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Now reading: Chapter 7: Grief Beneath the Mask from DC: The Man And The Hood, a Action novel by MaverickDaSupreme.

The night in Gotham was cold and suffocating, the kind of darkness that felt alive. Thick clouds smothered the sky, blotting out the moon and stars, leaving the city in an eerie gloom.

It wasn’t unusual for Gotham to feel oppressive, but tonight, the air carried sothing else. Anticipation. As if the city itself knew what was about to go down.

On the rooftop of an old, crumbling building, Batman stood still as a statue, his cape rippling in the wind.

His figure was almost indistinguishable from the night, a dark silhouette against a darker backdrop. He stared down at the city below, his jaw tight, his expression hidden but his fury unmistakable.

He couldn’t shake the mories tonight, no matter how hard he tried. Jason’s funeral played on a loop in his mind, every detail vivid. The rain had been relentless that day, drumming on the coffin like so cruel punctuation.

Everyone had spoken in hushed tones, their words aningless in the face of what they’d lost.

A coffin too small for soone who still had so much life to live. Batman’s fists clenched at the thought, the leather of his gloves groaning in protest.

But this wasn’t a night for grieving. Not this ti. There was no Bat-Signal in the sky, no Commissioner Gordon waiting with another case. Tonight, the mission wasn’t about Gotham, it was about him. About Jason. And the Joker.

He’d spent hours chasing whispers, fragnts of rumors that barely qualified as leads, but he didn’t care. He followed every single one.

Now, it had all brought him here, to the gates of an abandoned amusent park. The Joker’s kind of place. It was perfect in that grotesque way only the clown prince of cri could appreciate.

The gates creaked on their rusted hinges as Batman pushed through, the wind making them groan like they were alive. Inside, the park was a ghost of what it once was.

Broken rides lood in the dark, their faded colors dull under layers of gri. Clown faces were everywhere, grinning in a way that felt less cheerful and more like a warning.

He moved through the wreckage with practiced ease, every step calculated, every movent deliberate so as to not give away his presence.

The silence pressed in, heavy and almost suffocating, until it was shattered by a sound that made his blood run cold.

The Joker’s laugh.

That high-pitched, grating cackle that seed to echo from everywhere at once. Batman froze for half a second, his muscles coiled like a spring.

Then, he moved, heading straight for the sound, his cape trailing behind him. His destination was clear, a funhouse at the center of the park, its garish neon lights flickering in and out, casting jagged shadows on the ground.

Inside, mirrors lined the walls, distorting his reflection into grotesque shapes. He ignored them, his focus unshakable as the Joker’s laughter grew louder.

It was coming from sowhere deep within the funhouse, bouncing off the walls in ways that made it impossible to pinpoint.

“Joker!” Batman’s voice was low and rough, a growl with the weight of suppressed emotions.

Then the man himself appeared, stepping out from the dark like he owned the place. His pale face almost glowed under the flickering lights, that red grin of his stretched wide, and his eyes sparkled with sick glee. He clapped his hands slowly, the sound deliberate and mocking.

“Batsy!” the Joker said, his voice dripping with that manic cheerfulness. “I knew you’d co! Took you long enough. I was starting to think you didn’t care.”

Batman didn’t waste ti. He closed the distance in a heartbeat, his first punch landing squarely on the Joker’s jaw. The clown stumbled back, laughing even as the blow split his lip.

Batman didn’t stop. His fists flew, each strike harder than the last. Every hit was fueled by the mory of Jason, of the pain and guilt he couldn’t shake. Glass shattered around them as they crashed into mirrors, the shards raining down in glittering fragnts.

“Still so serious!” the Joker wheezed, his grin never faltering. “You really don’t know how to have fun, do you?” He said as he looked at blood stain on his suit. “I had so much fun with the kid, too bad he died at the end. What can I say, he was indeed a… Blunder.”

Batman grabbed him by the collar and slamd him into the nearest wall, the cracked glass spider-webbing out from the impact. His voice was a snarl. “This is for Robin.”

The Joker’s grin widened, sohow, his eyes alight with cruel amusent. “Oh, little Robin,” he said, his voice softening to a mockingly tender tone. “He was such a good boy, wasn’t he? Too bad…” He leaned in, whispering like it was a secret ant just for them. “…he couldn’t take a blast.”

Batman saw red. He struck again and again, the Joker’s words cutting deeper than any blade.

The sound of shattering glass filled the air as the mirrors around them gave way, but all Batman could see were flashes of Jason, Jason alive, Jason gone, Jason lying still in that coffin.

Finally, he stopped, his breath coming in harsh, ragged gasps. The Joker crumpled to the floor, blood sared across his face, his smile sohow still intact. He coughed, then let out another laugh, hoarse but just as maddening.

“Go on,” the Joker rasped, his voice a dare. “Do it. Finish it. You know you want to. Kill . It’s what the little bird would want, isn’t it?”

Batman’s fist hovered in the air, trembling with the force it took to hold back. He could do it, end it all right here, right now. One strike, and it would be over. Justice for Jason. Justice for all of them.

But deep down, he knew the truth. It wouldn’t bring Jason back. It wouldn’t even feel like justice. It would be surrender, giving the Joker exactly what he wanted.

With a sharp exhale, Batman tapped a button on his belt. The silent signal activated, and seconds later, the rumble of engines broke through the oppressive quiet. A prison van rolled into view, the ard officers inside ready for his cue.

He let the Joker fall, his grip releasing with a snarl. The clown hit the floor hard, shards of broken glass crunching beneath him as he crumpled in a heap.

“You’re going back to Arkham,” Batman said, his voice cold and clipped. “But this isn’t over.”

As the van screeched to a halt outside the dilapidated funhouse, the officers spilled out, their weapons trained on the maniac sprawled on the floor.

The Joker, of course, couldn’t resist. He grinned up at Batman, blood sared across his chin, his teeth still stained with that twisted, perpetual smile.

“Oh, Bats,” he rasped, a wheezing chuckle bubbling up as he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. “Always so predictable.”

Batman ignored him, dragging the Joker to his feet before shoving him toward the waiting officers. They moved in swiftly, slapping on cuffs that clinked like a death knell.

“Way to ruin the finale, Batsy,” the Joker said as they hauled him toward the van. He threw his head back, laughing through the pain. “I’ll see you soon.”

The echo of his laughter cut through the night, sharp and grating, and for a mont, Batman stood frozen, his jaw tight.

Commissioner Gordon approached, his boots crunching over the broken remnants of the Joker’s chaos. A cigarette burned between his fingers, the ember casting a faint glow in the darkness.

“When you called earlier, I thought tonight might be the night,” Gordon said, his voice heavy with sothing between relief and resignation. “Thought maybe you wouldn’t hold back this ti. Thought maybe it’d finally be the end of him.”

He dropped the cigarette, grinding it into the ground beneath his shoe.

Batman didn’t answer. He couldn’t. He simply turned and walked away, the Joker’s laughter following him like a taunting echo.

It clung to him as he stepped through the rusted gates of the park, the sound burrowing deep into the corners of his mind. He didn’t look back. He couldn’t. Not tonight.

The Batmobile waited just beyond the shadows, its sleek fra a sharp contrast to the decay around it.

He slid into the driver’s seat, the familiar hum of the engine steadying his restless thoughts. When the car roared to life, it drowned out everything else, the laughter, the mories, even his own doubts.

The city blurred past him as he sped into the night, light and shadow streaking across the windshield. But no matter how fast he drove, he knew one thing for certain: that laughter would follow him long after the night ended.

Batman’s thoughts weren’t on the roads ahead. His grip on the steering wheel tightened as his mind wandered, dragged back to a past that refused to stay buried. Jason.

Even thinking his na felt like a punch to the gut, stirring a storm of emotions he couldn’t control, grief, guilt, anger, and an ache that no amount of ti or distance could dull.

Jason was a tough kid, all fire and fight, with a grin so wide it seed to dare the world to knock him down.

Bruce could still hear his laughter, rare in Wayne Manor’s somber halls, but so full of life that even Alfred couldn’t help but smirk when Jason’s antics got out of hand.

That laughter had been sunlight breaking through the darkness, a sound that made the weight of their mission feel lighter, if only for a mont.

“C’mon, Bruce!” Jason’s voice echoed in his mory, sharp and vibrant. “You gotta loosen up! You’re not just the Dark Knight, you’re also a billionaire.

Billionaires are supposed to have fun, right?”

For the briefest second, Bruce felt the ghost of a smile tug at his lips, only to vanish beneath the crushing weight of reality.

Jason had been more than a partner, more than Robin. He was family. A son. Even if Bruce had never managed to say it aloud.

The Image of Jason’s first eting flashed through his mind. A scrappy, fearless kid trying to steal the tires off the Batmobile in the middle of Cri Alley.

There had been sothing in Jason’s eyes that day, sothing raw and untad. Bruce hadn’t just seen a thief. He’d seen potential.

He’d seen himself, years ago, burning with the sa anger and drive to make sothing better out of the chaos.

“Am I doing this right, Bruce?” Jason had asked during a quiet rooftop stakeout, his voice unusually uncertain. “I an, really right? Do you think I’m good enough?”

Bruce could still feel the weight of his response, his voice steady and sure. “Jason, you’re more than good enough. You’re extraordinary. Don’t ever doubt that.”

But no words, no assurances, had been enough to keep Jason safe. That image—Jason’s broken body, the blood, the stillness—was seared into Bruce’s mind, a nightmare he couldn’t wake up from.

He could still hear the explosion, the deafening silence that followed, the crushing realization that he had been too late.

The Batmobile’s engine roared as he pushed the mory aside, forcing himself to focus on the present.

Jason was gone, and no amount of regret or anger could bring him back. But his loss lingered, woven into the fabric of Gotham itself, a shadow Bruce would carry forever.

When the Batmobile finally slowed, it was outside the Batcave. I, he made his way atop the rooftop of the Wayne Manor overlooking the city.

Batman stepped forward, letting the cold wind wash over him as he stared at Gotham’s sprawling lights, glittering like scattered stars. Sowhere out there, Jason’s mory lingered, refusing to fade.

“Master Bruce.”

Bruce turned to find Alfred standing behind him, his expression calm but lined with quiet compassion.

“Alfred,” Batman said, his voice low, raw. “I failed him. Jason’s gone because of .”

Alfred stepped closer, his hand resting lightly on Bruce’s shoulder, a small but steadying gesture.

“You did everything you could, sir. Jason knew the risks. He chose this life, chose to fight alongside you. Blaming yourself will not bring him back.”

Bruce’s fists clenched, the words like a bitter pill. “I was supposed to protect him. He trusted . I let him die.”

Alfred’s voice softened, though his gaze remained steady. “Grief is a heavy burden, Master Bruce, but it’s not one you must bear alone. Jason admired you. He believed in you. He wouldn’t want you to lose yourself in guilt of his death.”

For a mont, the words hung between them, raw and unvarnished. Bruce took a slow, steadying breath, letting them sink in.

He couldn’t afford to let grief consu him, not when there was still so much work to be done. Jason’s mory wouldn’t be his undoing. It would be his strength.

“Thank you, Alfred,” Bruce said quietly, the words heavy with sincerity.

“Always here, sir,” Alfred replied with a faint smile. “Now, perhaps it’s ti we head back down. Gotham isn’t going to save itself, after all.”

They returned to the Batcave, the silence felt heavier, broken only by the hum of machinery.

Bruce’s eyes landed on the glass case where Jason’s Robin suit had once hung. Now, it was empty, a painful reminder of a promise he hadn’t been able to keep.

He stood there for a mont, his thoughts heavy, his heart heavier. “Jason…” he whispered, the sound swallowed by the cavernous space.

From the shadows, Alfred watched quietly, his usual stoicism softened by an undercurrent of sadness.

He knew better than anyone that Bruce’s grief wasn’t sothing words could nd. Still, he hoped that, in ti, Bruce might find peace, or at least purpose in Jason’s mory.

When Bruce finally turned away from the empty case, it was with renewed focus. He moved to the massive computer, its screens alive with data and surveillance feeds. The Joker had been taken down, but cri still lingered sowhere in Gotham’s shadows.

*****

Crave for even more chapters ahead of my public release? Kindly visit my p@t to read ahead pàtreøn.cøm/Da_supremaverick

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