Dairy Dude Essay

Submitted By ClarearmindaC
Words: 715
Pages: 3

Calcio
Years ago in the 1800s a chemist and inventor named Humphry Davy began to example the chemical effects of electricity. By passing an electrical current through certain substances he saw that these substances would decompose. In London, this work led him to propose that the elements of a chemical compound are held together by electrical forces. Through electrolysis, Davy was able to discover many alkaline earth metals including magnesium, calcium, strontium, and barium. He wondered what would happen if he injected these newly found elements into humans. Without researching them further he injected one element into the brains of each of his children. Davy would soon find out this wasn’t a good idea.
It was 10 years before Calcio was able to feel the grass beneath his feet. He had planned his revenge carefully, making sure that no matter what happened he would come out victorious. He had promised himself that he would put his sisters (Agnes, Tron, and Ari) through the same maltreatment he had been through. Spending his childhood behind bars cost his sanity. His sisters had forced this upon him, locking him away because they feared his powers. Calcio never could comprehend why, it’s not like he had requested to be like this. During his days in his minuscule cell all he did was imagine the day he was able to implement the murder of his family. It was soon about to happen. He stood there, silent, in front of his three worst enemies. They gawked at him, astonished that he had managed to escape. Despite everything Calcio was smiling.
“Hello siblings,” He said, his voice cutting through the rain that was soaking them. They looked terrified, which made his smile grow deeper. Using the calcium within the terrain he made sharp, bone-like structures emerge from under their feet. Ari was able to take flight and Agnes reacted to the rain to surround her in a high temperature ball of fire that melted away the rushing daggers. Tron couldn’t do anything as she was lifted higher and higher into the sky atop the pointed bones. Calcio surrounded her in a tight bubble knowing that her oxygen would run out with time. He turned back to Agnes who stood there glowing in the darkness. She threw a small ball of flames at him but it had no effect.
“Silly girl, don’t you know my melting point is 842 °C? You’re going to need a lot more than that to hurt me,” Calcio chuckled at her ignorance. She was about to throw another ball but he quickly imprisoned the calcium deposits in her bone making her stiffen in her tracks. He would return to her