Smallville, Kansas
Clark was like any other boy, the first few years of his life. He burped, he messed his diaper, he learned to talk, he learned to walk. It was when he learned to fly that Ma and Pa Kent knew he really was from another world. Clark was five, and was hanging from the ceiling fan in his bedroom, spinning in a slow circle and giggling incessantly.
“Clark! Come down from there this instant!” Martha wasn’t going to put up with any horseplay. Not in the house, anyway. Clark released his grip on the fan blade and floated downwards. Martha snatched him out of the air.
“You know better than to do that!” It was only then that Martha realized what exactly had happened. She was so used to being unsurprised by anything that it took a few seconds for the surprise to hit her. She clutched Clark tight, who by now was squirming to be let go, and ran into the kitchen. There Jonathan was enjoying a ham sandwich for lunch.
“Jon…our baby can fly.”
“What?”
“I said, ‘our baby can fly’!”
“Yes. I heard you. Doesn’t look like it.” Jonathan gestured to the struggling toddler, still in his mother’s arms.
“He was hanging from his ceiling fan and when I told him to get down he just floated into my arms.”
“Well.” Martha expected her husband to say more, but he didn’t.
“Well what?”
“I don’t know. I’ve never encountered a flying baby before.”
“I’m not a baby.” Clark entered the conversation with indignity on his face. “Can I go play?”
Martha looked at Jonathan and he looked back. Eventually he turned to Clark. “Yes. But stay on the ground and inside, ok? No…” he searched for the right way to explain things to a child “…floating. Understand?”
Clark looked at him curiously for a second before he nodded and twisted out of Martha’s arms. He scampered off towards the playroom.
“So…our boy can fly. Or float, at least. That’s new.”
“Jon…what is he?” Martha, for the first time, appeared to be frightened.
“Our son, Ma.” Jonathan reached out to hold her hands. “No matter what else, he is our son. We always knew he was different. Now I guess we find out just how different he is. After all, he did come from somewhere else.” Jonathan gestured towards the ceiling, indicating the heavens. Then he paused. He remembered the capsule little Clark had arrived in.
“I wonder if there is anything in his basket.”
It took Martha a second to understand what he meant. “The capsule? Didn’t you say there wasn’t anything inside?”
Jonathan shrugged. “There was nothing inside where he was, but I never really looked anywhere else. I didn’t even open it myself. The canopy lifted on its own when I got close. It must have been set to automatic or something. I wonder now if there isn’t anything anywhere else in the thing.” He gave a half smile. “Well, we better look I suppose.”
Martha nodded. “Bring Clark, will you?”
“Why?”
“Well, it occurs to me that the canopy reacted to you approaching that night, and it would make sense that was a general sort of, I don’t know, trigger, to ensure the boy’s safety. Look, I don’t know, but whoever could build and launch that thing must have been smart and must have known about earth before they sent their child here. That’s what I figure. You wouldn’t just send your child off haphazard like. No mother would, without ensuring his safety.”
“Yeah…but what does that have to do with Clark?”
“Well, if there is any sort of information, about Clark or his parents or whoever sent it, doesn’t it make sense that it would only react to him? Maybe to keep it information secret until he needs to know it.”
Jonathan smiled. He loved that he married smarter. And prettier. “Sounds good to me. Clark! Come here!”
With a pounding of little feet, Clark ran into the kitchen and threw himself at his father’s leg. He clamped on and smiled, looking up.
“We are going on a little adventure. Your mom and I have something to show you.”
“A present?” Clark grinned, excited now.
“Sort of.”
The family headed towards the barn, little Clark suspended between his parents holding on to each by a hand. He would stand still while they strode forwards, then jump to land just ahead of them. Once in the barn, Jonathan led the way to a corner behind some old, rusted equipment. There he shoved a hay bale out of the way, revealing a cross patterned metal door. Grasping the handle, Jon heaved, opening the door. There was a quick rush of air as that beneath equalized with that above. A light flickered on, showing a ladder leading downwards.
“Ok, careful now.”
Jonathan descended first, then Clark, eagerly, but with halting steps as he slowly assessed each step before reaching with his foot. Martha came last. At the bottom of the ladder they turned, and saw a large, mostly dark room. Off to the side was an egg shaped object underneath a dusty blue tarp. Jonathan grabbed an edge of the tarp, and pulled it. It slid off the object, revealing Clark’s capsule, still as shiny as the day it crash landed.
“Wow.” Clark was wide eyed. He toddled towards it, reaching out a hand to touch it. As soon as he got within a foot, the capsule seemed to shimmer, and then, from nowhere, there stood a tall man, with a rugged white beard, long white hair, dressed in blue with a long, red robe. He spoke, in deep rich tones.
“Welcome, my son, Kal-El.”
Clark ran back to his mother, hiding in her dress, peaking out at the man. The man turned and assessed Jonathan and Martha.
“Identify.” Was all he said.
Martha looked at Jonathan, who himself seemed puzzled.
“Identify.” The man said again.
Jonathan looked at his wife. “I don’t think he is real. I think he is a hologram or something. A projection.”
At that, the man spoke. “I am a representation of Jor-El, of Krypton. I am father to Kal-El. Identify.”
Martha smirked. “I am Martha, of Smallville, and this is Jonathan. We are parents to Kal-El.”
The hologram man turned to her. “Martha of Smallville and Jonathan, I thank you for protecting my child. His mother and I were forced to send him into exile to save his life at the destruction of his home planet of Krypton. What you see here is how I appeared at Kal-El’s birth. I am an interactive information module. Over time, I am to inform Kal-El of his home world, of his nature, and of his history. Stored within this capsule is all the information Kal-El requires. It is time locked, so that when he is of age, he will know what he is meant to understand.”
Martha absorbed all of this. “But…he can fly. Is there information for us?”
The hologram Jor-El went silent and stared off absently. “Searching.”
After a moment he turned back to Martha. “It is suggested by the ancient scholars that at one time, when Krypton’s sun was yellow, it imbued the power of flight to all Kryptonians. Considered by many modern scientists to be mere myth, it appears my calculations were indeed correct. Earth’s sun has unlocked long dormant genetic abilities within Kal-El.”
Jonathan finally spoke up, but to Martha. “I guess it is some sort of computer. We ask it questions and it answers.”
Martha snorted. “Obviously.”
Overhearing, the hologram Jor-El spoke. “My interactions are limited. Please state a clear question.”
Clark stepped forward. “My name is Clark Kent!”
Jor-El looked down at him. “That is your earth name, and it serves you well. Your true name is Kal-El, son of Jor-El and Lara. You are from Krypton. You are the destiny of an entire planet, of an entire people. Return when you are of eight years and I will tell you more.”
The hologram of Jor-El abruptly vanished. Jonathan turned to go, but Martha called out. “Wait, what’s that!?”
The side of the capsule brightened, and a small door slid away. Inside was a leather bound book. Jonathan approached slowly and retrieved the book. The door slid back into place, once again presenting a smooth surface.
“Well, I’ll be damned.”
“What is it?” Martha came to see for herself. Jonathan was laughing softly. “I guess babies do come with instruction books!”
On the cover of the book it said, in large, friendly letters:
RAISING A CHILD OF KRYPTON, TO THE CARETAKERS OF KAL-EL.
Martha suddenly turned. “Clark! Stop!” Eschewing the ladder, little Clark was floating up to the barn, content to propel himself by pushing down on the ladder rungs. Martha caught up to him rather quickly and swatted his butt.
“No flying!”