Jay woke to the sound of his heartbeat thundering in his ears, his body coiled tight with tension he couldn't explain. The morning light filtering through his apartment's blinds felt hostile, exposing rather than illuminating. He lay still for a moment, listening to the building's ambient sounds—footsteps in the hallway, muffled conversations, the distant hum of traffic—and found himself cataloging each one as a potential threat.
'When did I become this paranoid?'
But even as the thought crossed his mind, Jay was already moving. He slipped out of bed and began his new morning routine—checking locks, testing windows, running his fingers along window frames and door jambs looking for signs of tampering. A week of living with serious money had taught him that wealth came with its own vulnerabilities.
He pulled out a notebook and started writing:
Immediate Contingencies:- Multiple false identities- Offsite secure stash location - Multiple Burner phones - Backup safe house
Jay was halfway through his planning when his phone buzzed. Bobby's name flashed on the screen.
"Yeah?"
"Remember that rich lady from the other day?" Bobby's voice was tight with excitement. "She came back. But this time, she didn't come to the garage. She went to that fancy school up the hill."
Xavier's School. Jay felt his stomach tighten. "How do you know?"
"My cousin cleans the streets up there. Says some lady in an expensive dress showed up yesterday afternoon, stayed maybe an hour, then came storming out like her hair was on fire." Bobby's voice dropped to a whisper. "She's been at Murphy's Diner for two hours now, just sitting in a booth looking miserable."
Twenty minutes later, Jay walked into Murphy's Diner. He approached the counter with practiced charm.
"I'm meeting some friends, but they're running late. Could I get a table for four and maybe start with some appetizers?"
Jay ordered enough food for a small army—the perfect cover for extended observation and his enhanced metabolism. While he waited, he spotted her: corner booth, facing the door. A woman in her late twenties, expensively dressed but trying to look casual. Dark hair pulled back, designer jeans, and hands wrapped in white bandages.
She was sitting rigidly upright, her eyes constantly scanning the room like she was expecting an attack. Every time the door chimed, she tensed. When a waitress dropped a plate in the kitchen, she actually flinched.
She's constantly on alert.
He ate slowly, watching her for nearly thirty minutes. She'd ordered coffee but barely touched it. Her phone sat on the table, but she wasn't looking at it—instead, her attention kept darting to other customers, tracking their movements with obvious anxiety.
Finally, Jay made his move. He approached her table, but instead of sitting down uninvited, he stopped beside it with his coffee cup in hand.
"Hey," he said softly, offering a gentle smile. "I saw you at Xavier's earlier, didn't I? You looked pretty upset when you left."
She looked up sharply, and he could see her eyes were red-rimmed with exhaustion. Panic flashed across her face. "I don't know what you're talking about."
"It's okay," Jay said quickly, raising a hand. "I volunteer there sometimes. I'm not going to out you or anything." He gestured to the empty booth seat across from her. "Mind if I sit? You look like you could use someone to talk to who actually gets it."
She studied his face for a moment, clearly torn between the desire for company and ingrained caution. "You volunteer there?"
"Yeah. Mostly just helping with day-to-day stuff, but I've been around long enough to recognize that look." Jay sat down slowly, keeping his movements non-threatening. "The 'they just don't understand' look."
She let out a bitter laugh. "Is it that obvious?"
"Only to someone who's seen it before. Let me guess—they told you to embrace your gift? Learn to live with it? Maybe suggested you'd be happier around 'your own kind'?"
Her shoulders sagged. "Something like that."
"Yeah, that's their standard pitch. Don't get me wrong, they mean well. But sometimes what people need isn't acceptance—it's solutions." Jay leaned back casually. "What's your situation, if you don't mind me asking?"
She was quiet for a long moment, her fingers absently picking at the edge of her bandages. "You ever feel like your own body is betraying you?"
"How so?"
"Like it's giving you information you don't want. Making you aware of things that would be easier to ignore." She looked out the window. "I can sense things. Emotions, stress, danger. It started small, but now..." She unwrapped her bandaged hands, revealing precise, deliberate cuts across her palms. "Sometimes the sensation gets so intense I dig my nails in just to feel something else."
Jay felt his pulse quicken. This was exactly what he'd hoped for.
"That sounds exhausting."
"It never stops." Her voice cracked slightly. "I haven't had a peaceful moment in two years. Professor Xavier was very kind, but he kept talking about training and control. Learning to live with it. But my family..." She shook her head. "My father works defense contracts. My fiancé's family owns a private security company. If they knew what I was, I'd lose everything that matters to me."
Jay nodded sympathetically. "The Professor's approach works for some people. But he's pretty committed to the idea that mutations are permanent parts of who we are."
"Aren't they?"
"Not necessarily." Jay kept his voice carefully casual. "There are... alternative approaches. Less mainstream ones."
Her eyes sharpened with interest. "What kind of alternatives?"
"Well, I have a unique ability. I can permanently remove X-gene mutations from people who don't want them."
She stared at him for a long moment. "That's possible?"
"I've done it before. Helped a little boy whose mutation was making him constantly sick. His parents were desperate. Now he's just a normal, healthy kid."
"And the removal... it's permanent?"
"Completely. Once it's gone, it's gone for good."
Claire was quiet for a moment, then pulled out her phone and showed him a photo—herself smiling next to a handsome man in an expensive suit at what looked like a corporate event.
"That's my fiancé, David. We're supposed to be married in six months. He's a good man, but his family has very specific ideas about the ideal bride for him." She put the phone away. "I just want to feel normal again. To be able to sit in a room without feeling everyone else's stress and anger."
"That could be arranged," Jay said carefully. "Though this kind of procedure... it's not exactly sanctioned by Xavier's. It would need to be handled privately."
"What would that involve?"
"A consultation fee, mainly. This kind of work is... specialized, and carries certain risks."
"How much?"
Jay pretended to consider. "For something this complex? Probably around a hundred thousand. I know that sounds like a lot, but—"
"That's all?" Claire looked almost relieved. "I have access to resources. Jewelry, gold, assets that can't be easily traced. When could this happen?"
"Actually," Jay said, glancing around the diner, "it could happen right now. The process looks completely normal to anyone watching—just a handshake between two people having coffee."
"Here? Now? Is this going to hurt?"
"Sometimes the best place to hide is in plain sight. And no, it won't hurt" Jay extended his hand across the table. "What's your name, by the way?"
"Claire." She looked at his outstretched hand for a moment, then gripped it firmly. "God, yes. Please."
The moment their skin touched, Jay felt a gentle pulling sensation, like a slow tide drawing something away from her and into him. It wasn't violent or shocking—more like watching water flow from one container to another. Claire's ability settled into him gradually, layer by layer. First came the basic awareness—a subtle sense of the emotional temperature in the room. Then deeper: the cook's irritation, the businessman's frustration, the teenage waitress's anxiety about her finals.
But it was more than emotions. He could sense potential dangers too: the wet spot near the kitchen where someone might slip, the frayed cord behind the coffee machine, the tension building between a couple three booths over that might escalate into an argument.
The sensation refined itself as his Adaptive Power kicked in, organizing the input into something manageable. He could filter now, focusing on immediate concerns while pushing background noise to a gentle hum.
Claire, meanwhile, had gone completely still. Her rigid posture melted away, her shoulders dropping as years of constant tension finally released. She blinked slowly, like someone waking from a long, troubled sleep.
"Oh my god," she whispered, tears starting to form. "It's quiet. It's actually quiet."
"How do you feel?"
"Like I've been carrying a weight I didn't even realize was there, and someone just lifted it off my shoulders." She flexed her fingers, looking at her hands like she was seeing them for the first time. "I can't sense anything from you, from anyone. It's wonderful."
They spent another few minutes working out the payment logistics—Claire would gather the assets and meet him at a storage facility she rented under a different name. As she prepared to leave, she paused.
"Thank you. I know this is just business, but... you gave me my life back."
After she left, Jay finished his meal slowly, marveling at his new ability. As he walked home, the danger sense proved its worth immediately—he felt aggressive intent from someone in the alley beside the diner and took a different route. The would-be mugger was only about twenty feet away when the sensation hit, close enough that Jay could have been in real trouble without the warning.
'If they're hunting me,' he thought, 'now I'll feel them coming.'