Chapter 8: The Monster's Reflection
I spent the first hour exploring the limits of my cell.
The walls were definitely reinforced—some kind of polymer composite that would probably require industrial tools to breach. The door was seamless, opening only from the outside via biometric scanner. No obvious surveillance devices, but with Sinister's technology, that didn't mean much.
But the most interesting discovery was what had happened to my body.
I stood in front of the bathroom mirror, cataloging the changes. My eyes now had gold flecks in the irises that seemed to shift and move in the light. When I concentrated, I could see heat signatures through the walls—the guards posted outside my door, the electrical systems running through the facility, something large and warm three levels down that might be my mother.
My reflexes had improved dramatically. I could catch a dropped pen before it fell six inches, move my hand faster than my eyes could track. My skin felt different too—still flesh, but somehow denser, more resilient.
And then there were the claws.
They extended from my fingertips at will now, razor-sharp and strong enough to scratch the reinforced walls. Not as large as Sabretooth's, but more precise. Surgical tools rather than weapons of mass destruction.
What am I becoming?
The question haunted me as I paced the small space. Each death, each adaptation, was changing me into something less human. How long before I crossed a line I couldn't come back from?
A soft chime interrupted my thoughts. The entertainment system had activated, showing Sinister's face on the screen.
"Good evening, Alex. I trust you're finding your accommodations adequate?
"Where's my mother?"
"Safe, as promised. Would you like to see her?"
The screen split, showing a second camera feed. My mother sat in a cell similar to mine, but she looked terrible. Her clothes were torn, her face bruised, and she was rocking back and forth in obvious distress.
"She's been asking for you," Sinister continued. "Quite touching, really. Maternal bonds are fascinating from a biological perspective."
"Let me see her. In person."
"I'm afraid that's not possible. You see, your mother serves an important purpose in our research. She's leverage, yes, but more than that—she's motivation. Every parent-child bond represents a potential weakness in an otherwise perfect specimen."
The casual way he discussed using my mother as a test subject made my vision go red around the edges. Fire sprung to life in my palms, hot enough to melt steel.
"Easy now," Sinister chided. "Emotional responses like that are exactly what we need to study. Your powers seem to fluctuate with your psychological state. Anger enhances your pyrokinetic capabilities, fear triggers defensive adaptations, desperation catalyzes evolutionary jumps. It's all quite predictable once you understand the patterns."
"You're sick."
"I'm a scientist. The two are often indistinguishable." His image leaned forward, pale eyes intense. "But consider this, Alex—would you rather I study these patterns in you, or in her? Because I assure you, maternal bonds work both ways. What do you think would happen to your mother if she watched you die? If she saw you suffer? How long do you think her mind would survive that kind of trauma?"
The threat was clear. Cooperate, or he'd start his experiments on my mother instead.
"What do you want from me?"
"Tomorrow, we begin the real work. I need to understand the mechanism behind your adaptive resurrection. How does your body decide what immunities to develop? What triggers the evolutionary response? How can we control and direct it?" The screen flickered, showing complex genetic diagrams. "You represent the perfect fusion of science and evolution, Alex. Together, we're going to unlock the secrets of life itself."
"And if I refuse?"
"Then your mother becomes our new test subject. I have some lovely experiments planned involving neural interfaces and pain amplification. She might survive the first few sessions."
I closed my eyes, feeling trapped. Every option led to suffering—mine or hers. But maybe that was the point. Maybe Sinister wanted me to feel helpless, wanted to break down my resistance until I became a willing participant in his madness.
"I'll cooperate," I said finally. "But I want guarantees about my mother's safety."
"You're hardly in a position to make demands. But I appreciate the attempt." His smile was razor-thin. "Very well. Your mother will remain unharmed as long as you participate fully in our research. No tricks, no escape attempts, no resistance. Agreed?"
"Agreed."
"Excellent. Oh, and Alex? Don't even think about trying to break out of that cell. The walls are equipped with neural dampeners that will render you unconscious if you damage them. We can't have you adapting to our security measures, can we?"
The screen went dark, leaving me alone with my thoughts and my rage.
I sat on the bed, trying to think through my options. Escape seemed impossible—Sinister was too smart, too prepared. Even if I could get past the security measures, I'd never find my mother in this maze of corridors and laboratories.
But there was something else. Something Sinister didn't know.
Back at the government facility, I'd absorbed Pyro's fire powers through direct contact. And when Sabretooth killed me, I'd gained his claws and enhanced senses. Each death didn't just make me immune to the killing method—it let me steal abilities from my killer.
What would happen if I died in this laboratory? What new powers might I gain from the machines, the experiments, the building itself?
It was a dangerous gamble. But maybe that was the point. Maybe I needed to stop thinking like a victim and start thinking like a weapon.
A weapon that could adapt, evolve, and eventually turn on its creators.
I lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling, planning. Tomorrow, Sinister would continue his experiments. He'd push my body to its limits, try to understand how my powers worked.
But every test would make me stronger. Every sample would teach me something new about my capabilities. And every death would bring me closer to becoming something he couldn't control.
The old Alex would have been terrified. But the old Alex had died in that river back in Millbrook. What had taken his place was something harder, more calculating.
Something that understood that sometimes you had to become a monster to fight monsters.
I closed my eyes and began to plan. By the time Sinister was done with his experiments, I'd know everything there was to know about this facility. I'd understand his technology, his methods, his weaknesses.
And then I'd show him what evolution really looked like.
The question wasn't whether I could escape. The question was what would be left of me when I did.
But as I drifted toward sleep, I found that I cared less and less about the answer. My humanity was a luxury I couldn't afford anymore. Not if I wanted to save my mother.
Not if I wanted to stop Sinister from doing this to anyone else.
In the morning, I'd let him run his tests. I'd cooperate, adapt, evolve.
And I'd become exactly what he wanted me to be—right up until the moment I turned that evolution against him.
The last thing I saw before sleep took me was my reflection in the darkened window. For just a moment, my eyes flashed gold in the dim light, and I could have sworn I saw something predatory staring back.
Something that was no longer entirely human.
Something that was learning to like what it saw.