Losing Yourself
by
Chris J. Ueberall
Pairing: Lex/Clark Summary: Every man needs a safe harbor. Notes: A big thanks to A.J. as always for
encouragement and betaing. To Tehomet for being a beta-gem, and to
Signe for getting us together ;-)
Lying comfortably on the couch, listening to the heartbeat of
his lover, Clark felt himself totally relax for the first time in
days. There was something about Lex that calmed and grounded him. He
needed that - craved it, actually. Especially since he had become
Superman. The more his alter ego stood in the spotlight, the more
often he just wanted to hide in the arms of his
multi-billionaire-almost-mayor-of-Metropolis boyfriend. It felt so
good to be here; understood, loved, and cared for. Because here, he was just Clark, the ex-farmboy from
Smallville. One true love of Lex Luthor, his beloved for nine
years, his lover for six. Clark sighed. And could he get any more mushy? Probably. But he
didn't care. He felt good. Mellow. Maybe even a little dizzy. He
blinked in surprise. Yes, he felt dizzy. But it was a good kind of
dizzy. Everything seemed a little brighter, a little less cold.
Even Lex's collection of antique weapons. Clark's problems seemed
to be just out of reach, which was exactly where he wanted them.
He smiled, and knew that it came out as a goofy grin. 'Oops.'
Clark looked at the glass of wine in his hand and then up at
his lover. "This stuff seems to get to me much more than it
usually does. How come? New brand?" Lex watched him with wry amusement. "First, this is an
excellent wine not some 'stuff', and second it's the same
brand as last week and the week before. You liked it and therefore
I decided to stick with it."
"Then why ..." Clark started, but Lex wasn't
finished. "Neither did I spike it with drugs, nor did I handle it
differently from before. My guess would be that you've already
taken in more than your usual share; or maybe mixing different
drinks doesn't agree with you." While talking, Lex had dipped
his index finger into Clark's glass, and now he was running the
aforementioned finger over Clark's lips.
Clark's tongue darted out, tasting the wine and licking the
finger with lazy enthusiasm for a while. Only then did he get back
to the conversation. "I only had two glasses of wine so far,
Lex," he pointed out. "Here, yes." Lex nodded, and ran his hand over
Clark's chest, leaving a wet mark behind on the white shirt. "But
you were at the Daily Planet earlier, and I think you mentioned an
office party. Something about Lois Lane and you having won a prize
for your latest article. Maybe things are different at the Planet,
but in my experience such parties involve drinks. And knowing you,
I doubt you got away without at least one toast and drinking with
some of your colleagues. So what was it? Beer, champagne, blood?" "Blood?!" Clark echoed and sat up abruptly, spilling
most of his wine over himself and his lover. "Oh. Sorry." Lex's grin made his blue eyes sparkle. "It's better
without the shirts, Clark. No matter what the Campari commercials
attempted to indicate, wine on textiles, even on silk, doesn't
taste half as good as wine on skin." Clark blinked. He didn't get the reference, but wasn't unduly
shamed by the fact. Somehow he was quite sure that he wouldn't
know what Lex was talking about, even if he weren't drunk. Which
he wasn't, really. He just wasn't quite his usual sober self.
Fascinated, he watched one more drop of red wine fall from his
hand onto the mauve shirt below. It looked like blood. Which
reminded him ... "We didn't drink blood, Lex. Just champagne. And some
beer. The guys were taking us out to a club afterwards." "If you say so." Lex's fine eyebrows lifted
sardonically. "I wouldn't put it past your partner to be a
vampire. There's just something about her that shouts 'evil
creature'." "That's what she's saying about you, you know." Lex nodded. "I know. I was stealing her line." "She won't like that," Clark deadpanned. "Now, what a surprise. I'd say I'm sorry, but I really
don't care." Lex smiled arrogantly. Clark frowned; he didn't like the implication. "It's not
as if she hates you." "Could have fooled me." The sarcasm was heavy in
Lex's tone, but then his expression suddenly changed and he leaned
forward and affectionately ruffled Clark's hair. "But I know
it's personal so I don't mind too much." "Huh?" That went right over Clark's head. "But
..." "I know she hates me, because I have you. She's jealous
and trying to get at me the only way she can, since you won't
react to her advances. It's a little flattering and amusing,
actually, if you look at it from the right perspective." "Um, Lex ..." Clark shook his head. "I hate to
tell you, but Lois doesn't even know I exist, in that way. She's
totally fixated on Superman." "Because she can't have you." Lex's kiss was gentle,
pressing volumes of love and admiration into mere seconds. "Of
course she won't get Superman, either. But neither will anybody
else, so she can't really lose there. And with all her exclusive
interviews, she's ahead in the hunt, even though the fox will
never be caught." "You make him sound like a prize." "But he is, Clark. Everyone is in the eyes of a potential
partner. Some are just not as obvious as others. Superman is a
prize everyone is aware of. He's an immensely powerful being, he's
in the news, everyone knows him. There is an undeniable thrill in
the thought of catching him as a partner, because if you do it,
everyone will also know how special you are. They'll envy
you. Lois craves that. That's why she's the kind of reporter she
is. She's not after the truth because she believes in justice or
anything like that. It's more the thrill of being better than
somebody else, of winning, of being acknowledged for her success
that's driving her on. She is always reaching for the stars. She
won't ever be content with the wonders of Earth." When Lex finished speaking, Clark sat back and swallowed
heavily. "Where does that leave me?" he asked finally,
almost whispering. "You?" Lex touched his cheek gently. "What do
you mean?" "Where do you get your thrill? Since you already have me,"
he added hesitantly. "Oh, I have all I need. Once I dreamed of catching a star,
but then he descended from the sky and caught me, so that dream
became reality. Now I'm more than content. I'm not like Lois,
love. I don't need the world's envy to know that I'm bedding the
most beautiful person alive. I know what a prize I have."
Caressing Clark's face, Lex elaborated. "You're a diamond in
the rough, love. Precious and irreplaceable. Yet for some
incomprehensible reason, most people don't see you for the gem you
are. And I know this doesn't show me in a good light, but I get a
real kick out of knowing something others don't. I don't feel the
need to rub it in though. It's enough that I know that they are
fools. It feeds my superiority complex nicely."
Lex winked at him then, and Clark couldn't stop himself from
grinning in reply. He wasn't quite certain if he liked being seen
as a prize, but being compared to a precious diamond surely wasn't
too bad. Swallowing the last of his wine, Clark put the glass down and
left the couch, mulling over the conversation. When he reached the
window to the terrace he looked outside for a while, his eyes on
the light-show that was Metropolis. "Why do you hate Superman, Lex?" he heard himself ask
suddenly, wondering if he sounded as scared as he felt. Somehow he
had never gotten around to telling his lover his secrets. At first
he had been afraid, and then the timing had never seemed right.
Every time Clark had decided to come clean, someone had
interrupted or something had happened. And then Lex's first
anti-Superman speech had been aired and Kal-El had been a mute
ever since. "Why do you hate Superman?" Clark asked again, louder
this time, when no reply had come forth. "That's what I thought you asked." Nothing more. Trying for a calm expression Clark turned around slowly. Lex
had left the couch also, and stood now in the middle of the room,
facing him, hands in his pants' pockets, his shirt half open,
loosely hanging except for some transparent parts that stuck to
his skin. The stance was defiant, but his face spoke of
puzzlement. "I don't hate Superman. I never said that." Lex's
toneless words drifted across the room. "But you said he can't be trusted. That you don't think
that he's a good guy." "You, of all people, should know not to believe everything
the press says. That's not what I said, or what I meant." Lex
shook his head then walked around the couch, leaning against the
backrest. "I said people should not depend on him. They
shouldn't look up to him as an all-powerful being, and trust that
he will always come to the rescue." "Why not?" "Because he can't always be there. He can't save everyone.
He's not omnipotent. He's stronger, he's faster, he can fly, true.
But he can't be at two places at once. And I have no evidence that
he's clairvoyant. So there will be a time, there will be many
times, when he won't be there to help." Lex looked at the
carpet, then up again and caught Clark's eyes. "Love, all I
was saying is that, if something happens, people shouldn't wait
for Superman to come to the rescue, but should go for it
themselves. If something seems impossible to do at first they have
to look for an alternative and not just sit there and wait for a
miracle that might not come." His voice low and soothing, Lex added: "It's not about
Superman at all. It's about people and their short-sighted way of
looking at things." Clark looked at his lover and knew he spoke the truth, and yet,
something was still left unspoken. "If you don't hate him; if
it's not about him. Why are you so intense about it, why do you
always bring it up?" Silence took over the room. The temperature seemed to drop.
Then Lex moved. Slowly he walked to the window, keeping his eyes
on the view, his shoulder close to but not touching Clark's. "I'm
scared," he whispered. Clark's heart missed a beat as it contracted painfully. "Of
m... Su...Superman? But he's helping people, he wouldn't ever do
anything to hurt them. He uses his powers for good." "That doesn't change the fact that he's dangerous." "But ..." A hand on his mouth silenced Clark.
Surprised, he looked down into Lex's troubled blue eyes. "'The passions are like fire, useful in a thousand ways
and dangerous only in one, through their excess,'" Lex
quoted. "It's the same with every power or gift. Whether it's
strength, money, or just a brilliant mind. I know Superman is
doing good. I believe he is a good guy, more than that - a hero. I
admire him for what he does. But I'm also scared. Scared for him,
mostly." Stroking fleetingly along Clark's cheek, Lex crossed
the room once more and settled down in an armchair. Clark followed him without a second thought. Somehow he knew
this was important, knew that his future would be defined by
whatever his lover had to say. He sat down on the carpet in front
of Lex and looked up expectantly, feeling as if he had swallowed
green kryptonite.
Suddenly Lex reached out and began to play with his hair.
Despite himself, Clark instantly felt a bit better. "I'm afraid for Superman, because I know better than most
what it means to be a powerful man," Lex began. "I'm one
myself. In my own way, I'm just as dangerous as he is. I can
destroy lives with a wave of my hand just as he can. All I have to
do is sign the right paper. Spend some money. Money is power, you
know that." "But you don't hurt people, either, Lex. You use your
money to help." He grabbed Lex's free hand and kissed his
palm. "You are a good man." "Yes. Thanks to you. But that doesn't change the fact of
what I'm able to do. Every time I put my signature to a contract,
every time I make a decision for LuthorCorp or as a potential
mayor, I touch other people's lives. I try to save jobs, but I
can't always do it. Sometimes I have to sacrifice one plant to
save another. Even with all my money, I can't save everyone. The
people who work for me sing my praises, the ones who lost their
jobs hate me. It's a burden, Clark. If I were like my father it
wouldn't be. But I'm not like him. I feel sorry for those people,
it hurts that I failed them. Still, I can take it. Because I know
I did my best, because I've realized that I'm not God, and not
infallible. And I know that I have you. If things get too
difficult, if the world looks too bleak, you'll be here for me.
You'll hold me. You love me. As long as I have you, I can make it
through." Lex's hand left Clark's hair and gentle fingers ghosted over
his forehead, his eyes, further down over his cheek, then grabbed
his chin. "I'm not sure Superman has someone he can go to. If
he follows the same pattern as a comic book hero, he probably
keeps his identity hidden from everyone, except some close friends
or family members. And he probably doesn't want to burden them
with his problems. So he keeps it bottled up until it destroys
him." "What do you mean?" Clark wanted to get away. He
suddenly felt utterly exposed, but Lex's hand on his chin kept him
in place. "You think that Superman cares for people, don't you?" "Yes." "So, then he'll feel guilty if he doesn't save them, won't
he?" "I guess." "You guess?" Lex's tone was edged. "Clark, you
felt guilty - guilty, not only sorry - when Chloe lost her job at
the Planet. And that wasn't your fault, nor could you have done
anything to prevent it. Now tell me again, will he feel guilty
when he can't save someone?" "Yes. He will." He tried to look down, but Lex
wouldn't let him.
"And that will eat slowly away at him. It will change him.
Maybe he won't turn evil one day and try to take over the world,
instead of rescuing it. But think about it, love. Consider the
worst-case scenario. He seems to be pretty indestructible. What if
he falls into a depression? What if the guilt becomes so
overwhelming that eventually he wants to die? Can you imagine what
kind of destruction he might leave in his wake, if he tried to get
himself killed? So yes, I'm scared. For him as well as for us." Never losing eye-contact, Lex slid down and straddled Clark.
"Every powerful man needs his safe harbor. Someone to ground
him, to hold him together. I'm afraid of what I'll do, what I will
become if I ever lose you, love. I need you to be myself, to be
stable, to stay a good person. I'm not sure Superman understands
that he needs someone, too." "Maybe he has someone," Clark whispered, his arms
going around his lover, holding him tight. "Don't you think
that's possible?" Lex looked at him, blue eyes scanning his very soul. "It's
not important what I think, Clark. It's important what Superman
thinks." "And if he told you he has someone like that?" "Then I'd sleep a lot better, love. A lot. So maybe you
can ask him to tell me sometime, okay?" Clark nodded, even as he swayed closer to kiss Lex. "Okay." There was a lot to be said for flying. It was a rush, a buzz, a
heady feeling that was unlike any other. It was a way of getting
away, and losing oneself for a while. There were times when Clark
spent hours above the clouds not thinking at all. Unfortunately,
today he couldn't escape the real world this way. Because no
matter how clear the blue sky and how fresh the wind, he couldn't
get the smell of fire, blood and fear off him. He felt burned out,
and exhausted to a degree that had to be off the scale.
Where was the high he had felt hours ago? For a while, he had
exhilarated in his powers, in what he could do. Rushing in, where
no one else could go. Dodging streams of lava, feeling the heat,
the danger. Rescuing people, holding them in his arms, carrying
them to safety in an improvised ark. Seeing into their faces,
seeing fear becoming hope. The smile of a child, the blessing of a
woman. He didn't see the dead then, didn't hear the cries of the
lost ones, he was too caught up in saving whom he could save,
doing what was necessary, what only he could do. It had been
intoxicating in a way that alcohol had never been, close to the
buzz the red kryptonite gave him, but better, cleaner, and more
real. But now that feeling was gone, leaving him empty and cold. He looked down at Metropolis. While he had been away, a fire
had destroyed one of the city's office towers. The fire department
had done its best, but nobody had planned for a fire when the
building had been constructed. While helicopters could get to the
roof and the firemen to the lower levels, the people stuck in the
middle had been on their own. Some had died. Many had been
injured. Clark sighed. He could already imagine the headlines in the
evening news. 'Where was Superman?' they would ask, and the
answer, the news about the volcano erupting in Peru, would be a
small article on page five or nine. As if the lives of others
didn't count when compared to the deaths of people in Metropolis. He knew he should feel anger at that, but instead he felt like
crying, and yes, guilty. 'God,' he really was tired. Looking towards the horizon, he could just see the outskirts of
Smallville. He knew his parents would welcome him home. His mom
would take him in her arms, holding him close as if he were still
a child. All the while telling him that he had done his best, that
he couldn't be everywhere at once, that it wasn't his fault that
people had died. His father would nod, squeeze his shoulder, and
add that there really was no need to feel guilty.
They would surround him with their love and he would soak it
up, and yet it wouldn't help. Couldn't silence the accusing voices
in his head. Because his parents didn't understand, couldn't grasp
the fact that the guilt wouldn't just leave because you knew it
was unjustified. It came with the package of dealing with life and
death every day. Of deciding who would live and who would die. He
could never get rid of the guilt. It was a part of him. The trick
was to accept the guilt and live with it. Not to dwell on it. His parents couldn't comprehend what his life was like, no
matter how sympathetic they were. Their lives weren't like that.
But he knew one person who would understand. It was not even a conscious decision, because the next moment
he was landing on the terrace of the Luthor penthouse. Two bodyguards were at him at once, their weapons drawn, as
they made sure to stand between him and the suite. He wondered
what he looked like to them. His suit burned in places, blood and
ash all over him. They probably thought he had lost his mind. Why
else should he be showing up like this? Not sure what to say, Clark was saved from thinking something
up by Lex himself, who had opened the door to the terrace and was
now sending his bodyguards away. The women hesitated for a second,
but then obeyed, vanishing to their respective posts. Clark looked at Lex and wondered what to do. Speak as Superman
would? Confess and apologize? His tired mind couldn't come up with
an answer. He swallowed, paralyzed by fear as much as exhaustion. "Come in." Lex stepped back, leaving the door open
for him. Slowly Clark followed. Inside he took a moment to drink in the
sight of his lover. Lex was casually dressed, his sweater had a
dark blue color that didn't go too well with Lex's complexion but
had a soothing effect on Clark. He stood in the middle of the
room, his pose expectant, studying him patiently. All in all it
didn't seem as if the young billionaire was surprised to see
Superman in his penthouse. Flashing back to their conversation from a week ago, Clark
mused that it was possible that Lex had expected Superman to
appear one day, probably even in exactly this condition.
Still uncertain about what he should say, Clark cleared his
throat, and opened his mouth, but nothing more than a choked "I
..." came out.
Helplessly he stared at Lex, and then he noticed the arms,
raised and opened slightly. It was easy to overlook the gesture,
to not see it for the invitation it was. But years ago it had been
enough for a distraught seventeen-year-old to run into the arms of
his best friend, knowing that he would find compassion and
understanding. Seven years later that knowledge was still there, accompanied
by the realization that he didn't need to explain anything, that
Lex already knew, and had already forgiven him. Walking into the offered embrace, burying his face against
Lex's shoulder, Clark reveled in the strength and warmth of his
lover, letting the pure smell of Lex clean his sinuses. He knew he
was getting Lex dirty, but he didn't care and neither did Lex it
seemed, as he directed them gently towards the couch. Once they lay down, Clark snuggled as close to his lover as he
could, wishing - not for the first time - that he was the smaller
one in this relationship. Still, even though he wasn't quite as
tall as Clark, Lex managed somehow to give Clark the feeling of
being totally surrounded by him. Wrapped in Lex's strong arms,
listening to his lover's familiar heartbeat, Clark let go. Tears
of frustration were soaked up by Lex's sweater as Clark thought of
the injustice of people blaming him for things he hadn't done,
while only seldom praising him for the good he did. Then he cried
for the people he hadn't been able to rescue, for the ones left
behind alone, and finally, for himself, knowing that one day he
would be among the latter. All the while Lex held him, stroked him, gently kissed him. But
he didn't say, "It's all right," because it wasn't. And
he didn't say, "It will get better," because it would,
but it would also be bad again. Sometimes touch was all the
comfort acceptable. Or needed. Eventually Clark calmed down, and his tears dried up. Lifting his head from his lover's chest, Clark whispered
tiredly, "I'm sorry."
Lex nodded. "I know." Then he leaned forward and
kissed him. It wasn't chaste, but it wasn't about passion, either. More
like exploring. Reminding Clark of their second kiss. The one to
make sure they were on the same page, that the teenager Clark had
been then understood what he was getting into. Truly understood. Surprised, Clark looked at Lex, who grinned slightly. "I've
never kissed Superman before," he explained as if he had read
Clark's mind. Clark had to smile at that. The smile felt strange after all
the crying, but it felt good, too. "How long have you known?" Instead of answering, Lex let one hand trace the S-symbol on
Clark's uniform. "Alexander the Great's breast plate, love?
Very subtle." "Actually it's the symbol of my house. My alien heritage
so to speak." "Really?" Lex's eyebrows rose skeptically. "Yeah, really." Clark nodded, but then he blushed
lightly and admitted, "Though I probably wouldn't have used
it, if it hadn't reminded me of Alexander's breast plate. I'm not
that proud of my biological family, you know." "No, I didn't know," Lex said, his hand leaving the
symbol to gently stroke along Clark's cheek. "You can tell me
one day. But not now. Now is for you."
"For us," Clark corrected, looking straight into the
eyes of his lover. "I came to tell you that Superman has
someone who'll always take care of him, who understands, who gets
him through the rough spots. He knows this person will not leave
him, because they love each other very much." Lex smiled. "I'm glad," he whispered, leaning in for
another kiss. "And proud." This kiss was about love, passion and completion, about two
belonging together.
When they broke it to let Lex breathe, Clark had a revelation.
Suddenly he understood that, while for some people flying was the
closest thing to freedom, for him it was different, because he
actually could fly. So for him, freedom came by drowning instead,
by losing himself in another. In Lex. "Are you all right, love?" Lex asked, his eyes
shining with sympathy. Clark nodded. Then dove in for a kiss once more. Ready to
drown.
THE END © 9. January 2004
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