Ashes Of The Past
by Dannell Lites

Ah do not own the characters in this story nor the Movieverse in which Ah have placed them! This is a fanfic for entertainment purposes only! No money is being made from the creation of this fic so please don't sue moi! *eeeppp*
Rated PG-13 for m/m slash themes. So if'n such like offends ya'll, best skedaddle:):) Nothing graphic though:):)

Wolverine: "Why don't you just use the machine to find Magneto?"
Xavier: "He appears to have found a way to shield himself from it."
Wolverine: "How would he know how to do that?'"
Xavier: "Because he helped me build it."
from the X-Men movie

Erik?

Erik Lehnsherr looked up with a small smile to see Charles Xavier wheeling himself down the long ramp to pause before Cerebro. Of their own accord, several metal cables snaked their way across the floor and connected themselves flawlessly with the main console of the complex device. Through the cables he held, the man who was beginning to call himself Magneto sent a magnetic pulse that lit the interior of the machine with a brilliant harsh white light before dying down to a softer less blinding luminescence. The Polish born mutant's arresting voice still bore lingering traces of a slight accent. He'd only been here in America not quite a year, after all. And although Xavier had managed to telepathically teach him English in considerably less than a single day, he was powerless to remove the distinguishing accent.

"Ah, Charles!" cried Erik, sweeping an errant lock of dark brown hair off his forehead. "Just in time to help me calibrate our mutant detecting computer." He pointed with one long, elegant finger to the rather strange looking helmet laying on the console. "The induction module? Could you put it on, please?"

"Of course, my friend."

Xavier leaned forward and slipped the device over his bald head. The circuits glowed softly and the mutant telepath could feel a buzz, a tingling at the base of his skull as his power expanded, touching many hundreds of minds simultaneously. Briefly, he was elated. They'd done it! The most problematical aspect of Xavier's future plans would be finding young mutants to attend his proposed School For Gifted Youngsters was the initial search. How does one, after all, find a mutant? Cerebro was the obvious solution. He had faith in his Dream and his abilities as a teacher. After a few moments, the pressures of all those minds began to press in on him, weighing heavily, and the would be teacher scowled in pain. Swiftly, he disengaged the device and removed it to find an anxious Erik Lehnsherr crouched before his wheelchair, fear dancing in his pale blue eyes. Lehnsherr would have sworn he'd forgotten how to pray. But he hadn't.

Dear God, no ... not again ... not again .... Please let him be all right ... please ... Don't take him from me as well ... Unbidden, punishing memories rose to the surface of his mind like clotted cream. A boy, still a child really, he relived once more the horror of the moment when his parents were ripped away from his side at the gates of Auschwitz, herded away like cattle to die in the gas chambers of Birkenau. He remembered the boots and clubs of the guards when he tried ineffectually to strike back, the only sign of his grief and rage the crushed, distorted metal of the Main Gate.

ARBEIT MACHT FREI, insisted the sign that hung there.

Labor liberates.

"Charles?!" he demanded, his fear lending a sharp edge to his resonant voice. "Charles, are you well?"

Breathing rapidly, still somewhat disoriented, the mutant telepath entwined his fingers with Lehnsherr's. Such beautiful, lovely hands. Long and slender; strong but fine boned. Skilled at so many, many things ... The hands of a great artist or a great lover.

One of the two he could certainly attest to.

Two, actually, if he were being entirely fair. Erik was definitely an artist with machinery. As he had just proven.

Xavier squeezed the other man's hand in gentle reassurance. "I'm fine, Erik, fine," he murmured and was very glad to feel the intense man relax. Embarrassed, perhaps, by such an open display of emotion, the magnokinetic mutant turned away, ferociously studying the data readout on the console before him.

"Cerebro is attuned to your brain waves, now, Charles," he said in triumph. "Between the two of us, your knowledge of psionics and my talents as an engineer, we've built something quite extraordinary. Part computer, part psi-amplifier, under your guidance it can tune in on the unique alpha waves of any mutant brain and trace the signal immediately."

Xavier massaged his forehead and tried to ignore the piercing, throbbing headache that bit and scratched for release just behind his watering eyes. "I hadn't counted on such intense feedback," the mutant teacher murmured, throwing himself into a light alpha state to combat the pain in his mind. Slowly, it faded, beaten back by the force of his considerable will. "It concerns me that the machine could be dangerous to use," he observed. Magneto sighed.

"Nothing is perfect, I fear, Charles," he replied, sadly. "I will study the plans further and see what I can do to lessen the discomfort and the danger. But, I suspect that Cerebro will never be something to be employed lightly. And perhaps that's for the best." Around the two men, cables connected themselves, electronic components attached and detached themselves, generators and circuits sparked to life, seemingly without a human hand to guide or direct them. Erik was hard at work, Charles noted, not without some small concern.

"But not today, Erik," Charles urged. "You've been locked away in here most of the day, my friend, working on Cerebro. Even you have limits. You must be exhausted. Come. It's the middle of the evening and you haven't even eaten supper yet. We're making fine progress. We can finish this tomorrow. If you're not tired, I am. Take pity on a weary soul." He smiled in what he hoped was guileless allure, his eyes shining brightly. "And there are ... other things ... to occupy us this evening ... "

Lehnsherr said nothing, but his lowered his eyes and tiny smile of anticipation spoke his desire louder than words might have done. In answer, the frantic activity around them slowly ground to a halt and the tools all replaced themselves neatly in their proper places. The metallic debris of their days work, the discarded pieces of cable, the metal scraps and filings, the burned out circuits and useless components arranged themselves in an orderly pile and then, rising into the air, disposed of themselves neatly in a nearby waste receptacle.

"Tomorrow, then, Charles," agreed Erik, running his hands through his thick hair and smiling more openly now. Without the crippled telepath's knowledge he used his control over the forces of magnetism to assist the other man as he wheeled himself up the ramp to the door. He had no desire to shame Charles, after all. His lover was more than capable of taking care of himself, despite his handicap. Still ... Charles had claimed weariness and it was a steep ramp ... It would not do to admit to himself he supposed, that he took pleasure, even found a certain satisfaction, in helping his lover in small, insignificant ways.

Before them, the vast metal door rumbled open and then closed itself behind the two men as they exited the huge room. In the loudness of the sharp retort as the doors sealed themselves, locking out any intruders, Xavier almost missed the soft gasp of pain at his back. But he did not, however, miss the psionic echo of that pain that stabbed through him like a living thing.

Whirling as fast as his chair would permit he saw Erik stumble a bit on suddenly unsteady feet, then lean back against the wall for support, clutching his temples. He watched in mounting horror as a small trickle of blood began to flow from Erik's aquiline nose. In alarm, he wheeled himself as close as possible to the other man, grabbing in desperation for his lovers trembling hand.

Instantly he was flooded with such pain and weakness that he found himself glad he was already seated, lest he fall down. He had no idea how Erik was still on his feet. But then, the Polish mutant's will had frequently been more than a match for any frailty of his body. Erik had long ago recovered from the privations he'd suffered in the camps. Physically, at least. As much as he was ever going to.

"Erik ... Erik ... " he chided desperately. "How many times have I warned you about overtaxing yourself? Over using your powers? Why won't you ever listen me?"

Grimacing, the dark haired man responded. "Because I'm a stubborn fool, I suppose you'd claim," he gasped, still clinging to the wall.

"Can you walk?" Charles wanted to know, his brow furrowed now with building anxiety. If Erik couldn't ... What was he going to do? There were only the two of them here. Silently, and not for the first time, of course, he cursed his useless legs. "Can you make it to the elevator and then up to our bedroom?"

With a great effort, Erik straightened his back, closing his eyes against the sudden dizziness that Charles could feel assail him. "Of course, I can!" he declared in what was meant to be a strong, forceful voice. "Give - give me a moment."

Somehow, the two determined men stumbled their way into the elevator at the end of the corridor. As the elevator began to rise to the floors containing the living areas of Xavier's family estate, the telepath noticed Erik's white knuckles as the suffering mutant clung tightly to the brass rail. Miraculously, they made their way without incident to the master bedroom on the second floor before Erik collapsed with a sigh of great relief onto the large sumptuous bed there.

Xavier wheeled himself to the side of the bed. Tenderly, he removed Erik's boots and loosened the buttons of his shirt, exposing the pale expanse of his heaving chest. The other man's breathing was a bit easier now, Xavier was almost ecstatic to note. Retreating into the large bathroom, Charles quickly grabbed two washcloths. The first he soaked in hot water and the other he moistened with cold water. With the cloth steeped in hot water, he carefully wiped the drying blood from Erik's face and chest. When that was done he took the cold cloth and gently laved the other man's sweating face, then lay the chill cloth against Erik's forehead. Erik sighed and his eyes fluttered open.

"Thank you," he said, squeezing the other mutant's hand in gratitude. "That feels wonderful."

Charles stroked Erik's forehead, smoothing the wrinkled brow there with tender caresses. "My God, Erik," he whispered. "You frightened me so. This is serious, not just some minor ailment. You need to see a doctor as soon as possible!"

Beneath his fingers Charles could feel the other man tense, his body rigid with denial. "No!" Erik was firm, "no doctors! I ... I have had no pleasant experiences with ... doctors ... "

Soothing his lover with his hands as he might a skittish creature of the wild, Xavier crooned, "I know ... I know .. "

Charles never pretended to be something he was not and he was not, in general, a demonstrative man. Neither was Erik. Not for them public displays of affection in the manner of most lovers. Erik was loath to be touched without his express permission. Erik had been ... touched ... too often, Charles feared. Still ... there was something immensely human and humane in their private gestures of love.

For a moment Xavier's practical mind overwhelmed his concern and turned to the realization that his school would need a doctor. Preferably a doctor well versed in the complexities of mutant physiology. Perhaps a mutant themselves? He made a mental note. Finding a mutant physician might not be a simple matter, he reminded himself. Best to start looking soon.

Muscle by muscle he could sense Erik relax beneath his soothing ministrations. The pain was easing. But the bone weariness remained. His heart twisted, a heavy stone lump in his chest. Against his will he remembered the horror that was Auschwitz.

The Third Battalion, First Army Corps pushed through the crisp cold night of a Polish winter, pressing ever onward. And on January 27, 1945 in the early morning hours they came upon the concentration camp of Auschwitz. There had been rumors, but nothing, nothing, could have prepared them for the stark, hideous reality of Auschwitz that they faced with the rising of the sun.

In truth they smelled the camp long before they ever saw it. Even in the freezing senses numbing grip of the icy cold of Winter the odor reached them. That sickly sweet, slightly nauseating smell of death and decay mixed with the sharp acrid stink of burning meat. It seemed to permeate everything with an all pervasive miasma that spoke eloquently of death and dying. Many covered their mouths and noses with scarves or handkerchiefs. And not just against the cold. The smell burned the nostrils and settled into the pores. Later, Charles remembered distinctly burning his uniform against orders in a futile effort to rid himself of that smell.

Charles was never, ever going to forget that smell. It would likely follow him to his grave.

None of them knew what that smell meant, of course.

Not then.

For Charles it was an almost unendurable agony. So many thousands of minds ... in torment ... dying ... Death sang a siren song, shrieking along his nerves and he staggered as he marched. Swiftly, before he could betray himself further, Xavier erected his strongest psi-shields. Not since the first advent of his telepathic gifts in his early adolescence had such powerful shields been necessary. But ... Hell raged on the other side of those shields, clawing and raking at his mind with sharp, bloody talons.

The camp itself was worse. A horror beyond description ...

Unburied bodies lay strewn everywhere about, row upon row of naked, stripped corpses, stacked like cordwood or just left to rot where they lay. Gray faced, shaven haired living skeletons stared at them with dull, uncomprehending, blank eyes, unmoving, huddled together behind barbed wire fences like cattle, their bones protruding from striped prison uniforms. Even more disturbing were the ones who were moving ... stumbling blindly from place to place, unresponsive, unfocused, locked forever in the embrace of their hellish torment.

"Lord God have mercy ... " whispered Xavier's Platoon Leader, First Lieutenant Arn Mitchell and vomited up the scant meal of c-rations that passed as breakfast in the U.S. Army. "Iron" Mitch was one hell of a long way from Little Rock, Arkansas. Xavier saw battle hardened veteran soldiers, survivors of the Battle of The Bulge and Kasserine Pass, retching and sobbing in the gray light of dawn, stunned and sickened.

He joined them.

Someone broke the silence with a curse, then with a great roar the soldiers sprinted for the camp on the double... their no longer weary faces twisted nearly out of all human shape by their rage. They flung themselves down the road leading to the camp without any regard whatsoever for cover or concealment, their leaders cursing them and demanding that they halt. They were roundly ignored. No one was afraid, not after the sights that greeted them.

As the soldiers entered the camp, those living skeletons still able to walk crowded around them and, though the fighters wanted to drive farther into the camp, to confront the enemy, the milling, pressing crowd hemmed them in, denying them freedom of movement. The very sight of an American soldier brought cheers, groans and shrieks. People crowded around to touch the stunned soldiers, to touch the jeep, to kiss their arms--perhaps merely to convince themselves that this miracle was real. They clutched at Charles' uniform, they spoke to him in the rusty little used voices of the damned. Charles began handing out the small bites of food he carried on his person, chocolate bars and other sweets, bread and hardtack. He saw others of his weeping platoon mates doing the same. Those prisoners who couldn't walk crawled toward the jeep. Charles spied several who couldn't even crawl who propped themselves up on an elbow, and somehow, through all their pain and suffering, revealed through their shining eyes the gratitude, the joy they felt at the arrival of their liberators.

Over the next several days the U. S. Army struggled valiantly to save as many lives as they could. Tons of food and emergency medical supplies were airlifted in for the relief of the 7,000 men, woman and children left here to die. Doctors and nurses, Red Cross workers and volunteers from many different organizations fought the ravages of starvation and rampant disease with their hands and hearts and every weapon at their command.

In all too many cases the fight was in vain.

Upwards of 3,000 thousand of the pitiful remnants of a once proud, thriving European Jewry imprisoned at Auschwitz still died. Not a day passed but a dozen more died, too weak and far gone to be saved. But hunger and disease were not the only Horsemen stalking the inmates, Charles soon discovered. Suicide was the second most frequent cause of death among the ghosts of Auschwitz. They found them hanging from the rafters in the mornings, strange dark fruit of death ... they found them curled up beneath their new, warm Red Cross blankets, wet and blood soaked, their veins open and empty.

Charles understood.

"W-Why me?" one woman whispered in German, just before she died. "Why me? All the others died ... so many. many others ... "

They searched for answers, these discarded husks of humanity.

And did not find them.

It was guilt that drove them to the final solace of the knife or the rope when all that their Nazi tormentors could do did not kill them. They did the job themselves.

Charles found Erik Lehnsherr curled in a fetal position on a filthy cot in Barracks C, occupied with dying; too weak to swallow the food or the medicine provided for him. On the bed Erik stirred.

"Charles? Do you remember Auschwitz? Do you? You were so young, so young ... hard to believe you were a soldier ... you were barely 16 ... " Xavier smiled.

"I began losing my hair in my early teens when my telepathic abilities first manifested themselves. It makes me look older. Since I was barely fourteen people have thought I was a grown man. It wasn't hard to lie convincingly to the Army recruiters. They didn't ask many questions. And God knows it's not as though my step-father Kurt Marko concerned himself with what happened to me. He was glad to be rid of me." The stricken mutant closed his eyes and Xavier gently brushed a stray lock of dark brown hair from off the sweat slick forehead.

"So much alike .. so very much alike ..." Erik tried to smile. "I was always tall for my age. It saved me at Auschwitz. When the guards asked me how old I was, I lied and told them I was 17. Because I was tall, they believed me." Lehnsherr squeezed Charles' hand.

"Marko's loss was my gain," he murmured. "Yours was the first face I saw, the first voice I heard when I came back to myself. You fed me and bathed me like a child. You refused to let me die. It was you who kept the nightmares at bay so that I could sleep at night. You were always there, always with me, easing the pain and the guilt." Again Charles wiped his lovers face with the cool cloth.

"I was ... drawn ... to you from the beginning," he admitted. "You fought so long and so hard ... with such courage ... Your will reached out to me and would not let me abandon you. It was unthinkable that you should die. I couldn't allow it."

He had never told Erik the other, never spoken, reason he rarely left his side in those days. Although he suspected that the Holocaust survivor knew.

"Sondercommando!" the middle aged man hissed and spat down on the sleeping form of Erik. "Whore! Let he die!" His English was broken, disjointed, but his meaning was all too clear. Shocked, Charles wiped up the spittle and turned to face the enraged former prisoner.

"Vas ist das 'Sondercommando'?" he demanded in good German.

Surprised and gratified to hear his own language from the lips of a foreigner, eager to please, the man told him.

Charles paled.

"A Sondercommando," the man explained, "was one who took the others to the gas chambers. When the gassing was finished they removed and stripped the bodies. Cut the hair from the heads of the dead, pulled the gold teeth from their mouths. Then they buried the bodies. They did all this and ... other ... things for the Nazis. For this they were given extra rations of food and allowed to live when others died." He gazed down at Erik, tossing and turning in fitful, uneasy sleep.

"He does not deserve to live."

Charles recalled, then, the warehouses of Auschwitz. Filled to overflowing with all manner of useful things .. human hair for the stuffing of pillows and mattresses ... eyeglasses and shoes; clothing of all kinds and sizes. Suitcases ... and one entire warehouse brim full of over ten thousand pitiful childish rag dolls ...

"You were at my side when I saw the world for the first time," Erik's voice drew him back to the present. "Our travels and your company healed me much faster than any mere medicine could have done. I saw those Displaced Persons camps after the War. God knows what would have happened to me if you hadn't taken me with you when you left the Army ... "

"And God knows what would have happened to me in Egypt if you hadn't been there," Charles was quick to remind him. "Amahl Farouk would have taken much more from me than just the use of my legs, if you hadn't stopped him. He was a powerful psychic and, untried and untrained as I was, then, I wasn't ready to face him. There was a reason they called him The Shadow King ... and not just because he was King of the Cairo underworld. He'd have killed me if it hadn't been for you." Lovingly, the telepathic mutant laved the other man's chest and lay his hand over the heart within, feeling the rapid beat through the tips of his fingers, absorbing its reality through his skin.

"And who was it who sat by my side for weeks, months, in that Cairo hospital while I recovered? Who was it that refused to let me give in to despair and self pity when the doctors told me I'd never walk again? Who stood by me all during my physical therapy, prodding and lashing me ever forward? You were the one who proved to me that I was still a man for all my handicap. That I was yet capable of loving and being loved." Erik lay his hand atop Xavier's.

"We make a good team, Charles, my friend," he opined softly. "But this idea of yours for a school ... foolish ... It depends too much on the milk of human kindness ... the goodness of man ... And that doesn't exist. I know. Mutants must band together, yes ... there is safety in numbers ... but not to hide themselves away ... that's fatal. My family tried to hide but the Nazi's found us anyway. There is a war coming, Charles. And we must be ready. We must seize the initiative, we must - " Xavier stroked Erik's brow.

"Shhhhh," he urged and managed to still his face, not to frown. "Rest now. We'll talk in the morning." Erik closed his eyes and Charles covered him with the blanket with pensive hands, watching him curl into his pillows. With a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach, Charles wheeled himself to the light switch and clicked it off, plunging the room into darkness.

These philosophical differences between the two of them were becoming more and more pronounced. What should he do? What could he do? Was Erik right? With all his heart Charles did not believe so. That way lay ruin and disaster. It was past time that he take the bull by the horns and do something, though ...

But ... not today.

In the morning.

They would talk in the morning ...

The End