Kurogai watched from the side, stunned by what unfolded within Sif's subconscious. He hadn't intervened, yet the dream painted him as a looming devil while Sif cast herself as the heroic warrior fated to defeat him. The imagery struck him—this was how her subconscious perceived him, shaped by Asgard's ideals. To her, he was a villain, she was the champion. But then there was the strange twist: she had called herself a princess, unwilling, as if forced into the role by his shadow. The implication carried a weight of suffering that left Kurogai unsettled.
"Imaginative," he muttered, rubbing his temple, "but a little twisted."
If he hadn't entered her dream himself, he never would have imagined Sif harboring such fantastical visions. Yet here they were, vivid and unfiltered. That left him with an opportunity—and a question.
"Now that I'm inside Sif's dream, can my mental power reshape it?" he wondered aloud. The Dream Eye had already exceeded his expectations by allowing entry. But if he could not only observe but alter? That would place this ability on an entirely different level. Peering into dreams was useful, but rewriting them was transformative—dangerous, even.
He decided to test it. "Let's try."
Directing his will, Kurogai pushed his spiritual power into the scene. Until now, the dream had followed Sif's script, with her triumphant charge overwhelming the demon-king version of himself. She was moments from victory. But as his influence spread, the balance shifted. Power surged through the dream's "demon king," and he rallied, countering Sif's every strike with impossible strength. The tide of battle turned sharply.
Kurogai's focus was absorbed in this experiment, but elsewhere in Asgard, his presence was already stirring whispers.
Inside a golden hall, a man with sharp features and a book in hand looked up as a soldier reported.
"Lord Loki," the guard announced, "Thor has returned. He brings with him a man unknown to us. A messenger from Midgard, by his claim."
Loki, god of mischief, younger brother of Thor, tilted his head. Though never as beloved as Thor, he still carried Odin's blood and his own circle of loyalists. At the mention of Thor returning with a stranger, curiosity flickered in his eyes.
"A messenger from Midgard," Loki repeated, lips curling in intrigue. "How unusual."
Bringing outsiders into Asgard was rare. To bring one under the title of messenger, rarer still. Instinct whispered to Loki that something was hidden here—secrets waiting to be uncovered. And if those secrets concerned Thor, all the better.
"I must see this messenger myself," Loki decided, rising with intent. If there were truths to pry loose—or weaknesses to exploit—he would find them. He set off, leaving the palace behind, moving toward Kurogai's location.
Meanwhile, Thor stood before Odin's throne.
"Father," Thor began, his voice steady with duty, "I have completed the task. Matters in Midgard are as you foresaw. The gem guarded by the Sorcerer Supreme shows signs of disturbance. She has sent an emissary here to discuss it with you."
Odin's one good eye narrowed. This was confirmation of what he feared—the Time Stone's unrest, its resonance with the other Infinity Stones. The All-Father sighed, heavy with the weight of inevitability.
"I see," Odin said at last. "Then the storm truly gathers. And the emissary you speak of—where is he?"
Thor straightened. "He is a powerful magician, eager to witness Asgard's magic for himself. I asked Sif to guide him to the open training grounds. I will bring him here immediately."
"Do so," Odin ordered, lifting his hand in dismissal. "I will await you."
Thor bowed and departed, intent on retrieving Kurogai. Odin remained seated, deep in thought, his mind turning grimly toward the Stones.
Unaware of these movements, Kurogai remained in Sif's dream, manipulating the narrative. The demon-king version of himself pressed forward with unnatural might, overwhelming Sif despite her Asgardian spirit and resolve. Her strength was formidable, her will iron, but compared to his mental power she faltered. Pupil techniques tied to spiritual force tipped the scale heavily in his favor.
As her dream-self staggered back in defeat, Kurogai felt something else: a ripple of power, vast and unmistakable, drawing near from the waking world. The aura's pressure crashed against his senses like a storm tide. Instinct told him he couldn't linger. With practiced will he severed his link to the dream, retreating into his body.
His eyes opened. Reality returned.
Sif, however, still slumbered, her breathing steady, her dream unbroken. He had exited, but the dream continued without him, shaped by the fragments of his presence and her subconscious fears.
And in the distance, two figures approached—one the thunderous gait of Thor, the other the quieter, cunning step of Loki.
