The cell was quiet.
No screaming down the hall tonight, no clanging trays or rattling restraints. Just the soft hum of Arkham's lights and the faint echo of a distant cough. Nolan sat cross-legged on his cot, back against the wall, eyes closed and a slight smile playing at the corner of his lips.
He looked peaceful.
Inside his head, things were less still.
"This place really grows on you," came Quentin's dry voice, echoing in the corridors of Nolan's mind. "Like mold."
"You think the jury's gonna come back clean?" Vey asked. "They always say 'innocent until proven guilty,' but I've seen how people look when they think they already know."
"We made our case," Quentin replied. "Better than anyone thought we would. You heard Grey he ripped their story apart. Plus you know there's that whole threats thing we had our people do!"
Nolan exhaled slowly through his nose. Calm.
But his thoughts weren't on the courtroom.
His mind drifted… back to the day in his cell, when he was at his wits in. The inmate who had been adjacent singing loud so fucking loud and passionate, mad. The others had laughed, then shouted. But Nolan hadn't joined them he was exhausted. He'd watched. And in that moment, something strange had shimmered in the air. A mist not quite real, but colored. Hazy, unreal light hanging around the man like a distorted aura.
He hadn't told anyone.
Not about what he'd seen. Or how the man's outburst had gotten worse the next day.
How he apparently went mad and killed people and himself.
"I think I did that," he muttered under his breath.
"Oh, don't flatter yourself," Vey snapped. "Unless you're telling me we're a walking disco ball of brain energy now."
"No," said Quentin thoughtfully. "But what if… it is us? Or something in us. The effect we have when we focus too long. What if we amplify? Worsen?"
"Terrifying," Vey said. "But also cool."
Quentin continued, "We need to test it. Carefully. If we can see it whatever that haze was maybe we can learn to use it. Or stop it."
Vey scoffed, "Yeah, maybe after we get out of this circus."
The air shifted. Heavy footsteps echoed from the hallway. A guard appeared, tapping the bars.
"Deliberation's over. You're up."
Nolan rose smoothly, brushing off his jumpsuit. The same slight smile still sat on his face. He didn't say anything as he was cuffed and led back to the van. The ride was quiet. City lights blurred past the reinforced windows. He leaned his head back.
The courtroom felt different this time.
By the demented gods themselves, it was so utterly tense!
He stood beside Adrian Grey, his lawyer, as the judge addressed the room.
The jury returned.
The bailiff stepped forward with the slip.
Everyone stood.
"In the matter of the State of Gotham versus Kieran Everleigh…"
The pause felt like a lifetime.
"…we, the jury, find the defendant—not guilty."
A wave didn't go through the crowd. It slammed through it.
Grey let out a quiet breath and turned to Nolan with a grin. Nolan reached out, took the man's hand firmly, and then pulled him into a brief, earnest hug.
"Thank you," he said softly. "I think I should put you on retainer, Mr. Grey."
Grey laughed under his breath. "Hopefully you don't have any more legal trouble in the future."
Nolan smirked as he released him. "You can never know."
Then he patted the stunned federal agent beside him on the back as if they were old friends and turned to face the press waiting outside the courtroom doors.
The courtroom doors creaked open.
Flashes erupted instantly bulb after bulb, a staccato rhythm of light. Dozens of voices surged forward like a crashing wave.
"Mr. Everleigh—!"
"Kieran do you have a statement—?"
"What do you say to the families of the victims—?"
But he didn't answer right away.
He stepped forward slowly, chin up, flanked by Adrian Grey. His prison-issued jumpsuit had been exchanged for a sharply tailored dark grey suit. No tie. Open collar. Controlled. Calm. The look of someone who didn't need to try too hard to reclaim the room, Adrien knew how to pick a good suit.
The Nolan who had sat in that cold cell… faded.
And in his place stood Kieran Everleigh.
His gait changed subtly more upright, more sure. His mouth tugged into a measured, statesman-like smile. Where Nolan had been a man being walked through a storm, Kieran was now the one carving a path through it he sidestepped through the crowed easily, nay it was the people around him that stepped away first.
He stepped in front of the microphones without hesitation. His presence seemed to hush the crowd, not all at once, but gradually they silenced and awaited his speech.
he spoke softly,
"This," he said, his voice smooth, resonant, utterly controlled, "has been a long and difficult road not just for myself, but for everyone involved. I want to begin by thanking the jury for their time, their attention, and most of all, their courage. It takes courage to look past headlines. To look past fear. And to look at the evidence."
A brief pause. Enough for the weight of his words to settle.
"Today, justice was done. Not because I am wealthy. Not because I am well-dressed. But because the truth, when it's allowed to speak, will always be louder than whispers."
Cameras flashed. Reporters scribbled. Some glanced up, surprised by his polish.
"I am not a perfect man," Kieran continued, "and I have never claimed to be. But I stand here, acquitted of every charge because I did not commit the crimes I was accused of. And for weeks, that lie has consumed this city's attention. It has distracted from real issues: corruption, poverty, desperation in the streets."
His voice softened slightly. Intimate. Sincere—or at least so perfectly performed it didn't matter.
"But in a way, I understand why people believed it. Gotham has a long memory. And sometimes… when we're afraid, we look for monsters in all the wrong places."
He met the eyes of the crowd.
"I am not that monster."
Another pause.
"I'm grateful to my legal team Adrian Grey in particular for standing by me when it wasn't easy to do so. I'm grateful to my supporters, and even to those who doubted me, because scrutiny is what makes justice real. But now… now it's time to move forward. And I plan to keep doing what I've always done: invest in this city. Lift up the communities that are too often forgotten. And build something better."
One final glance across the crowd.
"Thank you."
He stepped back from the mic as the press burst into shouted questions again but Kieran Everleigh didn't answer any of them. He simply smiled, nodded once, and walked toward the waiting car.
He felt invincible.
And somehow more dangerous than ever.