The year was 1995. William Jefferson Clinton had been sworn into office of President just two years earlier. And while his four previous predecessors were hesitant to gauge the potential conflict that loomed within the Senate from the topic of an unsigned act approved only by Richard M. Nixon in 1985, Clinton had effectively broken the silence of the issue when he brought it up from the archives and announced it would be passed as law. The act in question was the Keene agenda, outlawing masked vigilantism and cutting the population of costumed superheroes from immunity of arrest.
But the law's potential resurface was met with reactions of nearly cataclysmic proportions. Once the idea of the thinning community of costumed superheroes being depleated was put into perspective, many former supervillains had taken what was considered to be their saving grace in stride, collectively beginning to attack American citizens in the hopes that the bill's signing would make haste and end superheroism forever. As a result, many police officers had gone on strike in fear, leaving the streets of New York City, Basin City, and others protected by little more than vigilance... an ironic twist of fate, all things considered. But the strike had prompted chaos, leading to international riots over a period of weeks, declaring the public's distrust of their would-be heroes.
Nite-Owl, secretly the mild-mannered Dan Dreiberg, was one of the heroes trying to keep the peace. But almost the very moment he entered the battlefield ahead of him, the realization had quickly dawned upon him that even with his gadgetry and prowess to keep above being killed by the rioters, he was in way over his head.
"Please, people, listen to me!", He pleaded over a megaphone, hanging off of the side of his massive aircraft, the Owlship.
"The police strike is being negotiated! There's no need for this! Please, just put down your weapons and cease! Return to your homes!"
"Who's gonna make us, vigilante? I don't see no badge!", One idle member of the crowd of looters shouted, as an electronic store's front window was shattered, prompting an invasion of desperate bystanders.
Nite-Owl watched them, horrified, as they took to the objects within like animals. But even as he reached for his utility belt to bring forth something to prevent the robbery, he couldn't bring himself to go through with it. These people weren't the criminals he was used to fighting. They were just people. People out of line, perhaps, but understandably so. The country was in anarchy, and there was nothing he could do about it.
Shaking his head, helpless, Dan commanded the Owlship to hover forward, as other citizens fled, eager to make it to the next block to continue their unlawful acts. The government would not ignore them any longer. Masked vigilantes had no place in their world, and even if he didn't want to admit it, Dan was starting to see their side. But at the cost of the country's sanity, was it really worth all of this violence?
At a fourway intersection on the end of the block, Dan finally stopped the Owlship, and leaped down from it's hub.
Backup... gotta find backup...
"H-Hey, man! I was... I was just... I wasn't doing anything! Please don't hurt- ACK!"
Nite-Owl's head shot towards the direction of a dark alleyway, as several sickening sounds came from the void of shadows. Someone was being slaughtered in there. Dan took a deep breath, and was about to retrieve his shuriken as a weapon, but stopped when he immediately saw the thug in question thrown out onto the pavement. His arm was twisted and his nose was bloodied, as his eyes rolled back into unconciousness. And stepping out behind him was a more-than-familiar face...
"Rorschach!", Dan called out, running over to the scene as the vigilante stepped into light, wiping his gloves.
"God, am I glad to see you. Listen, man, I can't do this on my own. I need some-"
Dan stopped, as he realized something. What Rorschach was wiping from his gloves was fresh blood. The thug hadn't been attempting to kill anyone. He was being assaulted by Rorschach the entire time. The inkblots on the rogue vigilante's mask shifted, as he finally acknowledged the nervous Nite-Owl's prescence.
"Ran into trouble,", Rorschach coldly explained, walking past the nearly lifeless thug's body.
"Won't be bothering innocents again."
"I...uh, I can see that.", Dan responded, uneasy at the sight at his feet.
"I guess we've all been kind of busy, huh?"
Rorschach didn't respond immediately. Instead, he just looked forth, ignoring Dan for a tense moment.
"Some of us."
Nite-Owl looked back, watching the fleeing citizens. Trying to do what he could to ignore the tension between him and his former friend. As much as he valued Rorschach's friendship over the years, he had heard all of the rumors. Starting back when he had handled the Blaire Roche kidnapping. After that, his friend hadn't been the same. He had started becoming more brutal. More unforgiving. And speaking in some unsettling growl, almost a hoarse voice from beneath his mask.
Then again, maybe Rorschach wasn't the only one that had changed. Everyone was.
"Look, I'm just glad you're here,", Dan finally stated.
"These riots are getting out of hand. Someone's going to get hurt, or worse. We need to keep the peace."
"Someone is getting hurt.", Rorschach agressively replied.
"Not us."
"I..", Dan stuttered.
"What do you mean?"
"Whole world descending to madness.", he explained.
"Mistakes of past made. Can't keep fighting soft. Can't keep being merciful. World won't allow it. Not anymore."
Dan couldn't believe what he was hearing. Was he actually suggesting that... they become executioners?
"Rorschach, y... you can't really mean that.", Dan urged.
"They're just... they're not thinking straight. This Keene act's got everyone on edge. They're still citizens."
Rorschach looked Dan straight in eyes. Even with Dan's goggles and his own mask, both heroes were intuned in that moment to the passionate hatred in his voice.
"Not anymore."
And in that moment, Dan didn't know what else to say. He simply watched the man he once trusted treaded back into the shadows of which he came, as he gave a final warning.
"Open eyes, Daniel. World needs hope. Evil must be punished."
He was right. The world needed hope.
But not that kind of hope.
God almighty. What's happened to us?
In that instant, a spectrum of light beamed through the sky. Dan looked up, the goggles of his mask glowing off of the reflection as a large blue ball of energy began to form within thin air itself. Even though the sight frightened the few remaining rioters left on the block, Dan recognized the phenomena immediately as that of Jon Osterman. Doctor Manhattan.
And sure enough, it was not a second later that Manhattan and his young wife, The second Silk Spectre, appeared within the air above him. Dan stepped back, even himself a bit astonished, as the god-like man of unparalleled power stepped onto solid ground. Even that in itself sent shockwaves of static electricity throughout Dan's body, causing the hairs on his head to literally stand under his mask.
"J-Jon? Laurie?", He asked, fixing his crooked lenses pulled away from his face by the magnetic pull.
"Are you guys, uh..."
"Have we arrived to aide? Indeed.", Manhattan responded, with no trace of emotion.
"It is good to see you once again, Nite-Owl. And I wish we could stay."
Dan blinked, confused.
"What? But, you just said-"
"It was my complete intention to subdue the rioters, I assure you. But I am about to be informed by my Government contacts that the White House is to be endangered from similar threat."
Silk Spectre, her real name known within the superhero fraternity to be Laurie Juspeczyk, looked up at her husband with both confusion and outright frustration.
"Jon, what do you... you mean, you knew that all along? Then why the hell did you send us down here?!"
"My apologies, Laurie. I know this can be, at times, frustrating for you. But I cannot help what has been set forth."
"Oh, no you don't. You're not starting that again!", Laurie argued, placing a firm finger on Manhattan's chest.
"Dammit, Jon. If you know the future, act upon it! You don't have to keep following some stupid..."
Laurie sighed, realizing that the argument would end up nowhere. It was pointless to try and rationalize with a man who knew everything. And to Dan, seeing the way that Jon looked at her during her protest, he could tell that he was not particularly bothered by her temperance anyway. Not that it was any of his business.
"Well, I mean... it's no big deal.", Dan calmly assured him.
"You'll probably be done with the other protesters in no time, right? Then you could teleport back and help us out?"
Manhattan turned away from his angry wife, as if nothing had happened.
"I am afraid not. Both statistically and factually speaking, it is unlikely that the President will allow me to leave the capitol for the night. He says he feels... safer, with my presence."
"Then let me stay here.", Laurie interjected.
"These crowds are getting rough, and I'm sure Dan would want all the help that he could get."
"Oh, don't say that on my account. I don't want to be a bothe-"
"In good conscience, I cannot allow that, either. In two hours time, you will request to be teleported to California, in order to be with your mother."
"W-what? I... stop that!", Laurie shouted, enraged.
"What did I just tell you? Dammit, do you ever listen to me!?"
Dan simply watched in silence as the two bickered, his head going from one to the other as they made their arguments. The woman standing in the skintight, yellow spandex and the man who was glowing blue. It was an odd sight to behold, even having known both of the crimefighters for years.
"Uh, Jon... the rioters?", He asked, looking nervously back at the
"Hmm?", Manhattan replied, turning his attention away from Laurie as she was still speaking.
"I'm sorry, but I was just being informed by my Government contacts that there are rioters at the White House gates. I suppose we should be going. It has been good to see you again, Nite-Owl. I wish you luck."
"Jon, don't turn away from me when I'm-"
And in a flash, they were both gone. Leaving Dan by himself, to stare into the skies of which they evaporated.
"Uh, sure...", He said to himself.
"Sure, you too. T-take care..."
But as he headed for the streets, almost immediately after Jon and Laurie, Dan found himself staring at the skies again. This time, in response o a different, but equally as distracting noise. A large black helicopter for the Army was looming above the street, ready to land. Running out of it's path, Dan quickly leaped onto the sidewalk's pavement as the craft touched down, it's loud blades blowing debris throughout the streets. Dan shielded himself with his cape, as several bits of trash came at him. It almost kept him from seeing who had lept out of the copter's bunker.
Then he heard that laugh.
Oh, no...
"What've we got here?", The masked soldier asked, toting a rather large shotgun over his shoulder.
"Looks like ya need'ya some reinforcement, Bird Guy."
"That's... Nite-Owl,", Dan nervously corrected.
"It's been awhile, Comedian."
The Comedian smirked, chomping down a cigar within the mouth of his leather mask.
"But not long enough, huh?"
Dan adjusted his goggles. Again.
"I, uh... I wasn't going to say that."
"Sure ya were. Believe me, I get it all the time!", He laughed, giving a hard slap to Dan's back.
"But 'nough fraternizin'. Yer with me. So let's go wipe the smiles off'a some'a those jokers..."
"I,", Dan stuttered, wanting to argue against it.
"Sure. Okay. Sure. Just let me get Archie over here. We can cover more ground..."
"The hell's an 'Archie'?", Comedian asked, loading his guns.
"Archiemedes. The name's inspired from, uh...", He began, pulling out the controls.
"Well, you probably wouldn't want to hear it anyway."
It was that night, and the first of many to come, that Dan Dreiberg actually found himself to be scared out of his mind. The world was changing around him, faster than he was willing to keep up with. And the worst part is... he didn't know if he actually
could.
"So what happened then?"
The year was now 2009. And despite their efforts on that fateful night over ten years earlier, the Keene law had officially made it's way to Congress over a week later. Masks, at least those worn by vigilantes, had been outlawed ever since. And Dan, having hung up his Nite-Owl uniform, was now in retirement. Or what he considered to be that, at least.
Dan smiled as his good friend, the elderly Hollis Mason and first man to take the Nite-Owl name, eagerly awaited the next part of the tale. He'd honestly thought Hollis would have gotten tired of hearing Dan's stories... but then again, by contrast, Dan had never grown tired of hearing his.
"C'mon, Danny. I'm only gettin' older! Now, you and Eddie Blake...", Hollis reminded him, in order to keep the story going.
"Right. The Comedian,", Dan continued, fixing his glasses.
"Well, after that, we took Archie over to 5th street and main, and tried to stop another crowd. They didn't really appreciate our prescence, though, so it wasn't long until Comedian... uh... found a beer bottle being thrown in his face."
"Hahaha!", Hollis chuckled.
"Wow. Tough crowd for The Comedian that night, huh?"
"Definitely. I swear, I've never seen that many people so angry before.", Dan admitted.
"You'd think we were criminals. And the names they called him? I almost felt sorry for the guy."
"Yeah, I might've had something to do with that...", Hollis nervously replied, looking over at a copy of his memoir on the shelf. 'Under The Hood'.
"But in the end, it all worked out, right?"
Dan's shifted away, trying to hide the memories that were creeping up on him.
"Well... not nessecarily. I mean, we kept the peace, but it wasn't really worth it in the end. The act was still passed. People still died."
"People lived, too.", Hollis corrected him.
"You always gotta remember that in our work, Danny. No matter how bad it got, it could've been alot worse. That's what we were there for."
Dan smiled to himself, his esteem slightly raised higher by Hollis' advice.
"I guess you're right, Hollis. Thanks."
"Anytime,", Hollis modestly shrugged, before noticing the clock.
"Oh. Speaking of which..."
Grabbing his overcoat, Dan nodded, helping to put away the two empty bottles of beer that the two had drank.
"Yeah, it's getting late. I've got alot of stuff to do around the apartment, and I'm sure you don't need to be kept up at this hour."
"Heh. Don't worry about me. I made a career off of late nights, remember?"
Dan grinned, as he put on his coat.
"Good point. Same time tommorow?"
"For you, Danny? Always. Take care."
"You too, old friend."
But as Dan exited the front door of Mason's Auto Repair Shop, entering the night of New York City, his smile quickly began to fade. He remembered alot about that night... and truth be told, he was glad that he didn't get to finish the story. Seeing the things that The Comedian would do to those people...
It didn't matter. It was all behind him, now. Retirement had come upon Dan Dreiberg, and he needed to stop wallowing in his own pity and enjoy it for what it was worth. Nite-Owl was gone, and the world wasn't his problem anymore. He was free.
The question was... did he ever want to be free? Dan wondered this, subsequently beginning to imagine the argument in his head about this for the rest of the evening.
Well, I guess it's going to be another long night...
Little did he know, that was going to be an understatement.