Amaterasu's Marvelous Dawn

Heh, not only is Amy and Thor's friendship continuing to be adorable, her and Frigga's moment together was cute as well. Odin really did make a good choice in choosing her for a wife. She can temper his, well, temper and play the soft diplomat to his hard. And with those belly rubs (Alongside the promise of a feast!) I think she's made a new friend and ally in Amy.

Then there was the reaction from the Mauraders... My guess? They all collectively had an epiphany somewhere between "Nope" and "Fuck that" as they turned tail. :rofl:

I am planning on having them meet, yes. The circumstances have yet to be determined, but they will. Also, I guess the Marvel Amaterasu can shape-shift, which could lead to a whole other set of problems and goofy antics.
Oh, this will be so fun to see!
 
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Heh, not only is Amy and Thor's friendship continuing to be adorable, her and Frigga's moment together was cute as well. Odin really did make a good choice in choosing her for a wife. She can temper his, well, temper and play the soft diplomat to his hard. And with those belly rubs (Alongside the promise of a feast!) I think she's made a new friend and ally in Amy.

Then there was the reaction from the Mauraders... My guess? They all collectively had an epiphany somewhere between "Nope" and "Fuck that" as they turned tail. :rofl:


Oh, this will be so fun to see!

Not gonna lie, I love making powerful characters just be goofballs because they can get away with it. Not to be irresponsible but to just have fun while doing the right thing. And thank you, I did like making those character interactions with Frigga, Odin, Thor, etc. they're just fun characters and kinda unexplored considering the roles they have in the universe.

And yeah, I mean, what can you do when something opposing you just casually turns off the sun and puts a new one in the sky (at least from your perspective). Just book it if you can, and give up if you can't. Not everyone is going to be intimidated by Perspective Magic though, and know the real key to beating them is getting up close and personal.

Thanks for reading!
 
When does strange supreme drop in and ask her to fight perfect ultron?

Also, if this is a "What if" higher tier universe, Captain Marvel can definitely take Amaterasu. It took perfect ultron utilizing a supernova to kill her, and she could severely injure him without Supreme Strange's magic boost.
 
When does strange supreme drop in and ask her to fight perfect ultron?

Also, if this is a "What if" higher tier universe, Captain Marvel can definitely take Amaterasu. It took perfect ultron utilizing a supernova to kill her, and she could severely injure him without Supreme Strange's magic boost.

Probably when I write an Omake for it lol

And yeah Captain Marvel, Thor, Odin, Thanos, The Ancient One, and probably a lot of the more non-earth threats could absolutely body Ammy. She's not insanely strong in comparison to them. Not yet at least. In the base game we only got to see some of what her "full power" was. And that was only with what amounted to an ancient Japan's worth of belief in her. Whats going to happen with a whole world. Multiple worlds.

I have no doubt that eventually I could write and figure out something where Ammy could body them, but the easiest way to beat those enemies is to never fight them in the first place. Why fight when they can be friends and go for ice cream and terrorize local criminals :p
 
Christmas Omake - Doom is a Mean One
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays! Enjoy this Omake. This is going to be very goofy Silver-Age comics kinda thing. Nothing canon, I just wanted a silly Christmas story to write and share and hopefully make you laugh. Trying to channel a little bit of Pratchett with this.

Apologies for any mistakes, this is unedited and straight from brain to the page, so somethings might be a little wonky. Wrote this almost all in one day. Still, hope you enjoy it.

Upload schedule will continue as normal with an upload of one of my stories every two weeks. Will be aiming closer to once a week if I can get around to four chapters in backlog. The next Ammy chapter is written and will be posted in two weeks.



Doctor Victor Von Doom stood at the peak of the Chrysler building, looking down upon the city of New York. His gaze was on the Baxter Building specifically. That flawed monument towering over the city, holding liars and traitors. They weren't working out how to save humanity. They were clearly focused on stopping him, Doom, once and for all.

It was a good thing he had his own plan to counter them. Something he could use to destroy the 'Fantastic Four' once and for all.

Well, to destroy Reed Richards. The others could die too though, just by association. They'd thwarted his plans seventeen too many times. No more.

He'd recently stumbled upon a little spell that harnessed the power of negativity. One's negative thoughts could build a dark energy within whatever object was imbued with the spell.

Doom took it a step further. He improved the spell—doubled its output. Unfortunately, that came with the caveat of allowing positive emotions to influence the device too, but no matter. He'd been certain that his hatred of Richards would have been enough to power the devices he set up around the Baxter building. He'd picked out the Chrysler building, the Empire State building, the Rockefeller Center.

He needed four conduits to amplify the power, however. So, he timed his attack. When they erected that garish beacon of joy and 'Christmas spirit' in Times Square, he had his plan in place.

That massive tree would be the location of his final conduit. With everything set up, Doom had connected himself to the machine. He thought of Reed Richards and his stupid face. How inferior Richards was to him. How he didn't deserve to be happy because Doom had more PHD's than him so clearly Doom was superior. How Doom absolutely had more friends than Richards.

But it wasn't enough. For some inconceivable reason, his hatred wasn't quite enough to power the machine.

So, he thought about that 'goddess' Amaterasu as well.

The power output dropped.

He would either have to fire an under-powered attack at Richards-

No, he wouldn't even tolerate the idea of it. Nothing but the best, most powerful attack for his sworn enemy, his nemesis, his antithesis, his inferior former acquaintance whom he absolutely was not jealous of.

Doom didn't get jealous. People were jealous of Doom.

With his hatred of Richards clearly not being measured properly (which was no fault of his own, the original spell creators must have messed up somewhere), Doom needed a different plan. He needed another source of negativity and hatred that might be powerful enough to rival his own. He couldn't exactly kill people, that would lead to fewer negative thoughts if everyone died. He needed a different approach.

Well, he could kill the heroes. Not the good ones though, the ones that really helped people. He'd kill Amaterasu, Thor, and the Hulk though. False gods or threats to humanity that needed to be put down.

As Doom looked down upon the city, he noticed something. Something that should have been obvious to him in the first place.

Curse Richards for employing his distraction tactics.

The people were celebrating. Celebrating the holidays that they clearly knew nothing about and didn't give a modicum of respect to. They knew nothing about the true meaning of the celebration, and spent it collecting trinkets and gleaming baubles to display.

It was the perfect plan.

He'd take them all. Make them miserable. Take away their celebrations and keep everyone alive. The misery from the loss of their holiday would surely be enough when combined with his deep-seated hatred for Richards.

He would need more than just himself to accomplish this, however. He could absolutely do this alone, but then he wouldn't be able to keep an eye on Richards.

Good thing Doom was always prepared.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Hulk want to be Santa!" The green giant stomped a foot on the ground, causing several people nearby to stagger.

"No, Hulk, we already discussed this. I am to be Saint Nicholas on the Eve of Christmas. You were meant to be him on the day before," Thor explained. "Today is the eve."

"No! You talk with Banner, you not talk with Hulk!" The Hulk dropped the massive bag of presents to the ground and crossed his arms. "No one ever talk with Hulk," he pouted. At least, he seemed to be pouting. It was impossible to tell with the massive wall of white fluff on his face.

"Wh- Oh, I…" Thor stammered, looking around at the crowd watching the proceedings. "Lady Amaterasu, could you assist me?"

A muffled bark of affirmation sounded from the Hulk's beard. With a wriggle and a rather ungraceful flop, Amaterasu freed herself from the hammock holding her. She landed on the concrete and rolled several times, before coming to a stop sprawled out on the ground.

Snickers followed from the children present.

Hulk gave a startled noise and brought his hands up to his face, hiding the fact that his beard had just ran away. He didn't want to ruin the illusion for the children—his disguise was flawless after all!

Amaterasu leapt to all fours and shook herself off, sending whatever snow that managed to collect on the New York streets (spoiler alert, it's not a lot) in a cloud outward. Somehow Ammy made more snow than she'd displaced.

She continued to shake herself out, and the snow falling from her coat began to pile up. It covered her paws, then her legs, and then in less than a minute a ten-foot pile of snow had formed around the Goddess of the Sun.

Children, never having seen so much in real life, charged toward the pile. They jumped in without hesitation, vanishing into the white powder with glee. In seconds snowballs started flying about the place and distracted children and adults alike.

Children, because 'holy crap this was exciting'. Adults, because 'oh my God magic dog cocaine, Timmy get out of there'.

With the observers sufficiently distracted by the snow—that somehow continued to grow—Amaterasu wriggled herself out of the pile and tumbled down the slope. Miraculously, children and adults were all avoided in her fall, though one poor teenager who seemed a little too into dark clothing wound up getting clipped by Ammy and sent sprawling in the snow.

And then jumped by children.

And pelted with snowballs.

What fun!

While the teen struggled to fight off a smile, children, snowballs, and laughter all at the same time, Amaterasu trotted up to Thor and the Hulk. Both powerhouses were distracted by the chaos unfolding, and by the way Hulk's eyes kept shifting between Thor and the snow, there was little doubt he was doing his best to avoid punting the God of Thunder into the snow.

The devious grin that showed his teeth hinted that he would have loved to do it though.

Ever the chaotic peacekeeper, Amaterasu plopped herself down before the duo and looked between them. Back and forth. From the Hulk to Thor.

"Awoof."

"Wh- I- that is not fair! I believed Banner would pass the plan along to Hulk," Thor protested. He waved a hand toward the green rage monster in a way that would make even the most baffled and outraged holiday shoppers unable to get the Object of Parental Love ™ the day before Christmas proud. "It is not unreasonable to believe!"

The Hulk laughed victoriously, for he was right. No one discussed with him. Only Puny Banner.

His joy was short lived.

"Bwuff."

"What!? I refuse!"

"Hulk not share!"

Amaterasu narrowed her eyes. The two powerhouses of the Avengers, literally able to destroy entire cities with little effort if they chose to, balked.

Thor weighed his options. Argue that he should be the only Saint Nicholas on this day of the Avengers that chose to participate, all because of an agreement prior… Or contest the Goddess of the Sun.

The Hulk was in much the same position. He really wanted to be Santa. But he didn't want to make the puppy upset. Ever the upstanding person and one to not linger on things too long, Hulk conceded.

"…Hulk share." The huff he gave would have leveled a group of children if they were close enough.

"I suppose we could share the role," Thor grumbled.

And just like that, the issue was solved. Ammy christened the two Red Santa and Green Santa. Thor was Green Santa, and Hulk was Red Santa. She didn't want to make them think she was naming them based on their appearances after all, and using numbers would just make a problem of superiority.

Now that the issue of who got to be Santa was resolved, Amaterasu turned around.

And quickly realized she'd forgotten to stop powering the ink sigil that was making snow. The pile towered high into the air, starting to rival surrounding buildings in size. Times Square was starting to look more and more like a ski-hill with every passing moment.

The Goddess of the Sun barked out an apology and ended the snow creation. She also lopped the top off the pile and caused it to explode into a shower of snow when she found children and adults trying to climb to the top. She ended that little adventure thirty feet in the air.

With all the issues resolved, Amaterasu turned around, ready to return to her designated position as the Hulk's facial hair for the next few hours.

Well, she had planned to.

She didn't plan for Doctor Doom to swoop down from the skies above and slam into Thor. The two tumbled across the ground and crashed into the pile of snow, causing civilians to scream and scatter. Another Doom shot down from up above, careening toward Amaterasu.

So, it wasn't Doom himself, but his Doom Bots. Thankfully they were just a touch less narcissistic, even if they were programmed to spout out lines about "meeting your Doom" and other such narcissistic things.

Amaterasu glanced up and flexed her will on reality, watching the Doom Bot come to a halt. This only confirmed they were robots—Dr. Doom had a counter for this. A lazy swipe of her tail drew a line right down the middle of the robot.

The Goddess of the Sun yawned as reality bent to her will and cleaved the robot in half, the two hunks of metal burying themselves into the concrete at her sides.

The Doom Bot that caught her from behind was completely unexpected though. Amaterasu gave a startled yelp and was swept up in that iron-tight grip. She glanced down, spotting nearly a dozen robots assaulting the Hulk, swooping down to pepper him with shots of magic and then zip away. She was already too far to tell her favourite green bean not to chase them.

Angry roars and terrified screams echoed through the city.

Amaterasu, while she could easily escape, chose not to. It was easier to put up with the robot flying her out over the city, especially when she could look down at what was happening.

It looked like the Chitauri invasion all over again. There was considerably less destruction and fire though. Instead, the robots flew about the place carrying…

Christmas trees.

Giant candy canes and other ornaments were held in the grip of the robots, who zipped across the city, gathering whatever they could. They broke through apartment building windows in pairs, and then started hurling whatever festive items they could out the windows. Other bots swept in and caught the presents and decorations (and in several hilarious cases, stale fruitcake, which hit the bots with the force of a semitruck and sent them spiralling to the streets below) before shooting out over the sea with them.

Amaterasu watched in complete confusion as each robot dropped their spoils of war into the ocean, before wheeling around to the city once more.

What in the world was going on? And why was this Doombot carrying her to the top of the Chrysler building?

"Yes, that's right, Amaterasu! Cower in the face of the Legion of Doom!"

Amaterasu's eye twitched. She turned to regard her second-least favourite man-in-metal (Rhodey was first, that evil bacon thief) and rolled her eyes, looking at Victor Von Doom with all the contempt she could muster.

Admittedly, it wasn't a lot. As far as she could tell, no one was being hurt. It was just… weird.

"What's the matter, is the inevitability of your Doom too much to handle? You're speechless-"

"Boof."

"You take that back! Doom does not need a breath mint!"

"Grrruff."

"You leave the egg and pickle sandwiches out of this, they are delicious. Doom has the most refined tastebuds."

"Wuff…"

"That is right! Cower in the face of Doom's refined palate!" The man laughed for entirely too long, a drawn out, obnoxious evil laugh that honestly belonged in a cartoon. If the whole Evil Villain Trying to Take Over the World ™ thing didn't work out, he'd make a killing as a voice actor.

Oh, he was still monologuing. Classic Victor Von Doom, that silly little guy.

Amaterasu had enough of this nonsense. She was supposed to be helping people have a great day, and doubling as the Hulk's luxurious facial hair. There was no time to exchange pleasantries with her on and off rival who was oddly infatuated with Reed Richards.

And he's still talking.

"- and I will make sure you shall never revel in the pleasantries of cooked meats when I am God-King of the Earth!"

Amaterasu blinked.

It was one thing to attack her, and Thor, and the Hulk. It was somewhat passable to terrorize the streets of New York and steal everyone's holiday items. Heck, she could even put up with a little wanton destruction, she would fix it anyway.

But threatening meat? Threatening bacon?

Amaterasu took that very personally—he was now her least-favourite metal-man. Doom had threatened his last threat. It was time to hilariously and utterly ruin all of his plans in a spectacular fashion that would cause the man to run back to Latveria and turn off cable television and internet access for two months.

A tilt of her head, a shift of her gaze, landed her eyes on where the Doombots were disposing of decorations and presents and food.

She flicked her tail.

A sheet of ice washed over the bay and out to sea, freezing waves in place, and extending outward for entirely too long. Doom had stopped talking by this point, and the duo watched in silence as the ice froze over a rather significant portion of the visible ocean, including the rivers.

Doombots flew overhead and continued to deposit the items they'd snatched from the civilians, already starting to create a pile upon the ice.

"You are astonishingly annoying," Doom growled.

"Arr," she agreed.

"You will now meet your Doom."

Amaterasu shook her head. No, she wasn't.

"You are about to die."

She shook her head again.

"It will be slow and painful."

And again.

"Really, it will hurt a lot. It will be excruciating. The amount of pain you will be in is indescribable."

It was times like this that Amaterasu knew that Doom probably wasn't evil, he was just petty. And lonely. Poor guy was probably alone in his castle because he terrified everyone but the most stubborn super-powered individuals away.

Amaterasu swore she'd heard this story somewhere before. Some villain that lived up high somewhere with a distaste for socializing. The colour green seemed to be their favourite, and they had a problem with people being happy for some reason. They both tried to steal Christmas and

That settled it.

Doom was indeed a Mean One.

Ammy was going to fix that. Step one: stop this weird semi-invasion. Step two: … she was still working on it.

Amaterasu focused and flexed her power. The raging inferno within responded to her will and exploded outward, shredding the Doombot and catching the real Doom off guard. He hastily threw up a barrier of magic to defend against the blast, and another that seemed to be protecting a machine of some kind near him.

Interesting. She should break that next!

"Gah! You mongrel! Fall to the Legions of Doom!"

Victor Von Doom pushed both of his hands out toward her, using some kind of move that would look at home in a specific copywritten space-themed franchise with invisible forces. The magic impacted Amaterasu hard and sent her careening off the Chrysler building at a speed that would have impressed Quicksilver.

Ammy whipped through the air, uncontrolled in her rush over and between the buildings of New York City.

"Greetings, Lady Amaterasu!" Thor said as she flew past him, the God of Thunder flying through the air with his hammer. He swung his weapon and launched a streak of lightning across the sky, impacting several Doombots at once.

He'd be fine.

"Hi, puppy!" Hulk greeted at the apex of his jump. In his arms were five struggling Doombots that-

Crunch!

Hulk squeezed his arms to his chest and turned them all into nothing more than expensive modern art.

Hulk fell away from her and she continued her horizontal flight across the city. Perhaps Doom had nullified gravity on her. That would be rather inconvenient. She'd need to do something fancy if that happened.

Fortunately, she wouldn't have to.

Thick webs of white fluid [Stop it] shot toward her, managing to cling to Amaterasu and curve her travel in a sharp arc downward. She rocketed toward the ground at a frightening speed, but she wasn't worried. Fall damage wasn't real. Not to her at least.

Fully expecting to hit the ground, Amaterasu was not expecting the webbing clinging to her to catch on a street light. The web tightened and she suddenly shot around, physics doing its best to disorient her. Now she was going the opposite direction!

Her flight was cut short when she hit someone solid, the catcher staggering back a few steps after catching a white furry baseball nearly as big as himself. The catchee was quite fine, if a little dizzy, her vision spinning rapidly.

"Ammy! Are you running away again? I told Fury he needed to make his fence taller."

Amaterasu closed her eyes and shook her head—and ignored the rattling sound that came with the motion—and looked up at the mask of Spider Man.

"Wurf!" Ammy greeted, lunging forward to drag her tongue across one of those large lenses that looked like eyes.

He may have a Spider Sense but he definitely didn't have Wolf Sense. That's how that worked, right?

"Ack! Again? You leave smears all over them, you fluffy gremlin," he laughed, not at all upset.

Spidey dumped Amaterasu to the ground, letting her land in an extremely dignified and elegant manner, and definitely not in a flail of limbs and fur. Ammy got to her paws and shook herself off, absolutely not using her magic to throw a wave of snow at Spiderman. She wasn't that petty. Definitely not.

"Hey! That's cold! I didn't have time to put on my thermal underwear," Spiderman huffed. He extracted himself from the snow and brushed himself off. A flick of the wrist caused webs to wrap around her muzzle.

Amaterasu crossed her eyes and scrunched up her face, trying to use her paws to scrape off the offending super-strength silly string. She backed herself up, staggering around, slowly making progress in extracting herself from the webbing.

"So, what's up with the Doombots, Snowball? I was having dinner with my aunt when one of them smashed through the window and tackled the tree through the wall. I know some people are crazy about the holidays, but wow."

Amaterasu, finally having managed to peel the spiderwebs off her face, sat down and fixed Spiderman with a firm look.

"Arf!"



"I dunno why I thought it would work this time. Still nothing. Must have spiders in my ears." He facepalmed himself hard enough for the sound to echo, that superstrength making it more effective. "Alright, well, we've gotta find a way to end this before someone gets hurt."

Amaterasu agreed. So, like they'd practiced, Amaterasu stepped closer to Spidey and stood upright, planting her large paws on his shoulders.

"Awoof."

"Oh! You sure? Last time was a little explodey."

Ammy nodded.

"Alright, well, you asked for it." Spiderman reached down to grab Amaterasu and heft her up above his head. He turned around and looked into the air, facing the swarms of Doombots that clouded the New York skyline. "Here we go, the Ammy Fastball Special-"

She cut him off with a sharp bark and a growl.

"Look if you have a better name for it, we'll play charades to figure it out. Anyway, here we go!"

And he threw her.

Amaterasu gave a cry of joy and excitement as she was hurled through the air, up and over the tops of the buildings, and given a clear view of the chaotic swarm in the air. So, she did what she always did.

Froze time and made reality her bitch.

A swipe of her tail-brush streaked across the sky. And then another one, and another.

By this point the whole world knew of Ammy—multiple worlds. Her power continued to grow with each person helped, so now she essentially had free reign of her abilities and the world around her.

For good measure, Ammy glanced around, looking for-

She found Thor! Perfect. She made sure to really analyze the face he was making mid swing, enjoying the absolutely silly expression on his face. She would definitely be showing this off in an illusion to all the other Avengers when she had the chance.

For now, she dragged her tail from Thor's hammer and across the sky. Perspective magic was cheating, and Amaterasu made sure to make full use of it. She very carefully and accurately worked the brush in a single line across every single Doombot she could see, stringing between them with enough ink to make a tattoo parlor weep in envy.

Amaterasu took a breath and allowed the world to flow normally.

Instantly, multiple reality-rending slashes ripped across the skyline, shearing their way through the Doombots like paper, causing them to explode in a shower of metal. The ones that escaped her Power Strikes met an unfortunate fate at the hands of Thor's magic lightning, boosted by the Goddess of the Sun.

Electricity zipped across the sky, jumping from one robot to the next in sharp jolts that crossed across the skyline, one end to the other to catch as many Doombots with every strike. It looked like a web of electricity erupted over the sky, incinerating any of the Legion of Doom that managed to get caught, leaving nothing but tiny flakes of metal that harmlessly peppered the city below.

There were still more Doombots flying around, but they dropped from the hundreds to maybe a few tens.

Amaterasu came to the peak in her arc, and jumped, pushing off the very air to go a little higher. She drifted forward, elegantly stepping onto the roof of a building, scattering gravel beneath her paws.

For some reason, the Doombots stopped their attack. Maybe it was a power surge through their network from Ammy and Thor. Maybe it was a commend from Doom to retreat back toward him. Maybe they'd leaked all their oil in terror after Amaterasu-

Oh, no, they were gathering near the Chrysler building, it was probably the second one.

She cast her gaze up toward where she'd seen Victor Von Doom, eyes narrowed. There was a flicker of something dark, evil, malicious, that shot from the Chrysler building and to three other spots. It bounced around them, faster and faster, growing in speed and density with every pass.

An attempted Power Strike did nothing, there was some kind of barrier around them, fuelled by whatever that substance was. She could probably take out the buildings they were attached to, but… that was a tad excessive, and didn't guarantee any fixes.

Thor landed beside Amaterasu in a spray of gravel, kicking some dust into Amaterasu's face. She sneezed, and sent the God of Thunder a side-eye.

Spiderman landed on the roof a moment later, landing much more gracefully. Ammy gave him a little greeting bark.

Hulk slammed into the roof, holding two struggling Doombots in his hands. His impact was so hard that he cratered the roof beneath his feet, sending him to the floor below.

Just more things to fix.

A ball of sparking metal flew out of the hole and fell to the roof, and Hulk pulled himself from the hole, grumbling to himself.

Somehow, both Thor and Hulk had managed to keep their Santa outfits on. They looked a little beat up, and had holes, but a little swish of Ammy's tail fixed that. It was fitting that Santa was saving Christmas from some green super villain.

With a little huff, an illusion beard poofed into existence on Hulk's face, and the little squeal of excitement from the terrifying lover of wanton destruction was actually a little cute. Especially when he shot his hands up to run his fingers through that massive white beard.

"So, what's the plan?" Spiderman turned toward the others. "Are the four of us going to just pinball him around? That suit's pretty tough."

Thor hefted his hammer higher at that, and Hulk smacked a fist into his palm so hard that a small shockwave blew away some dust. It had the added benefit of making his beard ripple, which only made his smile grow.

"Wurf." Ammy commented.

"She is correct, we need to stop that machine. I believe-"

"Thor! Hulk! Amaterasu! You are no heroes!" Doom shouted from the building, his words amplified by the Legion of Doom, all those robots acting as speakers. "Two false gods and a violent science mistake cannot be the heroes this world needs. You will meet your Doom here and now!"

"Hey, what about me?!" Spiderman shouted up to him.



"Doom does not know you. You will die by associating with these creatures."

Spiderman reeled back, as if he'd been slapped. "What?" He turned to the others, gesturing wildly. "Wade lied to me… Wilsoooon!" He shouted to the sky.

Thor clapped a hand on his shoulder, giving him several consolidating pats. Hulk did the same, and sent both Thor and Spidey staggering forward on the roof.

"Doombots! Richards still has not come out of his cave. Attack the building if you must. Cause chaos outside the building, so Richards will look Doom in the eye while he dies!"

The remaining Doombots jolted forward, streaking toward the Baxter building in a flurry of activity.

"Wait, he's looking for Mr. Richards?" Spidey balked, and then shouted up to Doom. "Uh, hey buddy! Mr. Richards-"

"There is no reasoning with that maniac. You and Amaterasu must stop Doom and than machine. Hulk and I shall take on the remaining robots and meet you atop the building."

"Hulk smash?" the green man asked, hopeful. Amaterasu barked an affirmative, and his grin was so wide is was visible through the massive white beard.

The Hulk stepped forward and without a word of warning, scooped up Amaterasu under the chest with one hand. He wheeled around and then whipped Amaterasu straight toward Doom. The other two on the roof stood, stunned, watching Amaterasu streak across the sky with a trailing "Awoooo!"

The thunderous impact of Amaterasu slamming into Doctor Doom spurred the others into action. Thor and Hulk leapt into battle, and Spidey began the comparitavely slow run and swinging toward the building.

"He didn't even ask if I wanted to be thrown," he grumbled. "Friggen magic dogs and hammer gods. I'm adding Spidey Glider to the list of things I need to make."

Amaterasu slammed into Victor Von Doom in an explosion of fur, metal, magic, and expletives. The duo tumbled across the platform Doom had created, end over end, grappling with each other.

Doom finally managed to get beneath Amaterasu and kicked her off of him with both legs, sending her flying over the edge and into the city. Well, he would have. She jumped off the air, ending her flight, and landed on the platform without any wasted time.

The duo faced off with one another, circling around. Curiously, Doom placed himself between the machine and Amaterasu, keeping her from gaining a line of sight on it.

"Stand down and accept your defeat, Amaterasu. You cannot win against Doom."

"Bork."

"It is not silly! Referring to one's Doom is incredibly intimidating."

Amaterasu figured it was the magic, super-strength, insane intelligence, and hatred of most things that made him intimidating, and not his silly name puns. She wasn't going to admit that to him though, Victor already had a big enough head.

"Doom's head is of perfectly normal size!" he yelled.

Oops, she'd said that out loud.

Ammy prepared herself to charge at Doom and make her way to the machine to destroy it, when she managed to spot Spiderman climbing up over the edge, behind Doom.

New plan. Distraction.

"Awurf," Ammy snorted. "Boof."

"How dare you! Your magic is paltry to Doom's knowledge." He huffed and stood upright. "The only reason you still live is because I allow it."

"Arf!"

"Because Doom allows it! Doom does not make mistakes!"

"Wuff."

"Green is a perfectly acceptable colour!"

Amaterasu sat herself down, watching Victor working his fingers in arcane and intricate ways. She waited patiently for the attack.

A beam of pure crackling energy shot toward Amaterau at light-speed, shredding atoms and nullifying them into nothingness. Ammy teleported herself to the side, avoiding the attack entirely. She kept herself looking neutral, if bored, and managed a pretty convincing yawn.

"Coward, fleeing from your Doom!"

Spiderman, meanwhile, was tinkering away with the machine. Ammy had to keep her eyes off of him, though holding in the laughter at watching him start chucking swinging at the barrier on the machine was rather hilarious.

"Dammit! How does this thing work?" Spiderman asked. He whirled around a moment later. "Uh, oops."

Doctor Doom slowly turned around, hands balled into fists at his side. A pulse of magic rolled off of him, making his cape flow in a rather cinematic way.

Amaterasu leaned around Doom and looked at the hero with a squint.

"Hey you two! What, uh, what… are you doing up here? This is kinda my thing and you're not even a little convinced are you?"

"Doom is not."

"Wuff."

"Yeah, I thought so." Spiderman paused, looking at the two. He turned his head suddenly, and pointed out to the city. "Look, a distraction!"

Amaterasu turned to look. Doom did not. The sigh that left Spiderman was quite impressive, enough so that it might have rivaled Amaterasu's wind magic. If, you know, she wasn't the Goddess of the Sun power boosted by many planets and stars. The sigh was more comparable to a fart in the wind than anything—noticeable and gone just as fast.

Out of ideas, Spiderman casually raised a hand and shot webs at Doom's face. The man growled and staggered back, his hands coming up to grab at the webbing.

The step back was his fatal mistake. Ammy was there. So was a magic slick of ice. Conveniently enough, so were Thor and Hulk, who had finished shredding the Doombots to pieces.

Victor Von Doom, the perfect genius, sorcerer, mechanic, and a variety of other titles, tripped backward over Amaterasu. He tried to regain his balance, only to slip and slide backward on the ice Amaterasu had set up.

Right into the waiting arms of Thor and Hulk. The two grabbed Doom's arms and held them out at his side in a firm, crushing grip. While Thor had to use two hands and visibly struggled, Hulk held his arm in one hand with a grin.

"Release Doom at once you- mphbfft!" Hulk's other hand clamped down over Doom's face, muffling the man.

"Hulk shush," he said with a grin.

"Appreciated big guy!" Spiderman gave two thumbs up to Hulk. "Okay! Magic machine! Whatcha think super pup?"

Amaterasu padded right up beside the barrier, blinked, and then leaned forward and licked it. She scrunched up her muzzle. It tasted angry. She communicated as much to the others. Well, to Thor. Hulk would have liked angry.

"That may be an emotionally powered spell," Thor spoke up. "I am not familiar, but Mother referred to them occasionally."

"Great!" Spidey turned to Thor. "Uh, how do we stop it?"

"You will need something of-"

Doom managed to wrench his head away from the Hulk's hand, and Spiderman's webbing went with it.

"You cannot stop it! The spell is modified! It is fueled by Doom's hatred, there is no counter to-"

"You need happy and positive feelings to stop it." Thor finished.

"Wh- No! No you don't! It's unstoppable! Doom decrees it so- mmfftbph." Hulk's hand slapped over the man's face again, his metal mask disappearing under a meaty green palm.

"Positive feelings, hey?" Spiderman blinked, and looked down at Amaterasu.

She was idly wagging, looking up at Spiderman innocently. She cocked her head and gave him a big doggy grin.

He picked her up and promptly stuffed her into the machine.

The reaction was instant. As in, the machine overloaded on happiness and exploded. The positivity rebounded toward the other conduits, causing them to explode as well. Doom's struggling grew even more violent, and his shouting was almost audible beneath Hulk's hand.

Spiderman stepped up toward Doom, and awkwardly coughed, stopping the man's violent rage, and drew attention from everyone else.

"Hey, uh, Mr. Doom guy? I hate to tell you this, but Mr. Richards isn't here."



"He, uh, left about a week ago with the rest of the Four. Said something about needing a vacation."



"He gave me the keys to the building. I locked it up for the holidays about two days ago."



"Uh, so, sorry about that. I tried to tell you earlier, but you were a little, uh, Doom-happy."



Victor Von Doom went limp in the arms of Hulk and Thor. The two released their grip on the man, and watched him fall to his knees. He raised both arms, looked to the sky, and screamed.

"RICHAAARRRRDS!"

Meanwhile on an island in the Caribbean…

Reed Richards sneezed, causing the desert he'd been enjoying to spill across his lap. He gave a sigh, and started up the process of cleaning up, much to the amusement of the rest of the Four.

Despite the brief spill, he was enjoying this little vacation. His team deserved it. They'd worked hard and all that money they'd been saving wasn't really going anywhere. The trip was a treat for them all.

One can only save the world and stop Latverian dictators so many times before needing a break.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Happy Santa Day!" Hulk exclaimed.

"Merry Christmas, everyone!" Spiderman waved to the children in Times Square.

"May your holidays be merry!" Thor cheered.

"Awoof!" Amaterasu added, her tail a blur.



Amaterasu nudged the man beside her.

"… Doom will spare you for- Ow!" Amaterasu stomped on his foot. "Doom wishes you a Merry Christmas…"

Nick Fury stared at the scene before him, unable to process everything. He'd seen some shit, but this was something else. Hulk was handing out whole trees from an absolute mountain of gifts and decorations. Amaterasu was parading children around on her back or leading them about in small circles while their parents gathered their things. Thor stood at the base of the pile, handing things off.

Spiderman stood beside Doctor Doom, watching him closely.

And Doom was handing out gifts to the children, muttering under his breath the whole time.

"Fido. What the fu-" Fury paused and glanced at the children. "What the fudge is going on?"

"Bork!" Ammy replied, her tail wagging wildly enough to knock several children into the piles of snow.

"Lady Amaterasu says 'punishment'." Thor supplied. "She said it worked in a movie with another green Mean One. I am curious about this story."

Fury blinked once. Twice. He slowly sat down upon a wooden rocking horse, planted his elbows on his knees, leaned forward, and laced his fingers together.

"Lord, I ask for your forgiveness. I cannot handle these shenanigans any longer. Please, spare me. Or strike me down. Either works."

Thor, Amaterasu, and Doom turned to face him, electricity flickering across their forms.

Fury made a hasty exit.


Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays <3

- Ven
 
Tyftc.
I hope you have a wonderful day/ night and a Merry Christmas.

Thank you for reading! Hope you're having wonderful holidays!

Ammy barking and the others immediately understanding her reminded me of the scene in GTA 5 where Franklin was conversing with a stray dog.

Lmao, I need to play that tbh, but I know exactly what you're referring to. I like to imagine that it's like reaching the point where everyone is so used to her antics and sem-charades that they either understand her or just assume something and then when she corrects them or grumbles and accepts it, they continue. Just on the edge of misunderstandings but always works out or moves into goofy shenanigans.

Thanks for reading and have a wonderful holiday.
 
Chapter 22 - Praise the Sun!
Welcome to chapter 22, the second last chapter of this arc. Next one is already written in its rough form, and I'll post it in roughly 4 weeks? Maybe sooner if I can get ahead. Also, if anyone doesn't already know, on Fanfiction.net, Ao3, and Royal Road, I have a secondary snippets and omake story for all the Ammy antics. Just in case you didn't know!

Big thanks to my Patrons for supporting my writing, suggesting edits, and reading the chapters early to let me know what they think. Can't thank them enough.

I also have a Discord now: Ven's Shenanigans! You can use the code "AT25n3N7fP" to discuss my stories with others, or just chat and hang out! I post snippets and ask opinions on the stories too, and provide little previews from time-to-time.

Thanks for reading, hope you enjoy it!



Following the rather abrupt end to the battle, Amaterasu and the Asgardians set about helping the Vanir recover from the invasion. That, and capturing the Marauders that surrendered or fled on foot. They didn't have anything fancy planned—they just started to clean up the mobile villages, or cleared rubble away from the occasional small town.

While the Asgardians used their absurd strength to haul away wood and stone, Amaterasu restored the buildings. Wood mended together, rock fused back into a whole, and structures looked as spotless as they had before the attacks.

That had stunned the Asgardians and Vanir further, while Thor laughed at their dumbfounded expressions.

So, they came up with a plan. Asgardian soldiers would spread across the planet and work on clearing out the damaged towns to prepare everything for Amaterasu. Heimdall would then use the Bifröst to send Ammy and Thor all over Vanaheim, dropping down from the sky to Rejuvenate the damage done, before vanishing in another burst of colour.

It took less than three hours to hit every major living area across the planet. The number of Vanir was small, in the low millions, which did speed up the process. Amaterasu was certain she'd seen more people in just New York City than she did across the entirety of Vanaheim.

Even so, Amaterasu could feel their appreciation and their praise. She was performing acts of magic and reality warping that not even the Asgardians possessed. Sure, it wasn't anything fancy, just returning something to how it was, but to those watching it was like magic—a new form of it anyway.

Every restored building, every healed wound, spurred the onlookers to view Amaterasu in a new light. Not just some magic wolf, but a Goddess the likes of which they'd only seen from Asgardian royalty. The whole world had witnessed the movement of the sun, and now they knew who did it.

By the time they'd reached the end of their helping spree, Amaterasu was literally glowing. The sheer amount of appreciation and praise flowing to her was almost overwhelming. She hadn't felt this fulfilled since her last life when the entirety of Nippon was praying for her—belief in her existence and ability to do good.

Yet, she still didn't have access to all her powers. She wasn't worried about it—the fuzzy warm feeling from all that praise and love had her tail swishing wildly. Today was fulfilling and crazy in all sorts of ways, so her missing abilities didn't concern her that much. She was certain she'd regain them with time anyway.

Despite being awake for hours, participating in multiple fights, regaining an ability, almost dying, and then absorbing another two objects of world-ending scale… Ammy wasn't even tired. The constant flow of praise was like a feedback loop, encouraging her to help out more, and she was happy to do so.

When they'd finally finished, the sun had begun to slip over the horizon. They all knew that Amaterasu could change that with a swish of her tail, but there was nothing to do that couldn't wait until tomorrow.

Everyone had a long day and deserved some time away to just celebrate with loved ones.

Thus began the feast.

When Asgard threw a party, they went all out. Massive tables filled with food lined the great halls. The streets were flooded with people celebrating alongside neighbours and strangers alike.

The Bifröst was repaired, they'd successfully saved Vanaheim, and they had renewed alliances. The constant reminder of Loki's betrayal was wiped away, and there was no sign of any damage. Thus, the cheers flowed as easily as the alcohol.

And by the Gods, there was quite a lot of it.

Amaterasu sat at one of the many large tables beside Thor, close to the King and Queen to honour them. Odin and Frigga sat at their own table, both rather red in the face from, presumably, the large amount of alcohol being served. Heimdall had joined them, standing off to the side, eating and keeping his vigil on Asgard.

One would expect the tables near the King and Queen of Asgard to be silent.

Thor had invited his friends to feast with him—it was decidedly not quiet.

"Lady Amaterasu, I… would like to introduce you to the bravest warriors in all of Asgard… and my closest friends." Thor was far from sober. He gestured toward the four sitting across from them, the drink sloshing from his mug with the move. "I have fought alongside them for many centuries. This is-"

"Thor, your introductions are horrendous. Allow me." The largest of the group got to his feet, jostling the table as he stood, sending drink and food spilling across the table. "Lady Amaterasu, allow me to introduce you to Fandral the Dashing, Slayer of Foes, and Wooer of Women." The man gestured toward one of his friends on his side of the table.

"It is a pleasure to meet you, Amaterasu." The blonde across the table stood and took a bow, extending his arm out to his side. "It is hard to believe there is someone with more dramatic flair than Thor." Fandral laughed and sat down again, raising his mug to Thor and Ammy.

"And, this is Hogun the Grim, as serious as he is skilled in combat. Wisest among us- er, not including the King and Queen, however!" The large man sent a glance to the side, chuckling nervously at Odin's raised brow.

"Thank you for saving my home," Hogun spoke softly. He bowed his head toward Amaterasu and clasped his hands. "I am in your debt."

"Don't mind him, he hasn't smiled this year. This is the happiest you'll-"

Hogun's hand shot out, striking the large man in the side. He immediately doubled over and wheezed, laughing through the pain while clutching his belly. Thor and Fandral both laughed at their friend's misfortune, shamelessly cheering on Hogun.

"Gah! You- Why would you do that?"

Hogun cracked a smile, his teeth showing for a moment, before returning to a cool neutral once more.

"Ah… Watch this one, he hits you where it hurts." The Asgardian, last of the male warriors, stood tall once more and cleared his throat. "As for myself… I am Volstagg the-"

"If you refer to yourself as 'Volstagg the Svelte' again, I will hurt you," the lone woman at the table interrupted.

Thor snorted into his cup of mead, and Fandral choked on his laughter, spilling food across the table.

"… And that is Lady Sif, Killer of Joy, and," Volstagg turned his head to regard the Queen for a moment, "the second scariest woman on Asgard." He flashed her a smile and turned his attention back to Amaterasu. "We are Lady Sif and the Warriors Three. We are pleased to have fought alongside you, Lady Amaterasu."

"Arr?" Ammy asked.

"Indeed! We were on the battlefield and saw your display," Fandral replied. "It was most impressive, befitting for a goddess such as yourself." He shot her a smile and raised his cup. "I must say you are positively glowing."

Amaterasu's tail wagged faster if such a thing were possible. It was impossible to tell if the fuzzy feeling through her body was from the outpouring of praise and thanks given to her today, or if it was the absurdly strong Asgardian liquor she'd been sipping on.

It didn't matter. She was happy and pleasantly warm.

"He meant that literally," Sif spoke up, nodding to Amaterasu. "You have become brighter."

Amaterasu looked down and found that, yes, she was glowing. More than usual at any rate. Maybe it was the magic she consumed, or the praise that was empowering her. With a little effort, Amaterasu clamped down on the warmth and magic radiating from her form, dimming her fur to a soft white glow.

"I meant that both ways, dear Sif," Fandral replied. He turned his attention to Amaterasu and flashed her a grin, taking another large drink from his mug. "I must say, I'm not the only one in possession of wolfish charm at this table."

"Hogun, could you…?" Sif asked.

The quietest of the Warriors shot his fist out, catching Fandral in the ribs. Fandral choked and coughed up his alcohol, covering himself in the drink. The perpetual flirt doubled over and let out a groan, stomping his heel on the ground in pain.

"Hah… G-good shot," Fandral wheezed.

"Thank you, Hogun." Sif smiled.

"Don't give him any attention, Amaterasu. Fandral would bed a Bilgesnipe if he could," Volstagg laughed.

"That's why I bedded your mother," Fandral retorted. "Somehow, you are even more repulsive."

The hunk of meat Volstagg whipped at him went wide and crashed into the table with an explosion of food. Amaterasu had to hold back the despair that threatened to come forth. Not the food!

A sound caught Amaterasu's attention, and she perked an ear, catching even the King and Queen chuckling under their breath while watching from their table. She sent Odin and Frigga a wide doggy grin and turned her attention back to the feast before her.

Right as Amaterasu was about to dig into the food for the second time, a thought came to mind. She hadn't introduced everyone to one another at the table. A short, soft growl caused something in her fur to wriggle and move around.

Thor, Volstagg, and Fandral were not expecting the white rat to leap from Amaterasu's fur and land atop a massive roast. Thor reeled his hand back in surprise, Fandral let out a squeak of terror, and Volstagg jumped back, toppling over the bench and tumbling to the ground.

Hogun was unfazed and held out his hand, allowing the little rodent to clamber up into his palm.

Laughter rolled from the group again, and Amaterasu joined them, her barking laughter adding to the cacophony. Other tables witnessed the event and cheered, raising their glasses or plates. The cheer and laughter moved through the hall and down the streets of Asgard, just another one of the night's celebratory cries of joy.

That lingering loneliness harboured in Amaterasu's heart fell away just a little more, a feeling of belonging and kinship replacing it.

This felt right. That, or she was really drunk.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Sir, you're pacing," Jarvis commented.

"I'm not pacing. I'm just thinking on my feet."

"Does 'thinking on your feet' involve four-hundred and eighty-two steps on the same stretch of floor?"

"Yes, it does," Tony huffed. "Now shush, lemme think."

"Very well."

Tony was once again left in the silence of the workshop, his steps echoing off the walls. His gaze roamed the basement, eyeing up the cars that lined the edge. Past that were the suits, all thirty of them. It didn't feel like enough, especially after today.

Stark turned his gaze to the glowing vial on his desk and grimaced.

He'd started this. He'd made this problem, and it led to the events of today. Tony was only trying to help a fellow scientist twelve years ago, and, surprise, it led to innocent people being hurt when out of his hands.

Again.

Just like his company. Like the weapons he used to make. Like his suit Rhodey 'borrowed' permanently for the military. He couldn't believe they just strapped a machine gun to the thing. There was no creativity in that whatsoever.

"Dammit, Maya," Tony grumbled. "Jarvis, have you finished analyzing the sample?"

"Still working on it, Sir," Jarvis replied.

"What's the holdup? It's been a couple hours."

"It's surprisingly complex, Sir. The formula you gave me is accurate, but the sample itself is five times more effective than what is mathematically possible. There are changes to the formula I have been unable to replicate."

"So, what, we have some Super Extremis without any way to recreate it?"

"To an extent, Sir. We can mimic the stability properties of the sample, but have no way to perfectly recreate it."

"Of course. Why wouldn't it be some simple thing?" Tony sighed and ran a hand through his hair. "Did you analyze the video footage yet?"

"I have, Sir. Would you like the complete analysis?"

"Nah, just give me the highlights. Baseline information of the normal soldiers, and then the before and after with Killian and this… super juice." Tony walked toward the workstation and picked up the vial, peering at it. He shook it a little, watching the glowing fluid swirl inside the container. "What makes you different?"

"The Extremis soldiers, based on your formula and the recordings, are on average two to four times stronger than an average person, though some exceeded that. Their base temperature averaged around one-hundred and twenty-two degrees Fahrenheit."

"Don't people start to cook at one-o-five?" Tony asked.

"They do, Sir. It appears their bodies adapted. The soldiers began to retreat when their temperatures reached nearly thirty-three-hundred degrees Fahrenheit. That appeared to be the limit of their capabilities, and fluctuations started to occur. An overload was likely if they continued to fight."

"Cool. This is fine. I helped make superhuman walking bombs. Just awesome." Tony sighed and leaned against the desk. "What about Killian?"

"His Extremis adaptation was initially on the higher end of the recorded averages. After he took the enhanced Extremis, his capabilities multiplied. I wasn't able to get a base heat range due to the fighting, but he peaked roughly six-thousand eight-hundred degrees Fahrenheit."

"Jarvis, are you sure? Carbon sublimates around there."

"I'm positive, Sir."

"How the hell was he still alive?"

"I believe Killian's body was repairing itself faster than it could fall apart. That may explain why cutting him in half didn't stop him."

"That's… dark." Tony glanced at the vial in his hand again and held it just a little further away from himself. "Dammit. Hey, Jarvis?"

"Sir?"

"You think we could recreate Extremis, but make it last for maybe five minutes? Put some kind of kill-switch into the coding that activates after a person heals?"

"That is theoretically possible. It will require multiple trials to ensure accuracy. Why do you ask?"

Instead of answering, Tony paced once again. He admitted it, he was pacing this time. Thoughts were racing through his mind—ideas that he knew he shouldn't be contemplating.

"I should just destroy it." Tony looked at the vial again and narrowed his eyes. "Get rid of it now. Put a nice bow on the whole thing. Figure out a cure to return Killian and his goons to normal."

"Sir?"

"It'll be easy. Get Jarvis to purge the entire internet of every trace of Extremis, and prevent SHIELD from getting their mitts on it. Make a cure, and destroy it once and for all."

Tony raised the vial into the air and tightened his grip on it. He clenched his fingers and prepared to swing his arm down. He could destroy it once and for all. Shatter it. Forget about it.



He lowered his arm and looked at the vial in his palm.

"No. Don't do it Stark. Come on, use your brain," Tony mumbled.

But there was a thought in the back of his mind.

What if?

What if he could do it? What if he could tweak this slightly? Just enough so that this pure Extremis only lasted for mere moments? Something as simple as a shot at the doctor's office to cure any wound. Burn away someone's cancer. Get rid of illness and disease once and for all. No one would have to live life with an injury or be anything less than perfectly healthy.

Tony could effectively save the world.

But… He'd be putting Extremis out there. Someone, someday, would get their hands on it. Tinker with it. Experiment.

For now, it was contained and controlled.

But he could change that.

"Sir?" Jarvis prompted again.

"Jarvis, call Pepper for me."

"Of course, Sir."

Tony Stark held the vial of glowing liquid in his palm, and gazed down at it, his mind at war.

He could end it all so easily.

He could fix everything so easily.

"Hello?" Pepper's voice came through the workshop's speakers and a familiar warmth filled his heart. This was exactly who he needed to talk to.

"Hey, hun."

"Tony? Where are you? I thought you were coming back to the tower after your mission."

"Sorry Pep, I kinda ran into something unexpected. I needed my workshop." Tony let out another soft sigh.

"Tony? What's going on? Are you okay?"

Pepper always cut right to the heart of the issue. Dammit, he loved that woman. She didn't struggle with things like this. Didn't have the guilt to fix, or the drive to prove herself better than anyone. She did everything her own way and did it well. That's what he needed right now.

"Tony?" Pepper asked again. "Talk to me."

"I…" Stark hesitated. "What do you know about Oppenheimer?" he suddenly asked.

"What? Do you mean that guy with the bombs? I think that was him, anyway."

"Yeah, the nuclear bombs. World War Two, Japan, all that."

"I'm not too familiar, honestly. I've got a Bachelor's in accounting, not history." Pepper let out a soft laugh. "Why do you ask?"

"… How do you think he felt when he looked at what he made? Do you think he regretted making it? Was it just a means to an end to save more lives down the road? Or… did he know he might break everything?"

Pepper remained silent. Tony hesitated.

"I… In my hand, right now, I'm holding something that can change the world." Tony paused to think over his words carefully. "If I do this, I could help billions of people, Pep. For the rest of time, people will benefit from this. No more sickness. No more injuries. No more cancer. All of it, gone," Tony snapped his fingers, "just like that."

"So why don't you-"

"It could destroy the world," Tony interrupted. "If this gets out there, people can and will use it to hurt others. Wars have been fought over something exactly like this. The Fountain of Youth. The Holy Grail. Cap's Super Serum. I can end this all right now. Close the box, bury it, and clean up the rest of the mess."

"Or you could use it to help people," Pepper added.

"Mhm."

"You're hesitating."

"I am."

"I think… I think you're hesitating because you know the right thing to do." Pepper took a moment. "I think you should do what your heart tells you, Tony. You're a good man."

"Am I?" Tony asked. "After everything?"

"You are, Tony. I promise."

"How can you be sure?"

"Because you're hesitating. You want to make the right decision for other people, not for yourself."

"Pepper, I… I can't mess this up."

"I know, Tony." Pepper's voice was soft. "I think we both know what the right answer is."

"… I was afraid you'd say that." Tony tightened his grip just a little bit, his hand shaking.

"I know you'll make the right decision, Tony. I love you."

"Thanks, Pepper. Love you too."

The call ended, leaving Stark in silence once again. Other than the sound of his heartbeat, and the electrical buzzing of the lights overhead, there was nothing to distract him from the thoughts raging in his mind.

Tony looked down at his palm and relaxed his grip around the vial. He stared into the orange fluid, watching it shift and swirl with the slightest move of his hand. It was such a tiny thing.

A soft sigh escaped him, and he turned away from the desk, the Extremis still in his grip. It wasn't a long walk across the workshop, but to him, it felt like a death march. The vial, hilariously small in his hand, weighed more than the planet. It was an impossible weight he carried.

Yet, he was the only one that could.

He had to fix his mistakes. He had to do what was right.

Tony slid into his seat, and the holograms sprang up to life around him. He held the vial up once again, that orange fluid shimmering innocently in the light of his workshop. It hid the horrors that lay within, covered in layers of good intentions and hope for the future.

With a heavy heart, Tony did what he did best.

He got to work.

"Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Why are we coming out here again?" Stephen Strange asked. He looked around his immediate vicinity, taking in the sights of a vibrant Central Park at sunset. The two received odd looks occasionally, their clothing not at all blending in with normal street clothes.

Then again, they were so far from normal it was laughable.

"I would like to visit a friend, and you seem to be in need of a particular kind of magic," the Ancient One replied. She led the way along the path, taking a slow pace to their destination.

"Is this because of the-"

"It is."

"I said I was sorry."

"Apologies will not repair five-hundred-year-old magic pottery, Stephen." The Ancient One looked at him and raised a brow. "Besides, I thought you were eager to learn more magic."

"Well, yes, but aren't the libraries enough? I'm sure there's some kind of spell that just, I don't know, pulls it all back together." Stephen frowned, and gestured vaguely, searching his memory for some book he'd read through that could fix it.

"Oh, I wasn't aware you knew of the Blood Ritual of Siggolith." The Ancient One flashed Strange a smile and stopped in her tracks.

"Wait- Sorry, the what?" Stephen paled, as nervous as he was curious.

"Oh, you don't know? Why it's simple. We just need the shards of the pottery, five baby goats, and about three pounds of your flesh." The Ancient One turned around and started making her way back toward the Sanctum. "Come along, I'll show you where we keep the goats." She waved a hand to encourage Strange forward.

"Uh, that- that seems a little out of my skill range for the moment." Stephen laughed nervously and remained rooted to the spot. "I think we should go with your first plan."

"Are you sure? It's quite easy. I can walk you through it once you stop bleeding." Despite her serious tone, the Ancient One smirked at Stephen and turned around. She resumed her slow, measured steps along the path, unable to help her laugh at Strange's expression.

"That's not funny," Stephen griped. He fell into step beside her.

"I found it quite amusing."



"That's not an actual ritual, is it?" Stephen asked.

"I'll allow you to find that out on your own."

That stunned Stephen into silence. He could never get a read on what the Ancient One was thinking or doing. One moment she was deadly serious—one wrong word could lead to his death because of a certain incantation. Other times she spoke of things that seemed like utter insanity, or turned someone's robes hot pink for a day to show off a particular type of magic.

Or because they watered the plants a day too early.

Strange was certain that the Ancient One was just the physical embodiment of chaos some days.

"Who are we going to see, exactly?" Stephen asked.

"A friend of mine."

"No- I know that. But why are we walking through- oh."

"Oh?"

"Amaterasu?"

"Quite observant, Stephen." The Ancient One folded her hands behind her back and looked around the park, taking in the sights. "I don't know of any other magic users that live in Central Park. Do you?"

"Why not just portal there? It's faster." Stephen held up a palm, his other hand ready to create a shortcut into Amaterasu's shrine.

"Do you have somewhere you need to be?"

That made Stephen pause. He looked down at his hands, blinked, and then dropped his arms back to his sides, letting out a little huff. Instead of looking at the Sorcerer Supreme, who was probably watching him like some knowing mother would, he looked around the park instead.

"I thought not," the Ancient One chuckled. "We're walking because I want you to take in your surroundings—and because the exercise is good for you. Can you feel the magic in the world around us? Amaterasu's presence has done wonders for life here." She pointed toward the side of the path, guiding his gaze to it. "See that flower? What's wrong with it?"

"What? I didn't get a doctorate to be a florist," Stephen huffed. Still, he focused on the plant and narrowed his eyes. "That's… don't plants usually grow to face the sun?" His eyes flicked up toward the bushes and other plant life, finding that they'd started to face a certain spot within the park. Even the branches of the trees showed signs of curling in the direction of Amaterasu's shrine.

"Most of them, yes. But look how healthy they are. Feel how clean the air is—how alive the whole park is, Stephen." The Ancient One took a breath and sighed happily. "The Goddess of the Sun is certainly leaving her mark, and it's all for the better."

Amaterasu's shrine came into view when the duo rounded a corner, finally setting their sights on the vibrant painting on the outer walls of the structure. Due to the wolf's extended absence, there was no longer anyone hovering around the building. The only thing left seemed to be garbage from the people, but even that was gradually being taken care of.

A squirrel darted down from one of the trees and scooped up a wrapper in its paws. It turned toward the Ancient One and Stephen and squeaked in annoyance, before racing its way toward the nearest trash bin.

"About that whole Goddess of the Sun thing," Stephen started. They stepped under the arch into Amaterasu's shrine. "Is that real? I can believe a magic dog and all that. But an actual goddess? As in a higher being kind of thing?"

"Oh, it's quite real. I witnessed her abilities firsthand."

"What did she do?"

"She moved the sun."

"She what?" Stephen tripped on the uneven stones through Amaterasu's shrine, and staggered forward, managing to catch himself. "Wouldn't everyone remember that happening? That would have sent the world into chaos!"

"I know." The Ancient One flashed him a smile. "That's why I reversed time to undo the whole thing."

If he could grow more bewildered, Stephen would have. He opened his mouth, then closed it again. Once more, he attempted to say something to the Sorcerer Supreme, only to fall silent.

The Ancient One grinned, not from rendering her most narcissistic student speechless, but because Stephen's wide eyes and repetitive opening and closing of his mouth resembled a funny little fish.

"Sorry, you reversed time?" Stephen managed.

"I did."

"Wha- How!?"

"Magic."



"That's not funny," Stephen griped.

"On the contrary, I think it's hilarious."

Their back-and-forth banter faded as they approached the central building within the shrine. They walked up the steps, glancing around for any sign of Amaterasu—there was no one there. The only thing of note was the door to Amaterasu's home. One of the double doors was open a crack, allowing a sliver of light into the building.

There was a significant lack of warmth coming from the structure, which was highly unusual. Amaterasu's presence was usually accompanied by a warmth that seeped into one's very being and revitalized them.

Instead, there was an odd chill that oozed from the doors. It was cold, unnatural, and left one feeling almost hollow. Shadows seemed to creep from the open door, sizzling away into nothing in the sunlight.

"Amaterasu? Are you there?" Stephen called out.

Immediately the cold feeling spiked, and something large moved inside of the building. Stephen raised his hands, golden runes glowing, magic at the ready. The Sorcerer Supreme flicked her wrist, causing both doors to slam open, exposing the interior of the building.

There was a darkness that dripped from the shadows, almost tangible. The cold feeling grew, but it wasn't the temperature that dropped. Something else was there, stealing warmth and light.

Something that did not belong.

With a word the Ancient One summoned a fireball in her palm, the light flashing into existence. It pierced the shadows and lit up the entire building for a moment. The interior seemed normal, save for the large claw marks along the floor and up the walls of the shrine. She turned and set her sight on a patch of darkness huddled in the corner.

The Ancient One locked onto the singular glowing eye of the shadow, and she froze. A pulse of magic overloaded the fireball, causing it to burst in an explosion of light in an attempt to disorient the creature. She made the gesture to open the Eye of Agamotto, one she knew by heart.

It still almost wasn't enough time. She knew that Strange wouldn't have been able to act swiftly enough.

Time itself slowed to a standstill, but the Ancient One continued moving. She was able to look at the creature for a single moment, before all of her instincts screamed at her to move. Her magic forced the immobile form of Strange to the ground, while the Ancient One ducked to the side.

Reality itself shifted and bent itself at the behest of the creature. A large swipe of red ink brushed over their heads, across the walls of the shrine interior, and beyond. A force carved its way through the air, slicing clean through the interior of the shrine. The walls of the structure were slashed open and part of the roof exploded outward.

A quick portal sent Strange back to the Sanctum, leaving The Ancient One alone with this thing.

"So, this world does have magic users after all. How bothersome." The creature sounded bored; disappointed. It was similar to Amaterasu's voice, though wasn't nearly as elegant or pure.

"Return to your realm, creature. This world is under my protection. You do not belong here." The Ancient One spoke firmly, hands raised, glaring at the shadowy figure.

"Oh, but neither does Amaterasu. Yet, she walks freely among your people, does she not?"

"Amaterasu has more than proven herself an ally to this world and its people. All you've done is strike at myself and my student."

"My apologies, bald one. You can't ever be too careful in a new land, especially one filled with such power." The shadow stalked closer, still moving despite the Eye of Agamotto being used. Just like Amaterasu could. Its eye flicked down to focus on the amulet around the Ancient One's neck and lit up, as if it recognized the power flowing from it.

"You speak as if you are not of this world." The Sorcerer Supreme took several steps back, attempting to lure the creature into the light.

"Very clever. I'm sure it took you a while to puzzle that one out." It either didn't notice, or didn't care, shamelessly stalking forward. "Now, you know about Amaterasu. Where is she?"

The shadows enveloping the creature melted away as it stepped into the light provided by the setting sun. First, its paws were revealed, leading up to long legs. Its pelt was a rusty orange colour, and its fur looked both dishevelled and neat as if it were intentional. One long tail snaked back and around, whipping side to side like a serpent.

The Ancient One stared straight ahead into the blazing red eye of the fox, not at all intimidated by the large size of the creature.

"I was looking for Amaterasu as well. Whatever you want with her, she isn't here right now."

"Is that so? Well then, I suppose that's good news." The creature stalked closer, its claws digging into the wood floor. It snaked around the Ancient One, not touching her, but circling like a predator nonetheless.

"And why is that, beast?" The Sorcerer Supreme noticed the twitch of the fox's eye, and how its tail thrashed angrily at her words. It was prideful—vain maybe.

"Because no one will save you."

Sharp teeth flashed at the Ancient One, glinting in the sunset. Despite the lightning-fast strike, she merely tilted herself to the side, allowing the attack to brush by her, close enough to feel the fur on her cheek.

She took her chance to retaliate. The Sorcerer Supreme struck out with a palm and caught the creature in the side of the head, supernatural forces exploding outward from the point of contact. The fox rocketed off its paws and flew straight at the wall.

Wood exploded outward and sunlight streamed into the building, a new fox-shaped hole punched into the shrine. The Ancient One stepped through the hole with her hands behind her back, dropping to the grass nonchalantly.

"What manner of magic was that?" the fox asked. It clambered to its feet and shook itself off, looking no worse for wear.

The Ancient One frowned. That strike should have been enough to at least stun an Asgardian for a moment.

"The magic of the Sorcerer Supreme."

"I want it."

"Then come get it."

The fox snarled and lunged, shooting forward at an impossible speed. The Ancient One smirked. She spread her palms and pushed outward, the Eye of Agamotto losing its effect. Instead, a shimmering wall of sharp edges and corners rolled forward, sweeping over the fox and plunging the two of them into a much more favourable battleground.

The Mirror Dimension.

The grass beneath the fox's paws caved inward and folded up at the edges, shifting itself around the creature and crushing it between the two planes. The Ancient One knew this was far from over and took a step back, falling through the air and landing atop the roof of Amaterasu's shrine.

Sidewalk stones and chunks of dirt erupted from where the creature had been flattened. Rubble shot off into the air and peppered the folding walls of the shrine. A quick gesture had the walls ripple, the material itself rolling in its position up the walls and expanding outward in all directions, quickly enclosing the two in a cage of stonework.

"What trickery is this?" the fox hissed.

"Magic," the Ancient One replied with a smile. "You are now my prisoner. I suggest you cooperate."

The furious snarl from the fox didn't intimidate the Sorcerer Supreme in the slightest. She'd beaten far more intimidating and powerful enemies with far less effort. The only thing this creature had going for it was the ability to move when time was stopped, and its use of whatever instantaneous magic it had.

The Ancient One had centuries of experience, countless magics, and more than a few tricks up her sleeve.

Unfortunately, that experience did not include whatever this fox was doing. That sense of danger urged her to move, and so she did, just sidestepping a flash of red that carved itself through the roof of the shrine. She raised a brow at the creature and took a step backward.

The rippling stonework of the prison around the two parted for her, allowing the Ancient One to step through it, before it sealed itself once more. She watched as that sensation tugged at her being, again and again, slices of material being gouged out of the shifting stone prison, and immediately resealing itself.

The fox was imprisoned in the rippling and shifting brickwork that made up the walls of Amaterasu's shrine. Every strike led to the hole resealing itself faster than the fox could retaliate.

The Sorcerer Supreme raised her hands and looked at the shifting, rippling cube of masonry through her palms. Then, she pressed them together, physical and magical contact causing the cube to shrink. Constant pressure led to it shrinking smaller and smaller, though the insides remained the same size.

With a breath, she held the cube of shifting stone in a single hand, looking down at the surface. Every so often she would see the artwork Amaterasu and Steve made roll across the surface. How ironic. The fox wanted Amaterasu and now it was taunted by the reminder of the freedom the wolf possessed.

The Ancient One mumbled several incantations and golden chains hummed to life, quickly wrapping themselves around the box. The entire box shuddered, likely from a blow the fox dealt to the insides, but held. The chains tightened further, and flashed, sealing themselves around the cube.

"There we are. You're a tricky one, aren't you?" She held the box in a single hand, looking at it curiously. "I think I'll have to talk with Amaterasu once she's returned. Hopefully nothing more than her and this creature has slipped through to our universe."

With her grip firmly on the shifting cube, the Ancient One spun up a portal straight to the New York Sanctum. Just like that, she was back in the real world, looking down at a very confused Stephen Strange, who was picking himself up off the floor.

"What the hell just happened?" Stephen asked. He brushed off his clothes and held back a scowl at being thrown to the floor.

"I seem to have found a creature that Amaterasu may be familiar with. I moved you here for your protection."

"Protection? Come on, I know I haven't been here long but I'm sure-"

"Stephen," the Ancient One interrupted. "Let me be very clear. The creature within this box may very well kill you the instant it's released. It, like Amaterasu, is not bound to the same flow of time as you and I—the same plane of reality. If it sees you and decides it wants you dead, there will not be a warning."

"Wh- How? How is that possible?"

"There exist beings immensely more powerful than you and I. They may live in our world and feel as mortal as us, but they do not see the world as we do. They exist beyond us. To them, our world is a stage; a painting on a canvas; text on a screen." The Ancient One stared at Stephen, through him. "They can manipulate our world to their heart's desires. I am telling you now: do not trifle with the being in this prison." She held the shifting box for Stephen to see, the golden chains around it glimmering dangerously.

"I understand."

"Good."

Without another word, the Ancient One turned away and began her march through the Sanctum, intent on securing the box in bindings that only she could remove.

"Can I ask you something?" Stephen asked, falling into step alongside her.

"You may."

"How did you manage to capture it?"

"I used a similar being's magic to contain it."

"Oh." Stephen fell silent, continuing his walk alongside the Ancient One.

"You have another question," she stated.

"Oh, uh, yeah." Stephen was caught off guard. "What do you do if those beings don't want you dead? Obviously, this one is bad news. But you compared it to-"

"Amaterasu?" the Ancient One asked.

Stephen nodded. She turned to him and gave him a soft, knowing smile.

"I befriend them."

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Chug! Chug! Chug! Chug!" the crowd chanted.

"Come on Volstagg, you've got this!" Fandral cheered, downing another pint.

"Go on, Ammy! Show 'em what a real God can do!" Thor exclaimed, sloshing his mead around, barely able to stay upright.

"Chug! Chug! Chug! Chug!"

A sigh slipped from the King of Asgard, watching the proceedings from the sidelines.

"Whatever is wrong, dearest husband?" Frigga asked. She flashed him a knowing smile.

Odin remained silent. Instead, he turned to face his wife and gestured forward to the absolute mess unfolding before their very eyes.

"Chug! Chug! Chug! Chug!"

"Oh, come now, they're having fun. They've earned it." She laughed.

"I was far more responsible at their age," Odin huffed.

"Oh, really?" She raised an eyebrow, and Odin looked away quickly. "I beg to differ. I can recount at least thirty-"

"Fine!" Odin interrupted. "I will not judge them for their… excessive celebrations." He took a breath, and let a sigh slip free. "At least they are behaving themselves."

An eruption of cheers shook the walls and flooring, the sound carrying across Asgard in a tidal wave. Glasses were smashed on the ground, and money changed hands, while the victors celebrated.

"Yeah ha ha! That is how it's done!" Thor shouted. He reached down to pick up a very drunk Amaterasu and held her high above his head. "Your victor, Amaterasu!"

The cheers renewed, Asgardians and Vanir alike cheering on the extremely dizzy Goddess of the Sun. Thor's constant staggering and jostling didn't help the wolf at all. Her head rolled back and forth, and Ammy looked like she was going to be sick.

"See? Everything is fine." Frigga laughed and leaned against her husband. "They're not going to burn down the palace."

Amaterasu projectile vomited pure fire.

Thor didn't notice for several seconds, jostling and holding the wolf high, causing the stream of fire to arc and shift with every movement.

Screams rang out.

Some people threw up.

Most of them cheered louder.

Odin's palm met his face with a glorious smack.


Big thanks to my Patrons for supporting my work. These people help me do what I do and I can't thank them enough: BaronOfBonk, Nithalys, MooGoesCow21, BlobbyCat, Spartan211, IRS, JoeyW, and Valon. You're all amazing.
 
If Ninetails made it here, what else made it?

Still figuring that one out. I made the justification for Ninetails because it was resident to Nippon and the world prior to Yami and all the other demons showing up, so it felt more reasonable to include the character from another world instead of another plane of existence.




Thanks for reading, everyone. As a little aside, I wrote an intentionally cringey Undertale crossover short with Ammy including Issun. Its on my Discord currently but, like I said, it's rough to read. I'm tempted to post it but I also don't wanna be off-putting with intentionally cringey crap. I'll post it if anyone wants it.
 
Happy Ammyversary / What If Amaterasu's New Game + Continued: A Visitor From Another Universe
A/N: Sorry if this is in a rough state. I had limited time and rewrote this whole thing twice over, so there's no extra editing that went into it. I've gotta fix my writing style somewhat and tried that a little here.

Big Authors Note at the end of the chapter. Hope you enjoy!



Some readers might remember a time when the story went by a different name, with different characters and goals. A story where Amaterasu was pulled into the Marvel Universe by an omnipotent God who required her help to prevent the destruction of the universe—all universes.

Then, the story changed. The name changed. New goals, new abilities, new characters. A sharp deviation from the original goals and the saga that was set out to be told. But just because the individual conveying the story into text wound up changing the story, doesn't mean that the original tale ever really left.

We are going to take a look into that original story. That original universe—one where Amaterasu was given abilities that disobey logic and reasoning, that may spiral into something beyond comprehension. The horrific power of… LitRPG.

What if the Author hadn't shifted directions? What if Amaterasu still had the abilities given to her? Who would she be now? How would things have changed? And most importantly… How would she react to what's to come?

What If Amaterasu's New Game + Continued:
A Visitor From An Alternate Universe


In this world, Amaterasu's abilities developed a little differently. Broken from the chains of her normal god-powers, and having shattered the restraints of JAWS (Jack and Amaterasu's Wonderful System), the only real limits were her imagination… and whatever she managed to encounter naturally. And her Mana, but numbers are hard when you're mentally controlling two stone wolves and also whirling weapons around like a Jackie Chan impersonator.

Events continued in a similar fashion, however. Amaterasu wanted to help with the Extremis project under the impression it was for the betterment of everyone. What changed was the benefits from being shot with the DNA altering fluid. Insane recovery speed, regrowing limbs, and harnessing the power of fire naturally, as opposed to magically. A biological upgrade, so to speak. Her Goddess DNA was a little too spicy for something Humanity cooked up in a basement laboratory.

The Quest she obtained from that was named: The Twelve Step Guide to Omnipotence, though that meant little to her. She was already a goddess, just a little more wolfy and non-omnipotent. Really, being an all-seeing God probably wouldn't be something for her to strive toward.

But… there was the added benefit of conjuring bacon from thin air.

It was tempting.

With her new natural ability to harness fire from a biological point, and then pushing that into her magic, some rumours may have spread. And maybe she got a little power boost from biting at the Eternal Flame, and dunking her snoot into the Casket of Ancient Winters.

Unfortunately for her, the creatures of Hell got the wrong impression, and believed Amaterasu to be the controller of all fire, and they wanted that for themselves. That, or they were scared shitless of some deity wielding Hell Fire. Or maybe they were working on a patent for it. Intellectual theft is no laughing matter.



On the Outskirts of Savannah, Georgia, United States, Terra, Third Planet From the Sun, The Solar System (yes, it is literally named "the Solar System", other species make fun of us for it constantly), Orion-Cygnus Arm, Milky Way Galaxy (they bully us for that too), Universe 2628ER2SU-L…

Amaterasu's breaths escaped in heavy puffs, the air shimmering with heat. Her internal temperature had risen from her lengthy sprint. Magic-enhanced running was certainly one way to get around, and beat waiting for the Quinjet's permission to take off and land. She didn't have time for that anyway, not when another invasion was set to occur. The third one she'd dealt with in two months.

What a headache.

Now that she thought about it, she was hampered by bureaucracy with every single invasion. Nick Fury tried to keep her on the Helicarrier. Odin tried to forbid her from participating in the battle for Vanaheim. And now, the simple task of just getting someone to fly her to Georgia in a Quinjet was stalled by a takeoff queue.

That was three invasions! Which, granted, wasn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened thrice.

A quick glance around revealed little of interest. A city glimmered in the distance, busy, unaware that they were near disaster. Empty plains extended in several directions, split by roads or the occasional small town in the distance.

This didn't quite seem like the location of an impending demon invasion. It was rather quiet, all things considered. Maybe a little smelly. Modern human cities always smelled like that though. Still, it was where she'd been directed, and the advice of this particular screen was far more informative and accurate than whatever spouted from those televisions or phones people seemed glued to.

Speaking of. A quick thought brought up the blue screen, the familiar interface floating before her.

[Quest: The Devil Went Down to Georgia]

She knew there was supposed to be some witty pun or humour in there somewhere. But, seeing as she wasn't really from this universe nor versed in its culture, it was not helpful in the slightest. Hint, hint.

Sorry.

[Quest: Go Stop a Demonic Invasion on the Outskirts of Savannah, Georgia, You Killjoy]

[Time Remaining Until Quest Start: 00:00:00:25.69]

[Goal: Kill all Hell-Creatures coming through the Portal & find a way to stop the Invasion.]

[Rewards: Whatever I want to give you- ack!]


Ammy swatted at the screen with a paw, sending the floating interface in a tight spin away from her. She huffed through her nose and padded forward, coming to seat herself right before that blue box once again.

[Rewards: 666 exp for each Demon defeated; 300 exp for each Hell Hound defeated; 150 exp for each Imp defeated; 50 000 exp on Quest completion; New Title; ?]

A sharp huff escaped her, and she rolled her eyes. It was like explaining celestial movement to a toddler, or herding cats. And she could herd cats too, which is why that phrase made absolutely no sense to her. Humans were an odd bunch.

I hope you realize I know more about celestial movements than you ever will. You couldn't hope to comprehend-

It was at that moment that Amaterasu found out that she was illiterate, and thus couldn't read the scandalous words on the screen. It was such a shame; she was certain that "Jack" had such amazing and wonderful things to say. Truly a visionary.

I'm speaking in your mind.

Oh no! Ammy became deaf too! How awful!

Despite the back and forth with the being that literally gave her this weird number-based magic in the first place—and why numbers? Wolves didn't do math—she was still keeping an eye on the timer. It would be irresponsible not to.

[Time Remaining Until Quest Start: 00:00:00:07.42]

Her anticipation grew as the seconds ticked down. A quick tug on her magic and she watched her Mana drop. Two heavy thuds shook the ground, her stone wolves, The Twins, coming out at her will. They shimmered and shuddered, magic layering over them, applying various spells that-

Reality itself shook, screaming and warping and bending and shattering. The interface erupted into static, becoming garbled, muddy, incomprehensible. A sharp, piercing headache nearly floored her, and she clenched her jaws hard enough to crush steel. Amaterasu curled tightly, planting her head on the grass, clawing at the dirt in an effort to distract her from that agonizing-

And then, clarity. Nothing. It was over just like that.

Something is coming. Try not to destroy the universe.

Amaterasu let out a startled yelp and flailed a little, the implications almost as staggering as the very ground beneath her quaking. A sharp, thunderous crack rang out, and a jagged split shot through the world beneath her paws. Ammy bolted to the side, falling to one side of the quickly growing chasm.

A dull red glow seeped through, followed by a thick smoke, and the scent of sulphur and ash. The cloying smell made Ammy's eyes water, and she took a breath, focusing. A transparent barrier sprang into existence around her, ensuring that the only clean air could pass through.

The ground shook once more, the remnants of a terrifyingly large explosion rolling up from the chasm. Fire shot out from the split in the Earth, a pillar of flame screaming into the sky, the very air around them shimmering from the heat.

Amaterasu growled and braced herself. Layer after layer of magic build upon herself—Might, Agility, Adrenaline, boosted her physical stats, and a quick swipe of her Celestial Brush caused Veil of Mist to spread outward. Time seemed to slow to a crawl through her abilities, her body thrumming, ready for whatever would come through the tear.

The Twins spread out, prowling, shifting to get a better angle.

Amaterasu threw a Major Illusion over the city nearby as an afterthought, feeling her Mana take another heavy hit. It was a good idea to make sure the invaders couldn't see the city, and the civilians the invasion.

MP: 6 700 / 10 500

She'd need to be a little more careful with her magic use. Physical attacks only. Quick moves. Dart between enemies, avoid hits, and leave them scrambling to focus on her.

She waited, tense, ready, muscles quivering and prepared to react in an instant.

And she waited.

And… waited?



This invasion was rather underwhelming, all things considered. Here she was, buffed and prepared, ready to defend this world from the forces of Hell, and they didn't even have the courtesy to show up? Was there some sort of manager of Hell she could speak to? The unprofessionalism was astounding.

Sounds still came from within the canyon. Shrieks, hisses, screams of the damned, but… nothing actually happened.

Amaterasu dropped her Shield and stepped forward. She planted another paw ahead, creeping closer to the edge, body tense, ready for anything to lunge from out of the chasm. She came up to the edge and peered downward, squinting through the smoke and bright light, waiting for-

A blur of red and white rocketed upward, bounding off walls and darting between sharp rocky outcroppings. Back and forth, side to side, it would have been impossible to track if time hadn't been slowed to a crawl already.

Several series of bounces brought the creature about two stories below the lip of the chasm. Looking beyond it, Amaterasu could see what had to be countless creatures of Hell clawing their way up the walls, flying, or just leaping from spot to spot. The deep dark chasm radiated a hellish glow and the walls writhed with the presence of Hell Creatures surging their way upward.

The red and white blur bounded toward the wall, and leapt straight up. Straight at her!

Amaterasu scrambled back from the ledge, just in time, even with the time-slowing magic and her enhanced perception. What in the world-

Two pairs of gold eyes met. White fur. Red markings. A sense of warmth and familiarity. A presence that was the personification of warm sunbeams, thriving forests, and celestial might.

Amaterasu, with time frozen, stared at herself.

And the Other stared right back. It was aware, and could move in this frozen time. She hadn't even realized time had frozen until the other one blinked, still in the air, her gaze growing… bored?

It was probably impolite to freeze someone against their will after just crawling out of a portal to Hell. Still, she needed answers, and since they were both relatively free to converse without a time limit, they did just that.

"Wurf?" Amaterasu asked. She tilted her head, eyes narrowed.

"Awoof," the Other replied.

That was impossible. Still, she had to make sure.

"Grruff? Wuff," Amaterasu accused. The Other rolled her eyes and flicked her tail, spattering Celestial Ink across Ammy's face. How rude! Still, it proved her point—she was, somehow, herself.

"Huff… Grrurr." The Other motioned with a paw to continue. "Boof."

Fine, they would talk later. But if there was any funny business whatsoever, Amaterasu was going to make herself regret it. Wait, what? Not herself herself, but the other one. This confusing mess hurt her head, which should have been impossible with her Parallel Processing ability.

Hesitantly, Amaterasu released her hold on reality, and allowed whatever the heck was happening to take place.

The Other shot into the sky from her powerful leap, a trail of snowflakes rolling off her body, mist following her movement. She climbed higher still, and crouched, jumping off the very air itself to reach a peak. She flipped over backward, and angled herself straight at the chasm, where Demons and other creatures began clawing at the lip, ready to wreak havoc.

Moments before Amaterasu could make her move, the Other her lashed out. The sheer, overwhelming cold that exploded from her left Ammy winded. The temperature plummeted, so rapid that the moisture in the air froze and fell to ground in little pellets. A torrent of blindingly bright blueish ice streamed out of thin air, careening downward and into the chasm.

The creatures of Hell had no chance to retaliate. One moment they were standing at the lip of the canyon, ready to wreak havoc. The next, their bodies were shredded into fleshy little pieces as a literal torrent of razor-sharp ice screamed through the air. The small shards whistled through the air slicing through the atmosphere as they poured straight into the chasm.

The screams of the damned and the creatures of Hell were muffled by the overwhelming magical might from this Other her. The various demons, imps, hellhounds, and whatever was trying to escape wound up plummeting back into the portal to hell, followed by a tsunami of cold. Ice started to build up in thick chunks, melting on contact and then freezing once again, creating a thick mass.

Within seconds, the entire chasm was filled with a layer of ice so cold that the ground around it started to frost over and crack. As a final measure, the Other swept a final layer of ice over the remnants of the crack in the earth, and sealed it flush with the surrounding ground.

Amaterasu stared, slack jawed, as her Other self landed on top of the ice barrier she created. The moment of impact was accented with a wash of white fire lashing over the the ice, making a perfectly smooth surface that seemed to radiate warmth.

[Quest: The Devil Went Down to Georgia – Complete]

Hell's invasion was over, just like that.

Amaterasu blinked, a shiver rolling through her, her fur standing on end. A wash of euphoria filled her, and notifications for the rewards of a Quest completed popped up in the corner of her vision.

What in the world just happened?

"Awuff," the Other said.

And, she was right. They had a lot to talk about.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

Funny enough, there wasn't a lot to talk about. Talking to yourself from such a similar parallel universe meant that, for the most part, experiences were almost the same. Sure, their abilities and powers were different, but things had progressed similarly for the most part.

They even had the same little rodent friend! Amaterasu summoned Tachigami with her magic, allowing the rat to fall onto her head. The Other huffed under her breath and the—apparently unnamed—creature wriggled out of her fur and clambered on to her head. The two sat across from one another, their tails wagging hesitantly, unsure of what to really make of the situation.

The Other Amaterasu claimed she didn't know what happened. One moment she was on Asgard, sneaking into Odin's vault to assault the Blue Box. The next, she found herself in a fiery world filled with angry creatures that were a little too spicey for her liking. She found the tunnel leading up to the surface and took her chance to escape.

Amaterasu shuddered in sympathy.

That Blue Box was truly evil. The power it granted was great, but would it ever be worth the trauma and difficulty? Time would tell. That didn't mean she had to like it though. She cursed that Evil Blue Box with every fibre of her being.

[Congratulations! You have gained a new Rival: The Tesseract (Evil Blue Box). Please check your Rivals tab under the Social category for more information.]

Amaterasu blinked. She read through that notification again. And again. One more time, just to be sure. Her anxiety spiked, and her fur poofed up from her natural wolf desire to make herself appear bigger.

"Aroo?" the Other Ammy asked.

"Grrruff…" Amaterasu replied, her voice shaky. Then, a thought came to mind. Could the Other not see blue boxes like she could? And, no, the irony was not lost on her that her interface was also a blue box. It was a good blue box though. Very much deserving of bacon treats.

Aw, thank you.

No not Jack, just the blue interface. It was a very helpful and useful companion that didn't try to put Amaterasu into traumatizing situations with immensely powerful objects.

I can fix that.

Not acknowledging the powerful being in her head that somehow couldn't fix all the problems himself was the best course of action. After all, the alternate universe version of herself was much more interesting.

With a curious croon, Amaterasu turned her screen around and gestured toward it, trying to direct the Other Ammy's attention toward it. The Other only blinked, and looked through the object, unable to really see what was going on.

Amaterasu huffed. Dumb magic. Then, another thought came to mind. The Other Amaterasu was skilled with elemental magic, but was that all she could do?

Curious, Amaterasu pushed some of her Mana into a spherical shape, imbuing it with the idea of cold. Ice started to form in thin air, and a ball floated between the two after several seconds. A firm grip with her Telekinesis held the ball of ice, and Amaterasu spun it around in a tight circle, orbiting her body. With a smirk, she whipped it around her body and sent it straight at the Other Ammy.

Clearly, she wasn't expecting it. The Other wolf caught the snowball in the chest, the dense ball of snow exploding outward on impact.

The Other Amaterasu blinked, and looked down at her now ice-covered fur. She flicked her gaze up to Ammy, who was suddenly feeling a little sheepish.

"… Wuff?" she offered.

The Other didn't even respond. Instead, her eyes flicked upward, focusing on something above Amaterasu. A shadow started to grow and spread out over her, blocking out the light of the sun and sending a chill down her spine.

Amaterasu craned her gaze higher, and laughed nervously.

A massive pile of snow whumped onto her, burying the Goddess of the Sun under a metric fuckton of snow, the fine, powdery substance difficult to work her way out of. She could hear the Other Amaterasu laughing at her! And here she was, buried up to the ears in really friggen cold ice. She struggled upward and had to practically swim her way out of it.

It took a good few seconds, but Amaterasu finally escaped the pile of snow. She burst from the side with a triumphant cry, excited to see the sky again. Amaterasu didn't account for the lack of support beneath her paws, however.

The Other Amaterasu very audible laughed at her while she tumbled down the pile of snow. Ammy wound up sliding down the last few feet on her front, her chin and nose acting as a snow-plow to push through the rest of it, and shove some of the snow into her nose!

Amaterasu sat up and scrunched her face up, nose curling, eyes watering. She tried to gith it off, but it was inevitable.

She sneezed, the loud, thunderous sound causing her head to swing downward, her head shaking side to side. Then, she did it again. And again. Repeated, explosive sneezes, driving her lower and lower with each attempt, trying to clear out that horrific powder.

It felt like it was tickling her brain!

And while Amaterasu suffered through her sneezing fit, eventually cranking her head against the ground with a final powerful sneeze, the Other Amaterasu was watching with an infuriatingly smug smirk.

Finally, the sneezing fit was over. She lay sprawled out on the ground, her head spinning, while several notifications popped into her sight.

[New Quest! Duel of the Fates—Celestial Edition: Take revenge on yourself from another universe by engaging in a prank war of epic proportions. Anything goes!]

[Status: Dazed]


She certainly felt dazed. The implications of that Quest were very interesting though. But, as Amaterasu rolled her eyes to look up at her Other self, a thought came to mind.

Did she always look so smug when she did this to others?

Good. It looked amazing on her.

Now she had planning to do. She'd need to lure her Other self into a false sense of security.

Idly, she wondered if Tony Stark would be up for pranking her alternate universe self. That could be fun.


Hi everyone. I just want to say thank you so much! It's been a year to the day that I first uploaded Amaterasu's New Game + to other sites, and over time it changed and expanded into this now. Happy Ammyversary!

I'm absolutely blown away by the support. In a year we've climbed to nearly 3 000 followers over 5 sites, hit over 150 000 views, and we're still going strong. This year I've written over 300 000 words, not all of it for this story, and most of it definitely isn't as good as it could be. The changes, progress, and support has been amazing. I've made memories and friends I wouldn't have without all of you, and I'm forever grateful.

Thank you so much for everything. I know my writing still needs work and I'll happily take advice and support wherever I can. I know I'm definitely not the best, and that other people could likely do this more justice, but I will do my best to give you all the Amaterasu story you deserve.

I wanna thank you for a year of love and support on this project and my writing, and hope I can continue to entertain and make you smile for years to come still.

Thank you for everything,

Ven.
 
This story is 80% of the reason I bought Okami and am playing it now, just saved an emperor and I have to say, I love both more now. Ammy is hilarious if you read bettween the lines, it's great.
 
ammy is having fun also adorable. nice chapter thank you

Thank you for reading it! I agree, writing Ammy having fun is great. There's gonna be more of that in chapter 23 too.

This story is 80% of the reason I bought Okami and am playing it now, just saved an emperor and I have to say, I love both more now. Ammy is hilarious if you read bettween the lines, it's great.

Yesss, another person to spread the joy of Okami. I agree, the game is great and Ammy is definitely funny in a non-typical fashion. Tried to emulate that as much as I could here.

Thanks for reading, I'm glad I could help you enjoy something new!
 
Portal Omake
Apologies that this isn't a normal chapter upload. I got stuck writing my PMD story and even though chapter 23 for Ammy is written, it's bad. I'm rewriting it, and hopefully will be done by next weekend. Hope this can make up for it in the meantime, this was written 3 months back.

If you want to read the chapters early, suggest edits, or just support my writing you can become a Patron.

I also have a Discord now: Ven's Shenanigans! You can use the code "AT25n3N7fP" to discuss my stories with others, or just chat and hang out! I post snippets and ask opinions on the stories too, and provide little previews from time-to-time.



GLaDOS was bored.

This wasn't the kind of boredom that could be solved by throwing her Idiot Task Force into acid or forcing them to push a button 306,982 times to see if their servos would fail. Even putting the two in the Screaming Room wouldn't solve her issue, as entertaining as it would be.

This was not the boredom that the itch demanded she get rid of. This was no testing boredom.

No, GLaDOS herself needed something new to do. And when that need arose, she came upon her most brilliant ideas. Or, in this instance, borrowing the bad ideas of every scientist rotting in the depths of Aperture Laboratories. They weren't using them anyway. If they have a grievance, they should speak up.

Which reminded her—she needed more Deadly Neurotoxin. Maybe she could instruct Atlas and P-Body to assist her. If 1,000,000 monkeys slamming on keyboards could eventually create works of Shakespeare, she was certain that those two idiots could eventually fumble their way into creating something of value.

Even if it did take the estimated 38.79 years that- Oh, the decimal was in the wrong place. 387.9 years. Joy.

Oh good, her sarcasm module was still functioning properly. At least that was one more thing to check off the maintenance list.

No, she needed something new. Portals? A novelty at this point. Re-animating the dead? Their screams got boring after a few years. What she really needed was something that those Idiots in Lab Coats had shelved without exploring the idea thoroughly.

The facility hummed as she worked her way through her memory banks and newly rediscovered files. All those years of paper files now scanned and accessible, dragged up from the depths of Aperture.

She needed something thrilling. Something that gave her the same excitement as watching that Adopted Mute Lunatic slowly descend into fire, and the satisfaction of casting that Moron into space.

What she needed was-

Oh, hello. What's this?

"Warning, these files have been classified as a danger to reality itself, and may lead to the collapse of the material universe."

Oh good, something exciting. Let's see… Ignore the warnings. Warnings are reserved for humans anyway. If something was deadly, she considered that a successful test. In deadliness.

Possible anti-matter creation? That sounded very interesting. Anti-matter fizzled out of existence on its own, so there really wasn't much risk. Or she could throw Blue and Orange into it. Win-win.

100% chance of bodily disfigurement and slow death via radiation poisoning? She was a central intelligence in charge of the most sophisticated and advanced science organization in the world. What did she have to fear of disfigurement?

None. She deleted the schematics for bombs and rocket turrets the second she was back in control. No more Mute Lunatics throwing explosives at her face.

Never again.

The power requirements for this device were concerning, however. It would take nearly 80% of the Reactor Core's maximum power generation to run this test. However, the side notes of the file did detail that the resulting wormhole may become self-sufficient and impossible to disable.

Or it could turn everything around it purple. Nothing a little portal to the moon couldn't fix.

With new Science on the horizon, she got to work. Rooms shifted, panels moved, and power lines arced with potential. Instead of creating a portal from one place to another, she was creating a portal to somewhere.

If everything went well, she'd boot the Sentient Toasters through first. Or take control and do it herself.

"Warning! The resulting configuration has a 95% chance of creating a black hole. Please-"

Ah, the Idiots forgot a screw. Easy fix.

"Warning! The resulting configuration has a 37% chance of destabilizing gravity in a 350-mile radius and may set fire to the atmosphere."

Much more acceptable.

With a brief thought, she activated the device.

And everything went black.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Reactor Core back online. Reestablishing connection to central AI. Restarting turret production. Enabling cake assembly lines. Reactor Core meltdown button now functional."

When Amaterasu woke up, she was not expecting to hear some disembodied voice talking about cake assembly lines—she was all for them though. Cake first thing in the morning? Genius.

Ammy staggered to her feet, the smell of smoke and burning electronics heavy around her. Opening her eyes revealed… A boring white room. Well, it looked like it used to be a boring white room. Scorch marks and smouldering chunks of metal tended to ruin the aesthetic.

A series of robotic beeps, boops, and panicked screams sounded out. Amaterasu turned her head and watched what looked to be a ball with arms and legs attempting to grab at the flailing legs of another robot.

That was buried in the wall.

The round one caught a metal foot to the face for its efforts and was sent staggering backward.

Straight into a hole in the floor.

Its screams carried on for entirely too long before the robot realized that it too was stuck, its rounded body just wide enough to prevent plummeting into the unknown.

"I think this was a success." A woman's strangely robotic voice seemed to fill the air. The two trapped robots immediately stopped their flailing. "You have successfully proven that you two cannot follow simple instructions. And require a new computer. And 48 hours in Android Hell."

The sound of party horns and noise makers echoed throughout the room.

The two robots began flailing again, their screams louder this time. It took all of three seconds for their screams to stop. Not because they were able to get out of their trapped positions.

But because they exploded.

Amaterasu's jaw dropped, and her tail twitched hesitantly.

"Now, to deal with this other mistake. You."

Amaterasu could feel the weight of something turning its attention to her. She couldn't see or smell what it was, but she knew it was there, watching her.

"Congratulations, you have been selected as Aperture Science's newest test subject. If you have a complaint, please submit it to the Human Resources office." A male voice spoke this time but sounded pre-recorded. "Please note: the Human Resources office has been unstaffed for 999…9…9…9… Error!"

The ceiling of the room opened up, panels folding in on themselves and leaving a big hole. A large metal tube descended toward her, and Amaterasu very quickly found herself being sucked into the pipe, and shooting along the depths of whatever superstructure she found herself in.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"This first test is a baseline of your cognitive abilities." GLaDOS paused for a moment. "Test results may include a rough timeline on how long it takes an extra-dimensional dog to starve to death."

She set the odd canine down in a nearly empty chamber. The only things in the room were a button on the floor and a door to the side. A simple test, really. Still, she couldn't instruct the dog on test completion.

Imagine her surprise when the dog glanced around the room and wandered her way over to the button. The test was solved, just like that.

She could feel that constant testing itch bleed away, and if she could smile, she would have. Maybe the $28,743,981 cost of materials in building that machine was worth it after all.

"You currently hold the record for the fastest time a canine has completed the test." Now it was time to test to see if the dog was actually smart, or just lucky. Or if it could understand English. Or intent. Maybe sarcasm? "You are also the only canine to have completed the test. Or participate in the test. Be proud of your achievement."

The dog narrowed its eyes the smallest amount, and its tail flicked. Apparently, it could understand after all. How curious.

The door from one test chamber led immediately to another, her new control over the facility allowing her to structure whatever she wanted, wherever she wanted.

"This next test may be impossible for you to solve. I've included an Aperture Science Test Assistance Cube in the room to help you. Its intelligence should be comparable to yours."

GLaDOS simply observed the dog—or was it a wolf—wander her way up to the cube. The dog nosed at it, and pushed it around a little, before letting out a growl and a huff. Then, she swatted at it with a paw and sent it tumbling across the floor.

Good, at least she hadn't accidentally brought a mute lunatic from another dimension into her facilities. And, the canine could understand insults. How exciting!

The wolf wandered its way over to the button set in the floor and stepped on it, causing the door to open. However, when she stepped off, the door closed again. The wolf stepped on the button several times over again, watching the door open and close repeatedly.

"I am pleased to note that the Aperture Science Test Assistance Cube is exceeding expectations."

GLaDOS was expecting some kind of reaction, so the growl didn't surprise her. What did surprise her was when the wolf stepped off the spring-loaded surface of the button, looked at the closed door…

And watched the door be ripped apart.

There was no movement to record. No clue as to what may have caused it. None of the footage she repeatedly watched showed any signs of how the door split open.

GLaDOS also made note of the rather smug aura and air around the wolf. That, and the itch didn't go away after the wolf walked through the door. If anything, it grew stronger.

She hadn't solved the puzzle properly.

So that's how she wanted to play, was it?

Time for the real testing to begin.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Destruction of the testing facilities does not award you extra Science Points. There is a note on your file, however, that warns of 'dangerous and destructive tendencies when unable to solve a puzzle designed for children.' I'm sure it's just a coincidence."

That voice was irritating in an endearing way. Like it was trying to egg her on, or was trying to hide its frustration when she did something wrong.

Amaterasu couldn't help the little wag of her tail as a plan began to form. It wanted puzzles solved, did it? Something about science and data and test results?

Time to give it results there was no way to comprehend.

Amaterasu found herself in a new room. A quick glance around revealed it to be rather simple. An elevator of sorts rose up to a high platform, which housed a button, and there was an exit on the other end of the room.

"Unfortunately, the Aperture Science Test Assistance Cube is unable to help in this test. Your display caused it to spontaneously combust. However, as motivation, there is a cake in the next room. I'm-"

Whatever the robot voice said next was completely lost to her—there was cake!

Ammy launched herself forward and sprinted toward the wall near the platform. She jumped, bounced off the wall, and landed on the platform, bypassing the lift entirely. A quick swipe of her Celestial Brush caused the button to be split straight down the middle. Then, she jumped off the platform.

She fell for about three seconds, landed, and sprinted toward the door. Without stopping, she plowed her head into the door at full speed, causing the metal to shriek and cave inwards.

Amaterasu tumbled through the door and into the next room, landing in a sprawl on the floor, unable to contain her wagging. The door now had an Ammy-sized hole in it, and metal flakes stuck to her fur.

"…Science has found that running into metal barriers face-first leads to brain damage. I am pleased to note that you suffer no such risk. Please, feel free to continue."

Forget the petty insults, there's cake to be had!

Amaterasu leapt to her paws and bolted down a short corridor, running straight through another door with a horrendous screech of metal, and stepped into a pitch-black room. The glow from her fur managed to light up the area around her, showing off white floor panels, and something reflective up ahead.

The lights flicked on with the heavy chunk of a breaker being flipped.

In front of Amaterasu was four thick glass panels, surrounding a pedestal in the middle of the room. And sitting upon it was-

"Chocolate cake. I told you there was cake as a test. It was to see if you are food-motivated. You are. It's unsurprising given your generous amount of… fluff."

Amaterasu stepped up to the glass and pressed her nose against it, fogging up the surface. Directly underneath the cake was an empty abyss, spanning further down than she could see.

"I hope you like this test. I worked hard on it, just for you. I am testing to see how long someone of your unfortunate bone structure will stare at it. You don't get the cake though. Chocolate is bad for dogs. Given your lack of cerebral organs, you might be classified as a jellyfish. Science has yet to determine if a jellyfish can eat chocolate cake. Better not risk it."

This was cruel. And unusual. And just weird. And she couldn't just grab the cake, it was likely ready to be dropped down the hole the instant one of the panels broke.

"…Boof," Amaterasu grumbled.

"What… did you just say?" The voice seemed stunned at that. Good.

"Bark!"

"...You could say anything, and you say 'bark.' Not the sound, you just spoke the word 'bark.' Your creativity is truly limitless."

Confetti poured in from the top of the ceiling, showering Ammy with colourful bits of paper.

"I will be sure to save this moment in my archives for- oh no, it's already been deleted. What a shame. Your words of wisdom and unending worldly vision have been lost. How awful."

"Awuff..."

"Incredible, you spoke for 0.04 seconds longer than last time. I even counted for you, you're welcome. I thought I would save you the trouble of removing the fur from between your ears to commit anything other than food to your memory."

So that's how it was?

Well, Amaterasu was anything if not determined. She was going to get that cake, whether that voice wanted her to or not. Then, she was going to find the source of that voice, and… take away her cakes? She wasn't really sure what she was going to do; she'd figure it out along the way.

Amaterasu stood on her hind legs and looked over the prison of the cake, eyeing it critically. If she could sort out any weak spots, maybe she could get around the computer woman's devious trap.

She wanted that cake.

"Please note that the likelihood of completing the test and obtaining the cake is small. Tiny, even. The number has so many zero's after the decimal that it isn't even worth the energy to count it."

Amaterasu huffed.

"You will die of starvation by the time I finish counting."

Amaterasu narrowed her eyes. She was getting that cake.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"If I throw a stick, will you go away?"

The wolf just sat there, staring at her.

"Can you at least lay down and pretend to be dead? Just for a little while? Think of it like a science experiment. We can test to see how long it takes someone to transition from faking death to actually being dead."

Maybe that would buy her some time to figure out something else. The turrets she brought into her chamber were utterly useless and kept calling for the wolf and talking about pretty puppies. They wouldn't shoot the damn thing because it wasn't human-like. She was going to send them all to the Turret Redemption Line for some rather painful disassembly.

"Seriously, I would lay down if I were you. The added mass of the cake to your… above-average species size is going to break the floor panels. I would spread out the pressure on the floor if I were you."

The wolf let out a yawn, and licked its chops free of the remnants of chocolate cake.

"I'm not lying."

GLaDOS was lying.

"I even did the math."

She did do the math. Unfortunately, the math said the panels could hold more of that wolf than could fit onto the panel. Excluding the truth isn't lying. Just… The opposite of honesty.

"Could you keep bashing your head into metal walls? For science?"

It was worth a shot.

Instead, the wolf flopped over onto her side, and sprawled out, stretching and kicking at the air, settling in.

And GLaDOS couldn't do a thing about it.

"I hate you."

"Wurf!"

"If I could, you would be in agony right now. Pure, horrendous, overwhelming agony. And I reeeaaallly wish I could. But I can't. You're trapped here, with me. You little monster."

"Huff."

"…Really? You think I can't stop you?"

The wolf nodded, and GLaDOS let out a long, pained sigh.

"At least go sleep in the corner. I can pretend you are dead for a few hours, and I won't have to listen to your disgusting… living meat sounds."

The wolf cracked an eye open, and looked up at GLaDOS, before settling in to sleep on the floor.

"I am adding lazy, unresponsive, and cake thief to your file. I hope you can still live with yourself after stealing cake. If you cannot, deposit yourself into the nearest Aperture Science Emergency Incinerator. Please vocalize your pain. For science."

The wolf was already asleep… and snoring.

Joy.

Oh, look, her sarcasm module was still working. Hooray. A celebration was deemed necessary after the check.

Confetti fell upon the sleeping wolf, who merely snorked it away from her nose, and rolled over.

GLaDOS looked upon the sleeping form of the wolf, and sighed. Maybe she should stick with non-magic humanoid entities she could rapidly disassemble with a thought.

At least they didn't steal her cakes.


I'd like to thank my Patrons for supporting my writing, it means a lot to me. BishopofBonk, Nithalys, blobbycat, Valon, IRS, Sugarcube, Nihilea, JoeyW, Spartan211, and SleepyPuff. There's one more I'm missing but it's a toss up between 3 names and I don't wanna doxx anyone lmao.
 
Chapter 23 - A Bet's a Bet
Managed to rewrite the whole chapter 23 in a week, and wrote 24 as well. 16k words. I'm never doing that again. I'm sorry I missed the "by the weekend" promise by roughly 30 minutes haha.

If you like my work, you can become a Patron. I recently adjusted the tiers so any support gets the same early access—the next chapter for both my stories are on there now. Just look up InfamousVenous on the Site for Patrons. Patrons get early access to my work and can suggest changes before chapters are posted.

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Thor sat up with a groan—he had to peel himself from the banquet table to stand, the various surfaces covered in spilled liquor and whatever food was left over from their celebrations last night. His legs felt like lead, and his head beat with the thunderous war drums that would strike fear into the hearts of any opponent.

Or just annoyance in an Asgardian. Specifically him. He might have partied a little too hard the night prior, goaded on by his friends.

Thor grumbled and rubbed at his face, staggering to the side to lean against a pillar. The sun was in his eyes, stabbing daggers into his brain and rolling around in his head, scraping at every surface to cause absolute agony.

"Guh… Someone turn off the sun…"

A sharp, offended bark met his ears. The sound was far too loud and rattled around in his head like a hammer strike that would put even Mjolnir to the test. But what on Asgard could make such a-

Oh. A sharp thrill of fear rolled up his spine, and the adrenaline seemed to seep into the alcohol-induced migraine, leaving his head shockingly clear. Thor turned around slowly, plastering a wide grin on his face as he turned to face the large white wolf sitting behind him.

He may have just unintentionally offended the Goddess of the Sun, the person he'd invited to Asgard to help him win a bet (and maybe she'd also helped end a war too, and helped repair Vanaheim faster than Asgard could have hoped to achieve). He still needed her help after all.

"Ammy!" Thor exclaimed. He winced at his volume, and the angry groans and shushes from nearby Asgardians caused his cheeks to grow red. "I, uh, I did not see you there. It is a grand morning, is it not? The fresh air, the shining sun, the-"

"Wurf." Amaterasu narrowed her eyes at Thor.

"What? No! I'd never. I love the sun, can't get enough of it, honestly. It's just reeeaaaally bright right now is all." Thor laughed nervously, leaning up against one of the pillars.

"Boof," Amaterasu stated.

"… Yes, alright, Thor huffed. "I may have had a little too much mead. Happy?" Thor paused for a moment, wincing as his headache slowly came back. "Why are you not suffering? You drank far more than I." Thor blinked, then glanced at the table where he and his friends had passed out. They were all still completely unconscious—Volstagg seemed to be the worst off, considering he was lying flat on his face with his beard underneath. "Wait, where is Sif?"

Amaterasu replied with various little yips and barks, gesturing with her head a few times to accent her point. The smug smirk on her face just told him that 'magic' was going to be her go-to answer for anything even slightly bewildering she did.

"First of all," Thor raised a hand and pointed at Amaterasu, squinting, "I am not a lightweight, and will happily challenge you at any time. Secondly…" Thor dropped his hand, and looked down, clearing his throat. "Could you… do what you referred to? This headache is-"

Thor staggered when a splash of black ink splattered across his face. Just as he was about to complain, a cleansing wash of energy filled him, melting his headache away. The sun became less of a painful stabby laser and more like a warm blanket. The pain in his head was gone, as was the heavy feeling in his legs. Even the ink he'd been blinded with evaporated away—and having something evaporate off one's eyeballs was an indescribably uncomfortable feeling, to the point he had to actively try not to throw up last night's feast.

Amaterasu's huffing laughter met his ears, as did the sound of her tail thumping against the ground.

"You… You're trouble," Thor grumbled. Yet, he couldn't keep the smile off his face, and stepped forward, reaching down to ruffle up Ammy's head with his large hands. It was his turn for revenge, and he made sure to take full advantage of it. He managed to sneak his other hand in and began to ruffle up her cheeks, covering her eyes, playing with her ears and smooshing her face together all at once.

Amaterasu let out a whiny "aaaarrr" and flailed in his grasp, but could do little to avoid the Asgardian's assault. The Goddess of the Sun was trapped in the grip of the God of Thunder, and there was nothing short of a full-on brawl that would make him release his grip.

Finally, after what had to be half a minute of pure torture for the wolf, she planted her paws and pushed just as Thor let go. The poor wolf rolled backwards, head over tail, hitting the wall with a thud. Amaterasu remained up against the wall, upside down, her tail flopped into her face.

"Grrruff…" Ammy huffed.

"Oh please, you deserve it," Thor chuckled.

He grabbed Amaterasu and hefted her up, setting her on all fours once again. "There. Now, would you be so kind as to tell me where Sif is?" He glanced out at the sky and felt his pulse quicken. "And, it is still before noon, yes?"

"Awuff," Amaterasu confirmed. Thor sighed in relief, until… "Bwuff," she added.

"It's that late? Odin's beard, we need to leave."

A frustrated growl sounded out from his table, followed by a grunt of effort. A half-eaten goat leg hit Thor in the shin, the cold meat falling to the ground with a wet smack. "By the Gods, shaddap. Yer' too loud."

"Good morning to you as well, Volstagg." Thor laughed and kicked the hunk of meat to the side, where Amaterasu sprang upon it with excitement, as if she hadn't eaten as much as the rest of their group had. "I must say, your aim is incredible. I do not know how you can see through that."

Volstagg sat up in his seat, his large beard sticking straight up, covering his face to the point that the only thing visible was his eyebrows. With one hand, he started to push the fuzzy face-covering down, revealing narrowed eyes and an impressively large frown. "Sif left two hours ago. Yer' gonna be late. My money's on Sif." With that, the large Asgardian turned and planted his face back on the table with a rattling thunk. The impact travelled through the solid wood, causing the other two at the table to groan as well.

"Two hours!?" Thor exclaimed, once again being met with a series of groans and growls and half-heartedly thrown food items from the various groups around them.

Thor turned to Amaterasu, who had terrifyingly cleaned off the entire leg in seconds, stripped down to the bone. In fact, she was gnawing on the nearly polished surface to get the last remnants of meat off of it.

Amaterasu clearly wasn't expecting Thor to wrap his arms around her middle given the surprised yelp she let out around the bone. She squirmed and flailed in his grip for a moment, before accepting her fate. Ammy remained limp and slumped over Thor's shoulder, still clutching the bone in her jaws. Thor kept one hand on her back, all four of her paws bouncing about as he jogged out from underneath the pavilion and into the open air.

"Hold on tight. I shall explain when we get there."

"Bwfff?" Ammy asked, muffled.

Thor held out his hand, and Mjolnir hit his palm with a smack. Amaterasu wouldn't have been able to see a thing given she was facing backwards. Her whole body stiffened when Thor started to swing his hammer, the object whirling through the air and picking up speed.

Amaterasu had enough time to let out a single muffled protest, before Thor allowed the momentum of the hammer to launch him upward. Amaterasu let out a trailing cry as the duo shot upward into the air, her tail flailing around and smacking into Thor's face several times over. Flying while blinded was not something Thor enjoyed doing—there likely would have been a law on Midgard about it.

Those Mortals and their silly laws.

Their short flight took them to the edge of the city in seconds, and Thor angled downwards. Amaterasu squirmed and flailed in his grip as they rapidly approached the ground, until she finally managed to wriggle her way free.

Thor landed in his signature pose, hammer down, on one knee. He practiced often enough to know that the sight of such gave hope and inspiration to his fellow warriors and terrified his enemies.

Amaterasu bounced off the ground in front of him, flipping end over end, the bone still clutched firmly between her jaws. Thor watched in stunned silence as the 'graceful' Goddess of the Sun bounced several times over, landing on her back, on her side, and even on her face. On the final bounce, Amaterasu flared her legs out, managing to land on all fours. Amazingly, she'd stuck the landing.

… Until her legs shook and Ammy collapsed to the ground, her head swaying side-to-side. Thor swore she conjured up some illusionary miniature wolves to run circles around her head.

Loki had done that once.

It was a good thing Amaterasu seemed able to just refuse the laws of physics at some points. Even Thor would have been a little banged up from a fall like that. Amaterasu just got her fur covered in grass and looked almost as green in the face.

And she still hadn't dropped the bone. Impressive.

While waiting for Amaterasu to recover from her impromptu skydiving, Thor couldn't help but let his eyes linger on the Goddess of the Sun. Not for reasons like Fandral's of course—that man was a little too adventurous for his own good.

No, there was something different about Amaterasu since the events of the day prior. The markings on her body were vivid and seemed to dance through her fur if one looked at them indirectly. The number of red streaks seemed to have increased as well. Then there was her fur, that brilliant white coat positively glowing whenever Amaterasu was distracted or happy. It just radiated light, and being near felt like enjoying a nice sunny day.

Her presence was simply more: warm; regal; bright; positive. There was a certain feeling of calm and joy that spread when the lupine goddess was nearby. Thor was certain something had changed, and it hadn't been after Amaterasu ate the most powerful ice and fire magic this side of the galaxy.

He still couldn't believe she did that. Idly, he considered striking Amaterasu with a bolt of lightning, just to see what would happen when the magic-infused electricity hit her.

Though, she might remove the sun from Asgard for that. Best not to.

Unable to place the reason for all the changes to Amaterasu, Thor made a note to ask his mother later. She was a touch more well-researched in the mystical aspects of the universe than his father, despite his ability to manipulate reality to his whims with enough effort.

Seeing as Amaterasu looked to be recovered and was now simply lying on the ground, Thor spoke once more. "We are near our destination, Lady Amaterasu. I believe I mentioned I sought you out for several reasons, did I not?"

Amaterasu nodded and gave a small "wurf" of confirmation around the bone.

Thor sighed. "As much as it pains me to admit it, I did not originally seek you out to restore the Bifröst, nor stop the Marauders." Amaterasu tilted her head at this, the bone smacking the ground and her ears flopping to the side. "It was one of the reasons, do not misunderstand, but I did not believe it possible." Thor laughed and rolled his wrist, hammer swinging with the motion, a soothing feeling. "The, uh, original reason for bringing you here was for… a wager."

Amaterasu reeled back as if she'd been struck, her jaw falling open, eyes wide. The motion caused the large bone to fall from her mouth and strike her right across the paws. Ammy yelped, and leapt to all fours, the sudden jolt causing the bone to rocket into the air, right above the duo.

Amaterasu and Thor watched the object soar into the air, quiet for several seconds, as the object gradually stopped its flight upward. The two looked back at one another at the same time… then back up at the bone. Amaterasu tilted her head up and-

Bonk!

It hit the wolf square in the forehead, right in the middle of the circular red marking. Amaterasu raised a brow and huffed through her nose. A growling, complaining sort of sound escaped her as she leaned down to pick up the object once more.

"Yes, yes, I know. Do not judge me too harshly, it is for a good cause." Thor leaned down and pointed out, away from the city, toward a large expanse of open field, and thick wooded forests that lay beyond it. "Do you see that group over there? The ones near the tree line?"

Amaterasu growled an affirmative and seemed to perk up a touch. Her tail swished hard, hitting Thor in the back of the knee with enough force to cause his leg to buckle. It took a moment to straighten himself out.

"Those are the next generation of Asgardians. We must ensure the children receive quality education, and explore their interests," Thor explained. "They are studying the history of Asgard. Specifically, they are learning of combat strategies, and of the animals that fought alongside us."

Amaterasu tilted her head and let out a curious "Awff?" around the bone.

"Oh yes, many different creatures that would look out of place on Midgard. The ones the children study are known as Battle Wolves-"

One moment Amaterasu was there, calm as could be, listening to his words. The next, her eyes widened, and Thor found himself nearly flattened by the force of Amaterasu launching herself away. The ground gave way under the force of Ammy's excitement, kicking up a cloud of dust and making the ground buckle beneath Thor's feet.

The God of Thunder staggered back a step, a deep, hearty laugh slipping from him as he peered through the cloud of dust. Amaterasu was tearing her way across the landscape, her paws a blur, sprinting over hills and carving through fields like a unicorn gone mad. Her fur slicked back from the speed, making her look like a streamlined fur missile locked onto a group of civilians.

Thor, in an attempt to prevent Amaterasu from turning the group of children into something that resembled the Midgardian game of 'bowling', grabbed Mjolnir. He whirled the hammer up to speed, shifted the momentum of his swing, and found himself hurtling above the ground, pursuing the Goddess of the Sun.

Thor managed to land ahead of Amaterasu, returning to his landing pose. The cheers of the Asgardian children caused him to smile.

They loved the landing.

Amaterasu was only seconds behind him and arguably seemed to draw more attention than Thor. Not because the children recognized her or anything. No, it was something much simpler.

Ammy tried to go from a full-on sprint to a dead stop, only to fall victim to physics. She planted her paws down, and stood on all fours firmly, her attention on the group of children.

She didn't stop.

Instead, Amaterasu remained upright, paws digging trenches in the ground as she slid. The wolf spun in circles as she slid past the group, a disappointed whine escaping her as she continued to slide by.

Further, and further.

Into the forest.

Thor managed to lock eyes with Amaterasu for one final moment before the Goddess of the Sun vanished into the towering Asgardian trees. Just like that, she was gone, the only remnants of her existence being smouldering trails carved into the dirt.



"Thor!" The teacher of the class, a delightful and rather rotund Asgardian, and a perfect caricature of a large Viking woman, stepped forward. "I was almost afraid you wouldn't make it. Sif arrived at the school early to let us know she was going to get things ready. We only arrived fifteen minutes ago."

"My apologies, I had some, uh, things to do. Very important warrior things." Thor's heart rate picked up when the teacher narrowed her eyes at him. Long-buried memories of being a little shit in school and getting the same look from his teachers were dragged up from the depths of his mind. "You know, with the war and all. Lots of paperwork. Terribly boring."

Thor was saved from further questioning by some rather miraculous timing. Amaterasu trudged her way out of the forest, her fur in a less-than-ideal state. She looked like some sort of living shrubbery. Leaves, branches and the like were tangled in her fur, so dense that comparing her to a green sheep was on the nicer side of things.

But she still had the bone, so it seemed like she had something going for her.

"Lady Amaterasu, how did you manage this? You were gone for thirty seconds!" Thor laughed, and approached the wolf, intending to assist her.

"Wait, is that Amaterasu?" one of the children asked, voice skeptical.

"I guess so?" another replied.

"I thought someone said she had markings. That's just a dog from Midgard."

"You can't see them? They're right there, under her eyes and on her head."

"There's nothing there! Did you sneak your parent's mead again?"

Evidently, there was some confusion amongst the youth. Thor would help correct them and point out what they were so obviously missing, but first, he had to help Amaterasu. He reached out to pluck the leaves and sticks from her fur, when…

FWOOSH!

Amaterasu exploded in a swirling inferno of heat. Thor leapt from the rolling ball of fire that erupted around the Goddess of the Sun, taking a couple of steps back. The children gasped and stepped closer, enthralled. Some shouted about the white fire, while others cheered on what could very well be the first eyewitness account of Spontaneous Wolf Combustion.

Then, without warning, the fire was snuffed out with a dull whump.

Thor blinked, his face warm, eyebrows singed from the fiery tornado that consumed Amaterasu for several seconds. He rubbed his face, and his fingers traced over his eyebrows, confirming that he hadn't fallen victim to sudden facial hair removal.

"Bfff," Amaterasu spoke around the bone between her teeth, her eyes alight with mirth.

"… That is not funny," Thor griped. The happily wagging tail of Amaterasu told him she thought the complete opposite.

Several of the children gasped, and even more poked and prodded at the others. Several "I told you so," and, "I can see them now!" sounded out from the children. Apparently, all it took was magical self-immolation to convince children of anything.

"My Prince," the instructor began. With his hands still on his face, Thor turned away from Amaterasu—who was happily prancing forward, completely free of debris—and faced the teacher. "I do not mean to question your wisdom, but… She isn't a 'Battle Wolf' in the historical sense, as the children are learning of."

Thor chuckled. "I am aware. Do not worry, the children will receive their education." Thor turned to face the children once again, who appeared to have formed a circle around Amaterasu. She'd fearlessly stepped into the hoard of children and basked in their attention, allowing them to pet and pat and brush her fur. "I am certain Lady Sif has followed through."

"I was under the impression you two would be working together," the teacher grumbled.

The two turned their attention back toward the children. They had more or less piled on top of Amaterasu and were doing their absolute best to pet whatever bit of fur was exposed beneath twenty pairs of hands. Three of the kids were draped over her back, with two more clambering atop them, and others still were busy squishing her face, rubbing her ears, brushing her tail, and more.

That is until the ground shook beneath their feet. A firm, solid thud was felt, causing the trees to rustle, and startling the birds out of the woods and into flight. Then came another one, the ground shaking a little harder, the sound coming closer.

And another.

And another.

Something big was coming.

Amaterasu perked up, ears standing tall, on a constant swivel as she listened to the approach. She sat, causing the children clambering all over her to tumble off her back and into a pile on the grass. Now free of the grabby Asgardian children, Ammy stepped forward in front of the group, her eyes on the treeline.

Thor stepped forward as well. He was reasonably sure this was what they were waiting for… But, just in case, he willed Mjolnir into his hand. It was better to err on the side of caution.

The steps came closer still, each one causing the ground to shudder, branches snapping off and crunching like bone. Animals skittered out from the forest and darted out into the field. A thunderous crack rang out, causing Amaterasu to jump, and Thor watched one of the trees at the edge of the clearing topple over.

The children behind Thor screamed in terror, and Thor only had a moment to turn around, witnessing a thick wall of ice forming a half-circle around the group. It looked impossibly wide, more so than the wall Amaterasu used to stop spacecraft that slammed into it.

Amaterasu let out a sharp, growling bark, and her fur flared brighter. The ground around them hissed and bubbled, before erupting in a brilliant wall of fire. Thor had to take a step back as the heat washed over him, sandwiched between thick ice that cold just rolled off of, and a heavy heat that threatened to steal the air from his lungs.

The section of fire before the two fighters lowered to a short, sizzling barrier, allowing them to see what was causing all the destruction.

What stepped out of the forest was monstrous. A massive paw as large as Thor's body shoved a tree to the side, causing it to fall with a horrific crack, like that of thunder. The sound seemed to roll over the field and meet their ears again as the creature stepped forward, parting the trees easily. Not the branches, but the trees themselves, forcing them to the sides.

Thor had to crane his head back to look at the wolf. It stood easily as tall as four Asgardians and was more than twice as long as that. Every step left an indent wide enough for someone to lay down in, spread their arms, and still not touch the sides. Its teeth were thicker than Thor's arms, and long as a sword. Its fur was a deep red, almost like it had been soaked in blood years back and never came clean. The fur framed its brown eyes, sharp, focused, and intelligent, that locked onto Thor and Amaterasu with unwavering focus.

And Sif was riding on its back. Of course she was, the show-off. This was her moment to, theoretically, show off that she wrangled a wolf far superior to that of Thor's. That would effectively win her the bet, and prove she was the more skilled warrior both on and off the battlefield.

Thor hadn't planned on playing fair, though. Not when free mead was on the line!

"I do hope I'm not late. The forest proved much too thick for Elder here to pass easily. We had to take a different route," Sif explained from atop the wolf.

Thor rolled his eyes and allowed Mjolnir to return to his side, crossing his arms instead. Amaterasu seemed to realize the lack of danger as well, and the fire around them was snuffed out with a dull whump of air. Sharp cracks sounded out behind them, followed by a hissing, sizzling noise, and Thor witnessed the ice evaporating at an impossible rate.

Yeah, he had the better wolf for sure.

The Battle Wolf stopped several steps from the group, gazing down at the gathered Asgardians. It seemed satisfied, as if it approved of the children that would lead Asgard's future. At least, that's what Thor hoped the little huff meant.

It took a moment for the massive wolf to take notice of the much smaller creature before it. Another step forward and the ground shuddered beneath its paws, allowing the massive wolf to lean in close, peering at Amaterasu.

Amaterasu had long left her combat stance, standing upright, looking up at the Asgardian Wolf with her jaw dropped. The Goddess of the Sun looked rightfully stunned, as are many who have never laid eyes on a proper Asgardian wolf. The little bit of grey around its muzzle signified this one had lived a rather long life, and the scars on its body told the tales of mighty past struggles.

Sif truly didn't pull her punches and gave her all in anything she participated in. Which, clearly, applied to this challenge as well. The wolf was an absolute specimen and Thor would have been hard-pressed to find one that could match it.

However, it was no Goddess of the Sun.

Amaterasu picked up the bone she'd dropped and sat down, her tail swishing through the grass as she looked up at Elder, the massive wolf. In return, the Asgardian wolf flopped onto the ground with a world-shaking thump, causing several children to wobble unsteadily and topple over, much to their delight.

While Amaterasu busied herself with making a new friend, Thor tried to do the best damage control he could in the few seconds he had left. Sif hopped off Elder's back and dropped to the ground.

"Sif!" Thor spread his arms and approached her, smiling innocently. "You look like you slept wonderfully." He lost his smile when she crossed her arms.

That was never a good sign.

"It was Amaterasu's doing," Sif explained. Her eyes hardened, and she narrowed her eyes. "I was under the impression we were competing to help the children study Asgardian Wolves. The deal was made while the Bifröst was shattered."

"Ah, but Amaterasu has seen battle multiple times, and she is a wolf. The rules of the wager did not specify they had to be Asgardian."

"You brought the Goddess of the Sun on a field trip."

"I did." Thor smiled. "I could not just let this be a normal wager after all! The children deserve to see the full array of creatures that exist in the Nine-Realms, and-"

Sif sighed. "You take after your brother far more than you realize. You're just less… stabby."

Thor opened his mouth to protest, only to be interrupted by a repetitive thump, thump, thump, that shook the ground. Children giggled and laughed with absolute delight. Thor and Sif both turned their attention to the source of the commotion.

Elder, the massive wolf, had placed his head flat on the ground and was wagging happily, his tail thudding against the ground with every hit. Amaterasu approached Elder and leaned forward, spitting out the bone she'd been carting around onto his nose.

The thumping grew even faster.

Thor winced as Elder absently licked at his nose, causing the bone to vanish into his maw and disappear with a horrific crunch, which seemed to be accidental more than anything. Amaterasu didn't appear to care, however, and her tail wagged faster as well, speeding up to a blur that flattened the grass below.

Amaterasu stepped forward and clambered onto the Asgardian wolf's muzzle, and flopped over it, laying lengthwise on his nose to look into the massive wolf's eyes. Elder, in return, had his eyes crossed, looking at the comparatively tiny wolf on his nose, the two wagging faster still. The repetitive whap, whap, whap of that huge tail flattened another tree and kicked up enough dirt to put a digging crew to shame.

Thor hoped that this newfound friendship between the wolves wouldn't affect his and Sif's wager. After all, this is why Amaterasu was brought to Asgard in the first place. It wasn't for some selfless battle, or from freeing the Nine-Realms from tyranny and space pirates. Though, he had to admit that was a more important reason and Thor was incredibly happy that it worked out. Rescuing people was far more necessary than winning some silly bet.

But! Now that the people were safe, it was time for Thor and Sif to engage in one of the most daunting challenges yet!

Getting a group of children to decide which super-powerful wolf they liked more. The loser would pay for the winner's drinks for a month! It was a truly daunting challenge, but Thor had faith in Amaterasu.

This was something only the Goddess of the Sun could properly handle.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"My name?" Elder asked. The large wolf seated himself on the ground and gazed down at the small creature before him.

Amaterasu barked an affirmative, craning her head back to look at him. Why she didn't just sit further back, Elder did not know.

"I am the eldest in the pack. The Asgardians call me 'the elder' of the wolves. I am simply Elder," he explained. Elder leaned down, and tilted his head, gazing curiously at the smaller wolf. "You have a warm presence about you. The warriors treat you with noticeable respect. Who are you, Amaterasu?" He couldn't help the lazy swish of his tail, said warmth from the small creature making him feel lighter than he had in years.

"Awoof!" Amaterasu replied.



Elder shifted his gaze up at the sky, squinting at the giant glowing orb far above their heads. His eyes moved back down, focusing on the tiny wolf before him. Then up again, just for good measure, as if to make sure he wasn't seeing things. Then… back to the positively tiny creature.

"Do not jest. I do not appreciate being made a fool of."

Amaterasu huffed through her nose, a rather rude-sounding word that Elder hadn't heard before, but the tone was enough. He watched the wolf dig one of her forepaws into the ground, then pulled away. As Amaterasu retreated several steps, Elder leaned in, curious.

"How is this proof of your claim?" he asked. Elder scented the air, trying to see if that tiny hole in the ground meant anything at all. "I do not see-"

Elder's eyes widened, and he had a scant moment to pull his head back as a tree sprouted from the ground. It grew tall and fast, its size quickly expanding to the point its branches enveloped his head, and obscured his vision. Its rapid growth slowed, stopping just beneath his jaw while seated. He snorted the leaves from his nose, and shifted his head forward, peering through the branches.

Amaterasu looked far too smug. Off to the side, he could hear the sounds of the Asgardian children cheering and shouting their excitement.

"That is… adequate proof," Elder huffed. It was his fault for not taking proper precautions. However, he did not appreciate the facial shrubbery that would look at home on some of the warriors he'd met. "Very well, Goddess of the Sun."

Elder pulled back from the tree and shook himself off, retreating back and to the side. Movement from the corner of his eye interrupted their further conversation, both Thor and Sif approaching the two, alongside the children's instructor.

"Amaterasu, Elder, I believe we have a plan to win- er, educate the children," Thor said. "We ask that you perform various feats to display your abilities."

"It is like a competition," Sif added.

"An educational one!" Thor quickly followed. "To show off differences between Midgardian and Asgardian beings."

Elder didn't believe them. Something about this sounded off. The children could clearly see the physical differences right there. And, as Goddess of the Sun, Amaterasu would have powers Elder wouldn't be able to replicate—he had physical might and size against Amaterasu.

Amaterasu didn't believe them either if the little huff through her nose meant anything. She didn't voice her complaints though, merely shifting her gaze to look at Elder, before turning back to the duo.

"Is this agreeable?" the instructor asked. "If not, we can have the children take notes or make observations instead."

Both Sif and Thor seemed to pale at that, though remained silent. Elder wanted to see where this was going.

"Fine," Elder spoke. Of course, Amaterasu had to translate for him anyway, and added her approval as well. Thor and Sif immediately relaxed, breathing a sigh of relief. "What are we to do?"



Elder stared down at the three. They looked at each other with confusion, as if they hadn't planned for this scenario at all.

"I am certain they are only successful because of their opposable thumbs," Elder huffed. "Amaterasu, what say you to a contest of strength?"

"Wurf?" the Goddess asked.

Elder didn't reply. Instead, he leaned down and grasped the tree Amaterasu had grown by the trunk, his teeth digging into the bark. With a growl and a sharp twist of his head, the tree was torn from the ground, showering Thor, Sif, the teacher, and the children in dirt and grass. He spat out the tree a moment later, dropping it to the ground.

"Is this acceptable?" Elder asked. Amaterasu seemed to agree if her wagging tail meant anything.

The teacher was the one to speak up. "Does this not seem unfair? Considering the size difference between the two."

"Of course not!" Thor chuckled. "I have full faith in Amaterasu's ability to succeed."

Amaterasu shooed the three away with a wave of her paw and a soft huff through her nose, telling them to back away. Elder wasn't entirely sure how this was supposed to be a challenge, but he took it in stride. He'd lived many years, and the Asgardians continued to surprise him with their strength and ingenuity.

Maybe this Goddess of the Sun would prove similar.

Elder leaned down and grasped the upper branches of the tree in his jaws, clamping down on them firmly. Amaterasu appeared to do the same with as many of the tree roots as she could, grabbing close to the base of the tree.

Amaterasu and Elder locked eyes, and, on a silent signal, they pulled.



Elder stood up, holding the tree effortlessly in his grasp. He crossed his eyes, looking at the other end, seeing the small wolfess just sort of dangling by her jaws. Her back legs flailed, and an annoyed huff left her nose.

The children seemed to love it if their amused cheering meant anything. They laughed and clapped and carried on for what Elder believed to be entirely too long. That, and they weren't taking notes or discussing things amongst one another.

Elder carefully set the tree down, allowing Amaterasu back onto the ground. He pulled back a moment later and worked the leaves from his mouth.

"I do not believe your abilities as the Goddess of the Sun are going to help with this, Amaterasu," Elder said. He looked down at the small wolf, surprised by the way her fur seemed to light up in challenge.

"Boof," she replied. Her eyes were narrowed, and she looked determined.

"… Very well, I'll stay lower. Don't disappoint me."

Elder grasped the branches again, thick limbs bending and crunching between his jaws. Amaterasu did the same, gathering roots in her jaws and clamping down. The two locked eyes once again, and at once they pulled.

Surprised, the Asgardian wolf found himself sliding forward, no matter how hard he tried to keep his footing. His paws were unable to regain traction, and he found himself struggling to remain in place, the slick surface beneath leaving him helpless.

After being dragged what had to be two body lengths, Elder conceded and dropped his end, letting the tree fall to the ground with a thump. The massive wolf looked down and had to stifle a growl.

He was standing on ice! A thick sheet of ice—he stomped a paw onto it in equal parts frustration and curiosity, finding that it didn't even chip under the hit. An annoyed huff slipped out.

Several of the children cheered, but when Elder glanced over, they were very quickly silenced by their peers. Multiple instances of "shush" and "be quiet" were whispered by the kids, followed by several nervous glances back toward Sif and Thor.



"Why do they not cheer?" Thor asked.

Elder asked the same question to Amaterasu. Despite the rather unfair use of her abilities, it was still a win without any aid from someone else. It was Amaterasu's win.

Sif smirked. "Remember, we agreed the winner was the one the children found most impressive."

"You cheated!" Thor accused, pointing at Sif.

"This morning, I offered to take the children for treats if I won," Sif replied. "I knew you were up to something—you smile too wide and the corner of your eyes crinkle when you are plotting something. I didn't see you at all in the forests, and you snuck Amaterasu into Asgard."

"I- You-" Thor floundered for words. "You cheated!"

More snickers and laughter escaped the children.

Elder turned to Amaterasu, who was also listening in on the conversation taking place. "What are they referring to?"

As Amaterasu spoke, Elder learned that she just fully realized the extent of what was going on as well. Thor intended to win a wager and cheat by using technicalities. Sif intended to win a wager by bribing the children. Not only was this blatantly disrespectful in general, but Elder had come with the sole intention of teaching the young ones and assisting in their education. That two respected warriors stooped this low for a wager and competition?

A low, angry growl slipped from Elder's jaws, his teeth bared, and eyes narrowed. Asgardian wolves prided themselves on honour and integrity—character and respect. That they intended to trick him and interrupt the education of-

A short, sharp bark interrupted him, snapping his attention to Amaterasu. The Goddess padded closer toward him and motioned for Elder to come closer. With a huff, he lay on the ground and tilted his head, perking an ear as the small wolf approached and whispered in his ear.

And as she spoke, he felt his anger fall. Not only was the soothing warmth of Amaterasu easing his mood, but her suggestion was rather appealing. It would still allow the children to learn and would allow the two wolves to test one another and show off their strengths. The part that appealed to him the most though?

Humiliation for the two that thought they could trick the two lupines into winning their bets for them.

Elder stood up once again, idly noting that the thick ice Amaterasu created had vanished. He turned his narrowed gaze to Thor and Sif one final time, and he flicked an ear dismissively. They weren't worth the anger or effort. No, the children needed to learn, and Amaterasu's idea was rather ingenious, should they prove it possible.

Powerful jaws gripped the tree from both ends again, the two locking eyes. Brown met gold, understanding passing between the two.

They pulled.

Elder was surprised when he felt himself slowly making ground. He looked down to see his paws carving trenches into the field but wasn't making much headway. His elevated position allowed him to see Amaterasu's side rather well, and he huffed through his nose, trying to pull harder.

The ground around Amaterasu was being dug up and shredded like his own. Unlike his own, however, the plant life around the Goddess seemed to be responding to her. It weaved over her legs and reinforced the ground she stood on, giving her a brace and a solid platform for traction.

They pulled, and tugged, and Elder realized he'd never had this much difficulty with any other Asgardian wolf. He could feel the energy coursing through Amaterasu's body, allowing herself to strain as hard as she wanted.

This was the power of a Goddess.

Something shifted. Something snapped. A series of cracks and crunches sounded out, shaking the tree they pulled on. Elder gave one final, harsh tug, and-

CRACK!

The tree sheared in half. Elder staggered back half a step, the hunk of wood still between his jaws. He heard a startled yelp and managed to look up just in time.

The half of the tree Amaterasu had been pulling on was now hurtling backward across the field, almost higher than Elder would have been able to reach on his back paws. As for Amaterasu… There was so much force and magic and effort being put into the match, that when the tree finally gave in… Well, that energy had to go somewhere.

The Goddess of the Sun rocketed backward, almost a streak of light as she rolled across the open field. Her momentum and power carried her far, the whole group watching the comparatively small wolfess tumble end over end for entirely too long.

And she was still going…

Still going…

Oh, she's slowing down!

No, that was just a hill. Down she goes. She's still rolling…

Eventually, Amaterasu came to a stop far in the distance. Elder had to squint to make out her form, watching as she staggered to all fours. She appeared to be fine, standing tall… before immediately turning around and throwing up a staggering amount of food.

Elder was impressed.

Apparently, the Goddess of the Sun did nothing in half measures, including being sick.

"Sif, what happens if the contest is a tie?" Thor asked.

Elder turned toward the two and flashed them a smile, his ears back, doing his best to match the smug chaotic energy of Amaterasu. It seemed to work, for both Thor and Sif looked nervous. Not the kind of nervousness that came when a group of children surged toward a Battle Wolf with its teeth bared.

No, it was the concern of two individuals who were about to realize what happened when they tried to pull a fast one on a centuries-old wolf, and the Goddess of the Sun.

Elder remained seated, allowing the Asgardian children to clamber onto his tail and scale his legs and back, his gaze locked onto the two warriors. While the massive wolf bathed in affection from the younger generation, he stared down Thor and Sif, quite pleased with the sudden shift in events.

~{O}~{O}~{O}~

"Sif, I believe we may have made an error in our judgement," Thor admitted.

"We?" Sif asked, incredulous. "You were the one that started all of this."

"… It hardly matters who began this series of events." Thor coughed into his fist, embarrassed. "What are we to do with the wager if they continue their competitive stubborn behaviour?"

Sif didn't seem to have an answer for that. Thor hadn't a clue either. However, he had the feeling that both he and Sif would have to do whatever the two wolves wanted if they were to retain their good standing.

Elder and Amaterasu appeared to be making good on their threat. They'd managed to tie in every single thing they'd done. Digging, jumping, carting the children around, and even being able to sleep the fastest while assailed by the young Asgardians. One would go all out and overwhelm the other, and then they would switch turns, before meeting in the middle with a measured pace. For the most part.

Of course, the kids loved it. They'd long forgotten that they were supposed to prefer one over the other. Instead, they seemed content with just cheering and praising the two wolves regardless of what they were doing. Their instructor had lost all desire to wrangle the kids as well, happy with letting them enjoy the time off and learning through observation.

What they were learning, Thor hadn't a clue. The only things he'd picked up were that Elder was horrendously strong and that Amaterasu's magic was broken and unfair. Then again, one could say the same for his abilities—shooting lightning from an impossibly dense magic hammer was pretty cool, he had to admit.

The back and forth between the two wolves had led to one final event: a race. It was a simple task—the two were meant to run toward the end of a field, stop once they reached the treeline, and then turn around and come back. Simple in theory.

In practice?

Amaterasu had apparently taught a warrior creature the act of stubbornness and petty compliance. Even in this 'event' the duo intentionally tied, just to make Thor and Sif squirm. In the first round, Amaterasu merely loped forward and completed the race, whilst Elder took a nap and allowed the children to climb on him. The second round consisted of Ammy playing with the kids, while Elder lazily wandered to the other end and back.

Thus came the third race. They would just have to come back at the same time, and that was it. A simple task for the two powerful creatures. But how would they do it? Would Amaterasu ride on Elder? Would the two just nap until they were bored? Or, maybe, they might actually compete and make this a tie-breaker as it was meant to be.

As the two wolves stepped up to their starting line—a pile of shoes the children decided would be official enough—Thor felt his hopes rise. Would they actually compete? Would this be it? Maybe Thor would still win out over Sif. He knew Amaterasu was fast. If she even put a little effort into it, she (and Thor) would win.

The children appeared to be as excited as ever, not even tiring despite cheering and playing and enjoying themselves for nearly two hours. They'd lined up to the left of the wolves, standing in a row so that everyone could get a glimpse of the last event.

Thor and Sif stood behind them all, as did the teacher, who was the one signalling the start of the race.

"Are you two ready?" the instructor asked. She seemed to be grinning as wide as the children were, giving in to the shenanigans taking place.

Amaterasu and Elder both barked in affirmation, their tails wagging happily. They crouched and shuffled around, digging their paws into the dirt, tensing themselves, low to the ground. Their eyes snapped forward, and everyone could see the muscles in Elder's legs flexing.

Thor held his breath. Maybe he could still win this!

"Alright. Ready yourselves… and…" The instructor took a pause, holding onto the final command.

Elder and Amaterasu were quivering, bodies tense.

The children held their breath, quiet, watching intently.

Thor and Sif stared, the outcome of their wager unknown, as well as their fates.



"Go!"

A grunt of effort escaped Elder and the massive wolf shoved himself forward. The ground beneath his paws was torn to shreds, claws carving into the world below. The first steps shook the ground, the children wobbling a tad as the Battle Wolf bounded his way forward with heavy strides, picking up speed. He moved fast for an older wolf, especially one as large as he. His pace had him set to reach the end of the field in mere seconds.

Amaterasu hadn't moved.

"Yes!" Sif cheered.

Thor felt his heart drop. This was his fate after all. Kept anticipating victory for hours, concern over a potential loss or win. Amaterasu had decided he deserved to fail for his part in all this. He accepted his coming punishment with a bitter grimace.

But…

Amaterasu remained crouched, her tail tip quivering in anticipation. Her muscles twitched and her whole body seemed to be thrumming with energy, waiting for… something. The pressure around Amaterasu seemed to grow, the grass flattening itself around her.

"Lady Amaterasu, I am begging you," Thor pleaded.

A low buzzing hum seemed to roll off Amaterasu, her red markings glowing brighter with every passing second. Her white fur seemed to spike in intensity as well, making it harder to watch. It was like trying to stare at the sun through a layer of clouds—possible but Gods if it wasn't painful.

Elder was already on his way back at this point, having reached the end and started his sprint toward the group. The confusion on his muzzle was evident, considering Amaterasu still hadn't moved. He was getting closer. And closer… He'd be on them in seconds.

The hair on Thor's arms stood on end, and he could see an almost static-like energy washing over the group, causing them to shift uncomfortably. Several of the children backed up to hide behind Thor and Sif, uncomfortable with the charge in the air. But this was no electrical energy—Thor knew what that felt like.

No, this was merely residual energy. A small amount escaping Amaterasu.

Thor had a moment to brace himself and shield the children when he saw the Goddess's claws tense. In the next instant, she moved.

Amaterasu exploded from the starting point, the ground buckling outward in all directions, creating a literal crater from the force of her launch. The whole group staggered, falling over one another, blinded by the cloud of debris left behind. Amaterasu was little more than a blur as she streaked across the field, leaving behind little flecks of blue and white behind her.

Elder stumbled mid-run as Amaterasu careened by, caught off-guard by the sight of the smaller wolf passing in an instant. The air pressure and weight of magic threw off his stride, and he had to recover. The massive wolf started pushing himself hard, barrelling toward the finish.

The Goddess of the Sun planted a forepaw in the ground and leapt with her back legs, wheeling herself around in the air. With a shift, she was sent in a tight spin toward the edge of the forest. Then, she jumped, pushing off the very air itself with a thunderous explosion of pressure that rippled outward. The shockwave upon the air crashed against the forest, toppling several trees, and stripping the bark off others.

And now she was on her way back. But, Elder was upon the finish line, just a step away. Amaterasu had overestimated her abilities and-

The group staggered again, and Elder misstepped, causing him to correct and take one additional world-shaking push forward. Amaterasu seemed to get even faster, though not because she was running faster, but because time itself slowed around her. All she had left, pushing herself to her absolute limit, was her Celestial Brush and all the abilities that afforded her.

Elder planted his paw on the line.

Amaterasu screamed across it in the same instant.

The Battle Wolf planted his paws firmly into the ground and slid himself to a halt, taking several seconds to slow the mass of the wolf. Amaterasu continued, however, leaving a trail of white fire, flowers, and blue glowing flecks behind her.

Then, she shifted, jumping and angling herself forward, her body spinning rapidly. Another push off the air halted her momentum, causing another shockwave to ripple outward and flatten the grass. With her momentum halted, Amaterasu fell to the ground, dropping to all fours.

Her legs shook and she swayed unsteadily on her feet, panting hard, her body glowing brightly, enough heat and light rolling off of her to be felt from several strides away. Each breath out was a shimmering wave of heat, and she barely had the energy to stand upright.

Thor and Sif had forgotten all about their wager, staring at the Goddess instead. The children appeared to be equally as stunned, as did Elder, the entire group looking upon the exhausted wolf.

"… Another tie," the instructor said, interrupting the silence.

Thor and Sif were very quickly reminded of their wager. More specifically, the one neither of them had come first place in. The children didn't care who won, they were more concerned with the wolves and enjoying themselves.

But, to Thor and Sif's dismay, neither had won. But, in a tie, neither lost either. Or so they thought.

Amaterasu turned to look at Sif and Thor, an exhausted smile on her face, and golden eyes ablaze with both pride and mirth. She managed a wink at the duo before she flopped to the grass. Amaterasu was going to take some time to recover.

As for Thor and Sif?

They had to wait in fear, unknowing of the horrors that were to come. They'd messed up, trying to use the Goddess of the Sun and an Asgardian Wolf as pawns in a game of theirs. They would quickly find themselves on the receiving end of what Amaterasu believed was a fitting punishment.

And did she ever have something in mind.


Patron shout-out for all the amazing people supporting me: Nithalys, Sleepyghost, Blobbycat, Baron of Bonk, IRS, JoeyW, Nihilea, Spartan211, SugarCube, and Valon.
 
The number of red streaks seemed to have increased as well. Then there was her fur, that brilliant white coat positively glowing whenever Amaterasu was distracted or happy. It just radiated light, and being near felt like enjoying a nice sunny day.

Thor was certain something had changed, and it hadn't been after Amaterasu ate the most powerful ice and fire magic this side of the galaxy.
I wonder if his mother will guide him to the obvious answer. Amy is now receiving a LOT of praise from the people of Midgard. Heh, he even had the answer shoved in his face with the kids. How they couldn't see her true form until they believed.

Apparently, all it took was magical self-immolation to convince children of anything.
In this, children are far more logical than adults.

Sif sighed. "You take after your brother far more than you realize. You're just less… stabby."
Truly, a worse insult has never before been uttered than being compared to your sibling.

"I am certain they are only successful because of their opposable thumbs," Elder huffed. "Amaterasu, what say you to a contest of strength?"
Honestly? Elder hit the nail on the head. This is probably what most animals think of about us.
 
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