Chapter 95: Mistaken Identity
Note: We met the goal still! That's nice. Here's two chapters, enjoy!
—
The morning sun painted Xavier's mansion in warm golden light, casting shadows through the hallways as I strolled alongside Gwen. The two of us were discussing my departure plans, with Gwen occasionally brushing her hair behind her ear – that little gesture she did when trying to seem casual about something important.
"So you're really taking her with you?" Gwen asked, her voice carefully neutral despite the slight furrow in her brow. "To New York to meet Jessica?"
"That's the plan," I replied, watching her reaction from the corner of my eye. "Don't be so worried. Madelyne needs space to figure out who she is without the X-Men hovering over her. Jessica can help with that."
Gwen tugged at the sleeve of her blue sweater. "And where exactly is she going to stay after that? The Rust Bucket is already cramped with the three of us."
I grinned. "Worried about sharing your beauty products with another redhead?"
"I'm worried about you getting confused between us!" she shot back, but there was no real heat in her words. She sighed, shoulders dropping slightly. "Just... be careful, okay? I heard stories of what happened last time someone had the Phoenix inside them."
Her concern touched me, even if she was masking it with irritation. "Yeah, I heard those stories too. But the Phoenix seed is contained. Jean helped make sure of that." I nudged her shoulder gently. "Besides, I've got the best magical backup in the universe right here if anything goes sideways."
That earned me a reluctant smile. "Damn right you do."
We reached the intersection where the hallway split – one path leading to the library where Gwen was headed, the other toward the kitchen where the scent of coffee and something sweet beckoned.
"I'll catch you later," I said. "Grandpa wanted me ready to leave by noon."
Gwen nodded, hesitating for a moment before adding, "Just remember who's got your back, Ben. Always."
The sincerity in her voice caught me off guard. "I know, Gwen. Always do."
As she disappeared down the hall, I headed toward the kitchen, drawn by the aroma of fresh baking. Rounding the corner, I spotted a figure at the stove. Familiar red hair cascaded down a slender back, paired with a curve-hugging gray sweater that accentuated every delicious line of her figure.
Madelyne. And damn, the girl knew how to rock a pair of jeans.
My lips curled into a smile as I approached quietly. She hadn't noticed me yet, a bit too focused on whatever she was cooking, hips swaying slightly to music only she could hear. After yesterday's intense mental procedure, it was good to see her doing something so normal, so human.
Without thinking twice, I slipped behind her, wrapping my arms around her waist and pressing against her back. I planted a soft kiss on the nape of her neck, just below her hairline.
"Morning, beautiful," I murmured against her skin. "Something smells amazing."
She froze instantly, spatula suspended mid-flip over what looked like French toast. "Um..."
That voice. Not quite right. My forehead went a little cold as she slowly turned her head, revealing not Madelyne's face, but Jean Grey's wide-eyed stare. Okay, it's impossible to tell.
"Ben?" she asked, voice pitched higher than normal. "What are you doing?"
Oh shit.
Instead of backing away like any sane person would. I stayed exactly where I was, arms still wrapped around her waist, body still pressed against hers.
"Jean! Hey! I, uh... thought you were Madelyne."
Her eyebrows climbed toward her hairline. "Clearly."
"Sorry about that," I said, still not moving.
Jean cleared her throat pointedly. "This is typically where you'd step back."
"Right, right," I agreed, but remained in place, a ridiculous smile plastered on my face. "So... what are you cooking?"
She gave me a look that could have melted steel, then turned back to her pan with a resigned sigh. "French toast. And you're still hugging me."
"It's comfortable," I shrugged, finally easing my grip slightly but not fully releasing her, my chin resting on her shoulder. "Plus, it would be awkward to back off now. Better to own it, right?"
To my surprise, a laugh escaped her. "Your logic is fascinating, young man."
"I'm a fascinating guy," I countered, peeking over her shoulder at the perfectly golden toast in the pan. "That looks incredible."
"It's just bread and eggs," she said, but I caught the hint of a smile playing at the corner of her mouth. "Could you at least give me enough space to flip this properly?"
I loosened my hold just enough for her to move freely, but maintained contact. The whole situation was absurd, but somehow it had crossed into territory too ridiculous to be uncomfortable.
"Also, I… I wanted to thank you," Jean said suddenly, her voice turning serious as she transferred the French toast to a waiting plate. "For yesterday. For what you did for Madelyne."
"I didn't do much," I demurred. "Just floated around as a creepy ghost alien while you and Emma Frost did the heavy psychic lifting."
She shook her head, turning off the burner. "No. You gave her something the rest of us couldn't. You saw her as her own person from the beginning. You advocated for her choices when the rest of us were making decisions about her life."
The sincerity in her voice caught me off guard. "Well, everyone deserves the chance to write their own story."
"That's exactly it," Jean said, turning in my arms to face me fully. "Most people say the right things, but you actually believe them. I heard more about that Omnitrix of yours from Emma… really powerful device. But something tells me it didn't just randomly fall on your wrist. I think it's fate. You treat people – humans, mutants, aliens – like they matter."
"That's the thing. They do matter," I replied simply.
Her green eyes studied me with uncomfortable intensity. "You know, for someone who acts like a goofball half the time, you can be surprisingly wise."
"Only half the time? I'm slipping."
That earned another laugh. "I know you won't take advantage of this position too much," she said, gesturing to our still-embracing stance.
"How can you be so sure?" I asked, curious as I lowered my hands just a little, from her waist to her firm ass, squeezing it. Her eyes twinkled with danger for a moment, but at my stupid smile, she didn't say anything.
"Madelyne and I... we have a connection now," she explained. "Sometimes I catch glimpses of her memories. I saw how you refused her kiss that night… how you respected her vulnerability instead of exploiting it."
"Oh." Heat crept up my neck. "That's... invasive."
"Tell me about it," she agreed. "It works both ways, unfortunately."
"Wait, so Madelyne can see your memories too?" The implications hit me suddenly. "Like, right now?"
A new voice answered from the doorway, rich with amusement. "I don't need memories when I can see the real thing right in front of me."
I spun around, finally releasing Jean, to find Madelyne leaning against the doorframe. But not the Madelyne from yesterday. This woman had transformed herself totally. She wore black lipstick, smoky eye makeup, and dark-painted nails. Her red hair featured streaks of black, and she'd swapped Xavier's conservative attire for a tight black top, ripped jeans, and combat boots.
"Wow," I blurted. "Is the Goblin Queen making a comeback?"
Instead of offense, Madelyne's face split into a genuine laugh. "Hardly. Just making sure people can tell us apart," she gestured between herself and Jean. "Though it seems some still have trouble with that concept."
"In my defense," I said, raising my hands, "I only saw her from behind."
"And what a behind it is," Madelyne teased, sauntering into the kitchen. "I'm flattered you thought it was mine."
Jean rolled her eyes. "You two cannot be acting like this. This is a school, for God's sake."
"That's why you didn't push me away, Miss Grey," I quipped, watching as Madelyne stole a piece of French toast from Jean's plate.
"So," Madelyne said between bites, "when are we leaving to meet this famous Jessica Jones? I'm eager to see the brave woman who's apparently ready to take in a cosmic-powered clone."
The video call with Jessica last night had gone surprisingly well. After the initial shock that was – "You want me to what now?" – Jessica had taken the Phoenix revelation with impressive calm. She'd added, "Huh. Not the weirdest roommate request I've had," she'd said dryly. "At least she doesn't have tentacles."
Trish, however, had been visibly excited by the prospect of meeting Jean Grey's mysterious clone.
"We can leave whenever you're ready," I replied. "We can either catch a train, or I can carry you in my arms as XLR8. Though I should warn you that'd be pretty damn fast, you might ruin your new fit."
"Nothing I can't handle," Madelyne said with a smirk, the confidence in her voice worlds away from the uncertain woman I'd found in the library days ago. "I've got a cosmic firebird seed inside me. A bumpy road trip is hardly going to rattle me."
"That's the spirit," I grinned. "Though maybe ease Jessica into the whole Phoenix thing slowly. She's… I love her, but she's a street-level superhero. I don't want to scare her with cosmic entities."
"Solid advice," she nodded solemnly. "I'll save the universe-ending talk for the second day."
As Madelyne and Jean fell into conversation about what essentials to pack, I found myself watching them with a strange sense of wonder. Two women with identical DNA yet entirely different souls. Does she even have a soul? One born of natural processes, the other created in a lab – yet both radiating strength, intelligence, and complexity that no scientist could have engineered.
The universe had dealt me a strange hand when that watch fell from the sky, but damn if I wasn't playing it for all it was worth.
****
Azmuth was not a creep.
He was, by any objective measure, the greatest intellect in five galaxies. The creator of technology so advanced it bordered on miraculous. A being who had unlocked secrets of reality that most species couldn't even comprehend.
And yet here he was, monitoring a teenager's romantic entanglements with an intensity that would have been embarrassing if anyone knew.
The diminutive Galvan frowned at the holographic display in his laboratory, showing Ben's interaction with the two redheaded women. His long fingers tapped against the console, his enormous eyes narrowing in contemplation.
"Young Tennyson seems to be collecting females at an alarming rate," he muttered to himself.
In truth, Azmuth's interest wasn't prurient. The Omnitrix was his greatest creation, designed for purposes far beyond the adolescent adventures of its current bearer. Monitoring Ben's activities was simply responsible oversight.
Or so he told himself. There was a lot more stuff here than this.
"Display previous interactions with Xavier's group," he commanded Asperia, his lab's AI system.
The hologram shifted, showing Ben in a heated discussion with Charles Xavier about mutant integration versus separation. The boy's passion was evident in his gestures, his arguments surprisingly nuanced as he challenged Xavier's isolationist tendencies.
"Separation has never worked in human history." Ben's recorded voice rang through the lab. "Not once. It always leads to 'us versus them.' Integration is messy and hard, but it's the only path that doesn't end in disaster."
Azmuth's mouth twitched in what might have been a smile. For all the boy's hormonal distractions, there were moments of genuine insight that suggested the Omnitrix hadn't fallen into completely unworthy hands.
"Huh. Well… The device was designed to foster understanding between species," Azmuth reminded himself. "Perhaps the boy's... enthusiastic approach to interspecies relations is not entirely outside its parameters."
After all, one of the Omnitrix's potential applications was preservation of endangered genetic material. In a manner of speaking, Ben's behavior was aligned with the device's purpose, if interpreted somewhat liberally.
Still, he hoped the boy would demonstrate more restraint eventually. The power of the Omnitrix came with responsibilities that extended beyond impressing potential mates.
"Asperia," Azmuth spoke, dismissing the current display, "analyze current situation on Earth location designated 'Genosha.' Calculate probable outcomes based on comparable historical scenarios throughout the galaxies."
The AI hummed softly as it processed the request, sifting through countless planetary histories and sociopolitical movements. Genosha had caught Azmuth's attention – a sovereign nation formed by and for mutants under Magneto's leadership. The parallels to certain galactic scenarios were concerning.
"Analysis complete," Asperia announced. "Primary projection indicates 73.8% probability of stable establishment with minimal conflict. Earth's existing power structures, including enhanced individuals, extraterrestrial alliances, and mystical entities, create a sufficient counterbalance to prevent aggressive expansion."
"And the remaining probability?" Azmuth asked, already suspecting the answer.
"26.2% probability of catastrophic intervention by external forces," the AI continued. "If such intervention occurs, there is a 94.7% chance of total or near-total annihilation of Genosha's population."
Azmuth's eyes narrowed. "Specify nature of possible intervention."
"Most probable: automated weapons systems designed specifically to target the mutant genome," the AI replied. "Historical analogs suggest weaponry would be deployed without warning, likely via orbital platform or atmospheric dispersal. Perhaps through teleportation."
The Galvan steepled his fingers, his massive brain calculating possibilities. Tennyson was planning to visit Genosha soon… a diplomatic mission that could place not just him but most mutants directly in harm's way if the worst-case scenario unfolded.
As the one who'd one day be called Protector of All Species, it'd be a damn shame if a species were made extinct right under his nose in his debut year.
"Asperia… just in case. Upload the section 007 data packet to Omnitrix subsystem 14." Azmuth's voice was quiet but firm.
"...Are you certain, First Thinker?" The AI rarely showed any sign of defiance, but Azmuth's glance made it shut up. "Understood," the AI cautioned.
"I'm counting on it," Azmuth replied. "Sometimes the best way to prevent a catastrophe is to prepare for one. Hopefully, it wouldn't need to be used."
He turned away from the console, gazing out at the stars visible through his laboratory dome. Somewhere out there was a small blue planet spinning through space, carrying creatures who had barely mastered their own genome yet wielded powers that could devastate worlds.
"The universe has a terrible sense of humor," Azmuth murmured, "placing such a powerful device in the hands of a hormone-driven teenager."
Yet as he watched the simulations run, displaying potential extinction events and countermeasures, a thought occurred to him despite all the worry and possible bad outcomes, the thought that was both unsettling and oddly comforting.
Perhaps the universe knew exactly what it was doing.
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