Morning light filtered through ancient windows as Arthur entered the Ancient One's study. Unlike the stark functionality of most Kamar-Taj spaces, her private chamber seemed to exist between worlds and eras.
Ancient scrolls shared shelf space with modern physics texts. A traditional Tibetan altar stood opposite a chalkboard covered in quantum equations. Incense smoke curled through sunbeams, creating ephemeral patterns in the air.
She gestured to a cushion opposite her own. "Your thoughts remain clouded, Mr. Hayes."
Arthur settled himself, accepting the offered tea. "I'm still processing the rejection."
"Are you?" She studied him over the rim of her cup. "Or are you processing what the rejection means for your carefully structured plans?"
He paused, steam curling from his cup. "Both."
"Tell me," she said, setting her tea down with perfect precision, "what makes MIT so essential to your development?"
"Their programs in computer science and artificial intelligence are unparalleled," Arthur replied immediately. "The resources, the faculty connections—"
The Ancient One raised her hand, stopping him. "I've heard this explanation before. It sounds rehearsed."
Arthur frowned. "It's the truth."
"Perhaps. But not the complete truth." She leaned forward slightly. "I suspect you're trying to accomplish too much at once, Mr. Hayes. Magic. Mystic Arts. Technology."
Her eyes narrowed. "All pursued simultaneously, with the intensity of someone who believes tomorrow may never come."
The observation struck uncomfortably close to home.
"Time is limited," he responded.
"Indeed. Which is why priorities matter." Her gaze held his. "Tell me, have you actually visited MIT? Observed these unparalleled programs firsthand?"
Arthur hesitated. "No."
"Then you're pursuing an idea, not a reality." She rose in a single fluid motion and moved to a window. "Perhaps you should see for yourself what you believe you're missing."
"And how would I do that?"
A hint of amusement touched her lips. "You've mastered portals that can span continents. You possess a certain cloak that renders the wearer invisible."
Arthur blinked. The solution was obvious in retrospect.
"Visit," she continued. "Observe without preconception. Then determine if what they offer truly aligns with what you seek."
"And if it doesn't?" Arthur asked quietly.
"Then you've gained wisdom through experience rather than assumption." She returned to her cushion. "Which is always more valuable."
Arthur nodded slowly. "I'll go tomorrow."
"Good." She poured more tea. "Now tell me more about this idea of using magic to influence admissions officials next year."
He froze, cup halfway to his lips. "How did you—"
"I observe," she replied simply. "Your energy shifts when you consider manipulating circumstances to your advantage. And it is also the only possible option for someone with your background."
Arthur set his cup down. "The Confundus Charm would be simple enough once my magic fully returns."
"Simple, perhaps." Her voice carried no judgment. "But worthy?"
"If MIT is truly essential to my development—"
"Is it?" she interrupted. "That's the question you need to answer first."
The silence stretched between them.
"The mystical arts require balance," she continued eventually. "Between capability and wisdom. Between what we can do and what we should do."
Arthur met her gaze. "I've never claimed to be a paragon of virtue."
"No," she agreed. "But you do claim to seek knowledge. True knowledge requires honest assessment, especially of oneself."
Arthur finished his tea in thoughtful silence.
—
The next morning found Arthur standing on Massachusetts Avenue, staring up at MIT's imposing main building. The spring air carried the scent of possibility, students hurrying between classes with textbooks and bulky laptops clutched against their chests.
His journey had been direct. A portal from Kamar-Taj to his London townhouse, then another to a secluded alley near campus.
The invisibility cloak settled around his shoulders like liquid darkness, its ancient magic requiring no action from him to maintain.
Arthur moved across campus methodically, following groups of students into buildings he recognized from his research. The Computer Science Lab hummed with activity despite the semester winding down.
In one lab, a team clustered around a robotic arm that moved with surprising fluidity for 1996 technology.
"The adaptive learning algorithm still needs work," a woman with tied-back hair explained to her teammates, "but the motion planning is finally smooth."
"Professor Rodriguez says we're the first undergrad team to get accepted to SIGGRAPH in years," added another student proudly.
Arthur drew closer, studying their work with growing interest. The principles were sound, but the implementation was primitive by the standards of his fragmentary future knowledge.
He spent hours moving from building to building. In every classroom and lab, he found similar scenes—brilliance constrained by the limitations of 1996 technology.
As Arthur sat in on classes and wandered through laboratories, a profound realization began to crystallize in his mind.
This was only 1996. The cutting-edge technology here focused on bulky desktop computers, Windows 95, and the internet boom—things Arthur had no genuine interest in.
While some students worked on robotics and weapons tech, everything was painfully primitive compared to what Arthur knew was possible. The chips were low-density, the hardware clunky, the software embarrassingly limited.
It was simply too early. If he joined MIT now, he would gain nothing beyond a normal college experience. Without advanced chip technology and the software architecture that wouldn't exist for years, nothing he learned in classes would serve his true ambitions.
He needed to wait. Perhaps five, even ten years before the technology would approach levels that could support his goals.
In a crowded student lounge, conversations confirmed his epiphany.
"Did you see that announcement from Stark Industries?" A student with wild curly hair looked up from his magazine. "They're claiming breakthroughs in neural network applications."
"Typical Stark," his friend replied without looking away from her chunky laptop. "All that money and the best they can imagine is smarter weapons systems."
"The architecture is still impressive," argued a third student. "Their pattern recognition framework is years ahead of anyone else."
"Speaking of which, my internship interview with them is next week," said the first student. "Hoping they'll let me work on the civilian applications."
"Sell-out," the woman teased, finally looking up. "What happened to your speech about open-source medical diagnostics changing the world?"
Arthur listened, fascinated by their casual brilliance. These were really some of the brightest minds in the world today.
As evening approached, he slipped into the admissions office, finding the room with accepted student files. Opening a cabinet labeled "Admitted Students - Fall 1996," he quickly scanned several folders.
The profiles stunned him.
One student had published three peer-reviewed mathematics papers before turning seventeen. Another had developed a new encryption algorithm while still in high school. A third had built and sold a software company.
Each file told a similar story: exceptional academic achievement paired with remarkable extracurricular accomplishments. Many had recommendation letters from school teachers, industry pioneers, and renowned professors.
Arthur closed the cabinet with uncharacteristic carelessness. His perfect test scores represented merely the baseline for consideration. The truly distinguishing factors lay in areas he had completely neglected.
Later, as darkness fell across the campus, Arthur walked alone through Killian Court. Students passed him, invisible as he was, discussing projects, theories, and weekend plans with animated gestures.
Arthur watched them with a sad smile. For all their brilliance and potential, he could foresee their futures with sobering clarity.
How many would be recruited by shadowy government agencies? How many would design weapons for military contractors? How many would end up working for Stark Industries or Oscorp, their innovations claimed by corporate giants?
The Marvel world was inherently dangerous for brilliant minds. Without power or protection, they became targets or tools. Their revolutionary ideas would be weaponized, classified, or buried to maintain the status quo.
These students were genuinely brilliant. But in this world, brilliance wasn't enough. The big conglomerates and evil organizations would consume them. Without powerful backers, there was little hope for truly independent success.
It was a somber realization. But it also clarified Arthur's own path. Perhaps MIT wasn't what he needed after all—at least not yet.
—
Arthur returned to Kamar-Taj the following evening, stepping directly from Cambridge through a portal into the familiar courtyard.
The Ancient One found him in the meditation garden, his expression more peaceful than she'd seen in weeks.
"Your journey was illuminating, Mr. Hayes?" she asked, though her tone suggested she already knew the answer.
"Yes," Arthur admitted. "I was chasing the wrong goal at the wrong time."
"And this realization brings you peace?"
"It brings me clarity." Arthur nodded. "The technology I seek to master is still years from existing. The students are remarkable, but they're working with tools that will be obsolete before they graduate."
"So your path shifts?"
"It simplifies." Arthur smiled slightly. "Focus on what's immediately useful. Master the mystic arts. Recover my magical abilities. When technology catches up to what I need, then I'll pursue it."
The Ancient One nodded, satisfaction visible in her serene expression. "A path with wisdom, not just ambition."
They discussed his training schedule for the coming months. With MIT no longer his immediate goal, Arthur could devote himself fully to his mystical studies and magical recovery.
"Remember, Mr. Hayes," the Ancient One said as she turned to leave, "true mastery comes not from dividing one's attention, but from complete presence in the moment."
Later that evening, Arthur returned to his quarters. The past two days had shifted something fundamental in his outlook. He'd been trying to run before he could walk, spreading himself too thin across disciplines that each required full dedication.
He settled onto his meditation cushion, centering himself with practiced ease. The routine felt different somehow—lighter, less burdened by urgency.
As he slipped into the meditative state, something stirred within him. A sensation both unfamiliar and intimately known.
A warmth spreading through pathways long dormant.
Arthur's eyes snapped open.
His hand reached out instinctively, fingers extended toward the small candle on his desk.
"Incendio," he whispered.
The wick burst into flame.