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Global News Networks - Simultaneous Broadcast
June 16, 2016, 12:01 AM EST
The world hadn't slept since Raj's broadcast six hours ago. Every screen on Earth still carried the aftermath—riots in Geneva, emergency sessions in Washington, mass protests outside LexCorp facilities. The carefully ordered world the Light had built was collapsing in real-time.
In hidden bunkers across the globe, the Light's inner circle watched their empire crumble through stolen feeds and encrypted channels. But they were survivors, each of them. They had contingencies for contingencies.
"Status report," Vandal Savage's ancient voice cut through the secure channel linking their scattered positions.
"All primary assets compromised," Lex Luthor's response crackled with static. "LexCorp stock has crashed. Government contracts frozen. I'm operating on backup resources."
"My psychic network is fragmenting," The Brain reported, his mechanical voice distorted. "The emotional resonance from the broadcast is interfering with my control nodes."
"The little witch-boy's chaos magic could mask our retreat," Queen Bee suggested, though her usual confidence was strained.
"No," Savage's voice carried the weight of fifty millennia. "We don't retreat. We remind the world why they needed us to begin with."
At the renovated Happy Harbor Observatory, Jeevika's holographic form shimmered as she intercepted the transmission through Raj's technopathy.
[Raj, you need to see this.]
The communication played across the observatory's main screen. Roy looked up from checking his equipment, Match paused in his tactical review, and Kiran's golden aura flared with sudden alertness.
"They're not running," Raj said quietly, rainbow fractals dancing around his fingers as his probability sight showed him branching timelines. "They're making their last stand."
"Good," Roy's mechanical arm whirred as he loaded specialized arrows. "I was hoping we'd get to finish this properly."
Match's pale features remained impassive, but his hands clenched slightly. "Parameters?"
"Global simultaneous strikes," Raj's voice carried harmonics of barely contained power. "They want to burn everything down rather than lose control."
Kiran stood, her golden light beginning to pulse in rhythm with his rainbow aura. "How many fronts?"
"All of them."
The display shifted, showing Light operatives moving toward critical infrastructure worldwide. Ocean Master's forces massing near Atlantean borders. The Reach fleet positioning for open assault. Chaos magic building around dimensional weak points.
"Jeevika," Raj's technopathy interfaced directly with the AI. "Can you coordinate a global response?"
[Already calculating optimal deployment patterns. But Raj—this isn't just about stopping them anymore. They're going to force you to make a choice.]
"What choice?"
[Save the infrastructure they're targeting, or stop them permanently. You won't have time for both.]
Raj looked at his friends—Roy's determined grin, Match's quiet readiness, Kiran's radiant resolve. Then his expression hardened, rainbow light coiling around him like liquid starlight.
"Then we make time."
Earth Orbit, Above the Indian Ocean; 12:15 AM EST
Kiran rose through Earth's atmosphere like a comet of golden fire, her White Lantern-esque powers blazing with the intensity of a newborn star. Her practice with Solstice Prime had taught her to think in terms of massive constructs, reality-bending possibilities made manifest through pure will.
The Reach fleet hung in space like a cancer—dozens of ships arranged in perfect attack formation, their scarab-tech hulls gleaming with malevolent purpose. The largest vessel, a mile-long dreadnought, pulsed with energy signatures that could glass continents.
"Attention, Earth defenders," Black Beetle's voice crackled across all frequencies. "The Reach's patience is at an end. Surrender your planet, or watch it burn."
Kiran's response came not in words, but in light. Her golden aura exploded outward, and she began to build.
The first construct manifested as a massive solar serpent, its body woven from condensed starlight and gravitational force. The creature's scales were individual suns, each one containing enough energy to power a city. It coiled through space with impossible grace, growing larger with each passing second.
"What is that thing?" one of the Reach soldiers screamed over their communications.
Black Beetle's scarab armor flared as it analyzed the approaching construct. "Impossible. Those energy readings—"
The serpent struck the nearest Reach vessel, not with brute force but with controlled stellar fusion. The ship didn't explode—it simply ceased to exist as its molecular bonds were overwhelmed by the construct's radiant heat.
Kiran was just getting started.
Her second construct began as gravity-forged chains, links of compressed space-time that bent reality around their passage. But these weren't simple bindings—each link was a miniature black hole, contained and controlled through her mastery over fundamental forces.
The chains lashed out across space, wrapping around three more Reach ships. Instead of crushing them, the gravitational distortion began pulling them through dimensions, stretching their hulls across multiple planes of existence until they fragmented into quantum static.
"Deploy all fighter craft!" Black Beetle commanded. "Overwhelm her with numbers!"
Hundreds of smaller Reach vessels swarmed toward Kiran like metallic insects. Her response was artistic in its brutality.
The third construct manifested as star-crushing anvils—massive geometric forms that appeared to be carved from crystallized light, but contained compressed matter from dead stars. She created dozens of them, each one the size of a small moon, and began to use them like a cosmic game of whack-a-mole.
The anvils moved with impossible precision, appearing instantly wherever Reach fighters tried to maneuver. But instead of simply crushing the vessels, each impact triggered a controlled supernova—brief, brilliant explosions that turned enemy craft into expanding clouds of superheated plasma.
Black Beetle himself finally emerged from the dreadnought, his scarab armor blazing with accumulated power. "Face me, construct-maker! The Reach has conquered galaxies! I will not be defeated by—"
His boast cut off as Kiran's fourth construct materialized directly in front of him.
The stellar javelin was beautiful in its simplicity—a spear of pure photonic energy, its point sharp enough to cut through space-time itself. It hung motionless for a heartbeat, gathering power from the nearby star.
"The Reach," Kiran's voice echoed across space, carried by gravitational waves through her dimensional manipulation, "conquered worlds that couldn't fight back."
The javelin launched.
Black Beetle had time to raise his scarab's defenses, to channel every weapon system his armor possessed, to scream his defiance at the approaching death. None of it mattered.
The stellar javelin passed through his defenses like they were made of paper, struck his scarab core with surgical precision, and detonated with the focused fury of a contained star. Black Beetle's final scream was lost in the brilliant flare of his own destruction.
But Kiran wasn't finished.
Her fifth and final construct began to manifest—a golden lotus flower, each petal of staggering size, unfolding in the vacuum with serene beauty. The flower appeared delicate, almost fragile, as it drifted toward the remaining Reach fleet.
"All ships, retreat!" the surviving Reach commander screamed. "Fall back to—"
The lotus bloomed.
What followed wasn't an explosion in any conventional sense. It was a controlled supernova, contained and directed through Kiran's mastery over stellar forces. Golden light washed over the Reach fleet, not destroying but transforming—converting their scarab technology into harmless debris, their quantum processors into ordinary metals, their dimensional drives into scattered atoms.
The Reach mothership, the meter-long dreadnought that had seemed so imposing, simply... ended. Its hull, its weapons, its crew, its entire command network—all of it sublimated into golden particles that sparkled briefly in the void before dispersing.
Kiran floated in the aftermath, her golden aura dim but satisfied. Around her, space was clear of hostiles. Below her, Earth continued to turn, safe from galactic conquest.
No survivors. Global Reach control ended.
Nanda Parbat, Hidden Valley in the Himalayas
12:30 AM Local Time
Match descended through the cloud layer like a pale meteor, his black uniform stark against the mountain snow. No cape, no symbol—just a young man with Kryptonian DNA and six years of suppressed rage finally finding its target.
Nanda Parbat rose from the valley like a fever dream, its impossible architecture defying both physics and good taste. Towers spiraled into the sky, connected by bridges that shouldn't have been able to support their own weight. The whole complex radiated the kind of mystical energy that made Match's Kryptonian senses itch.
He didn't bother with stealth. The time for subtlety had passed.
His first step into the outer courtyard triggered every alarm the League of Assassins possessed. Ninjas materialized from shadows, their movements fluid and deadly. Master assassins who had trained for decades, their skills honed to perfection.
It didn't matter.
Match's heat vision swept across the courtyard in a controlled arc, not the wild beams of his early days but precise surgical strikes. The first wave of assassins found their weapons melting in their hands, their armor fusing to their skin. Those lucky enough to dodge the initial sweep discovered that Match's anger had taught him new applications for his powers.
A master swordsman lunged with a blade that could cut through tank armor. Match caught it with his bare hand, and the metal turned to slag between his fingers. The assassin had time to look confused before Match's backhand sent him through three stone walls.
More ninjas attacked from above, dropping from impossible heights with poisoned darts and explosive devices. Match's super-breath created a localized hurricane that scattered them like leaves. But this wasn't just air—it was super-cooled, flash-freezing his attackers into living statues that shattered when they hit the ground.
"Impressive," Ra's al Ghul's voice echoed from the main palace, carried by hidden speakers throughout the complex. "But you are still just an imperfect copy of Superman."
Match's response was to punch through the palace's main gate. His fist met stone reinforced with mystical wards, barriers that should have been able to stop a missile. They cracked like eggshell.
The palace's interior was a maze of corridors and chambers, each one filled with deadly traps and hidden assassins. Match navigated it with the directness of an earthquake, punching through walls rather than following passages, his x-ray vision tracking every heat signature in the building.
A chamber filled with armed guards? Heat vision through the wall reduced their weapons to molten metal. A hallway lined with pressure plates? Match simply flew through it, triggering every trap simultaneously while remaining untouchable above the carnage.
He found Ra's in the deepest chamber, standing beside the Lazarus Pit with the casual confidence of a man who had cheated death for centuries.
"Welcome, clone," Ra's said, his voice carrying the weight of ancient authority. "Do you know how many would-be heroes have stood where you stand now?"
Match's reply was simple: he moved.
Ra's had enhanced reflexes, centuries of combat experience, and access to the Lazarus Pit's power. He was one of the deadliest fighters on Earth, fast enough to match Batman and strong enough to break steel with his bare hands.
Match was faster.
His first punch caught Ra's in the solar plexus, lifting the ancient assassin off his feet and sending him flying across the chamber. Ra's managed to twist in midair, landing in a combat crouch, but Match was already there.
The fight that followed was brutally one-sided. Ra's' enhanced speed let him dodge Match's initial attacks, his centuries of experience allowing him to read the young Kryptonian's patterns. But Match had learned something important in the months since his return to Earth-16: sometimes overwhelming force was its own strategy.
Ra's landed a series of precise strikes, each one aimed at nerve clusters and pressure points that should have dropped any normal opponent. Match absorbed them without flinching, then grabbed Ra's by the throat and lifted him off the ground.
"You orchestrated the traffic of meta- children," Match said, his voice carrying no emotion whatsoever. "For profit."
Ra's struggled, his hands clawing at Match's grip. "You don't understand—it was for the greater good! Population control! The weak must be—"
Match's grip tightened. Ra's' words cut off in a gurgle.
"Incorrect," Match said simply.
He threw Ra's across the chamber with enough force to shatter the stone wall behind him. The ancient assassin hit with a wet crack, his enhanced durability finally reaching its limits. Blood ran from his mouth as he struggled to stand.
"The Lazarus Pit," Ra's gasped, crawling toward the glowing pool. "I need only reach—"
Match's heat vision lanced out, not at Ra's but at the pit itself. The mystical waters began to boil, their life-giving properties cooking away into superheated steam. Ra's screamed as his path to resurrection literally evaporated before his eyes.
"Please," Ra's whispered, the mask of authority finally slipping.
Match knelt beside the broken man, his pale features showing no mercy.
He picked Ra's up one final time, feeling the ancient assassin's spine cracking under the pressure. Ra's al Ghul, the Demon's Head, master of the League of Assassins, looked into Match's eyes and saw nothing but cold judgment.
"This is for every child you sold," Match said.
The sound of Ra's' back breaking echoed through the chamber like snapping kindling. Match held the body for a moment, ensuring there would be no miraculous recovery, then dropped it beside the ruined Lazarus Pit.
The ancient assassin's remains caught fire from the superheated steam, burning away to ash that mixed with the destroyed pit's residue. After seven hundred years of cheating death, Ra's al Ghul had finally found something that couldn't be undone.
Match stood in the silent chamber, surrounded by the ruins of the League of Assassins' stronghold. Through the broken walls, he could see the surviving ninjas fleeing into the mountains, their loyalty dying with their master.
Status: Confirmed deceased. No regeneration possible.
LexCorp Deep Labs, Sub-Basement Level 12
Metropolis - 12:45 AM EST
Roy Harper had infiltrated more secure facilities than he could count, but LexCorp's deep labs were something special. Every surface crawled with sensors, every shadow hid automated defenses, and every step forward meant navigating layers of security that had been designed by one of the most brilliant minds on Earth.
Fortunately, Roy had help.
[Stealth systems online] Jeevika's voice whispered through his enhanced nano-bot system. [Nanite package deployment ready. Local electromagnetic interference masking your heat signature.]
Roy's mechanical arm hummed quietly as it reconfigured itself, specialized components sliding into place. The arm wasn't just a prosthetic anymore—it was a weapon system designed by someone who understood both advanced technology and creative violence.
The first security checkpoint dissolved around him as Jeevika-enhanced nanites ate through the electronic locks. The second fell to an EMP pulse from his arm that fried the motion sensors without triggering the backup alarms. By the third checkpoint, Roy was starting to enjoy himself.
"You know," he whispered to his comm, "I was expecting more resistance from the guy who routinely fights Superman."
[Wait for it.] came Jeevika's dry response.
That's when the walls came alive.
Roy's enhanced reflexes were the only thing that saved him as the corridor transformed into a death trap. Laser grids activated, pressure plates triggered, and hidden weapons ports opened to reveal enough firepower to level a city block.
Roy's response was to smile and let his arm do what it did best.
The arm-mounted railgun charged for precisely 0.3 seconds before unleashing a hypervelocity projectile that punched through the reinforced walls like they were made of tissue paper. The blast wave from its passage scrambled every electronic system in a fifty-meter radius.
"Okay," Roy admitted as he stepped through the smoking hole, "that was satisfying."
The deeper levels of LexCorp were a maze of laboratories and storage chambers, each one containing horror that would have made normal heroes hesitate. Cloning tanks filled with failed experiments. Weapon prototypes that violated seventeen international treaties. Research files documenting tests on unwilling subjects.
Roy didn't hesitate. His job wasn't to catalog Luthor's crimes—that had already been done. His job was to end them.
He found The Brain in Laboratory 7-Alpha, the gorilla's massive form hunched over a control console that managed his psychic network. Dozens of screens showed feeds from across the globe—his unwilling subjects going about their daily lives, unaware of the neural implants controlling their thoughts.
"Ah, Arsenal," The Brain's mechanical voice echoed through the chamber. "I was wondering when you would arrive. Tell me, how does it feel to be the replacement for the clone?"
Roy's mechanical arm shifted, EMP claws extending from the fingertips. "Like I'm exactly where I need to be."
The Brain's psychic assault hit him like a sledgehammer to the consciousness. Waves of telepathic force crashed against his mind, trying to tear apart his sense of self and replace it with subservience. It was an attack that had broken stronger minds than Roy's.
But Roy had spent the last six yearslearning to work with someone whose technological understanding transcended conventional physics. His neural implants—gifts from Jeevika's advanced processing—converted the psychic attack into raw data and fed it back through his arm's adaptive systems.
[Feedback loop initialized.] his arm's targeting system announced in Jeevika's voice. [Neural plasma charge at 94% and climbing.]
The Brain's mechanical systems sparked as his own psychic attack was reflected back at him, amplified by Roy's technology. "Impossible! My psychic powers are—"
"Overloaded," Roy said simply, and triggered the plasma feedback.
Lightning arced between his claws and The Brain's neural interface, creating a closed loop of psychic energy that fed on itself. The Brain's mechanical body convulsed as his own telepathic abilities turned against him, frying the neural pathways that had made him one of the most dangerous minds on Earth.
"My thoughts... I can't... what have you done?"
"Lobotomized you with your own power," Roy replied, then turned his attention to the control console. His nanite weapons interfaced directly with the system, analyzing its architecture before beginning systematic deletion. "Jeevika, how many people were in his network?"
[Approximately ninety-three thousand individuals across twelve major cities. Neural control implants are being deactivated now.]
Across the globe, people suddenly stopped mid-action as foreign thoughts left their minds. A businessman in Tokyo blinked in confusion as he realized he'd been walking toward a meeting he'd never scheduled. A teacher in Berlin stared at the lesson plan she couldn't remember writing. A mother in São Paulo dropped the phone she'd been about to use to call a number she didn't recognize.
"That's for every person you turned into a puppet," Roy said to The Brain's twitching form.
But he wasn't finished.
Luthor appeared in the laboratory's doorway, his power armor gleaming under the harsh lights. The suit was a masterpiece of engineering, incorporating technology reverse-engineered from Superman encounters and enhanced with stolen alien tech.
"Impressive work, Harper," Luthor said, his voice amplified by the suit's speakers. "But you're still just a failure. A pale copy of a hero who was himself inferior to the clone."
Roy turned slowly, his mechanical arm reconfiguring again. "You know what I've learned about being a replaced?"
"Do enlighten me."
Roy's grin was sharp as broken glass. "We try harder."
The fight was brutal and brief. Luthor's power armor gave him strength to match Superman and weapons that could level buildings. Roy had a mechanical arm and three months of suppressed anger.
It should have been a massacre.
Luthor's opening barrage—repulsors, micro-missiles, and targeted laser fire—would have vaporized any normal opponent. Roy's arm absorbed the energy, converted it to useful power, and fired back with twice the force. His adaptive plasma blade cut through Luthor's armor like it was cardboard.
"Impossible!" Luthor snarled, activating his suit's flight systems. "This technology is beyond anything you should have access to!"
"You're right," Roy said, firing his railgun at Luthor's thrusters. The hypervelocity round punched through the armored systems and sent Luthor crashing to the laboratory floor. "It's beyond what I should have access to. Lucky for me, I have friends with very high standards."
Luthor tried to leverage their shared history, his natural charisma and manipulation skills. "Roy, think about this. You could work with me. Together, we could build a better world. Isn't that what heroes are supposed to want?"
Roy's response was to fire a nanite virus directly into Luthor's armor systems. "I've seen your better world, Lex. It has child trafficking and clone slavery."
The virus spread through LexCorp's networks like wildfire, erasing black projects, destroying illegal research, and transferring evidence of Luthor's crimes to every law enforcement agency on Earth. Decades of carefully hidden atrocities were suddenly public record.
Luthor's armor seized up as its systems were overwhelmed. He crashed to the floor, trapped inside his own technology as it systematically deleted itself.
"You don't understand," Luthor gasped as Roy approached. "Without people like me, without hard choices, the world will tear itself apart. Sometimes terrible things are necessary—"
Roy's punch sent Luthor's helmeted head bouncing off the laboratory floor. "No, they're not."
When the Justice League arrived twenty minutes later, they found Luthor unconscious and secured, The Brain permanently disabled, and LexCorp's illegal operations completely destroyed. Roy was sitting on a pile of debris, cleaning his arm with mechanical precision.
"Status report?" Superman asked, his voice tight with controlled emotion.
"Luthor's alive," Roy said without looking up. "Figured you'd want to deal with him properly. The Brain... less alive. Seemed appropriate given what he did to all those people."
Superman looked around the destroyed laboratory, taking in the evidence of horrors he'd never imagined. "Roy, what you've done here—"
"Is exactly what needed doing," Roy interrupted, finally meeting the Man of Steel's eyes. "Some people deserve second chances. Some people deserve justice. And some people..." He gestured at The Brain's motionless form. "Some people just need to be stopped."
Status: Luthor captured, Brain lobotomized, data erased, operations destroyed.
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[A/N: WORD COUNT – 3757]
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