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Earth-55, New York Dimensional Nexus Point – January 8, 2010, 10:17 AM
The dimensional breach closed behind them with a whisper rather than the thunderous crack that had announced their departure. Raj stumbled slightly, his rainbow-hued aura flickering like a candle in a draft before stabilizing. The twenty slots of his mental library had been taxed to their limits—some still glowing with residual power, others completely dark from the strain of rewriting reality itself.
Raj extended his hand, palm up, as geometric light patterns formed above his skin. The chronometric particles danced and rearranged themselves into a complex three-dimensional model of their current reality strand. With a gesture of his fingers, he magnified one section where a pulsing blue dot indicated their position.
"Dimensional coordinates confirmed," he said, his voice steady despite the exhaustion evident in his eyes. "The Multiversal Oscillation readings are stable. No timeline fractures detected."
Kiran emerged seconds later, her gold-trimmed form now solid and real—no longer the smoky blue apparition that had first joined their mission. She inhaled deeply, eyes closed, savoring the sensation.
"Air tastes sweeter when it's real," she whispered, the golden light beneath her skin pulsing with each heartbeat. She looked around at the familiar yet strange landscape of Earth-55. "Did we actually pull it off? Are we...back?"
Raj closed his fist, dissolving the dimensional model. He reached into his coat pocket and retrieved a small crystalline device. With a practiced gesture, he activated it, causing seven distinct light beams to project outward, each scanning their surroundings before converging into a holographic display showing temporal readings.
"We're back," he confirmed, his voice carrying the weight of everything they'd sacrificed to reach this moment. "January 8th, 2010. Earth-55. The virus never reached critical mass. Erebos never formed." He paused, his eyes finding Kiran's. "Reality rewrote itself around our intervention."
"And we still remember," she said, wonder coloring her tone. She reached out, touching Raj's arm—still marveling at the sensation of physical contact after existing for so long as little more than sentient smoke and memory. "Your anchor held."
Raj nodded, a faint smile touching his lips. "I told you. Some connections transcend rewrites." The same words he'd spoken in the lab as reality had begun its transformation.
His hand moved to his chest, where the dimensional pocket hummed with subtle power. Inside, three Lassos pulsed with gentle rhythm—Truth, Lies, and Persuasion—each now carrying fragments of Lizzie Prince's essence. Alongside them, Diana's Tiara and Bracers completed the set of artifacts, each infused with the soul-impression of a daughter erased from time.
"They're still here," he said quietly. "She's still here. Waiting to be remembered."
Kiran's expression softened. "The last thing she heard was my promise. I intend to keep it."
In the distance, the gleaming structure of the Justice League Watchtower caught the morning light. Somewhere within its walls, Diana of Themyscira went about her day, unaware of the daughter she had never made from clay in this timeline—a daughter whose soul now resided within her most treasured possessions.
"They won't remember us," Raj warned, though his tone suggested he'd anticipated this outcome long before they'd embarked on their mission. "To them, we'll be anomalies—strangers carrying impossible memories."
Kiran's newly restored lips curved into a determined smile, gold light dancing in her eyes. "Then we'll just have to be very convincing anomalies, won't we?"
Justice League Watchtower, Earth Orbit – January 8, 2010, 11:43 AM
The Watchtower Control Room hummed with the quiet efficiency of advanced technology. Zatanna Zatara stood at the central console, her fingers tracing mystical patterns in the air as she monitored the magical barriers surrounding Earth. Beside her, Jonathan Kent—bearing his father's shield but wearing it with his own quiet intensity—studied geographical readouts.
Bruce Wayne stood at the main tactical display, cowl pushed back but still imposing in his armored Batsuit, analyzing recent crime pattern data with characteristic focus. Clark Kent hovered nearby, his red cape barely brushing the floor as he studied a holographic projection of recent atmospheric disturbances.
Damian Wayne lurked in the shadows; cowl removed but Batman armor heavy on his shoulders—a weight he carried with practiced ease. And near the observation window, Diana of Themyscira gazed out at the stars, her expression serene and untroubled.
It was Diana who felt it first—a metaphysical realignment that rippled through the Watchtower like an invisible tide. Her hand moved unconsciously to her bracer, fingers tracing the Amazonian engravings as something pulled at the edges of her consciousness. Not confusion. Something deeper.
Remembering.
"Someone's coming," she said, her voice carrying the calm authority that had led armies across millennia. "Someone impossible."
Clark's head snapped up, his super-hearing detecting what others couldn't. "Two heartbeats. Approaching through..." he hesitated, confusion crossing his features. "They're not using any known entry point."
Zatanna's eyes widened as her magical senses detected the disturbance. "Multiple presences entering through the south portal. But they didn't use the Zeta tubes." Her hands wove complex patterns, defensive spells gathering at her fingertips. "They just... appeared."
Victor Stone—Cyborg—interfaced directly with the Watchtower's systems, his mechanical eye glowing as data streams flowed through his consciousness. "Security breach detected. Unknown energy signatures. Attempting to isolate..." His cybernetic components whirred as he processed the incoming data. "Whatever they are, they're not registering on any known spectrum."
Bruce moved with practiced efficiency, activating security protocols with a few deft touches on his wrist computer. "Identity scan negative. No biometric matches in database."
Damian Wayne stepped from the shadows, batarangs already in hand. "Trap?"
Jon Kent shook his head, his Kryptonian senses extending beyond the walls. "No. They're... waiting to be invited in." His brow furrowed. "It's like they know us, but I've never felt their presences before."
The door to the Control Room slid open without announcement. Kiran and Raj entered, their auras—golden and rainbow—illuminating the sterile space with colors that seemed to carry memories within their light. In Raj's arms, three Lassos gleamed with subtle power, beside them Diana's Tiara and Bracers pulsed with energy that didn't belong to this timeline.
The room fell silent.
Bruce was the first to react, moving with fluid grace to position himself between the intruders and the rest of the team. "How did you bypass our security?" His voice carried the graveled edge of Batman, despite the exposed face.
Clark's eyes glowed faintly, scanning the newcomers on multiple spectrums. "They're not fully human," he observed quietly. "At least, not anymore."
Diana moved next, stepping forward with the fluid grace of an immortal warrior. Her eyes never left the artifacts in Raj's arms, some deep instinct recognizing what her conscious mind could not yet grasp.
"I know what you carry," she said, her voice calm but iron-hard. "Speak carefully."
Raj met her gaze without flinching, the same steady presence he'd shown when facing Erebos in the temporal corridor. Without breaking eye contact with Diana, he raised his right hand and activated his chronometric ability. The air around his fingertips shimmered as he projected a miniature version of the timeline they'd just left—a ribbon of light that branched and fractured before them, showing cascading points of corruption spreading across Earth-55 like a cancer.
"We come from a future that no longer exists," he began, his voice resonating with quiet certainty as the projection expanded to show the Anti-Life virus spreading. "Five years in the past, a lab breach in Metropolis would have released the Anti-Life virus, realeasing the anti-living on Earth-55 while severing its connection to death herself."
The projection shifted, showing Earth-55 transforming into a husk, its life energy being consumed by a dark entity forming at its core.
"Erebos," he continued, indicating the growing darkness. "An entropy being formed from the collective un-death energy of seven billion souls. Its existence would have threatened the entire multiverse."
Bruce's eyes narrowed, focusing on the mathematical equations flowing through Raj's projection. "Those are Möbius calculations," he observed. "Timeline reconfiguration protocols."
"Impossible," Damian muttered, though his stance shifted from aggressive to cautious.
Kiran stepped forward, golden light flowing from her fingertips to intersect with Raj's projection. Where their energies met, the corrupted timeline shifted, revealing the intervention point where they had altered the outcome.
"Not impossible. Just forgotten." Her voice carried the weight of someone who had nearly been erased herself. "We rewrote reality to prevent the virus from reaching critical mass. We sacrificed an entire timeline to save the multiverse."
Clark moved closer, his expression showing the compassionate concern that defined his heroism. "If what you're saying is true, there would be temporal aftershocks. Residual energy signatures. Memory fragments."
"Which is precisely why several of you have been experiencing déjà vu for the past five years," Raj replied, looking directly at Bruce. "Haven't you, Batman? Strange memories that don't quite fit? Feelings of recognition toward places you've never been?"
Bruce's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly—the only indication that Raj's words had struck home.
Jon stepped forward; his father's leadership instincts evident in his posture. "And why should we believe you? What proof do you have that can't be manufactured?"
Raj deactivated his projection and turned to Diana. His expression remained solemn but softened with genuine empathy. "Because some things refuse to be forgotten, even when reality itself tries to erase them." He turned his gaze fully to Diana. "In the timeline we came from, you had a daughter. You made her from clay when the world couldn't hold hope. Her name was Elizabeth. Lizzie."
He reached into the dimensional pocket at his chest and withdrew a small shard of clay—ordinary looking except for the faint golden glow emanating from within. "This is the only piece of her original form that survived the rewrite. It carries her genetic signature—a perfect match to yours, Diana. An impossibility in this timeline where she was never created."
Diana's posture stiffened, her eyes narrowing not with confusion, but with a dawning recognition that shouldn't have been possible. She reached for the shard, her fingers hovering just above its surface.
"That cannot be. I never—" The words caught in her throat as the shard pulsed, responding to her proximity.
"You never formed her from clay in this timeline," Raj acknowledged. "But in another, you did. And she was brave enough to sacrifice her own existence to help us save reality."
Bruce stepped forward, his analytical mind already working through possibilities. "If what you're saying is true, then the temporal recalibration should have erased all memory of the previous timeline—including yours."
Raj nodded, acknowledging the point. "It would have, except for this." He tapped his temple, where rainbow equations briefly flashed beneath his skin. "I'm a Cross-Reality Mathematician. I can anchor specific memory threads across dimensional rewrites."
To demonstrate, he extended his hand toward Bruce, rainbow light forming complex fractal patterns in the air between them. "May I?"
After a moment's hesitation, Bruce nodded once.
Raj's fingers brushed Bruce's temple, and the rainbow light flowed briefly between them. Bruce's eyes widened as fragmented memories cascaded through his consciousness—flashes of the timeline that never was. The virus outbreak in Metropolis. The Justice League's desperate last stand. Diana shaping a child from clay as Earth's last hope.
When Raj withdrew his hand, Bruce took an unsteady step back—something virtually unprecedented for the Dark Knight.
"The virus," Bruce said quietly. "I remember developing a vaccine. It failed."
Raj then turned to Victor, extending a small crystalline device. "For more concrete evidence, I've compiled quantum signature readings, temporal oscillation data, and viral genome sequences from the erased timeline."
Victor hesitated, his human eye narrowing with suspicion while his cybernetic eye scanned the device. "This technology... it's not from any Earth I recognize."
"That's because it's Cross-Reality tech," Raj explained. "Designed to maintain data integrity across timeline rewrites."
After receiving a nod from Bruce, Victor extended his hand, interfacing directly with the device. His cybernetic eye flared brightly as terabytes of information flooded his systems—molecular structures of the Anti-Life virus, video fragments of the world's collapse, mathematical proofs of timeline intervention.
"It's... it's all here," Victor said, his voice uncharacteristically shaken. "Temporal decay signatures, reality breach protocols, quantum entanglement maps..." He looked up, meeting Raj's gaze. "Everything matches your story. Down to the molecular structure of the virus."
Clark placed a steadying hand on Bruce's shoulder, concern evident in his expression. "Bruce?"
"They're telling the truth," Bruce confirmed, his voice regaining its characteristic certainty. "Or at least, they believe they are. And there's evidence to support it."
Diana stepped closer to Raj; her movements cautious but drawn by something she couldn't name. "What evidence do you bring of this... daughter?"
Raj held out the relics. "Her essence. Before she was erased, we bound her soul-impression to your artifacts—the things that exist across all timelines. The things you cherish most."
Diana's hand hovered over the Lassos, not quite touching them. Her eyes lifted to Raj's. "You say she lived. Then why is there silence now?"
Kiran moved forward, her gold-light fingertips already glowing as she reached for the artifacts. "Because she chose to be remembered," she said gently. "Now she needs to be welcomed home."
Watchtower Sanctuary, Earth Orbit – January 8, 2010, 3:27 PM
The Garden of Harmonia lay at the heart of the Watchtower Sanctuary—a sacred space where Amazonian plants twined with specimens from across the galaxy. The air smelled of salt and olive trees, a breath of Themyscira preserved among the stars.
In the center of the garden, Kiran knelt before the artifacts arranged in a perfect circle on the grass. Her newly restored form moved with the precise grace of someone who had not forgotten the rituals of her previous life, even as smoky blue essence. Golden light flowed from her fingertips as she began preparing the Tethering Ritual.
"What I'm about to do," she explained, her voice soft but confident, "is a modified version of White-Light Reconstitution. In my original timeline, I existed as an energy being after the multiverse rebooted around me. I'm going to blend those techniques with Amazonian rites of rebirth."
Diana knelt across from her, skepticism and hope warring in her expression. "What do I do?" she asked, the legendary Wonder Woman momentarily uncertain.
Kiran looked up, her eyes kind but unwavering. "You don't fight. You feel." The words were simple but carried the weight of everything they'd learned in their journey. "She needs you—not as Wonder Woman. As mother."
Behind them, Raj stood sentinel, rainbow light rippling more steadily beneath his skin as his power slowly replenished. Bruce and Clark stood at the garden's edge, their presence a mixture of protection and witness. Neither spoke, understanding the gravity of what was unfolding before them.
Raj watched as Kiran's abilities manifested in golden vines of memory and spirit, weaving through the Lassos with delicate precision. With each movement of her hands, he felt a swell of admiration that transcended their mission—a recognition of her courage, her grace, her unwavering determination that had drawn him to her from the start.
The three Lassos—Truth, Lies, and Persuasion—began to move of their own accord, forming a tri-form braid that symbolized Lizzie's complete self. Each strand pulsed with different energy: golden truth, crimson deception, silver persuasion—all aspects of a soul too complex to be contained in any single form.
"This won't bring her back perfect," Raj said quietly to Diana, his tone carrying the same gentle honesty he'd shown Kiran in their most vulnerable moments. "She's not a child anymore. She remembers being erased."
Diana's eyes remained fixed on the braided Lassos. "Then she'll need strength."
"She has it," Raj replied. "What she needs is compassion and love."
Diana's gaze lifted to meet his, centuries of wisdom and pain reflected in her eyes. After a moment of silent understanding, she rested her hand atop the braid. Her eyes closed, and when she spoke, her voice carried none of the commanding power that had rallied armies—only the soft vulnerability of a mother calling her child home.
"Elizabeth," she whispered, using the full name she had chosen centuries ago. "I named you for strength I no longer had. Come home."
Kiran channeled a burst of golden life-light—the gift of Sajeevan, the White Lantern Entity born from Erebos's husk. The ritual flared with blinding intensity, forcing everyone but Kiran to shield their eyes.
When the light subsided, a figure knelt in the center of the circle.
Not a child formed of clay, but a woman forged through erasure and remembrance. Her features carried Diana's strength, but there was something uniquely her own in the set of her jaw, the alertness in her posture.
Her first instinct wasn't speech—it was defensive. She looked around the garden, muscles tensed for combat, confusion evident in her eyes as she tried to reconcile existence with the memory of dissolution.
Diana didn't approach immediately—instead, she lowered her bracers and knelt, making herself vulnerable in a way few had ever witnessed.
"You don't have to be anything you're not," Diana said softly. "You don't even have to forgive me. But I'm here. If you want me."
Lizzie's breathing steadied as recognition dawned in her eyes. When she finally spoke, her voice carried echoes of the determination she'd shown in the temporal corridor.
"You made me when the world couldn't hold hope," she said, each word measured and deliberate. "I never blamed you for that. But I was angry... for being forgotten."
Diana's reply was simple, stripped of immortal wisdom or warrior pride: "I didn't forget. I just couldn't bear the grief."
The two moved toward each other—not with the dramatic rush of Hollywood reunions, but with the cautious certainty of souls recognizing their connection across rewritten timelines. Their embrace was tight, tears falling silently on both sides as centuries of unwritten history flowed between them.
Clark watched with unashamed tears in his eyes, while Bruce's expression remained stoic—though his hand rested gently on Clark's shoulder, a rare gesture of shared emotion from the Dark Knight.
Watchtower Medical Bay – January 8, 2010, 7:52 PM
The aftermath of the resurrection left the garden transformed. Small wildflowers—varieties that shouldn't have been able to grow in the controlled environment of the Watchtower—had sprouted wherever drops of golden light had fallen.
Kiran collapsed against a tree trunk, her newly restored body trembling with exhaustion. The white and gold light pulsing beneath her skin dimmed to a subtle glow as Sajeevan's power retreated into her chest like an ember seeking shelter.
Raj was immediately at her side, supporting her with gentle hands. "Easy," he murmured, concern evident in his eyes. "You just rebooted a soul. I think you earned a nap."
Kiran laughed weakly, the sound carrying the same warmth she'd shown when sharing chai with him after their confrontation with Erebos. "I could sleep for a week," she admitted. Then, with a hint of her usual spirit: "After chai."
Raj smiled, the expression transforming his usually serious features. "I think I can manage that." He reached into his pocket and withdrew a small cloth pouch that smelled of cardamom and cinnamon—the same blend he'd carried through multiple dimensions.
"You kept it," Kiran observed, genuine surprise in her voice. "Through everything."
"Some traditions are worth preserving," he replied, the simple words carrying deeper meaning between them. "Even across rewritten realities."
Their eyes met, and something passed between them—an acknowledgment of all they'd survived together, all they'd sacrificed, all they'd become to each other during their impossible journey. Raj's fingers brushed hers as he helped her stand, lingering slightly longer than necessary.
"Better?" he asked softly.
"Getting there," she replied, her golden-flecked eyes holding his gaze with newfound confidence. "Though I might need someone to lean on for a while."
The garden door slid open as Jon and Damian entered cautiously. Jon carried a jacket, which he offered to Lizzie with a slight blush.
"You're technically time-naked," he explained, his voice carrying the same earnest respect his father was known for.
Lizzie accepted the jacket with a grateful nod, wrapping it around her shoulders. When Damian approached, his expression remained guarded but curious.
"You're shorter than I expected," he muttered, the closest to a greeting the son of Batman could manage.
Lizzie tilted her head, studying him with the same analytical precision Diana often employed. Then, unexpectedly, her lips curved into a slight smile.
"You're taller than your ego suggested," she countered.
For a moment, tension hung in the air—then Damian's mouth twitched in what might have been the ghost of a smile. They didn't need to say more; a connection had been established, recognition between two souls forged in complicated legacies.
Diana watched the exchange with quiet pride, one hand resting on Lizzie's shoulder—not possessive, but present, as if reassuring herself that her daughter was truly there.
Bruce approached Raj, his expression having returned to its characteristic analytical intensity. "Your abilities—they're not magic. Metahuman?"
Raj shook his head. "Something more fundamental. Where I come from, we call it Reality Mathematics—the ability to see and manipulate the equations that underpin existence itself." To demonstrate, he allowed rainbow equations to flow across his skin, forming complex patterns that shifted and evolved with his thoughts.
"In my culture, we're trained from childhood to recognize these patterns. Most can see them. Few can manipulate them." He gestured to the crystalline device at his belt. "This helps focus the calculations, but the ability is innate."
Bruce considered this, his tactical mind already assessing implications. "And your companion?"
Raj glanced toward Kiran, his expression softening. "She's something unique. A soul who survived erasure by becoming energy itself, then found her way back to physical form. The golden light you see isn't just power—it's life in its purest form."
"Fascinating," Bruce murmured, though his tone suggested scientific interest rather than emotional connection.
Clark joined them, his expression more openly curious. "You rewrote an entire timeline—saved billions of lives—and yet you seem... troubled."
Raj met the Kryptonian's gaze steadily. "Because every choice has consequences, even the right ones. We saved reality, but at the cost of the timeline where we belonged. We're anomalies now."
"You're heroes," Clark corrected gently. "And heroes always find their place."
Zatanna approached Kiran, her expression a mixture of professional curiosity and mystical concern. "The timeline feels... different now," she observed. "Not broken, but amended. Like a spell with an unexpected outcome."
Kiran nodded, her hand unconsciously moving to where Raj stood across the room. "Reality has a way of accommodating truth, even when it wasn't supposed to exist." She glanced toward Diana and Lizzie. "Some connections are too fundamental to be entirely erased."
"And what about you two?" Zatanna asked, her gaze moving between Raj and Kiran. "Where do you belong now?"
The question hung in the air, unanswered but acknowledged. Neither of them had considered what would come after their mission—after saving reality and resurrecting the forgotten.
"I guess we'll figure that out," Kiran said softly, her eyes finding Raj's across the room. A moment of silent understanding passed between them—a promise of companionship in this strange new reality they'd created. "One day at a time."
Watchtower Observatory – January 9, 2010, 2:14 AM
Hours later, Raj and Kiran sat in the Watchtower observatory, the vast curved window offering an unobstructed view of Earth below. The planet spun in serene blue and white, untouched by the Anti-Life virus that had nearly consumed an alternate reality.
Kiran leaned against Raj's shoulder, her restored body still marveling at the simple pleasure of physical contact. The golden light beneath her skin pulsed in harmony with his rainbow aura where they touched.
"It's strange," she murmured, gazing at the planet below. "Fighting so hard to save a world we no longer belong to."
Raj followed her gaze, his expression thoughtful. "Perhaps belonging isn't about timelines. Maybe it's about connections."
He opened his palm, creating a small holographic projection of Earth-16's coordinates. "I need to check on my team," he said quietly. "Roy and Match; I need to check up on them too."
Kiran studied the coordinates pulsing above his palm. "Earth-16? She smiled slightly, understanding in her eyes. "When do we leave?"
Raj glanced at her; surprise evident in his expression. "We?"
"You think I'm letting you dimension-hop alone after everything we've been through?" Kiran raised an eyebrow, golden light dancing beneath her skin. "Besides, I have my own loose ends to tie up. My Team at hr prime universe... they might not remember me, but I remember them."
Raj closed his fist, the hologram dissolving into particles of light. "It could be dangerous. We're anomalies there just as much as we are here."
"Danger stopped scaring me somewhere between existing as sentient smoke and helping resurrect a time-erased demigod," Kiran replied with a wry smile. "We go together, or not at all."
"Like the one that kept me from being erased?" she asked, looking up at him with genuine curiosity.
Raj nodded, his hand finding hers with natural ease. "The mathematics were clear. When reality rewrote itself, everyone should have forgotten the previous timeline—including us. But some connections transcend mathematical certainty."
"Is that the scientist in you talking, or something else?" Kiran asked, a hint of teasing in her tone.
"Both," Raj admitted with a small smile. "The scientist observed the phenomenon. The man experienced it."
They fell silent for a moment, watching Earth's slow rotation. Kiran's fingers intertwined with his, her thumb tracing small circles against his palm.
"Why me, Raj?" she asked suddenly, breaking the comfortable silence between them. Her voice carried genuine curiosity rather than insecurity. "There were brighter stars you could've anchored to."
Raj turned slightly; his expression thoughtful as he considered her question. Rainbow equations flickered briefly beneath his skin—not from calculation but from emotion. When he replied, his voice carried the same quiet sincerity that had drawn her to him from the beginning.
"Because in a universe of constants and variables, you were the only equation that felt like home." He smiled slightly at her raised eyebrow. "Too mathematical?"
"Just mathematical enough," she replied softly.
Kiran shifted, turning to face him fully. Her golden light intensified slightly, illuminating his features in warm radiance.
"When I was nothing but smoke and memory," she said quietly, "you saw me as real. You spoke to me like I still existed." Her hand reached up, fingertips tracing the line of his jaw with gentle wonder. "That matters. That persists."
Raj's rainbow aura responded to her touch, the colors shifting toward harmonious golds and ambers. "I never saw you as anything less than extraordinary, Kiran. Even before I understood why."
Her hand found his jaw, guiding his face toward hers. "And now?"
"Now I understand perfectly," he murmured, just before their lips met.
The kiss wasn't their first—they had shared a desperate embrace before confronting Erebos, a moment stolen from the jaws of oblivion. But this was different.
Not the desperate connection of souls facing extinction, but the gentle affirmation of survivors who had earned each quiet moment. The kiss wasn't perfect; they were both still learning each other, still discovering who they were in this rewritten reality. But it was real—as real as the heartbeat Kiran had regained, as real as the memories they had fought to preserve.
When they parted, Earth continued its slow rotation below them—a planet that would never know how close it had come to entropy and oblivion. A world saved by those who refused to be forgotten.
"Does it scare you?" Raj asked softly, his forehead resting against hers. "Being real again?"
Kiran's eyes met his, golden light dancing in their depths. "Sometimes. But then I remember—" She took his hand and placed it over her heart, where her steady pulse beat beneath his palm. "Some things are worth being afraid for."
Raj smiled, the expression transforming his features with a warmth few had ever seen. "Like chai?"
"Especially chai," she agreed with a quiet laugh. Then, more seriously: "And connections that transcend reality itself."
Diana's Quarters – January 9, 2010, 3:47 AM
Later that night, in another part of the Watchtower, Diana sat with Lizzie in her quarters. Between them lay a selection of photographs—some ancient, yellowed with time, others more recent. In none of them did Lizzie appear, and yet Diana spoke of each as if her daughter had been there.
"This was Themyscira, the summer before you would have been born," Diana explained, touching a weathered image with gentle fingers. "The olive trees were heavy with fruit that year."
Lizzie studied the photograph, her expression complicated. "It's strange—having memories that never happened."
Diana looked up, centuries of wisdom in her eyes. "All memories are stories we tell ourselves, Elizabeth. Some are just written in different ink."
In another part of the Watchtower, Kiran sat alone in her assigned quarters, a single candle burning on the table before her. Its flame cast dancing shadows across walls that still felt strange—too solid, too permanent for someone who had existed as smoke and memory for so long.
She closed her eyes, focusing on the quiet pulse of golden light within her chest—the last echo of Sajeevan, the White Lantern Entity born from darkness made meaningful.
"Are you still there?" she whispered, not entirely expecting an answer.
The candle flame flickered, then burned steadier, brighter—just for a moment. And in that brief flare of light, Kiran felt rather than heard a response: not words, but feeling, impression, purpose.
Light remembers. Because you chose to.
Kiran opened her eyes, a single tear tracking down her cheek. She brushed it away with wonder, still marveling at the simplicity of having tears to shed, skin to feel, a heart to beat.
"Thank you," she whispered to the entity that had given her back her form, that had helped restore Lizzie, that had transformed the broken husk of Erebos into something that affirmed rather than negated.
Outside her window, Earth-55 turned peacefully in the void—unaware of the sacrifices made to preserve it, unremembering of the darkness that had been rewritten. But in the Watchtower Garden, new flowers continued to bloom where they should not have been able to grow.
And in the observatory, Raj stood watching the stars, rainbow equations flowing beneath his skin as he calculated and recalculated their position in this new timeline—not because he needed to confirm it, but because even mathematicians sought comfort in certainties.
Some stories refused to remain unwritten, even when reality itself tried to erase them from the page.
Light remembers. Because some choices transcend time itself.
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[A/N: WORD COUNT – 5200]
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