Dean heard the shouting before he saw the crowd.
Fifteen people formed a loose circle on the sidewalk, their voices ugly with excitement. Through the gaps, Dean spotted what held their attention: a kid, maybe eleven, curled up on the concrete. Thin arms, dirty clothes, and two glowing antennae poking from his scalp like dying Christmas lights.
Dean's stomach dropped.
This wasn't the sanitized, PG-13 Marvel Universe with feel-good endings and neat moral lessons. This was the comics. The real Marvel. The one where bigotry wasn't subtle or metaphorical—it was bloodstained and personal. Where mutant kids didn't get side-eyes—they got stomped into the pavement. Where the world didn't pause to question its hate before lighting a match.
And right in front of him was a terrified child with glowing antennae, surrounded by people who'd already decided he didn't deserve to live.
This wasn't cosplay.
This was a lynch mob.
And it was real.
"Look at that thing," someone laughed. "Like a bug."
A woman with a shopping bag stepped closer. "Disgusting. They're breeding now."
"Where's animal control?" A guy in a Yankees cap tapped a metal pipe against his palm. "We got pest problems in this neighborhood."
Dean's chest tightened. The kid wasn't fighting back, wasn't even moving. Just lay there while adults—people who probably had kids of their own—treated him like roadkill.
Trash hit the boy's shoulder. His antennae twitched faster.
"Freaks don't belong with real people," Pipe Guy said with casual certainty.
That's when something clicked in Dean's head. This was wrong, and he was the only one who seemed to care.
He pushed through the crowd, heart hammering.
"Back off! He's just a kid!"
Fifteen pairs of eyes turned toward him, irritated and threatening.
"You got a problem?" Pipe Guy stepped forward. Up close, he was bigger than Dean had hoped.
"Yeah. My problem is you're bullying a child."
"Child?" The woman laughed. "That's not a child. That's a walking science experiment."
A bottle shattered near Dean's feet. Glass sprayed across his sneakers.
"Siding with freaks now?" someone called out.
The crowd pressed closer, cutting off escape routes.
The crowd closed in. Dean's pulse spiked. No escape.
He dropped beside the boy and grabbed his arm. Contact hit like a live wire. His vision sharpened, zoomed past skin and bone into the glowing neural web feeding Marcus's antennae. Not alien growths—sensory organs wired straight into his brain.
[POWER TWEAK – ACTIVATED] [PHYSICAL CONTACT CONFIRMEDTARGET: Mutant Child (Marcus)] [MUTATION: Sensory Antennae – Telepathic/Environmental Feedback] [MODIFICATION OPTIONS: AVAILABLE]
He didn't know what he was doing. But he knew what he wanted.
Hide them. Make him safe.
The air shifted. The glow died. The antennae retracted into his scalp, leaving only faint bumps under messy hair.
[MODIFICATION COMPLETE] [MUTATION STATUS: TEMPORARILY SUPPRESSED] [⚠ WARNING: Unknown impact on subject's Health and perception]
Marcus looked up—wide-eyed, normal. Just a scared kid.
The crowd blinked, confused.
"Wait... that ain't a mutie."
"Where'd the bug things go?"
"Just some weird-looking brat."
Without the obvious mutation to focus their hatred on, the kid looked like any other homeless child. Which, apparently, wasn't worth their time.
"Waste of energy," the woman muttered, walking away.
One by one, they dispersed back to their perfectly normal day.
Dean knelt beside the boy, who was touching his head where the antennae had been.
"You, okay?"
The kid nodded but didn't speak. Up close, he looked even younger. Maybe ten. Definitely underfed.
"Where are your parents?"
"Don't got any." A shrug. "Streets ain't so bad. Better than the home."
Before Dean could respond, wind rushed overhead. Something dark and sleek cut through the sky—the X-Jet.
The jet landed with barely a whisper. Three figures stepped out.
Storm came first—white hair flowing, eyes crackling with power. Cyclops followed, ruby visor reflecting sunlight. Nightcrawler appeared in a puff of sulfurous smoke.
They moved toward the boy with practiced efficiency. Storm knelt beside him, her voice gentle.
"You're safe now."
The boy looked up with desperate hope. Cyclops studied the scene, frowning at scorch marks Dean hadn't noticed before.
"What happened to his mutation?" Cyclops asked.
Storm's eyes found Dean's, studying him with uncomfortable thoroughness.
"I don't know. But he's definitely one of ours."
Nightcrawler reported the area clear. Cyclops looked at Dean again.
"You the one who helped him?"
Dean nodded.
"Thank you. Not many people would have stepped in."
Storm helped the boy—Marcus—to his feet. "How would you like to come somewhere safe? Somewhere with other kids like you?"
Marcus looked at Dean. "What about him? He helped me."
For a moment, Dean thought she might invite him along. The X-Men. The Xavier Institute. A place where his abilities might make sense.
But Cyclops stepped forward. "We should go. The longer we stay, the more attention we draw."
It's just practical. Dean was human, not their responsibility.
As they headed to the jet, Marcus broke away and hugged Dean's legs.
"Thank you," he whispered, then ran back to Storm.
The X-Jet lifted off and disappeared like it had never been there.
Dean stood alone, staring at empty sky.
[Karmic Battery: +10 Units]
[Action: Risked personal harm to protect innocent mutant]
[Total Charge: +2/100 (Tier-0)]
Warmth flooded through him—deeper than before, substantial. But instead of joy, Dean felt hollow.
He looked at his hands. These hands had erased part of what made Marcus unique. Those antennae weren't just physical traits—they were probably how the boy experienced the world.
And Dean had taken them away.
"I didn't save him," Dean said to the empty street. "I hid him."
The ten karma points felt like blood money.
He sat on the curb next to broken glass that was the only evidence anything had happened. Around him, the city continued its relentless motion. People walked past without seeing him.
This was the world he'd landed in. Not bright movie heroes who always found the right words. This was a place where children got beaten for being different, where trying to help meant making decisions that would haunt you.
Dean gripped the silent Tallus on his wrist.
"Ten karma points," he whispered. "And I still feel like shit."
A pigeon landed nearby, pecking at broken glass. It reminded him of Marcus—small, vulnerable, just trying to survive in a world that didn't want him.
Dean stood slowly. The street looked normal now. You'd never know what happened unless you knew where to look for scars.
This world needed help. Real help.
Dean just hoped he was strong enough for whatever came next.
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