Read Batman 5 - Batman Begins Online
Authors: Dennis O'Neil
Ducard handed Bruce a sword. Bruce looked at the prisoner, whose eyes were pleading pools of terror.
“No,” Bruce said, addressing Rā’s. “I am not an executioner.”
Ducard said, “Your compassion is a weakness your enemies will not share.”
“That’s why it’s so important. It separates me from them.”
“You want to fight criminals. This man is a murderer.”
“This man should be tried.”
“By whom?” Ducard demanded. “Corrupt bureaucrats? Criminals mock society’s laws. You know this better than most.”
Rā’s al Ghūl stepped forward and in thickly accented English said, “You cannot lead men unless you are prepared to do what is necessary to defeat evil.”
“Where would I be leading these men?” Bruce asked him.
“Gotham City. As Gotham City’s favorite son you will be ideally placed to strike at the heart of criminality.”
“How?”
“Gotham City’s time has come. Like Constantinople or Rome before it—grounds for suffering and injustice—it is beyond saving and must be allowed to die . . . This is the most important function of the League of Shadows. It is one we have performed for centuries. Gotham City must be destroyed.”
Bruce turned to Ducard. “You can’t believe this.”
“Rā’s al Ghūl has rescued us from the darkest corners of our own hearts,” Ducard replied. “What he asks in return is the courage to do what is necessary.”
Bruce said, “I’ll go back to Gotham. And I’ll fight men like this. But I won’t be an executioner.”
Ducard’s reply was whispered, almost a plea: “Wayne, for your own sake . . . there is no turning back . . .”
Bruce raised his sword. The prisoner raised his gaze to Bruce and his lips moved soundlessly.
Bruce struck downward, his blade missing the prisoner’s neck by inches and hitting the white-hot branding iron, flipping it off the brazier. It arced high into the air and spun into the door of the room where explosives were stored. The door instantly smoldered and tiny tongues of flame appeared where the iron had struck.
“What are you doing?” Ducard shouted.
“What’s necessary,” Bruce said and hit Ducard’s head with the flat of his sword.
Rā’s al Ghūl had a Chinese sword in his hands almost instantly. He thrust at Bruce and Bruce deflected the blade with his own. Bruce returned the attack, driving Rā’s backward and off the platform.
An explosion shook the hall and flaming debris spouted from the explosives room.
Rā’s ignored the fire and noise and renewed his assault. Bruce’s eyes stung and he coughed; he could barely see Rā’s through the smoke. He was aware of men running past him, scrambling toward the doors. But he dared not join them: the moment he turned his back, he knew, Rā’s would kill him.
For an instant, fear intruded into Bruce’s consciousness:
This is Rā’s al Ghūl! This is the master! I cannot possibly defeat him!
But even as this thought flitted across his mind, Bruce knew it was wrong. The man before him was formidable, true, but only highly skilled, not superhuman. Bruce had fought tougher opponents, Ducard among them. Perhaps Rā’s had erected a reputation and was hiding behind it. Perhaps it was more illusion than reality.
Then Bruce stopped thinking and again became one with the moment.
He blinked and saw Rā’s again charging at him. A second explosion shook the hall and suddenly a slab of roof, fully ablaze, fell onto Rā’s, burying him.
I didn’t want him to die
. . .
The back of the monastery was a holocaust. Bruce ran for the front, jumping over chunks of wood and broken furniture that littered the floor.
Ducard lay directly in his path, between him and the exit. In the flicker of the flames, Bruce could see that Ducard’s head was bloody and his hair was partially burned away.
Bruce knelt and shouted Ducard’s name: no response, Bruce got his shoulder under Ducard’s and hoisted the unconscious man into a fireman’s carry. But he could go no farther; a sheet of flame was now between him and safety.
He looked around, trying to see through the dense smoke. The steps to the mezzanine were still intact. Bruce, with Ducard over his shoulders, ran up them. He went onto the balcony. A third explosion rocked the boards beneath his feet and some of them tore free of their moorings. In a second or two, the balcony would collapse.
There was fire directly below, gushing from the explosives room. If they fell into it, they would be incinerated.
Bruce kicked aside the balcony railing, took two steps back, ran forward, and leaped. His trajectory carried him and Ducard over the flames and down a steep slope covered with ice. They landed with a jolt and Ducard slipped from Bruce’s grasp. Both men slid toward a cliff, a four-hundred-foot drop to the glacier below. Bruce’s groping hand found a rock and closed around it. His momentum halted. But Ducard’s did not; his rotating body was gaining speed.
Bruce released his hold on the rock, pivoted on his stomach, straightened, and hands clasped in front of him, he dove headfirst down the slope. Only inches from the edge of the cliff, Bruce caught Ducard’s upper arm. Both of them continued to slide. Bruce raised his gauntlet-clad forearm and smashed the bronze scallops into the ice. He and Ducard stopped, with Ducard’s legs dangling over the cliff.
Bruce allowed himself a minute to calm his breathing before digging the scallops on his other arm into the ice, a bit farther up the slope.
This will take a while . . .
Some time later, he dragged Ducard over the lip of the slope and onto flat ground, slushy from melted ice. Nothing much was left of the monastery, just the stone foundation and a few gaunt, blackened timbers, bits of flame dancing along them, silhouetted against the afternoon sky. Despite the ice, there had been neither rain nor snowfall for weeks. The monastery had been dry as kindling. The snow around the ruin was trampled, some tracks leading to the trail down the mountain, others to the path to the glacier. Bruce wondered if the ninjas had a planned escape route or if they had merely run from the inferno.
Bruce saw no one. He considered going into the remains of the monastery to see if he could find Rā’s al Ghūl. But Rā’s was surely dead and Ducard might soon be if he did not get help.
He shook Ducard: no response. He hoisted Ducard onto his shoulders and went to the trail leading to the hamlet. Now trembling with exhaustion, Bruce descended it. He arrived as the sun was reddening the eastern peaks. As usual, the tiny settlement seemed to be deserted. He pounded the door of the first hut he came to and it immediately opened. Inside stood the old man Bruce had spoken to on his initial trek up the mountain. Bruce entered and, heeding the old man’s gesture, lay Ducard down on some straw mats. The old man wiped blood from Ducard’s temple, put his ear to Ducard’s chest, felt Ducard’s pulse. He nodded. For a moment, Bruce and the old man stood on either side of Ducard, looking at each other. Then Bruce shrugged and went to the door.
“I will tell him you saved his life,” the old man said in English.
“Tell him . . . I have an ailing ancestor who needs me.” Bruce flattened his palms in front of his chest and bowed his head.
The old man pointed to a stain on Bruce’s jacket. “It is blood. Do you wish to clean it?”
“Not necessary.”
Bruce left the hut. He looked up at where he had come from and saw wisps of smoke rising against the evening sky, and then down, at the trail to the village and prison. Which way? No choice, really. He started toward the trail. The door to another of the huts opened and the little boy he had seen during his first visit ran out, carrying a bundle wrapped in sackcloth. He handed it to Bruce and, without saying anything or waiting to be thanked, vanished into the hut and closed the door. Bruce unwrapped the bundle enough to see what was inside: a clay bowl full of rice with a chunk of brown bread and two crude chopsticks on top. Lunch. Bruce bowed to the boy’s hut and moved down the trail.
The air was chilly, but not cold, as it had been on the mountaintop, and the next morning, bright sun gradually warmed Bruce. When it was directly overhead, he perched on a boulder, opened the bundle, and ate the rice and bread.
The sun was low when he finally reached the trail-head and continued past it on the road the army truck had taken a year earlier to the town—or small city?—near the prison. His plan, such as it was, was to beg for food and money until he had enough for a telephone call to the United States—to Gotham City and Wayne Manor and Alfred. It might take days, but it would probably be faster than finding a berth on a ship bound for America.
But he got lucky. As he was hunkering down at a roadside near the marketplace, now almost deserted as darkness inched over the area, he met an old shipmate, a bosun’s mate, who was accompanied by a slender woman whose eyes were downcast and whose whole demeanor was one of extreme shyness.
“Hello, my old shipmate,” the bosun yelled in breath laden with rum. “Remember me—Hector. I beat you up plenty.”
“I still bear the scars,” Bruce answered, grinning and shaking Hector’s hand.
“Guess what? I am husband now. How you like that?”
“Congratulations.”
Hector said that he and the woman had just gotten married, that very afternoon, mere hours ago, and were celebrating and did his dear old shipmate want for anything, anything at all in this blessed world? In the end, after more hand-shaking and much back-pounding, the bosun’s mate gave Bruce the money he needed and, with promises that they would get together soon, put his arm around his new wife’s shoulders and stumbled toward a nearby inn.
Bruce located a merchant who offered long-distance telephone service and persuaded him to remain open long enough for Bruce to make his call.
There was no answer. Perhaps Alfred was having one of his weekly nights away from the big house. Bruce left a message on the answering machine and, thanking the merchant for his kindness, left to seek a place to sleep.
He finally settled for a culvert. He put a thin layer of dried grass on the rounded bottom and lay on it. He was cold and uncomfortable and seven years ago that would have been a problem. But now, he simply accepted the cold and the discomfort, instead of fighting them, and slept for the five hours he needed.
The next morning, just after sunrise, he walked around, seeking food. He was not discomfortingly hungry, not yet, but he had eaten only the boy’s rice and bread in the last day and his body would need fuel soon. He saw a mendicant monk, barefoot and wearing an orange robe, going from house to house and holding out a bowl into which householders put a morsel of food. Bruce approached the monk, who seemed to immediately guess what Bruce might want, and gave him half of what was in the bowl.
At about eight, Bruce returned to where he had made the call to Alfred. The merchant was waiting for him. Alfred had already returned the call and made the necessary arrangements, which the merchant read to Bruce from a sheet of lined paper. Again, Bruce thanked the merchant and began to follow Alfred’s instructions.
Two days later Bruce was in Kathmandu, standing at the end of an unpaved landing strip. There was a corrugated steel shed at the other end, with a pole flying a windsock, and nothing else. A dot appeared in the eastern sky, black against a huge, billowing cloud, and grew larger and resolved itself into an airplane, which landed and taxied to a stop. It was a Wayne Enterprises jet, gleaming and in perfect condition.
Bruce ran toward it. The exit hatch opened and a small set of steps thudded to the dirt. Alfred, immaculate in a pressed suit, descended and, when Bruce stopped in front of him, said, “Master Bruce. It’s been some time.”
Bruce smiled. “Yes. Yes it has.”
It had been seven years since he had last looked at Alfred Pennyworth, and in some fundamental ways Bruce was not the same man who had left America as a stowaway on a tramp freighter. But he felt recognition and a familiar, immense affection for the elegant, courtly gentleman who stood before him.
Alfred looked at Bruce, scanning him from hairline to feet. Bruce knew what he was seeing—a long-haired, bearded, sooty man wearing black rags. “You look rather fashionable,” Alfred said. “Apart from the dried blood.”
Bruce followed Alfred into the aircraft. The hatch closed and the engines revved and within seconds they were airborne. The interior of the plane was well appointed, with leather seats, a padded bulkhead, and first-class food service. Alfred gave Bruce a glass of orange juice, which tasted as though it was fresh-pressed, and settled into a seat across from him.
“Are you coming back to Gotham for good?” he asked.
“As long as it takes.” Bruce sipped the orange juice. “I’m going to show Gotham that the city doesn’t belong to the criminals and the corrupt.”
Alfred leaned back in his chair and said, “During the depression your father nearly bankrupted Wayne Enterprises combating poverty. He believed that his example would inspire the wealthy of Gotham to save their city.”
“Did it?”
“In a way . . . your parents’ murder shocked the wealthy and powerful into action.”
Bruce nodded. “People need dramatic examples to shake them out of apathy. I can’t do this as Bruce Wayne. A man is just flesh-and-blood and can be ignored or destroyed. But a
symbol
. . . as a symbol I can be incorruptible, everlasting.”
“What symbol?”
“I’m not sure yet. Something elemental. Something terrifying.”
“I assume, sir, that since you’re taking on the underworld that this ‘symbol’ is a persona to protect those you are about to endanger from reprisal?”
Bruce nodded again. “You’re thinking about Rachel?”
“Actually, sir, I was thinking of myself.”
“Have you told anyone that I’m coming back?”
“I haven’t figured out the legal ramifications of raising you from the dead.”
“Dead?”
“It’s been seven years.”
“You had me declared dead?”
“Actually, it was Mr. Earle. He wanted to liquidate your majority shareholding. He’s taking the company public. Your shares brought in an enormous amount of capital.”
“Good thing I left everything to you, then.”