Chapter 37 – Glass Houses
Added 2025-08-15 05:46:30 +0000 UTCThe silence stretched until Fury's presence filled the chamber.
His single eye swept across the scene with the practiced assessment of a man who'd seen every kind of clusterfuck the world had to offer. Behind him, S.H.I.E.L.D. agents held tactical positions, their weapons ready but not yet aimed—professional restraint barely containing the tension.
"Well," Fury said, his voice cutting through the underground stillness, "this is about as fucked up as I expected it to be."
The director of S.H.I.E.L.D. stepped further into the torchlight, his long coat settling around him like a battle standard. "Power Broker, X-Men, prisoners—nobody moves until we sort this mess out. And trust me, we're going to sort it out."
Jay's mask reflected the flickering flames as he turned to face this new player. His suppression field hummed invisibly around him, keeping the X-Men powerless while the Morlocks stood ready behind their human shields of restored faces.
"Director Fury," Professor Xavier said, relief evident in his cultured voice despite his powerless state. "We came here to retrieve our operative—"
"Shut it, Charles." Fury's tone brooked no argument. "You had one job. Keep the mutant community stable while we handled the political fallout. Instead, I've got Morlocks fighting in the streets, Hellfire Club facilities destroyed, and half of Manhattan's emergency services tied up dealing with what looks like a goddamn monster movie."
Storm, her powerless form still radiating authority. "Director, the situation is more complex than—"
"Complex?" Fury's laugh was bitter. "Lady, I've got my superiors breathing down my neck, asking why we can't contain a bunch of sewer rats. Your original deal with us was to prevent exactly this kind of public incidents."
Jay stepped forward, his electronic voice carrying across the chamber with calm menace. "Stay out of it, Fury. Let mutants solve mutant matters."
"That's not how this works." Fury's single eye fixed on Jay's masked form. "The moment you took your little underground rebellion public, it became my problem. And I solve my problems."
The S.H.I.E.L.D. agents shifted slightly, weapons still held ready. The message was clear—they were prepared to escalate if necessary.
"X-Men," Fury continued, "you're going to pair with my agents for immediate containment. We shut this down before it spreads to other cities."
Bobby Drake, still staring at his powerless hands in disbelief, looked up. "Uh, Director? We've got a slight problem with that plan."
"What kind of problem, Drake?"
"The kind where our powers don't work anymore." Bobby gestured helplessly at his normal skin. "Whatever this guy did, only Beast and Nightcrawler still look like mutants, and even Kurt can't teleport."
Beast's brilliant mind continued working through the puzzle, his enhanced intellect racing through possibilities.
"Most curious," Beast muttered, adjusting his glasses as he studied Jay. "The specificity suggests an intimate knowledge of our genetic structures."
Jay's laugh echoed strangely through his mask's modulation. "Doctor McCoy, always the scientist. Tell me, Fury—which UN Security Council member is a Hellfire lackey? I'd like to... have a conversation with them."
The temperature in the chamber seemed to drop several degrees. Even the torchlight flickered as if responding to the menace in Jay's distorted voice.
Fury's expression hardened. "How do you know about Security Council involvement?"
"Same way I know you were too late to stop their influence from spreading through your organization." Jay stepped closer, his suppression field moving with him like an invisible sphere of negation. "You want to talk about problems, Director? Let's talk about how S.H.I.E.L.D. is no better than anyone here."
The Morlocks shifted behind their leaders, tension rippling through the crowd like electricity. They could sense their protector building toward something, and they were ready to follow wherever he led.
"Working with dictators when it suits you," Jay continued, his voice carrying to every corner of the chamber. "Making deals with terrorists when they have information you need. Partnering with the Hellfire Club when their resources prove useful. Using the X-Men as your pet peacekeepers while letting innocents suffer to maintain your precious status quo."
Fury's jaw clenched. "That's how the world works, son. You pick your battles and make hard choices. Someone has to keep the lights on while idealists like you play revolution in the sewers."
"Idealists?" The electronic modulation couldn't hide the edge of genuine amusement in Jay's voice. "Director, I think you've got me confused with someone who still believes in fairy tales."
The moment stretched taut as both men sized each other up—the seasoned spymaster who'd built an empire on necessary compromises, and the masked figure who'd emerged from nowhere to challenge everything Fury thought he understood about mutant politics.
Then Fury fired back, his voice sharp with authority and frustrated anger. "You want to talk about fairy tales? Let's talk about you, Power Broker. Coming out of nowhere, manipulating an entire population with parlor tricks and false promises. Handing out facelifts like some bargain-basement messiah, giving these people hope you can't possibly deliver on."
The effect on the Morlocks was immediate and volcanic. Voices rose in outrage throughout the chamber, men and women who'd found dignity through Jay's intervention now faced with casual dismissal of their transformation as worthless trinkets. The sound was like a hive of angry wasps, decades of suppressed fury finding voice in unified rage.
Caliban's pale form tensed with barely contained violence, his gaunt features twisting with something dangerous and primal. Beautiful Dreamer's ethereal features hardened into something that promised retribution. Even the restored children pressed forward, their newly human faces flushed with indignation that ran deeper than their years.
"Fake hope?" S'kk's reptilian voice carried clearly over the crowd's growing rage. "You think their restored faces are fake?"
"Our dignity is fake?" Callisto stepped forward, her scarred face set in hard lines. "Our unity is fake?"
The mood shifted from tense standoff to the precipice of violence. The air itself seemed to vibrate with potential energy, like the moment before a dam bursts. Even without their powers, the X-Men recognized the signs—a mob building toward savage retribution, decades of suppressed rage finding a target in the man who'd just dismissed their transformation as circus tricks.
Then Jay simply snapped his fingers.
The sound echoed through the chamber like a gunshot, sharp and commanding. Suddenly, the Morlocks fell silent from choice. Choosing to listen to their leader rather than act on their justified fury. It was a display of absolute authority that needed no supernatural power to enforce, just the complete trust of people who'd found someone worth following into hell itself.
"Much better," Jay said calmly, as if the near-riot had been nothing more than a minor interruption. "Now, Director Fury, since we're discussing the credibility of hope..."
Jay walked toward Fury with measured steps, his boots echoing off stone as the suppression field moved with him invincible to all. The S.H.I.E.L.D. agents tensed, but Fury held up a hand to keep them from escalating.
"There's an old Indian proverb," Jay said, stopping just outside Fury's personal space. His mask caught the torchlight, making it impossible to read any expression beneath. "Those whose houses are made of glass shouldn't throw stones at others' houses."
"Speaking of glass houses," Jay continued conversationally but silently enough for only Fury to hear, his electronic voice dropping to a whisper that somehow carried more menace than any shout, "how's Natasha's family doing? You know, the ones you've been telling her are dead for years, while they either rot in Russian prisons or under the still operating Redroom's control?"
Fury's single eye widened fractionally—the only sign of shock on his carefully controlled features. But Jay caught it, caught that micro-expression that revealed everything. The legendary spymaster's poker face had cracked, just for an instant.
"Or should we discuss Project T.A.H.I.T.I.?" Jay's electronic voice carried a note of dark amusement that made Fury's blood chill. "Fascinating work, using Kree genetic material to create resurrection serums. Tell me, how many test subjects died screaming before you got the formula right?"
"How the hell do you know that?" Fury's voice was deadly quiet, his hand moving unconsciously toward his sidearm.
"The same way I know you've been running illegal human experimentation programs under the guise of 'enhanced individual research.'" Jay tilted his head, the gesture somehow managing to convey casual interest despite the mask. "The same way I know about the Fridge facilities, the Index, and your delightful habit of recruiting criminals and terrorists when their skills prove useful to your little shadow empire."
Fury's mind raced as he felt a strange déjà vu wash over him—this conversation, this casual revelation of state secrets, felt familiar.
"You're connecting me to someone," Jay observed, watching Fury's face carefully through his mask's eyeholes. "The doctor, perhaps? Cool guy, I heard he was single and available in the market." His head turned slightly toward the X-Men, the gesture somehow managing to appear amused despite the electronic distortion.
"Who are you?" Fury demanded not falling for his psychological tricks, his composure finally cracking.
Jay's laugh echoed through the chamber. "I'm exactly who I said I am, Director. I'm the Power Broker. And if you want to keep being Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. instead of just another corpse in a shallow grave, I suggest you back the hell off."
The threat hung in the air, but Fury wasn't a man who'd survived this long by backing down from dangerous situations. His jaw set with stubborn determination.
"I can't leave empty-handed. The Council expects results, and if I don't deliver, they'll find someone who will. Someone who might not be as... diplomatic as I've been tonight."
"Then take your results," Jay said simply. "Take the Hellfire prisoners. But understand—you're not taking what makes them superior."
Fury's eye narrowed. "What's that supposed to mean?"
Instead of answering directly, Jay turned toward where Masque waited among the other Morlocks. The surgically scarred mutant straightened when his leader's attention focused on him, a slow grin spreading across his damaged features.
"Masque," Jay's electronic voice carried clearly, each word dropping into the silence like stones into still water, "these prisoners have hidden their true nature behind pretty faces for far too long. Why don't you... bring their real beauty to the surface? To your heart's content."
The grin on Masque's face widened into something genuinely unhinged, years of suppressed rage and creative sadism finally finding an outlet. His hatred of Hellfire Club experimentation would finally get its revenge through him as an instrument of poetic justice.
"Finally," Masque whispered, his voice carrying a sick joy that made several people step back. "Finally, I get to show them what it feels like."
"No," Storm said immediately, her powerless form still radiating moral authority. "This is too much. You cannot—"
"Can't what?" Caliban interrupted, his pale, gaunt face turning toward the former goddess of the Morlocks with bitter accusation in every line. "Make them look like us? Make them experience what we've lived with every day of our miserable fucking lives?"
The cutting observation hit the X-Men like a physical blow to the solar plexus. Beast's enhanced intellect processed the moral trap immediately—how could they argue that permanent disfigurement was too cruel a fate without implying that the Morlocks' original appearances were somehow worse than death itself?
"That's not—we didn't mean—" Jean Grey stammered, her powerless state making her feel more vulnerable than she had in years.
"Oh, so looking like us is worse than death?" Caliban's voice carried a bitter edge that decades of underground existence had honed to razor sharpness. "So our faces are so horrific that inflicting them on others constitutes cruel and unusual punishment? How very fucking enlightening to learn what our supposed allies really think of us."
The X-Men fell silent, the ugly implications of their moral outrage exposed like infected wounds. They could weep for beautiful people facing disfigurement while accepting the Morlocks' monstrous appearances as natural consequences. They could protect the Hellfire Club's lost perfection while ignoring the ugly ones who suffered in darkness.
Masque didn't wait for further debate. His power flowed outward like liquid creativity, targeting the Hellfire prisoners who weren't protected by X-Men intervention. Shinobi Shaw's perfect features twisted into a grotesque parody of his father's arrogance. Harold Leland's face became a reflection of the cruelty he'd shown others. Donald Pierce's remaining human features warped to match the mechanical coldness of his cybernetics.
Their screams echoed through the chamber as flesh reshaped itself according to Masque's twisted artistry, their bodies reflecting the ugliness of their souls for the first time in their pampered lives.
Only Emma Frost and Sage were spared—the X-Men had moved to intervene just in time, though their powerless state meant they could offer only physical protection rather than any real defense.
"Enough," Xavier said firmly, his wheelchair humming as he positioned himself between Masque and the two women. "We understand your point. The disfigurement ends here."
Jay nodded approvingly. "Acceptable. Emma can leave... but all assets under her name—legal and illegal—go to the Morlocks. Consider it community improvement funding."
"You can't just steal—" Emma started, her diamond transformation trying and failing to activate under Jay's suppression field.
"Can't I?" Jay's electronic voice carried dark amusement that made Emma's blood turn to ice water. "Director Fury, Professor Xavier—do you guarantee this deal will be honored? Because I'd hate for Emma to discover what happens when people break their word to me."
Fury and Xavier exchanged glances, both men recognizing the political trap they'd walked into like lambs to slaughter. Emma Frost's fortune was built on decades of exploitation and illegal activities. Legally, she had few protections. Morally, they had even fewer grounds to defend her blood-soaked wealth.
"The deal will be honored," Xavier said reluctantly.
"S.H.I.E.L.D. will ensure compliance," Fury added through gritted teeth.
Jay stepped toward Emma, who instinctively backed away until she hit the stone wall behind her. Her diamond form tried desperately to activate, but the suppression field held her powers in complete check.
"What do you want?" Emma asked, her voice steadier than her expression suggested. "My body? Is that the price of keeping what's left of my face?"
"Your body?" Jay's modulated laugh echoed strangely, like broken promises and shattered illusions. "Emma, you're old enough to be my grandmother. I have standards."
Instead of the sexual assault she'd expected, Jay reached out with stolen power—Sage's enhanced mental abilities and X-gene Jump-Start, stolen during their earlier encounter and modified through his own understanding of mutant genetics. His touch was clinical, precise, reaching not for her flesh but for the genetic structures that governed her mutation and a new application of this was born.
Emma's eyes widened in shock and growing horror as she felt something fundamental shift in her. Her diamond transformation activated suddenly, her skin shifting to brilliant crystal—but instead of the controlled shift she'd mastered over decades, the change felt different. Permanent. Locked.
"What did you do to me?" Emma's crystalline features couldn't express emotion properly, but her voice carried pure panic.
"Insurance," Jay replied simply, his electronic voice carrying the weight of absolute finality. "You'll remain in diamond form until every cent of your assets has been transferred to Morlock community funds. Try to break the deal, try to hide resources, try to welch on any part of the agreement... and you'll spend eternity as a living statue, conscious but unable to feel, unable to touch, unable to experience anything but the cold perfection of your own reflection."
Emma tried to shift back to flesh, her panic rising as the transformation refused to respond. The power that had been her greatest strength had become a beautiful prison.
"You bastard!" She lunged forward, her diamond fists aimed at Jay's mask, but stopped short when she met his gaze through the eyeholes. Even through the electronic distortion and the physical barrier, something in his eyes made her survival instincts scream warnings.
"Emma," Jay's voice carried a note of almost gentle menace, like a parent explaining consequences to a particularly slow child, "I suggest you consider your next move very carefully. I've been patient with you because you're useful alive. That patience has limits that you really don't want to test."
Emma stepped back, her diamond form reflecting the torchlight like a living sculpture of crystallized terror. The threat was implicit but unmistakable—she could be beautiful and functional, or she could be beautiful and dead.
"The deal stands," she said finally, her voice containing decades of bitter pride swallowing itself.
Jay turned back to address the chamber as a whole, his presence dominating the underground space with casual authority that made everyone present feel small and temporary.
"Director Fury, Professor Xavier—I suggest you leave. Now. Before this becomes the kind of battlefield none of us can control."
"This isn't over," Fury said, but his agents were already beginning to withdraw. The political ramifications alone would take months to sort through, and they had what they'd come for—prisoners to satisfy the Council, even if those prisoners were no longer the powerful assets they'd once been.
"It never is," Jay agreed. "But next time, remember—some houses are made of stronger glass than others."
The X-Men began their own tactical withdrawal, supporting Storm and helping the powerless team members navigate the tunnels. Only Beast lingered for a moment, his scientific curiosity warring with tactical necessity.
"Power Broker," Beast said quietly, his enhanced intellect still racing through patterns and possibilities that didn't quite add up, "your knowledge, your abilities, the precision of your power suppression... there's something familiar about your methodology. Something that reminds me of—"
Jay's mask turned toward the blue-furred genius with laser focus. "Doctor McCoy, sometimes the most brilliant minds ask the most dangerous questions. And sometimes those questions have answers that brilliant minds aren't prepared to handle."
"Indeed, they do," Beast replied softly, his scientific instincts screaming that he was missing something crucial. "Indeed, they do."
As the three factions withdrew from the underground chamber, the Morlocks remained—united, empowered, and now wealthy beyond their wildest dreams. Their cheers echoed off stone walls as Jay stood among them, his suppression field finally dissipating as the immediate threat passed.