Months passed. The world, for the most part, turned as it always had, unaware of the cosmic battles fought in its defense.
On the misty, emerald isle of Peng Lai, Jack Hou was having the time of his life. He treated the ancient, scroll-filled martial library like a personal toy shop, spending his days devouring centuries of Peng Lai's signature martial arts, his mind a chaotic sponge for the deadly, graceful techniques.
He had also, surprisingly, grown a bond with Zhu Pang She. They held eating contests every other day, and it seemed the Fat Cobra was the only being in the Seven Heavens who could match Jack's voracious appetite.
One evening, Jack was invited to Fat Cobra's abode for a private meal. While there, he saw a wall covered in old, faded photographs. One, in particular, caught his eye. It showed a younger, though no less massive, Zhu Pang She teaching self-defense to a group of European women in what looked like the 1940s.
"Where was this?" Jack asked, pointing a greasy finger at the photo.
Fat Cobra chuckled, a low, rumbling sound. "Switzerland," he answered. "I was invited to teach the Allies self-defense, to help them fight the Axis. But I declined. Teaching beautiful women, however, brings me great relaxation."
Jack nodded, a wicked glint in his eyes. "Still working to satisfy the women with that winky dick of yours, huh?"
Fat Cobra's face turned a shade of offended purple, but he couldn't do anything. He had tried sparring with Jack again. And again. And again. And he had been beaten, effortlessly, every single time.
Jack just laughed and continued to look at the other pictures, a silent, comfortable camaraderie having settled between the monkey and the cobra.
…
Meanwhile, on the gritty streets just outside the Golden Peach, the man known as Donald Blake waved goodbye to his last patient of the day, a young child whose scraped knee he had just bandaged. He leaned on his cane, a gentle smile on his face as the child and his mother walked away.
He had opened a small practice right on the border of the old Hell's Kitchen. The difference between the two sides of the street was staggering. The people of the Golden Peach moved with a confidence, a peace, that was a world away from the desperate, hunted look of those who lived just outside its invisible walls. Jack Hou had not just cleaned up the territory; he had pushed all the criminal activity out, creating a clear, stark line between his sanctuary and the rest of New York. The God Tree, the giant peach tree that had once been Fisk Tower, stood as a silent, permanent testament to that fact.
Donald was ready to pack up and go back to his own apartment inside the Golden Peach when he heard a hesitant knock on his clinic door. He opened it to find a man he recognized as a small-time criminal, his face a mask of desperation. In his arms, he held a small, feverish child.
Donald's gentle smile didn't falter. He simply opened the door wider. "Come in," he said, his voice calm and reassuring. He looked at the sick child. "Lay him down on the bed. I'll just grab my coat."
…
A red blur leaped across the rooftops of New York, a silent, acrobatic shadow against the glittering skyline. It was Matt Murdock. The night was long, and it was only getting longer. Before, Hell's Kitchen had been a cage, a dark, concentrated cesspool where he could hunt the filth of the city. But now, since the arrival of the Golden Peach, the cage had been broken. The filth hadn't vanished; it had just spread, a cancer seeping into every borough. Patrolling was no longer a focused hunt; it was a desperate, city-wide chase.
…
Far from the restless energy of New York, under the vast, star-dusted sky of Phoenix, Arizona, the scent of gasoline and cheap popcorn hung in the air. The last of the crowds had left the Crash Simpson Stunt Cycle Extravaganza for the night.
"It's a no, Crash." Johnny Blaze's voice was firm, his back turned to the older man.
Crash Simpson, his face a roadmap of a life lived on the edge, chased after him, Roxanne trailing a few steps behind. "Johnny, just think about it!" Crash pleaded. "Did you not miss it? The roar of the engines, the chants of a hundred thousand fans screaming your name?"
Johnny paused, his gaze flicking to Roxanne, a silent plea for help in his eyes. But she just shook her head, her expression a mixture of love and weary resignation.
"Just let me think about it more," Johnny said, his voice a low grumble.
"You've been thinking for five years, Johnny my boy," Crash said, his voice softening as he walked up to him. He placed a hand on Johnny's shoulder. "Have you become such a coward that you can't even stand on the stage anymore?"
Johnny slapped his hand away, a flicker of something dark and ancient in his eyes. Without another word, he turned and walked away into the darkness, leaving the smell of brimstone and regret in his wake.
…
In a forgotten, dusty graveyard on the plains of Texas, an old man in a cowboy hat was digging. The rhythmic scrape of his shovel against the hard, dry earth was the only sound under the vast, silent sky. He was Carter Slade, and the dead were his only company.
He paused, leaning on his shovel, and closed his eyes. He felt the wind shift, a cold, unnatural current that carried whispers from a world beyond. He stood like that for a full minute, a silent sentinel listening to the secrets of the night.
Then, he dropped his hat lower, shadowing his face, and went back to his digging.
"The gods have moved," he muttered to the empty graves.
He began to whistle as he dug, a forgotten, haunting melody from a time when the land was new and the spirits walked freely among men.
…
The snowstorm in the Siberian wilderness had long since passed, leaving behind a world of pristine, silent white. Deep beneath the surface, buried under several feet of packed snow, one of Jack's clones lay dormant. Then, with a subtle twitch, he woke up.
He tried to move, but he was encased in a tomb of ice and snow. With a flicker of will, his form dissolved and reformed, shrinking into that of a small, agile snow fox. He dug his way up, a frantic scramble through the cold darkness, until he burst through the surface into the bright, blinding sunlight.
He shook the snow from his white fur, then transformed back into his human form, landing softly on the snow. He yawned, a long, jaw-cracking thing, and stretched his arms. "How long did I sleep?"
He closed his eyes, reaching out through the shared soulscape to his brothers. A chorus of voices answered him.
"It's been months, bro!" one voice echoed. "It's already the end of May!"
The Russian clone's eyes snapped open. "What?" he said to the empty landscape. "Have I been asleep or dead? Hmmmm, I think I was hibernating." He paused, a look of profound, scientific confusion on his face. "But that's dangerous. How does this even make sense? I'm a monkey, not a bear. How can I hibernate? Is this a new skill? Did I unlock the 'Fuzzy Wuzzy Sleepy Time' achievement? Hmmmm."
He sat down cross-legged in the snow again, completely forgetting his original mission, now lost in a deep, philosophical contemplation of his own impossible biology.
…
Meanwhile, on the sun-drenched, blooming shores of Krakoa, a sharp, stinging SLAP echoed through the training grounds.
Cheng Wudao, his massive frame a picture of stoic suffering, held a red handprint on his cheek. The clone teacher stood before him, his expression one of stern, academic disappointment. Between them, Krakoa, in its flowery, humanoid form, was giggling, its petals quivering with amusement.
"Again," the clone commanded. He pointed at Krakoa.
Krakoa's form shifted, its flowers and vines weaving together to form a perfect, four-legged wooden object with a flat top.
"What is that?" the clone asked.
Cheng Wudao, his voice a low, hesitant rumble, answered in English. "It's a… table."
SLAP.
"It's a counter," the clone corrected sharply.
Krakoa's laughter, a sound like a thousand rustling leaves, echoed across the island. "Xixixixixi!"
"Again," the clone said.
Krakoa's form shifted again, this time into a rectangular object with a hard cover and hundreds of thin, paper-like petals inside.
"What is that?"
"It's… a book."
SLAP.
"It's a compendium."
"Xixixixi!"
"Again."
Krakoa's form shifted one last time, becoming a simple, elegant vessel for drinking.
"It's a cup," Wudao said, already wincing in anticipation.
SLAP.
"It's a chalice."
Krakoa's laughter was now a full-blown, joyous roar, a background symphony to Cheng Wudao's quiet, tear-filled suffering.
…
On Tiger Island, a lush, mist-shrouded sanctuary where the women were the warriors and the men were the keepers of the hearth, the air hummed with a quiet, deadly focus.
Li Hua, the Tiger's Beautiful Daughter, moved through her private training courtyard like a leaf on the wind. In her hands, a pair of razor-sharp fans were not just weapons, but extensions of her very being. They sliced through the humid air with a sound like a whispered promise of death, a blur of silk and steel. She danced, a whirlwind of graceful, lethal motion, her focus so absolute that the world outside her deadly art ceased to exist.
A shadow flickered at the edge of her perception.
Without a thought, without a single break in her fluid dance, she snapped one of her fans shut. With a flick of her wrist, a half-dozen thin, razor-sharp knives, hidden within the fan's folds, shot out, silent and deadly, aimed directly at the heart of the sneaking figure.
The figure, a younger Tiger warrior, yelped and barely managed to dive out of the way, the knives embedding themselves deep into the wooden pillar where her head had just been. She lay on the ground, her face pale, her heart hammering against her ribs.
Li Hua's dance stopped. She turned, her expression a mask of cold, indifferent focus. "Oh," she said, her voice a low, dangerous purr. "It's you."
The younger warrior, still shaken, stammered, "I-I bring a reminder from the Matriarch. The tournament… it is set to begin in four months."
Li Hua gracefully wiped a bead of sweat from her brow with the back of her hand. "I know," she said, her tone flat. "What does she want?"
"The Matriarch," the warrior said, scrambling to her feet, "she says to come to her chambers."
Li Hua let out a long, weary sigh, the first crack in her perfect, warrior's facade. "Okay," she said, her voice a low murmur of resignation as she began to walk toward the main palace, leaving her deadly fans resting on a nearby stone.
…
In the Kingdom of Spiders, there was no sun. The city was a sprawling, gothic metropolis of sharp, obsidian towers and bridges woven from a silver, silk-like material that shimmered in the perpetual twilight. It was a dark, silent kingdom, a place of shadows and secrets.
In the heart of the highest tower, on a throne of solidified shadow that seemed to drink the very light from the air, sat Jiu Zhizhu, the Bride of Nine Spiders.
One of her subordinates, a silent figure whose form seemed to be made of a thousand skittering spiders, materialized from the shadows. "Your Majesty," the subordinate hissed, its voice a dry, rustling whisper. "The traitor's legacy has been found."
The Bride of Nine Spiders did not move. She simply extended a long, pale hand, and the subordinate placed a scroll made of a strange, papery substance into it. She unrolled it, her dark eyes scanning the report. It was about Alessa Geomi. It detailed how she had been seen using the lost legacy of their martial arts, the Web-Weaver's Dance.
A slow, cold smile touched the Bride's lips, a chilling expression that held no warmth, only a deep, ancient grudge. "Is there any possibility," she whispered, her voice a silken, dangerous thing, "to kidnap her and bring her here?"
"Yes, Your Majesty," the subordinate answered. "We can make it happen. But… the tournament is set to begin in four months. Should you worry yourself with a traitor now?"
The Bride of Nine Spiders rolled the scroll back up, her movements slow and deliberate. "Then let her have more fun," she said, her voice a low, final command. "Let the little spider dance a while longer. We will clean this web after winning the tournament."
**A/N**
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**A/N**