The SHIELD secure briefing room lay in heavy silence, entombed beneath layers of concrete, steel, and secrecy. No windows. No signals in or out. Only the pale glow of screens illuminating the faces of those gathered within.
Director Nick Fury sat at the head of the table, his expression unreadable beneath the low lights. His remaining eye was fixed, not on his colleagues, but on the looping footage projected before them. Fragmented images flickered without sound: Servo-skulls floating through streets, rows of containment pods, bodies half-consumed by machinery, their faces locked in silent screams beneath sterile lights.
Across from him, Maria Hill watched with a gaze like sharpened glass. Beside her, Coulson remained impassive as ever, fingers resting lightly on a tablet scrolling extracted intel. At the far end of the table, Alexander Pierce sat composed, his tailored suit as immaculate as the polite, concerned mask he wore.
The footage shifted again—this time, a still frame pulled from earlier intel: One of the skull-like drones hovering above the Iron Monger's battleground, caught in stark relief against flames and ruin.
"No AI signature. No standard tech markers. Organic traces confirmed." Coulson's voice cut through the silence, steady despite the grotesque nature of the subject. "What we're looking at isn't robotics. It's integration. Flesh and machine, forcibly combined."
Hill's jaw tightened. "These things shouldn't exist." Her gaze flicked to Fury. "What Stark's been toying with is child's play compared to this. Whoever is behind it is a lunatic who needs to be put down before this spreads."
Pierce leaned forward, fingers steepled. "We've all seen worse in the files, Hill. terrorist, mad man—even things we let slide when convenient. Why raise alarms now over a handful of missing criminals?"
"Because it won't stay a handful," Hill shot back. "You don't build infrastructure like this for a small operation. This is scaled for expansion."
Fury said nothing. He continued to listen to the audio : A prisoner mid-conversion, screaming before his throat was severed with surgical precision. Then there was a separate video about A servo-skull floating silently around the Luther'.
"We cannot act openly," Pierce pressed. "We are a secret agency not officially on record. Exposing SHIELD without a proper plan is a dangerous game."
Hill didn't flinch. "It's already dangerous. We should've moved yesterday. Every hour we wait, he's making more of them."
"You're too sentimental," Pierce countered smoothly. "Better to let others handle it. Local law enforcement. FBI. Military. Let them go after him. We watch. We measure. If they succeed, we clean up quietly. If they fail…" He gave a faint smile. "Then we learn exactly what we're dealing with before risking our own people."
"You mean before sacrificing someone else's people." Hill's words hung like a blade in the room, daring anyone to challenge what they all already knew.
Pierce didn't rise to the bait. "Don't be so dramatic."
Fury finally spoke, his voice slowly and measured. "You're both missing the point. This isn't about tech. Not about numbers. It's about something we don't understand." His eye flicked back to the footage. "That man's not building soldiers. He's building something beyond simple armies. One bullet won't stop it. Neither will ten."
Coulson tap his pad, pulling up Kara's latest report. "Agent Kara confirms mass abductions. Forced augmentation. Criminals mostly—low-profile, expendable. SHIELD's standing orders remain observation only."
"Observation?" Hill echoed, arching a brow.
"We could've dropped a bomb already, but from observation, he seems to possess teleportation tech," Coulson said calmly, though a crease of unease lined his brow. "One bomb wouldn't be enough. We need to lure him out—then strike."
Hill's gaze stayed steady. "That's going to be difficult. He doesn't leave his sanctum."
Pierce shrugged. "Maybe Stark could lure him out to some conference or gala. Easy target."
Fury considered this, leaning back, fingers steepled beneath his chin. His gaze lingered on still frames—servo-skulls drifting through dead corridors, lifeless bodies stripped of humanity beneath sterile light.
"We won't do that. But we could try something similar," he said at last. "First, draw him out. Then use third-party assets. Keeps our hands clean. Keeps SHIELD out of the spotlight. FBI, maybe. Tactical units. PMC for deniability. And if needed… a few agents or soldiers disguised as 10 rings."
Pierce was thinking if he should let Fury join him as just guys was more evil than him . he kept smiling. "Finally, some common sense. We can definitely create new 10 rings we could easily fund small units to do the dirtiest work."
"That would be great," Fury warned. "With this plan, we can finally test his limits. See how deep the rabbit hole goes before we decide how many bodies we're willing to throw in after."
Hill frowned. "And what if Luthar's strength is beyond even what we're guessing?"
"Then we know the scale of the problem." Fury's tone turned cold steel. "No matter what forces he's built, it won't be enough. That, I can guarantee."
Coulson slide the finalized options onto the central holo-display: Potential Third-Party Deployment:
FBI Hostage Rescue Team
US Army Special Forces (Delta)
Private Military Contractors (Expendable, No Oversight)
Pierce's smile widened by degrees. "Let someone else be the canary. Smart move."
Privately, he considered sending word to Rumlow, ensuring the tech was salvaged and any traces scrubbed if the FBI or military succeeded in removing Luthar.
Fury didn't return the smile. His gaze stayed fixed on the looping footage. On silent suffering beneath layers of steel and flesh. On mechanical vultures circling the remnants of humanity. He wondered if Kara realized how little her reports would change the outcome. SHIELD didn't save people. Not anymore. SHIELD managed outcomes. Balanced losses.
Above ground, orders moved quietly.
Below, the machines kept building.
"Proceed with third-party testing," Fury ordered at last. "Keep Kara and Rumlow in place. No intervention unless directly involved. Civilian and criminal losses… not our concern."
Hill didn't argue. Coulson only nodd.
Pierce leaned back, satisfied.
The screens dimmed. The images faded. Silence remained.
Fury's final thought remained unspoken beneath layers of classified files: He already knew what he would do when all else failed.
---
Back in the Sanctum, where even metal had a purpose, Kara Lin stared at the blinking message on her secure tablet.
> Directive Update:
Wait for further action.
Observe and report.
Maintain current cover.
No intervention permitted.
Civilian and criminal losses deemed acceptable.
Her hands trembled despite her training. The faces haunted her—the ones trapped in pods, the ones mid-scream beneath mechanical blades. She heard it all through the listening devices. Now more would be added to those numbers. FBI agents. Soldiers. Men walking into this nightmare thinking it was just another black-site.
They had no idea. None of them did.
Her reflection on the screen looked pale. Hollow. On the edge of tears she refused to shed.
No rescue was coming. SHIELD didn't save people anymore. SHIELD watched. SHIELD measured. SHIELD calculated costs and paid them in someone else's blood.
Kara set the device down, forcing her face into something cold. Something numb. If she broke now, she'd be next on Luthar's table.
Her orders were clear.
Observe.
And maybe help Luthar capture more victims. She wanted to scream. But there was confusion, too. She had reported Rumlow's betrayal—why was there no order about him? Why no response? Unfortunately, she didn't know the reason.
Not yet.
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