There's a bat. There's a cat. There's a past, present, and future. There's an overt riff on A Christmas Carol. There's Clay Mann artwork. There's original Earth-2 parallels and of course The Animated Series parallels. A clown, a pretty bird, and a hybrid. The usual structure-style-over-cohesion issues but some nice characterization.
The bits I rather liked; I can't tell (and I like that it's ambiguous) whether J. sees C. as a new toy to play with or complex angle to play against B. ... but it also seems very truly that much like in "The Best Man" ... C. and J. are actually friends. Like, she finds him horrible and his actions horrible more or less, but they're friends! Work-place friends! Old friends. Kids who even though they didn't know each other in their secret origins, come from the same kind of background and developed very similar skills ... except that he's a vile sociopathic killer! If they're both apathetic and live 'outside society' the difference is she's going to take what she wants and protect herself ... his game is to smash the whole thing. Villains United compatriots! What do you do when you marry your fella but you're friends with his worst enemy? It's soapish but it's also surprisingly relatable as a concept. So if she's going to uphold some weird code of her own and not kill him while B. is around but then as soon as she outlives him, do the deed ... it's doubly interesting motivationally because she doesn't even hate J., she just has apathy and sees what should've been done.
The other bit I liked was the 1v1 with C. and P., because it felt legit that both could hold their own but quite right that P. might get the ghastly jump but would quickly underestimate the vicious alley cat's ability to fight back, even in PJs. I can see where some of that's going.
I'm eager to see some other takes on it.