MARVEL SUPER-VILLAIN TEAM UP
It was, perhaps, early evening in the
desert... the recent sunset's golds and reds yet lingered in a thin,
tattered banner along the western horizon, allowing the pyramids to
be silhouetted sharp and dark against its fading glory. The
scentomizers were tuned perfectly; the smells of arid, faintly spicy
sand, fecund poppy fields, silty Nile water gurgling through canals,
the sweat of the nearby camels, the dry, powdery aroma of the silk
pavilion canopies... all of these mingled with the delicious aroma
wafting off the haunch of goat crackling over a camel fewmet fire.
The fire crackled convincingly; a dry
desert breeze moved through the oasis like an invisible river,
rustling the pavilion silks authentically.
In the oasis' central pool, thirty feet
from the crackling fire, two men soaked. Fresh from the rejuvenation
baths, neither looked more than perhaps forty Earth years of age, one
of them, in fact, could have been half that.
Both had the deeply bronzed skins of
long time desert dwellers, although it was for each an affectation;
neither had felt actual sunlight on their skins for longer than he
could easily calculate. Both were hawk nosed, clear eyed, dark
haired, heavy browed; to an ignorant observer, they would convey the
appearance of father and son, for one seemed to be at least two
decades older than the other. Appearances deceived, as they so
often do... the two men were not father and son. They were much,
much closer... and each was much, much more ancient than he seemed.
"So, then, Pharaoh," the
older man boomed, slapping the cool oasis water with his palm just to
hear the pleasant plashing noise it made. "Is it not as I have
said? Are not the diversions of Limbo infinite and inexhaustible?"
The one addressed as Pharaoh did not
answer... at first. He was a thoughtful man. Quick-witted when
necessary, but now, no emergency urged instant response. He pondered
his elder's words, and when his reply was fully formulated, only then
did he voice it:
"Indeed," he agreed. "And
yet... and yet..."
There was a wistful sadness to his tone
that was not lost on the older man. "You dwell on the past too
much," the Pharaoh's elder observed. "Here in Limbo, there
is no past, no future... just an eternal now. And now is enough...
is it not?"
"You have been the best of
mentors, o Immortus," the Pharaoh Rama Tut replied, choosing
each syllable with care. "And Limbo... Limbo does, indeed,
offer an eternity of delights. Yet... as I discovered in my own
court, in the 40th Century... a life without strife is a life without
meaning."
"Feh," Immortus snapped. "I
need no telepathy to discern your thoughts, my friend... and
although there is no time here, the circadian rhythms of your own
flesh tell you that now is the time of year when your beloved Ravonna
was first cut down by that cur Baltag. Do you think I do not feel it
myself? Do you think I have forgotten?" His hand tightened
into a fist. "I will never forget, my friend. Never."
Then he spread his fingers again, and
waved airily. "But life goes on, Rama... for us. Ravonna
remains in her eternal sleep, Baltag remains dead, Lords of Time rip
his spirit to shreds forever... yet for us, life goes on."
Immortus turned and gestured
imperiously. His strange servant -- 'my only subject, here in
Limbo', as he often labeled the creature -- appeared a few feet away
from him, seeming to condense out of the very darkling air, standing
on the damp sand, rubbing his spider-fingered hands together.
"Yessss, my master?" the creature hissed.
"Bring the entertainment now,"
the older man commanded.
The strange servitor nodded once, his
oddly furrowed countenance blank beneath his overlarge eyes and wild,
tangled brows. To the Pharaoh, those eyes had always suggested
boiled owl's eggs.
The servitor vanished, as quickly as he
had come. "Does that creature have a name?" the Pharaoh
asked, making no attempt to mask the irritation in his tone.
Immortus chuckled. "He is the
only subject of Limbo," the immortal time traveler said. "Why
would he need a name?" He paused. "Although as to that,
he is really no more a 'he' than the silicone in that sand... I built
him to be the ultimate shapeshifter, you know. A perfect agent."
"So you have said," Rama Tut
responded, distaste still evident in his tone. "But there is
something..."
There was a jangling... silvery,
musical. And then, from one of the pavilions, the six greatest
beauties of mythical Earth's storied history came across the sand,
clad in silks and bells and perfumes. The Pharaoh's protest died in
his throat. Ravonna had been beautiful, in her own provincial way.
But these women...!
"Do you like them?" Immortus
chuckled. "There is Cleopatra, of your own land, but a few
thousand years past your time. Her beauty... and her skills in the
pillow arts... are still legendary millenia after her death." A
dusky skinned, broad nosed beauty, full of hip and bust, nodded in
response to Immortus' words.
"And here is Princess Ranadys of
the land of Esteros, which sank beneath the vast world ocean aeons
before Atlantis ever arose. She was the last dragon queen..."
Here a silver haired girl, slender as a willow, with purple eyes that
flashed an inner fire, smiled coquettishly at him.
Doubtless Immortus introduced all six
of the women, and all of them were, indeed, legendary beauties. But
the Pharaoh only had eyes for one... just one... a strong looking
female, whose figure was somehow voluptuous yet athletic at the same
time, with clean, clear, beautiful features and hair the color of
spun gold. Eyes as blue as weapon-steel stared back at his
unblushingly, showing a will as strong and as inexorable as
gravity... even if that will was now bent and somewhat blunted
beneath the hypnotic influence of Immortus' mind control beams.
"And this is Carol Danvers, of the
late 20th Century," Immortus said. "She has been recently
exposed to a Kree device known as a Psyche Magnitron which has had an
interesting effect on her, both psychically and physically. Her DNA
is now an intriguing mingling of Terran and Kree, and she has just
embarked on a career with the Avengers..."
Immortus noted the clear signs of
infatuation on the face of the Pharaoh... the dilated pupils, the
flared nostrils, the deepening breath tones. It was aggravating.
He had hoped to provide his guest and student with a distraction from
futile, choleric thoughts regarding Ravonna... but once he had seen
the six women chosen by his servitor, he had also thought to keep
this one to his exclusive use. Something about her aura... so
ferocious. Of course, he knew she had a significant destiny, one
that stood out even among the larger than life fates and dooms of the
Earthling superhuman class he had made an obsessive study of his
whole life... yet, still. There was something magnetic about the
woman, here, in person...
"We will share her," Immortus
snapped. "Come, Pharaoh."
The two men waded up out of the pool
side by side, and as one, put a hand out to clasp either arm of the
woman named Carol Danvers --
* * * * *
The man awoke, some time later, head
aching. "Where..."
He was lying in a cool pool of water,
beneath a spreading... what was that thing?... a date palm tree, that
was it.
Around him was a... watering hole? No.
The word was oasis. There were silk canopies, rippling in a low,
cool breeze. The braying of a just wakened donkey, or... camel?
And...
There, lying face down on the sand... a
woman. A woman with golden blonde hair... and smoke, rising from her
forearms. Almost as if her arms were energy weapons, and had fired
some kind of discharge...
The man splashed to her side without
further thought. He did not know who she was, but a great passion
for her stirred within him... so great that it had not yet occurred
to him that he also did not know who he, himself, was...
* * * * * *
The man awoke, some time later, head
aching. Face down, in something soft and scratchy, that rustled in
the breeze...
He knew that smell, that texture.
Kentucky blue grass...! He sat up, abruptly.
He was in a field... or so it seemed.
Several large, powerful looking, oddly beautiful creatures stood on
four legs each, cropping the thick grass, ten or twelve arms lengths
away from him.
But it wasn't true. Somehow he knew,
this field full of... hoses? No, horses... was an illusion. There
was something about it... the feel of the air wasn't quite right.
The scentomizers were slightly off, and not masking the metallic air
conditioning smell fully....
The scene shimmered, and vanished. The
man was sitting on the floor in a small, gloomy, roughly rectangular
chamber, made of what seemed to be a dull grey metal. The smell of
the air conditioning was more pronounced, now.
From the empty air, a cool, pleasant
voice spoke to him: "This res-quart is designated as
uninhabited. Who are you and how did you come to access it?"
The man thought for a moment. "I...
I do not know," he confessed, finally.
"Working," the pleasant voice
responded. "Analysis of microscopic cellular particles taken
from your respiration indicate..." There was a pause. "You
have DNA strands aligned to several prominent sociopolitical lines,"
it continued, eventually. "But identification cannot be made
conclusively. You are... unknown."
The last two syllables were spoken
evenly, without inflection... but the man would have sworn the voice
was, nonetheless, appalled to have to confess to such a thing.
"Identity is necessary," the
voice continued. "I shall assign you a random nomenclature and
begin building identity files for you. Basic remedial training in
civil necessities will be made available to you. This cubicle will
be assigned to your needs."
The man got to his feet. "You are
a computer," he said.
"I am a pseudosentience," the
voice corrected him, somewhat primly. "My specific role is
social optimization. Do not worry. A place will be found for you."
It paused once more, and then
continued. "Your DNA has some strands taken from the prominent
Richards family. I shall, therefore, assign you the name Nathaniel
Richards..."
* * * * *
The woman did not remember her name,
any more than he did his. But when she had first looked up at him
with those laser bright blue eyes and asked him who he was, a
fragment of conversation had come back to him. He had been speaking
with an older man, who looked somewhat like him... his father?...
that seemed wrong, somehow, but still, in his photographic recall of
this fragmentary, isolated scene, the resemblance was unmistakable.
The man had been laughing, and saying
"...no heir... none that lived, anyway. But should I ever have
a worthy son, I will name him Marcus..."
"Marcus," he had told her.
"My name is Marcus." It felt right, on some level, and
wrong, on another... but he also had a deep conviction that he had
lived a long, rich life, and over the course of it, he had had many
names. Marcus was as good as any...
"You are Carol," he told her,
knowing as he said it that it was correct.
"Carol," she said, tasting
the name. "And... we are alone here, Marcus...?"
Marcus looked around. "Yes,"
he said. "I... " He looked back at her, boldly. "From
how I feel when I look at you, Carol, I think... I think we are
honeymooning."
She met his gaze with hers... and then,
when he bent his head forward, she met his mouth with hers, as
well...
* * * * * *
The newly minted Nathaniel Richards did
well at his studies, and showed an aptitude with the subatomic
particle circuitry that 30th Century technology was entirely built
around. But he was restive. The place and time he had come to was
very civilized... almost decadent. Any citizen could have anything
he or she wanted, merely by asking a socio-mech to simulate the
sensation. Somewhere in his mind, Nathaniel was reminded of a bit
of ancient folk wisdom... "Instant gratification takes too
long..."
There was no challenge here, nothing to
strive for!
Yet Nathaniel had a goal, one that
burned within him. A set of blazing blue eyes, looking into his..
his? Or some other man's? He could not quite remember. Skin as
soft as velvet under his touch, stretched taut over muscles like
corded titanium... and a psychic aura that blazed like a supernova.
He could not recall her face, her form, any other details of her
appearance... but he would move mountains to find her. She was his,
and he was hers... even though he had a feeling that he had at least
one rival for her affection. It would not matter. He knew, in his
heart, that he was a conqueror, and he would always be supreme...
He knew where to look for her. A half
remembered snatch of conversation... "the late 20th Century...
just embarked on a career with the Avengers..."
He'd done global searches using those
phrases. Something had happened in that era... something important.
The Celestial Madonna, so called, had given birth to... someone... a
child that had risen to unite the entire galaxy, at least, for a
time, under one benevolent banner. A Golden Age, a time of
unparalleled prosperity, which had lasted a thousand years... which
was still going on, even today, here in the exasperatingly peaceful
year of 3012.
Was the woman he sought this Madonna?
Somehow, he was sure she must be. She must be. His true love...
somehow he knew, she would not be sitting around waiting for him to
claim her. He would have to fight others for her... he would have to
conquer! But in the end, she would be his.
Time travel was known to be possible...
supposedly, the technology had originated in that very era. He could
go there, and find her.
He would. He would conquer the entire
universe, all of time itself, if that was what it took to win her to
his side...!
* * * * * *
"She could not have had the child
here in Limbo," the servitor said, his tones (as always) an
unsettling mixture of sneer and sycophancy. "There is no
duration here. It would not have prospered..."
"I know that," the man who no
longer called himself Marcus snapped. "But it might have done
well on Earth, in Carol's native time frame, if I had not seized on
its form as a vehicle for my own escape from this hellish place..."
"Well," the servitor
responded, "you could have just opened a portal. You know how
to use the machines."
"Opening a portal into the late
20th Century is always difficult," the man snapped. "Temporal
turbulence makes such a transit hazardous at best. I thought the
other gambit might work better. If those idiot heroes hadn't
destroyed my machine, I could have corrected that body's asynchronous
genetic coordinates, and..."
"Coulda, shoulda, woulda,"
the servitor said. "I do feel deep admiration for the novel
way in which you dumped her, though, after she followed you back
here. That illusion of you aging to decrepitude and dying within a
few moments... that was masterfully done. She'll be some time
getting over the psychological scars of that little break up ploy...
it may well drive her to drink."
"She's strong," the man said.
"She'll be fine." He shrugged. "I truly thought I
loved the wench."
"Ah, infatuation," the
servitor thought, waggling his disturbingly unkempt eyebrows
provocatively. "You know that Immortus was infatuated with her
as well, do you not? And wherever he may have ended up, he will seek
her out, as well?"
"I am Immortus now," the man
said, regarding the regalia laid out upon the sleeping platform in
his chamber. "Although," he added, dubiously, "I'm
not sure I want to dress like him..."
"Ah, yes, master," the
servitor fawn-sneered. "Because that blue face mask was oh so
stylish."
The new Lord of Limbo scowled at the
servitor. "Am I going to have problems with you, creature? My
predecessor may have tolerated your insolence, but I am not he."
The former Pharaoh stopped at that, thoughtfully. "I mean...
well..."
The servitor bobbed and capered
obsequiously. "I will give you no problems, Master," it
declared. "I have ever served the Lord of Limbo, and ever shall.
In that service, I shall tell you that my artificially attuned
chronal senses advise me that the temporal turbulence you already
know of in the late 20th and early 21st Centuries on Earth has
increased by nearly an order of magnitude since your paramour's
return to her native time-point. I cannot be sure, but I believe your
predecessor in those robes is somehow causing this disruption."
"He's going after her," the
former Pharaoh said, through gritted teeth. "He's still
besotted... he must not have her!"
The servant raised his fantastical
eyebrows in exaggerated puzzlement. "But... master... if you do
not want her..."
"He will not have her," the
new Immortus growled. "He will not lay a hand on her. Hmmm... I
must come up with a scheme..." He turned, and pointed at the
servitor. "You will travel to her timeframe. You will shadow
her. You will protect her. You will be my perfect agent in this. You
will keep my other self from ever so much as setting his damned dirty
paws on her."
The servant shrugged. "Your wish,
my command, of course, my master," he replied. "May I
suggest... perhaps I could replace that obnoxious Anthony Stark in
the Avengers roster? Then I could keep a close watch on her. The two
of them become quite companionable, I believe..."
"YOU are not to lay a hand on
her," the Master of Time snarled.
"Oh no, master, of course not, I
am not worthy," the servitor whined. "I will simply look
out for her... and ward her. Perhaps... if your predecessor's
attention could be turned to another... perhaps some sort of scenario
could be woven, to convince him to ignore Ms. Danvers, and fixate on
someone else..."
"Yes," the Lord of Limbo
agreed, musing. "That whole Celestial Madonna thing will be
going on right around that time period, and I remember how obsessed I
was with the Madonna... I can't recall why, now... I mean, what was I
going to do with Mantis, even if I'd managed to obtain her? A
skilled courtesan, I have no doubt, but... Gleaming Galaxies! The
woman married an undead corpus reanimated by a sentient tree!"
Immortus... the newest of his name... shuddered. "By the Lords
of Time, I really dodged a particle beam there."
"I will depart immediately,
Master," the servitor responded. "May I suggest that I
enter the timestream some light years away from Earth, to avoid the
local turbulence? I can easily travel there at faster than light
speeds once I am within the timeframe. I will establish my presence
early on, at the very founding of the team, or shortly thereafter.
It will give me an excellent vantage point to watch over Ms. Danvers,
as the Heroic Age unfolds."
"Capital," Immortus
responded. "Do it. At once."
"Yes, Master," the servitor
said, rubbing his inhumanly long fingers together in satisfaction...
* * * * *
As the servitor sped through the vacuum
of space towards Earth, it considered what it had already done, and
what yet remained for it to do. It went through each aspect of its
plan meticulously, testing each step in its own mind, re-examining
each link.
The female had been key -- this 'Carol
Danvers'. When Immortus-A had commanded it to go and seek out 'the
six most beautiful human women of all time', to distract Immortus-B
from his melancholy over yet another human female, the servitor had
taken the opportunity to initiate its own schemes. The scheme would
spread from that point, a veritable labyrinth worming its
incomprehensibly complex threads and branches through every level of
space-time... but it was with that command, given outside time by the
man always had been and always would be the greatest living master of
time itself... that command was the very first stone that had been
dropped into the pond, causing the very first ripple.
For, what was beauty? How could the
servitor know? It was not human. It had no permanent gender. It
could take on any seeming, certainly... but to it, all living beings
were potential partners in its eternal dance between the chronons.
All living beings were beautiful, in their own way. But one, and
only one, would be useful in fulfilling the servitor's desires.
So it had taken her, Carol Danvers,
from a point in the late 20th Century, and brought her to Limbo,
supposedly for the pleasure of its master(s). But actually, the
servitor was the only living being in the universe who knew how
carefully Carol Danvers had been sculpted over the course of her
life... shaped and molded, to be the servitor's perfect tool.
How it had slaved over her! Replacing
both her father and mother at different times, to ensure she was even
conceived, at just the right moment. Replacing various of those
odious, oh so pompous Kree -- Mar Vell far from least in those
measurements! -- to ensure that the young human female would not only
be exposed to the nearly immeasurable powers of the Psyche Magnitron,
but that when she was, the wish it would fulfill, hidden deep within
the subconscious recesses of her mind, would be that she would become
a woman worthy of Mar-vell himself... a woman warrior who was at
least his equal, if not his superior. And so she had. And so she
was.
A woman worthy, perhaps, to one day
give birth to... The One!
From there, the guidance had gone on.
Replacing that awful plant smoking human with the strangely flat head
long enough to offer Danvers the job that would move her to New York
City... a necessary step, to place her within the ranks of the
Avengers, at just the correct moment, so that she would take
sanctuary at Avengers Mansion when she returned from Limbo, all
amnesiac and unknowing as to where the strange pregnancy within her
had originated.
For had she not taken shelter with the
Avengers, Immortus might well have escaped Limbo into a permanent
human form on Earth... a human form immune to the servitor's powers.
And that must never be.
For that was the one immutable,
unalterable command Immortus had woven through every fiber of the
servitor's artificial being during creation... that the servitor
could never, under any circumstances, use his powers on Immortus. Or
any temporal iteration of Immortus. And that the servitor must
always obey Immortus... any iteration of Immortus, although the
others would not know that... even at the expense of the servitor's
own desires.
Had Immortus, in the form of Marcus,
managed to free himself and take corporeal form on 20th Century
Earth... already with strong alliances forged to the Avengers... he
would have been in position to shake the very stars in their heavens.
And the servitor could not have displaced him, either. He might well
have become... The One!... fathering himself on himself, proving
Carol Danvers to be the Celestial Madonna indeed.
And the servitor could not allow that.
Because at the end of this scheme, somehow, someway, the One would
be born. And as long as the One was not an iteration of Immortus,
then it would be a valid target for the servitor's powers.
The One would assume its destiny,
dominating the entire Galaxy, bringing all of humanity under its
loving, beneficent tyranny, creating an interstellar utopia
unprecedented in history.
And then, the servitor would displace
the One, and rule in its place...!
But much remained to be done before
then.
The first steps were already taken.
The servitor had subtly bent Immortus' mind control beams not just
upon the captured women, but upon both iterations of Immortus, as
well. The men had been naked, relaxed, secure in their timeless
sanctuary, certain that they could not in any way be attacked... and
indeed, all the servitor had done was ensure that they would both
become sexually fixated upon, even obsessed with, Carol Danvers.
Because, when their temporally charged flesh touched Danvers' own
substance, empowered so recently by the Psyche Magnitron, there would
be an energy discharge, and the servitor could use that energy
discharge to its own ends.
An undetectable portal would be opened,
to tumble the more entropically advanced Immortus through, after a
short range, high powered hypnobeam had permanently addled his long
range memories. He would arrive millenia earlier in his own
lifeline, and begin his eternal cycle once again... his obsession
with a mythical 'Celestial Madonna', from somewhere in the 20th
Century, already well rooted in his mind.
...while his younger counterpart,
similarly stunned, would remain behind, to become Immortus, thus
continuing the eternal cycle... most importantly, eventually, to
create the servitor itself.
So it was started... but there were
decades of work ahead of it yet. Centuries, perhaps. But what did
that matter, to a being such as itself?
It would self program itself to believe
it was a 'Space Phantom'... a vanguard for a nonexistent race
planning to invade Earth, come to test the planet's mightiest heroes
in battle. Should it somehow fail in combat and be captured, that
bit of self hypnosis would keep the Earthly heroes from learning
anything of the truth... and, more important, keep its creator's
various avatars from learning anything of it, as well.
In time, the programmed false knowledge
would fade away, letting the servitor recall its true mission... and
its true intentions.
The Avengers would defeat it, of
course... the memory was clear in the servitor's semiorganic data
processors; non-linear, six dimensional recall was an attribute
nearly unique to it. That damned pseudosentience inside the Norse
Eternal's primitive bashing weapon... how dare it pass judgment on
the servitor's worthiness to gain the Norse Eternal's powers! It
still galled the servitor to recall it. But once it engaged its
self programming, it would know nothing of it at the level of surface
consciousness. The non linear recollections would be buried beneath
its autohypnotic programming.
But after the initial defeat, when the
servitor was returned to Limbo, it would make use of the master's
technology to transport itself back to Earth along with many of the
master's machines. It would establish itself in an unused
subterranean warren it was aware of. Then it would act as if it
were 'seeking vengeance' on the odious Avengers for its earlier
defeat... a most illogical and nearly inexplicable course of action,
given the givens, but the servitor knew enough of the behavior of a
typical human 'super villain' to know that no Earthling of that time
and place would think twice about such a motivation.
It would, briefly, establish dominance
over a small sub faction of the laughable Hydra. It would carefully
calibrate all of the technology at its disposal by running field
tests against at least one of these so called superheroes – perhaps
the one called Captain America, he seemed the most resourceful of the
available test subjects. It would establish a doomed alliance with
the farcical Grim Reaper, to further calibrate its machinery against
a larger squadron of heroes... and all the time that it did this, it
would be establishing its primary identity as 'The Space Phantom', an
earthly supervillain of not insignificant power and repute.
It would, once more, allow the Avengers
to believe they had defeated it through a trick any just spawned
ameoboid would see through.
And then... then it would return to
Earth once again, and begin its real work. Protect Carol Danvers from
his master's other avatars? Certainly. It could replace any being it
chose to, and in their place, it could work its own will without fear
of detection. Replacing that oh so earnest and solemn Watcher just
long enough to place the artificial star in the sky above the
domicile of the Avengers... yes. That would focus Immortus' younger,
more savage avatar on the three women within the edifice at that
time.
In the meantime, it would be well
positioned. It would have established an identity that would allow
it to interact with the superhuman community at will, and, of course,
it could assume any other identity it needed to.
There would be setbacks, it was aware.
At some point, some other agent – it was, itself, unaware of just
who – would either impersonate the mutated human known as Rogue, or
mind control her, into making a devastating attack on the Danvers
female. And then there was Nightmare's agent Aarkus, slumbering
within the body of the android Avenger, forever striving to sire
competing candidates to be 'The One'.
None of it would matter. It was
adaptible. It was flexible. No other being in the universe could do
what it could. If its ongoing campaign seemed to go off course, the
servitor could replace any other being it needed to and affect a
course correction.
In the end, it would rule over all.
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