Emptiness. One word, but a whole world of hurt behind it. How can Gar feel nothing and the throb of his bleeding heart at the same time?

'How.' It's the only question on his mind.

How could she? Did the months of teamwork and friendship, of welcoming Tara into their home with every reassurance and smile mean nothing to her?

Gar bites down on his lip and tastes blood.

Didn't their nights spent stargazing, their shared glances and whispered secrets mean anything to her, when they meant the world to him? Was every shy brush of her hand against his fake? Was every kiss a trick?

He'll never know. The worst part isn't the betrayal. It's the fact that she's never coming back. She's never coming home.

A scene flashes through Gar's mind, the memory that plays over and over every time he closes his eyes.

A katana piercing the bandages wrapped around Tara's stomach, the vicious twist as Slade yanks the blade from the last wound he will ever give his apprentice. Tara's shocked expression as she collapses, Garfield's terrified cry as he cradles his first love in his arms. As he watches her bleed out with every throbbing heartbeat and gasping breath. As Tara dies in his arms.

In just a few hours, she betrayed him and died. He lost her twice that day.

The anger Garfield worked so hard to stoke and feed fizzles out, replaced by the sharp ache of pure loss tearing through his chest like a wild beast, ripping into his heart and lungs until he can't breathe. Why couldn't he save her? Why wasn't he enough?

Tears roll down his cheeks, soaking his fur as his shoulders tremble. He wants to stop, to take control of himself and shut down. Anything to stop the pain.

Anything to stop missing her.


"He's been in there all morning." Richard sets the TV remote down and sends a worried glance at the hallway leading to the team's living quarters. "Do you think we should…?"

"He doesn't wanna talk about it." Victor passes an empty soda bottle from hand to hand, never once looking up. He tried to reach out to Garfield again yesterday. When he returned, his expression told the others exactly how it went.

Raven's gaze flicks to Koriand'r as the redhead sighs loudly and props her chin on her hands. "There is truly nothing we can do to help?" She sends Richard a pleading look, undoubtedly wanting to make Garfield another present. It's a sweet thought, but ultimately futile. Just like everything else they've tried.

"Not if he won't let us," Victor replies. He finally lifts his head, turning to catch Raven's eyes. "You tried yet?"

"I've been giving him his space." He wouldn't want to see me. Not if he turned away Richard and Kori. Not if he won't even talk to Victor.

"It has been two days since he has emerged from his room," Kori points out, voice and thoughts drenched in sorrow. She's right to be worried.

"I'll try." Raven stands. "But I don't think it will help."

"Will it hurt?" Victor says quietly, gaze returning to his soda bottle.

The question is rhetorical, of course. Nothing could hurt Garfield any worse than what's already happened.

With each step toward his room, the pain in Raven's head grows. She closes her eyes and stops to lean on the wall, bracing herself against the waves of guilt, regret, anger, sorrow. And grief. So much grief, in every shade and variation she's ever sensed, present all at once in a single boy.

Taking a deep breath, Raven centers herself. She closes the distance to Gar's room and knocks on the door. No answer. Not even a rustle of movement. If it weren't for the hurricane of emotion flooding from him, she might think the room was empty.

"Garfield," she says to the closed door. "It's Raven."

Nothing changes. Not with the door and not in his mind.

She didn't come before because he needed time to process and mourn. But now that she's here… Garfield's in too much anguish for her to just turn around and leave. He shouldn't be alone with this.

"I'm coming in." Raven's hand rests on the doorknob for a few seconds, giving him a chance to protest. Silence. She opens the door and steps inside, shutting it quietly behind her.

The room is dim. The only trace of light seeps through the half-shuttered window, filtering between storm clouds and raindrops to drench the room in an even gray. Garfield lies on his side in bed, the covers tangled beneath him. He stares out at the downpour, expression distant and blank. Tired. Empty.

Raven closes her eyes again, just for a moment. Her head pounds, her chest tight and aching with the agony pouring from him like the rain from the sky. She forces herself to open her eyes.

"I don't wanna get out of bed." Garfield's voice breaks the silence, raspy and flat. "I don't wanna do anything." His dull eyes trace a raindrop trickling down the glass. "That's never happened to me before," he whispers.

"I'm sorry." Raven's throat feels thick, like a knot has tied the middle shut, and breathing past it is difficult. Her thoughts slow and blur, a numbness settling upon her. This… this is how Garfield feels. The sensations that plague her mimic the heaviness of grief upon his chest, the darkness of apathy draining the color from his being. This is the extent of his pain.

If Raven had the words to comfort him, she'd give them freely. If she knew how to help, she would stop at nothing. But that is an ability her mentor Azar never taught her. A skill she's never learned, despite the years spent surrounded by caring, whole people who do know how to soothe and comfort. It's yet another area where she has failed them.

Dark streaks trail the fur on Gar's face, marking the path of tears. Another falls as Raven watches.

"Why can't I just hate her?" he chokes. "Why do I have to miss her?"

"Because you care, despite what she did. Because that's who you are." It's the truth. She knows how to give him that, at least.

Garfield inhales shakily. "Yeah. And it's how I got hurt."

Without that openness and trust, you wouldn't be Garfield. But even if Raven argues, she won't be able to make him believe. Not when he's still so deeply wounded.

She searches for something to say as Gar falls silent again. He crosses his arms and pulls his knees to his chest, curling into a fetal position. "There's so much I never got to tell her," he whispers to himself.

Watching him feels like an intrusion and there's nothing she can do to help. Raven turns to leave and give him his privacy, but his voice stops her.

"Please."

When she glances back, Garfield is looking at her for the first time since she stepped into the room. His emerald green eyes, normally so full of joy and mirth, are dark and pained. They reflect the ache throbbing inside him, the one pulsing in Raven's head.

"Don't leave me," he whispers. "I don't want to be alone."

His words hit Raven like a shot to the chest.

After Tara left, in more ways than one, after what she did to him… He's afraid to be left alone again. And he's asking for Raven, of all people, to stay.

The pressure in her head builds until she wants to scream. "Let me get you something to eat." She needs an escape.

Garfield's shoulders drop. His head falls back to the pillow, eyes returning to the gray sky. "Sure."

Just like that, any emotion in his voice disappears as he slips back under the numbness. Another dagger pushed into Raven's heart. She shuts the door behind her with shaking hands, working to calm her breathing. His pain, his grief… It's too much.

She walks to the kitchen without thought. Kori looks up hopefully as soon as she enters, Richard and Victor following suit.

"How is he?" Richard asks.

"Not good." Raven wrenches the fridge open, searching for something Garfield would never turn down, not even in his current state. "He's depressed."

The word lies sour and dark on her tongue, the reality of it sending dread rolling over her. Sunny, ridiculously optimistic Garfield, depressed. Beast Boy, the light of the team, caught in the dark of his own mind.

Her fist slams down on the kitchen counter with a crack. "Curse you, Tara," Raven hisses.

Sharp pain travels up her nerves, the sensation delayed by her anger. Feeling her friend's wide eyes on her, Raven snatches a container of last night's garlic tofu and rice out of the fridge and marches from the room.

No one will ever put Garfield through this again. Not on her watch. If she's the one he's reaching out to, then Raven will do whatever it takes to make him whole. To bring back the smile to her friend's face and the light to his eyes. If it means hours of extra meditation afterwards to maintain her control, then so be it. It's more than a fair price.

"I brought garlic stir-fry." Raven sets the container on his bookshelf, next to a picture frame turned face down. Her gaze lingers there. It isn't hard to guess who's in the photo.

"You came back." Gar glances at her, then away when she faces him. "I thought that was just your excuse to get away from the mess in my head." He makes a finger gun and taps it against his temple. "Not that I blame you."

A shudder runs down Raven's spine. Her mouth goes dry. "Don't do that."

"I'm just joking." His voice is small and quiet.

The dark part of Raven is angry that Tara will never see what she did to him, the shell she reduced him to. Gar cares more than anyone else can ever hope to, and Tara used that. Troubled or not, a victim of manipulation or not, nothing can ever change that truth.

Raven pushes the darkness back and locks it away in a far corner of her mind. Tara is not her concern now. Garfield is.

"How can I help?"

Gar blinks. "You can't. Not unless you can take away the pain, like when I get beat up on a mission." He laughs once, a bitter huff.

Raven steps forward. "I can't." She sits next to him on the bed. "But I can share it."

Garfield's eyes widen and he jerks to sitting, showing the first bit of life she's seen in two days. "Raven, no." His ears droop, his brow furrowing. "That'll hurt you."

"If you can handle it, then so can I." The situation calls for comfort she doesn't know how to give. But her friends do. So she mimics the way she's seen Victor reassure Kori and cups Gar's cheek, fingertips finding still damp fur. She lets her concern show, her lips falling into a frown. "And I'm more worried about you, Gar."

His eyes glimmer. Just a spark, for just a second. "You called me Gar." Slowly, he shakes his head, gaze still fixed on Raven. "You never use nicknames."

Despite her teammates' best efforts to the contrary, Raven always uses their proper first names. It makes it easier to pretend she isn't as emotionally involved, as attached to them as she knows she is. It's silly, honestly. She uses the nicknames in her head anyway.

"Yes," Raven confesses. "I did."

"I knew you thought it was cool," Gar mumbles, curling up on his side again. But this time, he lays his head in Raven's lap.

She freezes for a moment, scrambling to comprehend this new turn of events. Her hand ends up in his hair, so she tentatively smooths it, careful to avoid the knots. She's never been comfortable with touch. It's a strange and unfamiliar sensation to her, having experienced it only rarely on Azarath. But she tries to set that aside now.

"Promise you won't leave." Garfield's vulnerable like she's never seen him. So small and afraid compared to who he usually is. Or maybe he's always hidden it well, even from her. "I just… I need…"

"I need you here." His thoughts say what he can't. "I need you."

No one has ever needed Raven before. All her life, she has brought this world only darkness and the promise of death and destruction at the hand of her father. But somehow, Gar sees something different. That ability to find the best in people, regardless of who they are… it's his greatest quality.

"I promise," Raven answers. "I won't leave."

Closing her eyes, she bows her head and lowers the walls around her mind.

Emotions seep in, flowing from the broken boy with his head in her lap. Forceful, potent feelings, far stronger than any she's ever experienced through her empathy before. They whip through her mind in blinding colors, mingling with and amplifying each other, complex and interconnected. When she lets herself appreciate them, they're almost beautiful, despite the monumental effort it takes to keep them from overwhelming her.

Raven breathes carefully and slowly, the tightness in her chest returning threefold. Inhale… Exhale… The sound is her point of focus as she works to channel the pain from Gar and release it into the void her powers come from, allowing herself to be a conduit.

A hand reaches up to touch her cheek, the contact pulling her mind back to this world. Gentle fingers wipe away a single tear that managed to escape her control. "Rae…"

Raven opens her eyes to see Garfield watching her with concern. Just two days ago, he endured tragedy that no one should ever have to experience, trauma that would break most anyone. Yet he's concerned for her.

"Get some sleep." Raven brushes Gar's hair from his face and he obediently closes his eyes, too exhausted to fight. She feels his tight muscles ease as she pulls the brunt of his emotions into herself, taking the edge off his pain.

The technique is beyond dangerous and it hurts. But if she can offer Gar any comfort, she won't withhold it. No matter the ferocity of the storm within her.

As Garfield's breathing deepens and he drifts into slumber for what she suspects is the first time since Tara died, Raven repeats her promise.

"I won't leave you."