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Chapter 41 - Lines in the Sand

[A/N]: Keep those Power Stones coming, and to keep spirits high, I've dropped a Triple-length chapter for you guys. đź’Ą

@Gemaxter, where are you, my guy??

The last spoonful of tiramisu disappeared from Domino's plate as she leaned back in her chair, her fingers playing with Emma's diamond nail like a worry stone. The private dining room had grown quieter around them, other diners having filtered out into Manhattan's glittering night.

"So," she said, her voice dropping to that husky register that made Jay's pulse quicken, "my place or yours? I'm thinking we could continue this... treasure hunt you started."

Her foot found his ankle under the table, sliding up his calf with deliberate pressure. The gesture was subtle enough that the remaining waitstaff wouldn't notice, but unmistakable in its intent.

Jay felt his body respond immediately, heat pooling low in his stomach as her mismatched eyes held his with unmistakable invitation. The diamond nail caught the candlelight as she rolled it between her fingers, and for a moment, he could picture those same fingers trailing across his skin.

"Rain check," he said, the words feeling like gravel in his throat.

Domino's foot stopped its exploration. "Rain check?" Her eyebrows shot up. "After that dessert? After you literally stole diamonds from another woman for me?" She gestured at the empty plates between them. "Honey, I was ready to drag you out of here twenty minutes ago."

Jay's smile was strained as he signaled for the check. "Trust me, you have no idea how much I want to." His hand found hers across the table, thumb tracing her knuckles. "But my last breakdown was three hours ago, remember? This feels too good, too fast for a first date."

"Since when do you strike me as the type to take things slow?"

Jay's grip tightened fractionally. "You deserve better than a rebound from my psychological crisis."

Domino studied his face for a long moment, her expression shifting from frustrated desire to something softer. "You know, most guys use that line to get out of commitment, not into it."

"I'm not most guys."

"No," she agreed, bringing his hand to her lips to press a soft kiss to his palm. "You're really not."

Twenty minutes later, Jay's Tom Ford suit hung in his penthouse closet, replaced by the Power Broker's tactical gear. The transformation was more than cosmetic—the moment the mask settled over his features, his entire bearing shifted. The conflicted man from the restaurant disappeared, replaced by something harder, more focused.

Bobby waited in the alley behind the building, his own transformation into Lasso complete.

"So, kiddo," Bobby said as they made their way toward the underground entrance, "didn't I tell you not to mix dates with work? And look what you did, calling me after striking out—"

"Too good, too fast," Jay cut him off, adjusting his mask. "But duty calls, old man."

"Classic." Bobby shook his head. "You sure you're good for this? What we're about to do down there..."

"The Morlocks need someone who'll actually fight for them."

"And when the X-Men show up?"

"Then they'll learn some lines can't be uncrossed." Jay pulled his mask down fully. "Masks on. Time to work."

The main gathering chamber buzzed with energy Jay had never felt before in the tunnels. Nearly every Morlock in the community had assembled, filling the space from wall to wall—some still bearing their mutations, others restored to human appearance thanks to Masque's unwilling cooperation.

Callisto stood at the chamber's center, her scarred face showing genuine hope for the first time in years. Beautiful Dreamer flanked her on one side, Sunder on the other, his massive frame casting shadows across the stone walls.

"Bring them out," Jay's distorted voice echoed through the chamber.

The crowd parted as Caliban led a procession into the space. First came Masque, his surgically scarred form moving with reluctant dignity. He'd spent the hours working tirelessly to restore normal appearances to those who wanted them—his penance for years of inflicting his own trauma on others. Behind him came the Hellfire prisoners: Emma Frost's white suit stained and wrinkled, Shinobi Shaw nursing a head wound, Harold Leland limping, Donald Pierce with circuitry sparking from recent damage, and Sage looking around with the dazed expression of someone suddenly incomplete.

"Three hours ago," Jay called out, his voice carrying to every corner of the chamber, "I made you a promise. I said I would give you hope, not pity. That you would stand together as a community, not hide as outcasts."

He gestured to Masque, who stood straighter despite his obvious discomfort. "This man betrayed you. Twisted your faces to match his own self-hatred. But even he can find redemption through service to others."

The crowd looked at their restored neighbors and cheered, raising their voices in the first unified expression of joy the tunnels had heard in decades.

"We are not monsters," Jay continued, his words resonating from the walls themselves. "We are not freaks. We are not forgotten. We are a community, and communities protect their own."

The cheering grew louder, voices echoing off stone until the chamber rang like a cathedral.

"Shut up, all of you!" Emma Frost's voice cut through the celebration like a blade. Despite her disheveled appearance, she radiated imperious authority. "Do you have any idea who you're dealing with? I am Emma Frost of the Hellfire Club. My resources could buy and sell every one of your pathetic lives a thousand times over."

Shinobi Shaw straightened beside her, wincing but matching her arrogant tone. "Father will tear this city apart looking for me. The Shaw fortune, the connections we've built—you're all dead already, you just don't know it."

"The Hellfire Club has existed for decades," Pierce added, his cybernetic eye whirring as it focused on Jay. "We've survived wars, revolutions, the rise and fall of governments. What makes you think a handful of sewer rats can threaten us?"

Harold Leland laughed, a sound like grinding stone. "I've crushed buildings with my bare hands. Once my powers return—"

The laughter died in his throat as Jay stepped closer, his suppression field expanding like an invisible wave of negation. Leland's expression shifted from confident threat to dawning horror as he felt his mass manipulation abilities simply... stop. Pierce's cybernetics remained functional, but Shinobi's phasing flickered and failed, Emma's diamond transformation refused to activate, and Sage was too dazed to even notice the change.

"Powers won't return," Jay said simply, his voice carrying electronic authority that made even the stones seem to listen. "Not while you're in my presence."

He tilted his head slightly, the gesture somehow managing to radiate casual dominance. "Did you really think you could threaten my people and walk away? How adorably naive."

Emma's composure cracked first. "You want money? I can transfer fifty million to any account you name. Untraceable, no questions asked."

"Power?" Shinobi tried next, desperation creeping into his voice. "Join us instead. The Hellfire Club could use someone with your... unique abilities. Full membership, seat at the inner circle table."

When Jay didn't respond, Emma's facade crumbled entirely. "Sex, then. You want me?" She stepped closer, her voice dropping to a purr despite the dirt on her clothes and the fear in her eyes. "I can be whatever you need me to be. Whatever sick fantasies you have about the White Queen—"

"Diamond is forever," Jay quoted back at her, his mask's modulation making the words sound like judgment itself. "Isn't that what you said? Just another fossil with a shiny coat."

The threat hung in the air like a blade, and Emma's face went ashen.

The Morlocks' voices began to rise around them like a gathering storm. "Kill them!" someone shouted. "Make them pay!" called another. The bloodlust was building, feeding on decades of accumulated rage and fresh wounds.

Sunder's massive voice boomed over the crowd. "How many others are still missing? How many would have died in their laboratories?"

The calls for execution grew louder, more unified. Jay could feel the mob's energy building toward a tipping point that would end in blood and screaming.

"Not happening, bub."

Logan stepped into the torchlight, claws extended, adamantium gleaming like liquid death. Behind him came the rest of the X-Men—Storm floating with her white hair flowing, Cyclops with his hand hovering near his visor, Jean Grey's eyes beginning to glow with phoenix fire, Rogue floating behind Storm with absorbed energies crackling, Colossus in his metallic form reflecting the flames, Nightcrawler perched on a wall outcropping like a blue gargoyle, Beast hanging from a support beam with predatory grace, Kitty Pryde phasing through the stone floor, and Angel's wings spread wide enough to cast shadows across half the chamber.

Professor Xavier's hoverchair hummed quietly as he entered, his bald head gleaming, his presence commanding attention through sheer force of will and decades of earned authority.

The Morlocks' reaction was immediate and fucking beautiful to watch.

About a tenth of them—mostly those who remembered Storm's leadership—dropped to one knee in instinctive deference. Old habits died hard, and Ororo had once been their goddess made flesh.

But the others, led by Beautiful Dreamer and Sunder, stepped forward with outright hostility radiating from every pore. "You don't get to judge us now," Beautiful Dreamer called out, her voice carrying across the stone. "Where were you when they came for Masque? Where were you when we were rotting down here, forgotten and abandoned?"

Sunder's massive frame blocked the torchlight as he moved closer. "Storm, you left us. You chose them—" he gestured at the X-Men with barely contained fury, "—over us. You don't get to return now and dictate our justice."

Those who'd knelt began to rise uncertainly, caught between old loyalties and new realities, watching their former goddess face the consequences of years of benign neglect.

Logan's claws extended another inch, catching the firelight. "I don't care about your politics, kid. Nobody gets executed on my watch."

"Kid?" Jay's electronic laugh was like broken glass wrapped in silk. He turned to face Wolverine fully, and something in his posture made the legendary X-Man's instincts scream danger. "James Howlett. Born 1832. You want to talk about age, old man?"

The casual use of Logan's real name—a name buried deeper than most government secrets—sent ripples of shock through both teams. Logan's claws retracted slightly, his enhanced senses telling him he was facing something far more dangerous than he'd initially calculated.

"Touching," Jay's electronic voice cut through the tension like a blade. "Tell me, Wolverine, how many people have you executed? How many throats have you opened? How many lives have you ended because someone told you they deserved to die?"

Logan's jaw worked silently, his feral instincts screaming at him that the masked figure represented a threat beyond his considerable experience.

"We came for Sage," Professor Xavier said, his cultured voice carrying clearly through the chamber despite the growing tension. "Tessa—the woman you know as Sage—is our operative. She's been undercover in the Hellfire Club for years, gathering intelligence on their activities."

Storm floated higher, her voice carrying the authority of thunder itself. "This isn't justice, Callisto. This is vengeance. And vengeance solves nothing."

Jay turned to face her directly, his mask reflecting the torchlight like polished death. "Storm, before coming here to lecture us about justice, did you ever ask yourself why it escalated to this?" He gestured to the restored Morlocks with theatrical precision. "How many years did you tell them to wait? To be patient? To trust that things would get better while they rotted in darkness?"

Storm's eyes began to glow with nascent lightning. "I gave them hope—"

"You gave them empty fucking promises." Jay's voice carried across the chamber with electronic authority that made everyone present feel the weight of judgment. "Hope without action is just another word for lies. How many more would have died while you negotiated with people who see mutants as experimental animals?"

Cyclops stepped forward, his hand moving to his visor with practiced precision. "Stand down. This ends now."

"Does it?" Jay's laugh echoed strangely through his voice modulator, sounding like broken glass and dark promises.

The X-Men powered up in perfect unison—a display of coordination that spoke to years of training together. Jean's eyes blazed with blue telepathic fire, Rogue's fists clenched as absorbed energies rippled beneath her skin like caged lightning, Colossus's metallic form reflected the torchlight in patterns of liquid steel, and Storm's hair began to whip in winds that had no earthly source.

Jay's suppression field expanded outward like an invisible sphere of negation, thirty feet in diameter, washing over the assembled X-Men like a cold wave of absolute denial.

"You know what's funny about legends?" Jay said conversationally as reality rewrote itself around him. "They're only impressive until someone better shows up."

The effect was immediate and absolutely devastating to watch.

Iceman's frost evaporated instantly, leaving Bobby Drake staring at his suddenly normal hands in disbelief. Jean's glow died like a snuffed candle, and she staggered as the vast psychic energies she'd been channeling simply ceased to exist. Cyclops's hand flew to his visor as his optic blasts cut out entirely, leaving him as powerless as any baseline human. Storm dropped from the air like a stone, landing hard on the chamber floor as her weather manipulation vanished without a trace.

Only Beast and Nightcrawler remained visibly unchanged—their physical mutations beyond the reach of Jay's power suppression, though Kurt's teleportation abilities were as dead as the rest.

"Mein Gott," Kurt breathed, his German accent thick with shock and something approaching religious terror. "What has happened to us?"

"What the hell—" Wolverine snarled, his claws retracting against his will, leaving him staring at normal human hands for the first time in decades.

Jay walked through the chaos like he owned it, completely unbothered by the fact that he'd just neutered the most famous superhero team on the planet. "Feels weird, doesn't it? Being normal. Being... limited." His electronic voice carried a hint of amusement. "Welcome to what everyone's Tuesday."

Beast's brilliant mind raced like an overclocked computer, his enhanced intellect working overtime despite the chaos erupting around him. Something nagged at him—a pattern he couldn't quite identify, an itch his scientific mind couldn't scratch. The suppression was too precise, too selective, too fucking convenient. And the way this "Power Broker" spoke, the tactical knowledge he displayed, the intimate familiarity with their codenames and abilities...

"Most fascinating," Beast muttered under his breath, his keen eyes studying Jay's masked form with the intensity of a researcher examining a particularly intriguing specimen. "The specificity of this power negation suggests an intimate knowledge of our individual abilities. Almost as if..."

Jay's voice cut through the chamber with electronic authority that made everyone present straighten unconsciously. "My name is Power Broker." The words carried weight—not just sound, but presence itself. "And I protect those who cannot protect themselves."

He gestured to the restored Morlocks around him, his voice softening with genuine care. "These people—my people—have suffered enough. They've been hunted, experimented on, treated like animals. That ends now."

 "Masque has the ability to reshape flesh at a molecular level. The Hellfire Club kidnapped him specifically to study that power—to see if they could replicate it, weaponize it, turn it into another tool for their sick experiments."

Xavier's wheelchair hummed as he tried to move closer, but his telepathy remained completely suppressed, leaving him more isolated than he'd been since childhood. "You can't simply execute them. There are legal channels, proper procedures—"

"Oh, Charles." Jay's electronic voice dripped with condescending amusement. "The great Professor X, reduced to begging. Tell me, how does it feel to be just another man? No telepathy means no way to make people do what you want them to do."

The casual cruelty of the observation made several X-Men flinch, but Xavier's isolation was complete—he couldn't even sense their emotional support.

"Legal channels that have ignored every complaint, every missing person report, every piece of evidence we've provided," Callisto interrupted, her scarred face set in hard lines that spoke to years of disappointment and betrayal. "Professor, with all due respect, your legal channels failed us long before Power Broker arrived."

Logan lunged forward despite his powerless state, his instincts and training still making him dangerous even without his claws. Decades of combat experience didn't disappear with his mutation—he was still a predator in human skin.

But before he could reach Jay, a small figure stepped between them with the kind of courage that stopped hearts.

Jimmy, previously called Leech, his face now perfectly human thanks to Jay's intervention, placed himself directly in Wolverine's path. The twelve-year-old child, despite his years underground living in darkness and fear, looked up at the legendary X-Man without flinching.

"Please don't hurt him," Jimmy said quietly, his young voice carrying clearly through the chamber. "Power Broker gave me back my face. He gave me friends. He gave me hope."

Jay placed a gentle hand on the boy's shoulder—the gesture somehow managing to be both protective and utterly menacing. "You heard him, Logan. Are you really going to hurt a child to get to me? Is that what heroes do now?"

The simple words hit Logan like a physical blow, stopping him mid-charge. Around them, the other X-Men shifted uncomfortably, realizing they'd been outmaneuvered by a twelve-year-old's courage and their enemy's tactical brilliance.

Jay's voice softened as he addressed the boy. "Jimmy, step back. Let the adults handle this." The electronic modulation couldn't hide the genuine affection in his tone. "You've already shown more bravery than most grown men ever will."

One by one, other restored Morlocks stepped forward, forming a human barrier between the X-Men and their chosen leader. Men and women who had hidden in shadows for years now stood tall, their normal faces reflecting the torchlight as they made their choice crystal fucking clear.

Jay's voice carried across the chamber, no longer electronic and cold, but warm with genuine pride. "Look at them. Look at these people who were told they were monsters, freaks, unwanted. They're standing together. They're standing strong. They're standing for each other."

Caliban's pale, gaunt voice carried with ethereal authority. "We lived in darkness because the world above told us we were monsters. Power Broker didn't just give us hope—when that hope was stolen, he gave us the courage to fight for it ourselves."

Sunder's massive frame cast shadows as he spoke. "You want to know why we follow him? Because he's the first person who ever asked what we wanted, instead of telling us what we should accept."

A young woman, her face now showing the beauty that had been hidden beneath mutation-induced growths for decades, stepped forward with tears streaming down restored cheeks. "Storm, I knelt to you because I remembered when you led us with wisdom and strength. But leadership means knowing when to step aside for someone who can do what you cannot."

The X-Men found themselves facing a wall of determined people—not the broken outcasts they'd expected to find, but a unified community ready to defend their chosen protector. Fighting would mean harming innocents, and every hero in the chamber knew it. They'd built their entire fucking lives around protecting people exactly like these.

Storm rose from where she'd fallen, her powerless form somehow still radiating the kind of authority that came from being worshipped as a goddess. "I order you to stand down. All of you."

"You order?" Beautiful Dreamer's laugh held no humor, just bitter disappointment. "Ororo, you haven't been our leader for years. You forfeited that right when you chose Xavier's dream over our reality. You don't get to issue orders now."

Even those Morlocks who had initially knelt remained standing. The community that had once looked to Storm for guidance had found new leadership, and old loyalties meant nothing in the face of fresh hope.

"We're taking Sage," Xavier said firmly, his chair humming as he tried to move closer to where the dazed telepath sat in confused silence. "She's our responsibility."

Jay's laugh echoed strangely through his mask's modulation, sounding like broken promises and shattered illusions. "Your responsibility? Charles, do you even know what Selene did to her?"

The chamber fell silent except for the crackle of torches and the sound of hearts beating too fast.

"Every time Sage used her telepathic abilities to report back to you, she opened her mind to psychic channels that Selene had already corrupted with centuries of dark magic. Your precious agent has been feeding the Black Queen information about X-Men activities for years without even knowing it. She's been an unwitting double agent since her first goddamn mission."

Xavier's face went pale as old parchment. "That's impossible. I would have detected—"

"Would you?" Jay's electronic voice dripped with contempt. "The great Professor X, who missed Sebastian Shaw's influence over Emma Frost?"

He gestured dismissively at the powerless telepath. "Charles, your track record for detecting psychic manipulation is fucking laughable. Maybe stick to running a school instead of pretending to be a spymaster."

The casual dismissal of Xavier—one of the most respected figures in the mutant community—sent shock waves through both teams. Storm's jaw clenched, Scott's fists tightened, but without their powers, they were just angry humans watching their mentor get verbally eviscerated.

The revelation hit the X-Men like a physical assault. Scott's hand fell away from his powerless visor as implications crashed through his tactical mind. Jean staggered as she tried to process years of potentially compromised missions. Storm's fists clenched uselessly at her sides as lightning that would never come again.

"How long?" Beast asked quietly, his intellectual curiosity overriding his shock while his mind continued to work at the puzzle before him. Something about this entire situation felt orchestrated, too convenient, too perfectly designed to fracture their team. "How long has this been going on?"

"That's for you to figure out, Doctor," Jay replied, and Beast's enhanced hearing caught something in the electronic modulation—a familiarity that made his scientific mind scream warnings.

Beast's eyes narrowed behind his glasses as pattern recognition algorithms ran wild in his enhanced intellect. The way this masked figure had just addressed him, the intimate knowledge of their codenames, their individual abilities, their personal histories... his scientific mind was screaming that something fundamental didn't add up. But what? What was he missing?

The chamber fell into heavy silence. X-Men faced Morlocks across an ideological divide that seemed impossible to bridge. Jay's suppression field maintained the balance—the only thing keeping this from becoming a massacre.

Then a new voice cut through the tension.

"I need all of you to stand down. Right now."

Nick Fury stepped into the torchlight, long coat sweeping behind him. A full SHIELD strike team followed, weapons ready but not aimed. A third player had entered the game.

"Well," Fury said, taking in the scene with his single eye, "this is exactly as fucked up as I expected."

He looked from the powerless X-Men to the unified Morlocks to the terrified Hellfire prisoners. "Power Broker, X-Men, prisoners—nobody moves until we sort this out."

The standoff was now three-way. In the flickering torchlight, silence held three factions in perfect, dangerous balance.

[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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