[A/N]: Big update — we've climbed to Rank 19. That's an incredible push and proof that this community can move mountains.
Reminder: we still have a 5-day window to reach the Top 10 by Monday. If we get there, I will publish a 7-chapter mass release.
If you can, please drop Power Stones, share the chapter, and leave a quick comment or like. Every action moves us closer. Let's keep this momentum and finish the climb.
ooOoo
Three days passed in calculated silence, punctuated only by Rogue's increasingly desperate messages.
First came requests for a private café meeting. Then dinner at an upscale Manhattan restaurant. Finally, formal sit-downs at the Xavier Mansion, complete with voicemails about "misunderstandings" that could be "easily cleared up."
Jay ignored every single one, letting each unanswered call twist the knife deeper into Xavier's desperation. The longer he let her stew, the more frantic the telepath would become. Desperate people made stupid compromises—gave away things they'd sworn to protect.
He needed Xavier desperate enough to hand over access to Hank McCoy's Mutant Growth Hormone research without a fight.
His secure phone buzzed with routine updates. Maria had tracked three more SHIELD surveillance teams to a staging area in Queens. They were closing the net, thinking they were adorably subtle.
Jay almost pitied them. Almost.
The danger sense slammed into him like a sledgehammer the moment he stepped onto his building's front stoop.
Someone was upstairs. Someone radiating enough controlled lethality to scream danger at his enhanced senses.
Jay immediately texted Bobby:
Check in every 20 minutes. If I miss one, assume trouble and tell Maria to find me.
Bobby's reply: You sure? I can be there in ten.
Jay's thumb hovered. For a moment, he almost said yes.
Instead: Trust me. This is exactly what I've been waiting for.
Because it fucking was. After days of amateur hour surveillance and second-string agents, the real player had finally shown up. Jay had been preparing for this moment since he'd owned Natasha.
The walk up four flights felt like climbing toward a war zone. His danger sense picked up measured, professional footsteps—positioned for maximum violence and quick escape routes. At least two people, possibly three. One definitely in his apartment, others covering exits.
SHIELD's finest.
Jay approached his door, cataloging everything. Someone inside radiated the kind of controlled violence that came from decades of turning people into corpses. Someone who'd killed more people than most soldiers ever dreamed of seeing.
He slid his key into the lock and paused.
"You know," Jay called conversationally, "SHIELD breaking and entering? Must be a really slow week, Fury."
Silence. Then, soft as whispers, the locks disengaged with precise electronic clicks—not his doing. Someone inside had just casually overridden his security.
Dramatic asshole.
Jay pushed the door open and stepped inside like he found legendary spymasters in his living room every fucking Tuesday. The lights flickered on, revealing exactly what he'd expected—yet still managing to blow his mind.
Nick Fury sat in his reading chair like he owned the place, positioned to watch both door and windows. Black leather coat, tactical gear worth more than most people's souls, that famous eyepatch that had become synonymous with "I will end you and your entire bloodline."
But Jay caught something the fanboys never mentioned. Controlled tension like a cocked gun held in check by pure will. Fingers positioned for a quick draw that could ventilate someone in half a heartbeat.
Nick Fury looked carved from granite and fuck-you attitude, but underneath that legendary composure, Jay sensed something delicious: uncertainty. The Director of SHIELD, the man who'd bitch-slapped alien invasions, wasn't entirely sure how this would go.
Perfect. Uncertainty bred mistakes, and mistakes created opportunities to absolutely wreck someone's day.
"Careful what comes out of your mouth next, kid," Fury said, each word dripping with barely contained violence.
Jay stepped inside but left the door open—because fuck your intimidation tactics. "Director Fury. I'd offer coffee, but something tells me you're here to threaten my existence."
"Damn right I'm not here for pleasantries." Fury leaned forward, flashing the substantial firearm beneath his coat. "Jay 'The Doctor' himself. You gave my agents quite a goddamn heart attack. Let me paint you a picture of what I know, and you tell me if I've got anything wrong."
Jay settled against the doorframe like he had all the time in the fucking world.
Fury machine-gunned names like bullets. "Robert 'Bobby' Torrino, fifty-three, Vietnam veteran with a gambling problem and surprisingly good instincts for a man who should've been worm food twice over. Distinguished himself at Firebase Charlie during Tet before a leg injury sent him home to a government that couldn't give less of a shit about his service."
Jay kept his face neutral, knowing Fury wasn't just reciting intelligence—he was demonstrating the power to crush everything Jay had built into fucking dust.
"Maria Santos, former clerk who lost her job after her 'accident' left her with a shattered spine and medical bills that'll bury her alive."
"Linda Washington, thirty-eight, two kids she hasn't seen in three years because she can't afford somewhere safe. Especially with her lungs barely fucking working."
Message received, asshole. Jay's people weren't safe.
"Max Coleman, discharged after an IED rearranged his face and left him with abilities the V.A. pretends don't exist."
"Henderson and his boy Tommy—kid had potential to be a genuine hero until you came along. Emma Carlisle, who stupidly fed a dangerous stranger. Claire Temple, who thinks you're the second coming of Jesus Christ."
Fury's voice never wavered, but Jay caught the razor-sharp emphasis. This was threat assessment—SHIELD deciding whether to recruit, neutralize, or make his people disappear forever.
"You've been running an completely illegal medical practice, treating enhanced individuals, building a network of fanatically loyal followers. Very effective, very dangerous, and very fucking illegal."
Now came the real throat-punch, delivered with surgical precision.
"But here's where it gets interesting." Fury stood slowly, radiating controlled menace. "You're not in any database. No birth certificate, social security, school records, medical history. You materialized three months ago with perfect English, advanced medical knowledge, and abilities too convenient to be natural."
The silence stretched like a garrotte wire. Jay felt Fury's single eye dissecting every micro-expression.
"And here's the kicker," Fury's voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "You're not even human—your blood evaporates too fucking fast in our environment. You're an alien with no identification, no history, and no goddamn business being on this planet."
The words hung like a death sentence. In Fury's world, unknown meant dangerous, and dangerous meant eliminated with extreme prejudice.
Jay couldn't help it—he started laughing his ass off.
The sound shattered Fury's psychological profile. The legendary spymaster's hand instinctively moved toward his weapon, looking genuinely rattled for the first time in decades.
"Alien?" Jay wiped his eyes, still chuckling. "Oh, Nick. That's fucking hilarious, coming from someone married to a Skrull. How's Varra doing these days?"
The transformation was instantaneous and devastating. Fury's legendary composure exploded like a grenaded building. His hand froze halfway to his gun, every muscle going statue-rigid with shock. The single eye that had stared down cosmic horrors went wide with something Jay had never expected to see:
Pure, undiluted terror.
For the first time in anyone's living memory, Nick Fury looked completely and utterly fucked.
Silence stretched for thirty agonizing heartbeats.
When Fury finally moved, it was to frantically cut external audio. When he spoke, his voice was death incarnate—the tone of a man who'd killed for much, much less.
"How the fuck did you know that?"
Jay stepped forward into the kill zone like he was taking a casual stroll. "Same way I know you lost your eye to a cat named Goose. Adorable little thing, really, if you ignore the face-melting tentacles. Tell me, do you still piss yourself when you hear purring?"
Fury's eye went dinner-plate wide, his hand completing its journey to his weapon without drawing—muscle memory screaming danger.
"Who the hell are you?"
"Someone who knows every dirty secret you've buried," Jay said, stepping well inside Fury's personal space. "Like how you've been harboring illegal fucking aliens for years. How you fell head-over-heels for a shape-shifting spy sent to catalog human weaknesses. How you've built your entire goddamn career on secrets that would topple governments and start wars if they got out."
Each revelation hit Fury like a physical assault. Jay could see calculations frantically running behind that single eye—most scenarios ending with someone in a body bag.
"Answer me right fucking now—how do you know about Varra?"
Jay's smirk could have cut glass. "Same way I know about the Tesseract. Same way I know about the Avengers Initiative. Same way I know about Project PEGASUS and what Wenzel Volker was really trying to accomplish."
Fury's composure crumbled further. "Answer the goddamn question right now, or I swear to Christ—"
"I know because knowing things keeps me breathing in a world full of trigger-happy psychopaths like you," Jay interrupted, his voice hardening to match Fury's intensity. "People who see a problem and reach for the fucking gun. People who think secrets are currency and lives are completely expendable. People who'd rather murder an unknown than risk losing control."
He straightened, suddenly looking less like a young man and more like a predator wearing human skin.
"And here's what you need to fucking understand, Director: if SHIELD so much as breathes wrong on me or my people—if Bobby gets arrested on bullshit charges, if Maria disappears into a black site torture chamber, if Claire gets sent to a mind-rape facility—the world gets free fucking access to every black operation you've sanctioned, every illegal alien you're harboring, and a detailed GPS guide to finding your wife."
The threat hung between them like a loaded nuclear warhead. Both men knew Jay wasn't bluffing—couldn't be bluffing, not with the information he'd just casually demolished Fury with.
Something snapped behind Fury's eye.
"MOTHERFUCKER—"
The punch came fast and professional, thrown by a man who'd learned to fight in back alleys and black sites, aimed to drop Jay unconscious without permanent damage.
But danger sense made Jay know the attack was coming before Fury's neurons finished firing. The director's fist cut through empty fucking air as Jay sidestepped effortlessly. His foot swept Fury's ankle at the perfect moment of overextension, sending the legendary spymaster tumbling forward like a drunk amateur.
Jay caught him by the shoulder, steadying him while demonstrating complete and utter dominance. The moment stretched—predator and prey, though it wasn't remotely clear who was which.
"Easy there, Nick," Jay murmured, maddeningly calm. "Losing your cool doesn't suit you. Kind of ruins that whole 'unflappable mastermind' reputation you've spent decades building."
Fury shrugged out of Jay's grip and stepped back, breathing hard, his single eye blazing with fury and something else—grudging professional admiration. Anyone who could make Nick Fury throw the first punch and then embarrass him like a fucking amateur deserved respect.
"You cocky little shit," Fury said, but there was genuine admiration in his voice now.
"So," Jay said, straightening his shirt like absolutely nothing had happened, "shall we negotiate like civilized adults, or do you want to throw more laughably telegraphed punches?"
Fury stared at him for a long moment, wrestling with homicidal rage and professional training. Training won—barely. He moved back to the chair and sat heavily, suddenly looking every one of his hard-earned years.
"What the fuck do you want?"
"Same things I told your Black Widow when she tried this with more subtlety and better legs," Jay replied. "Agent Coulson as my handler—and before you ask, it's because he resembles a character I like. Surveillance stops completely. And access to the Stark and Erskine research archives."
"First one's already done," Fury said, composure returning. "Coulson was briefed this morning. The second... I don't have complete control of SHIELD. The World Security Council calls the shots."
"I know about Pierce," Jay said quietly, watching Fury's eye sharpen like a blade. "But the surveillance teams harassing my network—that stops. Your people stop treating them like enemy combatants."
Fury nodded slowly. "That I can do. But research archives are completely off the table. No way I'm giving an unknown entity access to weapons of mass destruction."
Jay tilted his head, smile turning predatory. "What if I sweetened the pot considerably?"
"With what?"
"Call Coulson in first. And don't lie to me—I know he's waiting in dear old Lola."
Fury's jaw worked silently, running frantic calculations. Then he reactivated his comm.
"Coulson, get your ass in here. Now."
The door opened ninety seconds later, admitting Phil Coulson—immaculate suit, shell-shocked expression, exactly like Jay remembered. Professional, competent, and looking slightly overwhelmed by the cosmic shitstorm he'd walked into.
"Tell me," Jay said, laser-focusing on the newcomer, "why does Captain America matter to the world?"
Coulson blinked. "I'm... sorry?"
"Humor me," Jay said, his smile becoming genuinely warm for the first time. "Why does Steve Rogers matter? Not as a symbol or political tool, but as a human being. What makes him worth giving a damn about?"
Coulson glanced at Fury, who gave a curt nod. The agent straightened his tie.
"Well," Coulson began carefully, "Captain America represents the absolute best of what we can be. Living proof that it's not about the power you have, but what you choose to do with it."
As he spoke, Coulson's professional mask began cracking, revealing raw, genuine passion underneath.
"He stood up to bullies when he was ninety pounds soaking wet, and kept standing up when he could punch through steel. He never forgot where he came from or who he was really fighting for. He looked at the serum and saw responsibility, not opportunity."
The words came faster now, years of suppressed hero-worship bubbling to the surface.
"He's the man who threw himself on what he thought was a live grenade to save complete strangers—people who'd shown him nothing but contempt. Who crashed a plane into the fucking Arctic rather than let innocent people die, even though he'd just found the love of his life."
Coulson's voice rose, carefully maintained composure giving way to something raw and beautiful and honest. "He's the guy who proves beyond doubt that good men can stay good, even in a world that rewards the complete opposite. He's proof that heroes can exist—"
"Coulson," Fury interrupted, but there was unmistakable fondness in his voice.
"Right. Sorry, sir." Coulson straightened his tie, looking embarrassed.
Jay was grinning like a maniac now, the expression completely transforming his face. "Oh, Phil. I'm about to make your entire fucking year."
Both SHIELD agents looked at him with electric tension.
Jay let the moment stretch, savoring their attention and the power it represented. Right now, he had Nick Fury and Phil Coulson exactly where he wanted them—curious, off-balance, and desperate for information only he could provide.
"Tell me, Agent Coulson," Jay said, his smile growing wider and infinitely more dangerous, "how would you like to meet your hero?"
The silence that followed was absolutely fucking perfect.
[A/N]: Okay — I may have gone a little overboard with the swearing, my bad. Also, this one's double the usual length, so if you enjoyed it please show some love. I took a bunch of your advice and tried to work it into the chapter — did it land for you? What did you think?