Chapter 17: CHAPTER 17 BONUS CHAPTER
"Alright, impressive," Tony said, reclining in his cream leather seat. "But how do I put the marshmallow back in the bag before he tells me I need to floss more?"
Aidan smiled. "Just tell him you're satisfied with his service."
"Okay, Baymax," Tony said, patting the robot's soft belly. "I am satisfied with your service."
As if a switch had been flipped, Baymax deflated with a soft, prolonged hiss, folding neatly back into his charging case.
"What kind of battery is powering that thing?" Tony asked, his curiosity piqued. "The energy density must be off the charts."
"Lithium-ion polymer batteries," Aidan replied. "With a graphene supercapacitor for the rapid inflation and initial boot sequence. It allows for faster charging and deployment."
"Nice choice," Tony conceded with a nod. He fell silent for a moment, genuinely impressed.
Rhodey, who had been watching with the dumbfounded air of a layman at a physics convention, just shook his head.
The jet took off, a smooth, powerful ascent into the clouds. Once they leveled off, Tony unbuckled his seatbelt and leaned forward, his attention now fully on Aidan. He pointed to the devices strapped discreetly to Aidan's waist.
"So, what's that? Happy said he checked you for weapons, but he was a little vague on what he actually found."
"A personal security system," Aidan said with a small, mysterious smile. He detached one of the items—a sleek, silver-black rod, about fifty centimeters long.
Tony smirked. "And what's that supposed to do? Pop out a little flag that says 'Bang!'?" He took it from Aidan, feeling its surprising weight. "Is it some kind of explosive?" As the world's foremost weapons designer, he felt a familiar confidence. This was his territory.
"No," Aidan said calmly. "But it can fly faster than a bullet, and it's a bit more flexible."
Before Tony could retort, Aidan made a subtle motion with his hand. With a soft click and a low hum, a blade of brilliant, silent blue light erupted from the tip of the rod in Tony's hand. The air around it shimmered with intense heat.
Tony's smug expression vanished, replaced by one of pure, stunned disbelief. Rhodey, who had been nonchalantly sipping a drink, nearly choked.
"What is this?" Tony breathed, staring at the impossible object. "The power draw for a stable magnetic confinement field this small would be astronomical. How are you preventing thermal bloom?"
"It's a bit like laser-induced plasma…" Rhodey mused, his military mind recalling a high-level briefing.
"Exactly," Aidan confirmed, giving Rhodey an impressed look. "Laser-induced plasma, constrained by a proprietary, localized magnetic field."
"But the confinement system… that's been the problem for decades," Tony insisted, his mind racing. "No one's cracked it."
"I did," Aidan said simply, his face unreadable. Sorry, Wasabi, he thought, a flicker of apology for his brilliant friend in another reality. Your genius has to be my secret here.
"You… you did it yourself?" Tony was incredulous.
Aidan nodded. He then made a slight gesture, and the arrow zipped out of Tony's hand, hovering in the air before gracefully zipping around the cabin, its movements fluid and impossibly precise.
"My God," Tony whispered, his eyes wide. "It's a brain-computer interface."
"The neural-transmitter is woven into my headband," Aidan confirmed, tapping his forehead. "Right now, the only real limitations are energy and on-board intelligence."
Tony stared at the darting arrow, then back at the calm teenager. "Are you paranoid?" he asked, half-joking. "This is a serious amount of defensive tech for a kid from Queens."
Then, Tony's expression shifted. The playful curiosity was gone, replaced by a sudden, sharp seriousness. "Aidan," he said, his voice low. "Do you have any idea what this technology actually represents?"
"I do," Aidan replied quietly.
"No, I don't think you do," Tony countered, leaning forward. "This isn't about helping people. Tech like this, real next-level stuff, it's about power. It's about ensuring no one in the world can ever tell you 'no.' It's about wealth beyond reason, it's about getting the girl, the car, the world. I should know," he said, gesturing around the luxurious cabin. "I have all of it."
Aidan listened patiently. When Tony was finished, he responded, his voice soft but firm. "And what does all that power stop, Mr. Stark? Can it stop a house fire from taking a family? Can it pull a drowning child from a lake? My vision isn't about power; it's about replacing human loss. A world where no firefighter has to run into a burning building because Firebrand goes instead. A world where every home has a Baymax, and the number one cause of preventable death becomes zero. That's the world I'm building with my technology."
Tony Stark fell silent. For the first time in a long time, he was speechless. He looked at the half-empty glass of scotch in his hand, at the opulent luxury surrounding him, and felt a hollowness he hadn't noticed before. He was the "Merchant of Death," a title he'd always worn with a detached irony. But now, faced with this kid's staggering, brilliant idealism, the title felt heavy, and ugly. The guilt was a sharp, unfamiliar pang, one he quickly tried to rationalize away by thinking of Stark Industries' medical and agricultural divisions. We help people too, he told himself, but the words felt hollow.
Rhodey, for his part, was simply staring at Aidan with a newfound, profound respect.
The tension broke. The rest of the flight was a blur of frenetic energy. Tony, now seeing Aidan as a true peer, engaged him in a deep, rapid-fire technical discussion. They scribbled equations on cocktail napkins, pulled up holographic models, and argued about everything from AI ethics to miniature energy sources. It was a meeting of two supernova intellects. Rhodey just rolled his eyes and put on his headphones, mourning the party he could have been having with the flight attendants.
The smooth ride ended with a jolt as the jet's landing gear touched down. The cabin door opened, and a blast of dry, desert heat replaced the recycled, climate-controlled air. The scene outside was one of stark, military efficiency: soldiers in camouflage, armored vehicles, and high-ranking Afghan and American officers waiting on the tarmac.
Tony Stark, now all business, stepped forward to greet a waiting general. Rhodey moved off to oversee the transport of the Jericho missile prototypes. Aidan stepped out behind them, his simple clothes and backpack a stark contrast to the military hardware, and took his first breath of the air in Afghanistan. The game had begun.
300 DONE NEXT STOP 500 POWERSTONS
NEW FIC OUT
ANIME CARD SYSTEM
In a world where power is measured by cards, only the strongest deck reigns supreme.
Russell, a die-hard anime fan, suddenly finds himself reborn in this strange, card-dominated universe. At first, he dreams of crafting legendary myth-tier cards like the greats before him—only to realize he doesn't know this world's mythology at all.
But what he does know—inside and out—are the heroes, villains, and legends of anime.
With no other choice, Russell begins creating cards based on the vast anime knowledge from his previous life. From epic battles to iconic characters, he starts building a deck unlike anything this world has ever seen.
[Yamamoto Genryūsai Shigekuni], Soi Fon, Byakuya Kuchiki...
The soul reaper squad bares its deadly fangs.
Hashirama Senju, Tobirama Senju, Hiruzen Sarutobi...
The Will of Fire blazes once more.
Luffy, Zoro, Sanji...
The Straw Hat Pirates rally for battle.