Layla Miller
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Layla Rose Miller, also known as Butterfly, is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. She first appeared in House of M #4, and was created by Brian Michael Bendis and Oliver Coipel. Peter David has developed the character, placing Layla at the center of the ensemble of mutant private detectives in his title X-Factor.
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[edit] Fictional character biography
Layla Miller is a young mutant girl with strong precognitive powers. When the Scarlet Witch warped reality and provided everyone with false memories of living in the new, mutant-dominant world, Layla was instrumental in bringing down the "House of M".
Layla was one of four unaffected characters (the others being Wolverine, the Scarlet Witch, and the Witch's brother Quicksilver), and she was able to restore other characters' memories, helping them rebel against the House and restore reality. In House of M #7, Dr. Strange suggested that the Scarlet Witch had created Layla as a failsafe to help the heroes in case something went wrong.
In the current X-Factor series, Layla joins X-Factor Investigations and has knowledge of certain private matters and future events. In her own words: "I'm Layla Miller. I know stuff." Contradicting Dr. Strange's theory of her origin, Layla's life prior to the events of House of M has been described: she was a young mutant living in an orphanage. (However, it wouldn't be beyond the Scarlet Witch's powers to create a history for someone she herself had created.) At the close of House of M, Layla lost her powers at the moment of the Scarlet Witch's "no more mutants" statement, (a phenomenon referred to as the Decimation). However, Layla is the only person thus far known to have spontaneously gained new powers.
When asked, Layla has purported to understand how it is that she "knows things." However, she claims that if she were to tell anyone, she would be struck down and die on the spot. Since she has proven to be capable of manipulation, the veracity of her contention is in doubt.
Layla can be cold-blooded and detached in pushing events in a direction that she perceives as "right". She has admitted that she had prior knowledge of the vicious attack Siryn would suffer, and appears to have withheld this information because she surmised that X-Factor's reluctant leader Jamie Madrox would respond forcefully, directing his efforts against the source of the assault.
Layla's mission in X-Factor is to make certain the members of the team never learn the truth about the Decimation. However, this mission is made obsolete in X-Factor #8, (a crossover with Marvel Comics' Civil War), when Siryn acquires the details of the House of M and Decimation from Spider-Man. Siryn learns that Quicksilver, who has settled in the same area of New York City in which X-Factor operates, coerced his sister into warping reality and creating the House of M.
Layla refers to herself as Quicksilver's nemesis. At the same time she works to steer events in certain directions guided by the "stuff" she knows, Quicksilver desires to reverse some of the effects of the Decimation, using newly-gained abilities to restore mutants' lost powers. According to what Layla knows, Quicksilver's path is somehow dangerous in the grand scheme of things, and she believes the best thing for the world would be a future in which Quicksilver dies in an accident — a future which events beyond her control have rendered null and void.
Layla has also taken steps to deal with Singularity Investigations, a rival firm determined to eliminate X-Factor Investigations by any means necessary (Singularity arranged the vicious assault on Siryn). Layla has provided cryptic (and useful) advice to X-Factor members in their confrontations with Singularity, and has engineered the events that lead to the death of a Singularity operative who had broken in to X-Factor's base of operations (she then shipped the corpse, packed in ice, to Singularity's headquarters).
On several occasions, Layla has remarked that she and Jamie Madrox will eventually be married. Since Layla is his junior by at least a decade, this utterance causes Jamie repeated and considerable discomfort. This, however, may be a somewhat possible outcome for the two as Rahne Sinclair (Wolfsbane) recently revealed she had seen a future in which she had murdered both Layla and Jamie, apparently on their wedding night. This is still uncertain however as it is unknown if this was really a vision of things to come and even if it was, the future in the Marvel universe has been known to suffer multiple changes.
[edit] Powers
Layla has claimed that she once had horns and could breathe fire.[1]
During House of M her power shifted to the ability to "awaken" heroes and make them remember their former lives.
On M-Day Layla's powers shifted to a precognitive ability to see paths of causality to their ultimate conclusion, which allows her to alter events to prevent or cause certain occurrences. However, she only sees in the future, not the past, and a few times has exhibited 'blind spots'. Her abilities apparently do not work as well on Quicksilver, due to a chaotic influence, possibly caused by Quicksilver's relation to the Scarlet Witch, or those related to Singularity Investigations (like her brainwashed teammate Strong Guy), especially CEO Damian Tryp, whom she cannot read at all.
After the destruction of Singularity Industries, the present form of Damian Tryp (the elder/ancient) reveals to Layla that her very existence had foiled his plans — she is a force of chaos like he is. Tryp also reveals that when he comes into conflict with Layla, terrible events occur as a result. Following her encounter with Tryp, Layla appears genuinely shocked for the first time: the glass of milk she is pouring overflows, spilling onto the floor.
[edit] References
- ^ Although this may be taken too literally as she is explaining to Jamie Madrox that she was outcast from the other children in the orphanage. Peter David (w), Dennis Calero (p,i). "The Butterfly Defect" X-Factor vol. 3, #8 June 2006 Marvel Comics.