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The morphin and Jason

Shadowsett
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
The Ranger Ghost --- Jason Todd died in a warehouse, beaten to death by the Joker, buried in the cold earth of Gotham, and forgotten by the man who called himself his father. Ra’s al Ghul resurrects him not out of strategy, but out of a debt of blood—his own intelligence failures allowed the Joker to strike. But the Lazarus Pit does not work alone. A woman calling herself Lady Magdalene performs a ritual that draws upon forces beyond the League’s understanding. She is Rita Repulsa, a sorceress who has waited millennia for a vessel strong enough to carry her master into a new universe. When Jason opens his eyes, they burn with a green fire that should not exist. The Morphin Grid—a cosmic source of power that chooses champions across the multiverse—rejects him. He was never meant to wear a Ranger’s armor. But Lord Zedd, the ancient tyrant who once conquered galaxies, sees in Jason something more valuable than a chosen hero: a weapon forged by trauma, abandoned by his mentor, and hungry for vengeance. Through Rita’s manipulation and Zedd’s whispered promises, Jason claims the power of the Green Ranger. Each use of the Morpher comes with a price: the Grid resists, the corruption deepens, and Zedd’s influence grows stronger. But Jason discovers another power awakening within him—the green light of will, drawn from the Lazarus waters that resurrected him, the same energy that fuels the Lanterns of the cosmos. It is the one power Zedd cannot control. Jason’s journey is not a straight path. He travels through time and dimension, pulled by the cracks his own existence creates. In Angel Grove, he watches Tommy Oliver—the original Green Ranger—break free from Rita’s control and become a hero. In Reefside, Tommy becomes his mentor, teaching him that power is nothing without purpose. In the shattered realities of Drakkon’s war, Jason sees what he could become if he surrenders to the darkness inside him. With each journey, he unlocks new Ranger forms. With each return, villains follow him into the DC universe—Goldar, Scorpina, Mesogog, Ecliptor, Trakeena—until the cracks in reality threaten to consume everything. Batman watches from a distance, uncertain whether Jason is a hero to be saved or a threat to be neutralized. Tim Drake wears the colors Jason died in. And the Joker still laughs in Arkham, unaware of what is coming for him. But the true war is inside Jason. The Grid chose no one. Zedd made him. Rita used him. Ra’s sees him as a weapon. Batman buried him and moved on. If Jason is to become anything more than a ghost haunting the ruins of his own death, he must forge his own identity—not the chosen one, not the monster, not the forgotten son. He must become the Ranger Ghost. The one who was never meant to exist. The one who chose to rise anyway. --- "I will not be forgotten." — Jason Todd, The Green Ranger --- A six-arc saga spanning the Power Rangers multiverse and the DC Universe. From the Lazarus Pit to the Morphin Grid. From Gotham to Angel Grove. One hero who was never chosen. One destiny he will forge himself. Hablo español uso ia para transferir el contenido al ingles y hacerlo legible para esa lenguab
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Chapter 1 - The gif of the demon

The body floated face-up in the green waters, arms spread wide as if embracing the darkness that had taken it.

Ra's al Ghul stood at the edge of the Lazarus Pit and felt something he had not experienced in centuries: the weight of a debt he could not repay with gold or blood. The boy in the pool was seventeen years old. His name was Jason Todd. He had been Robin, the Bright Knight's squire, the son Bruce Wayne had pulled from the gutters of Gotham and shaped into something resembling hope. And now he was dead.

The Joker had killed him with a crowbar. Ra's knew this because the Joker had used resources that passed through the League of Assassins' intelligence networks. A shipment of explosives. A warehouse location. A blind eye turned at the right moment. The clown had been a variable, a chaos engine, and Ra's had not bothered to contain him because he had not seemed worth the effort.

He had been wrong.

"The magician is ready," Talia said from behind him. Her voice carried no judgment. She understood the calculus of empire, the reality that sometimes innocents died so that greater plans could advance. But she also understood that her father was not a man who tolerated errors—even his own.

"Send her in."

---

Lady Magdalene emerged from the shadows like a thought taking form.

Her robes were black silk threaded with gold, and her face was veiled in such a way that only her eyes remained visible—dark eyes, ancient eyes, eyes that had seen civilizations rise and fall and thought nothing of either. In her right hand she carried a staff of polished bone wrapped in copper wire. In her left, a clay vessel that pulsed with a soft violet light.

She had appeared at the League's gates three months prior, offering knowledge of resurrection that surpassed even the Lazarus Pits. Ra's had tested her. She had passed. He had watched her. She had given him nothing to see. Now she stood at the edge of the pool where a dead boy floated, and she smiled behind her veil.

"The body is ready," she said. "The soul is… elsewhere."

"Elsewhere?" Talia's hand moved toward her blade.

"The boy was not ordinary. His death was not ordinary. Something reached for him in the moment between heartbeats." Lady Magdalene's eyes flickered—just for an instant—with a light that was not reflected from the pool. "I will bring him back. But there will be changes."

Ra's stepped forward, his cloak pooling around him like wings folded against the dark. "What kind of changes?"

"The kind that come when a soul has touched something beyond the boundaries of this world." She knelt beside the pool and placed the clay vessel on the stone edge. "He will not be the boy who died. But he will be himself. His memories. His anger. His hunger for the face of the man who murdered him."

"The Joker," Ra's said.

"The clown," Lady Magdalene agreed. And somewhere in the spaces between her words, Rita Repulsa smiled.

---

The ritual began with a word that had no translation.

Lady Magdalene shattered the clay vessel against the stone, and the violet light within it poured into the Lazarus Pit like ink dissolving in water. The green waters turned gold, then silver, then a deep, pulsing violet that had never been seen in any Pit before. The cavern trembled. Dust fell from the ceiling. And in a dimension that existed between dimensions, a crack opened in the fabric of reality.

Inside that crack, Jason Todd's soul was not at peace.

---

He was falling through light.

There was no ground beneath him, no sky above, no air in his lungs because he had no lungs, no hands to reach out because he had no hands. He was consciousness without a body, awareness without a self, a single point of perception drifting through an ocean of colour.

Red light that hummed with power. Blue light that whispered of speed. Yellow light that cackled with madness. Pink light that burned with love. Black light that swallowed everything it touched. And everywhere, everywhere, the green.

The green light pulsed like a heartbeat. It reached for him, wrapped around him, tried to pull him into its current. He felt it examining him, testing him, searching for something he did not possess. And then it recoiled.

Not chosen, the green whispered. Not worthy. Not one of us.

It released him, and he began to fall faster, tumbling through the currents of colour, watching them recede as he plunged toward darkness. He tried to scream, but he had no mouth. He tried to fight, but he had no limbs. He was nothing, less than nothing, a ghost rejected by the very light that had called to him.

And then a hand closed around his wrist.

He had a wrist. He had a hand. He had a body again, solid and real, and the hand gripping him was cold as metal and strong as chains. He looked up and saw a face that was not a face—a skull of silver and chrome, a mask of exposed muscle and pulsing cables, two red eyes burning in the hollows where a human's eyes should be.

"You are not chosen," said Lord Zedd, and his voice was the grinding of tectonic plates, the collapse of stars, the death of worlds. "But I can use you anyway."

The darkness swallowed them both.

---

The surface of the Lazarus Pit exploded.

Jason Todd's body shot upward from the violet depths like a spear thrown by the hand of a god. Water erupted in all directions, steaming where it struck the stone, hissing where it touched the torches lining the walls. His back arched. His mouth opened. And the scream that tore from his throat was not human—it was the sound of a universe being born inside a dead boy's chest.

Then his eyes opened.

They were green. Not the green of the Lazarus waters, not the green of life or poison or the patina on old copper. They were the green of will made visible, of defiance given form, of a soul that had been told it was not worthy and had refused to accept the verdict. They burned in the darkness of the cavern like emerald suns.

He collapsed on the edge of the Pit, coughing up violet water, his hands scrabbling for purchase on the wet stone. His nails cracked against the rock and healed in the same breath. His muscles spasmed, rebelled, rebuilt themselves. Every breath was agony. Every heartbeat was a war.

"Where—" His voice was ash and rust. "Where is he?"

Ra's al Ghul knelt beside him, and for a moment the Demon's Head looked almost gentle. "If you mean the Joker, he lives. Batman found him. Batman saved him. Batman returned him to Arkham Asylum, where he will remain until his next escape."

The words landed like knives in Jason's chest. He turned his burning eyes toward Ra's, and something in his expression made even the centuries-old assassin pause.

"Saved him," Jason repeated. "He saved him."

"He does not kill," Ra's said, and there was no judgment in his voice, only fact. "Not the Joker. Not anyone. It is the line he will not cross, even for the son he loved."

Loved. Past tense. Jason heard it. He filed it away with all the other things he had learned about Bruce Wayne in the years he had worn the Robin suit. Loved. Past tense. Buried with the body.

Talia draped a cloak over his shoulders, and her touch was warm where everything else was cold. "You have time now, Jason Todd. Time to heal. Time to train. Time to become what you need to be."

He pulled the cloak around himself, but his eyes never left the surface of the pool. The violet waters had already faded back to their familiar green, but he had seen something in them. A face. A mask. A promise.

He did not ask what it meant. He was not sure he wanted to know.