"Running in circles."
Raj murmured from his perch atop a crumbling apartment building, his form invisible to all detection. Below, Johnny Quick completed another patrol, his crimson-yellow blur leaving scorched pavement in its wake.
The Dead Zone had once been called The Narrows - a working-class district where families-built lives in Gotham's industrial shadow. Now it was Dead Zone 7, where resistance had been fierce and the Syndicate's response brutally thorough.
Johnny Quick wasn't just fast - he was vindictive. Each pass included deliberate strikes: shattering windows, toppling walls, generating sonic booms to terrorize anyone hiding.
Unlike the Flash of other worlds, Johnny had stolen his speed formula from S.T.A.R. Labs, murdering everyone involved to ensure he remained unique. The formula granted him Speed Force access, but without any moral restraint.
The mental Pedestal in Raj's mind glowed with his current power selections:
Lag Disruption - letting him desync an opponent's mind from their body.
Tech Control - the ability to subvert electronic systems.
Dramatic Rebranding - the power to transform an enemy's appearance for maximum humiliation.
"It's time to send a message." Raj reminded himself.
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Underground Shelter - Dead Zone Perimeter
Three levels beneath the street, fifty-seven civilians huddled in former subway maintenance tunnels. These weren't fighters - just ordinary people who'd survived the initial purge.
A young woman with burn scars pressed her ear against a ceiling pipe, listening for Johnny Quick's vibrations. When they increased, she'd signal everyone to freeze.
What they couldn't know was another threat lurked much closer.
Atomica had tracked them for days. She hovered near the ceiling, shrunk to pinhead size by her stolen A.R.G.U.S. belt. Unlike her counterpart on other Earths, Atomica enjoyed intimate murders - entering bodies to destroy from within.
From outside, Raj monitored her through his Tech Control. The belt broadcast a specific signature he could track through concrete and steel.
"Let's start with the deadliest insect," Raj whispered, tracing invisible patterns in the air.
Inside the Shelter
Atomica hovered above a sleeping child, contemplating whether to kill him first or save him for last. The adults' horror at watching children die slowly was something she particularly enjoyed.
"Eeny, meeny, miny—" she whispered, just as invisible energy washed through her.
Her belt emitted a high-pitched whine. Then came gut-wrenching disorientation as her body expanded—but not uniformly. Her right side returned to full size with a sickening lurch while her left remained six inches tall.
"What the—" she shrieked, crashing to the floor in a spectacular wipeout.
"I have a Barbie arm!" Atomica screamed, staring at her tiny left side. She tried to stand, only to topple over again like a drunken flamingo. "What's happening to me?!"
Her sleek black and red uniform melted away, replaced by a garish harlequin pattern with polka dots and rainbow stripes. Bells appeared at her limbs' ends, each jingling with a different musical note.
Her voice changed mid-scream into a cartoonish falsetto: "Help me! Help—tee-hee-hee—me now!"
She tried to curse, but instead produced a series of animal noises. "Son of a—MOOOOO! What the—-DOODLE-DOO!"
Each step produced a different sound effect—kazoos, slide whistles, sad trombones. She attempted a threatening stance, but a loud fart noise erupted instead.
The shelter's occupants stared in bewildered silence. Then a child's giggle broke through. Another joined, and another, until the room filled with unrestrained laughter.
Raj appeared at the entrance in a shimmer of light. His dark hair, streaked with energy, framed sharp features and luminous eyes. His black tactical gear rippled with waves of neon color that responded to his emotions—magenta, cyan, and yellow dancing across the fabric like living paint. Where his powers activated, colors intensified into a corona of light that cast the shelter in an ethereal glow.
"The thing about shrink tech," he said as Atomica turned with fury in her uneven eyes, "is that it's incredibly precise. Mess with those patterns..."
He gestured, and Atomica's body began stuttering between sizes, parts growing and shrinking randomly.
"And you get hiccups."
"Who—squeak—are—BRUMMMMP-you?!" she demanded, her menace undermined by the comical sounds.
"Just someone restoring balance," Raj replied, the colored light around him pulsing brighter. "I'd stay still if I were you. Each move scrambles your belt further. Wouldn't want your heart shrinking while your body stays full size."
Atomica froze, trembling with rage as civilians cautiously emerged, staring at their tormentor reduced to a spectacle.
"You should leave," Raj told them. "Head east through the tunnels. You'll find supplies and directions to safety."
As they gathered belongings, a middle-aged man approached. "Are you... with Luthor's resistance?"
"Let's just say I'm against the Syndicate," Raj answered. "Go quickly. Johnny Quick will notice when Atomica doesn't report in."
A sonic boom echoed through the tunnels, sending dust cascading from the ceiling.
"Right on cue," Raj murmured. "Time for the main event."
Gotham Streets - Dead Zone Center
Johnny Quick circled Dead Zone 7 for the twelfth time that hour, moving so fast the world seemed frozen in time. At his speed, he could see individual dust motes floating, sound waves visible in the air.
His comm crackled with unusual static. "Atomica, report," he barked. "What's your status on the nest extermination?"
Only static replied, interspersed with... kazoo noises?
Johnny scowled beneath his mask. If Atomica was playing games instead of finishing the mission, Owlman would be pissed. And Johnny had no intention of sharing that punishment.
He changed course toward the subway entrance when something made him hesitate—a figure standing calmly in the street, seemingly waiting for him.
Johnny decelerated to merely superhuman speed, circling suspiciously. The stranger was a young man with South Asian features surrounded by a startling aura of color. His eyes burned with inner light, shifting between blue and violet. His dark attire absorbed and released light in hypnotic patterns, with occasional arcs of neon energy between his fingertips. The air around him crackled with energy, making Johnny's hair stand on end despite his velocity.
"You're either brave or stupid," Johnny called out, voice vibrating with energy. "Know what happens to people standing in the open here?"
"Something swift and unpleasant from the so-called Johnny Quick, I imagine."
" I am the last thing you'll ever see." Johnny corrected with a sneer, accelerating to create a suffocating vacuum.
But the vacuum didn't form. Johnny frowned, pushing faster, yet the physics didn't work. The stranger remained unaffected, still smiling.
"Problem with your speed?" the man asked. "Bad timing."
Johnny launched himself directly at the stranger, fist vibrating to phase through the man's chest—his signature heart-extraction move.
Instead, his perception fractured. The world split into overlapping timelines, his body responding to commands issued seconds earlier or not yet at all. His first passed through empty air as the stranger sidestepped easily.
"What did you do?!" Johnny demanded, staggering as momentum betrayed him. His Speed Force connection sputtered like running through molasses while his mind raced ahead.
"Lag Disruption," the stranger explained. "Your mind runs at one speed, your body at another. The harder you push, the worse it gets."
Johnny tried vibrating his molecules to escape, making his condition worse. His form blurred not with speed but inconsistency—parts catching up with others, then falling behind.
"Who are you?" he gasped, dropping to one knee, nausea overwhelming him.
"Call me Nexus," Raj answered, the colors around him intensifying. "And we're just starting."
With a gesture, he activated Dramatic Rebranding. Johnny's crimson and yellow uniform transformed to neon pink and pastel blue. Across his chest, glowing letters spelled "TOO SLOW" in scrolling marquee font.
His trailing lightning morphed into rainbow sparkles. With his next step, the air filled with disco-bhangra fusion music pulsing with his movements.
"What are you doing to me?!" Johnny cried, his fearsome image crumbling.
"Changing the story," Nexus replied, his voice resonating with strange harmonics as his aura intensified. "The Syndicate rules through fear. I'm showing people the truth."
He approached Johnny, hand surrounded by swirling energy patterns. His eyes now burned so brightly they cast shadows on his face. "How many lives have you taken? Families destroyed? Communities shattered?"
Johnny's eyes widened as Nexus placed a hand on his forehead. "Time to experience that suffering. I call this Memory Flood."
Energy surged into Johnny's mind. The speedster's eyes glazed as his consciousness was bombarded with compressed time—years of experiences condensed into minutes.
He felt the grief of parents whose children he'd killed. The terror of victims hearing his approach. The despair of communities losing hope after his raids. Not as concepts, but as lived experiences.
When Nexus removed his hand, Johnny collapsed, his body intact but mind broken. The feared speedster curled up, babbling about shadows and screaming faces.
"The speed remains," Nexus said quietly, "but the man who used it so cruelly is... gone."
He turned to find Atomica crawling from the subway, her mismatched body jingling with each move.
"You...won't...get away with this," she managed between kazoo-punctuated breaths. "The Syndicate will...hunt you down."
"I'm counting on it," Nexus replied, accessing nearby Syndicate surveillance equipment. "But first, I think Earth-3 deserves a new kind of broadcast."
Across the Continent
In living rooms, public squares, labor camps, and Syndicate outposts, screens suddenly switched from propaganda to a live feed from Dead Zone 7.
The image was unmistakable: Johnny Quick—feared enforcer—rocking in fetal position, drooling in a pink costume with rainbow sparkles. Beside him, Atomica flailed with mismatched limbs in a jester outfit, her threats rendered comical by her cartoonish voice.
Between them sat Nexus, his form pulsing with vibrant energy, calmly drinking tea that appeared from nowhere.
"People of Earth-3," he addressed viewers directly. "I am Nexus. This is not illusion or propaganda. This is what happens when tyrants face someone who doesn't fear them."
He gestured to the broken Syndicate members. "They rule through terror, but that can be broken. They seem untouchable, but they bleed like anyone." He sipped his tea. "To those watching in silence: Laugh at them. Mock them. Their power crumbles when you stop fearing them. To the resistance: Hold strong. This is only the beginning."
The broadcast cut off as Syndicate techs regained control, but millions had seen it.
Across Earth-3 - Real-Time Reactions
In a labor camp outside what was once Metropolis, workers paused as the broadcast flickered onto the propaganda screens. Guards reached for weapons, but hesitated when they noticed no one was running—they were watching, transfixed.
A middle-aged woman who'd lost her family to Johnny Quick's raids felt something crack inside her chest. She laughed—a rusty, unused sound. Others joined, tentatively at first, then with growing courage.
In the remains of Central City, children gathered around a salvaged tablet.
"Look at his costume!" a boy laughed, pointing at Johnny Quick's pink uniform.
"Do the dance!" another urged, and soon a group was mimicking his spasms, calling each other "Sparkle Zoom" and "Rainbow Dash."
Their parents, normally quick to silence such dangerous play, watched with silent approval.
A resistance cell in former Coast City recorded the footage, planning projections on Syndicate buildings.
In a tavern frequented by Syndicate informants, patrons watched in shocked silence. When an enforcer tried to shut off the display, three regulars blocked his path—small defiance unthinkable hours before.
For the first time since the Syndicate's rise, their invincible image had shattered.
Hall of Injustice - One Hour Later
Ultraman's fist shattered the reinforced console, scattering fragments across the obsidian floor. His eyes glowed with barely contained heat vision as he rounded on Owlman.
"You let them turn Quick into a joke?!" he roared, veins bulging with Kryptonite-infused blood. "Your surveillance is supposed to be perfect!"
Owlman remained calm, examining holographic data between his gloved fingers. "Control your temper, Kal-Il," he replied coldly. "This wasn't a surveillance failure. Someone who understands our systems struck with precision."
He expanded a window showing corrupted code from Atomica's belt. "This 'Nexus' reprogrammed Rhonda's gear in seconds. The manipulation suggests tech we haven't seen before."
"So what?" Ultraman crushed another Kryptonite chunk, absorbing radiation. "We find him, I burn him to ash, problem solved."
"Predictably simple," Owlman commented, earning a threatening step forward. "This isn't about one enemy. It's about his message. There's already laughter in the labor camps. Resistance symbols appearing faster than we can erase them."
Superwoman traced her lasso across the table with calculating eyes. "Thomas is right," she told Ultraman with dangerous sweetness. "This Nexus struck at something more valuable than Quick's body. He attacked our image. Our mystique."
Power Ring remained silent in the corner, his cursed ring whispering urgently. When Ultraman demanded his opinion, the tortured man shook his head.
"The blind spot... growing larger," he muttered to the ring more than his colleagues. "Something outside our world. Something wrong."
Owlman's eyes narrowed behind his mask. The Mobius fragments in his chair pulsed, responding to Power Ring's words. "Find Sea King and Deathstorm," he ordered Superwoman. "Increase security at critical sites. And bring me what's left of Quick and Atomica—their minds might reveal this Nexus's weaknesses."
As the others left, Owlman remained alone, holographic displays casting eerie light across his mask. "Nexus," he murmured. "From outside our universe, yet understanding it intimately..."
His gloved fingers initiated a new search protocol. If Thomas Wayne Jr. valued anything, it was knowledge about enemies.
Resistance Command - Location Unknown
Alexander Luthor replayed the broadcast for the third time. Unlike his counterparts on other Earths, this Luthor fought for humanity against the Crime Syndicate.
"Analysis?" he asked the scarred woman beside him.
"Confirmed legitimate," she replied. "Our contacts report Quick and Atomica exactly as shown. Quicks at their medical facility—mind severely damaged. Atomica's molecule structure is destabilized; they're keeping her contained while they investigate."
Luthor nodded, fingers steepled beneath his chin. The screen froze on Nexus's face—calm, determined, strategic.
"This connects to last week's coded message?" he asked, referencing the transmission that appeared in their systems.
"Energy signature matches," she confirmed. "Same pattern, same variance. Called himself 'Nexus' both times."
Luthor studied the image with the precision that had kept resistance alive against impossible odds. "He's not just another player," he decided. "He's leverage. A variable the Syndicate can't account for."
He turned to his communications officer. "Tell Harleen to set the meeting. Warehouse Twelve, as his message specified. I need to know what we're dealing with before committing resources."
As his team rushed to comply, Luthor examined the bracelet visible on Nexus's wrist. Something about it seemed familiar—like artifacts he'd studied before the Syndicate took power.
"Who are you?" he murmured to the image. "And what's your real game?"
The Hollow - Command Center
In his underground sanctuary, Raj reviewed footage from his confrontation. His duplicates had planted tiny observation devices throughout Dead Zone 7, giving him complete view of the Syndicate's response.
One monitor showed medics loading Johnny Quick's catatonic form into a transport. Another showed technicians struggling with Atomica's unstable form.
"You didn't kill them," Harleen observed from the doorway, voice neutral but eyes assessing. "You could have. Easily."
"Not the goal," Raj replied, eyes on the screens. His skin still shimmered with subdued light, occasional ripples of color flowing across his features. When he gestured, faint luminescent trails followed his fingertips. "Dead martyrs create fear. Living jokes create contempt."
He turned to her, shifting to a calmer stance. "Besides, death is too simple."
Harleen raised an eyebrow. "Simple? Johnny Quick executed thousands. Atomica tortured resistance leaders for days while their families watched."
"Everyone carries their own punishment," Raj answered, accessing a container holding Atomica's corrupted belt and energy extracted from Johnny Quick with his speed drug. "More importantly, their tech and powers can be studied. Repurposed."
Harleen watched with clinical interest. "You're playing a longer game. This wasn't just about humiliating two Syndicate thugs."
"It was about changing the narrative," Raj confirmed. "Fear spreads like disease, but so does hope. The Syndicate's greatest weapon was their aura of invincibility. That's gone now."
He showed another monitor where citizens gathered in small groups, whispering and glancing at Syndicate patrols with something besides terror.
"I didn't just beat them," Raj said quietly, his sandalwood bracelet catching the light. "I made them look human. Breakable. That's how you destroy legends."
Harleen studied him with new interest. "Luthor's people contacted us. They'll meet."
"Good," Raj nodded, the colors around him brightening slightly. "Because today was just the opening move. The real game starts now."
On the main screen, Owlman entered the medical facility where Johnny was being treated, his posture revealing intense focus. Even without seeing his face, Raj sensed the dangerous mind working behind that mask—analyzing, plotting.
"The Syndicate doesn't blink," Raj murmured. "But they're starting to sweat."
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[A/N : WORD COUNT- 2900]
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