Chapter 104: Dinner Diplomacy
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The bowels of Genosha were a marvel of engineering that would've made Stark Industries weep with envy.
Floating through layers of reinforced metal and crystalline support structures, I'd discovered enough defensive systems to make most countries jealous.
This place was filled with automated turrets that could emerge from seemingly innocent walls, energy barriers that could segment the entire underground network in seconds, and most impressively, a network of tunnels filled with some kind of liquid metal that Magneto could presumably weaponize at will.
The man built a fortress disguised as paradise, just like Grandpa said.
But… no Sentinels. I found no giant robots.
No hidden weapons caches from hostile governments. No orbital strike beacons or sleeper agents. Either Magneto's security was so thorough that he'd already found and eliminated any threats, or my theory of these being hidden underground had been a stupid one from the beginning.
The absence of evidence was somehow more unsettling than finding smoking guns.
I phased back through the floors of the citadel, my spectral form sliding through walls and barriers like they were made of mist. The sensation never got old – that weightless freedom of existing between dimensions, unbound by the physical laws that constrained normal matter.
When I emerged onto the balcony, Anna Marie stood exactly where I'd left her, though she'd apparently grown bored of the view and was now examining her gloved hands with intense focus.
"Find anything interesting while I was gone?" I asked, materializing beside her.
She didn't startle, which impressed me. "Nah… Just been thinking about touch," she said, flexing her fingers. "Wondering what it'd be like to feel someone's skin without seeing their life drain away."
The casual way she spoke about her curse was really something. It was difficult to forget that she'd been denied the most basic human connection, reduced to a weapon by circumstances beyond her control.
"Maybe someday you'll find a way," I offered, shifting back to human form in a flash of green light.
"Maybe," she shrugged, pushing off the railing. "Though I'm not holding my breath. Speaking of which, you're cutting it close. Dinner starts in five minutes, and Erik gets pissy when people are late to his carefully orchestrated diplomatic theater."
Oh well. "Lead the way."
She guided me through corridors that rearranged themselves subtly as we passed, the citadel responding to our movement like a living organism. The metal floors pulsed with faint energy that I could feel through my shoes, and I realized the entire structure was essentially one massive circuit that Magneto could manipulate at will.
"So," Anna Marie said as we walked, "find any scary government death machines hiding under Erik's perfect paradise?"
"Nothing," I admitted, the frustration clear in my voice. "Either Magneto's security is flawless, or we're looking in the wrong direction entirely."
"Or maybe you're being paranoid about threats that don't exist?" she suggested, though something in her tone indicated she didn't fully believe that either.
We reached an ornate set of double doors that opened silently at our approach, revealing a dining hall that belonged in a palace rather than a citadel. The room soared three stories high, with a domed ceiling that displayed a slow-moving aurora of electromagnetic energy. Floating candelabras provided warm, flickering light that danced across polished metal surfaces and rich tapestries.
At the center sat a massive circular table crafted from a single piece of dark metal, its surface polished to mirror perfection. Around it, the most powerful mutants in the world had gathered for what might be their last supper together.
Wow. Look at this guest list.
Professor Xavier sat to Magneto's right, his expression carefully neutral as he engaged in what appeared to be pleasant conversation with his oldest friend and greatest enemy. Emma Frost occupied the chair to Magneto's left, resplendent in white silk that seemed to glow in the candlelight, her diamond-hard beauty drawing glances from every male present.
But the real surprise sat directly across from Emma – Sebastian Shaw, the Black King of the Hellfire Club, his massive frame contained within an impeccably tailored black suit. The tension between him and Emma was so thick you could cut it with a knife.
When did Shaw get here? And why is he here?
Storm sat between Xavier and Beast, her white hair flowing despite the absence of wind, while Scott Summers looked uncomfortable in civilian clothes beside Jean. Grandpa Max had positioned himself strategically where he could observe the entire table, his Hawaiian shirt an almost comical contrast to the formal attire surrounding him.
And there was Gwen, looking elegant and hot in a dark blue dress that made her red hair shine like copper fire. Her eyes found mine immediately, and I caught the pointed look she gave me, noting that I was arriving with Anna Marie, who was wearing an emerald dress that accentuated every dangerous curve.
Oh, I'm definitely getting interrogated later.
"Ah, Benjamin." Magneto's voice carried across the room as conversations paused. He rose from his chair with fluid grace, arms spread in welcome. "And Anna. Perfect timing. Please, join us."
The smile he directed at me held layers of meaning I couldn't quite decode. Amusement, certainly. Interest, absolutely. I have to be careful. But there was something else – a chess player studying an unexpected piece that might prove useful.
"Sorry for the delay," I said, allowing Anna Marie to guide me toward two empty chairs. "I got turned around in your maze of corridors."
"The citadel can be confusing for first-time guests," Magneto replied smoothly, resuming his seat as we settled into ours. "I trust you found the architecture... educational?"
There it was. He knew I'd been exploring. Of course he did – every piece of metal in this place probably reported to him.
"Very impressive," I replied without being intimidated. "The integration of function and form is remarkable."
Shaw's deep laugh rumbled across the table. "The boy has an eye for construction, Erik. Perhaps he'd appreciate hearing about your expansion plans."
Expansion plans? That was new information, and potentially crucial. I filed it away while accepting a glass of wine from a server whose metallic skin reflected the candlelight.
"Sebastian speaks of business at a celebration dinner," Magneto chided gently, though his eyes glinted with something predatory. "Though I suppose some topics are unavoidable when such distinguished minds gather."
"Distinguished minds," Emma repeated, her voice carrying just enough acid to strip paint. "Is that what we're calling Sebastian's collection of corporate raiders and arms dealers now?"
Shaw's smile never wavered, but his eyes hardened. "Oh come on, you know me better than to say that, Emma. I prefer 'visionaries who understand that power shapes reality. Not everyone can afford the luxury of playing dress-up with teenagers."
The temperature in the room actually dropped several degrees as the Black King and White Queen of the Hellfire Club locked gazes, decades of personal grudge clashing against one another. I could feel Madelyne tense beside me, her fingers tightening on her wine glass as something flickered in her eyes.
Phoenix seed responding to conflict. Great.
"Perhaps," Xavier interjected smoothly, "we could focus on the positive aspects of this gathering. After all, we're here to celebrate Genosha's achievements."
"Indeed," Magneto agreed, raising his glass. "To Genosha. The first nation where mutants need not hide their gifts."
"To Genosha," the table echoed, though I noticed the varying degrees of enthusiasm in their voices.
As we drank, Shaw leaned forward, his dark eyes studying me with uncomfortable intensity. "Young Tennyson, I understand you've had some fascinating encounters recently. Particularly with our mutual acquaintance, Lady Selene."
Fuck. Every conversation at this table was a minefield. "We've met."
"Met," Shaw chuckled. "Such modesty. I should honestly be careful with what I say, but I heard you defeated one of the most powerful mutants in existence in direct combat. Quite impressive for someone so young."
Gwen's eyebrows shot toward her hairline at the stupidity of those words, while Grandpa Max's expression tightened almost imperceptibly. Clearly, they hadn't heard the full story of the Mexico incident. I had not won.
"I had help," I deflected. "And she was distracted by trying to control an Aztec death god's Avatar. Hardly a fair fight."
"Still," Emma interjected, her voice soft, "Fascinating that you could resist her psychic influence so completely." The Omnitrix alerted me that she'd just tried to communicate with me using her telepathy. I ignored it. "...Almost as if your mind operates on entirely different principles."
I met her gaze evenly, thinking as loudly as I could. Stay out of my head, Emma. Although the Omnitrix blocked telepaths when I wanted it, I could reply back if I wanted.
Her lips curved in a small smile of acknowledgment.
"Power," Shaw continued, unbothered by our exchange, "is the only currency that matters in our world. Governments rise and fall, but those with true strength endure."
"Is that your philosophy?" Gwen asked, her voice deceptively innocent. "Rule through force?"
Shaw turned his attention to her, and I felt a spike of protective anger at his gaze. "Not force, young lady. Influence. Those with power have a responsibility to guide those without."
"Guide," Storm repeated, her voice carrying the rumble of distant thunder. "An interesting euphemism for domination."
"Ororo raises an excellent point," Xavier said. "The question isn't whether we have power, but how we choose to use it. Do we lift others up, or do we stand above them?"
Magneto's fork paused halfway to his mouth. "And what of those who would destroy us simply for existing, Charles? Do we lift up the humans who build Sentinel programs designed to exterminate our children?"
There it is. The conversation I'd been dreading. Every face around the table reflected the central question that divided mutantkind: coexistence or dominance?
"The Sentinel programs are a threat, yes," I said, surprising myself by speaking up. "But they're not representative of all humanity. Fear drives those decisions, not inherent evil."
"Fear," Anna Marie scoffed, though not unkindly. "Sugar, fear got me thrown out of my home at fifteen. Fear made people cross the street when they saw me coming. Fear builds concentration camps."
"And yet," I pressed, "fear also built this place. Magneto's fear of persecution created a sanctuary for mutants who had nowhere else to go. Fear isn't inherently good or evil, won't you agree? Fear drives a man to think. Fear is a tool that can build or destroy."
Beast nodded thoughtfully. "An astute observation. Fear as a constructive force rather than merely destructive..."
"Pretty words," Shaw interrupted, "but ultimately naive. The strong rule, the weak serve. It's the natural order."
"Natural order," Grandpa Max spoke for the first time since dinner began, his voice carrying decades of authority. "I've seen civilizations rise and fall across the galaxy, Mr. Shaw. The ones that survive aren't the strongest. They're the most adaptable."
The table fell silent.
It's really difficult to argue back when someone starts the sentence with 'I've seen civilizations rise and fall across the galaxy…' Grandpa was so cool.
In the stillness, I could hear the faint hum of electromagnetic energy that pervaded the citadel, the distant sound of nightlife in the city below, and the almost inaudible whisper of mental conversation between the telepaths present.
"Across the galaxy," Magneto repeated slowly. "Maxwell, you continue to surprise me with the casual scope of your experiences."
"My Plumber times were... comprehensive," Grandpa replied with a slight smile.
Shaw's eyes narrowed. "Plumbers. I've heard whispers about that organization. Intergalactic police force with access to technologies beyond current human understanding."
Grandpa clearly disliked Shaw's interest in Plumber tech, but maintained a respectable silence.
Madelyne's wine glass suddenly cracked, a hairline fracture appearing down its side as her grip tightened. The candles around the table flared higher, their flames dancing with colors that had nothing to do with the wax they consumed.
"Madelyne," Jean said quietly, "perhaps some air?"
"I'm fine," Madelyne replied through gritted teeth, though the Phoenix fire continued to flicker in her eyes. "Just tired of listening to people discuss ruling over others like they're cattle."
Magneto leaned forward, his attention focusing on her with laser intensity. "An interesting perspective, Ms. Pryor. And what would you have us do? Hide while humans develop more sophisticated methods of hunting us?"
"I'd have us stop pretending there are only two choices," she snapped, the fractured wine glass beginning to smoke in her hand. "Integration or domination. Coexistence or conquest. Maybe the real answer is something nobody in this room has considered."
"Which is?" Shaw challenged.
Madelyne's eyes blazed with cosmic fire for an instant before she got herself under control. "Evolution. Not of powers, but of perspective. Stop thinking like apex predators and start thinking like gardeners."
The metaphor hit the table like a bomb. In the silence that followed, I could see minds processing the implications – not conquest or surrender, but cultivation. Growing something new rather than destroying what existed.
Only I smiled. Madelyne Pryor. She really was different from Jean Grey. As I observed the others, I realized they had reached the same conclusion.
"Gardeners," Beast mused. "Nurturing growth rather than imposing dominance. I find that... hopeful."
"Hopeful," Emma repeated flatly. "And utterly impractical. You can't garden while someone's shooting at you."
"But you can plant seeds," Gwen added quietly, her eyes bright with understanding. "Even in hostile soil."
Anna Marie looked around the table, then directly at me. "What do you think, transformation boy? You got more experience switching between different perspectives than most."
All eyes turned to me, and I felt the weight of the moment. These weren't just dinner guests – they were some of the most powerful beings on the planet, each representing different paths forward for their species.
What would a kid with alien transformations and future knowledge say here?
"Eh, I'm just a kid. But since you're so curious… I think," I said slowly, "that every alien species I've become has taught me something different about strength. Heatblast showed me that power can create or destroy. I'd absorbed a forest fire into me and so saved who knows how many poor animals? Four Arms taught me that sometimes you need overwhelming force to protect what matters, like when I stopped Hulk and the Abomination. But Ghostfreak..." I paused, meeting Anna Marie's eyes. "Ghostfreak taught me that sometimes the strongest thing you can do is exist in the spaces between worlds. Not human, not alien, but something new. Something that's not an enemy to either."
Magneto raised his wine glass again, but this time his smile held genuine intrigue rather than political calculation. "To existing in the spaces between worlds, then. May we all find the wisdom to build something worthy of our children."
As we drank, I caught Grandpa Max's approving nod and felt a flush of pride. But beneath the table, my hand clenched around my napkin as I thought about what was coming.
Two days. Two days until this beautiful, impossible dream gets tested by the worst humanity has to offer.
What the hell was I even saying to these people, when I knew it'd be humans who'd launch attacks at them?
The conversation continued, flowing from philosophy to practical politics to shared stories of persecution and triumph. But I barely heard it, my mind racing through possibilities and contingencies.
Because no matter how eloquent our dinner conversation, no matter how hopeful our toasts, I knew the real test wasn't happening at this table.
It was coming from the sky.
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Author Note: I'm done and back!! The exam results were fantastic, thank you all for waiting. It's a Sunday, I'll pray for some stones guys