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Chapter 30: Ripple Effects New

The Gym (Brooklyn, New York)

The heavy bag exploded off its chain like it had been hit by a freight train, sand spilling across the polished concrete floor of the Brooklyn gym. Steve Rogers stared at his fist, then at the destroyed equipment, processing what he'd just watched on the wall-mounted TV.

"So... he's the Doctor?" Steve asked, his voice carrying that slight Brooklyn accent he'd never quite shaken despite decades on ice.

Phil Coulson stepped out from behind a support pillar, tablet in hand, his expression carefully neutral. "That's him. Jay. Goes by 'The Doctor', though our files have a bit more detail."

Steve turned from the wreckage of the punching bag, sweat still beading on his forehead. "Files?"

"SHIELD's been tracking him for months. The homeless population in Manhattan started talking about an 'angel' who could heal anything. Bullet wounds, overdoses, hypothermia- things that could've been death sentences for people society forgot." Coulson swiped across his tablet. "Turns out he's been operating in the shadows, helping folks who couldn't afford to ask questions."

"And Fury knew?" Steve grabbed a towel, wiping down his hands with more force than necessary.

"Fury knows everything that matters in this city." Coulson's tone carried just a hint of dry humor. "Though judging by their last interaction, he and Jay don't exactly see eye to eye."

Steve watched the replay footage of Jay kneeling beside the Castle family, his hands glowing with soft healing energy while bullets flew around him. The kid couldn't be older than early twenties, but he'd run straight into danger to save strangers.

"He's the one who helped to get me out?" Steve said quietly.

Coulson nodded. "Yeah, Fury called him in as a specialist."

Steve stared at the frozen replay on screen. Jay worn down but resolute, speaking to reporters with conviction about protecting people regardless of their origin story. It reminded him of something. Someone.

"What do we know about his background?"

"That's... complicated," Coulson said carefully. "No birth records, no social security number, no school transcripts. It's like he didn't exist before three months ago."

Steve's expression sharpened. "How is that possible?"

"That's what we're trying to figure out. Either he's very good at staying off the grid, or..." Coulson hesitated.

"Or?"

"Or someone very powerful has been scrubbing his past clean."

SHIELD Helicarrier


Nick Fury's forehead vein was doing its best impression of the Hudson River during flood season- prominent, angry, and impossible to ignore. Maria Hill maintained her professional composure, but she'd positioned herself just far enough away to avoid collateral damage if her director actually exploded.

"That kid," Fury snarled, jabbing a finger at the wall of monitors showing Jay's television debut from every conceivable angle, "is going to be the death of me. And I'm gonna die before some bullet gets the chance."

"Sir," Hill said carefully, "the public response has been largely positive. Social media sentiment is running sixty-forty in favor, with significant support from the medical community and-"

"I don't give a damn about social media sentiment, Hill!" Fury's voice could've peeled paint off the bulkheads. "Mutants were supposed to stay quiet. Blend in. Keep their heads down and stay away from the media. Not hold impromptu speeches in Central Park!"

Hill pulled up a holographic display showing trending hashtags and public opinion data. "#TheDoctor is trending worldwide. #MutantHealer has over two million mentions in the last hour. The footage of him healing the Castle family has been viewed seven million times."

"Fantastic," Fury muttered, slumping into his command chair. "Just fantastic. Xavier's gonna have my ass for this. The kid just painted a very visible target on every mutant in America."

"Or," Hill said quietly, "he just showed America that mutants can be heroes too."

Fury shot her a look that could've sunk aircraft carriers. "Maria, optimism is a luxury I can't afford. That kid just declared open season on himself and every enhanced individual in the country. The Friends of Humanity are probably already planning their next rally. Senator Kelly's office has called three times in the last twenty minutes."

"Other agencies are going to start digging into his background," Hill said. "When they find the gaps in his records- "

"We prepare a cover story. Foster kid, bounced between homes, records lost in system failures." Fury's expression darkened. "His alien nature stays classified. Need-to-know basis only."

"And the President's office called to ask if we can arrange a meeting," Hill countered. "Not to mention the dozens of hospitals requesting consultation on cases they can't handle."

Fury was quiet for a long moment, studying Jay's speech about judging people by their actions rather than their origins. The kid had balls; he'd give him that. Stupid, idealistic balls that were going to get him killed.

"Double his security detail," Fury said finally. "Quietly. And get me everything we have on anti-mutant terrorist organizations. He's gonna be key part of my Avenger Initiative."

Tony's Villa (Malibu)

Tony Stark lounged in his modernist living room like a cat, a tumbler of aged whiskey in one hand while holographic displays showed Jay's media debut from multiple angles. The late afternoon California sun streamed through floor-to-ceiling windows, but Tony's attention was entirely focused on the young healer on screen.

"J.A.R.V.I.S.," Tony said, swirling his drink thoughtfully, "run a full analysis on our new public healer. Medical background, power limitations, public speaking experience-everything."

"Certainly, sir. Shall I also compile data on his associates?" came the smooth British voice from hidden speakers.

"Obviously. And cross-reference his methodology with current medical practices." Tony leaned forward, studying Jay's exhausted face as he spoke to reporters. "The kid's got something, J.A.R.V.I.S. That kind of raw healing ability? We're talking about revolutionizing medicine, not just superheroics."

"Indeed, sir. Preliminary analysis suggests his abilities operate on a cellular regeneration level far exceeding any known medical technology."

Tony raised an eyebrow. "Which means?"

"Which means, sir, that he may be the most valuable individual on the planet from a purely humanitarian standpoint."

Tony was quiet for a moment, watching Jay run toward danger while bullets flew around him. "He's also got terrible tactical instincts. Running into active gunfire to save civilians? That's either incredibly brave or incredibly stupid."

"Perhaps both, sir?"

"Yeah, probably both." Tony drained his whiskey and stood up, but instead of dismissing the displays, he expanded them. "J.A.R.V.I.S., I want a full workup on potential applications for healing technology. If this kid can do what I think he can do, we need to be ready to support him."

"Support him, sir? Not recruit him?"

Tony paused, watching the replay of Jay's passionate speech about mutant-human coexistence. "Let's call it 'strategic friendship building.' Besides," Tony's expression grew more serious, "a kid that powerful is going to need all the friends he can get."


Queens Warehouse
"Look at our boy go!" Bobby's voice boomed through the converted warehouse space, cigar dangling from his lips as he bounced on the balls of his feet like a proud father. "Tellin' those reporters exactly what they needed to hear!"

The team was crowded around Bobby's ancient TV. Maria leaned forward from her spot on the couch, arms crossed but smiling. Linda sat beside her, the diamond on her forehead catching the light as she analyzed Jay's vital signs through the screen out of habit.

"Kid's got backbone," Maria said approvingly. "Look at him, dead on his feet from healing three people and still taking on the press like a champ."

Max looked up from his laptop where he'd been monitoring social media reactions. "He's trending worldwide. #TheDoctor, #MutantHealer, #CentralParkMiracle—they're all going viral. The responses are actually pretty positive, all things considered."

Tom nodded, his silver-ringed eyes reflecting multiple viewpoints as he processed the situation from different angles. "The way he handled that question about dangerous mutants was brilliant. Turning it back on them about judging people by their actions, not their origins."

"And that girl of his," Bobby added with a knowing grin, "Domino's handling the attention like a pro. Look at her there in the background, calm as anything while chaos explodes around them."

Linda chuckled. "She's good for him."

"Speaking of which," Maria said with a sly smile, "remember when you thought she was too dangerous for our Doc, Bobby?"

Bobby had the grace to look slightly sheepish. "Yeah, well... maybe I was wrong about that. Girl's got his back, that's clear enough."

Max stood up abruptly, heading toward their makeshift kitchen. "This calls for a celebration. I've been working on a new deep-dish recipe, and-"

"Max," the others said in unison, "it's not even dinner time."

"So?" Max grinned, already pulling ingredients from their improvised pantry. "Our Doc just told the whole world who he is. If that ain't worth pizza at three in the afternoon, I don't know what is."

"Just don't burn it this time," Maria called after him.

"That was one time!" Max protested. "And technically, the oven was broken!"

Their family had just gotten a lot more famous, and a lot more dangerous, but they had his back.

That's what family was for.


Xavier's Mansion

The recreational room at Xavier's School felt thick with tension. Nearly the entire team was gathered around the large-screen TV, absorbing Jay's public declaration with expressions ranging from hopeful to horrified.

"This could be a turning point," Dr. Hank McCoy said, adjusting his glasses as he analyzed the crowd's reaction. "The public seeing a mutant as a healer rather than a threat-it's exactly the kind of positive representation we've been working toward."

Kurt Wagner nodded enthusiastically, his blue skin and pointed tail making him stand out even among the assembled X-Men. "Ja, he speaks well. With conviction. The people, they listen to him."

Logan grunted from his position leaning against the wall, arms crossed over his chest. "Pretty words don't stop bullets, elf. Kid just painted a target on his back and every other mutant in the country."

Ororo Monroe sat elegantly in one of the leather chairs, her white hair catching the light from the TV screen. "Perhaps. But silence hasn't protected us either, Logan. Maybe it's time for a different approach."

Scott Summers stood behind the couch, his ruby quartz glasses reflecting the screen's glow. "He's not trained for this kind of exposure. The media attention, the security threats- he's going to be overwhelmed."

"He handled himself well enough," Jean Grey observed quietly. "His responses were thoughtful, measured. He didn't let them bait him into saying something inflammatory."

But it was Marie-Rogue who seemed most affected by the broadcast. She sat curled up in the corner of the room, her gloved hands wrapped around her knees as she watched Jay speak with painful intensity.

The camera caught Jay in an unguarded moment, exhausted, vulnerable, but still standing strong. It was exactly how she remembered him, that quiet determination that had drawn her to him in the first place.

When the camera panned to show Domino at Jay's side during the Fantasticar evacuation, Rogue felt something crack inside her chest. The easy familiarity between them, the way Domino settled onto Jay's lap without hesitation- it told a story that cut deeper than she wanted to admit.

"They seem close," Rogue whispered, so quietly that only Kitty heard her.

Kitty Pryde phased partially through the sofa beside her, offering quiet support. "Hey," she whispered, "you okay?"

"I'm fine," Rogue lied.

"Rogue..." Kitty settled more fully into the room, her hand hovering near Rogue's shoulder but not quite touching. "You know, maybe if you had made a move..."

"Jay always had this wall around him." Rogue's accent carried all the pain she was trying to hide. "His smile looks natural with her."

On screen, Jay was answering questions about mutant-human coexistence, his voice carrying conviction despite his obvious exhaustion. He looked older somehow, more mature than when Rogue had last seen him.

"Maybe you should call him," Kitty suggested gently. "You know, just to... check in."

Rogue was quiet for a long moment, watching as the Fantastic Four formed a protective circle around Jay and Domino, helping them escape the media swarm.

"Maybe," she said finally.

As the broadcast switched to analysis and commentary, the X-Men began to disperse, each processing the implications of Jay's public reveal in their own way. But Rogue remained in her corner, watching the replays and wondering if she'd lost her chance at something she'd never quite had the courage to reach for.


The Other Side
Magneto sat across from Mystique in a booth near the back, both of them observing Jay's television appearance on the muted television above the bar.

"Idealistic," Mystique said, her natural blue skin and yellow eyes marking her as clearly non-human even in the dim light. "Dangerously idealistic. He thinks compassion and good intentions will protect him from humanity's fear."

Erik Lehnsherr-Magneto swirled the wine in his glass thoughtfully, his face contemplative. "Perhaps. But idealism isn't always weakness, my dear Raven."

Mystique raised an eyebrow. "You're defending him?"

"I'm observing him." Erik's voice carried the weight of decades of struggle and loss. "Charles and I have spent years debating the best path forward for our people. Integration versus separation, hope versus pragmatism. This young man... he might actually make Charles's dream work."

"How do you figure that?" Mystique's voice carried skeptical curiosity.

Erik gestured toward the television, where Jay was speaking passionately about judging people by their actions rather than their origins. "He has something Charles never did- the common touch. Charles is brilliant, but he's also privileged. A wealthy academic speaking from his mansion in Westchester. This boy? He lived with the homeless. He understands what it means to be abandoned, forgotten."

"And you think that matters?"

"I think," Erik said carefully, "that when people see a young man who grew up in foster care using his abilities to heal the homeless and save families, it's harder to paint him as a threat. He's not an Other trying to infiltrate their society- he's one of their forgotten children who happened to manifest abilities."

Mystique considered this, watching the replay of Jay exhausting himself to save the Castle family. "The government will still try to control him. Registration, monitoring, all the things we've fought against."

"Of course they will. The question is whether the public will let them." Erik's expression grew darker. "Charles believes in the better angels of human nature. I believe in their capacity for fear and hatred. This boy... he might be the test case that settles our debate once and for all."

"And if he fails? If they turn on him?"

Erik's hand tightened slightly around his wine glass, metal stress fractures appearing in the rim. "Then Charles will have his answer, and I'll have mine. And perhaps we can stop pretending that coexistence was ever truly possible."

On the television, Jay was helping Frank Castle to his feet, the man whose family he'd just saved from certain death. The gesture was simple, human, and powerful.

"For his sake," Erik said quietly, "I hope Charles is right."


Shadow Lab

The laboratory stretched into darkness beyond the reach of the harsh fluorescent lights, rows of life-support cylinders filled with unconscious figures floating in synthetic amniotic fluid. Each tank bore monitoring equipment that pulsed with steady rhythms, tracking vital signs and genetic modifications that would have been impossible just a decade earlier.

Dr. Nathaniel Essex moved between the tanks like a surgeon making rounds, his pale features sharp under the clinical lighting. The black diamond on his forehead caught the light as he paused before a particular specimen—one whose genetic markers showed promising signs of cellular regeneration.

"Fascinating," he murmured, checking the readouts. "The cellular restructuring is proceeding ahead of schedule."

A wall-mounted screen showed Jay's press conference, the young healer speaking passionately about using his abilities to help others. Essex glanced at it with the detached interest of a scientist observing an interesting specimen.

"Dr. Essex," his assistant's voice crackled through the intercom, "the subject in Tank Seven is showing increased neural activity."

Essex moved to the indicated tank, studying the readouts with professional intensity. "Increase the sedative mixture by fifteen percent. We can't afford premature awakening."

His gaze returned to the screen, where Jay was exhausting himself to heal the Castle family. "Such inefficient potential," Essex observed clinically. "All that power focused on individual cases rather than systematic advancement."

He turned back to his work, making notations on a tablet. "Still, every data point has value. Even misguided altruism provides useful behavioral patterns."

The figure in Tank Seven stirred slightly, vital signs spiking momentarily before the increased sedatives took effect. Essex watched with satisfaction as the readings returned to normal.

"Soon," he said to no one in particular, his voice carrying the patient confidence of someone who measured progress in decades rather than days. "Very soon, we'll have a complete picture."

On the monitor, Jay was being helped into the Fantasticar by the Fantastic Four, his public identity now exposed to the world. Essex made one final notation before moving to the next tank, already focused on the next phase of his research.


Pierce's Office

Alexander Pierce's office in the Triskelion was a study in understated power—expensive furniture, carefully arranged awards and commendations, windows that offered a commanding view of Washington D.C. But Pierce himself barely noticed the décor, his attention focused entirely on the wall-mounted screens showing Jay's public emergence from multiple angles.

"Jasper," he said without turning around, his voice carrying quiet authority.

Jasper Sitwell entered the office, tablet in hand, his expression professionally neutral. "Sir?"

"I want everything Fury has on this 'Doctor.' Every file, every scrap of intelligence, every photograph." Pierce's voice was calm, but there was something underneath it that suggested dangerous waters. "And I want it quietly."

"That might be difficult, sir. Director Fury tends to compartmentalize sensitive files, and—"

Pierce turned from the windows, his expression pleasant but his eyes carrying a warning. "Jasper, I've been working with Nick Fury for longer than you've been with SHIELD. Get me what I need."

Sitwell nodded quickly. "Yes, sir. What level of priority should I assign this?"

"The highest." Pierce moved to his desk, settling into his chair with the fluid grace of someone accustomed to power. "This young man just declared himself to the world. That makes him either a powerful ally or a dangerous enemy. I need to know which."

On the screens, Jay was exhausting himself to heal the Castle family, running toward danger while bullets flew around him.

"There's something else, sir," Sitwell said carefully. "The public response has been largely positive. Social media sentiment analysis suggests genuine support for his message about mutant-human coexistence."

"Public opinion is malleable, Jasper. It can be shaped, guided, influenced by the right people with the right resources." Pierce's smile was cold and patient. "All it takes is the right narrative."

"And if he proves... uncooperative?"

Pierce was quiet for a moment, watching the replay of Jay's passionate speech about judging people by their actions rather than their origins. Idealistic. Naive. Potentially useful, but only if properly guided.

"Then we remind him that good intentions are no match for superior organization." Pierce's voice dropped to barely above a whisper, but Sitwell heard every word clearly. "Hail Hydra."

"Hail Hydra," Sitwell replied automatically, then turned and left the office with his new orders.

Pierce remained at his desk, studying the screens as Jay was helped into the Fantasticar by the Fantastic Four. The boy was young, inexperienced, driven by emotion rather than strategy. All of which made him both powerful and potentially controllable.

The key was finding the right pressure points.


Roadside Diner

The diner was the kind of anonymous place where people came to disappear for a while- cracked vinyl booths, fluorescent lights that flickered occasionally, and coffee that tasted like it had been brewing since the Clinton administration. Perfect for two fugitives trying to blend into the background.

Dr. Bruce Banner sat across from Betty Ross in a corner booth, both of them wearing the kind of nondescript clothing that helped them blend into any crowd. On the wall-mounted television above the counter, Jay's media appearance played on mute while a closed-captioning system struggled to keep up with the rapid-fire questions.

"If he can heal gunshot wounds..." Betty said quietly, her voice carrying a hope she was afraid to acknowledge. "Bruce, if he can literally regenerate damaged tissue..."

Bruce stared into his coffee cup like it might contain answers to questions he'd been asking for years. "Betty, we've been down this road before. Every potential cure, every experimental treatment, they all end the same way. The only viable option we have right now is Dr. Sterns' research."

"This is different." Betty leaned forward, her voice dropping to barely above a whisper. "This isn't some experimental drug or gamma radiation therapy. He's healing people with his bare hands."

On screen, Jay was kneeling beside the Castle family, his hands glowing with soft healing energy while chaos erupted around him. Even through the grainy broadcast, his exhaustion was evident, but he kept going until all three victims were stable.

"Bruce." Betty's voice carried years of shared pain and stubborn hope. "What if he could heal the genetic damage without affecting the Hulk? What if you could have control back?"

Bruce looked up from his coffee, meeting her eyes for the first time since the broadcast started. "Betty, I've learned to manage this. The meditation, the breathing exercises, staying away from situations that trigger him. I can't risk throwing that balance away for another maybe."

Betty reached across the table, her hand covering his. "But what if this time it worked? What if you could have your life back?"

Bruce watched the screen, where Jay was being surrounded by reporters but still taking time to check on the Castle family one more time before leaving. The kid looked exhausted but committed to doing the right thing, even when it cost him everything.

"Look at him," Bruce said quietly. "Kid's exhausted, probably doesn't even know what he's gotten himself into, but he's still trying to help everyone."

"So you'll consider it?"

Bruce was quiet for a long moment, watching Jay's passionate defense of mutant-human coexistence despite his obvious fatigue.

"If we ever cross paths with him... maybe we'll ask. But I'm not getting my hopes up, Betty. I can't afford to."

But as he watched Jay help Frank Castle to his feet with genuine care and compassion, Bruce couldn't help thinking that this young healer looked like someone who understood what it meant to be different, dangerous, and desperately wanting to help anyway.

He also looked like someone who kept his promises.


Street Corner, Lower East Side

The homeless man sat on his usual piece of cardboard, a paper cup containing a few coins at his feet. A small crowd had gathered around someone's smartphone, watching Jay's press conference with rapt attention.

"That's him," he whispered to nobody in particular, staring at Jay's face on the screen. "That's the angel. Came to me when I was dyin' of hypothermia, couldn't feel nothing below my chest. He made me whole again."

People passed by without paying attention, but the man kept talking anyway, his voice carrying a reverence usually reserved for saints.

"Didn't ask for nothin'. Didn't want no thanks. Just... fixed me up and told me to take care of myself." He looked down at his legs, flexing his toes inside his worn boots. "Three years I been walkin' on these legs, and I ain't told nobody who gave 'em back to me. But now... now the whole world knows."

A young woman in a business suit slowed down, glancing between the man and the smartphone screen. For just a moment, her expression softened with something that might have been understanding.

She dropped a twenty into his cup and kept walking.


Suburban Kitchen, Westchester County

The Martinez family sat around their dinner table, the evening news playing on the tablet propped up against a bowl of fruit. Maria Martinez served rice and beans while her husband Carlos passed around freshly made tortillas, their three children chattering excitedly about their day at school.

"Mami," their youngest daughter asked, "are mutants real?"

Maria glanced at Carlos, sharing one of those wordless conversations that married couples master over time. "What do you think, mija?"

"I think... I think if someone can heal people, that's good. Even if they're different." The little girl considered this seriously. "Like when Abuela's hands hurt and she can't cook, but then her medicine makes her better."

Carlos nodded approvingly. "Sometimes being different means you can help people in ways others can't. The important thing is what you do with your gifts."

On the tablet, Jay was speaking about judging people by their actions rather than their origins, his voice carrying across their kitchen with quiet conviction.

"I still don't trust it," their teenage son said, picking at his food. "What if they're lying? What if it's all some kind of trick?"

"Then we'll find out," Maria said simply. "But until then, maybe we give them the same chance we'd want if we were different."

Their youngest daughter nodded seriously, already planning to tell her teacher about the healing man tomorrow.


Political Back Room, Washington, D.C.

Senator Robert Kelly sat at the head of a mahogany table, surrounded by advisors, lobbyists, and political operatives whose faces never appeared in campaign photographs.

"This changes everything," Kelly said, his voice tight with controlled anger. "One bleeding-heart mutant with a savior complex and suddenly they're not scary anymore. They're misunderstood heroes."

"It's a PR disaster," agreed his chief of staff. "The Mutant Registration Act was gaining traction because people were afraid. Fear is a powerful motivator. But this..."

On the wall-mounted screen, Jay's weary but unwavering face spoke about every life mattering, about using abilities to help rather than harm. The polling data scrolling along the bottom showed public opinion shifting in real-time.

"We need to control the narrative," Kelly continued. "Find the dangerous ones, the ones who can't be painted as sympathetic. Magneto, Sabretooth, that pyro kid in Boston. Remind people that for every healer, there's someone who can level city blocks."

"What about the Doctor himself?" asked one of the lobbyists. "Any dirt we can dig up?"

Kelly's smile was cold and calculating. "Everyone has secrets. We just need to find his."


Late Night Television, Nationwide

"So let me get this straight," Jimmy Fallon said to his studio audience, his trademark grin somewhat strained, "we've got mutants- we knew that, but it was kind of an open secret. And one of them just held an impromptu press conference in Central Park after saving a family from a gang shootout."

The audience laughed, but it was nervous laughter.

"I mean, good for him, right? Using superpowers to help people instead of... I don't know, what's the bad option here? Taking over the world? Is that what we're afraid of?" Jimmy shrugged. "Because honestly, have you seen the state of the world lately? Maybe we could use some new management."

More laughter, warmer this time. On late-night television, everything could be made palatable with the right joke and proper timing.

But in living rooms across America, families watched with expressions that ranged from wonder to worry, trying to process a world that had suddenly become more complicated, more dangerous, and possibly more hopeful than it had been that morning.

The footage kept playing- Jay drained but determined, Domino at his side, the Castle family alive because one young man had been willing to run toward danger instead of away from it.

Tomorrow, everything would be different. As tonight, the whole world was watching.

[A/N]: Nearly 5,000 words later, and I'm mentally exhausted! 😅 Jumping between all these different perspectives from Steve's gym to Rogue's heartbreak really took it out of me. What did you think? Please share your thoughts, as your feedback keeps me going!

If you wanna hang out, join my Discord

Support my work and get early access up to Chapter 195, exclusive content, and bonus material at my P@treon - Max_Striker.
 
Chapter 31: Long Night New
The night air felt different somehow. Jay walked hand-in-hand with Domino down Fifth Avenue, their footsteps echoing off the sidewalk as they left the Baxter Building behind. The streetlights cast long shadows, and every few blocks, someone would recognize them from the endless news coverage.

"Hell of a second date," Domino said, her voice carrying that trademark sardonic humor, but Jay caught the undertone of concern.

Jay shrugged, still processing everything that had happened. The weight of exposure sat heavily on his shoulders. His mind kept cycling through the reporters' questions, the flash of cameras, the way Frank Castle had looked at him with desperate gratitude while his family lay bloodied in the grass.

A middle-aged woman approached them tentatively, wringing her hands. "Excuse me, are you... The Doctor? From the news?"

Jay nodded, forcing a tired smile. "That's me."

"My daughter," the woman's voice cracked slightly, "she's been in a coma for three months. The doctors say there's nothing they can do. Could you...?"

Before Jay could answer, a younger man jogged up, slightly out of breath. "Dude! Holy shit, you're him! You know Iron Man, right? Can you get me his autograph? My girlfriend would lose her mind!"

The requests came faster after that. An elderly man with obvious arthritis begged for relief from the constant pain. A teenager wanted to know if Jay could cure his acne. A mother pushed forward with her son in a wheelchair, tears streaming down her face as she pleaded for just five minutes of his time.

Jay's danger sense prickled as the crowd grew larger, voices overlapping in a desperate chorus of need and want. He started to respond to the wheelchair-bound boy when another voice cut through the noise like a blade.

"Mutie freaks!" someone shouted from across the street. "Get the hell out of our city!"

The crowd went quiet for a moment, heads turning toward the source of the hostility. Jay felt Domino's grip tighten on his hand. But he stayed calm, processing it all with the detached analysis his stolen mental processing from Sage provided.

This was exactly what he'd expected. The public revelation meant exposure to both the desperate and the hostile. He'd played the part of the naive, emotional healer during the interview perfectly- someone driven by compassion. It would make future enemies underestimate him, see him as a bleeding heart rather than someone who'd thought through every angle.

But it also meant dealing with the inevitable drawbacks. The [Challengers] perk would bring random fighters looking to make a name for themselves by taking down the famous healing mutant. And [Rivalry] meant some organization would eventually target him. The question wasn't if, but when and how prepared he'd be.

"Come on," Jay said quietly to Domino, gently extracting them from the crowd. "Let's get you back to your hotel."

They walked the rest of the way in uncomfortable silence, both lost in their own thoughts. When they reached the elegant lobby of Domino's hotel, she turned to face him, those mismatched eyes studying his face with careful intensity.

"You could come up, after today's circus, I figure we both could use some normal human contact," she said, her voice carrying invitation and challenge in equal measure. "Might be nice to decompress after the day we've had. I've got a bottle of wine that cost more than most people make in a week."

The offer hung in the air between them. Jay felt the pull of it—the promise of warmth, of forgetting about the complications swirling around his newly public life for just a few hours. But it was too soon; his mind was already racing ahead, cataloging all the preparations he needed to make now that his identity was blown wide open.

"Rain check?" Jay said, pressing a soft kiss to her knuckles that made her eyes flutter slightly. "I need to get some things sorted before tomorrow hits."

"Again? Just remember, luck's a finite resource, even for someone like me. Don't bank on having infinite chances." Domino murmured, but there was understanding in her voice. "Go handle your business, honey. But don't think this gets you out of a proper third date."

"Wouldn't dream of it," Jay replied, meaning every word.

Back at the Apartment

The smell of Max's pizza hit Jay before he even opened the apartment door—that perfect combination of cheese, sauce, and whatever magical combination of spices Max used that made every other pizza in the city taste like cardboard by comparison. Jay's stomach growled audibly as he stepped inside to find Bobby waiting with enough boxes to feed a small army.

"My hero," Jay said with genuine gratitude, dropping onto the couch beside his friend. "You know me too well."

Bobby's weathered face creased into that familiar grin and cackled, that rough Brooklyn laugh that always made Jay feel more grounded. "Eat up, kid. Got a feeling it's gonna be a long night ahead of us."

Jay dove into the first slice like a man who hadn't eaten in days, thanks to his heavy-eater drawback. Healing three people with extensive gunshot wounds had burned through his energy reserves faster than a Ferrari burned through gas. The cheese and carbs hit him like salvation.

Between bites, he pulled out his phone, dreading what he'd find. The notifications were endless missed calls, text messages, voicemails, and email alerts.

Former clients offering ten times his usual rate just for a consultation. Hospitals begging for him to visit terminal patients. Media outlets requesting exclusive interviews. And then, buried in the mix, some truly bizarre requests that made him question humanity's collective sanity.

One message in particular made his stomach turn; a detailed request for sperm donation from someone who claimed they wanted to "propagate the healing gene for the betterment of mankind." Jay deleted it so fast he nearly cracked his phone screen, his appetite suddenly gone.

"Jesus Christ," he muttered, deleting message after message. "People are fucking animals."

Two messages stood out from the digital cluster. The first was from Professor Xavier, politely but urgently requesting a meeting at the mansion for "critical matters that affect the broader mutant community." Jay already knew what that conversation would be about- the implications of his public reveal, the attention it would bring to other mutants, the delicate political balance Xavier was always trying to maintain.

The second was from Nick Fury, and it was exactly what Jay expected- creative profanity mixed with practical concern. Fury had arranged a new fake identity for him, complete with backstory and documentation, but warned that other government agencies would be digging deeper now. The message ended with a grudging acknowledgment that Jay "owed him big time" for the cleanup work.

"Fury's just a big black bald tsundere, isn't he?" Jay said, scrolling through the director's colorfully worded concerns.

Bobby's expression sobered, the humor draining from his scarred features as he nearly choked on his beer, coughing through surprised laughter. "Kid, you got a death wish talking about Nick Fury like that?"

"He likes me," Jay said with a grin. "He just won't admit it."

But Bobby's expression grew more serious. "Jay, you know what this means for the network, right? Now that you're out there in the spotlight, people might start connecting The Doctor with Power Broker one way or another."

Jay nodded, already three steps ahead in his planning. "I know. That's why we need to move fast on a few things."

Jay leaned back on the couch, his mind already working through the implications and contingencies. The [Unmasked] drawback meant this exposure was inevitable—the question had always been when and how it would happen. At least he'd been able to control the narrative somewhat, presenting himself as a compassionate healer rather than letting someone else define him.

"Bobby," Jay said, his voice taking on the focused tone that meant he was switching into planning mode, "remind me—the procedure's in two weeks. I need you ready to handle things if something happens to me."

"Whoa, hold up." Bobby set down his beer, his scarred face creasing with concern. "What procedure? And why are we talking like you're going somewhere?"

Jay was quiet for a moment, considering how much to reveal. Bobby had been his anchor in this world for as long as he was here, the one person he trusted completely. But some truths were harder to digest than others.

"The enhancement I've been planning," Jay said carefully. "It's... big. And potentially dangerous. If something goes wrong, you need to be ready to keep the network running without me."

Bobby's face went through several expressions- confusion, concern, then a flash of anger. "Jay, things are good right now. Real good. Why risk it all for some upgrade you might not even need?"

"Because this world's more dangerous than you know," Jay replied, his voice carrying weight Bobby rarely heard. "Why do you think I prepare for every scenario? Why do you think I've got contingency plans for contingency plans?"

Bobby slammed his beer down harder than necessary, foam sloshing over the rim. "You're always saying you got some big secret," Bobby said, frustration bleeding into his voice. "Some truth you can't tell me yet. Then you keep putting it off, dancing around it like...."

"Because," Jay interrupted, then laughed despite himself, "you're right. I do keep putting it off."

Bobby leaned forward, his weathered hands clasped together. "So talk. What's got you so spooked that you're planning like the world's ending?"

Jay looked at his friend. If anyone deserved the truth, it was Bobby.

"Your worldview," Jay began slowly, "how's it changed over the past decades?"

Bobby snorted. "That's a hell of a question. Let's see... first, Captain America shows up, this perfect soldier from World War II, slapping Hitler. Then mutants go from urban legend to front-page news. Then we get the Fantastic Four turning into rubber and rock after a space mission gone wrong. Iron Man builds a suit that makes him basically a one-man air force."

He paused, taking a long pull from his beer. "Used to be the weirdest thing in my day was drug dealers with better weapons than the cops. Now every week there's some new impossible thing on the news. World's gone completely insane if you ask me."

"That's not even the tip of the iceberg," Jay said quietly.

Bobby stared at him. "What's that supposed to mean?"

Jay stood up, pacing to the window. Manhattan sprawled out below them, millions of people living their lives with no idea how fragile their reality really was. How many threats existed just beyond their understanding?

"Think of reality like a tree," Jay said, turning back to Bobby. "Each leaf is a universe, a complete world with its own history, its own people, its own version of events."

Bobby's expression shifted from confusion to concern. "Jay..."

"The branches," Jay continued, "those are themes or timelines. Similar worlds clustered together. And the trunk..." He paused, meeting Bobby's eyes. "The trunk is whatever created it all. God, the creator, the One-Above-All. Pick your name."

"Kid, you're starting to sound- "

"I'm not from this universe, Bobby."

The words hung in the air like a confession. Bobby went very still, his beer halfway to his lips.

"I'm what you might call a tourist," Jay continued, his voice gentler now. "Someone who fell between the leaves and landed here. Everything I know about your world, I learned when I arrived. Your history, your heroes, your threats- I have witnessed it all in different forms in different worlds while falling between the branches."

Bobby set down his beer very carefully.

"That's..." Bobby's voice was hoarse. "That's fucking impossible."

"So was Captain America," Jay pointed out. "So were four people getting cosmic powers from space radiation. So was a guy building a flying metal suit in a cave. Impossible's gotten a lot more flexible lately."

Bobby was quiet for a long moment, processing. Jay could practically see the wheels turning, all the little inconsistencies in Jay's behavior, his uncanny knowledge of things he shouldn't know, his preparation for people that seemed to cross our path out of nowhere.

"That's why you knew about the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, and especially about Fury," Bobby said slowly. "How you always seem to be one step ahead."

"Something like that."

"Jesus Christ, Jay." Bobby rubbed his face with both hands. "How long?"

"Months. Same as you've known me."

More silence. Jay waited, letting Bobby work through it at his own pace. This was the foundation of everything- if Bobby couldn't accept this truth, then everything else Jay needed to prepare for would be exponentially difficult.

"So what else?" Bobby asked finally. "If you're from somewhere else, if you know things... what's coming that's got you so scared?"

Jay settled back onto the couch, suddenly feeling every bit of exhaustion from the day's events. "That's a much longer conversation, my friend. And like I said—it's gonna be a long night."

Bobby reached for another beer, popping it open with more force than necessary. "Well then," he said, his voice carrying that familiar Brooklyn determination, "better order more pizza. And Jay?"

"Yeah?"

"Next time you wanna drop a bombshell like that, maybe lead with it instead of spending months dancing around it like a nervous kid asking me to prom."

Jay laughed. Some things, at least, never changed. Bobby was still Bobby—practical, loyal, and capable of finding humor even when his entire understanding of the world and his friend had just been turned upside down.

"Fair enough," Jay said. "But settle down, Bobby. We're just getting started."

Tonight, two friends sat in a room filled with pizza boxes and bears, finally ready to discuss the full scope of what was coming.

By morning, Bobby would know about Galactus, about the Phoenix Force, about cosmic threats that made street-level problems seem quaint. He'd understand why Jay couldn't simply be content with healing people and running a small network. He'd learn that in a multiverse of infinite possibilities, the only constant was that someone had to be ready for the worst-case scenarios.

The multiverse was vast, dangerous, and full of threats one couldn't even imagine.

It was going to be a very long night indeed.

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Chapter 32: Third Time’s the Charm (Probably Not) New
The morning sun filtered through Jay's apartment windows as he stood in his small kitchen, methodically preparing chai. The familiar ritual of crushing cardamom pods, measuring out black tea leaves, and timing the milk just right helped center his thoughts after everything that had happened.

Behind him, Bobby sat slumped at the kitchen table like a man who'd stared into the abyss and found it staring back.

"You want some chai?" Jay asked without turning around, stirring the fragrant mixture as it came to a gentle boil.

"How?" Bobby's voice was hoarse from a sleepless night. "How can you be so calm about all this? If even half the stuff you told me is gonna happen..."

Jay shrugged, pouring the steaming tea through a strainer into two mugs. "You get used to it."

"Used to it?" Bobby's laugh was bitter. "Kid, you basically told me the world's gonna end like six different ways. I'm never gonna sleep peacefully again."

"Why d'you think I drink so much chai?" Jay replied, offering Bobby a mug.

"Bobby, this is strictly between us. I only told you after you got Mental protections." Jay finished his tea and stood up. "Now get some sleep. I've got somewhere to be."

"Where are you going?"

Jay grabbed his leather jacket from the back of his chair. "To X-mension."

The familiar purr of the Datsun 240Z's engine was almost therapeutic as Jay drove through Westchester's tree-lined streets. The mansion's grounds looked the same as always—perfectly manicured lawns, ancient oak trees, and not a hint of the chaos that had erupted there just weeks ago courtesy of Moon Knight.

The drive had given him time to think, but thinking only made the knot in his stomach tighten. Every time he visited the X-Mansion, it felt like walking into a powder keg- too many powerful personalities, too many conflicting agendas, and too many secrets that could explode if handled wrong.

Kurt Wagner was waiting at the front steps, his blue skin and pointed ears immediately recognizable. "Guten Tag, Jay," he said with his characteristic warm smile. "Ze Professor, he is expecting you."

"Thanks, Kurt." Jay fell into step beside the teleporter as they walked through the mansion's halls. "Everybody home today?"

"Ja, everyone is here. Ze Professor, he thought it vould be... how do you say... prudent... to have ze full discussion."

Jay chuckled. "Hope third time's the charm and I don't have to run away like the last two times."

Kurt's laugh was genuine. "Perhaps zis time, ve keep ze telepathic probes to ze minimum, ja?"

Jay nodded, then hesitated as they approached the office doors. "Kurt, you ever feel like you're walking into a lion's den?"

"Every time I teleport into Cerebro vhen Storm is angry," Kurt replied with a grin. "But ze lions, they are usually reasonable once you explain yourself, nein?"

Xavier's office looked different with a full complement of X-Men arranged in a semicircle facing the guest chairs. Jay took a moment to catalog the assembled heroes- Scott and Jean sitting close together, Logan leaning against the wall with his arms crossed, Storm elegant in her chair, Beast adjusting his glasses, Kitty half-phased through the arm of her seat, and Rogue curled up in the corner along with Bobby Drake, Warren, and Jubilee.

"Hope you don't mind if I sit," Jay said, dropping into the chair directly facing them all. "This looks like it's gonna be a long conversation."

Kitty and Rogue chuckled at his casual tone, while the others maintained their serious expressions. Xavier rolled forward slightly in his wheelchair.

"Jay, I am profoundly relieved to ascertain that you have maintained your physical well-being after the regrettable incident in Central Park," the Professor said, his measured cadence carrying the weight of genuine concern and academic practice. "Your selfless intervention on behalf of the Castle family- administering healing under direct hostile fire demonstrated courage of the most extraordinary caliber."

"Thanks," Jay replied, accepting the praise but clearly wanting to move things along. "But perhaps we might address the substantive matter at hand? I suspect this convocation serves purposes beyond a mere wellness assessment."

"The young man speaks with wisdom, Charles."

Jay turned in his chair, his danger sense remaining completely quiet as Erik Lehnsherr, Magneto entered the room with Mystique at his side. The lack of any threat response from his danger sense meant that it wasn't an ambush for now.

What surprised him more was the complete lack of animosity between Magneto and the X-Men. No tensed muscles, no hands moving toward weapons, just the resigned wariness of people who'd had this argument before.

"Eric," Xavier said with a slight sigh. "I thought we agreed to discuss this privately first."

"Did we?" Magneto settled into another chair, his presence somehow making the already crowded room feel even smaller. "Because from where I sit, observing the grand chessboard of mutant-human relations, this young man's actions have accelerated all our carefully laid plans considerably. History teaches us that overexposure without preparation leads to persecution, and persecution..." His voice carried the weight of lived trauma. "Well. We have seen where that path leads."

Jay looked between them, then burst out laughing. "Oh, this is rich. What is this, a parent-teacher meeting? You're gonna lecture me about going public?"

Scott's jaw tightened visibly, his hands clenching into fists. "Jay-" he started, his voice strained with barely controlled emotion.

"No, let me guess how this goes. You're worried about the narrative, right? About mutants being in the spotlight again?" Jay's voice took on a mocking edge. "Tell me, Erik, how exactly do you think the narrative got so bad in the first place?"

Scott's face flushed red, his breathing becoming more rapid. Magneto's eyes narrowed dangerously, but Jay pressed on.

"The Cuban Missile Crisis, when you tried to start World War III. The 1973 White House incident, where you literally attacked the President on live television. Oh, and the Cairo incident that came to bite me in the ass a few weeks ago when Moon Knight showed up looking for payback. And let's not forget 1992, when aliens came for Jean and she seemingly exploded and came back, that really helped with the whole 'mutants are dangerous' thing, didn't it?"

The room had gone deadly quiet. Even Logan was standing straighter, his attention focused entirely on Jay's words.

"These are the precedents you've set," Jay continued, his metaphorical aura flaring with indignation. "Decades of fear, violence, and chaos. And you have the face to show up here and lecture me about protecting the narrative?"

"Now see here-" Erik began, his own temper rising.

"No, you see here. I saved a family. I healed homeless people. I showed the world that mutants can be healers instead of just destroyers. If that's what breaks your carefully maintained status quo, then maybe your status quo was already broken."

The argument might have escalated further, but Xavier's voice cut through the tension with practiced authority.

"We also wanted to discuss the Power Broker," he said, steering the conversation back on track. "Their abilities appear remarkably similar to yours- the power to suppress mutant abilities."

Erik and Mystique exchanged glances. "We know nothing of this Power Broker," Raven said, her voice carrying concern.

Charles quickly explained what they'd witnessed about the mysterious figure who'd taken control of Morlocks with a similar yet much powerful ability than Jay's. Erik's expression grew increasingly dark as the implications became clear.

"You're both threats to our entire species," Erik said finally, metallic objects around the room beginning to vibrate with his rising emotions. "In the wrong hands, either of you could be used as a weapon against all mutants."

Metal bands from various sources, chair frames, lamp bases, even the steel in Jay's jacket zipper, suddenly snaked through the air to bind him in place. Jay didn't resist, letting Magneto demonstrate his point.

'Classic Magneto move,' Jay thought as the metal wrapped around him. 'Next, he'll give a speech about mutantkind's destiny.'

"Eric, you're making assumptions—" Xavier started.

"Am I? This boy appears from nowhere with unprecedented abilities, and suddenly, there's another person with similar powers operating in the same city? The timing is—"

"The timin' is coincidental," a Southern voice interrupted.

Everyone turned to stare as Rogue stood up from her corner, walked over to where Magneto sat, and calmly placed her bare hand on his cheek.

The metal restraints around Jay clattered to the floor as Erik's concentration shattered, his eyes rolling back as Rogue absorbed his powers and memories. After a few seconds, she released him and stepped back, leaving the master of magnetism swaying in his chair.

"Jay gave Hank an' me hope that we could be normal again," she said simply, her accent thick with emotion. "He's a good guy, not a villain like you, who's only ever been draggin' our reputation down."

Jay stared at her in shock. Clearly, he had downplayed the impact he had had on Rogue.

Standing up and taking her bare hand in his. "Thanks, Rogue," he said softly as if perfectly natural.

"I've healed the Power Broker and his people on numerous occasions," Jay continued, addressing the room while still holding Rogue's hand. "He shared some information with me as payment. And while the application of our powers might seem similar, the nature is completely different."

Beast cleared his throat, drawing everyone's attention. "Forgive the interruption, but there exists an additional matter of considerable humanitarian import for which we solicited Jay's presence today." He moved to the door and gestured for someone to enter.

A young woman with dark hair and keen eyes stepped into the already crowded room. Jay recognized her immediately, though he was careful not to show it.

"Allow me to introduce Tessa," Beast said, his tone carrying both professional courtesy and genuine concern. "Her mutation appears to have encountered some form of impediment, leading to her losing most of her powers. We harbored hopes that your rather unique healing capabilities might enable you to conduct an examination and determine the feasibility of therapeutic intervention."

Jay nodded, moving to Tessa and placing his hands on her shoulders. He made a show of concentrating, using his stolen enhanced intelligence, originally hers, to perform a detailed scan while being careful not to reveal that he was the reason her powers weren't manifesting properly.

After several minutes, he stepped back with a carefully crafted expression of regret. "I'm afraid the prognosis is rather grim. There's nothing wrong with her body, but I can conclude the X-gene itself is absent," he said, the lie tasting bitter in his mouth even as he maintained his compassionate facade. "I'm sorry, but this isn't something that I can heal."

Beast's shoulders sagged with disappointment and doubt, his scientific mind already racing through alternative theories and treatments. "Most regrettable, though I appreciate your thorough examination." Several others in the room shifted uncomfortably, the weight of another mutant's unfulfilled potential settling over them like a shroud. Tessa took the news with stoic acceptance, though Jay could see the disappointment in her eyes.

Jean had been notably quiet during the discussions, her green eyes troubled as she processed the implications of everything being said about mutant politics, the Power Broker, and the various threats to their kind.

"Since we're on the subject of medical examinations," Scott said suddenly, his voice tight with worry, "As you know that Jean died and came back. Could you..." He swallowed hard, his earlier anger now transformed into raw vulnerability. "Could you check on her? Make sure she's okay?"

Jean's head snapped up, her expression shifting from contemplative to alarmed. "Scott, that's not necessary-" she protested, unconsciously taking a step back.

"It is necessary," Scott insisted, his voice cracking slightly. "If there's something wrong, if there's some kind of complication..." His hands trembled as he reached toward her, then dropped to his sides.

Jean's face softened as she saw the genuine fear in her boyfriend's eyes, the terror of losing her again written plainly across his features.

"Scott's got a point," Logan interjected, his gruff voice cutting through Jean's protests. "After everything we've been through, better to know."

Jay hesitated, knowing what he'd find but understanding that Scott's fears weren't entirely unfounded. "Alright, but I'll try not to be too invasive."

He approached Jean carefully, placing one hand on her shoulder and letting his healing aura extend just far enough to scan her cellular structure. Using Sage's DNA ocular abilities, he examined Jean's body while being extremely careful not to probe too deeply into the psychic realm where the Phoenix fragment resided.

His expression shifted from calm to surprised to deeply troubled as the scan progressed.

"Everything looks fine," he said finally, but his face clearly indicated otherwise.

Logan's eyes narrowed. "Your expression says different, bub."

Storm finally spoke, her voice carrying the authority of someone accustomed to command. "Jay, if there are concerns regarding Jean's well-being, we should address them openly. Secrets have a way of festering."

Mystique shifted in her chair, her yellow eyes studying Jay with calculating interest. "The boy's face suggests complications. Perhaps we should hear what he has discovered."

Jay glanced around the room at all the assembled heroes, mutant leaders, and curious students. "Maybe those who don't need to know should step out."

Nobody moved. Not one person.

Scott's voice was firm. "We've trusted each other with our lives in situations way worse than this. Whatever you found, we can handle it."

Jay was quiet for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "What I'm going to reveal is part of the reason for the excessive and almost illogical hatred against mutants in this world. But first, the happy news." He turned to Logan with a slight grin. "Congratulations, Wolvi. You're going to be an uncle."

The room went completely silent as everyone processed this information. Logan's eyebrows shot up, while Jean gasped, and Scott's mouth fell open.

"Wait, what?" Jean said, her hand moving instinctively to her stomach.

"You're pregnant," Jay confirmed. "About six weeks along."

The emotional whiplash was immediate and intense. Jean burst into tears of joy while Scott whooped and swept her into her arms. Logan showed a genuine smile, a warm expression that transformed his usually gruff features. Even Magneto and Mystique were smiling at the news.

After the congratulations died down, Jay held up a hand. "Hold on there. Why are you all huggin' Scott? I didn't say who the father was. Could be Kurt for all you know."

The room fell silent again as everyone processed this, then turned to stare at Jay with expressions ranging from amusement to horror.

"What?" Jay said innocently. "I think Kurt's handsome."

The tension broke as everyone burst into laughter- even Erik chuckled despite himself. Kurt's blue skin somehow managed to show a blush as he stammered something in German.

But as the laughter died down, the seriousness of Jay's earlier expression returned.

"The pregnancy is wonderful news," he continued, his voice growing grave. "But it's also complicated. Jean, you do carry the Phoenix, but it's just a tiny shard of the real thing. Which raises the question, what happened to the actual Phoenix?"

The room grew quiet again, sensing that they were about to hear something significant.

"After Jean died fighting to save everyone, she was transformed by the Phoenix Force. But when she returned, she shed part of herself to become mortal again. The Jean standing here is real, but she's also fundamentally changed by that experience."

"That's still good news, this means no more losin' control," Scott said, relief evident in his voice.

"That is the good news," Jay replied grimly. "The bad news would be if the real Jean was fully gone with the Phoenix, and this Jean here was actually a clone planted by someone else."

The words hung in the air like a death sentence.

'If this were the comics and she was real,' Jay thought, watching the shock ripple across their faces, 'this is about the time the Phoenix would torch the room.'

Scott's face went white, then red with fury. "My girlfriend is not some piece of test tube experiment! She's real!"

"I understand your anger," Jay said, raising his hands placatingly as his danger sense began screaming warnings, "but you need to hear the full truth before you—"

Scott's control snapped. "ENOUGH!"

Logan's claws burst from his knuckles with their characteristic snikt, his lip curling in a snarl. "Watch yer mouth, bub, or I'll—"

But before either of them could complete their threats, Jay's danger sense kicked in, and he dodged backwards, his reflexes keeping him just ahead of Scott's wild swing and Logan's slashing claws.

Optic beams charged to deadly intensity.

Adamantium claws gleamed in the afternoon light.

And Jay backed against the wall, trapped between two of the most dangerous mutants alive who'd just been told the woman they both loved might not be real.

The room held its breath as death hung in the balance.

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Chapter 33: The Revelation New
Jay's instincts screamed danger as both men moved toward him. Logan's trademark growl rumbled through Xavier's study while Scott's jaw tightened with barely contained fury.

Jay had had enough of this posturing. Time to show them exactly who they were dealing with.

Moving faster than most people could follow, Jay reached out and touched Scott's temple just as crimson energy began building behind his ruby quartz visor. The power suppression flowed through Jay's fingertips like water, instantly neutralizing Scott's optic blasts. With deliberate slowness, Jay pulled the visor clean off and held it up to examine it, as if it were some mildly interesting trinket.

Scott's eyes showed terror. Without his visor's protection, his uncontrolled blasts would level half the mansion. But Jay was already turning Scott's head toward Logan with an almost bored expression, casually removing his hand from Scott's head.

"No!" Scott's panicked shout came too late.

The full force of Scott's unleashed optic blast erupted in a brilliant crimson column, catching Logan square in the chest. The impact rang Logan's adamantium skeleton like a struck church bell as he flew backward, crashing through Xavier's reinforced wall. Ancient books tumbled from their shelves as Logan crumpled to the floor, blood already pooling beneath him.

"Logan! Jesus, I couldn't control it..." Scott's voice cracked as he fumbled for his spare visor with shaking hands.

Jay moved with the same calculated precision, dropping into a crouch beside the groaning Wolverine. The metallic smell of blood mixed with the ozone from Scott's blast. Without hesitation, Jay placed his palm on Logan's shoulder and suppressed his legendary healing factor, watching with clinical interest as the effect took hold.

The change was immediate and brutal. Logan's wounds stopped closing, fresh blood flowing freely as his superhuman recovery ground to a complete halt. The older mutant's breathing became labored and ragged, his face contorting as he experienced something he hadn't felt in decades... the very real possibility of dying.

"You know, Logan," Jay said conversationally, his tone maddeningly casual as he studied the wounded Wolverine, "for someone with over a century of combat experience, you really do have a predictable attack pattern. Think, Logan, Think." " He tilted his head with mock curiosity, a slight smirk playing at his lips. "I mean, I get Scott's reaction. He's protective of Jean, always has been. But you? What's with the whole feral routine?" Jay's voice carried an undertone of amusement as he acted out his favorite meme from back home.

"THAT'S ENOUGH!"

Xavier's voice exploded through the room with telepathic force that would have frozen every mind present, except Jay remained completely unaffected. The Professor's hand slammed down on his mahogany desk, sending papers flying in all directions. His usual composed demeanor had completely shattered.

"This behavior is absolutely unacceptable! We are supposed to represent something better than this petty violence! We stand for peaceful coexistence between our species, not... whatever this display was!"

Xavier's eyes blazed as he looked between his students. Even Erik straightened in his chair, recognizing the dangerous edge creeping into his old friend's voice.

Jay slowly lifted his hand from Logan's shoulder with theatrical timing, as if granting a royal pardon. The healing factor resumed its work immediately. Within seconds, Logan's wounds began sealing themselves, though he remained on the ground, glaring pure murder at the young doctor who had just humiliated him so effortlessly.

Rogue and Beast rushed to Jay's side, genuine concern written across their faces.

"Sugar, are you hurt?" Rogue asked, her Southern drawl thick with worry.

"Quite the tactical demonstration," Beast observed, adjusting his glasses nervously. "Though perhaps a touch excessive in execution?"

Jay brushed dust from his pants, completely unfazed. "I'm fine." His gaze swept the shocked faces around the room.

The silence stretched uncomfortably as everyone processed what they'd witnessed. The mild-mannered doctor had systematically dismantled two of the X Men's most dangerous fighters without even breaking a sweat, and he'd made it look almost... easy.

Xavier took several deep breaths, slowly regaining his composure. He smoothed his suit jacket and ran a hand over his bald head as the telepathic pressure in the room gradually diminished.

After Logan had grudgingly pulled himself upright, though his posture remained coiled and ready for round two, Jay straightened his jacket and looked around calmly.

"Now," he said, as if the last few minutes hadn't happened, "where were we?"

"You were tellin' us that Jean... my best friend Jean... is some kind of clone!" Jubilee burst out, her voice cracking with emotion. Sparks danced between her fingertips as her powers responded to her distress.

Jay nodded, his expression softening at Jubilee's obvious pain. "Yes, and I suggested that if Hank examines her DNA for specific markers, you might find evidence of tampering." He turned toward the furry scientist. "Whoever did this is extremely methodical. They've created what appears to be a perfect replica of Jean's genetic code, but they had to incorporate some form of control mechanism. Trace amounts of foreign genetic material, microscopic implants... anything that doesn't belong in a natural human genome."

Beast's scientific curiosity immediately engaged with the problem. "A fascinating hypothesis. If such markers exist, they would likely be incorporated at the cellular level, possibly even integrated into the mitochondrial DNA to avoid detection..."

Jean's face went pale, then flushed bright red with anger. The entire mansion began to shake as her emotions spiked, her telekinetic powers responding to her psychological turmoil. Books fell from shelves with thunderous crashes, windows rattling violently in their frames as her power built toward dangerous levels.

"Jean, you need to calm down!" Scott called out desperately, but his words were lost in the growing psychic maelstrom.

Everyone sprang into action. Storm spoke in soothing tones while Beast offered logical reassurances. Even Raven and Magneto moved to provide comfort. But the existential crisis was simply overwhelming for Jean to handle.

Jay walked over and placed his hand on top of Jean's head like she was an upset child, immediately suppressing her mutant abilities.

The shaking stopped instantly.

The scene became awkward as everyone found themselves clustered around Jean, attempting to comfort her, while Jay stood there with his hand on her head as if calming a frightened kid.

"You are who you are, regardless of what anyone else says," Jay said simply, his voice cutting through the uncomfortable silence. The conviction in his words seemed to reach something deep within Jean's psyche. Then he looked directly at Scott, seeming to peer straight into his soul with those unnervingly calm eyes. "Does this possibility change how you feel about her?"

"Not a chance," Scott responded immediately, his voice fierce with protective love. His hand found Jean's, squeezing gently. "I fell in love with who she is as a person, not her genetic code. Clone or not, she's still the same woman who laughs at my terrible jokes and makes me want to be better than I am."

"And Hank hasn't confirmed anything yet," Scott added more reasonably, his tone becoming gentler. "We're still dealing with theories and possibilities, not confirmed facts."

Jay removed his hand from Jean's head and turned to face Xavier and Erik directly, his expression growing grave. "What I'm about to share with you is highly confidential information. It cannot leave this room."

The air seemed to thicken with anticipation.

"The person most likely responsible for cloning Jean, if she is indeed a clone, is almost certainly Dr. Nathaniel Essex."

Xavier's eyebrows shot up in surprise. "I'm not familiar with that name, and I've made it my business to catalog every geneticist and scientist working in mutant-related research fields."

"That's because he's a Victorian era biologist who became so knowledgeable about genetics and evolutionary biology that he essentially achieved immortality," Jay explained, his voice taking on the measured tone of someone delivering a lecture on an extremely dangerous subject. "He's obsessed with creating the 'perfect' mutant specimen, and he'll use any means necessary to achieve his goals." Jay's eyes grew distant, as if calculating terrible future implications. "He's had over a century to perfect his techniques and hide his work from people like you, Professor."

"That's simply impossible," Xavier said firmly, his voice carrying the authority of decades of experience. "No such expert is operating in mutant genetics. I would have detected their presence when I first manifested my powers and began searching for others like us. My cerebral implants, Cerebro, no one could hide from that level of psychic surveillance."

Jay's expression became almost playful. "He used to operate under another name; one you'd definitely recognize. For a significant period, he assumed the identity of Charles Darwin."

The room erupted in shocked murmurs and gasps. Beast's jaw dropped open, his usual eloquence completely abandoned.

"You're claiming that Charles Darwin was a mutant?" Beast managed to stammer.

"Not exactly," Jay replied carefully. "But Essex appropriated Darwin's identity for a time, using his legitimate scientific theories as cover for his real work, genetic manipulation and directed mutation research specifically designed to create and control mutant evolution." His voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "He's operated under many names across the centuries, many different identities, but in our current era, he goes by Mr. Sinister."

The name sent visible chills through everyone present. Even Magneto, who had faced down ancient mutants and alien invasions, shifted uncomfortably in his chair.

"Sinister has been behind many of the worst atrocities committed against our kind," Jay continued, his voice heavy with terrible knowledge. "He pursues his goals without any moral constraints, human experimentation, mass murder, psychological and physical torture, anything that advances his research."

He turned to look at Jean, his expression softening with genuine sympathy. "He must have observed your performance against Apocalypse and decided you'd make an ideal test subject. Your connection to the Phoenix Force would be incredibly valuable to someone like him, the power of creation and destruction in a form he could potentially control and study."

Jean shuddered involuntarily, unconsciously moving closer to Scott, who immediately wrapped a protective arm around her shoulders.

Jay turned back to Xavier, his expression becoming urgent. "Charles, if I were you, I'd immediately conduct the most comprehensive physical and mental scans possible on every resident of this mansion. If Sinister has been observing Jean, if he's been planning something this elaborate, he wouldn't have limited himself to just her. He might have left other surprises... sleeper agents, genetic tracers, psychic backdoors, or worse."

Xavier nodded grimly, already mentally cataloging the security procedures he'd need to implement.

Then Jay faced Erik, his expression growing even more serious. "You, Erik, have always recognized humanity's seemingly irrational hatred toward mutants, especially when they simultaneously celebrate other enhanced beings like the Fantastic Four or Captain America. This discrepancy has always been illogical and disproportionate. It's not natural human prejudice... It's been orchestrated for a specific purpose."

Erik leaned forward, his eyes narrowing as he recalled decades of studying patterns of human hatred and violence. Metal objects around the room began vibrating almost imperceptibly as his emotions stirred. "What exactly are you saying, boy? Speak plainly."

The atmosphere in the study grew thick with unspoken fears and mounting dread.

Jay's voice dropped to almost a whisper, somehow making his words more ominous. "Someone... something... is behind all of this. All the hatred, all the suffering directed specifically at mutants while other enhanced humans are embraced as heroes and protectors."

Erik's eyes flashed red with building rage, and the vibration of metal objects intensified. Xavier's wheelchair creaked ominously, and Logan's adamantium skeleton began to ache. "Give me a name," Erik demanded, each word precise and deadly.

"Sublime. A sentient bacterial organism that has existed since the dawn of life on Earth." Jay's words fell like stones into still water, creating ripples of shock and disbelief. "It can possess and control human hosts, but mutants are immune to its influence. It sees mutant evolution as the first real threat to its eternal dominion over life on this planet."

The revelation hit everyone like a physical blow. They sat in stunned silence as the implications sank in of an ancient intelligence that had potentially been manipulating human civilization for millions of years.

Logan finally pushed himself completely off the wall, his healing factor having restored him fully, though his pride remained wounded. "Kid," he growled, his voice carrying decades of hard-won skepticism, "you're askin' us to believe that some ancient microbe has been pullin' humanity's strings since the dawn of time? That's one hell of a claim, bub."

"Logan raises a valid point," Beast interjected, his analytical mind engaging with the enormity of the suggestion. "The coordination required for such manipulation would span countless generations and multiple civilizations. Do you possess empirical evidence of this organism's existence? Genetic samples? Historical documentation?"

Scott crossed his arms defensively. "How exactly do you know all this? This isn't the kind of information someone just stumbles across in a medical journal."

Xavier leaned forward in his wheelchair, his telepathic senses probing carefully. "I've touched millions of minds over the decades, Jay. If such an entity existed and was influencing human thought on this scale, surely I would have detected some trace of its presence."

Jay paused, seeming to consider his words carefully. "This knowledge comes from my... unusual circumstances. I can't provide more details than that," he said. "But consider the logic, why would humans embrace someone who shoots fire from his hands or a woman who can turn invisible, yet fear and hate someone whose only 'crime' is being born different? The hatred is too specific, too coordinated across cultures that have never even interacted. It's not natural human prejudice."

Erik's hands trembled with barely contained fury, every piece of metal in the room responding to his emotional state with creaks and groans. "You're tellin' me that every act of violence, every Sentinel program, all of it orchestrated by some primordial parasite?" His voice rose to a dangerous shout. "Every child I watched die in those camps, every friend I lost... puppet strings pulled by bacteria?"

The words hung in the air like a death sentence. Xavier's face had gone completely ashen. "Social engineering on such a massive scale... the coordination required, the subtle influence over human institutions..." He trailed off, unable to finish the thought.

"Charles," Erik said slowly, his voice carrying the weight of terrible understanding, "think about every government that's turned against us, every scientist who's created weapons specifically designed to kill mutants, every mob that's formed seemingly overnight. Think about the coordination, the precise timing."

Storm finally spoke up, her voice barely above a whisper. "The patterns. All those years I spent traveling through Africa, I observed the same fears, the same specific hatreds in tribes that had never heard of America or Europe. It never made sense before."

"Exactly," Jay confirmed grimly. "Both Sublime and Sinister have survived this long because they understand patience in ways human minds can barely comprehend. They think in centuries, not years or decades."

Jay stood up, preparing to leave, his movement drawing everyone's attention. "I'm advising both of you to only engage these threats when you're fully prepared, when you've verified everything I've told you, and when you have comprehensive plans that account for their vast experience and resources. These aren't enemies you can simply punch your way through, Logan, or outmaneuver with conventional tactics, Scott. They've been playing this game since before any of us existed."

His expression softened slightly. "You might not get a second chance if you move too quickly."

He moved toward the door with measured steps, then paused with his hand on the ornate brass handle. "But here's what you can control," he said, turning back one final time. "You need to prepare to go mainstream, to take control of the narrative before your enemies can weaponize it against you. Just like I advised the Fantastic Four during my recent interview, you need to solve real-world problems and broadcast your successes. Show the world that when disasters strike, it's mutants who run toward the danger to help ordinary people. Make them love you before Sublime can re-teach them to hate you."

As he reached for the door, Rogue stood abruptly, her chair scraping loudly against the hardwood floor. She moved toward him with obvious urgency, catching his hand with her own bare skin. "Sugar, we need to talk," she said, her Southern drawl making it clear this wasn't a request. "Privately?"

Jay studied her face for a moment, noting the determined set of her jaw and the worry lines around her green eyes. He nodded, allowing her to lead him into the hallway as the heavy oak door closed behind them with a soft but definitive click.

Behind them, Xavier sat in his wheelchair among the scattered books, papers, and destroyed furniture... physical evidence of the chaos Jay's revelations had brought to their previously ordered world.

The professor silently vowed never to invite Jay again. Every time the young man arrived, things always evolved for the worse..

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Chapter 34: Interrupted Evolution New
Rogue practically dragged Jay out to the garden before he could make his escape. The late afternoon sun stretched long shadows between the roses, and she'd deliberately chosen the most hidden bench she could find, tucked away behind a wall of climbing vines.

"Sugar, I'm gonna be straight with you," she said, her Mississippi drawl thick with nerves.

Jay sat down, but kept a careful distance between them. He already had a sinking feeling about where this conversation was headed.

"I like you," she blurted out, the words tumbling over each other in her rush to get them out. "You're smart as a whip, handsome as sin, and your power helps people. Our abilities work together like puzzle pieces. You could touch me, and I could finally touch someone without hurtin' them."

The silence stretched between them like a held breath.

"Say somethin'," she whispered.

Jay studied her face, those green eyes so full of hope, which made his chest ache. "Is this your mind talking or your heart, Marie? Because what you're describing sounds..." he paused, choosing his words carefully, "parasocial. Like we'd be toxic for each other from day one."

"It ain't like that!" The words came out sharper than she intended.

Jay reached out slowly, his fingers brushing her gloved hand before his thumb traced her cheek. The touch was gentle, almost reverent. "What do you feel when I do this?"

"Warmth," she breathed.

"But warmth comes from anyone you touch. When the procedure works, if it works, and I can permanently remove your powers, anybody could give you that feeling. What happens to us then?"

Her eyes went glassy, and she blinked rapidly. "I'll still feel the same about you."

"Will you, though?" Jay tilted his head, and there was something in his expression that cut through all her carefully constructed justifications. "That warmth you're chasing, it's not really about me, is it? It's about not being alone anymore. About feeling safe. About being normal." His voice gentled. "And you deserve all those things, Marie, but..." He hesitated, then pressed on. "Tell me, did these feelings suddenly get stronger after you saw me and Domino on that news interview?"

Her entire body went rigid, shoulders locking up like she'd been struck.

Jay sighed and let his hand drop. "I thought so. Look, even if Dom and I aren't putting labels on things yet, we're... something. And it wouldn't be right- not to her, not to me, and definitely not to you to pretend otherwise."

Rogue swallowed hard, her voice barely above a whisper. "You make it sound so cut and dried."

"Trust me, it never is." Jay stood, brushing imaginary dust from his jacket. His voice carried just enough warmth to soften the rejection. "But hey, chin up. Someone's gonna come along, someone who can handle all of you, not just the parts that are convenient. Some smooth-talking charmer who'll steal your heart clean away."



The weeks between the Xavier Institute meeting and the procedure blurred together in Jay's memory like scenes from a half-remembered dream.

Training sessions with Bobby and strategy meetings with the inner circle gradually shifted into late-night pizza sessions where they argued over tactical maps spread across a massive oak table.

"You know we can still look for alternatives, right kid?" Bobby had said during one of those sessions, grease from his third slice of pepperoni dripping onto a blueprint of the safehouse. "From all those stories you've told me about the multiverse, power-ups were a dime a dozen."

"Different universe, different rules," Jay replied, studying the building's security layouts. "Besides, we need every advantage we can get for what's coming."

His dates with Domino were surprisingly easy. She'd drag him to dive bars where her luck made every impossible pool shot look effortless, or they'd catch midnight movies where she'd curl up against his shoulder, both of them pretending they weren't getting more attached by the day. They'd walk through Central Park after dark, her hand finding his while they talked about everything except what they were becoming.

The baseball game with Ben and Johnny was supposed to be a break from all the tension. It wasn't.

Johnny spent most of the first three innings hitting on the beer vendor until she finally threatened to dump her entire jug on his head. "I'm just being friendly!" he protested as she stormed off.

Ben argued with the umpire so loudly his voice carried three sections over. "That was clearly a strike, ya bum! I've seen better eyes on a potato!" He kept it up until security started eyeing their section nervously.

Jay spent most of the seventh inning wondering if this was what having brothers felt like.

And now, after nearly a month, the time had come.

"You sure you don't want backup?" Bobby asked, pulling up in his modified pickup truck.

Jay slung his duffel bag over his shoulder. "I need you here. Get those emergency protocols ready, just in case."

"Just in case what? You know we can still find other ways to—"

"Bobby." Jay's voice was firm but fond. "You worry too much, old man." He pulled the older man into a hug, feeling the warmth and genuine care radiating from Bobby's weathered hands.

Domino's sleek black Challenger pulled into the driveway with a purr of a well-tuned engine. Jay waved goodbye to Bobby and slid into the passenger seat, inhaling the familiar scent of leather and her perfume.

"Ready to go super?" she asked, but there was tension threading through her voice that she couldn't quite hide.

"That's the plan."

The drive through Manhattan was comfortable, filled with easy silences and the occasional comment about the traffic or the city lights beginning to flicker on as evening approached.

"Having second thoughts?" Jay asked as they hit a red light.

"About you getting zapped with cosmic rays by Reed Richards?" She gave him a look. "That's the job, baby. Don't forget that's the priority here."

"Yeah, what can go wrong?"

"Famous last words," she muttered, but squeezed his hand.

By the time they reached the Baxter Building, the sun was painting the Manhattan skyline in shades of gold and orange. Jay felt a knot of anticipation in his stomach.

Reed had transformed half his laboratory into a cross between a medical facility and NASA mission control. Cables snaked across the floor, connecting massive devices that hummed with energy. The air tasted sharp, with a hint of ozone and disinfectant.

"Jay!" Johnny called out as they entered the lab. "Right on time, as always. Fair warning, Ben's been stress-eating all day and might take it out on you with bone-crushing hugs."

"Johnny, please," Sue said, rolling her eyes but smiling. "Try to dial down the commentary for five minutes?"

"No promises, sis."

Rogue stood by the massive windows overlooking the city, wearing a crisp white blouse and dark jeans, her hands clasped behind her back. She looked up when they entered, her green eyes meeting Jay's briefly before she found something fascinating to look at on the floor.

"I asked her to come," Hank explained, approaching with his usual measured stride. "We'll need someone to test your new abilities on, assuming this procedure is successful."

"And if it's not successful?"

"She can absorb enough life force to stabilize you until Reed deploys Plan B," Beast said matter-of-factly, adjusting his glasses with one massive blue finger.

Reed emerged from behind a bank of computers, and Jay noted he looked like he hadn't slept in about three days. His lab coat was decorated with coffee stains in various stages of freshness.

"Today represents a significant milestone," Beast announced, his cultured voice carrying both excitement and genuine apprehension. "The theoretical implications alone are quite extraordinary."

"Are you absolutely certain about this course of action?" Reed asked, his expression grave as he looked Jay in the eye. "Once we begin the procedure, there's no stopping it. The cosmic radiation exposure must be completed in a single session, or the cellular damage becomes irreversible."

Jay met his gaze steadily. "I'm sure."

Reed nodded slowly. "Then we'll need you to remove your shirt and most of your clothing. The radiation-conducting serums require direct skin contact, and any fabric interference could compromise the entire process."

Jay stripped down to his briefs, revealing the results of months of intensive training with Bobby, teaching him military combat. Lean muscle defined his chest and shoulders, while his abs showed the kind of functional strength that came from actual combat preparation rather than just gym work. The transformation was subtle but unmistakable to anyone who'd seen him months ago.

"Well damn, matchstick," Ben rumbled appreciatively from across the room. "You been hiding those under all those loose shirts this whole time?"

Rogue's face flushed pink, and her eyes immediately found something fascinating about the floor tiles near her feet. Domino, on the other hand, stared openly and raised an eyebrow.

"You've been holding out on me," she said with mock accusation. "Now, Mama's getting ideas." She paused, noting Rogue's surprised expression.

Jay settled onto the angled medical table, trying to ignore the attention. "Can we please focus on the potentially lethal science experiment happening here?"

"Quite right," Beast agreed, moving to check the forest of monitoring equipment surrounding the table. "Your genetic structure presents a fascinating challenge, my dear fellow. It appears to exist in constant flux as every time we attempt to analyze your DNA, the samples seem to deteriorate almost immediately upon extraction from your body."

"Which is precisely why we're taking this approach," Reed continued, his hands dancing over control panels with practiced efficiency. "Rather than attempting to modify you from the inside out, we're triggering the transformation from the outside in. Controlled cosmic radiation exposure while you're immersed in a specially formulated solution containing a blend of Mutant Growth Hormone and a rudimentary super-soldier serum I've developed from Dr. Erskine's note."

He paused, looking apologetic. "I should warn you, the treatment will be excruciating. Your body will essentially be rewriting itself at the cellular level. We'll need to sedate you completely for the procedure to progress safely."

Jay looked around at the faces gathered around him, some hopeful, some worried, all focused entirely on him, which was both comforting and slightly overwhelming. "If this goes sideways, everybody remember....I asked for this."

"No going sideways allowed," Johnny said firmly, crossing his arms. "Sue would murder me if I let her favorite consultant get fried on my watch."

"I'm not her favorite anything," Jay protested weakly.

"Oh, you definitely are," Reed laughed, the sound bright in the tense laboratory. "After all, Sue's a biologist and she talks about your genetic structure more than he talks to me these days."

"That's not—I mean—" Sue began.

"It's okay, honey. Science is sexy when it's you rambling about it."

Domino stepped forward without warning and kissed Jay deeply, her hands framing his face. When they separated, both were breathing hard, and the room had gone very quiet.

"For luck," she said simply, her voice slightly rough.

"Thanks." Jay's smile was soft and genuine as he turned back to Reed. "Alright, doc. Let's make some magic happen."

The next hour passed in a blur of clinical preparation. IV lines went in with practiced precision, and monitoring equipment was attached to track every conceivable vital sign. Jay was carefully positioned within the radiation chamber, which was a transparent cylindrical device that looked like it belonged on a starship.

The sedative began to take effect as full darkness fell over Manhattan, the city lights starting to twinkle beyond the laboratory windows. Through the observation glass, Jay could see everyone gathered- Domino with her arms crossed and jaw set, Rogue standing slightly apart from the group, the Fantastic Four and Hank clustered around Reed's control station like anxious parents.

"Beginning final countdown sequence," Reed announced, his voice carrying clearly through the intercom system. "All systems are showing green across the board. Initiating cosmic ray sequence in thirty seconds."

Sue's voice joined Reed's over the speakers. "Radiation levels are within acceptable parameters. All biological monitoring systems are active and functioning normally."

Jay's vision began to blur pleasantly as the sedative took full hold. The last thing he saw clearly was Domino pressing her palm against the observation window, her lips moving in either a prayer or possibly a very creative string of curses.

"Six seconds," Reed called out. "Five... four... three... two..."

The laboratory suddenly blazed with brilliant, otherworldly light as the cosmic ray projector roared to life. Energy crackled through the air like bottled lightning, and Jay's unconscious form was bathed in the same forces that had created some of the world's greatest heroes.

That's when the explosions started.

The sound hit them first as rolling thunder that seemed to shake the entire building from foundation to roof. Then came the screams from the street forty stories below, followed by that distinctive whoosh of something massive moving through the air at impossible speeds.

Through the windows, they could see fires erupting across Manhattan like deadly flowers blooming in the night. Something enormous moved between buildings, its form blotting out streetlights and casting shadows.

The Baxter Building shook again, more violently this time. Books tumbled from shelves, and several pieces of equipment sparked ominously.

"Reed!" Sue shouted over the growing chaos outside. "Should we abort the procedure?"

Reed's hands flew over his controls, sweat beading on his forehead as alarms began blaring throughout the laboratory. Jay's unconscious form continued to be bathed in cosmic energy, the enhancement process reaching its most critical phase.

"We have to help the people out there!" Reed called back. "Hank, Domino, Rogue- stay with Jay! Don't attempt to move him until the process stabilizes!"

Another explosion rocked the building, closer this time.

Whatever was attacking the city was heading directly for them, and Jay was trapped in the middle of the most dangerous enhancement procedure ever attempted, completely helpless and utterly vulnerable.

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Chapter 35: When Monsters Come Calling New
The explosions rattled the Baxter Building like thunder. Through the windows, fires bloomed across Manhattan. Something massive moved between the skyscrapers, casting enormous shadows across the streets.

"Reed!" Sue shouted over the alarms. "Should we abort?"

Reed's hands flew across the control panels, sweat beading on his forehead. "The process can't be stopped now! If we interrupt it, the cellular damage could kill him!"

"Stretch, we gotta move!" Ben's gravelly voice cut through the chaos. "Whatever's out there ain't waitin' for your science experiment to finish!"

Another explosion rocked the building, closer this time.

Beast's eyes never left the monitoring screens as the others rushed toward their equipment. "His vitals are spiking," he called out with growing concern. "The external stress is affecting the enhancement process, and his body's trying to respond even while unconscious."

Domino pressed closer to the observation window, her knuckles white against the glass. "Jay doesn't need this right now?"

Rogue stood frozen by the chamber, watching Jay's unconscious form flicker with otherworldly energy. "His face, he looks like he's in pain."

"Hank, Domino, Rogue... stay with Jay!" Reed ordered. "Everyone else, we need to help those people!"

"That's it," Johnny burst into flames, the lab blazing with orange light. "Time to see what's got the whole city spooked. Flame on!"

He rocketed toward the window, then stopped dead, hovering outside. Through the glass, they could see his face go pale beneath the fire.

"What is it?" Reed stretched to peer out the window. What he saw made his blood freeze.

Moving through the streets below was something out of a nightmare. Twelve feet tall, grotesquely muscular, with gray-green skin like decaying flesh stretched. Bone spurs jutted from its spine, and its face was a mockery of human features... sunken eyes and a mouth full of jagged teeth.

It crushed cars beneath massive feet, sweeping aside a city bus with one arm. Civilians scattered as it let out a roar that shattered windows six blocks away.

Johnny flew back inside, his flames sputtering with disgust. "Okay, Ben, I thought you were ugly, but that thing down there is a straight-up abomination."

Ben's rocky features twisted into a scowl. "Very funny, match head." He gave Johnny a good-natured shove that nearly sent the Human Torch into a wall. "Now shut up and help me figure out how we're gonna stop that thing."

The creature - Abomination, as Johnny had called it, let out a roar that shattered windows blocks away. The sound was like freight trains colliding, full of rage.

"Fantastic Four, move out!" Reed commanded. "We need to get those people to safety!"

Reed stretched his arm across the lab to grab his uniform. "Ben, get the Fantasticar ready. Johnny, start clearing evacuation routes. Sue..."

"On it," Sue interrupted, her force fields already shimmering to life. "I'll run interference, protect the civilians from debris."

Within minutes, they were airborne in the Fantasticar, New York sprawling beneath them like a circuit board of lights and disaster. The Abomination had moved deeper into the city, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake.

"There!" Sue pointed down at a collapsed overpass where dozens of people were trapped beneath twisted metal and concrete. "Those people need help!"

Reed stretched down from the flying vehicle like a human rope, his body extending nearly twenty feet. His arms wrapped around trapped civilians, lifting them gently from the wreckage and passing them up to the Fantasticar.

"I got the heavy lifting," Ben grunted, leaping from the car to the street below. The impact of his landing cracked the pavement, but he immediately began tearing away chunks of concrete that would have taken construction crews hours to move.

Johnny streaked through the air like a comet, his flames cutting through twisted steel beams and clearing paths for fleeing civilians. "This way, people! Move it, move it!"

Sue's force fields formed protective barriers around clusters of survivors, deflecting falling debris and creating safe corridors for evacuation. She worked with precision, her barriers appearing and disappearing exactly where they were needed.

"It'd be great if Jay were awake," Johnny called out, hovering above a particularly nasty collapse. "With his power, we could've saved twice as many people by now. Reducing the causality count."

"Focus on what we can do now," Reed replied firmly, passing another family up to safety. "We do the best we can with what we have."

They worked like the team they were, but the Abomination's rampage spread faster than they could contain it. Every disaster they cleared spawned two more.

That's when Ben went flying over their heads.

The Thing tumbled through the air like a skipped stone, crashing into a fire escape three blocks away.

"BEN!" Sue screamed.

The Abomination stood in the rubble where Ben had been, cracking its knuckles. A broken tooth hung from its mouth. When it spat the fang onto the pavement, it grinned, showing far too much intelligence.

"Oh, you're gonna pay for that," Johnny snarled, his flames burning white hot with rage. "Nobody messes with my family!"

He unleashed everything he had, a torrent of fire that could melt steel. The flames engulfed the creature completely, turning the street into an inferno.

But when the fire cleared, the Abomination stood there smoking and charred, but its regeneration already healing the worst burns.

"That's toasty," it rumbled, its voice like grinding stone.

Sue threw up a force field barrier just as the creature's massive fist slammed down. The impact sent shockwaves through her construct, cracks spider webbing across its surface.

"Sue, get out of there!" Reed shouted, stretching toward his wife. "The barrier's failing!"

The Abomination raised both fists for a killing blow...

THUNK!

Something struck its raised arm with tremendous force, drawing a spray of dark blood. The creature stumbled backward, more surprised than hurt, looking down at the deep gash in its forearm.

They all turned to see where the projectile had come from.

A man in a brown leather jacket riding a Harley Davidson, one hand extended as if catching something. In his grip was a circular shield... red, white, and blue with a silver star.

The bike's engine growled as he performed a perfect slide, turning sideways and stopping with controlled precision. If Jay were here, he would recognize the famous Akira Slide. He dismounted with fluid grace, pulling off his helmet to reveal blonde hair and sharp blue eyes.

"Holy shit," Johnny breathed. "That's Captain America's shield! And you look exactly like..."

"Steve Rogers," the man said simply. "Someone named Bobby called Coulson and said, 'The Doctor's in trouble,' so I came as fast as I could. SHIELD's setting up a perimeter, trying to contain this..." He gestured at the Abomination.

"Abomination!" Johnny shouted. "That thing's called the Abomination!"

Steve nodded grimly. "Fits." He surveyed the destruction. "You folks mind if I join this party?"

"Mind?" Johnny was practically vibrating with excitement. "Are you kidding? I used to play you in every school play! Captain America, the First Hero, the Star Spangled Man with a Plan..."

"Johnny," Sue warned, "focus."

But Johnny was on a roll. "I mean, you're even more handsome in person, and that slide was straight out of an action movie, and..."

The Abomination's roar cut off Johnny's fanboying. The creature had recovered from its surprise and was advancing again, its wound already closing.

"Introductions later," Steve said, raising his shield. "Right now, we've got work to do."

What followed was the kind of coordinated superhero action that would become legend. Steve's shield ricocheted off buildings and the creature's hide in impossible angles, each throw calculated to maximum effect. Sue's force fields became mobile platforms, letting the Captain bank shots off invisible surfaces. Johnny's flames provided cover and confusion, while Reed stretched himself into nets and barriers to corral their opponent.

But even with four heroes working in perfect sync, the Abomination proved resilient. Every wound healed within seconds, and its strength seemed limitless. Worse, it was learning their patterns, adapting to their tactics.

"This isn't working!" Reed called out, dodging a massive fist. "It's heading for the Baxter Building!"

The realization hit them all at once. The creature wasn't just rampaging randomly... it had a destination. It was heading straight for Jay.

"The serum," Reed breathed. "It wants the enhancement serum, or Jay himself."

The Abomination broke into a run, seeing the hero catching up, its massive strides eating up city blocks. Buildings shook as it barrelled through traffic, cars bouncing off its legs like toys.

"We need to stop it before it reaches..." Sue began.

That's when Metallica started playing.

The opening riff of "Enter Sandman" echoed across Manhattan, broadcast from speakers built into gleaming red and gold armor that dropped from the sky like a metallic javelin.

"Don't worry, Iron Man's here!" blared from the suit's external speakers before the music cut out, replaced by a cocky voice that could only belong to Tony Stark.

"Don't worry, folks, the real deal is here. Looks like you could use some help from someone with actual firepower."

The Iron Man armor hovered thirty feet above the street, repulsors charging with brilliant white light. Weapon systems unfolded from shoulders and forearms like the wings of a mechanical angel.

"One ugly customer, coming right up," Tony quipped. "House special... extra crispy with a side of payback."

What followed was the most spectacular fireworks display Manhattan had seen since the Fourth of July. Missiles streaked from Iron Man's shoulder pods, each one guided with computer precision. Repulsor beams lanced out, and from his chest, the unibeam cut loose with enough power to slice through steel.

The Abomination disappeared in a cloud of smoke and fire, the street erupting in explosions.

"And that's how it's done, kids," Tony announced smugly. "Stark Industries... when you absolutely, positively need something destroyed overnight."

But as the smoke cleared, the Abomination stood in the crater, healing slowly but surely. Burns faded from its hide like a time-lapse in reverse.

"Okay," Tony's voice had lost some of its cockiness. "That usually works better."

The creature fixed its glowing eyes on Iron Man and smiled that horrible, knowing grin.

"Maybe we should coordinate..." Steve began.

"I work alone," Tony cut him off. "I don't need help from..."

The Abomination's leap carried it thirty feet straight up. Its massive hand closed around Iron Man's leg, dragging the armored hero down toward the street.

"Okay, maybe I could use a little help," Tony admitted as alarms blared inside his helmet.

That's when the helicopter appeared overhead.


A military transport chopper hovered above the battle, and someone was preparing to fast rope down from its open door. They could see the figure silhouetted against the aircraft's lights, lanky and human-sized.

"Another ally?" Reed wondered aloud.

Sue threw up a force field beneath the falling figure, intending to give him a soft landing. Instead, the man crashed right through her barrier like it was made of tissue paper, the telekinetic construct shattering on impact.

He hit the street hard enough to crack pavement, but instead of the sickening crunch they expected, there was just a solid thump. The man lay still for a moment, face down in the crater he'd created.

Sue and Reed stared in horror. Her force fields could stop bullets, deflect explosions... nothing should have been able to punch through one that easily.

"Oh no," Sue whispered. "I killed him."

Johnny started to fly down to check on the fallen figure. "Hey buddy, you okay down..."

That's when the large green arm erupted from the crater.

Johnny barely twisted aside as massive fingers swiped through the air where his head had been a heartbeat before.

The man in the crater twitched, and as he did, his skin began to change. What had been normal human flesh turned deep emerald green, muscles swelling to impossible proportions. His clothes shredded as his frame expanded, growing from six feet to seven, then eight, then nine feet of pure muscle.

When he finally stood to his full height, he was a towering green giant with wild dark hair and eyes that burned with barely contained fury.

The Hulk opened his mouth and let loose a roar that shook the whole of Manhattan.

The sound hit them like a physical force, reverberating through their bones and into their souls. It was primal and pure rage.

Johnny hovered in the air, his flames flickering weakly. "Guys? Is that the Hulk?" His voice cracked slightly. "I think we're in double trouble."

The Abomination and the Hulk faced each other across the ruined street, two titans of destruction sizing up their opposition. The air between them crackled with barely contained violence.

The Hulk's lips pulled back in something that might have been a smile.

"HULK SMASH!"

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Chapter 35: Victor's Spoils New
The two giants circled each other like predators, their footsteps cracking asphalt and sending tremors through surrounding buildings. The Hulk's chest heaved with each breath, massive fists clenched so tight veins stood out like steel cables beneath emerald skin.

The Abomination's lips curled into a mockery of a smile, revealing jagged teeth. "You think you deserve this power, Banner?" His voice like grounded stone. "You pathetic, whimpering nerd, you never earned what flows through those veins."

The Hulk's only response was a low, rumbling growl.

"Dr. Sterns finally saw the truth," the Abomination continued, circling closer. "Gave me what I needed- your blood and pure gamma. And now, with whatever serum they're cooking up in that building-" He gestured toward the Baxter Building. "I'll be unstoppable."

"HULK SMASH!"

The green goliath launched himself forward, his leap carrying him across the entire street. They collided like thunder, the impact sending shockwaves through buildings.

"Well," Johnny said, hovering at a safe distance, "at least they're keeping each other busy."

"I need to check on Jay and the others," Reed said, stretching toward the Fantasticar.

Steve's shield reflected Johnny's flames as he surveyed the devastation. "We need to check on Ben first."

They found the Thing half-buried in twisted fire escape remains, rocky hide scraped but intact. His eyes were closed.

"Ben!" Sue knelt beside him. "Ben, please-"

"Stand back," Tony's voice cut through her panic as Iron Man descended, his suit running diagnostics. "He's alive, just unconscious. Probably a concussion if you can call it that when you're made of rock."

"Can you wake him up?" Steve asked.

"This is gonna hurt." Tony's suit reconfigured, electrical energy crackling between his palms. "This will be the world's most expensive defibrillation."

The electrical discharge hit Ben like lightning. His rocky frame convulsed as voltage coursed through him.

Ben's eyes snapped open with a grunt like grinding boulders. "What the- Tin can?! Did you just tase me?!"

"Had to make sure your circuits were still running," Tony quipped. "You missed quite a show."

Ben sat up slowly, gaze immediately finding the battling monsters. Each punch echoed like artillery fire. "How's the kid? Jay- is he...?"

"Reed went to check. The process can't be stopped now."

"Then I gotta get back down there." Ben pushed himself up with surprising grace for a living rock. "Can't let anything happen to the Doc when he trusted us." His voice carried the weight of responsibility. "That kid's endangering enough already."

Another building-shaking impact punctuated his words as the Hulk drove Abomination through a storefront.

"Human Torch and Invisible Woman, you are on evacuation duty," Steve commanded. "Iron Man and I'll help Thing with the green guys."

Sue nodded, grabbing Johnny's arm. "There are still people trapped."

"But I wanna see Cap's shield tricks up close!" Johnny's flames flickered with excitement as he hovered in place. "I mean, come on! This is Captain America! The guy I've been pretending to be since I was eight! Can't I just watch him work for like two more minutes? Please?"

"Now, Johnny!" Sue's force field crackled with impatience.

"This is so unfair," Johnny muttered as they streaked away. "Finally meet my childhood hero, and I have to miss the show."

High above, Domino pressed her face against reinforced windows, watching chaos unfold.

"This is insane," she muttered, checking weapons for the third time. She offered Rogue a spare pistol. "Just in case."

Rogue accepted it with gloved hands, expression conflicted. "Ah, don't like guns much, but..." She glanced toward Jay's unconscious form. "For now, ah'll make an exception."

Hank's blue-furred hands flew across control panels, working to keep cosmic radiation dose stable despite building-shaking impacts.

"Seismic activity is affecting the quantum field generators," he called out, sweat beading on feline features. "I'm compensating, but if these tremors get much worse-"

The lab door hissed open. Domino spun, pistol raised-

"Just me," Reed's elastic form stretched through the doorway.

"Sorry," Domino lowered her weapon. "This whole situation's got me on edge."

Reed's body flowed across the lab like liquid plastic, limbs extending to reach every monitor simultaneously, which appeared both creepy and fantastic.

"How is he?" Reed asked, multiple hands working across dozens of controls.

"Stable," Hank replied. "As long as cosmic radiation output remains constant, Jay should pull through. Cellular reconstruction is proceeding exactly as calculated."

Reed's expression tightened. "Then we hold the line. Whatever happens down there, we protect this lab."

On the street, the three-way battle had reached mythic proportions. Hulk and Abomination grappled while Ben tried to minimize collateral damage.

"This is like herding cats," Ben grunted, catching flying debris that would've taken out a bus. "Really big, really angry cats."

Steve's shield sang through air, ricocheting off a streetlight to clip Abomination's knee. The creature stumbled, giving Hulk an opening for a devastating uppercut.

"Nice shot, Cap!" Tony called out. "You know, for a hundred-year-old, you've still got better aim than most people with targeting computers. But we need a better strategy than 'hit them until they stop moving.'"

"Open to suggestions, Iron Man."

"Still working on it. JARVIS is running simulations—"

The sound of twisting metal cut them off. Abomination had grabbed a city bus, hefting it like a club.

"Oh, come on," Tony groaned. "That's just showing off."

The bus came flying like a massive fastball. Tony twisted aside, but the projectile was too big to dodge completely.

That's when they heard helicopter rotors overhead.

Military chopper, coming in fast. Through the open door- an older man in general's uniform, and a young woman with concerned brown eyes.

The woman leaned forward, her face pressed against the window, and her voice carried over the helicopter's rotors, "Bruce!"

It was a voice the Hulk had heard in dreams, in nightmares, in every quiet moment when the rage subsided. A voice that could reach him even in his darkest fury.

"Betty!" The voice from the Hulk was different, deeper more human. Rage in his eyes flickered.

Abomination spotted the aircraft. His hideous grin widened. "Perfect. Let's see how much fight you have left when your girl is in pieces."

He grabbed concrete the size of a small car and hurled it with deadly precision.

Sue appeared, invisible force field catching the projectile mid-air. But the impact sent cracks spider-webbing across her barrier.

"Johnny!" she called out, strain evident.

Her brother streaked upward, flames trailing. He reached the helicopter as Sue's barrier shattered, wrapping the aircraft in controlled fire that incinerated falling debris.

"General, I presume?" Johnny called as he guided the chopper down. "Might want to keep your distance."

The older man in uniform leaned out of the helicopter as it touched down, his weathered face grim and blood seeping from his lips between coughs.

"That thing down there- it used to be one of my soldiers. Emil Blonsky." General Ross's voice carried the weight of command and regret. "It's my fault this happened and it's my responsibility is to stop it."

"With respect, General," Steve called out, shield at ready, "you might want to let us handle this one."

But it was too late. As the helicopter touched down, they could see blood on Betty's forehead where she'd hit the cabin wall.

The Hulk saw it too.

His roar was different this time, full of soul-deep pain. When he looked at Abomination, his eyes promised absolute destruction.

What followed wasn't a fight; it was an execution.

The Hulk moved with purpose, each blow calculated for maximum damage. He grabbed Abomination by the throat, lifting the twelve-foot monster like he weighed nothing. His other fist connected with bone-crushing force, over and over, until the healing factor couldn't keep up.

"You... hurt... Betty," Hulk growled between punches.

Abomination's struggles grew weaker. His gray-green skin began to fade, muscles shrinking as gamma radiation was literally beaten out of his system. Within minutes, where once stood a monster, now lay Emil Blonsky- human, broken, barely breathing.

But Hulk's rage wasn't satisfied. He raised both fists for a killing blow-

"Bruce, stop."

Betty's voice cut through fury like a knife. She stood twenty feet away, one hand pressed to her bleeding forehead, the other extended toward him.

"He's done. It's over."

Hulk froze, massive chest heaving. Slowly, his eyes shifted from the broken man to the woman he loved. Rage flickered, warred with something deeper.

"Betty... hurt," he rumbled.

"I'm okay," she said softly, taking a careful step forward. "I'm okay because you protected me."

Steve approached cautiously, shield lowered. "Easy, big guy. We're the good guys here. You saved a lot of people today."

Hulk's gaze fixed on the star-spangled shield, then Steve's face. Something passed between them- recognition.

"Hulk... protect Betty," the green giant said simply.

"I can see that," Steve replied. "That makes you one of the good guys in my book."

Tension began to ease. Tony's suit powered down weapons. Ben allowed himself a small smile.

The moment of calm lasted exactly thirty seconds before reality came crashing back.

"Well," Tony announced, "I'd say that's a successful first team-up—"

BOOM!

The explosion ripped through the Baxter Building's upper floors like a flower of fire and debris. Windows cascaded down in glittering shards, smoke pouring from what had been the laboratory levels.

"TONY!" Johnny screamed, flames flaring white-hot. "I swear, if you jinxed this-"

But they were already moving. Ben leaped between buildings with surprising agility. Steve grabbed Tony's armored leg as Iron Man rocketed upward. Sue wrapped herself in a force field bubble, Johnny shooting them both toward the building.

Only Hulk remained, his sole focus on protecting Betty.

The lab was a disaster zone. Smoke filled the air, sparks cascaded from damaged equipment. Through the haze, they could see figures huddled around the enhancement chamber as Reed's stretched form covering critical systems like a human shield, Hank working frantically at backup console, Domino helping Rogue to her feet.

"Reed!" Sue called out, force fields clearing smoke. "What happened?"

"System overload," Reed replied without looking up, multiple arms working across dozens of controls. "Seismic activity caused cascade failure in the stabilizers. I've got it contained, but- "

He stopped. His eyes widened as he looked at the chamber.

Inside, Jay's eyes were closed, but there was a leak in the chamber where shrapnel from the explosion had torn through the containment wall, and a jagged piece of twisted metal was embedded deep in his abdomen, dark liquid seeping around the wound.

Domino and Rogue both tried to leap forward, but Ben stopped them. "Hey, hey! Stay back!" He ran toward Jay. "That cosmic juice is still cookin' in there. One wrong move and we're all toast."

But saying that Ben was already moving and just as he reached the chamber, an energy blast crackling with green and silver sparks struck his face, sending him crashing through walls.

From the smoke came a figure in armor. Reed hopefully asked, "Tony, is that your friend?"

Tony grimly denied it, shaking his head.

When smoke cleared, they saw a man in metal armor from head to toe, eyes visible through slits, covered in a green cloak-cape.

"Fools," the armored figure spoke, voice resonating with absolute authority and disdain. His diction was regal, formal, the speech pattern of nobility that had remained unchanged even as the world became casual.

"You dare tamper with forces beyond your comprehension? The cosmic energies you have unleashed belong to DOOM!"

The figure raised one gauntleted hand, and the very air around them began to crackle with sharp energy.

"I have come to claim what is rightfully mine!"

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Chapter 36: The Doctor Will See You Now New
"Victor?" Reed's voice cracked as he stared at the armored figure. "Victor Von Doom? What are you doing here?"

Tony's HUD was already analyzing the intruder's tech. "Hold up, where'd you get my arc reactor designs? That power signature is way too close to my work."

The figure's eyes blazed through his metal mask. When he spoke, every word dripped with contempt. "STOLE? You dare accuse DOOM of common thievery? FOOL! DOOM has no need of your crude machinations! Any simpleton could construct such pedestrian armor. Trinkets like yours, DOOM has fashioned and discarded as inadequate prototypes years past!"

He turned that terrible gaze on Reed, his voice dropping to something far more dangerous. "But you, Richards... you took what was MINE. MY capital funded your pathetic venture into the cosmos. When your incompetence led to that catastrophic failure, it damaged Latveria's standing among the nations. Yet when you emerged from that cosmic storm with abilities beyond mortal ken—" His voice began to rise like a symphony of fury. "Did you answer DOOM's summons? Did you share the secrets of your transformation with the one whose wealth made it possible?"

Reed's jaw worked silently. "Victor, we were new at—"

"SILENCE!" Doom's gauntlet struck a control console, showering the lab in sparks. "Official diplomatic entreaties from the sovereign ruler of Latveria! Formal demands for audience! ALL IGNORED! You made DOOM appear weak before his subjects!"

His masked visage turned toward Sue, something infinitely darker entering his tone. "You stole DOOM's investment, DOOM's prestige, DOOM's rightful inheritance of power... and the one treasure that should have graced DOOM's throne."

Sue stepped forward. "Victor, what happened to you? This isn't who you were at Empire State."

"Have you learned nothing from DOOM's words, woman?" Doom's voice carried the chill of Latverian winters. "You have all betrayed DOOM. Most grievously you, Susan Storm. DOOM would have elevated you to royalty, made you a queen among nations. Instead, you play at heroics in these colorful costumes."

"That's enough!" Johnny's flames roared to life, bathing the lab in orange light. "Nobody talks to my sister like that! Flame on!"

He unleashed everything, a red-hot inferno that could melt steel. But Doom stood unmoved as a perfect energy sphere materialized around him. The flames washed over it uselessly.

"Parlor tricks," Doom said with bored contempt.

Rogue and Domino bolted toward Jay's chamber, but Doom casually raised his gauntlet. Twin energy beams forced both women to dive behind overturned equipment.

Steve's shield sliced through the air, intercepting the blasts, but the impact launched him backward into a wall hard enough to crack concrete.

"That's it!" Tony's suit screamed to full combat readiness. "Nobody messes with an American on American soil on my watch!"

Iron Man and the Human Torch attacked together, repulsors and superheated plasma creating a deadly light show. But Doom's barrier absorbed it all without a flicker.

Reed stretched across the chaos toward Ben. "You all right?"

"Been better, Stretch," the Thing rumbled, rolling his shoulders. "But I ain't down yet."

Hank's fingers flew over the cosmic radiation controls, sweat beading on his blue fur. "The containment field is fluctuating! If the radiation levels destabilize—"

"Johnny!" Sue shouted. "Sustained burn on his barrier and don't let up!"

Johnny poured his flames into a concentrated stream while Sue wove force fields around both the fire and Doom's armor. Not a barrier but a cage. The heat had nowhere to go but inward.

Doom's armor began glowing cherry-red as the temperature spiked. "Ingenious, Susan. But ultimately futile."

He spread his arms wide, energy crackling between his gauntlets. "DOOM SHALL NOT BE CONFINED!"

The explosion shattered Sue's construct and sent her tumbling across the lab. But the effort had cost him, warning lights flickered across his armor's systems.

Reed struck like an octopus, his form flowing around Doom from six angles. "Now! Everyone, now!"

"It's clobberin' time!" Ben charged forward.

His granite fist connected with Doom's chest just as Steve's shield ricocheted off his helmet. Tony's repulsors fired point-blank, the combined assault driving the armored dictator to one knee.

"This ends here, Victor," Reed said through clenched teeth, his limbs constricting around Doom. "Surrender, and maybe we can help you."

Doom's response was laughter- cold, bitter, and absolutely terrifying. "You never did comprehend the depth of your inadequacy, Richards. DOOM always has... contingencies."

Green energy erupted from his armor, an omnidirectional shockwave that hit like a train. Reed's grip shattered, Ben went tumbling, and Tony's suit was swatted aside.

As his enemies struggled to their feet, Doom placed a small device on Iron Man's suit. The EMP pulse turned Tony's armor into expensive deadweight.

"Fascinating technology, Stark. Regrettably vulnerable to electromagnetic interference."

A blade extended from his wrist. When Reed stretched toward him again, the edge sliced through his arm like butter.

Reed's scream echoed through the lab as he clutched the wound.

"Reed!" Sue's voice cracked with terror.

But Doom was already at the cosmic ray apparatus, his armored hand closing around the primary control. "If DOOM cannot possess these gifts," he declared with the finality of a death sentence, "then NONE shall benefit from them!"

The dial spun to maximum.

Jay's chamber erupted in blinding radiance as cosmic energy poured forth. The unconscious man convulsed as raw power cascaded over him.

"Sweet mother of Darwin, no!" Hank roared from his console. "Those radiation levels at that intensity, with his injuries, are going to kill him! Or transform him into something that should never exist!"

Domino threw herself toward the deadly beam, hoping to shield Jay. But the floor beneath her, which was weakened by explosions, chose that moment to collapse. She plummeted into darkness.

"Son of a bitch!" her voice echoed from below. "I couldn't even-"

Rogue watched Jay's body jerk and spasm in the chamber, the metal shard still bleeding in his abdomen. Her friends were down, the villain was winning, and someone she cared about was dying.

"Forgive me, sugar," she whispered, pulling off her gloves.

Her bare palm touched Ben's shoulder first. Strength and durability flooded into her as her skin took on granite texture. Sue came next as an invisible force field shimmering around her. Then Johnny, flames erupting from her arms. Finally Reed, her left arm stretching like taffy.


She was all of them now, their powers layered through her system. The agony was indescribable, every cell screaming as conflicting energies tried to tear her apart.

"Victor!" Her voice was a chorus now. "This ends now!"

What followed was less a fight than a force of nature unleashed. Rogue moved like lightning, stretching invisible, flaming limbs that struck from impossible angles while force fields contained destruction. She fought with Ben's instincts, Sue's precision, Johnny's courage, and Reed's calculation all at once.

She became a human storm, bending around Doom's energy blasts and striking back with flame-wreathed invisible fists that dented his armor. When he tried to fly, she wrapped elastic arms around his legs and yanked him down. When he fired missiles, she turned invisible and let them pass through the force field decoys.

But Doom adapted to her assault, using the lab as a weapon, turning tables into projectiles, overloading power conduits, and even collapsing ceiling sections.

"You are impressive," he admitted as his armor sparked from accumulated damage. "But you lack DOOM's greatest gift! His INTELLIGENCE!"

Through it all, Jay convulsed in the tank. Steve lay unconscious. Tony's suit was scrap metal. The Fantastic Four were down. Hank desperately tried reaching Professor Xavier while maintaining what control he had left.

Rogue's borrowed powers were cooking her from the inside. But before her body gave out, she managed one final act. Moving with Johnny's speed, backed by Sue's force fields, powered by Ben's strength, and guided by Reed's flexibility, she drove her fist through Doom's faceplate and chest armor.

Then she collapsed, her skin fading to pale as the stolen abilities drained away, leaving her gasping on the debris-strewn floor.

Doom stood amid the wreckage, armor sparking and failing. Blood ran from behind his shattered mask, but his voice carried satisfaction. "At last, I claim what was always—"

THWACK

Something struck his exposed face with sniper-bullet velocity. A quarter, twenty-five cents of American currency, moving so fast it punched through flesh like an armor-piercing round. Blood sprayed as his nose shattered, sending him staggering in blind agony.

In that moment of disorientation, he stumbled directly into the cosmic radiation beam.

Raw energy hit him with solar flare force. His scream could have shattered glass as cosmic fire began remaking his cellular structure. Only a fraction of radiation continued to Jay's chamber while Doom was absorbing the rest with his unwilling flesh.

Hank saw his chance. If the madman wanted cosmic radiation, the Beast would give him everything. Every dial spun to maximum. Every safety protocol disabled. The laboratory's entire cosmic energy reserve poured into the monster who had threatened their friend.

When the terrible light faded and their fuel was exhausted, the heroes slowly regained consciousness. What greeted them would fuel nightmares for life.

Victor Von Doom still stood, but no longer recognizably human. His once-magnificent armor hung in melted, twisted rags. Where his face had been was now scar tissue, exposed bone, and burn marks.

He was alive, but transformed into darkest nightmare.

But Jay commanded their attention now. The young man lay absolutely motionless in his chamber, terribly quiet.

Reed crawled to the chamber on hands and knees, his wounded arm leaving a crimson trail. "Jay?" he whispered hoarsely. "Jay, please... respond if you can hear me."

The silence stretched like a held breath.

No movement.

In the distance, sirens wailed as emergency responders finally reached the devastated Baxter Building.

But in that moment, all that mattered was the question none dared voice

Was he even still alive?

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Chapter 37: A Coin’s Journey New
[A/N]: This is my most ambitious chapter yet, so hit me with it all: the good, the bad, the ugly. Every bit of feedback helps me grow and make the story even better!

In the space between dimensions, where time flows like honey and causality bends to cosmic will, Uatu the Watcher observes. His ancient gaze falls upon Jay's motionless figure in the enhancement chamber, a twisted piece of metal still buried deep in his abdomen, and he watches the moment a quarter comes crashing and foils Doom's Plan.

"How curious," the Watcher muses. "The smallest acts of mortal free will can reshape destiny itself. Twenty-five cents became the pivot upon which this reality turns."

He gestures, and space-time ripples, revealing a truth that even the enhanced beings below cannot perceive: one month ago, frustration drove Jay to make a choice that would echo through countless lives.

One Month Earlier – Blue's Café

Jay strode toward the café's front window, irritation crackling through him like static. The copied power flickered weakly as the translucent die spun frantically in Jay's mental plane as if sensing what was coming.

"What are you doing?" Domino asked.

Jay was already drawing his arm back. He hurled the quarter through the glass with everything he had, watching it arc through the evening air. It caught the streetlight, spinning silver against the darkening sky before disappearing into the urban maze below.

The moment it left his sight, Domino's copied power faded from his mind like smoke.

"Well?" she asked, steadying herself against the booth. "Learn anything interesting?"

"Nothing changed," Jay lied. "Your powers work fine."

But the quarter tumbled through the New York evening, bouncing off a fire escape, ricocheting off a window ledge, and finally coming to rest on a Hell's Kitchen sidewalk with a soft metallic ping that no one heard.

Three Weeks, Six Days Ago - Hell's Kitchen

The rhythmic tap-tap-tap of Matt Murdock's cane painted the world in sounds and textures. Each echo told a story- rustling newspapers, distant traffic, whispered conversations floating from apartment windows above.

His enhanced senses caught the perfect metallic circle before his cane did. Matt paused, fingers finding the quarter. The coin was warm from the day's sun, its ridged edges distinct against his fingertips.

"Heads up, counselor!" Foggy called from across the street. "You planning to stand there all night, or are we hitting Josie's?"

Matt pocketed the quarter with a slight smile. "Just appreciating the city's generosity."

Later, outside the courthouse, the smell of fresh lemons and clinking coins drew his attention. A small voice, nervous but determined, spoke up.

"Lemonade, mister? Twenty-five cents for a cup. It's real good, I promise!"

Matt's enhanced hearing caught the flutter of a nervous heartbeat, the slight tremor in young hands. Maria Santos, a kid only eight years old according to the registration papers he'd helped her grandmother Emma file last month, was trying to help her family make ends meet.

"Then I'll take your finest," Matt said gently, placing the warm quarter in her small palm.

"Thank you! You're the nicest man ever!" Maria's voice bubbled with genuine joy.

The lemonade was terrible, far too sweet and somehow bitter at the same time. Matt drank every drop.

Three Weeks, Four Days Ago - Fire Escape, Lower East Side

Maria clutched the quarter on the rusted fire escape outside their tiny apartment. Through thin walls, she could hear Grandma crying into the phone about overdue bills and landlord notices.

"Please," Maria whispered to the coin, "heads I keep working the stand, tails I go ask Tommy for help."

She knew Tommy's parents were rich. She also knew abuela would be devastated if she found out Maria was even thinking about asking him for money.

The quarter spun high in the evening air, catching sunset's last rays. But as Maria reached to catch it, the coin slipped between her fingers, fell through the metal grating, and disappeared into the storm drain below with a tiny splash.

"No, no, no!" Maria pressed her face against the grating, but the quarter was gone, carried away by dark water flowing through underground tunnels.

Just then came Tommy's voice, "Maria! why didn't you tell me? We're friends! Now I'm healthy, I'd do anything to help you."

Three Weeks, Three Days Ago - Morlock Tunnels

Leech had been born in darkness and raised in the forgotten places beneath New York City. At twelve, his pale skin had never seen direct sunlight, a far cry from his previous scaly green appearance. His eyes were adapted to perpetual twilight of the tunnels. Lately, he'd been dreaming of the surface world.

When the shiny coin washed up near their settlement, carried by underground streams, it seemed like a sign.

"Surface world money," said Annalee, one of the tunnel mothers who'd helped raise him. Her face was scarred from years of running from those who called their kind monsters. "Ain't worth much down here, child."

But Leech held the quarter like it was made of gold. "Maybe it's worth something up there."

Three days later, he emerged from a subway grating in Harlem, blinking in the overwhelming assault of sunlight, car horns, and food truck smells. The city hit him like a physical force as all new sensations passed through his body, but curiosity drove him forward.

At a corner store, he approached the candy aisle with reverence. Rows of colorful packages promised flavors he'd only imagined.

"How much for this?" Leech asked the store owner, holding up a Snickers bar with trembling hands.

Ms. Chen looked at Leech's pale skin, his wide eyes, the way he held the candy like it might disappear. She'd seen that look before in refugees and runaways.

"Seventy-five cents." But seeing the quarter shaking in the child's hand, her expression softened. "For you, twenty-five cents."

Leech placed the quarter on the counter with ceremony and took his first bite of chocolate. The taste was better than every dream he'd ever had about the surface world.

He thought everyone on the surface was as good as Mr. Powerbroker.

Three Weeks, One Day Ago - Harlem, 12:47 PM

Frank Castle stood outside the same corner store, Marlboro Reds heavy in his jacket pocket like a loaded weapon. The cigarettes represented everything he was trying to leave behind: the wars, the nightmares, the part of him that solved problems with violence.

He'd promised Maria he'd quit when he came back from his last deployment. Promised the kids, too. But some days, when memories pressed too close, nicotine felt like the only thing standing between Frank Castle and something much worse.

"Marlboro Reds and a Pepsi, diet." he told the sleepy-eyed clerk.

The change included Leech's quarter. Frank stepped outside, cigarette halfway to his lips, when he heard the sound that nearly stopped his hands cold.

"Daddy!"

His daughter Lisa came running down the sidewalk, followed by Frank Jr. and Maria, his wife. They were dressed for their early afternoon picnic in Central Park.

"Frank?" Maria's voice carried worry. "We talked about this."

"You're right." Frank looked at the cigarette, then at Lisa's trusting face. He flicked the unlit cigarette into a trash can and knelt to Lisa's level. "Old habits die hard, baby girl. Can Daddy have another chance?"

Walking to the park as the sun painted the sky gold, they passed a homeless veteran against a building. Frank recognized the hollow stare and careful positioning with his back to the wall.

Frank pulled the quarter from his pocket and handed it to his son. "Go on, Frank Jr. Sometimes kindness goes a long way."

His son walked over with eight-year-old solemnity. "My dad says this is for you, sir."

The homeless man took the quarter with shaking hands. "Thank your dad for me, kid. Tell him... tell him I know what it's like."

Two Weeks, Five Days Ago - Under the Bridge

Eddie Brock had been living rough for three months, ever since PTSD made it impossible for his family to handle him. Afghanistan had rewired his brain in ways the VA couldn't fix.

The quarter joined sixteen other coins he'd collected that week through panhandling and bottle returns.

That's when the man with glasses and a stutter approached.

"You got change for a twenty, brother?" said with a stuttering Brooklyn accent.

Eddie looked at his pathetic collection of coins. "Seventeen pieces. That work for you?"

Eddie handed over his entire week's collection, including Frank's quarter, and received a crisp twenty-dollar bill.

The man asked directions and headed straight for the barbershop three blocks away.

Two Weeks, Five Days Ago - Dapper Dan's Barbershop

"Welcome to Dapper Dan's!" the elderly proprietor called from behind his antique chair.

Max Dillon wasn't having a good week. His faulty electrical equipment had caused another power surge, and the bodega owner had fired him on the spot. But Eddie's quarters represented hope and hope meant looking presentable for job interviews.

"Just a trim, nothing fancy. Maybe clean up the beard a little."

Old Dan worked with practiced ease while his assistant, a mountain of a man with rich dark skin and sledgehammer hands, swept hair clippings with surprising gentleness.

"Luke, put this in the tip jar," Dan said, tossing Eddie's quarter through the air.

Luke Cage caught it without looking, the weight familiar from a childhood spent feeding quarters into arcade machines.

"Sure thing, Pops," Luke rumbled in a voice filled with timber.

But as he moved toward the jar, door chimes sang out. The woman who entered moved with all confidence and a calculated attitude. Her black hair caught the vintage light, and her jeans were ripped in places that looked deliberately artful.

"I'm looking for Luke Cage," she said, leaning against the doorframe.

Luke stopped halfway to the tip jar. "That'd be me. What can I do for you?"

She smiled, trouble and fun in equal measure. "Jessica Jones. Private investigator. I've got a proposition that might interest you."

In that moment of possibility, Luke's grip loosened. The quarter slipped from his massive fingers, rolled across checkered linoleum, and tumbled onto the busy Harlem street.

"Sweet Christmas," Luke muttered, smitten as he was already moving toward Jessica.

Two Weeks, Three Days Ago - Columbia University

Dr. Samuel Sterns was running seventeen minutes and thirty-two seconds late for the most important meeting of his career. A man who calculated gamma radiation exposure to seventeen decimal places didn't do late, but the quarter lying on the sidewalk stopped him cold.

Uncirculated and practically mint condition. His collector's instincts overrode his punctuality, and he pocketed the coin just as the downtown 6 train pulled away.

He called his contact while waiting for the next train. "Mr. Green? I'm running behind... What? Move the meeting to your Manhattan lab instead? That's actually more convenient."

This venue change would alter everything.

Two Hours Ago - Manhattan Lab

Bruce Banner watched Dr. Sterns prepare for the most important experiment of both their lives. The cure was so close Bruce could taste it.

"We won't just suppress the Hulk, we'll eliminate him entirely," Sterns said, eyes bright. "You'll finally be free, Bruce."

The transformation was subtle at first, slowing the heartbeat and spreading calm. Then euphoria hit like a tidal wave, and Bruce laughed with pure joy.

In his excitement, he grabbed Sterns by the shoulders, spinning the smaller man around the laboratory. The motion scattered everything from Stern's pockets across the floor- pens, reading glasses, and one perfect quarter that rolled under the workbench.

"Sorry, sorry," Bruce said, kneeling to collect the scattered items. He scooped everything into his shirt pocket without looking.

That's when windows started rattling with helicopter rotors.

The door exploded inward. Military personnel flooded the apartment, and then came General Thaddeus Ross with his perpetual scowl.

"Dr. Banner. Betty. You're coming with us. Now."

Bruce felt his heart rate spiking. "General, please. The cure worked—"

"Stand down, Banner."

But Bruce was moving toward the window. "You're never going to let me live in peace, are you?"

In the chopper, minutes later, Bruce, inspired by Betty's encouragement, jumped.

The fall should have killed Bruce Banner, but it woke up the Hulk. Muscle and bone expanded exponentially, green skin stretched over impossible bulk.

The shirt couldn't contain the Hulk's massive frame. Cotton tore like tissue paper, sending buttons, fabric scraps, and one perfect quarter flying across the Manhattan street.

Ten Minutes Ago - Union Square

The battle ended after one hundred and ten minutes across six city blocks. General Ross coordinated from a secluded jeep.

"Sir, we've got Hulk cornered in Union Square," Major Talbot reported. "Requesting permission to deploy sonic cannons."

"Negative. Hit him with everything else, but I want him alive. My daughter's with him."

The Hulk, trapped by military hardware, pounded the ground with seismic force. Each impact sent shockwaves that rattled windows for blocks.

Bruce's quarter bounced free from a pile of newspapers, shaken loose by the vibrations. It tumbled across cracked pavement in small hops.

Ross, focused on coordinating the capture, didn't notice when the coin bounced off his polished boot. His instinctive reaction was to kick it away.

The quarter flew through the air at exactly the wrong angle and exactly the right time.

The Hulk, turning to face new attackers, swatted at what he perceived as another projectile without thinking. His massive green hand caught the quarter at precisely the angle needed to turn twenty-five cents into a bullet, spinning it across the city at impossible velocity.

The coin ricocheted off an office building corner, shot through three apartment windows uninterrupted, bounced off a fire escape, careened off a water tower, and finally crashed through the reinforced windows of the Baxter Building's forty-second-floor laboratory.

Where it struck Victor Von Doom directly in his exposed face.

Present

The Watcher's ancient eyes hold amusement as he observes the aftermath. "Twelve hands," he says to the empty space. "Twelve lives touched by twenty-five cents. A blind lawyer's kindness. A child's hope. A soldier choosing family. A veteran finding dignity. A chance meeting. A scientist's delay. A fugitive's brief hope. And finally, a general's unconscious kick and a monster's wild swing."

He gestures toward Jay's motionless form. "This one exists because powers beyond even my understanding allowed him life in a reality not his own. But even those forces would be surprised by the web of mortal choice and consequence."

The Watcher pauses. "Sometimes salvation comes not from cosmic power or scientific genius, but from the accumulated weight of small human kindnesses. A quarter thrown in frustration, given in charity, spent in hope, and returned at the precise moment when it mattered most."

Around him, the cosmic vista shifts like liquid starlight. "What happens next will be most interesting. This anomaly will soon discover that survival is merely the beginning of his journey."

In the space between heartbeats, Jay's eyelids flutter.

"Now," the Watcher whispers, "let us see what wonders await."

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Chapter 38: Doom Unmasked New
The silence hit the heroes harder than Doom's armor ever could.

Reed knelt beside Jay's chamber, his wounded arm painting the glass red as he pressed trembling fingers against Jay's neck. The cosmic radiation dispenser had finally died, leaving only sparks and the acrid smell of burnt circuits.

"Anything?" Sue's voice barely rose above a whisper.

Reed's stretching abilities flickered as stress and blood loss made concentration impossible. "No pulse. He's..." His voice cracked like dry wood. "He's gone."

"NO!" Rogue stumbled forward, her body still wracked with tremors from channeling four different power sets. "He ain't dead! He CAN'T be dead, sugar!"

Beast was already in motion, blue fur streaked with soot as he grabbed emergency medical equipment from the wall cabinet. "Defibrillation, immediately! Sue, position these paddles!"

The machine whined to life like a dying animal. Sue's hands shook so badly she could barely maintain her grip.

"Clear!"

Jay's body jerked against the restraints. The heart monitor stayed flat as a merciless and unwavering line.

"Again!" Beast's calm was cracking. "Higher voltage!"

"Clear!"

Another shock. Another nothing. The flatline mocked their desperation.

Reed slammed his hand against the chamber wall, the impact sending fresh blood down his arm. "Damn it all to hell! We're losing him!"

Heavy footsteps echoed from the floors below, followed by some truly creative profanity that would've made a sailor blush. Domino appeared in the doorway, hair wild, costume torn to ribbons, blood trickling from a nasty gash on her forehead.

"Sorry about that, falling through three floors wasn't exactly in my—" She stopped dead. Jay's motionless form was bandaged around his stomach. The flatlined monitor. Rogue's tears cutting tracks through the soot on her cheeks.

"No." She ran to the chamber, shoving past everyone to press her hands against Jay's face. "Christ, he's burning up. But his skin... It's cold as ice."

Domino closed her eyes, focusing everything she had on her luck. They'd always been instinctive, chaotic, but now she needed them to work on command. She needed to find the one chance in a million that could save him.

Nothing.

Her powers felt dead.

"Come on!" She pressed harder against his temples, feeling the heat radiating from his skin. "Work, you piece of shit power! WORK!"

Still nothing. Desperation clawed at her chest. In a moment of pure panic, she grabbed the bloodied, twisted piece of metal from the floor, raising it toward her own throat. Maybe if she hurt herself, forced her body into shock—

"Domino, stop."

Steve's hand closed around her wrist. The super soldier was bloodied, his jacket torn, but his blue eyes held compassion.

"This isn't the way. Hurting yourself won't bring him back."

"Then what will?" The words exploded from her like a scream, the metal clattering to the floor. "What the hell will?"

None of them had an answer.

Then the sound of helicopters filled the air like mechanical thunder. Tactical teams flooded through the destroyed lab, led by Maria Hill striding through with confidence as if she owned the place.

"Secure the perimeter. Barton and Romanoff, check for additional wounded."

"Should someone check if Fried Tin Man over there has a pulse?" Natasha added, nodding toward Doom's motionless form.

Two SHIELD agents approached the fallen dictator cautiously. The moment they got within arm's reach, his eyes blazed open behind the ruined mask.

"AAAAAAHHHHHHH!"

The scream that tore from Doom's throat was pure, undiluted agony. His ruined face twisted as consciousness brought the full weight of his radiation burns crashing down like an avalanche.

"Stay back!" he roared, raising a gauntleted hand. "Do not dare approach DOOM in his moment of—"

His words died as his gaze fell on Jay's still form. The flatlined monitor. The tears on every face.

Victor Von Doom began to laugh.

It started low and bitter, building into something horrible as madness given voice, echoing off the walls like a funeral bell.

"See?" he gasped between peals of insane laughter. "SEE what becomes of those who steal from DOOM? This is justice incarnate!"

Reed moved faster than anyone had ever seen him move. His wounded arm stretched across the lab like a snapping rubber band, his fist connecting with Doom's ruined face with a wet crunch that sent the armored tyrant sprawling.

"REED!" Sue cried as her husband's bandages burst open, fresh blood spattering the floor in crimson drops.

A SHIELD medic threw up her hands in exasperation. "Sir, if you keep moving that arm, you're going to bleed out!"

But Reed wasn't listening, his eyes fixed on Doom with burning hatred. "How dare you. How DARE you laugh when this is YOUR fault!"

SHIELD agents moved to restrain Doom, but Hill's communicator crackled with static.

"Agent Hill, this is Fury. Stand down immediately. Doom has full diplomatic immunity as Latveria's sovereign ruler. We cannot detain him."

"What?" The word exploded from multiple throats simultaneously.

"State Department's direct orders. Let him walk."

Doom slowly pushed himself upright, his ruined face twisting into a grotesque smile beneath the shattered mask. As he did, his eyes caught fragments of broken mirror scattered across the floor.

The laughter died instantly.

For the first time in his adult life, Victor Von Doom saw himself as others saw him, not the perfect god-king he imagined, but a scarred, broken monster. The cosmic radiation had stripped away his delusions along with his flesh, revealing the ugliness that had always festered beneath his mask of perfection.

"No," he whispered, touching his ruined face with trembling fingers. "This cannot be. DOOM is perfect. DOOM is—"

His gaze fell on the bloodied quarter lying in the debris, twenty-five cents that had caused his disfigurement. Then his eyes tracked to Jay's motionless form.

"YOU!" The word erupted like a volcano. "This is YOUR doing! Your existence cursed DOOM's perfection!"

His armored finger swung toward Reed like an accusation. "And YOU, Richards! This catastrophe wouldn't have occurred if you'd surrendered what was rightfully mine! The cosmic radiation storage! The transformation secrets! They belonged to DOOM by royal right!"

Clint had heard enough. His bow came up, arrow aimed directly at Doom's exposed throat. "One more word and diplomatic immunity won't matter when you're choking on your own blood."

But men in dark suits materialized from nowhere, CIA by their earpieces and badges.

"Stand down, Agent Barton. His Highness Victor Von Doom enjoys full diplomatic protection."

"This is completely insane!" Tony's voice crackled from his damaged suit as Natasha worked to extract him from it. "I don't care if he's the goddamn Pope. He nearly killed us!"

One suit stepped forward with a shark's smile. "Surely a man of your resources understands international complexities, Mr. Stark."

Tony's arc reactor flickered back to life as they freed him from the wreckage. His dark eyes promised bloody retribution.

"Resources? I'll spend every single penny ensuring this psychopath and Ross pay for today. And trust me—I have a LOT of pennies."

The CIA formed a protective corridor around Doom. He walked through it like returning royalty, his scarred face hidden once again behind battered metal.

At the laboratory entrance, he paused, looking back at the heroes clustered around Jay's chamber.

"Remember this day, Richards. Remember what happens to those who deny DOOM his rightful due. Your precious 'hero' is dead because of YOUR choices. His blood stains YOUR hands. And soon he won't be a 'hero' anymore."

Then he was gone, leaving only echoes and the bitter taste of injustice hanging in the air.

Nobody noticed the small spider scurrying across the debris-strewn floor. It moved with purpose toward the still-sparking generator, driven by instincts. As it passed under a dangling power cable, a tiny arc of cosmic radiation jumped down, striking the arachnid for just a microsecond.

The spider froze, its tiny body convulsing as alien energy rewrote its genetic code in ways that defied natural law. Then, with suddenly purposeful movements, it skittered away into the building's ventilation system.

The heroes stood in the wreckage, watching their friend's lifeless form through the chamber glass. Outside, New York continued its relentless pace, unaware that something precious had been lost in the city's heart.

"So what now?" Johnny whispered, his flames extinguished.

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Chapter 39: Doom Unmasked New
Hours dragged on like a funeral procession. Emergency responders and SHIELD agents had packed up and left, abandoning the core group to their vigil around Jay's still form. Sue had insisted on hooking him up to every life support machine in the building, refusing to accept defeat.

"Artificial circulation keeps the tissues viable," she muttered, adjusting ventilator settings for the fourth time. "Slows cellular breakdown. If there's even a chance..."

Nobody had the heart to tell her that hope was fading fast.

Xavier rolled in around midnight with Jean and Scott, their faces grim as undertakers. Hank had called for them. Jean dropped to her knees beside the chamber immediately, eyes closing as she reached out with her telepathic abilities.

"Anything?" Reed asked. His arm was properly bandaged now, but he still held it like it might fall off.

Jean's brow furrowed deeper, sweat beading as she pushed harder. "Can't get through. His shields are still up, even stronger than ever, actually. But Charles..." She looked up at Xavier, confused. "The shields are active. They're working."

Xavier's wheelchair creaked as he moved closer. "Mental shields require conscious effort to maintain. This suggests brain activity continues despite apparent physical shutdown."

"So he's..." Sue couldn't finish the sentence.

"Not dead," Xavier said firmly. "Not yet."

They worked through the night like grave robbers trying to raise the dead. Reed recalibrated every scanner in the building. Beast ran brain wave analyses that would've impressed the Mayo Clinic. Jean and Xavier tag-teamed telepathic attempts until Scott had to physically drag Jean away before she collapsed from exhaustion.

Nothing worked.

Then dawn crept through the broken windows, and every screen in the lab flickered to life. Every screen in the building. According to Beast's panicked monitoring, every screen in New York. America even.

Doom's metal mask filled them all, the face plating more melded to his skull now, those burning eyes radiating cold satisfaction.

"Citizens of the world, I, Victor Von Doom, rightful ruler of Latveria, speak to reveal the truth your leaders have concealed!"

"Jesus Christ on a pogo stick," Beast swore, claws flying over his keyboards. "Television networks, internet feeds, emergency broadcasts. He's hijacked everything!"

Doom's image leaned forward conspiratorially, like he was sharing state secrets. "You have been told the Baxter Building houses heroes. That the Fantastic Four represent humanity's finest. But Doom brings you the truth they desperately wish buried!"

The screen switched to news footage with crystal clear shots of Jay in Central Park, hands glowing green as he knelt beside Frank Castle's family. But Doom's narration poisoned every gesture.

"Behold your supposed 'hero.' Witness his manipulation of public sympathy. But this touching performance is merely theater. Observe the truth of what this creature actually is!"

New images flashed worldwide of Power Broker in full face mask, leading disfigured mutants through underground tunnels. Footage from the Hellfire Club showed the same masked figure orchestrating attacks on wealthy patrons, his followers moving with military precision.

Rogue gasped. "That ain't Jay!"

"This man you call Jay is the terrorist known as Power Broker," Doom continued with theatrical gravity. "Leader of the murderous Morlocks. Orchestrator of violence against innocent humans. Observe the evidence of his victims!"

The screens filled with images that made hardened heroes look away. Hellfire Club members twisted beyond recognition, faces melted into grotesque masks of flesh.

"Sweet mother of Darwin, where did he get this footage?" Beast whispered.

"He infiltrated your beloved Fantastic Four under false pretenses," Doom pressed relentlessly. "Promising to cure Benjamin Grimm, then manipulating both the Fantastic Four and X-Men under the same lie, to enhance his own abilities using their expertise, while recruiting mutant children for his underground army. Behold the child called Leech, before and after Power Broker's enhancements."

The most damning photos yet. A barely human child with scaly skin and dead eyes, then the same child looking completely normal. The implication was clear and completely backward from reality.

"If he possesses such power to normalize the child, why not simply cure Grimm and McCoy instead of this elaborate charade? Every heroic act was calculated deception. Every moment of trust was manipulation. Every rescue was reconnaissance for future attacks. And the final insult..." Doom's voice dropped to a deadly whisper. "This man has no evidence of legal existence before Anthony Stark revealed himself as Iron Man. Fabricated birth certificate. False school records. No childhood friends or witnesses. Only hastily forged government documentation to provide them with a controllable puppet hero!"

The lab fell silent as a tomb. Reed's face went white as laboratory paper. Sue covered her mouth with shaking hands. Even Rogue stepped back from Jay's body, her voice thick with confusion.

"You have been deceived by your own government," Doom concluded with obvious satisfaction.

"Your leaders created a false hero for propaganda purposes, and Doom has courageously exposed their lies. This creature you call 'Jay' is nothing but a terrorist weaponizing your compassion. A predator disguised as a savior."

The screens held on Doom's mask for one final moment, metal features somehow conveying smugness despite their rigidity.

"Doom has spoken. The truth stands revealed. I led the charge to expose this fraud, but your heroes and government tried to silence me. Even at the cost of my perfection, I completed this sacred duty and ended the false prophet Jay 'the doctor'."

Doom paused, letting his words sink in as the cameras continued rolling. His iron mask caught the light as he turned slightly, ensuring every angle captured his imposing presence.

"But there is more you must understand, citizens of this world," Doom continued, his voice carrying that distinctive blend of arrogance and conviction that had terrified diplomats across the globe. "This pretender, this Jay, dared to call himself 'doctor' without earning such a title! Where were his years of study? His doctoral dissertations? His mastery of the sciences?"

The armored monarch's cape billowed as he gestured with theatrical precision.

"Doom has spent decades mastering disciplines that would crush lesser minds. Physics, engineering, mystical arts. Seventeen separate doctorates earned through Doom's superior intellect! Yet this... charlatan... simply adopted the title as if it were some costume to be worn!"

His voice grew deeper, more commanding, as he addressed the watching world.

"Therefore, having exposed this academic fraud and restored honor to true scholarship, Doom shall rightfully reclaim what has always been his: the title of DOCTOR! From this day forth, know that DOCTOR DOOM stands before you, not as conqueror, but as protector of knowledge itself!"

He raised one gauntleted fist toward the sky.

"The false doctor has fallen. Truth has prevailed. This..." he gestured to himself with unmistakable pride, "...is what a REAL doctor looks like. So declares DOOM!"

Every screen went dark simultaneously, leaving the heroes in pools of morning light streaming through shattered glass.

The silence that followed was suffocating. The evidence had seemed overwhelming. The logic appeared bulletproof. The photos and footage looked completely authentic.

And Jay couldn't defend himself because Jay might never wake up.

"This is complete bullshit," Tony finally said, but his voice lacked its usual conviction. "You guys know Jay."

"Do we?" Reed's analytical mind was already dissecting possibilities. "Victor's correct about one thing. Jay has no verifiable past before two months ago. No documentation, no records."

"Reed," Sue warned, but uncertainty crept into her voice.

"I ain't sayin' I believe that nutjob," Rogue said carefully, "but some of them photos looked mighty real. And we X-Men were there for most of what he's talkin' about."

Beast stared at the dark screens, his brilliant mind racing through scenarios. "The technological sophistication required to fabricate evidence this comprehensive would be considerable. But not impossible for someone of Doom's resources."

"So we're supposed to believe Jay's been secretly running the Morlocks as Power Broker this whole time?" Scott asked incredulously.

"I have seen stranger things happen," Steve said quietly.

Doubt spread through the room like nerve gas, invisible but deadly. Each hero found themselves studying Jay's unconscious form with new questions, new suspicions. The man who'd risked everything to save them suddenly felt like a stranger.

Doom's broadcast had achieved exactly what he'd intended: turning the world against someone who couldn't speak for himself.

In that moment, Victor Von Doom claimed a victory more complete than any battlefield conquest. He hadn't just beaten their bodies with armor and energy blasts.

He'd made them doubt their own hearts.

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Chapter 39: The Queen of Nevers New
Pure white stretched in every direction. No boundaries that Jay could make out. Just endless, perfect nothing that somehow felt solid under his feet.

"Did I die again?"

The thought hit him like a punch to the gut. He'd been through this before, back when he first arrived in this reality. The same disorienting white void, the same terrible uncertainty hanging over his existence.

"Is... is XYZ here?" Jay's mind immediately went to the entity that had brought him to this world. The ROB's assistant, who'd given him a second chance at life.

He tried to remember what had happened. The enhancement chamber and Reed's worried face through the glass. Going under sedation, being submerged in the serum tank. Then, sudden, overwhelming pain even through the drugs, and... nothing.

"Well, that's just great," he muttered to the white void. "Either I'm having the world's most boring near-death experience, or I'm about to get lectured by some cosmic entity for dying so soon."

That's when she appeared.

One moment, he was alone in the endless white, then next second a woman stood before him. Tall, regal, with flowing hair that seemed to shift between silver and starlight. Her dress looked like it had been cut from the fabric of space itself. Dark material shot through with points of light like distant galaxies.

Jay's Comic Nerd Perk kicked in immediately. "Holy shit! You... you're the Queen of Nevers!"

She smiled, warm and motherly, with just a hint of amusement. "Language, dear. Though I suppose your recognition is refreshing. Most mortals don't even know I exist."

Jay's mind was racing. If she was here, this had to be serious. The Queen of Nevers is the embodiment of possibility and the remnant of the 4th cosmos itself. A cosmic entity so far above his pay grade it wasn't even funny.

"Am I..." His voice cracked. "Did I break something? The timeline? Was I caught as an illegal alien?"

The Queen laughed, a sound like silver bells. "Oh, child. No, you haven't broken anything. Relax." She gestured around them. "This isn't the domain of your so-called ROB. This is the Land of Couldn't-Be-Shouldn't-Be, my realm. A place outside the Multiverse itself, where possibilities gather before they become reality."

That was actually reassuring. Sort of. At least he was still in the Marvel cosmos, not being dragged back to wherever he'd started.

"Wait! If I'm dead or dying, why aren't I standing in front of Lady Death instead?"

The Queen's expression shifted. "Oh, that would have been the natural course of events. But honestly, dear, I don't think you'd be particularly happy to meet her. Given some of her... actions."

Jay grimaced, remembering the comics. Lady Death in Marvel was cold and cruel, unlike her DC counterpart.

She manipulated Thanos into a universe-wide genocide, cursed heroes with the worst death possible, and was a major reason for the spread of the Zombie virus throughout the Marvel Multiverse. "Yeah, hard pass on that meet-and-greet."

"Exactly." The Queen stepped closer. "This is the realm of possibility and free will, existing just below the House of Ideas where all stories are born, and from here, I see all."

Her expression grew distant for a moment. "I have seen the rise and fall of cosmic cycles, watched realities bloom and die. Thus, because of my uniqueness, all Nexus beings are agents of mine. Those whose existence allows for infinite possibilities in the multiverse. Wanda Maximoff, America Chavez, Franklin Richards, and beings like them are keystones of reality itself."

"Am I...?" Jay couldn't finish the question, but she understood.

"A Nexus Being? No, dear. Nexus Beings are rare individual entities with the ability to affect probability and the future, altering the flow of the Universe's destiny. They're born to their roles, crucial to the ultimate coherence and stability of the Multiverse." She explained.

"You are something rarer. You are an outsider!" Her smile held maternal warmth. "All outsiders are placed under my protection. Those who don't belong to the natural order but create change nonetheless. You see, Nexus Beings maintain stability, but Outsiders like you? You create beautiful chaos."

"But what's the difference?" Jay asked, genuinely curious. "Between maintaining stability and creating chaos?"

The Queen's expression grew thoughtful. "Nexus Beings are like... anchors. Without them, reality would drift into complete randomness. They are watched vigilantly by cosmic forces. Because their actions determine whether entire timelines survive or collapse."

She gestured around them at the white void. "But you outsiders? You're wildcards. You introduce elements that were never meant to exist in those realities. Sometimes you save worlds that were destined to fall. Sometimes you doom universes that should have thrived. The One Above All finds this... entertaining."

Jay felt a chill. "So, I'm just entertainment?"

"Oh, child, no." Her voice grew protective. "You are precious precisely because you choose your own meaning. Nexus Beings are bound by cosmic responsibility whether they want it or not. Outsiders can walk away whenever they choose. The fact that most of you stay, that most of you try to help despite having no obligation to do so... that's what makes you special. That's why I chose the duty to protect you."

The words hit Jay like lightning. His breath caught. He'd suspected there had to be others. Other transmigrators, other people given second chances, since XYZ appeared pretty used to the process. But he'd never been able to confirm it.

"There are others like me?"

"More than you could guess," she confirmed. "Scattered across infinite realities, each on their own journey. The One Above All allows their entrance because he loves to observe change from things he didn't create. Just as it's his nature as a curious creator."

Jay's head was spinning. Everything he'd thought he understood was just the tip of an iceberg.

"What about the comics? The stories we know?"

Her smile turned mysterious. "All that exists by the will of the One Above All. His whims, his curiosity, his endless 'what if.' To which the reasoning he only knows."

Jay had to ask. "Have other outsiders completed their goals? Where are they now?"

The Queen's expression grew distant. "More than you can count have tried. Many died before making their mark. Others left to explore the greater Omniverse. Some are still around, convinced they're the main characters of reality."

Her expression grew serious. "But even if you traveled the entire Multiverse looking for them, you would never encounter another. The One Above All doesn't like his shows to interrupt each other. Each outsider exists in their own narrative bubble, so to speak. You can consider yourself effectively alone in that regard."

It hit Jay how much he'd secretly hoped for someone who understood, but honestly, he was also relieved not to have that wild card throwing everything off balance.

"But that's also why my protection is so important," the Queen continued, her voice gentling. "You cannot turn to others like yourself for support or guidance. You must find your way through relationships with the natives of your adopted reality. The Nexus Beings I protect at least have cosmic forces watching over them, ensuring their stability. Outsiders only have me... and the connections they build themselves."

'That actually tracked,' Jay realized. 'Most reincarnated people were probably NEETs or social outcasts in their first lives. The type who spent all day reading power fantasy novels because reality sucked. Give them actual cheat abilities and throw them together? Of course they'd start a battle royale to prove who's the real MC to satisfy their egos.'

'But, what did ROB gain from watching this disaster unfold? Worth investigating later, assuming there was a later.'

"So what now?" he asked. "Am I dead?"

The Queen shrank down to his size and pulled him into a hug. The embrace felt real in a way that made Jay's chest tighten.

She patted his back gently. It was like being held by the mother he'd never really had. Not his biological mother with her endless expectations, but the kind of mother who loved you for existing, not for what you could provide to fulfill her expectations.

"All of you are like my children, trying your best to reach your goals," she said gently. "But Jay..." She pulled back to look at him. "You're always putting on a mask, always trying to make everyone win. I like that about you. But you're losing yourself. You matter too. You should do what's best for you, both physically and mentally."

The words cracked something open inside Jay's chest. It was exactly what Bobby had said, what he'd been trying to avoid facing.

"I'll still do what I think is the best way to survive and be free in this world," he said quietly.

She sighed and muttered something that sounded like "so you're one of the dense ones." Then louder, "You're not dead, dear. Your body is adjusting to the enhancements, and your soul was pulled here so we could meet. Don't worry, you'll return soon."

Relief flooded through him. "Thank you. This conversation has really opened my eyes."

She laughed. "If you're truly thankful, won't you do me a small favor?"

Jay hesitated. Agreeing to do favors for cosmic entities was usually a bad idea. But she'd been nothing but kind, and he did owe her for her protection.

"What kind of favor?"

"I'll tell you later. But first..." Her expression grew serious. "The world has had some changes while you were unconscious. Changes you may not like. Be ready. And be truthful, within limits, if you want to keep your friends. The time for masks is ending."

The white void began to shimmer around the edges.

"Wait!" Jay called out as her image began to fade. "What kind of changes?"

But the Queen of Nevers was already dissolving into starlight.

"Remember, child," her voice echoed as everything went white again. "Some cages are of our own making. But every prison has a key. You just have to be willing to use it."

The whiteness rushed toward him like an avalanche, and Jay felt himself falling back into flesh and bone.

Somewhere in the distance, he could hear the steady beep of machines and harsh, urgent voices arguing. Whatever had happened while he was under, it sounded bad.

'Time to wake up,' he thought as consciousness pulled him back toward the waking world.

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Chapter 40: The Man Beneath the Thing New
Jay's eyes fluttered open to find himself connected to what looked like half of Sue's entire medical arsenal. Tubes snaked from his arms, wires traced across his chest, and monitors whirring in mechanical symphony around him. He was plugged into more equipment than a NASA launch sequence.

The room was packed with worried faces. The Fantastic Four clustered near the windows, Tony pacing restlessly in his under-suit, Steve standing rigid with arms crossed. Xavier was there with Jean, Beast hunched over readouts like a man possessed. Rogue leaned against the far wall, her usual Southern warmth replaced by something cold and distant.

Domino sat beside his bed, her face downcast, avoiding any eye contact. That wasn't like her at all... usually she'd be cracking jokes about his near-death experience by now.

But it was Scott's voice that cut through the tense atmosphere, sharp with accusation.

"That's what I've been saying! We don't know if anything he told us was the truth or lies. His whole revelation story might've been manipulation to get something from us. Just like he lied to the Fantastic Four!"

Jay tried to focus, his enhanced hearing picking up every word even as his vision cleared.

"The Doc would never do such a thing!" Bobby's voice was heated, defensive. "And even if he did, it would be for some well-intentioned reason!"

"Like putting on the Power Broker costume and going around instigating Morlocks to fight?" Johnny shot back, small flames flickering around his clenched fists.

"Johnny, enough," Reed said firmly, but his voice lacked its usual warmth. Ben nodded grimly beside him, massive arms crossed.

Beast looked up from his monitors, blue-furred features etched with scientific concern. "I don't know the reasoning behind Jay's disguise activities, but what he told us about Jean's DNA being tampered with checks out completely. I've verified it myself."

Jean tried to argue, but Xavier raised a weathered hand for silence.

Tony stopped pacing to face Steve. "What do you make of this, Cap?"

Steve's jaw was tight with conflicted loyalty. "I don't know what to think. But I do know he helped me get out of the ice."

"Yeah, in exchange for your blood samples to help Reed improve his enhancement procedure!" Johnny yelled, his famous temper flaring.

Bobby had heard enough. Jay could feel the man's anger building like a storm front; he could sense, through his danger sense, that things were about to go catastrophically south as Bobby was about to use his powers to make everyone shut up and listen.

Without thinking, he pushed himself against the bed to sit up... and immediately shot upright like he'd been launched by a spring-loaded catapult. His newfound strength sent him rocketing from prone to standing in one fluid motion that surprised everyone in the room, including himself.

The collective gasp was audible. Reed's eyebrows shot up. Steve's shield shifted as he stepped back instinctively. Even Xavier's usually composed expression cracked with surprise.

"Sweet mother of Darwin," Beast whispered, his scientific mind immediately cataloging the display of enhanced physicality changes.

Domino's face finally broke into a smile... the first real emotion she'd shown since he woke up.

"Jay!" Bobby rushed over, checking him over with the frantic care of a father seeing his son return from war. "Easy there, kid. You gave us all quite a scare."

Jay steadied himself against Bobby's shoulder, but he couldn't ignore the atmosphere in the room. The lack of relief on most faces. Even Rogue seemed apathetic, her green eyes holding none of their usual warmth.

The conversation with the Queen of Nevers was still fresh in his mind... the revelation about the cosmic scale of things, about other transmigrators, about his insignificant place in the infinite web of stories. But right now, he had more pressing concerns.

Trying to cut through the tension, he forced a grin. "What's with all the long faces? Did somebody die?"

The silence that followed was deafening. Several faces darkened further, and Jay knew he'd stepped in it.

Scott stepped forward, his ruby quartz visor catching the light as he pointed an accusatory finger at Jay's bare chest. "Cut the act, Power Broker. What's really going on here?"

Jay's heart sank to his boots. His Unmasked perk had delivered as promised... again. All his careful planning about revealing his Power Broker identity at the right time and place had just gone up in smoke.

For a split second, he considered spinning another lie. He had backup contingencies, prepared explanations. But then the Queen's words echoed in his mind... the infinitely vast scale of reality, all those other transmigrators working toward their goals across countless universes. His own situation suddenly felt petty and small in comparison.

He stopped. Took a breath. And completely ignored Scott.

"Bobby," he said, looking directly at the vet. "How did you get here?"

"We were monitoring your situation," Bobby replied, confusion evident in his weathered voice. "Plus, that whole Doom broadcast didn't hide much. He tore through Max's encryptions like paper and got all our data. Wait... you don't know what happened?"

"Doom?" Jay blinked in genuine confusion. "What the hell does he have to do with anything?"

Steve stepped forward, his voice carefully neutral but strained. "After they put you under sedation, we were attacked. First, the Abomination, then Doom himself, who most probably sent Abominations here to distract the Fantastic Four and leave you vulnerable. He nearly killed all of us. If it weren't for some incredible luck..."

Jay turned to Domino, searching her face. "Dom, is this what happened?"

She couldn't meet his eyes, just hummed noncommittally while fidgeting with her gloves.

Growing more concerned, he looked to Rogue for answers. But the ice-cold look in her green eyes said more than any words could.

Jay scanned the room desperately. Only Beast approached, checking his monitors with clinical detachment.

"You appear to be in excellent health," Beast announced with his characteristic intellectualism. "Better than before, actually. It seems the enhancement procedure was remarkably successful."

"The one he tricked us into giving him," Johnny snarled through gritted teeth, "without even needing it! He could have turned Ben normal without any enhancements, just like he did with that Leech kid!"

Jay exhaled slowly, trying to formulate a response, but Beast interrupted.

"I'm certain Jay must have had his reasons. After all, it appears he doesn't wish to transform like Ben permanently, correct?"

"How?" Jay asked, his voice joining several others in confusion.

Beast's brilliant mind was already connecting dots with ruthless scientific precision, his blue eyes lighting up with the thrill of solved puzzle. "I've been harboring suspicions since we first encountered Power Broker in the Morlock tunnels. His powers operated in remarkably similar fashion to yours, Jay... merely different operational ranges. The correlation was statistically significant."

The room went dead silent as Beast continued, his academic tone making the revelation sound like a dissertation defense.

"When I observed Leech in his completely normalized state and applied basic deductive reasoning..." Beast's voice grew more animated with scientific excitement. "If Jay's abilities don't merely suppress mutations but instead permanently absorb them... unlike Rogue's temporary absorption... that would elegantly explain the vast majority of observed phenomena."

Tony's face went pale. "You're saying he's been collecting powers like baseball cards?"

Reed's analytical mind was already racing through implications. "The range differences, the permanence, the precise control..."

Sue took an involuntary step backward. "How many?"

Jay stared at Beast with grudging respect. The man was one of the smartest beings on the planet for a damn good reason. His entire job was analyzing and understanding mutant abilities.

Jay gave a rueful, defeated smirk. "Got me, doc."

Reed stretched his arm out to physically turn Jay around, but found he couldn't budge him even an inch. Jay turned voluntarily, meeting Reed's eyes with steady resignation.

"Is that the truth?" Reed demanded.

"Yes," Jay confirmed simply.

"Then you were lying when you said you could permanently turn Ben human!"

"I never lied about that. Not even once." Jay's voice remained steady despite the accusations. "To permanently remove his condition, I or someone else would have to carry that burden permanently... something Ben would never agree to. But now I can do something better. I can give him complete control over his powers, allowing him to transform between states at will."

Ben was about to voice a protest, but Beast cut him off with another revelation.

"You're able to perform this precise genetic manipulation by having absorbed Sage's powers of DNA analysis, aren't you, Jay?"

Every eye in the room fixed on Jay with new understanding... and new fear.

Without turning around, Jay nodded with quiet dignity. "Right again, Dr. McCoy."

That's when Scott's optic blast lanced across the room in a ruby-red arc of destructive energy.

Jay dodged it with almost insulting ease... his enhanced reflexes didn't even need his danger sense to warn him. In the same fluid motion, he extended his power suppression field, but with his upgraded control, he was surgically selective. Only his abilities, Bobby's, and Domino's remained active.

The effect was instantaneous and devastating. Sue's force fields flickered and died when she tried to protect the team. Johnny's flames extinguished like candles in a hurricane. Reed's stretched arm snapped back to normal proportions with an audible snap. Ben began partially shedding his rocky exterior in chunks that clattered to the floor.

The X-Men found themselves equally helpless... just like they'd been in the Morlock tunnels when they first encountered Power Broker.

The silence was deafening as every hero in the room realized they were completely at his mercy.

"Why don't we all calm down?" Jay said mildly, standing in the center of a room full of temporarily depowered heroes like some kind of cosmic referee, "and not attack the patient? How's that sound?"

The tension stretched like a wire about to snap.

Jay felt every eye in the room on him. His stomach twisted, but there was no backing down now. Not after coming this far.

"Alright, you want to know how my powers really work?" He gestured at the depowered heroes around him. "I absorb abilities from people. Permanently. But I'm not some endless black hole... there's a limit to what I can hold. I gotta choose what I take because once it's mine?" He shrugged helplessly. "It's gone from you forever."

The silence that followed was deafening. Ben's partially rocky face gave nothing away, those familiar orange eyes unreadable as his powers flickered weakly under Jay's suppression.

Jay pressed on, knowing he had to get this all out. "Look, I wanted to help Ben get back to normal. But I couldn't just walk up and ask to borrow his powers so I could turn into the Thing myself. What do you think would've happened?"

"I would've decked ya before you finished talkin'," Ben growled, his voice carrying that familiar gravelly rumble even in his weakened state.

"Exactly." Jay nodded. "So I had to take the long way around. Get stronger first, upgrade what I could do, then use everything I learned to give you something better than what you lost."

That's when Sue completely lost it.

"Why didn't you just ASK us?" The words came out strangled with hurt, rage and trust crumbling in real time. "We would've helped! We trusted you, Jay! We brought you into our home, treated you like..." She paused, the word catching in her throat. "Like family."

Past tense. The way she said it hit Jay harder than any physical blow could have. He could see it in all their faces now... whatever bond he'd built with the Fantastic Four was gone, snuffed out like Johnny's flames.

"Sue, I..." Jay started, then stopped. What could he possibly say? "I'm sorry. I know that doesn't mean much now, but I am. I can't explain this in a way that'll make it right, but I can still keep my promise to Ben."

"Don't." Sue's voice was ice cold. "Don't you dare try to make this about helping Ben when you've been lying to us this whole time."

But Jay was already moving toward Ben, who immediately coiled like a spring ready to snap. The big guy might be weakened, but he was still dangerous.

"Back off, kid!" Ben's Brooklyn accent got thicker the way it always did when his emotions ran high. "I don't need your pity, and I sure as hell don't need your help!"

When Jay didn't stop, Ben swung at him with everything he had left. Without his full strength, the movement was clumsy, almost pathetic. But the fury behind it was real enough.

"I ain't your charity case!" Ben snarled as Jay easily caught his fist.

"I know you're not," Jay said quietly, feeling the tremor in Ben's weakened hand. "But I can't let your pride stand between you and the life you really want. Not when I can actually do something about it."

"What life?" Ben's orange eyes blazed with humiliation and rage. "What are you talkin' about?"

"The life with Alicia." Jay's voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "Come on, Ben. What happens when you two want to get married? When you want kids someday? What about holding her hand without worrying you'll crush every delicate bone in her fingers?"

Ben went completely rigid. The anger drained from his face, replaced by something raw and desperate.

"Shut your mouth!" The words came out choked, and Ben lunged forward.

Jay was ready for him. He caught Ben's head gently in both hands before the charge could connect, stopping the big guy's momentum without hurting him.

Reed started forward instinctively, but Sue grabbed his arm. Whatever anger she felt toward Jay, she wasn't about to stop him from helping Ben.

Ben struggled weakly in Jay's grip, but there was no real fight left in him. "What are ya gonna do to me, kid?" he whispered, his voice shaking as he felt something starting to shift inside him.

"I'm giving you back your choices, Ben," Jay said softly, his own voice thick with the weight of what he was about to attempt. "This might feel strange, but I promise you... it won't hurt."

Jay's power went deeper than simple suppression this time. Way deeper than he'd ever gone before. Using every technique he'd absorbed from Sage, he reached into Ben's cosmic radiation-twisted DNA and began the most delicate work of his life. Instead of stealing the mutation like he normally would, he did something far more complex. He rewrote the genetic triggers themselves, carefully installing mental switches that would let Ben control his transformations at will.

It was like performing microsurgery on the building blocks of life itself. Jay poured every ounce of his concentration into it, sweat beading on his forehead from the sheer effort.

"Kid... what are you doing to me?" Ben's voice was barely a whisper now, filled with wonder and fear as he felt something fundamental shifting deep inside his cells.

"I'm giving you a choice, Ben. Your choice, always. "Jay admitted.

The change started small. Tiny hairline fractures appeared in Ben's rocky exterior, spreading like spider webs across his orange skin. Then it picked up speed, the cracks widening and spreading in waves across his massive frame.

But the orange stone didn't crumble or shatter like everyone expected. Instead, it seemed to dissolve, melting away like ice under a warm sun to reveal the flesh underneath. Ben's hulking proportions gradually shrank back to normal human size, muscle and bone restructuring themselves in real time.

"Oh my God," Reed breathed, his scientific mind struggling to process the impossibility unfolding before him.

Johnny moved closer, his usual wisecracks nowhere to be found. "Is it really working?"

"Look at him," Sue whispered, her anger temporarily forgotten in the face of this miracle.

For the first time in nearly a year, Benjamin Grimm stood before them as just Ben. Regular, flesh-and-blood Ben.

He stared down at his hands like they belonged to someone else, turning them over and over with growing wonder.

"I can see them," he said, his voice filled with amazement. "The lines in my palms, the creases, the fingerprints... Jesus, I forgot I had fingerprints."

His voice was different too. Still gravelly from decades of cigars and Brooklyn streets, but human. Completely, impossibly human. Ben touched his own face with trembling fingers, feeling warm skin instead of cold, hard stone.

"It's really me," he whispered. "Sweet Mary and Joseph... it's really me."

That's when the toughest guy from Yancy Street, the man who'd faced down Gamma monsters and cosmic storms without flinching, completely broke down.

Ben's legs gave out. He collapsed to his knees as if his strings had been cut, his whole body shaking as months of suppressed grief and longing poured out like a dam bursting. The raw emotion was so intense it made everyone step back, giving him space to fall apart.

"I can feel the floor," he gasped between sobs, pressing his palms against the cold metal decking. "Actually, feel how cold it is against my skin. It's been so long since I could feel temperature through my hands."

He touched his wet cheeks in wonder. "And when I cry, the tears are warm. God, I forgot they were supposed to be warm."

Ben kept flexing his fingers, marveling at the simple movement without the grinding sound of stone against stone that had become the soundtrack of his existence.

The Fantastic Four immediately surrounded their friend. Reed dropped to one knee beside him, his scientific mind warring with his heart. Sue knelt on Ben's other side, tears streaming down her face. Johnny crouched nearby, his usual wisecracks nowhere to be found as his own eyes grew wet with tears.

"Human," Ben repeated the word like he was tasting something precious he'd thought was lost forever. "Yeah, Reed. For the first time in almost a year... I'm human again."

Jay's suppression field flickered once and died completely as he exhausted himself. Around the room, everyone else's powers slowly began trickling back online. The familiar hum of energy filled the air, but nobody seemed to care about their returning abilities. All eyes remained on Ben.

Through his tears, Ben looked up at Jay with an expression that mixed gratitude with crushing betrayal. The kid had lied to them, manipulated them, put them all through hell... and then handed Ben back his entire life.

"You son of a bitch," Ben said quietly, his voice rough with conflicting emotions. "I don't get you, kid. I really don't. You lie to us for months, trick us, make us think you're gonna die on us... and then you turn around and give me back everything I thought I'd lost forever."

Ben wiped his eyes with the back of a normal, flesh-and-blood hand, still marveling at the simple gesture.

"How am I supposed to hate you now?" he asked, his voice breaking slightly. "How can I feel anything but grateful when you just handed me my whole damn life back? When you gave me the chance to hold Alicia properly again?"

Jay had no answer for that. What could anyone possibly say? Some gifts were too big for words, too important for explanations or apologies.

Bobby moved closer to Jay's side, the old soldier's weathered face showing deep respect. "You did good, son," he said quietly, his own voice rough with emotion.

The room fell quiet except for Ben's gradually subsiding sobs and the soft murmur of family coming back together. Everyone was still trying to process what they'd witnessed. Jay had given Ben something beyond price, beyond measure... something that couldn't be bought or earned or stolen.

He'd given him hope. He'd given him a choice. Most importantly, he'd given him back his humanity without taking away his ability to be the hero people needed him to be.

It was, perhaps, the most perfect gift anyone had ever received.

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Chapter 41: Lucky Break New
The silence after Ben's breakdown was fragile as glass. Jay could feel tension crackling through the room, everyone processing what they'd witnessed, betrayal and redemption in the same package.

But he wasn't done yet. And judging by the looks on their faces, this was about to get worse.

Jay's eyes found Rogue across the room. She stood rigid against the far wall, trying to physically distance herself from whatever was coming. The look in her green eyes wasn't anger but something colder and final.

"Rouge," he said quietly, taking a step toward her.

"No." The word cut across the room like a whip crack. Her Mississippi drawl was thick with pain and fury. "Don't you dare come near me with those sugar-sweet lies, Jay."

Her tone stopped him in his tracks.

"Rouge, please, let me explain—"

"Explain what?" She pushed off from the wall, stalking toward him. "How you've been manipulatin' me since day one? How every single word outta your mouth was calculated to get me right where you wanted me?"

Jay felt his heart hammering. "That's not—"

"Oh, it ain't?" Rogue's laugh was bitter. "You targeted me specifically 'cause of my powers, didn't ya? Knew exactly what buttons to push to get poor little untouchable Rouge all dependent on the one man who could make her feel normal again."

The accusation hit too close to home. Jay's silence was answer enough.

"Every caring word," she continued, voice rising, "every gentle touch, every promise you made about findin' a way to help me, all of it was just part of some grand plan!"

"Rogue, that's not—" Jay tried, but she was on a roll now, buried hurt pouring out.

"Save it, sugah. I know manipulation when I see it. Hell, I lived it for years. At least they had the decency to be honest about usin' me." Rogue's voice cracked. "But you? You made me think... you made me hope..."

She trailed off, wrapping her arms around herself.

Jay wanted to tell her the truth that the feelings to help her were real, even if the foundation was rotten. But looking at the devastation in her eyes, he realized the truth would only make it worse.

Sometimes the kindest lie was letting someone hate the villain instead of mourning the hero.

Jay's hands trembled as he opened his mouth to defend himself, but the words died in his throat. His jaw worked soundlessly for a moment before he forced out, "So what?" His voice came out hoarse. "Maybe I was. Maybe that's all it ever was."

The hurt that flashed across Rogue's face made his knees nearly buckle, and his chest felt like it was being crushed from the inside. Better she hates Power Broker than pine for a misunderstood Jay.

"I told you I'd find a way to make you normal," he continued, voice steady despite his chest caving in. "I kept my word. Now you can find warmth in other people. Just... get yourself treated and move on."

"Don't you dare talk to me like this is some kinda favor!" Rogue screamed, "I don't want your pity cure! I don't want anything from you!"

"Rogue—" Scott started forward, but she rounded on him.

"And don't y'all even think about takin' his side!"

Jay looked desperately to the others for support, but found only disgust staring back. Scott's jaw was set in judgment. Johnny's flames flickered with hostility. Even Xavier looked at him like something unpleasant.

Sue wouldn't even look at him. She'd turned to face the window instead. And Ben? Ben just sat there flexing his new fingers, refusing to meet Jay's eyes even though Jay had just given him everything he'd ever wanted.

"Jean," Jay tried, "you guys know me. You know I wouldn't—"

"Do we?" Jean's voice was cold. "Because the man we thought we knew wouldn't have lied to our faces for months. Wouldn't have manipulated a traumatized woman."

Xavier finally spoke, his calm voice carrying profound disappointment. "Jay, Rogue is clearly not in the right emotional state to process this revelation. Perhaps now is not the appropriate time—"

"If I what?" Jay's temper flared. "Left? Made it easy for everyone to forget that sometimes doing the right thing requires hard choices?"

"Hard choices?" Johnny's flames roared. "You call lying to people who trusted you a hard choice?"

"I call getting Rogue the help she needed, whatever it took!" Jay shot back. "I call giving Ben his humanity back worth it!"

As voices rose and powers flared in the chaotic argument, Hank's voice rang with an electronic trill that cut through the chaos.

Beast's voice came through clearly. "You're not forgetting about your promise to me, are you?"

"Never," Jay repeated, his voice now tired of all the argument and wanting to get it over with.

"I have to ask," Jay continued, "don't you harbor any resentment? For stealing Sage's abilities, for the deceptions, for the spectacular confrontation with X-Men and the Morlocks?"

Hank was quiet for a moment, aware of every eye watching. Finally, he shrugged. "I can't speak for Sage. But I think you've got a better chance of doing good with enhanced abilities than harm. And after getting a taste of what normal feels like..." He glanced at Ben. "I figure I deserve the same choice."

Without asking permission, Jay reached out and placed his hand on Beast's shoulder. The same genetic restructuring he'd performed on Ben flowed through his abilities, but working with mutation rather than cosmic radiation.

The change was less dramatic but no less profound. Beast's blue fur shed, his excessive bulk diminished to human proportions. The animalistic features softened, becoming distinguished rather than monstrous. His fangs receded, though he retained enhanced musculature and longer blue hair.

Beast looked like what he'd originally been- a brilliant scientist, rather than a creature struggling with humanity.

"My word," Beast breathed, examining his hands. "The cellular restructuring is remarkable. I retain enhanced physicality but with voluntary control over the more... pronounced aspects."

He looked up at Jay with wonder. "I must confess, I've always preferred 'Doctor' to 'Beast.' The latter always seemed rather tactless."

Despite everything, Jay grinned. "Yeah? I thought it really suited you."

The moment died quickly as Jay turned back to face the room full of people who used to trust him. The weight of their disappointment settled on his shoulders.

"Well," he said quietly, "I guess that's that."

Jay was preparing to leave when Bobby's voice cut through the tension.

"Uh, Doc? You might wanna look down there."

Jay glanced down and realized he was still in his boxers, same as when he went in the tank for the procedure.

The absurdity broke through his composure. A laugh bubbled up in hysteria when everything falls apart at once.

"Right," he said, grabbing his tattered jeans from the non-salvageable closet. "The big dramatic revelation scene, and I'm in my underwear."

Bobby shrugged out of his coat and tossed it over. "Here, kid. You're gonna catch your death."

As Jay struggled into his jeans, he caught sight of Steve and Tony. He asked Bobby something who pulled a card from his back pocket and handed it to Jay. "This is for you Tony."

"What's it for?" Tony called out.

Jay met his eyes directly. "To get your poisoning checked out. The arc reactor's been leaking palladium into your bloodstream for months now, isn't it?"

The color drained from Tony's face. His most carefully guarded secret was apparently an open book.

Xavier looked at Tony with pity. "First time?"

Tony's mouth opened and closed soundlessly.

With nothing left to say and nowhere left to turn, Jay walked away, Bobby's coat over his shoulders, leaving everyone to deal with the aftermath.




Outside, the cool night air hit Jay's face like a slap. He breathed it in deep, trying to wash the taste of burnt bridges out of his mouth. Bobby and Domino flanked him as they walked across the Baxter Building's back lot, their footsteps echoing off the concrete.


Then Jay saw his car.

"Jesus Christ," he breathed, stopping dead in his tracks. "My car..."

The sleek vehicle looked like it had gone ten rounds with the Hulk and lost every single one. The hood was crumpled into abstract art, both doors hung at impossible angles, and what used to be the windshield was now a spider web of safety glass held together by sheer stubbornness. One wheel was completely missing, and the other three pointed in directions that defied basic geometry.

For some reason, seeing his destroyed ride was the final straw. After everything, the lies, the betrayals, the necessary cruelties, watching every friendship he'd built crumble to dust, his totaled car nearly brought him to his knees.

"That was a nice car," Bobby said quietly, like he was offering condolences at a funeral.

"Sixty-seven Shelby GT500," Jay managed, his voice thick. "My dream car. I was so happy the day I finally got it—" He stopped, realizing how stupid it sounded to mourn a car when he'd just lost everything that mattered.

"Easy there, Doc," Bobby said gently, resting a weathered hand on his shoulder. "Metal can be replaced. I brought my own ride anyway."

They started toward Bobby's pickup truck, but after a few steps, Jay realized Domino wasn't with them anymore. He turned to see her standing perfectly still in the shadows between two dumpsters, like she'd grown roots.

"Dom? Come on, let's go."

She didn't move. Didn't even acknowledge he'd spoken.

"Domino, why aren't you getting in the truck?" His voice carried the exhaustion. "Are you angry at me, too? For the whole secret identity thing?"

"No." Her voice was barely above a whisper, so quiet he almost missed it.

"Then what—" Jay moved toward her, real concern creeping into his voice. In all the time he'd known her, he'd never seen Dom this still. She was always in motion, always ready to move, always prepared for trouble. "Dom, why won't you look at me?"

When he gently tilted her chin up, forcing her to meet his eyes, he saw they were red-rimmed and full of tears she'd been holding back for who knew how long.

"Dom, what's wrong? Are you hurt?" The words tumbled out in a rush. "We can go back to Reed's medical lab, or I can check you over myself, or—"

"No." She shook her head, pulling away from his touch like it burned. "Jay, when you were about to get hit by that cosmic ray blast... it was my turn to save someone I care about." Her voice cracked like ice under pressure. "But my powers failed you. I failed you."

Jay stared at her, pieces of a puzzle he hadn't known existed suddenly clicking into place. "Dom—"

"I've been alone since I was a kid," she continued, the words pouring out like water through a burst dam. "And I loved it that way. Nobody to worry about, nobody to let down, nobody to lose sleep over. Then you came crashing into my life with that stupid grin and those terrible jokes, and at first, it was just business. Easy money, you know? Then it got fun. Then..."

She wiped her eyes with the back of her hand, smearing her makeup.

"Then it became something I'd never felt before. Not for anybody. Not even for myself."

Jay felt his heart breaking all over again, but for entirely different reasons this time.

"When I saw you lying there on that table with the machines beeping and that flatline..." Domino's voice went hollow, like she was talking from the bottom of a well. "When my powers, the one thing I've always been able to count on, failed when you needed them most... it broke something inside me that I didn't even know could break."

"Dom, listen to me—"

"I'm better off alone," she said firmly, cutting him off with the finality that felt like a coffin lid slamming shut. "And now that this whole enhancement thing is done, I'm free from our deal too."

"But I can help you," Jay said desperately, his voice cracking. "Maybe I can tweak your powers just like I did for Hank and Ben. Maybe I can give you real control instead of needing constant danger. You could have a normal life, Dom. You could—"

"Stop." Domino smiled then, sad and beautiful and final as a sunset. "Just... stop."

She reached into her leather jacket and pulled out something small and metallic. A battered and bloodied quarter, its edges worn smooth by countless tosses and years of being carried in pockets. She pressed it into his palm, and it was ice cold despite the blood.

"Keep this safe," she whispered. "This coin saved your life. When Doom was about to put an end to us, it came like a bullet to his skull."

Jay's enhanced memory kicked in, analyzing the coin's unique markings and flooding him with recollections. Their first encounter, the way he'd casually flipped this exact quarter in irritation when he copied her powers briefly, how it had bounced off a fire escape at just the right angle.

"Seems like you're gonna need all the luck you can get where you're heading," she continued, stepping back like she was pulling away from something that might explode.

More memories cascaded through his mind. Their first meeting at the diner. Every date, every close call, every joke about her "good luck."

"The thing is," Domino continued, her voice getting stronger but sadder, "if my feelings for you stay the same, and you keep getting yourself hurt, which you will 'cause I know the path you've chosen, I'll break again. And next time, I don't think I'll be able to put the pieces back together."

She stepped forward and hugged him then, quick and fierce, like she was trying to memorize the feeling of her arms around him.

"Goodbye, Jay."

"Dom, wait—"

But she was already walking away, her pale skin making her look like a ghost disappearing into the shadows between buildings. She paused just long enough to give Bobby an awkward wave.

"Take care of him, Bobby. He's gonna need it more than he knows."

And then she was gone, swallowed up by New York like she'd never been there at all.

Jay stood there in the alley, staring at the quarter in his palm. Under his enhanced senses, he could see every scratch, every wear mark, every tiny detail that told the story of their relationship.

This quarter's been working overtime for me.

Then the irony of it all crashed over him like a tidal wave.

Domino's luck powers had been protecting him all along through this one simple quarter. Even when she thought her abilities had failed, even when she felt like she'd let him down, she'd been saving his life without even knowing it.

Jay's knees buckled, and he sank down right there in the alley, the quarter clutched in his trembling hands. The laughter started first—bitter, hollow laughter at the joke of it all. Then the tears came, hot and angry, because he'd been so damn stupid. He'd pushed everyone away trying to protect them, and lost the one person who'd actually been protecting him all along.

"God, I'm such an idiot," he choked out, his voice cracking like a teenager's. "She was saving me this whole time and I didn't even—" He couldn't finish the sentence. The weight of it all crashed down, every choice he'd made, every bridge he'd burned, every person he'd hurt while telling himself it was for their own good.

"The luck was hers all along," he whispered to the quarter, his voice raw. "Even when she thought her powers were failing, she was still saving me. She never failed. Not once. But I failed her. I failed everyone."

Bobby stood over him, watching this brilliant, complicated kid fall apart in an alley. The old vet had seen this before, not the superhero stuff, but the look. That hollow-eyed stare of someone who'd convinced themselves they were doing the right thing, only to watch it all crumble. Pride and good intentions, Bobby knew, could destroy a man just as surely as bullets.

"Shit, kid," Bobby muttered, crouching down beside him. His joints popped in protest. "You really went and fucked this up, didn't you?"

Jay's breath hitched, his shoulders shaking as he wiped his nose on his sleeve like he was twelve years old again. The quarter left an indent in his palm from how hard he was gripping it.

"I've been where you are," Bobby continued, his voice rough. "Thought I knew better than everyone else. Lost people because of it. The thing is, you can either sit here feeling sorry for yourself, or you can figure out how to not be such a dumbass next time." He spat into the gutter. "Your call, Doc."

When Jay remained silent, lost in his spiral of self-recrimination, Bobby just sighed.

"It's gonna be okay, kid," Bobby said quietly, his voice carrying the kind of certainty that only came from surviving your own personal hell. "Somehow, some way, it's gonna be okay."

But sitting there in the alley behind the Baxter Building, holding the quarter that represented everything he'd just lost—Dom's love, the heroes' trust, the simple joy of belonging somewhere—Jay wasn't sure he believed that anymore.

The cruel irony wasn't lost on him. He'd gotten what he came for. Ben's humanity restored. Hank's powers refined. He'd gotten his enhancement. But thinking of Rogue denying him the chance to cure her again broke him all over.

He'd just had to burn every bridge he'd ever built to do it.

And for the second time since arriving in this universe, the question haunted him: What next?

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Chapter 42: The Morning After New
Jay's eyes opened to the smell of fresh pizza and the sound of people moving around with urgency in their steps.

He blinked, trying to process where the hell he was. This wasn't Bobby's truck. This wasn't his bed. This was... the Queen's safehouse? The inner circle was bustling around like it was any other morning. Maria setting plates on the table, Linda arranging napkins, Tom pouring coffee. And Max was pulling a fresh pizza out of the oven.

The last thing Jay remembered was sobbing like a broken twelve-year-old in Bobby's truck, clutching Domino's quarter while the old vet drove through the night. Then... nothing. Just exhaustion hitting him like a freight train.

"Well, well," Maria said, noticing he was awake. "Look who decided to rejoin the land of the living."

Jay tried to sit up, and every muscle in his body screamed in protest. The enhancement, the emotional breakdown, the cosmic ray exposure. It had all finally caught up with him after the adrenaline and heartbreak wore off.

"How long was I out?"

"Well, it's the morning after," Bobby called from the kitchen, not looking up from whatever he was doing. "You passed out harder than a rookie on his first patrol."

Maria approached with that maternal look that made Jay feel simultaneously comforted and guilty. "Why don't you freshen up and come eat with us? You look like you came from the set of a zombie movie."

Jay moved like a zombie through his morning routine. Shower, teeth, throwing on clean clothes that someone had thoughtfully laid out. Domino's absence pressed at the edges of his mind, the ghost of her hug still lingering on his shoulders, but he shoved it down. When he shuffled back to the main room, he dropped into a chair between Max and Linda without a word. Tom sat directly across from him, and nobody said anything as they passed around pizza slices and toast like this was totally normal.

It took Jay three bites before his brain finally processed what he was eating.

"We're having pizza for breakfast," he said, and then he started laughing.

It wasn't happy laughter. It was the kind of brittle, slightly unhinged laughter that comes when everything's gone sideways. The laughter turned into something else pretty quickly, tears mixing with the giggles in a way that probably looked terrifying.

Everything hit at once. Domino walking away. Rogue's hatred. Ben's betrayed look even as he flexed human fingers. Sue calling him family in past tense.

"Hey, hey," Linda said softly, rubbing his back. "It's okay. Just let it out."

Max patted his head like he was a traumatized golden retriever. "We got you, Doc. You're safe here."

Jay finished his food through the sniffling, mumbled something about needing air, and stepped out of the warehouse.

The morning was crisp and clear, New York sprawling out like it always did, indifferent to personal crisis. Jay breathed it in, trying to reset his system.

When he came back inside, Bobby was leaning against the table with a cup of coffee, watching him with those knowing eyes.

"Why'd you bring me here?" Jay asked.

Bobby's mouth quirked up in that sardonic way. "Well, kid, seeing as you're now the infamous Power Broker and half the government probably wants to have words with you, figured we needed somewhere safe to crash."

Jay winced. Right. That was going to be a problem.

But then Bobby's expression softened just a fraction. "Also figured you needed to be around people who give a damn about you, instead of wallowing alone like some emo teen."

The reference to their earlier conversation about found family hit Jay right in the chest. He managed a weak smirk. "What is it with this lazy writing? Every time I have an emotional crisis, someone shows up with exactly the right words."

"Life's weird like that," Bobby shrugged.

When they settled back around the table, Tom leaned forward with that direct way of his. "So, what's the plan, Doc?"

Jay stared at his half-eaten pizza slice. "I... don't have one. For now, anyway. I can't seem to focus on anything past getting through the next five minutes."

Concerned looks passed around the table. Max frowned. "That's not like you, Jay. You always have three backup plans and a contingency."

"Relax, kid," Bobby said, settling into a chair with his coffee. "Do what you always do. Step by step. One thing at a time."

Jay nodded slowly. Right. Baby steps. He could handle baby steps.

"Okay," he said, taking a breath. "First step figure out what I actually got from that enhancement nightmare. I mean, mutant growth hormone, super soldier serum, and cosmic radiation ought to give me something good, right?"

He closed his eyes and sank into his mental landscape, the place where his powers existed and interacted.

The change took his breath away.

What used to be a sterile white void was now the most spectacular starry sky he'd ever seen. Like someone had taken the Hubble telescope's greatest hits and made them into wallpaper. Stars wheeled overhead in impossible colors, nebulae painted the darkness in shades of blue and gold, and everything pulsed with quiet life.

At the center of it all stood his powers, but they looked different now.

His theft ability was still there, grey-foggy and imposing, but more regal somehow. More refined. The sea-blue eyes that had been a part of Sage's power now looked actively intelligent, like they were seeing something deeper than surface.

Tommy's healing power was still pure green, still radiant, but there was a vitality to it now that made it seem more like a well of life force.

And Claire's danger sense, originally a bland mix of yellow and blue, had evolved. Sage's analytical mind had merged with it completely, the colors blending into something that looked like liquid gold.

Jay reached out with his enhanced awareness, testing the limits of what he could do now.

'Holy shit.'

He could hold ten powers simultaneously now, including his base modifications. His body was enhanced across the board. Muscles, bones, and senses all operating at peak efficiency. His mind, boosted by Sage's analytical capabilities, was processing information like a supercomputer with perfect memory recall.

But the really impressive upgrades were in his active abilities. His theft power could now make small tweaks to other people's abilities, just like what he did to Ben and Hank, though it couldn't fundamentally change their nature.

His null field had an upgrade to allow those he wants to have active power without losing range.

And his healing aura... Jay grinned as he sensed its limits. He could heal everything from nerve damage to missing limbs now, and the range was dramatically increased. He was basically a walking medical miracle.

When he opened his eyes back in the real world, he was smiling for the first time since last night's debacle.

"Well?" Linda asked, sitting across from him now, chin propped on her hands. "What's the verdict, Doc?"

The others leaned in, waiting for his answer.

"The benefits of the enhancement were more than I would have guessed," he said, flexing his fingers experimentally. "Way more."

"That's the first real smile we've seen from you all morning, Doc," Maria observed.

Tom nodded. "So, what now?"

Jay looked around the table at these people and made a heavy decision.

"Now I go and tick off my lists."



Four hours later, Jay walked out of the Queen's safehouse looking like a completely different person. The rumpled zombie-movie look Maria had so generously pointed out was gone, replaced by one of his backup three-piece suits. Charcoal grey with pinstripes, crisp white shirt, burgundy tie that brought out his eyes.

He looked sharp. Professional. Like someone who had his shit together.

Hilarious, since he absolutely didn't.

The suit felt wrong, too formal for someone who'd been sobbing in an alley a day ago. But when you're about to torch more bridges, appearances matter.

The argument with his inner circle still echoed in his head from that morning.

"This is insane," Maria had said when he'd announced his decision. "Associating with you isn't dangerous..."

"It is now," Jay had cut her off. "Doom's broadcast made sure of that. Anyone connected to me becomes a target."

"So we fight back," Max had argued, pacing like a caged tiger. "We stick together..."

"No." Jay's voice had carried finality. "On the surface, we're separate. That's how it has to be."

Linda had tried the emotional angle. "Jay, honey, you don't have to face this alone..."

"Actually, I do." He'd softened his tone then, hating himself for hurting them. "Look, I'm not cutting you off permanently. But publicly? We can't be seen together. Not until this blows over."

Tom had been the one to finally get it. "You're protecting us the only way you know how."

"Smart man."

The argument had dragged on for another hour, but Jay wore them down eventually. They'd agreed to surface separation with heavy hearts and promises to stay in touch through encrypted channels.

Now, walking away from the only family he had left, the suit felt like armor he didn't deserve.

"You sure about this, Doc?" Bobby asked as they headed for the tunnel entrance. The old vet had insisted on tagging along, despite Jay's protests that this was something he needed to handle solo.

"If I'm starting over, I need to settle accounts first."

Bobby snorted. "Fancy way of saying you're gonna make more people hate you."

"Probably. But they deserve the truth."

The descent into Morlock territory felt like time travel. Steam pipes hissed their greeting, converted subway platforms stretched in every direction. But something was off. Usually, when Jay visited as "The Power Broker," there was tension. Mutants who'd learned to be wary of outsiders, even friendly ones.

Today, everyone was acting normal. Kids playing in corridors. Adults chatting over meals. Nobody staring or whispering or watching him with that careful wariness he'd grown used to.

Confusing as hell.

"Something's wrong," Jay muttered as they walked through the community center. "After Doom's broadcast yesterday, everyone in New York should be looking at me like I'm carrying plague."

"Maybe they don't watch the news down here?"

Before Jay could respond, Callisto emerged from the shadows with that predatory grace, hair catching the flickering overhead light, eyes fixed on him with knowing amusement.

"Surprised they're not freaking out?" she asked, reading his face perfectly. "Most of them aren't connected enough to the surface to have seen the circus. And those who do know that Power Broker and Jay the Doctor are the same person..." She shrugged. "Their opinions got managed."

"Managed?" Jay's enhanced hearing caught the implications. "Callisto, what did you..."

"Beautiful Dreamer paid me a visit after the broadcast," she said, gesturing deeper into the tunnels. "Turns out our resident telepath has opinions about narrative control."

Beautiful Dreamer appeared beside them. Pale, dark-haired, eyes like deep water. Always one of the more optimistic Morlocks, but now there was steel in her gaze.

"Jay's been nothing but good for our people," she said with absolute conviction. "When I realized what Doom's words could do to our community, the panic, the fear, I made a choice. Those who knew connected Power Broker to Jay the Doctor... I adjusted their attitudes. Just those specific connections. To keep things quiet while you sort your mess."

Jay stared, processing. "Why? After knowing the truth?"

"'Cause it's you," she said firmly. "Dr. Jay, who saved Leech, gave us hope, showed us we didn't have to live like animals in the dark."

The weight of her trust hit him hard.

"I need everyone gathered," Jay said quietly. "Community center. All of them."

"Jay..." Callisto started.

"All of them. They deserve to know who they're really harboring."

Twenty minutes later, the community center buzzed with confused energy. Morlocks filtered in from every tunnel. Families, loners, survivors, and the thriving alike. Leech sat front row, looking healthier than Jay had ever seen him, pale skin now flushed with normal circulation.

Jay stood at the makeshift podium, hands shaking as he looked out at faces that still held trust.

"Anyone here know who I am?" His voice carried clearly through the chamber.

Confused murmurs. A few tentative hands.

"You're a teacher," called Erg, whose bioelectric aura made him glow faintly. "Dr. Jay."

"A healer," said a young woman with lizard-like scales.

Jay closed his eyes, feeling the weight of deception settle on his shoulders one last time. When he opened them, his null field expanded outward thirty feet.

The effect was immediate. Powers that had been active went dormant. Physical mutations began receding. The room filled with gasps of recognition and understanding.

They'd felt this exact sensation before, in this exact place, from this exact distance.

"Power Broker," whispered Erg, recognizing the field's signature even as it suppressed her abilities.

Jay nodded, the motion feeling like lifting a mountain. "I'm Power Broker. I came here to face you properly with no masks. You deserved better than deception."

Silence. He could see the moment each Morlock connected the dots, understanding flooding their faces with betrayal, confusion, anger, and hurt.

"You've come far since I first found you down here," he continued, voice steady despite the chaos in his chest. "You built something beautiful. A real community. A real family. Keep your heads high. The world up there's changing, and you're leading that change whether they know it or not."

Silence stretched.

Then Leech stood up. "Are you leaving?"

The question hit harder than any accusation. "For a while. I have to. Being around me right now... it's dangerous."

"But you'll come back?" Too much understanding in those young eyes.

Jay's throat tightened. "I don't know, Leech. Honestly don't know."

Callisto stepped forward, mismatched eyes blazing. "You son of a bitch," she snarled, getting right in his face despite the null field suppressing her reflexes. "You took away Leech's powers without explaining yourself. Without asking. Without giving us any choice!"

"I did what was best for the kid..."

"You decided what was best! Just like you decided to manipulate us. Just like you decided to lie for weeks!"

Jay met her anger head-on. "I exposed Masque's abuse. Gave your people a way to look normal, integrate with the surface. Brought medical supplies, resources, hope..."

"All while using us as your cover story!"

"Yes." The word fell like a stone. "I used you. Lied to you. Manipulated the situation for my own ends. But look at what I gave you instead."

Beautiful Dreamer stepped forward, face pale but determined. "The money from Emma Frost arrives soon. Enough to establish a legitimate community space above ground for real integration."

"And you'll have it without me complicating things," Jay added. "Clean money, clean connections, clean future. No terrorist associations dragging you down."

The crowd processed everything in silence. Finally, Sunder raised his massive hand. "Power Broker... Jay... same person helped Sunder's friends. Brought medicine when Morlocks were sick and dying. Fought the bad people who hurt us."

His words hung in the air.

"Sunder doesn't understand why names matter so much. Jay did good things. That's what Sunder remembers."

Other voices joined in, quiet at first, then gaining strength. Stories of medical care, protection, someone who'd treated them like human beings when the rest of the world saw freaks and monsters.

"You idiots," Callisto said finally, but without real venom. She turned back to Jay. "This is your goodbye speech, isn't it?"

"Yeah. It is."

The farewells were awkward and painful and somehow perfect. Handshakes, hugs, silent nods from those still processing. Leech hugged his legs tight enough to bruise, whispering "thank you for making me normal" so quietly only Jay's enhanced hearing caught it.

Walking back through the tunnels with Bobby, Jay felt lighter and heavier simultaneously. Another bridge burned, but this time by choice, on his terms.

"You know," Bobby said as they climbed toward street level, "for a master planner, you sure like making things complicated."

Jay managed a weak laugh. "Occupational hazard."

At surface level, Jay checked his phone for the first time since the enhancement. Seventeen missed calls from Coulson, twenty-three texts, enough voicemails to fill a novel. The SHIELD agent had been trying to reach him since Doom's broadcast went live.

Jay scrolled to Coulson's contact and dialed.

"Jay?" Coulson answered before the first ring finished. "Jesus Christ, where have you been? I've been calling for..."

"I need to meet with Fury. As soon as possible."

"Jay, listen, about the broadcast..."

"Coulson." Enough authority in the name to cut through the rambling. "Set up the meeting. I'll explain everything then."

Pause. "How soon can you be in Staten Island?"

Jay looked up at the clear New York sky. "Two hours."

Time to face the music. Again.

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Chapter 43: Secrets and Donuts New
The evening sun cast long shadows across the cracked asphalt of Inglewood as Jay pulled into the parking lot of Randy's Donuts, the New York Branch. That iconic concrete donut perched on the roof looked exactly like it did in the movies. Absurd and somehow perfect for the conversation he was about to have. In another timeline, Tony Stark would nurse his hangover here after that disastrous birthday party. But that was then. This was now.

"Nick really does have a taste for the dramatic," Jay muttered, checking his reflection in the rearview mirror. The face staring back at him looked older somehow. The weight of Doom's revelation still sat heavy on his shoulders.

The bell above the door chimed as he entered. Fresh-fried dough and cheap coffee hit him like a wave.

First, he saw the back booth. But it wasn't just Fury and Coulson waiting for him.

Steve Rogers sat across from them, his broad shoulders hunched over a steaming cup of black coffee. Captain America himself. The man who'd been frozen for seventy years, thrust into a world he barely recognized, and somehow still managed to embody everything decent about the American dream.

"Well, this is unexpected," Jay said, sliding into the booth with practiced ease. He kept his voice light, but his newly enhanced senses were already cataloging everything. Fury's elevated heart rate. The way Coulson's fingers drummed against the table. Steve's rigid posture that screamed readiness to move and intercept. "Captain America at a donut shop. Very wholesome."

Fury's single eye fixed on him. The man's jaw was clenched so tight Jay wondered if his teeth might crack, and those telltale veins at his temples were already starting to throb. Classic Fury. About to explode but holding it back through sheer force of will.

Before anyone could launch into what was sure to be an unpleasant conversation, Jay held up a hand and caught the attention of the teenage waitress behind the counter. She had that bored expression unique to minimum-wage workers everywhere, pink hair, and cute cat nail art.

"Excuse me, miss, can we have everything on the menu?" he told her with a smile.

She blinked, her gum-chewing momentarily pausing. "Everything? Like... everything everything?"

"Every single item. Glazed, chocolate, bear claws, apple fritters. The works. Oh, and coffee. Lots of coffee." Jay glanced at his tablemates, none of whom seemed inclined to order.

The girl shrugged and wandered off, probably thinking she'd just encountered another eccentric with more money than sense. In New York, that was practically a daily occurrence.

Fury's patience finally snapped. "Are you done..."

"I can't negotiate on an empty stomach," Jay cut him off smoothly, getting comfortable in the booth. "And judging by those throbbing head veins of yours, this conversation's gonna need serious carbs to survive."

The table fell into tense quiet. Outside, traffic hummed, completely unaware that decisions affecting countless lives were about to be made over donuts and coffee. The normalcy of it was almost surreal.

Steve cleared his throat. When he spoke, his voice carried that earnest quality that made you want to believe in truth, justice, and the American way all over again. "I haven't properly thanked you yet. For bringing me back. For giving them the information about my location and for... for defrosting me." He paused, looking down at his coffee cup. "So, thank you."

Jay studied the man across from him. After all the drama at the Baxter Building, he'd almost missed the guy. The living legend who'd sacrificed everything to save the world, only to wake up in a future he didn't recognize. There was genuine gratitude in those blue eyes, but also bone-deep loneliness that came from being a man out of time.

"It was a business deal," Jay said around a bite of glazed donut, his tone deliberately casual. "I already got my payment."

That did it.

"Yeah!" Fury exploded, his composure finally cracking like a dam under pressure. "And you used it to juice yourself up!"

"So what?" Jay's response was immediate and unapologetic.

The question seemed to catch Fury off guard. For a moment, the Director of SHIELD looked speechless. Then his expression shifted, becoming very still, very calm. Which was infinitely more terrifying than his yelling.

"You were perfect, you know that?" Fury's voice dropped to barely above a whisper, but it carried the weight of disappointment and barely contained rage. "Perfect focal point for the world's attention, both as the Doctor and as Power Broker. Let us prop up the Avengers Initiative based on the positive image you created for mutants and enhanced. One interview, and suddenly people were talking about coexistence instead of containment and elimination."

Jay raised an eyebrow, genuinely curious despite the obvious trap being laid. "Past tense?"

"Now that Doom's revealed your secret identity, we'll have to delay the Initiative indefinitely." Fury's words hit like physical blows. "Can't exactly use a glutton kid with control issues as our poster child for responsible superhuman activity."

The accusation stung more than Jay wanted to admit, but he forced himself to remain calm. Set down his coffee with deliberate care. "Wait." His voice carried genuine surprise. "You knew about my Power Broker identity?"

Coulson tried to hide his laugh behind his napkin, but Jay caught it anyway. Even Steve looked like he was fighting a smile, which somehow made the whole situation even more surreal.

Fury's smirk was pure predator. "Kid, I've been in this game since before you were born. After our little confrontation in the Morlock tunnels, we launched a comprehensive investigation. However smart you think you are, there's exactly one type of DNA sample that can't be analyzed."

The pieces clicked together in Jay's mind with sickening clarity. "When did you..."

"Hair from the hellfire club. Skin cells from every surface you touched. Dandruff from the Morlock tunnels." Fury leaned forward, his voice dropping to a conversational whisper that somehow felt more threatening than shouting. "Every single sample came back with the same result: 'Unable to process.' No matter the tech, no matter the lab. Same result we get from exactly one other person in our files."

Jay stared across the table, caught completely off guard. It felt like realizing you'd been playing checkers while your opponent was three moves ahead in chess.

"How long have you known?" The question came out more vulnerable than he'd intended.

"Three weeks, two days, approximately sixteen hours," Coulson said with that pleasant, almost parental tone that somehow made everything worse. "Give or take."

"If you knew, why didn't you confront me sooner?"

Coulson's expression shifted, becoming genuinely paternal. "We believed in giving you space to make your own choices. Sometimes people need room to grow, to find their own path to doing the right thing." He paused, stirring his coffee with methodical precision. "We only intervene when someone makes a mistake that could hurt innocent people. Like now."

Jay started laughing. The sheer audacity of being outplayed hit him all at once. "Oh, that's beautiful, Coulson. Only you could make preparing for blackmail and extortion sound like a counseling session."

"Alright," Fury said, breaking the moment. "Let's stop dancing around this and get down to business. Here's the deal: Full SHIELD protection for you, your people, and every single Morlock down in those tunnels. We're talking complete resource allocation here. Safe houses, new identities if anyone needs them, the whole package."

Jay's stomach tightened, even though he'd been expecting this moment. "In exchange for?"

"You join SHIELD as a full-time operative. Public surrender, complete with media appearances and a carefully orchestrated comeback story. We spin your image from some villain who attacked that elite club with a sewer monster into a reformed asset working for the good guys." Fury leaned forward, his voice dropping to that tone that made seasoned agents sweat. "But here's the real issue. Your intel. How do you know what you know? Where's it coming from? Because right now, you're either the luckiest guesser on the planet or you've got access to information that should be impossible to get."

He tapped the table with one finger. "That's what I need to understand. Not your powers, not your sob story. I need to know who's talking to you and how deep this goes."

The questions were serious, but Jay found himself laughing. This time, it was genuine amusement. He laughed until his sides ached. Because how could he possibly explain that they were all comic book characters? That Fury was supposed to be white until Samuel L. Jackson made the role iconic? That Coulson first appeared in Tony Stark's movie and wasn't even supposed to be a major character?

When he finally calmed down, wiping a tear from his eyes, he found three very concerned faces staring back at him.

"Hell no." His voice was certain now. "I've spent my entire life under someone else's thumb. Now I'm finally free. I'm not about to hit reverse and undo all the progress I've made."

Fury's voice went deadly quiet, carrying the kind of menace that had made him legendary in intelligence circles. "Then the deal's off. And whatever happens to your inner circle and Morlocks, that's on you."

Jay studied Fury's face, reading the micro-expressions that most people would miss. The slight tightening around his eye that suggested uncertainty. The way his shoulders tensed. A man bluffing, at least partially.

"Is that a real threat?" Jay asked, his voice staying level even as his eyes began to emit that soft blue glow.

Fury tensed. His poker face cracked for just a second as he processed the implications of Jay's words and the still-unknown extent of his capabilities. After a heartbeat, he backed down slightly.

"I'm just saying, without getting anything substantial in return, SHIELD can't justify allocating resources to protect your people."

Jay's smile was sharp now. "Fair enough. But what if I could give you something you'd kill to get your hands on? Information that would reshape everything you think you know about your own agency?"

Coulson's face went pale. Something like recognition flickered in his eyes.

"What?" All three asked in unison, leaning forward with sudden, intense focus.

Jay pushed back from the table, his expression serious for the first time since entering the shop. "Not here. Too many ears, too many people." He gestured toward the window. "My car."

Ten minutes later, they were crammed into Jay's sedan. A replacement vehicle he'd borrowed from Bobby after his beloved Datsun 240Z had been totaled during the Abomination incident. The car still smelled like Bobby's cologne and the lingering traces of whatever lady he'd been trying to impress that week.

Jay used his enhanced danger sense to sweep the interior for surveillance devices, electromagnetic signatures, anything that might compromise what he was about to reveal. Finding nothing beyond the usual electronic noise of a modern vehicle, he exhaled slowly.

"What I'm about to tell you stays between the four people in this car," he began, his voice carrying a weight that made even Fury sit up straighter. "If it absolutely must be shared, then only Natasha, Clint, and Maria Hill get to hear it. No one else. Not the World Security Council, not even the President himself."

Fury crossed his arms, his patience wearing thin. "It better be worth all this cloak-and-dagger nonsense."

"First, my conditions." Jay held up one finger. "Passive protection for my inner circle and the Morlocks. Not full resource allocation. I'm not asking you to babysit them. Just... keep an eye out. Make sure they don't disappear in the middle of the night."

Jay held up a second finger. "Second condition: Legal and political protection for the community I'm establishing. A place where mutants and humans can coexist openly, without fear or prejudice."

"What community?" Fury's tone was skeptical, but there was interest there, too.

Jay's expression softened. "District X. An above-ground sanctuary for the Morlocks and any other mutants who want a chance at normal life. Just... living and not hiding in sewers."

Fury's temples started pulsing again, those veins standing out like road maps of frustration. "Where's the funding gonna come from? The political influence needed to make something like that happen? We can provide protection, but SHIELD isn't authorized to interfere in domestic policy..."

"Don't worry about the money. Emma's fund will handle the financial side." Jay's confidence was unshakeable. "As for political influence, leave that to me."

He held up a third finger. "Third condition: I need you to actively promote the narrative that I've severed all connections with the Morlocks. That they were led astray by my influence, that Doom's propaganda about mutant superiority was lies and manipulation."

Fury nodded slowly. Propaganda and narrative control were SHIELD's bread and butter. They'd been shaping public opinion since the Cold War.

"And lastly," Jay held up his fourth finger, "I need access to the Fridge. Specifically, to a certain prisoner being held there."

Coulson immediately shook his head, his expression turning protective. "Given the nature of your abilities... your capacity to absorb and replicate powers... we absolutely cannot allow you unsupervised contact with high-security detainees."

Fury studied Jay with the intensity of a hawk sizing up its prey. "You're asking for an awful lot here, kid. What could possibly be important enough that we'd agree to all of this?"

Jay's smile made Coulson's blood run cold. It was the same expression from their first meeting.

"Tell me, gentlemen," Jay said, his voice dropping to barely above a whisper. "What do you really know about Hydra?"

The reaction was instant. Fury's eye widened like he'd been slapped. Steve's entire body went rigid, every muscle tensing like he was preparing for battle. Coulson made a small, strangled sound.

"And while you're processing that," Jay continued, turning to focus on Coulson specifically, "perhaps you could explain to us the historical significance of one James Buchanan Barnes? You know... Bucky? Steve's best friend, who supposedly died falling from a train in the Alps?"

The color drained from Coulson's face as the pieces fell into place. The déjà vu was crystal clear now, and he knew exactly what discovery it had led to as he saw Steve's stunned expression.

The car fell silent. Outside, New York continued its relentless pace, oblivious to the bombshell that had just been dropped.

Jay leaned back in his seat and waited for the rest to process the importance of what he was about to reveal.

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Chapter 44: The Fridge New
Fury went dead still, and Jay recognized the look.

Same expression Fury had worn in his apartment when Jay first dropped hints about finding Captain America frozen in the ice. That casual little question that changed everything.

Fury felt history repeating itself.

"This some kinda game to you, kid?" Fury's voice carried that particular brand of menace reserved for people who'd pushed him too far. "Or you actually got something worth hearing?"

Jay's whole demeanor shifted. Gone was the chill guy with the donut obsession, replaced by something more focused. "I mess around about a lot of things, Nick. My friends ain't one of them. Neither are the Morlocks."

Even Steve caught the change, straightening up like he'd heard a commanding officer enter the room.

"What... what do you wanna know about Buck?" Steve's voice cracked on the name. Always did. "I'll tell you whatever you need. We were just a coupla punks from Brooklyn. Too dumb to know when we were beat. Bucky was always the one keepin' me outta the morgue. Ninety pounds soaking wet and a mouth that wouldn't quit writin' checks my body couldn't cash."

The Brooklyn was bleeding through heavy now, like it always did when Steve talked about the old days. "He enlisted right after Pearl Harbor. 107th Infantry. Best man I ever knew. Brave, loyal, funnier than hell when he wanted to be. Could charm any dame into a dance, but he never once left me behind. Not when I was gettin' my ass kicked in alleys, not when Ma died, not when the whole world thought I wasn't worth the trouble..."

Steve's voice was getting rougher, guilt and grief spilling out. "I couldn't save him, just watched him fall from that goddamn train, and I couldn't..."

Jay's mouth stopped chewing. "That's... that's a hell of a story, Cap. I can't imagine carrying that kind of pain." His expression softened slightly before he continued. "But what if I told you he didn't die?"

The half-eaten donut went flying as Steve lunged across the cramped sedan, enhanced reflexes turning him into a blur of muscle and fury. "Don't you fucking dare!" The words came out in pure Brooklyn growl. "I won't let you drag Buck into whatever twisted scheme you're pulling!"

Steve's hands were shaking bad now, caught between hope and rage. The thought that Bucky might be out there somewhere, suffering while Steve slept his decades away in the ice. It was too much. "If you're lying about this, I swear to God..."

"Rogers!" Fury's command voice cut through everything else like a knife. "Stand down! This is exactly how he told us about you. The same casual question and knowing look." He gestured at Steve with barely contained exasperation. "And look how that turned out."

Steve's breathing sounded like a broken engine, hope and fury tearing him apart from the inside. "Where is he?"

Jay pointed straight at Captain, then at Fury. " First Language Captain! Second, that depends on how fast Nick here agrees to play ball."

Looking at Steve Rogers, America's golden boy turned living legend, Fury knew he was screwed. How do you tell Captain Fucking America you won't help save his best friend?

Sometimes doing right and doing smart weren't the same thing.

"Goddamn it," Fury muttered, sounding like a man accepting his own execution. "Fine. You get it. Everlast fucking thing you asked for. Now talk."

"Payment up front," Jay said, settling back in his seat. "I don't do business on credit, especially not with spymasters."

Fury's jaw worked like he was chewing glass, but he gave a sharp nod. "Coulson! Get me a Quinjet prepped for the Fridge. Now."

Coulson slipped out of the car, already dialing. Jay caught pieces of tactical chatter through the windows. Authorization codes, flight patterns, and the usual SHIELD Logistics.

"One more thing," Jay said, casual as ordering coffee. "I need you to set up a meeting with Emma Frost. Gotta finalize the Deal."

"You're really gonna build this mutant sanctuary?"

"Human and mutant sanctuary," Jay corrected. "I made a promise to the Morlocks, and a man's only worth his word."

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The next few hours blurred together. Armored transport to a secure helipad, then onto a Quinjet flying at speeds that would make the air force jealous.

Fury spent the flight quietly thinking, while Steve stared out the window like he was watching for ghosts, and Coulson kept shooting worried glances at his idol.

The Fridge squatted on the coastline like a concrete mountain, all harsh angles and "stay away" architecture. The only way in or out was through the roof, making escaping pretty much impossible and attacking it a suicide mission.

Going down through security was like descending into the world's secure mine shaft. Biometric scanners every twenty feet, guards who looked like they bench-pressed Buicks for fun, blast doors thick enough to stop a tank round.

At the bottom level, they hit enhanced containment. The place where SHIELD kept people who made serial killers look like jaywalkers.

Jay's eyes swept the cells, that comic book knowledge cataloging faces and power sets, until he spotted someone unexpected.

Marcus Daniels, aka Blackout. Poor bastard sat in his reinforced cell surrounded by specialty lighting designed to remove any shadows in his cell to keep him cut off his powers. His power to manipulate that dark-force made him one of SHIELD's nastiest catches, but Jay could see something else. That same haunted look he'd seen on other mutants whose abilities had scrambled their brains.

Not exactly what Jay needed for his planned powers, but a darkforce user is potentially useful. Very useful.

"Open it up," Jay told Coulson.

Coulson didn't budge. "Information first, Jay."

Jay held up a hand for quiet, then pointed at Fury. "Kill the recording devices. All of them."

Fury reluctantly tapped his phone, nodded.

Jay used his enhanced Danger sense to check again, and hearing all the electric hum die down confirmed it.

"I'll give you one freebie for Blackout here. Your choice. Bucky's status or the Hydra intel. Pick one."

Steve stepped forward before Fury could answer, desperation blazing in those blue eyes. "Bucky. Please."

Fury gave a nod that looked like it hurt.

Jay's voice dropped to barely a whisper. "James Buchanan Barnes is alive and goes by the Winter Soldier these days."

Coulson went white as a sheet. "That's impossible. Barnes would be pushing late eighties and Winter Soldier's one of the deadliest assassins on the planet..."

"Hydra pulled him out of that ravine barely breathing," Jay said, each word hitting them like hammer blows. "Pumped him full of their own bootleg super soldier serum, then spent the next seventy years systematically destroying his mind. Turned him into the perfect weapon with no conscience, just pure lethal efficiency. They keep him on ice between jobs. Keeps the extended warranty on their favorite killer."

The silence that followed was suffocating.

Then Steve's fist met concrete with a sound like a gunshot, spider-webbing the wall and painting his knuckles red. "They tortured him," he said, voice barely hearable anymore. "All those years I was sleeping in the ice, and they had him. They were breaking him, using him, turning him into..."

The words died in his throat.

"Hydra got wiped out after the war," Fury said, but even he didn't sound convinced. "Peggy saw to that personally."

Jay just smiled and said nothing at all.

Fury sighed like a man watching his pension disappear. "Coulson. Open the damn door."

Marcus Daniels came off the bench swinging the second Jay stepped into his cell just as the lights went out, hands wreathed in shadows. Then Jay's null field kicked in, and the guy stopped like he'd hit a brick wall.

Marcus stared at his hands like he'd never seen them before, then started crying like a baby.

"How?" The word came out broken and desperate. "I can't... the voices stopped. The darkness ain't whispering anymore."

"Your darkforce experiment gave you incredible power, Dr. Daniels," Jay said gently, "but it also messed with your head something fierce. Made you hear things, see things that weren't there. Made everyone look like a threat."

Marcus dropped to his knees, overwhelmed by the sudden quiet in his skull. "Jesus, how long have I been here? The shadows were always screaming, showing me horrible stuff. Made me think everyone was trying to kill me."

Jay held out his hand. "You want it gone?"

Marcus grabbed on with both hands, tears streaming. "Please, God, just make it stop."

"Keep still," Jay warned, then activated his theft ability. The darkforce power flowed into him like breathing in smoke, settling into his mental landscape, whispers and all.

Marcus sagged as the last of it left him, and for the first time in years, his eyes were completely clear. "Oh God. I remember now. What I did. All those people I hurt. And Audrey, oh poor Audrey!" Pure horror in his voice.

When Jay stepped back out and dropped his null field, Marcus was still on his knees but crying with relief now, not torment.

"That's... that actually helps more than you know," Coulson said quietly. "I'm the one who had to bring him in originally. What happened to him, what he became... it's kept me up for nights."

Jay glanced back at Marcus, still crying. "He's gonna need serious therapy. Years of it, probably. But he's not dangerous anymore."

He said it like he was diagnosing a common cold, then started walking deeper into the facility toward whatever he'd really come here for.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Fridge was a maze of reinforced corridors and steel doors, each one hiding secrets. When he reached the cell he'd been looking for, he stopped, studying the reinforced containment unit that had been specially modified for its occupant.

Inside, surrounded by thick layers of plastic lining every surface, Carl "Crusher" Creel was doing push-ups like his life depended on it. Up, down, up, down. Experience born of prison routine and the desperate need to stay occupied. Sweat dripped steadily onto the plastic sheeting beneath him, each drop a small percussion in the otherwise silent cell.

The plastic was yellowed and scratched from months of use. Jay could see where Creel had tested his power early on. Small indentations where he'd pressed his palms, trying to absorb something, anything, to feel that rush of absorbing materials again. Now he just went through the motions, a junkie cut off from his drug of choice.

The Absorbing Man. Former boxer turned enhanced individual with the ability to absorb the properties of anything he touches. The same Carl Creel who'd once fought Matt Murdock's father in the ring. Before Battlin' Jack Murdock refused to take a dive and paid for it with his life.

'Funny thing about searching for answers,' Jay thought. 'You never think to look right under your nose.'

When Fury, Coulson, and Steve caught up, their footsteps echoing in the sterile corridor, Fury took one look at Creel through the reinforced glass and crossed his arms.

"Creel stays put," Fury said flat out. "He's too valuable for whatever game you're playing. We've got plans for that absorption ability."

Jay tilted his head, genuinely interested now. The Tesseract project was still in its infancy, but if SHIELD was thinking that far ahead... "Tell me about him."

Coulson stepped forward, consulting his tablet with practiced habit. His thumb flicked across the screen a few times. The glow from the device cast strange shadows on his face in the dim corridor lighting.

Carl 'Crusher' Creel. Used to box middleweight before he discovered armed robbery paid better." He glanced up. "Six months ago, he underwent some unknown experiment which gave him his power. We caught him trying to crush some lawyer's skull in hell's kitchen with his bare hands, but whoever was pulling his strings..." Coulson shook his head. "Gone. They pulled out clean and left us with nothing to trace back."

"Since then, he hasn't spoken, regardless of our methods. It's unusual for a street thug to display such loyalty."

Steve leaned against the corridor wall, nursing his knuckles. "What kind of lawyer?"

"Personal injury. An ambulance chaser named Franklin Nelson. Nothing special about him that we could find." Coulson swiped through more files. "Creel never said why he wanted him dead. Just kept asking when he could 'feel the steel again.'"

Jay started laughing, low at first, then louder. It echoed off the walls, bouncing back at them from the sterile surfaces. "Funny thing about light, Fury. The brighter it burned, the darker the shadows it cast. And the darkest places were always right underneath the brightest lights."

He stepped closer to the reinforced glass, noting the single-sided design and voice isolation system. State-of-the-art containment. Triple redundancy on the locks. Pressure sensors in the floor. They'd built this place to hold monsters.

"The group that experimented on Creel? That was Hydra."

The name dropped into the conversation like a stone into still water.

"Hydra died with the war," Coulson said, but he didn't sound convinced. "But if what you say is true about the Winter Soldier, maybe some remnants survived. Small groups, hiding in a bunker somewhere. But what you're suggesting..."

Fury's eye narrowed. "Even if you gave us every Hydra hideout left on Earth, it wouldn't be worth what you're asking for."

There was something in Fury's voice, though. A crack in the certainty.

Jay's face changed. The casual interest was gone, replaced by something colder. "Nick Fury. Master spy. Built SHIELD into the ultimate watchdog. Got eyes and ears in every government, every corporation, every terror cell worth watching."

His voice got quiet. "But tell me something. While you're watching everyone else, who's watching your own house?"

Something passed between Fury and Coulson. A look that said they were wondering about the same thing.

The corridor felt smaller suddenly.

But Steve got it right away. He pushed off from the wall, his jaw tight. He'd fought Hydra before, seen how they worked. They didn't just kill you and walk away. They got inside your head, your organization, your life. They made you complicit.

"You're saying they're inside SHIELD."

The words hung in the air like smoke from a gun.

Fury went rigid, his eye narrowing like a gun barrel. "That's fucking impossible," he barked, voice raw with disbelief and rage. "I vet every single one of them myself. Every hire. Every promotion. Every transfer. I know what half my agents had for breakfast, who they're screwing, and what skeletons they've got buried."

He snapped toward Coulson, almost shaking with fury. "Phil. Tell him. Tell him about the protocols. The psych evals. The polygraphs. The background checks that dig three generations deep. Tell him we don't miss traitors. Not in my house."

Coulson moved closer to Jay. "I've served with these people for years. Bled with some of them. Watched them take bullets for civilians." His voice was rock solid. "If we had traitors in our ranks, I'd know. We'd all know."

Jay watched them rally around each other, and he almost felt bad for what he was about to do. Almost.

"Remember Operation Paperclip? After the war, your government brought over Nazi scientists. Rocket experts, they said. Help us beat the Soviets to space. But they didn't just bring the smart ones." He paused, letting that sink in. "They brought the believers too. The ones who truly, thought the Reich would rise again."

Fury went dead quiet. When he spoke again, his voice could have frozen water. "Give me names."

Jay counted off on his fingers like he was reading a grocery list. "Alexander Pierce, Secretary of the World Security Council. An old friend of yours, isn't he?
Jasper Sitwell, Level 6 agent, currently assigned to the Lemurian Star. Nice lad, great with computers. Brock Rumlow, STRIKE team leader. You personally approved him for Steve's security detail. Trusted him with Captain America's life."

He watched their faces fall with each name. "John Garrett, Level 8 operative, has been with SHIELD since the eighties. Gideon Malick from the World Security Council. Baron Wolfgang von Strucker's son, still running operations in Sokovia. Daniel Whitehall. Though you probably know him better as Dr. Werner Reinhardt, the charming Nazi who likes to cut people open while they're still breathing."

The corridor was silent except for the hum of the ventilation system.

Jay's smile was all teeth. "Want me to keep going? Because that's just the ones I know about off the top of my head. Probably about a quarter of your organization, give or take."

Fury exploded. He started swearing in languages Jay didn't recognize. Russian, probably some Arabic, definitely some words that would make a sailor blush. He paced back and forth like a caged animal, his leather coat making soft scraping sounds against the walls in the narrow space. His eye darted everywhere. Walls, ceiling, floor. Like he might find answers written in the fluorescent lights overhead.

Coulson just stood there, still holding his tablet loosely.

Steve stayed calm, but Jay could see the anger in his shoulders, the way his hands had curled into fists at his sides. For Steve, this wasn't a shock. This was just confirmation of what he'd always suspected. Hydra never really died. They just learned to hide better.

"Pierce," Fury said suddenly, stopping his pacing. "I've known Alexander Pierce for twenty years. He's the one who recommended me for director. He's..."

"He's Hydra," Jay said simply. "Has been since before you met him."

When Fury finally stopped cursing, he spun around and grabbed Jay's arm hard enough to leave bruises on normal skin. "Prove it. Right now. Give me something concrete, something I can take action on without sounding like a paranoid lunatic."

Jay pointed at Creel's cell.

Fury's brain was working overtime, trying to pull victory from the jaws of defeat. The man didn't get to run SHIELD by rolling over when things went sideways.

"Hold up." He held up one hand, that calculating look creeping back into his good eye. "You want Creel's power? Let me purpose another deal."

"Everything we got on Doom. And I mean everything. Surveillance footage going back five years, intercepted communications, financial records, our people inside Latveria who are still breathing." Fury paused, watching Jay's face. "But here's the kicker. Remember that green rage monster that tore up Manhattan back?"
He waited a beat, letting the question hang.

"Emil Blonsky. Goes by Abomination now. Took the military hours to crack him, but when they finally did..." Fury's smile was predatory. "Turns out that whole rampage wasn't some roided-up gamma soldier going crazy. Someone was pulling his strings. Feeding him intel, pointing him right at Reed Richards' lab like a guided missile."

Fury circled closer, sensing weakness. This was what he lived for. The negotiation. The chess match.

"Same day as your little enhancement party at the Baxter Building. Hell, same hour. You think that's coincidence?" He shook his head slowly. "Doom played us all. Used Blonsky to keep the Fantastic Four busy while he waltzed right in."

The spymaster in him was fully engaged now, reading Jay's body language, looking for tells. "Now, I'm thinking a man with your obvious... history with the good doctor might find that information worth something. Especially since we know he cost you your friends."

Jay burst out laughing. The sound bounced off the concrete walls.

"You serious right now?" Jay shook his head in disbelief. "Nick, Doom waltzed into the Baxter Building, had a nice chat with Reed Richards and the rest, dropped a nuclear bomb on my secret identity, and strolled out like he owned the place. Your entire intelligence network didn't even know he was in the country until he was this close to killing your precious Boy Scout."

Fury's jaw tightened, but Jay kept going.

"If Victor Von Doom can slip past every satellite and agent you've got watching the skies, what makes you think your intelligence on him is worth anything?" Jay stepped closer, his voice getting quieter but somehow more cutting. "I've got my own methods for dealing with Doom. Methods that don't rely on an organization that's been compromised from day one."

Fury's shoulders dropped. The fight went out of him as the full scope of SHIELD's failures hit home.

Fury stared at him for a long moment. Then he let go and walked to the control panel, his director-level clearance punching through the security protocols with a series of electronic beeps.

The reinforced door slid open with a hydraulic hiss. Creel looked up from his push-ups, muscles tensing when he saw the visitors. His eyes were the flat, calculating eyes of a man who'd spent months in the worst of cages.

Jay walked into the cell, casual as you please, raised his hand, and said, "Hail Hydra."

Just like that, everything changed. Creel's posture shifted from wary prisoner to devoted soldier. The tension melted away, replaced by worship. "Hail Hydra, sir!"

The transformation was so complete, so instant, that for a moment nobody moved.

Fury went white as a sheet. Coulson stumbled backward and his tablet hit the floor with a plastic crack. Steve's hands became fists, and Jay could hear his knuckles pop.

"Outstanding work, soldier," Jay said, his voice carrying the easy authority of someone who'd been giving orders his whole life. "Whitehall sends his personal regards."

Creel's face lit up like it was Christmas morning. "Sir, permission to absorb something? Anything? This plastic doesn't do it for me anymore. It's like... like drinking warm water when you want whiskey."

The desperation in his voice was painful to hear. The man was addicted to the pleasure absorbing exotic material gave him, and he'd been cut off from his drug for months.

Jay nodded, his expression almost paternal. "Don't worry about that anymore, Soldier. We can fix that up right now."

He reached out and touched Creel's shoulder exposed from his wife beater. Jay's Power Theft kicked in, and power flowed from Creel into Jay like water finding its level.

Creel blinked, the fanatic gleam fading into confusion. He looked down at his hands, flexing his fingers, pressing them against the plastic walls, and getting nothing back. "What's happening to me? I feel... empty."

Jay looked down at him with about as much warmth as a glacier. "Your services are no longer required, soldier. Take some well-deserved rest."

He walked out of the cell, and the door sealed behind him with Creel pressing his hands frantically against the plastic, trying to absorb something, anything, and getting nothing but the echo of his own desperation.

"That's not enough," Fury said, but his voice was shaking now. "One sleeper agent doesn't prove there's a conspiracy."

Jay turned back to them, and his expression was almost gentle. Almost. "One sleeper agent who's been in SHIELD custody for six months, who none of your interrogation specialists could break, who just revealed his true loyalties the moment someone said the right words."

Jay caught the look of dawning horror on their faces and couldn't help but find it a little amusing. This was exactly what he'd expected. SHIELD thought they were the good guys, the watchers on the wall. They had no idea they'd been compromised from the very beginning.

He shrugged. "But if you want more proof...Let's head back to New York first."

As they walked back through the facility, Jay could feel three pairs of eyes boring into his back. Fury's desperate and calculating. Coulson's shattered and searching. Steve's grim and ready for war.

He'd just torn apart everything they believed in, everything they'd built their lives around. SHIELD wasn't the solution to the world's problems. It was part of the problem. Maybe the biggest part.

Behind them, growing fainter with each step, Creel's voice echoed through the his cell "What did they do to me? What did they take from me?"

[A/N]: This one's a big chapter, folks. We're heading back into the Power Broker side of business—but this time, Jay's got a new hunger for powers and the seeds of next arc are starting to take root.

If you wanna hang out, join my Discord

Support my work and get early access up to Chapter 195, exclusive content, and bonus material at my P@treon - Max_Striker.
 
Chapter 45: Ghost in the Wire New
After reaching the roof, the four of them climbed into the waiting Quinjet. The pilot didn't ask questions when Fury flashed his clearance and deboarded, letting Coulson pilot it. Smart man.

As they took off from the Fridge, nobody said much of anything.

Fury sat stone-still, staring out the window at clouds that might as well have been empty air. Every few minutes, his jaw would work like he was chewing something bitter. Twenty years of building up SHIELD, of planning the bigger picture, of believing he could spot a traitor from across the room. And now some kid was telling him that a quarter of his organization had been working for Nazis the whole time.

Coulson kept fiddling with the controls. The guy who usually had answers for everything had gone quiet. All those agents he'd worked with, shared coffee with, trusted with his life. How many of them were calling their handlers right now?

Steve just looked beat down. Worn out from carrying weight that kept getting heavier. Finding out Bucky was alive should've been the best news he'd gotten since the ice. Instead, it felt like someone had reached into his chest and started squeezing. Seventy years of torture and brainwashing. Seventy years of his best friend being turned into a weapon while Steve slept like the dead.

Jay was doing something else entirely. His eyes were closed, lost in his mental plane.

The enhancement had changed things. Where his mindscape used to be just a white room, now it felt more like a galaxy. Stars and darkness and possibilities stretching out in every direction.

His regular abilities were still there. The theft power looked like a bigger, meaner version of himself with eyes like deep ocean water.

His Healing aura buzzed around nearby, all warm light and life & his Danger sense prowled the edges, always watching.

But now there were two new additions.

The first one was a mass of black smoke that seemed to eat light. Looking at it made his head pound. When he reached out to touch it, information crashed into his mind. Daniels' darkforce manipulation was much more. It was a direct line to the Dark Dimension.

He could absorb energy, mess with people's heads through nightmares, knock them out cold, and maybe even teleport like Cloak.

But there was something else in that power. Something that felt hungry. It whispered about all the people he could hurt, all the things he could take. The dark-force wanted to turn him into something worse than the Winter Soldier.

His Power-Theft ability crushed that influence flat, keeping the dark-force locked down tight with the help of his Mind Shield Perk.

The second ability was exactly what he'd come for. It looked human but see-through and patiently waiting. This was Creel's absorption power. The whole reason he'd tracked down Fury in the first place.

Jay had done his homework. He knew what Creel could do, and he wanted it. This is not a simple absorption. This was molecular mimicry down to the atomic level.

Creel didn't just get hard like steel; he became steel. Float like paper, conduct electricity like copper, tap into whatever magical properties enchanted materials had.

With vibranium and uru metal in this world, the ability was basically godlike. From his knowledge of the comics. Absorbing Man had lifted Thor's hammer, controlled lightning, and even absorbed energy from Infinity Stones.

That property absorption part was why he'd targeted Creel specifically. The thought was insane and terrifying, but the potential was too good to pass up.

Of course, Creel's power came with the usual catch. Like when he absorbed Mjolnir's property, he was in turn, controlled by Thor just like Mjolnir.

Another side effect was Constant hunger for something new, something stronger. Like a junkie chasing a high that got weaker every time.

But Jay had planned for that, too. His adaptive power and original theft ability worked together, ripping out the addiction and throwing it away. His recent upgrades made sure of that. What was left was clean power with no drawbacks.

Jay opened his eyes to find the cabin thick with tension. Fury's knuckles had gone white where he gripped the armrest.

"You done with your fucking meditation?" Fury's voice was controlled, but there was steel underneath. "Because while you were taking a goddamn nap, I've been thinking about everything you've told us."

Jay straightened, reading the shift in mood. "I can see the gears turning."

"Yeah, they are." Fury leaned forward, his single eye boring into Jay. "You drop a bombshell about Hydra, then conveniently zone out when it's time for follow-up questions. That's some convenient bullshit."

Coulson looked up from the control panel, sensing trouble. "Sir..."

"No." Fury held up a hand, never breaking eye contact with Jay. "I've been patient. I've listened to your story about sleeper agents and Nazi scientists. But my patience has run the fuck out."

Steve shifted uncomfortably. "Nick, maybe we should..."

"Should what, Rogers?" Fury's voice got an edge like glass. "Trust the kid who shows up with stolen powers and convenient answers? Who somehow knows more about my goddamn organization than I do?"

Jay felt the accusation sting, but he kept his voice level. "I told you what you needed to fucking know."

"Bullshit!" Fury stood up, making the small cabin feel even smaller. "You told me just enough to make me paranoid as hell, not enough to actually do a damn thing about it."

"Manhattan's coming into view," Coulson announced, though his voice sounded nervous. "Maybe we should continue this on the ground?"

But Fury wasn't backing down. "No, we're finishing this shit now." He turned back to Jay. "You want me to tear apart everything I've built based on your word? Then give me something concrete, goddammit."

Jay's jaw tightened. "I gave you Pierce's name. I told you about Whitehall. What the hell more do you want?"

"Proof!" Fury's voice cracked like a whip. "Not fucking stories. Proof that I can use to actually do something."

The silence stretched between them like a wire about to snap. Steve looked between them, ready to step in if things went sideways.

Finally, Jay spoke, his voice quieter but no less intense. "You want proof? Fine. But don't come crying to me when you realize how fucked you really are."

Time to drop the next bomb. "Before I tell you anything else, we need to establish some rules. First rule: you don't investigate any of the names I gave you through normal channels. No computer searches, no pulling files, no running background checks."

Fury's face got darker. "Why the hell not?"

"Because they're watching, you dense motherfucker. Every search, every query, every time you so much as type one of their names into a computer." Jay looked at each of them. "Remember Arnim Zola? Red Skull's pet scientist?"

Steve's face went hard. He remembered.

"Well, after he came to America in Operation Paperclip, he didn't die in 1972 like your files say. Cancer was eating him alive, sure, but before it finished the job, he found a way to cheat death." Jay leaned forward. "He uploaded his consciousness into SHIELD's computer systems. Been living there for decades, watching everything you do like some digital fucking ghost."

The words hit the cabin like a hand grenade.

"Every email, every database search, every classified file you've ever accessed. Zola's seen it all." Jay's voice was matter-of-fact, like he was discussing the weather. "He's been feeding information to Hydra since before most of your agents were born."

Coulson's voice came out strangled. "Our entire digital infrastructure..."

"Compromised from day fucking one," Jay confirmed. "That's why everything has to be analogue from now on. Face-to-face meetings. Handwritten notes. The kind of spycraft they used before computers existed."

Fury was on his feet now, pacing the narrow aisle like a caged wolf. "You're telling me that everything... EVERYTHING... I've built is worthless? That I've been playing into their hands for twenty goddamn years?"

"I'm telling you it's salvageable," Jay shot back, standing to meet Fury's intensity. "But only if you're willing to admit it's broken as shit and stop acting like you've got all the answers."

The two men faced off in the cramped space, the air crackling between them. Steve started to rise, but Coulson caught his arm.

"Let them work it out," Coulson murmured.

Fury stayed quiet for a long time, staring out at the Manhattan skyline. His breathing slowly evened out, the rage cooling into something harder and more dangerous. When he finally spoke, his voice came out raw.

"You're asking me to burn down everything I've built. Twenty years of careful work, of building networks, of earning trust." He turned away from the window, and his expression looked like he'd aged years in the last hour. "You want me to throw it all away like it's garbage."

"I'm asking you to save it before it destroys itself and takes the whole damn world with it."

Fury turned back slowly, and when he spoke again, his voice was dangerously calm. "This still isn't enough." His expression was hard as granite. "One sleeper agent and a ghost story about AI Nazis. I need something concrete if you want me to start a fucking war inside my own house."

Jay settled back into his seat, the immediate confrontation cooling, but tension still thick in the air. "I've told you everything I can without making things worse. You move too fast, they'll scatter like roaches. Move too slow, they'll know something's up."

He paused, seeming to weigh his next words carefully, looking at Steve. "I do have an idea, though. Something that might help us get a clearer picture. But it's your call, Cap. If you think it crosses the line, we don't do it."

Steve straightened. "What kind of idea?"

"There's someone you need to meet. Charles Xavier." Jay's voice got more serious. "He runs a school up in Westchester. Place where mutant kids can learn to control their abilities without getting locked up or dissected."

"I've heard the name," Steve said carefully.

Jay nodded. "Xavier's a telepath. One of the strongest ones alive. He's built something called Cerebro. Think of it as a telepathic amplifier that lets him reach anywhere in the world."

Fury's posture shifted, and for the first time since they'd started talking, he looked almost satisfied. "We know about Cerebro. Had our boys take a look at it years ago when we were building our mutant files. It's a detection system for active X-gene carriers. Useful for tracking, but that's about it."

He leaned back slightly, like he'd finally caught Jay in something. "You're not telling me anything new here, kid."

"See, that's where you're wrong, Nick." Jay shook his head, watching Fury's confident expression. "Cerebro doesn't just find active mutants. It finds anyone with the X-gene, period. Dormant, suppressed, doesn't matter. But here's what your science boys missed - pump enough power through that thing, and Xavier can touch every thinking mind on the planet."

Jay paused, letting that sink in. "Every single fucking one, Nick. Not just mutants. Everyone."

That got their attention.

Coulson's face drained of all color, his hand instinctively moving to his sidearm. "You're talking about violating the minds of every person on Earth."

Fury's confident expression cracked. The implications hit him like a freight train, and Jay could see the exact moment when the director realized he'd been playing checkers while Jay was setting up chess pieces.

"I'm talking about the ultimate lie detector," Jay said, watching Fury's face. "Point Xavier at your personnel files, have him scan everyone in SHIELD, and he'll tell you exactly who's thinking 'Hail Hydra' and who's actually loyal to you."

The room went dead silent. Fury's earlier smugness evaporated completely as he stared at Jay, probably running through every security protocol SHIELD had and realizing none of them would matter against something like this.

"Jesus Fucking Christ!" Fury breathed.

Steve was quiet for a long moment, the weight of the decision settling on his shoulders. "You're talking about scanning every mind on the planet. That's one hell of a line to cross, even for Hydra." He glanced at Fury, then back at Jay. "But if Zola's inside every system... maybe it's the only line left."

Jay couldn't help but smirk a little at their shocked faces. This was exactly the reaction he'd expected. SHIELD always thought they had all the answers until someone showed them how deep the rabbit hole actually went.

The Quinjet banked toward Westchester smoothly under Coulson's control.

"You think Xavier will help?" Steve asked, though his tone suggested he was still wrestling with the ethics.

Jay grinned. "Hard to say no to Captain America. Especially when Wolvie's old friend is right there asking nicely."

"Wolvie?" Steve looked genuinely confused.

"Trust me," Jay murmured. "This reunion's gonna be something else."

Outside the window, the Quinjet banked, clouds breaking to reveal the dark sprawl of Westchester below. One mansion glowed like a lighthouse in the night.

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Chapter 46: Another Unwelcome Visit New
The Quinjet's landing gear kissed the manicured lawn of Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters with barely a whisper. Through the cockpit window, Jay could see the mansion's imposing silhouette against the evening sky.

"Welcome to Westchester County," Jay muttered as the engines spun down.

As they prepared to disembark, Jay turned to Fury. "What about you? Psi-shields. Do you have them on you?"

Fury's face went dark. "Of course, you know about those? That's classified as shit!"

Jay shrugged. "I mean, you've had dealings with Xavier for years. Plus, back in the Morlock tunnels, you were pretty damn confident against Beautiful Dreamer. That only leads to one conclusion."

Coulson tapped a small device on his belt. "We carry them as standard protocol when dealing with telepaths."

"Good. Use them." Jay's voice got serious. "As long as Jean or Xavier doesn't push too hard, you'll be fine. And they won't want to make an enemy of SHIELD, so you shouldn't have a problem. Just keep those shields up and don't do anything stupid."

The mansion's front doors swung open before they'd even finished shutting down. One by one, figures emerged into the fading daylight. The X-Men, suited up and ready for trouble.

Cyclops stepped out first, ruby visor gleaming. Behind him, Jean Grey moved with quiet grace, auburn hair catching the last rays of sunlight.

Wolverine prowled from the shadows, dog tags catching the light. His stance promised violence barely held in check. Storm descended the steps like royalty, white hair flowing despite the still air.

Nightcrawler appeared in a puff of sulfurous smoke, indigo skin blending with dusk. Iceman emerged with frost crystallizing around his feet. Shadowcat phased straight through the door, rippling as she became solid again.

Rogue stepped forward, her brown and auburn hair streaked with white, gloves pulled tight. A barrier between her deadly touch and the world. Colossus filled the doorway last, his organic steel skin gleaming like polished chrome.

The X-Men stood ready.

Out of the Quinjet, first came Agent Coulson, ever the professional, straightening his tie as his shoes hit grass. His easy smile was in place, but Jay caught the tension in his shoulders. Old habits. Scanning exits, noting cover positions, cataloging potential threats even in a friendly environment.

Director Fury followed, his long coat billowing in the rotor wash. His single eye swept across the mansion's facade like a predator sizing up unfamiliar territory. Jay's revelations about Hydra had put the spymaster on edge, and it showed in every calculated step.

Then came Steve Rogers. Several of the X-Men shifted, studying the legend with curious eyes. Here was Captain America himself, walking their grounds. Not quite what any of them had expected.

Kurt Wagner's tail twitched as he took a step forward. "Mein Gott. Captain America, he really is back."

Rogue's expression shifted from curiosity to something harder. Recognition dawned, followed by anger that made her hands curl into fists. She'd been about to call out a greeting. They'd fought side by side during the Doom incident, after all, and Steve had proved himself decent under fire. But something made her pause.

Jay emerged from the Quinjet.

He looked older than she remembered. More mature. The easy confidence was still there, but underneath it was something sharper.

Her green eyes flashed. "Well, well. Look what the cat dragged in." Her Mississippi drawl carried the weight of broken promises and shattered trust.

Scott Summers stepped protectively in front of Jean Grey, his hand moving toward his visor. The other X-Men shifted into defensive positions. Subtle but unmistakable. Warren's wings spread slightly. Ororo's eyes flickered white for just a moment before returning to normal.

"Stand down," Professor Xavier's mental voice touched each of their minds at once. His wheelchair glided forward, serene as always. "They come in peace."

Scott's voice was tight with barely controlled frustration. "Professor, after that night, how could..."

"I remember perfectly well, Scott." Xavier's physical voice was calm but carried an edge. "As I'm sure our guest does."

Steve looked around the assembled group, reading the tension like a soldier who'd walked into a potential ambush. These weren't the simple heroics he was used to. There was history here, complicated and painful.

Then his eyes landed on a stocky, wild-haired man leaning against the mansion's pillars. Something about the stance, the build, the way he held himself...

Steve's breath caught in his throat. The features were the same as a face he'd seen laughing around a campfire in Belgium. A face he'd watched charge German machine gun nests with nothing but claws and rage.

His voice cracked with desperate hope. "James? James, is that you?"

Steve took a step forward, and for a moment the weight of decades fell away. He was twenty-five again, surrounded by his unit, believing that good men could change the world. "James Howlett! You magnificent son of a..." Steve started forward, arms spreading for an embrace that carried seventy years of grief and loneliness.

Logan looked up from cleaning his nails with one extended claw, his expression flat. "Bub, do I know ya?"

Steve stopped cold, the joy on his face crumbling. "What? James, come on, stop messing around. You don't know how relieved I am to see someone else from the Howling Commandos still..."

Logan straightened, and Steve could see genuine confusion in his eyes. "Look here, bub. I don't know any James you're talkin' about. Name's Logan, and I ain't never seen you before in my life."

The joy drained from Steve's face like water from a broken dam. He stood there, arms still half-raised for an embrace that would never come, staring at a man who used to call him 'Stevie' when they were drunk on captured German beer.

Jay stepped between them, his voice carrying across the courtyard. "Wolverine's memories are compromised, Captain. Everything from the late '90s back is gone, thanks to an adamantium bullet lodged in his skull."

The words shocked Steve; his shoulders sagged as the last connection to his old life dissolved before his eyes. Several X-Men shifted uncomfortably. Jay's habit of knowing their deepest secrets and darkest moments never sat well.

Rogue had seen enough for one evening. She turned and walked back toward the mansion, her shoulders rigid. Kitty Pryde glanced between the groups and followed her.

"Always with the dramatic revelations," Scott muttered.

"It would be best," Fury interjected, his voice cutting through the tension, "if we had this meeting somewhere secure. Somewhere with no electronic devices and no fucking surveillance."

Xavier studied Fury for a long moment, then nodded slowly.

"Of course. Follow me." The Professor's wheelchair began moving toward the mansion. "There's a meeting room in the basement level that should suffice."

"Actually," Jay's voice stopped the procession cold. "Where's Emma Frost?"

Scott's jaw tightened, and when he spoke, each word was carved from ice. "Why? So you can mess with her body again?"

Jay didn't even acknowledge Scott's existence, keeping his gaze locked on Xavier. The silence stretched uncomfortably.

Xavier sighed, the sound carrying decades of complicated decisions and moral compromises. "Ms. Frost is under my protection here. I won't allow any harm to come to her while she's a guest under this roof."

"Good." Jay's smile was sharp. "Then it's about time she completes the deal Emma made in the Morlock tunnels. After all, you and Fury were witnesses to it."

Xavier's eyebrows rose slightly, but he nodded. "Piotr, would you escort our guest to Ms. Frost's quarters? Agent Coulson, you should accompany them. I believe there will be legal and financial matters to verify."

Fury's nod was terse. "Go. Handle your business." He turned toward Xavier, thinking 'While I lay the groundwork for the cooperation that SHIELD's future depends on.'

The hallways of Xavier's mansion were like a maze.

Colossus walked ahead, his heavy footsteps echoing off the polished floors. Even in a place built for people like him, he moved carefully, like he was afraid of breaking something.

Coulson couldn't handle the silence. "So, Piotr, right? Phil Coulson, SHIELD." He stuck out his hand. "Hell of a place you've got here."

Colossus accepted the handshake with the careful control of someone who'd learned the hard way what happened when he forgot his strength. "It's home. Professor gives us what world will not."

"Family's everything," Coulson agreed, glancing around the mansion's ornate walls. "Must be nice having everyone together under one roof."

Colossus's expression darkened. "Not everyone."

"You got family back home?" Jay asked.

"Little sister. Illyana. Thirteen years old, lives on farm with parents."

"That's good," Coulson said. "Keeping her away from all this crap."

Jay's tone shifted slightly. "How's she doing?"

Something in the way he asked made Colossus stop walking. The big man turned around slowly, steel skin gleaming as muscles tensed. "What do you want with Illyana?"

The hallway went quiet. Coulson felt the tension spike and stepped forward, one hand moving toward his sidearm. "Easy there, big guy. He's just making conversation."

Jay raised his hands. "Rogue mentioned her once. Didn't mean anything by it."

Colossus studied Jay for a long moment, then nodded once. "She is safe. I keep it that way."

"What about other family?" Coulson asked, steering things to safer ground.

Colossus's voice went flat. "Older brother Mikhail. Disappeared three years ago. Is like he never existed."

They walked in silence until they reached a door with a brass nameplate: E. FROST.

Colossus knocked gently, his massive knuckles barely whispering against the wood. "Emma? You have visitors."

A sultry voice drifted through the door. "Come in."

The door opened to reveal Emma Frost in her diamond form, lounging in a white silk bathrobe that left very little to the imagination. She was positioned on her bed like a Renaissance statue carved from crystal, every angle calculated for maximum effect.

Both Colossus and Coulson immediately found the ceiling very interesting.

Emma purred, her diamond features catching the light like a prism. "Well, well. What brings such distinguished guests to my humble..."

Jay's voice cut through her performance like a blade. "Drop the stripper act, grandma. We're here for business, not your sad, desperate bullshit."

The temperature in the room dropped about twenty degrees.

Emma's diamond form flickered as rage flashed across her features. She lunged forward; diamond fist aimed at Jay's jaw with enough force to shatter concrete.

Jay caught her punch casually, and his hand began to shift and gleam.

The change hit him like ice water shooting up his arm. His skin hardened, crystallizing from his fingertips inward. It didn't hurt. Just felt wrong, like his bones were turning to glass.

Cold. It was cold. Dead cold. His muscles locked up, but he could still move, which made no sense. His arm felt heavy and weightless at the same time.

Within seconds, his entire arm had transformed into the same perfect diamond as hers. He could feel his pulse through the crystal, a weird vibration that made his teeth ache.

Courtesy of Creel's powers.

He flexed his diamond fingers and wondered if this was what it felt like to stop being human.

Emma stared at her caught hand, then at Jay's crystalline form. Her voice carried grudging respect. "You…you found a way to copy powers without stealing them permanently! How the hell did you manage that?"

"Keep guessing." Jay's face twisted into an amused smile, letting her keep her misunderstanding. "I'm here about the money you owe me, Emma."

She studied him for another moment, then curiosity got pushed aside by business sense and survival instinct. Emma moved to a small desk, punched a code into a tablet, and tossed it to Jay.

He caught it smoothly and handed it to Coulson. "Phil? Mind running the numbers?"

Coulson spent the next half hour buried in paperwork, making notes and humming under his breath like he was enjoying himself. Jay sat flexing his diamond arm, patient as a statue. Emma kept filing her nails with a diamond filer of all things, pretending she didn't give a damn about any of it.

But as the minutes dragged on, her mask started slipping.

Emma's voice carried a tremor she couldn't quite hide. "Are you done? I'd like to be myself again sometime today."

Coulson looked up from his tablet. "Just a few more..."

Emma cut him off, and the word came out sharper than she intended, carrying weeks of trapped desperation. "Please." A month stuck in diamond form, cut off from her telepathy, was a month too long. She needed her mind back. Needed to feel human again.

Coulson closed the last folder with a satisfied snap. "We're good. SHIELD will handle the rest."

That's when Jay stood up and put his hand on Emma's shoulder.

She felt something click inside her head. Like a switch being flipped. The diamond form that had been locked on for weeks just... stopped. Her skin warmed, softened back to flesh.

And then the voices came flooding back.

Her telepathy hit her like a freight train after weeks of silence. Every mind in the mansion, every stray thought and buried secret, all of it rushing into her consciousness at once. It was overwhelming and perfect, and she'd forgotten how much she'd missed it.

Her first instinct was revenge. Slip into Jay's mind, make him scream for what he'd done to her in those tunnels. Make him pay for every humiliation, every moment of helplessness.

But Jay was still smiling that damn smile, and something in his expression made her pause.

He could take her powers away again. Permanently. Forever. Strip away everything that made her Emma Frost and leave her just another powerless, ageing woman nobody would ever fear or respect again. All it would take was one touch.

Plus, there was what Xavier and Jean had warned her about. Neither of them could get into his head, not even close. If the two strongest telepaths she knew couldn't crack whatever was going on in there, what chance did she have?

Emma Frost didn't get where she was by picking fights she couldn't win.

She leaned back in her chair and smiled right back at him, the expression calculated and cold as winter. "Thank you."

The words tasted like poison, but they were the smart play.

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Chapter 47: The Doctor from Hell New
On their way back through the corridors, they encountered Dr. Henry McCoy emerging from his laboratory. The scientist looked up from his tablet, and Coulson had to do a double-take. The guy was human now, sporting this wild blue mane that flowed like water when he moved his head. When he saw them, his face lit up with genuine warmth.

Hank grinned, extending a massive hand that still moved with careful precision. "Well, I'll be a monkey's... ah, poor choice of words. Jay! Good to see you again."

Jay returned to his normal form and shook hands. "Hey, Doc. Rocking the new look?"

He gestured at his reflection in a nearby monitor, chuckling. "Three weeks human and I still reach for things expecting these massive paws. Yesterday I tried to pick up a test tube and nearly dropped it. Forgot I don't have that dexterity anymore."

The lying about his secret identity still stung, as did the theft of Sage's powers. But Hank had to admit that Jay had kept his word about giving him his human form back when he needed it most.

Hank's expression grew thoughtful. "The strangest part? I actually miss some of it. But being able to blend in again, to walk down a street without stares..." He shrugged, the gesture carrying years of complicated feelings. "It's worth the trade-off."

"Good to hear."

As they walked back toward the main levels, Jay could hear voices from the mansion's main hall.

In the main hall, an unlikely gathering had formed around the mansion's central fireplace. Fury sat in a wingback chair, a cup of coffee growing cold in his hands. Steve stood by the tall windows, looking out at the grounds. The remaining X-Men clustered nearby. Scott and Jean sat close together, having one of their telepathic conversations. Ororo perched gracefully on the arm of a sofa, Kurt walking nervously from spot to spot.

Jay entered quietly, taking in the room's tension. "How'd the deal go?"

Fury's slight nod carried the weight of difficult negotiations. "Xavier and I have reached an understanding."

But Steve's attention was elsewhere. He kept glancing at Logan, who was sprawled in a chair by the fire, apparently oblivious to everything around him. Steve looked like a man drowning in memories that only he could remember.

Jay studied Steve's face and caught the loneliness there, the desperate hunger for connection to something, anything, from his past. "What's eating at you, Captain?"

Steve's voice carried the exhaustion of a man who'd outlived his entire world. "It's hard, thinking about everyone I've lost. Peggy's on her deathbed in a hospital in DC. Bucky's been turned into a brainwashed assassin for nazis and now James..." He gestured helplessly at Logan, depression evident in every line of his body. "It's like they took away everything that proved I existed before the ice."

Jay felt a pang of sympathy. For all his power and knowledge, he'd never lost an entire lifetime of connections. He'd never woken up to find everyone he loved either dead or transformed beyond recognition.

The silence stretched until Jay finally broke it. "Professor, why haven't you tried to restore Logan's memories? Psychic surgery should be well within your capabilities."

Xavier's expression remained neutral, but Jay caught the careful non-answer.

Hank spoke up, his scientific mind overriding political considerations. "We would need to remove the adamantium bullet first. But Logan's adamantium skull has grown around it completely. The indestructibility of the material makes surgical extraction impossible."

Jay tilted his head, considering the problem from multiple angles. "Why haven't you asked Kitty to phase the bullet out?"

Scott's voice was ice-cold steel, each word precise and cutting. "You stay out of this. Your actions have already set the mutant community back decades."

Jay shot back, taking a step forward, his own anger finally surfacing. "I'm the one who gave mutants a positive image in the first place."

Scott moved to match him, hands tensing at his sides, ruby visor gleaming with barely restrained power. "By lying to everyone. By making deals in shadows while we fought for acceptance in the open. You made us all look like fools."

"I made you look human."

"We are human, you arrogant..."

"I don't know what reality you're living in, Scott." Jay's voice cut through Scott's building rage like a blade. "I hid my other identity like most supers do. Even your precious Professor X doesn't exactly advertise his mutant status to the general public."

Scott's jaw tightened, but Jay wasn't done.

"I actually helped the Morlocks instead of leaving them to rot in sewers. I uprooted the Hellfire Club, which you X-Men so conveniently ignored, even though they were trafficking mutants for their abilities. And when I asked Hank to help me, I kept my word. So tell me again how I'm the villain here?"

"What about Rogue?" Scott snapped back, grasping for ammunition.

Jay's laugh was bitter. "She's the one throwing a temper tantrum when I'm offering to help her control her powers. But hey, I guess leaving her dangerous and miserable is the X-Men way, right?"

The words hit their mark. Scott's hands clenched into fists.

"And let's talk about trust, shall we?" Jay's voice dropped to a dangerous whisper. "After my first visit here, your Professor tried to mind-rape me. On my second visit, Moonknight attacked me when he came for you, and I became collateral damage. The last time I was here, Magneto, you, and Logan all tried to jump me."

Jay spread his arms wide, his expression mocking. "So sorry I wasn't keen on sharing everything about myself and keeping a few backup plans. Can't imagine why I'd want to protect myself around such trustworthy people."

The room went dead silent. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.

Scott's visor flickered red, power building behind the ruby quartz. His voice came out strangled with fury and shame. "You don't understand what we've been fighting for. What we've sacrificed."

"I understand perfectly." Jay's voice was calm now, which somehow made it more cutting. "You've been fighting the same fight for decades and losing ground every year. I did one interview, and suddenly people were talking about coexistence instead of registration acts. But sure, tell me more about how I ruined everything."

The truth of it hung in the air heavy and undeniable.

Xavier's voice carried psychic weight that made the X-Men step back involuntarily. "Gentlemen." He paused, regaining his composure. "More importantly, Kitty's phasing abilities aren't refined enough for such delicate work. She's still young, and the trauma she'd have to deal with if she made an error when dealing with brain tissue, even Logan's..."

But Scott's jaw was still clenched, his visor reflecting Jay's face like crosshairs locked on target. But the red glow behind the ruby quartz was flickering. Every word Jay had spoken was landing like hammer blows, and Scott couldn't find a counter-argument that didn't make him sound like a hypocrite or a failure. Deep down, he knew that everything Jay said was right.

Jay interrupted, his voice cutting through the political tensions. "Since I can't stand seeing Cap looking like someone ran over his dog, I'll do you all a favour and remove the bullet myself."

Colossus stepped directly into Jay's path, his skin shifting to organic steel with the sound of grinding metal. "You will not steal Kitty's powers. Not while I draw breath."

Jay looked into the young man's protective eyes and grinned with genuine respect. "Aww." He turned to Coulson with mock sentimentality. "Look at young love, Phil. All pure and noble."

Colossus's cheeks reddened slightly. "It's not—"

Jay turned back to Colossus, his expression shifting to something more sincere. "I don't need Kitty's powers, Piotr. But I respect you looking out for her."

He looked over at Logan, studying the older man's features. "What'll it be, bub? Your call."

Logan studied Jay for a long moment, then glanced at Steve's hopeful face. The old soldier was practically vibrating with the need to connect with someone, anyone, from his past. Logan might not remember their history, but he could recognize pain when he saw it.

Logan growled, taking a long pull from his beer. "Hell. What's the worst that could happen?" He shot a look at Scott with a grin that was all teeth. "If the kid starts messin' with anyone's powers, you blast him with those laser eyes."

Scott started automatically. "They're not lasers, they're—"

Logan cut him off with a laugh. "I know what they are."

Twenty minutes later, Logan was seated in Hank's laboratory in a specially reinforced medical chair. The observation deck above was packed with worried faces. X-Men, the SHIELD director and his left hand, and one very nervous Captain America, all watching through reinforced glass.

Hank wheeled a cart of surgical instruments forward. "Now, the procedure will require careful—"

"I don't need them," Jay said, rolling up his sleeves. "Logan, pop your claws."

Logan's voice carried a hint of uncertainty for the first time. "You sure about this, bub?"

"Trust me. I'm 'The Doctor' after all."

Logan's claws slid out with their characteristic snikt, the sound echoing in the sterile laboratory.

Jay reached out and touched the gleaming adamantium.

The change hit him different this time. Where diamond had been cold and crystalline, adamantium was heat. Molten metal flowing through his veins. His bones felt like they were melting and reforming, heavier than lead but somehow still flexible.

From the observation deck, gasps echoed through the reinforced glass. Coulson's face went pale. "Is he supposed to look like that?"

"Mein Gott," Kurt whispered, his tail wrapped tight around his waist. "His entire body is changing like Colossus, did he take your power?"

The weight was incredible. His arm dropped a few inches before his muscles adjusted, and when he flexed his fingers, he could feel the density in every movement. This metal was unbreakable.

But then Jay concentrated on his Adaptation perk, remembering Kevin's limb-shaping from Ben 10, how he could precisely mold absorbed materials into exactly what he needed.

His index finger elongated and narrowed into a precision drill bit, while his middle finger flattened into a delicate extraction tool. Years of medical training and nursing experience guided the transformation. He knew exactly what instruments he needed for this kind of procedure. The adamantium responded to his will, forming the perfect surgical implements.

Then came his medical knowledge. Angles of approach, drilling speed, and how to extract foreign objects from brain tissue without causing trauma. His nursing experience had taught him these procedures theoretically by watching other surgeons perform it, and now he had the tools to perform them.

Jay examined his transformed fingers with professional satisfaction. "There we go. That should do it."

He looked up at the observation deck where terrified faces stared down at him. "Everyone might want to look away."

He began to drill.

Logan's agonized screams filled the basement laboratory as Jay worked with surgical precision. In the observation deck, Steve gripped the railing until his knuckles went white. This was his fault. His desperate need for connection had put Logan through this agony.

"Jesus Christ," Coulson breathed, his usual professional composure cracking. He'd seen plenty of field medicine, but nothing like this.

Kurt teleported to the far corner of the observation deck, his blue skin tinged green. "I cannot watch. This is..." He made the sign of the cross.

"Logan's vitals are spiking," Hank reported from his monitoring station, though his voice was shaky. "Heart rate through the roof, but his healing factor is keeping him stable."

Medical training took over completely. Angle of entry, pressure distribution, avoiding major blood vessels. The adamantium drill spun with inhuman precision.

Blood splattered across Jay's makeshift surgical attire. The drill generated sparks and heat, filling the air with the acrid smell of burning metal and tissue.

Jean doubled over, one hand pressed to her temple. "I can't block out his pain. It's too much." Scott immediately moved to support her.

"Jean!" Scott's voice was sharp with worry. "Get out of his head."

"I'm trying, but Logan's mind... it's like a hurricane of agony and memories trying to break free."

In the observation deck, several X-Men looked away. Jean covered her mouth, psychic empathy making her feel echoes of Logan's pain. Coulson went pale, one hand pressed against the glass. Even Fury's iron composure cracked slightly.

Ororo's hands sparked with electricity, her emotional control slipping. "This is barbaric. There has to be another way."

But Jay never wavered. This was surgery, not torture. Every movement had to be calculated and precise.

The drilling seemed to take forever. Logan's healing factor kept trying to close the wound around the drill bit, forcing Jay to work faster. Smoke rose from the friction. The smell of burning bone and flesh filled the air.

"Oh God," Coulson whispered as more smoke filled the chamber. "Is that..."

"His skull," Hank confirmed grimly. "The adamantium is heating up from the friction. Logan's essentially being cooked from the inside."

Scott's hands clenched at his sides. "This is insane. We're watching a man be tortured and calling it medicine."

Finally, with a sickening pop that echoed through the sterile chamber, he extracted the bullet.

A collective exhale went up from the observation deck.

"It's over," Jean whispered, finally able to pull back from Logan's mind. "The pain is... it's lessening."

Kurt teleported back, his face still pale but curious. "Did it work? Are his memories...?"

Logan's healing factor immediately began closing the wound, but a small hole in his adamantium skull remained. Evidence of what they'd just done.

The lab looked like a war zone. Equipment had been damaged by Logan's thrashing. Blood splattered the walls and medical instruments. Smoke filled the air, mixing the smell of burning electronics with something much worse. What used to be the mansion's pristine medical facility now looked like the aftermath of a battlefield surgery.

"Dear lord," Hank whispered, surveying the destruction through the glass. "It'll take weeks to clean this up. The smell alone..."

Fury stepped back from the window. "I've seen field hospitals in Afghanistan that looked cleaner than this."

Jay held up the bloody bullet, his adamantium form still steaming from friction heat. He flashed a thumbs up at the observation deck, grinning through the reinforced glass.

The sight would give several X-Men nightmares. A metallic figure covered in blood and smoke, holding up a bullet like some kind of trophy in what looked like hell's operating room.

Ororo covered her nose with her sleeve. "The smell is getting through the ventilation system."

"I'm going to be sick," Jean whispered, leaning heavily on Scott.

But Logan wasn't paying attention to the carnage anymore. His eyes were changing. Pupils dilating and contracting as memories crashed back into his consciousness like a broken dam.

Everyone in the observation deck fell silent, watching Logan's face transform.

"Something's happening," Jean said, her telepathic abilities picking up the change immediately. "His mind... it's like watching a puzzle piece itself back together."

Steve pressed his face to the glass. "James? Can you hear me?"

It started as a flicker. Confusion giving way to recognition. A name surfaced from nowhere: Sarah. Then another: John. Faces began forming in his mind, voices calling from across decades of stolen time.

The memories didn't come gently. They hit him like a freight train, each one carrying the weight of suppressed emotion. His childhood in the Canadian wilderness. The first time his claws emerged. Military service. Betrayal. Pain. Loss. Love found and lost again.

Logan's breathing became ragged as sixty years of stolen life flooded back. His hands shook as phantom pains from long-healed wounds made his nervous system fire randomly. Every person he'd killed. Every friend who'd died. Every woman he'd loved and lost.

His face cycled through a dozen emotions. Confusion, recognition, joy, grief, and finally... white-hot rage at all the stolen years.

Then he looked up and saw Steve through the observation window.

Recognition hit him like lightning. Not just the face, but the memory of friendship. Of shared foxholes and terrible coffee and watching each other's backs when the world was trying to kill them both.

Logan's voice started as a whisper, thick with decades of suppressed emotion. "Steve." Then louder, a roar that shook the blood-splattered walls and carried seventy years of brotherhood: "STEVE!"

Logan launched himself from the chair, still bleeding, his healing factor working overtime. He tore apart the observation deck glass with his claws and caught Steve in a bear hug that would have cracked normal ribs, both men trembling with the weight of recovered connection.

Steve's voice broke with relief and grief and joy all tangled together. "James. God, I missed you. I miss everyone."

Logan pulled back but kept his hands on Steve's shoulders, studying his friend's face like he was memorizing it. "It's Logan now. Been Logan for a long time. But yeah..." His voice grew thick with emotion. "Yeah, I remember. The Commandos. The war. All of it."

But then the weight of all those recovered memories hit him again. Logan's face crumpled as he remembered not just Steve, but everyone else they'd lost. Bucky's fall. Dum Dum's funeral. The way Jim Morita had died calling for his mother.

Steve saw the pain in his old friend's eyes and pulled him close again. "I know. I know it hurts. But you're not alone anymore."

Logan's voice was muffled against Steve's shoulder. "Feels like I buried them all twice now. Once when they died, and again when I forgot."

The observation deck had gone completely silent. Even the X-Men who'd known Logan for years had never seen him this vulnerable, this human. This was a man rediscovering not just his past, but his capacity for grief.

Jay watched the reunion from the laboratory floor, still in adamantium form and covered in blood. The weight of what he'd just done—giving these two soldiers back their shared past.

His voice was peppier than usual when he spoke. "Well. Anyone else need brain surgery? I'm on a roll here."

The horrified silence from the observation deck was answer enough, but it was broken by something unexpected. Logan's laughter, rough and broken but heaty.

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Chapter 48: Promises and Prices New
The hot water burned against Jay's adamantium skin, running pink down the drain. Logan's blood came off easy enough, but chunks of brain tissue needed serious scrubbing.

The metal form held heat from the drilling, making even the scalding shower feel barely warm. Steam completely fogged up the guest bathroom mirror.

When he finally felt clean enough, Jay shifted back to normal. The sudden weight change almost made him stumble, like stepping off a boat after being at sea for weeks. His clothes were spotless, naturally. One of the better perks of this whole deal.

The deformed bullet sat on the counter, catching the fluorescent light. Jay picked up the adamantium fragment and rolled it between his fingers. Years of Logan's life, all compressed into this tiny piece of metal. Worth more than vibranium, really. Wakanda had mountains of that stuff, same with Talokan. But genuine adamantium? You couldn't just dig that up without having androids and mechas playing gods at your ass.

He slipped it into his pocket. Fair payment for services rendered.

The hallways stretched quiet and empty as Jay headed back toward the main hall. He was already thinking about coffee, about pretending this had been just another normal day with Fury and Coulson, when a voice cut through the silence.

"You lied to me."

Jay stopped dead. A man stood there with the most forgettable features imaginable. Brown hair, average height, the kind of face you'd lose even while looking straight at it. But the hurt in his eyes mixed with desperate hope made Jay's chest tighten up.

For a second, Jay's eyes wanted to slide right past him, his brain trying to dismiss the guy as background noise. But his Mind-Shield kicked in hard, and suddenly the man's name surfaced through whatever fog had been clouding his thoughts.

"Ah, Xabi," Jay said carefully. "I finally found you. I nearly forgot…."

"Of course you forgot," ForgetMeNot cut him off, bitterness dripping from every word like poison. "Nobody remembers. That's my power, right? To be forgotten by everyone I meet. But you..." His voice cracked like breaking glass. "You promised you could help with that. All this time, you've been going around fixing people who didn't even want their powers removed, people who had families and friends and lives. But you didn't even remember me while I did your dirty work, while you basically blackmailed me with my family forgetting me, despite all your promises."

Footsteps echoed down the hall. Kitty phased through the wall first, followed by Warren and Piotr. They found Jay talking to some complete stranger who somehow felt familiar in a way that made their heads hurt.

They'd obviously heard the raised voices, but their faces showed nothing but confusion as they stared at this person they should have known but didn't.

"What's going on here?" Kitty asked, looking back and forth between Jay and the unfamiliar man. Something about him nagged at her, like having a word right on the tip of her tongue.

Jay ignored her completely, focusing on ForgetMeNot instead. "What do you want then?" His voice got softer. "For me to take your powers away and have everyone forget you permanently? And look, I didn't forget our deal. Can't you see it's only been three days since all the Doom crap happened at once?"

ForgetMeNot's face just crumpled like wet paper. "So that's it? You can help everyone else but not me? I've been here for years, helping the X-Men, saving their lives, and they don't even know I exist!" His voice completely shattered. "Do you have any idea what that's like? Being alone even when you're surrounded by people? Watching your own mother thank some stranger for help and then forget you existed the second you walk away?"

Warren stepped forward, wings rustling with agitation. "I don't understand what's happening, but..."

"You wouldn't," ForgetMeNot said bitterly. "You can't. That's the whole point."

Jay's expression softened, and something twisted hard in his chest. The man was right. He'd gotten so caught up in everything else, he'd nearly forgotten his promise. Just like everyone else forgot Xabi.

"If it's about tweaking your power instead of removing it completely..." Jay moved before ForgetMeNot could react, placing his hand firmly on the young man's shoulder. "Hold still."

"Wait, what are you..."

Power flowed through Jay's fingertips, way more complex and delicate than his usual suppressions. He could feel the mutation's structure, how it hijacked memory formation and recall in other people, forcing them to forget. With surgical precision, he added what basically amounted to a mental switch, a conscious control mechanism that would let ForgetMeNot turn his ability on and off whenever he wanted.

"There," Jay said, stepping back and flexing his fingers. "You should be able to control it now. But I'd suggest waiting until we get to the main hall to turn it off completely. You'll want witnesses for that reunion."

ForgetMeNot stared at him in absolute wonder, tears streaming freely down his face as he tentatively reached for the new sensation in his mind. It was like finding a light switch in a room where you'd lived in total darkness for years.

"I can feel it," he whispered. "I can actually feel the control."

"The main hall?" Kitty asked, still confused but sensing something huge was about to happen. "Why the main hall?"

"You'll see," Jay said simply. "Trust me, you'll want everyone there for this."

They walked together in this weird procession. ForgetMeNot flanked by three X-Men who kept glancing at him with frustrated confusion, trying desperately to grab onto memories that slipped away like water through their fingers. Every few steps, one of them would start to say something, then stop as the thought just evaporated.

The main hall buzzed with quiet conversation when they entered.

Fury still sat in his wingback chair, discussing something quietly with Coulson. Steve stood by the windows, looking way less haunted now that Logan remembered their shared past. The X-Men were scattered around in various states of exhaustion after the day's revelations.

"Everyone," Jay called out, getting their attention. "You're going to want to see this."

"See what?" Scott asked, adjusting his visor as he turned toward them. His gaze passed right over ForgetMeNot without stopping.

Jay looked at Xabi. "Ready?"

ForgetMeNot nodded, already crying harder. His whole body shook as he reached for that mental switch, the moment he'd been dreaming about for years. He took a deep breath, looked around the room at all the people who'd been his family without knowing it, and flipped the switch.

The change was immediate and absolutely devastating.

"XABI!"

Jubilee's shriek could've shattered every window in the mansion. She launched herself across the room, trailing multicolored sparks like a comet, and tackled him in a flying hug that sent them both stumbling backward. "Oh my God, where have you been? I've been so worried, and I couldn't remember why, and that was driving me absolutely crazy!"

"ForgetMeNot?" Scott's voice came out thick with dawning horror. His hand went automatically to his visor as memories flooded back like a broken dam. "You've been here the whole time. Fighting with us. Saving our lives." His voice broke completely. "How could we forget you?"

Storm rose from her chair with that fluid grace she was known for, but her face looked stricken. "The Friends of Humanity attack last month. You were there. You saved Kurt when those Sentinels had him cornered." Lightning flickered briefly in her eyes, responding to her emotional state. "We never even thanked you."

A BAMF of sulfur smoke announced Kurt's arrival directly in front of ForgetMeNot. His yellow eyes were wide with anguish as he reached out with a three-fingered hand, hesitated, then pulled Xabi into a fierce hug.

"Mein Gott. You have been our brother in arms, und ve..." He pulled back, gesturing helplessly with both hands. "Ach, how does vun apologize for somezing zey cannot even remember doing?"

The room exploded into chaos as memories crashed back like a tsunami. Years of interactions, battles fought side by side, quiet moments of friendship, all suddenly vivid and real and painful. The collective guilt was overwhelming. These were people who prided themselves on being family, on never leaving anyone behind.

Jean pressed both hands hard against her temples, psychic feedback from everyone's returning memories hitting her in overwhelming waves. "Even the Phoenix couldn't hold onto you completely. There were flashes, moments, brief glimpses, but never the full picture."

Xavier wheeled forward slowly, his face pale as parchment. "I had mental alarms. Reminders programmed to trigger at regular intervals. But I would still forget you for weeks at a time." His voice barely rose above a whisper. "The isolation you must have endured..."

"It wasn't your fault," ForgetMeNot managed through his tears, completely overwhelmed by suddenly being surrounded by people who could truly see him, remember him, know him. "None of you could help it. It was just my mutation."

But the guilt was written across every single face in that room. To forget a family member, even involuntarily, violated everything the X-Men stood for.

But even as the emotional reunion continued, the practical implications started hitting everyone like aftershocks from a massive earthquake. Scott suddenly realized that three years of mission reports would need complete revision. How many times had their "lucky breaks" actually been Xabi's intervention?

Fury stood up from his chair, the gears turning in his tactical mind. 'A perfect invisible agent, someone who could walk into any facility and be forgotten the instant he left. The possibilities were endless.'

"I should get going," Jay announced into the emotional chaos. He'd done what he'd promised.

He moved toward the exit, then paused beside Xavier's wheelchair. Leaning down, he whispered just loud enough for the professor to hear. "Oh, Professor. That Dr. Sinister I mentioned earlier?"

Xavier looked up, struggling to focus despite the reunion exploding around him. "Yes?"

"He was Hydra's partner during the war. He's the one who gave Shaw his energy absorption powers through artificial X-gene enhancement." Jay let that bomb detonate in Xavier's mind. "This isn't just about protecting mutants anymore. It's deeply personal, so I want you to give it your all."

The implications hit like a physical blow to the gut. Shaw, who'd murdered Erik's mother in cold blood, tortured Erik as a child, nearly triggered World War III over Cuba, had gotten his powers from the same monster.

Xavier's knuckles went white as he gripped his wheelchair's armrests. "You're absolutely certain?"

"Dead certain."

Jay didn't wait for any response. He walked out into the fading daylight, leaving behind a room full of people grappling with recovered memories and earth-shattering revelations.

Behind him, he could hear ForgetMeNot's voice, stronger and clearer than it had been in years:

"I need to call my mother. She's going to remember me this time. Actually, remember me."

For once in his life, someone would.

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Chapter 49: The Billion Dollar Detox New
Jay stared at the cracked ceiling of his secondary safe house. Morning light filtered through reinforced blinds, casting shifting shadows across sparse furniture. Just a bed and basic necessities. Nothing like his old life.

Before Doom's broadcast painted a target on his back, before the world learned their hero was also the Power Broker. Within hours, crowds had gathered: grateful patients, curious onlookers, full-blown pilgrimages. Mutants wanting their abilities removed. Desperate people seeking cures. Protesters screaming about mutant supremacy.

Moving here discreetly had been the only safe option for everyone in the building.

Jay rolled out of bed, muscles protesting. Yesterday's events blurred together: Xavier and Fury's coalition, absorbing new abilities, Emma's asset transfer, Logan's brain surgery, delivering on his promise to ForgetMeNot.

He pulled out the deformed adamantium bullet. Still warm after all these hours, this fragment represented his path to true invulnerability. With Creel's absorption power, he could transform his entire body into living adamantium.

Under the scalding shower, Jay studied his reflection. The enhancement had left him with peak human physique, every muscle defined while keeping his lean build. Magazine-cover perfection that couldn't fill the hollow ache in his chest.

He slammed his palm against the tile wall. The sharp crack echoed like a door slamming on his old life, where people looked at him with gratitude instead of fear.

Standing still meant drowning in regrets he couldn't change.

After dressing and pulling on Bobby's jacket, he paused at the safe house door. The weight of public recognition pressed down on him. His sedan was still parked in Staten Island, where Fury's extraction team had airlifted him to the Fridge yesterday. Public transportation it was.

The subway ride was a gauntlet of stares and whispered recognition. Every passenger who recognized him from the news either stared openly or pretended not to notice while fumbling for their phones. An elderly woman clutched her purse tighter. A teenage boy whispered "Power Broker" to his friend. By the third stop, Jay had pulled his hood up and moved to the back of the car.

The taxi provided brief relief from scrutiny. Stark Tower stood like a gleaming middle finger pointed at the sky. Nearly a year and a half ahead of its original timeline. Jay grinned despite himself. Tony's massive ego must have been eating him alive watching Reed Richards get all the attention with the Baxter Building.

"That's far enough," Jay told the driver, handing over cash. The tower's front entrance buzzed with construction crews and security personnel.

Conversations stopped the moment he walked through the doors. Workers recognized the notorious Power Broker. Whispers followed him across the marble lobby. "Is that really him?" "What's he doing here?" "Should we call security?"

Within seconds, Happy Hogan materialized, face set in professional wariness. His hand rested near his jacket, where Jay's enhanced senses detected a concealed weapon.

"Mr. Jay," Happy said, the name carrying careful neutrality. "Mr. Stark is expecting you. I'll need you to submit to a security scan first."

"Standard procedure?" Jay said, raising his hands slightly.

Happy's expression softened marginally at the compliance. "Appreciate the cooperation. Just following protocol."

The security checkpoint was thorough but professional. Jay noticed the slight tension in Happy's shoulders, the way his eyes never quite left Jay's hands.

"Clear," Happy announced to his earpiece. "Escorting the guest up now."

The elevator ride carried its own tension. Happy kept glancing at Jay, but there was something else now, grudging professional respect for someone who'd submitted to security without complaint.

"Long way up," Jay observed, watching floor numbers climb.

Happy grunted, then seemed to wrestle with himself before adding, "Mr. Stark likes his privacy. Can't blame him, considering the kind of people who want to get close to someone with his resources."

The unspoken question hung in the air: which kind of person was Jay?

When the elevator doors opened, Jay stepped into Tony Stark's personal playground. Open concept design flowed from gym to bar, massive windows offering panoramic city views. The kind of space that screamed wealth and ego in equal measure.

Tony Stark stood near the gym equipment in workout gear, nursing a green smoothie. But Jay's enhanced vision immediately focused on the dark veins threading along Tony's neck, barely visible beneath his collar. The palladium poisoning was accelerating.

"Well, well," Tony said, setting down his smoothie with theatrical precision. "The infamous Power Broker graces my tower." He flashed his trademark smirk, though Jay caught the slight tremor in his gesturing hand. "I was starting to wonder if you'd developed an allergy to answering your phone. Or maybe you're just playing hard to get. Very mysterious, very 'I'm too cool for billionaires.'"

"Welcome to my humble penthouse," Tony continued, his voice carrying that familiar rapid-fire cadence. "Though I suppose when you can steal anyone's abilities, material wealth loses its appeal."

Jay studied Tony's performance, recognizing the deflection mechanism. The more nervous Tony got, the more he talked. "Let's skip the small talk, Tony. We both know why I'm here."

Tony's smile faltered momentarily.

Tony gestured dismissively at Happy, who had positioned himself near the elevator. "Give us some space, Hap. This is grown-up talk."

Happy hesitated, protective instincts warring with orders. "Boss, you sure about this? I could stay, just in case..."

"Hap, if the man wanted to hurt us, he'd have done it in the lobby. Besides," Tony's grin turned sharp, "I have JARVIS monitoring everything. Go grab a coffee, maybe flirt with that redhead from accounting."

Happy's jaw tightened. "There is no redhead from accounting."

"Then find one. I have faith in you."

Happy retreated, but not before giving Jay a look that clearly communicated 'I'll be watching.'

"The deal's simple," Jay said once they were alone. "I remove the poison from your body, you get me the meeting I want. Today."

Tony's laugh carried less conviction now. "Poison? You wound me with such accusations. Next, you'll be telling me my arc reactor isn't just a fashion statement. I'm the picture of health. Ask any of my doctors, the very expensive ones who tell me exactly what I want to hear because I pay them obscene amounts."

"Tony." Jay's voice carried patient authority. "Anyone with basic metallurgy knowledge knows that putting a nuclear reactor full of heavy metals next to your heart would poison your body. The only question is the timeline."

The smoothie slipped from Tony's fingers.

[Sir,] came a crisp British voice from hidden speakers, [I believe our guest has made quite an astute observation. Perhaps we should consider that Mr. Jay's assessment is more accurate than our previous consultations.]

Jay glanced around, feigning surprise. "And you are?"

[Just A Rather Very Intelligent System, sir. Mr. Stark's AI assistant. A pleasure to make your acquaintance, Jay. Your reputation for directness appears well-founded.]

"Likewise." Jay wondered if his world's AI bots would have developed similarly given time.

[If I may interject, Mr. Jay, I have been monitoring Mr. Stark's biometric data extensively. His cardiovascular stress indicators are increasing exponentially, and cellular regeneration rates are declining alarmingly. My programming prevents me from acknowledging the obvious conclusion, but perhaps an outside perspective might prove... illuminating.]

Jay studied Tony's face, noting how his confident mask was finally cracking. "So, you're going to keep pretending, or can we get to work?"

Tony was quiet for a long moment. When he spoke, his voice had lost its performative edge. "The doctors... they've given me months. Maybe a year if I minimize reactor usage. But I've been throwing money at the problem like that's ever solved anything fundamental. Nothing works fast enough. And I can't exactly advertise for a specialist in 'removing exotic metal poisoning from genius billionaires,' can I?"

Tony walked to a sleek diagnostic station, pressing his palm against the scanner. Numbers flickered across the display: blood toxicity levels, cellular degradation rates, projected survival timeframes. The readout showed 64% palladium saturation.

"Jesus," Tony breathed, staring at the numbers like his own death certificate. "It's gotten worse since last week."

"Sit down and stay calm," Jay interrupted, already moving toward him. "This is going to feel weird."

Tony settled into a nearby chair, hands gripping the armrests until his knuckles went white. "If this is some kind of elaborate con..."

"Shut up and let me work," Jay said simply.

Jay placed both hands on Tony's arms and activated his healing aura with surgical precision rather than general restoration.

The sensation was immediate and deeply uncomfortable. Jay felt palladium traces flowing through Tony's bloodstream like liquid mercury, concentrated around the arc reactor but spreading in microscopic tendrils throughout his cardiovascular system. Each fragment was a tiny time bomb.

He sensed metal shards embedded near Tony's heart, legacy fragments from whatever had created this situation. 'Jesus, Tony, for a genius, you really did a terrible job protecting your own body.'

Tony's breathing became rapid and shallow, pupils dilating as his nervous system registered the foreign sensation of blood chemistry being actively manipulated. Sweat beaded on his forehead. "What are you doing to me? I can feel... something moving inside..."

"The palladium is being redirected through your circulatory system," Jay explained, voice tight with concentration as he maintained precise control. "Your body's natural filtration can't handle this volume of contamination, so I'm creating artificial pathways to concentrate the toxins for safe extraction. This is going to hurt."

Carefully, methodically, Jay redirected the palladium away from vital organs, using his healing ability like a microscopic guidance system. The process required incredible finesse—too fast would cause shock, too slow could create embolisms.

Tony's left hand began swelling as the poison concentrated there, skin darkening to an alarming black.

Tony stared at his discolored hand in horror. "Oh god, what's happening to me?"

"Quit whining," Jay said grimly.

Jay grabbed an expensive whiskey bottle from the bar, dumping the contents onto the floor. Tony started to protest, "That's a 1947 Macallan, do you have any idea..." but Jay ignored him. He used Creel's absorption power to transform his finger into a sharp glass blade.

The makeshift surgery was quick but precise. Jay made a small, clean incision, creating a controlled drainage point. The concentrated palladium flowed out like thick black sludge, each drop representing poison that would have eventually stopped Tony's heart.

The substance collected in the empty bottle, nearly a quarter full by the time flow stopped. The liquid was viscous, almost metallic, seeming to absorb rather than reflect light.

Tony watched the black liquid drain from his body with fascination and revulsion. "Is that... is that what's been killing me?"

"For months," Jay confirmed, using his healing ability to seal the wound without scarring. "Slowly, but yeah."

Profound silence filled the room, broken only by Tony's sharp breathing and the wet sounds of contaminated blood dripping into glass. Even JARVIS seemed to process quietly.

Tony immediately staggered to the diagnostic station, movements unsteady but urgent. He pressed his palm against the scanner with trembling fingers.

The display updated: 5% palladium saturation.

"JARVIS," Tony called out, voice shaking, "confirm these readings."

[All diagnostics indicate significant improvement, sir. Your cardiovascular stress indicators have dropped to levels not seen since before arc reactor implantation. I'm detecting traces of an unknown energy signature that accelerates your natural healing processes. However, this level of palladium extraction should be medically impossible without extensive surgical intervention and weeks of chelation therapy.]

Tony stared at the diagnosis, eyes bright with unshed tears. "Is this real... this is real."

"That's all I can do," Jay said, wiping black residue from his hands. "If you keep using that arc reactor at the same power output, palladium will build up again. You need a permanent solution, not regular detox sessions."

Tony's response was immediate and desperate. "Anything," he said, voice thick with emotion. "Money, resources, whatever you want. I'll pay you billions to be my personal physician. I'll give you a floor in this building, your own lab, unlimited research budget. Hell, I'll make you a partner in Stark Industries."

Jay shook his head. "I don't need money. And I can't be on call for your whims." He paused. "But Reed Richards has what you need. Let the two smartest men on Earth figure it out together. You've got the resources, he's got the theoretical framework for clean energy applications."

Tony's gratitude instantly soured into wounded pride. "Richards? You think I need that pompous, stretchy bastard to solve my problems?"

"I think your ego is going to blind you to obvious solutions," Jay replied bluntly. "Don't let pride kill you, Stark. You just got your life back—don't throw it away because Reed's initials come before yours in the alphabet."

Tony was quiet for a long moment, staring at his healed hand, flexing fingers like he was testing their reality. When he looked up, something had shifted—desperate gratitude replaced by calculating respect. "You're right. Screw my ego. Besides, working with Richards might actually be... interesting. Been a while since I had a real intellectual challenge." He turned toward the ceiling. "JARVIS, prep the jet, let's fulfil our promise to The Doctor. And... get me Reed Richards' contact information."

[Already done, sir,] the AI replied with satisfaction. [I researched Dr. Richards' recent publications. His work on dimensional energy applications is fascinating. I believe you two will have much to discuss.]

"Thank you," Tony said quietly. The words carried more weight than any amount of money could.

Jay nodded. 'Funny. The world's richest man, and those two words might've been the most valuable thing he's ever given out.'

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Chapter 50: The Deal of a Lifetime New
[A/N]: HUGE thanks to each and every one of you for being part of this journey! Your comments, likes, and support mean the world to me. We're now stepping into Chapter 50, and I'm beyond grateful for your engagement and encouragement every step of the way!

Time crawled at thirty thousand feet, even in one of Stark's jets. What should've been a three-hour hop from New York to D.C. took barely an hour, then another fifteen minutes by helicopter to the Naval Observatory.

Tony swirled the ice in his glass, fingers drumming against the armrest. They'd been quiet since takeoff, both lost in their own heads.

Jay finally broke the silence. "Can I ask you something?"

"Shoot."

"The shrapnel. Near your heart." Jay turned from the window. "I got all that palladium out of your system, but I could pull those metal pieces out too. Ten minutes, maybe less. How come you never asked?"

Tony's hand went to his chest automatically. "Huh. Most people would think it's about trust. Like maybe I figure you'd mess it up somehow."

"But that's not it."

"Nah." Tony stared down at his drink. "You really want to know? This thing," he tapped the reactor, "it's not just keeping me alive anymore. It's become who I am."

Jay didn't say anything, just waited.

"Before Afghanistan, I was just some rich prick who made weapons and threw parties. Smart prick, granted, but still just a guy building stuff that killed people while telling himself he was saving the world." Tony's voice dropped. "Then I wake up in a cave with a car battery wired to my chest and everything I thought I knew about myself went right out the window."

He leaned back, staring at the clouds. "Iron Man isn't my job, Jay. It's me. You take away the reactor, take away this constant reminder of how close I came to dying, to losing everything that mattered, and what then? Do I go back to being the guy who thought cruise missiles were just expensive party favors?"

"You don't trust yourself without it."

"I don't trust myself to remember what rock bottom felt like. Why I started building armor instead of artillery." Tony's laugh was bitter. "This keeps me honest. Keeps me grounded. It's my daily reminder that the old Tony Stark died in that cave, and something better came out."

Jay sat with that for a moment. "Hell of a thing to carry around your heart."

"Yeah, well." Tony shook his glass, ice clinking. "Some days I think I'm ready. That maybe I've changed enough that I don't need the reminder anymore. But then I look at what I've built, who I've become, and I wonder if pulling it out would be like removing a load-bearing wall."

"What if it would?"

Tony went quiet. Just jet engines and the soft hum of his reactor. "Then maybe I'm not ready to find out who I really am without Iron Man watching over my shoulder."

Jay nodded. "When you are, just say the word."

"I know. Thanks for not pushing it."

"We all move at our own pace when it comes to letting go."

Tony swirled the ice in his glass, fingers drumming against the armrest. "So, you gonna tell me why we're flying off to meet the Vice President, or do I just keep running through conspiracy theories?"

Jay's eyes tracked the Potomac below. "I need a sit-down with someone your money can't buy."

"Rodriguez? Christ, Jay. Please tell me we're not about to commit treason."

"Nothing treasonous. Just... politically messy."

The helicopter touched down on manicured grounds where the Vice President's residence sat beyond wrought-iron gates. Ancient oaks cast long shadows across perfectly maintained lawns.

Secret Service materialized instantly, earpieces buzzing, weapons hidden but ready. Jay's screening dragged for twenty minutes.

"Mr. Jay," Agent Morrison said. "Apologies for the delay, but we needed full verification."

Tony breezed through in under two minutes. "Should I be insulted they trust me more than you?"

"Probably."

Inside, portraits of founding fathers hung alongside modern American heroes. Fresh flowers sat arranged. Every detail calculated to reassure voters.

Tony muttered, "God, I hate being judged by ghosts." He glanced at Jay. "Why am I here? You don't exactly lack for leverage."

"When people see you, they see America's golden boy genius. When they see me, they see a loaded gun."

Vice President Rodriguez hunched over his desk, sleeves rolled up, briefing papers scattered across mahogany. He looked up and smiled at Tony, that practiced campaign smile.

"Tony, good to see you. How's the clean energy initiative? The President's been asking about our timeline."

Then his eyes found Jay, and something shifted. Cooled. The smile remained, but his posture straightened. "Mr. Jay. Your reputation precedes you."

A subtle gesture sent his security detail retreating outside. "So. What brings the Power Broker to my home?"

"I need White House backing for a mutant integration project."

The words hung between them. Tony's whiskey glass stopped halfway to his lips.

"A mutant integration project?" Rodriguez's voice carried careful neutrality. "You understand the complexities. The political capital required, the backlash from our base, the Congressional hurdles."

"I'm asking you to be on the right side of history."

Rodriguez's laugh held no humor. "The right side of history? Let me paint you a picture of reality, Mr. Jay. Sebastian Shaw nearly triggered World War III. Magneto came within inches of assassinating the President on live television. Last month in Detroit, one mutant child had a nightmare and two city blocks disappeared. One mutant child."

He moved to the window. "Insurance companies have redlined entire neighborhoods based on suspected mutant populations. Real estate markets crash at rumors of mutant activity. Every committee hearing, senators demand tighter restrictions, more surveillance, registration requirements. And you want me to build them a neighborhood?"

Jay remained steady. "District X. A place where mutants can live without hiding. Homes, schools, jobs. Normal life."

"And when crime statistics spike? When property values crater? When some child loses control in a classroom full of eight-year-olds?" Rodriguez's voice rose. "The backlash won't just bury mutant rights, it'll bury everyone associated with the project."

Jay leaned forward slightly. "That's why the rollout matters. Steve Rogers cuts the ribbon. Captain America himself. The Fantastic Four provides scientific credibility. Stark Foundation builds the infrastructure." Jay's voice stayed level. "My name never touches the headlines."

Rodriguez went very still. As VP, he knew about Rogers' revival, still classified. "Rogers' status remains classified, and even if he were willing to go public..."

"He represents something this country needs. Trust. Hope. The idea that we can be better than our fears."

"You're asking me to stake my political future on something seventy percent of Americans fear."

Rodriguez stared out at the Washington Monument rising in the distance. When he turned back, his political mask had slipped.

Jay's voice softened. "Then stop thinking like a politician. Think like a father."

The temperature in the room dropped.

"Your daughter. Jenna. The eight-year-old with Spina bifida, the severe kind. She's been in a wheelchair since birth."

Rodriguez's face went white. "Don't you dare bring my family into this."

"Three months ago, your chief of staff reached out through discrete back channels, looking for anyone who might help where conventional medicine had failed." Jay's eyes never left Rodriguez's face. "I wasn't capable then. The enhancement changed that."

"That's extortion."

Jay paused, conflict flickering across his expression before the mask of necessity returned. "No. It's two fathers who want better for their children. You want Jenna to walk. I want every mutant child to stop hiding in fear." His voice grew quieter. "We can both win."

Rodriguez gripped the back of his chair, the internal war playing out across his features.

"Show me."

Walking through the residence, the atmosphere shifted from political theater to something intimate. Family photos lined the hallway. A child's artwork hung at eye level, bright finger paintings declaring "I LOVE MY DADDY" in crooked letters.

They heard her before they saw her, bright laughter mixing with clumsy puppy barks.

Jenna sat in her wheelchair near the garden fountain, surrounded by her mother and two older brothers, tossing a tennis ball for a golden retriever puppy.

"Hammy, bring it back!" She giggled as the pup tripped over his own feet. "He's still learning. Daddy says learning takes patience, but I think Hammy might need extra."

Mariana Rodriguez looked elegant even in gardening clothes, but her eyes never strayed far from her daughter. The boys, Diego and Carlos, took turns chasing the ball when Hammy got distracted.

Jay approached slowly. "Hey there. What's your pup's name?"

"Hamilton! Like the President, but I call him Hammy because he's silly." She threw the ball. Hamilton chased a butterfly instead. "He's... still working on that part. Carlos says he's got attention problems, but I think he just finds everything interesting."

Jay's laugh was genuine. "He's perfect. Learning's way more fun than knowing everything anyway."

He studied her animated expression. "What's your biggest dream, Jenna?"

Her expression turned wistful. "To race Hammy to the big oak tree and back." She pointed across the vast lawn. "All the way there and back, running together like the kids at school do with their dogs." Her voice grew smaller. "The doctors say maybe someday they'll figure out how to fix me, but..."

She shrugged with practiced resignation.

"What if we tried right now?"

Jay's hands began to glow with soft green light as he placed them gently on her legs.

Mariana stepped forward instinctively, but Rodriguez caught her arm.

"This might feel strange. Like bubbles in your legs."

"Ooh!" Jenna giggled, squirming with delight. "It does! It's like drinking soda but in my legs! Are you magic?"

"Something like that."

Jay closed his eyes, face tightening with concentration as he worked, threading new connections between damaged nerves, coaxing life back into muscles, realigning bones.

"My legs feel warm," Jenna reported with scientific curiosity. "Like when you sit funny and they fall asleep, but backwards. Is that supposed to happen?"

"That's your nerves waking up. They've been sleeping for a very long time."

Behind them, Carlos whispered, "Holy shit, is this really happening?"

"Language," Mariana scolded automatically, but her voice cracked.

Diego had gone silent, staring at the soft green glow with awe.

"Okay, Jenna. Try wiggling your toes."

She stared down at her feet with intense concentration. Then her eyes went wide.

"They moved! They actually moved! Mama, look!" She wiggled them again, then her whole foot. "I can feel them! I can feel everything! It's like they were hiding and now they're saying hello!"

Mariana's hands flew to her mouth. Diego grabbed Carlos's arm. From the house, staff members had gathered on the porch.

"Take your time. Your muscles are remembering how to work."

Jenna gripped her wheelchair armrests with determination. She pushed herself up slowly, shakily, but rose on her own power. Her knees wobbled, almost buckled, then found strength.

"I'm standing. I'm really standing."

One step. Tentative and uneven, but undeniably a step. Another. By the third, she was walking independently.

Rodriguez made a sound like laughing and crying had collided.

Then Jenna looked up at her father with the biggest smile in the world and took off running, awkward and stumbling but absolutely running straight toward him.

"Daddy! Look how fast I am!"

Rodriguez caught her as she crashed into his arms. She wrapped her arms around his neck and squeezed.

"Daddy, guess what? Now I can run for President too, just like you!"

The dad joke hit Tony like a physical blow. He barked out a laugh that was half sob. "Kid learns to walk and immediately starts campaigning. Jesus, she's got better political instincts than half of Congress."

Jenna wiggled free and chased Hamilton around the fountain, her steps getting steadier. The puppy bounded in circles with her.

"Come on, Hammy! I can keep up now!"

Mariana collapsed onto the grass, crying openly. Diego wasn't even trying to hide his tears. Carlos alternated between grinning and wiping his eyes.

The staff stood transfixed. Rodriguez's security detail watched with naked amazement.

Rodriguez stood watching his daughter race in circles with her dog, chest heaving.

Eight years of specialists and experimental treatments and watching his baby girl smile bravely while doctors used words like "irreversible" and "learn to adapt."

"Eight years," he said, voice thick. "Every specialist in the country. Mayo Clinic, Johns Hopkins, Walter Reed, they all said permanent damage, nothing more we could do." He looked at Jay with reverence. "And you just... you gave her everything. Her future back."

Jenna had reached the oak tree and was running back with Hamilton bouncing beside her.

"Did you see? I made it all the way!" She crashed into her mother's arms, breathless and glowing. "Mama, I made it to the tree and back! Just like I dreamed!"

Rodriguez's voice carried new certainty. "Whatever you need for District X, you have it. Committee hearings, budget appropriations, press conferences."

He paused, watching Jenna teach Hamilton fetch. "If this costs me the next election, so be it. Nothing in politics matters compared to what you just gave us."

Jay handed him a plain white business card. "Keep this feeling. When the polling numbers turn ugly and the attack ads start running and your colleagues question your judgment, remember this moment. Remember her face." "District X is going to need every friend it can get."

"Daddy, come play!" Jenna called, waving both arms. "Hammy figured out how to run with me instead of away from me!"

Rodriguez smiled genuinely for the first time all day. "On my way, mija!" Then, quieter, turning back to Jay, "Thank you. I know those words aren't sufficient, but... thank you."

Near the helicopter, Tony pulled Jay aside.

"You scare the hell out of me sometimes. You take something pure, healing a child, and somehow make it the most effective political negotiation I've ever witnessed." He shook his head. "That little girl makes a dad joke before she can even walk properly, and I'm laughing so hard I can barely breathe. "

On the flight back, Jay sat quietly before pulling out his phone.

"Callisto? It's me. Everything's approved. Full government backing confirmed. District X is a go."

Tony watched him during the call and said, "If you ever decide to go corporate, give me advance warning. I don't want to wake up one morning and discover you've acquired Stark Industries while I was distracted by your latest miracle."

Jay's smile was faint, his eyes distant.

"I'll keep that in mind."

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Chapter 51: Departure New
Nearly a month had passed since Doom's broadcast shattered Jay's carefully constructed double life. The fallout was still settling like dust across his relationships.

The Fantastic Four had cut all ties. The X-Men were on better terms with him now, barely but even their gratitude came with conditions and suspicious glances.

SHIELD had immediately hired him as a "specialist consultant" the moment they realized how badly they needed his intel on Hydra's infiltration. Fury's pragmatism ultimately prevailed over his principles. Jay was useful. Not trusted. There was a difference.

Steve Rogers remained grateful. Jay had given him hope about Bucky, confirmed the Winter Soldier's identity, and provided a path forward. But Steve's hands were tied, any move to rescue Bucky would alert Hydra to their compromised status. So America's golden boy was forced to wait, knowing his best friend was out there, broken and enslaved, while Steve sat idle.

Tony Stark had begrudgingly followed Jay's advice about collaborating with Reed Richards. Together, they'd synthesized a new element that made the arc reactor safe and more efficient. Tony insisted on calling it "Badassium" despite Reed's protests. It had been Howard Stark's research, notes that Jay had passed to Reed months earlier, courtesy of Fury. Tony was alive and healthy, but their relationship remained purely transactional as gratitude mixed with wariness.

In Hell's Kitchen, rumors were spreading. A man in red with devil horns, swinging through the night and beating the hell out of gang members. Matt Murdock was making his presence known, one broken criminal at a time.

Luke Cage and Jessica Jones had made headlines recently with their new venture: Heroes for Hire. The controversy wasn't just about powered individuals charging for their services. It was about what it meant for everyone else. Insurance companies scrambled to create "superhero damage" clauses. Small businesses in their operating areas complained about being overlooked in favor of clients who could pay premium rates. But they were making it work, carving out a living helping people while navigating a system that had never planned for superpowers as a profession.

District X had been the biggest political shitstorm in decades. When Vice President Rodriguez proposed converting a Manhattan neighborhood for Morlock rehabilitation, Congress had lost its collective mind. Protests. Hearings. Death threats against anyone who supported it.

Media coverage split along predictable lines, conservative outlets calling it a "radical social experiment that threatens American values," while progressive networks hailed it as "a necessary corrective to decades of mutant marginalization." Corporate lobbyists worked overtime behind closed doors, framing the project as an existential threat to existing power structures and property rights.

The real backlash came from ordinary New Yorkers who'd been priced out of Manhattan real estate for years, now watching luxury apartments get demolished for "mutant housing projects." Property values in surrounding areas plummeted overnight. Local businesses shuttered rather than serve "those people." But with SHIELD backing, Stark Foundation's public support, and Fantastic Four endorsement, the project ground forward through layers of red tape and public outrage.

What nobody knew was the grease keeping District X's wheels turning. Every few nights, Jay slipped into private medical facilities through back entrances. A senator's daughter whose mutation made her skin transparent. A CEO's son with leukemia. A congressman's kid whose mutation was eating them alive from the inside out.

He healed them all, every single child whose parents had money and influence. The practice was invaluable, sure. Complex neurological cases, genetic disorders, conditions that would've stumped him months ago now resolved under his hands with increasing ease. But that wasn't why he did it.

The real reason sat heavy in his gut every time a grateful senator shook his hand or a CEO wrote another check to "Mutant rehabilitation programs." Parents who'd organized protests against District X, who'd called Morlocks monsters on national television, suddenly discovered compassion when their own children needed saving. Lobbyists who'd funded opposition campaigns quietly withdrew, their corporate masters now indebted to the man they'd tried to destroy. Congressional hearings that promised blood turned into photo opportunities, representatives praising "innovative solutions to the mutant question."

The Morlocks stayed safe. The Network stayed protected. His people got to live without looking over their shoulders every damn day.

Jay stood in his sparse safe house, looking at his packed travel bag on the bed. Five months of nonstop juggling. Time for a break.

Footsteps on the stairs. Bobby's timing was impeccable.

Bobby stood at the door, worn down but steady. "You really are somethin' else, kid," he said, Brooklyn accent thick. "Settin' up that District X thing, givin' the Network and them Morlocks more money than they know what to do with, and now you're just packin' up and walkin' away."

"Taking a breather, old man," Jay corrected, shouldering his bag.

"Why now, though? When everything's finally workin'?"

"Because it can run without me for a while. Network's solid. District X has momentum." Jay shrugged. "Sometimes you gotta step back."

Bobby studied him for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "C'mon then."

At Bobby's pickup, the old man reached into the truck bed and pulled out a duffel bag. "Happy birthday, kid. Linda, Maria, Max, and Tom all chipped in."

Jay blinked and checked the date. He'd turned twenty-five today. Completely forgotten.

Inside the bag: a hand-knit scarf from Maria, forest green with gold thread. A thermos with "World's Okayest Mutant" etched in Linda's careful script, the joke was layered. She'd been calling him that since he'd accidentally healed her hangover and then complained about the headache it gave him. A photo of all five of them at the diner, taken during one of those quiet evenings when the world had felt manageable. Max had insisted on it, saying they needed proof that good things happened, too.

And at the bottom, wrapped in tissue paper like it was made of glass, a pendant on a thin silver chain. Tom's contribution. The man barely spoke above a whisper, but his care ran deep as bedrock.

Jay grinned, running his thumb over the compass face. "You guys didn't have to do this. But what about you, old man?"

Bobby's answer was to pull him into a quick, solid hug. "My gift is keepin' a home waitin' for you. You're family, kid."

"I'll call every week," Jay promised against Bobby's shoulder. "Even send stupid tourist photos and everything."

"Damn right you will." Bobby clapped his shoulder hard, then stepped back and wiped at his eyes without shame. "Now get outta here before I get all weepy."

Jay drove through the familiar streets of New York, catching glimpses of the city he'd helped reshape. Construction crews working double shifts on District X infrastructure, their work lights turning the night harsh and bright. SHIELD agents trying to look casual while obviously standing guard. Small protests still gathered at the site's perimeter, mostly older residents holding signs about property values and "neighborhood character."

But there were other changes too. A clinic that had opened three blocks from the construction site. A bodega owner who'd started stocking different products. Small cracks in the wall of hostility, letting light through.

At JFK, Jay returned his rental and made his way through the private terminal. SHIELD had arranged a jet, one of Fury's quiet gestures that said more than words.

The jet was smaller than the commercial planes roaring overhead, sleek and efficient. Jay settled into one of the leather seats and pulled out his phone, scrolling through his itinerary once more. Japan first. The contact there was already waiting, someone who'd been flagged as worth meeting. After that, the route got flexible.

He caught his reflection in the jet's window as it taxied toward the runway. Looked older than twenty-five, but that came with the territory.

Behind him, New York glittered in the darkness. Bobby would be telling the others by now that he'd gotten off safe. They'd mark their calendars, waiting for his calls. Family stuff.

The jet engines hummed, building power.

Jay closed his eyes and let himself smile.

Yeah. This was going to work out.

If you wanna hang out, join my Discord

Support my work and get early access up to Chapter 195, exclusive content, and bonus material at my P@treon - Max_Striker.
 
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