Later that day, Nolan stood in a dim alley off the edge of Park Row, hood up, one hand stuffed in his coat pocket, the other loosely gripping a burner phone. The air smelled like wet stone and old cigarettes. He didn't look out of place here. That was the point.
A tall man approached thin, twitchy, eyes flicking up and down the alley as if he were born looking over his shoulder. He wore a patched coat and carried a small, scuffed duffel bag. He didn't say anything at first just nodded once and opened the bag.
Inside: a Glock suppressor, two spare mags, a pair of gloves, and a small collapsible baton. Nothing extravagant. Just the kind of tools you reach for when you plan to make someone disappear without raising a ruckus.
Nolan took the silencer, screwed it onto the barrel of his Glock, and tested the weight in his hand.
"You got something else for noise if I need it?" he asked quietly.
The man reached deeper into the bag and passed him a flashbang. "One. Ex-military. Not the cheap knockoffs."
Nolan nodded. "You did good."
He handed over a small envelope, thick with cash. Not their usual exchange. But this wasn't a usual day. The man looked surprised by the weight of it, but didn't question it. Just nodded and vanished back the way he came.
Alone again, Nolan stepped into the deeper shadow of the alley and checked the gear. Each magazine was clean. The silencer was threaded properly. He slipped it all into a sleek, black go-bag slung under his jacket.
***
The late afternoon sun pressed lazily through the windows of the owner's suite, cutting slanted shadows across the floor. Nolan sat at the small table by the window, a half-drunk glass of water sweating beside his phone. The hotel renovations echoed faintly from below—distant drills, muted hammering—but he barely noticed.
A new message buzzed his phone.
Beth:
These are the ones. I've seen their faces in thoughts. Memories. They've been watching the clinic, pretending to be patients, delivery workers, staff. I think they're Cadmus. I know they are.
Attached were photos of sketchbook pages, each one drawn in tight, careful lines. Four different faces. Hard eyes. Slightly exaggerated features, but he got the overall description. Beth wasn't an artist, but she didn't have to be these weren't drawings from sight. These were memories carved into her brain from the minds of the people she couldn't stop hearing.
Nolan stared at the images for a long while. Then he leaned back in his chair, elbows on his knees, rubbing his temples.
He didn't speak, but Quentin stirred, his voice emerging like smoke in the back of his mind.
"You know what this is."
Nolan didn't respond.
"We've all done it before," Quentin continued. "But this… this doesn't have to be on you. You've carried enough. Let me take care of this. I'm good at this. I can make it clean."
Nolan let out a long breath. His hand hovered over the phone again, then dropped to his lap.
"I know," he whispered. "I know you're good at it."
There was a pause.
Then he nodded once, just slightly. A flick of surrender.
"All yours."
The shift wasn't violent just a subtle straightening of the spine, a slow exhale that came out with a chuckle instead of a sigh. Quentin opened his eyes, rolled his neck, and stood.
"Well," he said, stretching out his arms, "let's dress the part, yeah?"
He stepped to the wardrobe and pulled out a crisp black suit—tailored, sharp at the shoulders, sleek down the legs. He laid out a red tie beside it, lips twitching in approval. From a drawer near the bottom, he withdrew a simple black box and cracked it open.
Inside was the theater mask.
One half smiling in wide, manic joy. The other half weeping, mouth open in sorrow. It was glossy, almost porcelain, and deeply unsettling in its duality.
Kieran had bought it from an old prop house when they were playing businessman for Leonard Harrow. Quentin had taken to it instantly. He always liked symbols.
He didn't put the mask on. Not yet. That came later.
He dressed methodically—black-on-black everything but the tie, which he knotted tight and perfect. He tucked the mask into a slim briefcase, along with gloves, the silenced Glock, and a single, sealed envelope.
Then he left the suite and rode the elevator down in silence.
No one stopped him. The workers were too busy, the security nodded, already used to seeing one version or another of him moving through the halls. But none of them had ever seen Quentin like this.
Outside, the city buzzed with its usual rot and chaos. He found a quiet alley two blocks from Dr. Tompkins' clinic.
There, in the shadow between two dumpsters, Quentin opened the briefcase. Slipped on the gloves. Pulled the mask over his face and adjusted it just right. The laughter side caught the light first. Then the crying side did.
He looked down at his phone one last time. The sketches were still there, waiting.
"Alright, boys," Quentin said to no one in particular. "Time for a little curtain call."
'lameeeeeee!'
"Shut up Kieran damnit!"
And he walked out of the alley, the mask pulled low and the weight of the work ahead settling comfortably across his shoulders.
***
Quentin walked at an even pace. Traffic hummed in the distance, but here just a few blocks from Doc's clinic things quieted. This part of Gotham held its breath in alleys. The streets were narrower, too many windows watching from above.
His phone buzzed in his coat pocket.
He didn't break stride. Just slipped it out and glanced at the message.
TINY:yo. u got eyes on ur sketches. two of 'em near DOC'S. not far. they look like they scoping. one in the alley now, another inside dressed like a reg. got a third & fourth watching from the south fire exit. maybe more.
Photos followed. Blurry, grainy but unmistakable.
The faces matched Beth's drawings exactly.
Quentin stopped at the corner. Looked up. The clinic was across the street, squat and unassuming. Nothing fancy. Just three floors of cracked brick and peeling window paint. But he could feel the tension.
A moment later, he spotted one of them.
Back alley. Moving behind a stack of trash bins. The man yanked off a delivery driver's jacket, revealing matte black body armor beneath. He dropped the jacket, pulled a small earpiece into place, and opened a duffel bag—gear. Compact, tactical. SWAT-level, with no insignia.
Cadmus. No question.
Quentin crossed the street quietly, slipping into the shadows. He moved like smoke, cutting behind a parked car and into the alley with the kind of certainty that came from years of practice.
The man didn't hear him.
Quentin was on him in two strides.
The silenced Glock hissed once. Right behind the ear. The man stiffened, collapsed like a puppet with cut strings. The duffel bag slumped beside him, half-unzipped.
Quentin crouched and rifled through it fast—flashbangs, zip cuffs, scalpels. A syringe with an unmarked clear liquid. A portable taser baton.
This wasn't a grab.
He wiped the gun on the guy's pant leg, then pocketed a small wireless comm unit clipped inside the man's ear. It clicked softly as he tuned it.
Agent 3: "Alpha team in position. Asset located on second floor. She's with another—female, older. Possibly the grandmother. Approaching now."
Agent 2: "Hold until I confirm. No resistance expected. If she resists, suppress and bag."
He didn't say anything. Just moved toward the side door.
The side entrance opened without a sound. Quentin slipped in like a shadow through the staff hallway, his footsteps soft against the linoleum. The scent of antiseptic clung to the air familiar, sterile, suffocating. He moved with practiced calm, checking corners, eyes flicking from shadow to shadow.
The comm still buzzed softly in his ear.
Agent 2: "Initiating contact. Securing asset now."
Quentin's jaw tightened behind the mask. He took a turn, ascending the narrow stairwell to the second floor—Beth's floor. His pace quickened.
At the top, he paused.
Voices ahead.
A man's voice, too smooth, trying too hard to sound casual.
"…you're not safe here. I know you're scared, but if you come with me now, we can protect you."
Beth's reply was barely audible. Quentin didn't need to hear the words to read the tension.
She didn't trust him.
Good.
Quentin moved. Quiet as breath.
He spotted them through the small rectangular window in the door—Beth sitting on a small examination table, her body rigid. The Cadmus agent stood close, hands in view, posture calm but ready. There was a slight bulge beneath his coat. Pistol holster, probably compact.
The man had his back to the door.
Perfect.
Quentin pushed the door open gently, silently.
The agent noticed too late.
He turned just in time to see the blurred glint of metal and the tragic comedy of the mask.
The silenced round buried itself in the side of his neck. The agent choked mid-turn, clutching at the hole, falling sideways into the crash cart with a metallic clatter.
Beth screamed half-startled.
Quentin caught the body before it hit the floor.
"Hey," he said softly, muffled by the mask. "You alright?"
Beth blinked. Her breath caught. She nodded slowly.
"They're still here," she whispered. "I heard one outside the window. And there's another down the hallway near the elevator. He was thinking about… about knocking out the power."
Quentin nodded once.
"You stay here. Lock the door behind me."
He stepped out before she could argue.
Down the hallway, another agent had just turned from the power junction when he heard something—just the faintest creak of a loose floor tile behind him.
He turned.
The mask was already there, staring.
The silencer whispered again.
This one dropped before he had time to even exhale.
Quentin dragged him into an empty utility closet and stripped his radio.
Agent 4: "Something's wrong. Jansen isn't responding. I'm moving in."
Quentin didn't wait. He stepped into the hallway toward the last known position—the fire exit stairs. He saw movement.
A fourth agent descending the hall fast, gun raised, sweeping.
Quentin ducked back and let the man pass. Then stepped up behind him, grabbed the arm, wrenched the elbow, spun him into the wall, and drove the butt of the pistol into the back of the skull. The man slumped without a sound.
Quentin stopped and stared at the unconscious man before raising his gun once more.
Quentin exhaled, then tapped the comm again.
Silence.
The line was dead now.
***
He turned and made his way back to Beth's room.
Inside, she was sitting against the wall, knees pulled to her chest.
He stepped in and shut the door behind him.
"They're gone," he said. "For now."
Beth looked up at him, still shaken, but steadier now, "I think I want to leave Gotham." She said quietly barely meeting his eyes behind the mask