No prob. I think though that someone has already spoiled in on the message boards at DC in the JLA section. Ahh, here it is:
Here's what happened next:
In the Watchtower, Faith and Wonder Woman are watching Manitou Raven console his wife Dawn after the ordeal she went through in “Trial by Fire.” Faith remarks on the beauty of love, and Diana replies that her actually knowing Love (Aphrodite) has tarnished her views on the subject. Faith asks if Diana has ever been serious about anyone, a teammate maybe (she mentions Superman, which elicits a laughing denial from Diana – she hears that all the time, apparently), and Diana says no. Faith tells her it’s for the best, since coworker relationships never work out – this she says as her teammate and would-be paramour Mr. Disaster shows up to whisk her away for the evening, leaving Diana alone with her thoughts.
Wonder Woman tries to clear her head, work out her feelings for Batman, through combat; but one lengthy training session (and a few dozen battle droids) later, and she’s still in the dark. So she turns to J’onn for a solution; he proposes that Diana employ the services of a Martian device that uses her own thoughts to conjure “what might be” scenarios from her mind. Wonder Woman suits up, connects to the device, and envisions what would happen if she and Bruce got together.
In one vision, an eternally youthful Diana pledges eternal love one last time to her elderly husband Bruce, as the cantankerous old curmudgeon stands (not literally, he’s too old to walk) at Death’s door in Themiscyra. In another, Diana stands at Batman’s side in a new guise as Batwoman, a vigilante of the night as dark and ruthless as her lover. In another vision, Bruce comforts a heartbroken Diana after her inability to bear him the children he so desperately seeks tears them apart. In one disturbing vision, Wonder Woman is pushed over the edge and into murder after the Joker tortures and kills her lover Batman. And in one final vision, Wonder Woman stands in the light of a glorious new Gotham as a maskless Batman thanks her for redeeming his soul and filling his heart with love.
When Wonder Woman emerges from the machine, Batman is there to offer a helping hand. He’s been doing a lot of thinking too, apparently. And then… it happens.
“I don’t think we should,” they blurt out simultaneously.
Diana speaks first. She talks about what she saw in her visions, of all the good things and bad things that she saw might happen if they pursued their relationship any further. Diana tells Bruce that she loves him, BUT only as a dear friend and comrade-in-arms; the friendship they have now is too great a thing to risk for something that could end in disaster. Surely he came to the same conclusion, she asks without really caring about the answer. But the forced grin on his face and averted gaze pretty much says it all (at least, in my eyes) – being “just friends” was the last thing he really wanted.
The two heroes hug in friendship, and move to exit the chamber. Batman asks in greater detail about her visions, wanting to know how bad it really was. It was “terrible,” Diana replies. But as the two leave and the room goes dark, an echoing thought betrays her to no one – the thoughts of Diana and an elderly Bruce pledging their undying love for each other in Themiscyra.