The dark, still water of the East River mirrored the sleepless glow of the city skyline. But beneath that glittering surface, a relentless and deadly undercurrent was flowing, and right now, it was pulling Leo Grant under.
He was crouched in the oppressive shadow of a disused dock, the air thick with the smell of brine, diesel, and decay. He bit down hard on the end of a bandage he'd lifted from a 24-hour pharmacy, his teeth and his one good hand working clumsily to tie a knot over the wound in his left arm.
The bullet had torn a deeper furrow than he'd first thought. A gruesome, spiderweb pattern of red was already soaking through the clean white gauze.
"Damn it…" he hissed through clenched teeth, pulling the final knot tight. The world swam in a haze of white-hot pain. He squeezed his eyes shut, fighting the urge to just pass out right there on the rotting pier. He couldn't stop. Not here.
On an old wooden crate beside him, the metal sphere he'd stolen pulsed with a soft, hypnotic blue light, like a captive star. Leo reached for it carefully, turning it over in his good hand. The intricate patterns etched into its surface weren't just for decoration; they looked like microscopic circuits, or maybe conduits for some kind of energy he couldn't begin to comprehend.
Tesseract technology, a thought flashed through his mind, sharp and clear through the fog of pain. He knew from his past life's obsession with Marvel lore that Hydra had spent years trying to harness the Tesseract's power during World War II. If this was a weapon derived from that research…
As if responding to the thought, the sphere vibrated in his palm, the blue light flaring. Leo almost dropped it. More terrifying than the light was the feeling that came with it—a strange, thrumming resonance that seemed to travel up his arm and settle deep in his bones. It felt like the device was listening to him, like some dormant part of him had just woken it up.
The distant sound of dogs barking, followed by the clipped shouts of men, shattered the night.
Leo's head snapped up. Across the water, he could see the sweeping beams of powerful flashlights cutting through the darkness. They'd found him. Hydra's hounds were closing in.
There was no more time to think. Leo shoved the sphere into his jacket pocket, the Glock feeling heavy and alien in his hand. He moved low and fast, slipping between the massive concrete supports beneath the dock. This whole industrial wasteland was a maze of abandoned warehouses and derelict factories. If he could just make it through to the subway station on the other side, he might have a chance.
"Target's last known position was in this sector. Full sweep," a voice crackled over a walkie-talkie, sounding unnervingly close in the quiet night.
Leo held his breath, pressing his back against a damp, cold wall. Every cell in his body was screaming, but his mind had gone preternaturally calm. It was a bizarre, out-of-body feeling, as if some primal survival instinct had hijacked his system.
He rounded a corner and froze solid.
Not thirty feet away, two agents in full tactical gear were searching an abandoned building, their backs turned to him.
He began to retreat, moving one slow, deliberate step at a time, but his foot came down on a rotten wooden board.
Crack.
The sound wasn't loud, but in the dead silence, it was like a gunshot. The two agents spun around instantly, their flashlight beams slicing through the dark and pinning him in their glare.
"Target spotted!"
Leo didn't hesitate. He raised the Glock, the instincts he didn't know he had taking over, and fired twice. The recoil jolted his entire arm, but he saw one of the agents stumble back as a bullet slammed into his shoulder. The body armor saved him, but the impact bought Leo a precious second.
He turned and ran. Bullets chewed up the brick wall behind him, spraying dust and debris into the air. He ducked into a narrow alley, his lungs burning, only to find himself staring at a graffiti-covered brick wall. A dead end.
"Damn it!" He spun around. The two agents were already at the mouth of the alley, their weapons raised, the tactical lights on their guns blinding him.
"It's over, Mr. Grant. Surrender," one of them said, his voice devoid of emotion. "There's nowhere left to run."
Leo leaned against the cold brick, his breath coming in ragged gasps. He could feel the metal sphere in his pocket growing hotter, its thrumming vibration intensifying, as if it were feeding on his own fear and desperation.
He was out of options.
Unless…
A wild, desperate grin spread across Leo's face. He let his hand slip into his pocket, his fingers closing around the sphere.
"Hail Hydra!" he yelled into the darkness.
The agents flinched. The sheer shock of hearing their own sacred words from the mouth of their target made them hesitate, their gun barrels dipping for a fraction of a second.
It was the only opening he was going to get.
Leo ripped the glowing metal sphere from his pocket. "You want to kill me?" he sneered, his voice ringing with a madness he didn't know he possessed. "Get in line!"
He threw the sphere with all his might, not at them, but at the ground right between them. He immediately curled into a ball in the corner of the alley, shutting his eyes and bracing for an explosion that never came.
Instead of a deafening blast, a wave of silent, dazzling blue light washed over everything. Leo felt a massive wave of energy radiate from the point of impact, but it wasn't a shockwave. It was a strange, almost gentle pressure, like it was trying to push him out of reality itself.
He risked opening his eyes. The agents were caught in a field of shimmering blue energy, their bodies dissolving, breaking apart into countless pixels of light. It was horrifyingly beautiful. At his feet, a complex geometric pattern was etching itself onto the grimy pavement in lines of brilliant light—a summoning circle, straight out of a fantasy novel.
"A magic circle?" he murmured, his mind reeling. "Did… did the Ancient One find me?"
The energy wave began to spread toward him. He tried to scramble away, but his legs wouldn't respond. He looked down and saw that at some point in the chase, a bullet had torn through his calf. His pant leg was soaked in blood.
"Well," he thought with a strange sense of calm, "if it's the Sorcerer Supreme, I should be okay, right…?" He smiled bitterly as the blue energy washed over him.
A wall of light erupted from the magic circle at his feet, enclosing him in a shimmering cylinder that seemed to reach for the sky. His body began to lift off the ground.
"Hey, wait a minute…" Leo's brow furrowed. "The Ancient One's magic isn't supposed to look like this, is it? This feels less like Kamar-Taj and more like… Asgard's Bifrost. Or a teleportation array from a video game."
Just as the light reached its peak intensity, a flash of red appeared at the entrance to the alley. A figure, impossibly fast, skidded to a halt.
"Get down!" a woman's voice yelled.
Leo instinctively ducked. A gunshot rang out, and he saw a deformed slug stop dead against the outside of his wall of light, inches from his face. He looked up and saw a red-haired woman in a sleek black suit, a pistol in her hand, trying to get to him.
Black Widow, his mind supplied, a sense of total disbelief washing over him. It's actually her.
"No, seriously, what's a little pistol going to do against this thing? You'd have trouble with bulletproof glass!" he wanted to yell, but it was too late.
The energy from the light wall erupted. Leo's vision dissolved into pure, white light, and with a sound like a thousand panes of glass shattering at once, he vanished.
The red-haired agent—Natasha Romanoff—watched the blue vortex left by the sphere expand uncontrollably, swallowing half the alley in its silent, pixelating energy. She made a split-second decision, diving backward out of the alley just as the vortex collapsed in on itself and disappeared, leaving nothing behind but a perfect, circular scorch mark on the ground.
Natasha pressed the comms unit in her ear. "Fury, the target's gone. Appears to be a teleport. Looked like some kind of legendary magic."
"Magic?" Nick Fury's voice was tense. After a beat of silence, he continued, "First, lock down the area. Nothing in or out. Second, I want to know who the hell those men were. No S.H.I.E.L.D. team was authorized for this operation."
Natasha knelt, her gloved fingers tracing the edge of the faint magical imprint left on the ground. "One more thing. The target knew who I was. That, plus the unsanctioned tac team… Are we compromised?"
The silence on the other end of the line stretched for a long moment before Fury's iconic, frustrated sign-off came through the earpiece.
"Motherf***er."
At that same moment, high in the New York Sanctum, the Ancient One opened her eyes. The image of the energy flare in the alley bloomed in the air before her. The magic circle at Leo's feet was particularly bright.
"A summons… from another world," she murmured, her voice a soft whisper in the quiet room.
She waved a hand, and the image shifted, focusing on Leo's face in the final moment before he was taken. Her ancient, knowing eyes seemed to peer through the image, through time and space, into the core of his very soul.
"A traveler from beyond our reality?" A faint, enigmatic smile touched her lips. "Perhaps… this is not a bad thing."
Her robes whispered against the floor as she rose, her form dissolving into a swirl of golden sparks and vanishing from sight.