The Vantress: The Origins of a DC Anti-Hero
  • Reads 237
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 9
  • Time 3h 38m
  • Reads 237
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 9
  • Time 3h 38m
Ongoing, First published Jun 20, 2024
1 new part
Rachon R. Moone was always a rather reserved, and albeit somewhat mysterious and controversial person, at times you could even say he was practically cut off from the rest of society. There were really only a few people who actually saw him or understood him, but even they weren't enough to make him feel like he ever belonged. One day, Rachon finds something that reveals to him he may be a whole lot more different than he actually thought. And that very thing might be the key to not only changing his life, but the people around him's lives forever. The only question is, would it be for better, or for worse?
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add The Vantress: The Origins of a DC Anti-Hero to your library and receive updates
or
#254raven
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
Pb (Lead) ✅ cover
Love Metamorphosis cover
Purple Eyed Wizard cover
Burning Ice cover
Missing (COMPLETED) cover
Empathy (Finished) cover
Mythology [Moon Knight] cover
Unaverage cover
Love and Darkness cover
Supernatural at Kordon High cover

Pb (Lead) ✅

16 parts Complete

It's always hard to stay true to what you believe in, especially when it's the crucial moment when it will cost you your life. But what if the attempt on your life failed and you lived with the aftermath of the attack? If you gained power from the experience would you use it to continue to fight for what you believe in or turn to the darkest parts of yourself to try and do what you think is right through a new found sense of morality? When the strength of character is so strong that you would warp what you believe in to achieve victory, do you in fact win or lose? This is a struggle that Devan Carr will face and how will he overcome it if he can't prove that he is right either when trying to correct others?