Jason exhaled slowly.
"Wait. Wait, wait," he said, voice trembling with false fear. "Just kidding."
He moved like a speedster. A twist. A wrench.
A sickening crack.
"AHHHHH!" The thug screamed as his elbow snapped in two.
"Jesus fucking Christ!" he wailed, staggering back.
"Shoot him!" the boss roared.
Gunfire erupted, loud and chaotic. Jason pulled the injured thug in front of him, bullets thudding into the man's body like a drumbeat.
Jason raised the stolen pistol and fired—two shots, two kills. Both headshots. One more to the knee of a third thug, dropping him instantly.
The rest scrambled, ducking for cover.
Before the wounded man in Jason's arms went limp, Jason leaned close and whispered, "You can't call out to Christ right now. The only man here handing out judgment… is me."
The thug's eyes widened before he slumped forward, blood pooling at Jason's boots.
The others regrouped and fanned out, circling the area. They thought they were hunters. Little did they realize they were being hunted instead..
Jason pulled a small device from his belt and pressed a button. Sparks exploded. Lights popped and fizzled out one after another until the entire section of the docks was plunged into a suffocating darkness.
"Find him. Kill him," the leader snarled, furious and scared.
Jason melted into the shadows, his breath even, body low.
He crept up behind one thug crouching beside a truck, peering into the void.
"Boo," Jason whispered beside the man's ear.
The thug screamed and accidently fired—right into his own foot.
"A+ for effort," Jason murmured before disappearing again, a wraith in the darkness.
A second scream also came from a different position, but without the sound of gun fire.
The scream pulled attention.
The first location was checked by three men, while the other four rushed over, flashlights from phones flicking on. In the brief moments of brightness, they found their boss—tied to a crate, bleeding from the thigh with a sock jammed deep into his mouth, his eyes wild and panicked.
"Boss!"
They raced to him, fumbling with the knots.
Then they heard it.
Click. Zip.
Jason's voice drifted in from the darkness. "That's all, boys. Enjoy the rest of your evening."
Panicked, they fired wildly toward the sound, bullets ricocheting off metal and cutting into empty air.
A groan echoed. "Did we get him?" someone asked, voice shaking.
A pause. Then—
"You wish."
Jason was on top of a container now, silhouetted by distant lights. Calm. Smirking beneath his mask.
"Oh, one last thing boys… The Falcones say hi."
The eyes of their boss widened upon hearing that statement.
"There he is!" a thug shouted, raising his weapon.
"Oops," Jason said, pressing a button on his detonator before tossing it near the trucks.
BOOM.
Explosions ripped through the docks. Trucks erupted into fireballs. Crates were sent flying like matchsticks. The shockwave sent men tumbling—one flew into the river with a splash. Others weren't so lucky.
- - -
The docks still smoldered beneath the velvet night sky, smoke bleeding into the clouds above Gotham's south pier.
The air at the Maroni docks still carried the bite of burnt rubber and diesel, thick and clinging to the lungs like a warning that hadn't finished echoing.
Steel twisted and groaned beneath the weight of the destruction left behind—three trucks, nothing but charred, skeletal remains of what once held over two million dollars' worth of narcotics, destroyed by an explosion that shook the nearby water like a detonation from a war movie.
Flames had licked the sides until the paint bubbled and peeled away like dead skin. The fourth rig had exploded outright, its twisted axle embedded halfway into a shipping container twenty feet off, now blackened and stinking of scorched chemicals.
And in the middle of it all stood Donnie Trillo, a former street rat turned dock supervisor, shaking like a man who'd seen the devil crawl out of the shadows and speak his name.
He did his best not to vomit as he lit another cigarette with bloodied fingers, hands that still trembled despite the warmth of the flame as blood ran down his leg.
His right knee buckled from the shrapnel bite, the makeshift tourniquet wrapped too tight. But he didn't care. Not about the pain. Not about the smell. All he could hear was that voice echoing in his skull.
'The Falcones say, hi.'
Cold. Unhurried. Like it didn't matter that men had died screaming just seconds before.
- - -
[Moments Later]
Across the river, Jason stood at the edge of a derelict rooftop overlooking the destruction, steam and smoke rising beneath him like the aftermath of a ritual cleansing. His balaclava still clung to his face, damp from sweat, his breath calm despite the chaos.
He watched as emergency crews began arriving in waves, floodlights cutting through the mist like artificial sunlight.
In his hand, he held the Maroni thug's pistol—emptied, wiped clean, and about to be dropped into the harbor.
"Let them tear each other apart," he muttered to himself.
The war to crumble and rebuild a faction of Gotham's underbelly had begun. And no one even knew who struck the first match.
With a flick of his wrist, the pistol vanished into the bay.
Then—movement.
A sudden whistle of air sliced through the quiet.
Instinct kicked in.
Jason spun with acute precision, his hand already drawing the combat knife strapped to his thigh. Metal shrieked against metal as the blade of a sword met the edge of his knife. Sparks flared and danced in the air like fireflies before fading into the night.
His opponent stepped back—young, masked, and clearly pissed. The kid's stance tightened as he switched his footing, the katana gleaming in the low light. With a sharp inhale, the boy lunged again, sword flashing with intent to draw blood.
Jason met the attack head-on, deflecting with a twist of his blade. The impact rang out like a bell between them.
"Oh. It's just the brat," Jason muttered under his breath, a tinge of amusement curled in his voice. He didn't need to guess who was behind the mask.
Across from him, the younger combatant's cape-draped shoulders tensed. His brows creased beneath the shadow of his hooded domino mask, a flicker of frustration dancing in his emerald eyes.
'Who is this peasant?' Damian seethed inwardly. 'And how the hell is he blocking my attacks so efficiently—especially the first one? I came at his blind spot.' His grip adjusted on the sword handle, fingers flexing slightly as he drew in a slow breath and re-centered his stance.
Jason tilted his head slightly, his voice dry and nonchalant as he did his best to mask his voice. "Isn't it way past your bedtime?"
"Not even close," came Damian's sharp retort, just as he flicked several smoke pellets to the ground.
The rooftops filled with an expanding plume of thick grey haze. The smoke curled and twisted in the cold air like writhing shadows. Without hesitation, Robin shot forward through the cloud, blade aiming for the very spot Jason had stood a heartbeat ago.
Steel hit nothing but air.
"What the—?" Damian's eyes widened behind the mask.
From within the smoke, a hard fist slammed into the side of his face. The blow landed with a brutal thud that knocked him off his feet.
He hit the rooftop hard, his body skidding across the coarse gravel. A grunt escaped his lips as he rolled with the momentum and sprang back to his feet in one fluid motion, boots scraping against the rooftop edge. His jaw clenched. That one stung.
With a scowl etched onto his face, Damian spat to the side and glared at the figure through the haze. "Better give back those pants. They're way too big for you to fill," he snapped, his voice dripping venom. The insult struck deeper than it appeared—aimed directly at the legacy of the Robin title.
Jason simply stood there, unmoved, like a tiger waiting to pounce. "And what would you know?" Damian growled, already shifting his weight, preparing to attack again.
But before he could move, Jason was suddenly there—right in front of him.
It was like he had blinked through space, erasing the distance between them in a breath. The wind seemed to ripple behind him from the sheer force of his movement. Damian's heart skipped as he instinctively braced himself.
'Let's see what Daddy's been teaching you these past few years,' Jason thought with a smirk beneath his mask, his grip tightening on the handle of his knife.
He went in low, feinting toward Damian's throat with the blade.
The boy brought his sword up, attempting to parry the strike, but Jason vanished from his line of sight.
It was a bait.
In a split second, Jason pivoted on the ball of his foot, slipping around Damian's guard and moving into his blind spot. The movement was so fast, so fluid, it barely made a sound. Just a whisper of motion and Jason was behind him.
Damian's eyes widened. His instincts screamed, but he was already too late.
A sharp crack echoed through the smoke as Jason brought the hilt of his knife down against the back of Robin's head—clean, efficient, brutal.
Damian staggered forward, knees buckling. His sword slipped from his grip with a muted clatter as his body slumped.
The rooftop felt like it was tilting under him. His vision doubled, blurred edges bleeding into the darkness. The last thing he saw through his rapidly dimming eyes were the heavy, black boots standing in front of him.
"Nighty night, kid," Jason muttered.
And then everything went dark.
- - -
[Later That Night Inside Big Lou's Lounge
West Gotham, Maroni-Controlled Territory]
The music was low and sultry—Italian jazz swirling from a vintage jukebox. The lounge itself was a velvet-lined cathedral of power and decadence. Blood-red curtains hung heavy over shuttered windows, muffling the outside world.
Oil portraits of long-dead Maroni patriarchs stared down from gilded frames, their eyes hollow with judgment or pride—it was hard to tell.
Crystal ashtrays glittered on every table, half-full with ashes and cigar stubs, the scent of aged tobacco mixing with expensive cologne and the faint chemical tang of gun oil.
Lou "Big Lou" Maroni sat like a king grown tired of his crown—sagging into a black leather couch, his bulk spilling over the armrests, legs spread in ownership of the space.
He was a wall of man, thick-necked, jowled, and wrapped in a custom-tailored silk shirt that clung to a belly seasoned by decades of gravy, violence, and unapologetic survival.
A half-burned cigar smoldered between his fingers, forgotten for the moment. Beside him, draped like a shawl he'd won in a card game, lounged a woman half his age—cocaine sheen in her eyes, curves quite visible through a glittering dress, high on powder and proximity to power.
Across from him stood Donnie.
If Lou was the emperor, Donnie looked like the last man dragged out of a burning coliseum. His suit was torn and crusted with blood and soot, shirt clinging to his frame with dried sweat, and with a bloodied tourniquet fastened tightly against his bleeding thigh.
His face was pale under the grime, jaw clenched tight, throat hoarse from smoke and screaming. He looked like someone who had just come from war and had left pieces of himself behind.
Lou's gaze was slow and deliberate, like a crocodile sizing up something it might kill or ignore.
"Start talkin'," Lou muttered finally, his voice low and thick with smoke. The words slipped from his mouth like Donnie was currently on trial, coiling in the air as he exhaled. "And don't gimme no stuttering crap. You were there."
Donnie blinked hard, trying to steady himself. The air was too warm, too still.
"I swear, boss—we checked everything. The manifest, the gate logs, all of it. Shipment was clean. No red flags, no leaks. It was quiet. Then… he just walked in."
Lou's brow lifted ever so slightly, a twitch of disbelief.
"He? Who the hell is 'he'?"
Donnie licked his cracked lips, voice scraping out like gravel. "I don't know. Never saw a face. He wore a balaclava—plain black, no logos, no flair. Just… walked in with his hands up as he announced his presence, like he was giving up. Calm. Relaxed. Like he belonged there."
Lou didn't speak. His silence said more than shouting ever could.
Donnie pressed on, words tumbling faster, like getting them out might spare him.
"The boys thought he was some junkie, some idiot strung out and wandering in. One of 'em put a piece to the back of his head. No warning. No patience."
Lou's eyes narrowed, barely a shift, but Donnie felt it like a noose tightening.
"So what happened?"
Donnie hesitated. His jaw worked for a second before the words came out, quieter now.
"He moved… fast. I mean ghost fast. Before the trigger pulled, he twisted the guy's wrist, snapped his elbow—clean break. Didn't even pause. Took the pistol mid-motion and shot the next two in the face. Headshots. One shot each. No spray, no panic. Just... bang. Bang."
He exhaled, shaky, haunted.
"The rest of us scrambled. Took cover. Thought maybe he wasn't alone, maybe part of a hit squad, but he didn't follow. Didn't speak. We heard a gun shot, then a scream. Before I knew it, I was disarmed, stabbed in my thigh and tied up so fast that I felt completely overpowered by him."
Lou leaned forward now, the couch groaning under his weight. Smoke curled around the crystal chandelier above like lazy spirits dancing in the dark.
Donnie's voice dropped, as if recalling the moment too loudly might summon it again.
"He looked right at me through the mask. Just stood there—so still it was unnatural. Then he said, clear as day: "'The Falcones say hi.'"
Donnie swallowed, lips trembling.
"Then he tossed something into the rig. A flare, or… I don't know what it was. But it hit the floor, and the whole thing lit up. Fast. Loud. The explosion banged all over the docks in an instant. I don't even remember crawling out. Just smoke and screaming."
The silence that followed was heavier than the music. Lou's jaw worked, clenched tight, the cigar now a dead stub in his grip.
He wasn't looking at Donnie anymore. He was staring past him—into old war memories, into streets soaked in blood, into a Gotham that never forgot betrayal.
"He leave anything behind? Accent? Build? Eyes?"
Donnie shook his head. "Could've been anyone. Maybe military. Ex-cop. But not street muscle. Too clean. Too calm. Moved like he'd done this a hundred times and never lost sleep over it."
Lou rose slowly from the couch, each step creaking the hardwood beneath him like it knew the weight of death approaching. He walked with a heavy calm, the kind that made men uneasy even before they saw the gun.
"Falcone," he muttered, almost to himself. "This reeks of their old man's playbook. Ghost tactics. No trails. Burn everything and let the ash do the talking."
He paced now, dragging heat through the room with every step. His eyes flicked toward the oil portraits as if seeking counsel from the dead.
"They think the mask gives 'em cover? That Sofia's gonna run the table with her daddy's tricks and I'm just gonna sit here smokin' cigars like a widow?"
His voice rose like thunder from a storm long overdue.
He turned to his consigliere leaning by the bar, a quiet, suited man with dead eyes and a razor in his pocket.
"Get word to the boys in The Narrows. Tonight. No waiting. No fuckin' debates. I want Miller Street lit up. Heroin depot, stash house—torch all of it. I want ashes where their stash used to be."
The consigliere gave a silent nod and gulped down the last of his drink before heading out, almost immediately.
Lou turned back to Donnie, his eyes bloodshot and hard now, like the fire hadn't quite left him.
"And you," he said, pointing with the dead cigar, "you're gonna deliver the message to Sofia."
Donnie's face drained of what little color remained. "Me?"
"Yeah. You. You looked him in the eye, didn't you? Crawled outta that fire? That makes you the messenger."
He stepped in close—close enough for Donnie to smell the bourbon on his breath, to feel the gravity of a man with nothing left to prove.
"And you're gonna tell her this; next time we ain't sendin' a message. We're sendin' fuckin' bodies."
Lou didn't raise his voice. He didn't need to.
The first move had worked. Gotham's underworld was rattled—paranoid, bleeding, and scrambling to make sense of a ghost in a red helmet. Now this.
But Jason knew this was just the beginning. Kicking the hornet's nest was easy. Holding it down while it swarmed? That was the real test.
And maybe it was madness—thinking one man could start a war and keep it from burning the whole city down. But he was willing to try anyway.
Because for Jason, this wasn't just about chaos. It wasn't just about control.
It was about Black Mask. It was about him. The Joker.
All of this—every explosion, every bullet, every carefully delivered corpse—was just the opening act.
The crime lords were pawns. The syndicates? Stepping stones.
What Jason wanted was bigger than fear. Bigger than revenge.
He wanted Gotham rebuilt on his terms.
Because in his eyes, crime couldn't be stopped. But it could be strangled, reshaped—its roots torn up, its foundations shattered, and rebuilt in a way that could be managed.
And if he had to become the villain to do it?
So be it.
- - -
Author's Note:
Keep an eye on the development of Jason's speed and physical strength—those details aren't just for flair. I've been dropping breadcrumbs of foreshadowing throughout the previous chapters, and the payoff is coming soon. You'll see the full picture take shape before long.