The city bled.
Not in one place, not in one neighborhood but everywhere at once. Gotham had always thrummed with crime like a rotten heart pumping poison through its veins, but now the pulse quickened, erratic and violent. The gang war was no longer whispers and shadows. It was open, raw, and bloody.
On the South Docks, the Odessa family tightened its grip. Gunfire rattled through the warehouses as their men ambushed a crew of Falcone enforcers trying to muscle into one of their smuggling routes. The clash was brief but brutal, automatic fire tearing through stacks of shipping containers, blood pooling on concrete slick with seawater. By morning, Odessa had staked their claim, a blackened Falcone car smoldering at the pier as a warning.
Across town, in Little Russia, the city's other Russian factions moved too. The Volkov Bratva, always brash, stormed a gambling den long held by the Sokolovs. Broken glass and overturned card tables littered the floor while the survivors whispered of Volkov soldiers laughing as they lit Molotovs. It wasn't just turf it was a message: no neutrality, no middle ground.
In Chinatown, the Triad fractured further. The Dragon Split—their internal civil war—had left the streets splintered. One night, red lanterns swayed above an alley as one splinter cell opened fire on another, blades flashing when bullets ran dry. By dawn, bodies lay in the gutter beneath neon signs still buzzing faintly. The smell of blood mingled with fried food and incense, a grotesque reminder that Chinatown itself was eating itself alive.
Meanwhile, the Cartel wasn't idle. In the East End, their sicarios linked up with remnants of a biker crew, using them as muscle to guard a shipment house. It was a strange, temporary alliance, but alliances mattered less now than survival. No one wanted to be next on the chopping block.
Even the Whisper Gang, reeling from the loss of one of their rail nodes, struck back elsewhere. In the Old Gotham tunnels, they ambushed a group of small-time smugglers, dragging their corpses into the dark. The whispers carried further now not just their name, but the fear they sowed in retaliation.
And through it all, people whispered of the underpass.
In bars, in backrooms, and on street corners, the story spread: the beggars had taken rail from the Whispers. No one knew the full details it was too clean, too quick but the rumor alone spread like wildfire.
"They did what?" muttered a Falcone lieutenant over his drink, his voice slurring in disbelief. "Homeless rats don't take rail. Not like that."
A Triad soldier spat blood onto the ground after a skirmish and growled, "Means someone's giving them good directions. Someone with brains, that's rare we might have to take them seriously I thought that black mask shit was Batman!"
At the docks, one of Odessa's men shook his head after hearing the news. "If beggars can pull that off… they're not beggars anymore."
The city was no longer just fighting the old battles—Italian against Russian, cartel against Triad. Now there was a new name creeping into every conversation. The underpass. Nobody knew exactly who they were, how many they numbered, or who led them—but every rumor, every half-truth, made them larger in the imagination. And that was dangerous.
By the time the sun fell again, Gotham wasn't just in a gang war. It was in a freefall, every group clawing for territory before someone else snatched it first.
***
Gunfire stitched the night air. Muzzle flashes pulsed like erratic lightning against brick walls tagged with gang colors. A squad car screeched sideways to block an alley, its doors flying open as officers spilled out, ducking low behind hoods and wheel wells. Bullets pinged off metal, glass spiderwebbed, sirens wailed and stuttered.
Detective Harvey Bullock cursed as he slid behind cover, revolver spitting fire into the shadows.
"Jesus—these guys are armed like the damn militia!" he barked, fumbling for a speedloader.
Across from him, Renee Montoya vaulted from her door, crouching tight, returning fire in controlled bursts.
"Gangs don't pack hardware like this! Not unless someone's funding them," she snapped, muzzle flash lighting her grimace.
"Jesus how long have they been waiting for something like this?"
A Molotov arced overhead, smashing into a storefront. Flames licked upward, painting the chaos in sick orange glow.
Further down the line, Crispus Allen yanked a wounded uniform into cover, one hand pressing against the crimson spreading across the man's vest, the other lifting his pistol toward the rooftops.
"Stay with me! You're not checking out here, kid!" he growled, then shouted upward as rounds chewed the squad car above him: "Sniper! We got a sniper!"
A sniper's shot cracked—clean, surgical. A streetlamp blew apart, raining glass, plunging half the street into shadow.
"Son of a—!" Bullock flinched, shielding his face. "They're herdin' us like cattle!"
For a heartbeat, it was only chaos: shouts, gunfire, the roar of fire eating into storefronts. Then—silence. Not total. Just… different. The kind that pulled every cop's eyes upward, breath caught in throats.
From the firelit haze, a silhouette dropped from the rooftop. The cape snapped like a guillotine blade in the wind. Boots struck asphalt with a thud that swallowed sound.
"Aw, hell," Bullock muttered, shoulders sagging. "About time."
Batman moved through them without words. He didn't need them. He was the shadow between muzzle flashes, the shape that made gang rifles stutter in their owners' hands. A fist cracked bone; a grapple line hissed; a man was yanked skyward, vanishing into black.
Montoya lowered her gun for half a second, breath shuddering. "Every time," she murmured, "I still don't know how he does it."
The gang's gunfire faltered. One by one, weapons hit concrete. Some fled into the dark, others lay groaning on the street, limbs broken, breath ragged.
Allen finally exhaled, glancing at the empty rooftop. "He's not human. No way."
Bullock shoved fresh shells into his revolver and spat. "Human enough to remind these psychos this is still our city."
The flames still ate at the buildings. The wounded still bled. But the storm of gunfire was gone.
And Batman was already gone, vanished into the smoke before any of them could speak his name.
***
Nolan sat at the edge of the worktable, hand pressed to his temple, the city's low, restless roar below like an ill-fitting soundtrack. He didn't bother with deep breaths; the motion of thinking was a mechanism now. "Good news and bad news," he said into the room.
Kieran was already leaning against the desk, palms flat, smiling like a man who loved the sound of a proper plan. "Always two," he said. "Which first?"
"Good," Nolan answered. "The Continental's doing exactly what we built it to do. Discreet business killers, brokers, private rooms traffic is up. Money's cleaner than we expected." He let the satisfaction settle for half a second. Then the line dropped. "Bad: it's not the men we have to fear. It's the jobs."
Kieran's face shifted, his interest sharpening. "Jobs?"
"Contracts," Nolan said. "Assassins and contract killers come here to be discreet. That's the point. But some of those contracts could be written to target our people. They could be contracts that say things like 'clear the rail node at the East Line' or 'remove the men keeping that wet-rail camp lit.' That's no longer a hotel problem. It's an Underpass problem. An assassin can be a neutral tool if they're paid to take out one man, but if the money says take a node, burn the cars, kill civilians—then an assassin becomes a weapon on our people and our homes. We can't vet every contract because that would destroy our anonymity and our reputation. That's the risk."
Kieran tapped his fingers on the desk. "This is different. The hotel is a service. We don't ask questions — that's how we get paid. But you're saying we could be letting our own enemies use us."
"Exactly," Nolan said. "We built a machine for discretion. Now others are most likely using it to target what we built."
Kieran pushed himself upright and moved closer, the showman's placid tone folding into something sharper. "Then change the terms. Keep the service, but not the assassination-for-any-target model. Vet the jobs. Ask for better paperwork. Slow down payments when a job smells like a gang contract. Make it hard for a buyer to pay without exposure. Make the cost of listing an Underpass target more than the price of the hit."
Nolan rubbed his forehead. "But an assassin on retainer will still take money. A clean-faced client with laundered cash checks in and names get passed along. You do that quietly enough, there's no headline. We need an enforcement mechanism that doesn't force us into open war with the best of the best." He tapped the theater mask on the bench. "It can't be just noise. We need something that makes those contracts unappealing, or plainly impossible."
Kieran's smile tightened like a wire. "We have options. One: vetting. We tighten intake. If a client refuses background or pays in a way we can't trace, the room books as a hospitality stay no services. Two: information traps. Let someone ask too many questions about the Underpass, route them into false intel. If they pay for a hit, they get a map to a fake node or a decoy address. The hit becomes worthless. Three: make certain hires unprofitable." He leaned in, voice low. "If the idea of doing business at the Continental means you'll waste cash on bad intel or get paid with taut strings, fewer buyers will risk it."
Nolan's jaw worked. "And if a major player insists? If Odessa or the Cartel decides those rackets are worth paying for?"
Kieran's eyes glinted. "Then we weaponize perception. Spread quiet rumors that certain rooms are wired, that certain faces have guardians. Subtly ensure assassins know a job here draws attention from people who don't like being crossed. Keep contacts on retainer who make an assassin's job look… poorly paid. Deadshot was a name we touched on. A message that goes: You come for our people you're answering to hands you thought you paid." He didn't say we'll kill your hired killer, but the implication sat there like a blade.
Nolan felt the pattern forming, a lattice of safe and dangerous nodes he could fold over his network. "So we deny the job at intake when it looks like a targeted strike against the Underpass. We feed false leads to anyone hunting our tunnels. We make buying a hit through us unreliable and costly. And we keep a contingency people to make a message if someone pushes too hard. Still it's risky for our reputation."
Kieran nodded. "And crucial train the staff more than you already have. Concierge, front desk, cleaning. They're our sensors. Anyone asking about maintenance gates, transformer access, who controls a deadcar those are red flags. We don't broadcast that; we quietly reroute 'helpful' advice into a dead end. We make the city's rumor net hardened against their queries."
Nolan pinched the bridge of his nose. "We also have to protect our people out in the tunnels. If a contract comes through naming a node, we can't let it be dark info. Naima needs the heads-up before an assassin shows up with a clean pass." He looked at Kieran. "We can't be the only ones policing this. The Underpass needs protocols: safe response, evacuation points, and a way to vet suspicious people."
Kieran spread his hands, pleased. "Exactly. We protect the lines without burning the ledger. And if someone tries to hire a hit that crosses the Underpass? Make the job worthless or make the consequences too expensive. Quietly. Efficiently. No headlines."
Nolan let out a single, ragged laugh that had the shape of tired relief. "So, a system of soft refusal, misdirection, and selective brutality. Net the contracts first, then close the traps. Keep the hotel's discretion intact, but refuse to be a map."
Kieran's eyes were bright as the sea at night. "We keep the business. We stop being the conduit for their war. The Continental stays clean on paper, and the Underpass stays off the menu. And if a buyer tries to force the menu…" He let the sentence hang.
"We make them regret it," Nolan finished. He reached for the pen and began to write lists: vetting steps, staff signals, code phrases, contingency contacts he needed to call. The work was methodical, immediate.
Everything needed to be improved.
Nolan's personalities watched as their friend, evolved. It was gradual but they could tell a something special was being born right before their eyes.