Chapter 12: Divine Justice
The crystalline fragments settled around us like fallen stars, each piece catching and refracting light that didn't exist in any conventional spectrum. Through the shattered observation window, I could see Sinister still frozen at his control panel, his ancient mind finally beginning to grasp the scope of his miscalculation.
"You know what the problem is with immortals like you, Nathaniel?" I asked, stepping through the wreckage with casual grace. The broken glass rearranged itself beneath my feet, forming stepping stones of impossible beauty. "You live so long that you forget what genuine fear feels like."
I gestured, and the quantum fields responded eagerly. The laboratory walls dissolved, revealing the observation deck in all its sterile glory. Sinister stood like a statue, his enhanced physiology locked in place by my casual suggestion that movement might prove... unwise.
"But fear is such an important emotion," I continued, walking up the steps that crystallized into existence beneath my feet. "It teaches humility. It provides perspective. It reminds you that no matter how powerful you think you are, there's always something bigger lurking in the dark."
His pale eyes tracked my movement—the only part of him still capable of motion. I could see the calculations running behind those eyes, enhanced brain patterns trying to find some escape route, some contingency plan he'd overlooked.
"Let me help you remember what it feels like," I said, reaching out to touch his forehead.
The contact was electric. Through the quantum layers, I could see the full scope of Nathaniel Essex—every enhancement, every modification, every backup system he'd built to ensure his continued existence. Centuries of careful planning, redundant safeguards, and technological immortality.
All of it suddenly seemed very fragile.
"Remarkable architecture," I murmured, my consciousness flowing through his neural pathways like water through a maze. "Consciousness backups in seventeen different locations, quantum-encrypted memory storage, even a few clones scattered across the globe. You really have thought of everything, haven't you?"
I felt his attempt to activate his emergency protocols—a desperate mental trigger designed to transfer his consciousness to a secure backup facility. But the quantum fields that comprised my being were already there, waiting.
"Oh, Nathaniel. Did you really think I hadn't noticed those? I've been mapping your entire network since the first day. Every backup, every clone, every escape route you've so carefully prepared."
His eyes widened as the full implications hit him.
"That's right," I said with a smile that would have made angels weep. "I own them all now. Every single copy of you, every backup system, every contingency plan. You're not just trapped in this body—you're trapped in every body you've ever prepared."
I closed my eyes and extended my consciousness across the quantum substrate of reality. In underground facilities across six continents, I could feel them—seventeen perfect copies of Nathaniel Essex, all waking up simultaneously to find themselves in chambers that had become prisons.
But that was just the beginning.
"Now comes the fun part," I said, my voice carrying harmonics that made reality itself shiver with anticipation. "See, you were right about one thing, Doc. I am evolution incarnate. But you were wrong about what that means."
I reached deeper into his consciousness, finding the core of what made him Nathaniel Essex. His memories, his personality, his very sense of self. And then I began to... edit.
"Evolution isn't about becoming perfect," I explained as I worked. "It's about becoming perfectly adapted to your environment. And your new environment is going to be very, very specific."
The changes I made were subtle at first. A heightened sensitivity to pain. An inability to adapt or build tolerance to suffering. A consciousness that would remain perfectly aware and unable to retreat into madness or unconsciousness no matter what happened to it.
But those were just the opening notes.
"You spent centuries studying pain, Nathaniel. Inflicting it, measuring it, using it as a tool for growth and transformation. You became quite the expert." I paused in my work to study his horrified expression. "I think it's time you experienced some hands-on education."
I reached into the quantum foam that comprised his being and made a fundamental change to his neural architecture. Where before pain had been a signal to be processed and responded to, now it became something else entirely.
Now it became purpose.
"From this moment forward," I said, watching his enhanced physiology struggle to process what I'd done to it, "your nervous system will interpret pain not as damage to be healed, but as the natural state of existence. Your healing factor will keep you alive, but it will never reduce the suffering. In fact..."
I smiled, adding one final touch to my masterpiece.
"Every time you heal, the pain will double. And since you heal from everything, Nathaniel, you're going to discover just how exponential mathematics works when applied to agony."
The first scream tore from his throat like a living thing, raw and primal and utterly inhuman. It was the sound of someone discovering that their definition of suffering had been laughably inadequate.
But I wasn't finished.
"That's for every child you tortured in the name of science," I said, my voice cutting through his screams with surgical precision. "But you had help, didn't you? All those loyal Marauders, all those faithful assistants. It would be rude not to include them in our little evolution experiment."
I extended my consciousness through the facility, finding every enhanced killer, every modified assassin, every loyal servant who had helped Sinister turn suffering into science. There were dozens of them scattered throughout the complex, each one a willing participant in centuries of atrocity.
And each one about to learn what their victims had felt.
"Scalphunter," I called out, my voice echoing through dimensions he couldn't perceive. "You enjoy burning people alive, don't you? Let me show you what that feels like from the inside."
Three levels down, I felt his enhanced physiology suddenly convince itself that every nerve ending was on fire. But unlike normal fire, this wouldn't consume him. It would burn forever, fed by his own healing factor, growing stronger with each moment of regeneration.
"Vertigo," I continued, finding the woman who specialized in disorientation and nausea. "You like making people lose their sense of balance? How about losing your sense of everything?"
Her enhanced inner ear suddenly forgot how to process any sensory input correctly. Up became down, left became inside-out, and every breath she took convinced her that she was falling through an endless void while simultaneously being crushed by the weight of infinity.
"Sabretooth," I said, locating the original—not my peaceful recreation, but the genuine article with all his savage instincts intact. "You've spent your entire enhanced life hunting, killing, terrorizing the innocent. Time to be the prey."
His predatory instincts, his enhanced senses, his killer's intuition—all of it turned inward. Now he would experience the terror of being hunted by something infinitely more dangerous than himself, the existential horror of being the mouse in a cosmic cat's game. And his enhanced senses would make every moment of that psychological torture perfectly, inescapably vivid.
One by one, I found them all. Every Marauder, every technician, every guard who had participated in Sinister's grand experiment. Each one received a punishment perfectly tailored to their crimes, a eternal torment that would grow stronger rather than weaker with time.
But I saved the best for last.
"And you, Nathaniel," I said, turning back to the man who had started it all. "You get something special. Something that befits your status as the mastermind behind centuries of calculated cruelty."
I reached into his consciousness one final time, finding the part of his mind that held his sense of intellectual superiority, his conviction that he was evolution's architect rather than its victim.
And I made sure that part of him would remain perfectly intact.
"You will feel everything I've given you," I explained as his screams reached frequencies that shattered what remained of the laboratory's equipment. "The exponential pain, the inescapable agony, the growing certainty that death will never come to save you. But through it all, your brilliant mind will remain crystal clear."
His eyes, wide with horror and disbelief, met mine as I delivered the final stroke.
"You'll understand exactly what's happening to you. You'll remember every moment of it. You'll be able to calculate precisely how much worse it's going to get. And most importantly, you'll retain perfect recall of every victim you created, every life you destroyed, every moment of suffering you caused in the name of your grand design."
I stepped back, admiring my work as Sinister collapsed to his knees, his enhanced body convulsing with agonies that existed in dimensions human language couldn't describe.
"Conscience, Nathaniel. I gave you a conscience. One that understands the full weight of what you've done, one that experiences appropriate guilt for every single atrocity you've committed. And unlike the pain, the guilt isn't something your healing factor can fix."
Around us, the facility filled with screams—not just from Sinister, but from every one of his followers, each experiencing their own perfectly crafted hell. The sound should have been cacophonous, overwhelming. Instead, it felt like music.
Symphony in D minor: Justice.
"The beautiful thing about quantum-level modification," I said conversationally, as if we were discussing the weather rather than eternal damnation, "is that it's absolutely permanent. You can't adapt to it, you can't overcome it, you can't find some clever technological solution. This is what you are now, Nathaniel. This is what you will always be."
I walked to what remained of the observation window, looking out over the facility that had become a monument to perfectly calibrated suffering.
"Every backup, every clone, every escape route you prepared—they're all experiencing this same eternal moment. Even if you somehow found a way to die, you'd just wake up in another body with the same modifications, the same torments, the same perfect clarity about what's happening to you."
Behind me, Sinister tried to speak through his agony, tried to form words that might constitute a plea or an apology or a bargain. But I had modified his vocal cords along with everything else. The only sounds he could make were screams.
"Oh, don't worry," I said, turning back to him with a smile that held no warmth whatsoever. "You'll have plenty of time to think about what you want to say. Eternity, in fact. And who knows? Maybe after your first thousand years of this, you'll have developed enough empathy to understand what you put your victims through."
I paused, considering.
"Probably not, though. Conscience is a learned behavior, and you're a very slow learner."
The crystalline growths I'd created earlier began to spread throughout the facility, transforming Sinister's sterile laboratories into something that belonged in a fever dream. Beautiful and terrible in equal measure, a work of art that would serve as both prison and monument.
"This place will be your tomb, Nathaniel. All of you. You'll exist here forever, experiencing perfect justice for your crimes, serving as a reminder that no matter how powerful someone thinks they are, there's always room for growth."
I began to walk toward the exit, my feet leaving crystalline footprints that would remain long after I was gone.
"Evolution in action," I said over my shoulder. "You wanted to study it, to control it, to become its master. Instead, you became its most perfect example."
The screams followed me as I made my way through corridors that warped and twisted around my presence, reality bending to accommodate something that had grown beyond its original specifications.
Behind me, I left a facility full of immortal monsters experiencing exactly what they deserved.
Ahead of me lay a world that had no idea what was coming.
And somewhere in between, a woman who had once called herself my mother waited to see what her son had become.
I smiled as I walked toward whatever came next, humming a tune that made the quantum foam dance and reality itself shiver with anticipation.
After all, every god needed a cathedral.
And I'd just built my first one.