Magical Marvel: The Rise of Arthur Hayes-Chapter 265: The Shape of the Universe

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Chapter 265: Chapter 265: The Shape of the Universe

The Royal Archives

The silence of the library was a stark contrast to the roar of the tavern.

Arthur sat at a reading station near the eastern wall of the Archives, the Ravenclaw pendant resting cool against his chest. The artifact hummed softly, sharpening his thoughts, accelerating his processing speed to inhuman levels.

Two weeks in Asgard. Between the sparring sessions and the pub nights and the missions, Arthur had carved out every spare hour for this place.

It wasn’t as much time as he’d wanted. But the Diadem made every hour count.

And in two weeks, he’d covered a lot of ground.

The Asgardian magical tradition was fascinating. Not earth-shattering. Arthur had studied enough systems by now that the fundamentals rarely surprised him. Magic was magic. The underlying principles were consistent across traditions, the way physics was consistent across planets.

But the applications were different. And different meant valuable.

Their rune magic inscribed intent directly into reality. Not channeled through a wand or a gesture, but carved into the fabric of existence itself. Instructions that the universe was obligated to follow. The result was durability that wizarding magic couldn’t match. Enchantments that lasted millennia. Wards that strengthened with age instead of fading.

Arthur couldn’t replicate all of it. Rune magic required a connection to Asgard’s own cosmic energy that he didn’t fully possess. But the underlying theory enriched his own enchantment work considerably.

The real prize, though, was their illusion magic.

Arthur used to think his illusions were good. He’d fooled dragons. He’d tricked Kree soldiers. He’d operated undetected in rooms full of trained spies.

Then he read the treatises of Frigga herself.

Asgardian illusions didn’t just fool the eye. They bent light, sound, and gravity. A true master could create an illusion of a bridge that you could actually walk across, because the magic convinced the universe the bridge should be there. It was reality manipulation wearing the mask of illusion. The line between "fake" and "real" became terrifyingly thin in Asgardian hands.

Arthur had spent several sessions on Frigga’s work alone. It would take months to fully integrate her techniques, but even the preliminary understanding had already improved his illusion magic by an order of magnitude.

Progress.

The Death Mark research, on the other hand, had hit a wall.

Arthur had searched systematically. Death magic. Necrotic energy. Spirit theory. Soul manipulation. Anything connected to the triangle branded over his heart.

The books were gone.

Not misplaced. Removed. The shelving still bore the faint magical imprints of where the tomes had rested. Outlines in the dust of centuries, like the shadow of a painting taken off a wall. It was a purge. Thorough and deliberate.

Odin’s instructions. Had to be.

Arthur knew enough about Hela to guess why.

The All-Father had erased his firstborn from history. Scrubbed the murals, the records, the stories. And he’d removed any text that might teach someone to walk her path. Death magic had been declared forbidden knowledge, because the last person who wielded it had used it to try to conquer everything.

Arthur understood the logic. A king protecting his realm from a repeat of his greatest failure.

But it left him stuck. The knowledge he needed most was the knowledge that had been locked away.

He couldn’t ask Odin directly. Walking up to the recovering All-Father and saying "I’d like the death magic books you hid because your daughter used them to become a monster" was not a conversation Arthur was ready to have.

He shelved the problem. Not abandoned. Shelved. There had to be another way in.

But the greatest treasure Arthur found in the Archives wasn’t magic at all.

It was the universe.

The Kree databases had given him galactic politics. Carol had shown him alien worlds firsthand. Kamar-Taj had taught him dimensional threats. Between all of that and his fragmented canon knowledge, Arthur had built a solid picture of how things worked.

The Asgardian Archives completed that picture. Ten thousand years of a galactic superpower’s accumulated records. Wars fought across the Nine Realms and beyond. Civilizations that rose and fell before humans learned to make fire. The Archives didn’t just cover what existed now. They covered what had existed. What had been destroyed. What slept. And what waited.

Over the course of two weeks, reading between training sessions and pub nights, Arthur had worked through the cosmological texts piece by piece. Some of it confirmed things he already knew. Some of it expanded on fragments from other sources.

And some of it was entirely new.

The Infinity Stones, for instance. Arthur knew the basics. Six powerful artifacts, scattered across the galaxy.

Then there were the Celestials. Arthur already knew about Tiamut sleeping inside Earth. The Emergence cycle. But the Archives gave him the full scope.

The Celestials were among the oldest beings in existence. Cosmic architects who shaped galaxies, ignited stars, and seeded life across millions of worlds. Not out of kindness. As part of a cycle. Plant a seed in a planet. Let it feed on the growing population’s energy for millions of years. When that population reached critical mass, the seed hatched.

Planet destroyed. Celestial born.

The Asgardian texts described this process with clinical detachment. A natural phenomenon. Like a caterpillar becoming a butterfly, if the cocoon was a planet and the transformation killed eight billion people.

Even Odin at the height of his power had never challenged a Celestial directly.

Arthur had found a report from two thousand years ago. A Celestial had judged a planet in the Rigel system. The planet didn’t explode. It was simply unmade. Reduced to atoms in seconds. No battle. No negotiation. Just a decision and an ending.

And there was one sleeping inside Earth. The clock was ticking. Arthur didn’t have a solution beyond hoping the canon plot held. That wasn’t a strategy. That was a prayer.

The Dark Elves were another looming problem. Malekith and his people, born in the darkness before creation. Bor had defeated them. The Archives said "believed destroyed." Arthur knew they weren’t. Just sleeping. And the Convergence, when the Nine Realms aligned, was cyclical. It would come again. A few years away at most.

And then there was the section that truly expanded Arthur’s map of reality.

The other pantheons.

Arthur had accepted that Norse gods were real. He was drinking with them every evening.

But it went further. Much further.

The Olympians were real. Zeus was real. A being of immense power who ruled a civilisation of gods from a realm parallel to Asgard. The Archives contained records of diplomatic exchanges between Odin and Zeus spanning thousands of years. Mostly cordial. Territorial disputes settled through negotiation rather than war. Two old kings who understood that fighting each other served neither.

The Egyptian Pantheon was real. The Ennead. Gods who had walked among humans and shaped one of Earth’s oldest civilisations.

The Hindu gods. The Shinto gods. The Celtic gods. Pantheon after pantheon, each real, each powerful, each with their own realms and their own complicated relationship with Earth.

They even had a meeting place. Omnipotence City. A nexus between divine realms where the pantheons convened to discuss cosmic matters. Odin had attended. Zeus had presided.

Arthur had sat with that for a while when he first read it.

He’d been living on a planet that was claimed, watched, and influenced by dozens of divine pantheons simultaneously. None of them had thought to mention this to the humans.

Typical gods.

Beyond the pantheons, the Archives described beings that existed outside any hierarchy entirely. The Elders of the Universe. Individuals so old they predated most civilizations. The Collector, who hoarded artifacts and living specimens. The Grandmaster, who treated reality as a game. Effectively immortal, endlessly eccentric, and dangerous in unpredictable ways.

The Watchers. Cosmic observers who recorded everything and interfered with nothing.

Galactus. A being that consumed planets for sustenance. Not evil. Just hungry. The Asgardian records listed worlds he’d devoured. The list went on for pages.

And at the very top of the cosmological records, described in texts so ancient that even Asgardian translators struggled with the language, were the Abstract Entities. Eternity. Infinity. Entropy. The fundamental forces of reality given consciousness. Not gods. Not beings in any conventional sense. The pillars the universe rested on.

And Death.

Arthur had read the passages about Lady Death with particular care. The entity whose mark he carried. The Archives described her with something close to reverence. Not evil. Not cruel. Necessary. The ending that gave meaning to every beginning.

He’d touched the mark over his heart as he read. It pulsed, faintly, as if acknowledging recognition.

That was two weeks of reading. Two weeks of the universe getting bigger and more dangerous with every text he opened.

Arthur leaned back in his chair, rubbing his eyes. The scale of it was staggering.

He was strong. He knew that now with a confidence that went beyond hope. Stronger than most beings on Earth. Stronger than most beings in the galaxy. Strong enough for the threats he could see coming with Thanos and his underlings. He had plans for those. Strategies. Contingencies. He would handle them.

But the things beyond that? The Celestial inside his planet? Galactus? Beings that made the Mad Titan look like a footnote?

He didn’t have answers yet.

But he looked around the silent, towering room. Thousands of shelves he hadn’t touched. He touched his chest, feeling the connection to something fundamental that he’d barely begun to understand. 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢

He had direction. And he had time.

That would have to be enough. For now.