Jerry Jaxon
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Jerry Jaxon | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Alpha Flight #2 (Sep 1983) |
Created by | John Byrne |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Jerome Jaxon |
Team affiliations | Roxxon Oil Omega Flight |
Notable aliases | Box |
Jerome "Jerry" Jaxon is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Publication history
Jerome Jaxon first appeared in Alpha Flight #2-3 (September–October 1983), and was created by John Byrne.
The character subsequently appears in Alpha Flight #6-7 (January–February 1984), and #10-13 (May–August 1984), in which he died. The character appeared posthumously in Alpha Flight: In the Beginning #-1 (July 1997).
Jerome Jaxon appeared as part of the "Omega Flight" entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Deluxe Edition #9.
Fictional character biography
Jerome Jaxon was born in
The failure to deliver a weapons system based on Hudson's designs proved devastating to Jaxon's career. After being dismissed from Am-Can, his wife took their two children and left him. Destitute, and with no prospects for the future, Jaxon attempted to commit suicide by hanging himself, only to be discovered by his landlady. Although Jaxon lived, the brain damage suffered from asphyxiation left him permanently unable to walk.[2]
After learning about Alpha Flight, and realizing that Guardian had to be James Hudson, Jaxon sought out
As Alpha Flight had been disbanded, James Hudson had been looking for steady work, and Jaxon sent Courtney to offer him a job at Roxxon's New York City office. With support from his wife Heather, Hudson accepted, and they moved in. However, Courtney lured Heather into a trap, where Jaxon revealed to her his plan for revenge; due to Heather's role in Jaxon's downfall, she was to be killed, but only after Guardian had been destroyed.[volume & issue needed]
When Guardian learned of the nature of Heather's kidnapping, he flew into Jaxon's trap at the World Trade Center, and faced off against Omega Flight. Alpha Flight soon arrived on the scene, having been teleported to New York by Shaman. During the battle between the two Flights, Box removed Guardian from the main fight into another part of the building. It was there that Jaxon revealed that he had taken control of the Box robot from Roger Bochs, as he wanted to kill Guardian personally. Although he brutally beat Guardian, badly damaging his battlesuit, Hudson was able to use his own suit to overload the Box robot; the feedback to the control helmet killed Jaxon.[volume & issue needed]
Although relieved that Bochs had not betrayed him, Hudson had little time to celebrate his victory, as his suit was about to explode. Heather, who'd gotten away from Courtney after discovering the robot's true nature, entered the room just as the suit was overloading, and as it exploded, Hudson appeared to be burned to ashes in front of Heather's eyes.[volume & issue needed] Jaxon had seemingly achieved a pyrrhic victory, although it was later revealed that Guardian had managed to channel the overload into an extension of the gravity-cancelling ability of his suit that sent him on a trip through time and space;[volume & issue needed] Heather would go on to lead Alpha Flight as Vindicator),[volume & issue needed] and eventually be reunited with her husband.[3]
References
- ISBN 978-1-4165-3141-8.
- ^ Alpha Flight #12
- ^ Alpha Flight #90
External links
- AlphaFlight.Net Alphanex Entry on - Jerome Jaxon
- Jerry Jaxon at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe