The morning sunlight pushed weakly through the gri on the window, casting fractured shadows across the cluttered floor. Nolan lay on his side on the couch, one hand hanging limply off the edge. A dried streak of blood had glued his knuckles to the upholstery. For a long ti, he didn't move.
His body ached in strange, deep places—not the sharp stings of bruises or the pulse of broken skin, but the heaviness of having carried too much too long. His left hand throbbed steadily, dull and angry. The mirror across the room was cracked, spiderwebbed in a dozen directions, his blood now dried along the fra and floor. Shards glittered on the cheap tile, untouched.
No voices.
Not Quentin, not Kieran, not the Fighter. Just the hum of the radiator kicking on and the occasional scream of sirens far off in Gotham's morning chaos.
Nolan sat up slowly. Each movent was chanical, detached. He looked down at his hand. The dried blood had cracked in the creases of his fingers. His knuckles were swollen. One of them might've been broken, but he didn't check.
He stood and moved to the sink.
The water was cold and rusty at first, but it cleared. He held his fist beneath the stream and winced as he peeled away the ss. Bits of glass fell into the drain, clinking softly. He didn't flinch.
He found the d kit under the kitchen sink, still half-stocked from the last ti Quentin had insisted on patching himself up "the smart way." Nolan didn't bother with antiseptic. Just gauze. Tape. A wrap. It wasn't clean, but it would hold.
The apartnt looked worse than it had the night before. Not because of the blood or glass, but because of the weight that hung in the air now sothing raw and unresolved, sothing clawing at the edges of what he could hold inside. The room almost felt haunted.
He moved in silence.
He swept the glass from the floor with an old towel. Picked up the overturned chair. Wiped at the sar of blood on the wall near the mirror. Everything hurt, but it wasn't the kind of hurt that made him stop. It was the kind that told him he was still here. Still standing.
At the window, he ripped the protections off and tugged the blinds open and squinted at the daylight. It was cloudy, but the light felt sharp against his eyes. He let it stay open anyway.
Back at his desk, his laptop sat open, a blinking cursor waiting in the command terminal. He didn't touch it yet. He just sat in the chair, stared at the screen, and listened.
Still no voices.
And yet he knew they were there—curled back inside him, maybe unsure of what ca next. Maybe waiting.
He leaned forward and started typing.
It wasn't anything complicated at first. Just a note to his network, pushed through their encrypted relay: "Keep your heads down. Penguin's pressure may ease. Batman's won't. Stay invisible."
Then ca the log updates. Three more burner numbers activated overnight. Two new safehouses added. A few lost contacts noted. Nolan ran silent queries through a handful of data breaches, checking for flags—stolen IDs used too many tis, familiar MAC addresses pinged by street-level surveillance.
His body worked the keyboard like a machine. Eyes tired but focused. His mind, though, drifted.
It kept flashing back to the alley. To Batman's fist. To the cold voice asking questions he couldn't answer fast enough. To Quentin shouting in panic. To the Fighter's fury, how it surged up and took control with terrifying ease.
And then… Nolan. Shoved to the surface like a survivor clawing his way out of a sinking car.
He didn't rember running. Only stopping.
And now here he was. Scrubbing blood from the floor.
At so point, his stomach grumbled. He blinked, surprised to find it was nearly noon. The diner downstairs was already busy. The sll of fried eggs and sausage filtered through the window.
He went out anyway, hoodie pulled up over his still-aching head. He didn't look at anyone for too long. Didn't make small talk. Just ordered a ham and egg sandwich, took it back upstairs, and sat on the floor by the window to eat.
The food was bland, but it was warm.
It made him feel human for a mont.
Later, he packed a gym bag and headed down the street, blending in like he'd always done. The local gym wasn't fancy. Half the equipnt had rusted spots or duct-taped grips. But it was quiet in the morning—just a few older guys doing their routines and a trainer working one-on-one in the corner.
Nolan hit the treadmill first. Kept it slow. Just enough to warm his legs, to feel the rhythm of sothing steady. He stared at the tir and counted the seconds in his head.
Then he moved to the heavy bag.
He didn't hit it hard—not like the Fighter would've. His strikes were awkward, unbalanced. His wrapped hand throbbed with each jab. But still, he moved.
A man maybe twice his age with broad shoulders and faded tattoos gave him a pointer. "Twist your hips more, kid. You're hittin' with your arms."
Nolan chuckled humorlessly. "So I've heard."
"You got a lot of tension in you. Work that out, too."
He gave a ghost of a smile. "I'm trying."
Back at ho, the sun had moved. The shadows were longer. He showered, changed into a clean shirt. Sat back at the computer.
Still no voices.
And sohow, that was the worst part.
Not the blood or the broken glass. Not even Batman's eyes staring through his soul.
It was the quiet.
Because at least when Quentin was barking or Kieran was smirking or the Fighter was simring with rage, Nolan didn't feel so alone. So hollow.
He sat there for a long ti, just watching the screen. The network map pulsed with soft green lights—active users, updated safehouses, flagged locations. A web of survival spun out from this dingy apartnt, built on whispers and ghost signals.
And Nolan didn't know if it belonged to him… or if he belonged to it.
He leaned back in the chair and stared at the ceiling.
"I didn't want any of this," he said aloud. His voice was rough from disuse. "I just wanted to disappear."
He waited.
No one answered.
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A/N: slowish chapter hope yall are enjoying
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