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Countdown Page 34

by Unknown Author


  To their credit, the Justice League had done a good job of looking after Ray’s house during his long absence. A paid housekeeper had kept everything spick-and-span. Yet of all the bizarre places he had visited in die last two years, none felt more desolate than this lonely suburban home, which was way too big for one solitary super hero, even when, as now, he was his normal height. He couldn’t help wondering how that other Jean was coping fifty dimensions away, in a reality he would never see again.

  He hoped she was happy.

  “So now what?” he wondered aloud. The League had been supportive, giving him time to acclimate before reporting back to duty, but was that really what he wanted to do with the rest of his life? His career as the Atom had cost him the woman he loved—twice. Was that even a life he wanted to live again?

  The doorbell rang, interrupting his moody ruminations. Who on Earth? Ray wondered. He wasn’t expecting anyone.

  He was tempted to ignore the bell and pretend he wasn’t home, but curiosity prevailed. Dragging himself off the couch, he went to the door. He opened it tentatively, half expecting to find a Jehovah’s Witness or a youngster selling Girl Scout Cookies. Instead he discovered a tall brunette woman wearing casual attire.

  “Donna?”

  “I knew it,” she said cryptically. Without asking for an invitation, she stepped inside the house. Her piercing blue eyes probed his own. “You too, huh?”

  Ray closed the door behind her and followed her into the living room, where she shucked off her leather jacket and made herself at home upon the couch. He sat down on the arm of the easy chair across from her. “Me too, what?”

  “That antsy, unfulfilled look in your eyes,” she explained. “I know that look from my own mirror.”

  Her confident assessment unnerved Ray, who tried to shrug it off. “It’s only natural we should feel at loose ends. We’ve been through a lot.”

  > “And?” she prompted him.

  No answer came. Ray squirmed awkwardly on the arm of the chair. What else is there to say?

  “Yeah, I know,” Donna said. He had to remind himself that, unlike the Martian Manhunter, she couldn't actually read his mind. “It bugs the hell out of me too.”

  GOTHAM CITY.

  The Bat-Signal shone above the city like a second moon. Jason Todd stood upon the rooftop of an abandoned warehouse down by the waterfront. Honking horns and police sirens filtered up from the grimy streets below. It was another busy night in Gotham.

  He sneered at the bat-winged emblem in the sky. Once, when he was young and naive, the Signal had promised adventure and excitement. Now it only reminded him of his lost innocence—and a life that had been abruptly taken from him.

  “Still fighting the good fight, eh, Bruce?”

  Part of him had never forgiven Batman for not avenging his “death” by killing the Joker, let alone for moving on with his life and training a new Robin. To hell with it, he thought. That’s water under the bridge now. No more masks and capes for me.

  He’d seen firsthand just how insane that life could get----

  A muffled whimper reminded him that he still had business to take care of tonight. Turning his back on the Bat-Signal, he strode over to where a helpless figure, his arms and legs tightly bound with duct tape, struggled uselessly upon the floor of the roof. Gang tattoos marked the man’s shaved skull. Perspiration glistened upon the faded ink. Bloodshot eyes were wide with fear. More duct tape was stretched across the prisoner’s mouth. Blood dripped from a broken nose.

  “They say knowledge is power,” Jason said with a smirk. “As a made man in the underworld. I’m sure you know that.”

  The gang member mumbled something unintelligible. Judging from the man’s panicked expression, Jason figured he was about ready to squeal. Rumor had it the Penguin was running guns in this neighborhood, and Jason really wanted to get a lead on the operation before Batman did. If nothing else, he thought, I can use the ammo.

  He drew a switchblade from his black leather jacket and flicked it open. “So lay some knowledge on me, smart guy”

  Forget that Multiverse crap, Jason thought. This is where I belong. In the streets and alleys where I can make a difference—my way.

  Too bad Donna couldn’t see that.

  IVY TOWN.

  “Ray, you were there,” Donna reminded him. “You saw what almost happened.” She showed no sign of budging from his couch anytime soon. “Godlike beings playing games with the cosmos, with every living soul their pawn.” Her pensive eyes searched his face. “Doesn’t that trouble you?”

  He looked away, avoiding her gaze. “I try not to think about it.”

  “Really?” she asked. “And how’s that working out for you? Because I know it’s keeping me up nights ”

  Ray felt a headache coming on. He squeezed the bridge of his nose. “What do you want, Donna?”

  She got up from the couch. “An answer.”

  “Okay,” he grumped. “And the question?”

  She fixed him squarely in her sights. “Who monitors the Monitors?”

  Huh? It took him a second to realize what she was getting at. “Oh no! Absolutely not!” Throwing up his hands to ward off the very idea, he spun around and started to walk out of the room. He shook his head in denial. “Are you insane?”

  Surely, she couldn’t be serious!

  THE KAHNDAQI DESERT.

  Moonlight reflected off an arid wasteland that stretched for miles in every direction. Towering sand dunes shifted slowly beneath the relentless push of a cold desert breeze. The skeleton of a dead camel lay half buried in a gully, the remains stripped to the bone by windblown grit. A brawny figure, clad in a black silk uniform, contemplated the forbidding landscape surrounding him. A golden thunderbolt adorned his chest.

  “Of all the kingdoms and empires that have come from the desert,” Black Adam mused aloud, “none have ever been able to match its stark majesty and cruel beauty.” He tipped his head to the sky. “Wouldn’t you agree, Mary?”

  Guess those pointed ears of his heard me coming, she thought as she descended from the sky behind him. Her boots touched down upon the lifeless sands. “Ancient history isn’t really my thing, but as far as ‘cruel beauty’ goes, I’m with you all the way.”

  She wasn’t surprised to find him here; this was his ancestral homeland after all. Nor was she startled to find that he had apparently regained his own powers, even after surrendering a portion of them to her months ago. Kind of like Billy kept his powers after sharing them with Freddy. Frankly, she was glad that she wasn’t the only Black Marvel in the world. There was at least one other person on Earth who understood what it was like to wield this power. Now that Darkseid’s gone for good, I’m a free agent. And I can team up with whomever I like.

  He grudgingly turned to face her. His saturnine features were hardly welcoming. “Indeed?”

  “Sure,” Mary said. “You should have seen me stomping gods and super heroes. You were right all along. The Justice League and the others, they’re no threat to beings like us. We can make our own rules.”

  She didn’t expect Black Adam to greet her like a long-lost sister, but she figured he’d be impressed by how well she’d followed in his footsteps. Who knows? she thought. Adam and I have both lost our families, so maybe we conform a new Black Marvel Family?

  But instead his voice dripped with contempt. “Spoiled, willful child. I have always done what I must, while you simply do what you want.”

  “Want?” Mary felt like she’d been slapped in the face. “I didn’t want this! I didn't ask for this!”

  If the gods hadn’t stolen her powers in the first place, and cut her off from her original family, she wouldn’t have had anything to do with this. She would still be the same happy Mary Marvel she was supposed to be. It’s not my fault!

  Black Adam ignored her protests. Turning away from her, he started to fly away. “Do not come to me seeking a partner in your misery.”

  Mary’s shock at his brusque dismissal
flared into anger. How dare he abandon her—just like everyone else! “Don’t!” Lightning blasted from her fingertips, striking Black Adam in the back. “Do not turn your back on me! Not ever!”

  The thunderbolt knocked him out of the air, causing him to crash down onto the moonlit sands. Smoke rose from his scorched uniform as he rose angrily to his feet, but still he refused to look back at her, as though she was unworthy of his notice. “I called you a child, and you reacted like one.” He took off into the sky once more. “As I normally find beating children distasteful, I shall simply take my leave.” She found herself staring up at the soles of his boots. “Farewell, Mary.”

  She was tempted to fire another blast at him, but what was the point? He had made his feelings clear. “That’s .right!” she shouted after him as he disappeared into the distance. “You’d better run!” She shook her fists at the heavens. “I’m Man' Marvel! I don’t need you! I don’t need anyone!”

  Lightning erupted all around her, tearing up the desert. Billowing clouds of sand raced outward across the dunes, leaving the aggrieved heroine standing alone in the center of a smoking crater. Her tantrum over, she took a deep breath and contemplated the messy aftermath of the explosion. The extent of the damage demonstrated, once and for all, that there was still one thing she could always count on.

  “I’m Mary damn Marvel,” she whispered.

  The rest of the world would just have to deal with that.

  IVY TOWN.

  “First Donna. Now you two?” Ray sulked upon his easy chair. “One more super-being sets foot in this house and I’m going to start charging rent.”

  “Sorry,” Jimmy Olsen apologized. The carrot-topped reporter perched on the arm of the chair next to Ray. “But Forager insisted.”

  The insect-woman, who was wearing a restored version of her chitinous exoskeleton, was conferring in the comer with Donna, who had apparently invited them to this improvised reunion of the Challengers of the Unknown. The only consolation was that, according to Donna, Jason Todd would not be joining them.

  I can live with that, Ray thought.

  “But to what end?” He gazed at the alien female standing over by the entertainment center. “The gods she served, the worlds of New Genesis and Apokolips, are all gone.” Superman had informed the League that the two planets had ultimately crashed together, forming a new world whose future was known only to the Source. “I .can’t help her find any of her own kind who might have survived.”

  Jimmy shrugged. “Yeah, well you tell her that.”

  His weary tone implied that his ardor for the exotic alien had cooled somewhat. Ray felt sorry for the younger man; it seemed that true love remained evasive no matter what planet you were on. At least she didn% go crazy and murder your friends.

  Donna and Forager finished their private conversation and joined the two men. “We’ve decided,” Donna announced, her hands upon her hips in a very take-charge manner. She sounded completely confident in her choice, whatever it might be.

  “To leave?” Ray said hopefully. “Please?”

  Donna shook her head. “We’re going to monitor the Monitors—with your help.”

  “No way,” he protested. Just because he had figured out how to traverse the Multiverse didn’t mean he was planning to make a career of it. He lurched angrily from his seat. “And why would I want to do that?”

  “Because you know they are right,” a solemn voice declared from a sparkling column of light. The teleporta-tion beam signaled the arrival of a Monitor, but not the one Ray first expected. Instead of the bearded Solomon, Ray recognized the clean-shaven Monitor of Earth-51, the one who had granted Ray sanctuary on his world until Solomon barged in and sent everything to hell. The one who had banished him from Earth-51 forever.

  “Nix Uotan!” Donna blurted.

  “Yes,” the Monitor confirmed. The coruscating energies dissipated, leaving behind the looming extraterrestrial in his intimidating high-tech armor. His black hair was bound up in a ponytail. “I have heard your words and agree. Sentinels are not infallible. Mistakes are made. Hubris, arrogance ... these are the pitfalls of those who become complacent with the responsibility they bear.”

  Ray was grateful that the living room drapes were drawn. The last thing the neighbors needed to see was the steadily growing alien population in his living room. “Count me out!” he insisted. “I’ve got a life.”

  “Really?” the Monitor asked. He eyed Ray dubiously. “Professor Palmer, you above all others should know the difference between living and merely existing.” He looked about the crowded living room, as though he knew exactly just how lonely and forlorn this place had been before Donna had invited herself in. “Have you ever felt more alive than when you were exploring the new worlds? First in the nanoverse, then in the Multiverse?”

  He’s got a point, Ray conceded. What’s really holding me here?

  He walked away from the others, trying to get a little distance from their arguments. “I tried running away before. It didn’t work.”

  “You wouldn’t be running away this time,” Forager observed. “You would be serving a purpose.”

  “I don’t know,” Ray said. “I—I’ve got to think about this....”

  Donna came up behind him and gently laid a hand on his shoulder. “No. You don’t.”

  THE TIMESTBEAM.

  Tin Monitors’ enormous space station, which was located at the nexus of the fifty-two universes, reminded the Atom of the Justice League’s satellite headquarters. Air locks and heavy steel bulkheads protected the heavily shielded base from the formless void outside. Insulated cables snaked across the walls and ceilings. A multitude of glowing view-screens offered pictures of all the myriad realities, from the postatomic wasteland of Earth-17 to a world of anthropomorphized cartoon animals. Portholes looked out onto the swirling vapors beyond the station’s walls. The air was clean and sterile. The gravity was mercifully Earth-normal.

  “This is preposterous!” an indignant Monitor proclaimed. “Sheer madness!”

  The Atom, Forager, and Donna occupied an elevated dais in the Monitors’ central assembly hall. Dozens of the armored aliens packed bleachers and galleries facing the dais, their individual appearances reflecting the distinctive nature of their respective universes. Fangs and pointed ears betrayed the vampiric nature of one Monitor, while another sported Victorian-style muttonchops. Facial hair, scales, feathers, tattoos, skin color, and variations in size and gender distinguished the Monitors from each other. The Atom scanned the galleries, but failed to spot Solomon among the quorum. According to Nix Uotan, the rebellious Monitor was now a pariah among his kind.

  Solomon could be a problem, the Atom thought. We ’re going to need to keep a close eye on him.

  “They do not belong here!” another Monitor objected. Her elaborate headdress looked vaguely Kryptonian in nature. “Their presence is an insult to our eons of selfless duty!”

  “And yet here we are,” Donna said defiantly. Like the Atom, she had traded her civilian garb for her super-hero costume. Silver stars glittered upon her ebony leotard.

  “You will abide by our decisions, or you will accept our punishments.”

  Forager brandished a futuristic lance. “You know we do not lack the will to enforce them!”

  The Monitors could barely contain themselves. They rose from their seats like an angry mob. “We are the Monitors!” someone in the first row shouted. “We answer to no one!”

  “We are flawed!” Nix Uotan shouted above the uproar. He strode out onto the stage beside Donna and the others. “I sponsor these Challengers!”

  “You!” another Monitor mocked him. “You could not even stop Solomon from invading your own universe!” Uotan did not back down. “All the more proof they are needed.”

  “But they are anomalies!” An avian Monitor, whose scalp sported glossy black feathers instead of hair, pointed accusingly at the Challengers. “Only the being known as Atom’ has a world!”

  The Atom steppe
d forward. “Not anymore!” His voice was strong and without hesitation. He had made his decision and he was going to stick to it, no matter what. ‘There’s nothing left for me in my world. I renounce my place in it.” He held his palm up as though taking an oath. “From now on, I join these others to serve the Multiverse as ‘border guards’ for man and Monitor alike!”

  The audience was not yet convinced. “This is without precedent,” observed an elfin-looking Monitor whose armor bore a medieval coat of arms. “We must weigh your proposal carefully.”

  “You misunderstand,” the Atom corrected him. “We didn’t come to ask permission. We came to serve notice.” He activated the controls upon his belt and brilliant atomic orbitals circled him and the two women. Harnessed white-star energies prepared to transport them away from the nexus. “We’re out there ... so watch yourselves!”

  They disappeared into the Multiverse.

  BfflUiraB'CJ! 319

  THE SBfllCI WALL.

  “Well, well.” Solomon chuckled. “And so a new game begins.”

  The renegade Monitor watched the Challengers’ departure via a miniature view-screen on his gauntlet. Although unwelcome among his fellows, he continued to track their affairs with interest. He savored their consternation at the Challengers’ professed new mission.

  Who knew Donna Troy and her fellow anomalies would prove so amusing?

  Solomon stood astride an asteroid at the literal border of the universe. Before him rose the Source Wall, a dense barrier of incalculable size. Although it appeared to be constructed of weathered ocher stone, it was actually composed of a unique preternatural substance more durable than any mundane element. Humanoid figures, some hundreds of feet tall, were embedded in the very substance of the Wall. No mere effigies, the figures were actually the entombed remains of the ancient Promethean Giants, as well as everyone else who had ever attempted to penetrate the Wall to discover what lay beyond. The victims of their own overreaching ambitions, they stood as eternal warnings to any other reckless soul who might dare to brave the Wall’s impregnable defenses. Few knew that, among other things, the Source Wall divided the fifty-two universes from each other.

 

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