Jean stood alone in the void. A vast, endless plain of black and stars, familiar in the way dreams sometimes felt familiar, but there was something off about it. Something different. The stars were brighter. The space was deeper. The silence too… loud.
Then—Cracks. Reality fractured. Shards of memories she didn't recognize began to bleed through the fabric of the void.
A blurred man's voice—Charles, shaky, trembling. "I'm sorry, Jean… I had no choice." A woman's scream. "Run, Jean! Run!" Another voice—calm, but urgent, layered in steel. "Control it, Jean. You must."
It was all too fast. A blur of sound and light, colors she didn't remember but felt like they belonged to her. A memory she never lived, yet echoed in her chest like a scream from inside a tomb.
Jean clutched her head, staggering under the weight of the information flooding in. "Stop—stop—stop—" she muttered, voice strangled.
And then, something moved. It wasn't in the distance. It was everywhere, like a presence wrapped around the entire void. A flame. No—a being of fire. It unfurled from the cosmos, wings like golden solar flares trailing across the sky. A body like a living star, pulsing with gravitational heat and light.
It spoke—not in a voice, but in an echo, as if it had been waiting through eons. "So… you finally visit me."
Jean opened her eyes, barely able to stand. The entity's presence was immense. It didn't walk. It hovered, and each movement rippled across the void like the wake of a god. Jean staggered. "Who—what are you?"
The being tilted its head, as if amused. "Not yet, Jean Grey. It's not time." And then—With a single beat of its great flaming wings, the being's power surged. The void itself twisted. Woosh—And Jean was flung upward, away from the starlight, away from the heat back toward her body.
A surge of fire erupted across the jungle floor. The vines shrieked, curling and snapping, recoiling from the heat.
From Jean's body—a faint light emerged at her back, like a flicker of consciousness returning. But the true source of the fire wasn't her.
It was Sunfire. His form ripped through the vegetation like a comet, unleashing waves of pure heat in concentric bursts, disintegrating the plant life with calculated precision.
From above, Storm hovered, eyes glowing white as lightning crackled in the sky. "We found them!" she shouted.
John Proudstar's voice came over the comms, tight with focus. "Kurt! Jean's still unconscious—get her out first!"
Kurt nodded, his face tense. He pushed through the scorched undergrowth and knelt beside Jean. His gaze landed on something around her neck—a silver cross. His cross. She had kept it.
Kurt's lip twitched into a gentle smile. He exhaled, placed a hand on her shoulder, and whispered, "Hold on, Jean."—BAMF! A burst of blue smoke. They were gone.
Sunfire still tore through the landscape, hurling concentrated blasts of flame in every direction. Even as the plants grew back, regenerating unnaturally fast, he was already melting them to cinders.
Logan, slumped and bloody, blinked. His body was stitching itself together again, albeit slowly. He saw the inferno blazing around him and groaned. "I thought you didn't like us, you fire-fuck," he growled, coughing through the pain.
Shiro, hovering just above ground in a cocoon of heat, grinned sideways. "Can't pass up a chance to burn your hairy ass."
Petra clenched her fists and stomped the earth—ripples of calm spread through the island floor, temporarily halting the tremors beneath them.
John glanced at the group—exhausted, but alive. "Back to the Blackbird! We're falling back!" He shouted into the comm: "Ororo! Where's Kurt? We need him for extraction!"
Storm, still circling above like a sentinel, frowned. "Wait. He's recovering. That teleport took a toll on him."
Colossus crouched beside the fallen X-Men, checking their vitals. He pulled open his bag, rummaged, then pulled out something small and metallic. He reached for Scott and gently placed a spare visored headset in his hand.
Scott looked at him, eyes barely open, fingers curling around it. "Thanks, Piotr."
Colossus gave a quiet nod. "Don't thank me. Just get out of here alive."
Kurt reappeared with a blue puff of sulfur smoke, staggering a little as he landed on one knee beside the others. His breath was ragged, skin slightly paler than usual. Sweat rolled down his brow as he pushed himself upright.
"Alright..." he panted, swaying slightly. "Who's next?"
Before anyone could answer—"Bobby!" Petra shouted, already stepping forward. "Petra!" Bobby shouted at the same time, lurching toward her. They blinked at each other.
John raised a hand, cutting the moment short. "We're falling back now—priority is to evac everyone while the island's not fighting us!"
But then—a low, deep rumble rolled through the ground beneath them. It didn't feel like a tremor. It felt like a warning.
Sunfire turned sharply, one hand still glowing with residual flame. His other arm braced for a blast, knuckles white. "Was that the earth girl?" he asked, eyes narrowing at Petra.
Petra's brow furrowed. She slowly shook her head, confused. "That wasn't me. I can't shake a whole mountain."
The team froze. Even the trees, still singed and curling from Sunfire's inferno, were silent. No new vines. No lashes. No attacks. The island had gone still. Too still.
Then Another tremor—stronger. This one sent loose rocks tumbling from cliffsides and shook the torn earth beneath their feet. The rumble grew and grew, deepening until it reached a roaring crescendo, a thunderous bellow from the mountain's core.
And then—Crack. A massive splintering sound cut the air like a scream. From the peak of the island's highest mountain, a jagged line of light split down the center of the stone. Something enormous was forcing its way up from within.
John's eyes went wide. "Holy shit—" They all turned just in time to see it. A giant staff, golden lines spiraling along its length, erupted from the mountain's summit. It wasn't rising—it was growing, stabbing upward from the inside, ripping the entire mountain apart as it did.
Stone exploded outward. Trees snapped like twigs. The sky above it churned with clouds that coiled unnaturally around the shaft, like they recognized it.
Colossus stepped in front of Scott and Alex instinctively, shielding them from flying debris as the ground quaked beneath their feet.
Scott squinted at the shape, the pattern of it, the curve at the top. He felt his gut twist. "That's..." Alex's voice cut in, half a groan, half disbelief. "Oh fuck—it's that Jack Hou guy's staff!" Everyone froze.
The staff now stood twice the height of the mountain, its base embedded deep within the torn earth. Something had changed. Something woke up. And Jack was no longer just inside Krakoa's soul.
…
Far above the shredded mountain, where the air grew thin and the strange clouds churned like boiling ink, Jack stood.
Balanced at the very tip of the towering staff, he looked impossibly still, a silhouette against the swirling gloom. The wind howled like voices lost in a storm, yet Jack's robes fluttered with the serenity of a man standing on calm earth.
He lifted his gaze to the mysterious cloud that had cloaked Krakoa for years, maybe longer. His voice didn't need to shout. It just… reached. "I'm sorry," he said, voice soft but resolute. "But you can't trap me inside forever. I still got more journey to be had."
Below, the ground responded before Krakoa did. A deep vibration hummed through the island, like something was pulling every root, every inch of stone toward a center. The ground twisted in impossible ways. Trees bent backward. Soil buckled and slithered. The entire island body began folding in on itself, forming an enormous, heaving mass of vines, dirt, stone, and rage.
From the debris, Krakoa rose—not just in form, but in voice. It was no longer the half-human shape. This was something primal. Its body stretched into a massive organic titan, thick with plant life, absorbing ground and mountain alike.
The voice came not from a mouth, but from the entire island. "YOU CAN'T TAKE HIM AWAY FROM ME." It rumbled the earth. Cracks split the ground near the X-Men, shaking them off their feet.
Jack didn't flinch. He sat on the staff like it was a bench under a willow tree, voice gentle, gaze never cruel. "You have to let him go… Don't hold on… The more you hold on, the more you suffer."
Krakoa's form only grew. It dragged entire chunks of coastline toward itself, vines snapping like whips, dirt flying upward into its mass. The X-Men, still recovering, were yanked closer, their footing lost as the land beneath them tilted toward the forming core.
Sunfire blasted the encroaching vines, keeping a perimeter up with ragged breath. "This whole island's collapsing into itself!"
John gritted his teeth. "No—it's dragging itself together. Toward something."
Then it happened. Krakoa raised a massive, mountain-sized arm, and with all the weight of its grief and desperation, it swung a backhand across the entire skyline, slamming it toward the staff. The wind roared with it.—WHAM!
It struck with thunder and stone and wrath. And the staff—Didn't move. Not an inch. The mountain had shattered before. But this time, the world bent around the staff like it was truth itself.
Jack didn't look down. He whispered, to Krakoa—to grief itself. "Nothing is permanent. Suffering is not holding you… You are holding the suffering."
The great body of Krakoa stilled for a breath. The rage paused, not extinguished, but confused. Jack turned his eyes to the cloud, that strange, inexplicable protector that had hidden the island for so long. "You're gonna help me here, right?"
No answer. The cloud trembled. Jack let out a breath. It wasn't angry. Just… tired. "You want to help him by hiding him. But hiding just traps him inside his own lament. You're not helping. You're preserving pain."
The cloud pulsed. Then compressed, like a heartbeat folding into itself. Then it moved. The entire formation condensed into a small, tight swirl—dense, luminous, and almost crystalline. It zipped through the sky like a silver comet, landing silently on Jack's side. Jack stepped onto it, balancing like it was second nature.
The staff beneath him began to shrink, spiraling downward, folding into itself like a collapsing pillar of time. It vanished into his hand, turning itself into an earring. "Alright," he murmured. "Let's calm this guy down, shall we?" And with that, Jack began his descent—toward the center of Krakoa's grief. Toward the heart of the storm.
…
Xavier Mansion – Sublevel Control Room
The familiar blue glow of monitors pulsed dimly in the underground control room. Moira MacTaggert's eyes narrowed, her fingers dancing over a touch-screen interface. Then suddenly—"Hank! Charles! We've got a connection!"
Hank McCoy's head jerked up from the corner where he'd been adjusting a separate relay system. He practically leapt across the room toward Moira's monitor, his glasses slipping down the bridge of his nose. "Let me see—hold on, that's... it's much clearer now." His voice climbed with excitement. "Alright. Let's fire up the new satellite link, shall we?"
With a few keystrokes and a satisfied grunt, the newly installed system flared online. Its orbiting lens activated and beamed down a high-resolution image onto the center monitor. The display crackled—and then came into focus. A massive landmass. Twisting unnaturally. Alive.
Moira leaned in. "That's the island. It's really moving—like… not just geologically, but biologically. It's twisting in on itself."
Beast's eyes sparkled behind his glasses. "So the team succeeded in clearing the cloud! This data is incredible. Finally—we have unfiltered observations."
But Moira's voice dropped, all excitement vanishing. "…Wait." Beast blinked at her. "What is it?" Moira turned slowly to him. "If we can see it…" Hank's smile faltered. "Then anyone with a functioning satellite can."
They both stared at the monitor. And the weight of it hit both of them like a stone. "Shit."
…
SHIELD Base – Director's Office
Far across the ocean, inside the polished, bunker-like SHIELD headquarters, Director Nick Fury sat with hands folded, the ever-present tension behind his single eye not quite relaxed.
In front of him, Phil Coulson stood at ease, flipping through a tablet filled with economic reports and territory maps. "So far, Jack doesn't seem interested in acquiring any more land," Phil said, tapping a region labeled Golden Peach Territory. "And?" Nick asked, brow raised.
Phil's lips tugged into the faintest smile. "It's flourishing. Peaceful. Almost suspiciously so." Nick exhaled and leaned back. "Well… at least he's kept his word." He eyed Coulson for a beat, then tapped a screen to bring up another file. "I'm releasing your duties on Golden Peach observation." Phil blinked. "Sir?"
"From now on, you're overseeing something else." He pushed the file across the desk. PROJECT T.A.H.I.T.I. Coulson read the name. Something flickered in his expression. "Understood, Director."
Before either could continue, a rapid, frantic knock interrupted the air. A young SHIELD analyst burst through the door, low clearance badge dangling, eyes wide and breath caught. "I-I'm sorry to interrupt, sir—both of you—but… we have a situation." Nick was already on his feet.
…
SHIELD Satellite Control Room
Fury and Coulson stepped into the operations center. The large central screen showed a satellite image, stark against the dark blue of the Pacific. A new island—organic-looking, spiked and uneven like a coiled muscle—floated in full view.
Nick frowned. "Where is this?" The analyst swallowed. "Central Pacific, sir. Just appeared on our satellite a moment ago." Phil stepped closer, his tone intrigued. "A new island. Fascinating…"
Nick didn't smile. "Why the hell is SHIELD involved?" The analyst tapped the console. "Because of this, sir." On the screen, a graph appeared. A familiar golden wavelength, spiked with chaotic but identical readings. Phil stiffened slightly.
The analyst continued. "We ran the spectrum signature through past logs. It matches the one we picked up when Jack Hou declared his claim on New York." Nick turned slowly toward Coulson. "You mean… this island correlates with Jack's journey? With that damn little boat of his?"
"Yes, sir." For a moment, silence. Then Phil's lips twitched into a crooked little smile. "Would you look at that, Director." He turned on his heel, already heading for the door. "I think it's time I met my new team."
And with that, Coulson disappeared into the hallway, already dialing numbers. The world was watching now. And Krakoa was no longer hidden.
**A/N**
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**A/N**