Everyone knew Reed Richards had a dangerous relationship with scientific curiosity.
The kind of curiosity that regularly opened portals to other dimensions and accidentally unleashed nightmares into reality.
This time was no exception.
By the time Drex Valen arrived at the Fantastic Four headquarters, the interior of the tower had become a catastrophe of fractured space.
Dimensional tears filled the building from floor to ceiling.
Hundreds of them.
Maybe thousands.
Layered over one another like shattered glass suspended in midair.
Just looking at the tangled network of portals was enough to make a normal person's scalp crawl.
Worse still, horrifying presences lurked beyond many of those openings.
The Fantastic Four themselves were nowhere to be found.
Drex scanned the building once, sighed quietly, and casually erased the monsters pouring from nearby portals.
They shattered apart instantly beneath invisible gravitational pressure.
Then Drex focused on the larger problem.
By manipulating gravitational waves and magnetic field interactions at the microscopic level, he adjusted the stability of surrounding matter itself, rebuilding the bridge between three-dimensional space and higher-dimensional structures.
Four-dimensional geometry.
Five-dimensional overlap.
Temporal harmonics.
At sufficiently advanced levels, manipulating spacetime and adjusting timelines became nearly interchangeable concepts.
Under Drex's influence, the chaotic dimensional distortions throughout the tower slowly began stabilizing.
Fractured realities folded back into order.
The tangled spacetime maze gradually untwisted itself.
Then Drex noticed something else.
The dimensional chaos was saturated with vacuum zero-point energy.
An absurd amount of it.
Quantum theory, one of the two foundational pillars of modern physics, predicted that even perfect vacuum was not truly empty.
At absolute zero, particles should theoretically still fluctuate due to the uncertainty principle.
If they stopped moving entirely, both their momentum and position could be perfectly measured simultaneously, violating fundamental quantum mechanics.
Therefore, even "nothingness" possessed residual motion.
Residual energy.
Zero-point energy.
And according to certain theoretical calculations, the energy density of vacuum fluctuations was utterly monstrous.
Potentially beyond comprehension.
A single cubic centimeter of vacuum could theoretically contain more energy than all observable matter in the universe combined.
Ridiculous.
Impossible.
And yet, in Marvel's universe, impossible things happened before breakfast.
Kryptonian science had already explored this field extensively.
Drex didn't know how far Earth science from his previous life had progressed in comparison, but Krypton's conclusion had always been clear:
Under normal circumstances, extracting usable vacuum zero-point energy was impossible.
The quantum vacuum existed at the ground-state energy level.
Any attempt to pull energy from it required spending even more energy than you gained.
You could not obtain something from true nothingness.
At least not conventionally.
But another concept existed.
False vacuum decay.
The difference between a false vacuum state and a true vacuum state represented a catastrophic energy gradient.
If even a single point in space dropped from a false vacuum into a true vacuum state, the released energy would be enough to trigger a universe-ending explosion.
Drex stared at the dimensional instability around him.
"So we nearly triggered another Big Bang," he muttered.
"Fantastic."
For a moment, he almost wanted to ask Ancient One why she hadn't intervened already.
But then another thought struck him.
And suddenly he stopped moving entirely.
A single cubic centimeter of vacuum zero-point energy potentially exceeded the energy content of an entire universe.
Meanwhile, the barrier separating universal-level entities from multiversal existence revolved around concepts like infinity and limitless energy.
Drex's eyes narrowed slowly.
The unstable zero-point fields around him remained dangerously close to detonating reality itself.
But instead of fear, he saw possibility.
A path forward.
"If I can't absorb enough universal mass to reach infinity…"
His thoughts accelerated violently.
"Then why not absorb vacuum zero-point energy instead?"
Theoretically impossible?
Sure.
Normally.
But this was Marvel.
A universe where reality frequently folded itself into a pretzel because someone sufficiently stubborn decided physics was optional.
So the question became:
How do you extract infinite energy from the vacuum without violating conservation laws?
The answer sounded almost like a joke.
Extract zero.
If the total extracted quantity remained zero, no additional energy expenditure was required.
Drex's current understanding of spacetime already confirmed something extraordinary.
By traveling continuously along expanded fourth-dimensional structures originating from baseline three-dimensional space, it was theoretically possible to reach another foundational three-dimensional reality.
An anti-universe.
A negative three-dimensional space.
A reality composed of antimatter and inverse energy states.
In normal space, vacuum energy represented the lowest possible energy state.
In the anti-universe, that same energy state became the highest.
Energy reactions there naturally descended toward increasingly negative levels.
If vacuum zero-point energy existed at level zero…
Then ordinary matter-energy states in positive space existed at positive one.
And corresponding states in the anti-universe existed at negative one.
Which meant unrestricted extraction suddenly became theoretically possible.
Connect the positive and negative universes.
Extract the zero-state vacuum energy between them.
Split that zero-state into positive and negative energy distributions across both realities simultaneously.
From the perspective of the total multiversal system, the net energy change remained zero.
But within a localized universe?
You had effectively created usable energy from nothing.
Every unit of vacuum energy Drex extracted on this side would generate an equivalent negative-energy reaction within the anti-universe.
Admittedly, repeatedly doing this would probably accelerate certain large-scale reactions between matter and antimatter realities.
Possibly even hasten universal collapse.
But the cosmos was incomprehensibly vast.
A little vacuum theft here and there probably wouldn't matter.
Probably.
The real problem was implementation.
How exactly was he supposed to connect the positive and negative universes in the first place?
Previous Kryptonian experiments strongly suggested that the singularity structures inside black holes represented access points toward inverse-dimensional space.
Unfortunately, no ordinary matter could survive passage through those higher-dimensional distortions.
The closer something approached a black hole's singularity, the more extreme the temporal dilation became.
From the victim's perspective, death happened instantly.
From an outside observer's perspective, the victim effectively froze near the event horizon until the end of the universe.
For anyone else, this problem was insurmountable.
For Drex Valen?
Not so much.
After thinking silently for several moments, Drex finally moved.
He twisted spacetime around himself, recreating the environmental conditions surrounding a black hole singularity.
Instantly, the region around him transformed into a temporal lowland.
Everything outside his immediate area now existed on a relative "high ground" within spacetime geometry.
And as a result…
Time beyond Drex's distorted field began accelerating wildly.
...
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