“You’re not a rule.” The voice came from everywhere and nowhere. “You’re a symptom.”
He rose, and for one second, Falcone saw the man beneath—the jawline of a dead prince, the eyes of a boy who never stopped falling. Then the window exploded inward, and the Bat was gone, leaving only a smear of rain on the glass and a single playing card—the Joker—that Falcone had never seen before. Batman Begins
Now, on that Narrows rooftop, Bruce pressed the prototype to his chest. Not armor— theater . The cowl’s lenses clicked, painting the world in sonar ghosts. Below, a warehouse: Falcone’s men loading crates labeled imported perfume . Inside, aerosolized fear toxin, a nightmare in a glass vial. “You’re not a rule
The creature dropped without sound. Not a fall—a descent , like a hanged man cut loose. Before the guard could scream, a gauntleted fist found his throat. The second guard fired blindly. Bullets sparked off cape-lined ceramic. Then darkness folded over him, and the last thing he heard was a rattle—low, guttural, the sound of a predator tasting prey. Now, on that Narrows rooftop, Bruce pressed the
Falcone fired into the dark. A shape moved—too fast, too wrong . Then the cigar was plucked from his lips. He looked down. The thing was kneeling before him, head cocked, lenses reflecting his own sweating face.
The first guard heard only the rain. Then a whisper, not quite human, curling from the shadows: “You’ve been very sick.”