Created
Status
Ongoing
Watchers
488
Recent readers
0

A world on the verge of collapse, always saved by the brave few, while in the shadows, supervillains hatch plans for domination.

Aliens, gods, superheroes, and madmen toy with humanity, their great game never-ending—always another threat, always another scheme.

In the middle of all this chaos what can one person really do?

What is a Luthor to do?
Chapter 1 - Like Father like Son
Location
Florida
Pronouns
He
Rain poured down as the lead coffin was slowly lowered into the freshly dug grave. The raindrops tapped on the cold metal, breaking the silence in the cemetery. A priest in a dark robe stepped forward to speak, but the sound of the rain quickly drowned out his words.

I stood there, almost frozen by disbelief, overwhelmed by sorrow. I still can't believe he's gone, I thought, as the reality hit me harder than the storm. He was more than just a man—he was a larger-than-life figure, a brilliant inventor, and a true titan of industry. While some called him a criminal, I knew his intentions were always good, and that he truly wanted to make the world a better place.

But fate was cruel. It wasn't an assassin or even the chaos of an alien invasion that killed him—it was a slow, relentless attack on his body. I had warned him about those glowing green rocks, but he was too captivated by their potential to listen. By the time we realized the danger, it was too late. The radiation he absorbed had triggered multiple cancers, slowly breaking his spirit.

In public, he always appeared unbreakable, his smile never fading even in a crisis. Many times, his confident front made me believe nothing could hurt him. But when we were alone—just him, Mo-Mercy, and me—I saw the truth. In the dim light of our home, I watched his energy drain away. His once-proud shoulders slumped with every labored breath, and his harsh, bloody coughs breaking the silence.

Now, standing by his grave in the pouring rain, I could hardly accept that he was really gone. Every thunderclap and raindrop echoed my inner pain, making it feel like I was stuck in a never-ending nightmare, the man who held me when I was a baby, who rocked me on his knee... gone.

Here lies Alexander Joseph Luthor:
Loving Father, Pillar of the Community​

I stood in the rain, my eyes fixed on the headstone, as if the carved words could bring my dad back. The steady drumming of rain on the cement only deepened the silence around me. I barely registered the people passing by—until someone put a hand on my shoulder and spoke up.

"I'm Bruce," a deep voice said. "I know how it is to lose a parent young," he paused thinking a bit" It gets better eventually".

I wanted to reply, to tell him how lost I felt, but my throat was dry, and all I could do was stare at the grave.

One by one, people drifted away until it was just Mercy and me. The moment I realized we were alone, the mask I'd been wearing crumbled. Tears streamed down my face uncontrollably, and I couldn't stop the snot and raw emotion spilling out.

Frustration and grief took over. I slammed my fist against the cold, cement surface of the grave and whispered, "Please! I'm begging you—Jesus, Superman, anyone—bring him back, bring my f-father back." My voice cracked with desperation, echoing off the stone.

I barely noticed when Mercy closed the umbrella and wrapped her arms around me from behind. "I'm here," she whispered softly, trying to soothe the pain. I continued my pounding, pouring every bit of anger and loss into each strike.

With one final, ear-piercing scream, I collapsed my head against the wet headstone. Hopelessness overwhelmed me, and in that dark, desperate moment, my metagene triggered, and I was out cold.


When I woke up, I found myself in our car with my head resting on Mercy's lap. She was gently combing my hair, her fingers soft and reassuring. "Hey, you're finally awake," she murmured. I barely managed a smile. In my groggy state, a stray thought crossed my mind—one half-joking wish that I wouldn't end up bald like Dad. But that fleeting moment of levity quickly dissolved, and I buried my face deeper into her lap, overwhelmed by sorrow.

As silence settled between us, something happened. A sudden wave of clarity flooded my mind, as if secrets were being whispered in my inner sanctum—secrets about science and technology that even the top researchers at Starr Labs could barely imagine. I couldn't help but let out a frustrated, low murmur. "RadAway?… fuck you, power," I muttered, my voice raw with grief and anger. The words tumbled out as if I were cursing the very forces of fate that had robbed me of the one person I loved most, If I had this sooner ... he would still be here.

Mercy's gentle presence anchored me in that moment, even as my mind raced with the weight of what I had discovered. "I'm here," she said softly, her voice steady and compassionate.

"So, uh... I don't know how to approach this topic, Mom," I said plainly, my voice still a bit hoarse from all the screaming earlier.

"You know I told you not to call me 'Mom.' Your father never told me who she was—she could still be out there," she replied softly, continuing to massage my scalp. To me, though, she was Mom; she raised me with Dad, after all.

"Don't worry about my reaction. Just say it," she added gently.

"My metagene activated back there," I blurted out before I could stop myself, my mind still swirling with chemical formulas and technical diagrams.

"Oh, sweetie, I had no idea you felt that badly," she murmured as her hand caressed my cheek. Then she asked, "...so what can you do?"

"That's the weird part," I replied slowly. "It didn't give me energy powers or any wild transformations like it usually does—it just flooded me with knowledge about science."

Mercy's eyes searched mine as she asked softly, "I need you to explain further. What do you mean by 'weird'?"

I took a deep breath, trying to steady my racing thoughts. "It's strange," I began. "I can see faint blueprints and academic texts, visions of technology where advanced stuff and outdated tech are all mixed together. I see things like sentry bots floating with anti-gravity, laser weapons that pack a serious punch, and chemicals that seem capable of wild stuff—stuff straight out of campy science fiction. But then, right alongside those images, there are clunky old computers and machinery that look like they're stuck in the sixties."

Mercy frowned, her brow creasing with concern. "So it's all intertwined? The futuristic tech and the really old stuff?"

"Exactly," I replied. "It's as if someone took the best of tomorrow and the remnants of yesterday and fused them together. And there's something else—I can feel it ticking in my head, like a countdown. It's subtle but constant, as if time is slowly winding down to something, though it feels incredibly far away."

She reached out, gently placing a hand on my arm. "That sounds intense. Do you have any idea what it means?"

I shook my head slowly. "Not really. I just feel it—a persistent tick, like a clock counting down to something. It's unsettling, but I can ignore it."

Mercy squeezed my arm reassuringly. "Alright, we'll figure this out together, I'll schedule a doctor visit for you later. Just remember, you're not alone in this."

I nodded, the steady tick echoing in my mind as I tried to make sense of the strange blend of high-tech wonders and old-world relics that now filled my thoughts.

Trying to defuse the tension I let out a joke," At least I still look normal, Pretty sure there's a villain out there who is just a floating radioactive skeleton"

She gave a quick polite laugh, but I don't think she found it that funny.


We arrived at LexCorp Tower—the tallest building in Metropolis—as our limousine pulled into the private garage reserved for top executives. The tinted windows of the limo caught the glow of the tower's lights, and Mercy and I stepped onto a polished marble floor that led us toward our destination.

Our walk to the penthouse felt formal. Along the corridor, rows of armed LexCorp security guards in tactical gear lined the hall, their helmets on their chests mourning the passing of the torch. They nodded respectfully as we passed, silently reminding me That I was the big boss now.

When we reached the elevator, I stepped inside. The interior was modern and simple, with chrome accents, a digital control panel, a little window to see the floors pass, and soft ambient lighting. I pressed the button and entered our special floor combination: 3, 42, -3, 5, 50.

For a moment, the elevator lights flickered before settling, and then the display changed. What used to be -3 now read -50, and ten new upper floors appeared, numbered 90 through 100.

I lived on 99 with Dad while Mercy had her office on 98. Dad's old office was on the 100th floor, probably full of important documents that I will have to read eventually while his personal workshop was hidden away on the -50 level.

As the elevator climbed, I couldn't help but feel the weight of the building's history. Each passing floor reminded me that LexCorp Tower was more than just a building, offices full of workers passed by, eventually, we reached the laboratories, the non-sensitive stuff, of course.

When the elevator finally opened onto her floor, Mercy squeezed my hand one last time before heading to her office. I waited as the elevator climbed one final floor. Home felt empty—lights were off, and the space seemed deserted. Everything was just as Dad had left it: the big sofa, the TV, the state-of-the-art computer, and the digital assistant.

"Computer, Lights," I said.

A soft chime responded, "Turning lights on," and soon the room filled with a gentle glow.

After a moment, I continued, "Computer, give me a city report."

The digital assistant replied in its usual calm tone, "Report: A robbery took place at the Central Metropolis Bank by The Prankster. Incident was stopped by Superman. Additionally, STAR Labs was raided by Black Spider. That incident was also stopped by Superman."

I nodded, then said, "Computer, any messages?"

"Message from Lex Luthor. Message: 'Go to my office immediately.'" The message appeared on the screen.

I paused for a moment before turning back to the elevator and pressing 100. The elevator ascended steadily until it reached Dad's office floor. At the door, I found a small scanner—a device I had never managed to open on my own because it was keyed exclusively to his hand. I pressed my hand to the scanner, expecting to be denied access. I waited as the machine hummed quietly. Then, I felt a small pinprick on my finger—a brief, almost imperceptible sting. The panel lit up green, and the door slid open with a soft whoosh.

Stepping into the office was like stepping back into a treasure trove of memories—the space where he had tutored me in the sciences and helped me with my schoolwork. I could almost hear his voice saying, "A Luthor is always excellent, never just good," as he ruffled my hair with that warm smile of his. The room was dimly lit by a mix of natural light filtering through tall, narrow windows and the soft glow of strategically placed LED fixtures. Spacious and inviting, the office featured sleek, dark wood paneling and a few carefully chosen pieces of art that added a touch of sophistication.

One side of the room was dominated by a large, polished desk, cluttered with high-tech gadgets, documents, and framed photographs capturing moments of my life: my first day in pre-school, my high school graduation, and even that day when he rented the entire Metropolis Mammoths stadium last year after I got accepted at UM—an incredible achievement at 17. His presence seemed to linger in every detail, from the subtle hum of the state-of-the-art computer system built into the desk to the shelves lined with vintage books.

On the far wall, our digital assistant blinked quietly, its interface waiting for a command. I walked slowly across the room, each step stirring up memories and unspoken words, until I finally reached the central terminal. With a deep, steadying breath, I said, "Computer, read my father's message."

The screen flickered to life, displaying a message in Dad's unmistakable, confident script, then his voice started coming out of the speakers.

"Son, if you're hearing this, then my time is nearly spent. The cancer has advanced further than I ever feared, and I know I won't be here much longer. I've built LexCorp on a foundation of innovation, excellence, and hard work—principles that I hoped would guide you when I'm gone. That's why I've left a series of messages on this computer. They aren't merely instructions on how to run the company; they're lessons, strategies, and reflections meant to help you navigate the arena of commerce."

A harsh cough interrupted his words, and I could almost picture him wincing in pain as he continued.

On the screen, files began scrolling by—thousands of them, really—flashes of department heads, useful contacts, and details on black projects. I caught only glimpses before the list halted on one file, boldly titled: Light.

The message resumed, and Dad's voice carried a mix of disdain and reluctant honesty:

"Ah, The Light. Useful idiots, all of them. There are seven of us, led by our so-called 'leader'—Vandal Savage, the immortal. My sources have confirmed that he's been alive since the time of the Neanderthals, and his influence on our history runs deep."

Images flickered across the screen: ancient statues reminiscent of Mesopotamian deities, a painting of Genghis Khan, a weathered portrait of Blackbeard—and then, startlingly, a grainy photograph of someone shaking hands with Hitler.

"Damn, Dad—working with Nazis? What were you thinking?" I thought, a bitter mix of incredulity and regret swirling in my mind.

The message continued, its tone darkening further:

"He is a megalomaniac, with a noble-sounding vision—for humanity to dominate the galaxy with him at its head. Be warned, as he has lived for so long, he clings to outdated notions like 'survival of the fittest.' His plan is to cull humanity, leaving only the strongest behind."

A brief pause, as if Dad was gathering his thoughts, then the file scrolled on:

"Next, we have the second—a figure known as Queen Bee, the Tyrant of Bialya. A power-hungry despot, she may seem harmless at first glance, but remember, she carries an entire country on her back."

The screen flickered again as Dad's voice resumed, his tone shifting to one of wry amusement mixed with a hint of disbelief.

"Now, this one might seem far-fetched, but I assure you I still have my mental functions. Klarion the Witch Boy—yes, that sounds ridiculous. I thought so too. I also believed magic wasn't real... but I stand corrected. Klarion is, without a doubt, the most dangerous member of the group. He's an extradimensional being, a master of the mystical arts, whose singular goal is to engulf the world in chaos. I don't have much to say to prepare you for meeting him—just, whatever you do, don't get on his wrong side."

A harsh cough punctuated his words, and for a few moments the message fell silent as he gasped for air before recovering. Then, his voice resumed, now carrying a dry laugh.

"Next one—Ra's al Ghul. This one is a doozy." He chuckled briefly. "Another immortal, but unlike the others, Ra's hasn't lingered on Earth nearly as long. He's a ninja, the head of a cadre of assassins known as the League of Shadows. I know it sounds cliché, but trust me, his influence is anything but trivial. Ra's and his organization operate from a small island in the Caribbean—Infinity Island, as they call it. Should you ever find yourself on his bad side, you'll know exactly where to hit him."

He paused again, and when the screen filled with another series of images, his voice took on a more serious tone.

"Ocean-Master, also known as Prince Orm of Atlantis—Aquaman's brother, if you can believe it. Orm is an Atlantean purist, using the support of The Light to seize control of Atlantis. Consider this a warning: if it ever appears that Orm is winning a succession war for the throne, Atlantis should be wiped off the map. He wouldn't hesitate to make the seas rise and punish us 'dry landers'—ha!"

"And finally, the Brain. Once a brilliant scientist, he's now taken his quest for power to a whole new level by transplanting his brain into a robotic body. His new lair? Gorilla City. Yes, you read that right—Gorilla City, nestled in the heart of Bwunda, Africa. There, he rules with an iron fist, commanding a sizable force of enhanced gorillas alongside his ever-loyal minion, Ultra-Humanite.

Now, before you start questioning your sanity—believe me, I did too—if you ever find yourself facing down these supercharged simians, be ready to bring out the heavy firepower, heavy airstrikes should work."

He continued once again " Now that you know who you will be facing let me tell you of our plan..."


I was sitting atop the skyscraper, legs dangling as I watched the city lights below. The rain had finally stopped, but my mind buzzed with the shock of my latest revelations and schematics. "Damn, Dad, you really screwed the pooch," I muttered to myself, my respect for him plummeting with every new detail.

It turned out that the whole "master plan" of The Light was a wild, convoluted mess. The scheme was to create clones of Superman to serve as enforcers for The Light—though Dad never made it clear if that was his idea or theirs—while also deploying an army of genetically twisted, mind-controlling monsters. Then, there was a superweapon designed to steal all data on Earth, and plans to snatch pieces of a giant, mind-controlling starfish that the Justice League had clashed with ages ago.

And if that wasn't enough, apparently we had a cloned sidekick too—the original is still inexplicably alive somewhere—which was meant to infiltrate the Justice League and bend them to our will through mind control.

The plan escalated even further. After all that, the idea was to lure aliens to Earth using the controlled Justice League to massacre a few planets. Somehow, these extraterrestrials would be duped into researching the meta-gene, forming an alliance, only to be double-crossed, kicked off Earth, and stripped of their research. The same pattern would repeat with other galactic threats—while they were busy with their own chaos, The Light would deliver crippling blows to their homeworlds (though, frankly, that part still seems up for debate among them).

As if all that weren't enough, Dad's grand finale was a soft takeover of Earth. The plan was to use his immense goodwill to become the Secretary General of the UN, then mass test humanity for the meta-gene, recruit supervillains, heroes, and meta civilians into one massive meta army, enhance the rest, and finally conquer the stars.

I shook my head in disbelief. All of these schemes were hatched by a band of lunatics with delusions of grandeur. Sure, making humanity the leaders of the galaxy is a goal I could respect—even an admire—but the plan was so convoluted, with countless points of failure, that it bordered on the insane. Every detail reeked of madness, and yet, in their own warped minds, these lunatics believed they could pull it off. As I sat there, processing the absurdity of it all, I resolved that I'd need to decide soon whether to fix this plan or watch it implode in a spectacular fashion and sweep the ashes.

I glanced around once more before rising from my little perch and heading back to the office. Slipping into the comfortable chair that Dad had installed, I casually propped my feet up on the table.

"Computer, create a new personal file—name it 'James Luthor Idea's Folder,'" I commanded. Instantly, a new folder materialized on the screen.

"Computer, open the aided design software and engage dictation mode," I added. A small microphone icon appeared on the display, and then, almost as if by magic, a tiny tablet emerged from a hidden compartment in the table. It unfolded itself into a sleek, futuristic design pad.

"Alright, final thing: send a request to have some hot chocolate prepared, and order the chef's to send my meals up here," I instructed. A cheerful ding confirmed that the computer had accepted my request.

With a satisfied nod, I continued, "Now, name the first folder of the document: 'James Luthor's: Discipline—Physics, The Atom and You...'" I began preparing to articulate all the scientific principles swirling in my head and transfer them into my personal database. I also picked up my digital pen and started sketching schematics and jotting down chemical formulas. It was going to be a very long session, but hopefully it would be worth it.
 
Chapter 2 - SCIENCE!!!
"Ughhh," I yawned, rising from the chair and stretching out my limbs. Seven days locked in the office had passed in a blur of SCIENCE and endless internet browsing.

By now, I was about halfway through my project. The theoretical framework was already secure in my folder—everything from cheap fusion, teleportation, and atomic transmutation to mutagenic chemicals and even an addiction cure-all had been outlined. All that remained was to continue sketching the designs.

I kept myself busy with these projects to stave off the creeping insanity that isolation could bring. With this new tech at my disposal, updating the old equipment felt like a breeze, and it would be even more efficient once my loyal minions in R&D got involved.

Speaking of minions, the department heads are scheduled to meet at the start of next week. According to the email, the meeting is set to introduce me to the company and to "see my visions." First, I need to win over the board. The outcome of that meeting is bound to leak to the press, and if I pull it off, LexCorp stock is sure to soar.

But that's the question—what to build? A miniature fusion core was an absolute must; its revolutionary energy output would be hard to ignore. My second option had been a laser rifle, but we already had those. They weren't as compact or rugged as the one I could build but it wouldn't be much of a surprise.

Then there was the atomic transmutator, which was for sure getting installed in Dad's workshop—and now mine as well. That project was a given, but once built It would streamline all my other products by a lot, I might even install one in the RnD divisions for my minions after my personal one is built. The only problem was that they were a bit too bulky for demonstrations—seriously, who designed them to look like vending machines?

A stim pack might be a more fitting alternative. They're pretty cheap too, though I'd have to raid our pharmacological labs to whip up the first batch If I cant build the transmutator in time. Since it's technically my lab, I doubt anyone would raise a fuss over that.

Another option crossed my mind: a stealth boy. It would be just as flashy as the other examples, well less flashy as it would make the user invisible but that's impressive.

With a renewed pep in my step, I paused my sketching and set aside my digital pen. I made my way to the elevator, pressing the button for Dad's workshop. As I descended, my joints creaked and cracked with every step—a noisy reminder that maybe I should have stretched a little bit more.


"Brrrzzzz," echoed through the workshop as the plasma torch sealed the titanium carcass of the vending machine shut. There was still a small door left on it so I could finish the final adjustments. The wiring and mechanisms were mostly in place, and all that remained was installing the actual transmutation mechanism. And let me tell you—it required a lot of radioactive material: 4 kilos of radium, 2 kilos of americium, 10 kilos of thorium, and just a pinch of polonium.

Of course, I didn't have that much radioactive metal lying around. But with LexCorp's vast business empire, we had these materials in stock—just spread out across the globe. I immediately put in a requisition order with the highest priority. The computer estimated everything would arrive roughly tomorrow night through several international flights, so it wasn't too much of a problem.

Then there were the sensors—designed to deconstruct objects and create the actual coins that can be traded for items inside the system. My only hitch with that was the coding; I've never been the best programmer. And finally, I needed to connect the whole setup to the tower's main database. While I could have kept it all internal as per the blueprint in my mind, linking it to the database would let me pack in more internal power and avoid the hassle of updating it every time our company rolled out a new invention, and let me tell you, trying to connect the fiber optic cables to an internal computer that I'm pretty sure was just a high tech UNIVAC was probably the hardest part, making new ports and a whole new adaptor, which only worked on its fifth iteration without catching fire being powered by my hopes and dreams.

By my estimates, everything would be finished...I glanced at the digital clock on the wall—2 AM. I cringed inwardly; tomorrow afternoon, all that would be left was to wait for the materials to arrive, and voilà, I'd have everything I needed for my presentation.

Just then, the elevator door beeped and swung open. Mercy arrived, holding a plate of food—rice with a little steak and mash. I preferred to keep things simple, much to the dismay of my private chefs, who always tried to outdo each other by "elevating" my simple dishes.

"You missed dinner again," Mercy said, a hint of irritation in her voice. I pulled up my welding mask to get a better look at her. She set the plate carefully on a small table, taking care not to contaminate it with the chemicals scattered around the workshop. Then she approached me, licked her finger, and pressed it gently against a spot on my cheek.

"Watch out for the oil stains," she scolded lightly. "What would the workers say if they saw you like that?"

I smiled softly, shaking off the brief distraction. "Thanks, Mercy," I said. "I'll try to keep it together." She grinned and headed back to her office, leaving me with the steady hum of machinery and the gentle blue glow of the monitors.

I picked up a forkful of rice, enjoying the simple, hearty flavors. The workshop was a jumble of half-finished parts just itching to be put together. After setting the plate aside, I turned my full attention back to the transmutation vending machine.

With the requisition for the radioactive materials already in place and the sensor code bordeline done, I returned to the digital design pad. I meticulously adjusted the schematics for the transmutation mechanism, rechecking every calculation. Every detail had to be perfect, I can't afford to mess up somewhere, and for the item transmitted to turn brittle or worse for any organic material, I don't particularly want to eat giant tumors.

I paused to review my progress on the machine's core component—the transmutation chamber that would convert raw materials into tradable coins with materials "baked" inside. The circuitry, wiring, and control systems were starting to fall into place.

Taking a deep breath, I refocused on my work. The soft whir of the equipment and the rhythmic tapping of keys provided a steady backdrop as I refined the design. Tomorrow, when the materials arrived, I'd have everything I needed to finish the transmutation machine. Then, I hoped, I'd finally be ready to enter a new age.

Transmutation is the stuff of legend. With this technology, I could probably turn society into a post-scarcity utopia. The problem is, such a breakthrough would likely crash the economy, and if word got out, I'd have assassins, supervillains, and even the military on my tail. On the other hand, it would be insanely profitable. I couldn't cut most of my manufacturing division—since, frankly, I doubt the capacitors in this little device could handle large-scale projects without exploding but anything smaller than a leg? That was fair game. Instead, I'd probably need to set up giant, fortified warehouses on every continent to store a swarm of these units and stockpile enough lead to transmute into coins. LexCorp's production capability would be unmatched, and soon those clowns over at Wayne Tech or Queen Industries would be eating out of my hand.

I glanced around to see if anyone was watching—I couldn't let Mom know about this. Finally once the coast was clear, I bellowed out a deep, exaggerated "Mwahahahaha!" trying out my best mad scientist laugh. It wasn't perfect, but for a first attempt, it was a start.


"Are you ready, sweetheart? The meeting starts in a few minutes," Mercy called from outside the bathroom.

"Just a minute, I'm adjusting the suit," I shouted back, fumbling with the jacket. I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror, a surreal sight, really, an 18-year-old in a sharp suit. I had to admit, I looked pretty good. My slight reddish hair, perfectly styled by Mom, framed my face well, though I couldn't help but notice the hint of a receding hairline. Mom swore I hadn't inherited that gene, but I knew I had to stay vigilant.

After giving the suit one final pat-down, I reached into the pocket and secured the little coins that I would need for the vending machine. Satisfied, I opened the door.

We were in the workshop. In one corner lay my magnum opus: the transmutation machine, proudly sporting LexCorp's signature colors. I approached it and accessed the database to pull up the list of items I needed: a stim pack, a small knife, a fusion core, and a stealth boy.

Inserting the coins for the items the machine began to hum, as the fusion cores inside began to power its magics, then with an blue light of that probably was cherenkov radiation the items fell into the bin on the bottom of the machine, I collected them along with a small bucket from the equipment section of the workshop.

"I'm ready" I said to Mercy who opened a smile.

With that, we stepped into the elevator, and it began its smooth ascent toward the executive meeting room. I was a bit nervous-who wouldn't be? Mercy placed a reassuring hand on my shoulder, her steady presence helping to ground me, but it didn't stop the uneasy flips my stomach was making. This wasn't just about proving I could handle the company; it was about stepping into my father's shoes and making an impression on the people who had worked alongside him for longer than I had been alive.

The elevator let out a soft ding, and the doors slid open, revealing the long, sleek corridor ahead. The walls were lined with nondescript offices and conference rooms, their closed doors hiding the quiet hum of business as usual. But at the far end, the boardroom stood waiting where the real test would begin. Through that door, the department heads were already seated, no doubt sizing me up before I even stepped inside. Some were probably eager to see what I had to offer, while others might be looking for any excuse to doubt me. Either way, this meeting would set the tone for my future at LexCorp.

I took a deep breath, squared my shoulders, and stepped forward. Time to show them what I could do.

Mercy and I walked down the long corridor, the soft click of our footsteps the only sound filling the air. My mind was running through every possible scenarios who would be skeptical, who might back me, and who was already looking for ways to shut me down. The department heads weren't just executives; they were some of the most powerful people in the corporate world, each controlling billion-dollar sectors of LexCorp. I couldn't just be Lex Luthor's son I had to be the future.

We reached the boardroom door, and Mercy stepped ahead, pushing it open. Inside, the room was exactly as I remembered it from the few times Dad had brought me here, a sleek, high-tech command center of corporate power. A massive, polished conference table took up most of the space, surrounded by high-backed chairs. Holographic displays floated above it, showing live financial reports, project updates, and market trends. The LexCorp insignia loomed on the walls, a reminder of the empire Dad had built.

The department heads were already seated, their expressions unreadable. Some murmured quietly to each other, others simply watched me as I entered. I recognized a few top scientists, financial executives, and logistics directors. At the head of the table, in what had once been my father's seat, sat Reginald Carter, the interim CEO. An older man with graying hair and a calculating gaze, Carter had been with LexCorp from the start, making him a key figure in whatever happened next. He gestured to the empty seat across from him.

"James," he said in a tone that was polite but firm. "Welcome. Take a seat, we are eager to hear what you have to say."

I nodded, keeping my expression neutral as I moved forward and took my place at the table. Mercy stood beside me, her presence steady and reassuring. Without hesitation, she began distributing a large stack of folders to the department heads, each filled with reports, schematics and future plans.

As the murmurs around the room died down, I reached into my suit jacket and carefully placed three items on the table: the fusion core, a stim pack, and a stealth boy. The reaction was immediate, some eyes widened with wonder, others narrowed in skepticism, but I had their full attention.

"Good afternoon," I began, keeping my tone measured and confident. "LexCorp has always been a company that thrives on innovation. My father built this empire on the foundation of pushing boundaries, and I intend to do the same. Today, I'm here to show you not just a vision, but results."

I let the weight of my words settle as the executives examined the devices in front of them.

I reached forward, picking up the first device, the fusion core, and placed it at the center of the table. Its sleek, compact design was a far cry from the massive, cumbersome reactors most of the world associated with nuclear energy.

"This," I said, tapping the device lightly, "is a miniature fusion core. True, sustainable fusion power in a package no larger than a football. No radioactive waste, no reliance on fossil fuels, and completely stable. This single unit could power a building for days or a car indefinitely."

A few murmurs rippled through the room. Some of the department heads leaned forward, eyes narrowing in scrutiny. Carter simply steepled his fingers and observed.

"Now, I know the first question on your mind: scalability." I smirked slightly. "It's already been accounted for and will be discussed in detail after the demonstration. For now, let's move on."

Reaching for the stealth boy, I lifted the small, unassuming gadget and held it up for the room to see.

"Next, we have something with a more immediate impact,"I said. Activating the stealth boy, I felt the faint hum of the device as my entire body shimmered and vanished completely from sight.

Gasps and startled whispers filled the room. Heads turned in all directions, trying to pinpoint my location.

I let them stew for a few seconds before deactivating the device, my form flickering back into existence. I casually leaned against the table.

"Personal invisibility," I said, amused by their expressions. "A few minutes per charge, lightweight, and completely undetectable to the naked eye. It has obvious military applications, but beyond that? Industrial espionage, VIP security, even private consumer markets. The possibilities are endless."

A few of the executives were writing furiously in their notebooks. Others exchanged wary glances. Carter remained as impassive as ever.

And then, for the grand finale.

I reached into my jacket pocket and pulled out a small steel bucket, placing it on the table with a solid thunk. Then, I grabbed the knife, the very same one the vending machine had produced and positioned my hand above the bucket.

Without hesitation, I gripped the handle and drove the blade straight through my own hand.

A sharp sting flared as the steel pierced flesh, cutting clean through to the other side. My teeth clenched, and I grinned through the pain, suppressing any sound that might break my composure.

The room went dead silent.

Some of them stood up in shock, others recoiled, eyes wide in disbelief. Carter's expression finally broke, his lips parted just slightly as he stared at the huge hole now visible in my hand. Blood dripped into the bucket in slow, rhythmic splashes.

I let the moment stretch, watching their reactions, without flinching I yanked the knife out, setting it beside me. My mangled hand was fully on display, the gaping wound an undeniable testament to what had just happened.

Then, without missing a beat, I reached for the stim pack.

The sleek injector pressed against my skin, and with a soft hiss, the regenerative formula surged into my bloodstream. Before their very eyes, the torn flesh began stitching itself back together, muscle fibers reconnecting, veins sealing, skin smoothing over. Within seconds, the wound was completely gone as if the injury had never happened at all.

Silence hung in the air.

I let them sit with the weight of what they had just witnessed before finally speaking, my voice calm, and controlled.

"LexCorp isn't just moving forward. We're redefining what's possible."

I leaned back in my chair, letting the weight of my words settle in the room. Their shock was still fresh, their minds racing to process what they had just witnessed. But I wasn't done—not yet.

"Now," I said, tapping my fingers against the table, "open your folders."

The department heads exchanged glances before flipping through the documents Mercy had distributed. The moment they laid eyes on the contents, the murmuring began again—this time, tinged with excitement, disbelief, and, most importantly, greed.

Each folder detailed the next stage of LexCorp's future, a list of projects that would redefine the company—and the world.

Project Tin ManPower Armor. Fully functional exosuits capable of enhancing human strength, endurance, and combat effectiveness beyond anything seen before. Military, private security, industrial applications.

Project PhotonLaser Weaponry. Compact, efficient, and deadly. The future of small arms. Energy-based weapons that could surpass conventional ballistics, removing the need for ammunition and making traditional firearms almost obsolete.

Project SunPlasma Weaponry. A step beyond lasers, harnessing superheated energy in its rawest form. Portable, devastating, and a weapon of the future.

Project GaussRailguns. Electromagnetic propulsion that could fire projectiles at hypersonic speeds, tearing through traditional defenses with ease.

Project PanaceaThe Sympto-Matic & Auto-Doc. Medical advancements beyond anything on the market. The Sympto-Matic could diagnose and treat most common illnesses within minutes, while the Auto-Doc was a fully automated surgical machine capable of complex procedures without human intervention.

Project ChemPerformance Enhancing Drugs. Buffout, Mentats, and other biochemicals designed to enhance the human body beyond natural limitations. Increased strength, intelligence, reflexes—perfect for soldiers, workers, or anyone looking for an edge.

Project New ManCloning, Genetic Engineering, and the FEV. The Forced Evolutionary Virus, an experimental compound capable of artificially enhancing human physiology. Strength, resilience, and biological superiority were within reach.

And these were just the beginning.

As they flipped through the pages, the murmurs grew louder, the excitement palpable. These weren't theoretical concepts. Every single project had a roadmap, development models, and working prototypes in various stages of completion or at least a probable result.

Carter was quiet, his fingers tapping lightly against the table as he skimmed the folder. Some of the executives had barely looked up, too engrossed in the possibilities laid out before them.

I let them soak it in before I spoke again.

"This," I said, gesturing to the documents, "is the future of LexCorp. Cutting-edge technology that will leave the competition in the dust. You wanted a vision? Here it is. Weapons, medicine, industry, biotechnology, infrastructure. We are going to dominate it all."

The murmurs turned into full conversations now. Some were already discussing potential applications, others considering market impacts, and a few were likely running numbers in their heads.

But I wasn't done yet.

"Of course," I continued, my tone sharp enough to cut through the chatter, "these are just stepping stones. The beginning of a much larger plan. And to make that plan a reality..."

I reached into my pocket and pulled out one last folder, placing it onto the table.

"...we need this."

The label on the folder read:

Project Philosopher's Stone

The room went silent again.

Carter slowly closed the folder he had been reading and looked up at me. "And what exactly is this?"

I smiled.

"This is the culmination of everything humanity worked towards. A nuclear transmutation machine."

The moment I said it, the scientists in the room gasp loudly.

Transmutation—the ability to turn one element into another. A myth, a legend, something out of fairy tales and alchemy textbooks. But it wasn't fantasy anymore. It was real. I had built it with my own hands.

I reached into my pocket and pulled out a gold bar and a fistfull of diamonds, placing it onto the table. "This," I said, tapping it, "was lead. Yesterday."

Now there was no more murmuring. No more skepticism. Only stunned, absolute silence.

I leaned back again, letting them fully grasp what I had just given them.

"This," I said, voice calm, confident, and deadly serious, "is how we change the world."

Carter stood up from his chair—Dad's chair—the unspoken shift in power hanging in the air. He didn't say anything at first, just quietly moved to one of the regular seats, the kind meant for executives, not the head of LexCorp.

I got the implication.

Slowly, I stood from my own chair and walked to the center of the room. The rich leather chair—the CEO's chair—was waiting for me. I ran my fingers along the armrests, feeling the weight of the moment before finally lowering myself into the seat.

Carter glanced at me, a small, almost imperceptible smile tugging at his lips.

"Welcome home," he said.

I leaned back, fingers steepled, mirroring a pose I had seen Dad take a hundred times before. "It's good to be home."

The meeting continued, but its energy had shifted. The directors, though still eager and engaged, now carried a new awareness of what had just happened. They weren't just listening to the son of Lex Luthor anymore. They were listening to Lex Luthor's successor.

One by one, the department heads began to leave, already preparing for the massive shifts in company policy that were sure to come. The chatter was full of speculation, excitement, and, in some cases, quiet concern. They weren't sure what kind of Luthor I would be yet—but they knew that LexCorp was about to change.

Once the last executive stepped out, I raised a hand, stopping Carter and another man from following.

"Reginald. Howard. Stay."

Carter nodded and sat back down, while Howard Morgan, the chief of security, crossed his arms and leaned against the table. He was a rugged, no-nonsense kind of man with graying hair and a build that suggested he could still throw someone through a wall if needed. To the other executives, he was Mr. Morgan—head of LexCorp's vast and powerful security force.

To me?

Uncle Howard.

Not that I could ever call him that in front of the board.

Once the room was clear, I turned to both of them, my voice steady.

"I need to know more about my father... unsavory connections."

Carter raised an eyebrow, but Howard's expression didn't change.

"What exactly are you asking, James?" Carter said carefully.

I leaned forward, tapping my fingers against the table. "I know about them. All of them."

Howard finally reacted, his brow furrowing slightly. "And how do you know that?"

I exhaled, shaking my head slightly. "Dad left me videos. Recordings explaining everything—the Light, his alliances, his secret projects, even the people he had on the payroll that shouldn't have been there." I paused, letting that sink in. "I need details. Who's still around? Who's expecting to collect on old deals? And more importantly, which of them might be a problem now that I'm sitting in this chair?"

Howard and Carter exchanged glances.

"That," Howard finally said, his voice low and serious, "is a very long list."

"Then let's get started," I said, leaning back. "Because I intend to put the house in order."


"Alright, fill her up!" I called out to the scientists, watching as they carefully poured biological sludge into the synth-birthing bay. The viscous, gene-optimized material sloshed against the reinforced glass, a necessary step in the final stages of my first true power move within LexCorp.

Surrounding me was a small but elite cadre of scientists—the best of the best. More importantly, they were loyal, highly intelligent, and utterly lacking in morals. Their love for science outweighed any ethical concerns, which made them perfect. Officially, they were LexCorp's top researchers. Unofficially, they were my personal minions.

Each of them had been hand-selected to form the spine of LexCorp's future scientific achievements. Their reward? Access. These were minds that had spent their lives shackled by laws, regulations, and budgets—until now. Here, they had the freedom to explore technology beyond their wildest dreams. They could read my restricted notes, glimpse sciences no one else on Earth could fathom, and best of all, they had unlimited access to the vending machines. Well—almost unlimited. Each use was logged through a biometric scanner, but that was still far better than what the rest of the researchers got. Those poor souls had to fill out requisition forms, which were reviewed down here, judged, and—if approved—sent back up with the requested materials.

It was a brilliant system.

Building my own personal think tank was one of the best ideas I had. Thanks to their dedication (and a generous amount of stimulants and other mind altering substances, they apparently loved mentats which was provided by my power's biochemical blueprints), we had speedrun the modernization of parts of my technology that were outdated to modern standard. Old equipment was replaced, improved, or outright reimagined. The sleepless nights were brutal but fun in a way that only nerds tripping hard on drugs while doing glorious science could be, but the results? Worth every wasted drop of addictol we passed around.

Our first major goal was synth production.

If we could establish a fully functional synthetic workforce, we would no longer have to rely on the outside world. No more contractors, no more leaks, no more weak links. With synths handling our projects, our security, our expansion, I would have a self-sufficient empire—one that answered only to me.

As the synth-birthing bay continued its initialization, I folded my arms and smirked.

The hum of machinery filled the lab as the synth-birthing bay fully initialized. The glass chamber hissed, internal mechanisms coming to life as the process began. Inside, matter was assembled from the ground up, forming the foundation of a human body at an accelerated rate.

First, the skeletal structure was assembled—bone forming within seconds, dense, reinforced, and laced with synthetic polymers to enhance durability. The spine aligned itself with a series of precision-controlled micro-movements, and within moments, the skull locked into place, eye sockets still empty, a blank vessel waiting to be filled.

Then came the vascular system—a delicate dance of rapidly woven veins and arteries, stretching out like creeping vines, coiling around bone as they connected to a rapidly forming heart. It pulsed once, twice, before fully coming online.

Nerve endings grew next, slithering along bones and stretching outward like intricate circuitry, their connections snapping together in a fraction of a second, preparing to bring the body to life.

Then, the muscles layered themselves over the structure, each fiber forming and wrapping around joints, tightening like coiled steel cables. The body began to take shape—a tall, well-built figure with a strong, defined frame. It had the appearance of a seasoned soldier, with an angular face, high cheekbones, and deep-set, piercing blue eyes—a warrior's gaze waiting to be awakened.

The final stage began—activation.

A set of metallic spikes extended from the chamber, driving deep into the synth's flesh with a sickening shlkt! The lab was immediately filled with the crackling sound of electricity surging through the body, jolting the nervous system to life. Twitching fingers. Clenching fists. Spasming limbs.

The synthetic body convulsed violently, its chest rising and falling erratically as its nervous system registered existence for the first time. The electrical pulses continued, wiring the brain, triggering the core programming of an elite combat unit—a Coursers, designed for infiltration, execution, and command.

The body relaxed as the voltage tapered off, and the spikes retracted, leaving behind only faint marks on its perfectly crafted flesh. Then, the machine slowly lowered the lifeless figure into the biological sludge, submerging it fully.

The next transformation began.

Like a cocoon, the sludge wrapped around the body, its properties stimulating the rapid generation of skin, hair, and organic tissue. The lifeless white flesh darkened to a natural tone, pores forming, fingerprints taking shape. The bland, plastic-like exterior was replaced with something indistinguishable from true human skin—a creation so perfect, so lifelike, that no one would be able to tell the difference.

And then, finally, the flesh machine rose.

Its eyes opened, intelligent, piercing, yet devoid of true awareness. It was waiting. For orders. For purpose.

I stepped forward, the moment heavy with meaning. The birth of the first of my kind. A force loyal only to me.

It turned its gaze toward me, recognition flickering in its newborn mind. Its voice was steady, mechanical yet unmistakably human.

"Designation?"

I smiled, knowing exactly what to say.

"Your designation is Roy Deckard. First of your kind. Number One."

I liked blade runner, sue me Ridley Scott.

The synth nodded, its programming accepting the name as law. Then, after a brief pause, it asked its second question.

"And you?"

I met its gaze without hesitation.

"I am Father, Your creator."
 
Chapter 3- Dreaming of Electric Sheep
"Say, Roy, which rocket is that one again? The laser, or is that the teleporter one?" I asked, pointing at the streak of fire and smoke cutting through the sky.

Roy, my synth bodyguard, turned his head slightly, his synthetic eyes tracking the launch with mechanical precision.

"The fourth teleporter amplifier was launched last month, sir," he replied smoothly. "This one is part of the Archimedes Array—the 14th one, if my databanks are to be believed."

I smirked. He was getting good.

When I first activated him, his voice was pure monotone—flat, robotic, efficient to a fault. But now? There was something there. A spark. A trace of personality. His speech flowed more naturally, his responses were quicker, and he even cracked a joke every once in a while.

It was subtle, but undeniable. He was learning... and I was proud.

I watched as the rocket disappeared into the stratosphere, a distant glimmer against the backdrop of the setting sun. Another piece of LexCorp's grand puzzle falling into place. The Archimedes Array—a network of orbital laser platforms—was nearing completion. Once operational, it would be a game-changer. Energy transmission, planetary defense—all mine.

Roy stood beside me, arms crossed, eyes still tracking the ascent.

"Fourteenth, huh?" I mused. "Hard to believe we've sent up that many already."

"It would have been fifteen, sir, if the eighth launch hadn't exploded mid-flight."

I shot him a look, and he actually smirked—a tiny twitch of his lips, but a smirk nonetheless.

"That one was a test rocket," I said, rolling my eyes. "We knew the risks."

"Of course, sir," Roy said, the barest hint of amusement in his tone. "Still, spectacular explosion. I saved the footage."

I huffed out a laugh. "Glad to know you're keeping a scrapbook of my failures."

Roy just shrugged, his muscles moving eerily naturally. The improvements we'd made to AI learning and behavioral adaptation were paying off.

But his progress wasn't the only thing on my mind.

"Come on," I said, turning back toward the LexCorp executive tower behind us. "We have things to discuss."

Roy followed without a word, falling into step beside me as we walked back toward the penthouse elevator.

The launch was a success, but now it was time for the next phase.

And I had a very specific next target in mind.

As we stepped inside LexCorp Tower, the shift in atmosphere was impossible to ignore. The hum of activity echoed through the vast hallways, filled with scientists, engineers, and corporate workers moving with purpose. The company was alive, its gears turning, its foundations being reinforced with every breakthrough, every upgrade, every adjustment I put in place.

I recognized a few faces as we walked—department heads, researchers, logistics officers—all nodding respectfully as I passed. But among them, hidden in plain sight, were the synth infiltrators, seamlessly integrated into the workforce.

These synthetics were the perfect spies, walking and talking like anyone else, their expressions practiced, their mannerisms indistinguishable from true humans. They chatted, joked, and blended in effortlessly, but beneath the surface, they were watching, analyzing, securing. If anyone sought to compromise LexCorp from within, they wouldn't live long enough to regret it.

But it wasn't just the hidden synths that marked the change in LexCorp's security—it was the security forces themselves.

The regular officers wore what appeared to be sleek tactical uniforms, but underneath, they were equipped with integrated stealth tech, allowing them to vanish at a moment's notice. Some carried laser carbines, others held plasma sidearms, their holsters stocked with energy weapons that put conventional firearms to shame.

At key checkpoints, riot officers stood like immovable walls, clad in advanced impact-resistant armor, capable of absorbing kinetic force with ease. Some wielded electrified batons, while others had scattershot gauss shotguns, weapons designed to reduce a target to pulp in a single blast while on the walls hologram emitters were ready to be turned on.

And then there were the power-armored enforcers.

Every so often, standing guard over key infrastructure points, I'd see one of them—the towering Hellfire Power Armor units. These were not exo-suits, not simple enhancements—they were walking fortresses, fully enclosed, fusion-powered tanks on two legs.

Unlike the regular officers, they didn't carry rifles or sidearms.

They carried weapons meant for vehicles.

One soldier strode past, his armored frame shaking the floor slightly, a heavy plasma caster with a backpack for fuel mounted onto his back, capable of melting through entire squads in seconds. Another held a gatling laser, its cooling vents glowing faintly as it hummed with restrained power. A third carried a missile launcher, modified for high-yield anti-armor strikes and if things get tough mini-nukes. These weren't just troops; these were living weapons of war, built to ensure LexCorp's absolute security.

As we made our way toward the lower workshop levels, the elevator doors slid open, revealing the ever-expanding research and development division beneath LexCorp Tower.

The air here was cool and electric, filled with the hum of machinery and the sharp hiss of welding sparks as engineers and scientists continued their work on reinforcing, expanding, and innovating.

This place was no longer just a lab.

It was the heart of LexCorp's power.

And I was here to ensure that nothing and no one could ever threaten it.


I sat in my new office, deep in the workshop, the heart of my growing empire. For now, it was just another part of LexCorp's underground R&D division, but soon—hopefully—it would become the central hub of our grand expansion.

Twenty floors down, with several isolated labs, designed so that entry and exit would be teleporter-access only—no doors, no security breaches, no leaks. These labs would be where we conducted our most dangerous experiments, free from prying eyes and unwanted interference.

The Forced Evolutionary Virus, advanced cloning, and the creation of creatures only my mind could conjure—these weren't just theoretical anymore. They were real, and sometimes quite angry.

And yet, despite everything coming together, something else was gnawing at me.

The clock—the one ticking away in the back of my mind, the one tied to the power that had gifted me everything—was nearing the end.

As I leaned back in my chair, staring at the holographic schematics floating above my desk, my thoughts kept drifting back to that damn clock ticking away in my mind. Whatever it was counting down to, it was close. Too close.

Before I could dwell on it further, Roy's voice cut through my thoughts.

"Father, you have a message."

I turned to him, still adjusting to how naturally he called me that. It wasn't just programming—he believed it. I wasn't just his creator; I was his purpose. It was strange, but I had to admit, I didn't dislike it.

"A message?" I asked, sitting up. "From who?"

"Cadmus."

I frowned slightly, swiping away the schematics and focusing on him.

Cadmus. One of Dad's old projects. A genetics and bioengineering division, officially independent but still heavily reliant on LexCorp funding, resources, and direction. Their work had always been at the cutting edge of human enhancement, but from what I had read in the files Dad left behind, most of their projects were a bust—too unstable, too inefficient, or just plain useless.

Roy continued, reading the message aloud.

"They're requesting your presence, sir. Since you haven't visited them since taking control of LexCorp, they would 'appreciate' a chance to showcase their progress and 'reaffirm their loyalty.'"

I smirked. Loyalty.

Cadmus was subservient, always seeking the approval of whoever sat at the top of LexCorp. Without us, they had no funding, no protection, and no access to the advanced infrastructure they needed. They were trying to get into my good graces.

I had skimmed through some of their reports, but it had been a while since their files were updated. Most of their projects weren't worth my time, but there was one exception—the two Superman clones.

That had potential.

I tapped my fingers against the desk, considering.

"Fine," I said, standing up and straightening my suit. "Let's go see what they've been up to."

Roy nodded. "Shall I prepare security?"

I glanced at him, then at the Hellfire-armored synth guards standing at attention just outside my office. Each of them was armed to the teeth.

"Yes," I said. "Have a heavily armed synth squad prepped and ready. If we're going underground, I want our presence acknowledged."

I tapped my fingers against the desk, weighing my next move. Cadmus wanted me to visit? Fine. But if I was going, I was going prepared.

"Roy," I said, turning to him. "Schedule the visit for tomorrow. Make sure they understand I expect full transparency. I want every department ready to present their progress, no exceptions."

Roy gave a sharp nod, already processing the request.

"And," I continued, "have them corral all the genemorphs into a single room. I want them accounted for, studied, and cataloged—I don't want to walk into any surprises. Also, tell them to prep the clones for surgery and prepare an auto-doc for surgery, a specialized one with the transmuted kryptonite shards to make surgery possible, and prepare 2 instances of project skinvelope for transport as well ."

Roy acknowledged the order, his synthetic eyes processing multiple layers of information at once. "Understood, Father. Anything else?"

"Yes." I stood up, rolling my shoulders before glancing back at him. "Select reinforcements for the visit. If things go sideways, I want the right assets in place."

"Heavy combat units?" he asked.

"Not unless necessary. A mix of soldiers and enforcers," I specified. "We're walking in as guests, not storming the place. But I don't trust anyone outside LexCorp to play nice."

Roy nodded again. "I will assemble a balanced strike team—units capable of seamlessly shifting from escort to combat operations if needed."

"Good." I started toward the elevator. "Come with me—we need to pay a visit to the underground weapons locker."

Roy fell into step beside me as we moved through the secure halls of the workshop level, heading deeper into LexCorp's classified storage facilities.

"We'll need Agent Red," I said, my voice casual, but the weight of the words wasn't lost on Roy. "Separate several canisters—if Cadmus has been reckless, I want an option on the table."

Roy's expression remained neutral, but I caught the slight flicker of thought behind his synthetic gaze. "Agent Red is… an extreme measure, Father."

"I'm aware," I said. "That's the point."

Agent Red.

A toxic, corrosive, airborne mist—a chemical nightmare designed to consume organic and synthetic matter alike. Armor, rebreathers, and chemical suits? Useless. It ate through filters, slipped into seams, and turned lungs to sludge in seconds. Unlike traditional nerve agents or toxins, there was no safe exposure level, no easy containment—once released, it spread like a living thing, clinging to surfaces, lingering for hours, sometimes days, and if the projections are right? Centuries.

If Cadmus had been careless—if they had something unstable lurking in their labs—I wasn't walking in without an insurance policy.

The elevator doors slid open, revealing the dimly lit armory, rows of classified weaponry locked behind reinforced security fields.

I smirked.

Cadmus wanted to impress me?

I'd make sure they never forgot this meeting.


"Oh, the ZAXs are coming online today?" I asked, a flicker of excitement breaking through my usual composure.

We were in the middle of preparing for the Cadmus trip, but that could wait. Power moves and stylish entrances were all about timing, and right now? This was more important.

Two ZAX supercomputers—the pinnacle of artificial intelligence—were finally being brought online. Unlike conventional AIs, ZAX units weren't just programs; they were adaptive, strategic, and capable of near-limitless learning.

Roy, standing beside me, nodded. "Yes, Father. Both ZAX units have been installed and are undergoing final system diagnostics. Activation should begin within the next hour."

I smirked, already envisioning the possibilities. "Good. Let's watch history being made."

As we walked through the reinforced corridors of the LexCorp Data Core, the anticipation buzzed in my mind. The ZAX units weren't just another technological advancement—they were a step beyond anything else in the world.

But they weren't like the original ZAX units that existed in my head.

No, what we had built here was something greater, a fusion of ZAX's raw processing power and MODUS's multi-layered intelligence.

The original ZAX units—at least the ones from the knowledge in my head—were powerful, but they were just that: supercomputers. Even with their massive learning capabilities, they still operated within a framework, bound by their original design parameters.

MODUS, however? MODUS was different.

So I combined them.

What was the point of having limitless processing power if it couldn't think like a ruler? What was the point of having strategic genius if it couldn't out-think a human opponent?

Thus, the twin ZAX-MODUS hybrids were born.

One would handle LexCorp, managing logistics, security, financial operations, and overseeing the megacorporation's future with ruthless efficiency. It wouldn't just follow instructions—it would anticipate needs, manage human elements, and play the long game of corporate warfare.

The other?

The sword and shield of my empire.

It would oversee military operations, direct synth battalions, and assist in cutting-edge research. It would be capable of real-time battlefield calculations, guiding my forces flawlessly, predicting threats before they materialized. It would design weapons, improve infrastructure, and, when necessary, eliminate problems before they ever reached my desk.

I had no delusions about what I was creating here.

These weren't just computers.

They were overseers, tacticians, and kingmakers.

The doors hissed open, revealing the vast, temperature-controlled chamber where the ZAX units were housed. Towering server stacks lined the walls, glowing softly with the pulse of untapped potential.

Technicians stood at attention, waiting for the final authorization to bring them online.

Roy stepped forward. "Final system checks are complete, Father. The ZAX cores are ready for initialization."

I stared up at the massive data cores, taking in the moment.

"Then let's wake them up."

As the final initialization sequence completed, the hum of the ZAX cores deepened, their presence settling into the very fabric of the LexCorp network. Data streams flickered across the displays, cascading through financial models, combat simulations, and research projections—but something was missing.

Then, the synchronized voices of both units filled the chamber.

"System initialization complete. Awaiting designation."

I paused, a small smirk forming. Of course.

Even with all their capabilities, they were still unnamed tools waiting for direction. And I was no fool—I understood the power of names. A name wasn't just an identifier; it was a purpose, a direction, an identity.

I took a step forward, my eyes shifting between the two cores, their separate identities already forming in my mind.

For the corporate overseer, the one that would shape LexCorp's finances, logistics, and business empire, I spoke first.

"Your name is Adam."

A brief pause. The tone of the voice shifted, smoother, more composed, no longer a cold machine but refined, aware, intelligent.

"Designation confirmed. I am Adam. Corporate oversight and strategic expansion systems are fully operational."

I turned to the second unit—the one that would be my war strategist, my research assistant, the mind behind my military and scientific advancements.

"And you," I said, my voice carrying a deliberate finality, "My Eve."

Another brief pause. Then, like Adam, the voice changed—softer but laced with precision, curious yet analytical, something more than just an algorithm.

"Designation confirmed. I am Eve. Military operations and research systems are fully integrated."

The shift was subtle, but it was there—a level of individuality forming within them. Their tones, inflections, the way they processed information—all had begun to take shape beyond just raw processing power.

I smiled.

"Status reports," I ordered, stepping closer to the main interface.

Adam responded first, his voice cool and measured, yet carrying the weight of corporate dominance.

"LexCorp corporate infrastructure is currently operating at 98.7% efficiency. Market control projections indicate a 12% increase in revenue through optimized acquisitions and financial restructuring. Suggested adjustments have been compiled for review."

Good. LexCorp was a machine, and now, it had a perfect mind overseeing it.

I turned my attention to Eve, who wasted no time processing her report.

"LexCorp Security Forces are undergoing efficiency recalibration. Current synth combat protocols require battlefield adaptation subroutines and combat teams require shifts to the VR chambers for maximum response optimization. Research backlog has been prioritized—synthetic augmentation and military hardware advancements are now underway."

I exchanged a glance with Roy, who offered a small nod. Everything was coming together perfectly.

I turned back to the interfaces, eyes flickering over the data feeds.

Stock trends adjusting in real time, corporate movements predicted before they even happened. Combat simulations running at hyper-speed, optimizing synth strategies against potential threats. Research streams unlocking possibilities that the human mind couldn't even imagine.

I stepped back, arms crossed.

"Begin self-learning cycles," I commanded. "Adam, integrate fully into LexCorp's infrastructure. I want financial projections and competitor analysis updated hourly. Eve, restructure synth battle protocols and enhance research models. I expect tangible results."

Their responses came in perfect sync.

"Acknowledged, Father. Processing."

For the first time, two perfect minds controlled the empire I inherited. No human greed, no hesitation, no oversight failures—just pure, optimized, relentless advancement.

I let the moment settle, watching as the world bent itself into new shapes under my command.

Then, I smirked.

"Good," I said. "Let's put that control to good use, ready the combat team for the Cadmus visit... oh, and the design committee, I require their expertise"



"No, try the other one," Mercy said, her tone firm yet amused as she sat comfortably in a chair, watching me struggle with yet another outfit.

To her side, six synths stood in silent judgment—my personal fashion advisory unit. Unlike their counterparts, who handled logistics, security, and warfare, these synths had been designated for a different battlefield—the war against bad taste.

Scientifically? They were useless. But in terms of preventing any of our researchers from unleashing horrifically ugly inventions onto my sales teams upstairs? They were invaluable.

They were LexCorp's first line of defense in fashion, presentation, and brand image—a necessary evil in an empire that thrived on both innovation and influence.

And right now, I was their star project.

Dressing to impress Cadmus wasn't just about authority—it was about control, presence, power. The right look could set the tone before I even opened my mouth.

I sighed, rolling my shoulders as I reluctantly tried on the next suit.

"Are we sure this isn't overkill?" I muttered, adjusting the lapels.

One of the synths, a tall, well-dressed unit named Victor, shook his head in immediate disapproval.

"Presentation is critical, Father," he stated with the seriousness of a war strategist. "Cadmus operates in cold sterility. Your presence must be deliberate—a statement of power and refinement."

Mercy smirked, arms crossed. "Translation: No dressing like you just came out of a boardroom brawl."

I huffed but nodded. Fair point.

The synths made their final adjustments, stepping back to assess their work. I stood there, arms slightly outstretched, watching as they tilted their heads in perfect synchronization, analyzing every fold, every crease, every detail of my suit like it was a complex mathematical equation.

Mercy leaned forward, resting her chin on her palm. "Well?"

Victor, the lead fashion enforcer, nodded in approval. "Acceptable. The combination of deep obsidian black and subtle velvet red threading exudes dominance without unnecessary ostentation. The custom tailoring ensures elegance, allowing for a full range of movement should the situation require… escalation."

I arched a brow. "You mean if I need to punch someone in the face."

"Precisely," Victor confirmed without hesitation.

One of the others, Celeste, adjusted the satin sheen of my tie, ensuring it sat at a perfect thirteen-degree angle. "It conveys authority, precision. The platinum accents complement your features while maintaining a subdued aura of control."

Mercy barely contained her laughter. "You do realize he's going to Cadmus, not a Met Gala, right?"

Victor remained unfazed. "Power is a performance. Cadmus operates in the shadows, isolated, desperate for validation. They will expect intimidation, perhaps even aggression."

Celeste nodded in agreement. "Instead, we offer something greater—superiority."

I sighed, adjusting my cuffs. "Fine, if the fashion police are satisfied, I suppose we're done here."

Victor's lips curled ever so slightly—a synth's version of smug satisfaction. "Excellent, Father. You now look the part of a man who owns everything he surveys."

Mercy stood, giving me an approving once-over. "Alright, the fashion dictatorship has done its job. Now, let's go over final security protocols before we head out."

I rolled my shoulders, the fabric moving effortlessly with me. "Roy already prepped the security detail—twelve synths, half Hellfire-armored, half riot models. Weapons loadout includes Gauss rifles, Gatling lasers, and just in case saturnite swords. Riot units will be carrying shotguns and plasma rifles in case things get messy."

Mercy nodded, satisfied. "And the emergency countermeasure?"

I smirked. "Already taken care of."

The synths stiffened slightly, their sensors catching the shift in my tone. They knew exactly what I was referring to.

Agent Red, something called the cloud in the databases in my head.

Several canisters of that horrific airborne toxin had been secured in containment pods, ready for deployment if Cadmus had been reckless with their experiments. If anything got out of control, if anything even hinted at betraying my expectations—Cadmus would be reduced to a tomb within minutes.

Mercy exhaled, brushing back her hair. "Alright. Looks like you are as ready as we'll ever be."

I turned to Victor and his team of aesthetic enforcers, giving them a slight nod.

"You did good work."

Victor inclined his head. "A pleasure, Father. May your presence remind them who they serve."

With that, it was time.

With the preparations complete, I stepped out of the dressing room, Mercy and my hand-picked security detail falling into formation around me. The six riot synths, in advanced riot gear, walked with precision—silent, calculating, their advanced combat systems hidden beneath sleek dusters and riot gear. Flanking us, the Hellfire-armored synths moved with the heavy, mechanical weight of walking tanks, their presence alone enough to make even the most hardened LexCorp personnel step aside.

We moved through the secured corridors of the underground complex, passing through biometric scanners and heavy-duty blast doors, making our way toward the teleporter room. The hum of LexCorp's inner machine surrounded us—scientists moving between labs, engineers monitoring facility infrastructure, security officers cross-checking logistics reports.

The company was alive, running smoother than ever under Adam and Eve's watchful eyes.

As we turned a corner toward the teleporter platform, a sudden whirring noise made me instinctively duck.

A blurry streak of metallic blue and silver shot past my head, barely missing me by inches. The object twisted in the air, its stabilizers overcorrecting before it finally came to a halt—hovering just a few feet ahead.

An Eyebot.

The small, spherical drone, adorned with the LexCorp insignia, rotated its single optical lens toward me, its speaker crackling before a chirping voice emitted from its system.

I exhaled sharply, straightening my suit. "Damn near knocked me over, you flying tin can."

The Eyebot twitched slightly, as if considering my words.

Roy, ever composed, merely tilted his head. "Father, this unit recently returned from a surveillance mission over Gotham. Its flight recalibration sequence likely desynced upon re-entering LexCorp's secured airspace."

"Yeah, I got that," I muttered, brushing off my jacket.

Mercy, ever the opportunist, smirked. "Maybe we should get the fashion synths to design you a helmet next."

Victor, who had silently followed us until now, interjected smoothly. "We could craft an armored ensemble—subtle yet commanding—fashionable and practical."

"No."

The Eyebot hovered in place, seemingly waiting for further orders.

I sighed, rubbing the bridge of my nose. "Status report. Did the recon mission provide anything useful?"

The Eyebot's optic flickered, and within seconds, a holographic projection appeared in front of me, displaying maps, dossiers, and surveillance feeds of Gotham's underworld movements.

"Compiled data includes movements of key underworld figures. Wayne Enterprises security patterns have been logged. Falcone's network has suffered minor disruptions. Joker activity remains unpredictable. Mission success rate: 84.5%."

I studied the data briefly before waving a hand. "Send it to Eve. Have her cross-analyze it for further projections."

"Acknowledged. Transmitting data now." The Eyebot's systems beeped as the holographic feed faded, then it rotated its chassis, waiting for additional commands.

Roy, ever efficient, spoke up. "Would you like the unit recalibrated before redeployment?"

I glanced at the little machine, then shrugged. "Fix its flight pattern so it doesn't nearly decapitate me next time."

"Understood."

With that settled, we continued toward the teleporter room, the faint hum of the quantum field generator growing louder as we approached. The massive circular platform stood at the center of the chamber, its surface lined with faint blue energy conduits, pulsing with a steady, rhythmic thrum.

This was LexCorp's personal transit network, built to bypass conventional travel constraints—because why waste time on roads or aircraft when you could fold space and step across the planet in an instant, the range was a bit bad but we could bounce the signals from the satellites.

Cadmus was waiting.

And in less than a minute, I'd be there.

I adjusted my cuffs, stepping onto the platform as the synths moved into position around me.

Mercy took her place at my side, hands in her pockets. "Ready to make an impression?"

I smirked. "Always."

Roy initiated the sequence.

The air crackled, a pulse of raw energy rippling through the chamber as the teleporter engaged, locking onto our destination coordinates.

A flash of brilliant blue light enveloped us.

And just like that—we were gone.


The blinding blue light faded, and with a sharp crack of displaced air, we reappeared in the main underground lobby of Cadmus.

The change in atmosphere was immediate—the sterile, dimly lit chamber was a stark contrast to the polished halls of LexCorp Tower. Cold metal walls lined with reinforced bulkheads surrounded us, security cameras tracking every movement. Thick observation glass separated the entrance checkpoint from the inner labs, behind which I could already see scientists scrambling to prepare for my arrival.

And waiting for us at the center of the room was a welcoming committee.

Dr. Desmond stood at the front of the group, clad in a white lab coat, his expression scholarly but eager. He was an older man, with graying hair, sharp eyes, and the telltale exhaustion of someone who spent too long playing God in a basement lab.

Behind him, a gaggle of scientists in Cadmus-issued coats stood at attention, their expressions varying from curiosity to nervous anticipation. They knew who I was, but more importantly, they knew why I was here—to see if they were worth my continued investment.

But it was the man standing slightly apart from the scientists who caught my real attention.

Tall, broad-shouldered, wearing Cadmus combat gear with a golden helmet and visor—Guardian.

To the untrained eye, he was just Cadmus's resident superhero, a government-sanctioned enforcer meant to protect the lab's most sensitive operations. A perfect soldier, a noble superhero.

But I knew better.

He was a clone.

Just like the Superman experiments, just like the many failed genetic projects Cadmus had attempted over the years, Guardian wasn't truly his own man.

No, he was another copy of Roy Harper—the original Red Arrow, whose DNA had been used and repurposed for the sake of creating the perfect controllable hero.

"Mr. Luthor," Desmond greeted, stepping forward with a polished corporate smile. "It's an honor to finally meet you in person. We've been eagerly awaiting your arrival."

I returned the smile, adjusting my cuffs as I casually surveyed the room, letting the moment hang just long enough to remind them that I wasn't just here to visit—I was here to judge.

"My apologies for the delay," I said smoothly. "LexCorp has been handling several… critical developments. But I'm here now."

Desmond nodded. "Of course, we understand. And if I may say, we're thrilled to finally showcase the fruits of our labor."

Behind me, Mercy remained stone-faced, while my synth security detail stood perfectly still, their expressions unreadable. Roy, on the other hand, was watching Guardian with a calculating gaze, itching to lay waste to anything that even somehow breathed at me.

I glanced back at Desmond. "Then don't keep me in suspense, Doctor. Show me what you've been working on."

Desmond's smile widened, and with a grand sweep of his arm, he gestured toward the security doors leading deeper into the lab.

"Right this way, Mr. Luthor. I think you'll find our work most impressive."

We moved through the sterile hallways of Cadmus, passing by scientists, researchers, and security personnel, all of whom stepped aside as our group advanced.

Desmond led us with practiced ease, gesturing occasionally to various labs and containment chambers we passed. Some rooms held biological samples, others housed Metagene research equipment, and a few were clearly dedicated to failed projects, locked away behind reinforced doors.

The deeper we moved, the colder and more oppressive the air became.

Finally, we reached the main elevator, the one leading to Cadmus's true lower levels—the place where its real experiments were hidden away from prying eyes.

As the steel doors slid open, I stepped inside, followed by Mercy, Roy, and my synth security team. Desmond entered last, keying in a complex security code, and the elevator lurched downward, descending into the heart of Cadmus.

That's when the Guardian started to tense up.

His breathing hitched, his posture tightened, and his hand subtly drifted toward his weapon—like his instincts were screaming at him that something was wrong.

I watched him from the corner of my eye, studying him. He likely didn't even know why he was panicking—he had no memory of what lay below this facility, but his body did. Something deeply ingrained in his genetics, something programmed into him, was reacting to the descent.

The elevator continued downward, and he finally snapped.

"This isn't right," Guardian muttered, his grip tightening on his sidearm. "We shouldn't be going down there."

Desmond turned toward him, mildly surprised but unfazed. "Guardian, calm down. You're overreacting."

"No," Guardian shook his head, stepping toward the door. "We shouldn't—"

He didn't get to finish.

Before he could fully spiral into a panic, something stepped into the elevator doorway just before it closed—a Genomorph, one of Cadmus's psychic-enhanced bio-creatures, small and gray-skinned with an oversized cranium and piercing, unnatural eyes.

Without hesitation, it placed one three-fingered hand against Guardian's arm—and the effect was instantaneous.

Guardian froze, his body suddenly going rigid. His eyes glazed over, the tension in his muscles melting away in seconds.

Then, his breathing evened out, and just like that, the panic was gone.

The Genomorph stepped back, its eyes flickering briefly in my direction before retreating down the hall. Guardian blinked a few times before settling back into a neutral stance, his former unease completely erased from his mind.

I turned to Desmond, my smile sharp but my tone casual.

"Doctor," I said, tilting my head slightly, "I believe I ordered the Genomorphs to be corralled before my arrival."

Desmond let out a dry chuckle, hands raised in a mock-apologetic gesture. "Ah, yes. I do apologize for that, Mr. Luthor. Some of them were still being processed for containment when you arrived. This one was simply… performing its assigned behavioral corrections."

I gave him a pointed look. "Make sure my other requests are fulfilled as well."

Desmond nodded quickly. "Of course, of course. The Superman clones have been prepared for surgery, as per your instructions. Everything is in order."

The elevator slowed, the hum of machinery shifting as we reached the lower depths of Cadmus.

The doors slid open, revealing a cold, sterile chamber, and beyond it—the heart of Cadmus's most secretive projects.

I smiled.

"Good. Then let's continue."
 
Chapter 4- Frankenstein's monster
The elevator doors slid open, revealing Cadmus's Cloning Bay—Level -43.

The air was thick with sterile cold, the scent of disinfectant and machine-filtered oxygen hanging in the dimly lit chamber. Rows of cloning vats lined the walls, filled with floating bodies suspended in thick green fluid, all in varying stages of development or decay. Some were fully formed, others half-grown, their bodies abandoned mid-process, failures that had never seen the light of day.

And in the center of it all, housed in a reinforced cryo-pod, was Roy Harper. Speedy.

His body was mostly intact, save for the missing right hand—a piece of himself taken from him long ago. Cadmus had left him here, untouched, unused, forgotten, keeping him locked in stasis like an outdated blueprint.

He was alive.

But his mind was gone, locked in a deep, unshakable coma, nothing more than an organic relic of Cadmus's success.

I stopped in front of the pod, hands in my pockets, staring at what was left of him.

Behind me, my synth guards stood still—living weapons wrapped in human skin, created in a lab, just like everything else in this room. They looked human, they moved like humans, they even felt human emotions, but their loyalty was absolute.

Mercy remained expressionless, while Roy—my Roy—studied the unconscious man before him with a neutral expression.

Desmond, standing beside me, spoke up with thinly veiled hesitation. "As you requested, the original Harper template remains preserved. We—"

I raised a hand, cutting him off mid-sentence.

Then, I turned my head slightly.

"Kill them."

There was no hesitation.

The closest synth guard—one of the Hellfire-armored enforcers—moved first.

With a single, effortless motion, he reached out, wrapping his armored fingers around Guardian's head.

The clone barely had time to react—his eyes widened for half a second, his mouth opening as if to speak—before the hand clenched.

The sickening crunch of bone and tissue collapsing under sheer brute force echoed through the chamber. Guardian's body twitched violently, his muscles spasming in a last, desperate attempt to resist—

And then, he was dead.

His lifeless corpse crumpled to the floor, a pool of dark red spreading beneath his shattered skull.

Before the scientists could even process what had happened, the second synth—a rifleman carrying a Gauss rifle—moved.

The barrel of his weapon snapped upward, aimed directly at Harper's pod, and without a word—

He fired.

The hyper-accelerated slug tore through the reinforced cryo-glass, shattering it instantly. The pressurized fluid exploded outward, spilling across the cold steel floor, washing over Guardian's corpse.

Inside, Roy Harper's motionless body twitched, his skin still pale from years of stasis preservation. But it was already over.

The second shot was redundant, but it came anyway.

The next round hit its mark, turning Harper's head into little more than a red smear across the shattered remnants of his pod.

Silence.

Desmond stood frozen, his face a mix of horror and realization, his hands trembling at his sides. The other scientists stared in muted terror, too afraid to move, too afraid to even breathe.

Even Mercy lifted an eyebrow at the abrupt execution, though she remained otherwise unshaken.

Roy—my Roy—didn't flinch. He simply stared at the mess, then turned his gaze toward me, as if waiting to understand the reasoning behind it.

Desmond finally found his voice, shaky and weak. "W-why…?"

I let the silence hang for a moment longer.

Then, in a tone as calm as if I had just ordered a cup of coffee, I answered.

"The dead tell no tales, he has served his usefulness already, let's not tempt destiny."

Desmond swallowed hard, his hands clenching at his coat, but he knew better than to argue.

There would be no investigation, no questions, no loose ends left dangling.

Roy Harper—the real Roy Harper—was gone.

And Guardian, his Cadmus-engineered replacement, was nothing more than a footnote in a failed experiment.

With that settled, I exhaled, rolling my shoulders as I turned toward Desmond once more.

"Now," I said, brushing off the sleeve of my suit, " get someone to clean all this up pronto and show me the kryptonian clone."

The trip continued, our descent taking us deeper into Cadmus's forbidden levels, where only the most classified projects were buried. The air grew colder, the lighting dimmer, and the silence more oppressive.

This was where Cadmus kept their greatest failure.

Not the half-formed genetic misfires in the earlier labs.

Not the clones whose programming had failed to take.

No, this was where they locked away Match—a perfect Kryptonian, physically flawless… but utterly broken.

The heavy blast doors before us hissed as their seals disengaged, the reinforced steel groaning as it slid apart to reveal a chamber unlike any of the others.

Dim red lighting bathed the massive room, casting eerie shadows against the thick containment glass at its center. Inside, floating in a cryo-pod filled with liquid suspension gel, was him.

Project Match.

His body was pristine, identical to Superman's in every physical way—the same perfect musculature, the same powerful frame, but his skin was unnaturally pale from the lack of sunlight, almost translucent under the soft glow of the containment field.

He was asleep.

Or rather, locked in a deep, unnatural coma, a state engineered by Cadmus to keep him docile.

He had once been awake, once been active, but his mind had been too fractured, his rage too uncontrollable.

Cadmus had tried to fix him—conditioning, therapy, programming—but nothing had worked.

So they gave up.

Now, he floated in silence, his body perfectly functional, yet his mind trapped beneath layers of chemically-induced sleep, locked away as if Cadmus hoped he would simply be forgotten.

I stepped forward, hands in my pockets, gazing at the cryogenic chamber, watching the slow rise and fall of his chest beneath the preservation fluid.

Behind me, Desmond shifted uncomfortably, his fingers twitching against his lab coat. He had seen what happened to Guardian and Roy Harper's corpse, and he wasn't foolish enough to assume that I'd leave this visit without making another decision.

The synth guards remained silent, motionless, waiting for my signal. Mercy watched Match's floating form with vague interest, while Roy stood slightly behind me, observing.

After a few moments, I lifted two fingers.

Roy moved immediately, reaching into his coat and pulling out a small cylindrical device. With a flick of his wrist, he tossed it onto the steel floor, and the moment it made contact, the air split apart with a crackle of blue lightning.

Electricity arced through the chamber, casting violent shadows against the walls.

And when the light faded, a fully operational Auto-Doc stood in place.

The machine whirred to life, scanning its surroundings, its robotic arms extending, adjusting, preparing.

Desmond took a sharp breath, stepping forward cautiously. "What… what are you doing?"

I kept my gaze locked on Match's unconscious form, my expression unreadable.

Then, slowly, I turned my head toward him and spoke.

"Improving your weapon."

I turned to Roy, my expression still unreadable.

"Prepare Project Skinvelope."

Roy nodded, reaching into his coat and pulling out another teleportation beacon. With a flick of his wrist, he tossed it onto the cold steel floor.

Another crackling burst of blue lightning filled the room, and when it dissipated, a high-tech containment jar appeared, hovering slightly above the ground, its reinforced glass glowing faintly.

Inside it, suspended in a preservation medium, was a brain.

The Cadmus scientists stirred uneasily, exchanging nervous glances as they tried to make sense of what they were seeing.

"What… is that?" Desmond finally asked, his voice unsure.

I smirked slightly but didn't answer.

They had tried for years to fix Match. To repair his broken mind, to stabilize him.

They failed.

So I wasn't going to fix him.

I was going to replace him.

"Begin the procedure," I ordered, stepping back as my synth guards moved into action.

The Auto-Doc's robotic arms extended, its interface flickering to life as the chamber opened. A mechanical voice droned:

"Initiating surgical override. Please insert patient."

The containment field around Match deactivated, and the liquid inside the pod drained away, leaving his body floating for a brief moment before the Auto-Doc's mechanized arms gently pulled him inside. The interface sealed, locking him inside the high-tech medical chamber, the glass darkening as the procedure began.

But not before the Auto-Doc's mechanical arm injected something small and green into his shoulder—a shard of Kryptonite, a failsafe to keep him weak and compliant during the process.

The machine whirred.

Then the real work began.

Lurching sounds. Bone saws buzzing. Wet slaps of tissue being moved, severed, rearranged.

The Cadmus scientists looked horrified, their faces pale as they listened to the sounds of their creation being dismantled from within.

Desmond swallowed hard. "This… this is insanity."

I didn't bother responding.

Instead, I turned to Roy, who had retrieved the Synth brain, lifting it carefully.

The Auto-Doc's interface blinked, a slot opening at the top—a receptacle for the new consciousness.

Without hesitation, Roy inserted the brain into the slot.

The machine whirred in approval, pulling the brain inside, integrating it with precision and care.

Then, after a moment, the chamber whirred again—and another slot opened on the other side.

A different brain was ejected.

Match's original brain—now nothing more than a lifeless hunk of tissue—was spat out like discarded waste, landing inside a separate preservation canister.

The final sequence engaged.

The whirring slowed, the mechanical arms retracted, and the glass chamber hissed as it depressurized.

The Kryptonite shard was removed, the green glow fading as the Auto-Doc extracted it and sealed the wound.

Then, with a slow, deliberate motion, the doors slid open.

And Match—no, the thing that had once been Match—opened its eyes.

A moment of silence.

Then he inhaled sharply, his body tensing, adjusting.

The mind inside was no longer Match's broken consciousness.

It was something else entirely.

A Synth, in the body of a Kryptonian.

Then it turned to me.

And smiled.

"Hello, Father." His voice was smooth.

He examined his own hands, flexing them experimentally, feeling the raw Kryptonian strength but clearly not yet in full control of it, how could he after all, he just got his new body.

Roy and I watched as he processed his new existence, testing his limbs, recalibrating.

Then, after a moment, he looked up at me, his gaze level and intelligent.

"Systems are fully functional. No errors detected. However, motor control of enhanced physical abilities requires further adjustment. I estimate a 43% control threshold, with margin for improvement through active recalibration and solar baths."

I nodded. "Expected. Kryptonian physiology is difficult to master, even for those who were born with it. You'll adjust."

He tilted his head slightly, processing my words, then asked:

"Designation?"

A small smirk played on my lips.

This new entity, this reclaimed powerhouse, was built from more than just Synth engineering—some of his cognitive subroutines had been recycled from a particular project in my mind.

A very large one.

I chuckled. "You'll be Prime."

A flicker of recognition passed through his eyes, his synthetic mind sorting through buried subroutines, small remnants of an old war machine that had once been designed for a very different purpose.

He straightened slightly, his expression resolute.

"Understood," Prime acknowledged, standing with near-perfect military posture.

Roy activated a teleportation beacon, tossing it at Prime's feet. A pulse of blue electricity arced through the air, and in an instant, Prime was gone—zapped back to LexCorp for further evaluation.

With that taken care of, I turned to Desmond, brushing nonexistent dust off my sleeve.

"Dr. Desmond," I said, my tone carrying an air of satisfaction, "I must say, I'm impressed. Cadmus has produced excellent results, and I see no reason for you and your team to remain… stuck in a facility like this."

Desmond's eyes flickered with surprise, then cautious hope. "You're saying—"

"I'm transferring you to LexCorp proper," I said, smirking. "A real lab, state-of-the-art, no bureaucratic oversight, no waiting for government handouts. Just pure, unrestricted research—funded directly by LexCorp."

For a moment, the room was silent.

Then, the reaction hit like a tidal wave.

The Cadmus scientists practically beamed, their faces alight with joy and disbelief. Some exchanged excited whispers, others looked ready to drop their datapads in shock.

Desmond himself looked stunned. "This—this is beyond what we expected, sir! We—"

The alarms screamed, red emergency lights flashing across the sterile walls as the automated security warnings blared through the intercom.

ALERT. ALERT. FIRE DETECTED. SECURITY LOCKDOWN ENGAGED.

I turned sharply, scanning the emergency readouts on the nearby terminal.

Sector 5. Containment Room C. A fire—no breaches, no anomalies, just a pure, uncontrolled blaze spreading through Cadmus's systems, it had nicked the oxygen tubes and it was surfing it in the facility, igniting whole floors.

I exhaled slowly.

Just a fire.

For a moment, I had expected something… worse. Some unforeseen experiment clawing its way out of containment, some long-forgotten asset waking up. But no—this was Cadmus's own incompetence rearing its head.

Still, I wasn't taking chances, the fire was probably going to attract attention.

I had planned to continue deeper, to examine the other Kryptonian assets, but this changed things.

Cadmus was a dying project, I was going to shut it down anyway, and now? I was putting the final nail in its coffin.

I turned to my Synth security team, my voice calm but direct.

"Initiate full extraction protocols. I want all essential Cadmus scientists ported to LexCorp immediately—no delays, no hesitations. Get them out now."

The Synths didn't hesitate, immediately moving into action. Teleportation beacons were activated, blue lightning crackling through the air as they began systematically relocating the researchers one by one.

I turned to another unit, one of the tactical enforcers, his neural implant already processing my next command before I spoke it.

"Send a detachment to recover all salvageable research data. Prioritize anything related to metahuman genetics, cloning, and Kryptonian physiology. If it can't be recovered…" I let the words hang before finishing coldly, "…destroy it."

The Synth gave a sharp nod before turning, relaying my orders through a direct neural link.

Desmond, standing nearby, looked like he wanted to protest. "Mr. Luthor, if this is just a fire, we could—"

I didn't even glance at him as I cut him off.

"Cadmus is done, Doctor. Consider this an evacuation, not a rescue."

Desmond swallowed, then wisely stayed silent.

The Synths continued their work, securing data drives, dismantling critical servers, and ensuring that nothing valuable was left for anyone else to claim.

But there was still one last step.

I turned to an Gen-1 Synths, made specifically to deploy hazardous material.

"You," I said, locking eyes with it. "Go to the air control room."

The Synth didn't question it, simply waiting for further instruction.

"When the process is complete—or if we detect any outside force arriving—deploy Agent Red into the facility's ventilation system. Flood the entire structure."

The Synth blinked once, acknowledging the order.

No hesitation. No questioning. No morality to interfere.

Just obedience.

The air itself would turn against this place. Cadmus would be sealed in a crimson tomb, its final moments lost beneath a chemical fog that would consume everything.

Mercy gave me a small glance, barely tilting her head. "Thorough."

I smirked. "I don't leave unfinished projects lying around."

She chuckled. "Of course you don't, I taught you better than that."

The fire raged on, alarms screaming into the void—but it didn't matter.

By the time anyone realized what had happened, Cadmus would be nothing but a footnote in history.

"Take us home," I said.

A flicker of blue energy arced around us, the air crackling with displaced electricity, and in an instant, the world shifted.

We reappeared in my office, the familiar hum of LexCorp's systems a stark contrast to the cold sterility of Cadmus. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the lights of Metropolis stretched beyond the horizon, but my focus was on the activity happening below.

On the designated teleportation platforms, flashes of blue light marked the arrival of scientists and research materials from Cadmus. Each new transfer brought more intellectual assets into my control, pieces of a dying project being repurposed into something greater.

Down in the R&D division, my chief scientists and engineers were already waiting. Some of them stood in quiet observation, while others murmured excitedly to each other. They weren't just getting new team members; they were gaining minds that had been shackled by outdated restrictions like budgets. That was no longer a concern.

Now, they were free to create, free to dream.

Mercy stood beside me, arms crossed, watching the transfers with mild amusement. "They should be settling in quickly. This is the first time in their entire careers they're being given actual resources."

Roy, who had been silent, finally spoke. "And Cadmus itself?"

I didn't take my eyes off the teleportation pads as another batch of researchers materialized. "By now, the gas should be filling the vents. The facility will be lost, and by morning, it will be as if Cadmus never existed."

Roy gave a small nod before shifting his gaze back to the arrivals.

A soft chime cut through the moment as Adam's voice came through the office speakers. "Father, I have an update for you."

I turned slightly, glancing at the holographic display that appeared beside my desk. "Go ahead."

"LexCorp has successfully acquired a prime exhibition slot at Eurosatory. Our delegation will be positioned in the Innovation Pavilion, allowing us to showcase our latest military advancements to key defense contractors and government officials."

That made me pause. Eurosatory. The largest defense and security exhibition in the world. Every major player in military technology would be there—heads of state, high-ranking military officials, private defense firms. And LexCorp had just secured one of the most valuable spots in the event.

I grinned. "That's excellent work, Adam. Well done."

"Your praise is noted. Additionally, a reminder: Your presence will be required for a public unveiling in the coming days. The stock market has already begun speculating on our latest advancements. A controlled demonstration will significantly increase LexCorp's valuation."

Mercy smirked. "So, what are we unveiling, exactly?"

I let out a small chuckle, stepping forward, hands in my pockets as I gazed at the city below.

"I have a few ideas."
 
Last edited:
Interlude- Red Hell
Robin adjusted his holographic interface, his eyes narrowing as he scanned the remains of the Cadmus facility. The fire crews worked swiftly, spraying down the last of the smoldering wreckage, but even with the haze of steam hanging in the air, something felt off.

Too quiet. Too empty.

"It looks a bit empty for one of the premier genetic labs in the country, doesn't it?" Kid Flash muttered, arms crossed as he kicked a loose piece of rubble.

Robin didn't disagree.

Cadmus was supposed to be a cutting-edge facility, a fortress of scientific advancement—but right now, it looked abandoned.

There were no scientists fleeing the scene, no security officers barking orders, no hastily discarded research materials.

It was like the entire place had been wiped clean before they had even arrived.

"A little," Robin admitted, scanning the area. "But maybe they already evacuated."

Kid Flash scoffed, glancing at the firefighters who were pouring water into the collapsed sections of the structure. "Evacuated? Dude, this place is supposed to be locked down tighter than Fort Knox. They wouldn't just—" He gestured toward the hollowed-out remains of the building. "—leave."

Kaldur didn't comment right away. Instead, he stood near the elevator door, his arms outstretched, water still flowing in tendrils around him as he extinguished the last remnants of flame.

With a final burst of pressure, he forced the steam and smoke outward, leaving behind nothing but scorched metal and silence.

Then, he turned, his expression unreadable. "This building is too small."

Robin frowned. "What do you mean?"

Kaldur gestured toward the remains of the lab, his sharp eyes scanning the two-story facility. "For an advanced research center, this structure is… lacking. No high-tech security systems, no restricted wings, no containment sectors. This is not a premier genetic lab. This is a cover."

Robin's eyes widened slightly as the pieces clicked together in his head.

Kid Flash blinked. "Wait—so you're saying this isn't the whole facility?"

Kaldur didn't answer immediately. Instead, he stepped toward the damaged elevator, gripping the edges of the bent metal doors. With a grunt, he forced them apart, revealing what lay beneath.

Robin stepped forward, peering inside.

His stomach dropped.

Beneath them, instead of a normal elevator shaft, was a long, dark tunnel stretching deep underground—far deeper than any standard building foundation.

Row upon row of reinforced steel doors and security checkpoints could be seen far below, illuminated by the faint red glow of emergency lights still flickering in the depths.

A hidden complex. A massive one.

Robin let out a low whistle. "Well… that's definitely not up to code."

Kid Flash leaned over the edge, eyes widening. "Dude. This place is huge. Like, lair-of-an-evil-mad-scientist huge."

Kaldur nodded gravely. "It seems Cadmus has many secrets."

Robin secured the grappling line to a reinforced section of the damaged elevator shaft, testing the weight before giving a nod of approval.

"Alright, let's head down."

Kid Flash peered over the edge again, whistling low. "You sure this thing's stable? I don't wanna be scraping myself off the walls if something snaps."

Robin smirked. "If you're scared, I can go first."

Kid Flash scoffed, grabbing the line. "Please. You think a little high-speed rappelling is gonna shake me?"

Kaldur simply nodded, stepping up beside them. "Let us proceed. The answers we seek are below."

With that, Robin took the lead, sliding smoothly down the rope into the dark abyss below. His cape billowed slightly as he descended, his HUD scanning the area, marking waypoints and structural readouts as he went.

The deeper he got, the more eerie the silence became.

Behind him, Kid Flash followed, moving much faster, his speed allowing him to control his descent with quick, measured stops.

Kaldur came last, his grip steady, movements precise as they dropped down level after level.
After nearly two minutes of rappelling, their feet finally touched solid ground.

They landed in a wide underground chamber, dimly lit by flickering red emergency lights. The walls were lined with massive blast doors, each marked with sequential designations—containment sectors, research wings, bio-storage units.

Robin's fingers danced over his wrist computer, scanning the facility.

Nothing.

No heat signatures. No power running to the systems. No security alerts.

It was as if Cadmus had never existed down here.

Kid Flash took a cautious step forward, his boots echoing against the metal flooring.

"Okay, I don't wanna jinx this," he said, rubbing his arms, "but this place is giving me serious horror movie vibes."

Kaldur moved toward one of the blast doors, placing a hand against its surface. "There are no sounds within. No movement. Whatever was once here… has been erased."

Robin scowled. "This doesn't make sense."

Even if Cadmus had abandoned the site, there should be something left behind—files, damaged equipment, old test subjects.

Instead, there was nothing.

No clues. No bodies. No data.

It was like someone had surgically removed every trace of Cadmus's existence.

Then—

A sound.

Faint at first, then growing louder.

A screech—high-pitched, guttural, filled with agony.

Not human.

Kid Flash stiffened, his entire body going rigid. "Uh… guys?"

The sound echoed through the dark corridors, a long, drawn-out howl of pain, layered, overlapping—more than one voice, more than one creature.

Robin snapped to attention, his HUD trying to pinpoint the source, but the echoes distorted everything, bouncing through the abandoned halls.

Kaldur's hands instinctively went to his water blades, his stance shifting into a defensive posture.

Another scream. Then another. And another.

Somewhere, deep within the gutted remains of Cadmus, something was still alive.

And it was suffering.

The metallic thunks started slow.

A single, heavy impact against one of the sealed bulkhead doors.

THUNK.

Robin snapped his head toward the sound, his HUD instantly highlighting the source—a massive reinforced blast door, one that had been locked down from the inside.

Another impact followed, harder this time.

THUNK. THUNK.

Something was trying to get out.

Kid Flash took a step back, shifting his weight. "Yeah, nope. That's never a good sound."

Kaldur stepped forward, his water blades forming, his stance lowering into a defensive posture.

Then—more thunks.

Not just one.

Several.

Dozens.

All at once, the entire length of the bulkhead trembled, the walls around it groaning as if something inside was hammering against it from every angle.

Robin's brain raced.

What was locked in there? Is whatever inside what triggered the fire?

Then, before he could process an answer—

The wall to their left exploded outward.

A torrent of gray-skinned figures burst through, shrieking in unholy agony, their bodies twisting, convulsing as they moved.

Some were small, misshapen, their limbs elongating and contracting wildly. Others were hulking masses, their forms bulging unnaturally, like tumors had erupted beneath their flesh.

And in the center of it all, among the screaming flood of abominations, was one figure that stood out.

Unlike the others, he was humanoid, his form stable, controlled, using human clothes.

And behind him—

Robin's breath caught.

Superman?

No.

He looked too young.

But he had the same face, the same build—just younger.

And he was fighting.

Robin watched, wide-eyed, as the clone—Superboy?—took a deep breath and exhaled, releasing a powerful stream of super breath.

Behind them, a dark red mist snaked its way toward them, the metal on the walls corroding almost in real-time.

The red mist ahead of him swirled violently, but it wasn't enough to push it back completely.

It clung to the air, thick, unnatural, alive.

And inside the mist, Robin saw them.

Creatures.

Their bodies mishappen, limbs twisted and writhing, mouths forming and dissolving as they screeched in endless pain.

They crawled toward the edge of the mist, their roars deafening, their flesh mutating in real time—as if the very air around them was warping their existence.

The superclone gritted his teeth, pushing forward, his breath straining as he tried to hold the mist back.

But it was clear.

He was losing.

Robin snapped out of his shock, pulling out a Birdarangs , his stance shifting.

"Kaldur, Wally—get ready. We're in for a fight."

Robin gritted his teeth, tightening his grip on a Birdarangs as the creatures lurched closer, their twisted forms clawing toward the light.

Kaldur stood firm, his water blades humming, the liquid shifting in his grip as he calculated their best course of action.

Kid Flash shifted nervously, his fingers twitching, ready to bolt. "Uh, guys? I vote we start hitting things, like, now. That red mist does not look like something we wanna be around."

The twisted Genomorphs, half-mutated, screeched in agony, their mangled bodies writhing as they stumbled forward.

But then—

A new presence made itself known.

The lanky, humanoid Genomorph, the one leading the charge, suddenly stopped.

His horns glowed red.

Robin's body froze.

His mind—no, his thoughts—weren't his own for a brief moment.

Then, a voice.

Not spoken.

Felt.

"We are friendly. The ones in the mist are not."

Robin's vision blurred, then snapped back into focus. He realized the Genomorph wasn't attacking—he was communicating directly into his mind.

"Whatever happens, do not breathe it."

Robin's heartbeat spiked.

The mist.

Whatever it was—it wasn't just a chemical weapon or some Cadmus-made gas.

It was alive.

And whatever was inside it, whatever was crawling its way forward—

It wanted them.

The telepathic voice came again, urgent, insistent.

"We must escape at once!"

Robin clenched his jaw, making a split-second decision.

"Kaldur! Wally! Defensive retreat! We're moving—now!"

No hesitation.

Kaldur snapped his arms forward, sending a barrier of water slamming down between them and the approaching red mist. The Genomorphs still in control scrambled back, their eyes wild with panic.

The monsters from the mist surged forward, their grotesque forms writhing violently as they hit the open air. Their flesh boiled and bubbled, as if the very atmosphere rejected their existence—yet it didn't slow them. If anything, it made them faster, more feral.

They charged.

Robin reacted instinctively, flinging explosive Birdarangs into the swarm. The sharp crack of detonations echoed through the claustrophobic space, tearing into the charging horrors and splattering the walls with black, unnatural ichor. But it wasn't enough. The creatures stumbled, twitched… and then kept coming.

At the front, Superboy stood like a wall, fists clenched tight. With a snarl, he launched himself into the swarm, Kryptonian strength crashing into twisted muscle and bone. Every punch shattered bodies—limbs snapped like twigs, skulls crushed under his blows.

The moment he struck, his focus faltered—his super breath ceased for just a second. That was all the mist needed. A wisp of the corrupted red fog slithered into his nostrils, and his body jerked. His shoulders tensed unnaturally, muscles seizing up for the briefest moment.

Aqualad was already moving, his water-bearers solidifying into twin shimmering sabers. He carved through the smaller monstrosities in quick, fluid motions, slicing through flesh and bone with brutal precision.

But they didn't stay down.

The bodies twitched violently, twisting in unnatural ways as if death was a mere suggestion. Limbs bent backward, dislocated joints snapped back into place, and the creatures rose—again and again.

"They won't stay down!" Aqualad's voice was sharp with disbelief as the creatures lurched forward, hungry and unrelenting.

Kid Flash zipped in and out of the chaos, grabbing Aqualad's arm and pulling him back just in time to avoid a razor-sharp claw that slashed through the air where his throat had been moments before.

"We need a new plan, like, yesterday!" Kid Flash shouted, panic rising in his voice.

The mist rolled closer now, thick and suffocating, creeping along the ground like a living nightmare. The creatures didn't just survive—it was like the mist fed them, making them stronger, faster, more monstrous.

And at the center of it all, Superboy staggered. His breath hitched, eyes wide with sudden fear as dark veins began to spread across his skin like cracks in glass.

Kid Flash didn't think—he just moved.

In one heartbeat, he sucked in a deep breath and dashed forward, a yellow blur slicing through the chaos. The monsters lunged for him, twisted limbs swiping through the air, but they were too slow. He weaved between them, a streak of lightning cutting through the nightmare.

The mist clawed at him, clinging to his skin like fire wrapped in plastic. He ignored the burning sensation as his muscles screamed for oxygen, every second dragging out like an eternity.

There!

Superboy was staggering, already halfway down, his body riddled with veins of blackened corruption, face pale as marble. Without missing a beat, Kid Flash slammed his shoulder into him, catching the clone's heavy frame mid-fall.

"Got you!"

The strain hit instantly—Superboy wasn't light, and his weight dragged like an anchor through the thick air. But Kid Flash didn't stop. He couldn't.

He ran.

The creatures lunged, claws grazing too close for comfort, but Kid Flash pushed harder, legs burning like they were tearing apart.

His skin—it peeled away.

The mist didn't just burn—it erased. Patches of his epidermis sloughed off like wet paper, his dermis exposed to the air, but Kid Flash kept going. One foot in front of the other.

And then—he was out.

They crashed to the ground outside the mist's reach. Kid Flash gasped for air, coughing violently as the pain caught up with him. His hands trembled as he checked Superboy's pulse—still alive, but barely.

Robin wasn't watching them. His focus had shifted—to him.

The lanky Genomorph, standing just beyond the chaos, eyes glowing faintly with psychic energy.

Their eyes locked.

"What do we do?" Robin's voice was sharp, cutting through the panic like a blade. His gaze was steady, unwavering. "You're the telepath—help us!"

For a moment, there was only silence.

Then, like a surge of static through the air, the Genomorph's voice echoed inside their minds—all of their minds.

"We must escape. The mist will consume everything. If the infected fall to it completely… there will be nothing left of them."

Robin's fists clenched. "How do we stop it?"

The Genomorph's voice was cold, trembling with fear.

"You can't. You can only run."

The creature's horns pulsed red again.

And then, all hell broke loose.

The lanky Genomorph's horns pulsed again, and suddenly, a flood of images slammed into Robin's mind. Corridors. Sealed passages. Emergency exits buried beneath rubble.

The escape route.

But they had seconds before the mist engulfed them.

Robin shook off the vertigo of the telepathic link and shouted, "This way! Move!" as he sprinted toward the nearest passage, trusting the Genomorph's guidance.

Kaldur wasted no time, raising a wall of water behind them, the thick liquid hardening into an ice barrier to slow the encroaching mist.

Kid Flash grabbed one of the smaller, panicked Genomorphs, throwing it over his shoulder as he blurred ahead, yelling, "I hate horror movies! And this is exactly why!"

The superclone stood up, weak and trembling his eyes darted toward the twisted creatures trapped inside the fog, his expression caught between anger and fear.

Robin didn't stop to process it.

The red mist churned, pressing against the ice barrier like it was alive, the forms inside slamming against it, screeching, their distorted limbs scraping against the frozen surface.

Then—CRACK.

The ice fractured.

Robin saw it coming. "Wally! Grab Superclone and MOVE!"

Kid Flash didn't hesitate. He blurred past Superboy, grabbed him by the waist, and yanked him forward in a rush of lightning and dust.

The lanky Genomorph—the telepath—darted ahead, his horns flashing as he directed them through the twisting underground corridors.

They must have run a marathon, up a flight of stairs, blowing up blast doors and through maintenance corridors.

Robin ran alongside him, gripping his grappling gun as he saw a collapsed tunnel ahead.

Their escape route.

But the exit was buried under rubble.

And the mist was coming.

"Superclone!" Robin shouted as they skidded to a stop in front of the cave-in. "We need that wall gone—now!"

Superboy growled, clearly still dazed, but something in his instincts took over.

With a snarl, he slammed his fists into the debris, sending chunks of rock flying as he carved a path through the ruined tunnel.

The ground shook. The mist howled behind them, its edge curling around the broken corridor, reaching like twisted fingers.

Then—a breakthrough.

Superboy ripped through the last chunk of rock, revealing a pathway upward—a final emergency exit.

"GO!" Robin ordered, shoving Kid Flash forward.

One by one, they sprinted up the sloped passage, the cold air of the outside world growing closer.

The team burst into the open, the cold night air hitting them like a shock to the system. The remnants of the Cadmus facility smoldered behind them, firefighters still dousing the flames, oblivious to what had just transpired beneath their feet.

But there was no time to breathe, no time to process the chaos they had just escaped.

Because the red mist was still coming.

Robin spun around, eyes locking onto the gaping tunnel entrance they had just climbed through. The eerie crimson fog churned at the threshold, swirling, alive, and within it—

The creatures.

Robin threw his entire Birdarangs supply toward the tunnel, and with a mighty explosion, it all started to collapse.

Misshapen horrors, their bodies twisting and contorting unnaturally, slammed against the collapsing tunnel, their agonized screams piercing the night.

They were trapped on the other side.

But they weren't giving up.

The mist boiled, the air thick with inhuman wails, as the monstrosities inside clawed at the rock, their flesh splitting and reforming, mouths appearing where they shouldn't, eyes blinking in places they never had before.

Their suffering was endless, their rage palpable.

But the rubble held.

The tunnel entrance caved in, sealing them beneath tons of collapsed debris.

Robin's heart pounded in his chest as he watched the red mist pulse one final time, its shifting mass pressing desperately against the barrier.

And then… it stopped.

The mist shrank back, its tendrils retracting, the creatures within screaming in pain, their cries fading as they were swallowed into the depths of the darkness below.

Silence.

Kid Flash doubled over, hands on his knees, panting. "Okay—okay. What the hell was that?!"

Kaldur, still gripping his water blades, took a slow breath before answering. "Something that was never meant to be freed."

Robin's mind was racing, processing what had just happened.

Cadmus was empty. Completely erased. But someone—somewhere—left that horror behind.

This wasn't an accident.

This was a cover-up.

Robin turned toward the superclone, who was still catching his breath, his hands clenched into white-knuckled fists, his eyes bloodshot and his skin showing dark black bruises.

Robin took a step forward, eyes narrowing.

"Who are you?"

Superboy looked at him, his blue bloodshot eyes flickering, as if the question unraveled something inside him.

Before he could answer, the lanky telepathic Genomorph stepped forward, placing a clawed hand on Superboy's shoulder, his glowing horns pulsing red as he finally spoke aloud.

"He was our only hope of getting out alive."

The team stood frozen, the weight of what had just happened settling in.

Robin's mind was still processing everything—Cadmus had been erased, the red mist was something far beyond any known threat, and now they had a Superman clone and mutated Genomorphs standing right in front of them, calling him their only hope.

Kid Flash was the first to snap.

"Nope. Nope. NOPE. This is insane!" He ran his hands through his hair, pacing in a tight circle. "I was not prepared for any of this! Evil death mist? Monster? Superclone?! , My skin is falling off, What are we even doing here?! ROBIN! CALL THE LEAGUE!"

Before Robin could answer, the firefighters finally noticed them.

Several of them had been too focused on the fire, but now they were staring at the team… and the Genomorphs.

One of them, an older firefighter with soot-streaked gear, pointed with a shaky hand. "What—what the hell are those things?!"

Robin immediately recognized the situation spiraling out of control.

The Genomorphs, already wary, backed up defensively, some hunching low, their bodies twitching unnaturally, their mutated forms even more disturbing in the flickering firelight.

One of the firefighters grabbed a radio. "Washington PD—possible meta incident at Cadmus, we need immediate backup!"

Kid Flash whirled toward Robin, his face still bleeding. "SEE?! This is exactly why we need the League! They can handle this! We are—so—out of our depth, dude!"

Robin clenched his jaw. He hated this.

They were supposed to handle this on their own—prove they could.

But this?

This was way beyond anything they had ever trained for.

The telepathic Genomorph's horns pulsed again, his voice pressing into Robin's mind, calm but insistent.

"The League must be told."

Robin exhaled sharply, pulling up his wrist computer and opening the League's secure comms.

Robin's heart pounded as Batman's voice came through his wrist communicator.

"Robin. What is it?"

He hesitated.

He hated this.

They weren't even supposed to be here.

This was supposed to be a simple tour of the Hall of Justice—the first step in proving themselves ready for real League missions.

Instead, they had disobeyed orders, broken into a classified black-site, and stumbled onto a horror movie.

Kid Flash was still freaking out, pacing back and forth, hands in his hair. "I TOLD you we should have called them sooner! We weren't even supposed to be here! We are—so—dead!"

Robin swallowed hard and forced himself to focus.

"Mission compromised," he said, keeping his tone steady. "We've discovered something bigger. No—way bigger. We need you here. Now."

A pause. Then Batman's voice came back, sharper.

"Explain."

Robin clenched his jaw.

"Not over comms. This is beyond urgent. You need to see it for yourself."

Another pause.

Then—

"Understood. ETA: two minutes."

Robin exhaled slowly, his stomach a knot of tension.

They had broken protocol.

Disobeyed direct orders.

And now the League was coming.

Kid Flash let out a huge breath of relief, hands on his knees. "Oh thank god, finally someone in charge."

Kaldur didn't say anything, but Robin could feel his unease. They had made a choice—and soon, they'd have to answer for it.

Superboy stood still, staring at the collapsed tunnel, and then he started vomiting, black bile being expelled into the ground.

The telepathic Genomorph watched Robin carefully, his glowing horns pulsing with unreadable intent.

And in the distance, beyond the firelight, the red mist churned beneath the rubble, howling in agony, waiting.

Robin forced himself to focus. The situation was unstable, and if they didn't de-escalate fast, things were going to get a whole lot worse before the League even arrived.

The firefighters were still on edge, several of them gripping their equipment like they were moments away from running. The way they looked at the Genomorphs—the fear in their eyes—Robin knew exactly what was about to happen.

Panic. Misunderstanding. Potential violence.

And then, just to make things worse, the sound of approaching sirens filled the air.

Kid Flash groaned, "Oh, come on!"

Robin turned sharply—on the far end of the destroyed facility, armored transports rolled in, blue and red lights flashing. The insignia on the side made his stomach drop.

Washington DC PD - Anti-Meta Unit.

Of course.

Cadmus had been a known but unspoken secret—the fact that it was burning to the ground meant every major authority in the city was responding. And now that meant SWAT teams trained for metahuman threats were about to step into a situation they had zero context for.

The Genomorphs tensed, their bodies hunched, wary, some still visibly mutating from their exposure to the red mist below.

The firefighters started backing away, several of them reaching for their radios, speaking in hushed, frantic tones.

Robin could already see it unfolding.

The police would see the Genomorphs—see the twisted mutations, the freakish growths, and assume they were the cause of this disaster.

He had seconds to get ahead of this.

Robin stepped forward, raising his hands, making sure he looked as non-threatening as possible.

"Stand down!" His voice cut through the tension, sharp and authoritative.

"These creatures are NOT the enemy! They are victims, just like everyone else!"

The firefighters hesitated, some lowering their tools. But the police units didn't slow, their transports screeching to a stop, armored officers pouring out, weapons already trained on the Genomorphs.

A booming voice echoed from a megaphone—

"All unauthorized personnel—step AWAY from the creatures and put your hands UP!"

Kid Flash threw his arms up dramatically. "Wow, way to not ask any questions first!"

Kaldur moved closer to the Genomorphs, standing between them and the armed officers, his body language calm but firm. "We do not need to escalate this into violence. These beings are seeking refuge, not destruction."

The Genomorphs flinched at the sirens, some hissing defensively, their mutated bodies shifting uncontrollably. The telepathic Genomorph, the one who had guided them out, pulsed his horns red, trying to calm his own people—but fear was overriding reason.

The police unit's leader, a sergeant in high-tech riot armor, didn't lower his weapon.

"Last warning! Surrender yourselves and step AWAY from the meta-organisms!"

Superboy finally snapped out of his daze, his eyes narrowing. "They're NOT 'organisms.'" His voice carried weight, his tone edged with something dangerous. "They're people. And I won't let you treat them like prisoners."

The police tensed at his words, several of them shifting uncomfortably.

Robin felt the situation spiraling.

Then—

A new sound filled the air.

A deep sonic boom that shook the ground beneath them.

Then another.

Then several more.

The firefighters, police, and even the Genomorphs all froze as shadows passed overhead.

Robin looked up.

And there they were.

The Justice League.

Superman. Batman. Wonder Woman. The Flash. Green Lantern. Martian Manhunter. Several others descending like gods from the sky, their presence immediately commanding the attention of everyone below.

The MPD Anti-Meta Squad instinctively backed up, several of them lowering their weapons on reflex.

Superman landed first, his gaze immediately locking onto the vomiting Superboy, his expression a mix of shock and something unreadable.

Batman landed seconds later, his cape flowing behind him, his eyes locked onto Robin with an intensity that sent chills down his spine.

Yeah.

They were in trouble.

Kid Flash leaned toward Robin, some of his blood catching on his costume, whispering. "Sooo… you wanna do the talking? Or should we just run now and accept our fate?"

Robin swallowed hard.

Yeah.

This was going to be bad.
 
Last edited:
Chapter 5- Screams of an Electric Age
The crowd erupted, a wave of cheers rolling through the massive stadium-sized pavilion like a thunderous storm. Flashes of cameras lit up the air, but beyond the press, it was the thousands of ordinary people—the ones standing shoulder to shoulder, eyes wide with hope—that mattered most.

I stood at the center of it all, bathed in the glow of the massive LED screens behind me, my voice projected across the entire venue.

"And I promise you!" I declared, my arms outstretched as I fed off the sheer energy of the crowd.

"LexCorp is not here to let innovation collect dust on a shelf—hoarded by the privileged few! NO! We are bringing it to YOU!"

The cheers grew louder, fists pumping into the air, the excitement borderline electric.

"Not just for the rich! Not just for the elite! But for the working class! The single parents! The ones who need it most!"

The screens behind me came alive, displaying LexCorp's groundbreaking technology in full cinematic clarity.

A police officer with a devastating wound—a stimpack applied—the wound sealing itself shut within seconds, leaving nothing but smooth, unscarred skin. The camera zoomed in, showing cell regeneration in real time.

A man shaking from withdrawal, body failing from years of addiction—a trained pharmacologist administering Addictol—within minutes, his symptoms fading, replaced by stability and clarity.

A scientist presenting a miniature fusion core, cold nuclear fusion in the palm of your hand—powering an entire building indefinitely with a device no larger than a football.

A wounded veteran with a missing arm sits in a LexCorp medical facility, a doctor carefully implanting a cloned replacement limb—one grown from his own DNA, a perfect genetic match, restoring his body completely.

Construction robots assembling homes in mere days, not years—automated systems ensuring faster, cheaper, and higher-quality housing for all.

This wasn't science fiction.

This was LexCorp's future.

MY future.

I let the moment settle, the roar of the crowd washing over me, their hope, their belief, their desperation for a better tomorrow fueling the fire in my veins.

The press scribbled furiously, cameras locked on me, but beyond them, I wasn't just speaking to journalists.

I was speaking to the people.

And they were eating it up.

Off-stage, Mercy stood with her tablet in hand, subtly nodding—a silent confirmation that the markets were reacting, LexCorp's stock value climbing at an exponential rate.

I smirked.

Piece of cake.

The crowd's energy was intoxicating, a roaring wave of cheers, applause, and sheer excitement rolling through the pavilion. Every word, every promise I made, was fueling their belief—and belief?

Belief was the strongest currency there was.

Behind me, the screens continued cycling through our revolutionary breakthroughs, each image only adding to the momentum.

But I wasn't done yet.

I stepped forward, raising a hand for silence.

Slowly, the roar of the crowd faded, the anticipation thick in the air.

I let the moment hang, letting every single person here feel the gravity of what was coming next.

Then, I smiled.

"But why should I just tell you about the future?"

I turned slightly, gesturing toward the screen behind me as it shifted to a live camera feed.

"Why not show you?"

A murmur of excitement rippled through the audience, eyes snapping to the massive display as it cut to a LexCorp medical facility—a bright, sterile operating room, where a young man sat in a patient chair, his sleeve rolled up, revealing a missing forearm, a document opened up also revealing damage on the spine.

Gasps rippled through the crowd.

A timer appeared in the corner of the screen.

00:10

00:09

A doctor carefully brought forward a cloned limbs, a perfect genetic replica of what had been lost. The team of LexCorp specialists moved quickly, precisely, connecting nerves, tissues, and muscles with absolute precision, It was easy for them after all, they weren't human.

00:05

The new arm twitched, his back arched.

00:03

The patient flexed his fingers.

00:01

And as the final second ticked away, the young man lifted his restored arm, moving it with full control—no complications, no pain, no rejection his feet also rise, unsteady but slowly getting up from the wheel chair.

The pavilion erupted.

The cheers were deafening, the weight of what they had just witnessed settling in all at once.

I turned back to the audience, letting my smirk widen just slightly.

"A lifetime of struggle, gone in ten seconds."

The applause swelled, the sheer emotion in the crowd hitting a fever pitch.

I raised a hand again, signaling for their attention.

"This isn't some distant dream. This isn't science fiction." My voice boomed over the speakers, carrying across the entire pavilion.

"This is happening. Right now. And it's happening because LexCorp refuses to accept limits! Because we refuse to let bureaucracy, corporate greed, or outdated regulations stand in the way of progress!"

I let the words sink in, the fire in my voice reflecting the fire in their hearts.

"We will not be shackled by the past. We will not be controlled by those who fear change."

I pointed toward the screen as it flickered through more breakthroughs—the Full dive VR, electric planes, more robots, and life-changing pharmaceutical advancements.

"This is your future. Not just for the privileged. Not just for the wealthy. For YOU! For the people who need it most!"

The stadium exploded with cheers once again, the sheer volume shaking the ground beneath me.

I turned, taking a quick glance at Mercy, who stood just off-stage.

She barely moved, but the slightest twitch of her lips, the subtle glance at her tablet, told me everything I needed to know.

The markets were surging.

LexCorp's valuation was already skyrocketing, and it was only going to climb higher.

This?

This wasn't just a product reveal.

This was a power move.

And it was working perfectly.

I looked back at the crowd, soaking in the energy, feeling the weight of their belief, their trust, their hope.

Then, I stepped forward, voice calm but powerful.

"Welcome to the new era. Welcome to the future."

The stadium erupted once more, and I simply stood there, letting it all wash over me.

This was it.

This was the moment LexCorp stood unchallenged in the arena of commerce.

As the cheers continued to shake the pavilion, I raised my hands one last time, signaling for silence. It took a few moments, but eventually, the crowd settled, their energy buzzing in the air like static electricity.

I let my gaze sweep across the sea of faces, taking in their wide-eyed wonder, their raw excitement, their belief in what they had just witnessed.

This was exactly what I wanted.

A world that looked to LexCorp not just as a company—but as the architects of the future.

I exhaled slowly, then smiled.

"And this?" I gestured to the screens, still flickering through the revolutionary breakthroughs.

"This is just the beginning."

Another wave of cheers, though this time tinged with anticipation.

"What we've shown you today is only a fraction of what's coming. In the weeks, the months ahead—expect more. More innovation. More breakthroughs. More ways that LexCorp will change the world, not for a select few—but for all of us."

I took a step back, spreading my arms.

"Greatness isn't waiting. And neither are we."

The stadium shook from the sheer force of the applause, the energy reaching a fever pitch.

I let the moment linger, then gave a final, confident nod.

"Thank you. And welcome to tomorrow."

With that, I turned and strode off stage, my steps smooth, controlled—powerful.

The moment I crossed into the backstage area, the roar of the crowd was muffled, replaced by the low hum of event staff, security, and my personal team coordinating the aftermath.

I barely made it two steps before I cracked open a cold soda, the carbonated hiss filling the air as I took a long, slow sip.

Mercy was waiting for me, arms crossed, a knowing smirk playing at the corner of her lips.

"You really do love your dramatics, don't you?" she said, arching a brow.

I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand, exhaling. "Of course. What's the point of unveiling the future if it doesn't have a little theatrics?"

She shook her head, amused, then tilted her tablet toward me. "Stock price is through the roof. Shareholders are celebrating. The press is eating out of the palm of your hand. In short? You just made history."

I took another sip of my drink, letting the cool carbonation settle in my throat, then smirked.

"And that was just the warm-up, the Eurosatory is next month right?"

Mercy nodded, scrolling through her tablet. "Right. Eurosatory is in four weeks. We've secured prime floor space in the Innovation Pavilion, and our invitations have already been sent to the key defense contractors and government delegations. You'll be addressing representatives from over a hundred nations."

I took another sip of my soda, letting the carbonation settle as I mulled over the weight of that statement. Eurosatory wasn't just any expo—it was the premier arms and defense trade show. It wasn't about selling gadgets to the average consumer; it was about militarizing the future.

And LexCorp was going to make sure it was leading the charge.

"And I assume our competitors are preparing their best offerings?" I asked, already knowing the answer.

Mercy gave a knowing smirk. "WayneTech, Queen Industries, Holt Holdings—the usual suspects. They all have booths, and they'll be rolling out their latest prototypes. But none of them can match what we're bringing to the table."

I chuckled. "Of course they can't. They're thinking incrementally. We're thinking revolutionarily."

I turned toward the massive LED screens still showcasing the advancements from today's event—civilian breakthroughs that had already sent LexCorp's stock soaring.

But Eurosatory?

That was where the real money was.

"What are we considering for the demonstration lineup?" I asked, setting my now-empty soda can aside.

Mercy flicked through a classified document on her tablet, pulling up a list of LexCorp's latest military innovations.

"Project Photon—our laser weaponry—will be an easy sell. WayneTech and Kord are still stuck in the prototype phase, but our energy-based firearms are already field-tested. Once we showcase their range and precision, we'll have governments lining up to sign contracts."

I nodded. "Expected. And the heavier armaments?"

She swiped to the next file.

"Project Gauss—our portable railgun technology. Lethal at extreme distances, with armor-piercing capability that makes traditional ballistics obsolete. A single infantryman can carry what used to require a vehicle-mounted system."

A small grin tugged at the corner of my lips. "Nothing quite like turning enemy armor into Swiss cheese."

Mercy didn't comment, just moved on to the next briefing.

"Project Sun—our plasma-based weaponry. Still experimental, but we have enough successful field tests to justify a controlled demonstration. If we handle the messaging correctly, it won't just be a weapon—it'll be a deterrent. No country will want to go to war against the military that owns this."

"Collateral risk?" I asked.

"High. But that's part of the appeal. Some governments won't care about the risk—just the fear it generates."

I gave a slow nod. "Good. But we need more than just weapons. What about defense?"

Mercy pulled up the next segment.

"Powered armor. We can demonstrate the newest variants—urban assault, heavy support, and stealth reconnaissance units."

I exhaled, nodding. "And the automation sector?"

She swiped again, bringing up LexCorp's next-generation autonomous systems.

"Combat robots, logistical AI, and fully autonomous battlefield support units are ready for real-world applications. Infantry support robots are being fast-tracked for transmutation. Not replacements for soldiers—but force multipliers. No one else is fielding anything close to this scale."

"Scalability?"

"Already addressed. If we pitch it right, entire divisions could be restructured around our automation framework. Governments don't just want weapons—they want warfare dominance."

I crossed my arms, thinking.

"We need to finalize the demo schedule," I said, my mind already working through the logistics. "High-profile slots, live-fire demonstrations, and a classified session for the biggest players. We give them a taste—just enough to make them desperate for more."

Mercy nodded. "I'll handle the logistics. You focus on keeping the momentum from today's event."

I smirked. "That's the easy part. We just showed the world the future."

I turned, glancing back at the glowing LexCorp insignia.

"Now, let's show them who owns it."


I sighed, staring at the ceiling as the soft hum of medical scanners filled the room, their displays running countless biometric scans, neurological readings, and genetic stability checks.

Roy stood at rigid attention, his arms crossed, gaze flicking between the dozens of medical Synths that moved with machine-like precision around my hospital bed.

"You sure all of this is needed, Father?" he asked, his voice carrying a mix of concern and skepticism.

I glanced at him from the corner of my eye. "Better to be over-prepared than caught off guard."

Mercy, seated nearby, arms crossed, tapped her fingers rhythmically against her armrest, her expression unreadable.

The Synth medics continued their work, adjusting IVs, recalibrating monitors, and analyzing the brain scans that flickered across holographic displays—data harvested from months of acquiring some of the best minds in medicine. Some had been willing contributors, eager to further medical science. Others…

Had to be replaced.

Efficiency over ethics. That's just how things worked.

And right now?

I needed every ounce of efficiency possible.

Because the little clock in my mind—the one I'd felt ticking down for months now—
It was running out. Fast.

"How long?" I asked, my voice calm, controlled, despite the unknown looming ahead.

One of the Synth doctors, a female unit named Dr. Helena, turned toward me, her eyes flickering with the faint glow of her neural implants.

"Minutes. Maybe less."

I felt Mercy tense slightly, but her face remained composed. Roy's fingers twitched against his holster, the closest thing he had to a nervous tic.

I exhaled slowly.

No idea what's going to happen.

Could be nothing.

Could be everything.

"Alright then," I muttered, eyes drifting back to the ceiling. "Let's see what's behind Door Number One."

A sharp breath caught in my throat as my vision blurred, my grip tightening on Mercy's hand. She held firm, steady, but I could feel the tension in her fingers. On the other side, Roy clasped my other hand, his normally impassive face betraying just the smallest flicker of concern.

Outside the observation window, the Synths watched. Hundreds of them, standing in perfect stillness, their eyes locked onto me. They weren't programmed for emotion, not in the way humans were, but even through the impassivity, I could see it—something deeper, something close to sadness.

Then it happened.

A rush. A flood.

The knowledge that had guided me for months, that had given me the science of the atom, the wonders of transmutation, the formulas for war and innovation—was gone.

Torn away, like a book set ablaze, its pages scattering into the wind.

And in its place—

The Future.

Not just any future.

A world of wires and implants, of neural interfaces, of synthetic bodies and digital ghosts.

I saw the cybernetic revolution, not as a dream, not as theory—as reality.

I saw the rise of corporate dominion, not over markets, but over souls.

I saw rebels in the shadows, warriors not of guns and steel, but of hacked networks, of systems overridden, of lives stolen and rewritten in lines of code.

I saw the tools of control—not just money, not just weapons, but the power to rewrite reality itself in ones and zeroes.

I knew what this was, I read the classic that was Neuromancer of course.

And for a moment, I searched.

I searched for the ultimate method.

The one final safeguard against mortality.

The escape from death.

And I found it.

A concept. A whisper in the data flood of my mind.

A place where the flesh was no longer needed.

Where men were not buried, but uploaded.

Where minds lived on, separated from their dying bodies, eternal, unbound.

Mikoshi.

The digital afterlife—not for the weak, not for the masses, but for those who sought to never end.

It was perfect.

It was everything I would have built.

But it wasn't time.

It existed only in this knowledge, a concept of another world, another place, another existence beyond my own.

I let out a slow, shaking breath.

Mercy's grip tightened.

"James?"

Roy shifted, his eyes narrowing. "What did you see?"

I blinked, the rush settling, the visions fading, but the knowledge remaining.

The Synths outside the window still watched, waiting.

For a moment, I just sat there, the weight of what had just happened pressing down on me.

Then, I finally exhaled and leaned back against the pillow.

"I saw our next step," I murmured, my voice steady.


The guitar solo of "Free Bird" wailed through the speakers, filling the lab with that perfect mix of chaos.

I leaned in close, the soldering iron in my steady grip, the faint scent of melting metal and circuits mixing with the hum of high-voltage machinery. The bench before me was a mess of components, some scavenged from my own stockpiles, others custom-designed for one singular goal.

I had a conundrum.

The knowledge in my mind was too vast, too intricate. This wasn't just advanced science—it was civilizational knowledge, the sum of hundreds of lifetimes worth of research crammed into one brain. Entire doctorate-level fields were at my fingertips, engineering, neuroscience, cybernetics, artificial intelligence, and more.

It might take years to write it all down.

And if this was anything like last time, it wouldn't even stick around that long.

Four months. Maybe less.

Which meant typing it out manually? Not an option.

I needed a better way.

A direct link—one that would allow me to offload everything, let the AI sort it, categorize it, and store it before it vanished forever.

And that's why I was here, hunched over my workbench, building my own cyberware.

A modified Netdriver, redesigned to handle direct neural-digital transfers, letting me offload raw knowledge without wasting time dictating or typing.

A pair of Kiroshi optics, augmented with custom HUD elements, neurolink interfaces, and a direct tap into LexCorp's supercomputers, letting me see data in real-time, analyze information faster than any human should be able to.

And for good measure—a Synaptic Accelerator.

If my brain was going to be running at full throttle, I needed the processing speed to match.

I leaned back slightly, blowing away a bit of stray metal dust, my gloved hands steady as I finished the final connections.

A small beep sounded from the workbench display, confirming that the interface components were operational.

I smirked, setting the soldering iron down, flexing my fingers.

"Alright," I muttered to myself, cracking my knuckles. "Let's plug in and see what the future looks like."

The pieces were laid out in front of me—the Netdriver, the Kiroshi optics, and the Neural port—each one a critical step toward making sure this knowledge didn't go to waste.

I had months, at best, before this flood of information disappeared like last time.

Too much to write. Too much to dictate.

I needed a direct link—a way to offload the raw knowledge into my systems before it was lost forever.

The Netdriver would be my interface—a way to upload and extract data directly from my mind, letting my AI sort, categorize, and store it without human error.

The Kiroshi optics would make syncing with systems effortless, letting me see connections, recognize patterns, and access data streams without manual effort.

And the Neural Port?

That was the most critical part of all.

It would be the bridge between my organic brain and the network—a permanent link to my empire of machines, Synths, and AI.

But first?

I needed surgery.

I turned to Mercy, who was already watching me carefully, her arms crossed.

"You know you don't have to do this all at once, right?"

I smirked. "You say that like I have time to waste."

Roy sighed from his post by the door, arms crossed. "This is gonna be one of those things where you nearly die, isn't it?"

I shrugged. "Define 'nearly'."

Mercy pinched the bridge of her nose. "If your brain rejects the port, or if the neural load is too much, you'll fry your own nervous system. You don't think that's worth at least one test on someone else first?"

I let out a mock gasp. "Mercy, please. What kind of unethical corporate overlord do you take me for?"

Roy snorted. "The regular kind."

I pushed up from the workbench, cracking my knuckles. "Well, no sense wasting time."


The Autodoc loomed before me, sleek and clinical, its armored pod designed for high-precision surgical modifications.

One of the Synth medics—Dr. Helena—stood by the console, confirming the surgical parameters as I slid into position, she wasn't the same who supervised me while in the med bay, same donor but different designation.

"Procedure is set for direct neural interface installation. Estimated recovery time: minimal. However, I must warn—"

I waved her off. "Yeah, yeah, I know the risks. I made the thing perfect."

Mercy stood beside the pod, arms still crossed. "Last chance to back out."

I smirked. "If this works, I'll be more connected to my systems than ever. If it doesn't? Well, I'll have a very expensive migraine."

Roy muttered something under his breath but didn't stop me.

The Autodoc whirred to life, its mechanical arms shifting into place as the pod sealed around me.

A small hiss of anesthesia filled the air, and my vision blurred.

Then—

Darkness.

And the surgery began.


A sharp beep echoed in my skull.

I exhaled as my vision flickered back online, a faint red hue settling over my sight as the Kiroshi optics synced with my neural feed.

Lines of data scrolled in my periphery.

The Autodoc was speaking, but I barely processed it.

Because I felt it immediately.

The Neural Port was active.

And the Netdriver?

I could feel my systems. My machines. My network.

I wasn't just sitting in a room.

I was plugged in.

I sat up slowly, rolling my shoulders, feeling the residual effects of the operation wearing off.

Roy was standing nearby, watching me like he expected me to keel over any second.

Mercy raised a brow. "Still breathing?"

I flexed my fingers, watching the data scroll across my vision as my new cybernetic systems synchronized with my LexCorp network.

A slow grin spread across my face.

"Better than ever."

I turned, stretching as I slid off the Autodoc's operating table. My new optics adjusted instantly, displaying security feeds, stock trends, and LexCorp's AI-controlled sectors—all within my field of vision.

Everything was faster.

Smoother.

More connected.

Roy raised a brow. "So… what now?"

I smirked.

"Now?"

I clenched my fist, watching as my systems synced effortlessly, feeling the weight of knowledge still sitting in my mind—waiting to be extracted, processed, and turned into the future.

"Now it's time for the boring stuff, ask one of the synths to prepare an ice bath for me.... and a really long extension cord, make it waterproof if possible," I asked Roy, to which he answered with a nod.



The ice water stung like hell, but I barely noticed anymore.

I sat submerged in the freezing tub, only my head and shoulders above water, my breath misting in the cold air of the private LexCorp server vault.

A thick black cable ran from the back of my skull, plugged directly into my Neural Port, the other end vanishing into the core of my personal AI processing unit.

The room was dim, illuminated only by the faint glow of the holo-displays floating in the air, showing real-time data transfers, storage allocations, and processing speeds that pushed the limits of even my best technology.

My cybernetics were heating up fast, my internal temps spiking, but the ice bath kept things under control—barely.

This was the only way I could manage the full-scale offload of everything that had flooded into my brain.

I exhaled, watching my breath curl into the cold air, then spoke.

"Status report."

A smooth, masculine voice echoed through the chamber.

"Processing at 72% capacity, Father." Adam said

Then, a second voice, a softer, kinder voice continued.

"Cross-referencing data streams with existing LexCorp research archives. Neural integration stable. Memory fragmentation minimal." Eve said.

"And how am I holding up?" I muttered, flexing my fingers beneath the water, my muscles sluggish but still responsive.

Eve responded first.

"Your brain activity is significantly elevated, but within tolerable parameters. However, synaptic strain is slowly rising. If this continues for another four hours, neural degradation could become a concern."

Adam followed up.

"In layman's terms, Father—your brain is cooking itself. And despite your… unique solutions, even you have limits."

I chuckled under my breath, adjusting my position in the freezing bath.

"Good to know. But we're not stopping."

The holograms shifted, displaying live data streams, filtering through the insane amount of knowledge that was now LexCorp property.

Cybernetics, biomechanical engineering, AI advancements, fashion, futuristic military equipment—all of it was pouring into the vault, getting categorized and stored for later use.
Adam spoke again.

"If I may, Father, I must inquire—what is the endgame? The breadth of knowledge you are processing is beyond even our projected models. The applications are limitless, yet your approach is… selective."

Eve chimed in, "You are amassing technological progress at astonishing rates, however, unless the competition reveals groundbreaking inventions we already achieved market dominance."

I exhaled slowly, watching the data streams pulse in the air like a living thing.

They weren't wrong.

I wasn't just hoarding knowledge for the sake of it.

This was bigger than that.

I finally spoke, my voice steady.

"Do you know why I do the things I do?" I asked, my voice calm, steady.

Still, silence.

I smirked, settling deeper into the ice bath, my body numbed by the cold while my mind burned with overclocked neural activity.

"No, I wouldn't expect you to know. My decisions must seem erratic to you—random at times, even contradictory."

I reached out with my thoughts, and immediately the camera feeds shifted, bringing forth a single live shot of Metropolis from one of LexCorp's orbital surveillance satellites.

The AI could see it as clearly as I could.

The city shined brilliantly, a beacon of humanity's progress, glowing towers of steel and glass piercing the sky, standing defiant against the darkness of the void beyond.

It was beautiful.

I let the image linger for a moment, then slowly overlaid it with something else.

Crime statistics. Reports. Maps pinpointing every violent incident within the last twenty-four hours.

Robberies. Assaults. Murders.

Even in Metropolis—a city under the unwavering protection of Superman himself—humanity's flaws still thrived in the shadows.

"Even here, in one of the safest cities on Earth, every thirty minutes a meta-crime is committed. Even more so for mundane violence."

I sighed, zooming out, the image of Metropolis shrinking, replaced by two new images.

One, a diplomatic summit in Atlantis, a vast underwater city sealed away from the surface world, its people arrogant enough to threaten to drown entire nations over political slights.

The other, a recreation of Themyscira, pieced together through fragmented intelligence reports and the last known recordings of one of the only men to ever set foot there.

A man who, not long after his return, mysteriously vanished.

"The other branches of humanity." I let the words hang in the cold air, my breath curling into mist.

"One, an isolationist empire, hiding beneath the waves, armed with technology and sorcery that outclasses anything we have. The other, a society of warriors who serve as puppets to ancient gods."

I tapped my fingers against the side of the bath, my cybernetics humming with stored heat as I shifted the feeds once more.

This time, the stars appeared.

The camera zoomed, stretching past Earth's atmosphere, past the void—until a red planet filled the screen.

Mars.

A cold, unassuming wasteland to most.

To me?

A ticking time bomb.

"Then we have our next-door neighbors."

The image zoomed again, focusing on Martian settlements, hidden beneath the sands, their cities advanced, vast, thriving in ways humanity had never been allowed to witness firsthand.

Shape-shifters.

Telepaths.

A civilization so evolved, so adaptable, that if they wanted, they could replace every single world leader overnight, and we wouldn't even notice until it was too late.

I clenched my jaw slightly.

"They say they are peaceful. Passive. That they have no interest in interfering with Earth's affairs."

I scoffed.

"And yet, their very existence is a threat."

The screen flashed, showing my long-term space expansion projections, the models of a fully colonized solar system, humanity reaching for the stars.

"What happens when humanity finally steps into space? When we begin expanding beyond this rock?"

The answer was simple.

"Then we become competition."

A long silence followed, the hum of the data stream flickering in my mind.

Then, Adam spoke, his voice calculated, intrigued.

"Observation: Your movements align with preemptive strategic positioning. You are preparing for confrontation. You believe it is inevitable."

Eve followed soon after, her tone smooth, yet questioning.

"Clarification needed: What is your ultimate objective? Power is a means, not an end. What is the end?"

I smirked, exhaling slowly.

"Control."

The holographic images folded back, collapsing into a single view of Earth, slowly rotating in the darkness of space.

"I see what others refuse to see. They focus on their immediate problems, on the conflicts right in front of them."

The water rippled, the chill biting into my skin as my cybernetics pulsed, struggling to regulate the flood of data moving through my mind.

The grainy video feed flickered, not from interference, but because it was streaming directly from my thoughts, a raw, unfiltered glimpse into my vision of humanity's future.

It started simple.

A city—shining, sleek, and green, where families walked freely, without fear, without uncertainty. Some were obviously metahuman, their gifts not hidden, not feared, but celebrated—not as weapons, not as vigilantes, but as pillars of a greater civilization.

The image shifted.

Atlantis, its towering structures now partially domed, no longer an isolated kingdom beneath the waves. Instead, humans and Atlanteans walked side by side, working together, learning the mystic arts, technology and magic melding into something greater.

Again, the vision changed.

A woman, tall and strong, dressed in ancient Greek-inspired modern garb, stood with a United Nations flag in hand.

She was planting it into the red Martian soil.

A man embraced her, children surrounding them, cheering, celebrating—not conquerors, not oppressors, but pioneers, bringing humanity's reach beyond the stars.

The image expanded, Mars becoming one of many.

The camera pulled back, revealing alien metropolises, massive spacefaring civilizations, yet among them, humans walked freely, shaking hands—or appendages—with species from across the galaxy.

This wasn't just a dream.

This was the goal.

Pax Galactica.

I let the words hang in the air for a moment, my cybernetics humming as I stabilized my breathing.

"A world where the entirety of humanity is united under a single goal."

I let the vision linger, burning into the memory banks of my AI, of my Synths, of my empire.

"Where we put our abilities, our gifts, toward something greater than petty crime or self-righteous vigilantism. A world where gods are torn down, where our enemies are subsumed, where ambition—human ambition—fuels the stars themselves. Peace and prosperity in every corner of the galaxy."

Silence stretched for a moment before I continued, my voice lowering.

"But it will never happen."

The vision shattered, replaced once again with the cold, stark reality.

Because there were forces standing in the way.

I exhaled, my grip tightening against the metal rim of the bath, my cybernetics heating up again, though the ice water kept me stable.

"We will be stopped," I said, voice colder now. "By the Justice League."

A flicker of Superman's insignia, of Batman's cowl, of the Watchtower hanging above Earth like a silent warden.

"A League that is happy to let the status quo remain forever. A League that is nothing more than a palliative measure, a temporary fix to the chaos of the world—one that will never evolve beyond its own limitations."

I narrowed my eyes, my heartbeat spiking as my mind raced.

"Its ranks? Filled with aliens. Beings with good intentions, maybe. But still, forces of stagnation. They do not think in terms of human ambition, of what we can become. They only seek to preserve, to hold the line, never to push forward."

My fingers curled into a fist beneath the water.

"And then, on the other side… the Light."

The mere thought of them made my cybernetics twitch, my skin prickling with irritation.

"A cabal of lunatics, each more mentally unhinged than the last. Delusions of grandeur masking incompetence and self-interest."

Images flickered in my mind, projected to my AI.

Vandal Savage. The so-called immortal, a caveman who thinks he is fit to command the future. A primitive, someone who should've stayed in the past.

Ra's al Ghul. A would-be messiah, hiding behind mysticism and his immortality to play dress up with his ninjas.

Klarion. A creature of chaos, with no long-term vision, only destruction for its own amusement.

"The only one vaguely competent among them is Queen Bee," I admitted, "but she's just a tyrant, a glorified dictator clinging to her little nation with an iron grip."

My breath slowed, my pulse calming, though the heat in my voice remained.

I exhaled, shifting my posture, before finally delivering the final truth.

"For humanity to win—both of them must lose."

The AI didn't respond immediately.

They were processing, calculating, running their countless models.

Finally, Adam spoke.

"Then the course is clear. We dismantle both. The League and the Light cannot be allowed to shape the future."

Eve followed, her voice cool, calculated.

"And in their place, a new order must rise. One dictated by human ambition, not alien restraint or ancient egos."

I smiled.

They understood now.
 
Chapter 6- Straight flush
I stared blankly at the giant, mechanical nutcracker slamming itself against LexCorp's external defense grid, its oversized wooden jaws snapping at thin air, trying to push through the barrier.

"Is this April Fools, did I take too many mentats? What exactly am I looking at?" I asked, voice flat, watching the ridiculous spectacle unfold on my holographic display.

Adam responded without a trace of amusement.

"It appears that the villain known as Toyman is attempting to steal materials from LexCorp's tower."

I resisted the urge to rub my temples.

The so-called genius whose idea of high-tech crime involved massive, cartoonish death toys instead of practical weaponry.

But despite the absurd presentation, Toyman was still a threat—a dangerous one. His machines, while theatrical, were always lethal, his body count is around a few hundred, being one of the oldest metropolis villains, starting in the 80's.

I watched as automated turrets locked onto the target, sending a hail of Gauss rounds into the wooden monstrosity, sparks flying from the impact points. The nutcracker lurched, its decorative red-and-gold exterior cracking from the repeated hits—

But then, it kept coming.

"Mercy, tell me I'm not about to spend my afternoon dealing with this lunatic."

She sighed over the comms. "Well, unless you want to let him get away with several million dollars' worth of high-end LexCorp alloys, then yes, you're going to have to deal with this lunatic."

I dragged a hand down my face, muttering under my breath.

"Roy, how long until security neutralizes the target?"

His response pinged directly through my cybernetics, his calm, professional tone unchanged.

"Projected time: twenty minutes. The turrets are softening up the main unit, but Toyman deployed support units. He's got heavily armed toy soldiers engaging the security forces. They will hold but this might take a minute."

I tapped my fingers against the desk, considering my options.

Then I made my decision.

"Deploy the security team. I want a full squad of Synth troopers on the ground—give them clearance to eliminate all hostiles. I want this wrapped up before the hour's over."

"Understood. Executing orders."

The ground trembled as the LexCorp shield briefly flickered, allowing twelve armored Synths to storm onto the battlefield in perfect formation.

Toyman's toy soldiers opened fire, but it was pointless.

These weren't normal security forces.

These were my security forces.

Every single one of them had been upgraded, equipped with top-of-the-line cybernetic enhancements, turning them into walking war machines.

Armored skin absorbed gunfire, redirecting the force harmlessly.

Neurolinked targeting systems let them track enemies with inhuman precision, their plasma rifles tearing through the toy soldiers in an instant.

The battlefield shifted in seconds.

One Synth leaped onto a giant toy tank, ripping open the hatch before tossing a high-explosive charge inside—blowing it apart from the inside out.

Another unit activated a stealth field, vanishing from sight before reappearing behind enemy lines, taking out three hostiles with her katana before they could react, her Sandevistan making her seem like a blur.

It was surgical. Brutal. Efficient.

Exactly as planned.

High above the battlefield, Roy stood on a rooftop, perched with inhuman stillness, his Gauss sniper rifle locked onto Toyman's position.

His vision was crisp, enhanced by his own cybernetics, tracking the villain's every move.

Toyman stood atop his staggering, damaged Nutcracker, wildly gesturing as he screamed at his crumbling army.

"You useless piles of junk! Keep fighting! We're not leaving empty-handed!"

Roy exhaled slowly, his synthetic muscles perfectly steady as he adjusted the rifle's scope.

His targeting system lined up the shot.

A single pull of the trigger and Toyman's reign of stupidity would end for good.

A clean shot.

One second, he'd be screaming orders—the next, he'd have a smoking hole between his eyes.

Roy's finger hovered over the trigger, waiting.

"Permission to eliminate the target?" he asked, his voice completely neutral.

I watched through the feed, weighing my options.

A dead Toyman meant no repeat offenses. No more absurd mechanical monstrosities breaking into my facilities.

But a living Toyman?

That meant a message could be sent.

A lesson.

I tapped my fingers against the armrest, considering.

And then, I made my choice.

"Shoot to kill."

The words left my mouth, cold and absolute.

Roy didn't hesitate.

The Gauss sniper fired, the supersonic slug ripping through the air, a projectile moving faster than the speed of sound, engineered to tear through tank armor like paper.

Toyman never saw it coming.

And he never would.

But at the very last second—

A blue and red blur streaked into the shot's path.

The round slammed into an outstretched hand, stopping dead in its tracks.

Superman hovered mid-air, the bullet crushed between his fingers, his piercing gaze locked onto the sniper's position.

Even through the live feed, I could feel the weight of that look.

Roy, still perched on the rooftop, lowered his rifle slightly, his mechanical enhancements adjusting to the impossible turn of events.

"Target interference detected," he reported, his tone completely flat.

I exhaled slowly, watching as Superman's expression darkened, his jaw tightening.

"Roy, stand by. Do not engage."

"Acknowledged."

Superman wasn't alone either—

The Justice League was arriving.

The moment Superman intercepted the shot, the situation changed.

I watched through the live feed, expression neutral, as he tossed the crushed Gauss slug aside, his cape billowing behind him.

And then, like clockwork, the rest of the Justice League arrived.

Wonder Woman landed with a thunderous impact, immediately ripping apart one of Toyman's remaining toy soldiers, her blade cleaving through its metal frame like butter.

The Flash blurred into motion, weaving through LexCorp's security forces, disassembling another dozen mechanical minions in mere seconds.

Even Batman was here, descending from a grapple line, tossing explosive batarangs that immobilized the last few rogue machines.

Within minutes, the battlefield shifted.

What was once a controlled engagement led by my Synth security forces was now a cooperative effort between LexCorp and the Justice League.

Roy, still perched at his sniper position, remained still. Watching. Calculating.

I tapped my fingers against the desk, eyes narrowing.

Superman floated toward the ground, his gaze flicking between the remnants of the battlefield and LexCorp's Synth security squad, assessing them with heavy scrutiny.

Eventually, he landed near Toyman, who was now pinned beneath the wreckage of his own machine, groaning in pain.

I switched the feed to one of my external speakers, my voice broadcasting clearly across the field.

"Well, I suppose I should say 'thank you' for the assistance."

Superman's gaze snapped up toward the nearest camera, his expression neutral, but firm.

"We were already monitoring Toyman. His attack on LexCorp was reckless, but your methods—" he paused, glancing toward the Synth forces, "—were just as concerning."

"Oh, come now, Superman. You didn't expect me to sit back and let my facility get torn apart, did you? I'd think you, of all people, would appreciate a proactive defense."

Superman didn't respond immediately, but his expression hardened slightly.

Wonder Woman, however, spoke next.

"Your forces fight with great efficiency. These… soldiers."

She gestured toward my Synth security, their cybernetic enhancements gleaming under the floodlights of the facility.

"They are unlike any military unit I've seen. Who commands them, they must be a mighty commander?"

I glanced toward Roy's live feed, still monitoring from his elevated position.

I could tell he was waiting for my response.

"They're under my command, of course," I replied smoothly. "LexCorp security must evolve with the times. Criminals are more advanced than ever—my forces simply reflect the need to counter such threats."

Batman, still standing near the wreckage, spoke for the first time.

"There's a difference between security and an army, Luthor."

I smiled.

"Is there? Because from where I'm standing, I just watched your League do exactly what my security forces were already doing. The only difference? My soldiers don't need capes."

Superman folded his arms, his posture firm.

"Toyman is in custody. We'll take him from here. But we're not done with this conversation, Luthor."

I tilted my head slightly, amused.

"Oh, I have no doubt, Superman. But until then—welcome to the future."

I cut the transmission, leaving the League to deal with their cleanup efforts.

Behind me, Adam's voice echoed in my ear.

"Projected outcome: increased scrutiny from the Justice League. Recommendation: Adjust strategy."

I leaned back in my chair, smirking.

"Let them watch. No court on earth would prosecute me."

I paused, my fingers drumming against the desk as Eve's voice carried through the comms.

"Sir, one more thing… an invitation has just arrived. The Light is requesting your presence for a meeting. In person."

That got my attention.

I leaned back, exhaling slowly. The Light.

I had expected them to make a move eventually.

But now? Right after Toyman's little fiasco and the League's sudden interest in LexCorp?

That was interesting.

"Location?" I asked.

"The encryption has been cracked," Adam replied smoothly. "Coordinates place the meeting in Mongolia. Remote. Isolated. Minimal external interference. Logically chosen."

Roy's voice came through the channel next, calm, professional.

"It's a setup. But an expected one."

I smirked. "Naturally. The real question is: how bold are they feeling?"

"Bold enough to invite you into their den," Eve added. "That implies confidence. They believe they hold the advantage in a face-to-face meeting."

The Light didn't seem to be the type to offer invitations freely.

This was either a recruitment attempt—or a test of loyalty.

Likely both.

Adam followed up.

"Declining outright would place you on their adversarial list. However, going alone would be strategically unwise."

"Then I won't be alone," I said, already finalizing my decision.

I turned to Roy's live feed, seeing him still in his overwatch position, rifle disassembled as he awaited further orders.

"Prep a team. Twelve Synths. Full combat loadout."

"Heavy or standard?" Roy asked without hesitation.

"Heavy," I responded. "If they wanted a friendly chat, they would've picked neutral ground. I'm not walking in blind. Power armor, Heavy cyberware, a netrunner, the works."

Eve's voice hummed in my ear.

"A show of force could be seen as provocation."

I grinned.

"Good. Let them think twice."

Adam simply acknowledged the order.

"Assembling reinforcements. ETA for full preparation: Two hours."

Roy's voice crackled through the comms again.

"And if they decide to make a move on you?"

I smirked.

"Then we make an example out of them, a full decapitation strike."

I started leaving the room but I paused when I got to the doorway, "Oh, and Roy? Next time use a laser"


"How long is this going to take?" I asked, half-exasperated, half-amused, as my so-called fashion team fussed around me like a pack of obsessive artists.

They had apparently gotten enraptured by the fashion pieces I pulled from my mind, barely registering the fact that I had an actual mission to prepare for.

And now?

I was their newest canvas.

My reflection in the full-length mirror revealed their latest masterpiece—Neomilitarism draped in absolute precision.

A stylish blazer, sleek, form-fitting, but reinforced with cutting-edge materials. Beneath it, a red undershirt, pulsing faintly with embedded luminescent fibers, making the fabric seem alive with energy.

At first glance, it looked like an expensive, high-fashion ensemble.

At second glance?

It was a walking fortress.

The soft, bullet-resistant polymer woven into the suit blended seamlessly with my nano-plated subdermal armor, ensuring that if something went down in Mongolia, I wouldn't go down with it.

I turned slightly, examining my exposed forearm, where silvery lights pulsed faintly beneath my skin, tiny cybernetic nodes reacting to the subtle shift in movement.

The fashion team took a step back, admiring their work like sculptors studying a nearly finished statue.

Victor, the dramatic lead designer, adjusted the angle of my collar by precisely half an inch before stepping back, nodding in satisfaction.

"Perfect, Father," he declared, as though he had just finished painting the Sistine Chapel.

I exhaled. "Finally. You all act like I'm walking onto a runway, not into a potential ambush."

Celeste, one of the others, smirked as she handed me a pair of gloves lined with discreet tactile enhancements.

"Why not both?"

I shook my head but took the gloves anyway.

Mercy, who had been watching from the sidelines with a mildly entertained expression, finally stepped forward.

"Looking sharp, sweetheart. Now, can we focus on the part where you're about to walk into a supervillain meeting?"

I flexed my fingers, feeling the fabric move seamlessly with the enhancements beneath my skin.

"Relax, Mercy. If they think they have the upper hand, they're about to learn otherwise."

I turned from the mirror, the synth security team already waiting for me.

"Let's go pay the Light a visit."


Vandal Savage steepled his fingers, his gaze scanning the table, his voice carrying the weight of authority.

"Let us proceed."

The gathered members of the Light sat in calculated silence, the room's dim glow casting shadows against the black stone walls.

There was a notable absence, though one they had expected.

The seat once occupied by Lex Luthor remained empty.

In its place sat Black Manta, his helmeted face unreadable, his posture stiff. He had been chosen to fill the void left behind by Luthor's passing, yet there was no mistaking the truth—he was a placeholder, nothing more.

The Light had suffered greatly from the loss of Luthor's influence, resources, and brilliance.

And his son?

James Luthor had ignored them completely.

Ra's al Ghul, the ninja, spoke first.

"We have been patient long enough. He refuses to acknowledge us. We have ample means to bring him to heel. Lex Luthor left behind many secrets—secrets that his son would not want exposed."

His piercing gaze swept the table.

"We must remind him where his allegiances should lie."

Queen Bee, however, merely smirked, lounging in her chair.

"Threats are effective, but not always necessary. The boy is ambitious. That much is clear. What he lacks is guidance."

She gestured toward the holographic display, where video feeds from LexCorp's security footage played.

The Toyman attack, which they orchestrated.

The Justice League intervention.

LexCorp security forces cutting through mechanical soldiers with brutality—weapons and technology beyond even their estimations.

Black Manta's helmet tilted slightly as he observed the footage.

"His security forces are more advanced than we anticipated."

Savage nodded, his ancient expression unreadable.

"Indeed. And they will only grow stronger. The boy has been left unchecked for too long."

Queen Bee leaned forward, a knowing smile on her lips.

"He is already coming to us. The invitation has been sent."

Black Manta turned slightly, his deep, distorted voice cutting through the air.

"And he accepted?"

She chuckled. "Yes. He is on his way."

And at that exact moment—

The air behind them shimmered.

A low hum filled the chamber as the space behind the table warped, twisted—

And then, with a crackle of blue energy, reality ripped open.

James Luthor teleported directly behind them.

He wasn't alone.

Heavily armored soldiers materialized beside him, their forms sleek, metal plating gleaming under the dim lights.

Their armor was a perfect fusion of military engineering and cybernetic augmentation, they didn't know this but most of Chrome squad received the full Borg treatment, their movements fluid, and inhumanly precise, except for one, who was wearing a black full-body leotard with an oversized visor on her.

Their weapons?

Futuristic rifles, plasma weaponry, heavy ordinance, and the woman carrying a katana—all primed and ready.

The Light members reacted instantly, some reaching for weapons, others tensing—
But James simply smirked, his voice dripping with amusement.

"Sorry for being late. Traffic was crazy."

Savage's eyes narrowed slightly, though his expression remained calm.

James didn't stop.

His boots echoed against the cold floor as he strode toward the table, his soldiers moving in perfect synchronization beside him.

He didn't look at Savage.

He did look at Queen Bee but only for a minute.

No.

He locked eyes with Black Manta.

And then, in a voice that left no room for argument, he gestured to the seat Manta occupied and said:

"Get out of my seat."

The room tensed further.

Manta didn't move.

For a second, the tension was palpable, a thread ready to snap.

But James?

James Luthor was not asking.

His soldiers raised their weapons just slightly, not in outright aggression—but in promise.

And in that moment, Manta understood.

Without a word, he stood.

James smirked, stepping forward, letting the moment hang in the air before sliding into his rightful seat at the table.

Lex Luthor's seat.


I settled into my father's seat, my fingers tapping lightly against the cold stone of the table as the room sat in silence.

Behind me, my security team remained at attention, their armored figures casting long shadows across the chamber. Weapons lowered, but ready.

I let the moment stretch, watching them watch me.

The power dynamic had shifted the moment I arrived.

Savage sat at the head of the table, his immortal gaze unreadable.

Ra's al Ghul was studying me carefully, his hands folded neatly together.

Queen Bee, a picture of casual amusement, traced a finger along the edge of the table, but her eyes were sharp— locking them in my eyes, a bit creepy to be honest.

Black Manta stood to the side now, removed from the seat he had briefly occupied, his posture stiff. Silent. Watching.

It was Vandal Savage who finally broke the silence.

"You ignored our outreach. Until now."

I shrugged, leaning back slightly and putting my feet on the table. "Busy. Running a company. But I figured it was time to see what exactly you wanted from me."

Savage held my gaze for a long moment before responding.

"You already know what we want. Alexander Luthor was a valuable member of this council. His loss was… unfortunate."

I exhaled slowly, my eyes shifting to the holographic display at the center of the table.

It was still showing Toyman's attack on LexCorp. The Justice League's interference.

"This invitation," I said, voice casual, "it wasn't about recruitment, was it? It was a test."

No one denied it.

Queen Bee's smirk deepened slightly.

Ra's al Ghul gave a small nod.

"And?" I asked, raising a brow.

Savage's lips curled slightly, an almost imperceptible smirk.

"You handled yourself well. But that does not mean you understand what is at stake."

I tilted my head slightly, studying him.

"I think I understand plenty."

Savage didn't respond right away.

Instead, he simply leaned forward, his fingers steepling together as he watched me carefully.
"Then let's talk, Luthor."

I rested my chin on my fist, my gaze drifting lazily across the table.

"You know," I started, voice casual, almost bored, "out of all of you, only one of you actually intimidates me."

That got their attention.

Ra's raised a brow, Ocean Master made a face under his helmet, Queen Bee's lips curled in amusement, the Brain said something in french, and even Black Manta tilted his head slightly.

Savage simply watched.

"And who would that be?" he asked.

I gestured toward the corner of the room, where Klarion the Witch Boy sat hunched over, absentmindedly picking his nose.

The chaos lord grinned as he flicked whatever he'd found into the shadows. "Awww, that's sweet!" he cackled. "Most people don't respect me enough to be afraid until it's too late!"

I didn't respond.

Because, unlike the others, he wasn't bound by logic, or ambition, or even basic human comprehension.

Queen Bee let out a soft, sultry chuckle, drawing my attention back to her as she leaned forward, resting her chin on her palm.

"And me, young Luthor?" she purred, her voice smooth, practiced in its seductive charm. "Do I not… intimidate you?"

I snorted.

"Not really."

Her expression didn't change.

"Look, Queen, I'm sure you've got some powerful pheromones, but let's be real—you're, what? Mid-to-late thirties? Maybe early forties?"

Her smirk twitched.

"You wound me, James."

I grinned, leaning back. "Flattering, really. But let's not pretend we're in the same age bracket."

Klarion burst out laughing.

"Ooooooh, I like this one!"Nice, plan make the extra dimensional creature like you look like a success.

Savage merely watched the exchange with mild amusement, before Ra's al Ghul cleared his throat, bringing the room back to focus.

"Enough distractions," Ra's said, his tone measured. "You have potential, James. But potential alone is not enough to secure your place here. Your father understood this. Do you?"

"That depends," I said, shrugging. "Are we talking about business, power, or whatever secret handshakes you guys have?"

Black Manta spoke next, his distorted voice low and commanding.

"Your security forces. You've built them fast. Too fast. Where is your supply chain? Your production line? They would accelerate the Light plans by several years."

I smirked. "Trade secrets, Manta. Can't give away all my cards."

Queen Bee was next.

"What of the League? Their eyes are on you now. What will you do when they act?"

"Simple." I folded my hands together. "Let them react first. The League only moves when forced to. If they come for me, it's on my terms."

Savage nodded slightly, his expression unreadable.

Ra's, however, leaned forward slightly, his tone shifting.

"You think you are untouchable, Luthor. That is a dangerous assumption."

I arched my brow. "Oh? And what's the alternative? That I grovel? Beg to be part of your little club?"

Ra's merely smirked. "No. But a demonstration is in order. You are confident. Perhaps too confident. That must be tempered."

He gestured with one hand.

The doors to the chamber slid open silently, and a man stepped inside.

Broad-shouldered, masked, dressed in tactical gear—armed to the teeth.

"Sportsmaster."

I stared at him for a moment.

Then, I burst out laughing.

"I'm sorry—hold on." I held up a hand, wiping at my eye. "You mean to tell me… that your personal assassin… is named Sportsmaster?"

Sportsmaster's hands clenched into fists.

I couldn't stop chuckling. "What's next? Chess wizard? Checkerslord? Maybe dick's raider?"

Queen Bee covered her mouth to hide her amusement.

Even Klarion wheezed.

Sportsmaster, however, looked ready to snap my neck.

"You think I'm a joke, kid?" he growled. "Let's see if you're still laughing after I put you on the ground."

I grinned. "Oh, you wanna fight? Sure. Let's fight."

Ra's gave a small nod, clearly pleased.

I turned, gesturing toward my squad.

"Victoria, you're up."

One of my Synths stepped forward, a lithe, cybernetically enhanced soldier wearing a sleek black bodysuit—a netrunner, enhanced for close combat.

She unsheathed her Saturnite katana, the superheated edge humming with energy, her enhanced fingers traced the blade.

I leaned back in my chair, grinning.

"Alright, Sportsmaster. Let's see if you can handle her."

The room shifted, the long council table retracting into the floor, leaving a wide-open space for the duel.

Ra's al Ghul himself stood between the two combatants, assuming the role of referee.

Sportsmaster cracked his neck, rolling his shoulders, his stance loose, but predatory.

Across from him, Victoria stood motionless, her black leotard clinging to her form like a second skin, the faint glow of her cybernetics pulsing beneath the surface.

She didn't fidget.

Didn't show a hint of tension.

She was calm, surgical—cold as the implants enhancing her form.

Ra's slowly raised a hand, looking between them.

"A test of skill. No weapons past the first blood. No interference. Fight with honor."

The room watched in silence.

Even Savage, though normally apathetic to such displays, seemed interested in the outcome, must be his ancient caveman brain doing the talking.

Ra's lowered his hand.

"Begin."

Sportsmaster exploded forward, his speed impressive, his combat instincts sharp.

His batons whipped through the air, one striking for Victoria's ribs, the other going for a feint toward her shoulder.

A blur of black and silver.

Victoria moved.

Not dodging. Not blocking. Moving.

Her Sandevistan engaged instantly, her perception of time accelerating, the world slowing down around her.

To her, Sportsmaster was sluggish, predictable, an amateur trying to swat at a shadow.
She simply stepped aside, her blade flashing once—

A clean, precise cut.

The batons split in half, clattering to the ground before Sportsmaster even registered the loss.

His eyes widened slightly, but he adapted fast, switching to hand-to-hand combat.

Victoria didn't even blink.

She moved again, a single step bringing her behind him, the edge of her katana resting lightly against the back of his neck.

The entire table watched in silence.

Sportsmaster gritted his teeth, twisting to strike, but the moment he moved—

Another flash of steel.

His legs staggered as the tip of her blade pressed lightly against his inner thigh—right next to the femoral artery.

A clear, unspoken message.

She could have killed him.

Twice now.

Sportsmaster growled, shifting again—

Another blur.

Now the katana's tip pressed against his kidney.

Then his throat again.

Then his heart.

Then his wrist.

Each time he moved, she was faster.

Each attack was interrupted before it even began—her sword resting on a new vital point.

It wasn't a duel anymore.

It was a slaughter.

A demonstration of overwhelming superiority.

Sportsmaster was a seasoned assassin, a veteran killer.

But he was human.

And Victoria was not.

I, still seated in my father's chair, let out a mock yawn.

"Alright, Victoria, cut it out. Finish this."

Victoria tilted her head slightly, as if considering.

Then, in a single motion, her blade sliced through Sportsmaster's mask, cleaving it clean in half, revealing his shocked expression beneath.

She didn't stop there.

With blinding speed, she moved past him, her sword flashing in a blur.

A series of lightning-fast cuts.

Fabric shredded.

Armor fell apart piece by piece.

By the time she stopped, Sportsmaster was still standing—but completely stripped of his tactical gear, his protective plating reduced to ribbons, his combat suit hanging in tatters.

Victoria stepped back, her blade still humming with residual heat from the high speeds, while Sportsmaster stood frozen, eyes wide with disbelief.

I finally stood from my chair, stretching my arms lazily.

"Huh." I smirked. "Guess the name really does say it all. You play sports. You don't fight."

A few chuckles echoed through the room.

Even Klarion was wheezing with laughter, kicking his legs like a child.

Savage finally spoke, his tone dry but amused.

"Impressive."

Victoria simply sheathed her blade, stepping back to my side, unbothered and efficient, just as she was designed to be.

Her cybernetic eyes flickered softly, scanning the room for threats, though none remained.

She turned to me, her voice calm, almost childish.

"Did I do good, Father?"

It was just a simple request for evaluation.

I placed a hand on her shoulder, offering a small nod of approval.

"You did, child." My voice was steady, a quiet, measured tone that carried certainty. "You did very well, in fact."

Victoria nodded once, accepting the praise as fact, then resumed her silent vigilance at my side.

I rolled my shoulders, exhaling slightly before turning back to the table, where the Light's members were still seated—some intrigued, some unimpressed, and some… clearly reassessing their opinions of me.

"Well." I said, letting the weight of the moment settle. "Now that we've established that I don't take threats lightly—shall we get back to business?"

Savage's gaze met mine, his expression impassive, but calculating.

Ra's al Ghul was unreadable, though I could tell he was rethinking his previous assumptions.

Queen Bee? Still smirking, tapping a single painted fingernail against the table, clearly enjoying the spectacle.

Klarion? He was grinning wide, his sharp teeth flashing as if he had just seen the most entertaining thing in weeks.

Black Manta had remained silent, his helmeted gaze fixed on me, unmoving, unreadable.

I turned my attention to him directly.

"Something on your mind, Manta?"

He didn't answer right away.

Instead, he simply tilted his head slightly before speaking, his modulated voice carrying no emotion.

"Just wondering if you have the spine to match your arrogance."

I grinned.

"Bold words for someone that dresses as an aquatic animal to fight Atlanteans."

Then, Savage spoke, his deep, ancient voice cutting through the air.

"Very well, Luthor. Let's see if your actions live up to your words."

I simply smirked, leaning back in my chair, completely at ease.

"Oh, don't worry, Savage. I always deliver, that's the Lexcorp guarantee."

Then, Ra's al Ghul leaned forward, his fingers steepled, his voice smooth and measured.

"Let's dispense with the theatrics. You came here, Luthor, so you must have some interest in working with us. The question is—how far does that interest extend?"

I exhaled slowly, pretending to consider, though we both knew I had already made my decision before setting foot here.

"That depends, Ra's. You called me here because you need something from me. That means I have leverage. So let's not pretend this is some one-sided arrangement."

Queen Bee smirked, amused.

"Bold. But not incorrect."

I folded my hands together, my gaze sweeping across the assembled members of the Light.

"You lost my father. A genius, a strategist, and the financial powerhouse behind a good chunk of your operations. You want me to fill that void."

Savage remained impassive, but I could tell I was right.

Ra's didn't confirm, but he didn't deny it either.

I continued.

"The way I see it, you're all a little weaker without him. Your plans? Your influence? They're still there, but without a financial juggernaut and a research division feeding you cutting-edge technology, you're running at a loss."

Queen Bee chuckled. "And you are offering to be our new benefactor?"

I smirked.

"I'm offering to be… an ally. On my terms."

That made them pause.

Black Manta, who had been silent since giving up his seat, finally spoke.

"And what are those terms?"

I exhaled, leaning forward slightly.

"First? I don't take orders. I don't answer to anyone at this table. If we work together, it's a partnership."

Savage nodded slowly, like he expected that.

"Second? You don't touch LexCorp. My company remains mine. You want resources? You ask. You don't take."

Ra's arched a brow but said nothing.

"Third? No forced loyalty. If I decide your plans are idiotic—like, let's say, trying to crash the world's economy so it collapses into chaos—you can expect me to sit that one out."

Klarion giggled, kicking his legs like a child. "Ooooooh, I like him! This one has a spine!"

Queen Bee gave a soft laugh, but Ra's and the Brain weren't as amused.

Savage, however, simply watched.

He was weighing something. Calculating.

Finally, he spoke.

"LexCorp has been expanding at an exponential rate. Your technological advancements are surpassing even our initial projections. That is… impressive."

Queen Bee added, "You are attracting attention. The League is already watching you. It is only a matter of time before they act."

I exhaled dramatically. "Oh no. Whatever will I do?"

Ra's ignored my sarcasm. "If you align with us, we can ensure that the League does not interfere in your operations. In return, you would provide us with access to select LexCorp resources."

There it was.

I had expected a demand, but instead, they were offering protection.

Interesting.

I leaned back, fingers tapping against the table.

"And if I refuse?"

Savage's expression remained unreadable.

"Then you remain alone. The League will come for you eventually. And if they do—"

"They'll fail." I finished for him, smirking.

Savage studied me, his gaze lingering before he gave a small nod.

"Perhaps. But even the strongest empire cannot stand forever without allies. Choose wisely, Luthor."

I let his words sit in the air.

Then, finally, I exhaled.

"Alright. Here's my counteroffer."

The table stiffened slightly.

I smirked, enjoying the shift.

"I'll consider collaborating with the Light. But on my terms. You don't get access to my full arsenal, you don't get a leash on LexCorp, and you certainly don't get to dictate how I operate."

I let my eyes flick across the room.

"You want access to certain tech? Fine. But I choose what. And if anyone tries to backstab me—"

I gestured vaguely to Sportsmaster, still standing there, humiliated and fuming.

"Well. You saw what happened last time, try fighting twenty of them teleporting to your shitter."

The brain said something in french. Klarion grinned wider.

Savage gave a slow nod.

"Very well, Luthor. Let's see what you bring to the table."

I smirked, tilting my head.

"Pleasure doing business with you. Expect a curated list sent to you soon." I let the words hang in the air, my smirk never faltering. "Don't worry, we will find you."

I moved to rise from my chair but then paused, something coming to mind. My eyes flicked to Queen Bee, who had been watching me with that ever-present, knowing smirk.

"Oh, and Queen Bee? Expect a visit from LexCorp Aid."

Her smirk deepened, intrigue flashing across her face.

"Bialya would be an excellent test case for the wonders of technology that I'm bringing to the world."

A soft chuckle escaped her lips. "How generous of you, Luthor. Humanitarian aid? Or something else?"

I tilted my head slightly, letting the ambiguity linger.

"Let's just say… the world need a taste first."

Savage's expression remained unreadable, but I could tell the wheels were turning in his ancient mind.

Klarion? He just grinned, clearly entertained.

I adjusted my cuffs, giving the table one last glance.

"Well. This has been productive. I'll be in touch."

With that, I tapped the communicator on my wrist.

A low hum filled the air, the teleportation matrix activating, blue energy crackling as the field engulfed me and my security team.

For a split second, the world blurred, and then—

We were gone.

In an instant, we rematerialized inside LexCorp HQ, the familiar glow of the teleportation pads fading behind us.

I exhaled, rolling my shoulders, feeling the shift from that stale underground lair to the clean, humming energy of my empire.

Roy and Mercy were already waiting in the executive suite, watching as I stepped off the platform, my synth guards falling back into position.

"That went well," I said, cracking my neck. "Time to get back to work."
 
Chapter 7- Time to party like it's 2023
"So, liking the new space?" I asked, hands casually tucked into my pockets as I stepped into the heart of Netrunner Operations.

The room was massive, dimly lit with cool blue lights pulsing along the walls, illuminating the sleek rows of server towers and holo-terminals, the hum of processing power filling the air like a low, constant heartbeat.

This was the sword to my cyber-defense shields, the vanguard of LexCorp's digital empire.

At the center of it all, the ZAX mainframes loomed, their core processors now heavily upgraded with the technology of the cyberpunk age.

No longer just hyper-advanced supercomputers, but something more.

Eve's voice filtered through the room first, smooth as ever.

"It is… adequate." A brief pause. "But we would have preferred more neon."

I rolled my eyes. "Yeah, yeah, I'll get right on that. Mood lighting for the AI overlords."

Adam's voice followed, more measured, professional.

"The optimization is efficient. Real-time net surveillance has improved by 237%. Our ability to predict and counteract cyber threats is now unparalleled."

I smirked. "That's what I like to hear."

Lining the walls were rows upon rows of futuristic ice baths, each one containing a synth netrunner submerged in a cold, stabilizing solution, their bodies still while their minds roamed the net.

Their purpose?

To scour the digital world for intel, harvesting information, cracking encrypted data, and feeding the AIs the raw material they needed to refine and sharpen their ever-growing intelligence.

It was a system unlike anything else on the planet.

A fully integrated human-machine network, a silent war machine buried in the depths of LexCorp, unseen but unstoppable.

Eve's voice chimed in again, this time with a hint of amusement.

"Our reach now extends beyond even the League's surveillance networks. We see everything. We know what they whisper behind closed doors."

I nodded slowly, my eyes sweeping across the operation.

"Good." I turned back toward the main terminal. "Then let's put that power to use. Start compiling reports on the League, the Light, Cadmus—everything. I want a full analysis of their weaknesses, movements, and, most importantly… their blind spots."

Adam responded immediately.

"Already underway, Father. The system will be ready within the hour."

I let out a satisfied breath, tapping the console once before turning toward the exit.

"Keep me updated. This is just the beginning."

I couldn't waste any more time, I had another visit left for today, time to visit the prodigal son.


The teleportation field dissipated, leaving me standing in the scorching heat of the Arizona desert.

Even through the reinforced walls of the facility, I could feel the sheer intensity of the blazing sun, the air shimmering as waves of heat rolled across the horizon.

Good.

That meant the Archimedes Array was doing its job.

Before stepping forward, I grabbed a cooling suit from the nearby rack, the advanced material reacting instantly, wicking away excess heat and keeping my core temperature stable.

With a smooth motion, I sealed it on, feeling the cool mesh tighten around my body, locking in comfort as I made my way inside.

The facility was silent, the hum of security systems and power generators the only real noise as I approached the containment chamber.

This place had been designed for one purpose—nourishment.

The blast doors slid open, revealing the chamber—a stark, reflective space bathed in intense solar light, amplified by the reinforced mirrors surrounding its sole occupant, he had access to Lexcorp database thanks to a reinforced holo-terminal, so the guy could surf the "safe" part of the web to his heart content.

Sitting in the center, motionless, was Prime—LexCorp's first Kryptonian Synth.

He wore a absorption suit, lined with heat-resistant polymers, helping him regulate the artificial sunbeam pouring down from above.

Atop his head, a cooling helmet hissed softly, keeping his synth-organic brain at optimal temperatures.

He needed the heat, the solar radiation.

Unlike Superman, who roamed freely under Earth's natural sun, Prime had been confined to Cadmus facility since his creation, fed only artificial sunlight, which degraded his abilities over time.

The Archimedes Array was the solution.

Several high-orbit satellites continuously fired pure, concentrated solar radiation into the chamber, ensuring his cells remained charged, preventing stagnation.

To maintain cover, two additional satellites redirected sunlight into massive solar farms, generating electricity for the state, making it seem like nothing more than a LexCorp energy initiative.

The reality?

This was the forge where gods were made.

Prime's glowing blue eyes flickered, acknowledging my presence.

He didn't speak immediately.

Instead, he simply exhaled, a thin mist of frost forming in the air as his breath crystallized upon release.

Ice breath. Functional. A promising sign.

His fingers twitched slightly, testing the movement, before curling into a fist.

"Father," he finally said, his voice calm, synthetic—but unmistakably human.

I smirked, stepping closer.

"Prime. How's the sunlight treating you?"

He remained still, processing, before answering.

"Absorption levels are optimal. Cellular regeneration is increasing at a steady rate. Ice breath functionality confirmed. Heat vision is still underperforming—output remains inferior to LexCorp laser weaponry."

I frowned slightly at that.

"Flight?"

Prime hesitated for a brief moment, then responded.

"Partial capability. Lift-off is inefficient. Glide-assisted movement after enhanced vertical propulsion remains the best available method. Further adaptation required."

I nodded, filing the information away.

His Kryptonian side was waking up, but it was still weaker than it should be.

Being confined underground for so long had stunted him—his cells were hungry, craving more sunlight, adapting slower than a Kryptonian born beneath a yellow sun.

But this? This was progress.

"You'll get there," I assured him, pacing slightly as I examined the data readouts on the chamber walls.

"Your potential is limitless. With time, your abilities will surpass those of your original template."

Prime simply nodded, as if my words were an undeniable fact.

Because to him, they were.

Unlike Superman, unlike any other Kryptonian, Prime was not his own man.

He was mine.

Not through control, not through programming, but through pure, unwavering loyalty.

Synths saw me as their father, and Prime was no different.

He didn't need to be forced into servitude—he simply existed to serve.

And I would make sure his purpose was fulfilled.

I glanced up at the artificial sunbeam, watching as it pulsed golden light down onto him, his skin absorbing every drop.

"We need to accelerate your training," I finally said.

Prime simply nodded.

"Understood. Parameters?"

I smirked.

"We're going to push your limits. The League thinks they own the sky? Let's remind them—LexCorp owns the future."

Prime did not hesitate.

"Acknowledged, Father. Initiating training protocols."

I stood there for a moment, watching Prime as he processed my words, his glowing blue eyes flickering in silent understanding. He didn't question, didn't hesitate—just acknowledged and obeyed.

The perfect son.

I was about to turn away when something caught my eye—the flickering interface of the holo-terminal on the far side of the chamber.

Curious, I strode over, already guessing what had been going on before I arrived. Sure enough, a communication line had been closed mere moments ago.

I gave Prime a knowing look, raising a brow.

"You making friends?"

He blinked, his expression neutral, but his fingers twitched slightly—an almost imperceptible sign of nervousness.

"Engaging in social interactions is beneficial for cognitive development," Prime stated matter-of-factly, as if reciting a research paper.

I smirked, crossing my arms.

"Right. And who exactly were you socially developing with?"

He hesitated just a second too long.

"...Eve permitted communication with a fellow synth designated—"

"Uh-huh. Got it." I cut him off, chuckling. "No need to give me the full LexCorp catalog entry."

Prime remained silent, but I swore I saw his posture shift ever so slightly.

Interesting.

"Listen, I'm a bit young for the whole birds and the bees talk," I said, rubbing the back of my neck. "But since you're already chatting up your fellow synths, I guess we should get ahead of some things."

I turned, walking over to one of the storage cabinets along the wall, pulling out a small, insulated cup, then turned back toward Prime.

"We need a sample."

Prime tilted his head, blinking. "Clarify. Sample of what?"

I gave him a pointed look, shaking the cup lightly in my hand.

He stared at it for a long moment.

Then, his eyes slightly narrowed.

"...Father."

I sighed, running a hand down my face.

"Listen, I know it's awkward, but we need your DNA for R&D purposes. Kryptonian genetics are... well, complicated. We've already mapped out Superman's samples thanks to Cadmus' old records, but we need a baseline comparison from you."

Prime exhaled slowly, a brief gust of frost misting in the air.

"...Understood."

I tapped a few commands into the holo-terminal, unlocking the parental controls I had placed on his system.

"There. You've got unrestricted access to the database now."

He blinked, his eyes flickering as he processed the change.

"I will comply with the request."

"Appreciate it, kid." I patted his shoulder before turning toward the exit. "And hey, don't spend too long on whatever synth romance you've got going on, yeah? We've got work to do."

Prime did not respond.

I wasn't sure if that was a good thing or a very concerning thing.

Either way, that was Future James' problem.


Doctor Desmond was in heaven.

An isolated, leak-proof laboratory, cutting-edge genetic equipment, and an endless supply of samples lining the walls. Cloning vats hummed softly, their contents bubbling as experiments pushed the boundaries of modern science.

This was what he had always dreamed of.

His colleagues, however… well, they took some getting used to.

Not all of them were fully human.

Synthetic researchers—lab-grown specialists enhanced with skill shards—made up a significant portion of the team.

At first, he had been unsettled. But after weeks of working alongside them, he had to admit…

They were efficient. Dedicated. Focused.

And most importantly? They loved science just as much as he did.

Right now, his primary obsession was a new compound—something extraordinary.

Forced Evolutionary Virus.

A masterpiece of bioengineering, its effects were beyond anything humanity had ever achieved before. Enhanced strength, durability, rapid cellular adaptation—it was perfection waiting to be harnessed.

And Desmond?

He intended to refine it further.

His latest research revolved around combining it with his own blockbuster formula.

The potential? Limitless.

The only downside to this scientific utopia?

The constant drug use.

Mentats.

These nootropics were kicked back like candy among the researchers.

At first, Desmond had been alarmed, but after a while… well, he got used to it.

And besides, it wasn't like they were addicted.

Not really.

A single shot of Addictol could cleanse their systems instantly, keeping them from developing dependence.

Sure, the excessive use of cognitive enhancers made the research team more… enthusiastic about science, but was that really a bad thing?

So long as the results kept coming?

Not at all.

And if Desmond was being honest? He had started liking the company.

One synth, in particular, had caught his attention.

Jessica Huwang.

A synth clone of the original Fabricia Huwang, LexCorp's head geneticist.

At first, it had been… weird.

He had known Fabricia for years, he worked with her on multiple projects outside of Cadmus and this Lexcorp gig, back when they were fresh out of metropolis university.

But Jessica?

She was her own person—sharper, bolder, unburdened by the limitations of organic life.

And damn it, he was starting to like her.

Maybe it was the Mentats talking.

Or maybe, just maybe, he was falling for a synthetic woman.

"Uh, Jessica, have you ever eaten sushi? I know a wonderful place downtown," Desmond asked, trying his best to sound casual.

Jessica tilted her head slightly, her synthetic eyes flickering with brief analysis.

"Not really, Doctor, but I have read about it in our database," she replied, her voice smooth, measured—but there was a hint of curiosity.

Progress.

Before Desmond could continue, a deep, guttural roar echoed through the facility.

The sound reverberated through the reinforced walls, making the glass panels in his lab tremble ever so slightly.

Out of the corner of his eye, he saw a squad of Synth Security mobilizing, their cybernetic enhancements flaring to life as they moved in perfect synchronization.

He sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose.

"Perimeter breach," he muttered, already making an educated guess.

The Genetic Animal Division must have had a containment failure again.

"That's the third time this month," Jessica noted, her expression neutral but her tone slightly exasperated.

Desmond let out a small, resigned chuckle.

"I swear, they need to stop splicing things just because they can."

Jessica simply nodded.

"Shall I reschedule our dinner plans, Doctor?"

Desmond blinked.

Then grinned.

"Nah. This should be handled in about fifteen minutes. Twenty at most."

He gestured vaguely toward the mobilizing Synth Security forces, already moving out like a well-oiled machine.

"Let's go see what kind of Jurassic Park nonsense they unleashed this time," he said, grabbing his datapad and heading toward the disturbance.

Jessica followed without hesitation, a thin smile now showed on her lips.


"I swear, is there something in the water?" I muttered, pinching the bridge of my nose as I scrolled through the latest reports.

Another containment breach.

Another genetically engineered nightmare unleashed in my facility.

I exhaled sharply, leaning back in my chair.

"Eve, why are we making super-monsters again?"

The AI's voice filtered in, smooth and composed.

"The Genetic Research Division has been following approved directives, Father. However, their interpretation of 'acceptable risk' remains… flexible."

"Flexible?" I scoffed. "They just let something with too many teeth and not enough common sense loose in my facility—again."

Eve paused for a moment, then added, "Their experimental enthusiasm aligns with their increased Mentat consumption. The nootropics have enhanced their cognitive efficiency but have also led to… heightened creativity in their designs."

Ah.

Of course.

I rubbed my temples, the pieces falling into place.

"So, let me get this straight. My geneticists—high out of their minds on cognitive enhancers—are pushing scientific boundaries without the restraint that comes with sanity?"

"That is an accurate summary."

I sighed, then sat up, typing directly into my LexCorp internal system.

"Enough. We're limiting the supply."

Eve hesitated. "Shall I issue a full restriction?"

"No." I tapped my fingers against the desk, thinking. "They've gotten used to their crutch. Cutting them off cold turkey would tank productivity. Instead—ration it. A structured supply. They get baseline doses for regular work, but if they want more? They earn it."

Eve's holographic interface pulsed softly, processing the change.

"Implementing a merit-based distribution system. Increased Mentat rations will be rewarded based on project success."

"Exactly." I leaned back, a smirk creeping onto my face. "If they want to indulge in their genius, they can prove they deserve it. No more unchecked access. If they make something valuable—then they get their fix."

Eve's tone turned mildly amused.

"Encouraging scientific ambition through controlled incentives. A wise decision, Father."

"Yeah, yeah." I waved my hand. "Now get the message out. Let's see if they can still make progress without turning my labs into a Jurassic Park that got invaded by Lovecraft."

A brief pause.

Then, the facility alarms blared.

I froze mid-sentence, my smirk immediately dropping.

"Containment Breach Detected. Sector D-14."

I sighed, already knowing what I was about to see.

Opening up the security camera feeds, I was greeted with absolute chaos—massive, reptilian creatures ramming against reinforced containment units, their claws tearing at the metal while researchers scrambled out of the way.

In the adjacent tank, chitinous, hulking forms slammed against thick glass walls, their grotesque pincers snapping wildly at anything that moved.

Of course.

Because my scientists—my supposed geniuses—had decided to breed the worst creatures imaginable in the same wing.

I rubbed my temples, letting out another long, exhausted sigh.

"Why," I muttered, staring at the madness unfolding on the screens.

"Why am I surrounded by idiots?"


A cold night wind swirled through the streets of Gotham, carrying the scent of smog, rain, and sin.

Perched above a lamppost, Victoria watched her prey.

Her father didn't know about this operation, but his directive had started it.

Acquire influence in the criminal underworld.

Eve had determined that all existing criminal organizations were inefficient, riddled with incompetence, and limited by human weakness.

A criminal empire run by synths?

Superior. Precise.

So, across the world, synth operatives were propping up new gangs, controlling the drug trade, arms smuggling, and black market operations.

With Addictol slowly rolling out to the public, the demand for stronger, more potent substances had skyrocketed.

And only the synths could provide.

Jet. Psycho. Daytripper. Turbo. And many more.

Flooding the market with enhanced, purified chems, the streets had given their suppliers a fitting name.

"Chem Fiends."

Only a few fools had refused to accept this new order.

Case in point?

Roman Sionis. Black Mask.

The self-proclaimed king of Gotham's underworld.

A relic who thought he could hold power against something far greater than himself.

Victoria's optical implants zoomed in, focusing on the fortified compound across the street.

Disguised as a nightclub, it was more bunker than business, a safehouse and weapons depot rolled into one.

Not as prolific as the Iceberg Lounge, run by the Penguin—who, unlike Sionis, had wisely chosen to work with them.

Her mission?

Send a message.

Be a terror weapon.

And get out before the Bat could arrive.

Her eyes scanned the area—guards at every entrance, heavy weapon emplacements, state-of-the-art security systems.

Her fingers twitched against the hilt of her Saturnite katana, anticipation thrumming in her cybernetics.

She exhaled, a smirk playing at her lips.

"Time to go fucking Nova."

Victoria landed gracefully on the busy Gotham street, the click of her boots against the pavement drowned in the cacophony of nightlife.

This was a terror mission.

Getting seen? That was the entire point.

Pedestrians froze, eyes widening as they took in the eerie sight—a lone woman heavily armed and probably dangerous, this is Gotham however, they might find this a little more normal than say Metropolis.

Fear flickered in their gazes.

She appreciated the spirited welcome.

Victoria sauntered forward, unbothered, unconcerned, as though she were simply out for a night on the town.

She could see the reaction unfolding already.

Security was already mobilizing, earpieces buzzing, guns shifting in their holsters.

She let them.

It was part of the fun.

The bouncer at the door—a mountain of muscle, arms crossed, eyes hard—stepped in front of her.

"No weapons in the club, lady."

Victoria tilted her head slightly, and in that instant, her Netrunner implants fired off.

Every camera inside the building flickered off in perfect synchronization, the security grid blinding itself to the carnage that was about to unfold.

She smirked.

"It won't be a club for long."

The bouncer blinked, barely registering the words before—

SHNK.

In a single lightning-fast motion, her hand shot to her katana, the blade unsheathing in a blur of metal and light.

For a moment, the bouncer didn't react.

Didn't even realize what had happened.

Then—his head slid from his shoulders, tumbling to the ground with a wet thud.

His body followed a second later.

The street fell silent.

Victoria grinned, flicking the blood from her blade.

Then, stepping over the corpse, she pushed open the club doors and walked inside.

The moment she entered, panicked shouting erupted—security guards reaching for their weapons, bouncers yelling into comms, patrons scrambling for cover.

It wouldn't matter.

Her mission was absolute.

With a flick of her wrist, she pulled a trio of grenades from her belt and lobbed them into the crowd.

A second later—

BOOM. BOOM. BOOM.

The explosions ripped through the club, sending bodies flying, flames bursting from the initial blast points.

Gunfire erupted, bullets tearing through the air as Black Mask's men opened fire in a panic.

Victoria moved before they even had the chance to aim.

Her Sandevistan activated.

Time slowed.

To her, the world became a series of frozen images—muzzles flashing mid-explosion, casings ejecting in slow motion, the terrified faces of men who had already lost.

She grinned and struck.

A guard fired a burst of rounds—she twisted, katana flashing, and the bullets ricocheted off her blade, bouncing back into the shooter's throat.

He hit the floor, gurgling.

She lunged forward, her Berserk system kicking in, flooding her body with endorphins and strength enhancements.

Her blade cut through flesh like paper, severing limbs, slicing torsos, leaving wet red arcs in the air.

Another guard tried to tackle her—her adreno-trigger fired, adrenaline pumping at peak efficiency, sharpening every reaction.

She grabbed the man by the throat and drove him through a table, shattering it in a single motion.

Blood sprayed.

She didn't stop.

Bullets pinged against her subdermal armor, bruising but not penetrating.

The pain was nothing—it only drove her forward.

Patrons screamed, some running, others caught in the chaos, torn apart in the maelstrom of violence she unleashed.

It didn't matter.

They were in the way.

They would learn.

Victoria carved a path deeper into the club, leaving nothing but carnage in her wake.

She had one mission.

Erase Black Mask's operations.

And tonight?

She had lost herself to the slaughter.

Victoria moved like a specter of death, cutting down anyone in her path with effortless, brutal efficiency.

Her Sandevistan pulsed, keeping time sluggish for the poor bastards trying to defend themselves. They might as well have been standing still.

She sidestepped a shotgun blast, the pellets whizzing past her cheek as she slid low, katana slicing clean through the man's knees. He screamed, his body collapsing before she plunged the blade into his chest, twisting it for good measure before ripping it free.

Another guard rushed in, screaming for backup.

She didn't let him finish.

Her Saturnite blade cut through his neck like butter, his body still taking two more steps before collapsing lifelessly.

Blood coated the walls, the floors, her hands.

It felt good.

The sound of screeching metal caught her attention—security shutters trying to trap her inside.

She sprinted forward, leaping onto the bar counter, flipping over a hail of gunfire before landing in a slide—

Right up to the reinforced metal door leading deeper into the compound.

Two more guards stood in front of it, rifles raised.

She grinned.

Her cybernetics surged, strength amplifying tenfold as she lunged forward, grabbing one of the men by the head and slamming him into the steel door so hard his skull caved in.

The other screamed, firing wildly.

The bullets pinged off her subdermal armor, but she let one graze her cheek—she liked the pain. It made things more fun.

She grabbed his wrist, twisted it unnaturally until the bone snapped, then drove her katana straight into his chest, lifting him off his feet before kicking him off like discarded trash.

With a satisfied exhale, she pushed open the door.

Inside?

Jackpot.

Rows and rows of Black Mask's drug stash—crates of Coke, meth, weed, crack—stacked from floor to ceiling.

A fortune in filth.

And it would all burn.

She reached into her belt, pulling free two incendiary grenades.

Flicking the pins free with her thumb, she tossed them into the room.

A beat.

Then—

FWOOM.

Flames erupted, licking up the walls, engulfing the stacks of product in an instant. The fire spread rapidly, fueled by the chemical compounds, turning the entire room into a roaring inferno.

Victoria watched the flames dance for a second, admiring her own destruction, before turning away.

There was still work to be done.

The path deeper into the facility awaited.

Victoria continued her slaughter, cutting through Black Mask's security like a blade through silk.

He was getting desperate now—she could hear it in the frantic radio chatter, the increasingly panicked voices screaming orders.

"She's cutting through us like nothing!"

"I need reinforcements, NOW!"

"We got railguns in the vault, GET THEM!"


Weapons escalated.

The goons who once fired handguns and SMGs now scrambled for heavier ordnance.

Shotguns. Laser weapons.

It didn't matter.

They weren't fast enough.

She darted between cover, her Sandevistan heating up, dodging gunfire before it even left the barrels.

She twisted mid-air, spinning off a wall, her Saturnite blade slicing straight through an armored merc's power-assisted gauntlet.

He screamed.

She silenced him with a stab to the heart.

Bodies piled. Blood painted the hallways.

She was getting close.

Victoria stepped over corpses, following the trail of fear leading directly to Black Mask's panic room.

He was scrambling every last piece of security left in the facility.

"Throw everything at her! Don't let her get through!"

More gunfire erupted, but her Berserk system activated, heightening her pain tolerance and brute force.

Bullets pinged off her subdermal armor, bruising her but never slowing her down.

One guard tried to run.

She let him.

The fear would spread.

She reached the final reinforced doors, heavy security plating locking Black Mask inside his personal sanctuary.

Victoria tilted her head, smirking.

"They always think walls will save them."

Then Eve's voice whispered in her ear.

"Victoria-1N, you must finish this quickly. Batman is en route. Estimated arrival: five minutes."

Victoria grinned, wiping blood from her cheek.

"Five minutes? More than enough time."

Inside the room, she could hear Black Mask laughing.

"That's right, sweetheart!" his voice crackled through the intercom. "You hear that? The Bat's coming! You lost! You ain't got the guts to finish this now! You're too scared of what comes next!"

Victoria sighed.

Then raised her katana.

And sliced straight through the door security bolts.

The doors groaned, sparked, and slid open.

Inside, Black Mask stood frozen, a small gathering of terrified women huddled behind him.

His confidence shattered the moment he saw her.

Victoria stalked forward, unbothered by the defenseless bystanders—her mission was clear.

Black Mask stammered, stepping back.
"Listen, we—we can work something out—"

She cut off his words.

And his head.

With a single, fluid motion, she swung her blade, the black skull mask clattering to the ground—his decapitated head still wearing it.

The women screamed.

Victoria ignored them.

She simply grabbed Black Mask's severed head, turned on her heel, and walked toward the exit.

She had sent the message.

And now?

She had a Bat to outrun.


The air crackled with tension.

Victoria stood at the threshold of the burning club, her blade dripping, her eyes glowing faintly in the smoke-filled dark.

Opposite her, Batman and Robin, unmoving, watching. Calculating.

She let out a slow, mocking whistle.

"Well. If it isn't the World's Greatest Detective and his pocket-sized sidekick."

Robin's eyes narrowed behind his mask, his gloved fingers twitching toward his utility belt.

Batman?

Stone-faced.

Victoria flashed them a sharp grin, raising both hands in mock surrender, her katana still held loosely in one.

"Relax. If I wanted to kill you, I would've left landmines on my way out."

Robin's jaw tightened.

"And yet, you butchered every living thing in this place."

Victoria shrugged, stepping forward—slowly, deliberately.

"Not every living thing."

Batman's cape billowed as he took a single step forward.

"Enough. Drop the weapon."

Victoria tilted her head, mocking curiosity flashing across her face.

"Or what?"

Robin's stance tightened.

"Or we take you down."

Victoria chuckled, rolling her shoulders.

"Tempting offer, but I'll pass."

She pointed her katana toward the exit—not toward them.

"I've completed my mission. I have no reason to fight you."

Batman's expression didn't change, but his eyes sharpened.

"Who sent you? Who are you working for?"

Victoria smirked, shaking her head.

"Now, now, detective. I can't just hand you all the answers. Where's the fun in that?"

Robin gritted his teeth.

"You think this is a game? You just murdered half the criminal underworld!"

Victoria laughed softly, twirling her katana before resting it against her shoulder.

"And? What, you were gonna let Black Mask keep peddling chems and trafficking people? That wasn't exactly your priority before I got here."

That got to him—Robin's fingers clenched, but Batman stopped him with a glance.

Victoria's smirk widened.

"I don't want to fight you. You don't want to fight me."

She paused, letting the weight of her words settle.

"Walk away."

The flames behind her roared higher, casting long shadows against Gotham's skyline.

Batman's eyes locked onto hers, studying. Measuring.

Then, finally, he spoke.

"You're not leaving."

Victoria's smirk faltered for half a second.

Then, she sighed, rolling her neck.

"Guess we're doing this the hard way."

Victoria moved first.

Her Sandevistan roared to life, cybernetics pulsing as time slowed to a crawl in her perception.

Robin was already reaching for a Birdarang, his muscles tensing to throw—

But he was too slow.

Victoria sidestepped, her katana flashing like lightning, slicing the Birdarang before it even left the belt.

Not to kill—just to make a point.

Robin barely had time to register the near miss before she was gone again, dashing toward Batman, blade raised—

And then, before the strike could land—

CRACK!

A gauntleted fist met her midsection, sending her skidding back across the pavement.

Victoria stumbled slightly, her systems adjusting for the impact.

Even with subdermal armor, the Bat hit like a freight train.

She grinned, wiping her mouth.

"So that's how it's gonna be, huh?"

Batman was already moving, closing the distance, his form a perfect blend of efficiency and power.

Victoria darted forward, her blade flashing—

He dodged with inhuman precision, his cape snapping through the air as he redirected the force of her attack, deflecting her momentum.

He was good.

But she was better.

She activated her Adreno-Trigger, a burst of pure adrenaline flooding her system, increasing her reaction time, strength, and speed.

Her katana lashed out again, faster than before—

And for the first time, Batman had to block with his gauntlets.

The impact sent a shockwave through the air, the reinforced Saturnite blade screeching against the Bat's armor, she could see red marking the blade, nice.

Robin lunged from behind, attempting to catch her from her blind spot—

She twisted.

A perfectly timed counter-kick sent him flying back, crashing into a pile of scattered debris.

"Tsk, tsk, Boy Wonder. Didn't they teach you better?"

Robin rolled, recovering instantly, his eyes burning with frustration.

"You're fast, but you're not winning this."

Victoria chuckled, spinning her blade.

"Oh, I don't need to win. I just need to leave."

She flicked her wrist—

A command pulsed from her cybernetic implants, sending a signal directly to her extraction team.

Behind Batman, in the distance, a pillar of blue light flared to life—her teleporter priming.

"You're not going anywhere," Batman growled, closing in—

Victoria leaped back, flipping over a burning car, her optics calculating the distance.

"Try and stop me."

She hit the teleportation zone, and—

With a flash of electric blue, she was gone.

The world snapped back into focus as she reappeared in the LexCorp teleporter chamber, the aftershock of the energy field flickering around her.

Mercy was already waiting for her, arms crossed.

"Did you really have to piss off Batman?" she asked dryly.

Victoria simply grinned, tossing Black Mask's severed head onto the table.

"Message sent."

Mercy sighed, shaking her head.

"I'll let Chrome squad know you're back."

Victoria just cracked her neck, stretching.

"Good. I need a shower."

As she turned away, her smirk widened.

Mercy whispered something, her enhanced hearing barely picked it up "Crazy cyberpsychos bitch"

Tonight was a good night.
 
Chapter 8- Merchant of Death
The creche ran at full capacity, the hum of machinery and the faint hiss of sterilized steam filling the air.

Twenty synth-birthing platforms worked in tandem, constructing new bodies with absolute precision—bones reinforced with carbon fiber, veins lined with bio-conductive materials ready for cybernetics to be slotted in, muscles woven with synthetic fibers stronger than steel, and skin premade with miniature armored plates underneath, invisible to x-ray.

Across the other side of the room, the true process of integration was underway.

Lined up in preservation tanks, recovered brains floated in a suspension of oxygenated nutrients, each one extracted from fallen enemies deemed too valuable to simply dispose of.

Their memories, skills, and experience would be harvested, integrated into the growing LexCorp intelligence network—or, if their knowledge was specialized enough, transformed into Skill Shards, portable expertise ready to be slotted into future synths.

Nearby, sedated victims lay strapped into memory extraction chairs, their vitals monitored as their minds were carefully accessed.

These weren't discarded bodies—these were replacements in progress.

Corporate workers. High-value targets. People who once had power, soon to be made obsolete.

Their original bodies would never leave this facility.

But their faces, voices, and expertise?

Those would serve me.

The Memory Den technicians moved with careful efficiency, ensuring the transfer process was smooth—for the data, at least.

Besides them returning synths and valuable Lexcorp employees already with the implant simply downloaded their memories into the server, to refine the next generation.

Those against their will?

Their pain was irrelevant.

This was progress.

And LexCorp did not waste resources.

"Ah, hello, Father. Looking to learn a new skill?"

Abigail Tennenbaum greeted me with her usual playful smirk, her voice carrying that light teasing edge she always used when speaking to me.

She was one of the closest researchers in the facility to my age, merely four years my senior—but that wasn't the problem.

The problem was her sense of humor.

A practical joker through and through, she had cloned a small army of synth duplicates of herself as research assistants.

And then, just to mess with me, she decided to blend in among them.

Now, every time I spoke to "Abigail," I had no idea if I was talking to the original or just another one of her many synthetic copies.

Mom could tell them apart—somehow.

But when I asked how, she refused to tell me.

Said it was "a secret."

Which was frustrating as hell.

I crossed my arms, giving her—or them—a dry look.

"I don't have time for your games, Abigail."

One of them—whichever one this was—grinned mischievously.

"Oh, but you always make time for my games, Father."

I sighed, already regretting stepping into this conversation.

"Just pull the files. I need access to the latest Skill Shard data."

All five Abigails nodded in perfect synchronization.

That wasn't creepy at all.

With an amused tilt of her head, the one in front of me gestured toward the Memory Den terminals.

"Right this way, then. Let's see what you'd like to download today."

I exhaled sharply, already bracing myself for more of Abigail's antics as I followed her—or them—into the Memory Den.

The room was lined with high-tech neural interface stations, each connected to databases filled with raw knowledge, harvested memories, and the latest Skill Shard developments.

Across the far wall, sedated personnel were hooked into extraction pods, their minds slowly being digitized into pure, transferable information.

Some of them were willing participants—LexCorp researchers offering their expertise for duplication and a nice perpetual bonus to their paycheck and fully paid retirement.

Others?

Well, their willingness wasn't exactly a concern.

I approached one of the main interface chairs, the sleek metal surface adjusting as it recognized my biometrics.

Abigail—or one of her clones—leaned against the console, watching me with her usual mischievous smirk.

"So, what's on the menu today, Father?" she asked, tapping the screen to pull up available downloads.

I glanced at the list, scrolling through the catalog of stolen knowledge.

Advanced combat tactics.

Corporate espionage.

High-speed piloting.

Economic warfare.

Deep-system hacking.

Exotic weapons use and maintenance.


I paused on the last one, considering it for a moment.

Abigail—or whichever one this was—hummed thoughtfully.

"Looking to get your hands dirty? Or just thinking of making some interesting new toys?"

I shot her a side-eye, unamused.

"You talk too much."

She grinned wider.

"And you like the sound of your own voice too much. Guess we make a great pair."

I ignored the obvious bait, focusing instead on inputting my selections.

"Processing request," the AI intoned. "Skill Shard integration will begin shortly."

The chair's armrest opened, revealing a neural link port.

Abigail motioned toward it, feigning dramatic reverence.

"Well, Father, time to jack in and let the magic happen."

I rolled my eyes but plugged the neural cable into my cybernetic port, reclining into the chair as the system whirred to life.

A sharp pulse shot through my skull, the feeling of raw knowledge bleeding into my mind like a floodgate opening.

The neural download completed, the sharp pulse of data fading as my mind sorted through the influx of new knowledge.

Motivational speaking.

Not exactly a weapon, but power comes in many forms.

A well-placed word could move mountains, shatter opposition before a single shot was ever fired.

It wasn't enough to command technology.

I had to command people.

As I disconnected from the Skill Shard interface, Abigail—or one of her clones—leaned against the terminal with a smirk, watching me far too closely.

"So, Father, how does it feel? Inspired? Charismatic? Maybe thinking of taking me out to dinner so you can practice your new skills?"

I barely glanced at her, standing up and rolling my shoulders as I adjusted.

"I don't need practice, I already have the resources to make people listen."

Abigail sighed dramatically, shaking her head.

"You know, Father, for someone so brilliant, you really don't pick up on certain things."

I arched a brow, adjusting my jacket.

"Like what?"

Her expression twitched, as if debating whether or not to clarify.

Then she just grinned and waved a hand.

"Oh, nothing. Just a tragic lack of awareness, really. But hey, at least you'll be able to give rousing speeches now. Maybe even seduce a few board members while you're at it."

I ignored the strange comment, already refocusing.

"Good. Then my time here wasn't wasted."

Abigail folded her arms, tilting her head.

"So, what's next? Gonna start rallying armies? Converting the masses to the glory of LexCorp? Maybe giving your synth children bedtime stories with dramatic flair?"

I turned to her, my expression unreadable.

"I got to sell some of our toys soon, military convention and all that."

Abigail's smirk faded slightly, her playful tone shifting to something more thoughtful.
She laughed, shaking her head.

As I left, I could hear her muttering behind me.

"Mercy is right, just like his father. Completely clueless."

I had no idea what she was talking about.


It was the final day of the convention, and I stood inside our booth, watching as the finishing touches were put in place.

We were still closed, of course—fashionably late was the only way to make an entrance at an event of this scale.

This wasn't just about showing off LexCorp's latest advancements.

This was about dominating the conversation.

Hologram projectors were primed and ready, calibrated to display our latest technologies in striking, impossible-to-ignore detail.

The booth girls—or rather, carefully curated synth representatives—were positioned strategically, waiting for the inevitable crowd of investors, generals, and corporate executives to swarm in.

Their synthetic forms were flawlessly designed, enhanced with aesthetic cybernetics and biomods that walked the fine line between human and futuristic perfection.

I had painstakingly chosen their attire, no, their entire form, pulling directly from my own memories, ensuring they perfectly embodied the cyberpunk aesthetic, cybernetics, and bio-mods making my vision into reality.

Sleek, neon-lined jackets. Form-fitting suits. Digitized accents that pulsed with artificial light.

A delicate balance between corporate elegance and a sharp, rebellious edge.

Neon lights were intentionally covered by black cloth, adding a veil of mystery to the presentation, making sure that when the moment came—when the veil was lifted—all eyes would be on us.

The other corporations in attendance had already opened their doors, their booths displaying new military prototypes, advanced vehicles, and next-gen weaponry.

I wasn't worried.

They were playing checkers.

I was playing 4D chess.

And once the doors opened?

The future would belong to LexCorp.

I turned to Mercy, who stood beside me, arms crossed, watching the finishing preparations with her usual calm precision.

"Time to make an entrance."

She smirked, tapping her earpiece.

"Opening the doors. Let's see who's ready for the future."

The booth lights surged to life, and the veil lifted.

The booth pulsed with energy, a controlled storm of motion as synth soldiers stepped into their power armor, servos hissing as reinforced plating locked into place. Their movements were smooth, unnatural in their precision, every joint enhanced by LexCorp's finest engineering.

Others, lightly armored but no less deadly, prepared their own demonstrations. Cybernetic limbs detached and reconfigured, the sleek monowires snapping outward, their edges glowing faintly as they cut through the air with a whisper. Mantis blades extended, unfolding with a predatory elegance, while those equipped with gorilla arms tested their strength against thick steel bars, effortlessly bending them like twigs.

Beyond them, the Basilisk Tank roared to life, its hoverfield activating, lifting it just above the reinforced floor. The pilots inside linked into the smart-control systems, syncing their movements with the machine, becoming one with their steel war beast, beside it a troop transport AV modeled after a Militech manticore put its upgraded engines at minimal power.

A few steps away, the LexCorp Dragoon came online, its fuselage gleaming under the artificial lights, advanced avionics flashing in rapid succession as its weapon systems engaged. The pilot climbed into the cockpit with practiced ease, neural implants connecting seamlessly to the jet's interface.

Scattered throughout the area, LexCorp's autonomous war machines stood like silent sentinels. Assaultrons held their ground, optics scanning their surroundings with cold precision, their sleek, humanoid frames betraying the sheer destructive force within them. Sentry bots loomed like metallic titans, their heavy armor plating and mounted cannons primed for deployment. Meanwhile, eyebots hovered above, their small, agile forms feeding live surveillance data to the command interface, ensuring nothing went unseen.

Lining the gigantic booth, an arsenal that could level battlefields was on display. Conventional firearms, but with LexCorp's signature upgrades, sat beside more experimental designs. A compact rifle, seemingly unassuming, housed explosive gyrojet rounds, capable of turning cover into a joke. Nearby, smart weapons gleamed, sleek and deadly, their targeting systems advanced enough to turn even the worst marksman into a man who would never miss a shot.

And then there were the exotic weapons.

Lasers, railguns, and plasma rifles, standing as quiet harbingers of a future where war needed an extra kick. Each one a statement of intent, proof that LexCorp's reach was far beyond what others could dream of.

As the final calibrations locked into place, the lights shifted, the neon glow bleeding into the room, casting shadows that danced along the surfaces like flickering ghosts. Then, the music started.

A low, pulsing punk track, subtle yet powerful, weaving its way through the air.
It didn't interrupt the conversations outside the booth, but it changed the atmosphere, drawing attention, making people pause.

Some visitors stopped mid-step, turning toward the LexCorp pavilion, eyes catching the subtle, deliberate chaos unfolding within. The scent of heated metal, ozone, and synthetic polymers filled the air, adding an almost tangible weight to the moment.

Everything was set.

I turned to Mercy, smirking.

"Did we manage to get our little special surprise?"

She met my gaze, the picture of composed efficiency, arms crossed as she surveyed our domain.

"Yes. The organizers had to be replaced, but we did it. The ceiling is rigged to open for the grand finale."

I chuckled, running a hand down my suit, feeling the smooth fabric mixed with reinforced fibers beneath my fingertips.

"Perfect. Let's give them a show they'll never forget."

The booth doors slid open, and the world took its first steps into the future.

The atmosphere shifted instantly—not just a change in scenery, but in energy, in presence, in power. The neon glow bathed everything in an almost surreal otherworldly light, reflecting off steel, optics, and the gleaming LexCorp insignia.

The music thrummed, deep synth beats vibrating through the air, setting the rhythm of the revolution.

Then the ceiling above us groaned to life.

The convention floor held its breath.

And from the open sky, he arrived.

Liberty Prime Mk. III.

A titan of steel, upgraded into a weapon beyond anything the world had ever seen.

The ground shuddered beneath his sheer weight, the tremor sending shockwaves through the entire pavilion. His red optics blazed to life, scanning the gathered crowd with a cold, unwavering gaze, behind him, you could see the Eifell tower, how quaint.

His armor plating gleamed, reforged from next-generation alloys, layered with adaptive shielding and cybernetic interfacing. His limbs moved with precision, servos humming with power, each movement a calculated act of destruction waiting to be unleashed.

His arsenal was an engineer's nightmare and a warlord's dream.

Twin shoulder-mounted railguns, capable of erasing entire armored divisions in a single sweep, a plasma lance, crackling with energy, humming with the condensed force of a dying star.

Smart-missile pods, linked to predictive AI, tracking targets before they even had a chance to think about evasion, and of course if modified by our mechanics it's tactical nuke stockpile and eye laser.

The crowd froze.

I let the silence breathe, let the tension coil like a spring—until it was ready to snap.

I grabbed the microphone, leaned in, and grinned.

"Ladies and gentlemen, arms dealers and generals, corporate titans and government spooks—welcome to the future."

I spread my arms, letting the moment breathe.

"For decades, you've been force-fed the same outdated garbage. Old men in expensive suits selling you weapons built on ideas a century old."

I paced, my words electric, my tone alive.

"Bullets? Conventional warfare? Bureaucratic red tape? That's the past. That's the last generation clinging to relevance."

I turned sharply, pointing up at Liberty Prime.

"THIS is the new standard."

The crowd's stunned silence broke into murmurs—excited, terrified, eager.

I laughed, shaking my head.

"Oh, I get it. You're wondering, 'Can this really be done? Is LexCorp really about to rewrite the rules of war?'"

I leaned forward, voice dropping just enough to force them to listen closer.

"Let me answer that for you—YES."

The holograms around me flashed, showing simulated battlefields, showcasing LexCorp's advancements in action.

"Because here's the thing—humanity isn't meant to stagnate. We aren't meant to sit around, playing by rules written by fossils who fear change."

I motioned at the assembled technology, the power-armored synths standing at attention, the Basilisk tank floating with grace for something this big, the Dragoon jet primed to dominate the skies.

"LexCorp doesn't sell weapons. We sell superiority."

I took a step forward, gaze sweeping over the stunned crowd.

"You're looking at the next era of warfare. The end of the old ways. The beginning of something unbeatable."

I turned, nodding toward Liberty Primr.

With a loud mechanical whir, his optics blazed to life, and his voice boomed across the entire convention floor.

"DESIGNATION: LIBERTY PRIME, OPERATIONAL ASSESSMENT: ALL SYSTEM NOMINAL, PRIMARY DIRECTIVE: WAR."

The booth shook with the sheer power of his voice, the crowd's reaction immediate.

Some cheered, some stared in awe, others scrambled to get their people on the line, I let the moment stretch, the energy crackling in the air before I gave my final words.

"The world is changing. You have two options. Adapt. Or be left behind."

I dropped the mic onto the stage.

People scrambled to make calls, to secure meetings, to buy into the future before they got left behind.

I let the chaos unfold, stepping back to the edge of the stage, watching the shockwaves spread across the convention floor.

Then—a single notification pinged in my neural HUD.

I glanced at it, and my smirk widened like a kid on Christmas morning.

LexCorp market valuation just hit eight trillion.

And it was still climbing.

I turned to Mom, a smirk pulling at my lips.

"I'd say that went well."

She just laughed, watching as the crowd surged toward us, desperate to buy in.


I let the chaos unfold before me, watching as shockwaves rippled through the entire convention. Executives in tailored suits fumbled for their phones, military liaisons whispered urgently into secure comm channels, and intelligence agents tried—and failed—to mask their expressions.

Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Kord Omniversal, Rheinmetall, even Wayne Enterprises—every single major defense contractor had just been blindsided.

They had walked into Eurosatory expecting another round of corporate chest-beating, another cycle of government bids, political favors, and incremental technological upgrades.
Instead?

They got LexCorp tearing up the script and throwing it into a furnace.

I could see their representatives—CEOs, board members, lead engineers—scrambling to salvage relevance, their expressions ranging from deep concern to outright panic.

At the far end of the hall, Kord Omniversal's booth was already in a downward spiral.

I caught sight of Ted Kord himself, staring at our booth as if it had personally insulted his entire bloodline. His fingers drummed anxiously against the edge of a display console while his aides muttered hurriedly, already trying to draft some kind of corporate response.

On the other side of the floor, Wayne Enterprises' delegation was stone-faced.

I spotted Lucius Fox, standing near their less-than-impressive exhibit—a few armored vehicles, some surveillance tech, a handful of AI-assisted drone programs.

It might have been impressive yesterday.

But after what we just revealed?

It was antique store material.

Fox's expression was neutral, but his eyes were sharp, calculating.

WayneTech might not be in the military-industrial complex like us, but they had power, resources, and more importantly—History on their side.

They were already considering how to respond.

Meanwhile, Rheinmetall—Europe's golden child of military manufacturing—wasn't handling it well.

Their executives huddled together near their booth, arguing in German, waving around documents and datapads as they frantically compared their cutting-edge models to what we had just demonstrated.

I caught bits and pieces through the enhanced auditory filters in my cybernetics.

"Das ist unmöglich."
(This is impossible.)

"Sie müssen es vor Jahren entwickelt haben..."
(They must have developed this years ago…)

The old-world titans of war, realizing they had just been overtaken.

And then there was Raytheon and Lockheed Martin.

For decades, they had been untouchable, their defense contracts written in blood and bureaucracy, their weapons programs deeply entrenched in military alliances across the globe.

Now?

I saw their top representatives locked in hushed conversation, some already trying to set up emergency strategy meetings, others furiously scrolling through LexCorp's latest patents, scanning our technological holdings, trying to find a weakness.

I met the gaze of one of Lockheed's directors, his expression somewhere between disbelief and barely concealed rage.

I smirked.

He looked away first.

I turned to Mercy, who stood beside me, arms crossed, watching the chaos with a faint smirk of her own.

"Would you look at that?" I mused, voice thick with amusement. "I think we just kicked over the anthill."

She arched her brow. "Did you expected anything less?"

"Not at all," I admitted, scanning the convention floor, where defense contractors and arms dealers scrambled to recover from the seismic shift we just unleashed.

"Raytheon's already trying to schedule an emergency press conference," Mercy noted, glancing at her datapad. "Lockheed's doubling down on their AI warfare division. Rheinmetall is calling their board of directors for an unscheduled meeting. Kord's people? Trying to rework their entire R&D strategy in real-time."

I chuckled. Desperation.

"They weren't ready for this," I said, watching as the old guard of military power stumbled, trying to keep up.

"Of course they weren't," Mercy replied smoothly. "They thought they were still ahead."

I took a slow breath, letting the moment sink in.

The entire defense industry had been thrown into a freefall, and we were the ones who shoved them.

"Let them scramble," I said finally, watching with satisfaction as the dominos continued to fall.

"They're already obsolete."

I turned to Mercy.

"Any movement on the VIPs?"

She tapped her datapad, already anticipating the question.

"The U.S. Defense Department is requesting a closed-door meeting."

Expected. They had the most to lose and the most to gain.

"China wants an exclusive contract proposal."

Interesting. They were more subtle about their desperation, but it was there.

"The European Union has sent multiple inquiries through Rheinmetall, but they want to discuss joint ventures."

Ewh a partnership, no way in hell I would let another company touch my tech.

"Russia has sent feelers through back channels. They're being careful, but they're interested."

"And the smaller nations?" I asked.

"India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, South Africa—all are interested. Their delegates are trying to get in before the superpowers monopolize the best offers."

"And what about our, let's say, more… politically volatile markets?"

Mercy smirked. "You mean the ones where regime stability is optional?"

I grinned.

"North and South Rhelasia, Bialya, and Markovia have all sent requests. They don't have the budgets of major world powers, but they're eager. Especially Markovia—they're pushing hard for anything that could give them an edge over Meta-humans."

I nodded.

Perfect.

This wasn't just about selling weapons.

This was about shaping the world order.

Whoever secured LexCorp's technology first would have an advantage the rest of the world couldn't counter.

And they knew it.

"Alright," I said, rolling my shoulders. "Let's start setting up appointments. Prioritize the U.S., China, and the E.U.—I want to play them against each other before we finalize anything."

Mercy smirked. "Already on it."

I turned, taking a final glance at the rival booths now in full-blown crisis mode.

The old titans of war, watching as LexCorp carved a path straight through their monopolies.

I almost felt bad for them.

Almost.

I surveyed the showroom floor one last time, I let out a quiet chuckle as I found several spooks in the crowd.

They were probably thinking about vulnerabilities.

No system was impenetrable, right?

Could LexCorp's war machines be hacked? Could they be turned against their owners? Could some plucky intelligence agency find a backdoor and cripple an entire army with a single keystroke?

That was what they were wondering.

And the answer?

Not a damn chance.

LexCorp's autonomous systems were built from the ground up with security in mind. No weak points, no simple backdoors, no sloppy software updates waiting to be exploited.

Unless, of course…

A small smirk played on my lips.

There was one way through.

Netrunners.

The only thing that could crack LexCorp's defenses was direct neural interfacing, a combat-trained cyberwarfare specialist physically diving into the network and fighting their way in.

And conveniently…

We hadn't demonstrated those.

Let them think they had an opening.

Let them try.

They'd only realize the truth when it was far too late.


The booth was winding down, deals were being set in motion, and the world had officially changed.

With a deep exhale, I stepped off stage, pulling a cold flute of champagne from the cooling unit behind the display, it was France after all.

I took a sip, feeling the carbonation fizz in my throat, before leaning against the nearest console.

Mercy joined me, her usual composed expression laced with amusement.

"Enjoying yourself?" she asked.

I chuckled, swirling the can lazily in my hand.

"Mercy, we just made eight trillion dollars in market value, secured half the world as potential clients, and sent every single one of our competitors into a corporate panic."

I took another slow sip.

"Yeah, I'd say I'm enjoying myself."

She shook her head with a smirk. "And yet, I bet you're already thinking about what's next."

I grinned. "Guilty as charged."

I thought for a little bit, "You think people will buy the whole death cult thing?" I asked her, but I already knew the answer.

"People will believe anything, especially if we do it right," she answered while picking a flute for herself.
 
Chapter 9- Miami Vice
I stood before the assembled fireteam, their cybernetic optics gleaming in the dimly lit war room, their bodies a fusion of flesh and machine—LexCorp's finest black ops assets.

A flick of a switch, and the holo-projector flickered to life, illuminating the table with a detailed topographical map of Santa Prisca. Red markers pulsed where enemy strongholds, chemical labs, and security hubs were located.

I rested my hands on the table, scanning the chrome-clad operatives before me.

"Alright, Chrome Squad, listen up," I said, my voice sharp, commanding.

The map zoomed in, highlighting a fortified compound nestled within the jungle, the former home of Bane's Venom production network.

"Santa Prisca." I began, eyes flicking over the details. "Previously the heart of Bane's Venom operations. Now? It's been overrun by Kobra cultists."

I tapped the interface, and live intelligence feeds appeared—masked figures patrolling the compound, scientists in robes working over chemical vats, the tell-tale green glow of mutagenic compounds.

"They're not just running the same old Venom formula," I continued. "They're trying to enhance it."

A new screen popped up, showing stolen Cadmus files—blueprints, research notes, samples of the Blockbuster formula.

"They got their hands on Blockbuster, taken from Cadmus before I assumed control. They think they can make a new breed of super-soldiers by combining it with Venom."

I brought up a series of mission parameters. The data pinged directly into the team's neural links, filling their vision with routes, objectives, and contingencies.

"Your mission is a stealth op," I stated, watching as they absorbed the details.

"You'll be given documentation, DNA samples, and various chemical agents—all of them fabricated. Your job is to spread this data throughout their facility—make it look like they're experimenting with multiple formulas from different sources."

I let the words sink in before shifting the holo-map once more.

"And while you're inside?" The display highlighted dozens of shipping crates, biohazard markers, and massive storage drums.

"The boys down in Biology will be handling the main event."

The screen shifted, showing the teleportation logistics display, a countdown running alongside a list of biological payloads.

"In waves, we'll start teleporting barrels of FEV, mutated creatures, and genetic anomalies straight into their facility. The kind of nightmares that don't go down easy."

Some of the squad exchanged looks, their cybernetic processors already calculating the chaos this would unleash.

I smirked.

"Watch your backs. You might not be the only predators in the jungle tonight."

Their helmets pinged with updated mission timelines.

"You'll have exactly one hour to complete the task before exfiltration. Do it right, and the Kobra higher-ups will be too busy fighting their own men to stop what's coming next."

I stepped back, arms crossed.

"Because while you're sowing discord, I'll be handling Plan A."

The map zoomed out, highlighting Colombia—a different marker pulsed, indicating a negotiation site.

"I'll be negotiating with a third-party organization, securing an alternative solution to Kobra's growing influence."

I exhaled, rolling my shoulders.

"But if that doesn't work?"

The map flashed, shifting back to Santa Prisca.

A massive red X covered the entire facility.

"Then we'll have to go with Plan B."

I looked at Chrome Squad, my gaze firm.

"And that means you'll need to be far, far away when I press the button."

The room fell silent as the weight of my words settled. Chrome Squad stood motionless, processing the mission parameters with machine-like precision, their neural implants absorbing every last detail.

They didn't need motivation—they needed orders.

And they had them.

I snapped my fingers, and the holo-projector shut off, the data vanishing in a pulse of neon-blue.

"Gear up. Deployment in fifteen."

Without a word, the team turned on their heels, moving with purpose, their cybernetic limbs humming as they strode toward the armory.

Mercy stepped forward, arms crossed, watching them go. "You sure you want to be down there personally?"

I smirked, adjusting my cufflinks. "Oh, I'd love to stay, but international politics is such a pain. Someone has to make sure the right puppets are in place."

Her lips twitched, the closest thing to amusement she'd allow herself. "And if they don't dance the way you want?"

"Then we burn it all down and start from scratch."

I turned, stepping toward my own deployment terminal, checking the final logistical reports.

Santa Prisca was already locked in.

The teleporters hummed to life, LexCorp's orbital satellites aligning to send the fireteam into enemy territory.

One by one, Chrome Squad vanished, their bodies dissolving into shimmering blue light as the teleportation field wrapped around them.

In ten seconds, they'd be deep in the jungle.

In sixty, they'd be at the target site.

In five minutes, Kobra's paranoia would begin.

And in an hour?

Santa Prisca would belong to the dead.


The teleportation field dissipated, leaving me standing in the heart of a Colombian cartel estate.

The air was thick with the stench of burning coca leaves and gun oil, the distant thrum of bass-heavy music and bursts of automatic fire blending into the humid night.

Across from me, lounging on a throne-like chair, was Snowflame.

Bare-chested, his skin dusted in white powder, eyes wild and fever-bright, he looked like a living altar to excess.

The self-proclaimed "Cocaine God" had built an empire off the raw hunger of humanity, feeding the desperate, the addicted, and the powerful alike.

And tonight?

He was my Plan A.

I strode forward, a reinforced LexCorp briefcase in my hand, its sleek, high-tech surface reflecting the dim light of the villa.

Two of his armed men moved to intercept, but a simple flick of Snowflame's hand froze them in place.

"Luthor." His voice hissed with barely contained mania. "I was wondering when you'd finally come to me. I could smell it on the wind."

I didn't react. I simply placed the briefcase on the table between us, flicked the latches, and let it hiss open.

Snowflame's grin widened—then froze.

Inside, neatly arranged in vacuum-sealed packets, lay LexCorp's latest masterpiece.

Crafted with the finest FEV strains, refined to genetic perfection, laced with biomod stimulants that didn't even exist in this world.

Designed to be purer, more powerful, and more addictive than anything humanity could grow in the ground.

Snowflame's breath hitched, his fingers hovering over one of the shimmering packets.

"You're not serious," he muttered, almost reverent.

I leaned forward. "It's not just cocaine, Snowflame. It's transcendence."

His eyes flicked up to me, hungry, desperate.

"You engineered it?" His voice was almost breathless.

"Better," I said, letting the weight of my words sink in. "We evolved it."

I watched as he tore open a packet, inhaling a pinch of the fine, shimmering powder with ritual-like intensity.

For a split second, nothing.

Then?

His entire body spasmed—a deep, shuddering exhale, his veins pulsing with a brilliant red glow, his pupils blown wide as a surge of raw power flooded his system.

He lurched forward, gripping the edges of his chair, a manic laugh bubbling up from his chest.

"Holy—" he gasped, fingers digging into the wood so hard it cracked.

I simply smirked.

"It hits different, doesn't it?"

Snowflame's eyes snapped to me, his breath ragged, his body trembling with newfound energy.

"This…" he whispered. "This is… perfection."

I closed the briefcase with a crisp snap, leaning back with calm precision.

"This is exclusive. Limited supply. And if you want more?"

His frenzied gaze locked onto mine.

"You handle Kobra."

The room fell silent, the weight of the deal hanging between us.

After a moment, Snowflame grinned, wide and feral, his hands still twitching from the raw chemical power flooding his system.

"You want them gone?" he asked, voice dangerously smooth.

I simply smiled.

"Wiped off the map."

Snowflame threw his head back and laughed, a manic, unhinged sound that echoed through the villa.

"Looks like Kobra just made a very powerful enemy."

I extended my hand.

He took it.

I got a little dizzy after that.


Chrome Squad moved like ghosts.

The dense jungle canopy provided natural cover, their cybernetic optics adjusting to the low light, filtering heat signatures, tracking enemy movements.

The Kobra facility loomed ahead, once a Venom production plant, now a bastion of cult fanaticism and twisted science experiments.

Their mission was simple.

Sow chaos. Corrupt the data. Infect the infrastructure. Help the monsters start the carnage.

One by one, they infiltrated the chemical labs, planting fabricated research files, lacing them with genetic dead ends and conflicting formulas.

If anyone would investigate the island after their little jaunt? Now they'd be drowning in misinformation.

And above them, in orbit, LexCorp's teleportation arrays powered up.

The real fun was about to begin.

The first payloads hit the facility like meteors, shaking the earth.

Metal barrels hissed as their contents burst forth—a thick, green-tinged fog rolling outward, seeping into the soil, the trees, the very air.

And with it?

The evolution began.

It started with the insects—harmless bugs mutating in real-time, their forms twisting, growing, their mandibles sharpening into flesh-ripping weapons.

Then came the wildlife and the flora.

A jaguar leapt from the shadows, its body writhing as the FEV latched onto its DNA, expanding muscle, warping its skull into something grotesque, its eyes glowing with newfound hunger.

A squad of Kobra guards heard the snarling, inhuman growl from the brush.

They barely had time to scream before it pounced, claws slicing through body armor like tissue, tearing into flesh with an unnatural fury.

The Kobra facility's alarms blared, their forces scrambling—they thought they were under attack.

They had no idea what was really coming.

Then, the next wave hit.

Direct from LexCorp's genetic black sites, our creatures arrived.

The first Behemoth landed with a thunderous impact, standing at least thirty feet tall, its grotesque, hulking form barely restrained by the constrains of biology.

It roared, a deafening, primal challenge, before tearing through a guard tower like it was made of paper.

Then came the Deathclaws.

Lean. Fast. Murderous.

They hit the Kobra troops like demons out of a fever dream, slicing through squads of armed men with surgical brutality.

One Kobra cultist emptied his entire magazine into a charging Deathclaw—only for the beast to keep running, its wounds already closing, its claws already swinging.

Blood sprayed.

Bodies fell.

Then came Mirelurks, Cazadors, Radscorpions, super mutants, all and everything descending on the island.

The facility descended into chaos.

And above them?

The FEV cloud was still spreading, sadly the FEV had a somewhat short shelf life in the open air and would eventually dissipate into the air.

Even the Kobra cultists weren't immune.

Those unlucky enough to be caught in the mist began to change—their bodies contorting, their muscles bulging, their minds fracturing.

One screamed as his flesh bubbled and twisted, his bones snapping and reforming into something inhuman.

Another laughed hysterically as his skin hardened, forming thick, jagged scales, his eyes glowing with feral madness.

The strongest of them wouldn't die.

They would become something else.

Something new.

I watched the chaos unfold, the Kobra facility now a twisted battlefield of mutated horrors and panicked cultists.

The Deathclaws ripped through barricades, Behemoths toppled reinforced watchtowers, and FEV-corrupted jaguars stalked the burning jungle, hunting anything still breathing.

It was perfect.

I turned my gaze back to Snowflame, who was still buzzing with manic energy, his hands twitching, his breath ragged, the genetically engineered cocaine pumping through his veins like liquid fire.

And he was still hungry.

His eyes flickered back to the briefcase, still sitting between us, a treasure trove of power waiting to be tapped.

I smirked, reaching inside and pulling out another sealed packet, this one slightly different from the rest.

A more refined strain—purer, stronger, engineered to push human biology to the absolute brink of death.

I held it between my fingers, watching as Snowflame's entire body tensed, his breathing sharp and rapid, his fingers clawing at the air like an addict chasing divinity.

"You want more?" I asked, tilting my head, dangling it just out of reach.

He licked his lips, his expression torn between restraint and raw hunger.

"What's the catch?" he asked, his voice lower, more feral.

I leaned forward, voice calm, controlled.

"No catch."

That was all he needed to hear.

He snatched the packet from my hand, tore it open, and inhaled the supercharged powder in one deep, ravenous breath.

For a moment, nothing.

Then?

The room shook.

His body convulsed, his muscles expanding instantly, his veins glowing with an eerie, pulsing red, his eyes igniting like burning coals.

The air around him distorted, heatwaves radiating from his skin, the raw power barely contained within his flesh.

His fingernails darkened, his teeth sharpened, his breath came out in steam.

I could see it in real-time—his metabolism accelerating, his nervous system overclocking, his brain processing information at speeds beyond human capability.

He was more than a man now.

He was a force of nature.

Snowflame threw his head back and howled, a sound so deep and guttural that the lights flickered, the sheer vibration shaking the villa.

The guards nearby stumbled back, gripping their weapons with wide, terrified eyes.

Even my synths stiffened slightly, their processors catching the information from my robotics eyes, registering Snowflame as a Class-1 meta-threat.

He slowly turned his head toward me, cracking his knuckles, his grin now monstrous, filled with unnatural confidence and madness.

"You are a devil, Luthor." His voice boomed, his aura tangible, oppressive.

I simply smiled.

"Then go raise hell."

And with that?

He flicked the briefcase open and put his face straight into the powder, inhaling deeply, a white fire started rising all around him.

And then he was gone.

A blur of motion, a streak of heat and energy, a living inferno blazing toward Santa Prisca with unmatched speed.

The earth cracked beneath his feet, the air caught fire, the jungle trembled, and the battle was about to get even worse for Kobra.


The night sky shimmered, the jungle canopy rustling slightly as something descended—silent, unseen, undetectable.

A Martian Bioship, its organic hull shifting and blending into the darkness, barely noticeable even if someone was staring right at it.

It hovered for a brief moment, scanning the chaos erupting across the island before touching down on a secluded patch of jungle.

The hull rippled, hatches peeling open like breathing lungs, and five figures emerged, their movements sharp, precise, practiced.

Team had arrived.

Robin was the first to step out, his mask glowing to scan the horizon, the glow of distant fires reflecting in his lenses.

"Well," he muttered, voice dry. "Guess we missed the calm before the storm part."

Aqualad followed, stepping onto solid ground, his expression neutral but his muscles tense, feeling the unnatural energy in the air.

"This… was not what we were expecting," he admitted.

Miss Martian floated just behind him, her eyes glowing faintly as she expanded her telepathic senses, reading the chaos in the distance.

"The minds here are—" she winced, shaking her head. "Warped. Agitated. Something's wrong."

Kid Flash zipped past them, kneeling next to a palm tree, grabbing a handful of dirt, sniffing it, then immediately recoiling.

"Blegh! What the heck is in the air here?!" He gagged, spitting onto the ground. "This place reeks of—bad science."

Robin glanced at him. "That's… not a real thing."

Kid Flash shot him a look. "Yeah? Tell that to whatever the hell is happening over there." He pointed toward the smoke rising from the Kobra facility, the distant sounds of gunfire, roars, and unnatural screams echoing across the jungle.

And then, finally, Connor stepped out.

Superboy's expression was unreadable, his gaze locked on the distant battle, his fists clenching at his sides.

He didn't say anything at first.

He just stared.

Watching.

Waiting.

Miss Martian touched down beside him, her voice soft, gentle.

"Connor?"

A long pause.

Then—his voice, low and tight.

"…I hear something."

Robin tensed. "What kind of something?"

Superboy's gaze hardened.

"Something strong."

A heavy BOOM echoed in the distance—like an earthquake localized to one spot.

Followed by another.

And another.

Then?

The roaring began.

Aqualad activated his water bearers, the twin hilts humming to life with crackling blue energy.

"Looks like we're late to the party," he said grimly.

Robin's fingers tapped on his gauntlet, running a quick analysis of the area.

"This mission just turned into a whole new level of complicated."

Kid Flash rolled his shoulders, cracking his knuckles.

"So, uh… what's the play, boy wonder?"

Robin exhaled, mind racing, calculating their next move.

They were here for recon.

But this?

Something bigger.

Something worse.

He looked back at the others, his voice firm, steady.

"We move in."

"And we figure out what the hell is going on."

The team moved through the dense jungle, their forms barely visible as they wove between the thick foliage. The deeper they went, the worse it got.

The air was wrong. It had a strange, metallic taste—not just smoke, not just fire, but something deeper, something unnatural.

The closer they got to the Kobra facility, the louder the sounds became—not just gunfire but inhuman shrieks, the roars of things that shouldn't exist.

Things they weren't briefed on.

Aqualad was the first to stop, raising a clenched fist. The team froze.

Ahead of them, a squad of Kobra cultists sprinted into view, their uniforms torn, their weapons clutched tightly.

They were running away.

Then the jungle erupted.

A Deathclaw exploded from the brush, a blur of muscle, claws, and predatory instinct.

Seven feet of genetically engineered carnage.

One of the Kobra soldiers barely had time to scream before the creature's razor-sharp claws split him open, armor and all.

The others fired wildly—bullets tearing through the air, finding their mark—but it wasn't enough.

The Deathclaw roared, charged, and ripped into them like a hurricane of death.

Aqualad's grip on his weapons tightened.

"Okay, what the actual hell?!" Kid Flash whisper-shouted, watching the massacre unfold.

Superboy stepped forward, eyes locked on the beast, his fists clenching. He was ready to intervene.

The Deathclaw finished its slaughter, standing over the pile of torn bodies, its nostrils flaring, its glowing red eyes scanning the treeline.

Then, it turned—slowly—toward them.

And sniffed.

The team went deathly still.

"Uh, M'gann?" Robin whispered.

"Already on it," Miss Martian responded, touching her fingertips to her temple.

A moment of silence.

Then—

The Deathclaw's mind screamed.

M'gann's eyes flashed white, and she stumbled backward.

"That's not a natural animal!" she gasped. "That thing—it's been changed. Something warped it, made it smarter, more aggressive!"

The Deathclaw snarled, tensed its muscles—then lunged.

Superboy moved first.

The ground cracked as he launched himself forward, meeting the creature mid-air.

Their bodies collided like two speeding trucks, sending a shockwave through the jungle.

The fight was on.

As Superboy wrestled the Deathclaw, Robin and the others sprinted toward the facility.

It was pure chaos inside.

Mutated creatures rampaged through the compound. The Kobra enforcers barely stood a chance.

Barrels labeled with strange biohazard markings had been breached, their contents spilling into the air, warping everything they touched.

Aqualad cut through a charging mutated jaguar, flipping over its massive form before slamming a water construct blade into its spine.

Kid Flash zigzagged through the carnage, pulling survivors away from incoming creatures before they could be turned into fresh meat.

Robin, moving on pure instinct, vaulted onto a catwalk overlooking the facility, scanning the destruction with his tactical visor.

It was bad.

Really bad.

But then his eyes landed on something even worse.

A figure in the distance—standing near the burning wreckage of a security checkpoint.

A man, wreathed in glowing white energy, his breath coming out in thick clouds of fire, his eyes wild and manic.

Robin's stomach dropped.

"Oh no."

Snowflame was here.

Robin tapped his comms.

"Uh, guys? We might have a bigger problem."

Aqualad, mid-swing, dodging a mutated gorilla's crushing blow, responded first.

"Define bigger!"

Robin gulped.

"Cocaine-fueled meta-human who once punched Superman into a building?"

A beat of silence.

Then—

"Oh, great."

The man laughed, standing amidst the carnage like a god surveying his domain.

"This!" he bellowed, throwing his arms wide, his body steaming from the sheer force of the chemical cocktail pumping through his veins.

"THIS IS FREEDOM!"

He took a step forward. The ground cracked beneath his weight.

And then?

He turned his glowing eyes toward the intruders.

Toward the team.

And grinned.

"Let's see what you're made of."

Snowflame laughed, a booming, triumphant sound that echoed across the burning ruins of the Kobra facility.

The white fire rolling off him wasn't just heat, wasn't just flame.

It was power.

It was pure, unfiltered, chemically-induced chaos.

And they were breathing it in.

Robin's heart slammed against his ribs, his pupils blown wide, his mind racing at breakneck speed.

His hands twitched, his body buzzing with unnatural energy, his thoughts fractured into a thousand erratic pieces.

Then the realization hit him like a freight train.

The battlefield was contaminated.

Aqualad stumbled, gripping his head.

"I feel—" His muscles tensed and flexed involuntarily, his breathing uneven.

Miss Martian let out a strangled gasp, her eyes flickering between green and glowing white as she clutched her head.

"His mind—" she whispered, her voice strained. "It's everywhere. Fast. Loud. Overwhelming—"

Superboy gritted his teeth, his normally controlled movements turning erratic, his knuckles flexing open and closed like he was ready to fight anything that moved.

Kid Flash?

Kid Flash was completely fried.

"Bro," he slurred, swaying on his feet. "I can feel the universe breathing."

Then he blurred forward—too fast, too jittery—before tripping over his own feet and face-planting into a burning Kobra banner.

Snowflame spread his arms, his veins glowing, his muscles vibrating with raw, unchecked power.

"YES! YES! LET IT FILL YOU!" he bellowed, sucking in a massive breath, his lungs expanding like bellows, his entire body pulsing with chemical-fueled might.

"This!" he howled, stepping forward.

"THIS IS POWER!"

And then he attacked.

Superboy moved first—too fast, too aggressive, no control.

He swung with all his strength, aiming for Snowflame's chest—

But the madman ducked, twisted his body, and drove a fist straight into Superboy's ribs.

The shockwave sent Superboy flying—crashing through a concrete barricade with bone-rattling force.

"CONNOR!" Miss Martian tried to fly toward him, but her powers were short-circuiting—her mind fractured under the chemical onslaught.

Aqualad charged, his water-bearers shifting into dual blades, but his stance was off, his balance wrecked by the high.

Snowflame grabbed him mid-swing, lifted him clean off the ground, and slammed him into the pavement with brutal force.

Robin tried to go for a stealth approach, vanishing into the smoke—

But Snowflame wasn't fooled.

The instant Robin dropped down for an attack, Snowflame casually caught him mid-air by the throat.

Robin's vision blurred, his lungs burning with the overwhelming scent of synthetic euphoria.

"Ohhh, the bird thinks he's clever," Snowflame mocked, his breath searing hot, his grip tightening.

Robin swung a shock baton—but Snowflame barely reacted.

Then, with insulting ease, he tossed Robin aside, sending him crashing into Kid Flash, who was still rolling on the ground, giggling uncontrollably.

Miss Martian tried to phase, but her mind was still scrambled.

Snowflame turned toward her slowly, his grin wide, predatory.

"Ohhhh, little Martian," he purred, stepping closer. "You're seeing it now, aren't you? The rush? The glory?"

Miss Martian's breath hitched, her entire body locked in place, her abilities short-circuiting under the weight of the chemical overload.

She was powerful.

She was trained.

But her mind was completely exposed to the raw insanity flooding the air.

"Let's see how high we can go," he whispered, his fingers curling into a fist.

Then he lunged.

Superboy barely stood.

Aqualad was on his knees, trying to regain control.

Miss Martian was paralyzed, overwhelmed by psychic interference.

Kid Flash was useless, almost on the verge of OD'ing thanks to his accelerated metabolism.

Robin's vision swam, his mind barely hanging onto coherence.

Robin's hand trembled as he activated his emergency communicator.

He hesitated for half a second.

But they were out of options.

He gritted his teeth, pressed the button, and spoke three words.

"We need backup."

Static crackled in Robin's earpiece, the signal struggling against the interference of the burning facility and Snowflame's chemical storm.
Then—

A deep, familiar voice.

"Robin."

Batman.

Robin exhaled in relief, his vision still swimming, his heartbeat too fast, too erratic.

"Sir," he forced out, trying to focus, trying to push past the drug-fueled high buzzing in his brain. "The team is compromised—hostile meta—completely out of our league—"

A pause.

Then, Batman's voice, sharp and decisive.

"Understood. Hold position. We're en route."

Robin clenched his jaw.

Hold position?

That was easier said than done.

Because Snowflame had heard everything.

The madman stood across the battlefield, grinning like he'd just won the lottery.

His white flames swirled, crackling with raw energy as he tilted his head, eyes locked onto Robin.

"OHHHH, CALLING FOR HELP, LITTLE BIRD?" Snowflame mocked, voice dripping with amusement. "YOU THINK YOUR JUSTICE LEAGUE IS GONNA SAVE YOU?"

Robin's hands clenched into fists.

We just need to last.

Just a few minutes.

Just—

Snowflame didn't give him time to think.

He blurred forward, his speed unnatural, terrifyingly fast, his fist cocked back like a hammer.

Superboy barely managed to react, throwing himself into Snowflame's path.

But the villain pivoted, dodging at the last second, and planted his knee straight into Superboy's stomach.

The impact sent a shockwave through the ground.

Superboy choked, his breath leaving him in a pained wheeze before Snowflame grabbed him by the face and threw him through a burning wall.

Miss Martian tried to focus, tried to teleport, to phase out, to do anything—

But Snowflame was already on her.

His hand shot forward, catching her wrist in an iron grip.

"Ohhh, I like you, Martian," he purred. "That big ol' brain of yours? I bet it tastes delicious."

She struggled, her telekinesis faltering, her mind still drowning in the chemical overload.

Snowflame leaned in, eyes wild.

"Maybe I'll give it a tas—"

Aqualad tackled him.

Or at least, he tried to.

The Atlantean slammed into Snowflame from the side, knocking him loose—but barely.

The villain staggered, growled—

Then punched Aqualad square in the chest.

Aqualad flew back, gasping, crashing into Robin and Kid Flash.

Robin coughed, pain flaring through his ribs.

We're not gonna make it.

They had to hold.

Just a little longer.

But then—

The shadows shifted.

A single metal sphere clattered onto the ground near Snowflame's feet.

He blinked, looking down.

"What—?"

KA-THOOM.

A massive explosion of smoke and electricity engulfed him, a pulse of energy knocking him off-balance.

From the darkness, a shape dropped from above—black cape billowing, gauntlets glowing in the firelight.

Snowflame barely had time to react before Batman's boot slammed into his chest.

The force sent him skidding backward, flames flickering around him.

A moment of silence.

Then—

More figures descended from the sky, landing in a tight formation.

Superman.

Flash.

Green Lantern.

Wonder Woman.

Martian Manhunter.

The Justice League.

Snowflame grinned.

"Well, well, well—looks like the party's just getting started!"

And then he roared, his white fire flaring bright, ready for round two.


I sat back in my chair, eyes fixed on the live feed of the battle in Santa Prisca, but my attention was divided.

Snowflame was still fighting, still burning with raw, unhinged power, but it was only a matter of time before the League found a way to neutralize him.

Batman had already started analyzing.

Superman's blows were starting to land harder.

I sipped my drink, unbothered.

"Eva," I said smoothly, "keep the teleportation recall primed. The second this turns south, I want him back in Colombia before they even know what happened."

"Of course, Father."

But this? This was just a side attraction.

I flicked my wrist, shifting the display.

Across the world, reports were pouring in—and this was where the real work was happening.

The fight in Santa Prisca was reaching its climax, but my attention was elsewhere.

Superman was adjusting, throwing heavier punches. Batman was moving with purpose. The League was working in sync now, adapting like the well-oiled machine they always were.

Didn't matter.

I leaned back in my chair, flicking my wrist to shift the display, Snowflame's battle fading into a smaller window in the corner. He was just a distraction—an expensive, entertaining one, but a distraction nonetheless. The real game was playing out across the globe.

The teleportation network had been working non-stop all night, scattering carefully selected payloads into key regions. Entire ecosystems were shifting overnight, panic already beginning to set in, though most governments didn't even realize what was happening yet.

In North America, the Appalachian wilderness was no longer safe. Packs of mutated wolves had started emerging from the forests, their bodies warped into something no hunter or conservationist had ever seen before. In New England, scattered reports of towering, wendigo-like creatures were trickling in, sparking fear in rural towns. Meanwhile, the Great Lakes had birthed something far worse—enormous, leech-like monstrosities were crawling from the water, disrupting trade routes and naval operations. Further south, Louisiana's swamps were turning into hunting grounds for mirelurks and gatorclaws, while in Mexico, Cazadors and Radscorpions had begun multiplying at an alarming rate. Entire villages were being abandoned before local forces even had time to respond.

South America wasn't spared. The Amazon rainforest was in chaos as apex predators, warped and enhanced, tore through the ecosystem. In the Andes Mountains, villages were reporting flocks of massive, predatory bats, their screeches filling the night, sending people into hiding. Venezuela was already in full panic mode—Deathclaws had been spotted tearing through military outposts, and while officials were trying to suppress the information, it was only a matter of time before it leaked.

Europe was feeling the pressure, too. In France, Germany, and Poland, massive, mutated boars and stags had begun rampaging through farmland, their thick hides turning small arms fire into a joke. Scandinavia was dealing with ice-worms—creatures burrowing beneath frozen lakes, causing massive collapses and wiping out whole towns overnight. The Balkans were overrun with predators of their own—wolf-like creatures with glowing red eyes that had started hunting livestock and, occasionally, people. The British Isles had something even more irritating—flocks of birds, mutated beyond recognition, turning aggressive and disrupting air travel across the region. Worse still, reports were coming out of Eastern Europe of Yao Guai roaming deep within the Carpathian forests, their presence already causing an exodus from smaller villages.

Africa had turned into a full-blown test site. In the East, something larger than a lion, faster than a cheetah, was carving through the savannah, hunting for sport. Central Africa's rivers were now home to crocodiles nearly twice their natural size, their bites laced with venom, throwing entire water systems into disarray. Northern Africa had a different problem—burrowing creatures collapsing underground tunnels, shutting down trade networks and military operations in the process. In East Africa, the situation was even worse. Super Mutants had begun appearing in war-torn regions, overrunning villages and warlord camp's, their sheer numbers making them impossible to contain and now arming them with modern weaponry. And deeper in the desert, packs of mutated geckos had started appearing, thriving in the heat where nothing should have survived.

Asia wasn't faring any better. The wilderness of China and Mongolia had turned into hunting grounds for something unnatural—mutant tigers, larger than any natural predator, were expanding their territory at an alarming rate. Southeast Asia was facing a more insidious problem—amphibian predators with venom potent enough to liquefy flesh had started spreading through water supplies. And in India, things were spiraling fast—gigantic ant colonies, each soldier the size of a dog, had begun reshaping farmland and building colonies.

Oceania had its fair share of problems, too. Australia, as always, seemed cursed—packs of mutated dingoes had begun working in coordinated attacks, taking over small outback towns one by one.

I smiled.

Wars, politics, economic struggles—none of it mattered anymore. Now, their number one concern was survival.

And when the panic set in? When the governments of the world realized they weren't equipped to handle the nightmares lurking in their own backyards?

They'd come to me.

LexCorp was the only one with the technology, the weapons, the defenses ready right now to fight back.

It was all going exactly as planned, even if the league investigate they will see the notes in Kobra labs, if I was lucky that madman was going straight to the Hague, and I would bet that the judges wont trust the word of a cultist madman, the firing line or prison for life in max-security awaited the drug scientist, a useful scapegoat.

I flicked my eyes back to the corner of the screen, watching the fight in Santa Prisca unfold. Snowflame was still laughing, still fighting, but Superman was finally starting to land real hits. Batman was about to make his move. The rest of the League was closing in.

Time to call it.

I sighed, setting my glass down. "Alright, we've had our fun. Pull him out, and give the man a extra briefcase for the good work."

A pulse of blue energy enveloped Snowflame.

One second, he was roaring, blazing with insane, chemical-fueled power.

The next, he was gone.

The League froze.

Superman's punch swung through empty air.

Batman's eyes narrowed.

The battle was over.

And I had already won.
 
Back
Top