"I go to school here now!" Lucy said, bouncing on her toes excitedly.
"How? You're only twelve."
"I was twelve, two years ago. I'm fourteen now, dummy."
"...Right. So why... how are you here? At this school?"
Lucy sighed. "Oh, I don't know. I got a free scholarship or something."
Bruce did the math in his head. Given the fact that Lois had been taken hostage at Excelsior once and later killed by the school's biggest supporter, it made sense that the school would want to offer the Lanes something to keep them from pursuing any kind of legal action.
Lucy hug-tackled Bruce. "I missed you."
Bruce peeled Lucy off his neck. "Thanks, Lucy. But shouldn't you be going home now? The school's about to close."
"I take the bus home."
Bruce looked over Lucy's shoulder. "You mean the bus that just left?"
Lucy turned. "Oh... oops."
Bruce sighed and rubbed his forehead. "I'll take you home. Do you have a cellphone?"
Lucy nodded. "Yeah, I got one for my birthday! Look, it has—"
"Good. Call your parents and let them know I'm taking you home. Let's go."
Bruce's phone rang in his backpack.
Lucy's eyes went wide. "Ohhhh, your ringtone is way cooler than mine. Mine is—"
"Tell me later; I have to answer this now." Bruce had never been more glad to take a call from Principal Reynolds.
Bruce answered the phone. "Yes sir?"
"Mister Wayne, I have a matter to discuss with you. Would you mind stopping by my office before you leave?"
"Sorry sir; I've already left."
"I can see you out my window, Mister Wayne. It won't take more than a minute, but I'd prefer not to explain myself over the phone."
Bruce sighed. "I'll be there in a minute."
"You remember Morgan Edge?"
Bruce frowned slightly. "We weren't friends, but I knew him."
"Have you heard about his family?"
"I heard his mother died in a car accident a few months ago."
"Two weeks ago, his father died as well."
Too many orphans at this school, Bruce thought.
"How?"
"Remarkably, the same kind of accident, down almost to the exact detail."
"That's... odd."
"You wouldn't be the first to say that, but all reports indicate it was a freak coincidence."
"...Weird, but why does this matter to me?"
"Morgan hasn't shown up for school in over a week and isn't returning calls. I'd consider it a personal favor if you'd go talk to him."
"You think since I'm an orphan too, I'd be able to get through to him?"
"That's the idea."
"Sorry. I'm not your errand boy."
Bruce turned and went for the door.
"Bruce, wait."
Reynolds sighed. "I think you know the board forced you back here because they want your money."
Bruce raised an eyebrow. "Well, obviously."
"In the last few months, the school has lost the funding of both the Wayne and Luthor families. If the Edge donations cease as well, the school will likely go bankrupt."
"You charge insane tuition prices here; how is that even possible?"
"Between you and I, the board's spending is... questionable."
"So they're sinking and they need our donations to stay afloat?"
"Until they can re-balance their budgets, yes. And if they lose the Edge donation... they may resort to drastic measures."
"You mean they'll start breaking the law and extorting us?"
"As the principal, I am inclined to disagree with such accusations."
"However accurate they may be."
Reynolds gave the slightest of nods.
Bruce thought for a moment. "I'll talk to him on my way home today."
As Bruce left the office, Lucy jumped up from her seat in the waiting room. Selina was sitting next to Lucy.
"What are you doing here?" Bruce asked.
Selina smiled and shrugged. "Something about assaulting a boy in the girls' locker room."
Lucy giggled. "We've been talking about you."
Selina winked at Lucy.
Bruce looked back and forth between Lucy and Selina. "Awesome."
He turned and left, Lucy following in his shadow.
The receptionist clicked off her earpiece and looked up at Bruce.
"Mister Edge says he'll meet you in his apartment at the top floor, and that you can take the private elevator there."
She gestured to a hallway near the back of the lobby.
Bruce and Lucy stepped into the glass elevator, both wondering why it was made of glass if there were walls all around it. As the elevator started moving, they quickly understood. The private elevator shaft went through every main research and development floor in the building, giving the Edges a perfect view into what their company was doing.
Bruce frowned slightly. Galaxy Communications was a media corporation. The Edges owned over half of the major media outlets in Metropolis. But what Bruce was seeing on several of the R&D floors—chemical labs, hospital beds, huge steel chairs with restraints—looked more like biochemical research. Human biochemical research. It all went by so fast that Bruce barely had time to figure any of it out.
Lucy leaned toward Bruce. "Why are they making helmets for sick people?" she asked.
"What?"
The elevator doors opened.
"Okay, Lucy, you stay here in the hall. I'll go talk to Morgan and be right back."
Lucy seemed a bit uneasy about being left alone.
"It'll just be for a minute," Bruce said.
Bruce walked to the apartment door and lifted his hand to knock. He sighed and whispered to himself, "why do I have to play counselor?"
Before Bruce could knock, the door opened.
"Bruce!" Morgan said cheerfully, his arms open wide. Bruce somehow felt threatened, but he usually did when people tried to hug him. He quickly held out his hand for Morgan to shake, diverting the danger.
Morgan noticed the maneuver and half-chuckled. "Same old antisocial Bruce. So what did you want to talk about, exactly?"
"It's... complicated."
"Sure. Come on in. Sorry about the mess; I've been redecorating."
Bruce followed Morgan inside. It looked like half of everything in the apartment was boxed up or being thrown away. Bruce found that odd, but he found Morgan even odder. Morgan and Bruce had been classmates for three years, but they'd rarely spoken. Now Morgan was acting like they were best friends... and Morgan seemed happy. Not entirely fake-happy either—he was pleased, for some bizarre reason. But the tinges of fatigue around Morgan's eyes told Bruce that he wasn't sleeping well, and the way his eyes twitched back and forth made it obvious that he was hiding something. Bruce's senses told him that Morgan was, at the very least, unstable, if not somehow dangerous.
Morgan casually sat down on the couch. "It's complicated how?"
Bruce sat across from him. "Excelsior wants you to come back to school, or at the very least continue your family's annual donation."
"Pssh. Well of course they do. Money's all they care about. You know the board takes that money and buys yachts with it?"
"Yeah, well apparently they didn't expect their three biggest donors to drop out at once, and they're deep in trouble."
"Three?"
"Me, you, and the Luthors."
"...Right. Wait, why are you here telling me this? I thought you graduated?"
"I did. But they decided one of my class credits wasn't valid and I needed to go back. They want me to resume my family's donations or they'll probably not let me leave until the end of the semester."
"Wait, they're extorting you?"
"Yeah."
"Bruce, you need to go public with this. Lest you forget, I now own a friggin' media empire. I'll have Channel 5 do an expose on the whole thing, get you out of it all, and take them down while I'm at it."
"Morgan, if you do that, it'll take so long that I'll have to stay through the entire semester, and they'll probably find a way to fail that one class so I'll have to retake it again. If the two of us put our donations in for this year, I can be out and have my diploma reinstated by the end of the week."
Morgan sighed. "Well, I guess I can spare the 300k."
"Thanks. I owe you one. And now I need to head out."
Bruce and Morgan both stood up.
"By the way," Bruce said, doing his best to feign casual interest,"what's everybody working on in those R&D levels?"
"Eh, just some stuff the brainiacs down there want to work on. Something about testing the effect our programming has on the brain. Some statistician says it'll help increase ratings by 30%."
"Ah. Cool."
Morgan was lying, and Bruce knew it.
Bruce said goodbye, gently took Lucy by the hand, and got back into the elevator—being careful not to be seen looking at the R&D floors.
Bruce's face was perfectly neutral, but he somehow still looked horribly tense.
"What's wrong?" Lucy said.
"Nothing, Lucy. I just want to get you home before your parents think I kidnapped you."
Bruce almost felt guilty lying to Lucy, but he couldn't even give a hint that he found anything suspicious. He glanced around the elevator car, feigning boredom. Sure enough, there was a tiny black lens hidden in the corner of the car. They were being watched and recorded.
Bruce had looked into Morgan's eyes and seen a reflection of himself—a young man who had lost both parents and been left king of an empty castle. But Morgan was different. There was something else there, hidden in plain sight. Morgan had partially lost his mind. He was literally overjoyed and devastated at the same time. It was understandable, given the circumstances, but Bruce doubted that this was simple depression or isolation. If Bruce was right—and he knew he was—Morgan hadn't merely lost his parents; he'd killed at least one of them.
Bruce's phone rang in his backpack.
Lucy's eyes went wide. "Ohhhh, your ringtone is way cooler than mine. Mine is—"
"Tell me later; I have to answer this now." Bruce had never been more glad to take a call from Principal Reynolds.
Bruce answered the phone. "Yes sir?"
"Mister Wayne, I have a matter to discuss with you. Would you mind stopping by my office before you leave?"
"Sorry sir; I've already left."
"I can see you out my window, Mister Wayne. It won't take more than a minute, but I'd prefer not to explain myself over the phone."
Bruce sighed. "I'll be there in a minute."
"You remember Morgan Edge?"
Bruce frowned slightly. "We weren't friends, but I knew him."
"Have you heard about his family?"
"I heard his mother died in a car accident a few months ago."
"Two weeks ago, his father died as well."
Too many orphans at this school, Bruce thought.
"How?"
"Remarkably, the same kind of accident, down almost to the exact detail."
"That's... odd."
"You wouldn't be the first to say that, but all reports indicate it was a freak coincidence."
"...Weird, but why does this matter to me?"
"Morgan hasn't shown up for school in over a week and isn't returning calls. I'd consider it a personal favor if you'd go talk to him."
"You think since I'm an orphan too, I'd be able to get through to him?"
"That's the idea."
"Sorry. I'm not your errand boy."
Bruce turned and went for the door.
"Bruce, wait."
Reynolds sighed. "I think you know the board forced you back here because they want your money."
Bruce raised an eyebrow. "Well, obviously."
"In the last few months, the school has lost the funding of both the Wayne and Luthor families. If the Edge donations cease as well, the school will likely go bankrupt."
"You charge insane tuition prices here; how is that even possible?"
"Between you and I, the board's spending is... questionable."
"So they're sinking and they need our donations to stay afloat?"
"Until they can re-balance their budgets, yes. And if they lose the Edge donation... they may resort to drastic measures."
"You mean they'll start breaking the law and extorting us?"
"As the principal, I am inclined to disagree with such accusations."
"However accurate they may be."
Reynolds gave the slightest of nods.
Bruce thought for a moment. "I'll talk to him on my way home today."
As Bruce left the office, Lucy jumped up from her seat in the waiting room. Selina was sitting next to Lucy.
"What are you doing here?" Bruce asked.
Selina smiled and shrugged. "Something about assaulting a boy in the girls' locker room."
Lucy giggled. "We've been talking about you."
Selina winked at Lucy.
Bruce looked back and forth between Lucy and Selina. "Awesome."
He turned and left, Lucy following in his shadow.
The receptionist clicked off her earpiece and looked up at Bruce.
"Mister Edge says he'll meet you in his apartment at the top floor, and that you can take the private elevator there."
She gestured to a hallway near the back of the lobby.
Bruce and Lucy stepped into the glass elevator, both wondering why it was made of glass if there were walls all around it. As the elevator started moving, they quickly understood. The private elevator shaft went through every main research and development floor in the building, giving the Edges a perfect view into what their company was doing.
Bruce frowned slightly. Galaxy Communications was a media corporation. The Edges owned over half of the major media outlets in Metropolis. But what Bruce was seeing on several of the R&D floors—chemical labs, hospital beds, huge steel chairs with restraints—looked more like biochemical research. Human biochemical research. It all went by so fast that Bruce barely had time to figure any of it out.
Lucy leaned toward Bruce. "Why are they making helmets for sick people?" she asked.
"What?"
The elevator doors opened.
"Okay, Lucy, you stay here in the hall. I'll go talk to Morgan and be right back."
Lucy seemed a bit uneasy about being left alone.
"It'll just be for a minute," Bruce said.
Bruce walked to the apartment door and lifted his hand to knock. He sighed and whispered to himself, "why do I have to play counselor?"
Before Bruce could knock, the door opened.
"Bruce!" Morgan said cheerfully, his arms open wide. Bruce somehow felt threatened, but he usually did when people tried to hug him. He quickly held out his hand for Morgan to shake, diverting the danger.
Morgan noticed the maneuver and half-chuckled. "Same old antisocial Bruce. So what did you want to talk about, exactly?"
"It's... complicated."
"Sure. Come on in. Sorry about the mess; I've been redecorating."
Bruce followed Morgan inside. It looked like half of everything in the apartment was boxed up or being thrown away. Bruce found that odd, but he found Morgan even odder. Morgan and Bruce had been classmates for three years, but they'd rarely spoken. Now Morgan was acting like they were best friends... and Morgan seemed happy. Not entirely fake-happy either—he was pleased, for some bizarre reason. But the tinges of fatigue around Morgan's eyes told Bruce that he wasn't sleeping well, and the way his eyes twitched back and forth made it obvious that he was hiding something. Bruce's senses told him that Morgan was, at the very least, unstable, if not somehow dangerous.
Morgan casually sat down on the couch. "It's complicated how?"
Bruce sat across from him. "Excelsior wants you to come back to school, or at the very least continue your family's annual donation."
"Pssh. Well of course they do. Money's all they care about. You know the board takes that money and buys yachts with it?"
"Yeah, well apparently they didn't expect their three biggest donors to drop out at once, and they're deep in trouble."
"Three?"
"Me, you, and the Luthors."
"...Right. Wait, why are you here telling me this? I thought you graduated?"
"I did. But they decided one of my class credits wasn't valid and I needed to go back. They want me to resume my family's donations or they'll probably not let me leave until the end of the semester."
"Wait, they're extorting you?"
"Yeah."
"Bruce, you need to go public with this. Lest you forget, I now own a friggin' media empire. I'll have Channel 5 do an expose on the whole thing, get you out of it all, and take them down while I'm at it."
"Morgan, if you do that, it'll take so long that I'll have to stay through the entire semester, and they'll probably find a way to fail that one class so I'll have to retake it again. If the two of us put our donations in for this year, I can be out and have my diploma reinstated by the end of the week."
Morgan sighed. "Well, I guess I can spare the 300k."
"Thanks. I owe you one. And now I need to head out."
Bruce and Morgan both stood up.
"By the way," Bruce said, doing his best to feign casual interest,"what's everybody working on in those R&D levels?"
"Eh, just some stuff the brainiacs down there want to work on. Something about testing the effect our programming has on the brain. Some statistician says it'll help increase ratings by 30%."
"Ah. Cool."
Morgan was lying, and Bruce knew it.
Bruce said goodbye, gently took Lucy by the hand, and got back into the elevator—being careful not to be seen looking at the R&D floors.
Bruce's face was perfectly neutral, but he somehow still looked horribly tense.
"What's wrong?" Lucy said.
"Nothing, Lucy. I just want to get you home before your parents think I kidnapped you."
Bruce almost felt guilty lying to Lucy, but he couldn't even give a hint that he found anything suspicious. He glanced around the elevator car, feigning boredom. Sure enough, there was a tiny black lens hidden in the corner of the car. They were being watched and recorded.
Bruce had looked into Morgan's eyes and seen a reflection of himself—a young man who had lost both parents and been left king of an empty castle. But Morgan was different. There was something else there, hidden in plain sight. Morgan had partially lost his mind. He was literally overjoyed and devastated at the same time. It was understandable, given the circumstances, but Bruce doubted that this was simple depression or isolation. If Bruce was right—and he knew he was—Morgan hadn't merely lost his parents; he'd killed at least one of them.