The Scent of Magic
II.
It had been a few months since the disappearance of half the universe. Three months, two weeks, and two days. Tony didn't bother counting it to the hour. In a way, he almost lost all sense of time. The world was reset and the people that were left either had a strong desire to build everything up fast and better than they were before...or-they didn't have a desire at all. Many people who were left behind lost multiple family members and friends, and were killing themselves.
Tony made a public announcement that the Avengers were going to do everything in their power to restore things to their natural order. But if the people didn't lose faith in Avengers after the incident in Siberia, they sure did after the Avengers split up during the Accords fiasco.
He was trying to speak empty words of hope to already hopeless people. And so the world, or Earth, at least, continued to lose population.
And there were times when Tony thought about giving up. Many times, actually. But he kept thinking about Peter's Aunt May and how she begged him to bring Peter home. If nothing else, that was his own true motivator.
That...and that ever stubborn (yet quite stylish) Cloak of Levitation. It was too intuitive for a cape such as itself; it knew when Tony had just about enough and it would put him back in his place. It became so human to Tony that he considered building a bot for it to live on and control. Tony wondered if he could connect anything through the magic of the cape so it could become more of a living entity, but…
But then it would slide itself over his shoulders and he found he preferred it there. He wasn't sure if it was just him or not, but the cloak never lost the scent it first had since he inherited it on Titan. (Maybe "inherited" wasn't the right word. Borrowed. Against his will.)
Tony couldn't wait to give the damn thing back to Strange (though he considered asking for weekend visitation, at the very least). It was surprisingly helpful in the lab; if Tony asked it to grab him something, it got it right eight out of ten times. He caught it having an argument with some of his bots, and Tony had to remind his AIs and the cloak that there was no reason to be jealous of the other, and they both shared an equal space in his cold damaged heart.
Then one day, a Christine Palmer came knocking on his door. At first, seeing only a woman on the other side of the door, Tony thought it may have been Pepper. He was still unsure of whether or not Pepper was one of the ones to bite the dust, or if she simply left because she warned him.
She warned him over and over that she would…
But Tony couldn't accept either case, because when he first returned to his home, he found an unopened pregnancy test sitting on the bathroom sink. So that was just another unknown in his life...was she or wasn't she?
He was so tired of thinking about it.
Christine reminded him of Pepper nonetheless, for she had the same look in her eyes-drained yet concerned. She didn't think Stephen made it, she was sure she would have heard from him had he, but she needed to find out for sure.
"Relation?" Tony asked, eyeing the cloak wearily as it floated gently over to her.
She tried to smile through her tears, "Complicated."
So he invited her in for drinks and they spent the whole night talking about the infamous Doctor Stephen Strange, a former neurosurgeon turned Sorcerer Supreme. She filled in every single gap of his life that Tony was interested in knowing. And Tony's suspicions that some part of Strange was living inside the cloak grew when it seemed insulted by some of the ways Christine described him at times.
"So…" Tony started, looking down at the empty glass in his hand, "Any plans for when I bring him back?"
She chuckled softly, "I'm really glad you sound so sure that you can, Tony," (she got into the habit of calling him by his first name as the night wore on). "But him and I...we work better as friends. If that's what you're asking? It seemed like that's what you were asking."
Tony shrugged and tried to act nonchalant. A part of him was hoping she was waiting for Strange...so he could have something good and positive to come home to. But another part of Tony wanted that thing to be him (God, he hated himself).
"I just worry about him. I'm sure he's changed a lot since...since he became...magic," it seemed she still had a hard time wrapping her mind around his new fantastical world, and she tried not to look at the cloak in fear it would be insulted again.
"Well...let me tell you, as someone who went into space to save his ass, only to get saved by him twice...there is something...different about him. Compared only to the stories you told me, of course." Tony stood up and walked over to the bar, "One more drink?"
"No, thank you," she stood as well, and he could tell she was getting ready to take her leave, "I do appreciate you listening to me all night. It was good to let go of some of that past I shared with him...so you can understand him better for the future." Christine touched Tony's arm comfortingly and flashed an understanding smile.
Tony's mouth dropped open at her statement, but he was having a hard time finding a response. The cloak pushed his jaw up to stop him from gawking.
After Christine left, Tony told his bots to clean up the living area and kitchen. The cloak tried to cut in and help out, but Tony grabbed it by its collar and dragged it along to his lab, "You're the guest, you don't have to clean."
Once down in the lab, the cloak rested over the shoulders of Tony's latest IronMan suit. Tony had to admit, the two sure looked good together.
"I'm going to ask you a few things that I...don't think I was ready to ask before, but now I am. That cool?" Tony leaned against his workbench, crossing his arms and watching the cloak move the Iron helmet up and down to nod. Tony nodded as well, wiping his mouth as though he wanted to wash the words out of him. He stared at the cloak. Then finally asked, "Is some part of Strange...threaded in you?"
It raised the arms to imitate a shrug.
"You don't kn-how can you not know?!" Tony almost lost his chill, but he stopped himself when it put the hands on the hips. "F-fine, sorry I just…" he sighed heavily, "Can you do magic? I mean...besides flying around. Do you do spells?"
It drooped helplessly around the armor, giving Tony his answer.
"Well can you at the very least tell me what I could or should be doing?" His voice was tense. This conversation was not going as he then the cloak was levitating into the air along with the suit. It pressed a button against the wall and the ceiling hatch opened up to allow it to escape the compounds.
"Hey! That's my new suit!" He groaned when he realized that cloak had no intention of coming back in. He called one of his other suits to take hold of him, then flew out to follow the cloak to wherever it was leading him.
Turned out that it was the Sanctum Sanctorum, the very place Tony first met Stephen (if he didn't include outside the portal at the park). And it was at this very spot where all the destruction first started. He told him to shove that stone down the garbage disposal…
The cloak opened the front door to 177A Bleeker Street in Greenwich Village and disappeared inside. Tony retracted his suit into its case on his arm and walked up the steps but stopped right outside the door. Was it weird, him being here? Was there some sort of enchantment that was put over the townhouse to keep unwanted visitors out? He supposed that, even if there was, the cloak letting him in meant that he was invited.
He took a cautious step inside, "Hello? Anybody home?" His voice echoed in a very isolated way. It had clearly not been lived in since…
He shut the door behind him. The cloak left his IronMan suit by the stairs and fluttered up to the second floor, spinning around to see if Tony was following. Tony could see that the cloak didn't have the patience for him to take a look around, so he went after the cloak until they made it to a library that seemed as ancient as the magic Strange used.
The cloak fluttered up and down the isles, throwing book after book down on the table that still looked like it was in use. There were two candlesticks, a worn journal, and an empty plate with only crumbs left behind. Tony slumped down in the chair, looking at all the items laid before him, picturing Stephen sitting right where he was.
"So this is where you did your homework, huh?" Tony mumbled, placing his palm flat on the journal, but not opening it. He considered looking through it later though. Right before he was ready to bring Stephen back, so all his dirty secrets he kept in his journal would be fresh in his mind.
"So what's all this?" Tony asked once the cloak put the twelfth and final book on the table. Tony grabbed the one closest to him and flipped it open. "Key of Solomon…" Tony skimmed through some lines and it didn't take him long to realize that it was a magical book dealing with the raising of spirits.
He looked over to the cloak, "You want me to study magic?"
The cloak did an excited backflip, then pushed a few more of the books closer to Tony. He chuckled and held up his hands, "I am a scientist who dedicated my life to technology. I am not Sirius Black." But the cloak didn't seem to like or care about any of that, as it continued to push the books closer and closer, trying to get its point across.
"These books will not give me a mystical spiritual awakening."
Why must facial haired handsome men be the bane of the cloak's existence? It went through the same kind of doubt with Stephen before, and now it was starting from scratch again.
Tony continued to sit and stare at all the books surrounding him. He was running out of options. He didn't know if he was waiting for a sign, or for the universe to magically right itself, but he couldn't just do nothing anymore.
"And you think this will fix everything?"
The cloak wasn't sure one way or the other, but it was out of options as well. If anyone could do this in a short amount of time, it was Tony Stark.
