Rain fell in sheets over the Manhattan skyline, drowning sirens and smoke under a gray shroud of silence. The storm had come and gone, but its echoes lingered—in ruined buildings, in broken bodies, and in the minds of those trying to make sense of what remained.
SHIELD's convoy rolled through the streets with no attempt at subtlety. Black SUVs, unmarked but unmistakable, moved through the eerily quiet district, headlights flashing over boarded storefronts and broken lamp posts. Soldiers lined rooftops, not aiming down at Fury's escort—but watching. Waiting.
The front doors of Luthar's Sanctum swung open before Fury even stepped out.
He was expected.
Nick Fury emerged from the vehicle, his long coat billowing in the wind. The silence around him wasn't merely tense. It was oppressive. This wasn't a territory under occupation—it was a domain. A kingdom carved from the bones of a city, ruled by a man who bent machines and flesh alike to his will.
Fury approached the stairs, each footstep echoing like a hammer against stone. He paused only once—as a mechanical servitor clanked past him, dragging a limp, dazed man toward the alley. The man wasn't dead. Not yet. But his eyes were hollow.
Then the doors shut behind Fury.
Inside, Luthar was waiting.
He stood at the center of the hall, robes dark and glistening with bloodstains, though none of it was his. The floor around him was a mixture of steel and stone, etched with circuitry and stained with surgical waste. Flickering tubes lined the walls, each containing things that should not have existed—mutated organs, spines, and ocular implants still twitching.
"Director Fury," Luthar intoned, voice colder than steel. "Your timing is interesting."
"You've caused quite a mess," Fury said, his voice calm but firm. "And you have something that belongs to me."
"Correction. Had. Most of what I acquired is already repurposed or discarded. But let me guess, you're here for Stark—"
"It's not just about Stark; I'm here to make a deal. You know that."
A pause. Luthar didn't blink. He didn't need to.
Behind them, a screen lit up with biometrics—Stark's brainwaves, distorted and erratic. Needles of activity spiked where there should have been rest. The screen zoomed into areas of the frontal cortex, annotated with machine-code overlays in a language only Luthar fully understood.
"Well, I have finished my experiments on his brains," Luthar said. "His insights are… primitive but interesting. The only disappointment is I didn't find what I was looking for. Even so, I don't see the reason to release him."
Fury's jaw tightened. "You're going to give him back. Him and the civilians your men rounded up."
Luthar turned slowly.
"And in return?"
Fury pulled out a case. Metal. SHIELD-issued. He opened it just enough for the glow inside to spill out—not light, but data. A hard-coded key with encryption so deep it burned through processor time like fire through oil.
"Top-level SHIELD data," Fury said. "Medical black files. Experimental archives. Information about Project Pegasus and Project Rebirth. Half of it predates my command."
For the first time, Luthar paused.
"You give me Stark and the civilians. You keep Hell's Kitchen… for now. But I need those civilians back."
Luthar tilted his head, the lights on his mechadendrites flaring.
"Agreed," he said after a moment. "But I keep the ones already transformed, and I choose three more from the civilians, as I found they would be quite useful."
Fury's face tightened, but he nodded; after all, the result was still better, as at least for now all the citizens would be released.
Luthar extended a hand. One mechadendrite moved forward—fused with Fury's device. A short burst of light passed between them.
The deal was made.
"I'll prepare Stark's release," Luthar said flatly.
Fury turned without another word.
As the final sparks of data transfer faded between the mechadendrite and the device, Luthar turned away from the center of the sanctum.
"Retrieve Stark," he commanded.
Two servitors moved without question, their limbs jerking with unnatural precision. Down through the corridors they went—into the heart of the Sanctum, where power hummed from every wall, and the air reeked of ozone and sterilization chemicals.
Tony Stark, suspended by clamps, lifted his head as the door hissed open.
"Well," he croaked, a smirk half-formed on his bruised face. "Did the cyborg finally get bored of poking wires into my brain?"
Luthar's voice crackled through a speaker embedded in the wall. "Your usefulness has concluded, and let me tell you, yours is less useful than something I can craft in a few minutes."
Before Tony could reply, the sedative was put in his veins and maybe a few other things that he would never find. Then the servitors released the clamps. He dropped to the floor in a heap, coughing.
"Jarvis," he rasped. "Note to self. Never get caught by a space priest with daddy issues."
The servitors hoisted him upright like cargo. They didn't answer. They weren't meant to. Machines did not humor sarcasm.
Back at the surface, Fury stood by his car, flanked by two agents. He didn't speak as the servitors deposited Stark in front of him, unconscious again—whether from pain, exhaustion, or the last injection, no one could tell.
Fury knelt down. His single eye swept over Stark's remains of the arc reactor casing fused to his chest.
"We'll get you patched up," he muttered.
Then he turned back toward the Sanctum, staring once more at the sealed door. Luthar watched him through a high-mounted lens—a mechanical eye embedded in the stone. He made no move to follow.
The deal was over.
The moment Fury's convoy left the place, Luthar started to move.
"Upload the civilian records," he ordered.
A pair of servo-skulls hovered closer, projecting hololithic screens before him. Each one displayed faces, data, biometric readouts, age, medical history, and preliminary testing results from the initial scans.
He filtered through them with mechanical speed, eyes darting like code readers as he analyzed each profile.
"Useless. Weak. Incompatible. Discard."
Images vanished one by one.
Then he stopped.
Three faces remained.
Subject A: Female. Early twenties. Viable immune system. High mitochondrial regeneration rate. No known mutations. Blood showed compatibility with genetic grafts.
Subject B: young girl still a teenager. Low body mass but high neural plasticity. Brainwave patterns suggested resilience to psychological strain. Early indicators of suppressed telepathic sensitivity.
Subject C: also a girl Ex-medical student. High anatomical knowledge. Potential surgical assistant or test administrator.
"Acceptable," Luthar said.
He sent the command.
"Quarantine these three. Begin pre-conditioning. Prepare augmentation suites three, six, and eleven."
The servitors obeyed.
Behind Luthar, another machine hummed to life—a massive biotank surrounded by swirling vials of preserved DNA strands and experimental retroviruses.
He stepped toward it, raising the data shard Fury had given him. His eyes gleamed as the interface accepted the encrypted files.
Lines of SHIELD science flowed across his interface: Project Rebirth formulas, early-stage replicants from the super soldier formula, failed mutant suppression enzymes, and gene-editing protocols years ahead of global medicine.
The most important of them was Project Pegasus, where they developed light-speed engine development based on the Tesseract, very important research. For him, studying this data, he might be able to discover new technologies, which would give system points.
Luthar spoke aloud, his voice merging with the machines.
"Now begins the construction."
He inserted the file into the master console. Machinery stirred. DNA strands were isolated, cross-stitched, and fused with his own chemical templates. One of the screens showed a flashing title in digital red:
SERUM SEQUENCE 001: ALPHA-HUMAN AUGMENTATION INITIATIVE
Luthar stood motionless as the system ran simulations. His breathing slowed to a mechanical rhythm. In this world of chaos and uncertainty, one thing remained clear.
Author's note Currently I am trying to figure out a new novel, but I got a baseline story for 10 chapters in time. but the current protagonist isn't suitable for this story. I also tried some other stories, but it didn't work like the green lantern in Warhammer, as green lantern has a quite prominent weakness. there is also the Ghost rider dxd storyline, which I am uploading, but due to not having time to write, I have only uploaded 9th chapters if you want to read on Scrabble hub and also on my Patreon page,he other thing I want to know why did it nobody join this week me patreon last night after uploading a thought I would at least at 5 new subscribers but when I wake up there was nothing 😰