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Document 4 - Unflagged Corrolation

  Recovered from archived instant-message correspondence: Superboy (Conner Kent) and Miss Martian (M’gann M’orzz)

  Exchange Log Date: Feb 8, 2045

  C. Kent:

  Yo.

  M. Morse:

  What happened?

  C. Kent:

  How much did J’onn tell you about the Metropolis tech situation?

  M. Morse:

  Fragmented devices. No cohesive system. Why?

  C. Kent:

  Because that’s bullshit.

  M. Morse:

  Conner—

  C. Kent:

  I read the full internal reports. Clark signed off on them. They’re wrong.

  M. Morse:

  That’s a serious claim.

  C. Kent:

  I know it is.

  But every device we’ve recovered is damaged. Cheap. Half-burned.

  Nobody competent leaves intact tech lying around in shit-stained alleys.

  We’re finding crumbs and pretending that’s the whole loaf.

  M. Morse:

  So you think we’re only seeing what someone wants us to see.

  C. Kent:

  Yes.

  And everyone’s acting like because the damned things are quiet, they’re harmless.

  They’re not harmless.

  M. Morse:

  You’re angry.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah. Because I feel like I’m the only goddamn person paying attention.

  M. Morse:

  You’re not the only one. You’re just the loudest about it.

  C. Kent:

  I’m not loud.

  M. Morse:

  You are absolutely loud.

  C. Kent:

  Fine. I’m pissed.

  Every time I bring it up Clark gives me the fucking “we’ve handled worse” speech.

  J’onn thinks it’s salvage junk.

  And I swear there’s more out there. Intact. Waiting.

  M. Morse:

  Why didn’t you ask Robin?

  C. Kent:

  He’s on a mission.

  M. Morse:

  And?

  C. Kent:

  And he’s an asshole.

  M. Morse:

  Conner.

  C. Kent:

  What? He is.

  He’d nitpick every line of data, tell me I’m projecting, then secretly agree and refuse to fucking admit it.

  I don’t have the goddamn energy for that.

  M. Morse:

  So you asked me.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah.

  Because you’ll actually look.

  And because you won’t treat me like I’m irrational just because I’m mad.

  M. Morse:

  This book was originally published on Royal Road. Check it out there for the real experience.

  Where are you right now?

  C. Kent:

  Kitchen.

  M. Morse:

  Your grandparents’ place or Clark’s place?

  C. Kent:

  No.

  Lois’s place.

  M. Morse:

  Are the walls still intact?

  C. Kent:

  …Yes.

  M. Morse:

  Conner.

  C. Kent:

  I’m not punching the walls.

  M. Morse:

  Good.

  Lois likes her walls.

  And Clark likes Lois.

  So by extension, you like her walls.

  C. Kent:

  That is not how that works.

  M. Morse:

  It is exactly how that works.

  C. Kent:

  I’m not going to damage anything.

  M. Morse:

  Because?

  C. Kent:

  Because she’d kill me.

  M. Morse:

  Correct.

  C. Kent:

  Also because it’s not her damned fault I’m stressed.

  M. Morse:

  There it is.

  C. Kent:

  Don’t read into that.

  M. Morse:

  I don’t need to. You said it.

  Clark dismissing your concern doesn’t mean he doesn’t value it.

  He just defaults to stability. You default to action.

  C. Kent:

  I default to not ignoring red fucking flags.

  M. Morse:

  And he defaults to believing in people.

  C. Kent:

  I believe in people.

  M. Morse:

  You believe in punching problems.

  C. Kent:

  Punching things fucking works sometimes.

  M. Morse:

  Not Lois’s drywall.

  C. Kent:

  I said I’m not punching the damn walls.

  M. Morse:

  Send me the data.

  C. Kent:

  Sending.

  (Several minutes pass.)

  M. Morse:

  Conner. The low-band signal on this unit—was the core physically tested, or just scanned?

  C. Kent:

  Scanned.

  M. Morse:

  That might not be enough.

  C. Kent:

  You think it’s not purely mechanical?

  M. Morse:

  I think it might not be purely mechanical.

  C. Kent:

  Clark moved the main piece to the Fortress.

  M. Morse:

  Do not take anything from the Fortress.

  C. Kent:

  I wasn’t—

  M. Morse:

  You were thinking about it.

  C. Kent:

  For five seconds.

  M. Morse:

  That’s five seconds too long.

  C. Kent:

  Fine. I’ll fucking ask Clark if I can take a look at it. I’ll grab it so you can take a look at it—yeesh.

  M. Morse:

  Good. That’s what I meant. Respecting boundaries doesn’t make you weak.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah, yeah. Respecting boundaries… sigh. Guess it’s easier to say than do.

  M. Morse:

  You’ll manage. And it’s not like he’s going to say no. He knows you’re careful when it counts.

  C. Kent:

  Careful… that’s generous. I mean, I don’t punch the walls, so that’s something.

  M. Morse:

  Exactly. Start there, Conner. One responsible choice at a time.

  C. Kent:

  One… responsible choice. Fine. I can do that.

  M. Morse:

  You can. Now text him. I’ll grab my laptop and pretend I’m not secretly excited to see what you’re whining about.

  C. Kent:

  …Yeah, yeah. Sending.

  M. Morse:

  You don’t have to fight everyone to be heard.

  C. Kent:

  I’m not fighting you.

  M. Morse:

  I know. That’s why you texted me instead of Robin.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah. You’re easier to talk to.

  M. Morse:

  Because I read your mind?

  C. Kent:

  No. Because you don’t make me feel like I’m just reacting.

  M. Morse:

  You’re not “just reacting.” You’re stressed. There’s a difference.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah.

  M. Morse:

  I’ll come over. We’ll look at it together.

  No shouting. No wall damage.

  C. Kent:

  No promises on the shouting.

  M. Morse:

  At least not at Clark.

  C. Kent:

  …Yeah. Okay.

  M. Morse:

  And Conner?

  C. Kent:

  What.

  M. Morse:

  Lois would absolutely tell you to breathe before she told you to punch something.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah. She would.

  M. Morse:

  So breathe.

  (A few seconds later.)

  C. Kent:

  Fine.

  But if I’m right, I get to say I told them so.

  M. Morse:

  You can say it quietly.

  C. Kent:

  We’ll negotiate that part.

  And M’gann?

  M. Morse:

  Yeah?

  C. Kent:

  Don’t tell Robin I said he was an asshole.

  M. Morse:

  He probably already knows.

  C. Kent:

  Yeah. You’re right.

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