"Do you think Drumm is going to be able to help us?"
There was no hint of jest on Misaki's face or in her tone, so Mikoto could only assume the question had been asked in all seriousness. She bit her lower lip and considered her answer with equal seriousness, tuning out the news program playing on the TV.
"I think he will if he can, and I think he's the best lead we've found so far," she said eventually. Despite his casual admission of having spied on them and monitoring their activities, she did not doubt his sincerity or his intentions. And simply on the basis of being able to detect their arrival in this alternate world and understanding what it was and how it had happened, he and the Masters of the Mystical Arts were better equipped to help them than anyone on the planet as far as she could see. And yet…
"But we shouldn't get our hopes up that he, or his group, are going to be able to get us home," Shokuhou said, nodding at her. It seemed the blonde had already reached the same conclusion she had.
"Right." They couldn't rely on anyone else to pull them out of this situation. They would be glad to accept any help or advice Drumm or the Masters might be able to offer, but they shouldn't wait around for someone to hand them all the answers they sought.
"We're Academy City Level 5s," Misaki said, letting some of her familiar haughty arrogance shine through. "Even if no one else can help us or point us in the right direction, we can and will figure it out on our own eventually."
"You said it," Mikoto said, smiling at her. "We just need to keep looking."
Daniel Drumm's master might have been able to sense their arrival and explain how they got here, but apparently neither she nor the magic side she represented knew enough to help them get back home. Misaka had some experience dealing with the magic side back on her own world, but by no means was it her area of expertise. She and Shokuhou were from Academy City. Not only that, they were two of Academy City's strongest and smartest. If magic couldn't help them, they needed to focus on what they knew best. Maybe science was the answer. Even though it had been a magician who sent them here, maybe science could provide a countermeasure that magic could not.
"We need to get on with finding a new apartment," Misaka said, bringing back an old topic. "Getting out of here and into a better, more isolated place will make it much easier for us to do whatever research we need to do."
"Fine with me," Shokuhou said, shrugging her shoulders as she sat down next to her on the couch. "You know I'm not attached to this place in the least."
"Me neither," Mikoto said. "I'm thinking we should make a list of what kind of features we're looking for, and then we'll start looking into less populated areas that might fit what…we…need."
She'd trailed off towards the end of her sentence, with the last couple of words coming out barely above a whisper. The current story on the news had caught her attention once it mentioned Japan. Even though Academy City had never been created in this alternate universe they'd been sent to, she still couldn't help but be interested in any news about her former homeland.
"We'll be back after this short break with more on this breaking story of an oil rig explosion off the coast of Japan, apparently the latest in a string of bombings by the mysterious figure known as The Mandarin. We'll talk to our correspondent Lee Danielson, who will give us all the latest on The Mandarin and the ongoing efforts to find and capture him, and later, environmental expert Hector Martinez will discuss what comes next. More after this."
"An oil rig bombing in Japan, huh?" Mikoto said, frowning at the TV. "I wonder what that's all about."
"Who knows?" Misaki responded, shrugging her shoulders. "But whoever was behind it, I'm sure the Avengers are caught up in it in some way. They seem to have a knack for creating chaos."
--
Dojima Oil Rig
Japan
Steve Rogers had an uneasy feeling in the pit of his stomach. No mission was ever really comfortable; while remaining calm and composed was vital, you couldn't afford to get complacent. This was different though.
"It's still hard for me to believe that we're being sent into Japan," he said while looking at Black Widow, who was sitting across from him in the submarine. "I thought this was outside SHIELD's jurisdiction, and the Japanese government didn't want us butting in.' That was definitely what Fury had said before.
"Ordinarily you'd be right," Natasha said, adjusting her gear as they neared their drop-off point. "But if those two girls currently hanging around in New York City are Japanese HYDRA agents, that's all the justification we need to deal with the group."
"There's no way Mikoto Misaka is with HYDRA," he said, shaking his head and frowning at her.
"I know you believe that," Natasha said neutrally. "But there's reason enough for us to be suspicious, and it's undeniable that those girls are a potential threat as long as they remain in the city."
"I don't like this," he said. "I trust those girls."
"Then think of this as your chance to clear them," Clint Barton interjected while examining his bow. "We go in, see if we can find any info on the girls or on what HYDRA is up to in general, and get out. Maybe we can finally find out that you were right after all."
Steve had his doubts that Natasha or especially Clint would ever stop being suspicious of the girls, but he wouldn't let that affect him. He did not expect to find any incriminating information on Mikoto or her friend, but he wouldn't pass up on a chance to deal a blow to HYDRA. No matter the country or the branch, he would never be satisfied knowing that that group lived on.
SHIELD was taking this mission very seriously. An elite four man STRIKE unit was joining him, Natasha and Clint to infiltrate the rig that also operated as a HYDRA base. They were leaving nothing to chance. He wasn't sure how he felt about the STRIKE team. They weren't soldiers, men he trusted implicitly to watch his back like he'd had back during World War II, but at least they were highly trained. SHIELD wouldn't send anyone but the best they had.
Steve was the first out of the submarine when they arrived, and the first to begin climbing the rigs that would lead them to the main body. They moved quickly, not wanting to give the HYDRA agents on site any time to spot them and coordinate a response. The infiltration team went into action as soon as they reached the scaffolding. The STRIKE agents showed no compunction about shooting to kill, neutralizing their foes in the most permanent way possible with the SHIELD-provided guns that were completely silent. Steve held no love for anyone with ties to HYDRA, but he still tried to subdue them in a non-lethal fashion. He grabbed one guard, slammed him against the wall and began punching, using his fists to defeat the enemy rather than a firearm. The guard didn't go down easily though. He remained defiant despite the beating Steve was putting on him, and grinned at him with blood in his mouth.
"Hail HYDRA," the guard muttered. He brought his gun up and leveled it at Steve's head at point-blank range. Steve narrowed his eyes and prepared to make a lunge for the gun, but he never had a reason to. Black Widow took the guard out with a perfectly-placed throwing knife to the side of the head. The guard sank to his knees, the gun falling harmlessly from his hand.
"Keep your head in the game, Rogers," Natasha said quietly. "These guys are HYDRA. No need to show them mercy."
Steve brushed it off and then focused on continuing his forward progress. Their infiltration had been going well so far. Almost too well.
The thought had barely entered his mind when an alarm began to blare. Someone had spotted them and pulled an alarm, triggering the base's security measures. Now the entire base would be on high alert. Their mission had just gotten a whole lot more interesting, and a whole lot more difficult.
"Of course," he said, sighing as he sprinted directly at three oncoming enemies.
--
Elsewhere on the rig
Kihara Gensei watched the security feed with great interest. Despite his advanced age, his sharp eyes did not miss a thing. He observed the team that continued to make forward progress despite being faced with greater pressure now that the alarm had been raised. Gensei could have alerted everyone far sooner, of course; he'd been watching the intruders from the moment they'd arrived. Why had he not sounded the alarm, and why was he smiling even as his own agents were being eliminated one by one?
To Kihara, human life held little value. It was research that ruled his life, and scientific advancement that he prized above all else. Even the other HYDRA agents were expendable to him. He would gladly sacrifice every last one of them if it meant he got to learn something new as a result. It was for that reason that the old man in the lab coat smiled as he watched his guards try and fail to stop the intruders.
The STRIKE team was of no interest to him. They were skilled soldiers, trained killers, and they carried out their job effectively and efficiently, but they were not truly special and thus he had no time for them. It was the other three that commanded all of his attention.
Kihara was often preoccupied with his experiments, but even he was aware of Captain America, Hawkeye and Black Widow. He had heard the names and was familiar with their abilities, but this was his first chance to truly observe what they could do in real time. It was a rare opportunity.
Hawkeye and Black Widow fought well. They were clearly several steps above even the highly skilled forces accompanying them, moving with a speed and a decisive, deadly intent that the average human soldier could not hope to match. Yet even they paled in comparison to the living legend dressed in the red, white and blue.
The moment he'd heard the story of Steve Rogers being pulled out of the ice, he'd wished he could strap the World War II relic to a table and perform all manner of experiments on him. Getting to watch him now was a true treat. He was the only member of his team not fighting to kill his enemies, and yet he was the one in the least danger. Perhaps the HYDRA squad would have had a chance if it had been just Black Widow and Hawkeye along with the regular STRIKE unit, if they'd managed to land a lucky shot on one of the two members of importance. But this battle had been decided the moment Steve Rogers got off of that submarine. With him at the helm, HYDRA had no chance.
There was something else he could do, however. It was time to see how the would-be heroes would fare against the results of his recent experiments.
--
Steve grunted as he fought off another would-be attacker. None of these HYDRA agents had been much of a challenge on their own, but the sheer numbers that kept rushing them were impeding their path and greatly slowing their progress. All hopes of stealth were long gone; now it was just about getting where they needed to go and carrying out their mission while doing their best to avoid casualties.
"Attention, all security on sector alpha," a monotone voice said over the speakers. "Initiate Defense Plan Limiter. Repeat, all security on sector alpha, initiate Defense Plan Limiter."
"Any clue what that means?" Steve said, flicking his eyes over to Natasha, hoping against hope that this might be something SHIELD already knew about and was prepared for.
"Not a clue," she said, dashing that faint hope right away.
"Whatever it is, I'm betting it's not good," Barton said, firing an arrow throw a HYDRA agent's neck while the man was attempting to pull something out of the pocket of his uniform.
It soon became obvious what that guard had been trying to do, because all the other members of HYDRA popped some kind of pill into their mouths at the same time. The closest guard was knocked unconscious when Steve picked him up and threw him against the wall, but there was nothing he could do to stop the others.
They didn't have to wait long to see the results of this pill. The HYDRA guards suddenly fought with drastically increased strength and speed, turning the tide of the battle abruptly. The STRIKE unit struggled to combat their much tougher and more aggressive foes, and even Steve, Clint and Natasha found themselves in more of a fight.
"What the hell was in those pills?!" Clint shouted, firing three arrows in quick succession out of sheer necessity.
"Don't know!" Natasha said. She was having to put all her training to use to avoid getting hit.
One of the members of the STRIKE unit wasn't so lucky. He could not react in time as one of the guards ran at him full-speed and buried his shoulder into his chest. The STRIKE team member went flying back into the wall behind him with unbelievable force and a sickening crack that made Steve wince. That man was down and not getting up, and Steve knew there was no need to check on him or wait for him to get up. No normal human could survive that kind of impact.
"We need to make a run for it!" Natasha shouted. "If every guard in this sector took one of those pills, we should head straight for the next sector!" Steve nodded and they sprinted forward, only to discover that the blast door leading to the next sector had been closed.
"Well there goes that idea," Steve said. "How about we go back the way we came then? Maybe those pills will wear off eventually." And even if they didn't, it could at least give them a chance to regroup.
"I'll check it out," Barton said. He lingered in the background since he liked to fight at range with his bow, so it was easiest for him to investigate it himself. Steve held his breath, waiting for the archer to return with his findings. "No good," he said. "They've closed that door too."
"We're sealed in, then," Natasha said. She didn't sound panicked, which Steve could only assume was thanks to her training. Her mind was probably hard at work on coming up with alternatives.
"Damn," Steve muttered, banging his fist on the wall. Then he cocked his head and looked at the wall for a second. If they couldn't go back and they couldn't go forward, maybe they could go straight through. "I think I've got an idea."
"Let's hear it," Natasha said.
"It's a little crazy."
"Our team is in danger of getting overrun," Clint pointed out. "I'd say now's as good a time as any to get crazy."
--
Kihara Gensei smiled as he watched the Avengers blow a hole through the wall. That had been a creative solution to the problem he'd posed for them. They were not letting him down, that was for sure.
They probably could have held out long enough to outlast the enhanced guards blocking their path through sector alpha. The pills they'd taken did not give the guards any additional strength or added abilities that they did not already possess within their bodies. It was a drug of his creation, one that removed the limiters the human body normally puts on itself as a matter of self-preservation. His drug overcame those boring restrictions, allowing the human body to use up all of its strength while leaving nothing in reserve. The downside to this, at least for the user, is that their body would give out on them pretty quickly and begin to shut down. The guards in the sector would have weakened before long, and then the intruders would have a simple time progressing. The STRIKE unit would have likely been wiped out completely. Hawkeye and Black Widow would have been able to outlast the guards in all probability, however, and Captain America's survival obviously would not have been in question. They had no way of knowing that, though, so the solution they chose was a sound one given the information they had, especially since this had never been a real oil rig. That was simply a cover for this base's existence, and this base had been created specifically as a place for Kihara Gensei to perform his research and experiments.
"Very good, Avengers," he said to himself in Japanese. "But let's see how you handle my next surprise."
They might have thought they were in the clear, and the danger was largely behind them now that they were out of sector alpha, but they were very, very wrong.
--
"You're a genius, Cap," one of the three remaining STRIKE members said as he ran beside him. Steve just shook his head. They had made it out of the sector, true, but it had come at a cost. He, Clint and Natasha were unscathed, but the STRIKE unit was down one member. He never liked to lose a man, and their numbers had dwindled before their objective was even in sight. This mission was teetering on the edge as far as he was concerned.
"Attention, sector beta," the same monotone voice said over the speakers once again.
"Oh shit, not this again," Clint sighed.
"Initiate Defense Plan Fury. Repeat, sector beta, initiate Defense Plan Fury."
"Fury?" Steve said, raising his eyebrows. If what they'd just been through was something as comparatively harmless-sounding as 'limiter', how much worse was 'fury' going to be?
As soon as the announcement had been made, they could hear a shuttering somewhere off in the distance, as well as a gentle whoosh of air escaping. Steve narrowed his eyes, trying to figure out what exactly had just happened, but Natasha had more experience at this kind of thing and thus was able to provide clarification.
"They've completely sealed this entire sector off from the rest of the rig," she said, her head rapidly turning back and forth as she examined their surroundings. Her mind was running a mile a minute, trying to anticipate what the opponent's next move might be and how they would need to respond.
A mechanical whirring drew Steve's attention skywards, where gas nozzles suddenly appeared from the ceiling.
"Shit," Hawkeye muttered from beside him, already reaching into his equipment. Steve, no less quick on the response, was in motion as well.
"Gas masks on!" Natasha shouted, making sure the STRIKE team members got the message as well. She put her mask securely over her face not long after Steve and Clint had gotten theirs on, and the STRIKE team quickly followed suit. They were highly trained and most had responded automatically before Natasha had even opened her mouth, so their response time was good.
That quick response time didn't help one unlucky soul, who had the misfortune of being equipped with a defective gas mask. Steve's eyes widened as he saw the exterior display of the man's mask flash red, indicating a malfunction. The man's mask was doing him no good, leaving him completely exposed and vulnerable to whatever chemical the nozzles were beginning to spray into the air.
The man's hands flew to his head for a moment, as if he was trying to pull the mask off, and then he let out an ear-piercing scream. It wasn't a scream of terror though. Steve had heard plenty of those both during the war and since he'd been pulled out of the ice, and that's not what this was. This was an insane, mindless, angry scream, the scream of someone who was no longer in control of their faculties. It was a sound that no human being would ever be able to produce while in their right mind.
"Watch out!" Steve shouted, trying to warn those who were closer to the afflicted individual, but there was little time to react and even less room to maneuver. The man closest to the affected brought his gun up in defense, but it was easily wrestled out of his grasp. Then he was mercilessly pummeled with punch after punch after punch. The infected man swung his fists wildly, attacking with a frantic, manic energy. His target did his best to fight back and defend himself, but his self-preservation instincts were no match for the mindless, berserk rage that the drug was infecting the other man with. There was no question about who was going to win this fight.
Natasha's first shot struck the infected man's left leg. He showed no reaction to the incredible pain that surely should have been coursing through his body. The drug must have taken hold of his brain to the point that it could no longer communicate with the rest of the body about danger, pain, fear or any other human concerns. He was a mindless beast rather than a man at this point, focused only on using his bare hands to crush the man who had the bad luck to be his target.
The Black Widow's next bullet struck the other leg, and now the inflicted's body was forced to its knees. He continued to fight even then, punching and even biting at the knees of the man he was fighting, who was now slumped against the wall behind him. The next shot took him in the ribs, and Natasha showed no mercy whatsoever with the next bullet, which was straight through the head. Barton put an arrow through his throat at the same time for good measure, ensuring that the man was very, very dead. Even the drugs pumping through his system couldn't keep his body going through all of that, and his lifeless body fell onto what remained of its face.
Steve stepped forward, pushing past the sole STRIKE agent still standing so he could check on the man who had been attacked. He was slumped down against the wall, his gas mask shattered into pieces from the force of the other man's blows, and a cursory look revealed that he would not be getting back up. If the numerous hits to his temple had not been fatal, the crushed windpipe certainly would have done it. With him and the man who had attacked him both down, three of the four members of STRIKE were dead. There was just one left, along with himself, Clint and Natasha.
"We're dropping like flies," Barton said through his gas mask, shaking his head.
"Let's just move on," Steve said. "We still have a mission to finish." He wasn't happy about all the losses they'd taken, but the least they could do was see this through to the end, gather the intel they needed on HYDRA's operations and make sure that the fallen hadn't lost their lives for nothing.
Every other gas mask had worked as intended, but that didn't mean their road was going to get any easier. It was only after their own crisis had been dealt with that Steve took note of the yells, growls and screams emanating from inside the other nearby rooms. All of their force had remained together, so this obviously wasn't any of them.
"Did they infect their own people?" he asked out loud. Not even HYDRA could be that callous, could they?
They got a little closer, close enough to see inside through the window of one of the rooms. The HYDRA armed security and the scientists in white lab coats were at war with each other, punching and kicking and even biting. It was strange to see scientists fighting so readily against guards, but that just went along with the effects of the drug. They were no longer armed killers or men of science; they were now all just berserk husks inside human bodies, beings that now existed solely to try and tear each other limb from limb. As if to drive that point home, a scientist looked towards the window and spotted them. He spit an ear out of his mouth and ran towards the window, baring his teeth which were dripping with blood. He snarled at them, but soon was attacked from behind by another scientist.
Steve had thought even HYDRA had limits, that they wouldn't subject their own men to such horror, but somehow the group had still managed to surprise him in the worst way despite everything he'd seen from them during World War II.
"What do we do now?" the remaining STRIKE member asked.
"Same thing as before," Natasha said. "If the doors leading from one sector to the next are closed off, we'll blow our way through." Steve nodded in agreement. It was the only solution he could see, and it had worked just fine last time. Subtlety had long since been thrown out the window, and the explosive, dramatic path was all they had left to them.
Perhaps they should have thought this through a bit more, because there was an additional element to consider that hadn't been there the first time they'd resorted to blowing another hole in the rig. There were still fairly significant concentrations of gas in the air of sector beta. The gas hadn't been able to reach the other sectors at all since beta had been quarantined off, but now that was all changing. Thanks to them blowing their way straight into sector gamma, the gas was now spreading throughout the entire rig via the HVAC system and infecting anyone who wasn't wearing a mask. They witnessed the unintentional results of their handiwork as they sprinted through sector gamma. Scientists and guards fought each other mindlessly, engaged in a senseless fight to the death with people they would have considered acquaintances at the very least, if not legitimate friends, minutes earlier. Steve could only shake his head in disgust at this proof of how low HYDRA was willing to sink.
"Well, at least this makes our job easier," Barton pointed out. Steve couldn't deny that the man had a point. With HYDRA too busy being turned against each other by their own chemical weapon, there was no one around to impede their progress. It should be a straight shot to the control room, which should contain the answers they seek. Hopefully the sick bastard that had set all this up would be there too. Steve very much wanted to punch his lights out.
They ran full speed ahead until they reached the control room. The STRIKE member flung the door open, and Steve narrowed his eyes.
"If this Kihara guy is really in there, wouldn't he have at least locked the door?" he whispered to Natasha.
"I'd certainly think so," she said, staring straight ahead with her gun loaded and at the ready. "Only one way to find out."
Steve's suspicion had been correct: the control room was empty. A series of monitors showed different areas of the rig, so if this Kihara Gensei had been here, he'd been able to watch their progress for some time. It had probably been him that activated those defense protocols, willingly poisoning and killing his own men just to impede their progress. What a sick bastard.
"There's a note card on the desk," Barton said, nodding his head to his left. Steve picked it up and held it up to his face. There was a USB stick underneath said note, but he ignored it for the time being in favor of examining the note.
"It's written in Japanese," he said, frowning.
"Give it here," Natasha said, holding out her hand. He handed the note to her, and she quickly scanned it.
"Modern Japanese," she said. "Combination of kanji and kana."
"Can you read it?" Steve asked, impatient for her to get to the point. The sooner they got off of this rig and back onto the sub, the better.
"Of course," she said, her eyes already moving back and forth across the paper. The way her frown grew progressively deeper told Steve that this wasn't going to be anything good for them, not that he'd expected much different as soon as they'd found the room empty.
"Feel free to fill the rest of us in any time," Barton said sarcastically, echoing Steve's own impatience.
"Kihara wrote it," she started. "He's mockingly thanking us for helping him test out the rig's defenses."
"Is that all this was to him?" Steve said. "A test?" He could feel a fresh wave of anger bubbling. How badly he'd like to hit something right now, preferably Kihara Gensei's face.
"To thank us for our help, he left us this USB stick," Natasha continued. Steve picked the stick up and rolled it around in his hand. "He says it has lots of information about the HYDRA cells in the United States."
"But nothing about the Japanese branch," Steve said. "And nothing to say one way or the other whether or not Mikoto and her friend have ties to the Japanese HYDRA."
"Meaning that the entire purpose of coming here, the entire objective of this mission, was a total failure," Barton finished.
"Looks that way," Natasha said. She crumpled the note up in her hand and threw it on the ground. Steve sighed and turned away, walking out of the control room.
"Let's head out," he said.
The other three followed him back the way they'd come. They faced no resistance whatsoever in sectors gamma or beta, and the guards they hadn't dealt with in sector alpha were now unconscious or worse. Apparently those pills they'd taken only powered them up for a limited time, and the aftereffects weren't pretty.
They planted explosives on their way out of the rig. What had happened here could not be allowed to go public, so their only option was to blow up the evidence. Setting fire to the rig was going to draw all sorts of attention, but it was agreed that there was no other alternative.
Once they were back below and reached the mini sub that was there for the extraction, they triggered the explosives. Steve watched the rig burn and shook his head. He'd never considered himself a poetic man, but that fire seemed a fitting symbol to mark their failure. The rig, much like their mission, was going down in flames.
"Well that was a resounding success," Barton said.
--
"So you not only failed to catch Kihara or get any information, but you lost three men and blew the entire rig up," Nick Fury said, rattling off their failures one by one. "I thought I was sending in the best team I could field, a team I could trust to get the job done. Apparently I thought wrong."
Steve, Clint and Natasha took the dressing down in silence. It wasn't like they could say much in their own defense. Steve didn't think any of their decisions had been poor in the moment, but the end result was an undeniable failure in both objective and in loss of life.
"Fortunately we were able to feed the media the story that the Mandarin was responsible for the bombing," Fury continued. "The public isn't any wiser about what happened there. But that doesn't make this mission any less of a failure."
"No argument there," Steve said, slumping over in his seat aboard the helicarrier. "Makes me want to get back out there and take on another mission ASAP, just to get this bad taste out of my mouth."
"Then you might want to consider some mouthwash, Captain Rogers, because you won't be going back out in the field any time soon. Same for you, Romanoff and Barton."
"Sir?" Natasha said, sitting up in her chair. Steve could tell she didn't like the sound of that, and he tended to agree.
"All three of you are on light duty for the foreseeable future," Fury said. He held up his hand to forestall the objection Natasha so badly wanted to make. "You're going to be in charge of SHIELD's security contribution to the summit in New York in December."
"That's months from now," Clint pointed out. Fury nodded and raised his eyebrows.
"Yes it is. The summit is snowballing beyond what anyone was expecting. The number of attendees from all over the world grows by the day, and with all those important politicians and foreign dignitaries in attendance comes the need for complicated and thorough security measures."
"Don't you have other people for that?" Steve asked.
"Of course. And while you're on light duty, you'll be working closely alongside them, working with them to coordinate every last detail of SHIELD's contribution to the security measures. So I suggest you prepare yourselves for several months of mind-numbing boredom and minutia while you reflect on this failed mission."
"So, I really don't want to say anything that might make you try and rope me into this whole security detail, but can I say something?" Bruce Banner said. Banner, who was still residing on the helicarrier until Tony finished with the remodel of Stark Tower, had wandered in during the lecture and watched in silence until that point.
"What is it, doctor?" Fury asked, turning to look at him. For his part, Steve was just glad the focus was no longer on him. Whatever point Banner wanted to make, he was glad to hear it.
"Maybe this is just the gamma radiation talking," Banner began, "but am I the only one worried about HYDRA running some kind of experiment to create a mindless, super-human berserker out of nothing other than drugs and chemicals?"
--
The Ancient One nodded to herself, satisfied at the results of her observation so far. She was doing a routine check to ensure that the wards protecting the world were still working as intended, and thus far had found nothing out of the ordinary. All appeared to be well.
She suddenly snapped to attention when she felt a ripple, a disturbance that required her immediate attention. She activated her sling ring, creating a temporary portal to deposit her directly at the Hong Kong sanctuary. Despite the instantaneous travel, she seemed to be too late. The sanctuary was already almost completely destroyed.
She had not been the only Master to take note of the disturbance. Others arrived as she walked through the remnants of the sanctuary and helped her with stabilizing the wards. The Masters had varying reactions.
"We must hunt them down," Karl Mordo said with an intense expression on his face. "Hunt them down and destroy them."
"There will be time for that later," Daniel Drumm said dismissively. "Ancient One, I wish to update you on our two teenage interdimensional travelers. I had a chance to meet with them, and I've learned some very interesting things about them both."
"You spoke with interdimensional travelers," Mordo said. "Spoke."
"Yes, that's what I said," Drumm answered casually. "It was a very interesting chat."
"And why would you do that?" Mordo demanded. "Interdimensional travelers are a threat. They should be killed immediately, and yet you engage them in friendly conversation?"
"Your problem, Mordo, is that you deal in absolutes. The universe doesn't work that way, my friend," Drumm said, not intimidated by the other man's anger.
The Ancient One was only superficially aware of the argument the two men were having. She was examining the bodies of those who had been in the sanctuary when it was attacked. Some of the bodies were riddled with bullets, and a few bore signs of blunt physical trauma. The most confusing ones, however, were the ones that looked as if they had died while fighting each other. What possible explanation could there be for that? She walked further forward, ignoring the argument between Drumm and Mordo.
"Your casual dismissal of such a clear and obvious threat disgraces you as a Master of the Mystic Arts," Mordo said.
"And your stubbornness could one day leave you making an enemy out of someone that could have been an ally," Drumm retorted. "But I guess you don't care about—"
"Quiet," Mordo said. He'd noticed that The Ancient One had stopped moving, and came to find out why. "Ancient One?"
She did not turn to speak with him, or acknowledge him in any way. She just stared straight ahead, her mind reeling as she felt true fear for one of the only times in her many centuries of life.
"Ancient One, what is it?" Drumm asked, walking up to stand on her other side. She continued to stare directly in front of her, and when the two men stopped speaking to her and instead focused on where she was looking, they could see what had her so concerned.
In front of her was an old, old display case, which contained two hands pointing to the sky. That was as it should be. The concern wasn't what was inside the display case, but rather what should have been there but now wasn't. Every single finger on the two hands should have been adorned with a ring, but all fingers were bare.
The Ten Rings of Power were gone.
--
Kihara Gensei stepped over the body of one of the HYDRA forces that had accompanied him off of the rig and served as his guard. He, like all the others, had been killed by something of Kihara's creation, a quick acting aerosol drug that uncontrollably sped up the heart rate of anyone who breathed it in, inevitably leading to a fatal heart attack. The guards had served their purpose, but they were no longer of any use to him. He had reached the conclusion that HYDRA itself was no longer of use to him, and it was time for him to move on to bigger and better things. The experiments he'd conducted there had been enlightening, but he ever thirsted to do more, to think bigger, to constantly test the very limits of science.
Losing all those wonderful test subjects back at the base was regrettable, but that was merely a temporary setback. Subjects were replaceable, especially ones as pedestrian as those.
He walked with a hunch as always, but he felt younger than he had in years. Being free of the obligations of HYDRA was strangely liberating, and as he walked through the back alleys of Hong Kong, he found himself looking forward to the future.
Two men suddenly came running down the opposite side of the alley, moving with considerable haste. One was a tall man, well kept and likely considered handsome by most, though Kihara couldn't care less about such meaningless things. The other was odd looking, and wore large amounts of eye shadow. They bumped shoulders, and Kihara had to catch himself to avoid falling down.
"Watch it, old man," the one with the eye shadow grumbled. The two men hurried on their way, and Kihara stopped and turned to watch them. He was an inquisitive man by his very nature, and these two had piqued his curiosity.
The two men stopped when they reached the first of the several dead HYDRA agents Kihara had left behind. Despite their apparent rush, something like this was bound to draw their attention. They looked around at their surroundings, and upon finding no sign of anyone else, turned back around to look at Kihara. They'd dismissed him as just a feeble old man before, but they were clearly rethinking that initial assessment,
"Did you see who killed all these men?" the tall one asked. Kihara smiled and nodded his head.
"That would be me," he said.
"You?" the one with the eye shadow said, obviously skeptical. "Do you really expect me to believe that one old man killed five heavily armed soldiers?"
"I don't expect you to believe anything," Kihara said. "You asked a question, and I merely gave you the answer. I know how much I hate questions that I don't have the answer to."
"How did you kill them?" This was the tall one again.
"I made their hearts explode," he said placidly. He reached into his pocket and showed them the now empty container that had once held the deadly drug. "The fruits of one of my recent experiments. Not my best effort, admittedly, but useful enough."
He could tell they believed him now, and were regarding him with great interest. Some might have brushed him off as just a senile old man, but these two seemed to know better. Perhaps they recognized a fellow killer when they saw one. He knew he sensed it in them.
"That's very interesting," the man wearing the eye shadow said. "Very interesting indeed. And you created this drug yourself, you say?"
"Indeed. It was far from my most interesting result, but it does have its uses."
The two men conferred with each other privately for a moment, after which they approached Kihara more closely.
"I think we could make good use of a man of your talents," the man with the eye shadow said. "My name is Kaecilius."
"Kihara Gensei," he said, smiling politely before turning to the other man.
"I'm Gene Khan," the tall man said by way of introduction. Kihara took notice of the many rings on his fingers. He wore one on each finger of both hands. While he had no explanation, his gut instinct told him that this was a man of immense power, and those rings were part of it somehow. "But if you prefer, you can also call me The Mandarin."