I have a pre-Batman Day treat for those of you looking forward to tomorrow’s Batmobile origin story, Motor Valley. Before it took shape as a character piece, I was concerned about a lack of conflict and so went with a well-worn shtick opening in the present day and telling the story in flashback, with regular cutaways back to the present and a racing-the-clock Batmobile pursuit.
I came to my senses, but rather than killing the darlings, I offer them up as an automotive aperitif.
Batmobile: Pursuit
The Batmobile sped wildly down Broadway, swerving perfectly to avoid a taxi but coming perilously close to—DAMNIT! Forced to swerve again AND a third time before the second was completed, the jammer pointed at his criminal prey was out of range. A shrill beep sounded and 0.8 seconds later a pair of digital displays began counting up in thousandths of a second. That 0.8 was all the crooks’ Luthor-tech would need to find its signal again, and every nano-second the jammer was out of range after that, they were transmitting data. The top display read 2.140 by the time the Batmobile closed the distance. That brought the total below to 34.493. 34 seconds. They needed 1 minute 20 to transmit the data stolen from Wayne Tech, 1 minute and 20 seconds and they could—or rather their employer could—Lex Luthor could unlock the unimaginable.
***
The Batmobile’s tires howled through their turn without reducing speed as the crooks’ SUV completed its turn and stretched its lead. The digital counter was again climbing 56 seconds, 58, 59.031 before Batman closed the distance so the jammer could finally reengage.
New Songdo, Korea; Coast City, Star City, Atlantis’s capital Poseidonis, and even Gorilla City employed software supporting the technical fabric of their city centers: communications between the buildings, urban infrastructure and portable devices. Though the software varied, all were backed up by a Wayne Tech process onto a simple USB that was legally required to be held in a safe-deposit box or the Atlantis or Gorilla City equivalent. With it, a city could be rebooted. The digital engine behind every electronic—or in Atlantis’s case magnetic—door lock, any elevator, street light, fire alarm, or subway tunnel, any bank vault or any surveillance camera would be under the user’s control. Under Luthor’s control, if the crooks completed their transmission.
59.031
In each case, the backup was locked with that same Wayne Tech process, so a crew of enterprising thieves breaking into a single safe deposit box could not come away with the backup of an entire city’s digital innards. And in each case, the lock could be bypassed by Wayne Tech’s back door. It only made sense: an act of God capable of wiping out the city’s technical fabric might very well kill the mayor, governor or other biometric key-holders. It only made sense to leave the back door intact as a skeleton key of last resort.
59.031
The thieves needed 1 minute and 20 seconds to transmit the entire code. This was going to be close.
***
… Yikes! Hope that Superman and Flash find and dismantle whatever they’re going after on Luthor’s end of that signal. We’ll never know, of course, because the real story, set entirely in the past during Bruce’s years of travel, will drop tomorrow at catwoman-cattales.com.
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