For a moment, time held its breath.
The Phoenix Force, wreathed in starlight and hatred, loomed in the air like a divine judgment. But before her, something changed—Jack Hou, battered, scorched, and grinning like a madman, began to shift.
It began with his hands. Golden flames licked across his palms, rising in shimmering arcs. The skin crackled, then split, but instead of blood, feathers burst out—fiery, radiant, almost too bright to behold. The feathers spread upward, growing in symmetrical fans until they crowned his shoulders like a pair of wings erupting from within.
"What…?" the Phoenix whispered.
His injuries, once brutal, vanished beneath the transformation. The blood evaporated into motes of stardust. His eyes sharpened, irises now forged from molten gold, glowing with eerie certainty.
Then came his legs, twisting and reshaping, sharpening into avian talons, scaled and clawed. The golden flame danced along every inch of his shifting body until the process was complete.
Jack Hou had become a Golden Phoenix, divine and chaotic. The sky trembled. Petals of peach blossoms whirled into being from nowhere, summoned by his presence, drifting like confetti at the end of time. "Kekekekekekekekeke," Jack laughed mid-air, his voice now carrying both fire and wind. "So this is how it feels being a bird. I get the hype now."
The Phoenix Force's fury deepened. "Impossible," she seethed. "You are an unnatural law—a mistake. You do not belong in this cycle."
Jack tilted his golden avian head. "Okay, Mom, calm down with the cosmic tantrums," he mocked. "You sound like my mom after too many glasses of whiskey."
The Phoenix screeched, her voice now an astral flare, and lunged. She dove from the air like a sun collapsing into wrath, talons wreathed in plasma, wings splitting the clouds.
Jack beat his wings once—a burst of sonic bloom knocked debris off the mansion ruins—and twisted mid-air, narrowly dodging the celestial dive. "Whew! Close one," Jack taunted, body corkscrewing in the air. "You'd think a bird born from fire would be better at aiming!" Then he struck.
Jack soared upward with explosive speed, then folded into a dive—mimicking the attack of a hunting eagle. His talons, shining like blades of the sun, raked across the Phoenix's left wing and leg, carving streaks of golden fire across her cosmic form.
She cried out—not in pain, but in shock. No one had touched her like that in eons. "Gotcha," Jack grinned. Using the momentum, he spun—a dazzling wheel of flames and peach blossoms—and with the power of a falling comet, he slammed into her side.
The impact exploded, sending the Phoenix hurtling to the ground. The earth cracked. A crater bloomed beneath her impact, shaking the entire estate. Smoke and energy rippled outward like a war drum.
But the Phoenix was not so easily bested. From within the crater, her form re-emerged—even grander, her body bleeding solar wind, her voice a galaxy's roar. "You mock creation with every breath you take," she hissed. "You defy the cosmic design, you bend destiny, you break everything."
Jack, wings spread wide, hovered high above her. "Kekeke. You say that like it's a bad thing," he smirked. "Maybe your real problem isn't me, but the fact that I'm having more fun being a Phoenix than you are, jealous chicken."
The wind swirled. Flames danced between them. Two gods, mirrored in fire—one born from control, the other from chaos. And neither willing to yield. "So what now, birdie?" Jack challenged, talons flexing. "Wanna see who flies higher?" The Phoenix Force surged upward in a storm of stars. The sky tore open, and the world held its breath.
Above New York, the veil between myth and reality shattered. Two phoenixes—one a cosmic firebird born of rebirth and destruction, the other a laughing, golden-eyed god born from chaos and sarcasm—collided.
From afar, they looked like dueling comets. Each flap of Jack's golden wings left a trail of blazing peach blossom petals, dancing in the slipstream like a storm of cherry confetti. Every screech from the Phoenix Force echoed like a dying star, rattling windows and splitting clouds.
On the streets of Manhattan, people looked up. Some gasped. Some screamed. Many filmed on their phones—Horizontally—with the steadiness of people too numb to process the cosmic horror unraveling in real time. No one had "double phoenix apocalypse" on their Christmas bingo card.
"Holy shit, that bird's glowing," a tourist muttered from the top of the Empire State Building.
"Which one?" a bystander whispered, eyes wide.
"Exactly."
Jack's clone, hair tousled and holding a "LIVE" sign near a nearby news van—let out a slow, tired sigh. "Well. There goes our local zoning laws," he muttered, watching a flaming feather crash through a distant building and rebirth into fireworks mid-air.
Beside him, the X-Men stood. Scott Summers, arms crossed, eyes scanning the heavens, was visibly tense. His optic visor glowed faintly, but he hadn't moved. "You're just gonna stand there?" he asked the clone. "You're not gonna help yourself?"
The clone shrugged. "Nah. He's just being dramatic. I knew we were gonna win the second we started flying. I mean—did you see how sparkly his wings are?"
Scott scowled. "He could die up there."
"Die? Jack?" the clone snorted. "Buddy. If jackassery was a divine domain, we would be the god of it and you'd all be kneeling."
Scott's jaw clenched. He looked up again.
The clone squinted at him. "You're not really in love with her."
Scott blinked. "What?"
"Jean," the clone clarified. "You're not. It's just the Phoenix talking. Emotional manipulation's her kink. Get her away from the flame bird and she'll probably start a scrapbook."
Scott turned, fuming. "What the hell do you know?"
"Enough," the clone said flatly. "Enough to know you're crushing on a half-chicken."
Scott opened his mouth to retort—But above them, a booming laugh cut through the sky. "KEKEKEKEKEKE"
"CATCH ME IF YOU CAN, FIRE CHICKEN!" Jack's Golden Phoenix form twisted through the clouds, leaving trails of gold and blossom-pink fire. He surged higher, wings cracking thunder with each beat. The wind behind him split buildings. Airliners swerved. Jack didn't care.
The Phoenix Force shrieked, following in a blaze of red-gold fury. They crashed again, mid-air, like the fangs of two angry gods biting into the firmament.
Jack twisted, dodged a cosmic talon, then kicked her in the beak. "See, this is what happens when you monologue instead of train!" he shouted.
The Phoenix retaliated with a whip of flame, nearly melting a thunderhead.
Jack dove straight down—then pulled upward at the last second, soaring through the burning funnel and cutting a spiral of golden fire through the sky.
The clone and Scott both watched as Jack soared beyond mortal height, dancing with a living star. "He's gonna win," the clone muttered. Scott didn't answer. "...Even if it kills him," the clone added, almost too quietly to hear.
Jack Hou soared higher—past the clouds, past the jet trails, past the sky—his golden wings slicing the stratosphere like molten sabers. "Kekekeke! Come on, fire chicken!" he called, his voice warping in the thinning air. "Let's see if you're bird enough to keep up!"
Behind him, the Phoenix Force shrieked through the heavens, a burning spear of cosmic wrath, eyes glowing like miniature suns. Her feathers bled fire. Her talons churned spacetime. The earth shrank beneath them. Cities became lights. Clouds became nothing. Gravity bent loose as Jack pushed himself past the boundaries of breathable air.
Then—Silence. The moment they breached the edge of the atmosphere, sound died. The last scream burned behind them like an echo from a dead star. All that remained was motion and intention.
The Phoenix snapped forward. CHOMP. She bit down on Jack's tail feathers—golden flame clenched in cosmic fire. He jolted in the vacuum, eyes bulging. "FUCK YOU," he mouthed, jerking his head back. "YOU BIT MY ASS!" There was no sound, but the look in his eyes screamed it loud enough.
With a savage twist, the Phoenix used his body as leverage, flung herself over him, and slammed her taloned foot into Jack's jaw—a perfect, physics-defying aerial roundhouse kick.
Jack's head whipped back. Blood burst in glittering motes from his mouth, instantly crystallizing in the cold vacuum. He reeled in the zero gravity. No air. No footing. No mercy.
Jack twisted, using his wings to stabilize. He didn't care that every flap burned his bones. He didn't care that cosmic frost nipped his soul. He turned—just in time to catch the Phoenix barreling toward him. SLAM.
They crashed in a cyclone of feathers and fury, golden and crimson. A storm of solar winds and blossoms exploded from their impact, scattering into the void like a celestial firework.
The Phoenix tore at Jack's shoulders. Jack slashed back with his talons. She dodged, arced behind, latched onto his spine, and bent him like she meant to rip out his wings.
Jack gritted his teeth. "She's stronger. She's faster. Her energy's...cleaner," Jack thought, every molecule of his divine form screaming. "But she's never fought dirty like me."
With a savage twist, Jack let her twist his wing—then snapped his foot back and caught her square in the neck. THUMP. The recoil shuddered through space. They separated. He lunged. She clawed. Again and again they met, two immortal birds locked in a dance of violence, in a duel where time slowed, and reality bent to will.
Jack could feel it now—his strength waning. He wasn't running on stamina anymore. He was running on instinct, on pride, on the unwillingness to lose. He let the Phoenix charge. Then at the last second, he looped beneath her, twisted through her flaming underbelly, and latched his talons around her throat. A chokehold. Mid-space. Zero gravity.
His body burned. The vacuum tugged at his soul. The Phoenix screamed, but it was mute, only felt through energy pulses and hatred. Then Jack leaned close. They locked eyes. His golden gaze flared. Not just light—but insight. Not just vision—but invasion.
Jack pushed his soul forward, his will like a piercing spike, driving through her eyes, bypassing the celestial flame—and punched through into the shared mindscape. A torn, burning world. Fractured memory and fire.
Jack Hou landed with a quiet thud. His bare feet met cracked obsidian ground, glowing from underneath with the molten pulse of psychic anguish. He wore a golden robe, unfamiliar, regal… divine. Jack dusted himself off, cracking his neck. "What did I say?" he muttered to himself. "Mind and heart? Kinda my thing." Then—Swish.
Something twitched behind him. Jack blinked, twisted his hips, and caught it midair. "...The fuck?" He stared at the monkey tail swaying between his fingers. "Oh come on. Why now? What am I, a golden-crowned Saiyan?" He groaned. "Goddamn archetypes."
He let the tail drop. "JEAN! Oi, Redhead! Where you at?" Jack's voice boomed, bouncing off molten cliffs and empty sky.
A gust of telepathic heat slammed into him. "You don't belong here."
The voice burned like venom. The Phoenix stood behind him, wings unfurled, her face now a warped and flickering version of Jean's. More flame than form. Her fury alone twisted the ground beneath her talons.
She flapped her wings—BOOM. A concussive wave of psychic flame erupted to eject Jack. But Jack just hunched and planted his feet, teeth clenched. "Huft—Fool me once? Shame on you. Fool me twice?" He grinned. "Shame on your dad."
WHACK! Without warning, he spun and slapped her in the face with his staff. "Kekekekeke!" Then he ran. Full sprint. Monkey tail flapping behind him.
The Phoenix blinked—momentarily stunned. Then rage returned. "YOU DARE MOCK ME—" She gave chase, talons raking the air, wings tearing through memories as she pursued him through Jean's subconscious like a divine predator.
Jack darted between crumbling scenes. childhood schoolyards melting into flaming wastelands, empty hallways, fragments of laughter turned to whispers of blame. "JEAN!" "OY, REDHEAD!"
He spotted her. Hunched. Kneeling in the middle of a shattered memory. Her hands clutched her head. As if letting go would cause her mind to fall apart in pieces. Jack skid to a halt. The Phoenix was nearly on him. "Jean!" he shouted. She looked up, eyes red, cheeks stained. "Jack… Hou…?"
He waved with one hand. The other still held his staff, bracing for death. "Hi. Little busy—being hunted by a cosmic fire demon."
BOOM. Phoenix roared down after him. Jean… chuckled. Just a small one. But it cracked the illusion. She's still in there, Jack thought.
The Phoenix screamed, realizing her grip slipping. In desperation, she surged psychic images into Jean again—hate, blame, betrayal, voices of her teammates yelling, doubting, damning.
Jean winced—Until Jack stomped the ground. CRACK. A ripple pulsed through Jean's psyche. The illusory hate shattered like glass. Shards of it scattered in the psychic winds. "No more gaslighting," Jack growled.
Jean blinked. The noise quieted. The color returned to the memories. "Now…" Jack stood tall, between Jean and the Phoenix. "Repeat after me. This is my mind. 'I'm the boss of it.' And I'm not letting a bird-brained squatter control me."
Jean sniffled. Then nodded. Then. "This… is my mind. I'm the boss of it."
The Phoenix screeched and lunged—Jack caught her by the beak. "Shut. The fuck. Up." CRACK. He slammed an elbow into her throat. The fiery avatar reeled back, coughing flame and fury. "You feel that, Jean?" Jack shouted over his shoulder. "Everything you love can exist here—make it real. Paint it in your head. Command it. This place bends to YOU."
Jean stood amidst the wreckage of her mind, her psychic form flickering like a candle in the wind. Doubt clouded her features, pain swimming in her eyes. "I—I don't know if I can," she whispered.
Jack, bruised and bleeding, turned to her with that ever-burning grin. Even as the Phoenix flared in full divine fury behind him, even as Jack's golden wings frayed at the tips, his voice was calm. "You don't have to. I'll lend you my energy. Use it. All of it."
And she felt it—a strange, alien warmth rushing into her. Energy not her own. It smelled like peaches and firelight. It burned clean.
Behind them, the Phoenix shrieked. Jack turned just in time to block another burning strike with his wing, wincing. He fought dirty—blinding flares of feathers, low blows, smoke feints, stalling tactics only a lunatic monkey god would think of. "Jean!" he yelled mid-somersault. "Focus! Shape this place! Own it!"
And slowly—beneath her bare feet—a ground formed. Not fire. Not ash. Stone. Earth. Real. Her first step in her own sovereignty.
Jack kicked the Phoenix in the beak again and landed beside Jean. "Good. That's a start." He grinned. "Now jump into the deep end, Red. We're sealing this bitch."
"Seal?" Jean asked, hesitant.
"With what power?" the Phoenix sneered. "You're both spent. Empty."
And she wasn't wrong. Their energy was nearly gone. Their minds frayed. Jack stood trembling, wings barely holding form. Still… he smiled. "Like my master always said… All things that fall from heaven… Can rise again with grace."
He slammed his staff into the ground. From his chest, his Celestial Qi surged. It spilled out in golden waves, flowing into the shattered mindscape like ink into water, carving symbols in a language Jean had never seen… but felt. Understood.
The Qi didn't just glow—it sang. Jean's hands moved on their own, guided by will and instinct, shaping the power Jack gave her. She shouted—not words, but intent. A divine command to bind. Then—CRACK.
From the heavens above her mind, ten torii gates fell like divine judgments. Two sealed the Phoenix's talons, locking her to the ground. Three latched across her burning wings—one for each pinion. One coiled around her tail like a shackle. And the last gate—the largest—slammed down on her head, a final crown of silence.
The Phoenix screeched, flame lashing in every direction, but the Qi held. "No!" she cried. "This is unnatural! This is blasphemy!"
"Yeah," Jack whispered, swaying on his feet, smiling. "But it's beautiful, isn't it?" His form flickered. His wings dimmed. His golden light faded. He turned toward Jean, voice distant now. "Welp… I'm out." He gave a little wave. "Don't die, alright? And remember to water the tree."
"Jack—" Jean started
But he was already gone, fading into gold dust with one final. "Kekekekekeke…"
Silence. Then… A warm wind. Jean looked around. Her mindscape was… beautiful.
The chaos was gone. The sky clear. A great peach tree bloomed behind the bound Phoenix, its blossoms fluttering like little stars in a night without storms. Petals danced between rays of golden light. She walked forward.
The Phoenix, though still vast, was smaller now—shackled, stripped of grandeur, forced into form. Her flames hissed, but no longer roared. "You meddle with unnatural law," the Phoenix said bitterly. "You'll be judged. You'll all be judged."
Jean crouched, meeting one of her burning eyes—unafraid now. "Then let's talk," she said softly. "Why did you choose me?"
The Phoenix blinked. And somewhere, deep in that divine inferno… a moment of hesitation.
…
Outside the sealed mind, in the battered remains of the Xavier Institute, a golden phoenix descended slowly through the smoke-choked dawn. Its wings tattered. Its feathers cracked. Yet still, it flew with pride. Cradled gently in its talons was Jean Grey—unconscious, whole, her aura flickering with soft embers.
The X-Men stood frozen, watching. Even Logan held back. The golden bird touched down in the courtyard. It lowered Jean onto the grass like a prayer made flesh.
And then… it shattered. A burst of golden petals scattered across the courtyard like autumn leaves on fire.
In the silence that followed, the figure of Jack Hou emerged—limping, bruised, bloodied, grinning like a fool under the stars. His red and green hanfu—gifted and tailored by the Alfar—was ripped and scorched, barely hanging off his battered frame. Even so, he looked... satisfied.
His bare feet touched the grass, trembling. He chuckled. "Kekekekeke… Oh yeah... I forgot how solid the earth feels."
In his left hand, the Ruyi Jingu Bang pulsed faintly—its golden sheen flickering. He weakly stomped the ground, and the earth welcomed it. A soft hum, like a lullaby from the world itself. And from the base of the staff, white marble crept upward, slowly turning the mythic weapon into marble. "Sorry, my clones…" Jack whispered. "We'll be on meditation for a while."
Across the battlefield, the X-Men watched in awe and confusion, unsure whether to step forward or not. The courtyard echoed with wind and golden silence.
And beyond the mansion grounds, J. Jonah Jameson's live camera caught everything. "Sweet Moses," he muttered off-screen. "Get me a damn poet, we're not worthy of this news"
…
In Brooklyn, two clones sparring in a graffiti-covered alley both froze mid-punch.
One, now half-marble, grinned while holding a guy in a headlock. "Guess this means I win."
"In your dreams," Other said, frozen in a mid-air kick. "Clearly I had the better pose."
They both laughed. "Kekekekekeke…" And turned.
…
In New York, a clone beside Natalie—Jack's handler, friend, or reluctant babysitter—knelt gently to the ground. Natalie's voice cracked. "Wh… what's happening?"
The clone brushed her tear-streaked cheek. "Don't worry," he said softly, eyes glinting gold. "I'll always see you. You blink loud, anyway." With a wink, he began to crystallize—one hand still reaching for her, locked in time.
…
In Krakoa, the teaching clone snapped shut the ancient Qi cultivation book.
"Jack?" whispered Krakoa, its plant-form vibrating. "Are you leaving me too?"
Bonk. The clone tapped Krakoa's petal-shaped head. "Disrespectful disciple. I'm just meditating. This ain't a farewell concert."
"Don't go."
"Silly disciple… I'm in every root of this island now. Now start reading—when I wake up, I'm gonna pop quiz your soul." The clone smirked—and faded into marble, sitting cross-legged, a scholar eternally waiting to teach again.
…
Back at the mansion, the original Jack—now three-quarters marble—stood beneath the cracked sky. His smile had gentled. Then… "Zeph?" A soft gust, and Zephyr swooped down—a dancing swirl of blue scarf and cloud-body, crackling with concern. "Heyyy Zeph," Jack muttered hoarsely. "How was the trip?"
Zephyr shifted anxiously, the sleigh behind him long gone.
Jack chuckled. "Oh, this?" He gestured to his stone-creeping limbs. "Just a little break. Gonna go back to Mother Earth for a while. Y'know. Classic divine nap."
Zephyr tried to float away—but paused, hesitated—then suddenly, stubbornly, curled against Jack's right arm. "Hey! Don't. ...Ugh. Fine. If you insist, fluffy."
With that, Zephyr began to crystallize too, his cloud-body hardening into semi-translucent marble wrapped around Jack's arm like a slumbering guardian. Jack gave one last look around—a small smile pulling at the corners of his cracked lips. "Merry Christmas, to all of you motherfuckers" he whispered.
And then—Stillness. The courtyard now held a statue. A monkey tailed young god and his cloud, carved from white stone, veins of golden ichor running through them like ancient lightning. A heroic pose? Not quite. Restful. Peaceful. He was smiling.
…
Somewhere beyond the stars, in divine tongues from a divine watcher that mortals cannot comprehend, a line was spoken—"A young god enters meditation… and all the realms pause to watch."
**A/N**
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~🧣KujoW
**A/N**