The creature dropped without sound. Not a fall—a descent , like a hanged man cut loose. Before the guard could scream, a gauntleted fist found his throat. The second guard fired blindly. Bullets sparked off cape-lined ceramic. Then darkness folded over him, and the last thing he heard was a rattle—low, guttural, the sound of a predator tasting prey.
For the first time in years, Bruce almost smiled. The rain kept falling over Gotham. Somewhere, a child was watching her parents die in an alley. Somewhere, a man in greasepaint was licking his lips. And somewhere, in the flooded subbasement of a Narrows tenement, a doctor named Jonathan Crane was injecting his own neck with a serum that smelled of almonds and screaming.
“It’s not Persian. It’s Ottoman.” Batman Begins
He rose, and for one second, Falcone saw the man beneath—the jawline of a dead prince, the eyes of a boy who never stopped falling. Then the window exploded inward, and the Bat was gone, leaving only a smear of rain on the glass and a single playing card—the Joker—that Falcone had never seen before.
In the warehouse office, Carmine Falcone was explaining to his lieutenant why fear was a commodity. “You think the mob’s about money? It’s about certainty . People need to know the rules.” He tapped a cigar. “I am the rule.” The creature dropped without sound
“Compassion is a wound you cannot afford,” Ducard said, firelight dancing in his dead eyes.
But tonight, a bat had flown. And the city, for one breathless moment, remembered how to be afraid of the dark. The second guard fired blindly
“No, sir. He said, and I quote, ‘Tell him the signal’s broken. I’ll get it fixed.’ Then he hung up.”
Bruce threw the torch into the snow. “Then I’ll bleed.”