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Chapter 119 - TPM Chapter 117 – Calibration

Tony Stark's world returned not with light, but pain—raw, electric pulses across every nerve. He tried to move, only to find himself locked in place, limbs heavy and restrained. Metal, definitely. The air around him was cold and sterile, carrying the faint scent of ozone and oil.

"Welcome back," a voice intoned, flat and unhurried.

Tony's eyes fluttered open. Blinding light overhead forced a squint, but he managed to focus on the figure standing before him—tall, robed in crimson and steel, with wires stretched from banks of ancient cogitators into his own temple. The pain was dull now, distant—numbed by something injected or simply overridden.

"Luthar," Tony rasped.

"You are remarkably difficult to incapacitate," the Tech-Priest replied without looking up. His attention was focused on a glowing holographic projection to Tony's side, a stream of data in no known language. "It's really bad; I did not find anything after scanning your neural architecture, which makes you so special."

Tony coughed. "Next time, just ask for a sit-down interview."

Luthar turned toward him. His eyes, mechanical and unblinking, seemed to pierce deeper than mere biology. "Your humor will not shield you from the implications of your failure."

"I call it charm." Tony tried to smile, but the movement tugged at the wires. "What's this? Brain scan? Thought decoder? Are you trying to plagiarize my genius?"

"No," Luthar said simply. "I am cataloging it and checking if I can copy your mind and put it inside a computer, which would do research day and night for me."

Tony tensed. "I would still suggest you just use AI because you cannot copy my greatness."

"If I can't copy your greatness, then you would be quite useless for me. which means I can only turn you into a piece of some door lock."

The words were cold. Not cruel—cruelty required emotion. Luthar's tone held none. He might as well have been reading a temperature gauge.

Tony's arms strained against the restraints again. "I thought you were going to turn me into one of your mechanical zombies. Rip out my spine, plug in a USB, call it a day."

"You are not suitable for servitor conversion," Luthar replied. "Like I said, the best thing I can do is to turn you into a door lock to avoid any situation where you can make a comeback."

"Wow, didn't think you would be afraid of me," Tony said.

Luthar did not respond to the quip. Instead, he reached forward and calmly adjusted a dial. The pain flared again—not physical, but mental, like static across thought itself.

"I am not afraid; I am just in trouble that even if I transform you into a servitor, you might still interfere with me," he said.

Tony gritted his teeth. "Come on, it's not like I have a secret nuke or a hidden protocol for wiping you out."

"I already know that." Luthar's eyes didn't blink. "You are not an apex intellect, but your improvisation and adaptive behaviors are statistically anomalous; by letting you live, I might be able to learn something."

"So I'm just a lab rat to you."

"Yes."

---

Far above the Sanctum, in the SHIELD's command relay, Nick Fury watched silent screens glow red with failure codes. The operation was lost. Stark's signal had gone dark. The Sanctum infiltration team—obliterated.

It had been a full hour of silence.

---

At the same time, far from the sanctified horrors of the Sanctum, Hell's Kitchen remained under lock and fire.

In a half-collapsed tenement tower converted into a holding point, Rumlow paced with restless frustration. The servitors stood motionless, encircling the perimeter, their glowing optics casting long shadows.

He keyed his communicator, sending a direct encrypted pulse.

> TO: LUTHAR

TOO MANY TO MOVE. We do not have INSTRUCTIONS to house this many. **

The reply came not in words, but in a stream of Machine Cant. Rumlow's modified augmetics translated it aloud in his ear.

> "Initiate localized containment. Screening will be conducted on site. Those deemed functionally sufficient will be transported. Others… discarded."**

Rumlow scowled but said nothing. He looked out over the makeshift pens of terrified civilians and soldiers alike. The message was clear—useful labor would be spared. The rest were abandoned or worse.

He closed the channel.

---

Inside the Sanctum, the lights flickered. Somewhere in the machine-womb of that place, a voice whispered—not a human one, but a chorus of data and iron. Luthar's mind focused on a dozen tasks at once.

Tony was still talking.

"I'm just saying," the billionaire muttered through clenched teeth, "if you're going to abduct a genius, at least have the decency to offer room service. You know, a cot, maybe a latte."

"Your comfort is irrelevant."

"Come on, you don't want your prized research asset dying of boredom."

"You will not die until I permit it."

Tony snorted. "That's comforting."

Luthar turned again toward his console. "I have dissected hundreds of minds. If you continue to irritate me, I might disassemble yours."

"And after that? You'll try to copy me?"

"I will replicate your conscience and improve it. Strip out weakness. Remove emotion. then split them into multiple SAB programs."

Tony laughed bitterly. "Yeah, good luck with that. Emotion is half the reason I built the damn suit in the first place."

Luthar's gaze turned back to him, and for the first time, there was a pause. Something like contemplation.

"Emotion is irrelevant," he said, but slower now. "Yet its patterns yield… unpredictable utility. We people wage war over ideals. Loyalty. Pain. Love. Illogical. Inefficient. But powerful."

Tony blinked. "Wait, did you just admit we're not entirely useless?"

"No. I admitted the emotion is a powerful force. That is not the same."

"Yeah, well," Stark exhaled, "I'll take the compliment anyway."

---

Back at Stark Tower, Pepper Potts clutched her tablet so tightly her knuckles turned white. JARVIS had just given her the confirmation.

Tony had been taken.

"Where?" she demanded. "Where is he?!"

"I do not have precise coordinates, Miss Potts," JARVIS replied, its voice oddly subdued. "However, he should be in Luthar's primary base."

She was already moving, grabbing her phone and her purse. Her voice trembled. "Call Rhodes. Now."

---

Back at SHIELD, Fury stood before a digital map, now marked with flashing icons. He'd had enough.

"This doesn't end with more drones and delays," he growled. "This ends face-to-face."

Hill raised an eyebrow. "You're visiting him? Alone?"

"He's not going to talk to a proxy. We've already thrown everything else at him. It's time I spoke to the monster myself."

He turned and walked toward the elevator.

Below, in the cold sanctum of steel and silence, Tony's voice weakened.

"You're going to lose, you know."

Luthar looked up. "Explain."

"You think this world runs on order. Equations. Calculations. But it doesn't. It runs on chaos. Stubbornness. People care about things you don't understand."

Luthar stepped forward, gaze unreadable. "You cared. You still feel."

Tony gave a crooked grin. "Yeah. But I'm not the only one."

The wires pulsed again. Data flowed. Stark's mind laid bare.

Luthar watched and cataloged it all—every thought, every defiance, every flicker of resistance.

Because even if the world burned around them, he wants to know what makes a genius.

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