Daredevil stands perched on the edge of a rusted water tower, his senses straining against the night. He filters through the cacophony of the city—the distant sirens, the hum of electricity, the frantic heartbeats of late-night commuters—searching for one specific, reptilian rhythm. He had been tracking Killer Croc for hours, following the trail of chaos the brute usually left in his wake. But tonight, the trail has gone completely cold. He can't hear the heavy, wet footfalls or catch the faint, musky scent of river water and scales that usually clings to the air. It's as if the creature simply vanished from the city's sensory map, leaving Daredevil with a gnawing sense of unease and a frustrating silence where a monster should be.
"Croc doesn't just disappear," Daredevil muttered to himself, his voice a low rasp against the wind. "He's too big, too loud."
He knew that Killer Croc, for all his brute force, was not typically a ghost. He always left a mark, a disturbance in the city's intricate symphony of sounds and slls. This sudden silence, after such a violent confrontation, was almost louder than any noise Croc could make. The lack of a trail was a calculated move, sothing beyond Croc's usual modus operandi. Soone else was involved. Soone smart enough to cover his tracks.
The subtle shift in the air currents, a faint vibration on the tal beneath his feet, warns Daredevil of company a second before a shadow detaches itself from the adjacent rooftop. A figure lands with the grace of a falling leaf, the sound barely a whisper against the city's drone. Daredevil does not need his eyes to identify the newcor; the confident posture, the specific weight distribution, and the faint scent of polished leather and high-tech fabric are familiar. He recognizes Nightwing, a fellow vigilante he has crossed paths with before during rare, city-wide threats that required a coalition of heroes. Nightwing offers a casual wave, his movents fluid and relaxed, a stark contrast to Daredevil's coiled stillness.
"Fancy eting you here, Spandex," Nightwing said, a light tone to his voice.
"You're far from Gotham," Daredevil replied, his voice a low rumble.
"Just following a hunch," Nightwing said. "Or, you know, doing my job."
"Batman was tracking Croc earlier," Nightwing explained, a serious note in his voice. "Sothing about him crossing into Gotham's periter, a big deal for the Caped Crusader, you know?"
Daredevil remained silent, letting Nightwing continue. He knew the Gotham hero preferred to talk things out, a stark contrast to his own thods.
"But then the Justice League called," Nightwing went on. "So cosmic ergency, typical Tuesday, right? So, Bats had to jet, leaving to pick up the trail."
"And you lost it." Daredevil's words were blunt, a statent more than a question.
Nightwing sighed, a slight shrug of his shoulders. "Yeah, near the docks. That's usually where he dips into the water, disappears into the currents. Pretty much the sa spot you hit a wall, I'm guessing?"
"He went cold," Daredevil confird. "No scent, no distinct sound signature. Nothing."
"Exactly," Nightwing said, a touch of frustration in his voice. "He's good at that when he wants to be, but this ti felt... different. Too clean."
"Soone helped him," Daredevil deduced, his senses still sifting through the city's symphony for any lingering trace of the brute.
"Bingo." Nightwing's voice turned grim, the casual tone fading completely. "My sources, the ones Bruce has cultivated over the years, they pinged . Croc wasn't just on a casual stroll through Hell's Kitchen. He was hired."
Daredevil waited, the na already forming in his mind.
"Kingpin," Nightwing stated, the na hanging in the air like a heavy weight. Even in Hell's Kitchen, where the Kingpin's influence was often subtle, his na carried a chilling authority. "He put a hefty bounty on sothing, and Croc was just the delivery guy."
"Kingpin doesn't hire muscle for muscle," Daredevil observed, the mory of his own past encounters with Fisk clouding his thoughts. "He hires for leverage. For control."
"Exactly what I was thinking," Nightwing agreed, his posture stiffening slightly. "It's not about Croc, or even the chaos he causes. Kingpin wants sothing specific. Sothing he believes will give him a significant advantage in his... corporate endeavors."
"Kingpin wants soone nad 'Orion Oak,' the owner of a place called 'Pokémon Ho'," Nightwing explained, his voice losing its usual playful edge. "Ever heard of it?"
Daredevil shook his head slightly, the movent barely perceptible. He had not. The na "Pokémon Ho" brought no recognition, no file from his ntal archives. His life in Hell's Kitchen, split between legal battles and nocturnal patrols, rarely left room for the city's latest fads or curious establishnts. He was aware of the criminal underworld, of course, and the everyday struggles of his neighborhood. This "Pokémon Ho" was just another unheard-of business in the vast, noisy expanse of New York City. It was simply not on his radar.
"Pokémon Ho, huh?" Nightwing mused, a thoughtful frown creasing his brow. "Doesn't sound like Kingpin's usual stomping grounds. He prefers financial institutions, art galleries, places with actual vaults."
Daredevil considered this. "It's a front," he stated, his voice calm. "Or sothing Kingpin believes can be exploited. Croc's involvent ans a physical threat, a direct acquisition. This isn't about money for him, not directly."
"Right, so Kingpin wants whatever Pokémon are," Nightwing clarified, already putting the pieces together. "And he's sending Croc to get them from so guy nad Orion Oak. This is definitely not a typical Tuesday, even for us."
Daredevil nodded slowly. The picture was clearer now. If Kingpin, the city's quiet corporate villain, was resorting to brute force to acquire these "Pokémon," they had to be sothing extraordinary, sothing valuable enough to risk a direct confrontation. And if Orion Oak was the target, his life was in imdiate, grave danger.
"You know where this 'Pokémon Ho' is located?" Daredevil asked, turning his head slightly in Nightwing's direction, the silent question hanging in the air.
"Already pulled it up," Nightwing confird, a faint ping from his wrist communicator echoing softly in the night. "Looks like it's right in the middle of the city center. A big, brightly lit place. Quite the contrast to our usual haunts, isn't it?" He offered a nod toward the direction of the city center, the unspoken agreent passing between them. They would confront this threat together.
"Let's go," Daredevil said, his voice decisive.
Nightwing wasted no ti. A practiced flick of his wrist sent a grappling line soaring across the chasm between their rooftop and the next. It bit into the stone with a soft thwip, securing his path. He launched himself into the air, a blur of blue and black against the skyline, swinging with effortless grace. Daredevil followed an instant later, his own billy club extending, a cable firing with a quiet hiss. He moved with equal precision, a red shadow mirroring Nightwing's path. The two heroes moved in a synchronized, silent dance across the rooftops, a rare alliance forged in the urban night, driven by the shared purpose of protecting the innocent from a threat they were only just beginning to understand.
***
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