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I'm very optimistic right now, yet also slightly nervous, lol...
So my final prayer for the night; "Please give Valko back... I need to study him under a microscope for like a week, so that I can properly add him into my Lads Stardew Valley au..."
Chapter Four: Gotham's One-Stop Shop For Villainy
The first thing Danny noticed about this dimension was it smelled. A polluted haze hung heavy over the sky, casting the urban jungle in a dark mist and assaulting the halfaâs nose with the sharp tang of gasoline. Loud big-city sounds filled his ears as he caught himself in the midst of his free-fall, leaving the man distorted. It was so much different compared to his Keep in the Zone. To be pulled from a place of near-constant quiet into a realm full of honking horns, shouts and sirens was enough to have Danny reel his aura back in. The ambient ectoplasm around him felt sticky, and wrong, like the very air around Danny had been contaminated by something dark and sinister. He pulled his atmospheric spirit back, tugging where he could feel all the tiny little souls around him closer to himself. Bit by bit, his range of feelings depleted until he almost couldnât feel the filth that surrounded him. Small pants left his lungs by the time Danny could only feel a tiny circle around himself that pulsed with his aura as he tried to keep a lid on his powers that desperately wanted to run free.
Attempting to ignore the uncomfortable feeling of not sensing the people around him, as well as the general unclean feeling of touching such disgusting ectoplasm, Danny spun in a small circle to try and get his bearings. The portal created by the Skeleton Key left him hovering over an old clocktower bathed in the haze of the city. Looking around proved to be near-futile, because even with his superior sight, Danny could barely see the street from where he floated.
The young man shifted the bags thrown over his shoulder, nervously looking around while trying to catch his breath. Clockwork had said his friend would be waiting for him, so where�
âHello, my King.â
A feminine voice caused Danny to startle, turning quickly to face the ghost that snuck up on him. The being before him reminded Danny of Shadow, almost. Their form was pitch black against the backdrop of the Victorian clocktower, constantly moving and shifting like a wispy fire. Piercing red eyes bore into him, causing him to nervously rub the back of his neck.
âHi,â Danny spoke slowly. âAre you the one Clockwork told me about? The Spirit of Gotham?â
The ghost chuckled softly, moving their wispy form closer to Danny. A belated wisp of cold air worked its way out of his throat, letting him know another of the Realms was close. âI am, young King. You may call me Lady Gotham, the protector of this city.â
âItâs nice to meet you, Lady Gotham. Iâm Danny Phantom.â He said, remembering the many hours he spent with Pandora and Dorathea drilling the proper mannerisms into his thick skull. Danny bowed at the waist, ignoring how the two bags he carried knocked against his knees. âThank you for allowing me into your domain and protections. I will treat your lair as my ownâ with the utmost kindness, respect, and haunting that should be given to any member of the Realms.â
âI accept your gratitudes and give my own, King Phantom.â Lady Gothamâs voice was steady when she spoke the traditional greetings of the Zone, unlike Dannyâs own unsteady cadence. Danny rose from his bow to see the otherâs form in her own imitation of a respectful stance. After a beat, she rose from it to meet his eyes again.
The young king grinned at the shifting shadow in front of him, allowing excitement-nice to meet you to leave the tight leash he had on his aura to tentatively brush against Lady Gotham. A little trill of happiness left his core at the tender hello-nice to meet you-calm that caressed the small bubble Danny had created.
âCome, Little One,â Gotham spoke gently. âClockwork has left you in my care until your tasks are complete. The ones who are mine have prepared an area for you while you are under my protection. We will head there and I will teach you the cultures of this dimension. Is this acceptable, King Phantom?â
âMore than, Lady Gotham.â Danny continued to smile at his new guardian. âBut, please, call me Danny. Or Phantom. Just- just none of that king stuff, please.â
A quiet chuckle emitted from the shadow before him. âAs you wish, Danny. If we are being informal, feel free to call me Gotham.â She paused, swiveling the area where her eyes rested around to face to her left. The movements reminded Danny of the character No-Face from Spirited Away, a heavy swing of herself in a dramatic full-body maneuver. âWe must head north to reach the lair I have created for you, Little One.â
âLead the way, Lady G!â
The flight over was a quick one, with Dannyâs ghostly guide fading from the visible spectrum before taking off. Danny followed suit, taking care to keep Gotham in his tiny bubble. As they traveled, he strained himself to see through the muggy haze that encompassed Gothamâs city. They passed large, towering skyscrapers with flashy signs, massive highways filled to the brim with cars, and Danny could barely make out dark water when they passed over a bridge. There were no immediate outstanding differences between his home dimension and this one. So far everything seemed pretty normal, besides the slimy feeling tingling on the edges of his senses.
From the past couple experiences Danny had with time travel and multiverse hopping, the man was expecting to see something like flying cars or gravity-defying structures. But everything seemed almost normal. Maybe this world wasnât one of those crazy superhuman filled ones like the one Kitty and Johnny told him stories of. Apparently, their home dimension was pretty wild.
Danny almost lost his ghostly companion when she led him across a wide-open area filled with plants, though he caught up with her when she began to head slightly to the left. They passed more towers, more open areas with the faint sounds of cresting waves against land, until Gotham finally began to slow down.
âThis part of my city is called Cherry Hills,â she said as the two ghosts hovered over the cityâs buildings. âMany of the areas to the northeastern side of this section are used as housing, the western as warehouses, and the southeastern as workspaces or labs.â The older being began to gently fly further north, slowly leading them closer to the buildings.
As the structures pulled into view, Danny took in the sights before him. A large highway cut through the housing district, and he could easily make out the far-off sight of warehouses leading to docks where a handful of large ships were tied up. A freight trainâs blaring horn was accompanied by the flashes of light as it cut through the cityâs haze. The raised railings of a metro train track ran alongside the highway. As they continued north, the housing buildings started to look more worn-down, less like their shiny brethren on the east side of the carpath.
âIs this the area Iâm going to be living in?â Danny questioned after a while. He wasnât too concerned about the state of the building he would be occupying - he (kind of) survived the Fenton household for eighteen years, after all -, but the shock of being in a large city was starting to grate on his nerves.
âYes,â Lady Gotham said as she began to hover over one of the taller residential complexes. âThis is the one.â
With that, Danny could only helplessly follow where he could feel her plummeting through the buildingâs roof. When he crossed the barrier, he let his invisibility go to match Gotham. Her shadowed form lazed within the large studioâs space, letting herself barely brush against the floor.
âWelcome to your new home, Little One.â Gotham swirled closer to him, the edges of her emotions pressing against him in a soothing tone of welcome-this is yours-take it. âI hope it is to your liking.â
An awed breath left Danny as he slowly turned to truly take in the studio apartment he was presented with. The ceilings were high, with one side tilted at an angle to run alongside the roof. Two large windows let the hazy dayâs light peak through the panes, washing the area with a gentle glow. A nice-looking kitchen occupied the spaceâs far corner, and Danny was only a little disappointed to note it would probably not see much use. An open area was broken up with a sturdy kitchen table sitting innocently next to another large window. The corner along the same wall as the kitchen area ran into a cozy-looking living room area, an elevator space acting as a barrier to the adjacent corner.
Danny was a bit perplexed to note that scattered lab equipment filled that space. Did Clockwork tell Gotham that he was a mad scientist or something? But Danny moved on to take in the staircase leading up to an open L-shaped platform. Floating up, he found a cozy-looking king bed greeted him, along with a computer set-up that would have made Tucker drool. He excitedly noted a window with access to a balcony with stairs leading onto the top of the roof was attached to the same wall perpendicular to the one his bed was against.
The young king zoomed next to Gotham, a large smile on his face. âThis is awesome! How the heck did you get this all set up?â
An easy chuckle left the other ghostâs form, gentle emotions swaying between the two as they continued to get used to the other. âThe people of my city donât often question when mysterious jobs line up for them. It is part of their culture to not ask too many questions, after all.â
âThatâsâŠâ Danny paused, trying in vain to find the morally correct words without offending his host. âInteresting?â
A rumbling purr filled the air, Gotham letting a gentle pulse of amusement ripple against her king. âInteresting is certainly a word for it. Do not fret, Little One, no harm comes to them.â
The young man awkwardly rubbed the back of his neck, embarrassed that his worries were so easily spotted by the older ghost. He wasnât quite used to having anyone other than the Ancients or his friends read him with such ease - having another do so, even if she was a ghost and Clockworkâs friend, was unusual for Danny. It made him wonder what type of relationship she had with Clockwork, as he had never before seen or even heard of Gotham before now. Before he could question her, though, she swiftly spoke.
âBefore we get too distracted, I must inform you of this dimension.â She shifted her way behind where Danny was hovering, seeming to herd him towards his new couch. âSit, sit. There is no need to be uncomfortable for such a conversation.â
âWait,â Danny protested. âLet me put my stuff down real quick.â Without waiting for a response, he zipped up to his new bed. Dropping his duffle and Clockworkâs satchel onto the plain blue bed sheet before rummaging around for the journal gifted to him. When he finally found it, the young man flew back to the simple pale couch where Gotham waited.
It was an odd sight to see. A giant, angry looking cloud of smog hovering like an exasperated parent in a picture-perfect looking home.
âOkay,â Danny started as he landed on the surprisingly comfortable couch. He leaned back, relaxing against soft cushions, as he let his transformation wash over himself. âSo what do I need to know?â
Surprise rippled across the air at the sight of Dannyâs flashy shift, but Gotham was composed when she spoke. âFrom what Clockwork has told me, you come from a dimension where you are one of three beings who are more than human?â
Giving a small nod, Danny felt like his chest would explode from the hope-excitement-trepidation at what Gotham was implying. âAre you saying thereâs, like, people with powers here?!â
âIndeed,â Gotham agreed, her voice lifting at the otherâs obvious excitement. âThere are metahumans, those with the meta-gene, who are humans with various powers. Others include humans who have been experimented on, had accidents, know the magical arts, or even been subjected to ancient powers. Aliens have begun to call this Earth home, as well. This includes those from Mars, Krypton, Thanegar, TamaranâŠâ She trailed off, staring at Danny who was physically vibrating. âMy king, are you okay?â
âThereâs aliens?â He whispered. âYou guys have aliens?!â
âYes, many of them-â
âHoly fucking shit,â Danny jumped up, coming to eye level with a startled Gotham. âCan I meet them?! Can I visit their planets? How many are there, what do they look like, do they have powers?!â The young man was trying to grab onto something in order to steady himself, but his hands kept passing through Gothamâs smokey form. âLady G, please tell me I can meet them. Please, I will literally die again if I canât meet actual people who live in space.â
A happy laugh echoed across the apartmentâs space, the City Spirit being the source of it. âYou are certainly excited about this, Little One.â
âOf course!â He exclaimed, waving his noodle arms around. âSpace is so cool, G. Itâs the greatest thing ever, I love it! Iâve always wanted to explore it, ever since I was a kid.â
âWell, you will be glad to hear that meeting the aliens who call Earth home is something you will be able to do.â
âDo any of them live here? In your city?â
âNo,â She said, moving her eyes to look out the large windows gracing the two with a hazy glow. âThe Dark Knight, a man who helps protect my lair, does not allow ones with powers to operate within me.â
A curious expression overtook Danny. His excited movements slowed to a halt, and he regarded Gotham with a critical, glowing eye. âDo you want me to take care of him, Lady Gotham?â
Calm-do not worry-amusement gently brushed against Danny, causing him to relax. âAs much as I appreciate your protection, Little One,â Gotham said as she faced her king. âThe Batman has this rule for good reasons, ones that I agree with.â
Dannyâs metaphorical hackles lowered at Gothamâs comment. The piercing neon green of his eyes bled back into their usual icy blue, though the curious look did not leave. âWhyâs that? And who names their kid Batman?â
Part of the City Spiritâs dark cloud tried to nudge him back towards his couch. âThe Batman,â she began, âis a hero who operates to protect my city. He was born here and donned his cape in order to help those in need from the many criminals who call my territory home.â
Danny gave an involuntary awed noise. âSo you guys have heroes here, too?â A dark tendril of smog wrapped around the back of the couch, resting gently against Dannyâs neck.
The idea of having other heroes around was something that greatly appealed to Danny. Being the lone super-powered protector of Amity Park for so long took its toll on the young man, even with his human companions. It just wasnât the same, being the only one with advanced abilities. He had to take the bigger hits, he had to be the one to save his friends if they got into too great of a bind, he had to be the one to try and take on the burden of Amity Park alone when they all went off to find their place in the world. With great power comes great responsibility, after all. And being the Ghost King? Well, Danny had more than enough âgreat powerâ to spare.
The thought was just as sobering as it was exciting. Other heroes, super or not, meant that there was something to have caused those heroes to come into play. Some great villain, or a world-ending disaster, or even large crime rates. Lady Gotham only said criminals, though, so maybe there were no supervillains Danny needed to worry about.
âYes. In fact, there is a large society of both heroes and villains.â
Well, it was a nice thought while it lasted.
âBut many of the aliens you were so excited to hear about are among those heroes.â Gotham continued, not noticing Dannyâs sudden mid-afterlife crisis. âThere is the Batman, who is one of the founders of the Justice League. Superman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Green Arrow, and many others are all part of this superhero society - the Justice League.â
âOkay,â Danny was desperately trying to keep up with this sudden information. âSo, Batman is a super-powered dude who helped to start an entire squad of superheroes?â
âHe has no powers. The Dark Knight is just a man, same with Green Arrow and many others. They simply are able to keep up with the aliens, gods, and metas.â
Danny paused, taking in a breath. He touched his fingers together, pressing his palms flat. Another breath was taken, this one deeper than the last. With every ounce of teenage angst he still had within him, Danny lifted his hands up together to rest against his forehead before bringing them down in an arch that would have made Sam proud. âWhat the fuck.â
A laugh rolled from Gothamâs form, his guardian sneakily tightening her protective hold on him. âWhat the fuck indeed, Little One.â
âOkay, okay-â Dannyâs voice cracked with indignation, âSo regular everyday humans fight supervillains and are able to keep up with gods? And super-powered aliens?â
âYes.â
âAnd one of those humans - who named himself after a bat - is the sole protector of your lair? Besides yourself? And he doesnât let any of his superhero friends help him?â
âI never said he worked alone. Though, for a long time he did not have any help.â
âLady G,â Danny said again with exasperation. âI repeat: what the fuck.â
Her only response was to laugh at his expense as he continued to moan about how he couldnât seem to escape crazy people, no matter what dimension he runs to. The space shared by two multi-dimensional beings filled with an easy warmth.
âSo,â Danny started after a couple minutes of his grumbling. âSuperpowered people arenât allowed in your city because one of your protectors is just a man in a⊠What, fursuit? A crime-fighting fursuit?â He paused, considering, before rapidly moving on. âBut there are super-powered people in this dimension who are also heroes.â
âYes, that is all true.â
The young man took a second, silently thinking, before speaking again. âOkay, okay,â He started. âAnd the chances that Iâm going to have to just⊠steal all of these ghostly artifacts is pretty high, right?â
âAgain, you are correct.â
âSo,â Danny said, stretching out the word. âChances are theyâre going to think Iâm some sort of villain.â
Gotham made a noise akin to two cars scraping against each other as she hesitated to answer. âThere is a chance of that, yes.â
âGreat,â he bemoaned, bonelessly flopping around his couch. âGuess itâs time to pull out the olâ acting shoes. Welcome to Dannyâs One-Stop Shop for Villainy.â
Foreign emotions rubbed against the sulking manâs aura, the City Spiritâs feelings of do not fret-all is well-I will protect you soothing Dannyâs temperament. âThere is no need for all of that, Little King.â When their eyes met, Gothamâs form had smoothed into a rolling fog compared to her usual flaking fire. âIf all else fails, you can learn to have some fun with it. Many of the heroes and villains of this world have⊠gimmicks, if you would, for their respective personas.â
A critical eye was shot to the other ghost. âWhat do you mean by that? My ghost formâs already pretty gimmicky.â
âBut,â she said. âYou can always take it to the next level. I would suggest you do some research on the various powers who live within my city as well as this world. You may find some inspiration.â She paused before speaking with a teasing tone. âI also believe that Clockwork told you to blend in? Maybe a name like Inviso-bill would fit right in with the likes of Condiment King and Kiteman.â
âAbsolutely not!â He screeched, waving his hands wildly as he bared his teeth. âHow do you even know about that?!â
A purr echoed from Gothamâs chest, so fierce Danny could feel it vibrating his own core. âI have my ways, Little One.â
âFucking cryptic geezers,â Danny sullenly mumbled as he pouted. âI donât even know where I could get an outfit for stealing stuff, anyways.â
âWere you not planning on doing it in your more ghostly form?â
He stopped, eyeballing Gothamâs face area with a critical eye. The other was facing him, though more of her wispy form had started to curl around his shoulders like a lazy cat soaking up the warmth of the sun. âI thought using powers in your city was a no-no?â
âThat does not mean you cannot use your other form,â Gothamâs voice took on a lecturing tone. âYou just will not be able to use your powers in an obvious way. It would help to protect your identity, and I know that you know the risks of not being in one of your forms for too long. Clockwork, at the very least, informed me to help you keep track of your health.â
Danny grumbled a bit, remembering the last lecture he endured from Frostbite about his general health. âYeah, yeah, I know. Canât I just use my ghost form as is, then?â
âI would not recommend it.â
âWhyâs that?â Danny inquired.
Gotham huffed, âBecause, quite frankly, there are magic users who know about your coronation. Any being with ties to death - through magic or dying or any other way - heard the Song of Ancients as you took the crown. It will not take long for your influence over the Realms to reach here, and when that occurs they will know.â
âAnd then the jig is up?â
âYes, then the âjig is upâ.â
A loud groan left him, frustration causing Danny to get up and pace. âSo, what? I just go around and snatch everything while invisible? Or in the Kingly gear? âCause I donât think my HAZMAT is the kind of gimmick youâre thinking of. Besides, wouldnât either form just give everything away from the get-go?â
When Gotham didnât respond, the young man turned to face her. The City Spirit was staring at him, not saying anything.
âWhat?â He finally asked when he couldnât stand it.
âYou can change the outfit of your form.â She stated. âDid you not know this?â
Danny nodded his head, âI mean, yeah, I swapped from the robes to my HAZMAT earlier - but I donât even know how to start on an entirely new outfit!â
The older ghost let out a quiet laugh, âDo not fret, Little One. I can teach you how to alter your form.â
âCan you change yours?â The young man asked, curious. He knew Amorpho could shapeshift and that often a ghost could generally alter their appearance, but he didnât think he would be able to alter his own.
âI used to be able to,â grief rolled off Gotham in waves, the intensity of it staggering. A dark cloud seemed to roll over the city, the weak light bleeding through the loftâs windows almost completely disappearing. âIt was a long, long time ago that I was last able to.â
Danny reached out, letting apologies-youâre okay-Iâm okay-weâre safe tentatively brush against his companionâs anguish. âWell, maybe we can figure out how to get you to change forms again. Iâll do some nosying around and figure out the best way to blend in so I can snatch some fun stuff.â
A thankful emotion poked through Gothamâs grief as she agreed with the young man before her. âUntil then,â she started. âIt might be a good idea for you to settle some more. I need to rest before attempting to mentor you through something as draining as altering yourself.â
âAlright,â Danny easily agreed. âShould I stay in here while you do that, or is it a good idea for me to roam around a bit?â
Gotham paused, considering. âYou should be fine to wander, though I would suggest spending time familiarizing yourself with my occupants beforehand.â
âGotcha,â he gave his new friend a small smile. âThank you, again, for helping me with this. I really do appreciate it, Lady Gotham.â
âBut of course,â she said in a tone full of fondness. âClockwork has spoken highly of you throughout the years. I am pleased to see his judgment was not misguided.â
âWell, Iâm glad that youâre pretty chill.â Danny happily moved closer to the City Spirit.
If Gotham had a physical mouth, Danny would bet that she was smiling at him when she spoke. âI will leave you to it, then. If you are in need of anything simply flare your aura. I will feel it, no matter where you are.â
âYou got it, Lady G.â
And with that, the Spirit of Gotham faded from the visible spectrum. Danny felt her slip out of his auraâs bubble and he was suddenly alone in a completely new dimension. Which was, apparently, full of superheroes, supervillains, and everything in between. When the young man began walking up the stairs to where his computer was set up, the only thing on his mind was figuring out where Clockworkâs list of artifacts were and which hero he was going to look up first. That Batman dude sure sounded like a good place to start.
âź(âŻâœâ°)â
The sheer amount of non-earthly beings that occupied this dimensionâs earth was crazy. That was the conclusion that Danny came to hours after Gotham had left him.
It took flipping through old news channels, trolling internet forums, random fan blogs, and even watching a few interviews of various heroes for Danny to get a vague grasp of this new reality. There were some heroes that he couldnât get a full view of - the Batman being one of them. All he could find were grainy photos of the hero and hints that he wasnât the only vigilante in the city.
Which would make Dannyâs job a bit harder.
During his deep dive into this dimensionâs cultures, Danny flipped through the little journal Clockwork had gifted him. His mentorâs steady handwriting listed out the various artifacts he was going to need to find as well as their general location. Many of those artifacts, after using his shiny new high-tech computer to look them up, were located in public places or stored in secret, secure facilities. Yoinking the public ones wouldnât be too much of an issue for Danny - his abilities would make it rather easy to avoid detection, after all - but he had no idea what a âFortress of Solitudeâ was. Or even something as vague as âThe Watchtowerâ. Seriously, some of these places sounded weird.
But others had cities listed out. Star City was obviously a town, he knew where Gotham was (duh), and even places like Themyscira were easy enough to Google. It was with this brilliant deduction that led Danny to believe some of the weirder names werenât attached to a city at all which was rather worrying.
Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on who asked) Clockwork wasnât one to steer Danny in a direction the old ghost knew wouldnât work out. So with a healthy dose of blind faith, Danny chose to focus on whatever artifacts he could easily access for now. This meant Danny spent a decent amount of time casually scrolling through museum articles, even more blogs, and whatever else he could get his grubby little hands on. Honestly, it made the Ghost King feel like he was back in highschool trying to desperately write an entire research essay the day it was due.
The first item on Dannyâs newly named âList of Shit I Need to Stealâ was an item called the Hand of Greed. According to the Gotham Museum of Natural Historyâs website, the Hand of Greed was a statuette found in an Ancient Greek city. There were some general facts about when it was found, who discovered it, and how it came into the Museumâs care. The Wikipedia page elaborated more on the lore behind the dark statuette, though.
According to random people on the internet, the Hand of Greed had been found by Ancient Greek farmers after a lightning storm in a graveyard. There was more than a few forums debating on what caused the storm, where the hand came from, and even some people arguing that everything about the Hand was made-up. The forums then led Danny to a dead end - nothing had ever been formally concluded about the relicâs origins. It frustrated Danny a little bit. He wanted to be at least slightly more prepared for his first ever consensual heist. The half-ghost broke away from his hunched position over his desk, popping his back and yawning. The motions of this move caused his stomach to gurgle angrily, reminding Danny that eating was still something he had to do.
The young man stretched himself out, wiggling around his comfy office chair. âGuess I better get some food or something,â Danny mumbled to himself. His eyes didnât move from where they were focused on his setupâs main monitor, where a picture of the strong fist carved out of black marble rested.
With a dramatic groan meant for no one but himself, Danny spun his chair around. He easily hefted himself off of the space, casually walking to where his duffle bag still rested. He rummaged around, grabbing his wallet before moseying his way to the elevator.
It wasnât like Danny didnât want to steal something, per se. As he smacked the âdownâ button, he considered the morality of taking something that did, technically, belong to him. It wasnât like the people who found the statue knew it originated in the Ghost Zone - to them it was just an old statue with a weird story behind it.
The elevator arrived with a happy-sounding âding!â and Danny stepped into the space as he fiddled with the bracelets resting on his wrist. He would have to make a plan to break into the museum, something the halfa was not looking forward to, especially with how little his research brought up. Reaching out, he poked the lobby button before resting his back against the stainless steel walls.
Maybe he could just go in invisibly? This Batman hero wouldnât even be able to catch him if he never even appeared on camera, after all. It wasnât like Danny had an identity in this world, anyways. Any hero would be hard-pressed to catch a ghost in the machine. The elevator stopped, doors opening with the same cheery noise.
But, even though Danny hated to admit it, he kind of wanted to meet the heroes of this dimension.
The young man continued to think about it as he walked out of the buildingâs lobby, not even taking note of the inside of it or the people loitering. Breathing in city smog, Danny pulled his beat-to-hell phone out of where it was resting in his khaki pants. He focused just enough to figure out where the closest convenience store was, slap a pin on his new home, and make his way in the general direction of where he needed to go.
Danny was honestly pretty surprised to see his phone worked. The shock of finding out that yes, his shitty phone did in fact apparently carry a multi-dimensional data plan, brought his attention to money. Lady Gotham didnât really explain what forms of currency this dimension used, nor did he even consider looking that up.
Which he could solve right now, by using his phone that did somehow work. But where was the fun in that? He had to spice up his obviously too-boring life somehow. All else failed, he would just act like he was from a different country or something. Thereâs no way that could backfire on him - no siree, no backfiring here. And technically he wouldnât be lying, either. Itâs a win-win either way.
It was with these thoughts that Danny serenely entered a beat-up looking store with various ads decorating its windows. He had about twenty dollars in his pockets when he hopped dimensions, which would hopefully be enough to grab a sandwich or something.
Danny really, really hoped that the currency of this dimension was the same.
After the halfa snagged a decent looking chicken salad sandwich out of the storeâs stacked fridges, he found it was at least similar enough to get him the food and a fountain drink. Danny took his change, thanked the cashier, and went back outside. The man leaned his back against cool glass and took out his phone to see how close the museum was to him. If nothing else, Danny could make his way to the place and do a little reconnaissance.
It seemed like something Jazz would want him to do, after all.
The GPS app on Dannyâs phone showed him that the Museum of Natural History was down in Gothamâs University District, closer to where he first came into this dimension than where he was now. A forty minute drive by car, apparently, but the halfa was sure he would be able to fly there in under ten. With a small smirk, Danny stuffed his lunch into his mouth as he hurriedly searched for a decent alleyway to shift forms in.
Finding a decent spot proved to be more difficult than he had expected. The city was teeming with life - people spilling in and out of the streets and bustling across warm concrete as they went about their lives. It was after the fourth time Danny wandered into an empty-looking alley, only to find a shady deal going on, that he felt frustrated beyond belief.
It had never been this hard in Amity to find an unoccupied spot to swap to his ghost form in. The spaces between buildings almost never had other people in them, and even when there were all Danny had to do was make it to the next one over to be alone. Here, though, it was proving to be a larger task. People were everywhere and it was starting to get on the halfaâs nerves.
Danny didnât miss home already, nope. He hadnât even been in this dimension for twelve hours - he couldnât break this early.
Finally, after spending way too much time trying to find a discrete area to die, Danny let his transformation sweep over himself. He faded away from the visible spectrum as soon as familiar rings of light sputtered out. He quickly shot to the sky, gazing down on the city below him with delight.
Yeah, it wasnât Amity Park. There were people everywhere, it smelled horrible, and Danny could still feel the sticky ectoplasm of the city brushing against his aura.
But it was beautiful in its own way.
Towering skyscrapers outline the heart of the city in the distance, windows reflecting back what bits of sky peaked through the slowly lifting haze. Flashing lights rose from between the cramped buildings, washing Gothamâs people in hues of red and blue. The noise was a pleasant backdrop as Danny flew between the streets, a smile gracing his face.
He could see himself getting used to this.
Minutes passed as the halfa twirled between man-made structures, occasionally dropping down to listen to the various people as they went about their day. It was when Danny flew up to the top of a skyscraper, his whole being bursting with joy as he played in the sky, that he felt an angry pulse brush against his aura.
Startled, Danny hovered over the top of the office space. Warily, the young man sent back a questioning feeling - doing his best to keep his little bubble of safety. He was left waiting, anxiety slowly building the longer no ghost appeared on his senses.
Who had sent that? Danny wasnât quite sure, but the only other ghost he had met in this dimension was Gotham. It had to have been her, but why was she angry?
His guess was proven correct when a black cloud rose from the edge of the skyscraper, sides flared like an avenging angel's wings. Startled, Danny dropped to the roof, taking a few steps back as his hands rose into a defensive position and his invisibility fell. Belated, a wispy breath left his mouth when the older ghost drew closer.
âMy King,â Gothamâs angry voice crashed against Dannyâs senses. Long gone were the soothing tones from earlier. In their place were sounds that made the hairs on the back of Dannyâs neck raise up, his senses screaming DANGER DANGER! âWhat did I tell you about using your abilities here?â
âI thought that was just for whenever I was stealing stuff!â Danny protested, trying to recall their conversation earlier. âI was just trying to scope out the museum - the Hand of Greed is something on Clockworkâs list.â
Gotham snarled, her form twisting angrily. âNo, you shouldnât be using any of your abilities. The risk is too great.â
Hesitating, Danny warred with himself. On one hand, he didnât want to piss off his ghostly host on the first day he stayed with her. That was just bad manners, and he knew Pandora would be disappointed in him if he wasnât polite. However, not being able to use his powers? Ever, as long as he was inside Gothamâs city? That was just too much to ask for, in his own opinion. Danny could understand not wanting him to use his powers to avoid Gothamâs protectorâs wrath, but on a day-to-day basis?
Danny wasnât too sure if he could do that. His powers were part of him and he thought he was finally going to a place where he wouldnât have to hide who he was.
At the end of the day, though, Danny wasnât one to try and piss off his allies. He had made too many enemies over the years to be okay with that.
âIâm sorry, Lady Gotham.â Danny spoke, trying to hide the frustration that had so quickly overtook his fear. âI wonât use my powers in your city - unless I am in my apartment.â
The spiritâs form shifted, considering. âVery well, I accept your apology.â She hesitated, for just a split-second, before continuing. âI think it is time we head back to your haunt, Little One. I still need to teach you how to shift forms and I want you to be prepared for when you meet my protectors in a few days.â
âA few days?â Danny asked, confused. That wasnât his plan.
âYes,â Gotham said. âDid you not want to get settled before attempting to lift the artifact?â
Danny shot a confident grin at the City Spirit, his eyes alight with mischief. âI know we just met and all, but did you really think I would do anything else?â
âNo,â Gotham conceded. âI will do my best to aid you on your heist tonight, but please be careful.â
âIâm always careful,â Danny sassed as he let his playful nature wash back over him. âShow me how to change my outfit?â
âAs you wish, Little One.â
ăœ(àČ _àČ )ă
Gothamâs setting sun cast an eerie, dark red light across Jasonâs apartment. The rays washed over him, making it look like the man was stained with spilled blood. Dick had just set off with a cheery promise to see the other on patrol before slipping out the door, leaving his younger brother alone for the small amount of time it took for the sun to set. Soon, Gotham City would be cast into the darkness of night, with the cityâs criminal elements slowly spilling onto the streets.
It was during the night that Jason always felt the most alive.
Before, when he was still living in a shitty Crime Alley apartment, it was because that was when Willis would go out. The arguments that came from him and Catherine would scare Jason more than the gunshots on the street. At least those were outside the safe walls of his home, but inside? To him, that was where the real danger lurked in the form of two angry adults.
Then, it was the streets. They had never been safe - but now that Jason was truly a part of them, he had to learn the tricks to stay alive. Part of that meant finding a safe place to squat, to wait out the evils that lurked in Gothamâs shadowed nights. The Bat was known for hunting and hurting criminals - something Willis had raged about more than once - and Jason was just a street rat who stole to survive. He had to stay alert during the lonely nights. Streets clouded in darkness just werenât safe for a kid.
After the streets, it was being Robin. Fighting alongside Batman, helping give others hope and protection, and doing what he could to make his home just a little safer was like magic. He felt alive, freer than he ever had before that. It wasnât just the adrenaline pumping through his veins or the thrill of leaping between rooftops, it was being able to help his home.
Jason was Gotham, born and bred in the darkest parts of the cityâs heart. More than Bruce, or Dick, or even Babs could ever be - so of course he felt more alive in the comfort of night.
Then, he died, and being alive was never the same.
He was learning how to live with it, slowly but surely. The waves of green rage had originally helped Jason feel more alive, a little bit more sane while he struggled to figure out who he was. But even his own mind had betrayed him, at the end of the day. Basking in the pit rage had become an addiction, a high that he could use to finally feel again.
Within the past few months, Jasonâs mind had been slowly coming down from the almost three-year stint of using the Lazarus Pitâs âgiftâ as a metaphorical emotional shield. It had been rough, trying to notice when it was the artificial rage whispering in his ear or his own emotions coming to the forefront.
Now, though? Oddly enough, even when Jason reached for the space he had learned the Pit coiled in, the green never threatened to take over. Throughout Dickâs impromptu forceful brotherly-bonding day, Jason hadnât felt a single peep from the corner of his mind occupied by the unwanted side-effects of a green, gooey hot tub from Hell.
It was nice to be alone in his own mind again.
These thoughts raced around Jasonâs mind as he went about the motions of getting ready for a normal patrol. It was odd, thinking the last patrol he had been on led him to the Batcave. Jason had been expecting to feel at least slightly off-center with the Pit Rage gone from its sulking corner. If anything, though, he felt more normal than he had in years.
As heavy kevlar fell to rest comfortably against Jasonâs body, he noticed a bullet hole in the shoulder of his uniform. Eyebrows scrunched in confusion, he examined the damaged spot. That hadnât been there the last time he donned his metaphorical cape, but Jason was pretty sure he would have noticed if he had been shot.
⊠He would ask Dick about it during patrol. Maybe that was how he ended up as high as a kitten on catnip?
Slipping his guns into their correct holsters, the young man snatched his bright red helmet from its hidden compartment. An almost feral grin danced across his face - the Red Hood coming out to play was always the highlight of Jasonâs day.
When the sun had finished slowly sinking below the smog-filled horizon, Jason meandered down a stealthily hidden passageway to the secret bunker that housed most of Hoodâs equipment. He was surprised to find his beloved hotrod-red bike parked in its usual spot â Jason figured he would have used one of his less-used bikes until he was able to get it from the Cave.
He didnât think too long about it, though, as he grabbed the rest of his gear and dropped down onto the piece of machinery. A loud rev of the engine reverberated between the enclosed walls of his bunker as he pressed a button on one of the bikeâs handlebars. Across from him, a large garage door slowly groaned to life. Jason kicked off from the ground, jumping into Gothamâs old tunnel system with practice ease.
The tunnels had originally been part of the Court of Owlâs underground hideouts, but after the Bat-family took down their operations, Red Hood had quickly laid a bright-red claim to them - including the bunker under his building. The tunnel system was near-perfect as it was. Some of it needed a bit of repairs and cleanup, but hidden ways to travel around the major points of Gotham with discreet access points was a resource Jason just couldnât say no to.
It was through one of these openings that the Red Hood burst into the darkened streets, engine loudly announcing the start of Jasonâs patrol to any bystanders who may be in earshot.
He quickly sped through the dimly lit streets, expertly navigating to one of the many areas Jason leaves his bike during the night. Today, he had decided, was going to just be an easy patrol. A nice little stroll through Crime Alley, maybe a stop at one of his favorite twenty-four hour hole in the walls, and then finishing up his night with a well-deserved bath.
With that in mind, the Red Hood grappled up to Gothamâs darkened rooftops, letting the cityâs shadows envelope him in a cool, familiar embrace. Street lights flickered noisily, enhancing the darkened figures thrown across well-worn buildings. The great expanse of Gothamâs ever-changing skyline greeted the helmeted vigilante as he began his daily patrol across his home territory.
A thick layer of smog blocked the moon and stars from being seen by the millions of Gothamites, the haze from the day still lingering at the very edges of the giant city. The early spring breeze brought a light chill to the night, making Jason glad he had a layered uniform, unlike when he was a child strutting around in Dickâs old scaly panties.
He tapped the side of his helmet three times, turning on the communication unit built into its protective metals. A quiet chatter of his family greeted him and against his will, Jason felt his shoulders drop just a bit.
â-Iâm saying that itâs obvious that Ivy and Harley are going to get married soon.â Dickâs voice was broken up by the sounds of wind sweeping across his speaker, small grunts echoing in Jasonâs ear as his older brother danced across rooftops in a well-loved routine.
Stephanieâs response came with the usual hyper rush Jason has learned to associate with his fellow street kid. âAnd Iâm saying that I think theyâre going to wait a little longer. We all know how Ivy is about commitments.â
âBut she and Harley have been dating for years. If the two of them can survive that tantrum Kiteman had a few months ago, then I think theyâre pretty much set for life.â
âQuiet on the line.â Bruceâs gravelly tone was a bit of an unwelcome entry in the friendly banter, making Jason fight to contain the natural tensing of his body. He forced himself to relax, jumping from the roof of a crumbling apartment building and onto an old office building in a much similar state.
âDonât be such a stick in the mud, B.â Dick let out a larger grunt, a fleshy sound accompanying it. âHey guys, mind if I drop in? Seems like youâre all having the party of a lifetime.â
âFighting on an open line?â Jason drawled, never one to not poke at Dick. âWatch out, Boy Wonder. Daddy-batâs gonna ground you at this rate.â A single grunt was the only response Jasonâs quip earned, making him sneer a bit under his protective hood.
Figures.
Before the gun-slinging vigilante could even get another word in, he heard the âpingâ associated with Oracle dragging his communication unit down onto another line. âHood, Iâve gotten reports of a gang break-in a few blocks from your location. Double back, itâs the building across from where you stored your bike.â
âOf course,â he groaned, but still dutifully skidded to a stop. Jason threw himself into sprinting back across the different roofs he had just parkoured his way over. âAny more information on the situation?â
âNegative.â
âWonderful.â
It took him a few minutes, but soon Jason was back in the general area where he had started his night. âIs it the jewelers or the pawn shop?â Jason asked the quiet line, staring down at the littered streets.
âThe jewelers,â Babs said. âFootage is showing four guys, their getaway driver is waiting outside near the back. Dark blue van. Best to proceed with the burglars then the driver, from what I can see.â
âGot it, going in now.â
âGood luck.â
The large vigilante dropped down in front of the store, scanning through the broken glass. He could barely see the four figures shoving anything they could grab into worn duffle bags. From what Jason could tell, none of them were armed â meaning he was quick to slip sneakily through the opening they had made when oneâs back was turned. It was his odd hybrid training that allowed him to move so quickly and silently when his body mass was constantly working against him.
Hood snuck up behind a robber who was rooting around a now-broken glass case. The vigilanteâs quiet movements served him well as he suddenly struck his arms out, grabbing the masked civilian around the throat. The man made an aborted shout, alerting his friends to the vigilante among their ranks as the Red Hood turned them around. Now with the thug between himself and his buddies, Jason tightened his forearm against the warm neck he held hostage.
âIâm only going to say this once,â Jasonâs modulated voice rippled over the thieves. âSurrender or youâll end up like chucklefuck here.â With the end of his statement, he tightened his grip and swept the other manâs legs out from under him, Jason placing one of his own legs between to keep his prey unsteady.
The thief in his arms started babbling pleads as he desperately squirmed in Hoodâs grasp. His friends cautiously lowered their bags, one even going as far as to show Jason his free hand.
âEasy now,â The one furthest from the door said. âWeâre just tyinâ ta put food on tâ table.â
âThatâs understandable,â The masked vigilante said in a tone laced with half-fake sympathy. âBut thereâs better ways to go around getting money than robbing stores. Surrender and Iâm sure prisonâll teach yaâ.â
âYeah,â The far guy spoke up again. âNot gonna happen, cape.â With that, the dude kicked a heavy rock at Jason with surprising accuracy, forcing him to let go of the squirming criminal in his grasp. As much as Jason would be fine with the dude getting a concussion, heâs sure the other bats would not be so chill about it.
The thief that was caught in Jasonâs grapple was busy running, trying to make an epic getaway. It gave Jason time to pull out his handgun and a warning shot was fired, putting a smoking hole into the floor in front of the fleeing robber. The man, to his credit, didnât flinch at the loud noise and instead kept gunning for the exit where his friends were waiting for him.
With a curse, Jason realized a bit late that the three of them were almost at the door â which he noticed had been disarmed. He slipped his gun back into its rightful place before he raced after the three thieves. As they ran through the store, jumping over jewelry cases and feeling his boots slide across scattered glass shards dusting the floor like deadly fallen snow. The vigilante pulled out a bola set from where it was hanging on his utility belt, aimed as best he could while running, and threw it with terrifying accuracy towards the first criminal in the fleeing line.
The bolas caught on the robberâs legs, drawing them up short. With a panicked shout, the man went down like a live oak â with a heavy crash and shaking limbs. The two behind him stumbled to a frightened stop, obviously startled. Jason used those couple precious milliseconds to gain ground on the group, already planning his next move. A gloved hand reached back towards his belt, gripping onto his last bola set. By the time he was re-noticed by the criminals, he was mere feet away from the trio. One of them let out a surprised noise, fleeing the scene and leaving his friends behind. It was him that Jason aimed his bolas at, easily letting the capture weapon fly and snag the wayward robber.
The last one had been trying to help his friend out, on his knees with a knife frantically sawing through the rope binding his buddiesâ legs. When Jason was close enough, he pulled the man up by the back of his jacket and punched him across the nose. The squirming criminalsâs hands came up to clutch at the bruised cartilage and Jason slapped Bat-grade handcuffs across his wrists.
âNow,â Jason said as he dropped his prey. He turned to look at the other two, focusing on the man at his feet while the one in his hands squirmed around. âMaybe itâs nap-time for some naughty boys.â
âLet us go, Hood!â The man in his hands yelled, drawing Jasonâs attention. âCâmon, man, we got families! Donât throw us in jail!â
âYou should have thought of that before you decided crime was your best option.â The helmeted man practically growled. âWhat would your family say if they found out this was the way you made your money? Huh?â
âDonât be so naĂŻve, Hood,â The man on the floor snarled.
âHow about you shut up, huh?â Jason snapped, looming over the other. He dropped the handcuffed guy next to the one on the floor before manhandling the un-handcuffed guy around to turn him into a newly-minted handcuff guy. âTime to take care of your last pal, boys.â But when Jason lifted his head towards the exit of the darkened store, all he saw was his now-sawed bolas and a wide-open door. âOh you have got to be shittinâ me.â
With a quick tap to his helmet, Hood rejoined the open line Gothamâs vigilantes used to alert when a crime was stopped as he ran through the open doorway. âOracle, got two of the four. Theyâre locked up in cuffs, in pursuit of the others.â
âNoted,â Babâs steady voice filled Jasonâs ears. âIâve got eyes on their get-away car and contacted GPD - so far theyâre heading south through the Bowery.â
âGot it. Do I have time to grab my bike or am I using the Rooftop Express tonight?â
âGet the bike, theyâre not slowing down.â Oracle paused for a split-second, no doubt cross-referencing the activities of all the vigilantes roaming the streets. âRed Robin will cut them off if they start heading east.â
Red Hood huffs as he spots his bike, having raced over from the now-destroyed shop. âSounds good,â he started his bike with a deafening cry from the engine, adrenaline pumping through the ex-crime lordâs veins. It was odd, to be so excited for a chase and not feel r agerageragerage  in the far corners of his mind, threatening to cloud his thoughts with mindless violence. âStreets?â
As Oracle rattles off the street name Hoodâs suspects are using to attempt to get away, the man uses his modified bike to its greatest potential. Weaving through traffic was something Jason was used to - it was as natural as grappling across rooftops for the young man. To slip between cars while traveling at high speeds was a rush he craved. Add in the hunt of criminals? Well, Jason was as happy as a Bat with a cold case.
When Jason spotted the criminalâs van, they were deep into the heart of Gotham. He had chased them through the Bowery, over the Robins Bridge. Gotham itself was a city made up of multiple islands - each broken up by different inlets bleeding into the Gotham Bay. Sprang River separated the northernmost parts of Gotham from the older parts of the city, like the Upper East Side, Diamond District, and University District. As soon as Barbara informed Jason that his suspects were heading through the Upper East Side, a plan started to formulate.
The Upper East side was broken into a grid pattern, much like how New York City was. If Jason could speed through the lesser-used streets parallel to 35th, then there was a chance he could cut them off. A quick one-handed pat down of his bikeâs stylish saddlebags confirmed he had a set of tire spikes. Hidden under his hood, an excited smile grew.
âHey, Oracle,â Jason cut off the red-headed wonderâs listing of streets. âIâm going to spike the van. Whatâs the traffic lookinâ like?â
There was a pause before a resigned sigh filtered through Red Hoodâs helmet. âTraffic is mostly clear, theyâre closing in on Robinson Park now. Best thing to do is try and get them in that area - it gives me time to stop traffic around there.â
âPerfect,â Hood purred as he pushed his bike faster, expertly weaving around the late-night commuters. In just a few minutes, Hood got the confirmation from Oracle that now was a good time to enact their plan. With a quick twist of his body, Jasonâs bike dodged between skyscrapers as he burst onto the main road in the Upper East Side. The criminalâs van was just barely behind him and, having no time to maneuver, ended up driving over the spikes Red Hood threw into the road.
A pop and the eerie screeching of machinery enveloped Jasonâs senses as his prey struggled to keep their getaway vehicle under control. When it finally crashed into a light pole, an odd quiet seemed to brush over the city. With an expert flick of his foot, Jason lowered his bikeâs kickstand before stalking over to the smoking van. He brought a padded elbow up, smashing the window in a practiced move. As glass fell like a dangerous snow, he paused to take in the sight of the criminals before him.
The vanâs airbags had deployed, leaving his two runaways unconscious in their seats. With a huff, the vigilante opened the driverâs door. He checked over the two thugs with practise ease, making sure there were no injuries he may need to know about before moving them out of their now-busted van.
âGot them, Oracle,â Hood said, pulling the two men out of the van. He set them a few feet away, zip-tying their hands and feet together. âCops on their way?â
âTheyâll be there in two minutes. Any chance you can pick up the spikes?â
âSure,â Jason agreed easily, sauntering his way down the street. He could see the faraway headlights of cars heading his way as he rolled up the spikes. As the black-haired man secured them back into the saddlebags, he heard the distant sound of sirens.
âYou best get a move on, Hood,â Oracle cautioned. Typing joined her speech, urgency picking up in her voice as she directed him. âLooks like thereâs been a break-in at the History Museum. Youâre the closest unoccupied.â
âSeriously?â Jason groused, hopping back onto his bike. He left the criminals in a trail of exhaust right as the Gotham Police Department showed up. The vague threats they made followed the Red Hood as he sped towards the University District. âYou know I hate that place.â
âWell, sucks to suck. Batman and Robin are currently chasing down a lead on Penguinâs drug trade, otherwise I would send the two of them.â
Hood paused, his brain going to places he definitely did not want it going. âNew lead or the one from yesterday?â
âNew lead - Red Robin and Orphan picked it up while you were indisposed.â With a sigh, Hood parked his bike in a random alleyway, taking note of the streets near it. The large man grappled his way up to the roof of the building before starting to parkour his way towards the museum, grumbling the entire way.
It wasnât that Jason didnât want to stop a thief, or that he was embarrassed about being drugged the other day. No, it wasnât that. A fight was something Jason pretty much welcomed every night he donned his guns and helmet. The museum was simply too full of times before. Before he had died, when things were just a bit easier. When it was just him, Dick, Bruce, and Alfred. Back when he wore the scaly panties and hid in Batmanâs cape. When banter and quips thrown at villains came easier to him, when he thought Batman would always be there to catch him when Jason fell.
He couldnât help but wonder what had changed about the museum since the last time he was there, six years ago, stopping Catwoman with Batman. From doing his best to ignore the flirting between his father mentor and the thief.
Now, instead of the hand-me-down Robin uniform, it was the Red Hood armor Jason wore to strike down a thief.
Jasonâs musing cut off as he landed hard on the roof across from the museum. The vigilante rolled into a light jog, shaking off the pain racing through his knees. He could see the top of his targeted building, stopping at the edge of the rooftop he was occupying to try and get a better view.
He needed to figure out what caused the alarm to trip on the building in the first place. It didnât seem like the type of area one of the usual Gotham Rogue Gallery would target for any occasion. Maybe Catwoman, but Jason didnât know of any jewels in any exhibit that she would try to steal.
âDo you have any information on who mightâve broken in? I canât think of anything Catwoman would try to get her hands on.â Jason asked as he kept a moving eye on the building across from him.
A thoughtful hum came from the other side of the transmission. âIâm looking at the CCTV footage now. The person who broke in is still inside, and appears to be wearing a dark, hooded outfit. White accents as well - whoever it is, theyâre not one of our usuals.âÂ
Jason cocked his head, body lighting up with a curiosity he hadnât felt in a long time. âRoger, going in now. Might as well figure out who it is.â Aiming his grapple gun towards a secure part of the museumâs building, he triggered the mechanism with a satisfying pop and whirr. With an ease born from being a Bat, he jumped off the rooftop - soaring above the late-night foot traffic with a small thrill.
Oracleâs voice crackled as she spoke. âHood, wait for at least one other to arrive before engaging. All CCTV footage is corrupted - this guy mustâve used a localized EMP of some sort, and depending on how strong it is, we might lose contact.â
âI thought the others were occupied?â The man questioned as he landed on top of the museumâs roof. He dropped to a crouch, surveying the space around him.
The Gotham Museum of Natural History was a building made up of pale stone. It had large, rectangular columns racing up the sides to form a grand entrance. The museum was split into four sections: the main part, and then three add-on sections that all intersected at the circular part of the building. While the roof was relatively flat, a massive glass dome rose from the main section with various skylights scattered around the add-ons. It may look cool but, as all the Gotham vigilantes knew, it created many escape routes for various villains to use. Without counting the many, many windows the building boasted.
âBatman and Robin are. Red Robin just finished up with a mugging and Nightwing is heading north. ETA is roughly ten minutes for each.â
Jason shook his head, creeping along the roof. âWhen did the break-in happen?â
Oracle paused, her silence speaking a thousand words. âAbout thirteen minutes ago.â
âSo theyâre probably finishing up grabbing whatever it is, already.â Red Hood kept his eyes out for any sign of break in, eyes expertly scanning the terrain around him.
âAssuming theyâre as fast as Catwoman? Yes.â
Jasonâs mouth opened to respond when movement through one of the northern add-onâs skylight caught his attention. The Hood hurried his way over, making sure to keep out of sight. As he got closer, static filled his ears. The noise was loud and startled the black-haired vigilante enough for him to quietly curse as he quickly moved to turn off the horrendous noise blasting through the casing covering his skull. Definitely a localized EMP, he thought as he settled next to the skylight to watch the thief.
While Jason typically had decent sight, through the glass he could only describe the person as whispy, almost like the window prevented him from having a clear view. He could barely make out a pitch-black cloak covering the personâs back as they lifted an object from its display pedestal.
Knowing time was running out and not wanting to let this new thief get away, Hood unlatched the skylight with a trick Batman taught him years ago - back when he was still learning the ropes of being Robin. Hooking his grapple claw onto the skylightâs edge, the ex-crime lord silently lowered himself down the large drop as quietly as he could. Even though there was next to no sound of the grappleâs mechanics and his landing was as quiet as an assassinâs, the thiefâs head whipped around. Startled, glowing neon eyes met Hoodâs through his helmet. Fear gripped Jasonâs heart as unblinking Lazarus pools bore into his very soul.
I shouldâve waited, Jason thought hysterically as the vigilante and thief stared at each other.
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