The interview began like many others.
Two applicants. One file.
Delivered through a deliberately obscure job listing that promised danger, advancement, and total discretion.
Luthar scanned the falsified documents without blinking.
"Brock Rumlow," he said, studying the larger man. "Security specialist. Retired military Soldier."
Rumlow nodded once, square-jawed and calm. "I handle threats. Quiet ones. Loud ones. I heard you needed muscle."
Luthar's optics glimmered faintly. "Muscle is useful. But not sufficient."
Rumlow said nothing.
The second applicant stood beside him, younger, sharp-eyed—early twenties, composed, but not yet hardened. Her papers claimed the name Kara Trent, a recent graduate with top marks in logistics and field operations. In truth, SHIELD had trained her for two years.
She offered a crisp smile. "I'm here for the administrative position. Scheduling. Coordination. Communications—whatever's needed."
"Why did you come together?" Luthar asked.
She glanced at Rumlow. "We thought it best to arrive together. Safer."
Luthar stepped aside from the threshold. "Very well. Enter."
They passed through the reinforced entrance into the observatory's sanctum, now half-machine, half-cathedral. The walls glowed with unseen circuits. Plasma conduits whispered behind sacred geometries. Servo-skulls drifted silently in the upper rafters.
"You will be evaluated separately," Luthar said as they walked beneath arching steel.
"Fine by me," Rumlow muttered, still not grasping the gravity of the words.
Luthar led him deeper—past the central chamber and into the surgical annex. The air cooled. Clean. Precise. Tanks of regenerative fluids lined the walls, glowing softly. Scaffolded lattices of biomechanical materials floated like offerings inside containment fields.
Rumlow eyed the setup warily. "This looks like more than a job interview."
"Assessment," Luthar corrected. "I require tools, not employees."
Rumlow paused at the threshold. "What kind of tools?"
Luthar's mechadendrites unfurled with a soft hiss, glinting in the surgical light.
"The kind I forge myself."
Before Rumlow could respond, a pulse of directed neuromagnetic energy struck behind his eyes.
His body went limp.
Luthar caught him with surgical precision and guided him to the reinforced operating slab.
Eight Hours Later
Rumlow stirred, inhaling sharply as light filtered through his eyes. He blinked, adjusting to the brightness overhead.
No pain. No stiffness.
Only a strange sense of balance—like a machine rediscovering its operating rhythm.
Luthar stood beside the slab, arms behind his back.
"You are awake."
Rumlow sat up instinctively. He expected soreness. Instead, his body moved with fluid strength.
"You didn't say it'd be that kind of evaluation."
"You didn't ask," Luthar replied. " you didn't fit the requirement, so I decided to adjust you myself."
Rumlow flexed his fingers. No strain. No hesitation.
"I feel like I could rip steel."
"You can," Luthar said. "In time. Once your neural thresholds calibrate."
He turned to a nearby terminal and scanned biofeedback logs.
"You are now statistically 5x more efficient—kinetic durability, neuromuscular coordination, reflex latency. In simpler terms: you move faster, strike harder, and think clearer—especially under stress."
Rumlow's brow furrowed. "What exactly did you do to me?"
Luthar gestured toward a monitor displaying cross-section diagnostics.
Internal scans revealed dense alloy reinforcement lattices woven through his skeleton. His muscle fibers were wrapped in myoelectric sheaths. Beneath his skin, microchannel coolant systems pulsed in quiet cycles.
Externally, he looked unchanged.
But beneath—he was no longer entirely human.
"Subdermal augmentation," Luthar said. "Skeletal bracing. Reactive gel buffers in the joints. Enhanced muscular recovery, accelerated oxygenation. No scars. No plating. Your exterior remains unmodified."
Rumlow stared at his own hands. The calluses were still there. His old scar across the knuckles remained.
But something fundamental had changed. A new responsiveness. A predatory ease.
"What's the catch?"
Luthar finally turned to him. No triumph. No cruelty. Only fact.
"you don't need to know the catch. Just know You are no longer just a man," he said.
"You are proof that humanity was an unfinished draft—corrected through devotion."
Rumlow rose, stretching slowly. No dizziness. No imbalance. He took a single step—and heard the faintest sound of servos realigning his spine.
"And if I decide I don't want this job?"
Luthar's voice remained even.
"You cannot decline."
Rumlow narrowed his eyes. "Mind control?"
"Recalibration," Luthar replied. "If you defy me, you'll feel pain. Intolerable. If you obey, you'll feel nothing. "
Rumlow said nothing. He didn't flinch.
But something deep in his eyes—the last flicker of resistance—faded, or maybe he realized he couldn't struggle.
---
Observation Booth—Eight Hours Earlier
Kara stood behind the reinforced one-way glass, pale and shaking. Her hands trembled against her datapad, useless now.
What she had witnessed was not surgery. It was disassembly.
Luthar hadn't spoken. He hadn't paused.
He had unmade Rumlow like a machine—one calibrated for replacement.
No anesthesia. No consent. Just a clean pulse that shut the man down like a deactivated mobile and then hours of cutting, wiring, refining.
At one point, she had to rush to the far corner to vomit—especially after Luthar removed Rumlow's heart, suspended it in fluid, and replaced it with an engineered node before stitching him back together.
The girl beside her—an assistant, barely 13 years old—hadn't blinked.
Kara had thought she understood the mission: go apply for a job and send back the information, but now she worried about her own situation.
Luthar wasn't calling some aliens to conquer the planet; he was transforming humans into aliens at least this is how she saw it.
She stared at the monitor, her heart racing.
The operation was a success even when it shouldn't be, especially since Luther even opened the head of Mr. Rumlow.
As Kara's expression shifted from shock to horror, Liliruca—watching from the sidelines—quietly opened her notebook. Without a word, she drew a line through Kara's name on the short list titled Luthar's Potential Assistant. After a brief pause, she wrote a new entry beneath it: "Lily's new assistant."
( I am working to increase the speed of writing one thing I don't like about current two chapters is I was planning for black widow to be the spy. I felt all fun fiction y
have black widow as a Spy which is quite weird so I decided to not pick her and selected these to and for black widow we can think about something else you can share your thoughts if you think I should have pic black widow )