The Ancient One's chambers felt smaller than usual as Arthur sat across from her, the weight of unspoken knowledge hanging between them. She rarely called individual students for private meetings unless something significant was happening so this sudden meeting was a shock.
"Tell me, Mr. Hayes," the Ancient One began, her ageless eyes studying him with uncomfortable intensity, "what have you been occupying yourself with recently? Is there anything you feel you should share with me?"
Arthur considered deflecting or offering half-truths, but something in her expression told him she already knew more than she was letting on.
"I've been pursuing justice," he said finally. "For my parents."
"Ah." She leaned back slightly, as if this confirmed a suspicion. "And what form does this justice take?"
Arthur met her gaze directly. "About eight years ago, my parents were murdered by hired killers. Recently, I discovered who was responsible. I'm currently taking revenge against those perpetrators."
The Ancient One nodded slowly. "I see. And how extensive is this revenge?"
"Three corrupt lords who ordered the killings, plus the military officers who carried them out." Arthur paused, then decided on complete honesty. "Though there's a high chance the scope will expand when I finish my revenge."
"In what way?"
"The three men aren't ordinary crime lords. They're backed by some of the most powerful criminal organizations in the world today - Hydra, the Hand, the Ten Rings. Their operations span continents. Human trafficking, arms dealing, systematic murder. The suffering they've orchestrated..."
Arthur's voice tightened as he remembered Greycairn's memories of kidnappings and human trafficking.
"And so you've appointed yourself judge and executioner," the Ancient One observed, though without condemnation.
"Someone has to," Arthur replied firmly. "These people operate above conventional law. They have wealth, political protection, international connections. Traditional justice can't touch them."
The Ancient One was quiet for a long moment. "You speak with conviction, and I see you are convinced that the path you've chosen to follow is right. Is there any way I can dissuade you from taking this dark path?"
Arthur's jaw tightened. "Earlier, maybe. Before I saw what all they'd done. But after witnessing their memories, seeing the systematic evil they represent... I can't just walk away. Children torn from families, innocent people murdered for profit, entire communities destroyed for convenience. After knowing that, how could I do nothing?"
"But this is simply how the human world functions," the Ancient One said gently. "Corruption, crime, suffering - these have existed throughout history. How much can one person truly change? Kill one criminal lord, and another rises to take his place. Eliminate one organization, and two more emerge to fill the power vacuum."
Arthur nodded slowly. "You're probably right. But after the horrors I've seen, I can't leave them alive to continue committing more atrocities. Maybe I'll have to deal with their replacements too."
Arthur's voice grew quieter. "Maybe new villains will emerge who are equally terrible. But as long as our paths don't cross and I don't witness their crimes firsthand, I can live with the comfortable illusion that everything is fine. It's the knowledge that becomes the burden."
The Ancient One regarded him thoughtfully. "So this isn't entirely about revenge anymore?"
Arthur considered the question seriously. "It's still partly about revenge," he admitted. "My parents deserved better than to die for refusing to help criminals launder stolen money. But it's become something larger. These three men represent a level of systematic evil that I can't simply ignore, now that I know about it."
"I understand your convictions," the Ancient One said, rising from her chair. "They remind me of my own younger self."
She walked to the window overlooking the courtyard. "I was like you once, Arthur. In my early years as a sorceress, I witnessed terrible atrocities committed by kings and warlords across different realms. I tried to correct them, to guide them toward better paths."
"What happened?"
"I failed. Repeatedly." Her voice carried the weight of centuries. "Every time I intervened directly, I either failed to create lasting change, or I inadvertently made things worse. Remove a brutal king, and his even more vicious brother takes the throne. Eliminate a warlord, and his lieutenants tear the kingdom apart fighting for succession. Stop one tyrant, and create the conditions for three more to emerge."
Arthur absorbed this, but his resolve didn't waver. "Maybe that's true. But I still have to try. Someone wise said that with great power comes great responsibility, and while I question that philosophy, I can't completely dismiss it either. I have the knowledge and ability to stop these specific monsters. How can I ignore that obligation?"
The Ancient One turned back to face him. "And what of the consequences? Your actions will have ripple effects you cannot foresee."
"Inaction also has consequences," Arthur replied. "Every day these men continue operating, more people suffer and die. At least action gives their victims a chance at justice."
The Ancient One returned to her seat, studying him carefully. "Your determination is... familiar. But this brings us to an important discussion about why our order maintains the principles it does."
She gestured toward the window where students practiced in the courtyard. "Look at them, Arthur. What do you see?"
Arthur followed her gaze. "Students learning the mystic arts."
"Look deeper. Most who come to Kamar-Taj are lost souls. People who have suffered tremendous losses, experienced betrayals, watched loved ones die. They arrive here broken, angry, seeking answers—or revenge."
Arthur remained silent, sensing this was crucial.
"Marcus Chen, whose family was killed in a terrorist bombing. Sarah Mills, who lost everything to corporate corruption. David Torres, whose sister was murdered by cartel violence." The Ancient One's voice was gentle but firm. "They all came here with rage in their hearts, seeking power to right the wrongs done to them."
"What happened to them?"
"They found peace. Distance from their pain. Purpose beyond vengeance. This sanctuary exists not just to train sorcerers, but to heal souls and provide perspective on the larger mysteries of existence."
Arthur began to understand where this was leading.
"If we encouraged our students to pursue worldly justice, if we told them that mystic power should be used for personal vendettas, what do you think would happen?" the Ancient One continued. "Every lost soul who arrives here would see this place as a training ground for revenge rather than a refuge for healing."
She stood again, pacing slowly. "Kamar-Taj would become a recruitment center for supernatural vigilantes. Our secrecy would vanish within a generation as dozens of sorcerers went forth to settle old scores. The peaceful environment necessary for spiritual growth would be destroyed."
Arthur nodded slowly. "And the sorcerers who genuinely want to focus on protecting the planet and understanding the universe would have their sanctuary ruined."
"Exactly. This place serves many purposes, Mr. Hayes. For some, it's a path to cosmic understanding. For others, it's a shelter from the world's cruelties. For all, it's a chance to find meaning beyond their personal pain."
The Ancient One sat back down. "Your situation is unique. You didn't come here broken and seeking revenge. You discovered this mission only recently. But the principle remains the same - if students see that we condone using these abilities for personal justice, it changes the fundamental nature of what we offer."
Arthur felt the weight of her words. He looked out at the courtyard again, seeing the students with new eyes. How many had lost families to criminals? How many had suffered injustices that would never see conventional resolution?
"I understand," Arthur said finally. "You're not just training sorcerers. You're providing a path away from the cycles of violence and revenge that brought many of them here."
"Precisely. The distance from mundane affairs isn't just policy - it's therapeutic. It allows people to heal, to find perspective, to discover purposes larger than their personal pain."
The Ancient One leaned forward slightly. "So knowing all of this, understanding what our order represents and why these principles exist, do you still wish to continue down this path of vigilante justice?"
Arthur sat in silence for a long moment, feeling the full weight of the decision before him. The competing loyalties - to justice for his parents, to the victims of ongoing crimes, to the sanctuary that had given him so much, to the other students seeking peace.
Finally, he looked up. "You've given me a great deal to think about. This is... more complex than I initially realized. I need time to consider everything you've said."
"Of course. Take all the time you need, Mr. Hayes. This is not a decision to be made lightly."
Arthur stood and bowed respectfully. "Thank you for your wisdom and patience."
As he left her chambers, Arthur felt the crushing weight of an impossible choice settling on his shoulders.
—
Back in his quarters, Arthur sat on his meditation mat, but found no peace. His mind churned with conflicting thoughts and obligations that seemed to tear him in opposite directions.
On one hand, there was everything the Ancient One had explained. The masters of Kamar-Taj and their sacred duty of protecting Earth from dimensional threats. The sanctuary's role as a place of healing for broken souls. The very real risk that his actions could expose the mystic arts to wider scrutiny, destroying the refuge that so many desperately needed.
Arthur could envision the consequences all too clearly—government agencies discovering Kamar-Taj and demanding access to mystical training. People arriving with motivations far worse than personal revenge. The quiet contemplation and spiritual growth replaced by militarization and exploitation.
The Ancient One was right. If students saw him using these abilities for personal vendettas, it would fundamentally alter what Kamar-Taj represented. The sanctuary would become just another training ground for those seeking power over others.
But whenever Arthur tried to close his eyes and accept this logic, the nightmares returned with brutal clarity.
He would see the attack on his family home—masked figures breaking down doors, his parents' terrified faces in their final moments, the helpless rage of a ten-year-old boy watching his world burn.
And worse, he would dream and relive the memories from the three lords. Greycairn's shipping containers filled with terrified children destined for unthinkable fates. Ravenscar's weapons flowing to terrorists and warlords. Ashridge's financial networks enabling every form of human misery imaginable.
How could he know about such systematic evil and do nothing?
The dilemma consumed him completely. Arthur tried meditation, but found no clarity. He attempted to focus on training exercises, but his heart wasn't in them. He considered the philosophical teachings he'd studied, but they offered no clean answers to this moral complexity.
Two days passed in this state of internal warfare. He was trapped between two impossible choices - abandon his quest for justice, or risk destroying the sanctuary that had given him purpose and peace.
On the third morning, as Arthur sat staring at his untouched breakfast, a familiar soft pop echoed through his quarters.
"Master Arthur!" Winky appeared, her large eyes bright with urgency. "Miss Aurora is at the manor. She wants to see you."
Arthur's mind immediately went to potential complications. Had he been discovered? But then again, he hadn't left any clues, so he wasn't overly worried.
"Did she say what she needed?"
"No, Master Arthur. Only that she must speak with you urgently and could not wait."
Arthur made his decision quickly. Staying here wasn't doing him any good anyway. He opened a portal to his home and stepped through.
Maybe Aurora had some important news about the wizarding world. That would help take his mind off the impossible decision weighing on his shoulders.