Mutant Base – Hocoming
"Welco back, heroes!"
"Our saviors have returned!"
Thunderous applause erupted as Charles, Erik, and Alex stepped off the Blackbird. The roar echoed through the tal hangar like a tidal wave crashing against steel. Young mutants lined the platform, eyes wide and faces lit with pure admiration—not just respect, but awe. So clapped with trembling hands, others simply stared, frozen in place, as if in the presence of living legends.
The trio walked past banners hastily hung across walls—"THANK YOU!" painted in ssy spray lines, flanked by hand-drawn Decepticon heads with big red X's over them.
The victories against the invaders had elevated mutantkind in ways no speech or movent ever could. These students, once mocked and hidden away, now stood taller, basking in reflected glory.
Charles paused at the edge of the steps, placing a hand on one of the young student's shoulders. "We rely defended our ho," he said with quiet humility. But the twinkle in his eye—and the faint curve of a smile—betrayed the pride he couldn't quite suppress.
Erik, walking beside him, remained outwardly stoic, but his chest rose a little higher beneath the weight of that thunderous welco. For once, the world had cheered them not as monsters, but as champions.
---
As dusk gave way to a star-scattered sky, the base fell into a steady hum of activity. And beneath it, in the quiet depths of the war room, the three leaders gathered once more.
Though the Decepticons had retreated, the mood remained sharp—like a coiled spring. They all knew the war had rely changed shape.
The Decepticons no longer sward in open waves; they had disappeared into silence, a silence that felt more dangerous than any scream.
They hunted shadows now.
Over the next seven days, the team launched operations across the country. Cities were swept, ruins cleared, energy traces scanned. But it was like chasing whispers. The Decepticons were shapeshifters—they left no heat signatures, required no food, built no nests. Without a psychic tether, they were ghosts.
Each day brought fewer leads. Each night, more frustration.
And yet, outside their circle, mutantkind flourished.
News stations replayed footage of Alex's stand a dozen tis an hour. Online forums that once spread fear now overflowed with praise. Mutant children were no longer hushed in public—they were hailed as the future.
It was everything Charles had envisioned.
It was everything Erik still doubted.
---
One evening, as the rest of the base dimd and most mutants turned in for rest, Erik approached Alex with his usual directness.
"Co to my base," he said simply. His tone was calm, but his gaze… burned. "We have much to discuss."
There was no mistaking it—recruitnt. A familiar call from an old revolutionary.
Before Alex could respond, Charles appeared from the shadows of the corridor. His voice cut in, smooth and cool:
"Enough, Erik. We've just gained acceptance from humanity. You'd jeopardize that for what? Another power play?"
Erik turned to him, voice low and sharp. "Acceptance? Is that what you call this? They praise us now, yes—but only because we bled for them. They'll turn on us the mont the danger's gone."
Charles' jaw tightened. "They've changed."
Erik's laugh was dry. "Have they? Or are we simply more useful now?"
The air between them crackled like exposed wire. The room held its breath.
Alex, until then silent, finally raised a hand. His voice was soft—but carried the weight of mountains.
"Charles. Erik."
The two n stopped mid-retort, their old war montarily paused.
"You've both wondered about my intentions," Alex said. "My endga. My path forward. Well… it's ti I told you."
He stepped forward, the overhead light catching in his eyes. The entire war room seed to tilt toward him, as though the gravity had shifted.
"I intend to found a nation."
The words fell like iron.
Not shouted. Not declared with bravado. Stated.
Inevitable.
Charles blinked, stunned. The teacup he'd been holding slipped from his fingers, shattering across the floor in porcelain shards.
Even Erik, master of iron and war, tilted his helt back slightly, eyes narrowing.
They'd imagined many futures. Dreamt of coexistence. Prepared for conflict.
But this?
This was new. This was unprecedented. This was revolutionary.
A sovereign holand for mutants—not given, not begged for, but claid.
And from Alex, of all people.
He, the one who had saved the world—not by ideology, not by politics, but through action. Through undeniable power.
In that mont, both leaders saw it clearly:
He wasn't choosing between their visions.
He was forging one of his own.
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