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Chapter 103: Date night

I spent the rest of that afternoon coming to terms with what kind of preparation I would need for the next few massive projects. Between the defense fleet and the shield array, I would be using a lot of materials, and I needed to get them ready to keep from running into delays. I was about to start printing things out, only to realize some of my UCMs weren't updated with the divine essence and Uru, which was something that would really hold me back in the long run.

So, I spent a significant amount of time updating everything that I could, or rather everything that needed it. I wasn't ridiculous enough to think that everything I had ever made needed to be perfect, but a lot of things seriously benefited from a single crystal of divine essence and an ingot of Uru.

When I was done updating everything that needed it, I moved a bunch of my now divinely enhanced surplus UCM to the Octopit to print out a ridiculous amount of materials, for both the satellites and the fleet. I also set up a few divine UCMs in the warehouse to print out Uru and divine essence, before whipping up expanded storage spaces for them, as well as the majority of Asgardian materials and resources they traded to me.

That took me the entire first half of a day, taking a break just around lunchtime to talk on the phone with Nat. She had picked out a play and a time, somehow managing to talk her way into a pair of tickets. I was surprised she was able to get them on such short notice, but I didn't question it. We chatted for a while before saying goodbye, both of us having work to do.

I spent the rest of the day monitoring the UCMs and becoming more familiar with the Asgardian shield projector, getting an LPM to print out individual parts to examine their concepts. It turns out that most of the powerful part of the entire projector was the core, which was a deep blue spherical gem. It was covered in carved runes, a singular swirling band of them running around the outside of the gem, set with gold so pure it almost glowed. I could see something inside, but it was too obscured to make out what it actually was.

Its concepts were powerful though, filled with magic, protection, shielding, and a dozen others that perfectly fit what I needed.

"I might end up just using this…" I mumbled to myself, setting the core to duplicate a few dozen times in the warehouse before returning to my examination.

My mind, focused as it was on creating a shield, kept returning to Wakanda. They had a shield around their cities, and while I wasn't entirely sure if it was just camouflage or an actual barrier. I needed to find out because any addition to a shield system, unless it was total crap, would allow me to improve the final result drastically. Even if it was just camouflage, being able to cloak the entire planet would probably be a powerful tool.

I could sneak in and scan it without them even knowing I was there… or I could make a phone call and ask to discuss it with them. If the circumstances were different, if I didn't already have two solutions for the shield coverage problem, I probably wouldn't bother asking. I wasn't about to let anything like isolationism or even small moral grey areas like design theft get in the way of global protection from outside threats. But, with Odin's and the Ancient One's gifts, it wasn't as necessary. While any additional shielding methods would greatly increase the potency of the final result, I knew that between the three powerful shielding methods I had already, the final result was going to be ridiculously powerful.

I would reach out to them soon, sometime after I met with the WSC, which would hopefully be soon. For now… I had a date to prepare for.


Natasha and I made our way down the Broadway theater's steps, our elbows interlocked as we did. The crowd moved and shifted around us, most people going the same way we were, out of the theater as the show had ended.

It had been an interesting production, with rather incredible set pieces and singing. I had heard of Wicked before, both as a play and a book, but I had never seen or read it, not that I had tried particularly hard. Natasha on the other hand had been wanting to see it for a while, so had been very happy to get her hands on a pair of tickets.

"I liked the idea," She had said as we made our way into the theater almost two hours ago. "Learning the story behind a villain, where they came from, learning what happened to turn her into the Wicked Witch, what they actually went through…"

She had been a little embarrassed to be looking forward to it, but I thought it was endearing. Besides, on the scale of weird shit, Natasha Romanov being into musicals was hardly even registered.

And honestly, it was a really entertaining production, enough that I readily agreed that we should see more eventually. As we made our way down the New York street, making our way to our restaurant reservations, we chatted about the play. Eventually, we arrived at the small but highly-rated Italian restaurant, and thanks to our reservation were seated almost immediately. It wasn't the fanciest of places, but according to reviews they served good food.

Natasha chuckled when I pulled out her seat for her, sitting down gracefully. She looked gorgeous in a simple black and red dress, the red a sort of undertone to the black fabric. I resisted the urge to comment on it again as I already had several times. Instead, I simply walked around and sat in my seat, smiling across at my date.

"You know, don't take this the wrong way but I didn't really take you for a musical type of person," I admitted.

"I… haven't had a lot of time for… normal things like that," She admitted with a shrug. "But I've been trying to make time for them, to expand my horizons beyond Shield and my past."

"That's good. You deserve to have a life beyond your job, as important as it is."

She nodded and smiled, but our waiter stopped by before she could respond, taking our drink order and promising to come back shortly. When she was gone Natasha continued.

"Small steps I guess. I got an apartment, one separated from work. It's under a fake name and I don't wear my normal face when I go there but… it's still mine."

"What did you do before this?" I asked, a bit confused.

"Shield safehouses mostly, or the temporary lodgings at whatever Shield base was closest to my objective, and lots of hotel rooms," She explained as she opened up her menu. "I travel a lot, I'll probably end up spending less time at home than I will be traveling. But still, I should have a home."

"You should, a space to call your own is important," I agreed. "Moving into my old apartment was a big step away from my old life."

"Old life?" Natasha asked, looking curious. "That sounds like a story."

"Yeah… just about," I said with a chuckle. "My parents died when I was nineteen. Left me with a little bit of money, and a fuck the world attitude. The friends I had at the time were not good influences on me. We partied, hard, for a very long time, and burnt through the money my parents left me pretty quickly."

"Wake up call huh?" She asked, and I nodded in confirmation.

"Yeah, a pretty strong one," I admitted. "Anyway, long story short, my friends got into some bad stuff, and when they wouldn't listen to me I had to leave before I got caught up in it with them."

"How long ago was that?"

"Oh, a few years now. I'm pretty sure a few of them are in prison, but I heard that tangentially through the rumor mill so who knows how true it is."

"Well, I'm glad you broke off from them, as hard as it probably was," She said, smiling.

The waitress dropped off our drinks, a glass of red wine for Natasha and a craft beer for me, which was actually pretty good. We gave the waitress our food order, and the young woman left after that.

"So, I want to ask you how your work is going, but I'm not sure how much you could actually tell me," I admitted, getting a chuckle out of her.

"I could probably tell you more than you think, your security clearance is a bit of a weird case."

"Really?" I asked, leaning back in surprise. "I would have figured they would only tell me the minimum they had to."

"Kind of, yeah. You are still listed as a contractor specialist, which means you have access to what you need, as defined by an agent with a sufficiently high-security rating…such as myself."

"Oh, well I'm curious, but don't put yourself at risk of being called out for it. Especially if it gets out that we… that this…"

"That we are dating? That we are interested in each other?" She asked, laughing at my poleaxed expression. "Your adorable Carson. Yes, they would be more than a little upset if I was feeding you classified documents or information while being involved with you. But sharing some general details of a standard mission isn't bad, especially considering the level of some of the secrets you already know."

"Oh… well that's good," I responded. "So how's work?"

"It was standard, nothing too exciting. I needed to make contact with an asset who was undercover," She explained, before taking a sip of her wine. "They would have sent someone else but the asset is skittish around unfamiliar faces."

"Can't say that I blame them for preferring your face," I commented, before immediately blushing at what I had just said.

"Wow Carson, that was incredibly cheesy," She said with a smile, before continuing to tease. "Thank you, I like your face too."

We both had a laugh, before drifting into more casual conversation. We talked about our favorite places around the city, as well as Natasha's favorite places around the world, as even though I could travel around the world in seconds, I hadn't actually done much explorational traveling. The topics stayed light for the most part, neither of us really feeling up for any more heavy talk. Eventually, the waiter dropped off our food, a large plate of fettuccine alfredo for myself, while Nat got a plate of shrimp scampi.

The food was pretty good, though most food was just "pretty good" these days, between Alfred's cooking and my recent trip to Asgard. Still, we continued talking and laughing as we ate, enjoying each other's company and the casual atmosphere the restaurant had. Eventually, though, dinner was finished and we left the restaurant, our arms once again linked together. We walked around the block a bit, not really concerned that it was starting to get late.

"So… I could drop you off somewhere," I offered as we stepped through a park. "Or, we could travel somewhere where it's still bright out and fly around a bit. I noticed you enjoyed it last time. Unless you still want to keep it normal…"

Natasha's eyes went wide and she looked at me, her lips curling into a smile.

"Well… I suppose it's been normal enough," She said, still smiling before looking down. "I'll need some new clothes, this isn't exactly flight-safe."

"Don't worry, I've got it taken care of," I assured her a confident grin. "Ready?"

She raised her eyebrow but nodded, and I traveled us away to my firing range, where the sun was still up, if not slowly getting closer to sunset.

"A gun range?" She asked, looking at me curiously. "Really?"

"It's in the middle of nowhere with a place for you to change," I said with a shrug, gesturing to one of the structures nearby. "First, we need to get it bound to you."

I pushed a singular black uniform, lightly armored with a zipper that went along the front. It was based on the uniform I had seen her in before, but that was just the beginning.

"Armor? But I'm already bulletproof for the most part… unless…" She looked at me with wide eyes. "You didn't?"

"If you mean did I make a suit for you that will shift into pretty much any outfit, of any material that you want?" I asked with a smirk. "Then yes, I absolutely did."

"What if I had said I didn't feel up for flying?" She asked, taking the outfit from me and running her hands along the material.

"I would have found an excuse to give it to you eventually," I answered with a shrug. "Now c'mon, let's get it bound to you so you can experiment with it a bit before we go flying."

She nodded and we quickly bound the new outfit to her, and she disappeared into one of the structures, coming out a few moments later. As she walked out her outfit shifted, going from the black, lightly armored suit to a pair of whitewash jeans, a casual red T-shirt, and a leather bomber jacket on top of that.

"Impressive, how do you like it?" I asked, doing my best to appreciate the outfit and not look like I was leering.

"You just made me the most dangerous spy in the world," She said with a smile, coming over and kissing me on the cheek, stepping back just as quickly. "This is amazing."

"I'm glad you like it," I said, my face more than a bit warm. "It's self-cleaning and self-repairing if you leave it out in the sun. It's also bulletproof and will absorb a lot of normal kinetic energy as well."

"Thank you, Carson. This is… it's a lot."

"I know, and I don't want you to think that I'm trying to overwhelm you with gifts or anything like that," I tried to assure her. "You mentioned wanting something like this and to be honest having an outfit like that is really cool."

I admitted before shifting my own clothes into something similar to what she was wearing, though my shirt was green.

"Oh great, the WSC is going to freak when they hear you have one too," She said with an eye roll. "So… where are the wings?"

I pushed out her wings for the night, helping her put them on. She activated the strap system and it wrapped itself tighter around her, molding to her body and forming a close attachment. I gave it a tug to make sure it was secure before stepping back. As I did I could see her outfit shifting under the straps, probably changing to be more comfortable.

"All set?" I asked, and she nodded.

"Everything feels good," She said with an eager smile.

"Good…" I said with nod, before summoning my own wings, the green dust of my armor fluttering around for a moment. "Now try and keep up!"

I flapped my wings and hurtled into the sky, stopping forty or fifty feet in the air for her to catch up. We flew for a while, exploring the area around my shooting range, swooping, and diving around. I kept myself to a reasonable speed, not wanting to completely outpace her. I had been tempted to lend Natasha the new and improved, divine and Uru augmented wings, but the ridiculous speeds they could reach were pretty dangerous without a set of armor like Panoply.

Eventually, after an hour or so of flying around, the sun started to set properly. Both of us met high in the air, floating with gentle wing flaps. We watched the sun slowly set over the horizon, holding hands as the sky turned purple and orange. When the sun was finally gone we landed back at the shooting range, and I traveled us back to New York.

We said goodnight on the roof of her new apartment, where she thanked me again for her new uniform before kissing my cheek and saying goodnight. I watched her as she opened the roof access of the building and stepped inside, before traveling away.


Hello! Did you know that I have a Pa-Tre-On? (MetaBettaOmegaLetta) Supporters enjoy benefits like the latest five new chapters of my original book, Last Resort: Dimensional Bloodsport, as well as early chapters for The Conceptual Deck and Mettle, Metal, Meddled. Board Members get to vote on story beats and plot points. Currently, they are voting on what the second half of the second date will be!

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    Chapter 102
    Wibbly Wobbly

    I woke up the next morning and spent some time relaxing and some more time training with my new armor. Ema suggested I tried juggling eggs to make sure I could control my incredibly increased strength, but that proved to be relatively easy with my increased speed and reflexes. Eventually, we simply spent some time sparring, and I bulldozed through another three trunks of robots. We now had a whole trunk full of caduceus droids, which Ema painted with a red cross and stored near her other rapid deployment trunks from when I was away from Earth. She grumbled and got replacement trunks printing out as well.

    After a morning of training and fighting, I took a quick shower and got ready for another day of crafting, while Ema once again started working on the nurse stones. She was making steady progress that she was happy about, though there was still plenty of spreading to be done.
    I wanted to work on the second half of the nurse stone project, the global shield system. While the stones would help the Earth's population treat, heal and even avoid major medical issues, I wanted something that could function as the last line of defense against exterior threats.

    As I sat down and began planning out how I would design such a shielding system, I quickly remember that I had already created a shield of one type around the world, and the Sourceress Supreme might know a thing or two about covering the world in protection. Besides, I wanted to talk to her about her having the Time Stone.

    I shot a message to Ema telling her where I was going before traveling down to New York while stealthed, taking to the air, and making my way to the New York Sanctum. I landed in an alleyway not too far from the building about five minutes later, only taking that long because I was still enjoying my new level of flight. After deactivating my stealth I made my way to the front door, knocking solidly.

    It only took a few seconds for the familiar muscular form of the New York Sanctum Master to open the door.

    "Greeting Maker, please come in," He said with a nod. "The Sorceress Supreme is expecting you."

    I nodded and followed behind the man as he led me through the halls and into the connection point between sanctums, now with seven doorways all around the glowing globe of Earth. Standing under it, looking up at the globe was the Sorceress Supreme, turning to me with a smile as I entered. She looked a bit younger than she had the last time I saw her, but not by much. I could just make out the chain of my healing amulet around her neck.

    "Maker, it is good to see you," She said, looking at my guide and nodding. "Thank you, Master Drumm, I will take it from here."

    I watched the sorcerer leave before turning back to the Sorceress Supreme. Before I could say anything she raised her hand.

    "Perhaps, before we start, we could find somewhere more private?" She suggested. "It's empty now but this is the connection between sanctums, many cross through here."

    I nodded and let the mysterious woman lead me through to Kamar-Taj, past practicing apprentices and the masters teaching them, eventually stopping in a secluded tea room. She gestured to a seat before spending a few minutes making us both tea. She placed my cup and saucer in front of me, and I sipped it tentatively.

    "Not bad," I admitted. "Not usually a fan of tea but this is nice."

    "Fresh honey does do wonders for the taste," She responded, sitting down across the table from me. "Now, I believe you have some questions?"

    "Yeah, and a request for help," I responded, the bald woman nodding in acceptance. "Where exactly did you get the Time Stone, and how long have you had it? I assume. since you know what it is, you know how dangerous it is, and how… weird reality gets around them?"

    "It has been in the hands of the Masters of the Mystic Arts since the days of Agamotto," She explained, parting a few layers of her monk robes to reveal a large amulet hanging from her neck. "He created the Eye of Agamotto around it as a way to seal its presence and still allow its energies to be utilized. We are very aware of how powerful and dangerous it can be."

    "Good. I would prefer it to be anywhere but here, but with the Space Stone on the Void Skipper, I really can't throw stones. But that does bring up a point," I started, taking a sip from the teacup before continuing. "I understand and agree that your order should stay out of the day-to-day of the world, but the stones paint a pretty big target on our back. Someone will eventually come looking for them. Maybe not today, or tomorrow, but it will happen eventually. The question is when they come looking will the Masters of the Mystic Arts step up to protect their home?"

    The Ancient One listened to what I had to say, taking a sip of tea quietly before placing the cup back on her saucer. She studied my face for a long moment before nodding with a smile.

    "The Masters of the Mystic Arts take the responsibility of the Time Stone seriously. If someone comes to Earth looking for it we will defend ourselves and Earth in general accordingly," She explained confidently. "We will also stand with the other defenders of Earth should a sufficiently dangerous foe come from outside our borders. We live here Carson, we won't let our home be destroyed."

    "No, I suppose you wouldn't," I said, sighing and leaning back. "Alright, I just needed to make sure you understood. I know it must feel like a puppy barking at Cerberus but…"

    The ancient one laughed, shaking her head for a moment.

    "An apt analogy, but not an accurate one. The difference in age does not mean my order nor myself is incapable of making mistakes, nor will your growing power remain lesser than mine for long." She said admitted. "I understand the need to check."

    "It's a little crazy. Less than six months ago I was just some guy," I said, shaking my head, leaning on the table to rub my face. "Now I've got Infinity Stones to worry about."

    "Have you ever considered gathering them together?" She asked, taking a sip of her tea.

    "Gathering the Stones?" I asked, an eyebrow raised as I studied the sorceress. "Of course I have. What kind of person doesn't wonder what they would do with endless power? Luckily I have a gift, much more powerful than the cards."

    "Oh? And what would that be?"

    "Perspective," I said with a smile, thinking of the hundreds of stories from the Marvel comics that showed just how stupid that kind of power made you, and how much trouble it attracted "The concept of controlling the universe on that level is tempting, but in reality, it would never go well. I'm happy with my version of reality warping. It makes me nervous enough as is."

    "I suppose that is true. Power at that scale is never free, and the cost is often not what you expect, and considerably worse than you would hope."

    "I have a question for you… Is the time stone how you're doing your all-knowing shtick?" I asked, raising an eyebrow. "The card through the portal when I made my Stone detector, the anti-mind control spell…?"

    She chuckled and nodded, her hand touching the amulet to tuck it back under her robes, hiding it from sight.

    "It is, though it has its limitations," She answered. "And its own costs. But, other times it is extremely useful. Such as right now."

    She stood from our table and walked to the counter where she had previously made our tea, opening the cabinet under it. From inside she pulled a large wooden crate, with rope handles and intricate carvings around the top and sides. She carried it over to me and placed it on the table, before stepping aside and gesturing to it. I stood and opened it slowly.

    There, laid in some sort of fibrous packing material was a massive red cubic spinel, about seven or eight inches across. It was carved with various runes and symbols, each of them filled with gold metal, probably electrum. I reached in and lifted it out, turning it over in my hands.

    "Is this… a piece from a Sanctum Spinel?"

    "No, it is made from the same material in a similar style, with a similar enchantment," She explained. "While its projection is not physical, it is still a projection of protection, capable of fending off invasions from extradimensional and mystical entities and energies. The best part is that it is capable of projecting its protection out around four hundred miles."

    "Which will compensate for my shield's size problems!" I finished excitedly, gently putting the red crystal back. "This is exactly what I needed."

    "I know, that's why I made it. A shield around the planet would give Earth an incredible amount of protection, and using this will enhance our extra-dimensional protection" She said with a smug smile, one that was well deserved as far as I was concerned.

    We talked more about her gift, its limitation, and what to look out for when I was crafting with it, but I was eager to start with this new asset. So, after finishing the tea I traveled from Kamar-Taj to the warehouse to start experimenting. The first thing I did was get the crystal scanned and copied a few times, before carding the original so I could get a better grip on its concepts.

    The Ancient One had been absolutely correct, I could easily use this as a way to extend the protection of a shield array massively, especially once I started stacking it and combining in divine essence, Uru, and whatever else would help.

    Now all that was left, besides actually building the projectors, was to decide how to deploy it. I brainstormed for a while, coming up with a few possibilities when Ema came home for a break. She was steadily working the nurse stones across central Europe, having decided early on to roll them out by population density.

    "So, any progress?" She asked, sitting down on a chair by my workstation.

    "Yeah, the Ancient One was a big help," I said, gesturing to the massive spinel sitting on the table.

    "Holy hell, that is amazing," Ema said, standing up to get a closer look. "She just gave it to you?"

    "Yup, had it ready to go and everything. Now I just need to worry about deployment," I explained, shaking my head. "The obvious choices are having it project up from Earth, or having it project from satellites. The problem is that they both have… well, problems."

    "Like what?" Ema asked, turning away from the spinel.

    "Well…If I have the projectors on Earth, I'm not sure how high up I will be able to project. I would rather the shield be as far away from the Earth as possible, which would be easy with satellites," I started to explain, pacing around slowly as I thought out loud. "The problem with the satellites is that they would have to cover more surface area, though admittedly it wouldn't be that much extra comparatively. Also, planetside, I could bury them underground, in space, they will be a hazard to anyone flying by, including normal satellites."

    "... I feel like satellites are the superior option," Ema said after a long moment. "How would you explain random projectors buried underground? You could just stealth the satellites and no one will know they are there."

    "Until a billion-dollar satellite crumples around one of them…" I pointed out. "There is just too much shit out there. Not to mention the fact that that amount is increasing…to be really safe we would have to go incredibly far away from the earth… or…"

    "Onto something?" Ema asked, noticing my pause.

    "Yeah, that we are being stupid," I said. "I'm trying to puzzle this out when Tony already has satellites in space. He will know how this shit works. Better than me guessing."

    I sent a message to Tony, who messaged back that he was about to travel to the research facility and that I could meet him there. Ema decided to get back to work on the nurse stones, leaving me to fly across the moon by myself. It didn't take long to find him, tapping away at the LPM.

    "What are you changing?" I asked, resisting the urge to peek over his shoulder.

    "Adding space to run wiring through the labs and other floors. Not much, just a half a foot off most of the ceilings," He explained, taping the screen a final time before turning to look focus on me, though he was clearly distracted. "What's up?"

    "Well I have everything I need to finally set up a planetary shield," I explained, Tony's interest suddenly skyrocketing. "I'm pretty sure a satellite system is a way to go, but I know very little about how that works."

    "Holy shit, really? I thought you were stuck with shields being too small?"

    "I recently got a few more things that pretty much cracked it wide open," I explained.

    "Let me guess, some Asgardian mambo jumbo?" He asked, rolling his eyes when I shrugged. "Well if it lets us put a shield around Earth I won't complain. You're going to need to talk to Shield or the WSC though."

    "Damn… was kind of hoping to do this without them."

    "It will be way easier now and for future satellite launches if you coordinate with them," He explained, shaking his head. "I could put maybe another half dozen on top of the ones I already have up there, but it is kind of a clusterf#ck if you don't know what you're doing."

    "Dammit… alright, I will design a satellite projector first, maybe test it on the moon first?"

    "You're probably going to need to start with a satellite base first," He explained. "Lots of tracking information is required to keep an orbit stable. I… well I could do it but the research station…"

    "Dammit… yeah, one thing at a time," I agreed, looking around. "Alright, I'll bring it up to Shield when I have my defense fleet meeting."

    "Defense fleet? What the hell is that?"

    I spent a few minutes talking to Tony about my idea, discussing the concept of a defense fleet stationed around the solar system. We even chatted about my potential solution for getting around the fact that my ships took forever to travel with a portal generator.

    "You realize that is going to be a pretty big project," Tony said with a surprisingly concerned face. "You're going to be pretty f#cking swamped for the next few months between the research base, this fleet idea, and your planetary shield…"

    "Yeah, I know. But it's worth it to finally get some proper defenses around Earth," I said, shaking my head. "Alright, I need to make a phone call and poke the WSC into a meeting. That's going to be fun."

    "Yeah, good luck with that!" He said, lifting his arm up, which was where his travel bracer was. "Travel New York!"

    The billionaire was whisked away a moment later leaving me alone in the LPM room. I double-checked the screen and saw his adjustment, which was mostly wiring space but also included a nightclub and casino combination on the entertainment floor. I shook my head but left it alone. It would be his to worry about.

    I traveled back to the warehouse and pulled out my phone, dropping onto the couch in the lounge area and dialing in Nick Fury. It rang for a moment before he picked up.

    "What do you want Carson?"

    "Just needed to talk to you about the meeting with the WSC about the earth defense fleet," I said, rolling my eyes at his bruskness.

    "...I'll let them know you called." He said. "Anything else."

    "Yeah, tell them the opportunity to have any input is closing rapidly. I want to start getting to work on this. As well as a planetary shield," I added. "I'm at the point where I should be able to make a planetary-level shield but I'm going to need some support with the logistics."

    As I talked, Ema came in through the landing pad, making her way to me, and sitting down on the couch across from me.

    "...I'll let them know," He said, sounding stressed and tired. "Anything else?"

    "Nope, that's it. Thanks for being the messenger Director Fury. Feel free to pass me off directly to them, I'm sure you've got more important things to do."

    "I thought your phone worked by just entering in names?" He asked.

    I opened my mouth to retort that I didn't know any WSC members… only to remember that I did, four in fact, though one might still be on Asgard.

    "Damn. Sorry Fury, I'll call them directly next time."

    "Whatever. Goodbye."

    When the director hung up I let out a sigh.

    "I think you are officially lower on his list than Tony by now," Ema pointed out, with a laugh. "It's no wonder he is bald, the stress that man must endure dealing with all of you."

    "Yeah… Maybe I should do something nice for him, make him a gift of some sort…" I said, scratching my chin. "You done for the day?"

    "Just for now, what about you?"

    "I want to start going over the pieces of the Asgardian shield system," I said. "Which is going to involve printing out a lot of materials. I probably won't get much further than that though."

    "Alright, I'll have Alfred start on some dinner."

    I nodded as she left, leaving me alone on the couch. I waited for a few minutes, taking a deep breath and letting it back out before I stood up. These projects weren't going to finish themselves.
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