The silence in the laboratory stretched for exactly forty-seven seconds after the door sealed behind my mother and her escorts. I counted each one, watching the quantum fluctuations in the air settle back into their baseline patterns.
Then I started laughing.
It began as a low chuckle, barely audible over the hum of Sinister's equipment. But it grew, building into something that resonated across multiple frequencies simultaneously. The sound made the reinforced glass of the observation deck vibrate in its frame.
"Something amusing, Alex?" Sinister's voice crackled through the intercom, tinged with what might have been confusion.
I wiped my eyes—when had I started crying from laughter?—and looked up at the observation window. Through the quantum layers, I could see Sinister's vital signs.
Elevated heart rate, increased neural activity in his prefrontal cortex, stress hormones flooding his enhanced physiology.
He was worried.
"Oh, Doc," I said, my voice carrying harmonics that made the metal examination table ring like a tuning fork. "How's my acting? Did I sell it? The whole 'torn between humanity and power' routine?"
The silence from the observation deck lasted exactly thirteen seconds this time. I could practically hear the gears turning in Sinister's ancient mind.
"I'm not sure I follow," he said carefully.
"Really? And here I thought you were supposed to be some kind of genius."
I stood up, letting myself float a few inches off the ground—not the controlled levitation from before, but something more casual.
Like gravity was a suggestion I'd grown tired of following. "The emotional breakdown about losing my humanity? The touching moment with dear old Mom? The big revelation about the cost of godhood?"
I snapped my fingers, and every piece of electronic equipment in the laboratory flickered in perfect synchronization.
"Pure. Theater."
Through the quantum layers, I watched Sinister's stress responses spike. His enhanced physiology was trying to compensate, but I could see the micro-expressions of fear bleeding through his carefully controlled facade.
"You see, Nathaniel—can I call you Nathaniel? We're old friends now, after all—you made one crucial mistake in your little psychological experiment." I gestured to the walls around us, and frost began to form in perfect geometric patterns. "You assumed I was still capable of genuine internal conflict."
The intercom crackled with what sounded like forced calm. "And you're claiming you're not?"
"I'm claiming that I evolved past that particular limitation about six deaths ago." I walked to the wall where my mother had been standing, trailing my fingers along the metal surface. Where I touched, the atomic structure reorganized into crystalline formations that caught the harsh fluorescent light and threw it back in impossible colors.
"The part of me that agonized over moral choices? The bit that worried about the cost of power? That died in your sensory deprivation tank, Doc."
"Then why the performance?"
"Because it was fun." The word carried enough force to make the observation deck's reinforced glass develop hairline fractures. "Do you have any idea how boring it gets, being this far beyond everyone else? Having conversations with people whose thoughts move like molasses, whose understanding is so limited they can't even perceive half of what I'm saying?"
I turned to face the observation window directly, knowing that my golden eyes would be clearly visible even through the quantum distortions I was unconsciously generating.
"But you? You're different, aren't you, Nathaniel? Enhanced, modified, rebuilt so many times you've forgotten what you originally were. You actually thought you could manipulate me. Guide my development. Control the uncontrollable."
My smile felt sharp enough to cut reality itself.
"It was adorable."
The lights in the laboratory began to strobe in patterns that corresponded to brain wave frequencies—specifically, the frequencies associated with terror.
Through the quantum layers, I could see Sinister's neural activity shifting, his enhanced mind trying to process the implications of what I was telling him.
"Every moment of apparent doubt, every flash of humanity, every tear I shed over the moral implications of my power—" I laughed again, and this time the sound made the metal walls of the laboratory begin to resonate. "Oscar-worthy performances, every single one."
"Why?" The word came out as barely a whisper through the intercom.
"Because I wanted to see how far you'd push it. How elaborate your little puppet show would get. And because..." I paused, savoring the moment. "Because I needed you to think you had me figured out while I figured out the real structure of this place."
I gestured, and every screen in the laboratory lit up with schematics—not just of Sinister's mountain facility, but of his entire operation. Labs in seventeen countries, breeding programs on four continents, experiments that spanned decades and involved thousands of subjects.
"Did you know your security is absolutely terrible for someone who's supposedly lived for centuries? Your firewalls are particularly pathetic. It's like you've never heard of quantum encryption."
Through the quantum layers, I could see Sinister reaching for something—an alarm, perhaps, or a weapon. I stopped caring about the distinction and simply... reached out.
His hand froze halfway to the control panel. Not paralyzed—that would be crude. Simply convinced, at the cellular level, that moving any further would be inadvisable.
"Now, now, Nathaniel. We're just getting to the good part." I settled back onto the examination table, crossing my legs in a mockery of meditation. "See, while you thought you were teaching me about the nature of power and the cost of godhood, I was learning something much more interesting."
"What?"
"How to hurt someone like you."
The temperature in the laboratory dropped thirty degrees in an instant, then spiked forty degrees above baseline, then forgot what temperature was supposed to mean entirely. The quantum layers were responding to my emotions now, reality itself bending to accommodate my growing amusement.
"Physical pain is meaningless to you, isn't it? Enhanced healing, redundant organ systems, probably some kind of consciousness backup stored in those computers of yours. You've made yourself effectively immortal."
Sinister didn't respond, but I could see his vital signs confirming my analysis.
"But psychological pain? Existential terror? The slow, creeping realization that you're not the apex predator you thought you were?" I grinned, showing teeth that had become noticeably sharper since our conversation began. "That's still very much on the table."
I stood again, this time letting my feet actually touch the floor. The metal beneath them began to crystallize, spreading outward in patterns that followed no earthly geometry.
"You want to know what I learned about myself in that sensory deprivation tank, Doc? It wasn't wisdom. It wasn't restraint. It wasn't some profound understanding of the cost of power."
The crystallization reached the walls and began climbing toward the ceiling, transforming the sterile laboratory into something that belonged in a fairy tale written by someone with severe psychological issues.
"I learned that I don't need to remake the world to be its god. I just need to remake the people who think they're in charge of it."
Through the observation window, I could see Sinister's pale face had gone even whiter. His enhanced physiology was pumping adrenaline through his system fast enough to kill a normal human, but his body remained frozen by my casual suggestion that movement might be unwise.
"Starting," I said, my voice carrying harmonics that made the quantum foam itself shiver, "with you."
The crystalline growths reached the observation deck, and I heard the faint sound of reinforced glass beginning to crack under pressures that existed in more dimensions than human mathematics had names for.
"But first," I continued conversationally, "I think it's time we had a proper family reunion. Bring Sabretooth back, would you? The real one this time, not that peaceful saint I created yesterday. I want to show him what evolution really looks like."
"Alex—"
"It's not Alex anymore, Nathaniel." The name felt small, limited, human. Something I'd outgrown like a childhood toy. "Alex was the frightened teenager who got kidnapped from a government facility. Alex was the one who cried over having to kill people. Alex was the one who worried about losing his humanity."
I looked directly at the cracking observation window, knowing that my eyes would be visible as golden stars in the growing darkness of the transformed laboratory.
"I'm what grew from Alex's corpse. And unlike him, I don't have any illusions about being the hero of this story."
The last thing I heard before the observation deck's reinforced glass finally shattered was Sinister's voice, barely audible over the sound of reality restructuring itself around my presence:
"What have I created?"
I smiled as crystalline fragments rained down like glittering snow.
"Something beautiful," I said. "Something terrible. Something that's going to make you wish you'd never heard the name Chen."