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Chapter 164 - Chapter 159 – Branding Opportunity

On the desolate, asteroid-pocked plains of the Sanctuary, Loki stood before a throne of meteorite and bone. The Chitauri armies, row upon silent row, stood at the ready, a sea of biomechanical death waiting for a command.

He was speaking to The Other, the gaunt, robed herald of his new benefactor. "It will be hard with that earth god on Earth," Loki conceded, his voice a silken, confident thing despite the admission. "But my glorious purpose should never be delayed."

The Other's head tilted, a gesture of pure, condescending dismissal. "You speak of a meager earth god. You want us to squash the meager might of Earth."

"Decisive ones, not the length of the battle," Loki countered smoothly. "That is, if your force is as formidable as you claim."

"You question us?" The Other's voice was a dry, chilling rasp. "You question him? He who put the scepter in your hand, who gave you ancient knowledge and a new purpose when you were cast out, defeated."

Loki's jaw tightened. "I was a king," he said, his voice laced with the bitter venom of betrayal. "The rightful king of Asgard… betrayed."

"Your ambition is little," The Other sneered, "born of childish need. We look beyond the Earth… to a greater world the Tesseract will unveil."

"Yet you need my help for the Tesseract," Loki pointed out, a faint, triumphant smile on his lips.

The Other moved, a swift, silent motion, his grey, three-fingered hand stopping just shy of Loki's neck.

Loki didn't flinch. "I don't threaten," he said, his voice a low, dangerous purr. "But until I open the doors, until your force is mine to command… you are but words."

The Other's hand remained, a silent, chilling promise. "You will have your war, Asgardian. But if you fail, if the Tesseract is kept from us, there will be no realm, no barren moon, no crevice where he cannot find you." The herald leaned in closer, its voice a final, terrible whisper. "You think you know pain? He will make you long for something sweet as pain."

Loki snapped back to a barren, distant moon.

A new voice, ancient and chaotic, echoed in the silence. "Done talking to that so-called titan?"

Loki let out his signature, slow smile and turned. "Amatsu… Chaos King. You've been a hard god to reach out to."

"What does an Asgardian want with a cast-out Yami like me?" Amatsu's voice slithered from the shadows.

Loki caught the double meaning in the words. Cast out. "Then as we are in the same impasse," he said, his voice a silken, conspiratorial thing, "isn't it jarring to see an earthling god prance around with his tail on your lands?"

The Chaos King's black form began to shift. Thin black tentacles and sharp spikes writhed across his body. Long, wicked claws extended from his fingertips. His empty white eyes fixed on Loki, and large, sharp fangs protruded from his upper jaw as he growled, a low, interested sound. "I'm listening."

Loki smiled and began to explain his strategies.

When he was done, Amatsu threw his head back and laughed, a dry, rattling sound that was a world away from Jack's joyous cackle. "Zekhakhakhakhakha! A fool! Akhakhakha!"

Loki's smile vanished. "Curb your tongue. You're talking to the king of Asgard."

Amatsu bent down, his towering, monstrous form looming over the Asgardian. "And you're talking to someone who had been a king before you existed."

The very surface of the moon began to crackle under the clash of their auras.

"You're being used by this mad titan," Amatsu hissed, his voice full of a gleeful, mocking wisdom. "I've never heard of him before, but he's got something up his sleeve to so confidently give you that scepter. And how fitting it would be for another Asgardian to take the Tesseract from Earth. Oh, how history repeats again."

"Why did the mad titan need my help to attack Earth?" Loki asked, his own mind now racing, a seed of doubt planted.

Amatsu's fanged smile widened. "The ancient one," he said, the name a venomous whisper. "The pantheons. And Ego."

Jack Hou waved his hands as three of his Zephyr cloud clones flew back to the balcony to sneakily escort Magneto, Xavier, and Ami Han's teams away.

Xavier and Logan said their goodbyes. "Jack," the professor asked, his voice laced with concern, "are you sure the world shouldn't be told about this?"

Jack laughed. "Kekekeke, Professor, in the world's eyes, I'm a criminal. My clones just broke out of labs around the world, costing them billions by destroying the prisons they kept me in. And don't forget, you're a mutant. In their eyes, you're as bad as, or worse than, me. Which is fucked up, because you've never even peed from the Eiffel Tower."

Logan's head snapped up. "Wait, you've pissed on the Eiffel Tower?"

"No," Jack corrected him cheerfully. "From the top. Anyway, just do the plan, and it'll be good." He then shoved both of them into one of the waiting Zephyr cloud clones, which immediately shot off into the night.

Magneto was still looking at the remaining Jack clones, a thoughtful, calculating expression on his face.

"Stop staring so creepily like that," Jack said, breaking the silence. "I feel defiled. Though, we're both criminals. I guess it's a perk of the job to defile each other. Kekekeke."

"Stop talking nonsense," Magneto said, his voice a low, powerful rumble. "We're doing the project next year, as soon as this 'invasion' is done."

Jack walked closer and began to rub Magneto's helmet in a slow, sultry circle. "My, my, Erik, so impatient. Raven," he said, turning to the disguised Mystique, "is Erik always this impatient?"

Mystique just chuckled as Magneto tried to shoo Jack away from him. Jack then turned to Mystique, took her hand, and brought it to his lips for a soft kiss. "You know," he said, his golden eyes twinkling, "I've always wondered what it would be like to make love to someone who could become anyone. We could be anyone we wanted. Romeo and Juliet. Antony and Cleopatra. Or, my personal favorite, we could both be me. Imagine the possibilities. Kekekeke."

He then gently guided them into their cloud, which promptly flew away.

Ami Han, who had been watching the scene with a mixture of amusement and professional curiosity, finally spoke. "Your cloud seems to be interesting, Mr. Hou. Can we have a sample and do research on it?"

"It's not an 'it'," Jack said, his tone suddenly serious. "He is my best bud. And no. He is off the table."

Ami Han just nodded. "Alright. We'll see you in several months."

"Hey, hey, stop," Jack said as she and Luna Snow were about to leave.

Ami Han stopped. "What is it, Mr. Hou?"

Jack turned to Luna Snow. "Can I get a selfie? I think my Instagram followers would skyrocket if I took a selfie with you."

"No can do, Mr. Hou," Ami Han interjected, her voice firm. "It will lead to misunderstanding. Seol Hee is still an idol. She can't just do a selfie alone with a man."

"Oh," Jack said, a wicked grin spreading across his face. "Then with you, then."

He threw his phone to a nearby clone, wrapped an arm around both Seol Hee and Ami Han's shoulders, and pulled them in for a picture. "Team Asian! Cheers!"

SNAP.

Ami Han could only sigh. "Don't upload it immediately. I need to make a media response for the rumor first."

Jack just laughed. "Kekeke, thanks, Miss Han Ami and Miss Seol Hee." He then kissed both of their hands. "You know," he said to Ami Han, "they say a fox's heart is a treasure beyond measure. But yours, I suspect, is a fortress of pure, unadulterated competence. It's dangerously attractive." He then turned to the beet-red and completely unresponsive Seol Hee. "And you," he whispered, "are a winter storm wrapped in silk. Beautiful, powerful, and utterly breathtaking."

Ami Han dragged the still-frozen idol into their cloud, and they, too, flew away. Jack waved to them.

He then went back inside the penthouse. "So," he said, walking toward the last remaining guest. "Emma Frost of Frost International." He shook her hand.

"The pleasure is mine, Sage," Emma said, her voice low.

"Oh, talking pleasure already? Kekekeke." He then saw Callisto, who was still staring at him with her one good eye. Jack grinned. "Your gaze is quite peering for a one-eyed woman. Kekekeke."

Callisto's voice was low, laced with a questioning intensity. "What are you?"

Jack, who was in the middle of taking the glass of wine Natalie had offered him, paused. "I'm a handsome man, of course," he said, his tone one of cheerful, unassailable confidence. "It's rare these days."

He took a seat on the couch beside Natalie. Across from them, Emma Frost, her posture a perfect, regal stillness, spoke. "White Knight, how can you speak to the Sage like that?"

"Now, now, it's okay," Jack said, a dismissive wave of his hand. He then looked at Callisto, his golden eyes twinkling. "What do you see, Nick Fury?"

Callisto was visibly irritated by the flippant nickname, but there was nothing she could do. She could sense other mutants, those with the X-gene, be it dormant or active. She could feel the shape and scope of their power. But Jack Hou… what she saw when she looked at him was an endless, churning ocean of energy, the very environment pouring into him in a constant, silent torrent. Yet, she was sure he was not a mutant. She could sense that he was not.

"Where do you get your power?" she asked, her voice tight.

Jack paused, then let out a low, rumbling laugh. "Kekekeke, is that what you see?" He poured a shimmering, golden liquid from his gourd into his wine glass. He smiled. "From Mother Earth."

"Is that the energy you've been using?"

"I take, and I am given," Jack said, his voice a strange, melodic thing. "It's all a part of a god's journey. Kekekeke."

Emma turned and looked at Callisto, her face a silent, sharp command to not pursue this conversation further.

Jack then turned his attention to Emma. "So, Miss Frost, we finally meet. I've heard a lot about you from Natalie."

"I hope it's all been good things," Emma said, her voice a silken purr.

Jack laughed. "Don't worry, I don't mind the bad. Can't live a good life without facing the bad and the ugly." He leaned forward, his voice dropping to a confidential, conspiratorial whisper. "So, what I'm trying to determine is… are you my good part, or the other two?"

Emma and Callisto both, almost imperceptibly, gulped.

"Rest assured, Sage," Emma said, her composure flawless. "We are here as your limbs to the outside world."

Jack leaned back, a satisfied smile on his face. "Oh, so you're my good side, then. Let's see. What do you have in mind?"

Emma turned to Callisto. "White Knight, bring the files."

Callisto walked away for a second and returned with a thin, elegant file, which she handed to Emma. Emma then gave it to Jack with two hands, a gesture of profound respect. Jack took it and began to read.

"We will need to rebrand your name, Sage," Emma explained. "The people outside of the Golden Peach mostly have a negative view of you. Especially the news."

"What did I ever do to them?" Jack asked with a completely straight face.

Natalie brought out the McCoy hologram projector, connected it to her phone, and a news clip flickered to life in the air between them. "Well," she said, her tone dry, "you did bring down that one news agency, The Daily Bugle."

Jack's face lit up with a look of pure, nostalgic delight. "Aahhhh," he said, a fond smile on his face. "That J. Jonah Jameson motherfucker."

The McCoy hologram projector whirred to life, casting a collage of frantic news reports into the air. The faces were a mix of familiar pundits, concerned experts, and the one man who had made Jack Hou his personal crusade.

Jonah Jameson's face, red with righteous fury, filled the screen. He slammed a fist on his desk, the sound a sharp crack.

"A MENACE! That's what he is! Not a savior, not a misunderstood hero—a MENACE! While the bleeding hearts in this city are singing his praises, building statues of him in their minds, the rest of us are living in the fallout! The real world! A world where his actions have consequences!"

A panel of experts sat at a sleek, glass table.

"The data is undeniable," a sociologist argued, gesturing to a chart showing a dramatic drop in crime within the Golden Peach. "Jack Hou hasn't just displaced crime; he's created a socio-economic environment where it's not necessary. He's made the very concept of a street-level vigilante obsolete within his borders by providing absolute security."

A sharp-faced urban policy analyst countered immediately. "Obsolete? Or exported? The crime rate in the Bronx has tripled in the last six months. Robberies in Queens are up by two hundred percent. Jack Hou didn't solve the problem; he just pushed the filth out of his perfect little garden and into everyone else's backyard. These new vigilantes aren't inspired by him; they're a direct reaction to the chaos he's created outside his walls."

An American foreign policy expert, a man with a flag pin the size of a small bird on his lapel, spoke with a confident, booming voice. "Let's be clear. What we saw was not a criminal escaping justice. It was an American citizen, Jack Hou, breaking free from hostile foreign powers. It doesn't matter what he did in Russia, Iraq, or China. These countries held him hostage, and now they're mad because he's an American who fought for his rightful freedom."

Another panelist, a sharp, cynical journalist, let out a dry, humorless laugh. "Oh, he's an American now? That's funny. Because last year, you said he was a 'mutie menace' in need of eradication."

"I will not have you put words in my mouth!" the expert roared.

"Oh, I'm not putting words in your mouth," the journalist said, a slow, predatory smile on her face. "I'm just quoting you. Show the recording from last year's congressional hearing."

The screen behind them flickered, and there he was. The same expert, his face red, shouting at a panel. "We need to search for and capture every clone! They are a threat to national security! We either utilize them as soldiers or we eliminate them!"

The studio was sleek and modern, the anchor, Dato' Razali, a distinguished man in a sharp suit and songkok. His tone was not one of panic or outrage, but of cool, pragmatic analysis.

"What we are witnessing is the emergence of what international analysts are now calling the 'Golden Peach model'," he began, his voice calm and measured. "A hyper-localized, self-sustaining microstate governed by a single, meta-human entity. From a geopolitical standpoint, this is a nightmare of sovereignty. An unelected power has annexed a piece of a major American city."

A map of New York appeared behind him, the Golden Peach glowing ominously.

"However," Dato' Razali continued, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes, "from a socio-economic perspective… it is undeniably effective. In one year, Jack Hou has achieved what decades of urban policy have failed to do: eradicate poverty, homelessness, and street crime within his borders. The question for leaders in Kuala Lumpur, in Jakarta, in Singapore, is not if this model is dangerous, but if its success, however unorthodox, offers a template. A dangerous, seductive, and utterly revolutionary idea."

The scene shifted to a rapid-fire montage of interviews from across the United States, each city offering its own unique, bizarre take on the Jack Hou phenomenon.

NEW YORK, NY

A bodega owner, leaning against a counter stacked with dusty cans of Goya beans: "The monkey guy? Yeah, one of his clones came in here last week. Bought all my Funyuns. Every single bag. Paid with a solid gold coin. Told me my bodega cat lacked 'killer instinct' and tried to teach it kung fu. The cat's been sleeping on top of the ATM ever since. He's good for business, I guess."

A performance artist in Times Square, dressed as a giant, sentient traffic cone: "Jack Hou is not a man; he is a concept. His actions are a form of meta-narrative performance art, a blistering critique of late-stage capitalism and the inherent violence of urban decay. The Golden Peach is not a place; it is a living installation that forces us to question the very definition of 'safety.' His tail is a symbol of our primal, repressed id."

An old chess hustler in Washington Square Park, setting up his board: "It's a chess game, see? Kingpin was the king, but he was playin' checkers. This kid… he's playing 3D chess. The Golden Peach? That was his opening gambit. The Japan thing? A knight fork. I respect his game. Don't know what his endgame is, but I'll tell you this for five bucks: it ain't gonna be boring."

AUSTIN, TX

A rancher in a dusty Stetson hat, leaning against the grille of his old Ford F-150: "Don't much care what he does in New York. Long as he don't mess with my cattle. He wants to clean up a city? Hell, send him down here, traffic on the I-35's a nightmare. But if he sets one of them magic peach trees on my land, he'll find out what a real shotgun looks like. And I ain't talkin' about no clone."

A waitress at a roadside diner, wiping down the counter with a practiced, weary rhythm: "Well, bless his heart. Sounds like he's doin' what the government won't. People are gettin' helped, right? Who cares if he's got a tail? My ex-husband had less manners and he was fully human, far as I know. Pass the hot sauce, honey."

LOS ANGELES, CA

An 'influencer' on Rodeo Drive, taking a selfie with a ridiculously small dog: "OMG, Jack Hou? His aura is just, like, so chaotic but in a really authentic way. I'm actually manifesting a collab. I think his brand could really use some synergy with my wellness journey. The Golden Peach aesthetic is so Chinese or whatever Asian country he is. Hashtag blessed, hashtag monkey bum."

A screenwriter at a coffee shop in Los Feliz, hunched over a laptop: "It's a great story. I'm already pitching it. 'God-Monkey Warlord.' It's Jack Hou-like character meets The Godfather with a dash of Eat Pray Love. The studio's gonna love it. The moral ambiguity is very marketable right now. Is he the hero? The villain? Who cares? The merchandising potential is insane."

Jonah Jameson's face was now a mask of something more complex than anger. It was fear. "I'm scared," he admitted, his voice dropping to a low, passionate growl. "I'm scared of another retaliation from this… this thing. I'm scared for the people who don't have a golden tree and an army of clones to protect them."

He leaned forward, his eyes burning with a sincere, desperate fire. "He has no residency. The American government has no record of him. He just… poofed into existence. And his vigilante actions, his so-called 'justice,' have inspired others. This morning, a teenager in New Jersey, trying to be a hero, trying to stop a mugging, was stabbed to death."

He looked directly into the camera, his voice a raw, pleading thing.

"Jack Hou has his Golden Peach. The mutants have their mansion. But what about the little people? The ones who live in the shadows of their ivory towers? Who speaks for them?!"

Natalie and Emma were looking at Jack, waiting for a reaction. An explosion. A denial. Something.

Jack just took a slow, thoughtful sip from his gourd. He looked at the empty space where Jameson's face had been, a slow, appreciative grin spreading across his face.

"Kekeke," he laughed, a quiet, amused sound. "He's got a point."

He just took another slow, satisfied sip from his gourd, the chaotic symphony of the world's opinions, a pleasant, amusing melody to him.

Emma Frost, however, saw not chaos, but opportunity. "They're building a narrative," she said, her voice a low, analytical purr. "Hero, villain, meme… it doesn't matter. What matters is that they're talking. He has a brand. And a brand can be shaped."

Natalie just sighed, the weight of a thousand potential PR nightmares settling on her shoulders. She looked at Jack, at his unconcerned, almost beatific smile, and knew one thing for certain.

Her job was about to get a lot more complicated.

**A/N**

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**A/N**

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