Cedar Tree
April 14th, 2013
Red Square, Moscow
****
His
hands were bloody, his back ached, and he was stuck in a two-bit motel room in
the middle of Red Square. In other words, it was a typical Tuesday for
Brock Samson.
He
wasn’t behaving, however, in a manner typical to his person. Not gleefully wallowing in ultraviolence nor casually
observing the situation, Brock sat in the middle of his borrowed bed, staring at
his own hands with deadened eyes.
A voice
at the back of his mind suggested that washing his hands might be a good
idea. The dark red remnants of his
latest battle had left sticky red patches on the tips of his fingers that
caught the dim light of the TV set. Were
it an ordinary day, he would have wiped them on his jeans hours ago, or perhaps
ignored it and left a trail of red across the room and down the hallway, a
pattern of gore that told the world “Brock Samson was here.”
But the
story’s a different one when the blood you’ve shed at the Kremlin belongs to
your mentor.
The
notion that he had killed Hunter to get to Mol, and that he had been forced to
turn Mol in to the OSI to protect the good of the world, had the power to give
Brock pause. At least he’d left Mol
alive – at least there remained a marginal chance she might reform in
prison. He had hardened himself against death
years ago, so it wasn’t the actual activity of dismemberment that made him
shudder.
It was
that it had been Hunter. His father
figure. His mentor.
A phone
began to ring, and it took him a minute to process the idea that the sound came
from his own room. He reached for the
receiver.
“Samson,”
he growled.
“Come
home,” a familiar young voice urged. “Dean
needs you.”
“Triana?”
he frowned. “How the hell did you find
me?”
“My dad has
sources…” A significant pause passed by.
“If it’s about money I can send the jet…”
Brock
rubbed a bloody palm across his forehead, opening a cut that ran crosswise to
his hairline. He tried to reconcile the
businesslike voice on the other end of the line with the sensitive but amusing
teenager he’d known on leaving the Compound.
Abruptly, his insides clenched as her words made landfall in his brain. “What’s wrong with Dean?”
Her
response came suddenly. “Do you know what happened with Hank?”
He nodded
foolishly. “Yeah. I’m sorry I didn’t get in touch but…”
“Dean never
could deal with life, and you know that.”
The accusation in her voice made him glower. “His father left after the service, and that
night, Dean locked himself up in his old bedroom. It’s been two weeks, and he won’t eat or
sleep, and he won’t let anyone in but me.
He’s wearing his old Spider Man pjs, and Brock, here’s the sickest part
of it – he thinks it’s 2004.”
Confronted
by the hollowness of his big victory – the revenge he’d pursued for five long
breathless years - Brock realized he had
no choice. He was needed.
“I’ll
charter my own flight. Be there in twenty-four
hours.”
He
didn’t wait for Triana’s goodbye before hanging up the phone.
***
April 16th, 2013
Venture Compound
Colorado Springs, Colorado
****
Resolute
is the footfall of a condemned man. Marching
up the stairs of the Venture Compound five years after quitting his position as
their bodyguard, Brock Samson felt the sting of his ancient departure.
He
contemplated the closed door before him for a moment before rapping his left
fist against it. Silence; his frustration
built - he’d kicked it down before, and if no one answered his call he’d do it
again without hesitation.
He lit
up a cigarette, savoring the flavorful burn, allowing it to calm him. Where the hell was HELPer? Had he broken down, and if so why the hell
hadn’t Doc fixed him? As he floundered against his wildly
conflicting thoughts the door parted, grinding against its moorings as it
opened; metal on metal, a hideous sound that made his jaw clench. Didn’t
Dean have enough sense to oil the damn thing?
A shaft
of light filled the dusty room before him, and it was the sight of the
cobwebbed foyer that caused Brock to decide that the entire place had gone to
shit in the long-term absence of his guidance.
“Sorry I
couldn’t make it to the airport,” Triana called as she entered from the study. “I can’t leave Dean alone – last time I tried
that he ended up on the roof yelling something about chupacabras.”
Brock couldn’t
keep the surprise off of his face as the pale-skinned woman approached him –
though her hair had grown longer and her outfit was that of a mature twenty-one-year
old, her dark eyes and confident body language hadn’t changed at all – they clearly
marked her as the daughter of Byron Orpheus.
Brock lifted his chin, grunting in acknowledgement. “Triana.”
She
smiled, a faint parody of her usual smug good nature. “He’s upstairs.”
Brock
glanced at the long staircase, memories flooding back to him. “You sure he wants to see me?”
A sad,
wistful look crossed Triana’s face. “You’re
the only person he’s asked for. I
offered to call his father, and he gave me the freakiest stare…like a bunny stabbed
in the heart by a skewer.”
Brock
smirked at her grim imagery. “Still hanging
out at the Hot Topic?”
Triana
shook her head. “You want me to take you
to him?”
Brock
had mounted the staircase, headed up the familiar pathway to the boys’ old
room. “I know the way. Thanks.”
She
managed a wave of her hand, casting her eyes about the dirty room with a disenchanted
expression, as if it were an emblem of Dean’s suffering.
Brock could
only search for the familiar room – with little effort he found it standing
open – why hadn’t Triana thought to shut
the door? – and took the opportunity to enter.
His heart sank at the spectacle before him.
The man sat
facing away from Brock, staring blankly at a poster of Danica Patrick taped to
the opposing wall. His skinny body had outgrown
some of its gawkiness, but somehow it still seemed childish and vulnerable. The Spiderman pajamas he wore, the top coming
to the middle of his stomach, the cuffs of the pants halfway up each calf – didn’t
help, either. He sat at the very edge of
the bed, rocked on his haunches, humming Braham’s Lullaby to himself at a slow
but high pitch.
Caution,
Brock decided, would be the best way to proceed. “Dean?” he asked, using the softest voice he
could manage, “it’s Brock.”
His
words spun the boy around. “Brock?” he
squeaked. Scrambling further up onto the
bed, Dean whispered, “Ssh….The dragon’ll hear you.”
Brock
automatically tossed a quick glance over his shoulder. His shoulders sloped. “Dean, there isn’t a dragon.”
“Yes!”
he hissed. “Golly, he’s right behind
you.” So quietly that Brock had to strain to hear him, Dean added, “he got Sir Hank.”
Brock’s stomach roiled violently. Abruptly,
Dean tried to grasp him with both hands, his eyes wide in madness. “Don’t let him get me and Lady Triana too,”
he begged.
Brock
grabbed him by both shoulders. “Dean,
listen to me. There isn’t any dragon. You’re both safe.”
Dean
gave him a crazed grin that made Brock think in despair of Myra Brandish. “I knew you’d come help me, Brock,” he said,
lying down in the sleeping unit, where he immediately fell asleep.
**
“Hello,
you’ve reached the wrist communicator of Thaddeus Venture. I’m probably doing something VERY important,
so if you’re listening to this – don’t bug me!”
“SUNUVABITCH,”
snarled Brock as he slammed his wrist down on the bar and enjoying the dramatic
sound of glass cracking. He turned
toward Triana at the sound of her chuckle.
“I’ve
been trying that for three days,” Triana pointed out, as she fixed them a pair
of brandies. Brock’s sharp look causes
her to add, “there ARE things a girl can do by herself, Brock. You did know that, right?”
He
swallowed down his drink and held out the empty glass, “make the next one a
vodka. Neat.” The only solution he could seem to find to
his Dean-related misery floated at the bottom of the glass.
She walked back to the bar, sparing Brock
another wary look before taking up an ice pick and stabbing it repeatedly into
a large hunk of ice. “He knows.”
Brock
sighed deeply. “Yeah, he knows that Hank’s
dead, so Doc can’t go the clone route this time. Guess the truth made his mind snap. Won’t be the first time - remember that whole
fantasy where you were Princess Tinglepants and he was some warrior guy?”
Triana
rolled her eyes at the memory. “Today’s
one of those days…”
“What?”
“Where I
wonder why I decided to start dating Dean,” Triana shook her head.
But
Brock understood. “You get each
other. That’s rare as hell.”
She
looked toward the ceiling. “I love
him.” It was no revelation to
Brock. “I could bring him back before,
but now he’s somewhere where he can’t even feel me….” she shot him another
look. “You can fix him, can’t you,
Brock?”
She
sounded more innocent than she’d ever sounded before. “You’re asking for a miracle, kid. Why didn’t you ask your father?”
“He’s
not asking for my dad.” Triana squeezed
Brock’s upper arm. She smiled, a little
more wanly than before, and sipped her brandy.
“You saved him before. You can
save him again.”
****
The
hours dragged by. Nothing Brock tried –
no plea, no urgent words – could stir Dean from his fantasy world. There were apparently dragons, and Triana was
a helpless maiden named Lady Triana of Goodheadlights, and Brock, over the
passing hours, ceased being ‘Brock’ and became a cleric named The Great
One.
After a
full twenty-four hours of this, Brock cracked.
He grabbed Dean in mid-rant and dragged him downstairs and into the
compound’s back grounds.
He
didn’t stop until he reached the family crypt.
“LOOK AT
THAT,” Brock demanded, shaking Dean hard enough to make his directionless gaze
suddenly refocus. “DO YOU SEE WHAT IT
SAYS?” He recited aloud, “Henry Allen Venture: Born 1992, Died 2013.”
Dean
stared at the plaque, and then wildly shook his head. “No…” Dean moaned.
“May
Science Heal What Nature Could Not.” Brock
shook him, hard, one last time. “It’s
the truth. Hanks’ dead.” Dean’s eyes cleared – his lip quivered. “He had cancer. Lukemia,” Brock said thickly. “That’s why your father let you go off to
college, so you wouldn’t see him suffer.
He tried to bring him back,” he deliberately used oblique terms, “but he
couldn’t get a good sample….” Silence
filled the eerie deathliness of the barren January desert. Brock spoke, “I’ve been chasing Mol around
for so long, trying to get to Hunter…I let you boys think I didn’t give a damn
anymore,” he laughed bitterly. “Hank
died thinking I didn’t give a damn about him.
That one’s gonna haunt me to the grave.” To his surprise, the urge to
cry refused to leave him. Brock choked it
down, fiercely controlling himself. “I
kept up with you through the news. That’s
how I found out about the funeral…” He
rested a hand on the crypt, sighed heavily.
“I’m sorry I let you both down.”
Then
Dean touched his shoulder. “Why do
people hafta go, Brock?”
Something
inside of him solidified to iron. “I
don’t know,” he concluded, “but I’m not going anywhere again.”
***
July 18th, 2043
Venture Family Crypt
Colorado Springs, Colorado
***
The autumn-bright
leaves of the cedar sapling are an incongruously cheerful riot of color beside
the pale marble of the mausoleum. Dean
brushes off his dirt-covered hands before standing up and looking at the closed
door with its freshly-inscribed plaque.
“It’ll
be beautiful one day,” Triana observes, coming up behind him.
“It’ll
grow big and tall, and watch over us all.
Just like Brock,” he turned to Triana and wondered, “you don’t think the
service was too small?”
“It’s
what he would have wanted,” Triana says.
“No muss or fanfare.”
“I
know.” In an abrupt gesture of feeling,
he concludes, “He taught me how to be a man.”
Triana
smiles, strokes his shoulder. “He was a
great guy. A bit of a horndog…”
Dean
gasped, “Triana! Don’t speak ill of the
dead…”
“…Brock
was a horndog. And a little psycho. But overall, a cool cat.”
Dean nods,
distracted momentarily by the sound of childish laughter. “Sam – Marie!” he shouts, stifling his own
laughter as two small, red-haired children peeped cautiously at him through the
branches of the artificial pine barren.
“It’s a graveyard, for goshsakes, not a playground!”
“You
sound just like your father,” Triana teases him.
“Don’t
remind me,” Dean mumbles, running a free hand over his balding pate. He brushes his fingers, just once, across
the stone surface before turning, collecting the children, and leaving - his
arm wrapped around Triana.
The
inscription, embossed deep and true into the metal plaque, had been his idea:
Here lies Brock Samson.
Loyal Friend and Bodyguard.
Home forever.The End