The Cosmic Consequence
Somewhere beyond time, in the space between heartbeats, Raj floated in meditation.
Not alive, not dead—existing in the liminal state Death had granted him as part of their bargain. His consciousness drifted like smoke through the crimson void of the Bleed, that strange membrane separating realities across the multiverse. Here, disconnected from physical form, his mind could finally process the magnitude of what he'd done on Earth-3 and how far he'd come.
The Joker had seen to his public execution, exactly as planned. A sacrifice that freed a world from perfect control and allowed them to choose their own destiny once more. But the death had been an illusion—a translation from physical form to energy, shifting him directly into the Bleed where Death had been waiting to fulfil their bargain.
The memory should have brought him peace. It didn't.
"You're brooding again," came a gentle voice from everywhere and nowhere. "That wasn't part of our deal."
Death materialized beside him; her pale skin luminous against the red backdrop of the Bleed. She perched cross-legged in the void as if sitting on invisible furniture, her ankh necklace floating weightlessly around her neck.
"I'm recovering," Raj corrected, his form solidifying enough to face her. "Processing."
"You're brooding," Death insisted, but with a kind smile. "I can tell the difference. I've been collecting souls since the first living thing ever died, remember? I know what healing looks like." She reached out, her cool fingers brushing against what passed for his cheek in this non-place. "And what avoidance looks like."
Raj noticed something in her eyes—a knowing that extended beyond even her vast domain. As if she were aware of herself in other forms, other realities beyond the boundaries of this multiverse. They were all her, in a way that transcended simple multiversal counterparts. All aspects of a greater cosmic truth that pervaded the entire omniverse.
"They're doing well," Death offered after a moment, knowing exactly what troubled him. "Your little experiment in liberation. The Joker is... well, not exactly a model citizen, but he's channeling his chaos constructively. For now."
"I shouldn't care," Raj said quietly. "That world was just one of thousands needing intervention."
Death laughed—a sound like silver bells that somehow didn't feel out of place coming from the embodiment of mortality.
"You give too much of yourself, Nexus. You're not a god. You're just..." her expression softened, "...kind. Exhaustingly, cosmically kind."
"Is that a criticism?" Raj managed a smile, his form stabilizing.
"An observation." Death floated closer. "Also, you're recovering too slowly. Time doesn't exist here the way you understand it, but there are other universes waiting. Other obligations before I can send you home."
Raj nodded, acknowledging the terms of their bargain. Earth-3 had been the first step. More worlds needed his intervention before Death would fulfill her end of the deal—opening a path back through the Source Wall to his home universe, a reality that existed outside the boundaries of the DC multiverse entirely.
Raj closed his eyes—or what passed for eyes in his current state. "The price of the bargain."
"The price of being you," Death corrected. "I merely pointed you toward what you would have eventually found anyway."
The Mark of God
They drifted in silence through the crimson void, two beings of immense power yet fundamentally different natures. Death belonged here—had always belonged in the grand architecture of creation. Raj did not.
"There's something you should know," Death said eventually, her playful demeanor giving way to something more solemn. "Something that happened when you breached the Source Wall and entered this multiverse."
Raj waited, sensing the gravity in her tone.
"You've been noticed. Although they still can't find you for some reason." Death traced patterns in the void with her fingertip, leaving faint trails of light. "By entities who generally don't pay attention to individual beings—even powerful ones."
"The Endless?" Raj guessed, naming her family of cosmic abstractions.
"Among others." Death nodded. "The Spectre. Lucifer. The Lords of Order and Chaos. Beings who maintain the cosmic balance." She paused, considering her words carefully. "They all sensed your arrival—a disturbance in the Source Wall itself. Like ripples in a pond that reached every shore simultaneously."
"I've glimpsed them before, even you, I think? But I can't remember it clearly" Raj said dismissively.
"Not like this." Death's expression grew troubled. "You lack something that every being native to these universes possesses—even the most powerful gods and demons."
"Which is?"
"The Mark of God." Death spoke the words with reverence. "The tether to The Presence that connects all things in creation. Every soul I've ever collected here carries it—a signature written into the fundamental nature of their existence."
Raj felt a chill that had nothing to do with the void around them.
"Except me," he said quietly.
"Except you." Death confirmed. "You're untethered. Unmarked. A cosmic anomaly that shouldn't exist within these realities, yet somehow does." She tilted her head, studying him. "It's why you can manipulate reality in ways others can't. Why your Eidolon powers work across dimensional boundaries that should be impermeable."
"And why they've noticed me."
"Yes." Death's voice became gentle. "They're... concerned, to put it mildly. An entity wielding cosmic power without the limitations built into creation itself—it breaks fundamental rules."
"Am I in danger?" Raj asked pragmatically.
Death laughed, but this time without humor. "In danger? No. That's not how beings at this level operate. They don't hunt or attack like mortals do." Her expression darkened. "They correct. They balance. They ensure the fundamental equations of existence remain stable."
"And I'm an unstable variable."
"Precisely." Death placed a hand on his shoulder. "Which is why our bargain matters more than ever. You need purpose to focus your anomalous nature. Direction that serves the multiverse rather than disrupting it." Her eyes met his, ancient and knowing. "And when you've completed your tasks for me, I'll do what no other entity here can—send you home, beyond the Source Wall, to the universe you came from."
Raj understood then—Death hadn't merely made a deal to resurrect a clown. She had been protecting him, channeling his outsider nature toward constructive ends before larger cosmic forces took notice and acted more directly.
"Thank you," he said simply.
"Don't thank me yet." Death's smile returned, mischievous and knowing. "Your next assignment is... complicated."
The Legacy Left Behind
Raj floated in the stillness of the Bleed, the silence around him thick and watchful. Somewhere behind the endless red glow and tangled memories, a worry tugged at him. Not cosmic. Not multiversal. Personal.
"My team," he said, almost reluctantly. "Roy… and Match. Are they doing, OK?"
Death's head tilted slightly, her eyes shimmering with that quiet, old kindness that always made Raj uneasy. "Arsenal and Sentinel. You gave them names. Purpose. A cause."
Raj grimaced. "I dropped them into chaos and vanished."
"You gave them freedom," Death corrected. "And they've done more with it than you think."
She gestured into the void, and the Bleed responded, parting to reveal a surveillance feed—flickering blue, clearly ARGUS-grade. In the corner, a timestamp read December 22, 2010.
Roy Harper—Arsenal—ducked behind a crumbling column inside a bombed-out LexCorp warehouse. His bow snapped up with practiced grace, loosing a specialized EMP arrow that shorted out an entire strike team's weapons in one shot.
Beside him, Match—clean-cut, focused, armored—landed with a thud, crushing a drone beneath his boots. Not a clone. A sentinel.
"They've taken a new name." Death said. "Wild Pack. Inspired by the stories you fed them—your multiversal visions, your plans, your impossible ideals. You told them wild cards don't follow the deck. They decided to reshuffle the table."
Raj swallowed. "I should've been there."
"You were. Just not the way you thought."
The scene shifted. Another op—Haly's Circus. The Pack running silent recon, dismantling a trafficking ring mid-performance. Roy in full tactical gear, keeping a low profile. Sentinel disabling hostiles with precise restraint.
Raj's eyes caught something etched into the side of Roy's bow: "Wild cards play for keeps."
"They think you're gone," Death said softly. "But not lost. They carry your teachings and gifts like a badge."
The Mission
Death gestured into the void, and the crimson parted like curtains. Beyond them, a holographic image took shape—a planet Earth, but not one Raj recognized. Its continents had different shapes, its oceans different hues. What should have been verdant landscapes and bustling cities were instead covered in darkness and chaos.
"Earth-55," Death explained. "A reality where the balance between life and death hasn't merely broken down—it's been violently shattered."
The hologram zoomed in, revealing scenes of absolute horror. Streets filled with shambling, twisted figures—not quite alive, yet refusing death's embrace. Their flesh rotted even as they moved, eyes glowing with an unnatural crimson light. They attacked anything living with relentless hunger.
"The Anti-Living," Death said, her voice heavy with sorrow. "A perversion of both life and death."
Raj watched as a horde of these creatures tore through a barricade where survivors had gathered. Unlike traditional zombies from fiction, these beings moved with terrible purpose and coordination, using weapons and even vehicles to hunt down the living.
"What happened?" Raj asked, unable to look away from the carnage.
"A techno-organic virus engineered from the Anti-Life Equation," Death explained. "Designed as a weapon, but it escaped containment. The virus doesn't just kill—it corrupts the very essence of life itself, turning victims into carriers driven to spread the infection."
The hologram shifted to show a laboratory where scientists in bloodstained coats worked frantically. On screens behind them, equations scrolled—complex formulations attempting to counter the virus.
"The Anti-Living aren't mindless," Death continued. "That's what makes them so dangerous. They retain intelligence, skills, even memories—but twisted into service of the virus's prime directive: infect everything that lives."
"And the survivors?" Raj asked, noting pockets of resistance across the globe.
"Dwindling," Death said grimly. "Some have partial immunity. Others have found ways to mask their life signs temporarily. But they're losing ground every day." She pointed to one particular stronghold where heroes fought alongside ordinary citizens. "What's left of this world's Justice League has established safe zones, but their numbers are thin. Many of their greatest defenders were among the first infected."
Raj recognized twisted versions of iconic heroes among the Anti-Living hordes—a shambling Superman with decaying flesh, a rotting Wonder Woman wielding her lasso with deadly purpose, a Flash whose superspeed sent him blurring between victims at horrific velocity.
"The Anti-Life Equation has been partially solved," Death continued. "Not by Darkseid, but by humans seeking a weapon of mass destruction. They succeeded beyond their worst nightmares."
"And the Life Equation?" Raj asked.
"The resistance is working on it," Death replied. "They've discovered fragments—enough to create temporary barriers against infection, but not enough to reverse the process once it takes hold." She shook her head. "And they don't understand the cosmic balance either. Their partial solutions are merely stopgaps."
Raj studied the hologram carefully, his enhanced perception—one of the new abilities gained during his six months of growth—allowing him to see patterns in the chaos. The spread of infection followed mathematical progressions that seemed almost beautiful in their terrible efficiency.
"Your encounter with the Source Wall gave you knowledge of both equations—the complete versions, not the flawed approximations they're working with." Death met his gaze steadily. "Knowledge you can't directly use yourself, but can guide others toward."
"I thought no mortal mind could contain these equations."
"You're not exactly mortal anymore, are you?" Death raised an eyebrow. "Not since our bargain. Besides, your outsider nature makes you uniquely suited for this task."
"How so?"
"You're immune to both equations," Death explained. "Impervious to both the despair of Anti-Life and the false hope of Life without balance. Where others would be overwhelmed, you can maintain perspective."
Raj nodded slowly, understanding dawning. "I'm to be a mediator."
"You're to be a catalyst," Death corrected. "For a new equation altogether—one that restores true balance."
The hologram shifted again, showing a resistance hideout where scientists and mystics worked together amid glowing equations and arcane symbols. At the center stood a familiar figure—Cyborg, half his body corrupted by the virus but somehow maintaining control through sheer willpower and technological innovation.
"Victor Stone," Death explained. "On this Earth, he's developed a firewall against the infection using his connection to the technology of New Genesis. He's close to a breakthrough that could save what remains of humanity."
Raj watched as Cyborg worked, surrounded by a team of surviving scientists and heroes—including a grim, battle-scarred Batman whose face bore the scars of narrowly avoided infection.
"They're close," Death said. "So close to understanding. They just need... a nudge from someone who can see the whole picture."
Final Instructions
The crimson void began to pulse around them, signaling that their time was growing short. Raj could feel his consciousness solidifying, preparing for transition to Earth-55.
"Your task is simple, Raj," Death summarized. "Witness the death of a future... and birth something better."
"Simple," Raj echoed ironically.
"I never said easy." Death's smile returned. "Just simple in concept."
Raj focused inward, feeling the twenty Eidolon slots shifting within his essence. The configurations that had served him on Earth-3 reconfigured, energy flowing into new patterns. Six months of growth meant he could maintain multiple high-level abilities simultaneously—perfect for a world in crisis.
He slotted abilities methodically: immunity to biological contagion, enhanced perception to detect the Anti-Living, reality stabilization to counteract the equation's worst effects, and defensive capabilities to protect survivors. With twenty slots available, he could prepare for almost any contingency this infected Earth might throw at him.
"Will I see you there?" he asked.
Death shook her head. "That's the problem. I can't reach Earth-55 properly—the Anti-Life virus has created a barrier that even I struggle to penetrate completely. The infected don't truly die—they exist in a state of perpetual decay, neither alive nor properly dead. It's why I need you." She touched his forehead gently. "My representative in a world that's forgotten how death should function."
"And when it's done?" Raj asked. "When balance is restored?"
Death's expression became enigmatic. "Then we'll continue our work. There are other crisis points in this multiverse that need your particular talents. After that..." she smiled mysteriously, "...I'll keep my promise. A path home, back beyond the Source Wall, to your own reality."
She leaned forward and whispered in his ear, repeating the full terms of the bargain they'd struck on Earth-3—words meant for them alone, the complete understanding of what would be required before he could return to his home universe.
Raj nodded solemnly. "I haven't forgotten."
"I know." Death took a step back. "That's why I chose you. Six months ago, you were powerful but untested in this multiverse. Now you're ready for challenges of true cosmic significance."
She raised her hand in farewell as Raj's form began to dissolve, preparing for transit through the Bleed to Earth-55. Just before he faded completely, she called after him:
"Remember, Nexus—you may not have the Mark of God, but you have something perhaps more valuable."
"What's that?" Raj's voice was already distant.
"A choice," Death replied simply. "Always, in every universe, a choice."
Closing Beat
The hologram of Earth-55 grew larger as Raj approached the transition point. He could see more details now—a world in collapse amid a zombie apocalypse unlike any in fiction. A city burning under a red sky, its buildings crawling with the Anti-Living. Former heroes, now corrupted servants of the virus, hunting down the last pockets of resistance.
In his mind's eye, Raj reviewed the twenty Eidolon slots now at his disposal—powers that had grown exponentially during his six months in this multiverse. Where once he might have hesitated at the scale of such a crisis, he now felt a measured confidence.
"One more question," he said as the void began to thin around him. "If these infected beings aren't truly alive or dead, what happens to them when—if—we succeed?"
Death's expression softened with compassion. "That's part of what you must discover, Raj. The Anti-Living exist in a state of cosmic violation—souls trapped in corrupted flesh, denied their rightful transition. Finding their proper end is as important as saving those who still live."
Raj nodded, understanding the true complexity of his mission—not just to stop a virus, but to restore the natural order that governed life and death themselves.
He breathed out softly, the last act before surrendering his consciousness to the journey.
"Let's go break fate again."
With those words, he plunged through the membrane between worlds, leaving the crimson void behind. The Bleed sealed after his passage, but not before a whisper from Death followed him through:
"That's exactly what I'm counting on."
As he fell toward Earth-55, Raj's mind filled with images of the Anti-Living—Superman with rotting flesh still flying through crimson skies; Wonder Woman's lasso now a tool of corruption rather than truth; Flash carrying the virus across continents in microseconds; Aquaman leading hordes of infected sea creatures against coastal cities.
A world where death itself had been perverted.
A world that needed someone who understood both the mathematics of cosmos and the value of a single soul.
A world that needed him.
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[A/N: WORD COUNT – 3000 | This is the end of Arc-3]
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