Friday, October 31, 2014

The Red Hood: Chapter 5

Author’s note
     This is a work of fiction inspired by characters created by Bob Kane, Bill Finger, Paul Dini, Bruce Timm, Robert Kanigher, Sheldon Moldoff, and various other renowned writers published by DC Comics. It is a retelling of the origins of the Batman Universe, which is copyrighted and should not be considered a true part of the mythology. I have created this project purely for the joy of dictating the actions of characters that I have grown to love over the years, and to suggest scenarios that I have often wondered myself would happen if those said actions were to have occurred in the mythos. Basically, its me being a kid and playing with my favorite toys again. That said, this story will never be published, nor distributed as an original idea, for it is not. It began as a writing exercise that at some point, transformed into an exciting unofficial chapter in the Batman series, that which is just far too awesome to keep to myself. Therefore, here it is. Hope you enjoy my interpretation of the origin of one of the most iconic villains in comic book history. 

Chapter 5
     Though not one of his best performances, the gig at Thomas Wayne’s agriculture fundraiser banquet in Newtown would stand the test of time in Jack’s mind as one of the most memorable events of his life. It wasn’t long after he had stepped off stage that the prestigious gentleman that was responsible for it all, would meet him in person to thank him for his time. Thomas was honest enough to admit that his sense of humor was a bit offputtingly crude for his taste. However, so too did he applaud him for his unique approach, claiming that much of what he had said turned out to be quite inspiring. Respectfully Jack smiled and thanked the man, giving him a firm handshake to solidify his appreciation. He only wanted to end the encounter as quickly as possible so that he could be on his way.
     Breaking free from the grasp of the clinging media as they gathered around the Wayne family, he made his way for the gorgeous couple he had noticed when on stage. The blond flashed a blushing smile at him as he approached, abandoning her redheaded friend in midsentence on a topic about how the city smog was choking the Earth. Oblivious, she yammered on, her eyes wondering as she spoke, her friend no longer paying any mind.
     Jack returned a smile to the woman with the golden hair and the bright blue eyes, and said, “Forgive me for the intrusion.”
     The redhead suddenly fell silent, turning to find the suitor making his move upon her friend. Soft music lilted in the silence from the band that was playing nearby.
     “But my dear lady, I must ask of you a favor…” He said.
     She sat back and crossed her arms, feigning sore amusement. “Go on.”
     Lost in the exchange, her friend could only watch with an excited grin upon her face. Enthralled, her eyes turned now to Jack, awaiting his response as she took a long swig from her glass of wine.
     Unctuously, he offered his hand and said, “Will you be ever so kind as to humor a lonesome jester by taking his hand and joining him in a dance?”
     Reluctant, she glanced at her friend, her tongue twirling ambivalently in her mouth. She only laughed and said in return, “Have at it, Harley! Your gentlemen caller awaits.”
     Harley scowled at her. Uncrossing her legs to stand, she took Jack’s hand and followed him to the dance floor. His hand placed firmly on her back and their hips close, they began to dance, her cheeks turning even pinker than before.
     “So, Harley, is it?” He asked.
     “Indeed it is, and you?”
     “Jack Quinzel.”
     There was silence for a moment, the heat of his breath on her neck made her heart flutter. “Well Mr. Quinzel…” She said at last. “As an answer to your favor, I shall be expecting a reward in return. Therefore I must ask: what is it that you can offer me?”
     Smiling he said, “Well, I can make you laugh.”
     “I just sat through your entire performance and I must say…,” She pulled back to give him a teasing grin. “That has yet to be seen.”
     “Perhaps you need a moment to allow the joke settle in.” He said, giving her a wink. “In due time, I think you’ll get it.”
     “We shall see.” She said sinking back into his arms.
     “That we shall.” He agreed
     The cry of the bedside phone tore him back to the present. In a deep gasp of the dry motel air, heavy with dust and languor, he arose in a bewildered panic. Like fog lifting from the surface of his mind his dream vanished, and the daunting world of reality began to set back in. Nary a day had past where he had not awoken taking inventory of all of the haunting memories that have come to past since the day he had retrieved the mysterious super genome formula for the Falcone family. As if to convince him all over again that all of his nightmares were indeed true and not just another dream he had somehow slipped into, he tormented himself recalling every misstep that had taken place on that fateful night; the killing of the Wayne family, the shooting of his wife, the incessant detective at his every turn with an all new list of curious questions, and The Falcones’ too watching his every move. Jack knew his days were numbered, and with a bottle of whisky by his bed he often drank himself into a quiescent state, praying to fall into a blissful coma when his demons had finally come to claim what was left of his soul.
     His swimming head spun, as he turned to search for the phone. His hand raked in the darkness, missing at first, and then clumsily smashing into the receiver the second try. He retrieved the phone, and placing it to his ear he answered in a shallow voice, “Hello…”
     Suddenly his eyes widened, and the vigor returned to his haggard face. Something the woman had said on the other line had him back to his feet, alert and vigilant.
     “Is she alright? Does she remember anything?” He asked.
     The voice replied, the answer uncertain.
     “Okay… Thank you.” He hung up.
     She was awake. He thought grimly.
He was partially relieved to find that his wife had survived his attack, however he feared now that his demons would be arriving much sooner than he had initially anticipated. He knew that if Harley was to survive, he would have to stop the Falcones’ before they learn of her current condition, and he would have to do so fast; for if she has come to with her memory intact, the GCPD would soon be hard on his heels. Donning his jacket and collecting what little he had claimed before abandoning his home, he fled the motel, peeling out of the parking lot in his old sedan.
#
At Gotham University just South of The Knights Football Stadium in the Otisburg District, a man was studying in the dark of his laboratory at his computer. Bathed in the blue glow of his monitor, he cautiously checked his surroundings before he inserted the flash drive that Falcone’s men had brought him into his desktop. Satisfied that he was alone, he opened the file on the screen and explored its contents with rapt astonishment.
Thomas Wayne had indeed paid well to save his son. He admired, skimming through the pages upon pages of information.
“What have you found?” a voice boomed from somewhere in the darkness of the lab.
Startled he spun from his chair allowing the luminous from the screen to pour onto the empty desks that filled the room. Seated alone at one table in the far back was a tall gentleman clad in a black suit and tie. He arose, his prodigious height only matched by his shadow that was cast upon the wall behind as he approached. Vincent Falcone walked right for the computer, interested only in the information that was on display there.
Fixing his glasses, Dr. Jason Woodrue exhaled slowly to calm his racing heart and then joined him in his wonder at the computer. “Well, Mr. Falcone... What I have found here may be a plot of unfathomable proportion.” He began hammering away at the keyboard as he continued. “Not only has Thomas Wayne provided us with the formula he has been working on for the government, but he had also been so generous as to add more classified information on projects set forth by Wayne Enterprises and Lucius Fox. Projects also funded by the government.” He shot him a grave look as a schematic appeared on the screen.
It was the blue print of a heavily armored vehicle with weapons attached to its hull, and at its rear a rocket booster that could send the massive tank-like machine into a powerful acceleration; perfect for plowing through solid obstacles as such could stall it from reaching it’s intended target. Another portion of the drawing unveiled how the machine could separate into two parts, using the front wheels to transform it into a high-speed motorcycle and potential escape pod for the operator.
“It would appear as though…” The doctor continued. “The government was preparing an operation to bring about some sort of Police State here in Gotham, and Wayne Enterprises was chosen to provide them with their tools.”
Another image appeared; a drawing of a potential aircraft too heavily armed, with the ability to fly in ways no other military craft short of a mini drone could ever possibly achieve.
“These schematics are designed for mass crowd control, and the soldiers destined to mount them…” He opened the file showing the genetic formula that Falcone so desired, and said, “Would not be human.”
“Dear God…” He uttered.
Scarcely had Dr. Jason Woodrue (whom has worked with the Family many times before) ever seen such a dreadful look in Vincent Falcone’s eye.
“Debug this formula.” He demanded. “Use whatever resources you should need, I care not of the cost. I want this power, and I want it now.”
“Ill do what I can.” The doctor replied, still gazing at the remarkable code before him in awe.
#
     James Gordon sat at his cubical pondering the facts that he and his investigation had uncovered on the Wayne family murders. Weeks had past since he had first spoken to the distraught young boy who was collected at the docks only a few yards away from where the bodies of his mother and father were found. So frightened he was, the boy did not speak to him for hours, and when he finally had he would wail in sorrow for hours more. No leads were yet uncovered, though forensics had found tire tracks and bullet shells on the scene. The shells possessed no traceable fingerprints, and they had yet to find a match for the tracks. Currently he found himself at a dead end; accept for one curious detail... a mysterious red blazer.
Over and over he read one line in the report; a testimony from the boy himself,
“The man in the Red Hood then turned and shot my mom…”
He remembered the boy breaking down in tears after he had spoken that, as though reliving it all over again in his mind. It pained him to see someone so young battling such inner conflict. In him he saw not only loss and mourning, but a fire growing so fierce he feared what burning scars it would leave upon his heart. He feared for his future, and he had feared he would never find the one who had kindled the flame, but now he was sure he found his suspect.
As I took my leave, His notes had read from the Quinzel case. I had taken notice to what appeared to be a red blazer ensconced beneath Mrs. Quinzel’s gurney. Mr. Jack Quinzel had apparently stashed it there upon my entry.
      
      A robust officer then entered his cubical and peered over his shoulder. He finished the remainder of a glazed doughnut that was no doubt much prettier inside the box it came in, rather than the sprinkled mess that was left of it caught in his thick mustache. Though aware of his presence Detective Gordon never turned away from his work, as to cozen his guest with the element of surprise. When the crumbs found his shoulder, he could not pretend any longer.
     “Can I help you Detective Bullock?”
     His tone startled the clumsy officer, causing him to stagger back in shock. He then shoved the last piece of pastry into his mouth and laughed. “Gordon! Are you still going over that Quinzel file? I was to understand that one was open and shut.” He said, still chewing.
     Gordon returned to the file as he answered mockingly, “Poor girl is shot in her home at Crime Alley and it is an open and shut case. For your information, I am reviewing the Wayne case.”
     “Then why are you reading up on Mr. Jack Quinzel?” He questioned, taking note that the detective’s computer was on and Jack’s information was poured all over the screen.
     “Because, Detective Bullock, He is my suspect.”
     Officer Bullock gave him a curious look and said, “May I ask, how you have drawn that conclusion?”
     He read a piece of information that was highlighted on the screen, “Jack Quinzel, a comedic live performer who also goes by the alias, The Red Hood, Jackie Quinn.” He returned his eyes to the curious detective and continued, “There is a mention of a red hooded jacket in both cases.”
     Bewildered, the officer could only give him a nonplussed blank stare for many moments. Then he said, “I have a red jacket; should I be expecting a search warrant into my home anytime soon.”
     Gordon said nothing to that.
     “Look Jim, we all wish we could be that super hero with the ability to always prevail against every monster that should bare its ugly face in this city, but the truth is, we can’t. We have rules; we live in the real world. This isn’t some kind of Detective Comic. In the real world you can’t just point at the nearest person with a red jacket and say that’s the guy, lets get him. We need more evidence than that.”
     Flustered, Gordon gave him a long vacant look for a moment. Then he said, “I will find the evidence, and I will take this bastard down.”
     Suddenly his phone rang. He picked it up, listened, said a few words to confirm what he was hearing was accurate, and then hung up. Collecting his things, he quickly arose from his desk and hurried past Detective Bullock.
     “Where are you going?” He asked.
     Jim Gordon never looked back as he answered, “Gotham General, to collect my evidence.”
#
     “Perhaps you need a moment to allow the joke to settle in”
     The voice echoed in the inky blackness of her thoughts. 
     “In due time, I think you’ll get it.”
     A shot rang. Blinding light exploded, burning her mind’s eye. Harley sprung from her coma, sitting up straight and tearing the wires and tubes from the devices that surrounded her gurney. Her lungs heaved, as to reclaim the breath she had lost from her drowning sleep. She knew not where she was; she could recall nothing of her past. She had awoken to a nightmare, without reason, without an identity. She was no one. She was scared.
     Her detached heart monitor flat-lined and screamed. The sound of chaos closed in, as strange voices barked muffled commands on the other side of the closed door before her. Hurried footfalls drew near, and her heartbeat climbed in her chest. Rising and falling, rising and falling, quicker now, her breath came.
     I’m sorry… A man’s voice had once said. But this must be done.
     “No…” She breathed, utterly afraid. She did not understand why, but she knew she had to escape.
     Suddenly there were men and women in her room. They wore white and blue gowns, and worrisome frowns upon their faces. Some spoke to her in soft tones, as one would have to earn the trust of a lost child. They moved in with caution. Others retreated with orders to send word of her current condition. Still she did not understand.
     I must get out of here… She told herself, her toes hanging off the gurney and slowly reaching toward the floor. I must go home…
     The pull of tender flesh at her midsection seized her. There was a sickening pain there, but her adrenaline neutralized it, and before she could fully grasp what she was doing, she was on her feet, holding the IV pole as a weapon; she remembered holding a baseball bat in such a way, though she could not quite recall when or why.
     Soon the men and women cleared from her path. Cautiously she made her way out of the room, but a nurse’s hand attempted to reach for the pole. When she felt the restriction, as the nurse pulled on the end of it, she saw the flash of a woman’s face smeared in black and white paint. It was her face, she knew, and she was grinning a sadistic smile.
     That instant, she felt herself turn, she saw her fist swing, and she sent all of her rage through the swollen striations of the muscles in her arm as her knuckles collided with the woman’s open jaw, sending her to the hard tiled floor with blood spraying from her hanging bottom lip. Now all eyes were on her, and all the doctors, nurses, and patients recoiled. She then fled the hospital, her gown hanging loose at her back side as she ran through the parking lot, across the busy streets, and disappeared into the woods that surrounded Gotham General.
     Night was on the horizon by the time she reached her old apartment and pushed through the caution tape that crossed the doorway where she had once fallen. She saw the baseball bat still lying where she had dropped it, though still she could not remember how it had gotten there. Something was calling her toward the bedroom closet. Strange voices echoed in her mind, but she did not know what they were saying. As she slid open the door, she found there hanging a beautiful red white and black wedding gown, next to a peculiar purple and green tuxedo. As she gazed at the dress she heard a man’s voice asking to take her hand, asking to marry him, asking her a favor…
     She collapsed to her knees, tears welling at her eyes. She slipped her slender frame out of her hospital garb, and looked down. There, naked and gruesome were three scars; two bullet wounds just over her navel, and one long crescent shaped infliction left from a C-section. She ran her tremulous fingers over the scabbing wounds and cried. Collectively they formed the shape of a smiling face at her navel, as though to mock her.
     In due time, A man had told her. I think you’ll get it…
     Suddenly she began laughing. Suddenly she was on her feet. Suddenly she found a pair of scissors. Suddenly she was cutting into her old wedding gown.
     It wasn’t long before Detective Jim Gordon had learned of Harley Quinzel’s outburst at the hospital, and lead a unit to her apartment where they met a crazed woman dressed in a tattered, halfheartedly sewn dress that was once a wedding gown, standing there with a bat in one hand and a pair of rusty scissors in the other. Her face was smeared in white powder, and her eyes bordered with dripping, deep black eyeshadow makeup. Stark red lipstick lined her lips, and her once long flowing blond hair had been hacked off, and what remained of it was tied together at either side of her scalp in rubber bands. Upon her crown she wore a torn white bridal veil, its frayed ends flagging in the breeze.
     Guns were drawn all around her, though Gordon approached unarmed. With a megaphone he called out to her, “Harley Quinzel, please, I beg you…, Lower your weapon, and surrender. I know you are afraid, but perhaps I can help you.”
     “Who is that?” She cried out.
     In the silence, the red and blue lights of the surrounding police cruisers lit up the area, as Jim Gordon answered, “Harley?… That is your name.”
     “I get it now.” She said, laughing. “I finally get it.”
     “What is that?” He asked, confused.
     “The joke.” She said. “Don’t you get the joke? I’m Harley… Harley Quinn.”




TO BE CONTINUED…

Monday, October 6, 2014

The Red Hood: Chapter 4

Author’s note
     This is a work of fiction inspired by characters created by Bob Kane, Bill Finger, Paul Dini, Bruce Timm, Robert Kanigher, Sheldon Moldoff, and various other renowned writers published by DC Comics. It is a retelling of the origins of the Batman Universe, which is copyrighted and should not be considered a true part of the mythology. I have created this project purely for the joy of dictating the actions of characters that I have grown to love over the years, and to suggest scenarios that I have often wondered myself would happen if those said actions were to have occurred in the mythos. Basically, its me being a kid and playing with my favorite toys again. That said, this story will never be published, nor distributed as an original idea, for it is not. It began as a writing exercise that at some point, transformed into an exciting unofficial chapter in the Batman series, that which is just far too awesome to keep to myself. Therefore, here it is. Hope you enjoy my interpretation of the origin of one of the most iconic villains in comic book history. 


Chapter 4
     The dawn was met by the presence of a gathering storm on the horizon. The distant thunder sent echoes of gunfire reverberating from his memory. Still he could recall every wrinkle that stretched from the corners of her mouth as she screamed; every bead of sweat that appeared from the perspiration at her brow when she lifted the small gun to seek her vengeance. She had no chance. He had gunned her down before she could even lock on to her target. Martha’s hand was steadier than his in her last moments, but the tides were against her. Jack had never killed anyone in his life, and now he had the blood of a woman on his hands; a mother’s blood…, a widow’s blood. His first kill made without honor. He had robbed the poor woman of her rightful claim to Joe Chill’s life, and so too stole from a child his mother right before his eyes. Jack’s wife had seen everything… the mother of his own unborn child. Now he was under orders to silence her as well.
Scarcely did he shed a tear for any victim whom has lost a great deal by way of his work, but for Bruce, Martha, and Thomas Wayne…, for his wife he wept. She was to pay the ultimate price for his sins, and he was to be her reaper. Jack knew he needed to do something, to get her somewhere safe. But first he had to get close enough to her so that he could explain. If he could only talk her down from doing anything rash, perhaps he would be able to get her out of Gotham before word of any of this should ever reach the Falcones’. He had to hurry, he knew as he raced his sedan back to his apartment in East Burnley.
When he came around the corner to head down the street that led to his home, he saw Harley’s SUV parked precariously off to the side, one of it’s front wheels mounted upon the curb, and the driver side door hanging open. He pulled up next to it, the car squealing to a stop. She heard the sound of the tires from inside her apartment. An open suitcase lay before her on the bed with clothes carelessly jammed inside. With a handful of needed supplies at her chest, she turned her attention toward the window that overlooked the road. She scanned it for a moment in stunned silence, the light reflecting off her tear drenched cheeks. Freeing a hand she carefully peeled back a corner of the curtain. Seeing her husband still in his red jacket as he reached into her open car to collect the keys from the ignition, she gasped with fright, immediately pulling away from the window. She then dropped the things in her hands and ran for the bedside phone. Fumbling for the receiver, she quickly punched in 911, and only a few moments later someone was on the other line taking her information.
“Hello!” She said with terror in her voice. “Please help me… I think I’m in danger…”
When jack turned to head for his apartment a black limo suddenly came tearing its way toward him. Sliding to a stop directly before him, two men with machine guns aimed at his chest poured out from the rear passenger doors, and forced him into the vehicle. Inside he found Joe Chill, and Carmine Falcone. Joe appeared to have been beaten mercilessly, as his face was covered in stark purple bruises, deep bloody gashes, and swelling knots. His left eye was consumed by blackened swollen flesh that appeared hard as bone, and his right could only shoot a brief apologetic glance his way before retreating back to the floor.
“Jack, please make yourself comfortable.” Carmine greeted, feigning exuberance. “Nice jacket.”
The armed men in black suits sat on either side of him, as he took his seat directly across from Carmine.
“Look…” He began pleading his case. “I have no idea what went wrong, but…”
“Your back was turned retrieving the package when an unexpected sound startled Mr. Chill here, thus causing him to pull the trigger upon our hostage’s esteemed father.” Carmine said in a stoic tone. “Then you saw the woman with a weapon at hand and took action. I am well informed of the details, and a trial over who did what and why is not the reason I have donned my best suit at such a miserable hour in the morning. I am here by the call of my father to give you a message.”
“What message?”
Carmine looked to the man across from Joe Chill and nodded his head. The henchmen then reached into his jacket and withdrew a pistol equipped with an elongated silencer. He pointed the silver barrel at Joe’s head, and before the man could utter a word of protest a whistling bullet sent chunks of his liquefied brain spattering against the rear window of the limo. His skull collapsed into the side door, as the killer found his next target. The end of the barrel was still scorching hot as it pressed hard at Jack Quinzel’s groin.
In a panic Jack squirmed away from the man, but the other hired hand wrapped his strong bicep around his throat, seizing him in a fixed position. Sweat was trailing from his scalp to his widened eyes, but Jack dared not to make another hasty move.
The spray of blood that found the side of Carmine’s face was already beginning to run down to his neck as he said, “I understand that you are a man of jokes… Well I have one for you: In a library run by monsters, what would you find in their books?”
Jack said nothing.
Carmine smiled and said, “The devil in the details… I believe you have some unfinished business to attend in that apartment there.” He nodded toward his home.
His head peering out from the mass of muscle around his jaw, Jack shook his head and begged, “Please… She’s my wife… You can’t make me do this. I won’t!”
The pressure had suddenly tightened around his neck, and he could sense that an antsy finger was testing the trigger at the pistol aimed for his manhood.
“Yes we can, and yes you will.” The boss challenged, leaning in closer. “You can either give her a quick and easy death, or we can show you both the true extent of the evil that the media has claimed the likes of our kind to possess.”
“She’s pregnant with my child.” Jack cried.
“Indeed, and if you wish to maintain the tools to try for another, than I suggest you get up there and do your fucking job.”
His demand was met with reluctant silence, until the henchmen with the gun pressed even harder, placing his genitals in an unbearable vice.
Unable to endure the pressure any longer, Jack caved and yelled, “Okay! I’ll do it.”
Before long, he was walking back toward his apartment, gun in hand, and Falcone’s men watching his every move. When he made it to his floor, he headed up the hardwood stairs to his room, where his wife was still standing next to the bed. The phone was lying off the receiver, and she was grasping a baseball bat in hand. Baring her teeth like a feral animal, she glared at him, fire in her eyes.
Holding the bat high she said, “Stay away.
He hid the gun behind his back as he cautiously made his way toward the window, freeing the doorway to the stairs. Glancing out the window he saw the men sill there, waiting outside of the limo.
A heedful eye upon his distraught wife he said, “Harley…”
“Don’t!” She spat, silencing him with guilt. “I saw you… You killed that woman. You’re a murderer.”
“I’m sorry, but I…”
She threw up a hand of warning, closing her eyes to chase the tears away. “How long? How long have you been doing this? How long have you been lying to me?”
“Almost a year.” He answered without hesitation. “We needed the money.”
“Could you not have gotten a real job?!” She snapped. “A bank teller, a gas station clerk? Christ! Even a fucking restroom attendant would be better than being a goddamn murderer caught in a life of crime!”
“You don’t understand. I wanted more for us.” He argued.
“A lot of good that has done us. Now my son will come into this world a bastard, born to a man responsible for the deaths of two of the most important people in Gotham.”
He let out a long grieving sigh. He hardened the features of his face, though a tear found way down his cheek. “No…” he said, raising the gun and pointing it at his wife. “He won’t.”
Aghast, she could only stare at the weapon in grave silence. Her hanging jaw quivered, the handle of the bat escaped her grasp and dropped to the floor. The clatter of the object bouncing off the hardwood was all that was heard for many moments. Then Harley uttered her husband’s name.
“I’m sorry… but this must be done.” He said coldly.
Harley then hurried across the bed trying for the door, but a sudden pain shot to her womb sent her tumbling off the other side of the bed where she collapsed to her hip. A throbbing sting exploded at her side, but still she crawled for the open doorway.
His gun locked on her back, Jack said, “Why?” His voice cracked with emotion. “Why couldn’t you have stayed out of this?”
At her feet again, Harley turned to look back at him, her face white with fear. She continued for the stairs.
“Harley, stop!” He warned.
She ignored him, taking the first step down, her hand protectively at her swollen belly. Even with all that had happened, she could have never dreamt that Jack would have shot her, especially in the back. But he had, the bullet exploding out of her midsection like a shooting star with a tail of crimson. And then he had again, the second only inches across from the last. It was not the pain that had stopped her in her tracks; though severe it was, being the worst she had ever endured in all of her life. It was the feeling of her child dying inside that sent her falling. As the weight of gravity pulled her down a foreign breath escaped her lips, and she knew it was not hers. Somehow she saw it as the soul of her unborn escaping the womb, and in that fleeting moment she wanted nothing more than to go where ever he or she was going, to escape this cruel world, to become one with the wind. Indeed she thought she had when the feel of the steps escaped her reach, when the empty air wrapped around her and the pull of the Earth heaved. She fell, as she had done so long ago over love, she found herself doing yet again by the hand of that very same man. Her everything she lived for turned harbinger of death… Her prince, her king, her push, her fall.  
Outside, Carmine’s henchmen heard the gunfire, but then another sound followed like an ominous lilt on the wind. The police sirens were growing, and they knew they would have to move quickly if they were to escape the scene unnoticed. One of the men knocked on the passenger window, and Carmine rolled it down.
“Police.” He warned.
“Collect the package.” Carmine replied, still with a cool about his voice. He then rolled back up the window, the reflections of his men making way for Jack’s sedan caught upon the glass.
At the trunk of the car, they dismantled the lock with yet another whistling bullet from the weapon with the silencer. It popped open, and they retrieved the ransom. Soon, they were back in the limo with their prize, and the driver spared little time fleeing the scene.
Jack froze a moment, the smoke from his gun still sifting in the air. His eyes hanging low, he moved for the stairs. He descended slowly, taking in the image of his lifeless wife sprawled out upon the floor before him to add to the on-going nightmare of that day. Blood was pooling from a wound at her skull where she had collided with the floor when landing. He knelt down by her side to feel for her pulse. To his disappointment, she was still alive. He stood and aimed the weapon at her head. His hand trembled as his guilt yet again took his conscious by storm. He found that he could not finish it, and when he heard the wail of the approaching sirens, he put the weapon away and fled.
He saw the trunk of his car still hanging open, but he paid little mind as he dove into the driver side and made for his escape.
Looking back at his street in the rearview mirror, he shook his head and said under his breath, “I’m so sorry, Harley.”
In Carmine’s limo, one of his men turned to him and asked, “What if he fails to silence the girl?”
His boss never looked away from the window, admiring the sight of the passing buildings as he answered, “Then we will make him regret it. If her eyes should see the light of another day, we will show them both to the darkness.”
#
     Some weeks later at Gotham General, shortly after a nurse had checked on her unconscious patient, assuring that her visitor had not tampered with any of the equipment while there, the heart monitor began racing. Her dormant hands sprung to life, gripping at the sheets beneath her, balling into white-knuckled fists. She shook her head, her breathing elevating. A word poured from her lips, tainted with desperation, loss, and fear.
     “n…no…”
     Harley Quinzel then threw open her eyes and screamed at the top of her lungs, “NOOOOO!!!!”


TO BE CONTINUED!