The moonlight filtered through the tall windows of the meeting room, illuminating every anxious face. Scott glanced around as the last students filed in. Anna Marie, Petra, Suzanne, Armando, Calvin, Bobby, Remy, and Alex. Behind them, the teachers—Logan, Ororo, Piotr, John Proudstar, Hank, and Moira—took their places in a tense half-circle.
At the front, Professor Xavier sat in his wheelchair, flanked by Jean Grey. Their expressions were grave. This was the core group who'd been X-Men since the beginning—now reunited at the midnight hour for a reckoning.
Silence stretched until Xavier cleared his throat. "Good evening," he began softly. "I apologize for calling you all at this hour, but it cannot wait. I wanted to give you time to adjust while you sleep."
Bobby yawned loudly. "Perfect timing, Professor—just before I drift off!"
Petra jabbed him in the ribs. "Shh!"
Xavier offered a small, sad smile and continued. "Tonight, I owe you all an apology… because I had altered your memories."
A collective intake of breath. Hank closed his eyes against the revelation. Moira's jaw tightened. Piotr and Ororo exchanged pained glances—they'd known, but couldn't bear to see the students' faces.
Remy whispered, stunned. "Mon Dieu…"
Bobby snapped awake. "What?!"
Silence crashed down again. Xavier raised a hand. "Before I explain further—"
Scott cut in, voice sharp. "Does this have something to do with Jean?"
Anna bristled. "Why are you blaming Jean?"
Suzanne began to argue, but Jean held up a hand. "Yes," Jean said, voice quiet but firm. "It does."
Her admission rippled through the room like an electric shock. Xavier nodded. "With Jean's permission, I will now restore your original memories. You must sleep immediately to allow your minds to reintegrate. I'm deeply sorry for what I did—but I ask that you judge me only after you've seen the full truth within your own minds."
Alex exhaled. "All right. We'll withhold judgment… until we remember."
Calvin sneered, half-under his breath. "Are you fucking kidding me?!"
Scott held up a hand, calm but firm. "Let's do this first. I can't handle another betrayal tonight."
A hush fell. One by one, the students nodded. The weight of what lay ahead was immense—but they trusted the bond they'd built. Jean stepped forward and placed a gentle palm on Xavier's shoulder. "It's time."
Xavier closed his eyes, took a breath, and began. Soft blue psionic light radiated from his temple, weaving through the room, touching each mind in turn. The students sagged into their seats, eyelids fluttering, as memories long dormant stirred and surfaced. Outside, the snow continued to fall—silent witnesses to a truth that would change everything by dawn.
…
The light faded. Professor Xavier lowered his hands, his brow soaked in sweat, the air around him shimmering faintly with the echo of psychic effort. Jean stood beside him, watching the aftermath unfold.
Across the room, the first generation of X-Men—his students, his family—slowly stirred. Some clutched their heads. Others gripped the arms of their chairs, as if waking from a dream too large to hold. Eyes wide, breathing uneven, each of them trying to make sense of the flood of returned memories now washing over them—altered, suppressed, sealed—now whole again.
"Steady yourselves," Xavier said, his voice gentle, weak. "Sit for a while. It won't feel... complete until you sleep." He took a slow breath, wiping his forehead. "Once you rest, it will settle. There won't be any backlash. When you're ready... head to your rooms."
No one spoke. One by one, they rose—silent, uncertain, as if trying to carry something invisible on their backs. Bobby looked down at his hands, his expression unreadable. Petra rubbed her eyes, dazed. Alex gave a long glance toward Xavier—but said nothing. Calvin, jaw clenched, left without a word. Even Remy, normally quick with a joke, moved like a ghost as he crossed the room. They filed out, some supporting each other, none making eye contact with Xavier.
At the door, Logan stopped. He didn't turn around. "Good night, Chuck."
Xavier nodded. "Good night, Logan"
And then... it was just Xavier and Jean. She lingered near the door, one hand on the frame. She didn't look back. "Jean," Xavier called softly. "Are you... truly all right with everything I've done to you?"
Jean paused. Her back still to him. Her shoulders rose and fell with one breath. "Of course," she said. "The team needed to see the truth. I wanted them to see it themselves."
Xavier let out a slow, aching sigh. "Thank you. I'm... I'm so sorry, Jean."
For a moment, she didn't respond. Then—she smiled. But not a smile Xavier could see. It was small. Not gentle. Just unfamiliar. Her eyes, shining in the dim light, gleamed with something deeper. Something stirred. "It's okay," she said quietly. "You had no choice, after all."
Xavier smiled from his chair, not seeing her expression. Not hearing the subtle shift in her tone. "Good night, Jean."
"Good night... Professor X."
The door closed behind her. And in the silence that followed, Xavier remained in the dim light, unaware that though he had restored what was lost… something else had awakened.
…
Alex Summers staggered down the dim dorm hallway, one hand braced against the wall. It wasn't pain—more like an over‑full dam in his skull had burst. Psychic seawater rushed in, flooding every corner of his mind with sensations he hadn't felt in almost a decade.
He all but fell onto his mattress. The quilt was cool, the pillow soft, and before he could think another thought he was asleep.
…
9 Years Ago. Early Winter, Westchester County – A memory
Alex huddled on a sagging bunk in their latest group home, hugging a too‑thin jacket against the bite of December air.
Scott, twelve‑year‑old and newly tall, paced the room, a pair of mysterious ruby‑quartz sunglasses trembling in his hand. "I'm a mutant, Alex," he blurted.
Eleven‑year‑old Alex stared, wide‑eyed. "What—? All these years we bounced between orphanages and now you say this?"
Scott adjusted the glasses, voice cracking with excitement and fear. "I can't control my eyes. These lenses keep the beams in. A man named Professor Charles Xavier—he can help. He offered a place for… us."
Alex had heard the name once, maybe twice—some rich‑guy letter delivered to the orphanage claiming a "school" for special kids. He'd thought it was a scam. "Professor who? And what about Gabe?"
On cue, little Gabriel—five years old, all messy curls and oversized hand‑me‑downs—padded into the room rubbing his eyes.
Scott softened, hoisting the sleepy child onto his hip. "We don't know about Gabe yet," he said, voice steady. "But if there's even a chance he'll need help like me, it's safer being with people who get it."
Alex watched, still half‑lost. Scott was already stuffing their clothes into a battered duffel, methodical and fast.
Within the hour they were packed, coats buttoned, money pooled for a taxi. Alex hefted the bag, Scott carried Gabriel, and together they rumbled north—through neighborhoods that grew grander the farther they went, past iron gates and old stone manors.
At last the taxi stopped before an enormous wrought‑iron gate crowned with a single bronze X. Gabriel's eyes widened. "Where are we?"
Scott squeezed his shoulder. "Our new home," he whispered.
He stepped forward, murmured something under his breath—an address code?—and with a soft mechanical click, the gates swung open of their own accord.
Gabriel gasped. "Magic!"
Scott laughed, ruffling the boy's curls. "Nope—technology. Study hard, and you can do magic too."
Alex, still confused, followed his brother up the long drive, snow crunching under worn sneakers. Past ancient oaks lit by fairy‑yellow lamps. Toward a mansion that glowed warm against the icy dark… Alex slipped deeper into the torrent of recovered memories.
He watched himself adjust—awkward, excited, overwhelmed—to life at Xavier's school. Over time he found rhythm, friendship, the sense of family he'd never known in the orphanage. Most of it felt familiar, already etched in his heart.
Then something… shifted. In the sequence of memories a new face appeared—a girl his own age, her features slightly blurred around the edges. What caught Alex first was her green hair, vibrant and impossible to miss.
But… nobody at the mansion had green hair. Not in any memory he'd ever recalled. He let the memory roll.
He saw himself talking with her under an oak tree near the quad. Laughing in the rec room over a chess match he lost intentionally. Training side by side in the gym, her hair caught in a ponytail, her grin bright enough to light the room.
Each time the scene replayed, the blur lessened. Little by little, her face sharpened—high cheeks, soft freckles, eyes full of mischief and fire. Her laughter rang so clear it squeezed his chest.
A tear slipped down Alex's cheek. He didn't even notice.
More memories unspooled—until a classroom scene took shape. Students sat at wide, polished desks. A tall figure stood at the front, another blur, broader than the girl's. A teacher.
His voice boomed—rich, warm, friendly—as he lectured about "navigating a world that might not always be kind."
The green‑haired girl raised her hand. "Why should we try to blend in," she asked, "if the world itself refuses to accept us?"
The teacher paused, thoughtful. The blur around him wavered, as though his image fought against erasure. "You know," he said at last, "I don't have a perfect answer. We've faced the barrel of that gun more than once. Blending in can feel like survival. And it's hard—believe me." He spread his arms, revealing wings each of them could see. "Cool at Halloween parties… less so the rest of the year."
A ripple of laughter rolled through the class.
The teacher's tone softened. "But maybe—just maybe—your generation won't need to blend. Maybe you'll be the first to be accepted exactly as you are."
The girl smiled, hope flashing bright in her emerald eyes. And with that smile, the memory flickered—then cut out, like film burning in a projector.
The dream‑tide swept him back under. Alex floated through scene after scene—every one brighter, clearer, more real than the last.
He and the green‑haired girl lounged on the living‑room sofa, a half‑finished chessboard between them. Her knee bumped his when she laughed. A slow warmth bloomed beneath Alex's ribs—an emotion he'd never had words for back then. Love. Soft and startling.
The memory shifted—Little Gabriel burst into the room, clutching an oversized box of LEGO bricks. "Brother! Help me build this castle, pleeease!"
Alex's past self chuckled. "Sure, bud."
He glanced at the girl beside him. "Want to help?"
She grinned, brushing a lock of green hair behind her ear. "Grand Master Alex needs help building LEGO? Shocking."
Alex laughed, feeling cheeks burn. "Hey, I can still beat you, can't I?"
She raised an eyebrow. "If I beat the Grand Master, what title do I get?"
He pretended to ponder. "Hmm… Grand‑Grand Master Lorna, then."
Gabriel erupted in giggles, pointing at her. "Hahaha—Grand‑Grand!"
She feigned outrage and chased the little boy around the couch while Alex doubled over, laughing so hard his sides hurt. The memory dimmed, but the laughter—and the name—echoed in Alex's ears.
The watching, waking Alex clenched the bedsheet. "Lo… Lorna…" he breathed, tears blurring his vision. "Lorna Dane."
Images poured in—snowball fights, Danger Room drills, late‑night talks about mutants and the future. Her brilliant mind, her magnetic power sparking against his plasma pulses. A promise to look after each other, whispered under the oak tree.
All of it—gone from memory until tonight. All of it—stolen. A tear slipped down Alex's cheek, followed by another. How could anyone think erasing her would protect me?
Important A/N:
Alright... Get your patience hat on for this week. I suggest you stockpile this week's chapters until chapter 80 because this week is a flashback week. I know it's a shame, but I felt we needed it. I want to use this week to test the way I develop characters. Also, I appreciate it if you give me feedback by the end of the week. I want to know how you feel about the flashback. Is it too long? Is it not immersive? But I need your judgement when the flashback is done. Anyway, see y'all Friday.