Submitted by Yapizzawachuwant t3_10hhuc3 in WritingPrompts
rain-blocker t1_j5beveb wrote
Reply to comment by ChevillesWasteInk in [WP]Nobody would look at you the same. "How did a normie like you kill three supers?" They would say. Those "heroes in training" ganged up on you, and the charges were dropped on self defence. No one seemed to take "not panicking" as the answer.... even though it was. by Yapizzawachuwant
Nice job using an established character, without actually using them.
It tells those of us in the know exactly what happens next.
ChevillesWasteInk t1_j5dd37b wrote
The thing is I don’t know what happens next. Clark Kent grew up in the middle of nowhere, hidden to the world, and became Superman. He used his power to lift tractors off trapped people and to save them from storms. He didn’t kill three people before first grade. This kid has no control and was thrust into an impossible to win situation, at least in Superman’s eyes. But this kid killed. And maybe manifested his powers for the very first time in an act of violence. What does the hero do?
If he asks for advice, Batman will almost immediately come up with a plan to eliminate the child; almost reflexively, this would put Superman into conflict with Batman. I think Clark Kent would write about the hero mother who fought off three attackers. I’m no so sure how it would play out behind the headlines.
rain-blocker t1_j5dn1w6 wrote
That wouldn't be batman's reaction at all. A kid who is basically already involved in the super-world who clearly didn't intentionally do evil? Batman would practically have a sidekick-gasm.
He'd be telling Superman to take the kid under his wing, and using the power dampeners that are 100% canon until they have full control.
FLAWLESSMovement t1_j5f2odi wrote
He’d have a full suit with the dampeners and a training itinerary for super in less than 12 hours. That situation is BEGGING for bats to step in and groom…I mean train a new hero.
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