webnovel

DC – THUNDER

After being reincarnated into the DC movie universe with six powerful wishes granted by the Presence, Alex awakens on the mystical island of Themyscira at the dawn of World War I. Gifted with the Mystical abilities, Alex’s mission quickly becomes intertwined with that of Diana Prince, the future Wonder Woman. As he helps Diana understand the complexities of the world beyond the Amazonian paradise, they form an unbreakable bond that grows into a passionate and obsessive love. Together, they face the horrors of war and the challenges of an evolving world, all while discovering their destinies as heroes. But as their love deepens, so too do the dangers around them, forcing Alex to wield his godlike powers to protect the woman he loves and the world they aim to save.

THE_MAN_HIMSELF · Filmes
Classificações insuficientes
26 Chs

Chapter 12: Whispers of Strangers

The town of Crimford was a place once filled with the warmth of peaceful days, but now it was a shell of its former self. Ever since the war had reached the doorstep of Great Britain, the people lived in constant fear. It seemed as though hope had abandoned them, leaving only loss and despair in its place.

But on this particular evening, something strange happened. Whispers began to spread among the townspeople about two strangers—oddly dressed, strikingly beautiful, and completely out of place.

---

It was Mrs. Alcott, an older woman with a sharp tongue and an even sharper eye, who first saw them. She had been hanging laundry on the line when she caught sight of a man and a woman walking into town from the forest. The man was tall, with an air of quiet power, dressed in what looked like armor under a long, flowing coat. The woman—oh, the woman!—her hair was black as night, and she wore armor too, shining with a golden gleam. Mrs. Alcott had never seen anything like it in her life.

"They came from the forest, you say?" murmured Mr. Finch, one of the town's few remaining elders, as Mrs. Alcott shared her story with a growing group of curious townspeople.

"I saw them clear as day!" Mrs. Alcott insisted, waving a hand dramatically. "Strangers like that don't just walk out of the woods unless they're something else. Soldiers or... or something worse."

"Aye," muttered Tommy Fells, a younger man who had stayed behind due to an injury sustained in the early days of the war. "Could be Germans in disguise, couldn't it? We've heard stories of them sendin' spies."

Mrs. Alcott scoffed. "Spies dressed like that? Not a chance. No, these two were different. Like gods, almost."

The conversation around the group shifted as more people chimed in with their own sightings. The strangers had passed through town in silence, their focus clearly elsewhere, but their presence left an undeniable impression on those who saw them.

---

Young Eliza, the girl who had spoken to the strangers, sat on the steps of her family's empty house, her thoughts racing. The man had been kind to her, gentle in a way that none of the soldiers or townspeople had been in a long time. His voice was calm, and though his questions were about the war, there was something about him that made Eliza feel safe.

The woman, though, had caught Eliza's eye even more. She was tall and strong, her eyes filled with something Eliza could only describe as sorrow—but also determination. The woman had looked at her with a kind of understanding that made Eliza's heart ache. There was something powerful about her, something that went beyond her strange, regal armor and the sword she carried.

As Eliza sat there, she overheard her neighbors talking.

"They came to help us, I'm sure of it," whispered Molly, a seamstress whose brother had gone off to war. "No ordinary folk would look like that."

"But who are they?" Old Mrs. March, the baker's widow, asked. "Where did they come from?"

Eliza bit her lip, staring down at her hands. She hadn't asked their names. But she remembered the look on the woman's face when she had said, "We are here to help."

Eliza couldn't help but believe her. They weren't ordinary people—of that she was sure. They had come to stop the war, to save the town, and maybe... just maybe, they could bring her father and brothers back.

---

As night fell, the townspeople gathered in the old inn, where the hearth still burned despite the gloom. They spoke in hushed tones, each person adding to the growing legend of the strangers. Some said they must be angels sent to stop the war, while others wondered if they were royalty—heroes from some distant land, come to fight the Germans and put an end to the violence.

"I heard they're looking for the front lines," said Eddie, a teenage boy who had heard the conversation between the strangers and Eliza. "The man asked about where the fighting is worst. Maybe they're soldiers from another country—some secret army that we don't know about."

The adults exchanged skeptical glances, but no one dismissed the idea outright. After all, nothing seemed impossible these days. With the war raging and the world falling apart, anything could happen.

"The girl—Diana," Eliza piped up suddenly, her voice breaking through the murmurs, "she said they're here to help. To stop the war."

The room fell silent as all eyes turned to the young girl. Her innocence was a stark contrast to the reality of the world around them, but her words carried a weight that no one could ignore.

"And the man?" asked Mr. Finch, his bushy eyebrows raised.

Eliza smiled faintly, recalling the man's calm demeanor. "He promised me they would. I believe him."

---

Meanwhile, outside the inn, the cold wind blew across the war-ravaged town, carrying with it the distant echoes of artillery fire. The people of Crimford, huddled together in their fear and grief, dared to hope again—if only for a moment.

Diana and Alex's presence had sparked something in the hearts of these war-weary souls. Though they knew nothing of the strangers' true origins, they clung to the idea that perhaps, finally, something—or someone—had come to save them.

But war had a way of dimming hope quickly, and even as the town whispered about the mysterious man and woman, the darkness of war loomed ever closer.

---

Later that evening, as Eliza lay in bed, she thought again of the strangers. The woman's eyes, so kind yet fierce, and the man's quiet strength. They were unlike anyone she had ever met.

"They'll stop the war," she whispered to herself, hugging her knees to her chest. "They have to."

As sleep took her, Eliza dreamed of the strangers—of Diana and Alex—leading an army of light against the darkness of war, banishing it from the land forever. It was a dream born of a child's innocent hope, but in a town like Crimford, even the smallest glimmer of hope was enough to keep the darkness at bay.

The town slept that night, haunted by the war but comforted, if only slightly, by the belief that these strange, powerful newcomers might be the key to ending the devastation. Whispers spread through the town like wildfire: stories of gods, of warriors, of beings from beyond the world of men.

And amidst the whispers, one thing was certain: the war had come to their doorstep—but so had something, or someone, who might just be able to stop it.