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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
champagnesbiggestproblem
champagnesbiggestproblem

Whatever you say Teach

Summary: Damien gets in a fight at school, and his favorite teacher has to set up a meeting with a parent or guardian. Bruce Wayne is away on a mission and Alfred isn’t picking up the phone, so Damien’s eldest brother has to attend a parent teacher conference. Only to find out that he has history with his little brother’s English Lit teacher.

Pairing: Dick Grayson/Teacher Fem!Reader & (PLATONIC) Damien Wayne/Fem!Reader

Content Warning: No use of Y/N, Second Person, cursing, second chance romance, yearner dick, angst, fluff, mentions of bullying and boys saying inappropriate things, Dick’s day job is being a P.E. teacher (I don’t believe in cop!dick propaganda, no matter how fine he looked)

Word Count: 11k

A/N: DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME!!! Please never get back with an ex, I have been there, done that, and got the t-shirt. Let me tell you it was NOT worth it. This is only acceptable because it is Dick Grayson. I usually hate second-chance romance, but it came to me while I was writing this and felt like it fit. Anyway, enjoy my lovelies <3

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shisuni
shisuni

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ᯓ➤ dairy queen closes in 10 minutes ⊹܀˙

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ʙᴀᴄᴋ. tim drake ✘ reader .ᐟ .ᐟ

ৎׅ ׄ synopsis ⋮ you broke up with Tim a year ago. Too bad he still thinks of you as his. Too bad everything he does reminds you that you are.
word cnt. 16.2k

includes ›››› sexual language, dairy queen, car make out, denial, you match his freak and that's why you dumped him

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Tim has been living inside the fraction of a second you hesitated before sitting beside him — that infinitesimal pause where your body seemed to remember him before your mind could intervene. He’s worried it like a loose thread, convinced it means something, that it proves there is still warmth there, buried but intact.

“I don’t think you’re good for me,” you’d murmured, voice dulled by exhaustion rather than certainty, even as your hands betrayed you—tugging your scarf tighter around his neck, fingers lingering just long enough to make the words feel like a lie you were both pretending to believe. You’d said it gently, like a confession instead of a sentence. Your eyes were watering, your hands shaking against the scarf. That was a year ago.

He remembers the cold that night more vividly than your words, the way you tried to protect him from it even as you stepped away, leaving him standing there with a warmth he didn’t know what to do with—except keep it.

Tims kept it alright.

It’s almost grotesque, how fiercely.

He’s preserved that pause of yours the way people preserve saints’ bones—wrapped in memory, reverent to the point of ruin. The fraction of a second where you hovered before sitting beside him, knees angled toward him before you caught yourself. That hesitation lives under his skin. Proof, he tells himself. Evidence that your body remembered him even when you tried not to.

And God, the things he’s kept.

The ribbon, slid carefully from your hair when you slept over, breath held like a thief afraid of waking something holy. The broken bracelet beads, every last one collected from the floor on hands and knees, replaced weeks later with diamonds he pretended meant nothing — an upgrade, he said lightly, as if he hadn’t memorized the exact way the original had looked against your wrist. The origami robins and flowers you folded when boredom softened you, creased wings and petals tucked into books, pinned above his desk, carried with him through every move like talismans.

You’d said it so quietly, then.

“I don’t think you’re good for me.”

Murmured, not declared. Your mouth said no while your hands betrayed you — tugging his scarf tighter around his neck, fingers brushing his jaw, thumbs warm against his throat as if instinct refused to let him freeze. The words felt practiced. The touch didn’t. He remembers the smell of your shampoo, the faint press of your knuckles, the way you exhaled like you were bracing for something sharp.

That was a year ago.

A year of being careful. A year of agreeing, without ever speaking it aloud, to be friends.

Friends.

After he’s been inside you, after he knows the exact sound you make when you’re trying not to beg, after he’s memorized the curve of your spine like scripture. 

Sure. Friends.

School makes it easier to lie. Same friend group, same bleachers at lunch, same unspoken rule: don’t touch, don’t linger, don’t look like you remember.

Your new boyfriend is a theater geek.

Volleyball team captain, too, and somehow managing to keep a perfect tan even in the dead stretch of Gotham’s winter, when the sun feels more like a rumor than a fact and everyone else looks faintly gray around the edges. 

Lloyd. 

Same height as Tim, just a little bulkier—closer to Dick’s build than Jason’s—but he doesn’t carry it the way Dick does, doesn’t wear his body with confidence. He's a blonde, freckles scattered across his face like someone forgot to finish the job.

Gemini.

Six hundred fifty-two followers on Instagram. Bio reads ‘i love my gf’.

Yeah. 

Tim loves his girlfriend too.

“Stop glaring,” Stephanie hisses, elbowing him sharply in the side beneath the library table, her shoe nudging his ankle a second later just to make the point stick.

“I’m not glaring,” Tim mutters back, not looking away.

“You’re still watching,” she says, exasperated, “and it’s creepy.”

You’re a few tables over, earbuds in, head bent forward just enough that Tim’s almost certain you’re blasting white noise—something steady, something meant to drown out the world. The library hums around all of you: pages turning, keyboards clicking, the low murmur of whispered conversations bouncing gently off tall shelves and stained-glass windows that filter Gotham’s weak afternoon light into dusty gold.

You were seated with Steph and a few other friends at one of the long tables, five chairs pulled in close, bodies overlapping in that casual, communal way people slip into without thinking. But now your back is to Tim, the familiar line of your shoulders framed by your coat draped over the chair, the curve of your neck half-hidden by your hair.

And there he is.

Lloyd sits next to you, angled just enough that his face is fully visible to Tim, a script spread open on the table between you, pages already dog-eared and marked up with pencil notes. He mouths lines under his breath, brows furrowed in concentration, tapping the edge of the paper with his pen like it might jog something loose.

Every so often, his green eyes flick up.

They land on Tim.

And every single time, the idiot smiles at him—awkward, polite, uncertain—before ducking his head back down and returning to memorizing lines for whatever stupid play he’s involved in this week.

Tim exhales slowly through his nose.

“He’s not even the main lead,” he mutters, barely above a whisper. “Why the fuck is it taking him so long to memorize so few lines?”

“Oh, I don’t know,” Lucas says from beside him, tone flat and edged with sarcasm, “maybe he wants to spend time with his girlfriend. Just a thought.”

Tim doesn’t bother looking at him. Lucas isn’t exactly close—not really—but Stephanie and you had introduced him to Tim after spending time together in art class, and he lets Tim rant without interruption, which counts for something.

My girlfriend,” Tim corrects automatically.

Dina, Lucas’s girlfriend, groans outright from where she’s leaning back in her chair. “This is why she isn’t sitting with us,” she mutters.

“She isn’t sitting with us because the idiot needed help,” Tim snaps back, keeping his voice carefully light, carefully neutral, even though the words come out sharper than intended.

And he’s not wrong. You had been sitting at the head of the table, comfortably centered, until Lloyd showed up—nervous, bashful, clutching his script like it might bite—and asked if you could help him run lines for an audition. You’d hesitated for exactly half a second before changing seats, scooting closer, tilting the pages toward yourself with practiced ease.

Tim had wanted to shove the script straight into Lloyd’s mouth.

Instead, he watches.

Watches the way you lean in when Lloyd gets stuck, the way you tap the page lightly and murmur corrections, the way Lloyd listens with an intensity that borders on reverence. The library settles around them, quiet and warm and heavy with books that smell like dust and ink and old promises, Gotham pressing its gray, unlovely afternoon up against the windows while, inside, you sit close enough to someone else that your shoulders almost touch.

Tim keeps his gaze fixed there, steady and unblinking, like if he looks away for even a second something permanent might shift without his permission, like the world might quietly rearrange itself while he isn’t watching.

“I hope they start making out,” Dina murmurs into her tea, voice low and wicked, steam curling up around her face, “just so I can watch Tim strangle himself with his computer cord.”

Lucas snickers beside her, shoulders shaking.

Tim finally drags his eyes away from you and turns to Dina, incredulous. “Come on,” he says, voice clipped, restrained by effort alone. “You can’t seriously think he’s actually good for her. He’s a fucking idiot.”

That makes Dina pause. She cups her mug in both hands, fingers warming against the ceramic, gaze drifting back toward your table as if she’s trying to see something she missed. “I’m not saying that, Tim,” she says, slower now. “I’m just… she seems happy. I guess.”

“You guess?” Tim echoes, one brow lifting as he flips his notebook open and starts scribbling absently, blue ballpoint pen gliding across the page. A stick-figure Scarecrow takes shape under his hand—crooked hat, lopsided grin—the ink dark and precise. One of the fancy pens you bought him for his birthday a few months ago. He presses a little harder than necessary.

Stephanie shrugs, spinning her pencil between her fingers. “It could be worse,” she says. “He’s just… awkward.”

Lucas snickers again when he catches the expression that crosses Tim’s face, all tight disbelief and quiet offense.

Tim turns on him immediately. “Fuck you, man,” he mutters, rubbing a hand down his face.

“I mean,” Lucas adds, holding up his hands, “I’m actually with Tim on this one. I don’t like him that much either.”

Oh.

Oh okay.

So Lucas is Tim’s best friend now, apparently, and they are the closest people in the fucking universe.

Tim straightens instantly, pointing at Lucas like he’s just been handed a winning card and swiveling back toward Dina and Stephanie. “You hear that?” he says, vindicated. “He agrees!”

Stephanie shoots Lucas a look and tilts her head. “Dude, come on—”

“She had to ask him out,” Lucas says, shrugging like this is obvious. “Once or twice, whatever, but it’s like—every time. Even for the winter dance. She had to ask him.”

“What happened to feminism?” Dina tries weakly, staring into her cup.

“That’s not what I mean,” Lucas replies, turning toward her. “Come on, you’ve seen how much she overthinks it every time. When have I ever made you feel like you needed to ask me just to see me?”

Dina huffs, looking away, lips pressed thin. “You’re inflating Tim’s ego.”

“I’m not complimenting him!”

“Then why does he look like you just proposed?” Stephanie asks, exasperated and amused in equal measure.

Lucas furrows his brow, confused for half a second before following her gaze.

Locking eyes with Tim.

“Dude…?”

Tim leans in immediately, grin sharp and hopeful, lowering his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “So you’ll help me?”

“Fuck no.”

Oh.

Okay.

Tim Drake fucking hates Lucas, actually, and he can go die.

Tim groans, letting his forehead drop forward onto his notebook with a soft thunk, pen rolling slightly under his hand. “You all want me dead,” he mutters, voice muffled by paper. “What if I killed myself, huh? What if—”

“She’d probably save you a seat at her wedding with Lloyd,” Stephanie cuts in cheerfully, chin propped in her palm, freckles creasing as she smiles, “and just keep it empty.”

Tim kicks her under the table.

The library exhales as the evening thins out. Lucas and Dina leave around six, their voices fading down the marble stairwell, footsteps swallowed by the building’s cavernous quiet. Gotham presses itself against the tall windows, the sky outside bruised purple and gray, streetlights flickering on one by one like tired sentries. The stained glass above the stacks bleeds muted color onto the floor—dusty golds and blues that settle into the cracks of old stone.

By seven, Stephanie finally closes her textbook, the heavy thud echoing louder than it should in the near-empty room. She leans back in her chair, stretching her arms over her head, curls spilling down her shoulders in loose blonde spirals that catch the lamplight. Her skin still holds a faint tan despite Gotham’s winter, freckles scattered across her nose and cheeks like constellations she never bothered to memorize.

She glances between Tim and you.

Lloyd left a few minutes ago.

You drifted back to the head of the table after, slipping into the seat like it was always yours, familiar and effortless. Tim doesn’t look up—not once—but Stephanie notices everything anyway. The way his fingers fly faster over the keyboard, knuckles pale, veins standing out against skin that’s already too light from long nights indoors. The way he takes a sharp pull from his energy drink, throat working like he needs to swallow something down before it crawls out of him.

Gods save him.

She stays put.

Doesn’t pack.

Doesn’t even pretend to.

Just slouches sideways in her chair, one knee tucked up, phone glowing softly in her hand as she doomscrolls with deliberate casualness, firmly wedged between the two of you like a human barricade.

“Don’t you have a date with Cass?” Tim asks eventually, voice rougher than he means it to be.

He doesn’t look up. He keeps his eyes locked on his screen, lashes casting dark shadows against sharp cheekbones, jaw clenched tight enough to ache. His black hair falls messily into his eyes, untouched since this morning, making him look more tired than he’ll ever admit in Stephanie's eyes.

Stephanie lifts her head slowly. “What?”

Tim swallows. Shifts in his chair. Still doesn’t look at you. Not at the way you tilt your head when you’re confused, not at the way the overhead lamp warms your eyes into something soft and dangerous. “Your date,” he clarifies, aiming for nonchalance and missing by a mile. “With Cassandra.”

Stephanie’s eye twitches.

Ah. Message received.

“I don’t recall what you’re talking about, Timothy,” she says, tone sugary enough to rot teeth.

There are maybe six people in this world Stephanie Brown would willingly do something stupid and petty for.

Right now, she’s sitting between two of them.

“Dinner,” Tim adds, coughing slightly. “That ramen place.”

He probably assumed she’d help him for free.

And leave you alone with this monster?

Absolutely not.

“Ohhh,” Stephanie drawls, suddenly thoughtful. “Yeah. That nice, expensive one near the GCPD? The new one?”

Tim blinks, confused, watching as she nods to herself and begins packing her bag with exaggerated slowness, slipping pens into pockets, zipping and unzipping compartments. “Yeah, I guess—”

“Oh darn!” she interrupts brightly, patting her jacket pockets. “I left my wallet at home. Guess it’d be easier to cancel on Cass and reschedule.”

You pull one earbud free, brow knitting as you glance between them, noticing the way Tim’s eyebrow jumps, a sharp little tell he never quite learned to hide.

“You—” Tim cuts himself off, exhales hard through his nose, then reaches into his jacket and pulls out his wallet. He doesn’t even look at Stephanie when he hands it over. “Here. Don’t be a bad girlfriend and—”

“Aww, you’re so sweet,” Stephanie cuts in, batting her lashes dramatically as she plucks his black card straight from his wallet. She slips on her jacket, curls bouncing as she turns to you with a grin that’s all mischief and affection. “Isn’t he just the sweetest?”

You hesitate, head tilting slightly. “Uh… yeah.”

“YOU’RE GOING TO BE LATE,” Tim suddenly snaps, voice echoing through the quiet library, drawing irritated looks from a few remaining students as he stands and physically herds a giggling Stephanie away from the table. “GOODBYE. HAVE FUN.”

She laughs as she goes, practically skipping toward the exit, boots clicking against stone, blonde curls swinging as she throws a careless wave over her shoulder.

Tim watches her disappear into the stairwell, shoulders slumping just a fraction.

With the way she vanishes into Gotham’s night, he already knows—deep, deep down—that he’s losing at least two thousand dollars tonight.

The library settles again, lights humming softly, the city breathing outside the windows.

And you’re still there.

There’s an empty seat between the two of you where Stephanie sat.

You don’t hesitate. You stand and move into it like it’s muscle memory, like gravity still knows where to put you, like you didn’t just walk Lloyd out to his car ten minutes ago with your hand wrapped around his sleeve, laughing softly like you were something out of a storybook—like his fucking prince charming.

The chair scrapes quietly against the floor as you pull it in, close enough that Tim feels the shift in air before he sees you settle beside him. His shoulders tense instinctively, pale skin already gone tight under the library lights, hair falling into his eyes as he stares a little too hard at his screen.

“What are you working on?” you ask, easy and conversational, fingers sliding up to tune your music down as you keep sketching, pencil moving in loose, confident strokes. It looks like something for art class—shading layered gently, lines purposeful without being precious. Stephanie finished the final touches on her landscape the moment she arrived, declared it done, and promptly started meddling.

Tim’s answer comes a beat late.

“Uh—” His voice stutters slightly, like it caught on the way out. “Just… trying to learn this new code. Finished school stuff already.”

You lean just enough to glance at his screen, not touching him, not quite, but close enough that he can see your reflection faintly in the dark glass. You nod, lips pursing thoughtfully. “Looks complicated.”

And then you go back to drawing.

Just like that.

Like you didn’t used to lean into him when you worked, shoulder to shoulder, knee pressed against his under the table. Like your head didn't tilt toward his when you concentrated, lashes brushing his sleeve. Like that wasn’t a year ago, like it wasn’t still burned into him in exact, brutal detail.

Tim swallows.

“Mhm,” he murmurs, the sound rougher than he intends, barely there, fingers hovering uselessly over his keyboard as the library hums around you both—lights buzzing softly, pages turning somewhere far off.

And you sit there beside him anyway, close enough to undo him, drawing like nothing has changed at all.

Tim doesn’t take your closeness for granted. He never has. Tim breathes it in the way he’s learned to breathe in every narrow allowance of proximity these days, slow and careful, like the moment might bruise if he holds it too tightly. You smell like your perfume—soft, familiar, worn into the fibers of your coat—layered with the papery dryness of old books and the faint, comforting bitterness of tea you shared earlier with Dina, mugs cooling forgotten on the table between half-finished thoughts.

And under all of that–barely there but persistent once he catches it–is cedarwood.

Not his.

The stupid blonde’s.

It clings faintly, like static, like a reminder pressed into the air itself. 

You walked him to his car. 

Tim isn’t a traditionalist, not really, but it’s winter and Gotham doesn’t do gentle cold; it bites, sharp and personal, and it only took Lloyd four quiet, “No, I insist—”s from you to give in. 

Amateur. Tim files it away automatically before he lets himself breathe again anyway, because denying it would hurt worse, because this is still you. His fingers crack at the knuckles without him realizing, a soft, dry sound swallowed by the library’s hush, and his gaze drifts—unintentional, unguarded—down to your sketchbook.

And stops.

Freezes.

Red Robin stares back at him from the page.

Not stiff. Not posed. Caught in motion, balanced on the edge of something unseen, weight shifted to one hip like he’s mid-turn, cape flaring in a way that suggests momentum rather than drama. 

The pencil work is confident—dark where it needs to be, light where it breathes—shading layered patiently along the lines of the suit, the texture of the fabric suggested with nothing more than pressure and restraint. The mask sits just right on the face, angular but not harsh, eyes narrowed with focus rather than anger.

It isn’t copied. It’s remembered.

Tim sees details no camera would ever bother with: the slight tension in the jaw, the way the line of the neck curves when he’s bracing to move, the subtle asymmetry that makes the figure human instead of iconic.

When Tim looks up, slow and careful, he finds you smiling softly as you draw, lashes lowered, pencil moving with quiet certainty. You once told him you’d never draw him—that it was bad luck, that you loved him too much to risk it, that some things shouldn’t be pinned down or flattened onto paper.

Gods help him, you’ve drawn him the way people draw something they’re afraid to lose.

Tim almost scoffs. Almost tells you that Red Robin looks worse in real footage, that cameras catch the sweat, the smudges, the moments where he’s off-balance and barely holding it together. He almost jokes, almost reaches for distance—

And then he sees it.

The small beauty mark at the base of the neck, just beneath the line of the mask, placed so casually it could only come from familiarity. From proximity. From having looked at him up close, when the mask was off and the world was quiet.

Something in Tim’s chest tightens, not painful, just full.

You drew him. And you did it sitting close enough that your sleeve brushes his arm when you shift, close enough that he can feel the steady warmth of you beside him, real and grounding, like you never stopped knowing exactly who he was beneath the masks and names and careful compartments.

“Thought you were a Nightwing fan,” Tim murmurs, the words coughing their way out of him in a whisper meant for no one else.

You glance up at him, pencil pausing mid-stroke where it’s shaping the fall of hair along the mask line, graphite smudged faintly along your fingers. “Thats all you, Tim,” you say easily, like it’s obvious. Like it’s always been obvious. “I’ve always liked Red Robin the most.”

“…Yeah?” Tim says after a second, his heart thudding too loud in his chest, the sound filling his ears until it feels like it might spill out of him. He shifts in his chair, shoulders drawing in slightly, like he’s bracing for impact. “He’s kinda boring, though. Don’t you think so?”

You laugh softly, the sound low and warm, shoulders lifting just a little as you shake your head. Your gaze drops back to the page, curls of hair falling forward as the pencil moves again—confident, unhurried—adding loose locks along the mask line, adjusting the angle of his jaw with a few precise strokes. “He’s nice to look at, and his suit is cool” you say, thoughtful, like you’re deciding it in real time. “That’s all that matters for the project.”

Heat rushes to Tim’s face, sudden and overwhelming, creeping up his neck and burning across his cheeks under the blue glow of his laptop screen. He swallows, fingers tightening around the edge of the table as if that might anchor him. “Just… nice?” he asks, voice thinner than he’d like, cracking ever so slightly at the end.

You don’t look up. You hum instead, soft and considering, a small sound tucked between breaths as your pencil hesitates—then continues. “Mhm. Well,” you add after a beat, lips curving faintly, “maybe a little bit more.”

Tim’s knee starts bouncing under the table, fast and restless, the motion telegraphing everything he refuses to say. He doesn’t know what to do with that—whether it’s a compliment or a deflection or something gentler and more dangerous. His mouth opens, closes, then settles on a useless, noncommittal, “Mhm…”

You tilt your head, studying the sketch with a critical eye, tapping the pencil lightly against the paper once. Then, without warning, you say, “He looks like if an Oreo Blizzard was a person.”

Tim pauses.

His fingers still on the keyboard. His knee stutters mid-bounce. The blush drains from his face, replaced by pure, quiet confusion as his brain stalls out completely. He stares at his screen like it’s betrayed him, cursor blinking patiently in the corner.

“Tim?”

He blinks, slow and deliberate, like he’s surfacing from deep water.

You’re looking up at him now, wide-eyed and earnest, lashes catching the warm lamplight, pencil hovering mid-air. Your mouth is tilted into something unsure, something fond.

“Mhm?” he says, automatically, voice distant.

“…Dairy Queen closes in ten minutes.”

The words land soft and absurd between you. Tim exhales a breath he didn’t realize he was holding, shoulders loosening just a fraction, something in his chest easing even as his heart picks up again. He glances at you, then at the sketch, then back at you—caught somewhere between disbelief and something dangerously close to hope.

“…I know.” His voice is careful, deliberate, each word weighed like a stone he’s been carrying around for years. “…And… what does that have to do with us?”

You groan, letting the edge of your sketchbook tap softly against his forearm, a playful, almost affectionate smack that makes him flinch just slightly. “Come on!” The protest is sharp but light, threaded with warmth that curls into the space between you despite the library’s stale, paper-scented air and the muted hum of fluorescent lights overhead.

Tim giggles, curling his fingers around the spot where the sketchbook landed, the sound of it mingling with his heartbeat in his ears, loud and jarring in the quiet. “Hey! You just watched me give my card to Stephanie, Tim Drake is broke now.” he protests, voice clipped with mock indignation, but the curve of his lips and the crinkle at the corner of his eyes betray the joy of being near you, of sharing this space with you.

“I’ll pay!” you insist, leaning a little closer, pencil still in hand, tracing shadows in the sketchbook as if the very act grounds you enough to be closer.

“Absolutely not,” Tim says, shaking his head, pale skin still flushed faintly beneath the library’s dim glow, sharp jawline catching light, lashes brushing against the tops of his cheeks. His grin is soft, but the tilt of his head, the way his shoulders draw back and his hands still, betray a protective instinct he never can fully hide from you. “When have I ever let you pay for anything?”

Your mouth opens, ready to argue, “Well… that was when we were dating, that’s different—”

You cut yourself off mid-sentence. The words hit him like a sudden draft of winter air, sharp and real, and he sees it: the way your eyes flick toward his, the trace of hesitation. His smile falters, eyes no longer crinkling into the familiar crescent moons but softening into a tentative curve, a dimple barely showing at the corner of his mouth. His shoulders draw in slightly, almost imperceptibly, as if he’s bracing himself against a memory he’s never allowed himself to touch.

He’s never heard you say it—name it—before. 

That what you two had, what you still carry in the spaces between words and touches, was over and that the over part was actually real. Broken, maybe, but real. Your breakup wasn’t a spoken ending; it was a silence he’d been forced to interpret, a confession he always assumed, but now you’re saying it anyway, in subtle, quiet ways, and it feels like the city itself has paused to make him process it.

“…Mhm…Yeah,” he murmurs, voice lower now, almost swallowed by the soft hum of the library. His gaze drops to his lap, hands brushing against each other in that small, nervous way he does when he’s unsure what to say but doesn’t want to let the moment slip. “…Uh I should have a 20 on me though, I'll just pay, yeah?”

The casual tone is a mask. He’s giving up the nonchalant act he’s perfected over months of careful observation, of distancing himself from his own feelings, of hiding in plain sight. Beneath it, there’s something else—something protective, careful, a quiet pursuit to make this moment of pause yours as much as it is his, because he's so sick of your pauses only having an impact on him.

You glance at him, heart squeezing faintly at the expression on his face, at the way he shapes his sadness into something neat, contained, so it doesn’t spill over into the world. There’s frustration in it, sure, but it’s measured, practiced—the same way he’s always measured his words with you, the same way he’s always carried your heart alongside his own without ever breaking stride.

The subtle history of your relationship—the jokes, the shared silences, the afternoons spent wandering Gotham’s streets side by side, the whispered plans, the quiet fights and louder reconciliations—all of it hums beneath the surface, threading through every glance, every brush of sleeves, every half-smile that was exchanged across the sketchbook between you.

For a fleeting moment, the world outside the library disappears, and the city—gritty, cold, unforgiving Gotham—fades behind the steady pulse of proximity, the weight of unspoken words, and the quiet certainty that some things, even after endings, never truly go away.

Not if Tim will let it. 

He didn't let go of Robin and he won't let go of you.

“Come on,” Tim mumbles, already rising to his feet, a small, careful smile tugging at his mouth as he starts packing up—laptop slid into its sleeve, notebook stacked neatly on top, cords coiled with muscle memory precision, the pens you gifted him gathered like he’s afraid to leave any trace of you behind. “We can use my car. You probably walked here right?”

You don’t answer right away.

You’re still stuck on the look he wore just moments ago, the way his expression cracked open without warning. Tim has always been controlled about this—too controlled. When you called things off, he didn’t argue. Didn’t bargain. Didn’t ask you to stay. Sometimes, in your worse moments, you resented that. It felt like indifference masquerading as respect.

But the way his blue eyes widened earlier, bright and unguarded for just a second, the way his composure slipped—it was the first time you saw how deeply it landed. How much it still mattered.

The realization unsettles you, stirring something low and uncertain in your gut, the quiet sense that maybe following him now isn’t as harmless as it feels.

“You comin’?” Tim asks over his shoulder as he adjusts the strap of his bag, posture easy but hopeful. He pauses, glancing back. “Or… I can heat up the car first. If you want.”

“No, I—” You stop yourself, then shake your head gently, moving to pack your things instead. Pencil tucked away, sketchbook closed with care. You hesitate only a moment before taking one last look at the Red Robin drawing, fingertips lingering at the edge of the page like a goodbye—or a promise—before you slide it into your bag, almost reverently.

When you turn back around, Tim is already there.

Holding your coat out for you.

You jump a little, startled enough to laugh, the sound breaking the tension. “God,” you chuckle, slipping your arms into the sleeves, “Alfred is rubbing off on you.”

“Yeah, well,” Tim says casually, adjusting the collar for you without thinking, “he says you rubbed off on me, so.”

He hopes what he just said sticks.

It does.

Your fingers pause mid-button, the moment stretching thin and quiet between you.

+1 point to Tim Drake.

“How bad is it?” you mumble, voice pitched with playful dread as Tim cracks the heavy library doors open just enough to peer outside.

Your fur coat does not have a hood.

“Uh…” Tim glances back at you, a nervous smile flickering as a gust of icy wind snakes raindrops inside. “How about I just pull the car up front?”

You sigh, already knowing the answer. “They won’t let you.”

Gotham’s library sits stubbornly away from main roads, tucked back like a secret it’s trying to protect. With the city’s endless appetite for destruction, they’ve decided some things are worth guarding—this place being one.

“Come here,” Tim murmurs.

He tugs gently at the sleeve of your coat, pulling you closer before you can overthink it. He unzips his jacket and angles himself instinctively, lifting one side to shield your head and shoulders from the cold, creating a small pocket of warmth that smells like clean fabric, ozone, and something unmistakably him.

You falter.

Tim doesn’t move. Doesn’t rush it. Just stands there, steady, letting you decide.

Your hands hover for a second before settling against his chest, fingers curling into the fabric like you’re reminding yourself that friends do this too. That this doesn’t have to mean more.

+1 point to Tim Drake.

The cold rain hits the moment you step outside, sharp and immediate, Gotham winter cutting through fabric and skin alike, the wind threading itself between buildings like it knows exactly where to hurt. Snow hasn’t quite committed yet, but the ground is slick with old ice and slush, the sidewalk shining faintly under the amber streetlamps like it’s been lacquered with danger.

Tim moves first.

Not rushing you, not pulling—just angling himself so his shoulder blocks the worst of it, his jacket still half-open, one arm hovering close enough to guide without touching. You fall into step beside him automatically, boots striking the pavement a little too fast, breath puffing white in front of you, laughter caught somewhere between nerves and cold.

The library looms behind you, all stone and quiet judgment, while Gotham opens up ahead—wet streets, distant sirens, the low hum of traffic threading through the night. The parking lot feels farther than it should, stretched thin by the cold, by the way your coat slips just slightly on your shoulders, by the fact that your fingers are numb and your steps are getting shorter.

You slip.

It’s small—just a fraction of a second where your heel skids on a patch of ice you didn’t see—but it’s enough. Enough for your balance to tip, for your stomach to lurch, for the world to tilt wrong.

Tim catches you without thinking.

His hand is firm at your waist, fingers splaying through the fur of your coat, his other arm bracing you before you can even gasp. The contact is sudden and close and undeniable, your momentum carrying you straight into him, chest to chest, the impact softened only by the way he adjusts instantly, grounding you like this is a problem he’s solved a hundred times before.

For a heartbeat, neither of you moves.

Your breath tangles with his, warm against cold, your gloved hands pressing instinctively against his jacket. You can feel the tension in his grip—not rough, not hesitant—just precise, protective, like his body decided this was non-negotiable. His pulse jumps under your palm, fast and real, a quiet tell he never quite learned how to hide from you.

Then the moment passes.

He steadies you, eases you upright, hands lingering a second longer than strictly necessary before pulling back, giving you space without fully stepping away. The cold rushes back in immediately, reclaiming what little warmth you stole from him.

The car is close now.

He opens the passenger door for you, quick and efficient, one hand still hovering near your elbow as you slide inside, the seat cold even through your clothes. Snow crunches under his boots as he rounds the hood, movements smooth, practiced, the kind of unconscious choreography that comes from years of doing things fast and right.

You watch him through the windshield as he slips into the driver’s seat, shutting the door with a solid thunk that seals the world out. The car fills with the quiet whir of the heater starting up, the windows fogging faintly at the edges.

Inside, the air is warm, sealed tight against Gotham’s cold, the heater humming low beneath the dash. Everything unsaid sits between you, dense and heavy, pressing at your ribs.

Friends do that, right?

You’d catch Stephanie at the waist if she slipped. You’d grab Lucas too, even if he made a joke about it afterward.

Yeah.

You’re friends.

+2 points to you.

You turn just in time to see him rake his fingers through his hair, trying to shake the rain loose, droplets scattering across his knuckles and the collar of his jacket. His black hair sticks up in damp, uneven strands, darker with moisture, lashes clumped slightly as he blinks. 

When he catches you looking, his mouth curves without hesitation—easy, familiar—eyes crinkling at the corners, teeth flashing, one dimple cutting deep into his cheek.

Your heart stutters, sharp and traitorous.

+2 points to Tim Drake.

You look away too quickly, forcing your hands to move, to do something normal, something harmless. You dig through your bag like you’re on autopilot, fingers brushing past pencils and folded paper until you find the packet of tissues. You hold it out to him, tone light, practiced, the way you talk when you don’t want him to notice anything’s wrong.

“Dry your hair, you’re going to get sick—”

“Hands are full,” Tim hums, distracted but smiling, one hand reaching back to shove both your bags into the backseat, the other twisting the key and cranking the heater higher. Warm air spills over your legs almost immediately.

So you move.

You pull a tissue free and lean in, close enough that your knee brushes his, close enough that his warmth bleeds into you. You scrunch the damp front of his bangs between your fingers, careful at first, then a little more deliberate, dragging the tissue through dark strands.

Tim freezes.

Not stiff—not pulling away—just… still. Like his body hasn’t been updated with whatever rule you’re operating under now. His shoulders lock, breath hitching just slightly as your fingers brush his scalp, familiar in a way that hurts. You can feel how soft his hair still is, how it curls faintly at the ends when it’s wet.

God. It’s been so long.

You’d do this for Stephanie.

You would.

You’d even do it for Lucas if he complained enough.

Tim is caught somewhere between letting himself melt into the touch and the dull ache of realizing he’s been reduced to the same category. Just another friend. Another person you’re gentle with.

+2 points to you.

“I think it’s dry,” he mumbles, voice lower now.

“No, it’s—” You pause, lifting the tissue, fingers brushing through once more. It’s slick. Too slick. You frown slightly, eyes narrowing as realization clicks.

You look at him.

He doesn’t look back.

“Uh—” His jaw tightens, gaze fixed firmly on the windshield.

“Tim.”

“So what do you want to get?” he rushes out, too fast. “Soft serve, maybe? Blizzard probably—”

“Tim.”

“You know I was thinking—”

“Tim Drake,” you burst out laughing, the tension snapping, “you stole my fucking hair serum!”

You smack his shoulder, not hard, just enough to make a point, before leaning back to toss the used tissue into the tiny trash can tucked by the console—the one you bought and insisted he keep there. He complained about it. Still kept it.

“You left it in my room,” Tim huffs, finally looking at you again, defensive but amused, cheeks pink as he flips on the seat heater under you. “That’s your fault.”

You stare at him for a second, mouth still parted like you’re gearing up for an argument, then think better of it. The tension drains out of you in a soft exhale, and you turn toward the mirror instead, lifting a hand to smooth down a few stray flyaways, checking your reflection in the dim interior light. Your smile lingers there, small and unguarded, like it always has.

Some things, annoyingly, haven’t changed at all—even if it feels like everything else has.

And that’s what makes it so sickening for Tim.

Because you still smile at him the same way, still tilt your head when you listen, still buy him an extra soda from the vending machine without asking because you know he’ll drink it later, still memorize a new coffee order for him every season like it’s muscle memory. Like loving him was a habit your body never quite unlearned.

You do all of that—and then you kiss someone who isn’t him.

Tim presses his tongue hard against the inside of his cheek as he pulls out of the library parking lot, jaw tightening just enough to ache. The tires hiss softly against wet pavement, streetlights bleeding into long, smeared reflections across the windshield as Gotham opens up around them—brick and neon and rain-slick streets, the city breathing low and restless even this late.

He keeps his eyes on the road, hands steady on the wheel, posture relaxed in a way that feels practiced rather than real. The heater hums, the radio stays off. There’s no room for anything else.

Five-minute drive to Dairy Queen.

Plenty of time to pretend this doesn’t hurt.

The radio settles into a song neither of you bothered to change, something mellow and familiar, the kind that feels like it’s always existed in Tim’s car. The bass is low, steady, syncing with the hum of the engine and the whisper of tires over rain-dark pavement. Gotham slides past in slow motion—storefronts half-lit, steam curling up from subway grates, traffic lights blinking like tired eyes that never quite close.

The dashboard casts a soft glow over Tim’s hands on the wheel, pale against the dark interior, veins faintly visible where his grip tightens and relaxes in small, unconscious adjustments. His black hair is still slightly damp, curling at the edges, lashes casting shadows when he blinks. 

There's a drop of water at the corner you watch fall from the reflection on your window. He drives like he always does—precise, smooth, attentive—but there’s something restrained about him now, like he’s holding himself a fraction too carefully.

You sit angled toward the passenger window, knee pulled up slightly, coat tucked close around you. The glass reflects pieces of you back at yourself—your eyes, the curve of your cheek, the movement of your fingers as you absently toy with a loose thread. Every so often, without really deciding to, your gaze drifts back to him.

It happens at a stoplight first.

Tim glances over, brief and instinctive, like checking a mirror. Your eyes meet, and for a second the city noise dulls, the song flattening into background hum. 

It’s not charged.

It’s worse than that.

It’s soft. Easy. Like nothing ever broke.

There’s no surprise, no tension, just recognition—quiet, familiar, intimate in a way that doesn’t ask permission. You look away first, clearing your throat softly, adjusting the hem of your coat like you’ve been caught doing something you shouldn’t.

The light turns green. He looks forward again.

His free hand lifts from his knee, fingers flexing once, twice, hovering in the narrow space between you and the console. Close enough that you feel the shift in air, the warmth of him. 

Tim’s knuckles brush the seam of your jeans when the car rolls over uneven pavement, and for half a heartbeat his hand drifts higher, instinctive, memory-driven to protect you.

He almost rests it on your thigh.

Almost.

You feel it—the pause, the jerk—before he pulls back, settling his hand firmly against his own leg instead, thumb rubbing into his black jeans like he’s trying to erase the impulse. His jaw tightens, then eases. The song swells briefly, chorus bleeding into the small space, and the moment dissolves without ever being acknowledged.

You shift again, uncrossing and recrossing your legs, pretending it’s just for comfort. The next time you glance at him is when you move to put your hands in front of the heater, he’s already watching you, eyes softer now, unreadable in the dim light. The corner of his mouth twitches like he might smile, but he doesn’t. The road curves, and he turns his attention back to it, streetlights sliding in rhythmic flashes across his face.

The Dairy Queen sign appears ahead, bright and almost ridiculous against Gotham’s muted palette. The song on the radio fades into its final notes as Tim signals and slows, the car easing into the lot.

Five minutes have passed.

It felt longer than that. Gods save him.

+2 points to you.

“I’ll go order,” Tim mumbles, already reaching for his wallet like it’s a lifeline, fingers curling tight around the worn leather. He cranks the heat up another notch before you can protest, warm air rushing over you in a sudden wave, fogging the edges of the windshield. Then he’s gone—door opening, cold slicing in for half a second before it shuts again.

You watch him through the glass. Trying to ignore the fact he still remembered your order, that he didn't need to ask.

The night swallows him immediately, Gotham’s winter biting hard, breath blooming white as he steps onto the slick pavement. Tim shrugs his jacket higher on his shoulders, posture straightening as if the cold has given him something tangible to focus on. His reflection ghosts faintly in the window as he walks, pale under the fluorescent lights, black hair getting soaked again before he remembers to put his hood on.

He looks smaller out there. Or maybe farther away.

Inside the car, it’s too warm, too quiet. The radio hums low, some late-night song bleeding softly into the space he left behind. You rub your hands together, then still them, feeling strangely restless. The seat still holds the impression of him, warmth lingering like a memory your body hasn’t caught up to yet.

You lean back in the seat, staring at the ceiling for a second, exhaling slowly.

Outside, snow starts to fall—not enough to stick yet, just thin flakes catching the light as they drift down. Gotham pretending, briefly, to be gentle.

You don’t know why your chest feels tight.

You don’t know why you’re counting the seconds until he comes back. 

You don’t know why the way the warm lights of the Dairy Queen reveal the fact that Tim is blushing makes you want to whine into your hands.

It’s ridiculous. Embarrassing, even. The glass is smudged, the fluorescent glow too soft for Gotham, and yet there he is—standing a little too close to the counter, shoulders slightly hunched, ears pink where his dark hair curls against them. 

He keeps shifting his weight like he doesn’t know what to do with himself, like the choice between a Blizzard or soft serve is somehow a high-stakes decision. You can tell exactly when the cashier smiles at him, because the color in his face deepens, creeping down his neck.

You shouldn’t notice things like that anymore.

You press your palms flat against your thighs, grounding yourself, reminding yourself that this is fine, that this is normal. People blush. Tim has always blushed easily. It doesn’t mean anything. It can’t mean anything.

And yet.

Your chest feels tight in that familiar, unwelcome way—like your heart has recognized something your brain is refusing to name. You told yourself you ended things because it was the right choice, because timing and fear and the city itself were all stacked against you. You told yourself that love doesn’t always mean staying. You’ve repeated it enough times that it almost sounds true.

Almost.

Because watching him now, framed in broken tile and menu boards and warm yellow light, you feel that old ache stir, the one you never quite managed to bury. It’s not sharp anymore. It’s worse than that—dull and constant, like a bruise you keep pressing just to check if it’s still there.

You think about the way his hand hovered in the car.

About how easily you slipped back into orbit around him.

About how natural it felt to sit close, to touch his hair, to laugh like nothing fragile existed between you.

You loved someone else. You’re supposed to now too. 

Lloyd is kind and steady and uncomplicated, and you chose him because choosing him felt safe. Because he doesn’t know how to look at you the way Tim does—like he’s memorizing you for later, like he’s afraid of forgetting.

Maybe that’s the problem.

Tim has never forgotten you. Not once. And some treacherous part of you wonders if you ever really wanted him to.

You swallow, forcing your gaze away from Tim, staring instead at the fogging glass, your own reflection staring back at you—uncertain, flushed, caught somewhere between past and present.

You don’t know what this feeling is.

You just know it hasn’t gone away.

And maybe that’s because you never really knew it at all—never gave it a name, never looked it straight in the eye—especially not in that library parking lot not even five hours earlier when Lloyd ended things, headlights painting the asphalt gold and gray, cutting long slices of shadow between you. 

You’d walked him to his car like you always did, side by side, shoulders brushing ever so slightly, pretending the cold wasn’t gnawing through your coat.

You gave him a blow job in the back seat. Thinking back on it now, you cant really find it in yourself to regret it even if it ended in a break up, because imaging Lloyd as Tim in the moment was so fucking easy.

“Hey… look, you’re great and all, but—” Lloyd had said after, voice low and panting as his hand started fumbling at the back of his neck, eyes darting anywhere but yours, like he was afraid of seeing something permanent there. “I just think you like me a bit more than I like you and– fuck its making me feel so guilty that…its kind of hard to be around you.”

And he wasn’t wrong.

You had liked Lloyd. You liked that he could smile and make it feel ordinary, the sort of steady warmth that didn’t demand constant attention or complicate your life. You liked that he made it easy to exist without thinking twice, that holding his hand didn’t feel like carrying a secret you weren’t allowed to tell anyone. He was the right shape for comfort. A safe harbor in a city that preferred to chew up and spit out anything soft.

But every time he leaned close, every time his lips brushed yours, your mind betrayed you, sneaking past the warmth and settling on the memory of someone else.

You had always pretended it was Tim. Always.

Lloyd’s hands on your waist became Tim’s in your imagination—steady, careful, asking permission in the way only Tim ever had. Lloyd’s smile faded into the one Tim gave you when he was nervous, the way it crinkled his eyes and made his dimple appear like a secret he didn’t know you had already discovered. 

The warmth in Lloyd’s chest became the slow, even thrum of Tim’s heartbeat, the one you had memorized during years of side-by-side walks through rain-slicked Gotham streets. 

Every kiss, every casual touch, every laugh you gave Lloyd was quietly replaced in your head by a ghost that looked like a boy in black and red, hair curling into his forehead, sharp jawline cut just enough by shadows to make you think of nights spent leaning too close, breathing too fast, and wanting to memorize him in ways that felt too intimate to ever say aloud.

With Lloyd it felt like standing under a lamp-post in the rain that only warmed one shoulder. 

Comfortable. Enough. But never whole. 

Never the way Tim was whole, even when he was frustrating, even when he made you want to scream or run or hide.

Because Tim would always stand in the rain and hear you scream at him to come in the warmth too with a smile on his face.

Tim would never listen to you.

You never meant it to be cruel. You never wanted to betray the quiet warmth Lloyd offered. You told yourself it wasn’t fair to Lloyd. You tried—God, you tried—to be present, to let yourself fall for the person who waited in front of you instead of the one who had always haunted the shadows behind your eyes.

And yet, just hours ago, when Lloyd said it, naming the imbalance, the truth hit harder than the cold ever could.

You did like Lloyd more than Lloyd would ever love you.

Because even without him realizing it, all you saw was Tim.

Through tan skin, blonde hair, green eyes and freckles–you saw pale skin, dark hair, blue eyes and beauty marks.

Every small gift, you'd come home and set it besides the ones given to you by Tim.

For fucks sake you recommended Lloyd the same cologne Tim used.

You were disappointed when he tried the tester in the store and scrunched his nose, shaking his head with a soft and awkward smile.

Sitting in Tim’s car now, the heater blasting warmth that can’t chase away the memory of that parking lot, the streetlights reflecting off the damp asphalt like shattered glass, you see Tim in the glow of the Dairy Queen sign, all pale skin and dark lashes and eyes wide enough to swallow everything you think you’ve built. 

The blush creeping up his neck is more than color; it’s a reminder, sharp as a blade, of everything you’ve tried to forget.

You trace the curve of his jaw in your mind, remembering every late night, every quiet conversation, every time he had said nothing at all but made you feel known in a city that never wanted to know anyone. Every casual brush of fingers, every laugh, every way he moved—like he belonged in the same orbit you couldn’t leave—floods you now with all the things you’d denied yourself, all the longing you’d tried to disguise as ordinary life with someone else.

And Tim… Tim never stopped noticing. Never stopped caring. Never stopped being Tim.

And maybe that’s why your chest aches so much right now. Maybe that’s why the warmth in the car, the song low on the radio, the smell of him mixing with the faint hint of gasoline from your city outside, feels like a tether you can’t break.

You don’t know what this feeling is.

But you know one thing for certain.

It has always been him.

And you used to be furious about it. Angry in the way you only are when something is both inevitable and unfair, when it’s been carving into your chest for years and you’ve spent every ounce of energy pretending it wasn’t there. Now it feels… numb. 

Like touching a wound that never healed but also never bled, a dull ache that pulses quietly under the surface, paralyzed, anesthetized, but still very much alive.

Tim slides back into the car, shaking a light drizzle off his hair, the glow from the Dairy Queen sign painting him in gold and wet streaks. He’s smiling, that soft, crooked smile that used to make your chest flip entirely against your will. “Got us two Oreos,” he says, setting the cup holder between you, carefully balancing the blizzards against the gear shift before he locks the doors.

You remember your own words from earlier, muttering about Red Robin. 

“He looks like if an Oreo Blizzard was a person.”, you said.

Irony doesn’t even begin to cover it.

He hums as he adjusts the heater, flicking the vents toward you. “The cashier was just about to close up—we got really lucky, so—”

You shrug, eyes tracing over the familiar curve of his jaw and landing on the beauty mark you had drawn on Red Robin, the one just below his ear, just the right spot to catch a glimmer of light. “Probably because she thought you were cute,” you say casually, but your voice carries just enough weight to make him pause.

Tim freezes mid-zip, one hand suspended over his jacket like he’s been caught mid-breath. “Huh?”

“That’s why you were blushing, right?” You tilt your head, faintly amused, tracing the warmth spreading over his cheeks. “You’re still red. Come on, tell me—what pick-up line did she use on you, hmm?”

It’s a reflexive memory. The same teasing he used on you the first time you had dared talk openly about Lloyd in front of him, that sly tilt of his head, the curve of his mouth as he dug his nails into his palm, “What pick-up line did that Greek god use on you, hm?”

You watch him now, fingers tightening on his zipper, knuckles pale, jaw working as though he’s chewing over his words before they leave his lips. Tim’s never been good at casual lies. He’s too honest, too exact, too weighted by the things he feels.

“What—What are you talking about?” His voice comes out careful, slightly high, trying to steady, but it trembles anyway.

You blink, caught off guard by the genuine confusion in his expression. For a split second, the playful rhythm of your teasing falters. “It was a joke, Tim… relax.” You straighten in your seat, shoulders lifting, trying not to let the sting in your chest show. You lift a spoon of your blizzard to your lips, the cold a sharp contrast to the heat radiating from him, and the way he’s frozen there makes your stomach twist in ways that Lloyd never could.

The city hums quietly outside, Gotham rain tapping against the roof, a soft percussion to the pulse between you. Tim’s eyes flicker to yours, a mixture of something like guilt, embarrassment, and that all-too-familiar longing you can read in him like Braille. He’s close, too close, and every small movement—the way his hand hovers near the cup holder, the slight lean of his shoulder toward yours—pulls at old threads in your chest, tangling with feelings you thought you’d put away neatly in labeled boxes.

“…She wasn’t flirting with me.”

Tim says it like he’s placing something fragile on the dashboard between you, careful, deliberate. The sentence sits there for a second, humming with the low noise of the car, the heater, the city outside that never quite shuts up.

“She was teasing me to her co‑worker,” he continued after a beat, eyes fixed straight ahead, unfocused, like he’s watching something far past the windshield. “About being ‘another slave in the rain for their master.’ Some other guy was here ten minutes earlier rushing for his girlfriend.”

You pause with the spoon still in your mouth. An oreo crumb dissolving slow and sweet against your tongue, cold blooming where you don’t want it. You don’t swallow right away.

“What I was… blushing about,” Tim adds, quieter now, voice thinning, “was that I realized I’m worse than an actual slave.”

The Dairy Queen lights flicker once, then go dark, leaving the interior of the car wrapped in soft amber and streetlight glow. Outside, two girls laugh as they lock up, their footsteps crunching faintly on wet pavement as they head for the same car, shoulders bumping, warmth shared without thinking.

“I’m choosing to be here,” Tim says, jaw tightening, “after being thrown out of the palace.” His fingers curl tighter when he moves his hands to rest against the steering wheel. “How pathetic is that?”

The word lands heavy, not dramatic—just tired. Worn smooth by repetition.

You don’t answer right away. You wait until the girls’ car pulls out of the lot, headlights sweeping once across the windshield before disappearing into Gotham’s throat. Until it’s just the two of you again, sealed inside this small, warm pocket of light and breath and old habits.

Only then do you turn.

Tim’s cheek is pressed into his forearms now, those braced against the steering wheel like he’s holding himself upright by force alone. His lashes cast shadows against pale skin. His shoulders are drawn in, posture small in a way he only ever allowed around you.

+4 points to Tim Drake.

“…I always liked you pathetic,” you murmur finally, voice low, casual, like it doesn’t cost you anything to say. You scoop another bite of ice cream, deliberately unhurried. “You know that.”

Tim huffs a laugh before he can stop himself, the sound sharp and breathless, and he drops his face fully into his arms like he’s hiding from the relief of it. When he speaks again, his voice is muffled, thinner, pitched exactly where he knows it will make you soften.

“I was too scared to ask you,” he admits. “When you said you didn’t think I was good for you… did you honestly think that sounded like a breakup?”

Your spoon pauses halfway to your mouth.

“It wasn’t meant to be a breakup…exactly…I guess,” you say, quietly.

Tim scoffs, straightening just enough to rake a hand through his hair, frustration crackling under his skin like static. He shoves a too-large bite of ice cream into his mouth, jaw working like he’s punishing himself for it. “Yeah, you just went home and blocked me on Instagram.”

“Didn’t block your spam, though,” you shoot back automatically. You knew he'd just hack into your account if you did that.

He groans your name, long and exasperated, twisting in his seat until he’s facing you fully now. His knee bounces once before he stills it with his own hand. “What the hell did I do?” he asks, not accusing—just genuinely lost. “I—God, I know I fuck up more times than I’d like to admit, but we always talked through things. Always. I let it go because you seemed so sure it was what you wanted, but—”

He stops mid-sentence.

Because your hand moves.

Your fingers slide into his hair, cool and gentle, adjusting his damp bangs where they fall too low over his forehead. The contact is soft, familiar, devastating. Tim goes utterly still, breath hitching like you’ve pressed a switch inside him. His lashes flutter once, then lower, instincts winning out as he leans just slightly into your touch.

You feel the heat of him under your palm. Alive. Real.

“You always looked like Red Robin the most when your hair was like this,” you murmur, thumb brushing his temple. “I liked drawing you with wet hair. In suit or otherwise.”

Oh.

Fuck.

Tim’s eyes open slowly, tracking your face like he’s memorizing it all over again. He searches your expression, looking for a joke, a deflection, a safe place to land—and when he finds none, his gaze drifts anyway. Your nose. Your mouth. The familiar curve of your jaw. Your brows. Like this might be the last time he’s allowed to look this closely.

“…When did you find out?” he asks at last, voice barely there. “Is that why you broke up with me?”

The question isn’t sharp. It’s scared.

Were you afraid?

That someone would come for him?

For you?

Or that he didn’t trust you enough to tell you first?

“…Yeah.” The word is a whisper, a soft confession that hangs between you, stretching longer than it should. You let your hand shift from where it had rested in his hair, moving carefully to his cheek, tracing the line from jaw to temple with a gentle touch, almost reverent. 

It pains you to feel him flinch just slightly, a reflex, the tiniest hesitation to let you keep touching him, and it twists something raw in your chest.

“I… I was actually going to argue about you being late to our date,” you admit, voice shaking a little, caught between guilt and memory, “then I saw you with that bandage on your neck, after watching Red Robin get struck in the news. I’ve drawn you both before—no, I’ve drawn you a million times, with and without the mask but that… that was the first time I noticed the beauty mark was the same. Because you were hiding it, covering it with a bandage.”

Your thumb brushes over his skin again, the motion gentle, unconscious, like you’re trying to soothe the memory away, like the touch can erase the hours of fear and worry that was tucked into your chest. Tim flinches again, but this time doesn’t pull away; instead, his hand rises to press yours against his cheek, anchoring you there as though letting go would mean you leaving for good.

“Do you know… do you know how scared I was?” you whisper, voice tight, breath catching. “How horrible it felt, knowing I was making you run from one end of Gotham to the other, after getting struck by a sword… all for a stupid coffee date?”

The car is still except for the low hum of the heater and the rhythmic tick of rain against the windshield, and for a moment, it’s just the two of you. The city has receded, the distant rumble of traffic and sirens muted, as though Gotham itself is leaning away, giving you this small, private corner in the chaos. Tim presses his cheek more firmly into your hand, and you feel the subtle warmth of him there, the heat of his skin against yours, grounding you in the moment.

“You didn’t make me do anything, I—” His words falter, swallowed in the space between heartbeats.

“Tim,” you interrupt, firm, the edge of your voice tempered with care, “you were going to kill yourself doing that. Being Red Robin, working at Wayne Enterprises, keeping your grades decent enough for this semester—how could I ask for more than that?”

Your words float in the car like smoke, curling around both of you, and Tim’s shoulders slump slightly, tension leaking out as he exhales harshly through his nose.

“How dare you not?” he hisses, voice low and almost desperate, but the words tremble. “How could you make that choice for me?”

“I wasn’t making the choice for you,” you murmur, softening, pulling your hand slightly away—but not fully, keeping it hovering over his cheek, tethering him to you. “I was making the choice for me. I didn’t want to feel guilty for using your time. I was being selfish… I am selfish, and I—”

“You don’t have to feel guilty,” he whispers, cutting through the quiet like a knife, but the tremor in his voice betrays him.

“Well I did.” You let it slip past your lips, a quiet affirmation, almost too soft for the sound to travel over the heater hum and the patter of rain.

Tim bites the inside of his cheek, tilting his head just enough to avoid your gaze while trying to form a coherent thought, a shield against the storm of everything you’ve just said. His eyes, those blue storms, flicker briefly to yours before darting to the dash, the blurred neon outside reflecting like water on glass. Your chest tightens, because even in his attempt to hide it, you see him unravel, every careful layer of control peeling back with each blink.

“I couldn’t handle you,” you mumble, the words slipping out quieter than you mean them to, like they’re embarrassed to exist at all. You’ve never said it out loud before. Never shaped it into something real enough to hear yourself. “I couldn’t give you—”

“All I’m hearing,” Tim cuts in briskly, too fast, too sharp, “is that you loved me too much and your little head hurt at the thought of it.”

He rolls the window down, cold air rushing in, carrying the smell of rain and wet asphalt, and with a flick of his wrist he tosses his Blizzard toward the far trash can. It arcs clean and perfect through the air, lands dead center with a hollow plastic thunk.

A perfect trick shot.

Any other night, any other version of you, you would’ve rolled your eyes and muttered, show off, just to watch him preen about it later.

Tonight, your chest feels too tight for sarcasm.

“You’re hearing what you want to hear,” you say instead, flat, defensive, staring down at your melting ice cream like it might offer backup.

“You’re saying what I want to hear,” he replies, softer now, turning fully toward you. He shifts in his seat, shoulder angling perpendicular to the driver’s side, body open in a way that makes your stomach flip unpleasantly. His knee bumps the center console. He’s too close again. He’s always been too close.

You don’t respond. You just huff quietly and scoop up another bite of your Blizzard, chewing slower than necessary, dragging the moment out. It makes him smile—small, crooked, fond, like he’s catching a glimpse of something familiar and precious that he thought he’d lost.

“God,” Tim murmurs under his breath, not quite looking at you, not quite not. “How does he stand you being so in love with me?”

The words land heavy and wrong and accurate all at once.

Your entire body freezes.

It’s like being flash-frozen mid-thought, like your blood turns to slush in your veins, like you might shatter if you move too fast. Mr. Freeze would be proud. You feel brittle. Exposed. Seen in a way you’ve spent months pretending wasn’t possible.

“…He doesn’t,” you mumble finally, voice barely holding together. There’s no point lying. You know Tim—he’d peel it apart eventually. “He broke up with me.”

Tim blinks.

Then he straightens abruptly, posture snapping upright like you’ve yanked a wire inside him. His face scrunches with confusion, eyes scanning yours like he’s waiting for the punchline, the laugh track, the gotcha moment.

“Huh—wait, what?”

“Lloyd broke up with me,” you repeat, quieter. “In the parking lot.”

Tim actually gapes at you.

His mouth opens, then closes, then opens again, like the words keep slipping past whatever part of him is supposed to process reality. Under different circumstances, you might’ve laughed. Might’ve cataloged it as another fond memory. Instead, your brain chants relentlessly:

Stay mad at him. Remember the guilt. Don’t forget why this hurts.

“He broke up with you?” Tim repeats, disbelief thick in his voice.

“Mhm.”

His hands lift helplessly, gesturing vaguely at you—your coat, your hair, your existence. “Why?”

“I don’t know,” you say too quickly, the lie sliding out smoother than the truth ever could. “Maybe the blow job I gave him in the parking lot was ass.”

Tim freezes.

Completely. Like the sentence unplugged him.

For half a second, you consider backtracking, rolling your eyes, adding it’s a joke, Tim, relax, but you don’t get the chance. He’s already lunging for the window controls, shoving the glass down with frantic urgency before leaning out and promptly throwing up into the rain.

The car fills with the sound of retching, the cold air rushing in, the absurdity of it all crashing over you in waves.

You stare ahead, spoon suspended halfway to your mouth, wondering distantly how the hell the universe keeps finding new, deeply stupid ways to prove what you already know.

That it has always been him.

And that loving him has never been simple, or clean, or survivable without a little collateral damage.

Once your brain finally catches up, you move instinctively, slamming the empty Blizzard cup back into the holder with a clatter that echoes in the quiet car. Your hands reach for him, hesitating only a second before gathering the wet, dark strands of hair away from his face, bunching them carefully in your fingers.

“TIM—Hey—” you whisper, voice tight, low, unsure.

He just retches harder. His body shudders violently, leaning against your hand, the heat of him radiating through the sleeves of your coat. The smell of rain-soaked hair and ice cream fills the small space, cloying and intimate, and for a moment you can’t breathe around it. Your hands stay there, cradling the damp strands, unsure if you’re holding him back or holding yourself together.

You rub his back in slow, tentative circles, trying to anchor him, trying to be the thing that doesn’t move when everything inside you feels like it’s breaking. His shoulders tremble, and the quiet rattling of his breath mixes with the sound of the heater and the faint hum of the idling engine. The world outside the car blurs into wet, dark shapes and flickering streetlights.

After what feels like a lifetime, he pauses, shivering and slumped over, and then leans forward against the steering wheel with a deep, ragged heave. You kneel slightly on the seat to press a hand to his shoulder, letting your thumb brush the tense muscles under his jacket, feeling the rapid rise and fall of his back.

“Hey,” you murmur again, softer this time, leaning your forehead briefly against his shoulder. You don’t know what else to say—there’s no script for this moment, no words that could make it less raw, less humiliating, less…human. All you can do is be present, your hands stubbornly refusing to leave him, letting the warmth of your body tether him just slightly to reality.

He heaves again, slower this time, chest shaking against the wheel, and finally slumps fully against it. His wet bangs stick to his forehead, and you brush them gently aside, letting your fingers linger there. The storm of the city presses against the windows, but inside the car, with the heater warming your legs and the smell of ice cream and rain, the world narrows to him—this broken, beautiful, utterly human version of Tim Drake—and the ache of wanting to fix him when there’s nothing to fix but his own exhaustion and embarrassment.

You whisper his name again, almost a prayer, almost a curse.

His head lifts from the steering wheel, dark hair plastered to his forehead, eyelashes wet and trembling, and for a moment his brain seems to catch up to the situation. “He breaks up with you after the blow job? What a fucking douchebag.”

Of course he’d always defend you, even if the rest of the world couldn’t be bothered. Even if he has no context. 

“He didn’t like it, I guess,” you mumble, heat crawling up your neck like slow flames, your ears burning in the dim orange glow of the Dairy Queen lights outside.

“Babe, don’t fucking play with me—your mouth is fucking—” Tim begins, voice low and strangled, before you cut him off by shoving a spoonful of Oreo Blizzard into his mouth.

“Does that get rid of the throw-up taste?” you murmur, squeezing your eyes shut as if the act could erase the memory of his words entirely.

He chews and swallows, still pulling back from the spoon, face scrunching. “I’m going to fucking kill him. I swear on Batman’s life you hear me—I—”

“He didn’t like that I was… too into it,” you whisper, embarrassment curling in your chest like smoke. Even if no one else could hear, Tim could. Oh, Tim could.

“Okay—what?” he stammers, eyes widening in disbelief as a faint greenish flush creeps across his pale cheeks. A wave of nausea flickers across his expression, sharp and threatening, and your heart lurches. 

Gods, he’s going to throw up again.

“Wait! Wait!” you exclaim, hands flying up defensively, waving like flags, as your voice cracks from both embarrassment and fear, “I was pretending he was you—so it wasn’t that hard, Tim—”

“Our dicks are the same size?!” Tim yells, scandalized in a way that makes your stomach do somersaults, your cheeks warming hotter than the car seat heater under your thighs. “I’M NOT BIGGER?”

You blink at him, dumbstruck, voice caught somewhere between mortification and awe. “Uh… sorry?”

He groans into his hands, still slouched against the wheel, hair wet and clinging to his temples. “I owe Stephanie four hundred bucks,” he mutters, like that explains everything.

Then, delirious, still tasting the faint bite of ice cream and bile, he flicks a glance at you, eyes wide, incredulous. “Did you… look for a guy with the same… on purpose?”

You stare at him, tilting your head slightly in the low, warm light of the Dairy Queen, the heater humming between you like it’s holding the moment hostage. “I went for a tan man with blonde hair,” you murmur, voice low and sharp, like a whip against his disbelief. “I want you to use your fucking brain and re-think that question and if you think Im that shallow.”

Tim opens his mouth, shuts it, opens it again. The pale skin of his cheeks blooms pink, almost purple under the harsh fluorescent lights that slice through the car like guilty spotlights. You always had a way of making him look like a kid caught with his hand in a jar of Bat-snacks.

“Gods, you—” he starts, voice rising like a fragile dam on the verge of bursting, “you always pull shit like this to throw me off—so… what, you were okay with him since he had free time?”

You blink at him, unsure if you should laugh or huff, but then you murmur, “…Don’t word it like that.”

“I am!” he hisses, sharp and fragile all at once, his fingers twisting into his dark hair as if he can physically pull the frustration out. “God… was this not hard for you like it was for me? Being away from me? Do you know how much I missed you? I—” He pauses, jaw tightening, eyes flashing with something raw and desperate. “I sold out your fucking perfume, you know that? Bought forty bottles. I've gone through four in the past three weeks.”

You freeze, blink once, and feel your stomach twist with a strange, bittersweet mix of guilt and something almost like pride. Oh. That’s why your niche fragrance—the one you've had for years—was suddenly impossible to find, why you’d been clutching the last few sprays like they were oxygen. You’d thought it was coincidence, scarcity, Gotham nonsense. But no. He’d bought it all.

Your chest tightens. The heater hums low, the soft buzz filling the car like it’s conspiring to keep you trapped in this too-close, too-small world. Tim’s cologne fills your nerves as he shifts forward. You can smell him—aftershave faint under his natural scent, a mix of charcoal and night air, sweat from nerves and embarrassment.

Your hand twitches, wanting to reach out, to smooth the tension from his shoulder or his hair, to do something that doesn’t require words. But you stop, fingers frozen in midair, because every movement feels too loud in the shared quiet, too intimate.

Tim swallows, lips pressing into a thin line as his chest rises in a slow, uneven rhythm. “You… you really didn’t… think about me, did you?” he murmurs finally, not a question, more a plea. His voice is low, rough, weighted with longing and frustration and that thing he never lets anyone see—the part of him that’s still a kid in the backseat of life, afraid he’ll never measure up, afraid he’s too much or not enough.

“I thought of you too much,” you murmur, voice low, almost lost in the hum of the car heater and the faint pitter-patter of rain against the windshield. “That was the problem. That’s why I broke up with you. That’s why… you’re not good for me.”

Tim groans, face pressing into the steering wheel as if the leather can absorb all the chaos between you. “Hey, babe… I think you need to see a fucking therapist,” he mutters, voice muffled, defeated, but still sharp enough to make you blink.

“You first,” you hiss back, crossing your arms, heat creeping up your neck, heart hammering too fast.

Tim scoffs, finally lifting his head just enough to reveal his dark eyes, pale skin flushed pink from both embarrassment and the heater’s warmth. Then, almost casually, he reaches into the back seat, where a brown grocery bag rests behind the passenger seat, and pulls out a tube of toothpaste and a toothbrush.

You blink at him, unsure if you’re seeing things. “That… that’s the brand I use,” you say slowly, voice cracking slightly between disbelief and awe.

“I know,” he says, voice quiet but firm, almost a whisper of obsession, a breath of intent you can feel pressing against your skin. “Bought your whole hygiene routine before I came to the library. It's coming in useful more quickly than I thought it would.”

You stare at him, mouth slightly open, unable to process the layers of thought, care, and absolute chaos wrapped up in his words. He pops open the toothbrush like it’s nothing, casual and deliberate, but your brain freezes on the fact that he—down to the exact shade of pastel pink on the bristles—bought the same one you use.

“Your… you’re actually crazy,” you whisper, awe and incredulity warring in your tone, your fingers brushing against your lips as if touching them would anchor you back to reality.

Tim twists in his seat just enough to lean toward the open window, toothbrush already in his mouth like this is the most normal thing in the world. The rain has slowed to a fine mist, the kind that hangs in the air instead of falling, and the parking lot is empty enough that Gotham feels briefly abandoned—like the city has stepped away to give you privacy it never usually allows.

You watch his jaw move as he brushes, quick and methodical, too hard the way he does everything when he’s trying not to think. His shoulders are tense, drawn up near his ears, black hair still damp and curling at the ends where your fingers were not that long ago. Pale knuckles grip the steering wheel when his free hand comes back to steady himself, and you can tell he’s grounding himself in motion because stopping would mean feeling.

It’s hard not to stare, even if he's doing something like brushing.

It’s harder not to ache.

Because the whole time he’s brushing his teeth out the driver’s side window of his car like some feral raccoon, all you can think about is how familiar this is—how many versions of this exact moment live in your head. Tim brushing his teeth at your sink at two in the morning. Tim rinsing his mouth and leaning over to steal a kiss that tastes like mint and coffee and him. Tim doing mundane things in your orbit like that’s where he’s always belonged.

You dig your nails lightly into your palm, trying to stay present, trying not to drown in the weight of what you lost and what you never really let yourself keep.

He spits out the window, sharp and practiced, then reaches for a water bottle from the cup holder, cracking the seal with his teeth. The sound is loud in the quiet car. He takes a mouthful, tips his head back, throat working as he gargles, eyes screwed shut like he’s holding something back that isn’t just nausea.

Your chest tightens.

Because this—this is the part you never knew how to explain to him. How loving Tim was never about grand gestures or dramatic heartbreak. It was this constant, low-level strain of being too aware of him. Of every breath he took, every sacrifice he made without complaint. Knowing that every small ask from you was another weight on an already overloaded system.

He spits again, wipes his mouth with the back of his hand, then closes the window, caps the bottle and exhales slowly, shoulders finally dropping an inch.

You realize you’ve been holding your breath.

It was hard the whole time, you think—not just now, not just after you found out. It was hard when he showed up tired but smiling. Hard when he apologized for things that weren’t his fault. Hard when he tried to be everything, all at once, and still looked at you like you were the one thing he couldn’t afford to lose.

Loving Tim felt like standing too close to a live wire—warm, electric, intoxicating—and knowing that one wrong move could burn you both.

Tim leans back into his seat, blinking a few times, eyes glassy but focused now. He sets the toothbrush aside into the grocery bag, hands lingering there for a second longer than necessary, like he’s stalling.

You don’t say anything.

Because if you do, you might admit that even now—after watching  him spit toothpaste into the Gotham night, watching him exist inches from you—you still want to choose him.

And you’re terrified of what that says about you.

“…I’ll be whatever you want me to be,” Tim says quietly, the words slipping out like a confession he’s been holding between his teeth all night. His voice is rough around the edges now, scraped thin. “Gods—I just can’t do friends.”

The car feels smaller suddenly. Too warm. Too close. You look at him and it’s unbearable how much of him there is to look at—his eyes still glassy from nausea and something worse, his lips a little pinker than usual, lashes clumped just slightly from rain. All the familiar details stack up in your chest until it aches.

“You…” You swallow. “I can’t ask you to be what I want.” The truth presses at you from all sides, heavy and immovable. “I wanted you to be my… everything. You know how selfish that sounds? You can’t handle that.”

“You don’t get to decide that,” Tim says immediately.

There it is. That stubborn, immovable core of him. The part that never learned how to back down when something mattered to him.

“I do,” you huff, a small, tired smile tugging at your mouth despite yourself, because he’s still the same—still arguing even while he’s trying to give you everything. “I want you by my side twenty-four seven. I want you to only think about me. I want you to not even look at anyone else.” You let out a breath that’s half laugh, half plea. “Don’t you hear how crazy I sound?”

Tim hears it. He hears all of it.

And instead of recoiling, a slow smile starts to bloom on his face, soft and reverent, like he’s just been handed something holy. He shifts fully toward you, body turning perpendicular in the driver’s seat, cheek pressing into the cushion as if he wants to stay right here forever. His eyes don’t leave your face.

“Gods, I love you,” he murmurs. “They sent you just for me, huh?”

“You’re insane,” you hiss, heat flooding you all at once, down your spine and into your fingertips, because it’s been so long since he’s said that word like it means salvation instead of danger.

“You’re perfect,” Tim says, voice dropping, gentler now. “You’re too in love with me to see how fucking crazy I am too. Wow—you’re perfect.”

Your breath catches. You look back at him and watch the way his pupils widen just a fraction, the way his gaze drags over you like he’s memorizing something he’s afraid he’ll lose again. When he speaks, it’s quieter than it’s been all night, stripped of humor, stripped of bravado.

“I know I’m not good for you,” he says. “I want you to choose me anyway.”

Your mouth opens.

Closes.

Opens again.

“I—I can’t,” you say, the words barely holding together. Saying them feels like pressing on a bruise you’ve been protecting for months.

“You have,” Tim answers, gently now. Not accusing. Just certain.

“I don’t want to,” you whisper.

“You have,” he repeats, softer still, like he’s not trying to convince you—like he’s just stating a fact you’ve both been circling all night.

The car hums around you, engine ticking as it cools, heater blowing steadily, Gotham quiet outside in a way it rarely is. Two people alone in a parked car, suspended in a moment that feels less like a choice and more like gravity.

And the worst part is—you don’t know when you started leaning toward him.

The space between you collapses quietly.

Not all at once—no rush, no collision—but the slow, inevitable pull of two people who have already crossed this line a hundred times in their heads. Tim leans in first, tentative in a way that feels almost reverent, like he’s afraid sudden movement might break the moment. His hand comes up, hovering near your jaw, hesitating there like he’s still giving you time to pull away.

You don’t.

When his thumb finally brushes your cheek, it’s barely there, a test more than a touch. Warm. Steady. Real. The contact sends something sharp and familiar through your chest, and before you can talk yourself out of it, you tilt your head up just enough for him to close the last inch.

The press is soft at first. Careful. Like he’s relearning you.

Tim’s lips press to yours with a gentleness that hurts, the kind that carries memory with it—every late night, every almost, every time he wanted this and didn’t let himself reach for it.

You feel him exhale against you, shaky and quiet, like he’s been holding that breath for months.

He has.

Then you kiss him back.

And that’s all it takes.

The sound he makes is small and involuntary, a broken little breath that slips out as his hand cups your face properly now, thumb resting under your cheekbone like it belongs there. The kiss deepens, still unhurried but surer, his mouth moving against yours like he’s afraid to stop once he’s started.

Your fingers find his jacket without thinking, bunching the fabric at his chest. He leans into it immediately, body turning further toward you, shoulder pressing into the seat. The world outside the windows fades—the rain, the parking lot, Gotham holding its breath—until there’s only warmth and the quiet rhythm of two people breathing each other in.

Tim kisses you like he’s been missing you.

Like he never stopped.

When he finally pulls back, it’s just enough for his forehead to rest against yours, noses brushing, breaths mingling. His eyes stay closed for a second longer, lashes casting shadows on his cheeks, like he’s grounding himself in the fact that this is happening.

It doesn’t stay gentle for long.

Something gives the moment you press back into him, and Tim reacts like he’s been waiting for permission. His hand slides from your cheek to the back of your neck, fingers firm now, anchoring you there as his mouth finds yours again with more intent. The kiss deepens, unhurried but hungry, like he’s making up for every second he forced himself to keep his distance.

His lips move against yours with purpose this time—still careful, still restrained, but undeniably heated. You feel it in the way his grip tightens just slightly, thumb pressing into your pulse point as if to reassure himself that you’re still here, that you haven’t disappeared again.

You shift closer without realizing it, knees on the center console, moving as careful as you can be. Tim follows the movement instinctively, body leaning back further, shoulder braced against the seat as he leans back for you. The kiss grows warmer, breaths breaking between touches, foreheads brushing when you part for half a second before coming back together again.

Tim freezes for half a heartbeat when his arm hooks under your thighs and lifts you, like even that small escalation startles him. Then instinct takes over. He settles you onto his lap carefully, one hand steady at your hip, the other still at your neck, holding you like something precious he’s afraid to drop.

Your teeth catch his bottom lip—soft, tentative, almost reverent—and the sound he makes is wrecked. A low groan that vibrates into your mouth, more feeling than noise. It’s enough to make your pulse spike, enough to make your hands curl into his jacket like you need something solid to stay upright.

He responds without thinking, mouth tilting, pressure increasing just enough to mirror you. When his teeth catch your lip back, it’s not cruel—but it’s real. Sharp enough to make you gasp, sharp enough that there’s a brief, metallic tang between you. Copper and heat and something dangerously close to relief.

He pulls back immediately, forehead dropping to yours, breath uneven. One hand tightens at your waist, not to pull you closer, but to keep you there. To stop himself from doing more.

“Hey,” Tim murmurs, not a warning—more like a check-in, like he’s grounding both of you at once.

Your noses brush when you breathe. Your hands are still fisted in his jacket. His thumb traces a slow, soothing line along your side, undoing the bite even as his eyes stay locked on your mouth like it’s gravity itself.

The kiss that follows is slower, deeper, restrained by sheer force of will. All warmth and pressure and promise, none of it rushing anywhere. Your knees are tangled, hearts loud enough to drown out the city—both of you painfully aware that this could tip into something unstoppable if either of you lets go.

And neither of you does.

The realization makes his restraint crack—it doesn't shatter, but splinters.

Tim’s hand tightens at your waist, fingers digging in like he needs the pressure to stay present, to keep from tipping completely. The next kiss turns rougher in rhythm rather than content—more insistence, more heat. He kisses you like he’s been starving politely and just lost his manners. No finesse now, just want, mouth pressing harder, chasing yours when you try to pull back for air.

Your hands slide up into his hair, tugging without thinking, and the sound he makes is sharp—half breath, half warning. His grip shifts, one arm bracing you fully against him now, anchoring you there like he’s afraid you’ll disappear if he loosens even a little.

Tim kisses you again, deeper, teeth catching your lip—not enough to hurt this time, but enough to remind you he could. Enough to make your stomach flip and a whine leave your mouth. His breathing is uneven against you, chest rising fast beneath you, heart thudding like it’s trying to escape.

For a moment it’s messy—foreheads knocking, breaths stealing, the car creaking faintly as he adjusts the driver's seat. His thumb presses into your hip, grounding, claiming, stopping himself.

Then he breaks the kiss abruptly, breath ragged, forehead dropping to your shoulder.

“Fuck,” he exhales, voice wrecked, like the word is torn out of him. His grip doesn’t loosen. If anything, he holds you tighter, hands moving to work the buttons of your coat open.

You can feel it in the way he’s shaking—not with fear. With effort.

The kind it takes to stop.

Tim’s breath keeps stuttering against your neck, the kind that can’t decide if it wants to steady or fall apart completely. He doesn’t let go. Instead, he shifts, pressing you more securely against him, like gravity itself is insisting you stay right there. The car feels too small for the way everything in him is brimming over—fogged windows, the low hum of the engine still warm beneath you, the rain ticking faintly outside like it’s counting time neither of you are keeping.

Tim leans back in, slower this time but heavier, like the weight of it finally landed. His mouth finds your neck, not frantic now but insistent, deliberate. Every kiss feels like a choice he’s making again and again. His hands stay where they are—one firm at your waist, one steady at your hip—like he’s drawing hard lines around what he won’t cross, even as everything else tilts.

You feel the tension in him through every point of contact. The way his shoulders stay tight. The way Tim’s jaw clenches when you press closer on him. When your fingers curl into the fabric of his jacket, he lets out a sound that’s barely there, swallowed before it can become anything dangerous.

Tim breaks a kiss on your collarbone, moving to rest his forehead resting against yours now. His nose brushes your cheek when he exhales, warm and shaky. You can feel his pulse under your hands, fast and unguarded, like he forgot how to hide it with you.

For a second, neither of you moves.

It’s not restraint born of distance—it’s restraint born of knowing exactly how badly this could spiral if either of you gave an inch more. His thumb presses once at your side, grounding, almost apologetic.

Then he pulls you into one last kiss, slower, deeper, less rough but heavier in meaning—like punctuation instead of a sentence. When he finally lets you go, it’s only by a breath, hands still bracketing you, eyes dark and searching, like he’s memorizing the moment in case it’s taken from him again.

He doesn’t say anything.

He doesn’t have to.

The silence between you is loud with everything you both know now.

“Get in the back.” Tim mumbles, “Mm…gonna give you head.”

You chuckle at that, running a hand through his hair just to watch the way goosebumps form on his neck, feel the way his breath stutters against your lips, “Gonna give your girlfriend head?”

“Yeah.” Tim mumbles against your skin, “Mm…my girlfriend.”

For once in this past year–you're exactly where you want to be. And you don't think Tim’s ever going to let you leave again.

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author is too tired to add the tag-list rn I'ma do it tmrw. tagging my fav Tim Drake stan tho: @moonologyy

pomegranatelifethis
pomegranatelifethis

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Ĩ̴̗͖͇͛͒͐̆ J̵̯̝̬͔́͋̊u҉̩̝̫̳̞̈̀̔s҉̖͕̩̬͌͐̓̾̚t̵̬̟̱͖͓̄̍̊̆̇ W҉̭͚͍̆́a̴͚͎̓̽̿͊̏n̵̝̰̭̈́͛̆̂t̵̳̯͔́͊é̵͕͔̲̟̄d҉̗͔̠̟̪͗̃̉̌̀ Ỳ̸̠͇̩̰̱̏͋o҈̭͓̉͛͊̿u̵͓͕̽͗,̴̖̰͎̀̀ D҉̫̪̞͉͙̂̉̀̆ä̵̘͚̟́̉̿d̸̰̝̣̽̈͂̎́-̶̯͓͕̥̄̃͐͂̀-̸̝̰̦͉̾̓

The thing about living in Wayne Manor was that you could go days without seeing another living soul, even though the house was never truly empty.

You discovered this particular brand of loneliness at age seven, when you'd spent an entire Saturday wandering the east wing's portrait gallery, counting the stern-faced Waynes who'd come before you. Forty-three paintings in total. Forty-three dead relatives who seemed more present than your own father.

Now, at sixteen, you'd perfected the art of existing in the negative spaces of Bruce Wayne's life.

The morning sun filtered through your bedroom's floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long golden rectangles across the Persian rug. Your alarm had been screaming for the past fifteen minutes—a shrill, insistent thing that barely penetrated the warm cocoon of your covers. Sleep clung to you like honey, sweet and thick, pulling you back down even as your conscious mind clawed toward wakefulness.

"Miss," Alfred's voice carried from the hallway, accompanied by a gentle knock. "It's half past seven. You'll be late for school again."

You buried your face deeper into the pillow, mumbling something that might have been agreement or protest—even you weren't sure which. The door opened with its familiar whisper of well-oiled hinges, and you felt rather than saw Alfred enter, his presence as comforting and reliable as sunrise.

"Third time this week," he observed mildly, setting down what smelled like Earl Grey on your nightstand. "At this rate, Principal Jameson will have my phone number memorized."

"Mmph," you eloquently replied.

"I've laid out your uniform. The blue cardigan, I think—it's going to be brisk today." A pause. "Your father asked me to remind you about the charity gala next Saturday. He'll need you in attendance."

That got your eyes open. You rolled over, blinking against the light, your dark hair a tangled mess across the pillow. Alfred stood by your window, impeccably dressed as always in his pressed suit, his expression carrying that particular blend of affection and exasperation he reserved exclusively for you.

"Asked you to remind me," you repeated, voice still rough with sleep. "Not asked me himself."

Alfred's mouth tightened almost imperceptibly. "He's been very busy with—"

"Wayne Enterprises. I know." You sat up, pulling your knees to your chest. The oversized t-shirt you slept in—stolen from the donation pile years ago, originally belonging to some nameless person—hung off one shoulder. "He's always busy with Wayne Enterprises."

This was an old dance between you, this careful navigation around Bruce Wayne's absence. Alfred was too loyal to criticize his employer, and you were too tired to push. Instead, you reached for the tea, letting its warmth seep into your palms.

"He does try, you know," Alfred said quietly.

You didn't answer. Trying, in Bruce Wayne's world, meant a new laptop appearing on your desk when your old one slowed down. It meant a blank check for prom dresses you'd never been excited enough about school dances to buy. It meant Alfred driving you everywhere because your father was too busy to teach you how to drive himself, and now at sixteen, you still didn't have your license because the thought of asking strangers to teach you something so fundamental felt like admitting a defeat you weren't ready to face.

Trying didn't mean showing up to parent-teacher conferences. It didn't mean family dinners or asking about your day. It definitely didn't mean noticing when you stopped coming home right after school, instead spending hours at the Gotham City Library, curled in the third-floor window seat where no one ever bothered you, reading novels about families who actually liked each other.

"I'll get dressed," you said, swinging your legs out of bed. Your feet hit the cold floor, and you suppressed a shiver. "Tell him I'll be at the gala. Wouldn't want to disappoint the cameras."

Alfred's expression softened into something that looked dangerously close to pity, which you hated more than almost anything. You were Bruce Wayne's daughter—people weren't supposed to feel sorry for you. You lived in a mansion. You wore designer clothes (when Alfred insisted). You'd never worried about money or food or safety.

You had everything except the one thing you'd wanted since you were old enough to understand what other children had that you didn't.

"He does love you," Alfred said, and this was his own particular dance, his way of building bridges across chasms he hadn't created. "He simply doesn't know how to show it."

You smiled, the expression feeling tired on your face. "I know, Alfred."

But knowing and feeling were different countries, separated by an ocean you didn't know how to cross.

Gotham Academy perched on the city's edge like a castle from a gothic novel, all stone architecture and ivy-covered walls. It was the kind of school where senators' children rubbed shoulders with old money heirs, where everyone's last name carried weight and history. You'd been attending since kindergarten, and you still felt like a visitor.

The bell for first period had already rung by the time Alfred pulled the Bentley up to the entrance. A few stragglers were hurrying up the steps, and you could see Mr. Patterson, the vice principal, standing at the door with his clipboard, marking down names with the grim satisfaction of someone who enjoyed catching students in minor infractions.

"Have a good day, Miss," Alfred said as you gathered your bag. "Try to stay awake during lessons, hmm?"

You shot him a look that was half-smile, half-grimace. "No promises."

The day unfolded with the predictable monotony of all your days. AP Literature first period, where Mrs. Chen was dissecting "The Great Gatsby" with the kind of enthusiasm you couldn't muster for anything before noon. You'd read it twice already—once for class, once because you'd been trying to understand what Fitzgerald meant about the past repeating itself, whether we were all just boats beating against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the patterns that shaped us.

You thought maybe you understood it better than you wanted to.

Your desk was by the window, third row back, and you spent most of the class period with your cheek pressed against your palm, watching the clouds drift across Gotham's perpetually grey sky. The city sprawled below the hill, all Gothic spires and steel, beautiful and terrible in equal measure. Somewhere down there, your father was probably in a meeting, making decisions that affected thousands of people, wielding influence and power that you could barely comprehend.

He just couldn't seem to spare any of it for you.

"Miss Wayne?"

You jerked upright, blinking rapidly. Mrs. Chen was looking at you with raised eyebrows, and you could feel the weight of your classmates' attention shifting your direction. Some looked amused, others sympathetic. Madison Carver, daughter of the district attorney, was whispering something to her neighbor behind her hand.

"Sorry," you mumbled. "Could you repeat the question?"

Mrs. Chen's expression softened slightly. She liked you, you thought, in the way teachers liked quiet students who didn't cause trouble even if they didn't exactly excel. "I asked what you thought Fitzgerald was saying about the American Dream through Gatsby's tragedy."

You scrambled for an answer, pulling fragments of analysis from the depths of your memory. "That... it's always just out of reach? That we think if we just achieve enough, acquire enough, we'll finally be worthy of love, but the premise is flawed. Because love—real love—isn't something you can earn. It's something freely given, or it's not love at all."

The classroom was quiet for a moment. Mrs. Chen's expression had shifted into something contemplative, almost concerned. "That's a rather cynical reading for someone your age."

You shrugged, sinking back into your seat. "Maybe Gatsby was cynical."

"Or maybe he was hopeful," Mrs. Chen countered gently. "He believed, even when belief was irrational. There's something almost noble in that."

You didn't answer, turning back to the window. Hope felt like a luxury you'd used up years ago, back when you still waited by the door on your birthdays, thinking this year would be different. This year, he'd remember. This year, he'd show up.

The rest of the morning passed in a blur of lectures and note-taking that you'd probably never review. By lunch, you'd perfected your usual routine: grab something light from the cafeteria, find an empty classroom or corner of the library, avoid the social dynamics of the lunch room where everyone seemed to know exactly where they belonged.

You ended up in the library's third floor, your favorite spot by the tall arched window that overlooked the grounds. The window seat was deep enough to curl up in, worn leather cushions conforming to your body as you settled in with a yogurt and a book you'd already read three times—a fantasy novel about a girl who discovered she was secretly a princess, loved and wanted and important.

Escapism at its finest.

"Skipping lunch social hour again?"

You looked up to find Ryan Martinez, one of the few people at Gotham Academy you considered something like a friend, leaning against the nearest bookshelf. He was tall and lanky, with dark curly hair that never quite obeyed styling products, and the kind of easy smile that suggested he'd never spent a day worrying about whether people liked him.

"You say that like the lunch room isn't a circle of hell," you replied, marking your page.

"Fair." He slid down to sit against the bookshelf, long legs stretching out in front of him. "But you could sit with us sometimes. Jeremy and Kate were asking about you yesterday."

Jeremy and Kate were Ryan's friends—nice enough people who'd been kind to you on the occasions you'd been forced into group projects together. They occupied that middle tier of the social hierarchy: not quite popular enough to be with the Madisons and Braydens of the world, but confident and connected enough to navigate the cafeteria without anxiety.

"Tell them I said hi," you said, which was neither acceptance nor rejection.

Ryan studied you for a moment with those dark, thoughtful eyes. You'd known him since freshman year, when you'd been paired together for a biology project and discovered you both had a tendency to overthink things and a shared love of science fiction novels. He was one of the few people who didn't treat you differently because of your last name, though whether that was because he was genuinely indifferent to wealth or just exceptionally good-natured, you'd never quite determined.

"You okay?" he asked. "You seem more... distant than usual. If that's possible."

"I'm fine," you said automatically. Then, because Ryan had never done anything to deserve your reflexive deflection: "Just tired. I didn't sleep well."

"Again?"

You shrugged. The insomnia had been getting worse lately, your mind refusing to quiet even when your body was exhausted. You'd lie awake in your enormous bedroom, listening to the manor settle around you, wondering if your father was home yet or still out doing... whatever it was he did that kept him gone until all hours.

Wayne Enterprises business didn't usually require someone to stumble home at four in the morning, smelling like rain and something else you could never quite identify. You'd noticed that pattern years ago, had tried to stay awake to catch him, to maybe have a conversation in those quiet early hours when the rest of the world was asleep.

But he'd been so cold the one time you'd succeeded, finding you curled on the second-floor settee at 3 AM, waiting. His face had done something complicated when he'd seen you—surprise, then something that might have been guilt, then a careful blank neutrality that hurt worse than anger would have.

"You should be asleep," he'd said.

"I wanted to see you," you'd replied, thirteen years old and still stupid enough to be honest. "You're never home."

"I'm home now." But he'd stayed distant, like you were something dangerous, something that might detonate if he got too close. "Go to bed. We'll talk in the morning."

You had. You'd gone to bed, and in the morning, he'd already been gone again, and Alfred had served you breakfast with the kind of gentle sympathy that made you want to break something.

You'd stopped waiting after that.

"Earth to Wayne," Ryan said, waving a hand in front of your face. "You're doing that thing again where you go away inside your head."

"Sorry." You pulled yourself back to the present, managing a small smile. "Told you I'm tired."

"You should actually sleep in class less," Ryan suggested with mock seriousness. "I know, I know, revolutionary concept. But Patterson's starting to notice, and you know he lives for writing people up."

"Patterson can—" You stopped, searching for an appropriately creative ending to that sentence.

"Fight a bear?" Ryan supplied helpfully.

"Eat glass?"

"Learn interpretive dance?"

That surprised a real laugh out of you, the sound feeling foreign in your chest. Ryan grinned, clearly pleased with himself.

"There she is," he said. "Proof that Wayne's daughter is, in fact, capable of human emotion and not just a very sophisticated android."

"Beep boop," you deadpanned.

The warning bell rang, signaling five minutes until fifth period. Ryan groaned, hauling himself to his feet and offering you a hand up. You took it, letting him pull you out of the window seat.

"Calculus?" he asked.

"Chemistry."

"Ah, the class where you actually pay attention." He shouldered his backpack. "See you tomorrow? Same bat-time, same bat-channel?"

"Maybe," you said, which you both knew meant yes.

He left with a casual wave, and you gathered your things slowly, not eager to rush back into the flow of academy life. Through the window, you could see storm clouds gathering on the horizon, dark and heavy with rain. The weather matched your mood, which felt appropriate. Gotham was always ready to provide atmospheric ambiance for whatever emotional drama its residents were experiencing.

The afternoon crawled by with the inexorable slowness of all school days. Chemistry was marginally interesting—you were studying reaction rates and catalysts, the way certain elements could speed up or slow down fundamental changes. Ms. Park was explaining activation energy, drawing curves on the board showing how reactions needed that initial push to occur, and you found yourself thinking about people. About how some relationships seemed to require so much energy to begin, such a massive push to overcome the natural state of separation.

Was that what you and your father had? An insurmountable activation energy barrier? Were you both just sitting on opposite sides of a reaction that would never occur because neither of you could generate enough force to bridge the gap?

"Miss Wayne, could you come up and balance this equation?"

You walked to the board on autopilot, chalk in hand, adding coefficients until the equation made sense. The numbers were easy—straightforward cause and effect. Nothing like actual life, where you could do everything right and still end up alone.

By the time the final bell rang, you were exhausted in that specific way that had nothing to do with physical tiredness and everything to do with emotional depletion. The other students flooded into the hallways, their voices echoing off the stone walls, everyone eager to begin their afternoons of sports practices and club meetings and social gatherings you'd never quite felt invited to.

You took your time at your locker, waiting for the rush to die down. Your phone buzzed with a text from Alfred: Running late with an errand. Will be there at 4:15. Wait inside.

You typed back an acknowledgment, then hesitated, fingers hovering over the keys. On impulse, you opened your messages with your father. The last text was from three weeks ago: Will be late tonight. Don't wait up.

You'd sent back: ok

Before that, a month earlier: Credit card approved for spring wardrobe. Alfred has the details.

Your response: thanks

The conversation log read like a relationship with a bank, not a father. All transactions and logistics, nothing resembling actual communication.

Your fingers moved before you could think better of it: How are you?

You stared at the message for a long moment, then deleted it character by character. Too needy. Too obvious. He wouldn't respond anyway—he never did to anything that required emotional engagement.

Instead, you pocketed your phone and headed for your usual spot: the east courtyard, where there was a bench tucked behind an overgrown rhododendron that most people forgot about. It was nearly four, and the courtyard was empty, most students long gone. The clouds had finally made good on their promise, and a light rain was starting to fall, misting everything in grey.

You sat on the bench, tilting your face up to feel the rain, not bothering to pull up your hood. There was something cleansing about it, like the weather was washing away the accumulated weight of the day. In the distance, you could hear traffic from the main road, the eternal heartbeat of Gotham City going about its business, indifferent to one lonely teenager's existential crisis.

Your phone buzzed again. You pulled it out, expecting another update from Alfred.

Instead, it was a news alert: BREAKING: Three Confirmed Dead in Downtown Gotham Shooting. Batman Reportedly on Scene.

You clicked through to the article, skimming the details. A robbery gone wrong at a jewelry store, violence spilling into the street, witnesses reporting the familiar silhouette of Gotham's vigilante arriving too late to prevent the deaths but in time to apprehend the suspects.

Batman. The city's dark knight, its mysterious protector. You'd never seen him in person, though you'd heard the stories everyone had—the way he moved like smoke, the fear he struck into criminals' hearts, the question marks that surrounded everything about him.

Your father hated Batman, or at least that's what he said in interviews. "A vigilante operating outside the law," he'd said once on the evening news, his public persona firmly in place. "However well-intentioned, it sets a dangerous precedent."

You'd always thought that was ironic, given how often Bruce Wayne himself operated outside normal social rules, like the ones that said parents should raise their children, not delegate the job to staff.

The rain was picking up, soaking through your cardigan. You should move, go wait inside where it was warm and dry. Instead, you sat there, watching the water bead on your phone's screen, feeling the cold seep into your bones. There was something almost meditative about it, this voluntary suffering. At least it was a feeling you chose, unlike the loneliness that had been chosen for you.

"Miss Wayne!"

You looked up to see Alfred hurrying across the courtyard, umbrella in hand, his expression caught between concern and exasperation. He reached you in seconds, immediately holding the umbrella over your head.

"What on earth are you doing sitting in the rain?" he demanded. "You'll catch your death."

"I'm fine," you said, but you let him pull you to your feet, grateful for his warmth, his presence, the way he cared enough to scold you.

"You are most certainly not fine. You're soaked through." He shrugged off his jacket and draped it around your shoulders, still holding the umbrella. "Come on, let's get you home and into dry clothes."

Home. Wayne Manor, with its seventy-some rooms and echoing hallways and absent master. But Alfred would be there, and that counted for something. Maybe everything.

You let him guide you to the car, sliding into the back seat of the Bentley. Alfred turned the heat up high, and you huddled in his jacket, breathing in the familiar smell of his cologne and the peppermints he always carried.

"Rough day?" he asked gently, meeting your eyes in the rearview mirror as he pulled out of the parking lot.

"Just a day," you replied.

But as Gotham City rolled past the windows, all Gothic shadows and perpetual gloom, you found yourself thinking about activation energy again. About reactions that never occurred because the barrier was too high, the push required too great.

About fathers and daughters and the space between them that might as well have been an ocean.

About Batman, and dead bodies, and a city that needed saving.

About how strange it was that Gotham's vigilante seemed more present in the city's life than your own father was in yours.

The thought felt disloyal, ungrateful. You pushed it away, closing your eyes and listening to the rain drum against the car's roof, letting the sound drown out everything else.

---

Wayne Manor rose before you like something from a Gothic novel, all stone and shadow and leaded glass windows that caught the dying light. The rain had intensified during the drive, turning the long driveway into a impressionistic blur beyond the car windows. Alfred pulled into the circular drive, the tires crunching on gravel, and you felt that familiar mix of relief and resignation that came with returning to this place.

Home, but not quite.

"Straight up for a hot shower," Alfred instructed as he opened your door, umbrella already deployed. "I'll bring tea and soup to your room."

"You don't have to—"

"I absolutely do have to. You're shivering, Miss, and if you think I'm going to let you catch pneumonia on my watch, you severely underestimate my dedication to my duties."

There was affection under the stern tone, and you felt something warm uncurl in your chest. "Thank you, Alfred."

His expression softened. "Go on, then. Before you freeze solid and I have to carry you."

The manor's entrance hall swallowed you in its familiar grandeur—marble floors, soaring ceilings, the twin staircases curving up to the second floor like something from a fairy tale. A fairy tale where the princess lived alone in the castle, waiting for a prince who never came. Or in your case, a father.

Your footsteps echoed as you crossed to the stairs, leaving wet prints on the marble. Somewhere deeper in the house, you could hear the usual sounds of the manor: the ancient heating system groaning to life, the tick of the grandfather clock in the study, the general sense of a building breathing around you.

What you couldn't hear was your father.

His study door was closed, which meant either he wasn't home yet or he was locked inside with whatever work occupied him. You'd learned years ago not to knock—the few times you had, you'd been met with distracted acknowledgment at best, irritation at worst. Bruce Wayne did not like to be interrupted.

Even by his own daughter.

Your room was in the family wing, a space that had once housed generations of Waynes but now held only you and your father, existing in separate orbits. You passed his bedroom door—firmly closed, always closed—and tried not to think about how you sometimes pressed your ear against it late at night, just to hear if he was there. If he was breathing. If he existed at all beyond the ghost who funded your life.

Your own room was exactly as you'd left it that morning, which was to say carefully curated to look like a normal teenager's space while revealing almost nothing real about you. The walls were a soft grey-blue, decorated with a few posters of bands you liked well enough but didn't love. Your desk was organized but not obsessively so, school books stacked beside the laptop he'd bought you, a jar of pens you barely used. The bed was four-poster mahogany, probably an antique, with a down comforter that cost more than most people's monthly rent.

It should have felt like a sanctuary. Instead, it felt like a stage set.

You peeled off your wet clothes, dropping them in the hamper—Alfred would see them laundered, because Alfred saw to everything. The shower was hot enough to hurt, steam filling the marble bathroom until you couldn't see your own reflection in the mirror. Good. You didn't particularly want to look at yourself right now, at the girl who had everything except what she actually needed.

By the time you emerged, wrapped in your softest robe, Alfred had indeed left a tray on your desk: chicken soup that actually looked homemade, Earl Grey tea with honey, and a couple of the shortbread cookies he made that you loved. A note in his precise handwriting read: Eat. All of it. -A

You smiled despite yourself and carried the tray to your bed, curling up against the headboard. Through your windows, you could see the grounds of Wayne Manor stretching out into the gloom, formal gardens giving way to the woods that surrounded the property. The rain made everything look like an oil painting, all running colors and soft edges.

Your phone buzzed. You grabbed it eagerly—pathetically, embarrassingly eagerly—hoping maybe your father had responded to the text you'd deleted before sending, had somehow sensed your need and decided to reach out.

Instead, it was Ryan: Stop me if you've heard this one: what's the difference between Batman and Bruce Wayne?

Despite everything, you felt your mouth quirk. You typed back: what?

Batman is actually there when Gotham needs him.

You stared at the message for a long moment, something cold settling in your stomach. It was meant as a joke—Ryan didn't know how deeply that particular observation cut. He couldn't know that you'd made the same comparison yourself more times than you could count.

Harsh, you sent back.

Too soon? My dad says your dad is actually doing a lot for the city through Wayne Enterprises. New housing initiatives, funding for schools, that kind of thing.

Yeah. He's great at helping everyone but his own kid, you typed, then immediately deleted. Instead: He tries.

Alfred's lie, now yours. You'd inherited his protective instincts, his need to shield Bruce Wayne's reputation even when the man himself couldn't be bothered to maintain the relationship that reputation was supposedly protecting.

You set the phone aside and focused on the soup, which was perfect because of course it was. Alfred's cooking was one of the few consistently good things in your life. You were midway through the bowl when you heard it: the distant sound of a door closing, footsteps in the hallway.

Your father was home.

You froze, soup spoon halfway to your mouth, listening. The footsteps paused outside your door, and for one wild moment, you thought he might knock. Might actually check on you, acknowledge your existence beyond the logistical updates Alfred presumably provided.

The moment stretched. You barely breathed.

Then the footsteps continued, moving toward his own room, and you released a breath that felt like it had been trapped in your lungs for years.

Stupid. Stupid to hope. Stupid to think today would be different from any other day.

You finished your soup mechanically, no longer tasting it, and crawled under your covers with your book. But the words wouldn't focus, the story of the secretly-royal girl suddenly feeling less like comfort and more like mockery. At least she was wanted by someone, even if she didn't know it yet.

Sleep came eventually, dragging you under despite the early hour, exhaustion finally overwhelming the tangle of emotions in your chest.

---

You woke to darkness and the sound of voices.

For a moment, you were disoriented, unsure what had pulled you from sleep. Then you heard it again: low voices from somewhere below, too muffled to make out words but carrying an intensity that suggested urgency.

Your clock read 2:47 AM.

You slipped out of bed, curiosity overriding common sense, and padded to your door. The hallway was dark except for the night lights that Alfred insisted on, small pools of illumination marking the path to the stairs. The voices were clearer now—coming from the direction of your father's study.

One was definitely Bruce. The other...

You crept closer, staying in the shadows. The study door was cracked open, light spilling out, and you could see movement inside. Two figures: your father, still dressed in what looked like dark clothes, and someone else you didn't recognize.

"—getting worse," the stranger was saying. He was older, maybe sixty, with grey hair and an air of authority. "Three dead tonight, and we were ten minutes too late. Ten minutes, Bruce."

"I know." Your father's voice was different than you'd ever heard it—raw, almost anguished. Nothing like his usual controlled tone. "I know, Jim."

Jim. Commissioner Gordon, you realized. You'd seen him on the news, standing beside the Bat-Signal, the only cop in Gotham who openly worked with Batman.

What was he doing here? At three in the morning? In your home?

"You can't be everywhere," Gordon continued. "You can't save everyone. But these are the ones that haunt you—the almosts. The if-onlys."

"Don't." Bruce's voice had hardened. "Don't make excuses for me. They're dead because I wasn't fast enough, wasn't smart enough to anticipate—"

"You're human, Bruce. Even in the cowl, you're still human."

The cowl.

The world tilted sideways.

The cowl. The Bat-Signal. Commissioner Gordon in your house in the middle of the night. Your father's unexplained absences, the strange hours, the smell of rain and something else—rain and Gotham's streets and fear.

No.

No, that was—

Impossible. Insane. Your father was Bruce Wayne, billionaire playboy philanthropist, the man who appeared in society pages and business journals. He wasn't—he couldn't be—

Batman.

Batman, who saved the city every night while you sat in your room, wondering why your father never had time for you.

Batman, who Commissioner Gordon was talking to right now, standing in Bruce Wayne's study, discussing people who had died tonight.

Your hand went to your mouth, holding back a sound that wanted to escape—a laugh or a sob, you weren't sure which. All these years. All these years of waiting, wondering, feeling abandoned and unwanted, and he'd been out there. Not avoiding you out of indifference but because he was trying to save everyone else.

Which somehow made it worse.

Because Gotham got the hero. Gotham got the savior, the protector, the Dark Knight who would run himself into the ground trying to prevent every tragedy.

And you? You got the leftovers. The exhausted shell that stumbled home at dawn. The man too emptied out by his crusade to have anything left for his own child.

You backed away from the door, moving on instinct, your mind reeling. Your foot caught the edge of a hall runner, and you stumbled, catching yourself against the wall with a thump that sounded catastrophically loud in the silence.

The voices in the study cut off.

You ran.

Not to your room—that would be the obvious place to check. Instead, you flew down the hall toward the back stairs, the ones the staff used, taking them two at a time in the dark. Your heart was hammering, though you couldn't have said if it was from fear of being caught or from the revelation still detonating in your mind.

Batman. Your father was Batman.

You made it to the kitchen, pressing yourself against the wall beside the pantry, listening for sounds of pursuit. For a long moment, there was nothing. Then:

"Probably the manor settling," Gordon's voice, distant. "This place must be a hundred years old."

"Hundred and fifty." Your father's voice, and you had to stop thinking of him as just your father now because he was also something else entirely. Someone else. "But you're probably right."

Their voices faded as they presumably returned to their conversation, and you sagged against the wall, legs shaking. The kitchen was dark except for the glow of the clock on the oven: 2:54 AM.

You'd spent sixteen years thinking your father didn't care enough to make time for you.

The truth was so much more complicated it made your head spin.

He did care—just not about you specifically. He cared about all of Gotham, every citizen, every potential victim. You were just one person, one life, weighed against millions. The math was simple, really. Cold, but simple.

And you'd been so stupid. So willfully blind. The signs had been there all along—the late nights, the injuries he thought you didn't notice, the way Alfred sometimes looked at him like he was watching someone slowly self-destruct. The state-of-the-art security in the manor, the restricted areas you'd been told never to enter.

The way Bruce had looked at you that night you'd waited up for him, like you were something dangerous. A weakness, he'd probably thought. A liability. Something that could be used against him, against Batman.

Was that why he kept his distance? Not because he didn't love you, but because he loved his mission more, and you were a complication he couldn't afford?

You pressed your hands against your eyes, willing yourself not to cry. Crying was pointless. It changed nothing. Your father was Batman, and Batman belonged to Gotham, and there was no room in that equation for a lonely teenager who just wanted her dad to ask about her day.

"Miss?"

You nearly jumped out of your skin. Alfred stood in the kitchen doorway, wearing a burgundy robe and slippers, his expression concerned. How did he move so quietly? How had you not heard him coming?

"I—" Your voice came out wrong, too high, too strained. "I couldn't sleep."

Alfred's eyes searched your face, and you saw the moment he understood. That you knew. That you'd discovered the truth that had been hidden from you your entire life.

His expression did something complicated—resignation, perhaps, or relief that the secret was finally out. "Come," he said gently, moving toward the small breakfast table. "Sit. I'll make tea."

"Alfred—"

"Tea first," he said firmly. "Then we can discuss whatever is troubling you."

It was such a perfectly Alfred response that you almost laughed. The world had just tilted on its axis, your entire understanding of your father fundamentally rewritten, and Alfred's solution was tea.

But you sat, because you didn't know what else to do, and watched as he moved around the kitchen with practiced efficiency. The kettle went on. Cups appeared. Shortbread cookies materialized on a plate. All of it so normal, so mundane, while your mind kept screaming Batman Batman Batman.

"How long have you known?" Alfred asked quietly, setting a cup in front of you.

"About fifteen minutes." You wrapped your hands around the cup, needing its warmth. "I heard voices. Heard Commissioner Gordon talking about... about the cowl."

Alfred lowered himself into the chair across from you with a small sigh. "I see."

"Did my mother know?" The question came from somewhere deep, somewhere you hadn't known was hurting until this moment. "Before she died, did she know what he was?"

Something flickered across Alfred's face—old pain, carefully contained. "Your mother passed when you were so young, Miss. I'm not certain—"

"Please don't lie to me." Your voice cracked. "Not you, too. Did she know?"

Alfred was quiet for a long moment, his tea untouched. Finally: "Yes. She knew. It was... complicated."

"Everything about him is complicated," you said bitterly. Then: "Does he know that I know?"

"I doubt it. Master Bruce is many things, but particularly perceptive about emotional matters? That has never been his strong suit."

It startled a laugh out of you, sharp and a little hysterical. "He can analyze a crime scene, track down criminals, save the entire city, but he can't figure out his own daughter?"

"He's been... focused," Alfred said carefully. "Since he took up the cowl, perhaps too focused. The mission has consumed him in ways that worry me deeply."

"The mission," you repeated. "Is that what we're calling it? The thing that matters more than his actual family?"

"It's not that simple—"

"Isn't it?" You could feel tears building now, hot behind your eyes, and you hated it. Hated that you were going to cry, that even now, knowing the truth, you were still the abandoned child looking for scraps of affection. "He chose this, Alfred. He chose to be Batman. He chose to spend every night out there, fighting for strangers, while I've been here, wondering what I did wrong. Wondering why I wasn't enough to make him want to stay."

"Oh, Miss." Alfred reached across the table, covering your hand with his. "You did nothing wrong. This has never been about you not being enough. If anything, you're the one thing in his life that has always been too important, too precious. You terrify him."

You stared at him. "I terrify him?"

"You're the one thing in this world he couldn't bear to lose," Alfred said softly. "And in his mind, the closer you are to him, the more danger you're in. So he keeps his distance. He tells himself it's to protect you, but really, I think he's protecting himself. Because if something happened to you because of what he does—" He shook his head. "I don't think he could survive it."

It made a horrible kind of sense. The way Bruce had looked at you that night, like you were dangerous—not to others, but to him. A weakness, yes, but not in the way you'd thought. Not because you were a liability to his mission, but because he cared too much, and in Batman's world, caring was the most dangerous thing of all.

"That's stupid," you whispered. "That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard."

"I won't argue with you there," Alfred said. "But understanding why someone does something doesn't make it less painful. I know that."

You did cry then, quiet tears spilling down your cheeks while Alfred held your hand and didn't tell you everything would be okay. Because he was too honest for that, and you were too old to believe it anyway.

"What do I do?" you asked when you could speak again. "Do I tell him I know? Do I pretend I don't? I can't—Alfred, I can't go back to how things were. Not now."

"I don't know, Miss," Alfred admitted. "But perhaps... perhaps this is an opportunity. A chance to bridge the distance between you. Though I should warn you: Bruce is very good at many things, but acknowledging his own emotions is not one of them. If you confront him, be prepared for resistance."

"What else is new?" You wiped your eyes with the heel of your hand. "He's been resisting being my father for sixteen years."

"He's been resisting being human for sixteen years," Alfred corrected gently. "There's a difference."

You finished your tea in silence, mind spinning through scenarios. How did you even begin a conversation like that? "Hey, Dad, I know you're Batman, and I understand that means you're too busy saving the world to parent me, but maybe we could schedule a family dinner sometime between stopping the Joker and preventing mass casualties?"

It was absurd. All of it was absurd.

And yet, for the first time in years, you felt something other than resignation about your relationship with your father. Anger, yes, and hurt—so much hurt. But also something that might have been hope, fragile and dangerous.

Because now you knew the truth. And the truth meant you could stop wondering what you'd done wrong, stop trying to decode signals that didn't exist. Your father's absence wasn't about you. It was about him, about his mission, about choices he'd made long before you were old enough to question them.

That didn't fix anything. It didn't give you back the years of loneliness, the birthdays he'd missed, the parent-teacher conferences attended only by Alfred, the nights you'd cried yourself to sleep wondering why you weren't enough.

But it was a start. Maybe.

"Go back to bed, Miss," Alfred said gently. "We can discuss this more in the morning, if you'd like. But right now, you need rest."

You nodded, standing on shaky legs. At the doorway, you paused. "Alfred? Thank you. For being here. For being... you know. Everything he isn't."

Alfred's expression turned impossibly soft. "It has been my greatest honor, Miss. Raising you. Watching you grow. I need you to know that."

You couldn't speak past the lump in your throat, so you just nodded and fled back upstairs, avoiding the main hallway where your father's study light still glowed. Back in your room, you burrowed under the covers and stared at the ceiling, watching shadows play across the plaster.

Batman. Your father was Batman.

Somewhere in the manor, Bruce Wayne—no, Batman—was probably still strategizing with Commissioner Gordon, planning how to save a city that devoured its heroes and demanded more.

And you were just his daughter, the girl in the tower, waiting for a rescue that would never come.

Because Batman didn't save people like you. He saved Gotham.

And Gotham would always, always come first.

---

Morning arrived with weak sunlight filtering through your curtains, doing little to dispel the grey that seemed permanently settled over Gotham. You'd barely slept after returning to your room, your mind cycling through the revelation on an endless loop: Batman, Batman, your father is Batman.

The knowledge sat in your chest like a stone, heavy and cold.

You dressed mechanically—jeans, a sweater, comfortable shoes—and made your way downstairs. It was Saturday, which meant no school, which meant an entire empty weekend stretching ahead of you in Wayne Manor. Usually, you'd spend it reading, or maybe convincing Alfred to drive you to the library or the art museum. Safe, quiet activities that required nothing from your father.

But everything was different now.

The breakfast room was flooded with pale light, Alfred already setting out food despite the early hour. Your father sat at the head of the table, newspaper in hand, dressed in casual slacks and a button-down shirt. He looked tired—shadows under his eyes, a tightness around his mouth—but otherwise perfectly normal. Like he hadn't spent the night before discussing dead bodies with the police commissioner. Like he wasn't Gotham's vigilante detective.

"Good morning, Miss," Alfred said warmly, pulling out your usual chair. "French toast this morning. Your favorite."

Bruce glanced up briefly, his eyes skating over you before returning to the paper. "Morning," he said absently.

That was it. One word. Not even a full sentence.

Something inside you twisted, and before you could think better of it, words were spilling out: "Did you sleep well?"

Bruce's eyes lifted again, this time with a hint of surprise. You almost never initiated conversation. "Well enough. You?"

"Not really," you said, holding his gaze. "I had trouble sleeping. Heard some noises around three in the morning. Voices."

You saw it—the microscopic freeze, the infinitesimal tightening around his eyes. If you hadn't been looking for it, you would have missed it. But you were looking now. You were finally, actually looking at your father and seeing him.

"Old house," he said smoothly. "Pipes, probably. Or the wind."

Liar. The word echoed in your head, but you swallowed it down. "Probably."

Alfred set a plate in front of you, and you could feel his concerned gaze. He knew you were poking at something dangerous, testing boundaries that had been firmly established for sixteen years.

"I was thinking," you continued, cutting into the French toast without eating it, "that maybe we could do something today. Together. Since it's the weekend."

Bruce's expression flickered with something—confusion, maybe, or wariness. "I have meetings this afternoon. Wayne Enterprises business."

"This morning, then."

"I have work to catch up on in my study—"

"Of course you do." The words came out sharper than you'd intended, years of swallowed bitterness finally finding their edge. "You always have work. Or meetings. Or somewhere else to be."

The silence that fell over the breakfast room was suffocating. Bruce had set down his newspaper, his full attention on you now, and you realized with a start that you couldn't remember the last time he'd really looked at you like this. Like you were something that required his focus.

"Is there something you need?" he asked carefully.

You, you wanted to scream. I need you. I need my father.

Instead, you said: "Nothing you can give me."

You stood, abandoning your untouched breakfast, and walked out. Behind you, you heard Alfred murmur something too low to catch, and your father's response: "What was that about?"

The man could decode criminal conspiracies and track the Riddler's clues, but he couldn't figure out why his own daughter was upset.

You grabbed your jacket from the hall closet and headed for the door.

"Miss, where are you going?" Alfred appeared from the breakfast room, concern written across his features.

"Out," you said. "I need air. I need—not here."

"Let me drive you—"

"I'll walk." You were already pulling open the heavy front door. "I have my phone. I'll be back before dark."

"Miss—"

But you were already down the steps, crossing the circular drive toward the long driveway that led to the manor's gates. You could feel Alfred watching from the doorway, but he didn't call after you again. He understood, perhaps better than anyone, that sometimes you just needed to escape.

The walk to the gates took fifteen minutes, the gravel crunching under your shoes. The rain had cleared, leaving everything washed and slightly surreal, colors too vivid against the grey sky. The gates opened automatically as you approached—Wayne Manor security, state-of-the-art and impersonal—and then you were through, onto the private road that eventually connected to Gotham proper.

You'd walked this route before, though not often. Usually, you were too tired or too apathetic to bother. But today, you needed the movement, needed to feel like you were going somewhere even if you had no actual destination in mind.

Your phone buzzed. Alfred: Please be careful. Stay in well-populated areas.

You sent back a thumbs-up emoji and kept walking.

The road wound through the woods that bordered the Wayne estate, tall trees creating a canopy overhead. It was beautiful in a melancholy way, like everything in Gotham—lovely and slightly decayed, romantic and dangerous in equal measure. You could understand why gothic novels were always set in places like this.

You'd been walking for maybe twenty minutes when you heard the car.

It came from behind you, engine purring expensive and smooth. You stepped to the side of the road to let it pass, but instead, it slowed, pulling up beside you.

The window rolled down, revealing a woman you didn't recognize—mid-forties, sharp suit, sharper eyes. "You're a long way from anywhere, sweetheart," she said. Her voice was pleasant enough, but something about her smile didn't reach her eyes.

"I'm fine, thanks," you said, keeping walking.

The car kept pace with you, moving slowly. "You sure? It's a long walk to the city from here. I could give you a ride."

"I'm good."

"You don't look good. You look lost." The woman's smile widened, showing too many teeth. "Come on, get in. It's not safe for a young girl to be walking alone out here."

Warning bells were ringing now, some instinct you'd inherited from growing up in Gotham telling you that something was wrong. You walked faster. "No, thank you."

The car stopped. You heard the door open behind you.

You ran.

Stupid, maybe—you were still a mile from the main road, surrounded by woods, with only your phone and no real plan. But every cell in your body was screaming danger, and you'd learned to trust that instinct.

Behind you, you heard the woman curse, then: "Don't make this difficult, Miss Wayne."

Ice flooded your veins. She knew your name. This wasn't a random encounter—this was targeted.

You crashed into the woods, branches whipping at your face and arms. Behind you, you could hear pursuit—more than one person now, multiple sets of footsteps. How many had been in the car? Where had the others come from?

"Miss Wayne, stop running! We're not going to hurt you!"

That was a lie. You didn't know how you knew, but you knew. Whatever they wanted, it wasn't good.

Your phone was in your pocket. You dragged it out while running, trying to pull up your contacts, trying to call Alfred, but the screen was locked and you couldn't get your shaking fingers to cooperate. You risked a glance back—

—and ran straight into someone.

Hands grabbed you, strong and unyielding. You screamed and fought, kicking and clawing, but there were too many of them. Three, maybe four, all dressed in dark clothes, all moving with professional efficiency. One of them grabbed your phone, tossing it away into the underbrush.

"Sedate her," the woman from the car ordered, appearing through the trees. She wasn't even breathing hard. "Carefully. We need her conscious but compliant."

Something sharp pricked your neck. Chemical warmth spread through your veins, and your legs went liquid. You tried to fight it, tried to scream again, but your voice came out slurred and wrong.

"That's it," the woman said, her face swimming in your vision. "Just relax, sweetheart. Your father is going to be very interested in getting you back. Very interested indeed."

Ransom. They were going to ransom you. Use you as leverage against Bruce Wayne—or worse, against Batman. Did they know about Batman? Was that what this was about?

You tried to ask, but your mouth wouldn't form words. The world was tilting sideways, sound distorting into meaningless noise. You felt yourself being lifted, carried, the tree canopy spinning above you.

The last thing you saw before darkness took you completely was a bird wheeling in the grey sky, free and untouchable, everything you weren't.

Then nothing.

---

You woke to the smell of mildew and concrete.

Consciousness returned in layers—first physical sensation, cold seeping through your clothes from whatever you were lying on. Then sound: dripping water somewhere close, the hum of machinery in the distance, voices speaking too low to understand. Finally, sight: dim light from a bare bulb, concrete walls, no windows.

A basement. Or a warehouse. Somewhere industrial and abandoned, the kind of place Gotham had in abundance, left to rot when the economy shifted and the jobs fled.

You tried to sit up and discovered your hands were zip-tied behind your back, ankles similarly bound. Panic flared hot in your chest, but you forced it down. Panic wouldn't help. You needed to think.

How long had you been out? Where were you? Most importantly: did anyone know you were missing?

You'd told Alfred you'd be back before dark. If it was already dark—and you couldn't tell from here—he'd be worried. He'd be looking for you. Maybe he'd already called your father, and Bruce was even now putting on the cowl, becoming Batman, using all his resources to track you down.

Or maybe he'd just assume you'd run away. Extended your walk into a teenage rebellion. Maybe he wouldn't even—

No. Alfred wouldn't let him assume. Alfred would make him look.

You hoped.

The voices were getting closer now, footsteps approaching. You closed your eyes, feigning unconsciousness, trying to gather information before they knew you were awake.

"—don't know why we grabbed her in broad daylight," a male voice was saying. "Could have waited, been cleaner."

"Boss wanted it done today." The woman from the car. "Said Wayne was getting too close to something. We need the leverage now."

"If he's really got Batman in his pocket like they say—"

"That's exactly why we need the girl. Even Batman can't be everywhere at once."

Your blood ran cold. They didn't know Bruce was Batman—they thought the two were separate entities. But they knew there was a connection, knew Bruce had some relationship with the city's vigilante.

"She's awake."

Your eyes flew open. The woman was standing in the doorway, arms crossed, studying you with clinical detachment. Behind her, you could see two men, both large and serious-looking.

"Good morning, Miss Wayne," the woman said pleasantly, like you'd met for coffee instead of her having kidnapped you. "Or should I say good evening? You've been asleep for about six hours."

Six hours. That meant it was early evening now. Alfred would definitely have noticed you were missing. He'd be frantic.

"What do you want?" Your voice came out hoarse, throat dry from whatever they'd drugged you with.

"That's direct. I appreciate directness." The woman stepped into the room—more of a cell, really, maybe ten feet square. "My name is Elena Marquez. These are my associates. And what we want is very simple: your father's cooperation."

"He won't negotiate with kidnappers," you said, though you weren't sure if that was true. Bruce Wayne might not, but would Batman?

"Oh, I think he will. When the alternative is getting pieces of his daughter mailed back to him." Elena's smile was pleasant, horrible. "But let's not get ahead of ourselves. We're not unreasonable people. We don't want to hurt you—you're much more valuable intact."

"My father will find me." You tried to sound confident, tried to channel even an ounce of Batman's intimidation. "And when he does—"

"When he does, we'll already have what we want. See, your father has been poking around in some business ventures that don't concern him. Wayne Enterprises has been buying up properties in the Narrows, pushing out certain... operations. We need those operations to continue. So, we need him to back off."

"He won't. Not for me." The words tasted like ash, but they were true. Bruce Wayne had proven over and over that you weren't his priority. Why would that change now?

Elena studied you, head tilted. "You really believe that. How sad." She crouched down to your level, her expensive perfume mixing with the mildew smell. "Let me tell you something, sweetheart. I've been doing this for a long time. And fathers—even the absent ones, even the ones who seem not to care—they always care when push comes to shove. When it's life or death. He'll cooperate."

"And if he doesn't?"

"Then we move to plan B, which involves making you a very public example of what happens when people interfere with our business. But let's hope it doesn't come to that."

She stood, brushing off her slacks. "Someone will bring you food and water shortly. I suggest you eat—you'll need your strength. We're going to record a video for your father in a few hours, and you'll want to look presentable for that."

"What if I refuse?"

Elena's expression hardened. "Then we'll make the video anyway, and it will be much less pleasant for you. Your choice."

They left, the heavy door swinging shut with a clang that echoed through your cell. You heard a lock engage, then footsteps retreating, then nothing but the drip of water and the hum of machinery.

You were alone.

The panic you'd been holding back surged forward, and you had to fight to keep breathing. Zip ties cutting into your wrists. Concrete cold beneath you. No way out. No help coming—or at least, no guarantee of it.

Think, you commanded yourself. Batman would think. What would Batman do?

First: assess your situation. You were bound but not gagged, which meant they weren't worried about you screaming—either because no one would hear, or because they were confident in their security. The room had one door, no windows, concrete walls that looked thick. The zip ties were tight but not impossibly so.

Second: gather resources. You still had your clothes, your shoes. No phone—they'd taken that in the woods. No jewelry except the small silver bracelet Alfred had given you for your thirteenth birthday, engraved with your initials.

Third: make a plan.

Except you didn't know how to make a plan for this. You weren't Batman. You weren't even particularly brave. You were just a scared sixteen-year-old girl who'd been stupid enough to walk away from the only safe place she'd known.

Time passed with agonizing slowness. You managed to work yourself into a sitting position, back against the wall, and tried to think of anything except the growing pain in your shoulders and the fear gnawing at your chest.

Eventually, the door opened again. A different man this time, younger, carrying a bottle of water and what looked like a sandwich in a plastic bag. He set them down just inside the door, studying you warily.

"I'm going to cut your hands free so you can eat," he said. "But if you try anything, Elena will make your life very unpleasant. Understand?"

You nodded. What choice did you have?

He approached carefully, producing a knife that made your heart jump, and cut through the zip tie on your wrists. Blood rushed back into your hands, pins and needles painful enough to make you gasp. Your ankles remained bound.

"Fifteen minutes," he said, backing toward the door. "Then I tie you back up."

The door shut again, and you were alone with your meager meal. Your hands shook as you opened the water bottle, drinking too fast, your throat screaming for moisture. The sandwich was generic—turkey and cheese on white bread—but you forced yourself to eat it. Elena had been right: you needed your strength.

Because you were going to get out of this. Somehow. You had to.

You thought about your father, probably just now learning what had happened. Was he in the cave—there had to be a cave, right? Some secret Batman base? Was he reviewing security footage, tracking cell phone signals, doing whatever detective work would lead him to you?

Or was he hesitating? Weighing your life against whatever crusade he was on, whatever mission he deemed more important?

The thought made something crack inside your chest, a fissure in the carefully constructed wall you'd built around the truth of your relationship with Bruce Wayne.

He would come. He had to come.

But what if he doesn't come as your father? a small voice whispered. What if he only comes as Batman? What if he saves you not because you're his daughter, but because you're a civilian in danger, just another victim in Gotham's endless cycle of violence?

What if he saved you and didn't even realize who he was saving until it was over?

The man returned exactly fifteen minutes later, binding your wrists again, tighter this time. You didn't resist. There was no point, not yet. You needed to wait, to watch for an opportunity.

Batman was a planner. Batman was patient.

You could be patient too.

---

Hours passed in the dark. You dozed fitfully, dreams mixing with waking anxiety until you couldn't tell which was which. In your nightmares, you were trapped in Wayne Manor, running through endless corridors, calling for your father, but he never answered. Or he did answer, but when you found him, he was wearing the cowl, and he looked at you like a stranger.

You woke to voices again, multiple people arguing somewhere beyond your cell. You couldn't make out words, but the tone was urgent, aggressive. Something had changed.

The door burst open. Elena stood there, her earlier composure cracked, anger making her face harsh in the dim light.

"On your feet," she snapped.

"I can't—my ankles—"

She gestured impatiently, and one of her men cut the zip tie. Blood rushed back into your feet, painful and dizzying. They hauled you up before you were ready, and you stumbled, legs not quite working properly yet.

"We're moving," Elena said, already turning away. "Your father decided to be difficult. Time to send him a stronger message."

Fear spiked through you. "What kind of message?"

She didn't answer, just started walking, her men dragging you along. The hallway beyond your cell was long and industrial, pipes running along the ceiling, more doors leading to other rooms. You tried to memorize the layout, look for exits, but they moved too fast.

They pulled you into a larger room, better lit, with camera equipment set up in one corner. A chair sat in the center, positioned in front of a blank wall. This was where they'd planned to film you, you realized. The ransom video.

But now something had changed.

Elena was on her phone, speaking in rapid-fire Spanish too fast for you to follow. When she hung up, her expression was ice. "Sit," she commanded, pointing at the chair.

You sat, because you had no choice, and watched as they positioned the camera. Your heart was hammering so hard you thought it might burst from your chest.

"Your father," Elena said conversationally as she adjusted the camera angle, "has apparently decided that his business interests are more important than your safety. We made our demands very clear. We gave him six hours to respond. And do you know what he did?"

You didn't answer. Couldn't answer.

"He sent a statement through his lawyers. A statement saying Wayne Enterprises does not negotiate with criminals and will not be extorted. Can you believe that?" She laughed, but there was no humor in it. "His own daughter, and he chooses his precious company."

Something inside you went very cold and very still. He hadn't come. Hours had passed, and he hadn't even tried to negotiate.

But maybe Batman is out there, you thought desperately. Maybe he's tracking you, getting close, waiting for the right moment—

"So now," Elena continued, "we're going to show him the consequences of that choice. We're going to start with something small. A finger, maybe. And if he continues to refuse—"

"Wait!" The word burst out of you, panic overriding sense. "Please, just—give him more time. He'll cooperate, I know he will—"

"You know nothing," Elena snapped. "That man doesn't care about you. If he did, he would have responded by now. But don't worry—we'll make sure he sees exactly what his stubbornness costs."

One of the men grabbed your arm, pulling your hand forward, and you saw the glint of a knife, and somewhere in your mind, you heard yourself screaming, but it sounded distant, like it was coming from someone else—

The lights went out.

Not flickered—went completely dark, the kind of sudden absence of light that only happened when power was cut deliberately. You heard Elena curse, heard movement in the darkness, confused shouting.

Then: breaking glass. The sound of something heavy hitting flesh. A body dropping to the floor.

"What the—"

More sounds of impact. Someone screamed. The emergency lights kicked on, dim red, and in their glow, you saw him.

Batman.

He moved like liquid shadow, like violence choreographed into art. One man went down with a shattered arm, another with a blow to the head that looked strong enough to crack concrete. Elena lunged for you, maybe to use you as a shield, but Batman was faster—a grappling line caught her leg, yanked her off balance, and she hit the floor hard.

It was over in less than thirty seconds.

Batman stood in the center of the room, chest heaving slightly from exertion, surrounded by unconscious or groaning bodies. The red emergency lights cast his face in deep shadow, made him look more monster than man.

Then his eyes found you.

You were still in the chair, hands bound, frozen in shock and fear and relief so overwhelming you thought you might throw up. For a moment, neither of you moved. He stared at you—at just another victim, just another civilian caught in Gotham's violence.

He didn't know. Even this close, even looking right at you, he didn't recognize his own daughter.

"Are you hurt?" His voice was rough, distorted—modulated, you realized. Batman's voice, not Bruce Wayne's.

You couldn't speak. Could only shake your head.

He crossed to you, producing a knife to cut your bonds. His hands were gentle despite their leather covering, careful not to hurt you as he freed your wrists. You could smell him—kevlar and something like gunpowder and, underneath it, something that might have been the expensive cologne Bruce Wayne wore to board meetings.

"Can you walk?"

You nodded, not trusting your voice. He helped you stand, one hand supporting your elbow, and the touch burned even through the layers between you. This close, you could see the details of the suit—the armor plating, the utility belt, the cape that seemed to swallow light. This close, you could almost see his jaw beneath the cowl, the shape of it familiar in ways that made your chest ache.

"I'm calling the police," he said, already reaching for something on his belt. "Stay here. You're safe now."

Dad, you wanted to say. It's me. Your daughter. Don't you know me at all?

But the words wouldn't come, and maybe that was for the best. Because this was what you'd needed to see, wasn't it? This was the truth laid bare: Bruce Wayne would come for you as Batman, would save you as part of his mission, but wouldn't even recognize you while doing it.

You were just another civilian to him. Another victim. Another stranger he'd rescue and forget.

Sirens were approaching, their wail cutting through the night. Batman moved toward the window—this room had windows, you saw now, high up near the ceiling, broken to allow his entrance.

"Wait," you said, finding your voice. It came out smaller than you wanted, younger. "Will you—do you need to ask me questions? For your investigation?"

He paused, looking back at you, and you thought maybe—maybe—there was something in his expression. A hesitation. A flicker of recognition.

Then: "The police will take your statement. You'll be fine."

And he was gone, cape swirling behind him, up through the window and into the night like he'd never been there at all.

You stood in the red emergency light, surrounded by unconscious kidnappers, listening to the sirens get closer, and felt something inside you finally, irrevocably break.

He'd saved you.

He just hadn't known he was saving his daughter.

And somehow, that was so much worse than not coming at all.

---

Since I haven't been active lately, I'm leaving an old piece of my writing here. Looking back, I realize there are quite a few logical leaps in it – sorry about that 🙈
I might edit or delete it later, because it doesn't really sit right with me now.
But I thought sharing is good anyway. Take care

kingkaisen

Anonymous asked:

Prompt idea: Royal knight Kento or Suguru that falls for the princess they’re protecting

kingkaisen answered:

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VULCANIA — Kento N.

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♛ — 𝐒𝐔𝐌𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐘: the king has given kento nanami one very important task and no say in the matter: protect you, the beloved princess, with his life. however, the knight can’t help but wonder … if you ever found yourself in danger, could he protect you? Would he protect you?

♛ — 𝐂𝐎𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐍𝐓: spicy kissing scene but overall sfw, feral nanami, angst, fluff, major violence, mentions of war, minor character deaths, slight enemies to lovers, brief mention of arranged marriages, geto, gojo, & sukuna make an appearance. this takes place in a mythical world! oh, and animals adore you.

♛ — 𝐖𝐎𝐑𝐃 𝐂𝐎𝐔𝐍𝐓: 10k (sorry, I was having a blast)

♛ — 𝐀𝐔𝐓𝐇𝐎𝐑’𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓𝐄: dividers by @uzmacchiato!

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Kento Nanami wanted to hate you.

Truly, he did. He tried.

After all, his bloodline’s only purpose was to shed blood; to die in service of whomever sat on the throne, as well as their spoiled spouse and privileged offspring. 

An unstable, overemotional king would often start a war over a bruised ego and an insatiable thirst for power. And every time — every single time — a king declared war on another nation, be it near or far, members of Kento’s family would die a pointless death on a battlefield.

More land and subjects for the king. Another funeral to attend for Kento.

Keep reading

nezuscribe
nezuscribe

𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐜𝐫𝐮𝐬𝐡 𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐨𝐫𝐞𝐦

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pairing: gojo satoru x fem!reader

summary: two years had passed since you first met gojo satoru, and it was two years of having an agonizingly one-sided crush on the white-haired genius. for the most part, you were okay with keeping it down and acting like the nights you spent fantasizing about what it would be like to be his were normal. you were fine keeping it hidden until something between the two of you shifts, and you're left wondering if this crush you have on him is truly as delirious as you think.

genre: 18+, nerdjo, slow burn, angst + happy ending (duh), fluff, eventual smut (nerdjo being a munch), some mention of insecurities but nothing major

word count: 33k (oops)

note: nerdjo bu set in oxford! art credit! @to00fu

jjk masterlist

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It began at one of the English department get-togethers. 

Two years ago, when you felt like you had to come to every single event in the hopes of striking expeditious luck at one of them. And it’s not that you particularly disliked these events, but they weren’t the first thing you’d think of when it came to how you’d prefer to spend your free time. 

The weather was just getting chilly enough where you’d rather stay in your dorm and wrap yourself in three blankets and a sweater, and the year had been dragging on long enough where you’d rather just talk about the wonders of Shakespeare and his sonnets in the confines of your next research paper and not with academics who made you feel inferior. 

You had been invited weeks in advance, and yet you still found yourself dreading being here, the more it led to it, and even more when you were in the thick of it. Awkward small-talk with students you’ve seen around briefly and stiff handshakes with male professors who think that they have better places to be were just mentally taxing, and you counted the seconds until it was all over. 

Thankfully, it was busy enough that you could slip into the background without many people even noticing you were there, but not so crowded that you could just slip away entirely without somebody asking where the great Dr. Howard’s research assistant had gone. And anyways, it wasn’t too horrible. You had taken to silently recounting Othello in your mind moments before everything changed. 

There was a small tap on your shoulder. It startled you at first, and you looked around in your small corner to see a man waiting patiently behind you, a sheepish look on his face as you tried to gather yourself up. 

“I’m sorry,” he stammered, and you blinked out of your stupor as you tried to recall in your brain if you had met him before to save yourself from the embarrassment of him having to re-introduce himself, “I didn’t mean to surprise you.” 

Keep reading

supermenz
supermenz

fall in love (again and again)

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summary: You and Kyle meet during one of the hardest times of your life, and despite it all — your rudeness, rage and violence — he still finds a way to fall in love with you.

pairing(s): kyle rayner x batsis!reader, platonic!batfamily x batsis!reader

word count: 13.1k (mama didn't raise no quitter)

warnings: swearing, gotham typical violence, troubles with drinking/alcoholism, broken bones, fear toxin and everything that comes with it, reader is LITERALLY haunted by the fact that she's batgirl, hurt/comfort, a lot of it, bruce is a bad dad but he learns from his mistakes, gordon guessed the batfam's identities and he's right about them, call me flash cuz i wrote the first 5k of this in like two months and the rest between yesterday and today, implied torture, mentioned puke, some comics canon (knightfall, pre-retcon parallax, barbara's still in a wheelchair) if there's anything else PLEASE let me know!!

author's note: GRANDPA BRUCE! GRANDPA BRUCE! GRANDPA BRUCE! also, merry crisis! merry crisler! merry crismus! this is my gift for you all and is both a sequel and a prequel to not a lot, just forever, even if i'm pretty sure that they can be read separately :) this is just... a lot. start your engines because it's going to be a long ride LMAO

dividers from @uzmacchiato and @cursed-carmine!

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rosasandroses
saltyjoy

The Gift of Truth

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Jason Todd x Female Civilian Reader

Summary: After figuring out that your boyfriend is Red Hood, you struggle to figure out a way to tell him you are aware of his “nightly activities.” When Jason finally introduces you to his family a week before Christmas, you are presented with the perfect opportunity to tell him

AKA: You give Jason Red Hood merch for a Secret Santa exchange, it goes about as well as you expect.

Word Count: 10.5k

Warnings/Tags: Pre-established relationship, Reader wears makeup and has a purse but I don’t go into much detail, Nosy reader lol, Crack fic treated seriously, Scenes jump around a lot, Fluff, Don’t think about canon when reading this, Probably ooc, Do not take this fic seriously, Convenient plot stuff had to occur for this story to work okay

A/N: Happy holidays guys! I actually can’t believe I finished this before Christmas (at least for me) enjoy this little fic. This will probably be my last fic before New Years :)

DC Masterlist

Something was off about the Wayne family, and not in the way you might’ve expected from people as rich as they are.

What’s funny is that you had come to that conclusion in the most unconventional way. You didn’t mean to start investigating the Wayne family, but somehow you did. One might think that with a public imagine as widespread as their own, somebody would eventually slip up.

That was not the case here.

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