The Secret Return of Alex Mack

The Secret Return of Alex Mack is a Mega Crossover Fanfic by Diane Castle focusing on the title character of the 1990s Nickelodeon series The Secret World of Alex Mack. It is a sequel to her earlier fic, The League of Extraordinary Women, and is launched by Alex Mack's efforts, once she returns to her own world, to find the local counterparts to her teammates from the previous story, and to establish a genuine superhero identity for herself in order to protect her friends and family while she continues to help people with her powers. Along the way she becomes affiliated with a small, unconventional government organization created to deal with supers, which results in her going from a small-town local hero to a global one, and lets her begin assembling a team of extraordinary individuals -- many super-powered, some not -- around herself.

And it also leads to the discovery of a global conspiracy to kill off 99% of the world's population...

The Secret Return of Alex Mack can be found here.


 * The Secret World of Alex Mack
 * Harry Potter
 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer
 * Stargate SG-1
 * James Bond (Exists "for real" and as fiction in the Teraverse; there, Fleming wrote the Bond books as revenge for being passed over by the "00" program.)
 * DCU (DC Comics does not exist in the Teraverse, and numerous DC characters have direct or indirect counterparts there.)
 * Eureka
 * Tarantula
 * Blood Beach
 * The Invisible Kid
 * The Toxic Avenger
 * Firestarter
 * The Blob
 * Island of Terror
 * McCloud
 * Godzilla (Heisei era)
 * Resident Evil
 * Star Trek: The Original Series
 * The Parallax View
 * The F.B.I.
 * The Green Slime
 * The Quatermass Experiment
 * The Crazies
 * The Wild Thornberrys
 * Matt Helm
 * Congo by Michael Crichton
 * Prey by Michael Crichton
 * The Midwich Cuckoos (aka Village of the Damned)
 * The World Set Free by H. G. Wells
 * Monsters vs. Aliens
 * Dead Rising
 * Carrie
 * My Secret Identity
 * Attack Force
 * The Boys from Brazil
 * Wall Street
 * The Fugitive
 * The Donna Reed Show
 * To Catch a Thief
 * Jurassic Park
 * The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

In-Universe works which affect the plot in one way or another:
 * Avatar: The Last Airbender
 * The Iron Giant
 * Marvel Universe
 * In particular, seems to have read enough X-Men to quickly figure out how to make the best (and classic) use of ice powers.
 * My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: Alex and Hanna decide to give Jack the codename "Pinkie Pie".  Much later, there is an op where everyone has pony codenames.
 * The Simpsons

A Brane of Extraordinary Women
Other works in this 'Verse: (Warning!  Spoilers for The Secret Return of Alex Mack abound!)


 * Hermione Granger and the Boy Who Lived by Diane Castle
 * The Lion, the Walsh, and the Laboratory by Speakertocustomers
 * As the general saw it... by fpb
 * Refusing the Call by Zeviz
 * It is to Laugh by batzulger
 * I Thought I Was Crazy by batzulger
 * Nevada by batzulger
 * A Matter of Family by AntonioCC
 * Thank Yuh Very Much by batzulger
 * Rough Day at the Office by batzulger
 * Flyover Country by batzulger
 * MINUSCULE by batzulger
 * The First Cut is the Deepest by Speakertocustomers
 * Hunter's Moon by batzulger
 * Band in Boston by hysteriumredux
 * Ye Shall Not Die Alone by Robert M. Schroeck

There is also a guide to significant individuals being written. Again, there are spoilers here:


 * Who's Who in the Tera-Verse by batzulger

And there is artwork there, too.

"You, on the other hand, look like your last name ought to be Flaherty or Hannigan or O’Clancy."
 * Action Girl: Alex, Hanna, Jo, even Shar.  Hanna's code name is "Action Girl".
 * Actor Allusion: Scattered here and there throughout the story:
 * The brunette pixie cut that Alex adopts to distance her appearance from that of Terawatt just happens to be the look that Alex Mack's actress Larisa Oleynik was sporting as of her appearances in Mad Men in the early 2010s.
 * A twofer: When discussing with Willow how different she appears from her adoptive parents, Jack O'Neill tells her:

"Jack grumbled, “You’d think you could go one stinking vacation without finding trouble.” “Yes sir,” Alex agreed unhappily."
 * Alex thinks Jack could cosplay as MacGyver because he resembles the actor.
 * Buffy Summers is a former ice skater, and her boyfriend is named Freddie.
 * All Jews Are Ashkenazi: Averted:  While Willow's parents are explicitly identified as Ashkenazi Jews, it's used as a descriptor to differentiate them from being generic media Jews.
 * Alternate Universe: Alex's knowledge of certain persons from several other universes prompts and often helps her attempts to make contact with their counterparts in her own universe.
 * Amazon Brigade: Terawatt's superteam, named after the Justice League, in which women outnumber the men at least two to one, depending on the exact deployment.  Klar is often The One Guy when they're in the field.
 * And a Diet Coke: Subverted.  Alex needs all the calories she can consume, but despite this she drinks Diet Coke because she likes the taste.
 * Avengers Assemble: One of Alex's goals through much of the story is finding and bringing together the native counterparts of the women with whom she worked in another universe during the events of The League of Extraordinary Women.  Along the way she ends up with a genuine superteam forming around her.
 * Badass: Hanna is a very classic badass.  Alex doesn't quite realize (or believe) it of herself, but she's one, too -- to the point that many people thank that she's the single most powerful and dangerous individual on the planet.  (She might not be, but you couldn't tell it from what she's accomplished.)
 * Badass Adorable/Killer Rabbit: Shar, as "Pyre" -- an eight-year-old capable of ...
 * Badass and Child Duo: Terawatt and Pyre during the .  Played with in that Pyre has had her powers longer and is more dangerous than Terawatt.
 * Badass Bookworm: Dr. Brian Stanley, who amputated his own hand to escape a silicate and then went right back to work on a way to defeat the creatures.
 * Beautiful All Along: Eliza Thornberry, who gets her braces off, her braids brushed out, and sports contacts instead of her glasses after hooking up with the SRI.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: What the SRI in general think of Alex -- a sweet, innocent kid who you'd think would run home crying if you were mean to her, but who is actually an unstoppable force of nature -- and who doesn't quite realize she's as impressive as she is.
 * Blessed with Suck: Klar is permanently invisible, and because of this is blind in the visible spectrum (although he can see in infrared).  And until the SRI reproduces the effect on a sheep (from which clothes of invisible wool can be made), he must go on ops completely naked.
 * Blob Monster: Fought by Terawatt and the SRI in Downington, Pennsylvania.
 * Bond One-Liner: Hanna starts making these toward the end of the story.
 * Book Dumb: Alex, at least initially.  Intimidated by her elder sister Annie's scientific brilliance, Alex slacked off in middle school and early high school.  However, inspired by the events of League (and given lots of tips on how to manage schoolwork better by Willow Rosenberg, Hermione Granger and Sam Carter) she began taking her studies far more seriously, with outstanding results by the middle of the story.
 * Boy Band: In-Universe example:  towards the end of the story, Alex discovers to her complete mortification that a boy band called "The Click Five" has a top-40 song about Terawatt.
 * Buffy-Speak: The majority of the story is told from Alex's point of view, and the narration, while not first-person, is rendered in a voice that is clearly intended to reflect her personality and thoughts.  As such, it's presented in a very low-key Buffy-Speak, in which the "insufficiently educated" aspect is slowly subverted through the course of the story as Alex takes her studies increasingly seriously (see "Yay, SAT vocabulary!" under Running Gags below).
 * Hanna eventually develops a kind of neo-"Valley Girl" manner of speaking -- partly from Willow, partly from Alex, and partly from other sources -- when she's not on-duty and is "just being a teenaged girl". Subverted in that it's more a deliberate choice made in order to better fit in with her contemporaries than a natural evolution of her manner of speaking.
 * Busman's Holiday: Alex comes to realize that trouble seems to lurk, waiting for her anywhere she goes for any reason.  Lampshaded toward the end of the story:


 * The Cameo: Several of the sources in the list above contribute characters who just make a couple small but plot-relevant appearances.
 * The Cape: Terawatt.  She's the archetype of the Cape for her world.
 * Captain Ersatz: Local versions of various DCU characters begin appearing, most notably Bruce "Batman" Paine.
 * is pretty obviously supposed to be the local analogue to Superman. (Or one of them; Terawatt eventually becomes the "godlike global savior" archetype in the public eye, which means she's also an analogue to Superman.)
 * And there's evidence that the local version of Selina "Catwoman" Kyle is more than just the trophy wife of a Greek billionaire.
 * The are based on various members of the Legion of Doom.
 * Thanks to one incident toward the end involving metal bracers, seems to partake of at least a bit of Wonder Woman.
 * Chekhov's Armoury: Numerous and well-executed, often taking the form of seemingly-irrelevant Funny Background Events or inconsequential parts of someone's Backstory when they first appear.
 * One good example is a telekinetic combat move suggested to Alex by Jack O'Neill, the idea of which Squicks her at the time. Fifty or so chapters later, it's exactly what she needs to save herself in a tight situation -- and later becomes her tactic of choice for taking down an enemy without killing them.
 * Another is the series of slapstick sitcom mishaps that occur to Alex's friend Louis and his girlfriend Marsha.
 * Yet another is the fact that.
 * The number of people in the Macks' neighborhood who have become shut-ins or suffered some kind of disability over the previous year or three.
 * Child Soldiers: What Jack O'Neill can't help but see Alex and the other super-powered teens in his command as, and feels guilty about it.  It comes to a head when Shar manages to get herself onto the battlefield against ; it doesn't matter that she's the one who actually took down the foe, Jack goes ballistic about an eight-year-old in combat and she gets banned from even getting near to any future SRI operations.
 * Clark Kenting: Alex makes an extensive effort to visually differentiate herself from Terawatt. Terawatt's masked costume incorporates platform boots, a padded bra and a shoulder-length light-blonde wig along with subtle makeup (actually coloration on a saran-wrap-thin sheet of plastic that adheres to her face, for near-instant application) to appear older and much taller, and she deepens her voice and speaks in a manner she sometimes thinks of as pompous.  Meanwhile, in her "civilian" identity, she's gradually dyed her hair several shades darker than her natural blonde and cut it pixie-style, and habitually wears flats to appear much shorter than Terawatt.  Terawatt also tends to hover anywhere from a couple inches to a foot and a half off the ground at all times just to reinforce the illusion of height; most observers think she's in the vicinity of six feet tall or more.
 * Played with a bit, also, in that Terawatt occupies a role in her world much like Superman's in the DCU -- and her secret identity is a journalist. (Well, journalism student.)
 * Averted several times by persons (most notably ) who put together a lot of little details -- her chin, her gestures, a few other things -- and figure out her identity.
 * The Conspiracy: The Collective.  From the internal politics we occasionally see, they act something like a cross between a Mega Corp and a Nebulous Criminal Conspiracy.
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: Danielle Atron, who is so overwhelmed by her own greed that she pretty much fails to be an effective Big Bad -- all the flaws and inanities she displays in The Secret World of Alex Mack are here, and in some cases magnified by her circumstances and her decisions.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Jack O'Neill.
 * Alex occasionally fell into this mode when dealing with those members of who seem Too Dumb to Live.
 * Defictionalization: In-Universe:  Shar combines her fire powers with training in Shaolin Kung Fu in order to learn how to do "firebending".  Oddly, it seems to work.  And after this point, she only ever refers to her powers as "firebending".
 * Determinator/Plucky Girl: Alex.  No matter how tired, scared, hungry or hurt she is, she just does not stop doing what is right and necessary.
 * Shar, for all that she's still in grade school, is turning out to be the same.
 * Disney Princess: On a trip to Disneyland, Alex finds (authorized) Terawatt merchandise being sold alongside the various Princesses, and objects (privately) that she's not a Disney princess.
 * Elaborate Underground Base: Averted in that the SRI operates out of several perfectly above-ground military bases and office blocks.
 * Played for Laughs with the backdrop Alex literally cut-and-pastes together for use in videoconferencing, which shows a huge Batcave-like base that most of the SRI knows doesn't really exist.
 * Played painfully straight by various bad-guy headquarters, most especially the complexes under the Spencer mansion and the Umbrella building during the Resident Evil segment. Lampshaded and mocked by both O'Neill and Alex.
 * Evil Twin/Jekyll and Hyde: The canonical effect of "GC-Divide", which Alex uses.
 * Inverted by
 * Evilutionary Biologist: The Collective in general, but Margaret Walsh and  in particular.
 * Fantastic Racism: The Collective's attitude to "homo inferior" -- basically anyone not a super of some variety, no matter how minor.
 * Flung right back by those who want to tar all as automatically evil.
 * Feed the Mole: One of Jack O'Neill's plans for dealing with known Collective agents in the SRI.  Played with at the climax of the story, when things become so confused the reader can't be sure who's trustworthy and who's not.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * Free-Range Children: Eliza Thornberry; upon hearing about her, Willow Rosenberg muses that the elder Thornberrys make her usually-absent parents look like micromanagers.
 * Funny Background Event: Also Funny Off-Screen Events -- almost all are Chekhov's Guns waiting to be fired.
 * Genre Savvy: Jack O'Neill, often hilariously so.  Alex, too, to a lesser degree at first, but she rapidly catches up with him.
 * Get a Room: In the aftermath of the, Alex considers saying this to a snuggling Jack and Willow, but decides not to when she realizes they probably would, leaving the cleanup to everyone else.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: In-Universe example -- pretty much any conversation that involves both Jack and Willow includes something along these lines from either or both of them.
 * Gosh Dang It to Heck: While other characters can and do swear colorfully, Alex continues to use only terms suitable to her original audience on Nickelodeon.
 * Also, Jack tries to tone his language down to this level around Shar.
 * Grappling Hook Pistol: Action Girl has two, courtesy of.
 * Grey Goo:
 * Half-Human Hybrid: Less obvious than most, and all over the story.
 * Hands-Off Parenting: Willow's parents, effectively, although it was in part motivated by their knowledge that she was exceptionally mature and capable even at an early age.
 * The elder Thornberrys.
 * Heel Face Turn:
 * Heroic BSOD:
 * Heroic Sacrifice:
 * Hide Your Pregnancy: Two In-Universe examples are mentioned in the epilogue:  the times Alex got pregnant, the SRI gave the cover story that Terawatt had gone on an extended mission that took her away from Earth for several months.
 * Hurricane of Puns: Chapter 155 ends with Willow and Alex making "cat" puns about Selina Kyle.
 * An Ice Person: Yuki Sato.  And an unnamed North Korean super.
 * Identity Impersonator: Jo Lupo, for Terawatt, on several occasions.
 * Immodest Orgasm: Alex has trouble sleeping when Jack and Willow share the room next door.
 * Impossible Hourglass Figure: Built into Alex's Terawatt uniform as part of the disguise.  Apparently blatant enough that Saturday Night Live didn't think it was exaggerating things too much to put Pamela Anderson into a Terawatt costume.
 * Impossibly Cool Clothes: Alex's Terawatt uniform is designed in such a way that the only way it can be put it on is if you can turn into a liquid form and flow into it.  Alex lampshades this in-universe when indicating to a crowd of onlookers that one way to identify a Terawatt imposter is that duplicate costumes have a zipper in the back, and the real thing doesn't.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun:
 * Impossible Hourglass Figure: Built into Alex's Terawatt uniform as part of the disguise.  Apparently blatant enough that Saturday Night Live didn't think it was exaggerating things too much to put Pamela Anderson into a Terawatt costume.
 * Impossibly Cool Clothes: Alex's Terawatt uniform is designed in such a way that the only way it can be put it on is if you can turn into a liquid form and flow into it.  Alex lampshades this in-universe when indicating to a crowd of onlookers that one way to identify a Terawatt imposter is that duplicate costumes have a zipper in the back, and the real thing doesn't.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun:

"Jack pretended to sniff like he was crying. “You’ve become sneaky and underhanded, just like me! I’m so proud!” Willow fussed, “Oh stop it.  And nobody’s as bad about this stuff as you are.” Jack beamed, “Thanks!”"
 * Insistent Terminology: Jack insists on prepending "Tera-" to almost everything in Alex's life, including the "Tera-mom" and the "Tera-dad".  He takes a perverse joy in Alex's annoyance with it, and eventually it starts spreading to other members of the SRI.
 * Insult Backfire:

"And speaking of boys, she really didn’t want to hear about Azure Crush and her naked blue body, but the December issue of a certain filthy magazine was already out, and selling like hotcakes, or maybe really filthy hotcakes with naughty pictures drawn on the tops."
 * Intrepid Reporter: Alex settles on this as a career, and makes a good start on it during the course of the story.
 * Invisibility: Klar's only real power.
 * Large Ham: Trish's friend "Nature" (real name: Wendy) is described this way in-universe.
 * Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex: Charlie O'Neill encounters this trope when his girlfriend Hanna "Action Girl" Heller involuntarily injures his hand with her thighs when he manually stimulates her to orgasm.
 * Hearing about this, Alex wonders how other superstrong people, specifically Azure Crush, manage to have sex with their partners without hurting them.
 * Massive Multiplayer Crossover
 * May-December Romance: Jack O'Neill and Willow Rosenberg.
 * Meta Origin: Hypothesized at one point by Alex's father, who suspects the existence of a master "can acquire powers" gene that not everyone possesses, along with other genes that influence the powers a person might gain; if they have the master gene and are exposed to the right kind of biochemical or other agent, they gain powers.
 * On a different level, a large number of superhumans and monsters directly owe their existence to Dr. Margaret Walsh and/or her research.
 * Metaphorgotten: From chapter 127:

"Jack casually said, “Hey, a bet’s a bet. Remember what you did to win our little bet last week? First one to the restaurant?” Willow insisted, “Hey!  I paid for the dry cleaning on your uniform afterward.  And the steam cleaning for your car interior.  And I bought a whole new bottle of olive oil.”"
 * Mind Over Matter: One of Alex's powers is telekinesis, which she uses in increasingly inventive ways.
 * Louis.
 * "Solstice"/Ayananta from India.
 * Carriette White.
 * In fact, many supers turn out to have some variety of TK behind their apparent powers.
 * Miraculous Malfunction: GC-161's power-granting properties were initially an unexpected side-effect of what was intended to be a simple diet pill.  Unlike many other fictional examples, these properties were perfectly open to further research and refinement, which both Danielle Atron and George Mack do during the course of the story.
 * The Mole: Both subverted and played straight.
 * Mood Whiplash: The aftermath of the Carrie White incident is the first instance of this we see in the story, but is nothing compared to what happens after
 * Mundane Utility: Alex figures out how to charge rechargeable batteries with her lightning, and uses this to keep her cameras, cell phones and other gadgets going at all times.  She also uses her TK to clean the house, do dishes, and to pick locks.
 * My God, What Have I Done?:
 * Mythology Gag: Yuki gives Gojira its name because, she says, "It swims like a whale and it walks like an ape." "Gojira" (which was Americanized into "Godzilla") is a portmanteau of the Japanese words for "gorilla" and "whale", and was originally the derisive nickname of a worker at the studio where the Godzilla films were made.
 * For reasons nobody, least of all Alex, can figure out, Jack insists on calling Bruce Paine's home "Stately Paine Manor".
 * The Nicknamer: Jack O'Neill.
 * Noodle Incident: We get a lot of these in regards to Jack and Willow's relationship.  For example:

"Alex smiled and kissed her on the top of the head, because Shar was already too busy for Alex a lot of the time, and as Shar got older, and discovered boys, and found new stuff, she’d get more and more busy. Alex suddenly had to swallow a lump in her throat and blink away some tears. She needed to talk to her mom and see if her mom felt like that all the time these days."
 * Obfuscating Stupidity: Appears to be Buffy Summers' primary skill for coping with life.
 * Oh Crap: Danielle Atron gets two "Oh crap" moments in her final confrontation with Terawatt -- first when Terawatt walks completely untouched through the first salvo of weaponsfire which Atron expected to utterly annihilate her, and.
 * Older Than They Look:
 * Omnicidal Maniacs: The Conspiracy is an entire organization of these, planning to kill off 99% of the world's population.  However, at least some of them are doing so to prevent what they see as an inevitable Malthusian catastrophe.  After which they will rule what is left.
 * One Steve Limit: When the Macks take in Charlene "Charlie" McGee, they start calling her "Shar"; within the story this is part of hiding her identity from Shop agents who might still be hunting her, but on the meta level it's probably as much because there was already a character named "Charlie" in play.
 * Averted with the probably-inevitable collision between Dr. Samantha Carter and Dr. Samantha Finn.
 * One-Woman Army: Terawatt, more because of her Determinator qualities than because of sheer power.
 * Open-Minded Parents: The Macks, who learned of Alex's powers in the finale of The Secret World of Alex Mack, and have been nothing but supportive of her decision to be a public superhero upon her return from the events in The League of Extraordinary Women.
 * Person of Mass Destruction: Shar is described as being a living WMD.  In a note at the end that chapter, the author explicitly references this trope as a "correction".
 * Playing with Fire: Shar's primary powerset, along a smattering of classic psychic powers.
 * Pop-Cultured Badass: Jack O'Neill.  To an absolutely ridiculous degree.
 * As her isolation from any human culture at all is rectified, Hanna begins to become one of these as well.
 * Promotion to Parent: Jo Lupo -- among others -- observes that Alex's relationship to Shar is more maternal than like the "older cousin" the cover story makes her out to be.  And when planning for college makes Alex realize that she and Shar are going to grow apart...



"So Alex ... explained all about the secret world of Alex Mack. It took a while."
 * Puberty Superpower: Alex tells her parents that she doesn't plan on getting pregnant, even after marriage, until someone can guarantee this trope for her children -- as opposed to, say, with powers at two.  Or in the womb.
 * Reckless Gun Usage: Studiously averted with everyone in the story who is supposed to know how to use firearms; everyone realistically adheres to Gun Safety protocols.
 * Recursive Fanfiction: The Secret Return has inspired nearly a dozen other writers to add their own contributions to its 'verse.
 * Running Gag: "Yay, SAT vocabulary!" and variations thereon.
 * Alex's eating habits.
 * Willow remotely changing ring tones on people's phones.
 * "Can I firebend them?"
 * Shar overhearing private conversations from two floors away, through closed doors. And commenting loudly.
 * Secret Identity:
 * After returning from her extradimensional adventure in The League of Extraordinary Women, Alex designs a superhero identity for herself. The story is basically about what happens once she begins using it in public.  The story also deconstructs the trope by showing how difficult it is to maintain a comic-book-style secret identity even with a government agency and a genius hacker helping cover for her -- and even then at least two people still put together all the details available to the public and work out who she is.
 * In addition to Terawatt, Alex has several other identities, including Lt. Annie Farrell, Jack's quietly competent hacker/adjutant, and a teenaged version of Annie Farrell.
 * Shar chooses a hero identity -- "Pyre" -- and makes her own costume in imitation of Alex's.
 * Hanna ends up wearing a mask and her hair differently when on operations to protect her privacy.
 * Eliza Thornberry takes "Shaman" as a codename; her sister Debbie designs a costume for her.
 * Andrew Clements decides on "Ultraman".
 * Shooting Superman: Seen especially in the Congo op, where the warlord and his soldiers persist in emptying their guns at Terawatt even though it's obvious that nothing is hitting or harming her.  Ends with the warlord trying futilely to hit her with his now-empty submachine gun.
 * Taken up to 11 in Terawatt's final confrontation with Danielle Atron.
 * Shown Their Work: Castle has made a point of doing enough research (or perhaps using her own knowledge) to make the jargon and exposition of experts in various fields -- including IT, physics, biochemistry, genetics, even the economics of being a freelance photojournalist -- accurate and plausible.
 * Shrouded in Myth: Outside of the SRI, her team and her family, no one really knows the limits of Terawatt's powers.  For instance, few people know that the SRI uses the last two operational SR-71 "Blackbird" planes to get her where she's needed fast and assume she can fly at supersonic speeds.
 * Spit Trail Kiss: Between Louis and Marsha after the first time he sees her in her Mack-made Terawatt costume.
 * Static Stun Gun: Alex uses her lightning powers to knock out targets on several occasions, and at least twice uses a fake "prop" stungun to hide the fact that she did so while in her civilian identity.
 * Super Serum/Psycho Serum: GC-161, depending on the genetic structure of the person it's administered to.
 * Super Speed: One of Andrew "Ultraman" Clements' core powers.
 * Superhero
 * Superhero Paradox: Inverted.  Almost all the villainous individuals and organizations already existed before the start of the story, and most of the superheroes become such to oppose them.  In particular, Alex chooses to become a superheroine mainly because there's already a supervillain out there already -- Danielle Atron -- who had attacked her and her family, and who was manufacturing other supervillains to do her dirty work.
 * Take a Level In Badass: Alex, continuously, without ever really noticing.
 * Take Over the World: One of the goals of the Collective -- once they clear out a pesky few billion people here and there.
 * Thigh-High Boots: Shiny white PVC knee boots with platform soles and five-inch heels help Alex maintain the illusion that Terawatt is much taller than she is.
 * Throw-Away Guns: The Congo warlord who tried to throw his submachine gun at Terawatt after emptying its magazine.
 * Title Drop: In chapter 212 -- just not for this story:
 * Title Drop: In chapter 212 -- just not for this story:


 * To the Batpole: Inverted:  Alex's father installs a pipe from the Macks' garage into the town storm drain system so that Alex can leave the house in "puddle" form and reappear as Terawatt pretty much anywhere in town.
 * Later, the SRI do much the same for the apartment they arrange for her to live in while attending college in Washington, DC.
 * And of course, there's the Teraverse's version of the Trope Namer.
 * Trademark Favorite Drink: Alex prefers Diet Coke to almost anything.  Given the absolutely huge amount of food she has to eat to fuel her powers, almost everyone in the know about her finds this both amusing and ironic.
 * Training From Hell: Alex puts herself through this, slowly ramping up the difficulty as her physical and psychic limits grow.  For example, by the middle of the story she's doing 100 upside-down sit-ups every morning by holding herself to a wall with her TK.  Plus martial arts training from another super.  And her academic schedule could be seen as just another form of this.
 * Transformation Sequence: Played with.  Alex basically dives in her liquid form into a gym bag holding her costume, and pretty much just flows into it, then comes back out and returns to human shape.
 * However, people watching find the change to be startling and the difference in personality and presence between bubbly, slightly insecure Alex and the stolidly confident Terawatt to be profound and even a little unsettling. To the point that some suggest it's actually a case of Multiple Personalities.
 * Twin Tails: Hanna wears a clip-on pair as part of her disguise during the Korean op.
 * Unspoken Plan Guarantee: Several instances, often disposed of in a single sentence along the lines of "she told them what she had planned, and they all agreed".
 * Utility Belt: Alex gets one as a gift to add to her Terawatt costume after her first couple ops with the SRI, mainly to hold energy bars, but also a couple of useful toys.
 * The Verse: Variously called the "Tera-verse" or the "Alex-verse" by the authors contributing to it.
 * Weaksauce Weakness: Terawatt needs food badly.  Even when not using using her powers Alex burns, as she puts it, "stupid amounts of calories".  And using them?  Makes her absolutely starving in almost no time flat.  When the India op had her going for seven hours straight with no breaks and no meals, she ended up so hungry that she was almost incoherent and stumbling when it was over.  (But even so she still managed to keep a nuclear missile from obliterating Moscow by disassembling it in flight.)  One of the biggest reasons she wears a Utility Belt is to have someplace to keep energy bars on her while in uniform.
 * are killed by the compound which gave Alex her powers; just splashing them with it is enough.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Despite Alex's repeated claims that Hermione is important and necessary to her plans, she all but vanishes from the story as it rolls to its climax, and doesn't even get a mention in the Where Are They Now? Epilogue.
 * Where Are They Now? Epilogue: Two, one for most everyone other than Terawatt, and one for her.
 * Where Does She Get All Those Wonderful Toys?: A couple from her parents, a lot from the government, and once in a while from the Batman.
 * Hanna got a pair of Grappling Hook Pistols from the Batman as well.
 * Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: Invoked word-for-word by Alex as the kind of person she doesn't want to turn into as a result of her experiences with the SRI.
 * World of Action Girls: While overall the gender ratio of supers in the Teraverse seems to be close to 1:1, the core super cast of the story is predominantly female.
 * Yiddish as a Second Language: Willow's mother uses so much Yiddish in her brief appearance in chapter 138 that the author has to provide a glossary at the end.  There's even more surrounding, but it's not footnoted.
 * Younger Than She Looks: Alex as Terawatt; she's deliberately designed both the uniform and the persona to give the impression that Terawatt's in her middle twenties.  When people first learn her secret identity, one of the most common reactions is to comment on how young Alex seems in comparison to Terawatt.
 * Played with for laughs when a disguised Shar (all of eight and three-quarters years old at the time) is identified as a "54-year-old midget" to someone who doesn't have clearance to know her real identity.