The detention block of the Helicarrier was a massive, echoing cylindrical chamber built around a single terrifying feature.
A towering cage of reinforced glass and heavy steel sat suspended in the center of the room, hanging over an open drop shaft. The glass was thick enough to stop a tank round. The steel was rated for stresses that would have collapsed a bridge. None of it had been designed for the lean, smiling man currently standing inside it.
Nick Fury walked up to the control console on the raised observation platform. He pressed a single heavy button. The floor beneath the cage dilated open with a grinding chanical roar, revealing the howling winds and the nauseating plunge to the earth thirty thousand feet below.
"In case it is unclear," Fury said, his eyes fixed entirely on the prisoner. "You try to escape. You so much as scratch that glass." He gestured at the open abyss beneath the cage. "Thirty thousand feet. Straight down. In a steel trap. You get how that works?"
Loki stood at the center of the cell with his hands clasped loosely behind his back. He did not look at Fury. He did not look at the drop beneath his feet. He looked directly at the security caras positioned around the room, knowing they were broadcasting to every screen on the Helicarrier.
"It’s an impressive cage," Loki said, his voice smooth and conversational. "Not built, I think, for ."
"Built for sothing a lot stronger than you."
"Oh, I’ve heard." Loki’s eyes glittered with cold amusent. "A mindless, raging beast who still makes believe he’s a man. How desperate are you, Director, that you call on such pathetic creatures to defend you?"
"How desperate am I?" Fury stepped closer to the glass. His voice was controlled but the edge beneath it was real. "You threaten my world with war. You talk about peace, and you kill innocent people because it’s fun. You have made very desperate. You might not be glad that you did."
"Ooh." Loki smiled broadly, as though Fury had just paid him a lovely complint. "It burns you to have co so close. To have all that cosmic power, that endless potential, right in your hands. And for what?" He looked back at the caras, his eyes finding the lens. "A warm light for all mankind to share. And then to be brutally reminded what real power actually is."
Fury let the silence hold for a beat. Then his mouth curved into sothing that was not quite a smile.
"Well, let know if ’real power’ wants a magazine or sothing."
Loki’s expression flickered. The smallest crack in the performance.
Fury did not press the advantage. He turned away from the cell and gestured casually toward the dark corners of the chamber.
Two figures draped in heavy, featureless grey cloaks stepped silently out of the shadows.
Fury had requested them through Aurora Thatcher twelve hours ago. Alia Bones had sent them within four. They were two of the Departnt of Mysteries’ absolute best ward specialists, officially on loan to SHIELD for the duration of the global crisis.
The Unspeakables did not speak. They drew wands from their sleeves and began casting. Bright golden runes flared to life, etching themselves deeply into the reinforced glass and the steel struts of the cage.
The casting took two minutes. When they finished, the runes pulsed once and faded to a faint shimr beneath the glass surface.
Fury turned back to Loki. The satisfaction on his face was deep and entirely genuine.
"The cage is magic-proof now, too," he said. "Just in case you were thinking about trying any of your little tricks."
Loki simply tilted his head. He looked at the glowing runes with mild, almost insulting amusent. He was completely unbothered. Compared to the complex, cosmic weaves of Asgardian magic he had mastered centuries ago, these little Midgardian safeguards were nothing but child’s play.
"Are you quite sure about that, Director?" Loki asked softly. "Can your little glowing cage truly guard against my real power?"
"I think we’re done here."
Fury turned on his heel and walked out of the detention block. The two Unspeakables lowered their wands and followed in silence, their grey cloaks sweeping the tal floor.
The heavy blast door sealed behind them with a deep, resonating boom.
Inside the cage, alone with the caras and the howling wind beneath his feet, Loki sat down on the narrow bench. He folded his hands in his lap. He looked directly into the primary cara lens with an expression of infinite, terrible patience.
He had things to say. And they were listening.
—
The assembled heroes stood gathered around a bank of glowing monitors in the main laboratory, two decks above the detention block. They were watching the live, silent feed from Loki’s cell.
Steve Rogers stood with his arms crossed tightly over his chest. Tony Stark leaned casually against a tal workbench. Bruce Banner was carefully cleaning his glasses. Natasha Romanoff sat quietly in a rolling chair, her expression completely unreadable. Thor lood in the background like a thundercloud, his arms folded and his eyes dark with sorrow.
"He really grows on you, doesn’t he?" Banner said dryly, putting his glasses back on.
Nobody laughed.
Thor stared intensely at the screen. At his brother’s face. At the smile that hid sothing Thor couldn’t reach and couldn’t fix.
"Loki’s mind is far afield," Thor said quietly, his voice thick with sorrow. "It is not just power he craves. It is not this world he wants. It is to be seen. To be acknowledged. To matter."
"Is that supposed to make us sympathize with him?" Steve asked sharply, glancing back at the god. "He killed innocent people in Stuttgart for sport."
"It is not sympathy. It is understanding." Thor did not take his eyes from the screen. "You cannot defeat an enemy you do not fundantally understand."
On the monitor, Loki stopped his slow pacing.
He turned. Deliberately. Precisely. He looked directly into the primary security cara with the careful aim of a man who wanted his next words to land on very specific ears.
His voice ca through the lab speakers, smooth and venomous and perfectly controlled.
"The strings are so very visible from in here." Loki’s smile widened. "All of the great wizard’s little puppets, gathered together exactly where he left you."
Steve frowned, leaning closer to the monitor.
Loki stepped right up to the glass. His green eyes seed to pierce through the cara lens.
"I learned so many fascinating things from your archer," Loki said softly. "Years of classified files. Operational details. The complete picture. And once I had the complete picture, the patterns beca impossible to ignore. How Arthur Hayes ca into each of your lives and saved you at precisely the mont you needed it most. Earning your loyalty. Earning your trust. Your blind, grateful, unquestioning trust." He paused. "Makes you think, doesn’t it?"
Tony tapped his fingers rhythmically against the workbench. He did not look away from the screen.
"Take the man of iron," Loki continued, his voice dripping with mock sympathy. "Knowing the wizard’s vast strength, he could have saved you in minutes after your convoy was attacked in the desert. He could have plucked you from that cave before the shrapnel ever reached your heart. But he did not. He watched. He waited. He let you suffer until you had forged yourself into sothing useful. And then he arrived to play the hero."
Tony’s fingers kept tapping. Sa rhythm. Sa speed. His face gave away nothing.
Loki paced to the other side of the cell, his reflection sliding across the glass.
"The soldier." A dark, knowing chuckle. "The wizard can track objects across this planet with a wave of his hand. He could have retrieved you at any ti. Any year. Any decade. But he waited. Until Fury needed a symbol. Until Stark needed a teammate. Until the mont was perfectly, strategically ripe."
Loki stopped pacing and smiled directly into the lens.
"And the beast. The poor, tornted Dr. Banner, cursed with a monster inside his skin. Your wizard is capable of soul surgery. He can cure your condition anyti he wishes. He can make you whole." Loki let the word sit in the air for a mont. "But he doesn’t. He keeps the beast comfortable. A nice laboratory. A reunited lover. Just enough happiness to guarantee loyalty. Just enough dependency to guarantee obedience. He always waits for the best opportunity, doesn’t he?"
Loki spread his hands wide, looking like a dark priest delivering a terrible sermon.
"Arthur Hayes is no savior. He is a playwright. He waits until you are thoroughly broken, and then he steps in to play the benevolent god. You are not a team. You are a collection of perfectly tid rescues. A gallery of gratitude. Carefully manufactured assets wearing the faces of free n."
The lab fell into a heavy, suffocating silence. The speakers humd with quiet static.
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