

**[SYSTEM NOTIFICATION]**

**[EMOTIONAL STABILITY: MARIE D'ANCANTO - IMPROVING]**

**[EMPATHIC CONNECTION: STRENGTHENING]**

**[TRUST LEVEL: HIGH AND RISING]**

**[RECOMMENDATION: MAINTAIN SUPPORTIVE PRESENCE, CONTINUE PROTECTIVE BEHAVIOR]**

Over the next few hours, Marcus watched the terminal slowly populate with the early morning crowd. Business travelers with pressed suits and coffee cups. Elderly couples with small suitcases and patient expressions. College students with backpacks and the look of people accustomed to traveling on tight budgets.

Normal people living normal lives, heading to normal destinations for normal reasons.

At 5:45 AM, Earl Patterson appeared—a grizzled man in his fifties with gray hair, a Greyhound uniform that had seen better decades, and the steady walk of someone who'd been driving buses since before GPS made navigation automatic. He checked his clipboard, glanced around the terminal, and made eye contact with Marcus from across the room.

"Y'all the twins heading to Memphis?" he asked, approaching their corner.

"Yes sir," Marcus said, standing up and helping Marie gather their bags.

Earl looked them over with the same practiced eye as Dolores, but his assessment seemed more focused on their ability to be good passengers than their potential legal status.

"First time on a long-distance bus?"

"Yes sir."

"Few rules, then. Keep your tickets handy—I'll check them at every stop. Don't mess with the air conditioning or try to open the windows while we're moving. If you're gonna be sick, there's a bathroom on board, but give me warning if you can. And if anybody gives you trouble, you come tell me. I don't tolerate nonsense on my bus."

"Understood," Marcus said.

Earl nodded approvingly. "Good. Bus loads in ten minutes. You can board now if you want—get yourselves settled."

As they walked toward bay 3, Marcus felt the weight of the moment settling on his shoulders again. In ten minutes, they'd be committed to this course of action. No going back, no changing their minds, no returning to their old life in Caldecott County.

**[FINAL SYSTEM CHECK]**

**[RESOURCES: $2,993 REMAINING CASH]**

**[DOCUMENTATION: FORGED BUT HIGH QUALITY]**

**[DESTINATION: MEMPHIS, THEN CHICAGO, THEN PHILADELPHIA, THEN NEW YORK]**

**[TOTAL TRAVEL TIME: 30 HOURS]**

**[THREAT ASSESSMENT: MODERATE AND MANAGEABLE]**

**[PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: MAINTAIN MARIE'S EMOTIONAL STABILITY]**

**[SECONDARY OBJECTIVE: REACH XAVIER'S SCHOOL]**

**[TERTIARY OBJECTIVE: DEVELOP POWER CONTROL AND STRATEGIC CAPABILITIES]**

The bus was exactly what Marcus had expected—worn seats in blue and gray, small windows, and the lingering smell of industrial cleaning products mixed with decades of human occupancy. They found seats about halfway back, Marie taking the window seat so she could watch the world go by.

As Earl started the engine and began his pre-departure announcements, Marcus felt Marie's hand slip into his through her leather glove. Through their empathic connection, he sensed her mixture of fear and anticipation, terror and hope.

"No matter what happens," she whispered, "I'm glad you're with me."

"Always," Marcus said, meaning it with every fiber of his borrowed being. "That's what brothers are for."

The bus pulled out of Jackson as the sun began to rise over Mississippi, carrying two teenage mutants toward a future that was uncertain, dangerous, and full of possibilities.

In the distance, Marcus could hear the faint sound of sirens heading in the wrong direction.

They were free.

---

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