Jason nods, slowly. Crap. He wants to retire Adam. Or pull him from the group. And immediately he begins to wonder if that would be a bad thing. No. We haven't been perfect, but we've been trying. We can help him, in a way that his home family can't. "I understand," Jason says. "Nobody understands the dangers of --" He gestures vaguely. "-- this kind of life more than I do. And I've been exposed to those dangers since before I was --" He catches himself. He's focusing on the words so carefully for the right effect that he almost forgot the other concern. "-- since I was younger than Concord. But that wouldn't be a comfort to Concord's family, either, given what it's almost cost me, what it has cost me. But --" His brow furrows. "Concord is ... incredibly powerful. We've seen it. That power can do a lot of good and great things, things that could save thousands of lives. That have saved lives. But even that's not enough, I know, to balance the worries of those who love him." Which side of this am I arguing? he wonders. Both sides? Jason lowers is voice. "Power of that sort needs exercise. Training. Experience. Monitoring. Coaching. It -- doesn't go away, stop being a danger, stop being powerful, just because it isn't used. In fact, it might become more dangerous that way, to -- Concord, and to others around him." Does he know about the shard? Or that Adam's sharing his head with a voice that is telling him what to do? If he thinks it's just a matter of Adam staying home and not going out on missions any more -- it doesn't sound like the shard would accept that for long. But if I tell him about that, if he doesn't know already -- that's betraying a trust. And it might make things even worse. "I'm worried about him, Sgt. Amari. That's why I'm trying to help him. To be a friend. Someone who can assist him with this power he has. And, yeah, I know, I don't always do the right thing, and that scares me, too. That I might let the team down, including Concord. But -- I don't think he has an option to just turn it off, sir. Which would mean y--his family would need help in controlling it. And there aren't a lot of options there. "The bigger teams, the 'adults' -- he'd be a sidekick, or a ward, the kid with the dangerous power that needs to be kept an eye on, a bird in a gilded cage. The government --" Jason shakes his head. It's no difficulty being sincere about this. "They'd lock him up. Put him someplace they thought was safe. Study him. Figure out his power, how to control it, how to stop it. But not whether he needs it, whether it would hurt him to stop using it. Or they'd figure out a way to use him to use it." Jason leans forward, mirroring Amari's pose. His intensity is not feigned. "My team -- we like Concord. We respect him. We want to help him, help him control this, help him learn to make the right decisions, be there with him when there's danger, protect him, mentor him, pick him up when he falls, shield him when he's vulnerable, cheer him on when he's kicking ass to protect people." A quirk of a smile. "Make sure he gets his homework done. Make sure he goes home safe to his family. Make sure he has his family, and that he also has friends who understand his ... challenges." [Pierce the Mask coming online, if this goes south.] [Sorry, that was long. It's all one chain of argument, though.]