When a vengeful woman turned the teenage Clark Kent
aka Superboy into Claire Kent aka Super-Sister, that was
the last anyone ever saw of Clark, or so Supergirl
believed. So why, when she travels back in time from
a period when her now adult cousin is the world-famous
Superwoman, does she find a Smallville in which Superboy
is back, and Claire Kent is one of the town's bad girls?
CLAIRE KENT, ALIAS SUPER-SISTER: THE RETURN OF SUPERBOY
by BobH
(c) 2006
All characters herein are the property of DC Comics.
(Note: This story is a sequel to CLAIRE KENT, ALIAS
SUPER-SISTER: THE BEGINNING, which is also available
here on fictionmania.)
Prologue:
Three billion miles out from the Sun, the light and heat
that made it as far as Neptune and Pluto were pale and
feeble things. Life as we know it could not exist on those
icy worlds. Yet in the cold, dark space between our star's
most distant children, life of a sort stirred.
To anyone capable of observing the gigantic craft it would
have looked like an entirely mechanical construct, but it
was not. Built by clouds of hyper-intelligent nanoclusters
in bioforges floating within the photosphere of its home star,
the ship was semi-sentient. Expelled out into the void to
explore and to gather knowledge for the Great Intelligence
that ruled its kind, the ship had used its warpbleed engines
to fold itself from its own universe into ours, its receptors
now grazing on the datastreams flowing through this new
solar system it found itself in. It had a name, a very long
and precise name that completely defined it, but no concept
of individual identity. An infinitesimally small part of
that name, if it could be expressed in a form we could
comprehend, would be Qlwrnt57.67a, so that is what we shall
call it.
The unimaginable vastness of space makes the odds of an
accidental collision many trillions to one. Despite this,
they still sometimes happen. One was about to happen to
Qlwrnt57.67a.
Sweeping into the solar system from deep space on a long,
parabolic arc, the blue and red rocket capsule carrying
the survivor of a now dead world was much smaller than
Qlwrnt57.67a. Its galancing impact caused neither craft
the slightest damage. But the blow did surprise
Qlwrnt57.67a, and that surprise caused the secretion of an
enzyme, which in turn triggered the reflex activation of
one the many exotic devices that studded its outer surface.
The ray that struck the small rocket capsule momentarily
engulfed it in an impossibly bright ball of light. When
the light faded there was no longer a solitary blue and
red rocket racing towards the inner planets of our solar
system but *two* of them, totally identical in every
respect, and each carrying what appeared to be identical
living cargo. Qlwrnt57.67a recorded this accidental
duplication, watched the twin craft for a while, then
turned its attention back to its mission. No longer of
any interest to it, the twin craft were on the home
stretch of their journey, vectoring in on the third
planet from this system's sun, a world teeming with
life and known to its inhabitants as...Earth.
Chapter 1: Supergirl
The frigid wastes of Antarctica with their sub-zero
temperatures and howling winds were one of the world's
most inhospitable environments, and the last place most
people would choose to have fun. If you had super-powers
that made you immune to the conditions, however, and if
you wanted to be sure no one was watching you, there
were few better places to be. Such was the case for the
two flying figures busily erecting a gigantic structure
out on the snowfields.
"This is great fun, Superwoman," laughed Supergirl, putting
the midsection of the colossal snowman in place while,
flying overhead, her cousin added the head. Then she noticed
the expression clouding that beautiful face.
"Why aren't you smiling?" she asked, concern in her voice.
"Is something wrong?"
"I was just recalling something unhappy about my childhood,"
said Superwoman. "Many years ago, when I lived in Smallville
as Superboy, I could never play full-on with kids my own
age for fear of giving away my identity. How I longed for
a human playmate who was super, like myself."
"I know how you feel," said Supergirl. "I, too, daren't
play with anyone my own age."
"It was worst when I first got turned into a girl and became
Super-Sister. That was a really difficult time. I put a brave
face on things for Ma and Pa, but I think I came closer to
losing it then than I ever have in my life. I think I'd have
given anything to have had another super-powered girl as a
friend, someone like you, Kara," said Superman, using
Supergirl's Kryptonian name.
"I can only imagine, Kal," replied Supergirl, gently laying
a hand on her cousin's shoulder.
It was strange to think this beautiful, confident woman who
was her hero and role-model had started life as a boy. As
far as the rest of the world was concerned, Super-Sister had
replaced her brother as a teenager and Superboy had then left
for deep space, never to be seen again. It had been a real
shock to Kara when Superwoman had revealed the true story of
her past, but if anything it had only increased her admiration
for her cousin. It was something that could have destroyed a
weaker person, but Kal had learned to live with it and grown
into the confident, vibrant woman she was today.
"Well, enough of this moping," said Superwoman, managing a
smile. "It's time I was getting back to Metropolis, and you
need to return to Midvale orphanage. We can't have anyone
thinking Linda Lee has gone missing. Want to get together
same time next week?"
"You have to ask?" said Kara. "I live for our times
together. They're the highlight of my week."
"Good, because there's someone I think it's time you
finally met," she said, mysteriously.
Superwoman gave her cousin a hug, smiled, then launched
herself into the skies. Supergirl followed suit, falling
into formation alongside her, speeding north back to the
USA, and loving the feeling of the shockwave on her body
as the two of them hit mach-1.
"See you next week," yelled Supergirl, as she peeled away
from her cousin somewhere over West Virginia. But she was
not heading back to Midvale. Instead, she flew out over
the Atlantic and up towards the outer atmosphere.
"I'm not just going to feel sorry for Super-Sister and
myself," she thought, "I'm going to do something about it.
First, I'll speed faster than light....then Super-Sister
here I come!"
Circling the globe beyond the atmosphere, the way she had
been taught by Superwoman, her incredible super-speed
enabled Supergirl to crash the time-barrier, to power
her way through it by sheer brute force alone. Travelling
in the same direction as a planet's rotation while in its
gravity well took you forward in time; travelling in the
opposite direction took you into the past. Seeing night
and day flicker past her at a fantastic rate, Supergirl
counted their number until she had reached the period she
was aiming for. Rapidly decelerating brought her frame of
reference back into sync with the rest of the world,
causing her to reappear in normal time, fifteen years in
the past. This should be a Saturday, which would give her
time with her cousin she could not have on a school day.
Taking a moment to get her bearings, she then sped off in
the direction of Smallville, keeping high enough that
no-one would see her from the ground.
In the few minutes it took her to reach Kansas and
Smallville, Supergirl wondered how best to approach her
teenage cousin. Should she just drop down in front of her
and say "Hi, I'm your cousin Kara, from the future", or
should she be more cautious, maybe get the lay of the
land before announcing herself?
Arriving in the skies over the Kent home, she hovered in
place while scanning the building with her super-vision.
There were Jonathan and Martha Kent at the kitchen table,
eating lunch with....Clark Kent?
"I must have overshot," she said to herself, "arrived back
before Clark got turned into a girl, but I *can't* have."
Puzzled, she used her super-hearing to listen in on their
conversation.
"So," said Martha Kent, "it looks like Claire won't be
joining us for lunch again today."
"She's probably with that boyfriend of hers," smirked Clark.
"Johnny Brandon is bad news," said Jonathan Kent, grimly,
"and he's too old for her."
"Yes," said Martha Kent, "but she doesn't listen to us
anymore. I tried having it out with her but she just lost
her temper with me and stormed off. And her language!
I've never been spoken to like that before in my life!"
"What are we going to do about her?" sighed Jonathan Kent.
"Thank the good Lord you've never given us any trouble,
son."
"I do my best, Dad."
There was that smirk again. It was not an expression she
recalled ever seeing on her cousin's face, and seemed out
of character to Kara. But...Claire and Clark together
at the same time? How was that even possible? Had she
perhaps inadvertantly stumbled into a parallel universe
where they were separate people, she wondered? But, no;
Superwoman had warned about that and shown her how to
avoid it. As impossible as it seemed, this was the past of
her own timeline. So what was going on?
Knowing the situation required serious investigation, Kara
turned and headed off. The first thing she was going to
need would be some regular clothes....
So it was that sometime later, clad in newly purchased jeans,
denim jacket, T-shirt and sneakers (she had entered the
store room of the department store at super-speed, selected
a few outfits, and left behind one of several gold doubloons
retrieved from a sunken Spanish galleon by way of payment),
she approached the coffee shop where Lana Lang, taking a
break from her own shopping, was enjoying a latte.
"Hi," she said, "you're Lana Lang, right?"
"Do I know you?" said Lana, in a puzzled but not unfriendly
tone.
"No, I only just got into town. Name's Linda...Olsen. I'm a
friend of Claire Kent's from back east. She told me to look
her up if I was ever out this way, and I recognized you from
the photo she included with her last letter."
It was fascinating to meet Lana, her adult cousin's best
friend, as a young teenager, but the pretty redhead frowned
at Claire's name.
"Did I say something wrong?" asked Kara.
"No, no, it's just...Claire and I had become really close
since she came to Smallville last month, but this past
week...."
Her voice trailed off, and she shook her head.
"What happened?"
"It's like she's a different person," sighed Lana. "She
doesn't bother going to school any more, shuns her
classmates, and spends most of her time hanging out with
that no-good boyfriend of hers, Johnny Brandon."
"Any idea where I might find them this time of day?"
"Probably at Murphy's Garage, where Johnny works," said
Lana. "Are you planning on trying to talk some sense into
her, Linda?"
"I just might at that," said Supergirl, thoughtfully.
"Good, because I'd really like my friend back."
"One last thing before I go," said Kara. "I hear you
have a super-powered girl in town."
"Oh yes, Super-Sister," said Lana, her face brightening.
"No-one's seen her in a while. We figure she's probably off
on a mission, or maybe out in space, visiting her brother,
Superboy."
On the walk to Murphy's Garage, Kara pondered Lana's
words. When Superboy became Super-Sister, she let people
believe Superboy was her brother and had relocated to another
planet, just as Claire was supposed to be staying with the
Kents while Clark was with her parents back east. Since Lana
still believed Superboy was off in space, this meant Clark had
not been operating as Superboy. If in fact he was capable of
doing so, of course. If that wasn't the real Clark lunching
with the Kents he might not even possess super-powers. On the
other hand, since Super-Sister had not been seen since Claire
had gone off the rails, perhaps she no longer had any powers
of her own either. It was something Kara knew she needed to
test.
Murphy's Garage was a seedy structure on the edge of town. Its
cinder-block walls and rusting corrugated steel roof had both
seen better days. Standing to one side of it, on top of a very
spindly-looking steelwork tower, was an old lead water tank,
while the twin gas pumps out front were ancient. Snoring away
on a chair near the pumps was a balding, overweight, and
middle-aged man in greasy overalls.
"Mr Murphy, I presume," muttered Kara.
Behind the garage, next to a refrigerator noisily humming away,
were two cars. One of these had its hood up and was being
worked on by a guy who looked to be around 17 years old and
had to be Johnny Brandon, while learning against the other car,
noisily chewing gum, swigging from a bottle of beer, and
watching him adoringly, was a slender girl of around 14 or 15.
It was Claire Kent. Kara gasped at the sight of her cousin.
Claire was wearing thick dark lipstick, eyeshadow, mascara and
nail polish; her hair was bleached blonde, heavily lacquered,
and teased into a wild, spiky shape; she was clad in a tube top,
tiny skirt, fishnets, three-inch spike-heels, and a leather
jacket, all in black; and her wrists were festooned with
bracelets, large gold hoop earrings hanging from her ears,
and garish rings on every finger though, mercifully, there was
no jewellery on her bare midriff. The whole effect was cheap
and tacky, something her cousin had never been.
Johnny Brandon finished what he was doing, lowered the hood of
the car, and wiped the grease from his hands with a rag.
Smiling, Claire took the gum from her mouth, stuck it to the
wall for later retrieval, and sashayed over to him. Throwing
her arms around his neck, she kissed him long and hard, pressing
her nubile young body against his, and wriggling with pleasure.
"*Ahem*!" said Kara.
"Who the hell are you?" snarled Claire, disengaging from Johnny
and glaring at this unwelcome new arrival. "Are you another one
of Johnny's loser ex-girlfriends? Because if you are, I've seen
them off and I'll you see off you, too."
"Hey, I ain't never seen blondie before, babe," said Johnny,
holding his hands up and grinning. "She is kinda cute, though."
"Not after I teach her not to stick her nose in where it doesn't
belong, she won't be," said Claire, jealously.
"Hey, chick fight!" said Johnny happily, taking a beer from the
fridge and flipping the cap off. "Go get her, babe!"
"Are you always this belligerent?" asked Kara, as she and the
other girl circled each other.
"You'll see," said Claire, suddenly throwing a punch.
Kara easily blocked this with the palm of her own hand. It was
a harder punch than might be expected from a teenage girl like
Claire, but it was not Kryptonian-level.
"Whooeee!" whooped Johnny. "Ain't seen another chick who could
block my girl like that.
Furious, Claire rained down more blows, and as Kara blocked
each one so they doubled in intensity and power. Now *this* was
evidence she still had her super-strength, but what about her
other powers?
In a quick burst of super-speed, Kara got behind Claire, grabbed
her tightly, and launched herself into the sky. Claire stopped
struggling, looking fearful as Kara poured on the speed,
eventually landing them at a small area of woodland, fifty miles
away from Smallville.
"How did you do that?" said Claire, pulling away from Kara and
glaring at her. "Are you Super-Sister in disguise?"
"No, I'm not Super-Sister," said Kara, " but you are."
"What? Are you drunk, or on something?"
"The more I blocked your blows the more you ratcheted up the
force behind them until you were throwing punches at me stronger
than any ordinary person is capable of. Then there was the way
you neither blacked out nor froze when I flew us here, despite
the speed and altitude and your lack of protective clothing. No,
you're Super-Sister alright, but someone or something has made
you forget it."
"You're nuts!" said Claire.
Before she could react, Kara threw a punch that caught Claire
square on the jaw and sent her flying backwards, slamming into
a tree and toppling it. Getting to her feet, Claire looked down
at the tree in amazement.
"That hurt!" she said.
"Actually, it didn't. You just think it did because you expect
it to. You survived hitting a tree with enough force to
bring it down. No ordinary human being could do that."
"If you're not Super-Sister, then who the heck *are* you?"
"I'm your cousin, Kara. Like you, I'm a Kryptonian. You don't
remember this, but you were sent to this planet as a baby by
your parents, Jor-El and Lara, when our homeworld Krypton was
destroyed in an explosion. You probably thought you were the
only one to escape alive, but you weren't. By sheer luck, a
large chunk of the planet was hurled away intact, one that
held the domed Argo City. The dome preserved the atmosphere
within it, and there were machines to recycle the air and
synthesise enough food to meet the needs of the survivors.
Unfortunately for them, the nuclear reactions that destroyed
Krypton continued in the rock beneath their feet and the
ground slowly transformed into kryptonite, the substance whose
radiation is lethal to Kryptonians. Fortunately my father, the
scientist Zor-El, had enough lead sheeting in his lab to cover
the ground and so block the harmful rays. Life then settled
down for the Kryptonian refugees, and some years later Zor-El
took a wife. I'm their daughter.
A couple of years ago, a meteor shower got through the energy
dome and shredded the lead sheeting protecting us from the
kryptonite beneath our feet, dooming Argo City. Determined his
daughter at least should survive, and knowing that we had
little more than a month left to live, my father raced against
time to construct a rocket to carry me to safety. Meanwhile,
my mother searched the heavens for a world where I could live.
And she found it."
"Earth," said Claire, entranced by the story.
"Yes, Earth," confirmed Kara. "My mother found this world
through the radio and TV traffic it's continually beaming out
into space. Our technology allowed us to swiftly translate and
learn Earth's languages. We were all particularly intrigued by
news reports about Earth's most famous champion, Superwoman.
Imagine our surprise when we learned she was from Krypton and
that the effect of this world's sun on Kryptonian physiology
was to grant us powers beyond those of mortal men. My mother
made me a uniform pattered after Superwoman's, one whose
Kryptonian materials would become indestructible under Earth's
sun, and I was put into my father's rocket and sent here.
There was only enough material to build one rocket, so I was
the only one to escape. My parents, my friends, everyone I'd
ever known was left behind to die."
Claire touched her shoulder sympathetically, and only then
did Kara realize she had stopped telling her story and was
staring into space, tears welling. Damn, but it still hurt.
"Anyway," she said, shaking herself and clearing her throat,
"when my rocket landed on Earth it was found by Superwoman,
who'd seen it enter the atmosphere. Being bathed in the
rays of Earth's sun as my rocket vectored in on this world
had given me super-powers, and she was stunned to see a girl
flying out of the rocket, one wearing a version of her own
uniform. We compared notes, and that's when we discovered our
fathers were brothers."
"So...who is this Superwoman?" asked Claire, puzzled. "I've
never heard of her."
"She's Super-Sister grown up," said Kara. "She's you fifteen
years from now. I'm from the future and I travelled back in
time a decade and a half to meet you."
Kara decided not to tell Claire she had once been a boy just
yet. Learning she had super-powers and had been born on
another planet was more than enough for her to handle right
now.
"So I'm really her? I'm really Super-Sister?"
"Yes, you really are."
"But she's such a goody two-shoes!"
Kara laughed at the expression of distaste on her cousin's
face. Then she grew serious.
"That's not the real you speaking," she said. "Whoever messed
with your mind didn't just make you forget who you really are."
"So...this isn't the real me?"
"No, it's not. If you let me, though, I think I can restore
your memories and bring back the real you."
Claire looked at Kara a long time, weighing up what she had
said, then her shoulders sagged and she let out a long sigh.
"I like being me," she said, "but if this isn't real, if
someone did this to me then, yeah, let's do it."
"OK," said Kara. "I'm assuming what was done to you is a form
of hypnosis. I can't hypnotize you against your will, but if
you open yourself to me, if you don't resist, there's a good
chance I can undo this."
Claire nodded, staring into the other girl's eyes unflinchingly
as Kara stared back, her voice soothing, lulling Claire into a
receptive state. This was a great act of faith on Claire's part.
They had only just met, and not under the best of circumstances,
yet despite her obvious doubts she was trusting Kara to put
things right. It was a trust Kara prayed would be justified.
Soon, as hoped, Claire was under hypnosis.
"OK, Claire," said Kara, "I'm going to count to three and snap
my fingers. When I do, all your memories will come flooding back.
You'll remember who you really are, who did this to you, and you
will be yourself again. One, two, three...."
Kara snapped her fingers, and Claire's whole expression changed.
"I remember!" she said, voice excited but eyes grim. "I remember
everything that happened, and who was responsible...."
Chapter 2: Super-Sister
As well as the entrance to the tunnel that enabled Super-Sister
to come and go from the Kent home without being seen, their
basement held another secret. Concealed behind hidden doors was
the room that served as her workshop, laboratory, and trophy
room. It was here that she kept samples of the various types of
kryptonite (all carefully contained in lead boxes so as to block
the harmful rays they gave off) and devices such as her Phantom
Zone projector, and here that she had constructed her robots.
Standing at her workbench, clad in her Super-Sister costume, she
was currently wrestling with the problem of what to do with an
unexpected gift.
"So, have you come to a decision yet?" asked Ma Kent, entering
the room.
"No, not yet," said Claire, holding the small glass vial up
to the light. Even if its faint green glow had not been an
obvious kryptonite tell-tale, the tingling in her fingers would
have confirmed the presence of the poison.
"I don't think it's a decision I can make without a lot more
thought."
"I'm sure your friends meant well," said Ma Kent, regarding the
vial with disapproval, "but I think it's cruel."
"Yes, they did mean well," said Claire, sliding the vial back
into the lead tube it had come in and screwing the cap on, "and
one day, when the time is right, I *will* use it."
"If you say so," sighed Ma Kent. "I see you're still making
that test flight.
"Yes," said Claire, glancing down at the lines of color on the
back of her hand that had caught her mother's attention. "If
things go to plan, these should all evaporate when I fly fast
enough. I've got to admit, when I set up this workshop and
laboratory, I never imagined there would come a day when I
used it to work on formulations for make-up."
"Yes, but get this right and it gives you the sorts of options
a woman will need."
"Hey, you've already sold me on the idea," laughed her daughter,
"there's no need to keep on trying to sell it, Mom."
Exiting through the basement tunnel and emerging in a secluded
area several miles outside Smallville, Claire poured on the
juice and flew west towards Colorado and the Sangre de Cristo
mountains. It was still not long after dawn, a part of the day
she had always loved. She was heading for a particular mountain
lake, one she had returned to several times since being turned
into a girl. Capable of speeds and acceleration beyond those of
the fastest jet-fighter, she covered the distance in minutes,
gently alighting beside the lake. Glancing at the back of her
hand, she was pleased to see that all but one of the lines of
make-up there had evaporated during her flight, just as she
had hoped they would.
Kneeling down beside the lake, Claire gazed into the still,
cold waters and studied her reflection wistfully. That pretty
face with its full lips and beautiful blue eyes; that long,
lustrous hair; that slim young body with its pert little
breasts and shapely bottom were all things that most girls
would love to possess. But then Claire was hardly 'most girls'.
She was trying her best to adapt to this, to fit in and become
the girl everyone saw when they looked at her, but inside that
female form there still lived the mind of a boy, of Clark Kent,
formerly Superboy, and he was finding this very hard.
This lake had been the place where Claire had first seen her
altered body reflected, where she had first had to face up to
the reality of her new gender. Sighing, she brushed her hand
lightly over the surface of the water, dispersing her reflection.
If only it was as easy to wipe away what had been done to her,
But, no. This is who she was now and who she knew she would be
for the rest of her life. That female face was the one she
would always see reflecting back at her.
As the waters settled so her reflection came back into focus...
as did that of the person standing behind her, of Superboy.
Startled, Claire spun around and started to rise, but before
she could he had grabbed her hair and hurled her backwards
with tremedous force. Claire slammed into a nearby mountain,
causing a small avalanche that momentarily buried her. Throwing
the rocks aside, she barely had time to catch her breath before
he was on her, pinning her down. She tried to struggle free,
but the glowing green rock he held in his hand sapped all her
strength.
"Hi," he grinned, and for the first time Claire noticed the
small, black eyemask he was wearing.
"Who...," gasped Claire, "...how?"
"How come I look just like you and have all your powers but
without the weakness to kryptonite?" he said. "Truthfully, I
have no idea. My folks, 'Wolf'and Bonnie Derek, found me as
a baby, in a rocket that crashed near their house. Pa Derek
calls me Super-Bully."
"What...what do you want?" croaked Claire.
"Well, Clarkie-girl, there's the thing," he laughed. "Pa Derek
wants me to keep my existence secret from the world until he's
ready to reveal it, until we can pull off the biggest score of
all time. I'm not happy about that, but he is my Pa. Things are
different for you. I've been secretly observing you and hating
you for years. About the only thing I like about you is your
costume, so I copied it using material from the blankets in the
rocket that carried me to Earth. I happened to be spying on you
a few weeks back when you got yourself turned into a girl. I
don't think I've ever laughed so much. I followed you home -
which was the first time I'd ever realized Clark Kent and
Superboy were the same person, by the way - and so got to hear
those dumb explanations you came up with for where Clark and
Superboy had gone. Of course, the nice thing about those
explantions is they allow for Clark and Superboy to return."
"Oh no," said Claire, realization dawning, "you can't."
"Oh yes," he said, returning the green kryptonite to the pouch
in his cape and retrieving a large, strange red petal, "I can.
On the planet Albo, in the Xurolu galaxy, there's a certain
mountain on which grow giant red flowers that give off a
fragrance with unique properties. I'm immune to the effects,
of course, but it can make even Kryptonians susceptible to
suggestion, can make it easy for someone else to impose their
will on you and have you do things you wouldn't usually dream
of doing."
With that, he crushed the petal directly under Claire's nose
and, try as she might, in her weakened state she was unable to
hold her breath long enough not to breathe in the fragrance.
"Relax now, Clarkie," he said, his voice soothing and hypnotic,
working its way into her mind and impossible to resist. "You're
a pretty girl and I think it's time you lost all your
inhibitions and fully embraced your femininity. Now listen
carefully, because I'm going to describe exactly what sort of
girl you're going to be...."
Claire felt herself falling, falling....until, with a start,
she lurched forward and sat bolt upright in bed. She looked
around her in some confusion, shaking her head. She had the
feeling she had been dreaming, that there was something she
ought to remember, but whatever it was the memory escaped her.
Oh well, if she couldn't remember then it probably wasn't
that important anyway. Getting out of bed, she examined her
naked body in the full-length mirror, adopting various poses
of the sort she had seen in cheesecake shots, and pouting
seductively at her reflection.
"You're one hot chick, Claire baby!" she chuckled to herself.
Wandering over to her closet, she examined the clothes hanging
there and sighed in disappointment. They were all so staid,
so...safe. None of them were sexy enough. On the floor, near
her dressing table, were a number of shopping bags. Had she
been shopping, Claire wondered? Was that what she couldn't
remember? She emptied the bags on her bed, laughing in delight
as the contents spilled out. She cast her eyes approvingly
over the tiny skirts, the tube tops, spike heeled shoes,
fishnets, studded leather choker, and that fine black leather
jacket. Now *this* was more like it! There was a bunch of
dark make-up in there, too, hair dye and gel, and lots of
bangles and earrings. Yes, this was definitely more like it.
Throwing on her bathrobe, Claire grabbed her purse and opened
her bedroom window. Sticking her head out of it, she lit a
cigarette, careful to blow the smoke so that none found its
way back into her room. Her Aunt Martha and Uncle Jonathan
would not approve if they found her smoking, and the last
thing she needed to hear was another moralistic lecture. When
she had finished the cigarette, she ground it out carefully
on the window sill then tossed the butt away. Her Aunt and
Uncle would have been up doing chores since dawn - a crazy
time for anyone to get up in Claire's view - which meant she
would have the bathroom all to herself, and she wanted to
take a long, luxurious bath before getting to work with that
hair dye.
An hour or so later, sitting at her dressing table, Claire
admired the finished effect. The thick dark lipstick,
eye-shadow, and thick mascara definitely worked with spiky
blonde hair, and these clothes were great. Her Aunt and
Uncle would plotz when they saw her, which was half the fun
of dressing like this. She moved to put on her glasses, then
stopped. Why did she wear these things, anyway? She had
perfect eyesight, and the lenses were plain glass. It made
no sense, so she tossed them aside.
Exiting her room, she bumped into someone making his way to
the bathroom. It was her boring cousin.
"'Morning, Clark," she said, unenthusiastically.
"Good morning, Claire," he grinned. "My, that's an...ah..
eye-catching look."
"Just what I need," she grumbled, pushing past him, "fashion
commentary from my geeky cuz."
Clark had returned from back east only last night, she remembered,
where he had been visiting with her parents these past few weeks.
It never occurred to her to wonder why she did not recall just
where back east it was she allegedly hailed from, or why she
had no memory of the entirely fictional parents who supposedly
lived there.
"Claire!!" said Ma Kent as soon as Claire arrived at the
breakfast table. "What have you done to yourself?"
"I just felt like a change," she shrugged, sitting down at the
table. "I was totally bored with my old look."
Her Uncle Jonathan was also sitting at the table, reading his
newspaper. Pointedly, he did not look up.
"Well, you can't go to school looking like that."
"Why not, Aunt Martha?" said Claire. "There are other girls at
school who dress like this."
"Yes, but none of them are good girls," said Martha Kent,
firmly, frowning her disapproval.
"Well maybe I'm fed up with being a good girl, too."
"Jonathan, talk some sense into her!" said Ma Kent.
"Well, Martha," he said, uncomfortably, "it's not like it was
when we were her age. Young girls these days wear all manner
of things we'd have considered scandalous. And we're not her
parents. It has to be Claire's choice how she dresses."
"Thank you, Uncle Jonathan," grinned Claire.
Martha Kent gave her husband the sort of look that promised
they would be having a serious discussion about this later,
but she said no more on the matter. Clark joined them soon
after, and the four ate breakfast in relative silence.
Afterwards, Clark and Claire set off for school, being joined
on the way by their classmate and neighbour, Lana Lang.
"Clark!" said Lana in delight, throwing her arms around him
and giving him a hug. "I didn't know you were back!"
"I got in last night," he grinned.
Then Lana caught sight of Claire.
"Claire!" she gasped. "What have you done to yourself?"
"I felt like a change," she said. "You should try it, Lana.
Your clothes are just as dull and boring as the ones I got
fed up with."
"Wh...what?" said Lana, stung by her comment. "That wasn't a
very nice thing to say."
"Not really, no," chuckled Claire. "True, though. Look, I'm
sure there's no way I can avoid seeing you two later anyway,
but I'm skipping school. I've got better things to do with my
life than listening to teachers droning on about stuff I have
no interest in."
With that, she turned and left them, leaving Lana shocked and
hurt.
"What's happened to her?" she asked Clark.
"It's probably just a phase she's going through," he said.
Watching the departure of her friend, Lana did not see
Clark's smirk, or the look of triumph in his eyes.
Claire headed for the Good Chow Diner, a cheap eaterie where
passing truckers, bikers, and the poorer blue-collar residents
of Smallville usually breakfasted. Once inside, she positioned
herself at the pinball machine in the corner, which gave her a
good view of the door. After fifteen minutes or so of playing
on a single quarter - she was impressed by her reflexes - she
saw the person she was waiting for, Johnny Brandon, swagger up
to the door. A high school dropout, Johnny had several
convictions for petty theft, and the tightest little butt
Claire had ever seen. He had his arm around the waist of Janice
Coolidge, a brunette Claire recognized from school. Janice was
in the year ahead of Claire's - on the rare occasions she
actually showed up at school, that is. Claire moved quickly,
getting to the door before them, then stepping through and
blocking their way.
"Sorry," she said, putting her hand on Janice's chest, "no
dogs allowed inside anymore."
"What?" said Janice, knocking aside her hand. "Who do you think
you are?"
"I'm Johnny's new girlfriend," she said. With that she gave
Janice a shove that knocked her off her feet.
"Are you just going to stand there, Johnny?" said Janice,glaring
at him.
"Hey, two hot chicks fighting over me," said Johnny, leaning
against wall of the diner and lighting a cigarette. "That's
every guy's dream."
With a snarl, Janice scrambled to her feet and launched herself
at Claire. Despite her extra height and reach she could not
seem to land a blow on the other girl, but Claire had no trouble
hitting Janice and kept knocking her to the ground.
"Who *are* you?" she cried, tears of anger and frustration in her
eyes.
Smiling, Claire sidled up to Johnny and he slid an arm around
her bare midriff.
"She already told you who she is," he grinned. "She's my new
girlfriend."
As Janice slunk away, sobbing, Claire turned to face Johnny and
pressed her body against his.
"Mmmm, nice muscles!" she purred. Taking the cigarette from his
fingers, she took a long drag, then dropped it to floor and
crushed it under the pointed toe of her spike heeled shoe.
Before Johnny could say a word, she ground her body even harder
against his and kissed him long and deep. He was a hunk and had
that sexy bad boy thing, too...everything she wanted in a
boyfriend!
**********
"Wow," said Kara, as Claire finished her tale. "That's all so
unlike you. Did you and Johnny....?"
"No!" said Claire quickly, "I mean, I wanted to, and Johnny
*really* wanted to, but there was always something that held
me back, that stopped me from taking that final step. It drove
Johnny wild. He thought I was being a tease, and I suppose I
was but...I can't believe I acted like that with any boy, that
I felt like that about Johnny! I mean, since becoming a girl
I've wondered what it might be like to kiss a boy, but I'm
nowhere near ready to try it yet, if I ever am!"
"Super-Bully took that choice away from you," said Kara,
grimly. "He played with your mind, made you act in ways you
never normally would. That's one of the worst ways one
person can violate another."
"Omigod!" said Claire, her hands going to her mouth. "I've
just remembered some of the things I've said to Ma and Pa
over the past few days, and to Lana. How are they ever going
to forgive me?"
"They will because they love you," said Kara, resting a
hand on her cousin's shoulder. "What concerns me is
your parents saw nothing wrong in having both Clark and
Claire living under their roof at the same time."
"He must have hypnotized them, too."
"Looks like it," said Kara. "So how are we going to take
him down and put things right?"
"I think I might have a few ideas on that score," said
Claire, rubbing her chin thoughtfully. She explained her
plan to Kara. When she had finished, Kara nodded
enthusiastically.
"Yes, I think that'll work," she said.
"Good," said Claire, "because it's fifteen minutes since
you grabbed me from outside Murphy's Garage and I need to
get back there. I'm sure Super-Bully's been watching me
with his telescopic vision, and enjoying seeing me degrade
myself. Revelling in what he did to me is probably what's
kept him from creating mischief as Superboy over the past
week. He's almost certainly not watching me as closely now
as at the start of the week, but he's bound to check in on
me soon and we daren't let him find out about you before
we're ready if my plan's going to work, or take a chance
that he's watching me when I do my part. Are you ready to
create the diversion I need?"
"Yes," said Kara. "I just need a half hour or so to get the
materials I need."
"Good. Then I'll return to Johnny and make like nothing's
wrong."
With that, they flew off, heading to their assigned tasks,
both knowing this had to work first time out if they were
to stand any chance against an evil version of Superboy
who was stronger than either of them.
Smallville's old movie house, the Smallville Saturn
Theatre, had been a thriving picture palace in the 1920s
and 1930s, but its time had long since passed and now it
was boarded-up and scheduled for demolition. However,
that demolition came much earlier than expected when a
flying girl dressed in a strange costume of purple and black
appeared and, before the eyes of astonished onlookers,
started demolishing it, punching great holes in the
structure with her gloved fists. One final blow brought
the whole thing crashing down then, standing atop the
rubble the stranger shouted:
"Bring Superboy to me! I challenge him to face the might
of Satan Girl!"
Sitting in the coffee shop, where he had joined Lana after
her shopping, the imposter Clark Kent heard this challenge
with his super-hearing.
"Excuse me, Lana," he said, getting to his feet, "I need
to step out for a few minutes to make a phone call."
Once outside, he found a secluded spot to change, then
Superboy took to the skies over Smallville once more.
He flew straight to the site where the Saturn Theatre
had stood, alighting a few yards away from the girl who
had destroyed it and quickly taking in the details of her
costume. It was black and skintight and covered her entire
body. Only the eyeholes and the cutout around her nose,
mouth, and chin revealed any skin at all. She also wore a
cape, boots, and a belt over this, all in purple.
"It's you, isn't it?" he said. "Somehow, you've shaken off
the effects of the Albo plant. But what's with the costume
and that mask?"
Puzzled, he turned his X-ray vision on the mask.
"Lined with lead foil," he said, "and when I looked in on
you only a few minutes ago you were with that troglodyte
boyfriend of yours, and...."
Suddenly suspicious, he turned his telescopic vision in the
direction of Murphy's Garage. Claire was nowhere to be seen.
Of course she wasn't. He was being paranoid; there couldn't
be two girls in town with her powers, after all.
"If you want to know why, you're going to have to catch me,"
said Satan Girl, and with that she took to the air, shooting
off at super-speed. A moment later, and the imposter Superboy
was speeding after her.
Back at Murphy's Garage, where she had been listening to this
exchange with her own super-hearing, Claire emerged from her
hiding place behind the water tank and flew off at high-speed
for the Kent home, thankful that Super-Bully could no more
see through lead than she or Supergirl. She had a few minutes
at most to do what she had to do, so every second counted.
As he had no reason to suspect its existence, and since it
had not come up in conversation with Ma and Pa, the imposter
did not know about Claire's workshop/laboratory in the secret
room off the basement of the Kent home. Once inside, Claire
retrieved the device she was looking for, speedily cobbled
together another gadget to work in tandem with it, found her
costume hidden away in Clark's room, switched her clothes,
and flew out again - all in under a minute. She poured on the
speed, knowing that everything depended on her getting to
their agreed rendezvous point ahead of Satan Girl.
For Super-Bully, puzzlement at the whole Satan Girl charade
and being led on this merry chase had turned to anger and,
as he steadily gained on his quarry his thoughts turned ugly.
If Clarkie-girl thought what he had done to her the first time
was degrading, just wait 'til she got a taste of what he
intended for her when he got her back under the influence of
the Albo plant. They were heading back towards Smallville when
Satan Girl suddenly dived into a culvert under the road.
It was Super-Sister who emerged on the other side.
Landing in a field a mile or so further on, she turned and
stood, hands on hips to face him. He landed ten feet in front
of her, glaring at his nemesis.
"What was that whole Satan Girl bit and the quick-change in the
culvert about, Clarkie? You obviously don't want the townsfolk
to see Superboy and Super-Sister together and...heck. You know
what? I don't *care* why. You've got some lumps coming, then
slutty Claire's coming back."
He took a step towards her, then stopped as Claire reached
behind her and pulled out a small lead tube that had been
tucked inside her belt.
"What is that?" said Super-Bully, uncertainly.
"A present from some friends of mine in the 30th century," said
Claire. "When humanity moved out into space, they encountered
all manner of strange new viruses and diseases. One of these is
something they call Grandin Gender Reversal Disease. As the name
suggests, it switches the gender of anyone exposed to it for the
duration of the infection. Ordinarily, I'd be as immune to its
effects as I am to every other disease, but a very clever friend
of mine named Brainiac 5 has managed to incorporate a trace
amount of green kryptonite into the genome of the sample of the
bacteria in this tube, enough to make me as vulnerable to the
gender switch as everyone else. If I swallow it, I'll be Superboy
again. For the next 24 hours, anyway. And it's very fast-acting."
She smiled, then tossed the tube aside.
"Why?" said Super-Bully, suspiciously. "What are you playing at?"
"You're bigger than me, and stronger," said Claire. "And, as
you're so delighted to keep rubbing in, I'm a girl now. Yet you
needed green kryptonite to overpower me last time. That tells
me I don't need to be a boy again to defeat you. Your father
knew what he was doing when he called you Super-Bully. Bullies
pick on those who are weaker than them because they're cowards.
Well, I may be weaker than you, and a girl now, but I'm still
more of a man than you'll ever be."
Stung by her words, he lunged for Claire, but she had already
moved aside, slamming her elbow into the back of his neck as
he flew past her. This enraged Super-Bully even more and what
followed, at speeds faster than most human eyes could follow,
was a furious flurry of fists and feet amid a whirling blur of
red and blue. Yet when the dust settled, it was Super-Bully
who lay defeated on the ground and Claire who stood over him,
one foot on his chest.
"H...how?" he said.
"You may be stronger than me but I have more experience in
combatting actual menaces, and I don't let myself get mad
and careless like you did," said Claire. "You rely on brute
force but it's skill that wins most fights, and I'm far more
skilled at this than you are. You took me by surprise before,
but you didn't have that advantage this time."
"You think you're really something, don't you?" he sneered.
"But I've taken over your old life, and I'm not giving it up.
And there's not a thing you can do to stop me."
With that, he lurched upwards, throwing Claire off him, and
flew off at high speed towards Smallville. This was it; the
final act that Claire had expected. She only hoped Kara had
been watching closely and was prepared for what came next.
"That took longer than I expected," said Clark Kent to Lana
Lang as he rejoined her in the coffee shop, "are you ready
to leave?"
"Sure," said the pretty young teen, gathering up her
shopping, "lets's go."
When they stepped out into the steet, a familiar blue and
red figure dropped from the sky and landed in the road a
few yards in front of them.
"Super-Sister!" said Lana, genuinely delighted. "We've
missed you!"
Claire swiftly sized up the situation, noting the way the
imposter was gripping Lana's arm and seeing the warning
in his eyes. He might be determined to remain Clark Kent, but
he clearly had no qualms about hurting Lana if he needed to.
"Yes, hello Super-Sister," he said, voice carefully neutral,
"what brings you here?"
"I'm pursuing a super-powered criminal who calls herself
Satan Girl," said Claire. "She just demolished the Saturn
Theatre and issued a challenge to my brother. Have either of
you seen her?"
The ersatz Clark Kent's top lip curled into a sneer. He was
about to make a dismissive comment, when a new factor entered
the situation.
"Hey, girl!" came a voice from above them. "If your brother's
too chicken to face me then you'll have to take his place."
Hovering in the sky overhead was Satan Girl. She was holding a
strange-looking gun. The fake Clark stared at her in amazement,
momentarily non-plussed, and in that moment Claire pounced,
using the distraction to tear Lana from his grasp and leap
away from him. In that same instant, Satan Girl fired her gun
at him, engulfing him in purple flame.
And when the flame faded, all that was left of him was a small
pile of ash, his glasses, and the charred remains of his
clothes.
"Clark!" screamed Lana, breaking free of Super-Sister and
falling to her knees amid the remains. "She killed Clark!"
Chapter 3: Supergirl
Since Linda Olsen was neither family nor a close friend of the
deceased, Kara had not been in the graveside front row at the
funeral of Clark Kent. Now, looking at those who had - Claire,
his parents, Lana, and Superboy - as they filed out of the
cemetary, she was glad. This might be an act for Superboy and
the Kents, but Lana did not know her real friend had not been
killed and so was genuinely distressed. It was at times like
these Kara had the most doubts about the cost of maintaining
a secret identity.
The press had maintained a respectful distance out of
consideration for family grief, but they were massed outside
the cemetary gate for what everyone knew would be a big news
story: Superboy was saying farewell to his adopted planet and
leaving it forever.
Watching as Superboy climbed the steps of the small podium
that had been set up, then looked out at the expectant faces
of the crowd from behind a small forest of microphones, Kara's
heart went out to him. Only she and the Kents knew what this
meant to her cousin and what he must be going through.
"Ladies and Gentleman," he began, "I'll keep this brief because
today is not about me but about my friend, Clark Kent. I'm here
representing both my sister and myself while she's out in space
pursuing his killer. I'm grateful for the chance to say a proper
goodbye to this world, though saddened by the circumstances that
brought me back here. I love the world of yours, this wonderful
Earth that provided a home and a haven to an orphan refugee
from a dead planet when he needed it most. I grew up here, and
I will always be grateful for that. For reasons I cannot go into,
this will be the last time you'll ever see me. When I depart
this time, I will never be able to return. I leave you in the
capable hands of my twin sibling, Super-Sister, and I hope you
will take her to your hearts as you did me. And now, I must go.
Thank you all."
With that, and before the assembled press had time to ask any
questions, Superboy launched himself into the air, a blue-and-red
streak that shot straight up from the podium, cameras desperately
tracking his path until he was out of sight.
Kara turned her attention back to the mourners and went over to
the Kents. Seeing her approach, Claire turned to Ma Kent.
"I think I need to go back to the house, with Linda," she said.
"I'll see everyone back there later."
Martha Kent nodded, and Kara led Claire to one of the waiting
cars, instucting the driver to take them to the Kent home. Once
back there, she led Claire upstairs to her room.
"I was wondering when you'd get back," said Superboy as they
entered the room. "I don't think I have long left now."
He turned to Claire.
"Robot C-3," he said, "take your clothes off and place them on
the bed."
"Yes, master," said 'Claire Kent', and began disrobing.
"They're fine for substituting for you in some circumstances,"
said Superboy, "but their limited ability to emulate human
emotion makes it risky to use the robots for an extended
masquerade. Now help me get this thing off my head."
Walking up behind him, Kara got her nails under the artificial
skin at the base of his neck, then peeled off the whole head
piece with the short hair of Superboy woven into it. It had
been taken from a Superboy robot. Underneath, his own hair was
held tight to his head by a nylon skull cap. Whipping this
off, he shook out the long locks he had had since becoming
Super Sister.
"The weird ring that made me a girl also gave me long hair,"
he said, "but Grandin Gender Reversal Disease has no effect
on hair, which isn't any sort of gender-dependent physical
characteristic, after all. I didn't want to cut it, knowing
Claire and Super-Sister would then both have the same short
style when I reverted."
"Is it happening yet?" asked Kara.
"Yes," he replied. "I can feel my body already starting to
change. Looks like Brainy called it about right - it's just
over 24 hours since I infected myself with the sample."
Looking closely at her cousin, Kara could see it beginning.
It was subtle at first - an almost imperceptible softening
of the jawline, a slight narrowing of the back and shoulders,
a gradual widening of the hips - but it quickly gathered pace,
as the form of Superboy morphed into that of Super-Sister,
into the more familiar form of the cousin she knew and loved.
He, now she, held a slender-fingered hand up to her pretty
face and sighed.
"And that's it," she said, sadly, "the last ever appearence
of Superboy."
So saying, she burst into tears. Alarmed, Kara rushed over
and wrapped her arms around her cousin.
"I knew this would happen," sniffled Claire. "To begin to
come to terms with what was done to me, then to be offered
a one-time only chance to reverse it...I knew it would be
hard."
"That's why you were determined to use it sooner rather than
later," said Kara, realization dawning, "why you didn't want
to keep it back until some time when you might need male
strength in a fight."
"Keeping it back, always knowing it was there, would've been
unbearable," said Claire, "I needed it over and done with."
"And so you used it to say a proper farewell."
"A proper farewell, yes," agreed Claire. "Now both Clark and
Superboy are gone for good."
"That was a stroke of genius, realizing you could use the
defeat of Super-Bully to stage Clark's death," said Kara.
"Thank you," said Claire, gently disengaging from the other
girl's arms. "I need to change my clothes before anyone
else returns to the house."
Kara watched Claire dry her eyes then climb out of her
costume and don the outfit the robot had lain on the bed. She
smiled as Claire rolled the black panty-hose up her legs like
someone who had been doing this for years. She might not be
happy about her transformation yet, but she was adapting to
it and gradually learning how to be the girl everyone saw
when they looked at her. Not that she didn't still have a
few male traits that were less than helpful.
"I wasn't too happy at first that you wanted to go
mano-a-mano with Super-Bully," said Kara. "I know you
thought you had something to prove, but it was dangerously
macho of you. We had the means to put him away and I
thought we should have used it immediately. Yet you fought
him, you beat him, and somehow you knew he'd retreat back
into Clark's life, where Clark Kent could then be killed
in front of witnesses."
"When you helped me remember the real me, I still had all
my memories of the past week, still recalled every detail
of living at home with him masquerading as Clark," said
Claire, standing in front of a mirror and carefully applying
lipstick. "I'd seen how much he enjoyed being Clark, how
much he revelled in it, so I didn't think he'd give that
up easily."
"Why do you think that was?" asked Kara, frowning.
"We may never know his true origin, but on some fundamental
level he was a copy of me. That must mean we started out as
pretty much the same person, but where I was found by the
Kents he was was unlucky enough to be raised by Wolf and
Bonnie Derek, a notorious gangster couple. He saw what I had,
and he envied me and hated me for it. Having tasted life with
Ma and Pa, having seen what it could be like, he no more
wanted to give it up than I would."
"And so we trapped him in the Phantom Zone," said Kara. "When
you passed me the Phantom Zone projector in that road culvert,
the only one of the old lead ones still to be found near
Smallville, I knew what I had to do and I did it without
hesitation. The heat ray you'd cobbled onto it, and rigged to
operate ahead of the projector itself, burned off his outer
clothes a fraction of a second before the beam from the
projector sent him into the Phantom Zone."
"To normal human eyes, Clark had simply been disintegrated,"
said Claire. "Only we two know otherwise. It's ironic my
father Jor-El discovered the Phantom Zone and proposed it as
a place of imprisonment for Krypton's worst criminals, yet
now it holds a doppelganger of his own son."
"Yes, but I wonder if we did the right thing banishing him
to it," said Kara, worriedly.
"What do you mean?" asked Claire.
"You said it yourself: he's a version of you. He was
corrupted, yes, but if at his core he's the same person,
could he have been redeemed? Was there some better way of
handling this than trapping him as an intangible, invisible
phantom, able to see but not communicate with or touch the
real world, one whose hatred will only fester and grow? I
worry at the possibility of him getting out one day, an
evil Superboy freed from his extra-dimensional prison and
bent on wreaking bloody vengeance on us all."
"You can't think that way," said Claire, gripping Kara's
shoulder. "All any of us can do is whatever is our best at
the time. It's impossible to forsee every eventuality and
allow for everything that *could* happen. It can't be done.
Now help me zip up the back of my dress. It sounds like
people have started arriving downstairs."
They heard someone coming up the stairs, then there was a
knock on the door.
"Claire?" said a female voice.
"Come in, Lana," said Claire.
She did, and the two girls hugged.
"How are you holding up?" asked Claire. "He was my cousin, but
you were closer to Clark and knew him better than I did."
"I still can't believe I'll never see him again," she sobbed.
"I know we were in the line of fire, and Super-Sister
probably didn't have time to save both of us, but I feel so
guilty I survived and Clark didn't."
Kara put a sympathetic hand on Lana's shoulder, and
a pained look passed between her and Claire. Yes, when it
hurt a friend like this, the cost of maintaining a secret
identity was definitely too high.
"I have one bit of good news, at least," said Claire, gently.
"What do you mean?" said Lana.
"There have been...problems between me and my parents," said
Claire, "which is the reason I came to Smallville. I was
seeking legal emancipation from them. Well, it's just
come through, and Uncle Jonathan and Aunt Martha are going
to adopt me. I'm staying in Smallville, and they're going to
be my Ma and Pa."
"Oh, Claire, that's wonderful news!" said Lana. "You being
here will really help the Kents and we'll get to hang out
together more...if you want to, that is."
"Yes, I really, really want to," said Claire. "I'm sorry
I've been such a jerk this past. Can you forgive me?"
"Of course," said Lana, giving her another hug, "I'm just
glad to have the real Claire back."
"Me, too," said Claire with feeling, "me, too."
"And Johnny Brandon?"
"He's history," said Claire. "I broke up with him two days
ago. He didn't seem very cut up about it."
"Boys like Johnny can always attract new girls," said Kara.
"Yes, and most of them will be idiots," said Claire.
The following day, Super-Sister and Supergirl got to frolic
together out in space, playing hide-and-go-seek among the
asteroids, leap frog with a meteor, and a whole slew of
other games of the sort that only a pair of teenagers with
their incredible abilities could. They were able to go all
out and let rip with their powers in a way they seldom got
the chance to. It was the most fun either of them could
ever recall having.
"To be able to do that was my reason for coming here in the
first place," said Kara when they were back on Earth. "I'm
glad we finally got the chance to play together before I
leave."
"Me, too," laughed Claire. "It's really taken my mind off
things."
"I can imagine," said Kara, seriously. "So how was it for you
right after you were turned into a girl? It must've been very
difficult."
"It was a confusing time, that's for sure," said Claire, "but
with all that was going, it all prevented me from having to
face up to what was done to me. "First there was my encounter
with a magical imp from the fifth dimension. He had an
unpronouncable name and reality was putty in his hands. I
*really* hope I never meet him again. Then exposure to red
kryptonite caused me to lose my memory for a week while I was
far from Smallville. I also visited the past to check out
something in the history of the Kent family. This was in
addition to dealing with the usual crooks and aliens, of
course."
"We sure live complicated lives, don't we?" chuckled Kara.
"We do at that," admitted Claire.
"And now?"
"Now? Well now I'm taking it one day at a time and handling it
as best as I can, but it's still really hard."
"You'll get there eventually," smiled Kara. "In my time you're a
happy, confident women, totally at ease with who and what she
is. She...you...are my hero and my role model."
"It's a real shame you had to leave, and that you wouldn't let
me reveal to Ma and Pa who you really are. I think they'd be
delighted a relative of mine had also survived the destruction
of Krypton."
"In the same way you used me as your secret weapon, Superman
keeps me in reserve as his," said Claire. "No-one else knows
Supergirl exists yet, and I have to keep it that way. The Satan
Girl disguise may have prevented Super-Bully from realizing I
wasn't you, but it also preserved my secret. In fact, I can't
take a chance on you remembering I was here, either. Knowledge
of your own future could potentially be catastrophic."
"I suppose you're right," sighed Claire. "How do you want to do
this?"
"Well you could self-hypnotize with a spinning hypno-wheel," said
Kara, "but I think it would be safer if we used something stronger
than that."
So saying, she reached into the pouch in her cape and pulled out
a sealed bag of transparent plastic containing a single large
red petal.
"From the stuff Super-Bully left behind," she said. "Another
petal from the Albo plant. Are you ready?"
Claire nodded.
"Right, then when I crush this under your nose, and you breathe
in the fragrance, you will forget me and anything you've learned
from me about your own future."
She opened the bag and crushed the petal in front of Claire,
holding her own breath as the other girl breathed in deeply.
While Claire was still dazed and disoriented, Kara flew off,
heading up into space for the trip back to her own time. She
had been in Smallville the better part of a week, but she would
arrive back mere minutes after she had left. It was one of the
things you could do with time travel she really appreciated.
A week later, her regular get together with her cousin was not
the usual meeting of Superwoman and Supergirl in some remote
part of the globe to have fun, but between Claire Kent and
Linda Lee in one of the classiest restaurants in Metropolis.
Having now met her as a teenager, Kara found herself studying
her cousin closely as they were shown to their table.
Clark Kent had been timid and something of a klutz to make him
the opposite of Superboy. Superwoman was a powerful, no-nonsense
woman who took villains out with her fists, so for contrast her
cousin had made Claire Kent very feminine. She was always
immaculately made up and coiffed, never a hair out of place. Her
clothes were always elegantly fashionable, and her shapely legs
always clad in stockings and high heels - she never wore trousers.
The way she spoke and carried herself, every gesture and
inflection, and that sexy purr in her voice, meant she usually
had men falling over themselves to do things for her. Of course,
this meant she had ended up covering fashion, showbiz, and high
society on The Daily Planet rather than doing the hard-hitting
investigative reporting of her colleague, Lois Lane, but as she
had explained to Kara, not only was there crime aplenty in those
areas but just being in the Planet newsroom meant she heard about
the big stories as they were happening. Still, Kara suspected
the crime beat was the one Claire would have preferred to cover.
"So," said Claire when the waiter had taken their order, "how
did you enjoy Smallville?"
"You Knew?!" said Kara.
"Of course I did," chuckled Claire, "but before I say anything
else, tell me everything that happened as you remember it."
Kara did as Claire asked, then said:
"I wish I could remember something about the v