"Adam, listen closely," Wheeler said, her form glowing faintly, trembling at the edges of unreality. "It's different over there. I've seen glimpses. I've brushed against that place before—but I've never been there."
She looked at Adam—his cheeks soaked with tears, his breathing labored—and smiled through the pain.
"I don't know what it's going to be like. But I know one thing—I'm not human anymore. Not really. I can't come back. But... I love you."
Adam's head felt like it was on fire. Thoughts crawled through his neurons like glowing insects, burning, reshaping.
"I know," he whispered. "It's okay. There's no one left to come back to. Just seeing you again... It's enough. I love you too."
[Stand back.]
Dr. Hughes' voice echoed not from the air, but from inside their minds.
Wheeler gave Adam one last look. Then she slowly stepped back.
"You used to sing," Adam said, as her form shimmered under the rising ignition.
"Always," she said softly. "That was the first thing it took from us. But I still remember."
A sound like distant thunder rolled through the chamber.
The launch window opened—not a door, not a portal, but a metaphysical burst of cognition and light.
And then—
She ascended.
Her perspective expanded.
Everything around her—Adam, the room, the Foundation, even the Earth itself—began to shrink into the distance.
From the outside, it was just a shimmer on the screen.
From within, Wheeler was transcending the limits of human perception.
The Marvel world held its breath. None of them could speak. No one even blinked.
This was beyond superpowers. Beyond magic. Beyond gods.
This was cognitive warfare on a divine scale.
At S.H.I.E.L.D. headquarters, Natasha Romanoff's voice trembled. "Dr. Hughes… He turned himself into a biological version of the Unreality Amplifier…"
Nick Fury nodded slowly, "And Wheeler… she was the best idea. The one spark of light."
He clenched his fists.
"She was the ignition."
And then...
The stars screamed.
SCP-3125 turned.
Its massive structure—beyond imagination, beyond logic—shuddered.
It had no true body. It was a cosmic lie, an idea so vast, it took form only through its parasitism on lesser minds.
Its presence had destroyed entire realities.
It had unwritten civilizations by simply making them forget themselves.
Its chaotic complexity was beyond the scope of sanity.
Just knowing it existed caused psychic hemorrhaging.
But Wheeler was changing. Ascending.
She rose until she could see it for what it was.
A tangled mass of falsehoods.
A monument to oblivion.
And then—
She understood.
Instinctively, she grasped its structure. Its weaknesses. Its flaws.
And how to unravel them.
The two beings faced one another—not in battle, but in pure thought.
This wasn't combat. It was math.
Memetic algebra. Conceptual calculus.
They collided like two galaxies of equations.
Each iteration slicing away complexity like a sculptor carving truth from stone.
SCP-3125's form began to degrade.
From complexity to simplicity.
From overwhelming presence to outdated error.
One by one, its limbs collapsed inwards. Its infinite limbs folded like origami made of thought.
It tried to scream.
It tried to adapt.
But it was too late.
Wheeler's light was truth.
And truth devours lies.
With a flash,
SCP-3125 vanished.
Not exploded. Not destroyed. Simply… disproven.
Its memetic grip on reality disintegrated, and with it, the lies that had twisted the world unraveled.
Balance returned.
As if someone pressed reset on existence itself.
In Marvel's world, the silence was overwhelming.
The threat that once felt larger than gods, greater than time, was gone.
And with it—so were Wheeler, Adam, and Hughes.
They had been the only ones left. And they'd given everything.
Kamar-Taj.
The Ancient One sat alone.
She had witnessed the collapse not with eyes, but through the weave of magic and mind.
Wheeler had defied reality itself.
Fought a Supreme Cosmic Idea and won.
How could this be?
A mortal turned into concept… and then into salvation.
She whispered to herself, "That was divinity… reversed."
Observer Dimension.
Watcher Uatu stood frozen.
He had seen gods fall. Universes vanish.
But nothing like this.
He watched the spider legs that remained—the few remnants of SCP-3125's manifestation.
They were being devoured by something even more ancient.
Something that should not exist.
He stepped back in fear.
Whatever was now consuming the last pieces of SCP-3125 was worse than the threat itself.
It was the price of balance.
Meanwhile—
Back at S.H.I.E.L.D., the broadcast resumed.
The screen displayed James, standing tall.
"At this point, SCP-3125 has been completely neutralized."
"The last remaining man became the fuse for the weapon."
"A love long lost transformed into a concept."
"And an entire department became a battlefield."
Then he said, firmly—
"There is no more Antimemetics Division."
The supervisors remained silent as statues.
Until at last—
James asked, "So what did we learn?"
He didn't raise his voice.
He didn't shout.
But the weight of his words was undeniable.
"We learned that time was stolen from us. There was nearly a full year that vanished."
"Entire city sectors were cut off from perception. Humanity rerouted itself around holes in the map."
"And people disappeared. So many that I couldn't even count them."
He looked at the audience, looked beyond the screen—into them.
"We learned that no matter how massive the anomaly, civilization always forgets."
"Because forgetting… is easier than remembering."
No one argued.
Everyone remembered now.
The lost time.
The empty buildings.
The missing friends.
All erased by a predator of thought.
James pointed at the screen's timeline.
A list.
Dates, names.
Each one a death.
First 4,000.
Then 90.
Then 40.
Then none.
The Antimemetics Division had died quietly.
No celebration. No honors.
Just erased.
"And what did the Foundation do?" he asked.
"Did we witness it? Fight it? Hide?"
"What did we do to protect our own?"
The O5 Council remained silent.
James's voice softened.
"At the very least... they deserve a tombstone."
He stepped away.
Drained. Hollow.
He knew he'd forget again.
He knew the Foundation would deny it again.
But still—
"Give them a tombstone."
Scene fades.
The convoy carrying James leaves Site-19.
And somewhere beyond their perception…
It watches.
A massive beast, nearly a thousand meters tall at the shoulder.
She walks the barren plain, invisible to humans, just as the site is invisible to her.
In her mouth: a spider. Shriveled, twitching.
The last fragment of the monster.
The beast's name: SCP-2256 — Hook.
A prehistoric predator of thought.
Still alive. Still feeding.
She swallows the last spider leg.
Victory.
She throws her head back and releases a triumphant infrasonic cry.
The Marvel world hears nothing.
But the universe does.
Old lies become food.
And new stars begin to shine.
.---------------------------------------------------
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