Chapter 6: The Weight of Fire
The helicopter ride back to the facility was quieter than the trip to Boston. Agent Reyes spent most of the flight typing notes on her tablet, occasionally glancing at me with the same expression a scientist might wear while observing a particularly interesting specimen.
I stared out the window at the lights passing below, but I wasn't really seeing them. Instead, I kept replaying the moment I'd turned off Pyro's flames. The look of shock and fear in his eyes. The way he'd crumpled when I hit him, suddenly powerless and vulnerable.
*You're evolving faster than any mutant I've ever seen.*
His words echoed in my head. What was I becoming? Each death, each resurrection, seemed to strip away another piece of who I used to be. The scared teenager who got beaten up by bullies felt like a stranger now. In his place was something harder, more dangerous.
Something that could reach into another mutant's power and simply switch it off.
"You're quiet," Agent Reyes observed, not looking up from her tablet.
"Just thinking."
"About?"
I considered lying, giving her some sanitized version of my thoughts. But what was the point? She'd probably just hook me up to another machine and read my brain waves anyway.
"About what Pyro said. About camps and experiments." I turned to face her. "Is that what you people are planning? Concentration camps for mutants?"
She set down her tablet and studied me for a long moment. "That's classified information."
"That's not a no."
"No, it's not." She leaned back in her seat. "Alex, you need to understand something. You're not like other mutants. Most of them have one power, maybe two if they're lucky. Static abilities that can be predicted, planned for, contained if necessary."
"And me?"
"You're adaptive. Evolutionary. Every challenge you face makes you stronger, more capable. Right now, you can resurrect from death and absorb fire attacks. But what happens when you face a telepath? A reality warper? Someone who can manipulate time itself?"
The implication was clear. Each time I died, I'd come back immune to whatever killed me. Eventually, I'd be unstoppable.
"That scares you," I said.
"It terrifies me. But it also makes you invaluable." She picked up her tablet again. "The world is changing, Alex. Mutants are emerging faster than ever before, and some of them see humans as insects to be exterminated. We need someone who can adapt to any threat, who can face the worst monsters our species can produce and survive."
"And if I decide I don't want to be your weapon?"
"Then a lot of innocent people are going to die while you sit in a cell, wondering if you could have made a difference."
The same manipulation as before, but it still worked. Because underneath all the moral complexity, the truth was simple: I had the power to save lives, and with that power came responsibility.
Even if it was slowly turning me into something inhuman.
---
We landed at the facility just after midnight. The place looked different in the darkness—less like a government installation and more like a prison. Razor wire glinted in the moonlight, and armed guards patrolled the perimeter with weapons I didn't recognize.
"Get some rest," Agent Reyes said as we disembarked. "Tomorrow we start training you to control your new abilities."
"What new abilities?"
"Pyrokinesis, for starters. The readings we got during your encounter show clear evidence of flame manipulation. You didn't just turn off his fire—you absorbed it, converted it, made it part of yourself."
I looked down at my hands, remembering the flames dancing between my fingers. "I can control fire now?"
"Among other things. We'll run a full battery of tests tomorrow to see what else you picked up. Get some sleep. You'll need it."
My room was exactly as I'd left it—sparse, functional, depressing. But as I lay down on the narrow cot, I found myself thinking about my old life. The trailer park, my alcoholic mother, the bullies who'd tried to drown me.
It felt like a lifetime ago.
I was almost asleep when the fire alarm went off.
Red lights flashed in the hallway, and a computerized voice announced: "Facility breach. All personnel to emergency stations. This is not a drill."
I rolled out of bed and grabbed the tactical gear they'd given me. If someone was attacking the facility, they were probably here for me. The government's new pet weapon would be a valuable prize for the right buyer.
The hallway was chaos. Agents ran back and forth, shouting orders and checking equipment. Through the confusion, I spotted Agent Reyes near the command center, talking rapidly into a radio.
"What's happening?" I asked, jogging up to her.
"Multiple breaches. North wall, east gate, and something just tore through the motor pool." She looked grim. "This isn't random. Someone's orchestrating this."
"Who?"
"Unknown. But they seem to know exactly where our weak points are." She handed me an earpiece. "Stay close. If this goes south, you might be our only chance of—"
The lights went out.
Emergency lighting kicked in a few seconds later, bathing everything in red. But in that moment of darkness, I heard something that made my blood run cold.
Laughter. Not the crazy cackle of a madman, but the amused chuckle of someone who found the whole situation entertaining.
"Well, well," a cultured voice said over the facility's PA system. "What have we here? A government black site, full of delicious secrets. And if I'm not mistaken, they're keeping something very interesting in cell block C."
Agent Reyes cursed under her breath. "How did he access our communications?"
"I accessed them, my dear Agent Reyes, because I'm very good at what I do." The voice paused, and I could almost hear the smile. "Now, I believe you have something that belongs to me. A young man with some rather unique abilities. I'll be collecting him shortly."
"Alex, run," Agent Reyes hissed. "Get to the safe room and—"
"Oh, there's no point in running." The voice seemed to come from everywhere at once now. "I can hear his heartbeat from here. Such an interesting rhythm—two hearts, did you know that? One human, one something else entirely. Evolution is fascinating, isn't it?"
Two hearts? I pressed my hand to my chest, feeling the steady thump-thump beneath my ribs. When had that happened?
"Who are you?" I called out to the darkness.
"Someone who's been watching your progress with great interest. Someone who understands what you're becoming better than these government fools ever could." The lights flickered back on, and I saw him standing at the end of the hallway.
He was tall and lean, wearing an expensive suit that somehow remained perfectly pressed despite the chaos around us. His hair was silver, swept back from a face that might have been handsome if not for the predatory gleam in his pale eyes.
But it was his smile that made my skin crawl. Too wide, too knowing, with teeth that seemed just a little too sharp.
"Hello, Alex," he said, his voice carrying easily down the corridor. "My name is Nathaniel Essex. But you can call me Mr. Sinister."
The name hit me like a physical blow. Even in the government's sanitized files, I'd heard whispers about Sinister. A geneticist who'd been experimenting on mutants for decades. A monster who collected powerful mutants like others collected butterflies.
"Stay back," I warned, fire springing to life in my palms.
"Oh, my dear boy," Sinister chuckled. "You have no idea what you're truly capable of, do you? Fire is just the beginning. You're adapting, evolving, becoming something magnificent. And I'm here to help you reach your full potential."
"Alex, don't listen to him," Agent Reyes said, raising her weapon. "He's a sociopath. A killer."
"A scientist," Sinister corrected. "One who appreciates the beauty of genetic perfection. Alex here represents the next step in human evolution. Unlimited adaptability, true immortality, and power that grows with each death. Do you have any idea how rare that is?"
He took a step forward, and I saw armed agents emerging from side corridors, surrounding him. Their weapons were trained on his chest, but he didn't seem concerned.
"You're outnumbered," Agent Reyes said. "Surrender now, and we might let you live."
"Outnumbered?" Sinister looked around at the agents with genuine amusement. "My dear woman, I brought friends."
The walls exploded.
Dust and debris filled the air as something massive crashed through the facility's reinforced walls. Through the smoke, I saw a figure that made my enhanced metabolism skip a beat.
It was humanoid but wrong, as if someone had taken a person and twisted them into something monstrous. Its skin was a mottled gray-green, and its arms ended in claws that could tear through steel. But the worst part was its face—or what was left of it. One eye socket was empty, the other held a red orb that pulsed with malevolent light.
"Meet the Marauders," Sinister said pleasantly. "I'm afraid they're not much for conversation."
The creature—Marauder—moved faster than anything that size should have been able to. It was among the agents before they could react, claws slashing through kevlar and flesh with equal ease. Blood sprayed across the walls as men and women who'd been talking and laughing moments ago fell screaming.
"Stop!" I shouted, launching myself forward.
Fire erupted from my hands, a controlled blast that should have incinerated the Marauder where it stood. Instead, the flames simply washed over it harmlessly, as if it were immune to heat.
"Impressive," Sinister observed. "But Sabretooth here has been adapted to resist fire damage. You'll need to be more creative."
Sabretooth. The name fit the creature perfectly. It turned toward me with that single red eye, and I saw intelligence there. Malevolent, hungry intelligence.
"Fresh meat," it growled, its voice like grinding stone.
It lunged at me, claws extended. I dodged to the side, but not fast enough. Razor-sharp talons raked across my chest, tearing through my tactical vest and the metallic skin beneath. Blood splattered the floor as I stumbled backward.
The pain was incredible, but it was already fading as my body began to heal. I could feel the wounds closing, the damaged tissue rebuilding itself. But Sabretooth wasn't done. It grabbed me by the throat and lifted me off the ground.
"Die slow," it hissed, squeezing until I felt my windpipe collapse.
I died choking on my own blood, staring into that single red eye.
---
I woke up thirty seconds later to the sound of gunfire.
The agents were making their last stand near the command center, but they were being overwhelmed. More Marauders had arrived—creatures that had once been human but were now something else entirely. They moved through the facility like a pack of wolves, hunting down anyone who wasn't already dead.
But I felt different. Stronger. My throat, which had been crushed moments ago, now felt reinforced somehow. My breathing was deeper, more efficient. And my claws—
Wait. My claws?
I looked down at my hands and nearly screamed. My fingernails had extended into razor-sharp talons, similar to Sabretooth's but smaller, more precise. I flexed them experimentally, and they cut through the air with a soft whistling sound.
"Fascinating," Sinister said, appearing beside me as if by magic. "Adaptive mimicry. You're not just becoming immune to the methods used to kill you—you're absorbing and integrating useful traits from your killers."
"Get away from me," I snarled, surprised by the feral quality of my own voice.
"Oh, I don't think so. You see, Alex, you're exactly what I've been looking for. A perfect specimen. Someone who can adapt to any challenge, overcome any obstacle, become stronger with each defeat." He gestured to the carnage around us. "This is just the beginning. Imagine what you could become with proper guidance."
I launched myself at him, claws extended. But he was ready for me, moving with inhuman speed and grace. One moment I was attacking, the next I was flying through the air, my own momentum turned against me.
I hit the wall hard enough to crack the concrete, but I was back on my feet in seconds. My body felt loose, flexible, ready for anything. The impact should have broken half my bones, but I barely felt it.
"Excellent recovery time," Sinister noted, pulling out what looked like a tablet. "Your healing factor has increased by at least thirty percent since your last death. And those claws are a nice touch—clearly inspired by your killer, but refined and improved."
"I'm not going with you."
"Oh, but you are. You see, I have something you need." He held up the tablet, and I saw surveillance footage of a familiar trailer park. "Your mother is having a very bad day."
The screen showed my mom's trailer, but something was wrong. The door was hanging off its hinges, and scorch marks covered the walls. In the center of the wreckage sat a figure I recognized—another Marauder, this one with the ability to generate and control electricity.
"She's still alive," Sinister said conversationally. "For now. But Arclight gets bored easily, and your mother is proving to be rather... fragile."
Rage filled me, hot and pure. The fire in my palms flared so bright it hurt to look at, and I felt something else stirring in my chest. Something cold and sharp and utterly murderous.
"Let her go."
"Come with me willingly, and I'll consider it. Refuse, and she dies. Slowly."
I looked around at the devastation, the bodies of agents who'd been alive and laughing just minutes ago. Agent Reyes was slumped against a wall, bleeding from a head wound but still conscious. She caught my eye and shook her head slightly.
*Don't do it,* she mouthed.
But she didn't understand. She'd never had a parent who needed protecting, never felt the weight of being someone's only hope.
"Fine," I said, letting the fire in my hands die out. "I'll come with you. But if you hurt her—"
"You'll what? Kill me?" Sinister laughed, and the sound echoed off the walls like breaking glass. "My dear boy, I've been killed dozens of times. It never takes."
He gestured to his Marauders, and they began moving toward the exit. I followed, feeling like I was walking to my own execution.
But as we reached the breach in the north wall, I heard Agent Reyes call out behind me.
"Alex! Remember what you are!"
I turned back, confused. "What I am?"
"You're not their weapon," she said, her voice carrying despite her injuries. "You're not his experiment. You're Alex Chen, and you choose who you become."
Sinister paused, his pale eyes narrowing with interest. "How touching. But ultimately irrelevant. Evolution doesn't care about choice, Agent Reyes. It only cares about survival."
As we stepped out into the night, I felt the weight of those words settle over me like a shroud. Choice. Did I really have any choice left? Every path seemed to lead to the same destination—becoming something more than human, less than human, or something else entirely.
The helicopter that had brought me home was in flames. In its place sat a sleek black aircraft that hummed with barely contained energy. Sinister's ride.
"After you," he said, gesturing toward the open hatch.
I took one last look at the facility, at the agents fighting to contain the damage, at the life I was leaving behind. Then I stepped aboard, and the hatch sealed behind me with a soft hiss.
As we lifted off into the night, I pressed my face to the window and watched the facility shrink below us. Somewhere down there, Agent Reyes was probably calling in reinforcements, trying to track our flight path, planning a rescue mission.
But I had a feeling that by the time they found me, the person they were looking for would be long gone.
The question was: what would be left in his place?