The Invincible
IRON MAN
#370
by Van Plexico
"A
DISTANT STAR"
The ship fell out of the darkness and into the light.
The wailing sound that had accompanied their journey
finally faded away; brightness flared all around.
Mon-Dria relaxed her grip from where she had vainly
fought the bucking controls. She gasped for air, sweat
running down her face, which had flared from its usual
placid blue to a more angry hue. She reached up and
smoothed back her mane of snow-white hair. Never, in her
years of service to the Kree Starfleet-in-Exile, had she
encountered anything like the bizarre vortex they were
passing through. The sudden change from blackness to
light all around did nothing to assuage her fears, but
she refused to reveal them to her human companion.
In the copilots seat, Tony Stark unlocked his
helmet from the rest of his crimson-and-gold armor and
pulled it off. Then he looked up at the viewport. His
eyes widened.
The black void theyd passed through had been
replaced by a spiral of light; streaks of color flashed
past them at horrendous speed. It seemed that they moved
through a tunnel of sparkles, or down the barrel of a
kaleidoscope.
He glanced over at Mon-Dria. Despite her efforts to
appear otherwise, she, too, was entranced by the sight.
"I take it," he inquired, "that this is
not a usual sort of thing."
She frowned at him. "No." Then she turned back
to the port.
Tony grew worried. The ship had grown still, which he
found in some ways even more ominous than the violent
roller coaster ride theyd just survived. What they
had lost in turbulence, however, they seemed to have made
up for in speed; they traveled ever more rapidly along
their unknown course. Wherever they were, they were
definitely covering a lot of distance.
He looked back at Mon-Dria. "Not an
interstellar craft, you said."
She glared at him. "If this were my doing,
youd know it."
He raised both hands in defense. "Okay, okay.
Its not like a trip to the Moon wasnt
dramatic enough for me, though."
She was ignoring him again, staring out the port at the
waves of light streaking by, no end in sight. As he
watched her grip the controls tighter, he thought yet
again about how theyd gotten into this mess...
***
HOURS EARLIER:
The sun glinted brightly off the smooth surface of Iron
Mans newest outer space armor. Hovering in the
void, he kept one hand clenched firmly to the edge of a
vast piece of equipmentone so vast, he never could
have lifted it on Earthholding it in place while
SHIELD techs worked at their usual steady pace to attach
it to its new home. Its new home happened, in this case,
to be a gigantic new SHIELD space station, and one with
numerous construction contracts held by Tony Stark.
Looking downor, at least, in the direction of his
booted feethe saw the great bulk of the Earth, a
blue and white sphere that still seemed too small to
encompass his entire world. As ever, he felt humbled by
the sight. "I dont get up here nearly often
enough," he thought to himself, vowing silently to
do so more often in the future.
"Okay, Shellhead, weve got it."
Iron Man blinked, looking back "up." Two SHIELD
agents in their trademark spacesuits hovered just ahead,
one of them giving him a "thumbs up." The
Golden Avenger waved back, then triggered his boot
thrusters and circled around the station, taking it all
in.
The station was huge; one of the largest ever built by
Man (or at least by normal men, he corrected himself
quickly, thinking that probably Dr. Doom or someone else
of his ilk had snuck something bigger up here at one time
or another.) With Tonys acquisition of numerous
contracts to help build the thing, it was only natural
for Iron Man to show up and get involved. And he could
hardly resist the opportunities both to get into space
againand to gain more information on exactly what
SHIELD was up to with this facility. That kind of inside
info never hurt, and, for once, he might actually be able
to surprise Captain America by knowing more about
SHIELDs secret activities than Cap did.
"Thanks for the assist, Shellhead," came the
crackling voice of an agent over the radio. "The
commander wants to see you inside."
Iron Man nodded. "Roger. Ill"
The flash was blinding. Iron Mans tinted lenses
dropped instantly into place, sparing him the brunt of
the flare. Even so, he was dazzled for a moment.
Recovering and looking past the station, he saw two
spacecraft approaching rapidly, then racing by, the
trailing one firing some sort of powerful energy weapons
at the other.
"What the--?" The SHIELD agents had spun about
and were watching now, too. "You gotta be kidding
me!"
"Actually, in my line of work," Iron Man
replied, "youd be surprised how often I run
into this sort of thing."
Triggering his rockets, Tony swooped around the great
curve of the station and keyed his onboard tracking
stations. "There." He had them located. The two
ships had raced past and were pretty far away already,
but his readings showed they were turning again and
coming back, still slugging it out.
Iron Man ran a quick check of his systems; he had a
foreboding feeling hed be needing them shortly.
Everything checked out finegreen lights across the
boardwith his latest model of outer space armor.
Much less bulky than his previous space versions, this
suit differed only slightly in appearance from his
regular armor.
The two ships had nearly returned. Iron Man studied his
enhanced displays, but didnt recognize either
design. His onboard warbook searched its own files but
came up with no direct matches, either. "Close
matches," he ordered, and the warbook instantly
locked onto the pursuing ship and suggested, "Kree
light cruiser, unknown configuration."
Iron Man blinked. Kree?
Flash!!
The fleeing ship took a hit, flames spouting out behind
it as it began to tumble.
Warning lights flared across Iron Mans tracking
displays. "Oh, no," he whispered. The nearer
ship was spinning out of controlit was headed
directly for the SHIELD station.
He had only seconds. His boot rockets flared to life, and
he covered the distance to the spiraling alien ship in a
heartbeat.
In the distance, the pursuing ship, the one tentatively
identified as Kree, seemed to have also taken a mortal
hit. Flames gushed from its sides and it, too, began to
tumble, thoughfortunately enoughnot in the
direction of the station.
Iron Man scarcely had time to notice more. Reaching the
nearer ship, his gauntleted hands felt across its smooth
hull, seeking a handhold. Finding a small seam, he
gripped and fired his rockets again, turning maneuvering
over to his onboard computers. For long seconds, he
couldnt tell if he was accomplishing anything.
Then, finally, almost grudgingly, with the SHIELD station
looming large before him, the red lights on his tracking
displays began to wink out, one by one. Sweat dripping
down his cheek, he judged the distance.
Not enough.
Diverting more power to his rockets, he redoubled his
efforts. It actually began to seem that he was making
progress. And then
--CRASH!!--
--the out of control ship impacted the station. It was
only a glancing blowIron Mans efforts had
paid off, to a degreebut the ship still tore a
chunk out of the side of SHIELDs newest pride and
joy.
Cursing to himself, Iron Man released his grasp on the
ship and quickly covered the distance back to the
station.
It was not good.
The rescue efforts too time. Eventually, though, Iron Man
and the SHIELD agents together managed to retrieve the
stations crew, with only a few serious injuries.
With things in hand, Iron Man turned his attention to the
alien ship. His efforts had slowed its momentum a great
deal, and he covered the distance quickly.
Thats when he saw the human-shaped form tumbling
out of an airlock.
* * *
Minutes earlier, aboard the pursued ship, one Lt.
Bal-Rogg raged his fury as blast after blast of energy
crashed against the hull. On the other side of the
bridge, Lt. Mon-Drian eyed him angrily.
"If you have nothing constructive to contribute,
Bal-Rogg, then I suggest you be quiet!"
The wiry, blunt-nosed Kree pointed a finger at her.
"How dare you speak to me that way? By all rights,
you should be nothing but a ships tart, not a
ranking officer of the crew. In fact, if this were my
ship "
"If this were your ship," she finished for him,
"wed have all been dead long ago."
Bal-Rogg glared at her, and started to bark off a retort,
but another blast impacted the ship and shook them
savagely. The lights dimmed, flared, dimmed again. Yet
another impact rocked the ship, this one more violent
than anything before. Mon-Drian was hurled to the deck,
her head bouncing savagely from the metal surface.
Darkness took her for a time
And finally released her. She awoke with a start,
but had no immediate sense of how long shed been
out. Pulling herself to her feet, she looked around the
bridge.
It was dark. Red emergency lights flashed from nearly
every console, reflecting in ghastly shades from the gray
deck metal. And the rest of the crew
they lay where
they had fallen, unmoving.
Coughing, Mon-Drian fanned at the thick smoke filling the
bridge, and turned toward the helm seat. Someone sat
there, alive, awake, working the controls. She took a
step forward. "Bal-R?"
The lieutenants head jerked up, eyes wide.
Composing himself almost instantly, he studied her with
suddenly lustful eyes. "So. The good Lt. Mon-Drian
lives. Wonderful."
"What happened?" she managed, between coughs.
He turned back to the console. "The atmospheric
systems were hit. Ive managed to stabilize the air,
but its too late for the rest of the crew.
Theyre dead."
Mon-Drians eyes widened in shock.
"Theyre-- All of them?"
He bent back over the controls, ignoring her.
"No
" Mon-Drian felt an intense sense of
loss for the many crewmembers who had been close to her.
They had worked and fought alongside one another for
several years, part of the backbone of the Kree
Starfleet-in-Exile. For a fleeting moment, she wanted to
sit down and cover her head. She forced the feeling aside
and composed herself, turning back to Bal-Rogg "What
are you doing?"
He didnt bother to look at her. "The ship is
mine now. Im getting out of here."
Mon-Drian frowned, puzzled. "Yours? What do you
mean, yours? This ship belongs to the Fleet-in-Exile. We
have to find a way to return--" Her voice trailed
off as her crewmate drew a pistol and pointed it at her.
"Wha--?"
"You have a choice," he told her flatly.
"Serve me
" and he smiled cruelly,
"
or join the rest of the crew when I jettison
their bodies."
She looked upon him with utter contempt.
"Youve lost your mind."
He pulled the trigger.
She wasnt there.
Leaping to his feet, he whirled about, firing blast after
blast. She was too quick. Before he could bring the gun
to bear on her again, she had dropped to the deck and
rolled behind a console bank.
His anger growing, his blue Kree face darkening, he
strode after her. Rounding the console, he brought the
gun up again, but the space was empty. Shed moved
again!
Furious now, he whirledand Mon-Drians foot
lashed out, striking his knee and sending him crashing
down to sprawl on the deck. The weapon clattered out of
his grasp.
Mon-Drian was a streak of motion, her lithe, athletic
body moving like a jungle cat, her years of training
coming to bear. Her plume of long, white hair flared
behind her as she struck again, her booted foot bloodying
Bal-Roggs nose.
Cursing, he lunged for his weapon and grabbed it. By
then, she had concealed herself again.
"Blast youcome out! You cant hide
forever!"
"I dont have to hide from the likes of
you," she barked back, striking again. Her fist
caught the side of his head, but this time he held his
ground and lashed out himself. His fist connected with
her stomach, knocking the wind out of her. She doubled
over, silently cursing the pride that had forced her to
attack again, rather than finding a better defense or
hiding spot. The pride, so strong in her father and her
brothers; strong enough perhaps to get her killed before
she had the chance to see any of them ever again.
Bal-Roggs kick caught her full in the face,
stunning her and leaving her lying in a heap. Before she
could move, he hit her with a low-intensity stun
beamjust enough to momentarily incapacitate her.
Bending down, he grabbed her under the arms and dragged
her to the airlock at the rear of the bridge. Opening the
inner hatch, he shoved the white-uniformed woman into the
airlock before sealing the inner hatch again. Looking
through the glass, he saw her begin to stir, and he
smiled. He waited patiently.
A few moments later, she had regained her senses and
clawed her way to her feet, realizing then just where she
was. Her situation fully hit her, then, but she knew with
equally sudden awareness that there was nothing she could
do.
"Your last chance," Bal-Rogg said over the
intercom, smiling that evil smile again.
She spit on the glass.
Calmly, Bal-Rogg cycled the airlock.
* * *
Iron Man had of course seen her tumbling from the ship,
and swooped in to the rescue. The ship rocketed away as
he grabbed the girl, but he could only let it go, though
he recorded its configuration and energy signature in his
computers before it was out of range.
His new spaceworthy armor included an emergency
environment bubble that popped out of a tiny storage unit
at his waist and instantly expanded to a size that could
hold two people. He had Mon-Dria inside it and breathing
again within moments, and felt reasonably sure that
hed rescued her quickly enough to avoid any serious
damage.
Hed been more correct than he could have guessed.
Shed recovered quickly, and just as quickly
revealed that she spoke English. Her first words, after
she quickly surveyed the area of space surrouding them,
were not an introduction but an order: "Get me to
the other ship!"
The other ship, the pursuing one, had been even more
heavily damaged that her own, and no one remained alive
aboard it. But it did have shuttles lavish luxury
yachts, he would find out laterand almost before he
knew what was happening, he found himself seated in the
copilots seat of one, as the Kree woman blasted
them out of the shuttle bay and into space. After a brief
introduction and a terse exchange, hed agreed to go
with her for a couple of reasons, including the fact that
he wanted to get to the bottom of all this. Shed
dragged him along for a couple of other reasons,
including his obvious abilities and usefulness in a
fight. She planned on getting into a fight very soon.
Eventually, he'd even taken off his helmet, for
several more reasons. One, he'd been wearing it for more
than half a day, already, and was getting downright
claustrophobic. Two, after spending so much time cramped
in a spaceship cabin with her, he was already developing
some sense of familiarity with her, and had reached a
sort of odd comfort level. And three-- She's an
alien, for crying out loud! What interest could she
possibly have in revealing my secret identity to anyone
on Earth? It made enough sense to him at the moment,
that he hardly thought twice about popping out of his
headgear and breathing an enormous sigh of relief.
Thus this strange, mismatched couple came to be piloting
a small starship above Earths Moon, tracing the
lingering remains of a trail left by another ships
engines, when the portal opened before them, swallowing
them up.
It appeared from nowhere, a glowing mouth that gulped
them down and hurled them along a seemingly endless,
glowing tunnel of light. A great keening wail sounded
throughout the ship as it shook violently. Mon-Dria clung
to the sticks, fighting desperately to maintain control.
And then, just as suddenly, it stopped.
"I think were coming out of it."
Tony sat up, looking out the port. Theyd been
racing through the tunnel of light for what seemed like
hours. But now he could see that the light had faded and
their speed seemed to have vastly decreased.
"There."
He followed her eyes. A point of blackness grew in the
center of the viewport, and spread rapidly.
"Oh, sh--"
With a flash, they were out of the tunnel and back into
space. Starfield all around them. Tony sighed in relief.
"Well, at least thats over. Where are
w--" He shut his mouth instantly, staring out into
space. Then he opened it again. "What the hell is
that?!"
Mon-Dria said nothing, merely shook her head slowly.
Stretching out before them floated a gigantic gray
rectangle, hanging motionless in space. At first it was
not clear exactly how big the thing was, but all too soon
they could see that the structure was immense. At the
angle they approached, it looked like a great featureless
slab of concrete runway a million miles long, and nearly
as wide. Their minds rebelled at the very idea of
something artificial, a construct, being so vast.
Because it clearly was a construct. As the ship continued
to travel towards it, they began to make out details. All
sorts of cables and conduits and sections and boxes and
the like covered every surface. A number of what had to
be gigantic clear bubbles protruded from various
locations. Tiny red lights flickered on and off along its
edges. Spacecraft, clearly much larger than the one they
currently occupied, lay moored along the sides, each one
dwarfed by the enormity of the rectangle, almost lost to
visibility like grains of sand along a driveway.
Tony shook his head in wonder. "It-- its some
kind of space station..."
Mon-Dria nodded. "But not one I have ever
encountered before. Or even heard of." She squinted
at the close-ups her ship provided. "Those
spacecraft-- I am unfamiliar with them." She glanced
back at Tony. "That should not be. I am fully
trained in all military and civilian spacecraft
configurations. I should know them. But they are not
Shiar, they are not Skrullian, they are certainly
not Kree..."
Tony peered at them. "They really dont look
like they belong to any one group. Theyre all
totally different."
"...Yes..."
The space station now filled their viewport, and still
some unseen force drew them closer.
"No windows, either..." Tony leaned next to
Mon-Dria, studying the images. "Those must be
navigation lights-- but there are no lights from the
inside... Is it abandoned?"
Their ship, still under external guidance, pulled even
with one edge of the station and ceased its forward
progress, then smoothly switched to a perpendicular angle
and floated inward.
"Well, no doubt where were being taken now,
huh?" Tony whispered.
Mon-Dria sunk back in her seat, away from him, her face
growing pale.
Tony glanced back at her. "Are you alright?"
"...I dont know..." Her eyebrows were
knitted in concern.
"Well, look at it this way-- at least weve
reached the destination. Maybe now we can do something
about getting back home." He realized instantly his
mistake, but she gestured it away.
"You must understand," she said softly,
"Ive lived my entire life believing that my
people, and our allies or associates, were the most
technologically advanced beings in the universe."
She gestured airily again. "Oh, sure, the
Shiar have slightly better interstellar drives, or
the Rigellians produce better artificial intelligence
units. But the point is, were all fairly close to
one another." She pointed out the viewport.
"But this..." She shook her head, white hair
tousling, "...this is beyond my imagination..."
He frowned. "Its just a big space station,
right? Big deal. We dont know how advanced they are
yet."
"They overrode this ship. An admirals cutter,
with all the shielding! They brought us here through some
sort of gateway... And who knows where here is?!"
With a resounding clang, the ship docked into the
station. Tony looked around, then stared back at her.
"Mon-Dria. Pull yourself together. Okay?" He
met her eyes; they still seemed shaky. She seemed on the
verge of tears. He couldnt believe it. Quickly he
switched to a different tack. "Look, Im just
an uncivilized monkey from a backwater planet,
right?"
Her eyes focused, and for the first time, revealed a bit
of compassion. "What? No, I never meant to suggest
that--"
"No, its really true. Youre a high and
mighty space ranger, who isnt intimidated by
aliens-- as long as theyre not as advanced as you!
But me-- Im just an uncivilized bumpkin who rarely
gets off his own homeworld!" He glared at her, then
indicated the station. "But still, despite all that,
Im not going to be intimidated by this." He
picked up his helmet and waved it in front of her.
"I have a few tricks up my sleeve, too. So Im
gonna go out there and demand that these people release
our ship and send us back where we came from!"
Her eyes widened ever so slightly, and the blue skin of
her face flushed as blood rushed through it. Then, her
jaw setting, she stood, moving to the back of the cabin.
She said not a word at first, just opened a locker and
pulled out a bundle of equipment. Tony watched in
silence, uncertain of exactly what reaction hed
provoked in her. Then, finally, she moved back to him and
leaned close, taking his chin in her hand. Her lips moved
very close to his. "Thank you," she whispered.
Then she whirled and strode imperiously from the flight
deck.
Tony stood there a moment, blinking, then smiled faintly.
"No problem," he whispered back, before
snapping his helmet on and rushing after her.
Next: All Alone in the Night!
SOCK IT TO SHELLHEAD!
Send mail to: vplexico@bellsouth.net
Hello again, MV1 readers!
Yes, it's me again.
I warned ya, back at the end of 1998, when I was
finishing up the big Moonstone storyline
in the pages of MS. MARVEL, that I might
be back when you least expected it. Only a couple of
characters and series could bring me out of
"retirement," and good ol Shellhead
is one.
Sowrite
in and let me know what you think.
As you can no doubt tell, if youve read this
far, Ill be taking Tony in a very
different direction over the course of these twelve
issues. Some of you may like it, some may hate it
but I hope youll give it a try, and let me
know what you think.
By the way, the logo art at the top of this page is
from a piece contributed to my www.avengersassemble.org
website, by Eric Wolfe Hanson.
Aint it swell? I Photoshopped it up a bit, for logo
purposes, but to see the original, head over to Avengers
Assemble.
Enough of this stuffsee ya back here in thirty
days for the next chapter in "A Distant
Star!"
--Van Plexico
September, 2000
Story © 2000 by Van Allen Plexico
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