Penguin swirled the ice in his glass, eyes never leaving the cityscape framed by the tall windows of his private office. Reports had come in within the hour: the Hammer Gang had tried to torch Naima Rez's people out of the railroads and had been gutted for it.
Cobblepot's umbrella tapped against the floor in a slow rhythm.
"Idiots," he muttered. "Damn idiots."
The non-aggression agreement with Everleigh meant the South Tracks were off-limits, but Penguin knew what this meant: the city was about to spiral. Once the sharks smelled blood, the feeding frenzy wouldn't stop.
He rang for one of his lieutenants.
"Double security on the warehouses. And tell our 'friends' on the docks not to twitch unless I give the word. If the city's about to burn, we don't want to be the ones holding the match."
Still, Cobblepot's smile was thin. He could play both sides of the chaos. He always had.
***
The news spread quickly to the Triads. By the time it reached Boss Chen's mahjong table, the room was already thick with cigarette smoke and tension.
"The Hammer dogs went for the rails," one of his captains said, laying down tiles. "And they were beaten bloody. Half their men didn't make it back."
Chen's eyes flicked toward the ceiling, calculating. The Hammer Gang's grip on the waterfront warehouses had always been thin. Now? Their wounded crews couldn't defend them.
"Then we move," Chen said softly. "Tonight. Before their dead are even buried."
A ripple of agreement passed around the table. The Triads would bleed them further, strip their assets, and weaken them until they were nothing but a cautionary tale.
***
Across town, the Whisper Gang's leadership huddled in a candlelit cellar, their faces obscured by masks and shadows. Their entire trade—black market guns, smuggling, human cargo—depended on silence and careful timing.
One of their scouts laid down the word: the Hammer Gang was reeling, stretched thin, their attention locked on holding ground they could no longer afford.
The leader leaned forward, voice like gravel.
"They wanted the rails. They failed. Now everyone sees weakness. If the Triads take their docks and we take their Midtown routes, what's left of them will crumble."
"Won't that draw fire?" another asked.
"It will," the leader said. "But in chaos, we thrive."
****
At the East End docks, the Cartel bosses watched crates being unloaded and traded sharp words in Spanish. They weren't Gotham-born, but they had learned its rhythms quickly enough.
"The Hammers bleed," one said, lighting a cigar. "And the Triads circle. If the docks fall to them, we lose our cut."
Another spat into the water,
"Then we make our move first. Take their weak spots before Chen does."
Already, their enforcers were loading into trucks, ready to carve off slices of Hammer turf.
***
In the marble halls of the Falcone family's estate, the news reached carmine Falcone. He sipped wine, considering it carefully.
"The Hammers overreached," he said, calm but sharp. "That's no surprise. What is surprising is that they were allowed to look so bold in the first place."
Her consigliere shifted uncomfortably.
"Do we intervene?"
Carmine smiled,
"We don't intervene. We profit. The Triads will move. The Cartel will move. The Whispers will move. By the time the dust settles, the Hammers will be hollowed out. And then…" he gestured lazily with his
glass.
"…we step in, take what's left, and remind Gotham who really holds its throat."
***
By midnight, the city was alive with movement. Triad trucks slipped through Chinatown streets. Whisper Gang smugglers diverted shipments away from Hammer hands. Cartel shooters prowled the East End. The Falcones whispered to crooked cops and judges, lining up their eventual sweep.
The Hammer Gang's strike at the railroads had failed. Worse than failure—it had made them prey. Their enemies, rivals, and supposed allies all smelled blood.
And in Gotham, when one gang fell, everyone else sharpened their knives.
The dominoes had started to fall.
***
The Narrows had never been quiet, but tonight it held a strange tension. The Hammer Gang, still licking their wounds from their failed assault on the railroads, had pulled tighter around their turf shady dockside warehouses, back-alley bars, and the network of streets they controlled like a chokehold. Their grip was weaker now. Everyone in Gotham could smell it.
The first move came from the Cartel. Two black trucks roared down an alley, doors flying open as men leapt out with shotguns. They fired into shuttered doors and painted walls, trying to flush the hammers out, but the gang knew their ground too well. Within seconds, windows cracked open above them and masked gunmen rained bullets from hidden perches.
The alley turned red in a heartbeat. A Cartel soldier toppled into the gutter, another scrambled for cover behind a truck tire that exploded under the gunfire.
Before the gun smoke even cleared, another sound rose the deep growl of motorcycles. The Triads cut in from the opposite street, engines snarling, machetes and pistols in hand. They didn't wait for Cartel or Whisper blood to settle. They came to carve a piece of the city for themselves.
"Take their routes! Burn their holes!" a Triad enforcer shouted in Cantonese as Molotovs shattered across brick walls.
The Cartel, realizing they weren't the only predators here, turned their guns on the newcomers. The alley became a crossfire of conflicting ambitions, gangs shooting at Whispers and at each other, no allegiance holding in the heat of bloodlust.
Word of the territory battle spread fast. Other gangs Falcone affiliates, smaller East End outfits, even splinter groups of the Hammers began testing boundaries elsewhere. A warehouse fire in Chinatown. A gun battle at the Narrows bridge. A stabbing outside the East End market.
By 3 a.m., Gotham's underworld was tearing itself apart.
Smoke rose in thin columns across the city, each one a marker of another skirmish, another piece of territory contested.
On the horizon, the first rays of sun pushed against Gotham's skyline. The night had been chaos, but the light revealed something worse: the beginning of something far larger than a single raid.
For years, Gotham's gangs had lived in uneasy balance, circling one another like wolves. But the attack on the railroads had tipped the first stone. The dominoes were falling fast.
The city had woken to a new reality.
Not just another night of blood.
But the dawn of a new era
A new war.