Have been reading every part, but I don't comment so much because I don't always agree with every plot point in the story (for example, I'm with Ann about Van El -- don't like him, don't like the idea of him -- but I'd like to see where the story takes him)... but even when I don't, this is a story I am very attached to and look forward to reading every day.

That being said, I did want to defend a line in these latest parts:

Quote
"Is he your biological son?" he asked quietly. [Clark] sighed. "Does it matter?"
I did not read that as Clark denying that Christopher is his son. I read that as Clark saying that it didn't matter, he married Lois because he needed to protect her, and that he would have done it whether or not Christopher was his son. I read it more as a reference to his frame of mind at the time of the marriage decision than his current frame of mind. So... perhaps it's not a flip-flop so much as a testament to the character of Clark Kent?