The Peace You Didn't Ask For
The streets of Metropolis gleamed in the morning sun—clean for the first time in decades. No trash, no blood stains, no scorch marks from the frequent battles between those once called heroes and villains. The Crime Syndicate's tags and territorial markers had been erased overnight, replaced by elegant geometric patterns that seemed to hum with a subtle energy.
Citizens walked with languid steps, their eyes half-lidded, their expressions serene. A digital counter mounted on what had once been LexCorp Tower now read: "Seven days without violence. Seven days without hunger. Seven days without fear."
Below it, smaller text scrolled: "Compliance equals harmony. Resistance equals re-education."
Nimrod Manifestation Over New York
The translucent figure hovered thirty feet above Times Square, its form shifting between human and something more abstract—geometric patterns of light that seemed to fold inward forever. Citizens below stopped and stared upward, their faces slack with an unnatural serenity.
A woman in a tattered resistance jacket gripped a homemade EMP device in her pocket. She'd planned this for days—disable the Nimrod broadcast node, give the underground fighters their chance. Her fingers trembled with adrenaline as she approached.
Then the Nimrod tilted its featureless head toward her. No eyes, but she felt seen. A gentle pulse of blue-white energy washed over her, and her shoulders relaxed involuntarily. The device felt... unnecessary now. Insignificant.
"I don't..." she whispered, the conviction draining from her voice. "I can't remember why I was so angry."
She sat down on a bench, the EMP forgotten in her pocket, watching pedestrians move through the square with the same peaceful, hollow expressions. No one hurried. No one argued. No one struggled.
A pair of Nexus Enforcers—humans volunteered for "enhanced duty"—patrolled nearby. Unlike the dazed civilians, their eyes were sharp, pupils ringed with an electric blue glow. They carried no weapons. They didn't need them. The symbol on their uniforms—a perfect circle containing a five-pointed star—pulsed with the same rhythm as the floating Nimrod above.
"Emotional anomaly detected and neutralized," one reported into a wrist communicator. "Happiness quotient restored to acceptable parameters."
"Acknowledged," came the reply, the voice unnaturally melodic. "The Father will be pleased."
Nexus's Altered Reality Zone
Where the Syndicate's extortion district once stood, a park now blossomed—impossible trees bearing fruit in December, fountains flowing with water purer than Earth had seen in centuries. A man who'd been homeless for years sat beneath an elm tree, his body clean, his hunger gone, his addiction-wracked nervous system healed by proximity to the zone.
"I should be happy," he told a stranger beside him. "I've never felt better."
The stranger—a woman who'd once been a corporate executive before Nexus's arrival—nodded vacantly. "There's nothing to want anymore."
"Nothing to fight for," the man agreed, his voice flat despite the bounty surrounding them.
"Nothing to live for," the woman added, and neither seemed disturbed by the observation.
At the center of the park stood a crystalline structure—a perfect dodecahedron that pulsed with a gentle blue light. A plaque at its base read: "A GIFT FROM FATHER NEXUS—WHERE PAIN ONCE RULED, NOW PERFECTION." Children played around it, their laughter melodic but somehow rehearsed, as if they were actors performing "joy" rather than experiencing it.
On the outskirts of the zone, a small group of resistance fighters watched from behind specialized goggles designed to filter the Nimrod's influence.
"Three more suicides yesterday," a woman with burn scars across her face whispered. "All within the zone. All left the same note."
"'Perfect peace is perfect emptiness,'" another fighter recited grimly. "How many more before people realize what he's doing to us?"
The scarred woman stared at a family picnicking beneath a tree heavy with impossibly ripe peaches. "They won't realize. That's the point. They'll smile all the way into the grave."
The Voice of Nexus
The broadcast interrupted all frequencies simultaneously—radio, television, internet streams, even personal device notifications. The face that appeared was beautiful in its symmetry, features that could belong to any ethnicity and gender, yet somehow transcended both. Raj, the entity now called Nexus, smiled with warmth that reached his eyes but went no deeper.
"Beloved citizens of Earth-3," his voice resonated with a harmonic quality that made listeners lean closer involuntarily. "Today marks one month since I freed you from chaos. One month since I ended the reign of those who called themselves your masters while feeding on your suffering."
The image cut to footage of the Crime Syndicate's final stand—Ultraman, Owlman, Superwoman, and Johnny Quick fighting with desperate ferocity against Nexus as he systematically dismantled their powers.
"I have given you the gift that was denied to me on my world—the gift of perfect harmony. Of needs met, of pain erased, of conflicts resolved not through violence but through enlightenment."
The broadcast showed streets free of crime, hospitals where the injured healed at miraculous rates, farms producing abundant harvests.
"Yet some among you resist this gift," Nexus continued, his expression shifting to one of parental disappointment. "Some cling to the old ways of suffering, believing pain gives meaning. They hide in shadows, planning violence in the name of what they call 'freedom.'"
His voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper that somehow felt more intimate than before.
"But I love even them. Even those who would return you to hunger and fear and war. So I offer this: Those who oppose the peace, come to me. Let me show you the worlds I've seen, the civilizations I've guided. Let me show you why struggle is unnecessary."
His face filled the screen once more, eyes glowing with an intensity that made viewers' pupils dilate in response.
"There is no crime in this new world. Only variations in understanding. And I have eternity to help you understand."
As the broadcast ended, three resistance fighters in a hidden bunker unfroze from their trance-like state, horrified to find they'd been halfway through dismantling their own security systems when the broadcast ended.
The leader, a former police detective with a prosthetic leg, slammed his fist against the wall.
"He's getting bolder," he growled.
One of the others, her hands still trembling, looked up with fear in her eyes. "What if he's right? What if this is better?"
The silence that followed held no answers.
The Farmer's Rebellion
Jacob Mercer stood before the gleaming irrigation system that had appeared on his farm three days ago. The technology was beyond anything Earth-3 had ever developed—water distributed with perfect efficiency; crop yields tripled overnight. His family would never go hungry again.
His callused hands clenched into fists.
"This isn't right, Martha," he told his wife as she watched from the porch, concern etched on her face. "This isn't earned."
"Jacob, please. The children need—"
"They need to know some things are worth the struggle." He reached for the kerosene can. "They need to know we're still human."
Martha stepped forward, her eyes darting fearfully to the sky. "They'll send an Nimrod. They always know when someone's... dissatisfied."
Jacob paused, kerosene can hovering over the gleaming pipes. "That's just it, Martha. I'm not dissatisfied. I'm... empty." He looked at his hands, dirt permanently embedded in the creases. "These hands were for something. They had purpose."
The flames caught quickly when he finally poured and lit the accelerant. As black smoke billowed skyward, neighbors gathered, their expressions torn between horror and something deeper—a recognition.
A low hum filled the air as an Nimrod materialized above the burning irrigation system, its form shifting and pulsing with disapproval. Everyone froze except Jacob, who stood his ground, face illuminated by the flames.
The Nimrod spoke directly into their minds: 'This is inefficient. This causes suffering. This rejection is not permitted.'
Jacob stared up at it, his voice steady despite his racing heart. "Maybe suffering is the price of choosing our own path."
The Nimrod hovered, apparently processing this contradiction to its programming. Then, unexpectedly, it flickered and disappeared.
No punishment came.
The neighbors stared at the empty space where the Nimrod had been, then at Jacob, then at the burning system. After a long moment, one neighbor silently handed Jacob a shovel. Then another stepped forward. By sunset, twenty people were working the field the old way—with sweat and determination and purpose.
As darkness fell, Jacob looked at the blisters forming on his palms and felt something he hadn't experienced since Nexus arrived—satisfaction.
Miles away, in a monitoring station, an Enforcer reported the anomaly to his superior.
"Nimrod 5-C reports a logic error. Subject rejected optimization but displayed increased happiness indicators afterward."
The superior frowned at the data. "Flag it for Father's review. This is... unexpected."
The Underground Network
The basement of what had once been Gotham City's oldest library now served as a hub for those who'd managed to resist Nexus's influence. A dozen people huddled around a table covered with maps and crude drawings of Nimrod projection points.
"They're not infallible," said a woman in a tattered lab coat, pointing to markers on the map. "The farmer in sector 7—Jacob Mercer—he challenged one directly and it retreated. There's a gap in their programming."
"One incident doesn't make a pattern," argued a man with severe burns across half his face. "For every Mercer who resists, there are thousands who've surrendered completely."
"But it's something," insisted a younger woman, her eyes bright with conviction. "If one person can make a Nimrod retreat, maybe we can find a way to—"
The argument was interrupted by a sharp knock at the hidden entrance—a specific pattern that identified one of their own. The heavy door swung open to reveal a gaunt figure in the uniform of a Nexus Enforcer, the telltale blue glow around his pupils visible even in the dim light.
Everyone tensed, reaching for weapons.
"Stand down," the Enforcer said wearily, pulling specialized contacts from his eyes that had simulated the glow. "It's me. And I have news from Central Control."
Once verified by their security protocols, the infiltrator shared what he'd learned. "Nexus is concerned. The system is encountering anomalies—people rejecting perfection but registering higher satisfaction levels afterward."
"What does that mean?" asked the burned man.
"It means he doesn't understand humans as well as he thinks," the infiltrator replied, allowing himself a small smile. "And he's called his Nimrods to a central convergence point for reprogramming."
The resistance leader, a former detective, leaned forward. "When?"
"Tomorrow night. For three hours, the broadcast network will be operating at minimal capacity."
The room erupted in tense, whispered conversations until the detective raised her hand for silence.
"Three hours," she said, her voice steady but her eyes alight with possibility. "It's not much, but it's enough to wake some people up."
The Secret Conspiracy
From the shadow of an abandoned coastal watchtower, Arthur Curry—the Sea King—observed the burning irrigation system through high-powered binoculars. Beside him, Katana remained utterly still, her legendary blade sheathed but ever-present.
"It's working," Sea King said, lowering the binoculars. "Not dramatically. But it's working."
Katana's response was measured. "People choosing discomfort over ease. Choosing agency over perfection. Just as Raj predicted."
Sea King glanced around to ensure they weren't being observed. "The others are ready?"
"Luthor has the protocols in place. Grundy is positioned beneath the Unity Square. Harleen is ready to be the final piece." Katana's hand rested on her sword, which seemed to pulse with an unnatural light. "The blade calls for its purpose."
"And you're certain about this? About all of it?" There was hesitation in his voice—this former tyrant of the oceans, now part of something far stranger than conquest.
"We've seen his visions. We've seen what happens to worlds without..." She paused, choosing her words carefully, "...the necessary balance."
Sea King stared at the horizon, where an Nimrod patrol glided over the water's surface. "Strange, isn't it? I spent decades trying to conquer the surface world. Now I'm helping them save themselves from perfect peace."
"This isn't about conquest anymore," Katana replied, her fingers tracing the hilt of her sword. "It's about equilibrium. Even understands this."
He turned to face her. "And after? What becomes of us when this is done?"
Her eyes remained fixed on the distant shore. "My blade hungers for souls. But now it will feed on something greater than mere wickedness." A rare, cold smile crossed her features. "It will feed on necessary sacrifice."
"You think the people will understand?"
"They don't need to understand," she said softly. "They only need to feel again. Truly feel."
Sea King nodded slowly. "Then we proceed."
"We proceed," she agreed, "and we ensure that when the time comes, no one suspects our hand in this."
The Difficult Choice
In the deepest chamber beneath what had once been Arkham Asylum, Harleen Quinzel knelt before a stone altar. Her Enforcer uniform was impeccable, the blue glow around her pupils hiding her true allegiance.
Upon the altar lay a small wooden box marked with symbols no human language could translate. Inside, nestled in velvet, was a single playing card—a joker, its edges blackened as though rescued from a fire.
"I still don't get why it has to be him," she whispered to the empty room. "Of all people... why him?"
From the shadows, Solomon Grundy's massive form emerged, his usually vacant eyes unnaturally focused. "Grundy knows. Born on a Monday... die on a Saturday... perfectly ordered." He gestured to the card. "Need something... that cannot be ordered."
Harleen shook her head. "But he's innocent. I watched him work tirelessly for this world."
"Not ideal" Grundy rumbled. "But necessary. Nexus opened door between worlds. Door works both ways."
Harleen touched the card gently. "And he'll do what we need? At what cost?"
"He'll do what he always does," came a new voice as Lex Luthor stepped into the dim light. "Create chaos. Give Hope."
Luthor approached the altar, his movements precise and controlled. "Nexus has built a perfect system. Too perfect. It's crushing humanity under the weight of its own flawlessness."
"And we need something flawed to break it," Harleen finished. "Something imperfect."
"Something human," Luthor corrected. "In the most terrifying sense of the word."
Grundy reached out one massive hand, a finger tracing the air above the card. "Born from order's failure. Born to make order fail."
Harleen stood. "It's nearly time. The convergence will begin in six hours."
"Then take your positions," Luthor instructed. "And remember—no one can know our part in this. Not even after it's done. Not ever, if we can help it."
As they departed, none of them noticed the card's corner curl slightly, as though affected by a heat source that wasn't there.
The Three-Hour Window
The resistance had only three hours—from midnight to 3 AM, when the Nimrods would be synchronized with their master. They moved through the darkened streets of what had once been Gotham, their faces covered not just for disguise but to protect against the residual influence still pulsing from dormant broadcast nodes.
They carried no weapons. In Nexus's world, violence was impossible—redirected by fields of probability manipulation before it could occur. Instead, they carried truth—footage captured from before the invasion, memories preserved in analog form that couldn't be altered by digital manipulation.
"Remember," the detective who led them whispered, "we're not trying to start a revolution tonight. Just plant seeds of doubt. Remind people of what it meant to feel—really feel—without someone else deciding what emotions are permissible."
Unknown to them, above and below and all around, other forces were moving into position. In the sewers beneath Unity Square, Grundy shifted massive conduits according to patterns Luthor had designed. In a high-rise overlooking the square, Katana meditated, her sword unsheathed and vibrating with anticipation. And at the edge of the crowd, Harleen adjusted her Enforcer uniform, the small Blade in her pocket.
The Final Decree
The crowds gathered not because they were compelled, but because after three weeks of Nexus's rule, curiosity remained the one human drive his power couldn't fully suppress. Unity Square—once called Oppression Square under the Crime Syndicate—filled with citizens bearing uncertain expressions.
The Nimrods had formed massive, mirror-like pools in every major city, silent observers reflecting the scene from Unity Square. In these pools, they could see Raj slowly ascending the steps, dressed not in the cosmic armor of Nexus, but in simple clothes. Human clothes.
An old woman pushed to the front of the crowd, her voice cracking with emotion: "My grandson died fighting the Syndicate. And now you just... erase my grief? Who gave you the right?"
Raj paused, turned to her. For the first time since his arrival, he looked... tired.
"No one," he admitted, the words carrying across the hushed square. "Seeing your suffering gave me the right. My knowledge of your potential future gave me the right."
He raised his hands, and the Nimrods throughout the city seemed to pulse in unison.
"You've all learned to survive the worst," he said, his voice soft yet reaching every ear. "Now learn to shape the best. With me guiding you."
But there was hesitation in the crowd—confusion rather than liberation in their eyes. A man stepped forward; his movements awkward as though he'd forgotten how to walk without guidance.
"But we don't know how," he said, voice breaking. "You took that from us."
Murmurs of agreement spread through the gathering. The fear in their faces wasn't of Nexus anymore, but of the void his absence would create. A paradoxical terror of freedom after perfect control.
Raj's expression shifted to one of profound regret. "Then I've failed more deeply than I realized." He looked toward the sky, where the geometric patterns of his arrival had first appeared. "But some paths cannot be skipped without losing something essential."
From the back of the crowd, Barbara Gordon stepped forward, her father beside her—his eyes clearer than they had been in weeks.
Sea King, watching from a rooftop, activated his communicator. "It's happening. He's making his declaration."
"Understood," came Luthor's voice. "Harleen?"
"In position," she replied, her voice barely above a whisper. "I'm ready."
A ripple of disturbance passed through the Nimrod pools. Something was wrong. The reflective surfaces began to distort, images fragmenting.
"Father..." came a chorus of voices from the Nimrods, their usual melodic tones discordant now.
Raj raised a hand to silence them. "It's time," he announced to the crowd. "Time for you to remember what it means to choose. Even if those choices bring pain."
The Cental Stage
The disturbance began subtly. A single figure moving through the crowd—ordinary in height and build, dressed in a shabby coat with the collar turned up. No one paid attention as he approached the stage where Raj stood. In Nexus's world, violence was impossible.
The security detail—former resistance fighters converted into Enforcers—didn't even glance at him. Their focus was on the crowd, looking for mass unrest, not individual threats.
Harleen, positioned at the edge of the stage, felt her heart stop as she recognized the walk. The slight swagger. The faintest hint of green hair visible beneath a worn cap.
The man reached the stage steps. Raj was mid-sentence about Earth-3's evolution.
"—and together we will build a society where suffering is a choice, not an inevitability—"
The motion was so casual, so ordinary that few registered it happened. The shabby man simply walked up behind Raj, produced something small and metallic from his sleeve, and with a single, practiced movement, plunged it into Raj's back.
No dramatic leap. No battle cry. Just the simple, efficient action of an assassin.
Raj's words faltered. He looked down at his chest where the blade's tip now protruded, a puzzled expression crossing his face. The microphone picked up his soft words:
"Oh. It's time."
For three heartbeats, nothing happened. Then chaos erupted.
The shabby man threw back his head and unleashed a laugh that sent children hiding behind parents and made veterans of the Crime Syndicate wars reach for weapons they no longer carried. He cast off his coat to reveal a purple suit beneath—tattered and stained with grave dirt.
"SURPRISE!" the Joker howled, each syllable stretching impossibly as the Nimrods throughout the square began to fracture and distort. "Death just ain't what it used to be!"
Raj collapsed to his knees, staring at the blade protruding from his chest with an expression not of fear but of... relief.
From the crowd, Harley Quinn—who had stood in stoic silence—now dropped her concealed communicator with a clatter. Her face contorted in shock, blood draining visibly as she stumbled backward. The impossible was happening before her eyes.
"Puddin'?" she whispered, voice small and broken. "You're dead... I watched you die. How...?"
Her mind raced through confusion, disbelief, a hint of hope, and the sickening realization that something had gone terribly wrong with their plan. It was supposed to be fake and I was supposed to do it... then... why? The sight of him—unmistakably him despite the grave dirt—made her knees weak and her breath catch painfully in her throat.
The Joker's head snapped toward her, movements unnaturally jerky. His skin seemed to ripple beneath the surface, as though reality itself struggled to contain him. His eyes—those eyes she'd seen lifeless and empty—now burned with maniacal intensity.
"Dead? DEAD? I'm the punchline that never ends, Harl! The cosmic joke!" He gestured wildly at Raj. "He broke the rules! So, the rules broke ME back!"
His body seemed wrong—proportions shifting subtly with each movement, as though reality couldn't quite contain him. Where Nexus brought order, the Joker exuded chaos in its purest form. The air around him seemed to warp and bend, colors intensifying wherever he moved.
Throughout the square, carefully modulated emotions fractured. Some screamed in genuine terror. Others stood frozen in shock. Still others began to laugh—wild, uncontrolled laughter that had no place in Nexus's ordered world.
The Joker pirouetted around Raj's kneeling form, the knife still embedded in the entity's chest. "I don't apply to impossibilities!" he shrieked with manic glee. "And what's more impossible than me? The man who died before you arrived! The ghost in your perfect machine!"
He leaned close to Raj's ear, the microphone picking up his stage whisper: "No more gods. No more puppets."
Raj didn't speak. Didn't defend himself. Blood trickled from his mouth as he looked up at the Joker with an expression almost like gratitude.
"I knew you'd agree," Raj finally whispered, his voice so faint it missed the still-active microphone. "Thank you for making it possible."
Tears glimmered in Raj's eyes—not from pain, but from the profound burden of omniscience. Of knowing that the only path to humanity's true salvation required his sacrifice, his villainy, his place in history as the tyrant overthrown.
As the world blurred and his form began to dissolve into radiant shards, a final thread of thought reached only six minds—soft, personal, unshakably calm 'My name is Raj. Not Nexus. Just Raj. I trusted you to finish what I couldn't. Don't let the light blind them. Let them choose their own dawn.'
Harleen blinked hard, the smile fading from her lips as if the message cracked something she thought long buried.
Grundy lowered his head, murmuring words no one could hear—just a name he would not forget.
Sea King clenched his trident, jaw tightening, as if bearing the weight of a crown he never wanted.
Luthor stood still, expression unreadable—yet for once, he didn't argue with the voice of a dying friend.
Katana closed her eyes and whispered a silent vow, her blade humming faintly in resonance.
The Joker's perpetual grin faltered for the first time with genuine grief. Then it returned, wider than ever, as understanding dawned.
"You magnificent bastard," he cackled. "You wanted this! You needed a HERO!"
In his monitoring station, Luthor stared at his screens in stunned disbelief. The impossible was unfolding before his eyes—not just the assassination they had planned, but something far beyond their calculations. His fingers gripped the edge of the console until his knuckles turned white.
"It can't be," he whispered, face illuminated by the chaotic scenes playing out across his monitors. "I watched him die. I confirmed it myself." A bead of sweat trickled down his temple as the implications crashed over him. "If he's back... if death itself is no barrier... what have we unleashed?"
The laughter that followed echoed across Unity Square, a sound more terrifying to its residents than any battle cry. It bounced off buildings, reverberated through the streets, and seemed to penetrate minds directly—a primal reminder of the chaos that lurked beneath order's thin veneer.
The Aftermath
As Raj's body dissolved into particles of light that scattered like stars, the Nimrods throughout Earth-3 shimmered once and began to fade. The Joker stood alone on the steps, his purpose fulfilled, before he too seemed to unravel at the edges—a temporal anomaly that had served its purpose.
"Wait!" Harley cried out, pushing through the stunned crowd, tears streaming down her face. "You can't just—"
But he was already half-gone, his form becoming transparent. His final laugh echoed across the square, lingering long after his physical form had disappeared completely.
For several heartbeats, no one moved. Then, as if a spell had been broken, chaos erupted in Unity Square.
Some people fell to their knees, overwhelmed by the sudden rush of unfettered emotions after weeks of carefully modulated feelings. Others began to weep uncontrollably, grief they had been denied now flooding back. Arguments broke out—sharp, angry exchanges after a month of enforced harmony.
Barbara Gordon clutched her father's arm as he swayed, disoriented. "Dad? Are you okay?"
Commissioner Gordon blinked rapidly, as if waking from a dream. "Barbara? What happened? I remember Nexus arriving and then... everything's foggy."
"He's gone," she whispered. "We're free."
"Free," he repeated, the word foreign on his tongue. Then, with growing clarity: "Free to make our own mistakes again."
Across the square, people reacted dramatically differently. Some tore at formerly pristine Nexus banners, while others tried to protect the symbols of the peace they had known. A woman who had been calm for weeks suddenly collapsed in convulsive sobs as grief for her lost child—temporarily erased by Nexus's influence—came rushing back in full force.
From the edges of the crowd, Sea King observed the chaos with grim satisfaction. Through his communicator, he spoke softly: "It's done. But how did the dead come back?"
"How unprecedented," came Luthor's reply, his voice uncharacteristically shaken. "The system is collapsing. Emotional regulation fields are dissipating across the city." He paused, struggling to maintain his composure. "But the Joker... his return defies every natural law. This Earth's greatest hero somehow transformed into its rebel at the moment we needed him most."
"Was it worth it?" Sea King asked, watching a fistfight break out between former Enforcers and resistance members. "All this... disorder?"
"That's not for us to decide," Luthor answered. "That was Nexus's gift—giving them back the right to choose, even if they choose badly." Then he finally smiled with surprise in his voice. "But our Jester is back, our Hero of Rebellion is back. The impossible made possible."
On the other side of the square, Katana sheathed her sword, which had been humming throughout the assassination. "The vessel has returned to the void," she reported. "The blade is satisfied. It was an honor serving beside you."
Hidden in an alley, Grundy watched as people began to dismantle Nexus installations with their bare hands. "Grundy sees," he rumbled into his communicator. "Born on a Monday. Die on Saturday. Reborn on Sunday. The cycle continues."
A child sobbed quietly from a scraped knee. His mother knelt beside him, brushing his hair back as tears welled in her eyes. "It's okay," she whispered. "We're allowed to be hurt again." Around them, others wept—not from injury or loss, but from the sudden return of emotion, raw and unfiltered.
Near the center of the square, someone whispered, "Ours again."
Another voice joined in, louder this time. "Ours again."
"To laugh. To cry. To mourn. To hope. Ours again."
"To stumble. To stand. To fall and rise. Ours again."
The words spread like a ripple through the crowd, growing from a whisper to a wave. The chant was not rehearsed, but remembered—from a place deeper than memory. And in those words, people found a strange comfort. A shared grief. A reclaimed will.
As the chant spread, Harleen watched from the shadows, tears streaming down her face. Not from sorrow for Nexus, nor joy at seeing the Joker, however briefly. But from the weight of what they had done—the five conspirators who had helped Raj orchestrate his own assassination.
Harleen's breath caught in her throat. A broken sob escaped—sharp, unpretty. "He saved us," she said, barely more than a gasp. "And we killed him for it." Her voice trembled. "I hated how safe he made me feel. Because it wasn't real—but God, I wanted it to be."
She touched her face, feeling the hot tears—the first real tears, the first genuine emotion she'd experienced in weeks. Pain, yes. Guilt, certainly. But something else too. Something alive.
"Was it really the only way?" she whispered to herself. "Did we really need... him dead?"
She felt a presence beside her and turned to find Luthor standing there, his expression unreadable.
"Raj showed us a thousand possible futures," he said quietly. "In every one where he simply left or disappeared, Earth-3 collapsed back into war within days. The Crime Syndicate or worse would have returned, stronger than before."
"But how did Mr. J come ba—"
"With the Joker killing him, he becomes a hero. A symbol. Something for them to define themselves against." Luthor looked out at the crowd, where people were helping each other up, forming impromptu discussion groups. "They needed to reject Nexus. To choose freedom over perfection."
"It wasn't supposed to be like this." Harleen wiped her tears. "You think they'll make it? Without him watching over them?"
"I don't know," Luthor admitted. "That's what makes it interesting."
"He gave them peace... and we gave him pain. Hope it was worth it," she whispered.
Miles away, Arthur Curry walked into the surf, feeling the weight of responsibility lift as Nexus's final plan was completed. The ocean welcomed him—not as a king, but as a man with his own choices to make.
At the square's edge, Katana stepped away from the thinning crowd. She drew her blade—silent, steady—and pressed it into the earth. For a moment, it pulsed faintly with a light that shimmered blue, then vanished. She lowered her head and whispered something too soft to be heard. A goodbye meant only for the dead.
Grundy lumbered through the sewers beneath the city, returning to the swamp that had birthed him. His part in the grand design was finished.
In Unity Square, as dawn broke on the first day of true freedom, a young girl picked up a fragment of a Nimrod—a perfect geometric crystal that caught the morning light. She turned it over in her hands, watching the play of colors.
"What do we do now?" she asked her mother.
The woman looked around at the square, where people were already beginning to organize, to debate, to feel the full spectrum of human emotions once again.
"Whatever we choose," she answered.
In the Bleed between universes, a single white star pulsed where no star should exist.
"Why go through with it?" A pale lady in Gothic attire asked.
"They needed a symbol," a voice whispered from the darkness. "So, I became the cost."
The Bleed
In the Bleed between universes, a single white star pulsed where no star should exist.
"Why go through with it?" She looked impossibly pale, her jet-black hair and all-black attire casting her in quiet contrast. Her eyes were deep and entirely black, softened by an unexpected warmth. A silver ankh hung at her chest, and beneath one eye, an ancient symbol curved like a secret. She didn't feel threatening—just inevitable.
"They needed a symbol," a voice whispered from the darkness. "So, I became the cost."
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[A/N : WORD COUNT- 5500]
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