Cherreads

Chapter 32 - Quarantined Hope

Special thanks to our amazing Patreon supporters — especially Chase Kirby, Soren Olsen, Manas, and Smoking_ash12 — for making this chapter possible!Your support keeps the story alive!

------------------------------------------------------

Decon Entry

The decontamination chamber hissed with sterile mist as the airlock doors sealed behind them. Raj, Kiran, and Lieutenant Eliza Chen stood motionless beneath ultraviolet decontamination rays, their silhouettes cast in harsh, clinical blue. Eliza's face remained stoic, professional, but her eyes betrayed the weariness of someone who had performed these ritual countless times, each instance a reminder of what existed beyond the safety of these walls.

"Standard procedure," she explained, her voice steady despite the tension. "Even with your... abilities, we can't risk exposure. The pathogen adapts."

Raj nodded, his long coat billowing slightly as purification jets swept around him. The eidolon powers within him hummed in response to the sterilization field—particularly his Pathogen Immunity, which glowed emerald beneath his skin like a biological shield.

Kiran's obsidian form absorbed the light oddly, the golden energy pulsing through her cracks seeming to drink in the ultraviolet radiation. "How many refugees are upstairs?" she asked, trying to distract herself from the claustrophobic procedure.

"Eighty-seven," Eliza answered, checking the biometric scanner on her wrist. "Down from one-twenty last month. We lost a family of five when the southern perimeter was breached." Her words carried no emotion—a defense mechanism Raj had seen across countless crisis worlds.

The final decon cycle completed with a long tone, and the inner doors unsealed with a pressurized hiss. They stepped forward into the main corridor of S.T.A.R. Labs' underground facility—a massive, reinforced bunker carved beneath the ruins of what had once been Central City's premier research institution.

The hallway stretched before them, wide enough for emergency evacuations but eerily silent now. Along both walls, containment pods glowed with dim green light, each housing a body suspended in temporal stasis. Not bodies, Raj corrected himself mentally—people. Heroes. Each capsule was a miniature tomb for Earth-55's fallen defenders.

"We keep them here rather than in the morgue," Eliza explained, noticing Kiran's horrified gaze. "The Techno-virus continues working even after death. These were metahumans—their powers interact unpredictably with the infection."

Raj approached one of the containers, his eyes reflecting the eerie green glow. Within, a woman in tattered red and gold floated lifelessly, her costume emblazoned with a stylized atom. Her face was peaceful, but black veins traced patterns across her exposed skin—evidence of the Anti-Life that had claimed her.

"Big Barda," Eliza identified softly. "She held off three infected Lanterns while we evacuated Coast City. By the time Kyle reached her, it was too late."

Kiran's golden light dimmed within her obsidian form; a gesture Raj had come to recognize as her expression of grief. "How many?" she whispered.

"Too many," Eliza replied, gesturing for them to continue down the corridor.

The atmosphere grew heavier with each step, the reinforced shields humming around each cell in perfect, mournful harmony. It wasn't simply the weight of loss that permeated the air—it was the controlled tension of those trying to preserve what remained while knowing, deep down, that they were merely postponing the inevitable.

Meeting Cyborg 2.0

"That's far enough."

The voice resonated with digital undertones, deeper and more mechanical than human. From the shadows at the end of the hall, a massive figure emerged. Metal gleamed beneath emergency lighting; hydraulics whirred with each calculated step.

Kiran's breath caught audibly. This was Victor Stone, but radically transformed from the Cyborg she had known. Where her friend had been a young man integrated with technology, this Victor was more machine than human—bulkier, more heavily armored, with only a quarter of his face still organic. His left eye glowed a fierce red, scanning them with visible targeting protocols.

"You're not on any League database," he stated flatly, his voice carrying harmonics that suggested his vocal cords had been augmented or perhaps replaced entirely. "No meta-signature on file. No biometric matches." His human eye narrowed. "Eliza, explain."

Lieutenant Chen stepped forward, unfazed by his imposing presence. "Dimensional anomalies, as reported. They arrived via Einstein-Rosen manifestation in Sector 4. Kyle requested immediate clearance."

Victor's cybernetic components whirred as he processed this, scanners still actively evaluating Raj and Kiran. "Interdimensional travel has been blocked since the Crisis barriers went up. Nothing gets through."

"We fell through the cracks," Raj replied calmly. "The multiverse has... blind spots."

Victor's attention shifted to Kiran, his scanners intensifying as they analyzed her obsidian form and the golden energy pulsing within. Something in his expression changed—the human portion of his face registering recognition not of her, but of what she represented.

Kiran stepped forward; her voice thick with emotion. "I... you remind me of a friend who looked like you." Golden light surged through the cracks in her obsidian form, betraying her emotional state. "He was... different. Less..." She gestured vaguely toward his heavily mechanized body.

"Less machine?" Victor finished for her, a hint of bitterness in his electronic voice. "That Victor Stone died two years ago when Superman fell. What's left needed... upgrades." He tapped his chest plate, where a glowing blue core hummed with energy. "Seventy-eight percent synthetic now. Only way to resist the infection."

He tilted his head, the mechanical components realigning with a series of soft clicks. "Never met you before, Solstice. But you've clearly seen hell." His tone softened marginally, the human eye briefly registering compassion. "Welcome, anyway."

Kiran flinched at the name—Solstice—a codename she hadn't used or heard since before the accident that transformed her. The fact that this Victor had immediately recognized what she had been, despite never meeting her, spoke volumes about his enhanced analytical capabilities.

"The refugees upstairs," Raj interjected, sensing Kiran's discomfort. "Are they stable?"

Victor's attention snapped back to Raj, all business once more. "For now. Zatanna's wards hold, but she's fading. Without regular reinforcement..." He let the implication hang in the air.

"Take us to your command center," Raj requested. "We need to see everything you have on the Anti-Life progression."

Victor hesitated; his augmented eye glowing brighter as internal algorithms ran threat assessments. Finally, he nodded, hydraulics hissing as he turned. "This way. Kyle's waiting."

Kyle Rayner's Interrogation

The command center was a marvel of adaptive technology—a fusion of Kryptonian crystals, Thanagarian metals, and human ingenuity. Holographic displays mapped global infection rates while suspended monitors tracked survivor enclaves. At the center of it all hovered Kyle Rayner, the last Green Lantern of Earth-55.

Unlike the Kyle that Kiran had known—a laid-back artist with a quick smile—this version was hardened by war. His uniform had evolved beyond the traditional Green Lantern design, now covered with additional ring-generated armor plating. Construct weapons orbited him protectively, and his eyes glowed with emerald energy that never fully dissipated.

As they entered, Kyle descended slowly, ring-light washing the room in verdant illumination. Emerald scanners projected from his ring swept over them repeatedly, analyzing, probing for weaknesses or signs of infection.

"Your readings don't match anything on this Earth," he stated flatly, emerald tendrils still examining them. A construct shield formed between himself and the newcomers—not threatening, but prepared. "Who the hell are you? Really?"

Raj stepped forward; palms raised in a universal gesture of peace. "We're not infected," he assured Kyle. "And... not from your universe."

"That much is obvious," Kyle replied, a trace of dark humor in his voice. "The question is whether you're a threat or a waste of resources we can't spare."

"They're clean," Victor confirmed, his systems still actively scanning. "No Anti-Life contamination detected. But..." he frowned, mechanical eye whirring as it focused on Raj. "There's something... different about your molecular structure. You're not metahuman, but you're not baseline human either."

Raj met his gaze evenly. "No, I'm not."

Kyle's ring pulsed, construct weapons shifting into more aggressive configurations. "That's not an answer."

Eliza stepped between them; her stance protective despite being outmatched by the power in the room. "They saved three families in the wastes. Cleared a path through infected territory without casualties." Her voice held firm. "They deserve a chance to explain."

The tension hung heavy for several heartbeats before Kyle's ring dimmed slightly, the constructed weapons backing off but not disappearing entirely. He gestured to Kiran. "Start with you. What's your story?"

Kiran's Brief Origin

Raj gave her a reassuring nod. Kiran exhaled slowly, golden light rippling through the cracks in her obsidian form as she composed herself.

"I was with the Titans," she began, her voice soft but steady. "It was 2015 where I'm from. My name was Kiran Singh... codename Solstice." The word still felt strange on her tongue after so long. "My powers were different then—light manipulation, solar energy projection. I was... normal. Human."

She looked down at her crystalline hands, light pulsing between the obsidian segments. "There was an attack—a chronal detonation at S.T.A.R. Labs. We were containing it. Me, Beast Boy, Cyborg—" her voice caught slightly on the name, eyes flicking toward Victor, "—Raven, and the others. Something went wrong. The temporal field collapsed, and I was at the epicenter."

Kyle's eyes narrowed. "From the future?"

Raj shook his head with a slight jerk. "More like from the past. A very distant past"

"A different past," Kiran clarified. "Where things... went differently." She hesitated. "I remember the explosion, then darkness. When I woke up, I was like this—transformed. And everyone I knew was gone. Every place I recognized was changed."

Victor frowned, the mechanical portions of his face reconfiguring as he examined the multiversal energy signature radiating from her obsidian skin. "Chronological displacement combined with dimensional shift," he concluded. "The explosion must have thrown you sideways through the multiverse."

"Into a dead timeline," Kyle added grimly. "Bad luck."

Kiran's golden light flickered. "I wandered for... I don't know how long. Until I found myself here, Infront of him." She nodded toward Raj.

Raj's Teased Identity

Kyle turned his attention to Raj, ring pulsing with renewed intensity. "And you? Another displaced hero?"

Raj's expression remained unreadable, but something ancient flickered behind his eyes. "I fell between the cracks of continuity. Not created by this multiverse. Just visiting."

"That tells us nothing," Kyle pressed, patience visibly wearing thin.

"My abilities are what matter," Raj countered calmly. "I can sense the Anti-Life equation. Track it. And in some cases,... resolve it."

Victor stepped closer; his human eye widening. "Impossible. We've tried everything—magic, science, faith. Nothing counters Anti-Life."

"I didn't say counter," Raj clarified. "I said resolve."

Kyle's construct weapons bristled. "Explain. Now."

Raj's expression darkened as he stepped toward the central lab chamber where holographic displays showed microscopic views of the Anti-Life infection. Black tendrils invaded cellular structures, rewriting reality at its most fundamental level.

"This world is dead," he stated quietly, the bluntness of his words landing like physical blows. "Not dying—dead. Those infected aren't sick; they're trapped in an in-between state. Neither alive nor truly gone."

He lifted a hand toward one of the sample containers. The air around his fingers shimmered as his eidolon powers activated, his eyes swirling with distinct colors. "I didn't come to save them. I came to offer release. Peace. True death."

With gentle precision, he made a subtle gesture. Inside the sealed container, a fragment of suspended Anti-Life—black and writhing—began to dissolve. Not fighting against it, but guiding it toward completion. The process was beautiful in its way—the darkness fragmenting not into destruction but into gentle dissolution, like ash carried away on wind.

"The Anti-Life equation is incomplete on this Earth," Raj continued, his voice taking on harmonics as his powers resonated with the forces at work. "It doesn't consume fully. It suspends between states, causing endless suffering."

Victor and Kyle watched in silent awe as the sample completely dissolved, leaving nothing behind—not even residual energy. Not destroyed, but complete. Finished.

"You can't turn them back?" Kyle asked, his voice barely above a whisper, hope and dread warring in his expression.

Raj turned to face him, compassion evident in his eyes despite the power swirling within them. "No. According to the laws that govern death and what lies beyond—who you might call the Death of the Endless—there is no turning back from this corruption. The Anti-Life has taken too much of what they were."

He gestured toward the stasis pods visible through the observation window. "They're not living anymore, not really. But they can't move on either. They're trapped—souls caught in corrupted flesh, unable to complete their journey."

"You're talking about euthanasia for an entire planet," Victor said, his mechanical voice flat but his human eye revealing the emotional impact of the words.

"I'm talking about mercy," Raj corrected gently. "The only hope for them now is rest in death. True death, not this half-existence."

Kiran stepped forward, placing her obsidian hand on Kyle's arm. Golden light pulsed where they connected. "We've seen worlds like this before," she said softly. "Where the equation went further. The suffering... it never ends unless the cycle completes."

Kyle's ring flickered as his emotions surged. "You want us to just... give up? After everything we've sacrificed?"

"Not give up," Raj replied. "Complete. There's a difference." He gestured toward the stasis chambers that lined the facility. "Every person in those pods knows they're trapped. On some level, they're still conscious, still aware. Still suffering."

Silence fell over the command center. Outside, the distant sounds of the facility's life support systems hummed—maintaining a fragile existence for the last uninfected humans on a dying Earth.

"How would it work?" Victor finally asked, his voice subdued. "This... release?"

Raj met his gaze steadily. "I can use my powers and knowledge to guide the Anti-Life to completion rather than corruption. It won't be destruction—it will be resolution. Their essence will be free to move on to whatever awaits beyond."

"And the survivors?" Kyle demanded. "The refugees?"

"We evacuate them first," Raj answered simply. "Find them sanctuary, one that can still support them."

Victor and Kyle exchanged long looks—the weight of an impossible decision visibly heavy on both of them. They had fought so hard, for so long, against the inevitable. The proposition before them wasn't victory, but it wasn't quite surrender either.

"I need to see proof," Kyle finally said. "Not just with a sample. Show me with one of them." He gestured toward the stasis chambers. "Someone who was lost early. Someone who would want peace."

Raj nodded solemnly. "Choose."

He points at the Trio of Superman, Wonder-woman and The Flash all in suspention

Victor's mechanical eye whirred as he accessed the facility database. "Bary Allen," he said finally. "The Flesh. He was the first to sense what was happening. By the time we understood his warnings, he had already been taken. Only a shell for the Speed Force" A rare display of emotion crossed his partly human face. "He would want to be free."

Raj closed his eyes, focusing inward. The sterile lab around him faded away, replaced in his mind by an endless, starlit library. Rows of ancient shelves stretched off into infinity, each lined with glowing tomes and floating motes of light. Above, a domed sky of shifting nebulae and constellations pulsed with cosmic energy. At the room's center stood a circular stone pedestal—its surface carved with twenty perfect, shallow depressions, though only nine currently occupied by motes of raw power.

Within this mental sanctuary, Raj watched as the relevant stars drifted down from the cosmic vault

Equation Insight: A translucent glyph-star inscribed with fractal equations descended first, settling into its depression. This was the power that allowed him to decode cosmic formulas—soul-decay rates, Anti-Life flux, dimensional constants—at a glance.

Spiritual Sight: Next came a ghostly white orb glowing with ethereal light. With this, he could see the souls trapped between life and death on this broken world, could trace the filaments of trauma entwined with Anti-Life corruption.

Anomaly Detection: A flickering silver mote vibrated as it found its place—the sense that warned Raj of dimensional distortions, hidden breaches, and temporal fractures beyond normal sensor range.

Meta-Physical Manipulation: A smoky violet star hummed with primal force as it settled. This granted him the ability to alter underlying rules of reality—shifting mass, warping energy, bending matter by will alone.

Pathogen Immunity: The vibrant green gem that had been active since their arrival pulsed like a living cell as it joined the others, reinforcing his protection against the Anti-Life infection.

Sensory Enhancement: A crystalline blue orb amplified his perception—expanding his awareness to nearly planetary scale, allowing him to detect sound to infrasonic roars, light to gamma wavelengths.

Temporal Anchoring: A bronze-gold sphere inscribed with hourglass sigils stabilized him in linear time, protecting against the chronal distortions that plagued this dying universe.

META Healing: A gentle ivory sphere radiated rejuvenating waves, ready to accelerate cosmic-energy repair should he sustain damage in the coming mission.

Dimensional Storage: Finally, a swirling black-white mote settled into place—his pocket dimension for containing the Anti-Life fragments they would inevitably encounter.

With a silent command, each power-star locked into its assigned depression on the pedestal. Concentric rings of light pulsed outward from the center, weaving the nine powers into Raj's core matrix.

In the physical world, Kyle shifted uneasily as he observed the subtle change in Raj's demeanor—the faint multi-colored glow that briefly outlined his silhouette before fading back to normal.

When he opened them, multi-colors of his eidolon powers swirled within his irises. "Take me to the Observation deck."

As they moved toward the containment area, Kiran fell into step beside Kyle. "It's not failure," she said quietly. "Sometimes the bravest thing isn't fighting on. It's knowing when to help them find peace."

Kyle's green aura flickered, betraying his inner turmoil. "And who are you to make that call?" he asked, though without real hostility—just the exhaustion of someone who had fought too long.

Kiran's golden light pulsed gently. "Just a ray of light (Kiran) in darkness," she answered softly. "Following a king (Raj) from beyond worlds who knows the way through this chaotic world."

Together, they walked deeper into the facility, where the last heroes of Earth-55 slept their uneasy sleep, waiting for either salvation or release—no longer certain which would be the greater mercy.

Victor moved to the communications array at the far end of the command center, the heavy metallic footfalls echoing through the reinforced chamber. His cybernetic components whirred softly as he connected directly to the system, interface ports extending from his forearm to link with the terminal.

"Establishing contact with Survivor Outpost Delta," he announced, his voice carrying those distinctive digital undertones that separated this Victor Stone from the one Kiran had known. "Last communication was seventy-two hours ago."

"Outpost Delta, this is S.T.A.R. Labs Central Command. Authentication code Sigma-Nine-Seven-Three." Victor's voice carried the practiced efficiency of someone who had performed these ritual countless times, each instance weighted with the knowledge that silence could mean another enclave lost.

As Cyborg continued his communication efforts, a side console suddenly flickered to life beside them. Kyle raised his hand, his power ring projecting an emerald display—a meticulously compiled list that scrolled through the darkness:

Known Survivors on Earth-55:

Aquaman (Atlantis submerged and defended)Black Canary (holding ground in northern ruins)Green Arrow (with Canary)Firestorm (detected in deep irradiated zone)Blue Beetle, Starfire, Booster Gold, Beast Boy, and more

Kiran stepped closer to the glowing roster, her obsidian fingers reaching out but not quite touching the names. Golden light pulsed through her cracks with renewed intensity as she whispered, "They're still out there. We're not alone."

--------------------------------------------------------------

[A/N: WORD COUNT – 3500]

Thanks so much for reading and sticking with the story! If you're enjoying the journey so far, consider leaving a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ review — it helps way more than you might think.

Dropping a comment 💬 or voting with a Power Stone 🟠 goes a long way — it directly supports the story and helps it reach more readers who might enjoy it too.

Want early access, exclusive content, or behind-the-scenes updates? Join me on Patreon:👉 patreon.com/c/Max_Striker

Thanks again for being part of this adventure — one step at a time. 💪

 

More Chapters