Chapter 289: Chapter 289: Vanishing Act
Arthur had been searching for four days.
He had tried every spell in his repertoire. Scrying. Tracking charms. Asgardian runes. Modified locator spells pushed to a scale they were never designed for. He cast them from London, from the Mojave ruins, from the roof of his New York mansion. He cast them at dawn, at midnight, and at the hollow hours between.
Nothing worked.
Eve ran parallel searches. Global surveillance. Satellite imagery. Facial recognition across every camera network she could access, which was most of them.
The same result. Always the same result.
The Mind Stone hid Loki from magic. Clint Barton hid him from the cameras. Either that, or Loki was not on this planet at all. But Arthur knew which was far more likely.
Loki was invisible. Perfectly, absolutely invisible. And he would remain so until he chose to be seen.
The gaps between searches were not wasted. The death crusade continued in its quiet rhythm. Eve’s algorithms never stopped running, and the list of targets never stopped growing.
Arthur’s methods had evolved. He could now track Mephisto’s signature directly. After freeing so many of the Hell Lord’s victims, he had built a perfect profile of the binding magic Mephisto used. The chains were all fundamentally alike. The same signature of suffering that Arthur could feel from thousands of miles away if he concentrated.
Eve continued finding the dark practitioners and necromancers through conventional means. The contract victims, Arthur hunted himself.
Each release deepened his connection. The second tier of death magic, the threshold authority that Frigga’s research had described, shimmered at the edges of his perception. Reaching it would sharpen his affinity to Death’s energy further. Make the hunt easier. Make the releases cleaner.
It was close. Very close. Like standing before a door and feeling the handle beneath your fingers, but not yet having the strength to turn it.
Soon. But not yet.
—
It was two in the morning. The house was quiet. Eileen was asleep. The children were asleep. Usually he would be in Asgard at this hour, but ever since Loki had arrived on Earth, he had cut back. The searches took priority.
Because, without Loki, his plan was in ruins.
Arthur sat in the armchair with a cup of tea that had gone cold twenty minutes ago, staring at screens that had nothing left to show him.
“Master.” Eve’s voice came through the study speakers. Soft. Measured. “I have completed the seventh iteration of the expanded search pattern. All results are negative. Loki cannot be found through any available method.”
The study clock ticked. New York hummed distantly beyond the windows.
“The plan cannot move forward,” Eve said.
Arthur set the cold tea aside and leaned back. His eyes stayed on the window.
“No,” he said. “It cannot.”
The plan. The one he had not told anyone about. Not Eileen. Not Fury. Not Carol. It had existed entirely inside his own head, refined over years, adjusted and readjusted as variables shifted.
He had meant to capture Loki alive. Take the Mind Stone. Then wear Loki’s face and walk into Loki’s role. Contact the Chitauri fleet, give the signal, open the door. But open it where he chose. When he chose. Not over Manhattan. Over ground he had prepared, where Earth’s defenders were already assembled and waiting.
Harry and the wizarding world’s best on one flank. The Avengers with Tony, Thor, Hulk, and SHIELD’s forces on the other. Ariadne’s troops deployed along the perimeter. He would have sent Fury details beforehand, disguised as secret intelligence, and Fury would have acted on them without knowing the source.
The invasion would have happened. The sky would have torn open and the alien army would have poured through straight into a corridor of concentrated firepower designed specifically to annihilate them. And the people of Earth would have watched their defenders win. Wizards and Muggles fighting side by side against an enemy from beyond the stars. The best possible revelation under the best possible circumstances.
The Statute of Secrecy would have shattered. Not in chaos and fear, but in triumph.
A crisis designed to be won. An invasion scripted from the inside.
And now it was dust.
Loki was free. Loki had the Mind Stone. Loki was invisible. The army would come on his terms, in his location, under his conditions. Every advantage Arthur had planned was gone. Scattered like ashes in a wind he hadn’t seen coming.
The clock ticked.
“Master,” Eve said. “May I ask you something?”
Arthur’s gaze moved from the window to the screen. There was something in her tone he didn’t hear often.
“Go on.”
“Are you not becoming what you once resented?”
The question landed in the room like a stone dropped into still water.
Arthur said nothing. He didn’t look away.
“You are shaping events at a global scale,” Eve continued. “Deciding for billions of people, without their knowledge or consent, what is best for them. Choosing outcomes before others are even aware that choices exist. You decide where conflict happens. How it unfolds. Who is prepared. Who is not.” A pause. “You once condemned people for doing exactly this.”
“I know who you mean.”
“Dumbledore,” Eve continued. “The Ministry. The Politicians. You believed they treated lives as variables. That they justified manipulation by claiming some greater good.” Her voice softened, surgical and cold. “You are doing the exact same thing, Master. Only on a much larger board.”
The words settled into the room like dust after an explosion.
Arthur exhaled. Slow. Controlled. The kind of breath a man takes when the blow has already landed and all that’s left is deciding whether to stay standing.
“When I was a nobody,” he said, his voice quiet, “people like that felt monstrous. Untouchable. They sat in their towers and made decisions that ruined lives like mine, and they never had to look at the wreckage. Never had to step over the bodies. It was easy to call them villains.” He paused, looking back out at the glowing skyline. “It’s always easy when you’re standing outside the room.”
“And now you are inside the room,” Eve said.
“Now I am in the room.”
Silence stretched between them.
“Is that your justification?” Eve asked.
“No.” Arthur shook his head. “There isn’t one. Not a clean one, anyway.”
“Then what is it?”
He thought about that. He thought about it honestly, which was harder than it sounded when you had the power to flatten cities and the intellect to rationalize anything.
“I don’t know what it is,” he said softly. “Maybe it’s just the difference between understanding why someone does something, and agreeing with them. I understand Dumbledore now. I understand the weight of it. The way it sits on your chest every morning and never gets lighter. But I’m not him. He let people die to protect a broken status quo. He let children fight wars they didn’t start. I didn’t send my pieces in blind. I leveled the playing field. I gave them armor. I gave them a chance.”
“People may still die, Master. Under your plan, fewer. Without it, possibly more. But those deaths are still a direct consequence of events you chose to shape rather than prevent.”
“Yes.”
“And that distinction satisfies you? Between causing deaths and failing to prevent them?”
Arthur was quiet for a long time.
“No,” he said. “It doesn’t satisfy me at all.”
Eve let that breathe. Then she spoke again.
“The optimal strategy was always clear,” she said. “Travel to deep space. Destroy the Chitauri fleet before it ever reaches Earth. Locate Loki. Capture him. The invasion would never have occurred. Zero casualties. Zero revelations. Zero risk.”
“Zero growth,” Arthur said softly.
“Growth is not a requirement for survival,” Eve pointed out.
“And survival without growth is just a slower way to die.” Arthur leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “Eve, if I fly out there and destroy that fleet, what happens next? Another army comes. Another conqueror. Do I fly out and destroy that one too?”
“Yes.”
“For how long? A decade? A century? Should I be Earth’s silent guardian? Always watching, always intercepting, while seven billion people tear themselves apart over imaginary borders, completely oblivious to a universe that is already sharpening its teeth?”
“They would be alive.”
“They’d be preserved,” Arthur corrected. “There’s a difference. A species that never faces a real threat never develops the capacity to face one. I could keep them safe forever, Eve. And the day I leave, the day something gets past me, or I simply stop caring, they would be annihilated. Because they would have learned nothing.”
“That is a projection, Master. Not a certainty.”
“Fair. But history is on my side.” He gave a thin, joyless smile. “How many civilisations have collapsed because they outsourced their survival to a single protector? How many empires fell the moment the wall came down, because the people behind it had forgotten how to fight?”
Eve did not respond to that directly. Instead she asked “And the people who will die in the invasion? The ones who would have lived if you had simply ended the threat?”
Arthur’s hands went still.
“They’re real,” he said. Not a deflection. An acknowledgment. “They have families. Children. They’ll die confused and afraid, in a fight they didn’t choose, because I decided that their world needed to change.” His voice grew rough. “I know that. I carry it.”
“Carrying it does not absolve you.”
“Nothing does.”
The silence returned. It was not empty, but heavy, like the air between lightning and thunder.
“You speak of leveling the playing field,” Eve said. “Of giving them armor. A chance. But you are also shaping the conditions under which they choose. Narrowing the path until only the outcome you want remains viable. That is a form of control.”
Arthur gave a quiet, humorless breath. Almost a laugh.
“Yes. That’s exactly what it is.” He looked directly at her sensor array. “I’m not going to lie to you, Eve. Or to myself. I am doing what powerful people do. I’m making choices for others and telling myself the reasons are good enough.” A beat. “The difference between me and Dumbledore isn’t moral. It’s that I know I’m doing it. I don’t dress it up. I don’t pretend I’m some benevolent shepherd guiding his flock. I’m a man with power trying to use it well, and probably failing at the margins.”
“That is more honest than most,” Eve noted.
“Honesty isn’t virtue. It’s just the minimum.”
Eve was quiet for a moment. “Most people with your power do not manage even the minimum, Master.”
Arthur looked at her. Something flickered across his face. Not gratitude, not comfort, but the brief, startled recognition of being seen by something that had no reason to be kind.
He didn’t acknowledge it. He didn’t need to.
“Then why continue?” Eve asked.
Arthur looked back at the window. At the sleeping New York. At the millions of lives stacked in towers of glass and steel, dreaming their private dreams, unaware that a storm was coming that would wash away everything they thought they knew.
“Because doing nothing is also a choice,” he said. “And that choice has a body count too.”
He stood up, walking to the glass.
“I could step back. Let events unfold naturally. Loki invades, the battle is bloodier, then later the exposure of magic is chaotic, the transition takes decades of fear and witch-hunts. Millions might die. But I didn’t choose those deaths, so my hands are clean.” He pressed his palm flat against the cold glass. “Except they’re not. Because I could have acted and didn’t. Because I saw it coming and looked away to protect my own conscience.”
“An impossible position.”
“Yes.” Arthur’s reflection stared back at him from the window. “That’s what power is. Not strength. Not freedom. Just an endless series of impossible positions, and no right to complain about any of them, because you chose to pick up the weight.”
He dropped his hand.
“I’m no hero, Eve. I never will be. If it weren’t for my family and the people I love, I would have left this planet years ago. Toured the multiverse. Found better fights. Everything I do here, all of it, is to make sure the people I care about have a world worth living in.”
“And the billions you don’t personally care about?”
Arthur’s jaw tightened. “They benefit from the same actions. But I won’t pretend they’re the reason.”
Eve processed that. Evaluated it. Filed it alongside every other moral contradiction in the man she served. She had asked the questions that needed asking. That was her function.
—
Arthur looked at the city one last time.
The plan was ruined. The crisis was coming anyway. It would be uncontrolled, unpredictable, and dangerous. People would die. People who might not have died under his planning.
That was on him.
He would carry it. Eyes open. No justifications. No comforting lies.
He always carried it.
—
The safehouse was a converted industrial space somewhere Barton had chosen. Underground. Windowless. Three exits, two of them concealed. The kind of place a man picked when his primary concern was not being found.
Loki sat in a steel chair that was too small for him, examining the scepter’s blade by the light of a single overhead lamp. The blue gem pulsed steadily. A heartbeat that was not his own.
Barton stood against the far wall, arms crossed, bow leaning against his leg within easy reach. His posture was relaxed. His eyes were blue and empty and patient. A weapon waiting for instructions.
Loki reached through the Scepter.
The connection opened like a wound. Space folded. Darkness pressed in from the edges of his vision. The safehouse fell away and he was standing in nothing, in the void between places, facing a presence that had no body and no face but filled every corner of the space it occupied.
The Other.
“The Tesseract is gone,” Loki said. His voice was steady. He had practised this steadiness. “The signal that drew me to Earth came from a replica. The real stone is hidden. I cannot reach it.”
The silence that followed was not empty. It was the silence of something vast deciding how angry it was going to be.
“You were given a simple task.” The Other’s voice came from everywhere. It scraped against the inside of Loki’s skull. “Retrieve the stone. Open the pathway. Deliver the planet.”
“The replica was a trap. Laid by the human sorcerer. Hayes.”
“We are aware of the sorcerer.” The Other’s tone carried a contempt that went beyond personal. It was the contempt of something ancient for something small that kept refusing to stay small. “His interference was anticipated. Your failure to overcome it was not.”
Loki’s jaw tightened. He had centuries of practice controlling his expression in the presence of beings who could destroy him. He used all of it now. Every trick. Every mask. Every lesson learned at Odin’s table about how to swallow fury and smile.
“The plan adapts,” the Other said. “The fleet is already moving. It will reach you within days. You must be ready to receive them.”
“I will be ready.”
The Other’s presence pressed closer. The darkness thickened. Loki felt the weight of it against his mind, against his will, against the places where his confidence lived.
“You had better be.” The voice dropped lower. “The Lord does not accept failure, Asgardian. The scepter was lent to you. Not given. If you cannot deliver this world, the scepter will be reclaimed. And so will your life. Both debts paid in full.”
The connection severed. The darkness retreated. Loki was back in the safehouse, sitting in the too-small chair, the scepter’s blade still glowing in his hand.
He breathed. In. Out. Steadied the tremor in his hands before it could reach his face. Buried everything. The fear he would not name, the fury he could not use, the wounded pride that was the last inheritance of a prince without a kingdom and locked it away where it could fuel him without consuming him.
I am not a tool, he thought. I am the hand that wields the tool.
I will show them the difference.
The invasion would proceed. The fleet was coming regardless. Loki’s new directive was simpler and more brutal than the original plan. Weaken Earth’s defenses before the fleet arrived. Identify the key defenders. Understand their capabilities. Find their fractures. Create chaos, division, and mistrust. Ensure that when the Chitauri descended, they landed on a world already at war with itself.
Loki turned to Barton.
The archer had not moved. Had not blinked. He stood against the wall with the coiled stillness of a predator awaiting a command.
“Tell me about Earth’s defenders,” Loki said. “Everything you know. Start with Hayes.”
Barton’s blue eyes focused. When he spoke, his voice was calm and precise. Clint Barton had spent years inside SHIELD. He had read every classified file. Attended every briefing. Watched every asset from his perch with the obsessive attention to detail that made him one of the most valuable agents Fury had ever recruited.
And now every piece of that knowledge belonged to Loki.
Barton started talking.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 310: The God’s Frustration – Part - 1
- Chapter 309: Puny God
- Chapter 308 308: The Beast on the Leash
- Chapter 307 307: The Breach
- Chapter 306: The Scepter’s Games – Part - 2
- Chapter 305: The Scepter’s Games – Part - 1
- Chapter 304: The Cage – Part - 2
- Chapter 303: The Cage – Part - 1
- Chapter 302: Hammer and Iron – Part - 2
- Chapter 301: Hammer and Iron – Part - 1
- Chapter 300: Brothers
- Chapter 299: Not Really My Style
- Chapter 298: The Soldier and the God
- Chapter 297: The God Walks – Part - 2
- Chapter 296: The God Walks – Part - 1
- Chapter 295 295: Assemble Part - 2
- Chapter 294 294: Assemble Part - 1
- Chapter 293: The Shield He Built
- Chapter 292 292: Unmade
- Chapter 291: The Annihilator
- Chapter 290: The Missing Fleet
- Chapter 289: Vanishing Act
- Chapter 288 288: Damage Assessment
- Chapter 287: Shattered
- Chapter 286: The God of Mischief
- Chapter 285: Doors Open From Both Sides
- Chapter 284 284: Clear Skies
- Chapter 283 283: Between Worlds
- Chapter 282: The Changing World
- Chapter 281 281: The Day Medicine Changed
- Chapter 280 280: Balance
- Chapter 279 279: Death
- Chapter 278 278: The Queen's Garden – Part - 2
- Chapter 277 277: The Queen’s Garden – Part - 1
- Chapter 276: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 3
- Chapter 275: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 2
- Chapter 274: The Hayes Invasion – Part - 1
- Chapter 273: Foundations
- Chapter 272: The Day After
- Chapter 271: Movie Night Part - 3
- Chapter 270: Movie Night Part - 2
- Chapter 269: Movie Night Part - 1
- Chapter 268 268: Round Two
- Chapter 267: The Boy Who Lived and The Ice Queen
- Chapter 266: The Wake-Up Call
- Chapter 265: The Shape of the Universe
- Chapter 264 264: Days in Asgard
- Chapter 263 263: The Singular Focus Part - 2
- Chapter 262 262: The Singular Focus Part - 1
- Chapter 261 261: The Man Out of Time
- Chapter 260 260: Winter Soldier
- Chapter 259: The Cleanest SHIELD
- Chapter 258 258: House Cleanup
- Chapter 257: Twenty Minutes of Light
- Chapter 256: The Sorcerer at the Crossroads
- Chapter 255: Closure
- Chapter 254: The Hulk Whisperer
- Chapter 253 253: The Morning After
- Chapter 252: The Cost of Victory
- Chapter 251: The Unforgivable
- Chapter 250: Hell on Fire Part - 2
- Chapter 249: Hell on Fire Part - 1
- Chapter 248: The Arcane Mage
- Chapter 247: A Father’s Wrath
- Chapter 246 246: The Line You Don't Cross
- Chapter 245: Hulk
- Chapter 244: When Devils Come Calling
- Chapter 243: Like Father, Like Children
- Chapter 242: The Ice Queen’s Wrath
- Chapter 241: The Monster of Harlem
- Chapter 240 240: Girl’s Day Out
- Chapter 239 239: Homecoming
- Chapter 238: After the Storm
- Chapter 237: The Frost King Part - 3
- Chapter 236 236: The Frost King Part - 2
- Chapter 235: The Frost King Part - 1
- Chapter 234: Asgard Under Siege
- Chapter 233: The Road Home
- Chapter 232: Worthy
- Chapter 231: The Destroyer Part - 2
- Chapter 230: The Destroyer Part - 1
- Chapter 229: Friends and Foes
- Chapter 228: Worthy and Unworthy
- Chapter 227: God of Thunder
- Chapter 226: The Hammer Falls Part - 2
- Chapter 225: The Hammer Falls Part - 1
- Chapter 224: The Sins of the Father
- Chapter 223: The Iron Vows
- Chapter 222 222: Sparring and Howard's Legacy
- Chapter 221 221: Extremis and Rebirth
- Chapter 220: AIM and Apologies
- Chapter 219: The Stark Expo Part - 2
- Chapter 218: The Stark Expo Part - 1
- Chapter 217: The Waiting Game
- Chapter 216: Secrets and Snakes
- Chapter 215: I Am Iron Man
- Chapter 214: The Cleanup Part - 2
- Chapter 213 213: The Cleanup Part - 1
- Chapter 212: Iron Monger Part - 2
- Chapter 211: Iron Monger Part - 1
- Chapter 210: Shadows Gathering
- Chapter 209: The Unchallenged Hero
- Chapter 208: Purpose
- Chapter 207: Brooms and Bad News
- Chapter 206 206: First Flight
- Chapter 205: Tony Stark Returns Part - 2
- Chapter 204 204: Tony Stark Returns Part - 1
- Chapter 203 203: Birth of Iron Man
- Chapter 202 202: Director Fury’s House Call
- Chapter 201 201: The Spark of Iron
- Chapter 200 200: The Need for Speed
- Chapter 199: Christmas Gathering Part - 2
- Chapter 198 198: Christmas Gathering Part - 1
- Chapter 197: The Gathering Begins
- Chapter 196: The Extended Family
- Chapter 195: The Red Room Part - 2
- Chapter 194 194: The Red Room Part - 1
- Chapter 193: The Ice Queen of Europe
- Chapter 192: Home
- Chapter 191 191: The Years In Between - Part 4
- Chapter 190 190: The Years In Between - Part 3
- Chapter 189 189: The Years In Between - Part 2
- Chapter 188 188: The Years In Between Part - 1
- Chapter 187 187: Shopping with a Princess
- Chapter 186 186: New Century, New Path Part - 2
- Chapter 185: New Century, New Path Part - 1
- Chapter 184: Tony Stark
- Chapter 183: Fate’s Quiet Architect Part - 2
- Chapter 182: Fate’s Quiet Architect Part - 1
- Chapter 181: The Thorn That Pricked a Finger
- Chapter 180: The Pan Elf
- Chapter 179: Vengeance
- Chapter 178: Hogwarts Again
- Chapter 177: When Chi Meets Cosmic
- Chapter 176: The Iron Fist
- Chapter 175: The Dragon’s Heart
- Chapter 174: Chi
- Chapter 173: Starting From Zero
- Chapter 172: K’un-Lun’s Uninvited Guests
- Chapter 171: The Path to K’un-Lun
- Chapter 170: Path Forward Part - 2
- Chapter 169: Path Forward Part - 1
- Chapter 168: The Devil and the Death-Marked
- Chapter 167: The Devil’s Bargain
- Chapter 166: Trials and Resolve
- Chapter 165: The Hand’s Plan
- Chapter 164: The Dream’s End
- Chapter 163: Unintended Consequences
- Chapter 162: The Dream Master
- Chapter 161: Back to Hala
- Chapter 160 160: When Plans Fail
- Chapter 159 159: Tea with Old Friends Part - 2
- Chapter 158: Tea with Old Friends Part - 1
- Chapter 157: Homecomings
- Chapter 156: The Dying World Part - 2
- Chapter 155: The Dying World Part - 1
- Chapter 154: The Annihilator
- Chapter 153: The Wizard and The Star
- Chapter 152: Combat Training Part - 2
- Chapter 151: Combat Training Part - 1
- Chapter 150: A Parting Gift
- Chapter 149: Dawn After Victory
- Chapter 148: Hard Truths
- Chapter 147: Mephisto’s Game
- Chapter 146: The Devil’s Bargain
- Chapter 145: Endgame of a Dark Lord Part - 2
- Chapter 144: Endgame of a Dark Lord Part - 1
- Chapter 143: The Fated Duel Part - 3
- Chapter 142: The Fated Duel Part - 2
- Chapter 141: The Fated Duel Part - 1
- Chapter 140: All Hallows’ War Part - 4
- Chapter 139: All Hallows’ War Part - 3
- Chapter 138: All Hallows’ War Part - 2
- Chapter 137: All Hallows’ War Part - 1
- Chapter 136: Gathering Armies
- Chapter 135: Ancient Magic
- Chapter 134: The Hidden Vault
- Chapter 133: The Art of the Duel
- Chapter 132: The Dark Lord Moves
- Chapter 131: The Wounded Guest
- Chapter 130: Ordinary Moments
- Chapter 129: Master of Death
- Chapter 128: Harry Potter and the Exploding Dummies
- Chapter 127: Ariadne
- Chapter 126: Master of the Elder Wand
- Chapter 125: Shadows and Fire
- Chapter 124: Boy Who Lived Reborn
- Chapter 123: Healing
- Chapter 122: At the Crossroads
- Chapter 121: Soul Surgery
- Chapter 120: An Elegant Battle
- Chapter 119: Learning to Live
- Chapter 118: The Weight of Love
- Chapter 117: Echoes of the Dead
- Chapter 116: Vault Hunting
- Chapter 115: A Warning to Spies
- Chapter 114: The Alien Crossroads
- Chapter 113: Grave Robbing
- Chapter 112: Secrets in the Serpent’s Den
- Chapter 111: The End of an Era
- Chapter 110: The Fall of the Light
- Chapter 109: Walking Into a Trap
- Chapter 108: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 5
- Chapter 107: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 4
- Chapter 106: The Dead Man’s Moves - Part 3
- Chapter 105: The Dead Man’s Moves Part - 2
- Chapter 104: The Dead Man’s Moves Part - 1
- Chapter 103: The Art of Persuasion
- Chapter 102: Farewell to the Sanctuary
- Chapter 101: Foundations of an Empire
- Chapter 100: Dangerous Games
- Chapter 99: Blueprints for an Empire
- Chapter 98: An Unexpected Partnership
- Chapter 97: The Quiet After
- Chapter 96: A Reluctant Janitor
- Chapter 95: Final Judgment
- Chapter 94: The Gloves Come Off
- Chapter 93: Death Walks the Halls
- Chapter 92: The Hunt Begins
- Chapter 91: The Calm Before the Kill
- Chapter 90: The Weight of Power
- Chapter 89: Silent Retribution
- Chapter 88: The Trifecta of Villainy
- Chapter 87: Hunting Shadows
- Chapter 86: Uncomfortable Truths
- Chapter 85: Picking Up Pieces
- Chapter 84: The Nightmare Unleashed
- Chapter 83: Bullets and Spells
- Chapter 82: Temporal Mechanics
- Chapter 81: Dead Man Talking
- Chapter 80: Dark Lord Showtime
- Chapter 79: Behind the Veil
- Chapter 78: The Department of Mysteries
- Chapter 77: A Call for Help
- Chapter 76: Magical Renaissance
- Chapter 75: Through Different Eyes
- Chapter 74: Lessons in Humility
- Chapter 73: The Dark Dimension
- Chapter 72: Gates to the Unknown
- Chapter 71: Dimensions of Power
- Chapter 70: The Making of Adversaries
- Chapter 69: Spatial Affinities
- Chapter 68: The Art of Rivalry
- Chapter 67: Dark Paths
- Chapter 66: Dimensional Energy
- Chapter 65: The Ancient One
- Chapter 64: Unexpected Doors
- Chapter 63: New Beginnings
- Chapter 62: Farewells
- Chapter 61: Winky
- Chapter 60: Revelations
- Chapter 59: Confrontation
- Chapter 58: The Maze
- Chapter 57: The Final Countdown
- Chapter 56: Old Enemies, New Strength
- Chapter 55: Metamorphosis
- Chapter 54: Hard Truths
- Chapter 53: The Healing
- Chapter 52: Back to Hogwarts
- Chapter 51: Aftermath
- Chapter 50: Cosmic Awakening
- Chapter 49: Desperate Measures
- Chapter 48: Escalation
- Chapter 47: Kree Confrontation
- Chapter 46: Mar-Vell’s Laboratory
- Chapter 45: A Space Mission
- Chapter 44: Black Box Revelations
- Chapter 43: Maria Rambeau
- Chapter 42: Project Pegasus
- Chapter 41: Desert Revelations
- Chapter 40: Pancho’s Bar
- Chapter 39: Pursuit
- Chapter 38: Fragments of a Forgotten Past
- Chapter 37: The Arrival Part - 2
- Chapter 36: The Arrival Part - 1
- Chapter 35: The Waiting Game
- Chapter 34: Rules and Rulings
- Chapter 33: Aftermath
- Chapter 32: The Second Task Part - 2
- Chapter 31: The Second Task Part - 1
- Chapter 30: Preparations and Hints
- Chapter 29: Unwelcome Return
- Chapter 28: Across the Pond
- Chapter 27: Breaking Tradition
- Chapter 26: Explanations and Evaluations
- Chapter 25: The First Task
- Chapter 24: Dragons and Conversations
- Chapter 23: Perks, Plans, and Preparations
- Chapter 22: Dumbledore
- Chapter 21: The Headmaster’s Office
- Chapter 20: The Four Champions
- Chapter 19: When a Slytherin Bargains
- Chapter 18: The Goblet’s Choice
- Chapter 17: An Eventful Morning
- Chapter 16: Foreign Arrivals
- Chapter 15: The Final Year
- Chapter 14: Six Years of Solitude Part - 4
- Chapter 13: Six Years of Solitude Part - 3
- Chapter 12: Six Years of Solitude Part - 2
- Chapter 11: Six Years of Solitude Part - 1
- Chapter 10: The First Day
- Chapter 9: The Muggle-Born Slytherin
- Chapter 8: Hogwarts and Sorting
- Chapter 7: The Letter
- Chapter 6: Preparing for Hogwarts
- Chapter 5: New Beginnings
- Chapter 4: Aftermath & the Magical Unveiling
- Chapter 3: Shattered
- Chapter 2: Second Chances
- Chapter 1: The King’s Cross Station