The previous strip left us on a poignant cliffhanger. Bruce, still emotionally raw from the loss of his parents, had pushed Diana away. The scene was quiet: rain against a window, two kids in a classroom, and the enormous weight of trauma that Bruce carries in his tiny shoulders.
Issue #271 opens not with dialogue, but with body language. Yale Stewart is a master of the "silent beat," and this page is a clinic in visual storytelling. The first panel is a close-up of Bruce’s hands—gloved, tiny, but clenched. The second panel pans out: Bruce is looking away, jaw tight, while Diana stares straight ahead. jl8 comic 271
JL8 #271 is a masterful slow burn. It rewards the patient reader who has followed Bruce’s journey from a silent, angry kid in issue #1 to the fragile, guarded boy we see here. The dialogue is sparse but lethal. The art is gorgeous. The cliffhanger is infuriatingly good. The previous strip left us on a poignant cliffhanger