Font Size
15px

It was more accurate to call it a giant bat with a human face rather than a Bat-Man. Judging by its behavior, Su Ming concluded that it lacked human intelligence or humanity—it was just a beast.

This enormous, hideous creature certainly made people uncomfortable, especially as it flew erratically overhead, emitting piercing screeches. Whether due to malnutrition or genetic instability, its fur shed constantly during flight, making it look as if it were snowing black and brown flakes inside the room.

Su Ming also drew his gun and fired. Although this thing flew swiftly, it was still far inferior to the Talons of the Court of Owls.

After all, these genetic monstrosities had been ordinary humans before their mutations.

On the ground, it was probably weaker than a regular rat of the sa size, because a bat's bones have very low density, filled with hollow spaces like birds, which lightens their weight and allows them to fly.

The scientists who conducted genetic experints with bats and humans were truly wasting their ti.

If Atlantis were the hypothetical enemy, given they lived in the sea, why not experint with aquatic creatures? None of these monsters seed capable of swimming.

They were all completely useless.

But now wasn't the ti to chastise those people for wasting taxpayer money. The bat had already been shot down by the two of them, crashing into several other glass tanks before landing in the corner of the room.

Cindy drew her sword and slowly approached. "I hope the bullet holes aren't too nurous to ruin the fur. Rich people have bearskin rugs. Now I can have a batskin one. A bat this big would make a nice trophy."

The Bat-Man wasn't dead, just severely wounded. It lay helplessly on the ground, its red blood mixing with the blue nutrient liquid from the shattered tanks, forming a blackish fluid.

Its face looked at Cindy as she approached, showing a surprisingly human-like expression.

"Ah... ah..." It opened its mouth wide, making strange noises.

Cindy swapped her sword for a gun.

"Ah... ah... help... help..." It actually managed to utter a few simple words.

"Bang!"

Cindy shot it in the forehead without hesitation. The Bat-Man twitched once and then lay still.

Barbara bit her lip hard. The old her might have tried to save this creature that could speak human words, but now she understood that killing it was the most thorough form of salvation.

If it really had human intelligence, being trapped in a bat's body was the cruelest thing. Death was its only release.

Cindy ejected the magazine and reloaded as she turned and walked back to the group.

"You're giving up on the bat rug?"

Su Ming put a few more bullets into the creatures that had fallen out of the tanks, regardless of their state, while reloading his own weapon and asking Cindy.

"No, having dead things hanging around the house isn't lucky."

Cindy said nonchalantly.

Perhaps when the Bat-Man showed that terrified human expression, Cindy had already changed her mind. Even Su Ming had to admit—that was indeed a person.

Vicki Vale sighed, signaling Peter to forget about filming. After recording a few brief shots, the team set off again.

These specins in the tanks were still just the outer periter of the lab, all useless rejects, preserved in the nutrient fluid with hypnotic properties to keep them alive.

Such pitiful lives.

Before leaving this hall, at Su Ming's request, Barbara executed the sterilization command for all the life support tanks. All those creatures would die in their sleep.

Barbara knew she had killed them. At least half of their genes were human; they looked human and might even have been able to use human language.

But she was sure she had done the right thing. Killing them was a rcy.

For the first ti, she understood this truth, and it clashed with her previous beliefs. Her thoughts were chaotic, and she could only silently focus on hacking the door to the adjacent room.

anwhile, Su Ming was talking with Cindy. According to his speculation, Earth Negative-11's Indian Hill seed more like a playground for madn.

"This place is a genetics lab. Below, it's likely to be viruses or sothing else. Be careful."

Cindy nodded. "Don't worry. Just keep so distance from . I know what to do."

The door slowly opened. The second ti hacking the door was much faster than the first. Cindy went in first, while Su Ming stayed behind to guard the group.

Upon entering, they were greeted by a human skeleton, along with a blackboard and many teaching tools, similar to what you'd find in a dical school. Scattered around were so exercise equipnt and a few tables and chairs.

It looked like a gymnasium that had been abandoned for many years.

The instrunts and equipnt here were fewer but took up more space, and the massive tallic devices looked like shipping containers.

Cindy carefully scanned the area, even checking the ceiling, and soon signaled that it was safe.

Su Ming had already figured out what this place was—the tahuman Research Facility. In the TV series, this place housed many tahumans who, as experintal subjects, harbored an intense hatred for outsiders.

The large tal instrunts nearby were actually isolation pods, each like a small room. The tahumans were kept inside, observed like animals in a zoo.

He walked up to one of the rooms, and the facilities were still operational. He peered through the observation window; it was a ss inside. The room had originally been furnished like a bedroom, with a pretty wooden bed and a thick mattress, but now everything inside was torn to shreds. Many pieces of furniture still bore bite marks and claw scratches.

A particularly large skeleton lay spread-eagle in the center of the room.

Su Ming guessed it had starved to death.

In the TV series, Indian Hill was discovered and opened in the '90s, right after the lab was shut down, and the tahumans inside were still alive and very powerful.

But now, on Earth Negative-11, several decades had passed. Even the strongest tahumans would have starved to death. DC was different from Marvel; there were no mutants here, and tahumans didn't have innate superpowers.

All the tahumans here had been humans before.

The military captured them, then induced genetic mutations through massive doses of radiation or chemicals, turning them into monsters.

On Earth Negative-11, the history of this lab would probably be localized too. The scientists likely wanted to find a way to induce mutations in Atlanteans, causing them to self-destruct.

But that was a flawed premise.

Atlanteans, like Amazons, had semi-divine bloodlines. How could scientists experinting on humans develop a weapon that would work on Atlanteans?

They had died in vain.

These tahumans were humans, with the sa minds and hearts as any other.

So, the postures of the skeletons in the rooms varied. So were curled up in the corners, hugging themselves. Others lay peacefully on their beds, while so clearly had committed suicide.

There was nothing more to see. The hall was safe.

Su Ming called Vicki over, asking her to take a look at the isolation chambers while he briefly explained the situation to her.

"This is the kind of story you journalists like—governnt experinting on its own people."

"Maybe, but I think I've seen too much news today. I can't seem to get excited."

Vicki pondered for a mont, scratching her chin, then replied to him.

You are reading Multiverse: Deathstroke Chapter 40: Ch.39 Underground on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Top-tier Unruly Master cover
Trending now

Top-tier Unruly Master

Be Qin Sanchi ·Other

WhenDingFanopenedhiseyesagain,everythingbeforehimhadchanged.ACultivatorrebornonEarth,hefoundhimselfinthedespisedbodyofadisgracedheir.Fistsstrikinga...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.