Marvels midnight suns, p.1
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Marvel's Midnight Suns, page 1

 

Marvel's Midnight Suns
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Marvel's Midnight Suns


  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Leave us a Review

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  1

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  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  INFERNAL RISING

  NOVELS OF THE MARVEL UNIVERSE BY TITAN BOOKS

  Ant-Man: Natural Enemy by Jason Starr

  Avengers: Everybody Wants to Rule the World by Dan Abnett

  Avengers: Infinity by James A. Moore

  Black Panther: Panther’s Rage by Sheree Renée Thomas

  Black Panther: Tales of Wakanda by Jesse J. Holland

  Black Panther: Who is the Black Panther? by Jesse J. Holland

  Captain America: Dark Design by Stefan Petrucha

  Captain Marvel: Liberation Run by Tess Sharpe

  Civil War by Stuart Moore

  Deadpool: Paws by Stefan Petrucha

  Morbius: The Living Vampire – Blood Ties

  Spider-Man: Forever Young by Stefan Petrucha

  Spider-Man: Kraven’s Last Hunt by Neil Kleid

  Spider-Man: The Darkest Hours Omnibus by Jim Butcher, Keith R.A. Decandido, and Christopher L. Bennett

  Spider-Man: The Venom Factor Omnibus by Diane Duane

  Thanos: Death Sentence by Stuart Moore

  Venom: Lethal Protector by James R. Tuck

  Wolverine: Weapon X Omnibus by Mark Cerasini, David Alan Mack, and Hugh Matthews

  X-Men: Days of Future Past by Alex Irvine

  X-Men: The Dark Phoenix Saga by Stuart Moore

  X-Men: The Mutant Empire Omnibus by Christopher Golden

  X-Men & The Avengers: The Gamma Quest Omnibus by Greg Cox

  ALSO FROM TITAN AND TITAN BOOKS

  Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy: No Guts, No Glory by M.K. England

  Marvel’s Avengers: Extinction Key by Greg Keyes

  Spider-Man: Miles Morales – Wings of Fury by Brittney Morris

  Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover by David Liss

  Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse – The Art of the Movie by Ramin Zahed

  The Art of Iron Man (10th Anniversary Edition) by John Rhett Thomas

  The Marvel Vault by Matthew K. Manning, Peter Sanderson, and Roy Thomas

  Marvel Contest of Champions: The Art of the Battlerealm by Paul Davies

  Marvel’s Spider-Man: The Art of the Game by Paul Davies

  Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy: The Art of the Game by Matt Ralphs

  Obsessed with Marvel by Peter Sanderson and Marc Sumerak

  Marvel Studios: The First Ten Years

  Avengers: Endgame – The Official Movie Special

  Avengers: Infinity War – The Official Movie Special

  Black Panther: The Official Movie Special

  Spider-Man: Far From Home – The Official Movie Special

  Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse – The Official Movie Special

  Thor: Ragnarok – The Official Movie Special

  LEAVE US A REVIEW

  We hope you enjoy this book – if you did we would really appreciate it if you can write a short review. Your ratings really make a difference for the authors, helping the books you love reach more people.

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  Marvel’s Midnight Suns: Infernal Rising

  Print edition ISBN: 9781789097726

  E-book edition ISBN: 9781803360560

  Published by Titan Books

  A division of Titan Publishing Group Ltd

  144 Southwark Street, London SE1 0UP

  www.titanbooks.com

  First Titan edition: November 2022

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  FOR MARVEL PUBLISHING

  Jeff Youngquist, VP Production and Special Projects

  Sarah Singer, Associate Editor, Special Projects

  Jeremy West, Manager Licensed Publishing

  Sven Larsen, VP Licensed Publishing

  David Gabriel, SVP of Sales & Marketing, Publishing

  C.B. Cebulski, Editor in Chief

  Special thanks to Brian Overton

  FOR MARVEL GAMES

  Amanda Avila, Associate Manager, Integrated Planning

  Bill Rosemann, Vice President, Creative

  Haluk Mentes, Senior Vice President, Business Development & Product Strategy

  Jay Ong, Executive Vice President

  Peter Rosas, Senior Manager of Product Development & Project Lead

  Tim Hernandez, Vice President, Product Development

  Tim Tsang, Executive Director, Product Development

  Cover design by William Robinson

  Marvel’s Midnight Suns developed by Firaxis Games in association with

  Marvel Entertainment, published by 2K Games Inc.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

  For Steve and Dianne

  PROLOGUE

  SATANA Hellstrom was bored.

  It wasn’t the party, the party was fine. Better than fine, obviously; she had the most interesting guests in any Hell dimension, period. Artists and musicians, addicts and gamblers, famous suicides and forgotten monsters mingled in her throne room, laughing and talking and plotting against one another at her feet. They drank the finest spirits and enjoyed fantastic fusion cuisine, flawlessly provided by one of her countless soulless servants… who also provided entertainment, as needed. Nothing to liven up a dull moment like a spontaneous evisceration. She’d recently completely redone the chamber in shades of plum and rose, perfectly entrail-themed, and arranged her best trophies into fun athletic poses on the walls.

  And yet it’s the same as the last party. And the one before, and the ten thousand before that.

  Satana sighed, letting the frenetic energy of a hundred vibrant conversations wash over her. The players changed regularly, but the smell was always the same—desperation, envy, ego. All of them endlessly jockeyed for favor with her advisors, whom she only kept so that nobody bothered her with their stupid requests. Did any of them understand all that she did for them, the pains she took to make everything so amazing? Did they realize how lucky they were, to have come to her realm, where there was fun and art and beauty, instead of landing in a torture prison or a lake of fire? Of course not. They fawned over her, groveled before her, stabbed each other in the back to get a step closer to her, but not a single one of them appreciated her. She was a competent and capable ruler with exquisite taste, better than any of them deserved.

  She shifted against the throne’s stone back, artfully carved to provide good back support, and the conversation lulled as a score of guests turned to watch, their eyes greedy. The theme for this party was scandal and Satana had dressed for it, her tight black bodysuit cut to reveal plenty of creamy skin, her thigh-high stiletto boots a deep shade of crimson. She’d done her hair cherry black and piled it into a loose knot between her horns, a few wispy tendrils artfully teased out to give her a tousled, sex-kitten vibe.

  Okay, so she didn’t hate those hungry looks, but she was a succubus; everyone wanted to touch her, it was a given. How did that validate her in any way, besides the super obvious? It wasn’t fair that everyone around her got to experience the delight of her company and her ever-changing, dynamic realm, and all she got back were variations on how hot she was. Where was the recognition of her work?

  Maybe it’s time for a change. She’d completely remodeled her slice of Hell a dozen times in the last few decades, thrown herself into each transformation with enthusiasm and creativity. She’d raised cities and castles of gold, bone, obsidian, ice, gone through multiple palettes for environment and interior design, changed the weather, the light levels, even the design of the vermin that scurried around the crumbling edges of the infinity pits. Her guests wore knock-offs of clothes and jewelry she’d created—she’d spotted a dozen bad copies of the ouroboros necklace she’d adorned herself with just the night before—but trend-setting was old news, and no matter how engaging each re-creation was, she always ended up vaguely dissatisfied in the end.

  And the end comes faster and faster. First night of a grand unveiling, and here she sat, itching for relief from all the sameness… But what was the cure? She could dump her guests and minions into one of the eternity pits so
uth of her palace and burn every structure in her domain to ashes, then rebuild as it suited her. Again. She could take a vacation, open herself to inspiration, but she’d done that, too, lots of times. The party scene was getting tired, but nothing she could think of sounded better than what she had.

  There were a dozen-plus admirers hoping to talk to her, gathered at the low stone steps of her platform and held back by the glowering Krek brothers, a matching pair of rock demons she’d lately been using as security. The Kreks were mute, ten feet tall and thicker than the walls of her best castle, plus their natural charcoal color went with everything. Satana scanned the waiting faces, mostly mortal, looking for anybody who might be worth her attention. A heavy-metal pill overdose with delusions of grandeur, a brilliant physicist with chronic halitosis and a tendency to get handsy, a handsome but dumb actor who went on and on about his instrument…

  Satana’s upper lip curled. There was that starlet who drank too much and always pushed “us girls” narratives—ugh. The blonde wore a trashy red dress with spangles and, when she realized she’d been noticed, dropped Satana a broad wink.

  Satana had grown up in Hell and was the ruler of her own domain; her soul had once been bonded to the arch-demon Basilisk; she’d traveled through space and time, saved or doomed worlds as suited her, and been slain and resurrected more than once. Yes, it was exactly the same as being in a movie. They were practically sisters.

  On a whim, Satana pointed at the winking actress and sent her to one of the pits, with no fanfare or public announcement. Even a year ago, she would have come up with some horrifying spectacle that ended with the actress as a trophy on her walls, fun for everyone and a friendly reminder not to be too familiar. These days, Satana didn’t even bother waiting for their expressions to change when they realized they were uninvited. And the people behind the starlet just crowded into the empty spot, each of them convinced that they were special, different, worth tolerating…

  Satana took a deep breath, causing another conversational dip, and then let it out slowly. Her advisor Veren, a mostly useless idiot, had said something about celestial alignments the other day. There was one of those once-in-a-millennium, darkness-rising deals coming up within the year. Satana hadn’t really paid attention. Alignments happened all the time and she kept her realm stable, but perhaps it was making her restless. In any case, there was nothing for it but to quit the party before she burned everyone alive.

  If you still want to burn them tomorrow, fine, but don’t be reactive, she told herself, and rose from her throne. Maybe she was in a rut, but good for her. Recognizing her mood and checking her own behavior, that demonstrated maturity and—

  Satana’s thoughts cut off as she felt something push at her dimensional wards, magic that wasn’t hers. The far wall, across from her throne platform, trembled and flickered.

  The partygoers made ooh and ahh sounds, and were suddenly five times louder, shouting and calling to each other as the wall continued to shake.

  “Shut up,” Satana hissed, throwing up a hand, and froze the party. Her guests were stuck in mid-shout, some still pointing at the shimmering wall. In the new silence, Satana could hear the rock particles shifting. The wall’s structure flickered again, the motion localizing to a narrow, jagged sliver by the floor, emitting an ugly green light. Whoever it was, they were weak, their magic puny. She could hear a whisper of chanting through the stone and tilted one delicate ear toward the sound.

  “…nos voca nomen eius et Satanas, obsecro, audi nos…”

  “Oh,” Satana said, and sat down on her throne again, crossing her legs and sitting up straight, adjusting a few of her assets. Someone was reading a very old, very powerful spell, respectfully begging an audience with her specifically. The flavor of the magic was unfamiliar, secretive. Had she gained new worshippers? The invocation was strong enough to worm into her wards, but whoever was reading it apparently wasn’t robust enough to make it work properly.

  She waited. The almost-portal just kept flickering, which was irritating and embarrassing for the spell-caster, so Satana opened and stabilized it with a wave of one hand, creating an archway. The electric-green light intensified, spilling from the realm on the other side; it clashed with her décor and smelled man-made. She also smelled meat.

  Human. She didn’t bother unfreezing the Kreks, or anyone else. If the spell-caster couldn’t even make a hole, she had nothing to worry about.

  A man stepped into her throne room and held up his hands. He wore a kind of bulky bracelet that threw off the same green backlighting him, a soft glow like decay, like graveyard gas on a moonlit night. He was tall and pale, with slicked-back red hair and a full beard with mustache, neatly groomed. He wore tiny rectangular glasses and was dressed in an impeccably tailored brick-colored suit that fit him like a glove. The color was fabulous.

  “Glory unto you, Satana Hellstrom, that you deign to acknowledge this worthless form,” the man called. His voice had a nice rasp to it and sounded European, one of those brisk, practical countries.

  Satana beckoned, shoving a few of her frozen guests out of the way, and the mortal appeared in front of her platform, blinking at the sudden transition. Up close, she could see that he was almost handsome in an angular, wolfish kind of way, closing in on middle age. He had light-blue eyes with the twitchy, too-wide stare that always accompanied zealotry of one kind or another.

  “I’m listening,” Satana said, and arched a brow, leaning toward him. The mortal blushed deeply, sweat popping across his wide forehead. He was uncomfortable! How sweet.

  “My name is Fenn, and I seek vengeance upon Mephisto, who destroyed my family,” the man began.

  Satana snorted. “So, you’ve got a death wish. Hey, how’d you get in here, anyway?”

  “One of many formidable spells I’ve collected, and this,” Fenn said. He held up his left arm, showing off his glowing bracelet. It was all cheap black Velcro and tiny buttons, except for the green light, which pulsed with some kind of inherent energy. Radiation, maybe.

  “I’m an inventor, of sorts, an engineer. I design machines. And I don’t have a death wish. I’ve found a way to control Mephisto.”

  “Oh, really? Do tell.”

  “An amulet, called the Varkath Star,” Fenn said. “An azure stone the size of a sparrow’s egg, created from the direct energies of the lost dimension Abalosom and set into silver forged from the bones of Abalosom’s angels. The Star’s creation required all of the dimension’s reality. It’s been hidden away for centuries. The wearer can command any demon.”

  Satana laughed. “Yeah, right.” This was entertaining.

  “Varkath was a powerful sorcerer from Earth, long ago,” Fenn said. “The eldest of the Thaumaturge Trivium. His magical prowess was legendary, before he was possessed by the evil entity known as—”

  “Sure, sure,” Satana broke in. Backstory was a drag. “But how do you know it works? It’s been out of circulation for a while, right?”

  Fenn smiled tightly. “I wouldn’t dare bother Your Highness without certainty, or pursue my vengeance against Mephisto based on wishful thinking. I’ve done my research.”

  Huh. He had a point there; if he was lying or mistaken, he’d be more than sorry. Mephisto held grudges. And, she’d been known to incinerate stalkers. She’d never heard of the Varkath Star, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t a thing. “So, why are you talking to me, and not out there getting your vengeance on?”

  “The amulet is part of a small collection, hidden and sealed away by powerful wards,” Fenn said. “I believe I know where it’s secreted, but will need help pinpointing the location and breaking the protections.”

  There it is. Nobody ever dropped in with a free gift, did they? “And you thought I would help you, because…”

  Fenn blinked. “With the power to cast Mephisto from his throne—really, to unseat any demon ruler, in any dimension—I thought… That is, why wouldn’t you be interested in expanding your magnificent realm? Planets and dimensions are coming into an alignment that will destabilize magic everywhere, an ideal time to redefine power dynamics, and Mephisto must pay for what he’s done. I was only five years old when he took my mother’s soul and…”

  Fenn kept talking, but Satana tuned him out. Expansion. If the amulet was real, if Mephisto was unseated… There’d be a major power vacuum, and who was more qualified than her to step up?

 
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