Begin
by Elektra Pendragon
The house was purple. That itself wasn't too strange,
but it was also HUGE. Built on a slight hill, there
were trees all around and a lot of empty land
separating the Institute from the rest of the city.
It was almost like a secluded mansion. There would be
privacy in abundance for the psychics to work on their
skills. No one creeping at the windows, wanting to
catch a glimpse of the freaks. No one would even have
to know that's what he was there for. New school, new
friends, new life.
Renny stilled his excitement with a deep breath and
dragged his bags into the house.
Inside, it seemed much more cozy than it looked from
the outside. There was a pile of bags and boxes and
random items in the foyer, so Renny unloaded his arms
gratefully next to the spread of items. He quickly
adjusted his glasses, which had been slipping down his
nose since he left the taxi, and wiped the sweat off
his palms. His fingers were reddened with the strain
of too many bags. Perhaps he'd packed up too much,
but he was going to be away from home for about a
year, and he had wanted to be as comfortable as
possible. He wondered for a moment whether he should
leave his bags until later, or take some with him. He
took an abortive step forward, but with a second
thought he picked up his suitcase and his laptop.
There was noise and laughter coming from upstairs, and
with an eager grin Renny started up after it.
There were rooms along the hallway at the top of the
stairs. The first door was closed, but there was
noise coming from the middle room. Renny walked
towards it, hearing the laughter grow louder as he
neared. He peered around the side and saw a girl
about his age sitting on a lap of a man who looked
like he should be in college. The girl was laughing,
her long hair falling down her back as the man ran his
fingers down her throat. It was an intimate gesture,
and Renny was instantly blushing. He moved to quietly
leave the couple to their devices, but he backed into
someone, tripping over a large foot.
"Ow! Hey, watch it, man, those are my best sneakers!
I'm gonna kick your ass!"
Renny side-peddled, falling into the wall by the door.
"I'm sorry, I didn't see..."
The young man's smile was dazzling, straight and
sparkling white. He playfully punched Renny in the
arm, nearly causing him to lose his grip on the
suitcase. "Hey, man, I'm just kidding!" He laughed
quick, biting it off as he looked into the room. He
narrowed his eyes at the couple, but Renny stopped
himself from looking too. Whatever he'd walked into,
he wasn't ready to mediate a fight. The young man
smiled, however, when he turned back to Renny. "So,
you're one of us psychics?"
Renny nudged his glasses up his face with a
nose-wrinkle. "Yeah, I guess. I'm--" he looked down
at his full hands, unwilling to drop something in
order to shake hands. He offered an apologetic smile
instead. "I'm Renny."
The man nodded, his blue eyes sliding to the side
again. "Yeah, cool, man. I'm Sasha. I think you
already met Frost and King."
"That's ParTAY King," the older boy's voice came from
the room behind him. When Renny turned to look, he
was face-to-face with the young woman.
She was very good looking. She gave Renny a beaming
smile, one hand absently fixing her hair over her ear,
taming the wild, thick curls. Her gum smacked in her
mouth as she spoke. "Laurie Frost. It's a pleasure,
Renny." She wiggled her long-nails at him as she
pushed into the hall.
"Yeah," Renny said, nodding, watching her move
smoothly down the hall to the first closed door.
"Like to get a piece of that, huh?" Sasha said,
waggling his eyebrows suggestively.
Renny blushed and nudged his glasses up with his
shoulder. "Um, so, are these the only rooms up here?"
"Yeah. The Institute's pretty cozy that way. Sabrina
and Frostie in room one, King--'scuse me ParTAY King
in two, I'm in three. I guess you're stuck in the
back with the other one." Sasha wiped a hand over his
broadly smiling mouth.
"The other one?" Renny didn't like the sound of that.
"Nerds in the back!" King shouted from the room.
Renny narrowed his eyes and scowled.
"Ah, don't pay attention to him. He's just King Priss
since he got the big room. No hard feelings that we
already split the place up, huh?" Sasha asked as he
started to steer Renny down the hall. "I mean, first
come, first serve; it's only fair right?"
"Yeah, sure, whatever," Renny muttered, already
finding Sasha's fake-friendliness more off-putting
than King's rudeness.
"Cool. Enjoy!" Sasha gave him one last hard pat on
the back and left Renny to find his own way to the
last room on the floor.
The door was open, and when Renny stepped in he saw
that the large bay window was also open. A body, long
and lean, was stretched out across the box-like bench
in front of it, the sharp, bony shoulders ending at
the pushed-up windowpane. It took Renny a heartbeat
to realize that he hadn't just walked into a murder
scene. His new roommate NOT headless, but was hanging
half-out the window, butt perched precariously on the
edge of the sill.
The outside edge.
Renny dropped his bags and was crossing the room
before he even completed his line of thought. His
hand gripped the jean-clad thigh hard as he ducked
under the pane, reaching out for the man's shoulder.
Just as Renny was about to grab him, the man startled
away from his touch, the sinewy muscle under Renny's
hand tensing. Renny tightened his grip on the man's
thigh and yanked, dragging his butt off the sill and
onto the cushioned bench. There was a meaty-sounding
THUNK, followed closely by a rough-growled "FUCK!" and
then Renny met his suicidal roommate face to furious
face.
"Whatthefuckareyoudoinggetyourhandoffmeyoufaggot," the
man said in a rush. He ended his proclamation with a
heavy exhalation of smoke right into Renny's face. The
thick smell of tobacco filled Renny's nose. He reeled
back, taking his hand away from the man's leg as
though he'd been burned.
"I thought--" As he watched, the man--maybe a year
older than Renny, but no more--took a long drag on his
half-done cigarette before holding his hand out in the
open air of the window. He rubbed his other hand
across the side of his head. His long black hair
untangled for a moment, giving Renny a clear look at
his grimacing face before it fell back across his
cheek, shadowing his eyes once more. He exhaled
towards the open window, his hair falling forward to
further obscure his face.
"I thought you were going to fall out," Renny finally
completed.
The man coughed. It might have been a laugh, but it
was a rough, incomplete sound. He lifted his
cigarette to his lips again before saying a simple,
"No." He tipped the ash out into the light breeze
whisking past the window. His right hand lifted again
to his head, pressing on what must by now be one
impressive bump, but he didn't complain.
It wasn't exactly how Renny had imagined meeting his
roommate. He'd had vague thoughts of friendly
awkwardness, the kind of thing you always saw in the
movies right before the two guys became best buds.
This was supposed to be something like college, only
he was still a senior in high school.
His roommate seemed content to ignore Renny as he
finished his cigarette, but Renny felt awkward and
uncomfortable. He didn't want to share a room for a
year with a guy who hated his guts, so he raised the
white flag first. "I'm sorry. I didn't meant to...ah,
grab you and stuff. I just didn't want to share my
room with a corpse. At least not until I got his
name." He ended with a laugh, to ease the tension he
could feel creep into his voice. He rubbed his
sweating palms against his thighs.
The man pinched the cigarette between thumb and
forefinger, rolling it until the little clump of
burning tobacco fell out of the paper. Then he
flicked the extinguished butt out into the wind. He
slithered off the bench, his long body twisting and
moving with a complicated twitch of too-long arms and
legs until he was standing. His shoulders rolled
forward as he slumped, his head ducked behind his
fringe of long, dark hair.
"John." Even without the smoke, his voice was rough,
unused.
Renny stopped himself from offering his hand for a
shake; though it would have been polite, John didn't
seem too open to body contact. Or he might have been,
if Renny hadn't grabbed him before even meeting him.
Instead he offered a fairly strained smile and nodded
his head. "I'm Paul Renfrew. My dad is Paul,
actually. Most people call me Renny."
John just nodded silently to himself, edging away from
Renny towards the bed closest to the window. There
was a lumpy duffle bag dropped into the center of the
bed.
It was at that moment that Renny realized the true
extent of his actions. With a panicked gasp, he
sprinted back to the door to where he'd dropped
everything that had been in his hands the moment he'd
thought John was in danger. He swore under his breath
at seeing the laptop case upside-down, tipped at an
angle by the suitcase he'd also been carrying. He
carefully lifted it between his palms, turning it
over. From the outside, the damage looked minimal,
but there was no telling if the padding had protected
his precious computer.
Renny carefully placed the long briefcase on the
unoccupied bed and unlocked the zipper. He lifted the
cover just an inch or two, checking to make sure
everything was still in their pockets. When nothing
immediately fell out, he flipped back the casetop and
eased out the black computer. The plastic was cool
and slick under his fingers, unchipped and uncracked.
He opened the laptop and hit the power button, holding
his breath. He half expected it to not turn on at all
after his maltreatment, but with a whine of the fan,
the screen lit up.
The Enterprise stretched out before him, its decks
outlined in gold on a flat black background. It was
an exact replica of the schematics of the Enterprise
NCC1701-D that were displayed in Engineering in /The
Next Generation/. The computer beeped happily at
Renny as it finished loading the programs. Renny
clicked through his most-used programs first, to make
sure they were running, before he checked the file
manager. Everything seemed to be working fine, and he
breathed easily for the first time since setting foot
in the house.
/'The Institute,'/ he reminded himself. /'They call
it the Institute.'/
Renny was determined to fit in and not be the "nerd"
that Sasha and King obviously thought him to be. To
be honest with himself, he was a bit geeky. He was
smart, and he spent too much time around electronics,
learning them inside and out with his mind as much as
his hands. But back home, he had been pretty popular.
He'd run track, and the one year he was on the swim
team he'd placed in the top ten of the district. He
wasn't really a jock, or a nerd, or any other clique,
and he didn't want to start out the year placed into
any category. He wanted to fit in with everyone.
So far, he was off to a lousy start. At least they
had two weeks to get comfortable before school
started. His senior year, and he was at a new school,
with new friends, learning how to be a better psychic.
It seemed too surreal, like the plot of a bad teen
drama.
Concentrating, Renny used just his thoughts to shut
down his laptop. It was trickier to manipulate
programming than simple electronics, but the more he
practiced, the easier it got. It all came down to
energy--1's and 0's, on and off. You just have to
find the right place to push. The computer warbled a
goodbye noise, and the screen went blank.
Renny glanced over at his roommate. John was standing
over his bag, moving clothes item by item from the
duffle to the drawers by the bed. It was impossible
to tell what his special psychic power was; all that
Renny had been told was that everyone would be
psychics at The Institute, not what they could do.
For all he knew, John could be another PK psychic.
"So, uh, what do you do?" He tried to make it casual,
but feared that his excitement might bleed over into
his voice. This was the first time he ever met
another psychic. A real one.
John looked up from his unpacking. His long hair fell
back a little as he tipped his head, and Renny had a
moment of shock as cold grey-blue eyes looked right at
him, almost through him with the intensity of the
gaze. Then he shook his head slightly, knocking a
dark lock across his eyes. "Astral projection."
Renny was able to keep the smile off his face. The
way John growled out the words, he didn't sound too
happy to admit to it. Renny had never really thought
of astral projection to be a psychic power, more like
what people did when they meditated. "That's... ah,
cool," Renny finally settled on, hopefully not
sounding too amused. "I do psychokinesis. I'm really
good with electronic things. Watch." Renny turned
his attention to the TV perched on top of the old desk
at the foot of the bed. He concentrated, feeling the
layout of the wires and the flow of electricity inside
the box. It was almost as though he could see the map
of it imprinted on his brain. Just move some energy
here and--
The television came to life with a whine of guitar.
Images appeared, first as ghosts, then clearer as the
machine warmed up. It was a music video; in the
corner, Renny could see the station logo. "I'm glad
we got the room with cable. I think I'd die without
my MTV."
John nodded without agreement, turning apathetically
away to stare into his bag. It was empty. Renny
retrieved his own suitcase from the floor and began to
unpack it. Out of the corner of his eye, he watched
John crumple up the thin duffle and toss it into one
of the drawers. Instead of going downstairs to get
the rest of his bags from the pile by the door, John
tossed himself down on the mattress, stretching out
his long legs and leaning against the headboard. His
eyes glittered in the shadows of his hair, reflecting
the light of the rapid-moving music video.
Suddenly, Renny felt rich and overdressed in his
letterman's jacket and designer jeans. John was
wearing an old t-shirt and jeans that looked lived in,
and the clothes he'd unpacked--what little there
were--didn't look much better. Renny wanted to ask
about that, to see if those were the only things he'd
brought, but he had pissed his roommate off enough for
one day. If there was any hope of being friends with
John, he'd have to find some way to break through that
thorny exterior.
John blinked slowly, making the light in his eyes
flicker oddly.
"You have cool eyes." The words were out his mouth
before he even thought to speak them. Renny ducked
his head quickly, feeling stupid for saying his
thoughts aloud. He watched John carefully out of the
corner of his eye.
John startled at Renny's voice, his spine going rigid
as his hands clenched into fists on the mattress. He
slowly turned his head, ducking beneath long bangs.
"What do you mean?" he asked suspiciously.
Renny held up a hand, hoping to stave off another
confrontation. "I didn't mean, like, they're freaky
or anything. I just... they're cool."
"They're blue," John said simply.
"Nah, not the color. Just..." Renny fumbled for an
explanation, feeling the full heat of John's intense
gaze concentrated on him. It was unnerving.
Instantly, a memory rose to the surface of his
thoughts. "Reminds me of a jackal I saw, at a zoo."
He'd been nine. It was right beside his mother's
favorite animal, so he'd seen a lot of it in his
formative years. "He always... he looked..." Every
time, the jackal had fixed that intelligent, hungry,
animal gaze on him, and every time Renny hid behind
his mother, knowing that the creature wanted to eat
him alive, little bite by little bite. He could never
look away from that jackal, so small and sleek and
cunning. He had been so scared...but at the same
time, so fascinated.
That was exactly how John looked at him. Like a
predator who'd just sniffed out some prey.
And just like those times at the zoo, Renny felt the
stirrings of an erection, the rush of heated pleasure
at the thought of being devoured alive.
He couldn't tell any of that to John. Instead, Renny
deflected his attention with a wave of his arm,
adjusting his glasses and turning back to the computer
wires in his bag. "Nevermind."
Even as he untangled the clump of wires, he could feel
that intense gaze still concentrating on him. He
stopped himself from meeting it, afraid that those
eyes would be able to read his thoughts, see the
rising bulge in his pants.
Just when the tension reached the point that he knew
he'd have to say SOMETHING, Sasha's voice rose up from
the hallway. "All right, it's suppertime kids! Let's
move it to the kitchen!"
Renny waited for John to leave the room before he
followed, his eyes on John's heels as they walked down
the hall.
THE END
|
|