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G M (s): Lord Wraith C O N S U L T I N G G M (s): Enarr & Sep G E N R E: Fandom T Y P E: Collaborative Linear Sandbox
"To me, writing is fun. It doesn’t matter what you’re writing, as long as you can tell a story."
S T A N L E E ( 1 9 2 2 - 2 0 1 8 )

I N T R O D U C T I O N:
I N T R O D U C T I O N:

T I M E.
S P A C E.

R E A L I T Y.

I T ' S M O R E T H A N A L I N E A R P A T H. I T ' S A P R I S M O F E N D L E S S P O S S I B I L I T Y, W H E R E A S I N G L E C H O I C E C A N
B R A N C H O U T I N T O I N F I N I T E R E A L I T I E S, C R E A T I N G A L T E R N A T E W O R L D S F R O M T H E O N E S Y O U K N O W.

I A M T H E W A T C H E R.
I A M Y O U R G U I D E T H R O U G H T H E S E V A S T N E W R E A L I T I E S.

F O L L O W M E A N D P O N D E R T H E Q U E S T I O N...

'What If' is built on the idea of how altering even one detail can greatly alter the stories of the characters we all know and love. As a basic premise, the world is already altered by the presence of both DC and Marvel characters, locations, technologies and all other associated concepts. Players will collaboratively flesh out and build the world, telling stories that exist exclusively alongside each other and inclusively intersect, overlap and build a brand new world filled with answers to the question...

What if?

Compared to past 'One Universe' games, 'What If' is focused on the concept of the multiverse meaning players are concurrently running their universes alongside the one run by the GM. While the GM multiverse will consist of the game's primary narrative, players are also encouraged to build the world with their multiverses and collaborate with other players to tell those stories. Players will be presented with opportunities to cross between their multiverse and the GM multiverse for 'Crises' events with individual 'Crossovers' left up to the discretion of each player and their concept.

The game will, as it has in the past, run in 'Seasons' with the Season concluding when that Multiverse's narrative has resolved. Each season, the GM-directed multiverse will pivot to a different multiverse with players being able to continue their characters in the previous multiverse or swap out for a new concept to keep the game feeling fresh.

S U M M A R Y:
S U M M A R Y:

"T H E R E W A S A N I D E A . . .
. . . A N I D E A T O B R I N G T O G E T H E R A G R O U P O F R E M A R K A B L E I N D I V I D U A L S."


Aliens live among us.

For the past ninety years, metahumans, mutants and the battles between superheroes and supervillains have dominated the lives of everyone on the planet Earth. Heroes such as the Superman from Krypton and the Manhunter from Mars have made life from other planets an accepted part of daily life. But unbeknownst to even the watchful eye of S.H.I.E.L.D. and its global counterparts, key figures on Earth have begun to disappear, only to be replaced by hostile alien imposters positioning for a Secret War between alien races. An arms race between the Skrulls and the White Martians has been brewing beneath the surface for several years now and threatens to come to a head.

All across the globe, crime has risen exponentially and many of the world's superpowers are in international turmoil as a direct causality between the warring factions. Even unaware of the foes at home, Earth is now forced to face a threat on a third front as the Reach has begun carving an aggressive path toward Earth.

More than ever, Earth needs her heroes. Who will answer the call?
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T H E C O N T I N U I N G S T O R Y:
T H E C O N T I N U I N G S T O R Y:
S E A S O N O N E:


S T O R I E S F R O M O T H E R R E A L I T I E S:


Hidden 12 mos ago 12 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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| EARTH-668
__NOT SO LONG AGO, IN A GALAXY NOT SO FAR AWAY...
Smoke coupled with the smell of ash and weapons fire rose into the violet sky that surrounded the world of Centuri VI. Three of its moons were still visible, sitting high in the sky, unobscured by the sun even at midday. Despite never having had contact with Earth, Centuri VI’s architecture was incredibly similar to that found in some regions of the Terran Homeworld.

The Capitol; the home of the Centurii’s governing democracy, had seen better days. Buildings made of materials comparable to limestone and marble had been damaged from the sonic blasts of the insurgents’ weaponry. Entire buildings had been reduced to nothing more than rubble from the attack.

At the heart of the Capitol lay the Senate, Centuri VI’s governing body. The dome-shaped roof was supported by a series of columns that circled the building, raising it high above the ground. The Senators had been brought out one at a time, forced to kneel and wait. For what?

They did not know.

Each governing body member exchanged nervous glances with those on their left and right. Any cries for help were silenced immediately, and equally so any pleas for mercy. The armoured insurgents showed no signs of sympathy for the Senators.

Centuri VI had been a democracy for almost as long as recorded history existed. A planet made up predominantly of philosophers and artists, they had long considered themselves to be past the needless bloodshed of war. But unrest had spread across not only the Capitol but the world as a whole and soon the insurgents had enough numbers to go to war.

This was the closest any of the Senators had ever come to a violent death. Tear-stained eyes were drawn towards the foreign weapons held by the insurgents. Neither the arms nor armour were of Centurii make. It was this advantage that had allowed their smaller numbers to quickly overwhelm the world’s governments.

The steady hum of a skiff echoed down the street as the sleek craft appeared within view. The narrow vehicle flew above the ground, the brake flaps deploying before it came to a sudden stop only yards from the line of soon-to-be executed men.

Atop the craft, a towering figure in black armour began to descend towards the ground. Wings appeared from the back of his suit allowing him to glide towards the ground before marching towards the Senators. Following behind him was a tall, lean figure.

But they were not Centurii.

<“I see you took some time to use our gift for personal gain. Has your team located the fugitives?”> The figure asked, gesturing towards the restrained men with one of its four arms.

<“By my honour, your fugitives are not among my people.”> The armoured figure replied, his helm retracting to reveal a scarred visage. His yellow skin was marred with red and orange bruising. The man’s right eye had been entirely replaced by an implant, the luminous circuitry visible within a large scar running the entire length of the right side of his face.

<“But your gift has not gone unappreciated. For too long have the old and cowardly forced all of Centuri to adhere to their ideal way of life He. Now society will be able to begin anew, led by those who fought for it.”> The armoured figure smiled, nodding towards his men as twelve simultaneous shots rang out. In that same instant, the bodies of each Senator fell to the ground lifeless.

<“Now, you have more of this technology, you can bring us more to solidify power?”> The armoured man asked, turning back towards the alien.

<“Oh indeed,”> It smiled wickedly in response. < “I’m more than happy to oblige.”>

Above Centuri VI, the void of space was suddenly illuminated by a blinding flurry of lightning as the fabric between time and space was ripped apart like a once-clenched jaw. The bow of a ship slipped through the gaping maw as a Hive Ship exited slipstream and came to orbit around the remote Class-I planet. Behind the massive vessel came another like it and another after that. Each of the ships entered into orbit around the Centuri VI. From the surface, the humanoid populace turned their eyes to the sky. Even from the surface, the Hive ships were visible around the planet.

The armoured figure turned towards the sky, a confused look crossing his face. He could not possibly understand the horror he had unleashed upon his world, but he knew enough to feel fear.

<“Deception!”> He roared, raising his weapon towards the alien. In response, it looked back towards him defiantly, clearly unphased by the sonic arm cannon levelled towards its face.

“Khaji-Da.” It replied, and suddenly, the armoured figure froze. The helmet emerged from within the armour and closed around the humanoid’s head. The eyes suddenly glowed red before it spoke.

<“Assuming direct control.”> Came the suit’s response, the weapon lowering away from the alien. The smug look of triumph passed over its face before it turned its gaze back towards the sky.

<“If the fugitives are not among your people, then you are no further use to me. You and your world will exist solely to serve the Hive.”>

From within the Hive ships came a deafening humming noise. Hundreds of small vessels suddenly exited from the hexagonal patterning on the ships' underbelly. Diving through the atmosphere of the planet, the ships began to fire on those below. A man reached out to his child only to be struck down. A metal prong hooked into his back, injecting the man and forcibly transforming his body. Crying out to his child one last time, the man's eyes went blank as he lost his individuality becoming nothing but a drone to the invading aliens. Turning to his crying child, he extended a spike from his wrist before reaching down and submitting her to the same fate as he. More and more of the natives began to fall to this fate. From the Hive ships above, a haunting electronic voice echoed over the planet.

<“We are the Reach. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.”>

The message continued to play on a loop as the Reach began to bomb the planet from orbit. As they had done to the populace, the surface was transformed. The Reach penetrated the surface with pillars that unfolded to cocoon Centuri VI. Drilling to the planet's core, they were preparing the world for a metamorphosis, ensuring it would survive the terraforming process. As the cocoon began to spread, the planet's resources were slowly absorbed as the Reach harvested each and every one of them. Their new drones slowly awakened from the transformation process as they began to assist the cocooning process, their new implants allowing them total comprehension as they became one with the hive mind. Descending through the atmosphere, the first of the Hive ships prepared to land as the other two departed from orbit.

This world, like many others, now belonged to the Reach.


Location: Washington, D.C. - United States of America
Secret Invasion #1.01: Clandestine
Interaction(s): None
Previously: None

Hard heels clicked rhythmically along the cobblestone alley as the red-haired woman maintained a brisk pace. The cold night air showed her breath from between a pair of pursed, ruby lips. One hand was slipped into her jacket, resting at the ready on her standard-issued firearm. The other gingerly touched against the stone wall while emerald eyes darted about recording every inch of her surroundings. Clandestine meetings on a foggy night were a Hollywood cliché, but yet, here she was carrying one out on behalf of S.W.O.R.D. The Sentient World Observation and Response Department was a counterpart to S.H.I.E.L.D., the Strategic Homeland Investigation, Espionage and Logistics Division. Developed in response to the world's so-called heroes and villains, it was these beings of power that had long since confirmed humanity's question of what was out there.

Turned out, most of it wasn't as friendly as the one with the hammer or the Boy Scout in blue.

Ahead of her, a tall figure loomed in the shadow cast by the overhead footbridge. The sounds of the city were louder here, able to cover their conversation as splashes of colourful lighting could be seen beyond the figure at the alley's exit.

"The sun is very bright today." The male stated as Agent Morse approached him.

"But the ice is still very slippery." She replied with a bored tone.

Again. Cliché.

"Thank you for meeting with me." The other figure nodded appreciatively before producing a small flash drive from within their palm. "Everything you're looking for is on this drive. Recorded footage, your analysts will be able to tell it's not doctored or forged. There were three of them; big, green and with pointy ears."

"Skrulls." Morse snarled before reaching for the drive. "They're not usually so careless."

<"Then you shouldn't be surprised that this is a trap.">

Morse moved to draw her weapon, but the familiar hum caused her to hesitate as she looked toward the male in front of her. The glowing barrel of his weapon pointed directly towards her abdomen as two others appeared from the shadows, transforming from inanimate objects back to their true form.

<"Easy, Red-Eyes. This is a Shi'ar Disrupter; it'll put a hole even in your durable carapace.">

The agent smiled before her voice suddenly filled the heads of her three would-be assailants.

If you knew what I was, then, you should have brought more firepower.

The Skrulls shrieked in agony, purple blood spilling from their ears before their eyes rolled into the back of their heads. All three corpses dropped to the ground simultaneously as Agent Morse brought her phone to her mouth.

"I have three specimens for transport."




- -First Issue: TBD--
Next Issue: Retaliation
-
Latest Issue: Clandestine
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Byrd Man
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Byrd Man El Hombre Pájaro

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Gotham City


“I believe in Gotham City.”

Hamilton Hill took a rather large swig from his glass of scotch and looked out the window at the impressive view of the city below.

“My grandparents came here from Kentucky during the war, my grandfather was looking for any opportunity to escape the coal mines. He labored in a factory so that his son could become a lawyer and judge, so that his son’s son could one day become mayor." A soft smile played on his lips as he thought back to some distant memory of his grandfather. "The city isn’t without her flaws and imperfections, but… she’s done alright by me.”

Hill turned away from the window and stared across the desk at the man sitting behind it. Bruce Wayne looked at Mayor Hill with indifferent blue eyes.

“And my love for this city is why I turn to you. Falcone, Maroni, Sionis, they’re all just nouveau riche wannabes. The name Wayne means something in this city, that name rings out from the slum corners to the corridors of power–”

“If you could get to the question,” said Bruce. “And stop kissing my ass, Mr. Mayor.”

Hill smirked and raised his glass to Bruce.

“Can’t shit a shitter.”

He drained the rest of the glass and put it on the edge of the desk. Bruce stared at the glass in silence for a long moment before Hill got the hint and put it on a coaster.

“I, umm… am in a bit of a pickle you see,” Hill said, clearing his throat. “It stems back from my days as a law student. I did something rather rash, I’d rather not get into the details…”

Bruce watched the fop sweat begin to form on Hill’s forehead. He reached into the breast pocket of his suit and pulled out a lint covered handkerchief he used to mop his face with. Hill was a four term mayor seeking a fifth term next fall, the man had traded away his sense of shame or impropriety and even decency in the same of reelection. Whatever he was hiding, it had to be horrible.

“But suffice to say, during my first campaign someone wrote a crude letter threatening to leak the details of that unfortunate event to the world at large if I did not pay them a certain amount. I obliged them and that seemed to put the matter to bed, until my reelection campaign four years later. And every reelection cycle since they reach out and ask for more and more and more. This time I simply cannot afford their asking price! I need your help to find the blackmailer and end my nightmare once and for all. I’ll pay you, name your price.”

Bruce let the silence in the room linger as he stared at Hill with an annoyed look on his face. He knew the man was a born politician, a silent room would be the worst thing in the world for him. He let the man squirm in silence for nearly a minute before he spoke.

“For almost ten years now,” Bruce said softly. “I’ve tried to donate to your campaigns, including that time you ran for congress and lost in a landslide. But my donations were always returned. I’ve never known a politician to turn away free money.”

“It’s the optics,” Hill mumbled. “It just wouldn’t look good. I do the same with Falco– uhh, others. I just don’t want to answer all those pesky questions reporters would have.”

Bruce nodded and put his hands together, leaning back slightly in his plush leather chair. “And now you come to me, like a thief in the night. Your chauffeur parks five blocks away, you take the freight elevator up to my office –” Bruce motioned towards the empty glass on his desk. “You drink my scotch, and you ask for help. No, you demand it. And you offer to pay me? Like I’m some errand boy.”

Bruce stood and slowly walked around the desk. He wrapped an arm around Hill’s shoulder and walked with him towards the large glass window.

“Mr. Mayor, people like me don’t deal in simple things as money. If you’d taken the time to know me, then you’d know that we have at least one thing in common: favors are our currency. You’re not asking me to do work for you, you’re asking me to do a favor. A favor which you’ll pay back one day.”

Hill went for his soaked handkerchief again, dabbing it on his cheeks.

“I’m not some common hood, Mr. Mayor: I’m a Wayne.”

With his free arm, Bruce pointed to the city that stretched out below them.

“Like you said earlier in your sycophantic rant, this city was built on the backs of my ancestors. They didn’t hop off some boat from Sicily one hundred years ago and call themselves American. You won’t be the first politician in debt to a Wayne, and you won’t be the last.”

Bruce let Hill go, pushing him away slightly. Hill lurched forward against the glass window and caught himself against it while Bruce walked back around the desk. He sat down and spread his hands, letting a cold smile spread across his face.

“Besides, Mr. Mayor, if not for my grandfather, how do you think your father would have become a judge? How do you think you were allowed to run for mayor in the first place? Back in the day, nothing happened in this city without my father's say so. You say you’re afraid to be in my debt, but the truth is you were in my debt before I was even born.”

He saw Hill’s face flush and Bruce knew he’d struck a nerve.

“Now, tell me all you can about your blackmailer.”




Finger Housing Projects


The Finger operation ran like clockwork. The high-rises and low-rise courtyards operated 24/7, selling cocaine, heroin, crack, weed, pills, whatever you needed. Everyone in Gotham and the greater tri-state area all came to the Finger regardless of class or social standing. Stockbrokers in power suits lined up alongside dope fiends, minivans with the little annoying stick families idled behind crackheads pushing shopping carts.

The demand served as a testament to both the product and the business acumen of the Skeevers Bros. Jefferson and Julius Skeevers had once been corner boys selling dime bags and eight balls once upon a time. The life of the corner boy was usually short and violent, you either died by the time you were eighteen or in jail for most of your life. The people at the top always changed due to the usual violence and backstabbing, but Jeff and Julius were always good soldiers. If the streets were a game of chess, the two brothers would have been pawns, but they were the smartest and most dangerous pawns in the game.

After one management change too many they decided they were done being pawns. A few guns and a few connections with the west side dealers for product, and they slowly but surely took over the east end block by bloody block. An alliance with Carmine Falcone gave them all the product and men they would ever need to control the entire city’s drug supply.

Jeff stood on the balcony of his apartment at the top of one of the high-rises. He smoked a cigarette and watched the traffic. A dark suburban pulled out of the high-rises and headed down the avenue. That would be the midnight re-up. A group of armed muscle went around the spots and resupplied the dealers with drugs and did cash drops. The crew chiefs were responsible for making sure the inventory count was correct, both in cash going out and drugs coming in. If the count was off both the dealer and his boss would faced the consequences.

“Goddamn,” Julius said as he came out on the balcony. “It’s too cold to be out here this time of night. What are you doing?”

“Watching,” Jeff said, exhaling a column of smoke. “Look at this shit, Jules, all this territory and all this product, all the work we put in… it’s just amazing.”

“Imagine if we’d been born white,” Julius said with a chuckle. “We’d be CEOs or some shit.”

Julius bumped his chest with his fist, Jefferson doing the same, before they dapped each other up.

“Us,” said Jeff.

“Us,” replied Julius. “Always us.”

The two brothers looked out proudly at their empire below. What they didn’t know was that while they watched, they were being watched. It was true that they had built up an empire. But like the people before them, and the people before them...



Empires were made to fall.
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Hidden 12 mos ago 10 mos ago Post by Roman
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Roman Grumpy Toad / King of Dirt

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#1.01: A Fine Day
Earth-93913003, Gotham City


"It's a fine day in Gotham City."

Oswald Cobblepot stood proud and as tall as his stout, pudgy frame could allow him, his back to the Antarctic Industries boardroom table. The mahogany slab propped up on black iron struts was the closest thing the otherwise starkly-white room got to warm: one wall was a blank white space, barren but for the swirls of paint failing to provide character; the opposite featured a painting similarly devoid of life, some great and terrible acrylic storm of whites and grays that supposedly depicted a vast, frigid tundra; the third wall - the one Oswald was facing now, as he supped whiskey far too expensive for its comparative quality from a glass clutched in his sweaty, stubby fingers - was an edge-to-edge, floor-to-ceiling window, gazing out across the polluted, smog-stained skyline of Gotham City.

Behind him, a cavalcade of portly white men sat around the table smiling and offering each other knowing, self-congratulatory nods and handshakes and dignified chuckles. To the side of the head of the table, offset to Oswald's position but carrying his own air of self-importance and subtle authority, stood the only in-shape man in the room, a thin gentleman with a tidy coif of hair and a pencil mustache. In his right hand he held a thin cigarillo, smoke trailing upwards from the tip, and in his left a tablet, from which he'd just delivered the news they were all patting themselves on the back about: the twelfth consecutive quarter of profit growth against the previous financial year. Warren White - the man holding the tablet, and Antarctic Industries' Chief Financial Officer - was hailed as an industry prodigy and a financial genius, and his tenure on Oswald's executive board certainly lent credence to his reputation. Antarctic was a monolith in Gotham's financial landscape - over the last three years, their already heavy industry presence had only ramped up to monopolistic levels, and the company subsequently now handled the majority of east-coast imports and exports.

"Yes, a fine day in Gotham indeed." Cobblepot continued, turning around to raise his glass to the board, who all offered back empty-handed raised arms. Oswald kept only his personal supply in the building, and his subordinates were not permitted to partake. "But a finer day in this very room. Antarctic Industries continues to flourish under my leadership. This company has soared to heights my father never dreamed of! Truly, Antarctic Industries is a titan - and there is still plenty of opportunity for further growth."

Around the table, board members delivered the general murmured buzz of agreement and congratulation, as was expected of them. They were, after all, mostly figureheads, kept on mainly for their ability to stroke Cobblepot's ego. Sure, a couple had actually delivered the so-called 'duties' of their so-called 'job roles', both for Antarctic and other companies before Antarctic - but since the passing of Elijah, Oswald's father, and Oswald's subsequent takeover and revamping of the organization, Antarctic had seen unparalleled growth that was, frankly, ambivalent to their input or lack thereof, and this had only spiked further with Warren White's entry to the company.

Of course, the unspoken catalyst of this massive growth was Oswald's empire as the singular drug kingpin of Gotham, ruling the city from its underbelly as the Penguin. Warren was instrumental as well, utilizing his financial acumen to artfully fold the illicit revenue stream into the company's legal (and public) profits, laundering their own dirty money through little more than carefully managed bank accounts and ledgers. Whether the rest of the board knew or cared was inconsequential; if they knew, they didn't speak of it, and if they cared, they definitely didn't speak of it.

"Cheers to industry, gentlemen." Oswald finished, sneering from beneath his crooked nose in the best approximation of a sincere smile he could manage. "And to another fine day in Gotham City."

- - -

"It's a fine day in Gotham City."

Gotham City Police Department Street Officer James 'Jimmy' Gordon raised his eyebrows in shock as a scrawny man in a ratty hoodie and stained cargo pants spat on his newly-polished shoes as he walked past, hustling away before Jimmy could even muster the energy to be angry, let alone pursue him; a few bystanders who'd seen the act chuckled, and a couple more accelerated their weary, dead-eyed shuffles, lest they be caught up in any incoming retribution. Jimmy looked at his foot, grimacing as the thick, phlegm-speckled wad of saliva slowly dripped down the toe of his shoe.

All of this occurred mere micro-seconds before his partner, Detective Harvey Bullock, reappeared from the bodega Jimmy was currently leaning against, and spouted the bizarre, impromptu statement. Harvey had one hand inside his jacket, squirreling away what Jimmy knew was a small brown envelope of cash, while the other was clutching a thick breakfast sandwich, bacon grease slowly oozing out the sides of the bread and down Harvey's fingers. Jimmy snatched away a paper napkin from Harvey's hand and bent over to wipe off his shoe.

"I don't know that that's ever been true in the history of this city." Jimmy said once he'd stood up, and the two of them crossed the street back to their police cruiser. Harvey was already sinking his yellowing teeth into the sandwich, and yolk and ketchup stained his scruffy, unkempt beard. The two men stood on opposite sides of the car, Jimmy waiting on Harvey to unlock the doors, Harvey leaning on the roof as he polished off the sandwich in three more gargantuan bites. With one last impressive swallow, he took another napkin and wiped his face down.
"See, that's your problem, Gordon. You still haven't fished out the bug that crawled up your ass and died."

Jimmy scoffed, shaking his head. His tidy appearance was almost a perfect mirror of Harvey's half-assed attempt to look presentable; the pressed GCPD uniform cut a fine figure down Jimmy's well-exercised body, with the uniform peaked cap sat neatly atop an orderly, practical haircut and his handsome face accessorized by a pair of stylish-yet-subtle glasses and a trimmed, well-groomed mustache perched over a strong, clean-shaven jawline. Harvey was a dark reflection - street clothes creased and stained from the days he'd been wearing it previous, a wild unshaven beard, and greasy hair that cascaded down his neck from beneath a beat-up and raggedy trilby. The two men could not look more unsuited to pairing if they'd actively tried. Harvey finally shoved the keys into the car door and unlocked the cruiser, and the two men slunk down into their seats almost in unison, the cruiser rocking from side to side as the aging chassis took on their weight.

"That 'bug' is a goddamn moral code, Bullock." Jimmy replied, his voice almost a low growl as he buckled his seatbelt. This time it was Harvey's turn to scoff, shaking his head as he stuck the keys in the ignition and turned, the cruiser's engine sputtering to life and a plume of soot erupting from the exhaust. "And I'll be cold in the ground before I throw that away like the rest of this damn city."
"The way you're going, Jim-bo, you might not have that long a wait ahead of you. A moral code is one thing, but where's your self-preservation instinct?"

At this, Jimmy did actually have to concede Harvey had a point. The engine rumbled as Bullock kicked it into gear and they rolled into a light cruise along Gotham's main avenues, Harvey picking corners seemingly at random; with Harvey's 'pick-ups' done for the day and no one specific incident to respond to, the pair had the morning to simply make sure they would be seen. In this town, police presence was a reminder to pay your dues and keep to your own business. It certainly wasn't so that the community could feel safe and secure.

"No one's got a shit to give about me, Bullock, before you start getting soft on me." Jimmy said, prompting a quick eye-roll from Harvey. "One measly cadet no one likes versus the entire force of the GCPD? I'm so insignificant I don't even count as small-fry."
Harvey nodded sagely, already tuning out from Gordon's self-pitying diatribe. Many hours in this cruiser had been spent discussing the dearth of ethics and principles within the police force and the city at large; Harvey had long consigned himself to the pointlessness of rallying against it, even before his assignment as Jimmy's partner. In a way, Jimmy reminded Harvey of his younger, more idealistic self. He wondered if Jimmy, in turn, saw in him his likely future self.

For his part, Jimmy simply took to staring out the window at the passing city, watching the drunks and addicts stumbling on the pavements, the domestic disputes spilling out of front doors into the streets, the purse-snatchers, extortioners, the over-worked, the living-out-of-their-cars. Every fresh tragedy another counted failure for Gotham as a city.
"After all," he said, his final musing for the morning before resigning to a familiar sullen silence that Harvey far preferred over high-minded moral rhetoric, "what can one man do against an entire city?"

- - -

"It's a fine day in Gotham City."

Mayor Aubrey James, a toad-like, sweaty man, stood at the podium in front of city hall and paused for dramatic effect. In front of him a sea of reporters and members of public office pointed cameras and microphones and held pencils carefully against paper; he took a moment to adjust his too-tight tie against the flabby flesh of his neck that spilled from his collar, and drew a breath to continue.

"Yes, a fine day in Gotham City indeed. When the good people of Gotham sensibly voted myself as their elected official to lead this city into new, more prosperous times, I was sworn in with the promise of delivering real, tangible change - no wishy-washy, vague policies that could be hand-waved and delayed." He paused again, clammy hands slipping slightly where they gripped the edges of the podium. He withdrew a monogrammed handkerchief from his jacket pocket and carefully dabbed his forehead. "I promised to bring stability to the economy and new, affordable housing to the people - and look at our great city today. Home-grown, grassroots, Gotham-led companies aren't just stable but thriving, bringing jobs and revenue to the city at levels Gotham has never seen before. The Narrows Restoration Project is well-underway, with a planned 10,000 new homes over the next two years, all with affordable, long-term leases attached."

There was scattered-but-steady applause across the crowd, and Mayor James paused again to allow those scribbling feverishly to catch-up. It had been a strong first year of his term, at least by Gotham Mayor standards, and his office knew that if he delivered in the Narrows, he was a shoo-in for re-election. Even in a city as execrable as Gotham, the Narrows were especially heinous, a buzzing hive of the worst the city and its population had to offer.

"Of course, our work in the Narrows wouldn't be possible without the proper funding, and my platform of unburdening the taxpayer remains steadfast! Gotham's tax-paying citizens already pay for our fine public services, and we cannot expect to maintain the quality of these services if we expect the common men and women of Gotham to fund the Narrows Restoration project as well. To this end, my office has spear-headed a brand new platform of shared funding for public works projects, to allow particular citizens of Gotham to give back to their city."

James gestured to the seated guests to his left, the first of which was a rake-thin, sharp-chinned man dressed impeccably and with a warm smile as he stood and waved, slowly approaching the podium.
"So please, join me in a round of applause as I introduce a close personal friend, William. D. Sommers, who is as passionate about rebuilding our great city as I am!"

James stepped aside, shaking William's hand and leading the crowd in heavy applause as he continued to smile and wave. Reporters within the crowd practically licked their lips; Sommers was a known entity already, a heavy supporter of Mayor James' campaign during the election period, and his company - Hightowers LLC - was already in the public eye due to the recent changeover in leadership. Bill Sommers Sr. had been known to be ill for some time already, and he had finally stepped down from his position and handed the reins to William, his only son and heir to the Sommers empire and industrial fortune. William had started his era at Hightowers strong, introducing new policies and working conditions that had both elevated public opinion of the company and increased revenue for the private market. He was, right now, Gotham's golden child, and Mayor James was eager to milk that popularity for all its poll-improving worth.

William allowed the applause to die down before beginning his address, every eye rapturously fixed upon him.
"Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you so much to yourselves and my good friend Aubrey for having me here today. Please, let's have another round of applause for Aubrey, and all he's managed to accomplish in only a short twelve months!"
William lead the crowd in another scattering of applause, beaming at Mayor James, who smiled back and played the humble card, a well-practiced series of gestures and facial expressions designed to engineer good faith.

"It's true - I have been graced with this honourable opportunity to give back to the city that has done so much for me and my family. Without the good people of Gotham, Hightowers would still be the mere pipe-dream of my father and his father before him; this great city that has helped us so much deserves to share in that success. So Hightowers is donating generously to the Narrows Restoration project from our own profits - an even split with the taxpayer, straight down the middle. 50/50. So that we can, all of us, contribute to the improvement of the city that we share and love. I for one, can't wait to see Gotham usher in a new golden age for the city, and I can't wait to help every step of the way!"

The applause went up again, and cameras flashed and popped as Aubrey came to stood next to William, the two holding a strong handshake and a smiling pose toward the reporters. The Narrows Restoration project was well and truly funded, with minimal impact on the common citizens of Gotham. That Hightowers LLC had been awarded, through one shell company or another, every public and private contract for every aspect of the project wasn't mentioned, nor would it be, and neither was the fact that as a result, Hightowers' generous contribution went straight back into its own pocket, straight alongside the taxpayer-funded half.

William smiled, all teeth, eyes sparkling with something other than philanthropic pride. Aubrey smiled, thin lips, sweaty forehead, eyes squinting in the afternoon sun and hiding a nervous trepidation about who'd actually been elected mayor last year.
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Hound55
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Hound55 Create-A-Hero RPG GM, Blue Bringer of BWAHAHA!

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Then...

The waves rolled in as the tide gently eased out.

Rick looked at her tanned physique, the way the light shimmered in places off her lotioned flesh. Tried to remember it for later. Less that 15% cloud cover. The late afternoon, not-yet-evening light that caught the waves at an angle just before cresting, and shimmered off her flesh.

The sands blew gently on a moderate breeze; just enough to keep the sting of the summer heat at bay, as if counting away the lazy infinite seconds that a place like the shack could afford.


"What are you thinking, Ricky?"

I'm thinking about how you look, how all of this looks, for when I have my oils out later, and a fresh canvas in front of me.

Except you can't say that. It's weird. Becky's also a little too basic for that to be a response.

"Ricky..?"

Well, maybe. I mean, give her a little credit. People might surprise you.

"I guess I'm just thinking about how good this all looks, and thinking about painting it later."

She gasped. "You paint? I mean... I knew you paint, but you paint here too? In your free time? I thought that was just stuff you did for school."

He smiled politely. As the closed-mouthed smile kept him polite. And his mouth closed.

Excitement took over her.
"Oh, you've got to show me Ricky!" And after some begging and pleading and false modesty on his end, they walked back to his beachside shack which was left to him by the dead grandfather he never met, where he would sit her down and show her a few of his more recent attempts from here. Without the other girls in them. Although honestly, it mightn't make much difference...

He produced a few of his more recent efforts. Including an impressionist effort to capture the dappled light off the shore and the swirl of the swell rising to the fine spray of an evening mist.


"Oh..."

She sounded disappointed.

"Well... I have other's. That's from when I was working through some impressionist stuff, and trying to experiment with--"

"Well, if you're asking me my opinion..."

Wasn't. But go ahead anyway.

"I guess my impressionist is that it doesn't really look like the thing that you were tring to paint."

Rick laughed spontaneously at her joke, which caught him so well off guard.

Then he saw she still had a straight face.

A very straight face.


Oh Becky... No...

"Impressionism is an art style. I was-- trying to do a thing. Anyway, sounds like you might like something a bit more... realism... Landscapes. Have a few in here..."

He handed her a smaller canvas that had a fine brush landscape immediately recognisable as the shack with the beach and surf in the background.

Then in his haste to produce more slice of life artwork that might take her fancy, he failed to suitably filter the art and handed her another from last year when he brought Lauren from that Theatre group down here.
Wait, was it Lauren? Laura..? No, Layla? Oh this is bad, Rick... you're bringing that many down you're losing track of the names now? It hasn't even been that man-- no. It was definitely Laura. Laura or Layla. Laura sounds right though.

Well, it's gone pretty quiet. You should probably say something. Or-- you know-- at least make eye contact.

OK. Here goes. Pick our eyes up off the floor. Knees. Wow, she's got good legs. Pity you messed this all up. OK, keep going up. Eye contact, we're gonna be doing eye contact and three, two, there it i--


She was looking at him and biting her lip.

"I have a bit of a naughty idea, Ricky..."

"...maaaybe, it'd be fun if you painted me."

"Well there's nothing naughty about--"

The two piece swimsuit became a one piece as the top half hit the floor, with the conspiratorial promisary look of even less to come.

"I'm gonna go get my paints..." He walked quickly out of the room towards his art supplies, before hastening his pace to a frantic frenzy as soon as he was out of view.

Paints... Gotta find paints. Grab a canvas. Paints. There!

Then he raised his head and considered possible outcomes from the direction things had been taking.

Rubbers... Gotta find rubbers.

He scrambled across the room and started going through a set of drawers in desperation. He opened drawers and grasped around blindly hoping to find a familiar square wrapper.

...and instead his hand found a different kind of plastic. Taped to the underside of the drawer above. One of the drawers had a false bottom, but whatever this was hadn't been returned carefully enough and plastic still protruded.

He pulled the drawer out further and pulled on the plastic just to find a baggie containing dozens of small pills.


"Oh Gramps... what were you into? What is this, E? Viagra?"

He drew one of the small pills from the bag and held it up to the light. They were stamped with a marking he hadn't seen adorning pills before.

A single hourglass.


"Ricky..?!?" He heard Becky call out to him from areas unseen. Presumably in a state of undress unseen.

He dropped the pill in the bag and threw it back in the drawer. Back to the task at hand, there'd be time for... whatever that was... later.



H O U R M A N
H O U R M A N



Now...


There was no time for dalliance. This was the Hour of Chaos. And as he felt the surge as more and more Miraclo surged throgh his blood stream, it would be an hour of power.

As Kobra had looked to seize an entire sporting arena, seemingly eager to rapidly increase their number beyond what had been creeping growth for the cult, the J.S.A had stormed through in response in familiar style. With Rick dropping from S.T.R.I.P.E like a bomb. First point of contact. The tip of the spear.

Kobra cultists converged. This was not an enemy which would sit and wait and attack in ones or two. A mass of humanity converged on him.

But not enough to overwhelm the heavy hitter.

Blasts launched from S.T.R.I.P.E as cover for the secondary point of contact. Stargirl swept through, with green blasts from the augmented cosmic rod that Ted Knight had recently provided her with, to better attune to her sensibilities. She landed and began striking at the cultists who splintered from her Miraclo juiced teammate, as two more were sent sailing by heavy punches.

Sanderson Hawkins landed near homeplate, and with a smile quickly took control of the environment. Kobra members sank up to their necks in the dirt. He threw a wave of dirt across the ball park, staggering a morass of humanity and throwing out whatever little order they had left.

The left field lights suddenly cut out, and Doctor Midnight made good use of their discombobulated order, with blackout bombs and well timed kicks, attacking the fringes. She called Dugan to, and the pair worked on driving them across, controlling the brawling mass with a semblance of order.

Stargirl took to the skies again, and made a sweeping run, giving the pack little chance to regain control, as green blasts further kept them off balance.

Sandy, changed tactics from the broad, to the more focused. Using dirt waves to sweep across and clear the right field side, giving Kobra nowhere to run to and nowhere to hide. Collapsing their attack and converging it back to the middle, where Hourman was still wading through their ever-present numbers like he was back at the shack and waiting to hop on the perfect wave.

They were herding Kobra like sheep. Dispatch enough of their numbers, knock as many as they could out. Maybe some of these ones would take to the attempts to remove the brainwashing. It had been tricky, they used chemical psychotropics and some kind of drug that Beth hadn't yet been able to isolate, in addition to the age-old and time tested brainwashing techniques from other cults down the years. But, if nothing else, they'd add no more to their numbers today. Left field and right field started to converge into a singular column. Stargirl took to the skies once more.

But they had forgotten about the bullpen. And Kobra had brought one Hell of a reliever.

A single blast, a flash of plasma, stopped time. Halted breath. Changed everything.


"--Courtney!" Cried out the mechanical voice of S.T.R.I.P.E, momentarily losing track of keeping to codenames in the field.

The Stargirl fell.

Kobra fell all around as Rick exploded upon them with a surge of Miraclo-infused rage.


"Sandy. Clean up. I'm taking that weapon off the field. Clear a path for S.T.R.I.P.E."

Rick sprinted to the bullpen and kicked the door in, which blasted through and took out three Kobra men lending support to the plasma rifle unit. They fired the weapon at him, it knocked him off balance, blasting him into a wall. But with gritted teeth he pushed through and the area was soon cleared.

He dragged Kobra cultists out, three-to-a-hand, to the field proper to join the rest of their ilk.

The rest of his team had taken down the remaining Kobra scurge. Pat Dugan had left his robotic power-suit behind and now knelt over his step-daughter, holding her in his arms and visibly weeping. Sandy had raised dirt waves up to turn the ballpark into a contained bowl, to keep the personal moment and private identities away from the prying eyes and cameras which had anticipated a very different evening of excitement.


"Doc?" Sandy asked Beth, the team's resident physician. With the implication of asking whether anything could be done.

Beth solemnly shook her head. She'd had a good angle on the shot. The fact that the plasma had burnt an exit wound through the back of Stargirl's uniform that was visible as Pat held her was not a good sign.


"Plasma rifle, straight to the vitals. Scorched right through. Her eyes were open, but she was probably gone before she ever even hit the ground." The doctor uttered. It was overly clinical, but delivered with the intention of providing some small hope of a silver lining of having not had the time to significantly suffer.

Whilst Pat held her and sobbed uncontrollably, Rick watched their former teammate's face and cocked his head to one side. A single eyebrow raised in curiosity.


"Uhh Beth--? You'd know better than me... how long does rigor usually take to set in?"

A less than sensitive question given the circumstances at hand. But not without merit. Her jaw had seemed to tighten in the few moments since passing. And the skin's colour was shifting pallor very quickly, given how recently the blood would have stopped circulating.

Pat turned to scowl at the crude question, but Doctor Midnight pulled him up before his indignation was given voice.


"He's got a point, Pat. Look! What's happened to the side of her mask?"

Pat lay Courtney down on the infield grass, and looked at what she was referring to. A bulge had begun to form on the side of her head. With great care, Dugan pulled back the mask to reveal the fresh bulge.

Just to find an ear that clearly never belonged to Courtney.


"He's not the only one with a point." Sanderson said, referring to the ear. Pat scowled.

"Look, I was kept in a state of suspended animation for literally decades... sometimes I fall short on the social cues. Ok?" He justified his ill-timed joke.

They looked back at the body of the fallen 'Stargirl', the skin hadn't merely gone translucent. It had taken on a clear green shade. And her previously tightening jaw now revealed clearly defined ridge folds, vertically upon her chin.

Nobody was joking now.

The atmosphere turned thick as the present moment washed all over them.

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Hidden 12 mos ago 12 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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| EARTH-668
__THE VEGA SYSTEM - THE EREBUS, THE CITADEL FLAGSHIP
The Tamaranean woman walked the bottom-lit hallway flanked by a pair of armed Gordanian guards. Long black hair flowed from the back of her alien orange skin, falling against her back and spilling over the purple fabric of her intricate bodice's train. Waiting for her on the massive vessel's bridge was Lord Antar Ftt B'Jan. He was a Kree deserter, though despite being a tailcoat, it hadn't stopped Ftt B'Jan from having a bloated sense of self-importance due to his position as the sole autarch of the desolate world of Hny'xx. The Tamaranean Queen was familiar with the Kree male, as like herself, Antar had forcibly been made to sign an alliance with the Citadel when they sieged the Vega System.

"<Ah,>"1 Antar acknowledged the Tamaranean Queen coldly as she entered the room. "<Queen Kormand'r, your sister sends her regards.>"

"<I'm surprised her heart still beats in her chest. I thought your pits were supposed to be only for the strong.>"

"<Your disdain for your sister blinds you if you think her weak.>" Taunted Antar, "<You gifted me my champion, she's the strongest contender in the pit. But!>" He paused, rubbing his hands together wickedly, "<I have someone new I'm eagerly anticipating will give her a challenge.>"

"<They had better provide more than a challenge,>" Kormand'r snarled, "<They had better kill her or I'll personally be visiting your backwater little world to finish the job personally!>"

"<Might we remind you, your majesty,>" A new voice hissed, "<You are not in charge here.>" The Psion added, their reptilian tongue darting in and out from between their scaly lips as they approached the bickering pair. Kormand'r froze for the slightest second, her hair standing on end upon seeing not only a Psion, but this particular Psion again. Her right hand balled into a white-knuckled fist, fingernails threatening to draw blood from her palm as she increasingly squeezed.

"<My Lady sends her regards and flagship in her stead, but she will not join us today. Our forces on the Shi'ar front are more demanding of her focus at this time.>"

"<Plytus.>" Kormand'r started, steeling her tone to hide any hesitation in her voice, "<Lady Styx does herself a disservice sending a Kraalian crotch-worm in her stead. Our history is hardly cordial, I should cut you down where you stand.>"

The Gordanians flanking the Tamaranean Queen tightened the grip on their weapons, but to Kormand'r's surprise, they were not pointed at Plytus, but rather at her. The crocodilian-like guards had an almost sly smile to their toothy snouts. Their long tails raised from their relaxed position on the floor, balancing them to spring into action. Perhaps it should not have surprised Kormand'r where their loyalty would truly lie as she looked from one reptilian species to the other. The Gordanians after all, were made in their creator's image.

"<And you, my dear Queen,>" Plytus replied, raising a clawed limb signalling the Gordanian guards to relax, "<Need to remember to whom your position is owed.>" Plytus purred walking past the Tamaranean without fear of harm.

"<After all I fixed you.>" He stated before taking a seat in the commanding officer's chair on the Erebus' bridge.

"<You're welcome to cut me down, but that would make you a traitor to the Citadel. Your death would not be so quick, and Tamaran would be forfeit. Tell me, was the physical price you paid so high that you'd let your world die for revenge?>"

Kormand'r locked eyes with Plytus, defiantly staring the reptile down before the tense silence was broken by Antar.

"<As I have no interest in this stalemate, I would ask why, if the Lady could not be present we were summoned to her flagship, Herald.>"

Plytus gave Kormand'r one last smug look before turning his eyes towards Antar.

"<Centuri VI was lost to the Reach.>" The statement hung in the room, even the Tamaranean seemed stunned enough to stifle her feud with the Psion, at least temporarily.

"<The Hive has begun a hostile expansion and we can't be sure that the Vega System is not in their path. The Citadel is already at war with the Shi'ar and we have barely settled our ceasefire with the Kree Empire. Tensions are high and a single ship in the neutral zone could make the entire Rann-Thanagar Treaty fall apart. Lady Styx expects the utmost competency from you both. Get your houses in order before the Reach is on our doorstep.>"

Plytus looked down at both the leaders before him.

"<Did you think your Lady did not know about the uprisings on Tamaran? Sparing the resistance simply because your brother is among them, now who is weak your majesty?>" The Herald scolded before turning to Antar.

"<And you, using prisoners for entertainment instead of harvesting the resources that Hny'xx holds beneath her surface. You were a traitor to your people, the Citadel did not put you on Hny'xx to indulge in a hedonistic fantasy. You are there to work, you are there to make sure that planet is stripped to its core for the glory of the Citadel! Stop wasting their strength in the pit when it should be used for the quarry!>" Plytus roared, salvia flying from his maw.

"<Guards!>" The Psion snapped, motioning towards both the Queen and the Lord. "<Get them out of my sight.>"

As she was escorted from the bridge, Kormand'r managed to steal one last look at Plytus. She could still smell the sterile lab environment as she looked at his smug visage, still feel his cold-blooded fingers ignoring her cries and still hear the hissing laughter at her agony.

The reptile would die by her hand.
1 - Translated from a Vega System Pidgin Dialect.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Gladitorial Pits - Hyn'xx, 'Hope's End'
The Chain #1.01: Albatross
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: None

Thud.

The leathery fist made contact with Carter's face. The meaty slap echoed across the open arena, eliciting a cheer from the crowd and a muted grunt from the Terran combatant. Rearing back a fist, the four-armed Branx held the Thanagarian warrior tightly between his lower arms while continuing to swing wildly with his other two arms.

Thud.

Thud.

Thud.

The wall suddenly gave way, revealing the hidden chamber behind the ancient wall. Entering the new opening, Dr. Carter Hall straightened his hat before igniting his flashlight. The beam refracted off the metallic hull of the vessel within.

It was exactly as he recalled it through his ancestor's memory. It was perfectly preserved despite the passing of several millennia, the damage sustained from the crash was barely visible as the Nth Metal slowly healed itself using the vessel's dwindling power reserves. The Brontadon had once been cutting-edge technology and by Earth standards, it still held up. Its Nth Metal construction made it capable of exiting the atmosphere with next to no difficulty, easily defying gravity all while giving the ship an almost organic construction.

Removing it from Egypt was no small feat, but after managing to circumvent several layers of red tape, Carter had the Brontadon back state side where Pat Dugan whistled admirably at the sleek construction.

"Don't worry, Carter. I can definitely get this bird back in the air."

He was true to his word too as Carter found himself making his first jump to lightspeed. The ship handled beautifully until it suddenly didn't. Pulled from lightspeed, the console was flashing various shades of amber, red and orange. Weapons' fire rained along the hull and Carter found himself in a dogfight without a gunner. The Wingships were designed to be flown by a team of two, a gunner and a pilot.

Out maunevered and flanked, the Brontadon soon was entangled between four tractor beams and Carter found himself looking up into the mask of the pirate captain. His ship stolen, stripped for its precious resource, Carter was given as tribute to a local despot. The despot recognized him as a Thangarian, a fighter.

Leading to Carter joining the pits.

T
hud.


"Enough of this." Carter roared as the final punch split his lip. Warm blood dribbled into the thick layer of stubble that had begun to cover his chin. Tucking his knees to his chest, Carter drove his heels straight forward into the Branx's abdomen, aiming for where the diaphragm was located on a human. Whether he struck the equivalent alien organ or not, it was enough to loosen the larger sentient's grip. Using the advantage, Carter took ahold of the alien's wrists, pulling his knees up again but this time twisting his torso upwards. Delivering another set of sharp kicks, Carter struck the underside of the Branx's jaw, driving its tusks upwards into its own cheekbones.

Its cry of pain echoed across the arena as the spectators jeered at Carter's sudden reversal. Free from the alien's grip, the Thanagarian warrior retrieved his sword, sliding between the towering alien's legs and slashing across the back of its calves. Following up with a swift kick to the back of its knee, the Branx howled with agony before dropping to the ground.

A pommel strike to the back of the head was enough to completely daze the creature before Carter slid the blade of his weapon under its chin.

"At least make it a challenge for me!" He mocked, looking defiantly towards the ruler of Hope's End, Lord Antar Ftt B'Jan.

"Do you yield?" Carter roared in the Branx's earhole as the crowd jeered again.

"<No.>"

"So be it." Carter muttered as the warm silver liquid spilled over his blade and onto the rusty sand below. The displeasure of the crowd echoed in Carter's ears as he returned to the undercroft beneath the arena's floor.
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Byrd Man
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Byrd Man El Hombre Pájaro

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Dutch Hill


Tim Drake got out of his car and surveyed the area. It was a fairly quiet, working class neighborhood. The further east Dutch Hill ran the suburbs yards faded into row houses and inner city Gotham, but this neighborhood was about four blocks away from the change. Tim saw yards well kept, dogs in some of them, and houses that were maintained with pride by their owners but in desperate need of remodel. Gentrification was only a matter of time, but for now it stood as a bastion of blue collar Gotham that was rapidly becoming a distant memory.

He was looking for the 1200 block of Williamson Road, a little side street that ran parallel to the main avenue of Kemper Street. Two weeks ago GCPD made a routine traffic stop on Antonio Boggs and found a substantial amount of cocaine on his person, enough to arrest Boggs for felony possession with intent to distribute. Boggs retained the services of Pennyworth & Fox for his criminal defense, and Al threw him the case. An easy enough task for an investigator still wet behind the ears.

Tim checked the PDF of the arrest report on his phone as he walked down the sidewalk towards Williamson. Sergeant Mike Malone of the Western District initiated the stop, made the arrest, and later wrote out the report Tim was reading. From soup to nuts, Sergeant Malone was the lynchpin of the entire case.

The map on the incident report showed Tim where the stop had occurred, just quiet of the part of the street. He looked around for any cameras on light poles or in backyards. The advent of the wireless doorbell cameras made the job a lot easier some times, some times. You still had to deal with getting the footage from greedy homeowners looking for a cut. It seemed that headache would be avoided this time.

According to the report, Malone observed Boggs’ car doing a rolling stop at a four-way intersection on Williamson. That gave Malone the probable cause he needed to initiate a traffic stop and find the drugs. Tim took pictures of the street with his phone. There was a four-way stop about 200 yards from where the traffic stop occurred, but he couldn’t see a good vantage point to where Malone had been sitting. He walked up the street towards the stop. No good spots to park for a cop cruiser, but he did see a convenience store on Kemper that might have a view. He took more shots of the intersection before trudging over to the convenience store.

“Good morning, my friend,” the man behind the counter said as Tim entered.

The place seemed to be empty. This time of the morning most working people’s days were well underway. There would be a lunchtime rush and then another at five, but for the most part Tim imagined the place just had customers dribbling in one at a time.

“Morning,” Time said. He reached into his pocket and quickly flashed his credentials. “My name is Tim Drake and I’m an investigator.”

He always found the key was to carry yourself with the air of a cop, but never outright say you were. His ID card did in fact identify him as a state license private investigator, and he hoped his use of the word in an introduction wouldn’t lead to follow up questions.

“Who is the owner here?” he asked.

“It’s me,” said the man.

Tim should have guessed. He was a middle aged Asian man wearing a white button up with top button undone, dark dress pants, and a nice gold watch on his wrist. He didn’t exactly look like he was working for minimum wage.

“I have a few questions for you.”

Tim got out a leather bound notebook and a pen. The good thing about most immigrant business owners was that they were the law and order types, especially in borderline neighborhoods like this one. After asking his name and other biographical details he got to the heart of the matter.

“You ever have a cop frequent this place?”

“Yes,” he said with a smile. “Sergeant Mike. He’s here almost practically every day, he’s one of the good ones. Doesn’t ask for free stuff, always pays full price, and always likes to talk.”

“He ever sit out in the parking lot?”

“All the time,” the owner nodded. “And I love it. Bunch of punk kids live around here, they see Sergeant Mike and they know not to fuck with me.”

Tim kept his head down as he wrote in his notebook. “He ever pull anybody over while sitting in your lot?”

“A couple of time. The people around here, they speed up and down this street. No sense of safety.”

Tim nodded and kept scribbling.

“When was the last time he did that?”

“A couple of weeks ago,” said the man. “Why?”

“Just curious,” Tim said as he looked up. “Thank you for your time.”

“Who did you say you were with?” the man asked with a furrowed brow. “You police?”

“Thank you for your time,” Tim said as he walked out the store.

From the front of the store, Williamson could be seen, but the four-way stop was a little further up the road. Boggs may have done a rolling stop, but from his vantage point Malone couldn’t have seen it. What he would have seen was a blacked out car with music blasting out of it and he made an assumption, invented probable cause. Profiling, in other words.

Tim took a few more pictures of the street from the front of the store and headed back to his car. It wasn’t much, but in the hands of Big Al Pennyworth it would be enough. They’d go to trial, subpoena the convenience store owner, and destroy Malone’s credibility on the stand. All it took for a Gotham City jury to hear was that a GCPD officer may have lied in the course of the investigation. Al would play it up from there. If Sergeant Malone had lied about the probable cause, maybe he was lying about the drugs he found on Boggs? Enough doubt to get Boggs out of jail and back on the street.

Because the fact of the matter was Boggs was a drug dealer, the cocaine Malone found on him was in fact meant to be sold. But Boggs was a Wayne Family dealer, and as such he was under the legal protection of Pennyworth & Fox. Tim knew firsthand that the Waynes always stood by their people. He and his dad were proof.

He was on the way back to his car when his phone buzzed. Not the actual phone he used for personal or work related things, but the second phone only a select few people had the number to.

BW
Meet me at the tower tonight.


He slipped the phone back into his pocket and got into his car. The big man was calling. They probably hadn’t seen each other face to face in a a lone time, but that’s how it worked. That’s how he worked. If it required face to face then it was a big deal. Tim texted Karmen and let her know they’d have to reschedule for another night, she could always pick up another shift at the Peppermint Rhino.

Back when Tim was a kid and his old man was out on the street hustling for nickels and dimes, he had always had a dream that he wanted to be a somebody. The night his old man stood tall for the Waynes, Bruce had promised Tim the chance to be that somebody. Jack Drake had sacrificed his life, but it wasn’t in vain. And now here was Tim, a nice well paying job doing something he loved and the freedom to be his own man and the chance to sleep with beautiful women.

“Living the dream,” he said softly to himself. “I made it, pop.”




Barbara Gordon opened her eyes. The sound of her phone vibrating on the nightstand was nearby. She sat up and groaned. The clock on the nightstand said it was almost 11 in the morning, the sunlight peaking through the curtains doubled down on the time. She leaned over and squinted at the screen of her phone.

INCOMING CALL:
BULLOCK


The hell was Bullock calling for? He knew she worked third shift last night. She had just gotten to sleep a few hours ago. Barbara fumbled for her glasses and put them on. She heard a groan over her shoulder and looked back.

“Tell them to call back,” Dick Grayson mumbled.

She scowled back at him before slipping out under the covers and grabbing her phone.

“I didn’t wake you did I, sweetheart?” came Bullock’s gruff voice.

“Yeah, you did in fact.”

“Too bad. I’m on my way to your place. Think we may have a break on the Crutchfield Street killings.”

Barbara cursed under her breath and looked back at the bed. Dick was half asleep, the sheet covering his naked body. The last thing she needed was for Bullock to find him here like this.

“How far away are you?” she asked. “I need to get ready.”

She heard a knock on the front door.

“That answer your question? I been trying to call you for an hour now.”

“I’ll be right there.”

She hung up and started to shake the bed.

“Dick,” she hissed. “Wake up, my partner is outside.”

It surprised Barbara how quickly he moved at that point. He seemed to spring out of the bed and start dressing himself. Within seconds he had his jeans and t-shirt on.

“Do you think he knows?” he asked.

“Bullock is a great detective when he’s on the job, but outside work? He’s a mess, no way. This is something else”

There was another thump at the door.

“C’mon, Babs, I don’t care if you’re in your pj’s.”

Barbara turned towards the door.

“Give me a minute, Harvey!”

When she turned back, Dick was gone. The window to her fire escape was open and she heard the sound of rattling metal. Good, she thought, the last thing Harvey needed to find was Bruce Wayne’s adopted son warming her bed.




“This was worth waking me up for?” Barbara asked as she looked at the grainy security footage. Bullock was sitting on her couch, drinking a cup of coffee while Barbara watched the footage from Bullock’s phone, her robe covering her pajamas.

“Keep watching,” Bullock grunted.

On the phone events from four months prior played out like it had a thousand times before. But, she noticed, this was a new angle.

Crutchfield Street in the Bowery had a reputation. It was firmly in the red light district and known for its wide variety of carnal pleasure for sale. Usually the red light district was violence free. They knew it drew the attention of the cops, and cops were bad for business. But that truce had been broken during the height of the summer. A pimp and his two goons had been killed approaching the brothel they ran. All three men had been stabbed to death with surgical precision. Barbara and Bullock inherited the case from the uniforms of the southeastern district. They’d identified the three men as Eastern European, members of the Chechen’s crime organization.

After that, the trail went cold. No eyewitnesses were willing to speak to cops, and the few surveillance cameras they found showed footage that was grainy and out of focus. But now? The footage Barbara watched was pretty clear and pretty close. She could clearly make out the name of the brothel where the men had been killed out front: Alexi’s Tea Room.
“How did you get this?” she asked Harvey.

“It took a little convincing and a little bribing,” he said. “But the whorehouse across the street from our scene did in fact have a security camera, despite what they told us. It was hidden in the tits of that naked statue out front.”

He cleared his throat and looked away from Barbara.

“Don’t… ask more about what I had to do to get it, just watch.”

She smirked and turned back to the footage. It showed a black sedan pull up to the Tea Room. Three serious slavic looking men in suits climbed out the car. The two larger ones flanked a smaller man with a shaved head and a neck full of gold chains.

Before the could head inside, a figure landed on the roof of the car and struck out quickly. They jumped down with the car blocking them off from the camera. Movement from the other side of the car was fast and furious, the figure knocking all three men to the ground before they could defend themselves. Barbara saw blood running on the pavement under the car and pooling on the street.

Her eyes widened as the figure jumped back on top of the car. She tapped her finger on the screen to freeze the footage. Crouched on the top of the car, frozen mid-jump, was a man dressed in black body armor. In both hands were some sort of club with what looked to be a razor’s edge. A mask hid his face and on his chest was a bird. The footage was black and white, but she knew the bird would be red.

“Deathwing,” she said softly.

“If that’s what that jerkoff’s name is,” said Bullock. “He’s one of the Bat’s goons, that’s all I know. This was a Wayne hit, Babs.”

She cursed softly and looked towards her bed. The window to the fire escape was still cracked open. If she didn’t know any better, she could have sworn she saw the fire escape sway with movement again.
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Hidden 12 mos ago 12 mos ago Post by Simple Unicycle
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Location and Time: New York City; Behind Greene's Groceries - 2:08 PM
Issue #1: We Don't Sell That Here

Interaction(s): None
Previously: N/A


The sun was high in the sky, casting a warm glow over the city. Just around the corner I could hear the constant flow of traffic and pedestrians, cars honking and people talking. Leaning against the wall right next to the back door, I took a drag from my cigarette, inhaling then slowly exhaling a cloud of smoke. This was my single fifteen minute break in a ten hour shift and, as usual, I spent it smoking and taking in the ambience of the city.

It wasn't even a minute later when the back door opened, my younger coworker Mason leaning out and looking at me with worried eyes. "Um, Mr. Forte? Can you come back inside real quick? There's a customer asking for a manager."

I sighed, snuffing out the cigarette on the wall and flicking it into a nearby trash can. "Alright. Let's go see what the problem is."

The two of us went back inside, heading up to the front counter. There was Karen behind the counter, staring doe-eyed at the customer in front of her who was demanding to see a manager. Karen looked over to me, her fearful expression shifting into one of relief. I stepped in between the counter and the customer, looking to meet the customer's eyes. "Who are you?" the customer asked, crossing her arms.

"I'm the manager. What seems to be the problem here?"

"I do all my shopping here and now you're out of the one thing I need!"

I've never seen this woman before in my past five years of working here. "What are you looking for, ma'am?"

"Diapers."

"We don't sell diapers here, ma'am."

"You're kidding! I buy them here all the time!"

I shake my head. "I'm sorry for the inconvenience, but we don't sell them here. Never have. There's a Walgreens two blocks away, you should be able to get some there."

She narrows here eyes at me and scoffs. "Fine. I'll take my business there then." With that she struts out the door, the tension in the air following after her. Crisis averted, for now.

"Thank you, Mr. Forte," Karen says. "Sorry we interrupted your break."

"It's fine. Just try to be more assertive next time. Tell them 'we don't sell that here'."

"I tried, but... She was so demanding."

I chuckle at that. "Yeah, they usually are." I cast a glance at my watch. 2:14. "Well, break time's over. Time to get back to work." I give a nod to Mason and Karen and head to the back office. Taking a seat, I sigh, then get to work on putting my inventory count into the system. With Mr. Greene retiring last year, most of the work fell on me, meaning I was the one doing inventory and ordering us more goods.

The rest of the day passed by uneventfully. After putting in my counts and making an order I moved onto helping Mason stock the store. It was 8PM now, closing time, and we were finishing up a pallet of soda. "Any plans for tonight, Mason?" I asked, placing two twelve packs of Coca-Cola on the shelf.

"Nothing much, probably just gonna chill out on the couch with my girlfriend, maybe watch a movie or something. What about you, Mr. Forte?" He loads up another two twelve packs.

"Take Chip out for a walk, like I usually do. Then call it a night."

"Heh, you and that dog. You make it sound like he's all you need."

"Because he is. I love that dog."

"Do you even have anybody in your life, Mr. Forte?" Mason pauses, as if realizing how rude that sounds. "Sorry, I don't mean it like... I'm just, y'know-"

"You're fine, kid." Two more twelve packs on the shelf. "No, I don't. But I've gotten used to it."

"You ever had anybody in your life?"

"I had a family, once. Car accident took that away."

"Shit... I'm sorry."

"... It was a long time ago now."

The two of us don't talk much after that. Just an awkward silence hanging over us for a couple of minutes as we finish up the soda. Thankfully, it's over quickly. The silence remains as we clock out and head out the door. I lock it, speaking to Mason as I do: "You enjoy your night, Mason."

"You too, Mr. Forte. See you tomorrow," he says, before getting into his car and driving away. My apartment is only a few blocks away, so I begin the trek home.

Haven't talked about my family in a while. Mr. Greene had heard the same car accident story from me, one night after we closed and he invited me over for some drinks. I hadn't told that to anybody except Mr. Greene, fearing that someone might put the pieces together. I was still a wanted man for all that I had done, still had to hide even if it was in plain sight. If someone were to recognize me...

"Stop! Please, stop!"

"We'll stop once we get what we want out of you, girlie! Trav! Hold her down..."

Voices from the alleyway. Nothing good. I pressed myself up against a wall at the mouth of the alleyway, peeking around the corner. Forty feet away, two big bastards looming over a girl. Not a woman, a girl, couldn't be more than sixteen. One of them grabbed her and forced her to the ground, sitting on top of the girl as she screamed. "Shut your fuckin' mouth or I'll cut off your pretty little tongue!" he yelled, waving his switchblade in the air.

I was already walking down the alley before I could even think of stopping myself. The one still standing was staring at the girl on the ground and licking his lips, too caught up in his twisted thoughts to even notice me. I grabbed him by the shoulder and rammed a fist into his jaw, sending him to the floor.

The one on top of the girl whipped his head around to look at me. "What the fu-" A knee straight into his teeth, sending him off the girl and into the wall. He pulled himself up and began to swing his knife around wildly. It was easy enough to duck out of the way and grab his wrist with one hand, using the other to ram straight into his elbow and break the arm. Now it was his turn to scream.

I pulled the knife out of his now limp grip. Every part of me was begging me to stick the blade in his throat, hear the scream of agony turn into a gurgle as blood oozed out of his mouth. I resisted, as much as it hurt. Instead I stuck it in his shoulder and rammed my fist into his face once, twice, three times, until he slumped against the wall and slid down it slowly, collapsing into a heap on the ground.

The other guy was only just now getting onto his feet. "Who the fuck do you think you are, old man!?" I was already moving on him when he whipped a pistol out of his inner coat pocket. The barrel was leveled against my head for just a second before I swatted his arm away. The gun went off as it flew out of his hand, sliding across the ground before finding a new home under a dumpster. I threw a fist into his gut, then another to his face followed by a knee to his groin. I ducked down and tackled him to the floor, unleashing a barrage of punches to his face. By the time I was done he was choking on his own teeth.

The girl had already taken off at this point. Good instincts on her. I stood up, looking at my cut and bloodied knuckles. Six years ago this would've gone down as an arrest, a couple months after that it would've been a double homicide. Now? Now I just wanted to get home. The problem was solved and I don't think these two will be in any shape to hurt anyone else for a while.

I left the alley behind and made my way back home.
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Grimnir
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Grimnir Grumblin' Guard

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"And that's it. All the important information, anyway. The rest you'll pick up or have to rely on John and the others. Nothing is to chance anymore. Good luck."

Parker Robbins concluded to himself, his hoodless reflection staring back at him in a handheld mirror. He tossed the mirror onto his desk and reclined further into his chair, sighing exhaustively. The man brought his right hand to comb through his hair, swiveling on his chair to stare out the window to New York City.

He should have been out there, still running an iron grip on the underbelly of Hell’s Kitchen. Digging his hands in and gathering all the sleaze and opportunity that he could. Power was earned by beating the next guy and The Hood, as he became known as, was a true kingpin in this city. That life seemed like a lifetime ago despite it being only yesterday that he… No, that wasn’t right anymore.

Parker closed his eyes. What did Spider-Man say to him once? With great power comes great responsibility., he chuckled, shaking his head as he leaned up in his chair to slouch forward. He mocked Spider-Man for that line before getting his ass beat by the masked hero. What was funny then was that Parker would counter that great power comes with great opportunity. Now, he got it but for all the wrong reasons.

The criminal kingpin known as The Hood was replaced entirely by the stronger The Hood Supreme, taking the mantle of the Sorcerer Supreme. He could bend reality to his will with the magic that coursed through his fingertips and yet, he’d doom himself in the process. All that power came at a price, requiring a strict adherence to time. Greater power didn’t give him more opportunity, it only sentenced him to greater responsibility. In a way, Parker might have deserved this. A life sentence for the wrong he has done. He could understand, but this wasn’t just one life sentence.

It was an eternity.

His watch beeped, an alarm triggering. Parker didn’t acknowledge it just like he didn’t acknowledge the grandfather clock chiming in a westminster tune behind him. Out in the hall, another clock sounded, albeit muffled by the closed door.

One till midnight.

Time was up.

”Fuck you, Spider-Man.”

Parker muttered, recalling that damned phrase as he turned around to face his desk. He drew the amulet from around his neck and held it in hand. A green glow emanated from strange eye-shaped amulet. With one last breath, Parker slipped a finger in and tapped the stone. A green flash broke free and engulfed Parker, the man vanishing as the light faded.

Two minutes passed, and the green light returned, replacing Parker Robbins right back in his chair. His eyes snapped open, wild and confused. He had no idea how he had got there.

It was a new day for all but him.
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Enarr
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Enarr

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Question 1.01 - Going Live

Going live in 30, the countdown chimed to the land's faithful.

And all across the network, the living dead peaked through their coffins, breaking the threshold of incuriousity. Rolling the stone from before their tombs and tasting bandwidth, as doggedly as a maggot working through jerky. Cranking the video quality, they tested the stream's dedication. Steadfast, they were given light and color in 1080P.

"Good evening, Hub City. As always, I'm Victor Sage and you're watching Sage Advice! Only on Hub City News Online, where you don't have to worry about advertisers skewing our bottom line, shadowbans, or information suppression courtesy of rogue algorithms." With the tail of his trench coat snapping in 4/4 time, the reporter stood before a wire fence that said No photography. No recording. No trespassing.

"Following Mayor Wesley Fermin's acquisition of a private helicopter, the people of Hub City have been demanding an audit. Seeing as no such gifts were disclosed and it's very hard to imagine how an elected official with a one hundred thousand dollar salary managed to pinch enough pennies after declaring bankruptcy six months ago. I figured we could help him out this evening."

Sage winked at the camera, as the drone it was mounted on was called to heaven, rising above the eye of man and setting its sights on the shadowed walls of Hub City's mightiest piece of post war construction. Reaching the highest smoke stack of the facility, the camera saw what laid within its concrete heart and laid it bare.

"Welcome to Hub City Motor Works, the city's biggest source of employment since 1952 or, at least it was, until it shuttered it's gates five years ago. But I don't need to tell you that. You used to work here or at least someone you know used to. As you can see, they're burning the midnight oil down there, manufacturing SUVs by the thousand.

But none of whatever proceeds there are have been entering circulation within the local economy. Well, not unless you count whatever gas station Mayor Fermin is refueling his helicopter at. The business license for Motor Works was surrendered years ago after they were pursued by the Department of Labor for unpaid wages."


Once the dark, outer walls were overcome, it was plain to see that the facility was alive and well, with the industrial glow of work lights bleeding through the cracks in the brick. Switching away from Vic for a moment, the drone's camera went live as the audience was drawn into a seance.

The facility roared with the vivacious scream of steel shaping steel, swishing with the ancient bile of dinosaurs coursing within them, pulsing on demand like a frog leg touched by an electrode. A monstrosity held back by generations of workers whose blood spackled the thresholds like a Passover lamb, just once a year if they were lucky.

"As you can see, the parking lot is empty. The lights are on but nobody's home. Someone, it would seem, has been connected to the city utilities, as you'll see here," the camera swung towards the electric meter that was mounted to the side of the building. "And last month, the very same day that all the firetrucks in the city were seen traveling in the direction of this hollow shell, the chief of twenty years retired. I see a pattern here. Perhaps we should take a look inside, however. Don't you think so, citizens of Hub City?"

From on high, the drone swiveled to look at Vic as he raised the chain link fence like a scroll and passed through it untouched. Incidentally, at that moment, the rays of light that had been whispering through the gaps in the wall went dark. Responsively, the drone swiveled around the facility to investigate.

The door nearest the ginger journalist swung open and, when it did, somehow seemed to suck the moonlight from the grass, as a trio of men slithered forth from their den.

"Good evening, gentlemen," Vic waved his gloved hands. "I hope I'm not intruding on anything too terribly interesting but I was just hoping you might be able to answer a few questions for the people of Hub City this evening."

"Can't you read, sir? The sign says no trespassing. Clear as day. Now we know its dark out and we don't need to make this any more than it is but we won't be answering any of your questions, Mr Sage. You need to be on your way."

"I did see the sign. But this is public land. When I spoke with the office of Commissioners of Public Lands two days ago, she insisted that the Motor Works property wasn't for sale and gave me permission to be on it. So, it is in fact, not me who is trespassing. But if anyone, you. Speaking of which, who are you? The public would love to know."

It was at this moment that the stream, which had been broadcasted to hundreds of working class Wisconsinites, doubled in viewership. The amounts of comments placed on the HCNO page and, in all material ways, audience engagement remained the exact same. But there were now hundreds more watching. Hundreds more knowing where Victor Sage was.

"We don't give our names to the public, Mr Sage."

From behind the nebulous shadow man, emerged another figure. This one a lady, stepping forward from the factory's darkness and into the moonlight just as visible as Mr Victor Sage.

"While we appreciate that you've done your homework, Mr. Sage, I'm afraid that you're in error," the woman said, her voice warping and tongue wobbling like she was trying to swallow a fistful of unchewed gumballs. "We'd been negotiating and working through the property's sale for quite a while before finalizing its sale just yesterday. So while that's all technically true, the situation just isn't what you're implying it to be." Finally, her voice stabilized, "If you refresh the website by morning, you'll find it updated to be perfectly in order."

"I'll be sure to do that. It seems I might need to have a word with the head of the Commission to see why the state of public lands are so unclear and see what needs to be done to help modernize it."

"Oh, dear. You don't need to bother with any of that. I am the head of the Commission. I'm merely here to help finalize the paperwork."

"Really? I'm surprised you'd drop everything during your vacation to Fawcett City to come here, of all places, in the dead of night, to sell a building that's been worked in for months."

She choked. "I am on call. Business is business."

Vic stared. Daring her to say something he could fact check into oblivion.

"Can we help you with anything further, Mr. Sage?"

"I don't think you can. But I'll be sure to look into that, Ms. Clifford. I hope you can get back to your vacation soon."

CRACK! The video feed went dead. And it seemed that this line of inquiry would have to be punctuated, not with a question mark, but with buckshot.

The drone dizzily circled down to the ground and heard the sound of dozens of feet marching from the concrete into the grass. An electric car growling to life as a bland cast of stock characters yelled "on the ground," "don't you fucking move," and "I will blow your fuckin' head off if you gimme an excuse."

The last thing that the audience heard from the blind drone before it was crushed under heel was "We have a warrant for the arrest of Victor Sage."
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Sep
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Sep Lord of All Creation

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Storm clouds brewing.




Drums echoed in the back of the Great Hall, ethereal singing came over the heads of the crowd who danced and cheered. The hall was a blur of colour, as people twisted and turned to the beat of the drums. The musicians at the far end of the hall controlled the flow off the room, they were at its mercy. Only Odin sat stoic and still at the far end of the hall on his great throne, Huginn and Muninn sat atop his shoulders. Gugnir in right hand, while his left tapped along as if controlling the beat of the drums.

The doors at the far side of the hall opened, and in walked Thor. Second son, and crown prince. He carried Mjolnir. His red cape billowed in his wake. He took a step into the room, smiling at Loki, his half sibling who danced among the denizens of Asgard. One second he was dancing closely as a man, the second as a woman. Weaving an elegant dance through the crowd, but never with a partner other than themselves.

Thors steps thundered through the hall, mirrored by the beat of the drums as the tempo changed. Raindrops started to fall, though nobody in the crowd seemed to notice as their clothes became damp. Despite his forward walk Odin never seemed to get any closer. Thunder rumbled as his heart rate increased, and his speed picked up. The drums got louder and thundered in his ears, he could feel it them echoing in his skull.

Feet splashing in the water, his pace continued to increase. Soon the water was up to his knees as he fought against the torrent of water that streamed down from Odins throne. The water was up to his knees when Odin slammed Gugnir on the ground and all the dancing stopped as everyone looked to him. They cheered and looked to the ceiling as the water turned to blood. Thor screamed, and lightning lanced out from him as the blood continued to rise. He tried to swim to the surface, to keep his head above it. Though soon he was consumed in its darkness.




Thor awoke with a start. A low rumble of thunder could be heard outside his small wooden cabin as he sat up, cradling his head in his hands. The same dream, again. It had been for the past several months. The dreams were the very reason he had come to Midgard, to this small cabin he had owned since the 1930s. War had been raging across the Nine Realms, a war he was responsible for in his ignorance. While with the assistance of many of the other Aesir peace had largely been restored, there were still small pockets of unrest.

When the dreams began, he went to his mother. Who told him that what he needed was rest, a break from duty and responsibility. Having gone from one crisis to the next for nearly a century, and so he had returned here. To Midgard. A world where he felt more at home than he did within Asgard, he always had. The people here and a spirit, that he never saw anywhere else within the nine realms.

Walking to the small sink he splashed some cold water on his face. Sighing as he heard a small. Tap, Tap, Tap at the window, as soon as he saw the ravens he knew.

It was time to return home.
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Hound55
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Hound55 Create-A-Hero RPG GM, Blue Bringer of BWAHAHA!

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Then...

It was a wet day.

The dress code was clearly not agreed upon, as those in attendance wore a blend of black, and colourful garments that showed as much. It wasn't often that one of their kind had passed, and there was no clear way to best represent their fallen comrade.

Somehow despite this smattering of the brightest of outfits, one stood out beyond all. The one draped in the flag, who had inspired him. It was only fitting.

Captain America and Fred Davis Jnr held tight salutes through the twenty-one gun salute they'd demanded for the man in the pine box.

The one who was refused the opportunity to leave his country to fight for it, because another man in a flag was already over there.

Jeff Mace. The Patriot who was denied the right to fight for his country in a war on foreign shores, for the good of morale he could do on the homefront.

Johnny Thunder looked particularly peculiar, his regular green suit replaced with a black one, albeit with a very familiar belt which didn't match with what he wore for this occasion.

Most of the core J.S.A had come in garb. Jay Garrick had his iconic helmet. Alan Scott in full Green Lantern regalia, as did Fate in his own. Heck, Wildcat looked ready to fight back Death and win Mace another day.

Rex was only really joined by Ted Knight in his choice to hold to traditional dress for the occasion. Black suit, tie and shoes.

The hour didn't seem appropriate for anything else.

He didn't feel it was right to draw any additional attention to himself, he'd fought alongside the man quite often. Mace and his 'Liberty Legion' sub-group of the J.S.A fought predominantly out of New York, which was one of the two cities he spent the most time in. But he wasn't amongst their number. Not really. And with the exception of 'Bucky', his closest associate, they'd all come in full dress - but it seemed different in their case. Appropriate. Close comrades standing to in support.

Whilst he generally linked the 'Liberty Legion' with the core J.S.A. proper, and his vouching and connection was a major part of their becoming a part of the larger Society. There was still unspoken space between them.

And now certainly didn't seem to be the time to approach Miss America. Not after that night where Mad-- well, its best not discuss such things in polite company.

He'd wait until they were together as a group and offer his condolences. If he was feeling particularly sheepish, maybe he'd take Jay or Terry Terrific with him... it was harder to find fault with either of them, or point fingers in front of them. People wanted to please them.

Almost as much as the one in the flag, he supposed.

Rex looked down at the box covered in the flag. The metal supports polished to such a shine. Even on this miserable day.

The big C. Cancer. Who would've thought this would be the way the next of them would fall? With their lifestyles?

Then Rex considered his own mishaps, side effects and issues with Miraclo down the years.

The war was in the mirror now, but darkness hadn't left this world.

Hell, not even all of the Nazis had. They still fought Baron Blitzkrieg less than six months ago. And even fallen adversaries had a way of finding their ways back.

Cancer seemed pretty final though didn't it?

Not like hate, evil and fascism. That seemed to find a way to hibernate, twist and re-emerge in new forms, new versions, more suited to addressing more current environs and talking points.

Reich mk.II - Now available in Diet! Ugh.

The Thin Man turned and gave him a subtle nod.

Yes, he'd definitely have to pay his respects more directly to the 'Liberty Legion' as a group after the ceremony. He was curious what the Whizzer had been doing with himself... and that's before you even get to some of the stranger members of the Legion.

He looked up and Jay Garrick was giving him a look of pity.

It dawned on Rex that to the rest of the J.S.A HE was the one who had lost someone closer.

He felt pangs of guilt as he realised he really didn't know as much about Jeff Mace as he could have. If he'd taken the time. Inspired by Captain America to play a role. Used in America's own marketing of itself and shilling war bonds. The need and crave for more - which Rex had always assumed was just the craving for adventure... for those moments... - the need to help his country.

Patriot by name, Patriot by nature. What more had there been to really know?

Until the sands of the hourglass run out, and you realise there's no more time to find out.



H O U R M A N
H O U R M A N



Now...


The sun was out, but the sentiment somber.

A contradiction which seemed fitting for the circumstances.

A funeral for a 'friend' they didn't know in the box. Going through the motions to pretend they didn't know, that they hadn't discovered that their friend was anything but who she claimed.

Barbara Whitmore's, along with Mike and Pat Dugan's tears were real.

No need to fake anything when you don't know where on earth your daughter or sister is, or what condition she's in.

New and old J.S.A were in attendance. Mostly recognisable by costume. But there were some faces who weren't known to the younger current group. A man with a goatee in a black leather jacket, a gaunt elderly man with glasses, another lean gent done well up to the nines in his black suit, complete with a cane, dark glasses and top hat - which he politely removed for the ceremony itself.

The four current members had carried the casket.

Despite being a J.S.A affair, they'd tried to keep it somewhat small. Wake at Courtney's family's house. A standard press release to avoid suspicion. The regular funeral service for the same reason, which Pat had organised, with his own familiarity to the traditions and etiquette of the lifestyle. Sandy had offered to help, having some familiarity with his time by the original Sandman's side. But Pat had decided to take it upon himself, things had been hard enough for the family.

The ceremony was uncomfortable for Rick, in its somber nature. He wondered what the thing in the box presently looked like. Not knowing their biology... would it turn to acid and melt through the bottom like something from a horror movie? Beth had assured him it wouldn't, but how much could they really glean about its physiology?

'It'. It took their friend's form and he was left with calling it an 'it'. They didn't know what the Hell it was, other than it seemed pretty clearly alien in nature. Where were they from? What were they called? What did they want, and what was their interest in the Stargirl, and by extension the Justice Society of America?

The staff was left lying upon on the casket, removed only when the box was lowered into the cold ground. A few cold words followed.

And then it was over. No fanfare. No cheap thrills. None of the joy with which Courtney had led her life.

He swore if he had a funeral it wouldn't take this form.

The small core group left to attend the wake at the Whitmore-Dugans.

There was food and drink put aside, but nobody had touched anything.

It was somehow more strange and somber an occasion because she HADN'T passed than if she actually had.

What HAD actually happened? Was she OK, or still dead, just her body left somewhere else entirely?

Unspoken uncomfortable questions that nobody wanted to address yet, but would need to be.

The cacophonous silence was broken with a knock at the front door.


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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Master Bruce
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Master Bruce Winged Freak

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The Williamsburg Bridge
12:32 AM


I'm so happy, 'cause today I found my friends. They're in my head.

It all seemed to happen in the blink of an eye. Two armored trucks en route to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York were in the midst of a delivery of bills. Normally, armed transport would accompany them in the event of an attempted robbery - in the case of the FRBNY, there were always three sets of security vans on loan from a local agency, with one to stay in front and two to follow. But as soon as all five vehicles had made it to the halfway point of the bridge, something in the air started to change. A fourth van of an identical make and model appeared from the rear and casually veered into their path, prompting all six to a screeching halt. As the truck's drivers slammed the brakes themselves, though, they noticed that the four vans had started moving in a particular pattern. The two in front had peeled inwards, while the two behind interlocked in an opposite formation. Within seconds, the truck drivers realized something was horribly wrong. Another terrorist attack was always a possibility, with the security detail potentially acting on the defensive.

Then the gunshots started. Before the drivers could think to radio in an alert about the suspicious activity, sixteen men appeared out of the vans in ski-masks, bulletproof vests, and darkly colored jumpsuits, all brandishing automatic rifles. A hail of bullets pelted the exterior shell of the trucks, causing sparks to fly and glass to shatter. The driver of the first truck even ducked behind cover as his side mirror exploded. But the message was delivered plainly without an exchange of words: this was a robbery and if any of them valued their lives, they'd do exactly what was asked of them. While the second truck's passenger cocked his significantly underpowered pistol, his co-worker grabbed the weapon and forcibly lowered it. He was new to the job, so the reaction was understandable. But this wasn't a scenario that allowed for any heroics.

"Transport's en route, let's double-time it. ETA's eleven minutes to extraction."

As soon as one spoke, another emerged from the back of the crowd, seemingly pushing his way to the forefront.

"Eleven minutes for you, maybe. Remember that the plan diverges from here for some of us."

"But we were promised---"

"Relax. You're still getting your payday. Soon as we get these idiots out of the way of it..."

There seemed to be a leader amongst the pack, as the slender-framed man stepped forward, rifle still drawn. His head turned ahead, visibly indicating the drivers and their subordinates with a much more threatening demeanor.

"Here's the deal. You make your hands nice and visible with no sudden moves, you don't get scrubbed off the the windshield. Any action to the contrary receives the contrary."

His accent seemed to indicate that he was from Jersey, though it was a dialect that was all too familiar from the region of New York. He could have easily been from Brooklyn, for all they knew. What was important now was that he'd given an order. Hesitantly, their hands visibly shaking, both men complied with the request and sat back in their seats, arms raised. A much taller, bulkier figure appeared from behind the leader and quickly grabbed the door, flinging it open and latching onto the first truck's driver with one massive hand.

"Remember to be gentle, O."

"Heh."

I'm so ugly. That's okay, 'cause so are you. Broke our mirrors.

With surprisingly little effort, the driver was violently tossed onto the pavement, forcing him into a sideways roll. By the time his body crashed into a series of nearby traffic cones, he looked up to see at least three of the rifles pointed in his face. That was enough to cause the other three occupants of the truck to quickly maneuver out, their arms also raised. The leader snapped his fingers, and all at once, three sets of four gunmen swarmed upon the hapless representatives of the FRBNY.

"See? Painless, simple. Like all good things."

The leader turned towards the waiting second-in-command.

"Blow the truck, do whatever you gotta do with the contents. Throw it in the river for all I friggin' care, just be sure to make it nice and loud."

Wordlessly acknowledging the change-up of priorities, each group of four ordered to keep one of the FRBNY pinned down parted with a man a piece, with three ultimately approaching the massive and electronically locked back doors of the trucks. A third man who hadn't been noticed before approached, his garb similar to the others, but noticeably different for one detail: a massive trenchcoat covering his uniform. He held something that was difficult to see at his side, almost like it was some sort of coiled-up cable.

"With respect to our deal, D, you know I could just break the door myself."

The leader held up a hand, his gaze fixated on the skies.

"No. They handle the cash, we handle whatever comes next. Don't get antsy on me, M."

Even from beneath his mask, a wide smirk could be seen creeping across trenchcoat's lips.

"Who's antsy?"

Sunday morning is every day, for all I care. And I'm not scared.

"Please..."

D turned towards the faint murmur that originated from one of the drivers. Sure enough, one of them was forcibly brought to his feet, rifles still trained at either side of his head. The man was visibly in his late thirties, eyes glassy and breathing labored. Scared out of his mind.

"Please don't do this. Take... take whatever you want and go, but don't hurt anybody. We're just out here to do a job. I've got a... a family, a couple of kids."

"That right?"

Suddenly, D's demeanor switched. Just moments before, his body language communicated that even under the circumstances, this was a calm and collected professional. One could easily imagine that this had been far from his first rodeo when it came to executing high-risk-higher-reward robberies. But the minute that the guard had started groveling, it was like a fuse had just... shorted.

"Alright, line 'em up."

The others turned, a couple of them even exchanging confused looks.

"What?"

D angrily shot forward, rifle drawn.

"I said line 'em up. Straight line, horizontal."

"Boss, maybe take a breath..."

"No."

To everyone's surprise, he responded to that appeal by turning off the gun's safety. The others that had just been in the middle of trying to crack the door had stopped, their reaction being to place their hands back on their weapons. Something was evidently going very differently than what had been planned, and it startled them.

"No, this piece of... this is what I hate. The minute that somebody begs? Drops to their knees like they're five and just got, what? Caught with the cookie jar? That's when I get pissed. This is a simple exchange. We get the cash, they get to live. I laid it out all nice and clear. But that?"

Grabbing the newly wide-eyed and completely pale guard by the collar of his shirt, D spun around and tossed him face-first onto the concrete. The man shrieked for half a second, but became eerily silent as soon as he looked back to see the gun lowering towards his line of sight. It was at this moment that the others noticed, for the first time, that the make and model of D's rifle was considerably different from theirs. More sleek, streamlined. Highly technological, in a way.

"That's the kind of thing that'd get me beaten by the old man. 'Till I learned not to do it no more. 'Till I got made an example of."

The gun cocked, ready to fire. The helpless driver began to shake his head, overwhelmed with disbelief. Several wanted to advance and prevent this, but none took so much as a step. This had just become an entirely different situation - casualties weren't conducive to a simple heist.

"It's just not something I can abide in others."

Light my candles in a daze, 'cause I've found God.

THWIP!

All fell silent as a thick line of a silken material appeared out of nowhere, latched onto both of the driver's shoulders and whisked him into the air. A few of their jaws dropped while watching the driver scream out as he sailed past the trucks, disappearing from sight entirely. D himself was frozen in place, clearly wondering what just happened. But before anyone could react properly, another set of lines shot out of the dark.

THWIP! THWIP! THWIP!

"What's going---"
"Is that---"
"What the f---?!"

Three gunmen holding down the other drivers felt an immensely strong tug on their weapons. Then went slackjawed as the rifles careened out of their hands, whipped sharply, and struck three others hard in the back of their skulls. They tumbled forward and slammed against their immediate surroundings, one colliding with the armored hull of a nearby truck, another hitting the metal railing of the bridge, and the last unfortunately forced into a fourth gunman, whose weapon fired off a stray shot into the air in surprise.

D, O, and M converged on eachother, frantically scanning for any sign of something in the dark. But the lights of the New York City skyline bled into a heavy early morning fog to obscure their vision enough to make it a difficult task. The other men began racing around, shouting barely intelligible orders, grabbing their freshly discarded guns and trying to quickly position themselves on the defensive.

Yeah, yeah.

"You've gotta be friggin' kidding..."

"What's happening?! Is it the cops?!"

"No, moron, this is it! This right here!"

A large, human-shaped shadow moved above them at blinding speeds, twisting and turning mid-air with the grace of an Olympian. D's eyes locked onto the figure just as landed on the side of the armored truck, seemingly clutching to something. Or more accurately into something, with each of them hearing the distinct sound of metal slowly bending. D pressed a button on the side of his weapon, brandishing it as a series of orange lights began to emit.

"M's right, it's him! The friggin'... the guy that the Bugle talks about!"

All stood to attention as the figure's head raised, revealing the intricate crimson design that sat atop a featureless black visage. Scanning the crowd of would-be thieves, readying himself to strike before any of them got wise enough to try and attack. The Spider-Man.

Yeah, yeah.

Pérdida de tiempo. His heart still racing from the frantic swing across the bridge, Spider-Man felt a surge of adrenaline hit him all at once. The world went into slow-motion as his enhanced senses kicked in, revealing a few potential approaches on how to handle this before they opened fire. There were at least fifteen, maybe sixteen hostiles in total? He wasn't sure. A couple of guards were being held at bay, though some had escaped the notice of their captors upon the webslinger's dramatic entrance. Miguel had to quietly hope that they took the opportunity to escape on their own, because he had a feeling that what happened next would be occupying his attention.

Which suited him just fine. Unlike a majority of the mask-and-spandex crowd that had come to infest New York, he wasn't interested in pretending to be a hero. He just knew from a lifetime of living in the city that he couldn't trust the cops to do the job correctly. Clenching hard against the steel casing of the truck, Spider-Man held his breath and focused. Then without much consideration, he leaped high into the air. He could hear the guns start to fire at him, but they sailed straight past. His movements were too fast for them to keep up.

"DON'T LET HIM GET CLOSE! YOU HEAR ME?! DON'T LET HIM---"

THWIP!

The leader fell directly on his ass, his mouth suddenly engulfed in a thick patch of webbing. Two of the thugs approached him and attempted to help remove it, but the others were still focused on their mystery attacker as he somersaulted into an arc above. Firing another webline to secure himself, Spider-Man swung low and reached out with a gloved hand. Grabbing one of the gunmen by the back of the neck, he violently flung him into the air and brought his knees up, effectively propelling into his spine. Shooting like a missile, the screaming henchman collided with two others, allowing Spider-Man to coat them in another, bigger patch of webs as he swung over. As a result, the three were now immobilized.

I'm so lonely. That's okay, I shaved my head. And I'm not sad.

Landing on the bridge proper, Miguel rolled and flipped out of the path of another smattering of bullets. Sparks once again flew off of the truck as he dodged behind it, leaping onto the back and scaling it with precisive movements. His head was pounding and the blood was rushing to his extremities, but he had to admit - it was a feeling that he'd become addicted to. Compared to the monotony of his day-to-day grind, putting himself in situations like this gave him a thrill that no drug, he suspected, could ever hope to match.

Leaping over the protection of the truck, Spider-Man raised both hands and shot out two weblines at once. Watching them attach to the opposite support cables of the bridge, he yanked hard on them and released his heels' grip on the vehicle. The result catapulted him directly at a group of thugs who were surprised enough to stop firing, seriously considering whether they should try and clip him there or move out of the way. By the time it became obvious that "move out of the way" was the smarter option, his fists brutally collided with two of their faces. Miguel then used his momentum to sail forward, grabbing onto the third's shoulders with both hands. Swinging his body wildly, he wrapped himself around the criminal's back, grabbed his arm in a lock, and then maneuvered the other arm into the other side of his closed thigh. Watching Spider-Man yank himself back, all of them backed away in horror as the sickening sound of bones snapping drowned out the man's screams.

He'd broken both of the thug's arms. In an instant, acting without hesitation. This was enough to cause at least two of them to drop their guns and immediately turn away, running for their lives past the barricade. Spider-Man couldn't help but smirk as he leaped ahead and latched onto one of the poles connected to the overhead bridge light.

"Anyone else?"

They responded with further gunfire. Miguel cursed at himself as he dodged, realizing that he'd nearly opened himself up to a bullet by trying to act tough. He'd paid the price for such arrogance in the past, having suffered stabbings and gunshot wounds in his initial days wearing the suit. A year of experience had taught him to be better, but there were occasions when he forgot himself. He figured that was the part of him that he'd inherited from his father, who would "forget" himself all too often - to the point that it cost him any contact with his family, having put Miguel and his brother through enough physical and mental abuse to last the rest of their lives.

And just maybe... I'm to blame for all I've heard. But I'm not sure.

He would never be like him. Being Spider-Man meant that Miguel had a chance to make a difference, but it was going to be on his own terms. And as far as he was concerned, stopping a robbery like this was only a step below intervening in a random carjacking. Before the gunfire on the bridge had alerted the police to the chaos, prompting Miguel to respond after hearing it on his police scanner app, he'd been pursuing an Alchemax truck to an off-site storage facility that could have resulted in something truly incriminating. Evidence of some genetic tampering that the government couldn't possibly overlook, no matter whatever story Tyler Stone could have spun for them. But because of this, he'd lost the trail.

It made him angry. And when he got angry, Spider-Man got particularly into the idea of mimicking a certain Wookie by snapping someone's arms out of their sockets - hence his earlier display of aggression.

"HEY, FREAK! PLAY DEAD!"

Before he could engage with his next few attackers directly, Spider-Man was surprised to feel the brunt of some unseen energy knock him off of the path of his descent. Just barely managing to catch himself from falling by latching onto another bridge cable, the wall-crawler spun around to see just what had knocked him back. But to his surprise, a large rectangular strip of something glowing came flying towards him. As Miguel tried to leap out of the way, it struck him hard between his shoulder blades, ripping into the fabric of his suit and causing him to cry out as it burned into his skin.

Falling several feet before hitting the concrete below, Spider-Man's ears began to ring as his vision blurred. And three obscured shadows began to overtake his line of sight, moving towards him at an alarmingly calm pace. Miguel could feel his shoulder ache from being practically dislocated from the impact of the fall, but he didn't have the slightest idea of what could've hit him.

"W-Who the shock..."

"Who the 'shock'? What's that supposed to..."

"Montana. Eyes on the prize. Ox?"

Spider-Man started weakly pushing himself back up, but was struck again. This time by a massive fist hitting the back of his skull. The ringing got even louder and he almost felt himself black out, but he could swear that he'd heard these voices before. Not in person, but in something he'd watched. Some sort of televised court hearing, or something.

"Nice one. Bet he's not up for anymore of that jumpin' around like a cartoon bunny on crack."

Montana. Ox. It all clicked into place. Their leader was a two-bit hoodlum named Daniel Brito. Or "Fancy Dan", as he was more colloquially known to the public at large. The three of them had been sentenced to a Maximum Security facility for murdering at least a couple dozen enemies of the Maggia over a five-year period. Gruesome stuff, at least enough to get all of them a life sentence. But they had mysteriously disappeared during a prison transport six months prior.

I'm so excited. I can't wait to meet you there.

They were known as The Enforcers. Usually, they were only called upon when their clients had reached a point of no return. Spider-Man realized that their presence here could only indicate one thing, as he could feel them coming closer - this wasn't a robbery after all.

This was a trap. And like an idiot, Miguel had leapt right into it.

Mierda.

And I don't care.
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Hidden 11 mos ago 10 mos ago Post by Roman
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Roman Grumpy Toad / King of Dirt

Member Seen 12 hrs ago

#1.02: The Bat
Earth-93913003, Gotham City


Earl Skinner was a drug dealer, a hired thug, a gang initiate, a general scumbag, and a landlord.

His father’s father has been in construction and lived in what was effectively a worker’s village contained to a single two-story bloc estate, 8 apartments of 4 rooms each (including the combination den/kitchenette and the cramped en-suite bathroom) forming a brutalist square around a double-function courtyard and parking lot for bikes and the one guy who’d scrimped and saved enough pay to buy an actual car. Eventually the other workers had died or moved away, and it had been just Ol’ G-Paw Skinner left, living off state pension, nursing arthritis and lung disease. When G-Paw died Earl was still a boy, and didn’t understand that G-Paw had been a long-time blocker to companies that wanted to purchase the lot for redevelopment; he didn’t know that his father had been made an offer for the bloc shortly before G-Paw’s sudden decline after a decade battling illness, nor that his father had countered the offer with the inheritance and bought the whole run-down, crumbling estate himself with city guidance he make the bloc as a whole presentable amidst the other developments around them. What he did understand, through his father’s tutelage, is that paint and spackle was a lot cheaper than actual structural repairs, and that desperate people would pay far more than what a place was worth just to have a roof over their heads on those sodden Gotham rainy nights and a bed to lay their children in. By the time Earl learnt the truth of G-Paw’s demise - confessed by his father on his own deathbed - his only real thought was ‘why ain’t ya do him in sooner’.

Since his father’s death, he’d come into ownership of the bloc and its leases himself, and he’d developed new, even more degenerately cunning methods of extracting money from his tenants and funneling it into his own assets; see, Earl only took rent in cash, in stark defiance of the modern age, and Earl's pal Brad owned a payday loan business in the same neighborhood, just on the right side of shady to still be operating. Between them, they also knew a revolving door of gang initiates looking to cut their teeth on some violent scut-work.

So with all the pieces clicking together, the play went like this: Earl would demand payment from whoever was coming up to rent day, and because he demanded it in cash, he'd wait until the unfortunate tenant had made the withdrawal, and then have them mugged. Unable to pay, the tenant invariably found a very un-sympathetic Earl would begin imposing late fees day-by-day, while the stolen cash would be taken straight to Brad. As the victim grew desperate beneath the looming threat of homelessness on Gotham's unforgiving streets, one of two things would happen - either they found a way, almost always a horrible way, to stump up the cash, plus late fees, and Earl and Brad split the original rent money for a tidy little profit; or they came to Brad's door, who was genial and polite and more than happy to lend them back their own stolen money to pay Earl's rent and late fees and all at a tidy little interest rate of 100-150% to start with.

The sustainability of such a model mattered little to either man; when the pair's combined ploy eventually drove someone out of the bloc entirely, Gotham's endless font of desperate unfortunates was quick to plug the gap. Anyone who suspected Earl Skinner was never in a position to do anything about it.

Earl Skinner was about to have a bad night.

- - -


Maggie hurried home through the streets on yet another rainy Gotham night, her jacket held up to shield her hair from the downpour. In truth, she didn't hate the rain; the streets were quieter, she liked the sound of it, and more often than not wet nights were warmer than dry ones, which she felt grateful for in her unheated apartment. The rain hit against her skin and she tried to embrace it rather than shiver. On her thighs she still felt the greasy, clammy grips of the barflies who'd pawed at her as she'd delivered drinks and paraded shots - but it made for good tips, so instead of recoiling in disgust she smiled, put a hand on a shoulder, bent over just enough to present the tray as well as her cleavage, and tips were sorely needed. Today, rent was due. Earl had messaged to remind her this morning. She gripped the envelope of cash tight.

A couple streets over, Earl Skinner sat in his Chevy Suburban, a ghastly SUV monster that looked all the more ridiculous in its overblown and gaudy pompousness when it was sat outside the neglected and degrading apartment block that he'd used to finance it. He fiddled with his phone, flipping between apps and webpages and generally killing time while the rain beat down around him and he waited for the evening to proceed. Out in the wet his goon was splashing across the asphalt, off to fetch Earl his money.

Maggie was close to home, and grateful for it; she felt like she must be approaching terminal wetness, a plateau of simply how soaked a single person could physically be, and the rain seemed only to worsen in response. She was drenched to the bone, and without a working boiler she was in genuine danger. Towels and blankets might not be good enough to dispel this chill from her core, but she had no other options. Her clothes would take days to dry.

Ahead of her, the road was awash with a great lake of water; there was a blocked drain and the rain had taken full advantage to sink the street into a shin-high marsh. Maggie didn't even stop to consider her options; she couldn't face having to walk through it and ruin what was left of her shoes - her feet pounding the pavement in double-layered socks was about all the warmth she had left in her right now. Instead, she took a sharp turn, ducking between two buildings to cross through the alley in between them, intending to circle around the flood; she was maybe a block, block-and-a-half from home, and she even had the day off tomorrow. Home, some food, some dry clothes.

She didn't even see the man holding the crowbar until he stopped her forcefully with a heavy hand against her collarbone. He almost felt like a caricature of Gotham's standard run-of-the-mill muggers; dressed head-to-toe in a grey rubber poncho, balaclava covering his face beneath the poncho, booted in black wellies and gloved hands forming a tight grip around his choice of weapon. Maggie simply started to cry.
"No dramatics, lady. Just make this easy on the pair of us and hand it o-"

He was interrupted mid-sentence by the sudden and forceful impact of a stranger's shoulder to his midsection, and his yelp of surprise and pain was cut short by the ringing of metal as they hit a dumpster and the dropped crowbar hit the floor. There were several wet thuds in fast succession and more yelps, and then the stranger stood, hunched over, one hand gripping the goon by the collar of his poncho, the other balled into a fist and rearing back; it came down hard, and even through the poncho and the balaclava, the sound of a fractured jawbone rang clear through the rain. The terrible hands found the discarded crowbar and this too was raised, flashing in the sky against the streetlight like the flaming sword at the gates of Eden; it found its mark against a kneecap, and the cry of pain cut ice through Maggie, even as it came out garbled through the broken jaw.

The stranger stood tall, fist still clenched around the crowbar. Maggie didn't dare breath. He was some manner of terrible demon: all-black, horns erupting from his head, terrible wings trailing down his back like flayed skin slung over his shoulders, something branded across his chest. His hot breath spooled out as fog from his mouth in the evening air. Out of sheer morbid curiosity, Maggie leaned forward, trying to get a better view of the symbol across his torso; when he finally moved, turning toward her, the illusion was dispelled.

Stood before her was a man, 6-foot and change, well-built and broad-shouldered; he wore dark-grey military pants, the legs tucked into heavy black boots. His hands flexed inside padded gloves, and his torso was clad in a matte-black armoured jacket; across the chest was the painted insignia of a bat. A cape wrapped around his neck and fell backwards over his shoulders, the ends ragged and torn, and finally a hardened cowl covered his head, that furrowed his brow and darkened his eyes, with great pointed ears sprouting from the top. In the murky night, through the rain, he cut a hellish otherworldly figure; as Maggie adjusted and the terror subsided, he became a saviour, and simply a man.

They looked at each other for a long time; Maggie didn't move, and neither did the Bat; he kept a firm grip on the crowbar, and she still clutched her pay. Finally, with a rasping breath, the Bat stooped over again, passing the crowbar from one hand to the other and picking up the would-be mugger's uninjured leg. Step by step, the Bat began to drag the man past Maggie, his ferocious gaze set on some distant objective that Maggie couldn't see through the rain. He growled as he passed her, offering only a few short words,
"Get home, get dry. Save your money. No more robbery tonight."
And then he was gone around the corner, and the spell on Maggie was broken; she scrambled away, running all the way back to the bloc.

- - -


Earl yawned and rubbed his face, feeling eyestrain from staring at his screen in the dark of the car's interior for the last hour. He wondered where the hell that jackass rookie was. That was the problem with kids these days - no drive, no common sense. If he'd taken the money and split, he'd be on crutches within the week, and that was best-case scenario. As it was, Earl was still fixing to deliver him a black eye, or maybe a broken nose, just for the tardiness.

Something groaned outside the car.
"Alright, fuck this dumb kid." Earl muttered to himself, sitting up and twisting the keys in the ignition to bring the engine to life.

There was a great crunching and creaking of metal as something heavy hit the car and the roof buckled beneath the weight. The car rocked side-to-side, something else tumbled down the windshield and landed on the bonnet, and then everything was still, only the beating of the rain against the car once again. Earl breathed heavy, panicked breaths, mind racing. Shakily, he brought his phone to his ear, dialing the rookie.
What the fuck is going on out there?

Earl jumped as his phone connected and the rings made the car hum like thunder. He peeked over the steering wheel and now saw the object on the bonnet for what it was; his rookie's phone, lighting up against the night and vibrating with each ring. Slowly, but surely, Earl watched the phone vibrate its way to the edge of the car and tumble to the ground; the call fail immediately as the phone cracked and switched off. Earl looked up, and now noticed the outline of a limp hand hanging over the lip at the top of the windshield. Nervously, and with some effort thanks to its now partially-crumpled frame, Earl pushed the door open to try and look at the individual on the roof and confirm his suspicions.

A strong hand gripped Earl roughly by the back of the collar and pulled him bodily from the car, tossing him hard onto the wet asphalt of the road. Earl blinked, trying to wipe the rain from his face and get a good look at his attacker; he scrambled to stand, trying to push himself up, but a forceful kick to his elbow sent it bending the wrong way and put him straight back on the ground. He clutched his arm, growling in enraged pain.
“Whoever the fuck you are, you have no idea who you’re fu-”
There was a flash of metal in the streetlight and the crowbar Earl had handed the rookie not even an hour previous came down onto his ribs; Earl felt at least three crack from the impact and growled again.
“I’m gonna fucking kill you-”
This time the crowbar hit his kneecap dead-on, shattering it. The leg would be useless for weeks; he’d never walk on it properly again.

Earl screamed, and there was a crashing sound of glass from the car; through the pain, Earl looked up. The crowbar was lodged through what remained of his windshield.
The light from behind Earl’s head was eclipsed as a great shadow stepped behind him. Earl couldn’t twist to see properly, and he was hazy through the pain and the downpour, but he saw…blackness. A dark figure, with wings and horns and a snarl like a primeval beast, looked over him.

The Bat put a single careful boot on Earl’s wrist.
“You will never hurt another person again. You will never take money from another person again.”
The pressure on Earl’s wrist increased and he groaned, unable to pull himself free.
“You will never push drugs again. You will never rob again.”
Slowly, slowly, more pressure; Earl could feel the small bones grind against each other, the asphalt bite into his skin.
“You will never rape again. You will never kill again. You will hide, and you will think, and you will regret your pathetic life, your sad life, your vicious little life that has been predicated on hurting, and taking, and exploiting, and trafficking, and you will never do any of it again. Because if you do, I will know.”
The Bat pushed down with that last little push that was needed, and a series of short, sharp snaps popped from Earl’s wrist as it was crushed beyond use entirely. The Bat crouched, inches from Earl’s panicked, terrified face, a demon snarling the truths of Hell into his ear.
And I will come back for you.”

Earl fainted, the pain finally washing him out of consciousness. The Bat stood up, and walked away, disappearing into the night.
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Bork Lazer
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Bork Lazer Chomping Time

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I was the Phantom Stranger.

I see the end of days. I see a woman, ivory-skinned and dressed in black, turn off the light and close the door. I hang up my hat and my coat. I walk out with her. I don’t look back.

I am the Phantom Stranger.

I see a blue world. I see pearls falling onto damp concrete. I see a comet from a doomed world. I see gods fall. I see men rise.

I will be the Phantom Stranger.

There is nothing more to say.

don’t be so sure, darling

I am the Phantom Stranger and I see your defeat.

when? in a million years? i will be defeated, wanderer, but not anytime soon.

I am the Phantom Stranger and I have the first move.

ah. the mortals.

well, wanderer, you now have my attention. try to amuse me this time.






issue 1: call 666-666-666 in case of emergencies





SOMEWHERE IN LAS VEGAS

MADAME XANADU’S TAROT HOUSE


In all of the various casinos that lined the Vegas Strip, the Tarot House was not the most famous but it commanded a certain reputation. It was the oldest on the strip by far and if you asked a local, they would have sworn it had been there since 1970. Or 1950. Or before the Alamo. Regardless, it was a squat purple brick, the old wood and concrete walls intertwined with vines and speckled with vines. Within its walls, its patrons gambled their lives away under the guise of violet curtains and lily-scented oiled smoke that cloyed at the walls.

In the basement of the Tarot House, guarded by two burly half-troll guards with sloping bear-like shoulders, was a door. And a door after the first door. Past several heavy doors wrought in wood, iron, silver, and all manner of strange materials, Madame Xanadu sat unmoving. A cigarette burned impossibly slow between her fingers, embers never traveling further along the rolled paper. Bookcases lined every wall of the room. Ancient tomes marked with swirling scripts, battered things, summoned from the ether, and rested heavy on the shelves, full of words written in tongues long since forgotten. Scattered objects, strange in every imaginable way, filled the gaps between the books. A collection of grim talismans that pulsed with magic and the unmistakable touch of the occult.

The faint, pleasant smell of jasmine was everywhere, overcoming even the burning smell of nicotine. A candle flicked on the table, red wax slowly seeping onto the table. Six chairs had been strewn in front, occupied by six strangers. Cards spun slowly through the air, one held in place above Madame Xanadu's extended finger.

Turning her attention away from the floating card, she spoke, her sonorous voice sickly sweet for a moment, “You wonder, perhaps, why I have brought you here?”

“Free drinks?” The first voice that morphed into a multitude of voices replied, whispers of hideous laughter seeming to shiver into existence from several parts of the tatterdemalion form all at once.

The second voice that replied was clipped, slow, each vowel a cog in some great mechanical device“ Hauling six strangers out into the Mojave desert, each of whom have no prior connections to each other.Everyone here acts familiar around you. They know you. You’re here to collect.”

Ah, an astute observation. There may be hope for you yet.” “I have aided you, one and all, and my help does not come free. You knew this, I told you my price, I warned you, when you sought me out that my services do not come free. You will not refuse me, not now, not ever. We have a contract. We have a deal.

“ YOU THINK YOU CAN HOLD ME TO A CONTRACT?,” The third voice crackled like a furnace, each syllable piercing the air like a fire poker. The temperature in the room rose by a few degrees.

Madame Xanadu smirked, her eyes calmly meeting the two smoldering embers that glared at her with righteous fury.

“Some deal,” The fourth voice bitterly intoned with a heavy french brogue. “An agreement made at gunpoint is hardly a fair bargain.”

What price would you put on your life? Do not play the fool. I saved you. You would not have made it out of Paris if it had not been for my help. I can happily see you returned if that is your wish? No? How terribly unsurprising. A sensible choice, but your lack of gratitude does you little credit.

The fifth voice, a soft voice, full of the sounds of the West, the City of Angels, interrupted. The most normal figure in the room, the young woman looked like a poster child for a dated music video featuring the Cure. Black lipsticked lips were pursed in a careful frown, a hand rested nervously on the silver ring of her choker, and her painfully obvious magical staff was held in her other hand, leaning lightly against the side of her chair as she gripped it tightly, "Umm, I don't mean to be rude, but I’ve got some things to deal with, some bigger problems, maybe you can find someone else? Someone better suited for this task.”

“Bigger problems? Someone else?” Madame Xanadu hissed, shaking her head.

“Yeah, maybe you can find someone else! You know, some real heroes? Like Zatanna, Doctor Strange, or Brother Voodoo,” the cackling collective cheerfully added, somehow managing a conspiratorial wink beneath the strange garb they wore.

“Are you questioning my judgment?” The goth fashioned girl shrunk under the clairvoyant’s glare as she continued speaking. “ I choose the tools according to the task, but……you wouldn’t be my first choice.”

“ What the hell are you trying to say, lady?” The sixth voice said, no, growled, hackles raised, the anger in it leashed and tugged at its collar frenetically. “ You summoned us here, all the way to bumfuck nowhere, just to shit on us?”

“Pah, Vegas is hardly nowhere, the rooms furnished to you were nothing to complain about. I could have left you sleeping on the floor in some warehouse. Perhaps next time? I do not waste kindness on the ungrateful…”

The fabric shrouded figure shook its head, “It would’ve been a whole lot nicer if I didn’t have to share my room with a stranger, no offense to Miss Stabbity and her glowing sword over there.”

“Beggars can’t be choosers, as they say. A sad fact that I am well aware of at this very moment. You’re not the best. You’re not even the second best. You’re a bunch of losers. Thieves. Deadbeats. Butchers. Magical sledgehammers, vagabonds, and pantless beasts.”

The wizened fortune teller continued to hold her expression of contempt for a few seconds, emerald eyes before surrendering it with a sigh of resignation.

“ But you will do, you will suffice for this mission.”

“ What mission?,” The fourth voice enquired.

“ The Phantom Stranger has gone missing.”

“ IMPOSSIBLE. I WOULD HAVE SENSED ITS PRESENCE.”

“ Yes, if only you had the patience to remain with your prior host, Spirit. You only have had time to acclimate to your mortal form for a week.”

“ I don’t get it. Who the heck is this stranger guy?”

“ He is a Lord of Balance.”

“Never heard of him,” the multimodal voice quipped, draping itself over the armrests of the large fabric chair it had claimed. The opossum perched on their shoulder released a low yawn, before they continued, “Balance doesn’t sound like my problem.”

The second voice interjected, their voice terse.“ He is an agent of the Green Hooded One, the Guardian of the Aether, the Spectre. They are the gatekeepers of this reality. ” With realization, the second voice slowly turned their head to the clairvoyant with a new look“ And you are as well.”

“ The Hooded One has many voices and hands on which to act, hedge mage.” The second voice bristled at the jab. Madame Xanadu took no heed of it as she continued on. “ But your observations are correct. He has gone missing.”

“ I don’t get it.” The final voice, the beastly one, asked. “Why doesn't this Spectre guy just deal with his own business?”

“ Take care of how you speak his name, half-breed. You talk blithely about matters of which you know nothing about.”

“ What my esteemed colleague means to say is that the Spectre has many matters to focus his attention on. Direct intervention by him in the mortal plane would take an inordinate amount of focus and limitless power does not equate to finesse. It’s why the Spectre usually uses agents such as Xanadu over here or…the Stranger.”

“ A simple explanation, hedge mage,” said Xanadu.

“ But where would we even begin finding him?,” The voice of voices spoke once again, amusement turned to a screeching whine.

“ I do not give you the answers, soulkeeper. Only this promise. That your debts will be released upon completion of this task.” Xanadu took another drag from her cigarette, her face growing more shadowed before stubbing it out in a copper ashtray. She snapped her fingers and a circle of candles lit around the seven figures, turning the room red and orange. From under her left sleeve, a curved dagger emerged, pale scrimshaw gliding across the flat, and the ruby encrusted grip glowing ominously in the candlelight.

“ Your hands,” said Xanadu. “ If you would please.”

Slowly, six hands came forth, four of flesh, one of flame and one of fur.

“ Hold on,” The fifth voice whined. “ Are you sure you cleaned that knife properly-”

Xanadu was swift yet gentle, the edge of the dagger biting through the skin and sinking into the flesh. Streams of ichor pooled into a small pewter basin, swirling together in a stormy red eddy. Xanadu began to chant slowly, her voice pouring like a river into every corner and crack of the small basement.

“ I, Madame Xanadu, in authority of the Lords of Balance, the Earth and the Hooded One, bind you to three truths. I bind you to find the Phantom Stranger. I bind you to not seek any ill intention against my patrons. I bind your shadows to be one until this pact is fulfilled.” She paused and the candle flames became frozen. “I bid you six thee farewell.”

The pewter bowl bubbled, a fountain of red spraying up in the air, before the . Before the six strangers could say a word, Madame Xanadu clapped her hands and stood up.

“ Alright, we’re done here.” She said quickly. “ Shoo now. I have a very important guest coming in the next 30 seconds.”

“ Wait, where do we begin looking - “

“ Get. Out.” She nodded towards the pair of burly trolls that arrived in, wielding clubs that were about the size of a man. “ Boris, Kochansky, please escort our guests out.”

As they were being roughly guided out of the basement, the faint shadow of Xanadu’s voice could be heard behind them, growing ever more quiet.

“ Ah, Mr Luthor, I have been expecting you. I assume your investments in LexCoin have paid off…..”




The doors to the Tarot House slammed shut, leaving the hastily shepherded group of magicians with a fading vision of the two considerably sized trolls and their menacing cudgels. A chill wind battered the unlikely party, the unlucky souls who had been unceremoniously tossed out into the desert night. Bright neon strips loomed in the distant, no longer glowing pleasantly, but instead shining with a fell light that filled their hearts with uncertain dread. The threads of the ritual still hung heavy in the air. Powerful magic did not fade so quickly. They were bound together now and the chains that bound them seemed to rattle in the darkness.

“ So, where the hell do we begin?”, The wolf-man asked,

“ In a bar with good drinks, I know just the one,” the laughing tatterdemalion offered, shrugging with obvious boredom when they were met with pointed glares.

The trenchcoat hatted man sat on the side of the boardwalk, ignoring the looks drunk tourists and casino-gamblers sent his way. He reached into his trenchcoat and produced the pewter bowl that he had snatched from Madame Xanadu. The bottom was still dried with blood from all six of them. He took out a piece of chalk, hastily sketched a circle on the concrete and placed the bowl in the centre. With a snap of his fingers, the pewter bowl cracked in two and smoke erupted from the pieces that were split in twain.

“ Oi, wolfie.” The trenchcoated man recoiled briefly as the wolf-man snarled, hackles raised again. “ You mind taking a sniff?”

The wolf-man lumbered forward and took a deep draught of the crim-coloured smoke.

“ I smell……baobab against skin……powdered sugar…beignets……seawater……..gunpowder and blood…….the stink of split blood against leather whips….”

“ Well, anyone up for a trip to the Crescent City?,” The trenchcoated man asked.

“ Hell seems as good a place as any to start…” The french swordswoman said, her voice dripping with sarcasm.

The midnight sky began to purple as dawn fiunally arrived and stretched their shadows, six in total, as they lengthened across the asphalt strip of the Vegas Boulevard into the barren desert beyond.......
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by autumoon
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autumoon the king of fucked up characters

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Location and Time: New York City; Avengers Tower - 1:37 AM
Issue #1: Same as it never was

Interaction(s): None
Universe: Earth-6023


A shudder overcame his body when he awoke in his bed. Since Loki joined the fight that his brother started- since he sided with the avengers, he hadn't slept in his bed- on Asgard. Apart from the fact that he felt his fathers cold anger- his distaste with what Thor had become and the power and influence Loki had gained- He had made a promise to protect earth. Now he was stuck there- A bit foolish, but sleeping in a lonesome tower was better then prying eyes.

Now that his brother had been shown off to the world as monster- something he could never believe himself- He had taken a spotlight just as the other avengers did. It wasn't what he wanted- Sure, he talked all about having a throne, but the eyes of mortals looking to seep into his every bit of life, know his every thought and wonder if he was truly good- it clawed at him in a way that he didnt expect. He hated how good everyone saw him. His morals were not of the avengers he was surrounded with- it was more dark, more horrid. Yet he had been put on a pedastol, told that he was great like the others- even though some (most) of the avengers could disagree readily.

He stood from his bed, tossing the sheets he still had yet gotten accustomed to. He walked quietly, as if a single noise would kill him, moving towards the window of his room to peek out into the night sky. Well, as much he could see. The stars weren't seen- pollution obviously rotted this areas atmosphere enough that the beautiful sky he always adored seemed to be hidden by the clouds of grossness. He huffed, looking around his barren room before deciding to get himself a drink.

Loki exited his room without making even a sound. He made it through the hallway less quietly, but he had decided he didnt want to give away his complex habits he had retained when he was a child- nor explain them. It was a long hallway, and even when he finally reached the main area it was just as lifeless as his room. None of the avengers really lived here- i mean, some stayed there for long periods of time, but to nobody but him it was their only place they could rest their head. Loki brushed off the lack of life to turn to the fridge and look around inside, looking around for anything to drink really. He usually took these times to have wine- incredibly strong wine- but humans were alot weaker when it came to drinking, so he grabbed some milk and closed the fridge in favor of making himself a nice tea. and taking some of the milk for himself, straight from the jug. If there was cameras, screw it, he was thirsty.



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Hidden 11 mos ago 11 mos ago Post by Ruby
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Ruby No One Cares

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Kara Luthor, Supergirl


“Not every college freshman lives where there’s a doorman and a wine cellar, Kara.”

The words were dry as primed powder, there was a danger to them to her ears, but it wasn’t a danger that would kill—it would just hurt. She’d seen it before; jealousy, resentment, mistrust. Worse, she’d seen it from friends before. That was the trade-off to being adopted by Lionel Luthor…everyone you ever met, on one level or another, would hate you for it.

In one way, or another.

“Call me,” the pretty girl said, and leaned in on tippy toes to steal a kiss from Kara’s lips. Kara smiled, sanguine and silent, and watched the girl walk back to her car down the street.

“…everything okay, Ms. Luthor?”

It made her chuckle, the irony of it, before answering in a sad, wistful tone, “Yeah, Marcos, I’m just watching her ass as she walks away. Its why women walk away.” Kara liked the girl, but the well was poisoned, and she’d ridden this ride enough to know how it ended. When the girl ducked into the car, Kara walked for the door of the building, thanking Marcos as he held the door open for her.

She ignored the front desk, and security, as she walked towards the elevator. Biometrics and a security device unlocked the elevator for her and allowed her entry, allowed her to pick the penthouse floor, allowed her into the place the Sterling and Sharpe Design House had decorated in Midcentury Modern, with touches of Bohemian and Glam, because, as they explained, ‘it fits your personality.’

As if they really knew her personality.

The heavy Prada saddle brown leather bag was shrugged off onto the table in the middle of the vestibule table, warm dark brown wood and a seamless glass top that seemed to melt right into the sides of the table. Through the double entry way and into the main space of the apartment, she saw the figure and stopped, dead.

“…who the fuck are you?”

The voice was strange; strained, filtered, with an electric buzz to it. The shape the figure cut was masculine, but not overly large, or overly thin…medium built but tall enough. The robes it wore were dirty, time-stained, and decorated with embroidery that had lost its color long ago, but the shapes left behind teased symbols, or a language, decorating the edges of the time tattered cloth.

It stood between custom lavender-gray sectional, and wooden kitchen island, a five-foot length of cherry wood cut straight from the center of the tree, black wrought-iron hooks and shelves underneath holding pots and pans that she liked to use.

“This is a first for me,” the chuckle that followed made her skin crawl. Unknown, self-satisfied, and brief. “You’ve beaten him before, but never like this…”

He seemed to wander, mentally, as she waited for him to go on. When he took a moment too long, she simply sighed, “Who the fuck are you, again?”

“…well, anyway, I guess that doesn’t matter now. Flying yet?”

Her head…tilted. “Who. The—”

“—heard you the first time. I’ll take that as a ‘yes’, then.” The voice came, but the face behind it stayed crystalline and unchanging, as if it was a facet of nature hiding from nature, a mask of gemstone she almost thought she could see what might have been eyes blurred through, staring at her.

Into her.

“You were always more dangerous than he was, I’ll give you that, but you each had your touchstones…yet that’s been taken from you. Robbed, I imagine, given the name you carry with you.”

Her hands were stuffed neatly into the front pockets of the black leather quilt Prada waist length jacket she wore over the simple white silk button up, the blue jeans with their slight fade and perfectly tight fit felt a little tighter now than they had minutes ago as her anger began to rise, deep down, tucked away where Lionel had trained her with coldness to keep it.

“Yeah? Wanna share with the class, mister? Or shall I test just how unbreakable I’ve become against your face?”

It made the figure with the multi-faceted disguise laugh, a harsher sound than it should have been, “It’s not a thing you can be told. It’s a thing you must see…and I can’t just show it to you. Nor would I; this is the most fun I’ve had in…well, time is different for me, but let’s just say too long.”

“Where do I look?”

Something felt wrong. It sounded like he was smiling as he spoke, now, “Into the abyss as you stand on the cliff of death, child, which you’ve been to before…but sadly she didn’t let you look.”

“She who?”

The surreal sound of his chuckle chortled once more, quicker, finished much quicker now, “Death, of course.”

Her bright blue eyes couldn’t have rolled harder, “Of course. Death is a fucking woman. Story of my life.” She moved towards him, a walk but one with real purpose.

“I wouldn’t,” he warned, “I don’t think you’re ready to see this yet.”

Her shoulders rolled in a shrug, “Take my chances, pal.”

He never flinched as she got close and reached out with the intent to grab, squeeze, see just how soft and squishy his flesh could be compared to her hardened steel grip. The texture of the robe was as rough and strange as it looked. It was the heat she didn’t expect, it was the sudden pulsing of kinetic force through her fingers and hand and wrist and arm and shoulder that kicked her like a shotgun going off in a loose hold, sending her body reeling.

It was the heat that scared her. Hotter than anything she’d ever known. It was the silence that panicked her; no scream, just a goodbye she barely registered as she convulsed onto the hardwood floor below her. Stars and shine and catastrophe and love flashing so fast she might have thrown up. It was infinity that stretched like a line that ran through all of it, and right into her.

“…fuck.” was the first sound she heard herself make as she woke up in a pool of vomit in an apartment lit only with the burning gold of the setting sun. It was a blur, it was a dream, a nightmare that she’d been awoken into. Her mind raced to make any sense of it, even if in her heart, she knew the figure had been right: she wasn’t ready to make sense of it. Not yet.

She stared at the phone, bent over the marble counter of the washroom with towel over her washed and wet hair so it would dry, instead of looking in the mirror. For the moment, the phone was scarier than the mirror. It wasn’t the first time the phone had been the evil in the room, her fingertip with its black paint starting to chip and flake finally hit the name.

It rang, and rang, and she silently cursed him. Pick the fucking phone up. I’ve called you three times the past few days with nothing. You promised— The line went live, as she heard his voice.

”I’m sorry, Kara, it’s been…crazy.”

She smiled, despite the instant worry, “You okay?”

The pause was too long, the silence was secrecy. She knew him. “…no.”

“I’ll be there in an hour.”

The second silence actually hurt. “Don’t, it’s…you don’t want to be here right now. I’ll be okay.”

You PROMISED me. “What is it?”

He sighed. He rarely sighed. “I’m sorry, I know our promise, but…I’ll tell you soon. I’ll come see you. You really don’t want to be around this place right now. Forgive me?”

Sadly, Kara smiled, “You’re my brother, Lex.”

“You didn’t answer me. Forgive me?”

Blue eyes closed, hot, to keep tears back. “Yeah, Lex, I did. See you soon.”

States away, in the subterranean vaults of a building he didn’t know existed until a week ago, Lex Luthor stared at the phone and the line went dead, the picture assigned to the contact of ‘Sister’, of the two of them together, smiling, staring right back at him. It took him a moment before he regained himself and slid the phone back into the interior pocket of his blazer, his eyes going back to the woman holding the gun on the secret scientist in the secret lab that his father had kept from him. Then, slowly, his eyes went back to those of the scientist.

“Go through it again, Doctor Sadler, and this time…don’t lie.”
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Sep
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Sep Lord of All Creation

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Return of the man God who would be King




Thor walked out of the small cabin. The two ravens moved to his shoulders, but he shrugged them off. "Yes, I am aware I am being called to Asgard." They both cawed. He stretched out his hand, mentally calling to Mjolnir who lay nearby, the hammer wobbled, stirred and then flew to his hand—creating a crack of thunder on this warm summer's day. He turned his attention upwards towards the sky, raising Mjolnir as he did so. "Heimdall! Return me home."

A brilliant flash of light and colour came down from the sky as the Bifrost opened, lifting him up and into the air. All the colours of the various worlds surrounded him as he was pulled towards Asgard. He heard a caw and looked up at Muginn. Thor could have sworn he flapped his wing downwards as if pointing. Turning his attention below he was surprised to see several beasts coming behind him. Their wings outstretched, some form of golden armour adjourned their chests. Baring their teeth in a snarl. His fist tightened on the handle of Mjolnir.

Looking up the light at the end was becoming brighter. As soon as he arrived in Asgard he'd-

The wind was knocked out of him as something collided with him from his side. Pushing him out of the tunnel, he came crashing down in a flurry of dirt and debris. Thunder cracked and rolled as Thor brought himself to his feet. Duck, Odinson! Thor did so, he heard the woosh of movement over his head as he narrowly avoided whatever weapon had been tossed at him. Standing back up he saw Hugin and Munin flying above him. Thor didn't have time to process this, however, as he heard the thump-thump-thump of heavy footsteps.

Walking around him, the man picked up his large axe. Red energy glowed around it. "So the Young Prince wants to return home to Asgard?

Mjolnir twisted in Thor's hand as clouds grew overhead. "What interest is it of yours?

The behemoth before him chuckled, as he swung his axe up to lay on his shoulder. "In time Princeling. In time. He paced around, circling Thor. "I come today with a proposition. To join us, then once we have taken the Nine Realms you can have your precious Earth to rule as you see fit."

Lightning crackled overhead, playing in the sky. A few stray drops of rain escaped the swirling clouds and dropped on the ground around them. Thor's words and tone didn't match the anger beneath the surface. This was a battle of wits, and Thor had long ago learnt from Loki how to play in such a theatre. To reveal his anger, was to lose. "You come to offer me that which is less than my birthright? I think not.

The man chuckled and swung his axe nonchalantly. He was arrogant and confident. This is what made Thor wary, if his opponent knew enough to be able to intercept him within the Bifrost. Then he had to have some understanding of Asgard, and likely of Thor himself. Was his confidence mere ego, tactics or was it earned?

"Oh little Princeling. You fail to understand, if you do not accept within the week-" An orange portal opened behind him, as he turned towards it. At the last moment, looking back over his shoulder. "-I shall take your birthright from you." Then without another word he stepped through the portal.
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Hidden 11 mos ago 11 mos ago Post by Ruby
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Ruby No One Cares

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Jimmy Olson, Metropolis


The ‘to-do’ list that took three sticky notes, front and back, was finished five minutes later than it needed to be. He stole a minute in the bathroom to send the text that he might be a little late. Every time he was caught with his phone out, it was a sharp look, a comment. Or at least he thought it was. Better to just avoid it, sad as it was, by hiding in a bathroom stall. He just hoped no one came in and pulled on the locked stall…that was always an uncomfortable moment that, for whatever reason, filled him with dread.

He told the desk reporter he would be back in an hour. To his shock, the desk reporter just waved his hand and responded with, “Go home, kid. Nothing happening tonight.”

Even when he thanked the desk reporter, the man never looked up from the AP Flash screen he was studying and exploring, click at a time. The subway took a little longer than he would have liked to get across the city to midtown. He got through the lobby and into the elevator in good time. When he got to the suite number, he was hopeful he’d made good time, only to enter the office and see no receptionist, and the woman standing in the doorway to her office, waiting for him.

“Little late, Jimmy, come on in. We still have about thirty minutes.”

“Sorry, Doctor Lanza,” Jimmy Olson’s heart sank a bit as his shoulders slumped and he followed the woman into her office and took a seat on the patient side of her desk. Had he really taken that long to get there? She asked him about his meds, and he answered as well as he could, as honestly as he could, his right leg bouncing nervously as he sat there answering her questions.

“You think you’re taking the right dose at the right time?”

He felt like he might blush, “I think so, yeah, uh, yes Doctor. It’s just…the newsroom sometimes gets a little hectic.”

“Well, Jimmy, it’s very important you take the right dose at the right time. I’m sure the people you work for would understand. Just take them during your breaks?”

Jimmy Olson smiled, sheepish, “Right, yes, I will do that. Thanks.” You’ve never met Perry White, doc.

“Sleeping better?”

He nodded, “I think so, my Apple Watch broke, and I haven’t gotten a chance,” or the money, “to replace it yet, but tracking it myself it seems like it’s gotten better, for sure.”

“Eating better?”

He chuckled, “Learning how to cook when my roommate doesn’t take the kitchen, so I think so.”

“Suicidal ideation?”

His head shook, once, quick, “No. That’s a lot better,” the lie came so quickly even he barely noticed it. The rest of the twenty minutes were a blur of her telling him something about adjusting the dosage of his medication, and another lecture about taking it on time, every time. As if he didn’t know the agony of missing a dose firsthand. She asked him if he had wanted to talk about anything about a little joke about the five minutes they had left. He might had said something, he needed to say something—it was the only part of the sessions that he felt did any good for him, but the anxiety of the five minutes comment just left him smiling and shaking his head, making an excuse about how he had the rest of the night off and just wanted to go enjoy it.

“Well then, I’ve got a date with my husband, so I’ll see you next week Jimmy.”

The subway ride to his apartment was a gallery of people excited and dressed up for Friday night on the town. The northside seventh story walk-up was little more than a closet with a little kitchenette and a metal sink that doubled as bathroom and kitchen sink. His roommate worked in a restaurant kitchen, but left their kitchenette littered with mess and unwashed dishes that left Jimmy almost sighing as he walked in and stared at it.

“FUCCCCCK!”

The sound made Jimmy wince as it came through the thin walls of the lowest rent apartment he could find, the roommate there before him, the price too good to pass up. The roommate was rude, and it appeared, had brought company over unannounced and without checking as they’d agreed when the lease was heard. In a moment of dark curiosity, Jimmy got closer to the door, only to hear the sound of skin-on-skin, and the same woman’s voice who let out the ‘fuck’ began a disturbing stream of words that just made Jimmy blink.

He didn’t always understand why some women let themselves be treated that way, but he wasn’t one to judge, he just didn’t understand. He retreated to his tiny bedroom, a single-sized cot decorated with a sleeping beg and blanket, a few pillows tucked against the wall between bedrooms. The desk was old, something he’d found on the street and cleaned up, his old computer on it, waiting for him. He nearly jumped when something started hitting against the wall between bedrooms, sighing deep as he slid on headphones and drowned it out, deciding against sleep for now, not wanting to feel the thuds from the wall. Instead, he logged into the coolest thing he was part of; the secret online forum for super sightings. There were posts about magic, gods, metahumans.

Downvoted and towards the bottom he found a post about Boston. The poster claimed to be an MIT student with dark cell phone footage about a girl in the air, floating, then flying then floating. He tried to understand the downvoting until he saw the comments:

Great. Ultra Bimbo. Just what the world needs.

She can fly. Big whoop.

FAAAAAAAAKE.

You go to MIT and I go to Harvard, sure, bruh.

Clown ass simping dude.

He’d been to Boston. He noticed a building, it had a garden on top of it, a co-op, his aunt had shown him when he visited her last year. He sent the link to an old online friend, a digital artist that worked contracts for gaming companies, and started up Baldur’s Gate 3. It was towards 3 in the morning when he finally could escape the burning of his eyes from screen exposure no longer, saving his game and checking his messages before he went to bed, taking off his headphones and frowned at the sounds of his roommates bed hitting against the shared wall again.

Yet it was the message notification on the computer screen that drew him in.

” Hey James. Not sure what crackpipe they’re smoking but this isn’t CGI, or AI, this footage is real. Know anything more about it?”


---
Lois Lane, The Daily Planet


The phone rang, and her eyes darted to it, suspicious. It was the desk phone, not her cell phone, which rarely meant anything good. In the back corner of the bullpen, where new reporters and interns were tossed and forgotten, Lois didn’t have a line of sight on Perry White’s office, or the office of Jerry, the assistant editor for Metro that she’d been assigned to…but it was nearly three in the morning, and she knew she’d seen both offices empty. She heard the phones of every desk ring, too, “Security calling to see if anyone’s still here so they can leave early? Get off your butt and do your rounds,” she snorted, and returned her attention back to the screen that illuminated her cubicle and herself, fingers continuing to type.

When it rang again, she ignored it, again. She was half-way through one of the better lines she’d written all night when the phone rang for a third time and made her nearly jump, “Jesus, you’re lazy,” it was irritation that drove her to pick up the receiver and hold it to her ear as she just continued to type, trying to recover the brilliant finish to the line she had lost when the third ringing of the phone surprised her, “listen, keep calling and I’ll give the editors your name for not doing your ro—”

“I need help. This is my only hope.”

Lois stopped. The voice was a woman, older sounding, desperate and terrorized. “Ma’am, slow down, and—”

The voice kept going like she didn’t even hear her, “—they stole my baby. It took me over a decade to track them, but I did, and I think they found me out—”

“—who found you?”

Again, the woman just kept going, “They took my little girl. They took her and everything she came with. They thought I wouldn’t fight, but I kept fighting, I escaped the facility they had me committed to, the judge they paid off—”

Her eyes rolled, hard, eyes coming a close as she sighed softly into the receiver, “Listen, Ma’am—”

Again, the voice ignored her, “—no matter what they did, I found her. Luthor, they named her, my baby Kara…named after the MOTHERFUCKER WHO TOOK HER!...I think they found me, so if you’re hearing this, I’m dead—”

Lois blinked and stared at the receiver for a heartbeat before bring it back up to her ear.

“—and you’re my only hope. The only journalists in town who they don’t own. North 81st and Clinton, Greyhound station. The key is taped onto the back of the last toilet of the women’s restroom on the second floor. It has the locker number on it...please, please, please help. Please do the right thing…please, please...”

There was just sobbing and mumbled, desperate, heartbroken pleas before the line went dead.

“...what was that?”

Lois Lane found herself jumping out of her skin, so high, so fast, that she was on her feet and swearing at the shadow who she found standing at the entrance to her cubicle, “JESUS CRIST!” When she looked up, heart beating so hard and fast it had made it’s way into her throat, she found only Jimmy Olson, the copy boy and, as Jerry as so adorably put it, the coffee bitch we’ll fire before his review period so we don’t have unemployment taxes spike on us.

That was the moment Lois decided Jerry was a fucking sleaze.

“...Jimmy, dammit,” Lois deflated back into her seat, taking deep breaths with her eyes closed before she regained her composure, and looked back to the guy, “Why are you even here?”

He shrugged, like he’d been scolded, “My, uh...roommate had a party going, I had some work to finish, so, uh...”

You’re lying but I don’t care. “…okay, well, since you’re here why don’t you get me everything we have on the Luthors? I’m going to take the recording of that call and scrub it from the Planet’s system after I download it onto my phone.”

Jimmy just looked confused, “Why?”

“Jimmy…background. I’ll explain it over breakfast, but we have a few hours until people get here, and I want to be out of here by then. Can you do that?” She asked him, her tone softer, gentler. There was something raw in the guy’s eyes. Something vulnerable, and Lois was smart enough to know how to handle it.

It was only when she watched Jimmy nod, walk off towards the archives that she finally turned her attention back to the phone, and listened to the call once more, the secure, encrypted browser on her cell phone the only search she trusted in the moment, bringing up pictures of the Luthor family and checking photo credits and descriptions, her scrolling stopping dead at a family picture dated a year ago, tagged at a charity function: the elder, Lyonel, the son, Lex, and...daughter, Kara. It should have been fear Lois Lane felt.

But she was Lois Lane, and all she felt was determination.

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This particular night was quite cold. He was glad to be inside of the Jokemobile which had air conditioning. Driving down the lone street to a location he didn’t know where just yet. Listening to the police scanner for any potential crimes that could be happening. To relieve his boredom he turned on the radio to a random station. The voice of a sad-sounding man filled the Jokemobile. Joker could only stand a few minutes before changing the station. On the next few stations, he found a song he really liked

Singing along while he was speeding passed a few honking cars. Singing in a high-pitched and off-key voice while tapping the wheel of his car. Only stopped when he heard a bulletin from the police scanner. There was a robbery going on at a well-known jewelry store. Joker punched in the coordinates speeding faster towards the store. He wanted to catch them with their pants down and get the element of surprise. Although he knew stealth was not his strong suit. Nevertheless, he was going to try his best to not be seen until the right moment.

Parking his Jokemobile a few feet away from the jewelry store. Jumping out of the seat clicking a button to lock it. The Joker would be very angry if some hooligan stole his vehicle while he was out fighting crime. He had paid a good amount of money to customize his old car to create the Jokemobile. The clown hero jumped out of the car and started walking towards the store. Going around the back thinking he could flank them. Noticing the backdoor of the building was open. He assumed that was where the robbers had entered. Joker was crouched walking further into the building hiding behind a wall. Watching the robbers trying to wrangle the crowd.

A figure who he assumed to be the leader was barking orders to the others. Joker moved from his current position toward a vent. Carefully opening the grate and setting it down on the floor. Moving from the vent towards the offices where the hostages would be. Peeking from the vent grate he could see the hostages being guarded by two robbers. Leaving a small jack in the box that was timed to fill the room with laughing gas. This was only going to make everyone in the room have the cause of the giggles. This would give him enough time to subdue the robbers.

The Joker moved further into the vent and to the adjourned room. Looking at his watch to see how much time he had left on the jack in the box. Putting on his X-ray specs to see both the hostages and the robbers. He could hear the faint sound of “Pop Goes The Weasel” starting to play. As soon as it finished he could see everyone in the room starting to laugh. This was his time to strike while the iron was hot. Joker put some explosive gel on the wall. Jumping through the new hole in the wall. Quickly he closed the distance and punched the laughing robber with a hard punch. BIFF! POW! Thud! He was glad he remembered to bring a pair of brass knuckles. Pulling out a pair of handcuffs from his utility belt. After handcuffing them he knew that the other robbers would hear the commotion.

Joker could hear loud footsteps coming towards the room. Joker quickly leads the laughing hostages through the hole in the wall to the other room. Reaching toward his utility belt and pulling out a few small pellets. As quick as a cheetah the clown he threw the pellets near his feet. Moved into the large puff of smoke moving towards the main room, while pulling out a deck of cards. The cards were sharpened so he could use it as a weapon. Throwing the sharpened cards at the hands of the robbers, making them drop their weapons and holding their hands. "Bad boys like you need a good spanking."

Joker threw some chattering teeth at them. The teeth stuck onto the robber’s legs making them fall to the ground in pain. He could see the other hostages who were cowering in the corner of the room. "Don't worry folks this will be over before you can say supercalifragilisticexpialidocious."

Noticing four other robbers coming into the room firing their guns at the clown hero. Joker hid behind a display. Scanning the area of how he could escape this situation. Then all of a sudden someone crashed through the skyline of the building. Everyone seemed to stop what they were doing to stare at the strange person. Joker noticed the person was wearing a costume that looked like a bat. The man looked over at the robbers with a serious glare. And without a moment of hesitation throwing what looked like boomerangs at the robbers. Disarming them and started to punch them with his fists. Joker watched as the costume man beat the criminals senselessly.

Looking angry at the strangely dressed man. He was not going to share the spotlight with anyone. Not now not ever, not as long as he was Gotham's sole protector.

Pulling out a long-barreled .44 magnum from his pants aiming it at the bat person. “There can only be one star of this show, that would be moi.” He said with a big smile on his face. Firing the pistol which only shoot out a sign that said BANG. “Oops. Oh right.” This action got the attention of the man who turned to grimace at him. Clicking the trigger again made the sign shoot out like a projectile at the man.

“Are YOU retarded OR something, your GUNS can’t HURT me I’M the GOD damn BATMAN!!!” He bellowed as he got out of the way of the sign, he lunged forward towards the Joker. Laughing the Joker now found the situation has become more interesting.

I got something better than a gun to take you down.” Joker grabbed hold of Batman’s arms and threw him backwards into a display case. The burly man crashed loudly into the display utterly destroying it. Quickly he put away his gun and brought out a crowbar. The Batman was rushing towards him like a charging bull.

YOU cannot BEAT me SCUMBAG! I'm THE night I'M THE GOD DAMN BATMAN!!!” Batman was stopped in his tracks by Joker slamming the crowbar into the vigilante’s face. He was laid on his back, but he seemed to quickly get back onto his feet.

If you want to work for me so badly, You only need to ask nicely.” Moving out of the way of a punch or two. It seemed to him that Batman would not stop until he punched out a few of Joker’s teeth.

YOU’RE a FILTHLY animal, WHY would I HELP a CRIMINAL like YOU rob THIS store!” Batman kept punching. They were slow so Joker could easily dodge it.

I’m not helping them rob this store, I am trying to stop them from stealing. Don’t you know who I am? I’m the gosh darn Joker. Protector of Gotham ” This made Batman stop and glare at Joker with the same intensity he gave to the criminals. Stepping closer toward the Joker who had to cover his nose. This guy smelled like a mixture of garbage and sour milk.

Their conversation was interrupted by police sirens and a voice speaking Joker turned his head toward the sound of the voice. “This is Harvey Bullock of Gotham PD, put your guns down and your hands up. The building is surrounded.” The man’s voice was gruff and echoed thanks to the bullhorn he was using.

Look you must be new around here, but like I said before there can only be one protector of Gotham. That person is me…” He turned his head back towards Batman. Being perplexed that Batman had suddenly disappeared. Joker was glad that costumed freak was gone, so now no one would steal his spotlight. "Oy Vey." Rubbing the bridge of his nose.Putting away his crowbar. Walking out of the building with his arms outstretched with a big smile on his face. “It’s so nice to see you again Harvey. I gave those bad boys a good spanking.” Pointing a gloved thumb behind him referring to the criminals.

“We didn’t need your help clown, we could’ve got these bastards.” Bullock looked annoyed signalling for his men to secure the hostages. “GET THOSE SCUMBAGS IN THE VAN!!!” Screaming into his bullhorn again while walking past Joker.

How rude Harv, should you at least say hi good Joker? Besides the only thing you could get is a box of donuts.” Joker was now fully ignored by Bullock. This was commonplace between him and everyone in Gotham PD. He was sure that one day he would get the recognition he deserved. Joker walked away from the building and got into his Jokemobile.

I’m going back to HQ Harley. Would you like anything to eat?” He said through the communicator that Harley had made for him. Starting the Jokemobile and starting to drive down the lonely dark road. Harley was happy to know that Joker had gotten out okay. She suggested some Taco Whiz, which was something Joker wouldn’t mind having.
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