The night sky over Japan burned.
Jack, in his Golden Phoenix form, was a living star, his wings of molten gold beating against the darkness. With every powerful flap, he summoned another pillar of celestial fire, pulling raw energy from the cosmos and giving it form. The pillars erupted from the ground around the battlefield, soaring into the heavens, their light turning the night into a false, fiery dawn.
…
Deep within a SHIELD command bunker, the world was watching. Nick Fury sat in the commander's chair of the newly convened World Security team, his one good eye fixed on the main holographic display.
"Sir," an agent at a nearby console said, his voice tight with a mixture of awe and terror. "We're getting a massive energy reading from Japan. The signature… it's almost identical to the phenomena from the Xavier Mansion incident several months ago."
Fury didn't move. He just stared at the image of the golden bird setting the sky ablaze. A long, weary sigh escaped his lips.
"This motherfucker," he muttered to himself. He turned to Maria Hill, who stood at his side, her expression as grim as his. "Hill. Call Natalie Beckman. I want to know what Jack's doing."
Maria Hill simply nodded and pulled out her secure phone.
"What did that monkey do now?" Fury asked the empty air, his voice a low grumble of pure, unadulterated frustration.
…
Back in the heart of the inferno, Jack's voice, now a chorus of divine fire and chaotic energy, echoed across the battlefield.
"HEY! SUN AND STORM! DO YOU WANT TO HELP ME FIGHT, OR DO YOU WANT TO BE MY DIVINE BATTERY PACK?!"
Susanoo, his sword a blur of silver as he parried a vicious strike from the Kusanagi, threw his head back and laughed. "AKHAKHAKHA! WHY SHOULD I GIVE YOU MY ENERGY WHEN I CAN FIGHT WITH YOU?! ISN'T THIS MORE EXCITING?!"
Amaterasu, her pristine robes now singed and disheveled, her breath coming in sharp, controlled gasps, was less enthused. "Hermes's energy alone cannot sustain that form indefinitely!" she shouted, unleashing a spear of pure sunlight that forced Amatsu back a step.
"AKHAKHAKHA! MY SISTER SEEMS TO LIKE YOU!" Susanoo roared, thoroughly enjoying the chaos. "SHE DOESN'T WANT YOU TO BECOME MARBLE AGAIN, MONKEY!"
Even in his fiery, avian form, Jack managed to convey an expression of pure, unadulterated smugness. "WHAT CAN I SAY?" his voice boomed. "I'M TOO CHARMING LIKE THAT."
With a final, joyous battle cry, Susanoo charged, his storm-wreathed sword clashing with the hilt of the Grasscutter, locking Amatsu in a brutal, head-on confrontation.
This was the opening Jack needed. He circled high above them, his wings beating a steady, powerful rhythm as he summoned the last of the pillars. They erupted from the ground, forming a perfect, celestial circle around the battlefield. With one final, mighty flap of his wings, arcs of golden fire shot out, connecting the pillars and forming a shimmering, inescapable jail.
Amatsu looked up, his borrowed face twisting into a sneer. "YOUR MONKEY BRAIN HAS BEEN TURNED INTO A BIRD BRAIN, HASN'T IT?" he hissed. "YOU ARE INSIDE THE JAIL WITH ME."
Jack's laughter was the sound of a star exploding. "OH, MY UGLY FRIEND, YOU THINK I ACCIDENTALLY TRAPPED MYSELF WITH YOU? NAAHHH. I TRAPPED YOU HERE WITH ME."
As the main battle raged within the cage of fire, the clones on the outside finished their own task. One by one, they took the small, golden cages containing the chipped fragments of Amatsu's essence and began to toss them back through the portal to Yomi. One clone, in a final act of glorious disrespect, made a spectacle of it. He used his Ruyi Jingu Bang as a makeshift baseball bat, tossed a sealed shard of black goo into the air, and with a perfect swing, hit a home run straight into the underworld.
In Yomi, Izanagi and Izanami, their faces grim, worked in a tense, unspoken alliance, catching the screaming fragments of chaos and forcing them back into their ancient, weakened seals.
The battle within the cage of fire was a symphony of beautiful, brutal chaos.
The Golden Phoenix and the God of Storms moved not in sync, but in a glorious, clashing harmony. At first, their styles were a mess. Susanoo would charge in, a tempest of raw power, his sword a whirlwind of silver, only for Jack to zip past him, a streak of golden fire, nearly clipping his ear.
"Hey! Watch the feathers, Stormy!" Jack's voice boomed, a chorus of divine flame.
"Stay out of my way, Bird-Brain!" Susanoo roared back, deflecting a blow from the Kusanagi that sent shockwaves through the fiery pillars of their cage.
But then, something clicked.
Susanoo swung his massive blade in a wide, reckless arc—a false step, a move of pure, untamed aggression. But Jack, instead of dodging, used the opening. He rode the current of wind from Susanoo's swing, his phoenix form a blur, and landed a searing talon strike across Amatsu's back.
The Chaos God shrieked, a sound of pure, primordial rage.
A wild grin spread across Susanoo's face. He saw it. Jack saw it. Their chaos was not a weakness; it was a weapon.
They became a two-god storm. Susanoo would unleash a hurricane, the winds not just a barrier, but a chaotic playground for Jack to navigate. Jack would zip through the tempest, his movements impossible to predict, his fiery form a constant, annoying distraction that created openings for Susanoo's brutal, decisive blows. Amaterasu, from the edge of the cage, provided support, her spears of sunlight striking with a precision that was the perfect, orderly counterpoint to their beautiful disaster.
Amatsu was becoming more manic, more desperate. He was not just fighting two gods; he was fighting a war on two fronts.
"You are alive because of me!" the voice of the Chaos King roared from Alexander's lips, but the words were not for them. They were for the soul trapped within.
A flicker of hesitation. The Kusanagi's swing faltered for a split second as Alexander's consciousness fought back.
Jack saw it instantly. He swooped in, his voice a triumphant, unhinged cackle that cut through the divine din. "NOPE! YOU'RE A LYING POOPOO HEAD! SHE'S ALIVE BECAUSE HER DAD'S A DEADBEAT GOD AND YOU'RE JUST A COSMIC SQUID SQUATTING IN HER SOUL WITHOUT PAYING RENT!"
The insult, so juvenile yet so utterly Jack, seemed to enrage Amatsu more than any divine blow. He unleashed a wave of pure, unmaking chaos.
But it was too late. Jack and Susanoo had found their rhythm. They saw their opening.
"Together!" Susanoo roared.
"LET'S MAKE THIS BIRD-BRAIN REGRET EVER LEAVING HIS EMO VOID! OH WAIT... I'M THE BIRD. KEKEKEKEKEKE." Jack screeched in agreement.
They moved as one. A storm of lightning and a supernova of golden fire, a combined, final attack aimed to shatter the Chaos King's hold. Jack pushed his phoenix power to its absolute limit, the divine energy a roaring inferno within him.
But the vessel was still mortal. The armor, a gift of sorcery, was not divine.
The sheer, overwhelming power was too much. Cracks, like spiderwebs of pure, crystalline light, appeared across the shimmering, runic armor of the Vishanti. The ancient symbols flared one last time, then went dark.
With a sound like a thousand shattering crystals, the mystical armor exploded.
A psychic whiplash, a torrent of raw, unfiltered magic, snapped back along the tethers connecting Jack to the sorcerers. Wong, Mordo, Kaecilius, Master Wright—all of them were flung backward as if struck by an invisible fist, their bodies slumping to the ground, unconscious.
Only Yao remained standing, his hands still outstretched, his face pale, a trickle of blood running from the corner of his mouth. The connection was broken.
And Jack, in his Golden Phoenix form, now raw, unarmored, and utterly vulnerable, was still hurtling toward his final, decisive blow.
"IT'S GONNA HURT LIKE HELL, ALEX, SO ENDURE!" Jack's voice roared, a sound that was both a warning and a promise.
He dove. His golden talons, sharp as divine judgment, sank into the writhing, shadowy mass of Amatsu's essence that clung to Alexander's form. He began to pull, to rip the primordial chaos from its mortal anchor. He could feel the Chaos God trying to shift, to retreat deeper into Alexander's soul, but Jack's own fire blazed in response. He bathed Alexander's body in his golden phoenix flames, not to harm her, but to create a cage of pure, celestial energy, cornering Amatsu, leaving him nowhere to hide.
Below, Susanoo brought down a controlled tempest, his storm-winds coiling around Alexander's physical body, trying to pull her free from the spiritual chains that bound her to the chaos god. The plan was working. Amatsu was being torn from his vessel.
It seemed that it all went well, until—
CRASH.
A bundle of blackened, spherical energy, like a cannonball fired from the heart of the void, slammed into the side of the fiery cage. The pillars of celestial fire shattered, the jail collapsing in a shower of golden sparks.
From the portal to Yomi, a torrent of the same black spheres poured through. They were the remnants of Amatsu's power, the fragments Izanagi and Izanami had failed to contain. The rest of the Chaos King had come to Earth.
His chaotic energy warped the very space around the temple. A pressure, cold and absolute, washed over the planet. From the deepest oceans to the highest mountains, half the world felt the arrival of a true, primordial god.
Amatsu, now free from his cage, willingly tore himself from Alexander's body, a screaming mass of shadow and tentacles. The newly arrived spheres of chaos, his missing pieces, shot toward the fragment Jack was still clutching in his talons. They crashed into him, their momentum a physical, crushing blow. The fragments merged, and in a blinding flash of darkness, the true, complete form of Amatsu-Mikaboshi was reborn.
He swallowed Jack's Golden Phoenix form whole.
The world went silent. The divine energies of the gods, the frantic movements of the sorcerers, the very air itself—all seemed to stop.
And in the silent, suffocating darkness within the belly of the Chaos King, the real battle began. Amatsu attacked Jack's soulscape.
In that single, silent second, as Jack was consumed by the primordial darkness of Amatsu-Mikaboshi, the heavens trembled.
On the frozen battlefields of Jotunheim, Odin, in the midst of a brutal war, paused. He felt the ripple, the desperate surge of a kindred, chaotic spirit on the brink of being extinguished. A slow, grim smile touched his lips. He raised his spear, Gungnir, and a sliver of his own divine, kingly power shot across the realms, a blessing of resilience for the monkey who dared to fight.
On Olympus, Zeus, who had been watching with smug satisfaction, suddenly felt the weight of Hermes's silent accusation. He saw the chaos god about to win, and in that moment, he saw not the defeat of an enemy, but the victory of an even greater one. With a reluctant, thunderous roar, he too sent a spark of his power, a blessing of strength.
Across all the pantheons, from the sun-drenched halls of Heliopolis to the serene gardens of the Jade Palace, a consensus was reached. They had been cowards. They had been fools. And now, the mortal who had shamed them was their only hope. One by one, they sent their blessings, a torrent of divine energy that converged on a single point on a small, blue planet.
A brilliant, blinding light erupted from within the cracks of Amatsu's incomplete envelopment. The Chaos King didn't scream. He didn't roar. He simply used the sudden, overwhelming surge of divine power as a platform. With a final, silent contortion, he launched himself from Jack's body, a streak of pure blackness that shot into the heavens and vanished among the stars.
The Golden Phoenix, now free, was slammed back to the earth with the force of a meteor. He crashed into the ruined temple courtyard, the impact sending a shockwave that shattered the last of the standing stones. As the dust settled, the brilliant, fiery form of the phoenix slowly receded, leaving behind the small, battered body of Jack Hou, who slowly reverted to his normal form.
He lay in the crater, his hanbok in tatters, his body a canvas of burns and bruises. He pushed himself up, clutching his head, a searing pain pressing against his skull. "What the fuck…?" he groaned. "Why did he—?"
Yao, Susanoo, Amaterasu, and Hermes rushed to his side, their faces a mixture of relief and grave concern.
"What just happened?" Jack asked, his vision swimming.
Jean, who had been watching from a safe distance, her own power now calm, looked at the empty sky where the chaos god had vanished. "I think… I think we lost," she said, her voice a defeated whisper.
Jack rubbed his head, a slow, wicked grin returning to his face despite the pain. "No," he said, his voice raspy but firm. "We repelled that tentacle-faced bitch off our world. For now."
Amaterasu looked at the devastation around them, at the exhausted sorcerers, at the very sky that still seemed to hum with the echo of primordial chaos. "What then?" she asked.
Jack looked at them all, his golden eyes burning with a new, terrifying light.
"We get ready," he said. "Great winter is coming."
Hermes, ever the observer, was the first to notice it. "What's with the headband?" he asked, pointing.
Sure enough, settled snugly on Jack's forehead, was a simple, elegant golden headband.
Jack reached up, his fingers brushing against the cool, unfamiliar metal. A fragmented memory, a deal made in a world of frozen time, surfaced in his mind.
"An old seller gave me a visit," he said with a grin. "And I got a deal."
(Flashback)
The second Amatsu-Mikaboshi's darkness tried to swallow him, Jack's consciousness was ripped from the physical world. He expected a battle of souls, a chaotic, fiery clash in his mindscape like the one he'd had with the Phoenix.
But what he saw took him aback.
He was standing in a familiar, bustling Chinatown night market. The air smelled of sizzling meat skewers, fresh baozi, and cheap cigarettes. And there, tucked between a noodle stall and a mahjong parlor, was the same old stall covered in faded red cloth, filled with trinkets and ancient-looking antiques. Behind it sat the old man, his piercing eyes watching Jack as if he'd been waiting for him.
"Strange," Jack said, his voice echoing slightly in the dream-like space. "I met you once in my past life. And now that I'm reincarnated, I meet you a second time." He took a step closer, his grin fading into a sharp, analytical stare. "I have the feeling you had something to do with my reincarnation."
The old seller, who had been a picture of frail, cryptic wisdom, dropped the pretense. His posture straightened, and a slow, ancient smile spread across his face. "You're only just connecting that now?" he said, his voice no longer a frail whisper but a deep, resonant hum. "My, my. You really are as stupid as yourself, huh?"
Jack's jaw dropped. "Hey! How dare you! I got a perfect score on my tests, thank you very much!"
The old seller's smile widened. "And how does a street kid like you get a perfect score?"
"I got it from the trash!" Jack shot back, his pride stung. "Some ungrateful rich kid threw his review books away behind the school. I found them."
The old seller did something Jack had never seen before. He stood up. And as he rose, the simple trinket stall seemed to melt away, leaving them standing in a void of quiet, swirling starlight. "Follow me," he said.
Jack's face went blank. For a split second, he caught a glimpse of the old seller's eyes, and it was like looking into a universe being born.
The old man gestured with a single, lazy swipe of his hand upwards. A gentle breeze lifted Jack from his feet, hoisting him into the air. Jack, ever the chaos agent, immediately broke the tension.
"Kekekekeke, again!" he laughed, doing a flip in the zero-gravity space. He then sat cross-legged in the air, grinning.
The old seller chuckled, then swiped his hand down. Jack was slammed into the ground with the force of a fallen star.
"Hurry," the old seller said, his voice now carrying the weight of eons. "Like I said before: Even a monkey must wear his crown before he rules the mountain."
Suddenly, the star-lit void around them shifted, twisting and reforming. The scent of old fish, rotting vegetables, and desperation filled the air. They were standing in a back alley. One Jack knew all too well from his past life.