“Henshaw”
Meets His Past
“Please.
Whatever I have done to make an enemy of your person, it's between
us.”
“Are
you asking me for something Henshaw?” The alien commander said
brusquely.
“Whatever
I have done, leave her alone. There is nothing she could have done to
deserve this. On that I would stake my life.
I know enough to know what's coming, and I accept it. All
I ask is that you do not make her suffer for who I
was back then.”
“I
must say, this is unanticipated. You showing concern for another
human life.”
“You
have no reason to hurt her, other than to force my cooperation. I
imagine she is only here at all because you knew I would do anything
to keep her safe.”
“More
or less.” A woman's voice said from somewhere nearby.
“If
this is because of something I've done, to other aliens, I implore
you, do not make her suffer for it. She had no choice, she was simply
following my orders. If you want to punish me for what I've done,
let's DO that. Just please, don't make her watch.”
“Are
you, responsible for her somehow?”
“In
so far as I'm the reason her father is dead yes!” Hank effused.
“Her father, the closest thing she's known to a father served under
my command. And died saving my life. And yet every single day for 2
years she's served with honor and kept me sane. As
a fellow solider I expect you can understand that.”
“To
other
aliens?” The man prompted, his face completely impassive.
“He
means me.” Nikita said stubbornly. “I look as human as you do but
I'm no more human than you are. Luckily for all of us I'm not Atraxi
or we would have a seriously worse problem on our hands.”
“Okay,
what does that mean?”
“Gama
Zod jirtaa?” Nikita stated firmly.
“I
am one of his people but I am not necessarily on his side.” The
soldier replied.
“How
may I address you then?” Nikita continued. The solider made no
reply. “Among my people, not to introduce yourself is considered
extremely rude,
even among enemies. My name is Nikita, I'm Xavallen. And you?”
“My
name is Lieutenant Non of Krypton.”
“And
you're here looking for Kal-El.”
“Why
do you say that?” Non replied with interest.
“Because
I know someone who wears the symbol of the house of El on their
chest. And about 27 years ago I knew someone who...” Nikita took
the look from Hank's eyes and fell silent.
“Go
on.”
“That
was before anything that matters. I will say I knew he was Kryptonian
when I first met him. I recognize the name of your planet...if very
little else.” She finished in a biting tone.
“We
are not here looking for Kal-El. But Kara Zor-El.” A woman said,
stepping into the light. She had long brown hair that she wore loose
down her shoulders. She was dressed in the same one piece black suit
as Lieutenant Non. A geometric shape was outlined in blue over her
left breast. “And you are the first we have encountered that could
lead us to her.”
“Kara
Zor-El.” Hank said thoughtfully. “Yes, a familiar name. But not
one you'll be able to pry out of me.”
“Oh
I think you'll be surprised about that. We have...other aliens that
can help.”
“What
is your interest in the house of El?” Nikita insisted.
“That
is not how this works. You my friend are protected. Your taskmaster
is not.”
“He
is my commanding officer he is NOT my 'master'!” Nikita said with
surprising feeling.
“It
makes no difference.” Lieutenant Non barked.
“Ummata
kootiif ni ta'a. Kana malees yoo garaagarummaa tokkollee hin fidne
maaliif balleessuuf of dhiphisna?” Nikita rattled off.
“Hey,
Nikita! Even I
don't understand you.”
“The
difference he dismisses does
matter to me. And it says a lot about him if he dismisses it so
completely. It literally takes nothing to respect a person's
pronouns...and a prisoners native language while you are chipping
away at the block that is Director Henshaw's mind.”
“We
have no issue with Nikita. And no use for her other than to prove to
the humans we are sincere in our intentions and our goals. We will
show her the respect we would show any innocent bystander.”
Nikita
straightened her back and pushed up on the armrest of her chair.
“General, I thank you.”
Six
hours later hank Henshaw looked down, tired but unharmed.
“I
don't understand.” The gray alien said, clearly sincerely puzzled.
“I can't read his mind.”
“I
thought that's what your race was famous for.”
“Maybe
he's playing you for a fool Non. It wouldn't be that hard to do.”
“I
would never do that to you.” the alien said hurriedly.
“Or
maybe you have no direct knowledge useful to us.” Non replied
snidely.
“No,
I can't read his mind...at all. You humans must have found some way
to block us.”
“Human
ingenuity is as vast as the spirit of hope. The only difference is
ingenuity can be used destructively.” Hank Henshaw said blithely.
“I
see your point there.” Non admitted.
“We
should ask the Xavallen, Nikita.”
“You
said she was protected from interrogation.”
“Which
is why I will simply ASK her. She clearly recognized her name. And
she might tell me just to spare this human more pain.”
“Kara.
She recognized the name KARA.” Hank Henshaw corrected from his
seat.
“The
two of you are truly inseparable.”
“The
implication being we would literally do anything to spare each-other
any kind of pain. While that's probably true, that's not what's going
on. I just don't want her interrogated for information she doesn't
actually have. And besides I was there. Jeremiah Danvers, the agent
that died under my command had two daughters. One of whom
was...'similarly foreign to this planet'. Their names
were...are...Alex and Kara.”
“You
are taking a great risk telling me this.” General Astra informed
him.
“I
don't believe so. You don't wish her harm. Rather you want to see her
again. I can tell.”
“But
your usefulness to me might just have come to a very sudden end.”
Astra said, putting her hand on Hank's shoulder.
“You
hurt me, you'll tick off another member of the house of El.”
“And
how do you figure THAT.”
“Because
J'onn and I are allies.” Superman said literally racing into the
room. “And I am telling you to let him go, now.”
“Kal-El,
son of Jor-El.” Lieutenant Non said formally.
“Yes,
I don't believe I caught your name?”
“My
name is Lieutenant Non, this is my wife, General Astra.”
“Kryptonians?”
Superman queried, looking at J'onn rather than his captors.
“Kryptonians
extremely interested in the house of El; more specifically in Kara
Zor-El.”
“What
do you want with Kara?”
“I
want you to tell her that her aunt Astra is here looking for her. And
I want to know why you'd ally yourself with someone who hates us so
much.”
“There's
no bad blood between...”
“Apparently
you ARE who you pretend to be Superman.”
“Astra,
J'onn J'onzz has committed no crimes against you or any of our
allies. More than that he my friend and my captain. You let him go,
right now or I promise you there will be enmity between us.”
“Ba-shaa'am.
Ac'andra.” J'onn Jo'nzz said amiably. Which was 'Good
morning' in the Martian tongue.
“Release
him.” General Astra said coarsely.
“But
general...” Non began.
“We
did not come here to start a civil war. Kal-El, take him and go.”
“What
about Nikita?” J'onn asked standing up, rubbing his wrist.
“Nikita
is safe. She will happily provide us answers. And if I'm reading the
situation correctly, she knows the answers better than you do.”
Superman
started to protest. J'onn pushed him back. “Trust me Kal-El, Nikita
is not only safe, she is content where she is. She did th...was
willing to do the same for me once.”
“Remind
me to ask again about how you two met.” Superman said blithely.
Hank
Henshaw learns AND Teaches
“Non
please. Whatever I have done to make an enemy of your person, punish
me not her!”
“You
have done nothing to me Henshaw. This is for those aliens you've
despised and tortured all these years.”
“Damn
it Nikita IS an alien! She's Xavallen. She's also the most peaceful
person I know. Whatever you want from me, I implore you, don't make
her suffer any more. There's nothing she could have done to deserve
this. On that I woulds take my life.”
“I
admit I did not anticipate this. You showing concern for another
human life.”
“If
she's here, it's because you knew that she was under my command. It
follows you would know that I feel responsible for her.” Hank said
with a slightly tensed jaw.
“More
or less Director.”
“You
want to punish me, fine. Let's DO that. Just please don't make her
watch.”
Non
looked like someone had slammed his face with an Nth metal 2x4. “This
goes above duty to a friend Henshaw. Why are you being so human all
of a sudden? Why completely selfless for her?”
“Her
father...the closest thing to a father she has known on this Earth is
dead because of me. When he died I swore I would not fail him twice
by letting any harm come to her. It's been a little over three years
since that day. And she has never failed to keep me safe and to keep
me sane. If you count yourself superior to us, prove it to me. Keep
her safe.”
“Her
father served under your command?” The woman's voice said from
nowhere.
“Jeremiah
freed me from the D.E.O.” Nikita said wearily. “He served under
Hank for almost 6 years without once disobeying orders...that I knew
of. But he could see I didn't belong there, couldn't turn
away. He was the closest to what a father should be that I
have ever known.”
“And
I expect that as a fellow solider, you can appreciate my duty, Non.”
“That,
I can do.” He waved his hand to a pale, mottle-skinned alien with 3
obsidian eyes. “Take that one to crew quarters. And make sure the
walls are sound proof.”
The
alien scientist half led, half carried Nikita out of the room. “Do
not ask me for any further favors. You will receive none.”
“I
understand. I shall not. Unless by some miracle you get me to plead
for mercy.”
“That
would be a miraculous sight indeed.” Non replied simply. An icon on
Non's control board lit up. “That is taken care of. And now, to the
business at hand.” He pressed a button on his control console and a
metal restraint wrapped itself around hank's neck.
“Non__Thank
you.” Hank sighed heavily. “Now let's get down to it.”
“I
can almost promise that I will hear you scream before you sit up from
this chair.”
“I
can promise you that you better not be suffering from what we humans
call 'mission creep'. That would be disappointing.” Non adjusted a
dial and Hank seized up, briefly.
“Yes
it would. Considering what this is going to be like for you.”
“We
are here to get Kara back and find out what happened when they
landed. NOT to wage war with the humans nor for your personal
satisfaction, Non.”
“That
doesn't mean I'm not allowed to take some satisfaction in
making him talk.”
Six
hours later Hank collapsed, unconscious. “He is a true solider.”
Non observed.
“Why
is Nikita protected?” Hank asked of his inquisitors.
“I'm
sorry?” Non replied briskly.
“I
look after her because I owe her a debt. You treat her as if she's
politically immune to interrogation. I was just wondering why.”
“She
is.” Non answered begrudgingly. “There are very few powers in the
galaxies that could use her discomfort to force the truth out of
another persons lips. If I had something against her, as an
individual I could do what I pleased to obtain satisfaction. As it
is...”
“Xavallen.”
Hank realized softly. “That's what she meant. She wasn't just
telling me she was different from Enkarens.”
“What
are you talking about?”
“I
once had an Enkaren woman in my charge. Half-Enkaren actually, her
name was Elana. She was from Earth and no intentional threat to
anyone so we released her from out custody. Nikita was...a lot less
forth-coming. There was no torture but I could not understand
the..significance of a lot of things she said. I didn't know what
Xavallens were. She didn't seem to know either, which I thought was
really odd if she remembered her home planet at all.”
“Xavallens
don't have a home-world.” General Astra said curtly. “Not one
that is their own anyway. They are the majority population on exactly
zero planets in the 16 galaxies.”
“So
Nikita's home-world...” Hank began.
“Planet
of origin.” Non interrupted. Hank looked at him, his face
displaying his confusion. “Is Earth her home or is this other
place?”
“She
speaks of Earth as her home.” Hank replied, uncertainly.
“Then
say 'planet of origin'. It matters to her people as well as
Enkarens.”
“She
ran away from 'home', her planet of origin, when she was almost an
adult. She's lived on Earth for more than 40 years. And Xavallens
are...protected...in the galaxies?”
“For
16 of the 23 major powers in the galaxies Xavallens are considered
innocents that do not keep secrets and should not be mistreated. If I
had something against her, personally. If I felt she had wronged me,
we could settle it as individuals. But to cause her pain, because of
another individuals transgressions...is frowned upon to say the
least.”
“And
that's why she let me interrogate her. Why she never fought back, or
even resisted. Because it involved her as an individual. And she
could sense that I simply wanted answers.”
“You're
getting quite an education HANK.” Lieutenant Non said shortly.
“It's
been an interesting 4 years.”
“You
have our attention.” Astra said, leaning in.
“Jeremiah.
The man who died under my command. There is more to it than that. He
died saving my life. Nikita says he 'gave his life to save mine'. I
never knew the kind of man he was... until died protecting me, from a
Martian solider. At that point I made it my mission not to misjudge
anybody quite as badly as I did Jeremiah Danvers. And to listen to
Nikita when she told me who to be on-guard around and who to deal
respectfully with. And which alien races were like her own, happy and
normal by human standards. The weak innocents.”
“A
fellow solider died saving your life. That would shift one's
perspective.”
Reading
his mind works in one version not the other because in the first
version 'Henshaw' is really J'onn Jo'nzz. In my Earth 21 story, as in
the show Supergirl the Green Martian J'onn Jo'nzz assumed the
identity of Hank Henshaw in order to reform the D.E.O. In Earth-9 (as
I call my two stories) Hank Henshaw was never as xenophobic or angry.
And he changed for the even better after Jeremiah's Sacrifice.