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The warm July air bit at Jay's face as he stepped through Xavier's front doors, satisfaction radiating through him like warmth from a good whiskey. Hours of careful negotiation had netted him access to Beast's MGH research, Rogue's gratitude, and the grudging respect of the most powerful telepath on Earth. Even Logan had looked impressed by the end.
'Check and mate,' Jay thought, fishing his car keys from his jacket pocket. The Datsun 240Z sat pristine in the circular drive, chrome gleaming under the mansion's security lights. 'Fury's got his arctic expedition, Xavier's got his face-saving compromise, and I've got genetic research that could help me upgrade my body.'
He paused at the driver's door, breathing in the night air. The grounds stretched out before him—manicured lawns and ancient oak trees. Behind him, warm light spilled from the mansion's windows, where students finished homework or gathered in common areas, probably gossiping about the mysterious doctor who could suppress mutant abilities.
'Got to say I've finally got the board under control,' he mused, sliding the key toward the lock. 'Now I just need to—'
His danger sense exploded.
Too late.
A blur of white slammed into him like a freight train, the punch connecting with his left temple with the wet crack of bone meeting unstoppable force. The world tilted, spun, then shattered as Jay's body crashed through the mansion's ornate wooden gates. Splinters and iron hinges scattered like shrapnel as he tumbled across the marble foyer, students' screams piercing the air around him.
"GET THE KIDS UPSTAIRS!" Scott's voice cut through the chaos. "NOW!"
Jay's vision swam as he tried to push himself up, ears ringing like cathedral bells. Blood trickled from his hairline, warm and sticky against his palm. Through the haze, he caught glimpses of students fleeing—someone teleporting them away in puffs of smoke, others racing up the grand staircase with terror written across young faces.
'What the hell—'
A figure stepped through the destroyed entrance with the measured calm of divine judgment. White armor gleamed under the foyer's crystal chandelier, flowing cape rippling in the night breeze. The hood cast shadows across features that seemed carved from marble and moonlight, but the eyes...the eyes burned with silver fire.
Moon Knight.
Jay pressed a glowing green palm to his temple, letting his healing aura knit damaged tissue back together. The healing warmth spread through his skull, clearing the fog of concussion even as his mind raced to process the impossibility before him.
"Who the hell are you?" Cyclops demanded, ruby quartz visor already glowing with barely contained optic force. "And why are you attacking us?"
The figure's head turned with predatory precision, studying each X-Man as they took defensive positions around the foyer. Logan's claws extended with metallic snicks, Storm's eyes went white as barometric pressure plummeted, and Jean's hair began to lift with telekinetic energy.
When Moon Knight spoke, his voice carried the weight of divine authority, cold and absolute.
"I am the Fist of Khonshu, avatar of the Moon's will." He stepped forward, mystical weapons materializing in his hands—crescent darts that gleamed with sharpness. "The X-Men stand accused of crimes against the gods of Egypt. Your battle with the false god Apocalypse laid waste to Cairo, desecrated sacred sites, and weakened the faith of millions."
Xavier's wheelchair whispered across marble as he rolled into view, telepathic probe already reaching out. "The Apocalypse crisis required—"
"SILENCE." Moon Knight's roar seemed to shake the foundations. "The devastation you caused damaged the balance between life and afterlife. Ancient temples reduced to rubble. Believers turning from the old ways in fear and confusion. You took no responsibility. Made no recompense. The debt remains unpaid."
Jay's healing finished its work, leaving him clear-headed enough to understand what he was witnessing. 'This is about X-Men: Apocalypse. The timeline's shifting—Moon Knight should be years away from manifesting, but gods operate on different schedules than mortals.'
"We saved the world," Scott said, optic blast building behind his visor.
"At what cost?" Moon Knight's cape billowed as power gathered around him. "Khonshu has rendered judgment. The guilty must be punished."
Logan snarled, adamantium claws gleaming. "Funny way of introducing yourself, bub."
The fight erupted like lightning.
Logan struck first—three hundred pounds of Canadian fury and unbreakable metal. But Moon Knight moved like liquid shadow, sidestepping the wild haymaker and driving an elbow into Logan's ribs. Even reinforced bones creaked under the impact. The Wolverine grunted, pain flashing across his features as mystical crescent blades left shallow cuts that healed slower than usual.
Cyclops fired. Ruby-red destruction lanced across the foyer, and Moon Knight's armor absorbed most of the blast—but the force still staggered him backward, armor smoking. In that split second of recovery, a gauntleted fist caught Scott square in the solar plexus, doubling him over.
Storm called down lightning. This time Moon Knight had to dive and roll, the electrical assault forcing him behind a marble pillar as bolts scorched the floor around him. "Impressive," he acknowledged, genuine respect threading through his voice. "But divine will cannot be so easily deterred."
"Professor!" Jean's voice cracked with desperation as she raised both hands, telekinetic force slamming into Moon Knight like an invisible sledgehammer.
The armored figure launched off his feet and crashed into the far wall, armor cracking audibly against stone. He pushed himself up slowly, clearly feeling every inch of the impact. "The Phoenix's flames may burn bright," he said, voice slightly strained, "but moonlight is patient."
That's when Xavier made his play.
The Professor's eyes rolled back as he launched the most intense psychic assault he could muster, telepathic force hitting Moon Knight's mind with enough power to shatter ordinary consciousness. For a moment, Xavier's probe seemed to penetrate the mental defenses, slipping past the maze of fractured personalities.
"Multiple minds..." Xavier muttered, sweat beading on his forehead as he fought through the mental labyrinth. "But still mortal consciousness at its core. I can reach—"
Then something else stirred in the depths of Moon Knight's psyche.
A presence vast and ancient uncoiled from the shadows of Marc Spector's mind—Khonshu himself, the Moon God's consciousness awakening like a titan from slumber. Xavier's telepathic probe, which had been carefully navigating the fractured personalities, suddenly found itself in the presence of divine awareness that stretched back millennia.
"MORTAL." The voice thundered through the psychic link, not heard but FELT, reverberating through Xavier's very soul. "YOU DARE INVADE THE MIND OF MY CHOSEN?"
Xavier's confident expression cracked as he realized what he was facing. This wasn't just a mutant with multiple personalities—there was something genuinely divine lurking in the mental landscape, something that made his telepathic abilities feel like a candle flame before a hurricane.
"Impossible," Xavier gasped, his psychic probe recoiling as Khonshu's presence expanded, filling every corner of Moon Knight's consciousness with silver fire. "No mind should contain—"
"I AM KHONSHU, LORD OF THE MOON, PROTECTOR OF NIGHT TRAVELERS, GOD OF VENGEANCE." The divine voice pressed against Xavier's mind like a weight that threatened to crush his sanity. "AND YOU, CHARLES XAVIER, HAVE MADE A GRAVE ERROR."
"Did you think," Moon Knight said, his voice now layered with four distinct tones—Marc, Steven, Jake, and something infinitely older, "that an avatar's mind would be defenseless against invasion?"
Xavier's scream was telepathic but somehow audible, the Professor's chair rolling backward as divine fire burned through his mental probe. The psychic backlash was devastating—not just the failure of his assault, but the terrifying realization that he had touched something that existed on a completely different level of reality.
"Suppress him!" Jean shouted at Jay, Phoenix's fire beginning to manifest around her silhouette—not the overwhelming cosmic force, but the more controlled version she was learning to master. "Like you did with Rogue!"
Jay was already moving, adrenaline and desperation overriding tactical thinking. If he could just reach Moon Knight, get his hands on the armor, maybe his power could cut through whatever divine enhancement—
"JAY!" Beast's warning came too late.
Jay's palm slammed against Moon Knight's breastplate, and nothing happened. His power flowed out like water hitting stone, meeting some fundamental resistance that made his teeth ache.
'Oh shit! How could I forget? Can't affect magic-infused abilities because of the damn drawback!'
The "No Arcane" limitation that had seemed like such a minor drawback suddenly became a death sentence.
Moon Knight's hooded head tilted with predatory interest. "Interesting. You attempted something." The avatar's gauntleted hand closed around Jay's throat, but his grip was weaker than before, the earlier battle having taken its toll. "The god judges you as well, young one."
What followed was brutal.
Moon Knight, clearly fatigued from fighting multiple X-Men simultaneously, still landed solid hits but lacked his earlier devastating precision. A hook to the ribs cracked bone with an audible snap. An uppercut to the jaw rattled Jay's brain against his skull like dice in a cup. But his danger sense, now fully active, helped him twist away from the worst damage, turning killing blows into painful but survivable impacts.
Through the haze of pain, Jay managed to trigger a discreet SOS device—a gift from Reed Richards that would transmit GPS coordinates and vital signs directly to the Baxter Building. Please let someone be monitoring the scanners...
Moon Knight noticed the signal but was too engaged with an increasingly aggressive Jean Grey to stop it immediately. "Calling for help?" The avatar's voice held dark amusement tinged with exhaustion. "Khonshu's judgment cannot be delayed by mortal interference."
The final confrontation came when Jean's Phoenix fire flared brighter, forcing Moon Knight to make a tactical decision. Rather than continue a battle he might not win against multiple opponents, he delivered a precise strike to Jay's temple and began his withdrawal.
Jay's consciousness spiraled down into merciful darkness, his last sight the figure in white retreating through the destroyed entrance, his mission of delivering divine judgment incomplete.
Jay woke to medical equipment humming and the smell of ozone. The Baxter Building's medical bay.
"Easy there, Doc." Johnny Storm appeared beside the bed, concern tempering his usual grin. "You've been out for six hours. Reed was starting to wonder if that psycho in the Halloween costume scrambled your brains permanently."
Jay tried to sit up and immediately regretted it as his ribs reminded him of Moon Knight's beating. "How did I get here?"
"Your SOS beacon," Reed called from across the lab, studying holographic displays. "We reached Xavier's mansion in twelve minutes."
"What happened?"
"Awful mess," Ben Grimm rumbled from the doorway. "Gates smashed, but most of the X-Men were back on their feet."
Sue shimmered into visibility. "Jean Grey was maintaining a defensive position when we arrived. The armored figure had already withdrawn."
Reed pulled up a holographic replay. "Moon Knight, as they called him, retreated in an orderly fashion—more message than destruction."
"And Xavier?"
"Conscious but shaken. His telepathic probe left him disoriented for hours."
"He was collecting a divine debt," Jay said, managing to sit upright. "Something about their battle with Apocalypse damaging sacred sites and weakening faith in the old gods."
"Interesting, are they divine beings or advanced entities with different genetic and mental frameworks?" Reed mused.
"Yeah, well, nobody beats up our consultant without answering to us," Johnny said. Ben cracked his knuckles like breaking concrete.
But Jay's mind was racing. He'd walked into Xavier's mansion feeling like a chess master, confident in his knowledge and planning. Then Moon Knight appeared—someone who shouldn't exist yet—and systematically dismantled his assumptions.
'I've been playing it safe, he thought grimly. Relying on knowing the stories, thinking I could control everything without real risk. But this isn't a comic book or a movie. This is real, the timeline is changing, and I'm nowhere near strong enough.'
Moon Knight had been weakened by fighting multiple X-Men and still rendered Jay helpless. His power suppression useless against magic, his danger sense insufficient, his healing barely keeping up.
Every major threat suddenly felt imminent rather than safely distant. And he wasn't ready.
"Thanks for the rescue," Jay said, swinging his legs over the bed with new determination. "I owe you one."
"You don't owe us anything," Sue replied. "That's what friends do."
At the door, Reed stopped him. "Jay. Be careful out there."
Jay's expression had shifted from confident manipulator to something harder, more focused. "Reed, I need to ask you something. How quickly could we accelerate my enhancement program? I managed to get Xavier's Mutant Growth Hormone research—all of it."
Reed's eyebrows rose. "That's significant acceleration. What's prompted this urgency?"
Jay glanced at the New York skyline, thinking of gods and cosmic forces that didn't follow schedules. "I've realized I can't afford to take things slow anymore. The world is bigger and more dangerous than I thought, and I need to be ready for whatever comes next."
[A/N]: I write across multiple fandoms. Support my writing and get early access to 20+ chapters, exclusive content, and bonus material at my P@treon - Max-Striker.
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