Somewhere in Brazil.
The streetlights flickered dimly, their faint yellow glow stuttering as if under some strange influence. The hazy light spilled onto the street, adding an eerie undercurrent to the night.
A young, stylish woman walked along, one hand stuffed into her pocket, the other holding a phone, chatting endlessly with whoever was on the other end about all sorts of trivial matters.
Suddenly, a manhole cover rattled, the sound barely audible, before a mud-caked hand shoved it aside. From the opening, a haggard face emerged. Even under all the grime, you could tell the woman had once been wearing a white outfit—now stained, smeared, and ruined.
Climbing out of the sewer, her eyes instantly locked onto the back of the fashionable woman with the phone. She needed a cellphone—desperately.
Replacing the manhole cover with practiced speed, she ran up behind her target, placing both hands on the woman's shoulders and speaking in the kindest tone she could muster:
"Could I please borrow your phone for a moment?"
Whether it was the mud-caked face or the uncanny similarity to a low-budget horror flick, the fashionable woman turned, took one look, and let out a sharp scream.
Behind them, the manhole the woman had just replaced shot into the air with a loud clang, followed by a massive tongue of fire roaring out from the depths below. The scorching light bathed the street, and the airborne cover, licked by the flames, melted midair into molten iron.
"Dammit! Give me the damn phone!" the mud-streaked woman barked, driving a fist into the fashionable woman's face and snatching the phone without hesitation.
Time was running out. Her fingers flew over the screen, punching in a number, and as soon as the call connected, she babbled a rapid torrent of words into the receiver—so fast no one could make sense of it.
From the sewer, a figure emerged, body radiating an intense, flame-like glow.
The woman hit send, watching the phone display the message: Message Sent. A look of deep relief crossed her face.
"Thank God."
A deafening explosion followed, engulfing her—along with the phone—in a roaring inferno.
Inside a lab, Tony Stark crumpled up the seventy-second blueprint he'd designed and hurled it to the floor. On the holographic display, the simulation results glared back at him, mocking him. With a frustrated jab, he hit delete.
This was the seventy-second iteration of his Iron Man armor, and still, not one design met his standards.
It wasn't just him—it was the limits of Earth's technology itself. Software engineering, mechanical design, material science—there were simply too many interconnected challenges, and no matter how brilliant he was, he was still tethered to this world's scientific ceiling.
Yes, he was a genius—a man ahead of his time—but even geniuses are shackled by the era they live in. And he could no longer ignore the truth:
If Earth was going to be protected from the threats he'd seen, he wasn't the one to do it.
But there was someone who could—
The Black Devil.
More and more evidence pointed to the existence of an organization known as S.W.O.R.D. (Sentient Weapon Observation and Response Division), led by none other than the Black Devil. This shadowy force had agents stationed worldwide, and they weren't just recruiting humans—mutants in staggering numbers were joining their ranks.
Colonel Stryker's Mutant Registration Act? Crushed under an unseen force. Nobody knew exactly how—but Tony had his suspicions.
S.W.O.R.D.'s roots ran deep and wide, yet no one knew where their headquarters were or the full extent of their power. The slivers of their capabilities that the world had seen were already enough to inspire awe—and fear.
And then, there was the Black Devil himself.
From the moment Tony staggered out of the Ten Rings' warehouse, fate seemed determined to cross their paths. When he faced the Kree reconnaissance drone—a machine that nearly took him down—it was a toy in the Black Devil's hands.
When he battled Aldrich Killian, the so-called Perfect Being, Tony had been seconds away from becoming human toast. The Black Devil? He carved through Killian like a hot knife through butter.
Even the time Ultron hacked into his armor and used his own suits against the Black Devil—Tony's tech, his strongest Hulkbuster armor included—had been dismantled like a child's Lego set.
That meant one thing:
Their technology wasn't just better—it was in another league entirely.
On Asgard, Loki—wielding the immense All-Father's Power—had tossed both him and Thor around like ragdolls. Tony had felt, for the first time, the futility of a truly unwinnable fight.
The Black Devil? He met Loki blow for blow, in a battle that shook the heavens.
It made Tony wonder:
Was the Black Devil even human?
That question haunted him—and it drove him. He needed more power.
…..
"Sir, you have a new message," J.A.R.V.I.S. interrupted.
"Patch it through."
Immediately, a woman's voice filled the room—urgent, desperate, and edged with panic.
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