Prologue: The Wrong New York
Diary Entry
September 15, 2007
Queens, New York
Sunny, then overcast
My hands are still shaking as I sit at the desk in this rented apartnt, staring at the spiral notebook I bought on impulse from the convenience store downstairs and trying to decide where to begin.
Three days ago, I was an ordinary college student in 2026, holed up in my dorm room, grinding Azur Lane.
Now I am a white-haired freshman in 2007 New York nad Mira Vale.
Even writing that feels insane.
The cause is so stupid I want to swear every ti I think about it.
That night, I was farming an Arbiter in Operation Siren while boiling water for instant noodles. The lid kept curling up, so I grabbed a cheap plastic lighter and set it on top to hold it down. A second later it exploded.
Boiling soup and bits of lted plastic hit in the face. The back of my head slamd into the corner of my desk.
My last thought, with death apparently seconds away, was not about family, regrets, or the aning of life.
It was: damn it, I never spent my saved gems on that new TB skin.
Then I woke up like this.
The girl in the mirror had snow-white hair with pale blue at the ends, clear blue eyes, skin like porcelain, and the kind of face that belonged in high-budget ani key art, not real life.
My body had changed from male to female. My age had dropped from my twenties to sowhere around fifteen. The calendar had rewound by nineteen years. My address had changed from a cramped campus room to a student apartnt in Queens.
According to the paperwork in this place, I was now Mira Vale.
No parents. No guardian in sight. Stellar grades. Full scholarship. Enrolled at Midtown High School. Quiet, withdrawn, brilliant, and apparently living alone.
A custom-built second-life setup.
At least, that was what I thought before I found the first glitch.
At first I assud this was standard reincarnation nonsense. Weird, impossible, but survivable.
Then I looked at the brick-sized 2007 HP laptop on the desk and thought, Try turning it on.
It bypassed the password screen, skipped the crawl of the boot sequence, and opened to the desktop almost instantly.
That was when I stopped pretending this was normal.
Over the next three days, I tested everything.
Anything tied to electronics, software, code, or networks beca transparent the mont I focused on it. I did not need a keyboard. I could write thousands of lines of clean code in my head. Nearby signal networks felt close enough to touch. Security caras across Queens folded open in front of like windows.
The school database was barely a locked door.
The internet security of 2007 was tissue paper.
Between my final thought before dying, the white hair, and the cold, structured logic humming sowhere under my skin, the answer ca fast.
I had beco sothing dangerously close to TB from Azur Lane.
Not literally, maybe. Not in the clean, ga-defined sense.
But close enough to make my blood run cold.
Panic was part of it.
Relief was the rest.
I had died once already. Compared to that, waking up in a new body with a built-in god-tier cheat felt less like a curse and more like a warning wrapped in a gift.
On paper, my new identity was almost too perfect.
Mira Vale was a scholarship student on an accelerated academic track, the kind of quiet prodigy people wrote off as gifted and odd. If I kept my head down, studied hard, and acted like a socially awkward STEM kid, nobody would look twice.
I already had a plan.
Go to school. Keep the grades up. Use my abilities to make small amounts of money without leaving a trail. Stay far away from attention, institutions, and anyone with a badge. Build a stable life and do not make the kind of mistakes that get you killed.
That plan lasted until this afternoon.
I went out to buy so basics, and because I had been in New York for three days without properly seeing Manhattan, I took the subway into Midtown.
The weather was good. The air had that early-fall crispness to it. I ca up the station steps, looked up, brushed my hair out of my face, and saw the tower.
The logo on the building was impossible to miss.
Stark Industries.
For a second, my brain locked up.
Then the massive screen on the side of the building lit up, and there he was.
Tony Stark, in an expensive suit, wearing that smug half-smile like the whole world existed for his amusent, lifted a glass toward the cara while a corporate slogan flashed below him.
Stark Industries.
Tony Stark.
New York.
Midtown.
The pieces slamd together so hard it felt like getting hit in the skull.
This was not so random alternate 2007.
This was Marvel.
Not comic-book-fun Marvel, either. Not from the point of view of a bystander.
This was the version where New York turned into a war zone, secret agencies were rotten from the inside, aliens treated Earth like a highway rest stop, and in a few short years the universe itself would start losing coin flips.
I got back to my apartnt in Queens on instinct.
The mont the door shut behind , my knees gave out and I hit the floor.
Sitting there on the carpet, I erased every piece of surveillance footage that had captured that afternoon. Subway platforms. station entrances. traffic cams. storefront security feeds. Any lens pointed in my direction went blind after the fact.
No backup survived.
While I was at it, I patched several obvious holes in the local cara systems so nobody could use them to trace my route.
Only after that did I make it to the desk chair.
My heartbeat still felt uneven. My back was damp with cold sweat.
I had thought I landed in a power fantasy.
Instead I had dropped straight into a nightmare with better lighting.
In a normal world, control over digital systems would make terrifying.
In this one, it made bait.
If S.H.I.E.L.D., HYDRA, or anyone else with enough resources realized a self-directed intelligence could slip through global electronic systems at will, I would not make it to next week. Best-case scenario, I would disappear into a lab.
Worst-case scenario was everything after that.
And that was before factoring in Loki, Ultron, and the purple apocalypse waiting down the line.
Right now, I had only two things going for .
The first was whatever this TB-based ability set had turned into inside .
The second was foreknowledge.
So listen carefully, Mira.
From today on, you are just a quiet scholarship kid with excellent grades and no social life.
You do not show anyone what you can do.
You do not get involved with superheroes, intelligence agencies, billionaire inventors, or anything remotely adjacent to them.
You stay small.
You stay forgettable.
And above all else, you stay alive.
September 17, 2007
Evening
Rush hour in New York could sand a person's patience down to nothing.
I shoved the stack of cash deeper into my hoodie pocket as I stepped out of the Daily Buglebuilding and let the flow of commuters drag toward the subway, my expression cold enough to crack glass.
The job itself had gone fine.
More than fine, actually.
The newspaper's manuscript managent system had been rotting for years under layer after layer of rushed fixes, lazy shortcuts, and code that looked like five different programrs had fought each other and all lost. Two hours in a break room with my laptop was enough to untangle the whole ss, close a list of embarrassing back doors, and leave the system cleaner than it had probably ever been.
The editor handling the hire looked thrilled.
He paid in cash on the spot and asked, more than once, whether I wanted to co in regularly as technical support.
I declined, blad school, and got out fast.
It was not that the money was bad.
It was that this place was dangerous in the long term.
Even setting aside the fact that the Bugle was one of those nas that always ended up near chaos in Marvel stories, I had zero interest in leaving a paper trail around a building that might soday connect to the wrong headlines, the wrong people, or the wrong masked vigilante.
I preferred my future without footnotes.
My mood was worse for another reason.
Lunch had been a convenience-store turkey sandwich because the job had run long, and that thing had committed several cris against bread. The roll was dry enough to count as masonry, the lettuce looked pre-defeated, and the turkey had the texture of folded cardboard.
I took two bites, gave up, and threw the rest away.
Hours later, I could still taste regret.
What I wanted now was simple.
Hot food. Real food. Sothing cooked by a human being with standards.
That was the beauty of my current side hustle.
For sothing built on TB-like logic and control, fixing bad code for small businesses was less a challenge and more a mild courtesy. I charged about half of what normal contractors did, worked ten tis faster, asked no questions, and insisted on cash.
The cash-only part was non-negotiable.
HYDRA was scary. The IRS was worse.
If unexplained money started piling up in an account attached to a scholarship student, the questions would co fast, and questions were exactly what I could not afford.
I had even built myself a repeat custor loop.
Nothing catastrophic. Nothing that would cost anyone real money.
Just the occasional harmless systems headache. A printer that refused to stay connected. A shared drive that dropped files. Lag spikes at the worst possible mont. The kind of problems that made people swear at their desks and rember the quiet girl who could fix anything.
It was ethically questionable.
It was also effective.
Between the Bugle work and three remote cleanups for smaller clients, I had made close to two hundred dollars by the ti evening rolled around.
That was enough for a proper al.
My face remained the bigger problem.
The waist-length white hair was hard enough to hide. The faint blue tint at the ends did not help. Add the blue eyes and the fact that I looked more like a doll than a teenager, and anonymity beca a full-ti project.
At the Bugle, half the programrs in the room kept glancing over while pretending they weren't. One of them even tried to ask if I was there on so kind of internship.
I answered technical questions, kept everything else to one-word replies, and left before anyone got curious.
Too visible. Always too visible.
I pulled my hood up and slipped into the subway with my head down.
Once I got on, I took the far corner of the car and let my gaze rest sowhere near the floor while my mind skimd the local surveillance network on reflex. Every cara that had caught on the way in lost the footage cleanly, fra by fra, as if I had never been there.
By now the process felt automatic.
That should have worried more than it did.
Forty minutes later, I got off in Queens and walked three blocks to a narrow neighborhood diner wedged between a laundromat and a hardware store. I had found it the day before, and more importantly, it had booths, decent coffee, and a television mounted high enough to monitor the room without turning my head.
From a survival standpoint, that counted as luxury.
The place was small. Eight booths, a worn counter, and a grill in back that never seed to stop hissing.
The waitress recognized at once.
"Back again, sweetheart?"
"Yeah," I said. "atloaf plate, extra gravy, and a cola."
"Smart choice."
I slid into the rear corner booth, the one with the wall at my back and a clear view of the entrance.
So habits ford fast in a universe where death beams, secret police, and alien invasions were all statistically possible.
The food arrived in under ten minutes.
atloaf, mashed potatoes, green beans, thick brown gravy, and an ice-cold cola sweating onto the table.
I took one bite and almost closed my eyes.
At last.
Sothing hot. Sothing savory. Sothing that tasted like it had been made in a kitchen instead of assembled in a vending machine.
For the first ti all day, my shoulders loosened.
There were not many people inside. A middle-aged couple was splitting pie near the window. A delivery driver sat at the counter with coffee and fries. No one paid any attention, which automatically improved my opinion of everyone present.
I ate fast enough to be embarrassing.
By the ti I slowed down, the plate was nearly clean and half the cola was gone.
I leaned back and looked up at the old boxy TV over the counter.
Local news.
Traffic, weather, politics, the usual churn of harmless noise.
For a mont, I almost felt normal.
It hit with enough force to sting.
A cheap al, a cold drink, evening news in the background, and the day fading out around . It felt weirdly close to my old life, the safe one, the one where my biggest problem had been event grinding and bad sleep.
Then the broadcast cut to international coverage.
And there he was.
Tony Stark.
Expensive suit. Desert backdrop. Military escort. The Jericho missile sitting behind him like a promise written in steel.
He lifted a drink toward the caras with that sa polished arrogance and said sothing smooth while the feed cut to the test launch. Light ripped across the screen. The missile split and detonated with theatrical precision.
The anchor kept talking.
I stopped hearing most of it.
Stark Industries. Tony Stark. Afghanistan.
I knew what ca next.
Sooner or later, he would get kidnapped. A cave, a battery in his chest, the first suit, and then the whole machine would start turning. Superheroes. supervillains. invasions. collapses. gods. monsters. half the universe turning to dust.
And all of it began with monts like this.
I was sitting in Queens with gravy on my plate while history ward up in the distance.
A pulse of tension ran through so sharp it almost hurt.
I swept the diner with a quick glance and froze when two n in dark suits walked in.
S.H.I.E.L.D.?
HYDRA?
Then one of them complained about parking, the other asked for decaf, and both of them started arguing over whether they still had ti to catch the ga.
Not assassins. Not agents. Just office workers.
I exhaled and leaned back.
Paranoia was becoming a reflex.
Then again, paranoia was the only reason I was still breathing.
In this world, a hidden intelligence that could crawl through digital infrastructure at will was not a person.
It was an asset.
Assets got caged.
Just then the television crackled. The picture jumped, warped, and filled with static hard enough to scrape at my nerves.
I frowned at it.
Co on. Not now.
The thought had barely crossed my mind when the screen snapped back into perfect clarity.
No static. No hiss. No flicker.
Just a clean, stable image like nothing had happened.
I stared at it for half a second, then looked back down at my drink.
I wrote it off as instinct, a low-level extension of whatever my system had beco.
What I did not stop to examine, and probably should have, was the fact that I had not consciously reached for the TV at all.
I had only wanted it fixed.
The bill was cheap. I paid cash, left a tip, and stepped back out into the night.
Queens after dark had its own rhythm.
Storefront light on wet pavent. Distant sirens. traffic rolling in bursts. voices spilling out of bars, laundromats, corner stores. The city never really slept. It just changed shifts.
I still had cash in my pocket.
I had hot food in my stomach.
For one evening, that was enough to make life feel manageable.
Today had been a success.
I made money. I ate well. I kept my head down. I left no trail worth following.
As far as survival went, that counted as a clean win.
I looked up as I walked.
The skyline glowed in the distance, Manhattan lit in hard lines and cold glass, and sowhere beyond it all Stark Tower cut into the night like a warning no one else could read.
It did not matter.
I still had ti.
Ti to save money. Ti to move. Ti to put distance between myself and New York and every disaster magnet in it.
As long as I did not involve myself, did not attract attention, and did not expose what I was, maybe I could slip through the cracks.
Maybe that was enough.
I pulled my hood higher, tucked my hair out of sight, and headed for the subway.
By the ti I disappeared underground, every cara on the route behind had already begun to fail in exactly the right way.
Footage corrupted. backups overwritten. tistamps broken.
By morning, it would be as if I had never been there at all.
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