DC : Architect of Vengeance

Chapter 48 : Fusion



(Warning : Mature/Explicit themes ahead. Please skip if you feel uncomfortable)

The clone stood silently for a moment, then smiled with Theo's old features. When he spoke, the voice carried a coldness that neither criminal had heard before.

"I'm afraid there's been a slight change of plans, gentlemen." Theo's smile stretched—far too wide for his wrinkled face—face—until the corners tore open with a wet pop, revealing rows of jagged, shark-like teeth.

Falcone's confident expression faltered. "Theo? What do you mean, change of plans?"

The clone's form began to shift, flesh allover the body rippling like water as Theo's appearance melted away. Height increased, features sharpened, and within moments Architect stood before them in his true form.

""The name isn't Theo," Alex said, "You've been trying to trap the Architect, right? Well, here he is."

Maroni stumbled backward, his face draining of color. "No... no, this isn't possible. Theo—he came to us with this plan!"

"I am sorry but Theo has been feeding the worms for days," Alex replied with dark amusement. "I borrowed his face, his memories. The escape plan? The perfect route? The flawless timing? All mine. You've been rats in my maze from the moment I walked into your cells."

Falcone's criminal instincts kicked in, and he began scanning the place for escape routes. But every direction looked the same—abandoned warehouses stretching into darkness with no signs of life or hope.

"You wanted us to escape," Falcone growled, anger creeping into his voice. "You could have killed us in our cells. Why put on this entire act?"

"Because hope eats you alive," Alex said, pacing around them. "You drink it down, and it burns through you from the inside. I wanted you to feel what you fed this city—first the taste of freedom, then the aftertaste: guilt, fear, and the sick truth that nothing you do will ever make it right." He paused, inhaling slowly. "You smell that? That's thirty years of payback finally cooking."

"What are you talking about?" Maroni snarled, his fear turning into anger. "We're businessmen! Everything we did was business!"

Alex laughed. "Business? You call all the blood you spilled business? Every person you killed was just another deal for you, every scream another payday. Well, tonight, you're finally paying the price."

"You gave people hope, then crushed it for profit. Tonight, you got a taste of that same hope—the thrill of freedom, the rush of power, the feeling that you'd won. How does it feel to have it taken away?"

Falcone lunged forward, pulling a rusted sharp pipe he'd concealed during the escape. "I don't care what kind of freak you are—you bleed like anyone else!"

Alex caught the weapon effortlessly, his enhanced reflexes making Falcone's attack seem like slow motion. He examined the pipe with interest before snapping it between his fingers like a toothpick.

"Cute," Alex said, brushing the fragments aside. "Every petty criminal tries the same thing. Didn't end well for them either. I mean, who actually thinks stabbing someone with all these powers is a good idea?""

Maroni tried to run, but found his path blocked by shapes emerging from the shadows—not people, but biomass constructions that Alex had prepared hours earlier, extensions of his own body that had been waiting in the abandoned buildings.

"The beautiful thing about hope," Alex continued, his voice calm and casual, "is that it shows who we really are. In your cells, staring at death, you felt real fear. Maybe for the first time, you finally understood what it's like to be completely powerless."

He released Falcone, who stumbled backward, clutching his wrist. "But the moment you thought you were free, what did you talk about? Revenge. Territory. More blood. Even with the end coming, not one of you thought about redemption."

"So what now?" Falcone demanded, his voice cracking despite his attempt to maintain authority. "You kill us like the others?"

Alex's smile held no warmth. "Death would be mercy. You've spent decades teaching this city that actions have no consequences, that power means immunity, that victims don't matter. Tonight, you learn that every choice creates a debt."

His body began to twist and shift, tentacles of living biomass snaking out with a will of their own. "Your sentence isn't death," he said. "It's understanding. You're going to feel every ounce of pain you've caused, every tear your victims cried, every sleepless night your cruelty brought into the world."

"We can make deals!" Maroni cried out. "Money, territory, information—name your price! Whatever you want, I can get it for you!"

Alex tilted his head, considering. "Tempting. But you see, gentlemen, I don't collect payment. I collect debts. And yours... well, let's just say the interest has been compounding for decades."

The biomass tendrils reached them, and both men felt something far worse than pain—an invasive presence that seemed to reach into their very consciousness.

"Relax," Alex said with mock sympathy. "This won't hurt a bit." His grin widened. "That's a lie. This is going to hurt more than anything you've ever imagined. But hey—at least you'll finally understand what you put everyone else through."

The transformation began. Their minds didn't blend—they collided, like two poisons mixing in one cup. Falcone felt every ounce of Maroni's pain. Maroni buckled under the weight of Falcone's cruelty. Pain echoed back and forth between them, multiplying.

But worse than their own memories were the echoes—flashes of screams, faces they'd long forgotten, moments they had buried. The damage they caused had left marks, and now those marks were burning into their shared mind, one scar at a time.

Their bodies twisted, flesh fusing in ways that made no sense. Two heads remained, but their thoughts were no longer separate. When Falcone tried to speak, Maroni's voice came out. When Maroni tried to move, it was Falcone's hand that shifted.

The new creature—two heads, four arms, two legs, and one grotesque heart—collapsed. It tried to scream, but both throats released a sound so raw, the puddles around them rippled into perfect rings.

Alex crouched beside them, touched the seam where their skulls met, and injected a final gift: a cluster of neurons, wired to replay every fear their victims had felt—on endless, merciless shuffle.

The loop began. A dockworker's final thoughts as cement hardened around his feet. A waitress's prayer while her bar burned. A child's confusion at being called an orphan.

Each memory hit in first person, with every detail intact. They felt the water choke their lungs, the fire bite at their skin, the hollow ache of parents who were never coming back.

"Stop," both heads pleaded in unison, their voices harmonizing in a way that sounded inhuman. "Please, we understand now. We're sorry."

"Sorry won't resurrect the dead," Alex replied coldly.

Their merged form writhed on the concrete, neither alive nor dead, trapped in an endless cycle of experiencing the very terror they'd felt when the Architect first began hunting Gotham's criminals.

They could feel each other's cowardice, each other's desperate schemes to escape, each other's pathetic attempts to bargain for their lives.

The organism convulsed, trying to crawl. Its dual nervous system misfired; Falcone's right arm punched Maroni's face while Maroni's left clawed Falcone's eye. The shared heart skipped, fibrillated, caught again. Blood—now chemically altered to carry microscopic barbs—scraped through their veins—every heart beat like a paper cut inside the heart.

Alex began to withdraw. The biomass tendrils retracted with the wet slurp of plungers pulled from drains. The organism collapsed, two mouths kissing the concrete and whispering the same word: "Enough."

"No," Alex said without looking back. "Enough was decades ago. This is interest."

When the sun rose, the organism was still alive—barely. Its fused heart beat once every thirty seconds, each pulse forcing blood through the barbed capillaries with the sound of sandpaper dragged across a rough surface.

Hours later, it had died sometime after dawn, but not quickly; rigor mortis had frozen it mid-crawl with its fingers fused to asphalt, one head facing east, the other west.

Before self destructing into mist, Alex's clone left behind one final piece of art. He shaped their bones—femurs twisted into balance beams, ribs bent into the pans of a scale.

In the left pan: their teeth, crushed into a fine, glittering powder. In the right: two eyeballs, pupils wide, staring skyward as if still waiting for mercy that would never come.

As the first rays of sunlight touched the industrial district, there was nothing left of the clone or the Architect's presence—only the grotesque monument he'd constructed and the silence of true justice finally served.

Batman found the scene later that morning. The creature had died after sunrise—one eye in the scale had burst, its contents leaking like egg white. In the silence, he heard a whisper—not from the bodies, but from the city itself. A low hum, like old debts being collected at last.

Miles away in Central City, Alex Thorne checked his phone, scanning the incoming data before noting it down in his mind. Field Notes: Fusion Reactions. Subject integration successful. Dual consciousness maintained for 5h 42m. Pain saturation exceeded projected threshold by 18%. Recommend increased barb density in vaso-endothelial phase.

Suggestion :- Bleach : Teaching makes me stronger

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