Why did he say that?
It took a few turns and back alleys for Bruce to lose the paparazzi, but soon enough he was driving on the road of the fight. The thighs of his pants were damp from rubbing his hands on them to dry; he needed to check the side-effect list of his meds. His body felt alight with tension and activation, and all he could think about on a haunting loop was: from the bottom of my heart. He didn't say things like that. Why did he say that?
Now that he was further from the trigger, and not yet at the scene, he tried to dehaze the memory of what it felt like to sit across from you. If he could pin himself to that moment, investigate those feelings… he was drawing a blank. He focused in on the apprehension, the hesitation that stopped him from saying goodbye, or even good riddance. It wasn't often he couldn't drudge up any possibilities. He shoved his foot on the gas, frustrated.
The sun had fully abandoned the sky, and the moon was shrouded in clouds. The dim street lamps didn't do much, so he double-clicked the headlights, thankful for the apparent lack of other drivers to render sightless with his ultra-brights. Seemed like no one had been to the complex yet; at the entryway, a small pile of decaying vomit engraved itself below the side railing. Some specks of blood could be seen on the steps—his eyes narrowed. He hadn't felt a cut on your head. Maybe Miller's?
His nagging thoughts fell by the wayside as he noted no one around the apartment complex. He slid the car down an alleyway across the street, cutting the lights as he turned off the motor and unbuckled his seatbelt. That familiar tingle came back into him like a breath of life. The feeling of adventure, the feeling of duty, of purpose. It wasn't the longest he'd kept from this, and he took a forceful inhale as he recalled the period after the flooding. All the blood that had been in the street, the bodies, the animals, the glass scattered everywhere… he'd drifted around in the weeks following, and he always heard someone scream from a cut. Every walk. The sound of the city's sobs hadn't left his mind for months.
A car drove past, then backed up. Bruce sat forward in his seat, his jaw locking tight as he soaked in the environment. Black Chevy truck, 832KZY license. Dent in the left flank by the brake light. Dusty. Faded paint. The driver was a petite woman with olive skin and mid-length dark hair. Bangs. She looked down at something to her right with annoyance. After some lurching, she grinned, and the car sped off. He relaxed. Stick shift issues. That year's model was notoriously difficult.
As he reclined in his seat just so, the weight of speaking in front of the crowd thudded into him. His insides felt hollow, scooped out; his eyes stung like staring straight at the sun on a blazing summer day. He'd have to watch back the footage, even though the thought skinned him alive. It was necessary to study how he came off, find areas to tweak, improve. He slumped further into the seat. He would've much rather had a gun to his head. At least then he'd feel less lost. Less drained. Might even jolt some rage-fueled energy into him.
He was disappointed there wasn't more to sink his teeth into; he longed to investigate. The cut-and-dry never did much for him. He lived to find the detail everyone else overlooked; to forge a bond between two things no one thought could be connected. God, even imagining doing that brought a rush… the pulsing throb of electrum whispered behind the past week's curtains.
He redirected himself, pulling out a small journal from the glovebox. He clicked the pen.
Electrum. John Doe. Gordon. Investigate.
More thoughts came to him. Every other word he paused, flitting his eyes up to check for changes.
Hady, Grange, March. Research.
Bella Reál. Investigate.
He put it back in the glovebox and readjusted in his seat. Early on he'd tried to carry everything all at once, following the natural direction of his thoughts as if it were logical to rely on intuition alone. It was distracting. Inefficient. One thing at a time.
After a paltry fifteen minute stakeout, Alfred lit up his phone. Bruce hated how worrying he was lately, but what he hated more was he had good reason to. As severe the desire to ignore the man's calls was, he knew he couldn't keep him waiting… he grit his teeth. Under the present circumstances. While it wasn't rare for him to daydream about time machines, he'd never before wanted to jump forward in time. He kept his eyes trained to the building, but there was no movement. "Yeah?"
"Did you see Y/N leave the meeting?"
・。。・・。。・・。。・・。。・
You'd done precisely what Bruce had instructed, save your addition of turning off the lamp. Even after minutes spent gasping air into your lungs, waiting for an Uber to arrive, pretending that conversation with him had just been a figment of your imagination, you still struggled to catch your breath walking through the foyer.
Half of it was nerves about him going out again so soon, and the other was a sensation you couldn't pin down, but it had you sweating and shaking. Fear? Anxiety? Sadness? Tension! More than anything, you'd felt tense. Bruce was intimidating, especially so when he held a metaphorical pair of scissors. And when they were aimed at you.
Mar had answered your third phone call as you walked down the city hall steps, berating you for interrupting their 'jam session'. Faint guitar chords were heard in the background, the acoustics isolated and muffled. It sounded like a house party. She dismissed your concern about staying away, finally conceding and telling you she'd avoid it for a few weeks. "And to think I was practicing all my trivia skills for nothing."
You should've realized by the beanie pulled nearly covering his eyes, but your usual vigilance had been halved as you came down from your interaction with Bruce. Sliding into the seat had you wincing at the pain in your thigh; you berated yourself for not bringing Tylenol with you. It'd been shockingly effective; you'd barely felt your injury on the walk here.
The drive was normal for the first half, so much so that you relaxed against the window and stared blankly at the people milling the main street, speed blurring them like ants. As the streets wound toward your apartment complex, you thought about how you could've feigned innocence, inputting the destination as the area of the fight. "Get a ride?" You'd tell him, when he glared at you and questioned your arrival. "I thought you meant here!" It was embarrassing roleplaying conversations with him, so you rid yourself of the thought. You'd feel it all in the morning and think about what to do next when your head was less scrambled.
The driver took a sharp left, cutting the lights as he pulled into an alley. You realized a second too late to reach for the door, ready to drop, roll and run. He'd child-locked it, and by the time you manually unclicked the lock, he pointed a gun at your head. The beanie slipped higher, and you could see clearly it was Miller. No other thoughts formed as the reality of having death pointed at your skull set in.
"Try to leave and I'll blow your brains out." He had two black eyes and a smushed nose. His lip was busted open and you swore he was missing a tooth. The rest of him was covered in thick industrial clothing. Bruce had effective punches. He hadn't been on the guy more than a few seconds. Even Bruce began to slip away as you felt the cold metal jam into your temple. He pressed it harder and harder with every word he spoke. "Who the fuck was that guy?"
The dizzying adrenaline made the blood leave your body and rush into your head; he pressed right on a nerve that coaxed out every last bit of sting and throb from your concussion. You could barely focus on what he was saying. Breathe. Breathe. Your body stilled outside of your heartbeat and wincing eyelids.
"I'm not gonna ask again, bitch. Who the fuck was the guy last night?"
You shook your head. "I don't know,"
"Bullshit. Call him."
You stared back at him, unable to move. He stuck the barrel of the gun into your mouth, slacked open with debilitating fear. You couldn't move. You couldn't breathe. You slapped around for your phone that had fallen at your side, unable to look down or move your face even an inch.
"Show me your call log."
You strained your eyes to look down, fumbling with your apps, accidentally opening the likes of Old Navy and Target, tears threatening to slip with each passing second. You held it up to him, hands almost too shaky for the screen to be legible. 'Alfred' was listed for an eleven minute call at 11:49pm Wednesday. "It's my, my stepdad,"
"Call him." He pressed it and held it out to you, clacking the tip of the gun against your front teeth. You swallowed, thinking death only seconds or minutes in the horizon. He picked up on the third ring. Not long enough for you to plan much. Or at all. The man was deadly serious, his eyes a frenzied mess of bleary red as he jostled the gun against the roof of your mouth.
"What's going on, Miss?"
The man withdrew the barrel just enough for you to speak unencumbered. You rushed the words to refuse him time to say something that would give him away. "Hey Dad." You let out a small sigh. "I just wanted to call to see how the cats were doing." You paused, then hurried more out with a hollow laugh. The man narrowed his eyes, cocking the gun. "Probably lost on the upper floors of the house. Or stealing some soup, you know how they love it."
You were saying too much. If the roles were reversed, you'd think you were speaking in code. A predetermined plan. A keyword to let people know things were not alright.
Alfred chuckled on the other end. "I think Camelot is nestled on my bed. Everything go well at the meeting? After your call last night, I've been worried." His tone was conversational, but concerned. You wanted to fucking bawl, reach out to him and wrap him in a tight, tight hug, mutter a thousand thanks. It felt like there was an ocean between the both of you. He'd fucking caught on.
"Yeah, I'm fine." You stuttered forward. "And just more boring election stuff. Not much to go off of." It was fucking incredible you could speak. You were starting to regain some more of your breathing. The clouds were beginning to lift. The environment slowly moving back into focus. Even with him however many miles away, you knew he'd be looking out for you, and do his best to help.
Alfred sighed, a light but impatient one. He rustled something in the background that sounded like metal on metal. "Well, hurry back. I'll bring over some lasagna later. I have your locale, but… the streets are dangerous at night. I worry. Your screams were terrible."
Maybe not as subtle as you would have liked, but you knew what he was trying to do, and you trusted him more than yourself in this moment. He muttered something. "The ricotta… Jane, I told you we needed the automated mixer." He let out another sigh. "Call me when you get back, sweets. I've got to put some muscle into this."
Alfred ended the call. You tried not to have it feel like the beginning of the end. If it took Bruce, or Batman, or the police longer than it took for him to shoot you in the head…
He drew closer to you, hucking spit onto you before he spoke. It slid down the sides of your nose. "Who was the guy?"
It was difficult to speak. "I don't know,"
"YOU KNOW!" He jammed the gun further into your mouth, and you kept your mouth wide as you felt a small chipping.
The words were swallowed against the thickness of the gun. "I don't, I just screamed and then he came and, then the, police," He pressed the gun to your uvula and you gagged. It was humiliating, and your blood boiled when you saw him grin at it.
He spit in your face again, this time just below your eye, and pressed the gun until it scraped the back of your throat. Tears sprung to your eyes and poured down your cheeks in reflex. He ripped the gun out of your mouth, keeping it focused at your sternum. He cursed and slammed a fist against his seat. He began muttering, his eyes ablaze. "No one has ever fought me like that, no one but..." He punched the center console, sending a part of the plastic flying in front of the passenger seat. "Immediately booked, too. Only happens with him."
Oh. You opened your mouth to speak but he shouted at you instead. "You're gonna help me, or you're fucking dead."
He taunted you by shoving the gun toward you. You considered making a break for it, but figured you wouldn't get far before all you saw was black. How the fuck did Bruce face this every night? Even if his suit was bulletproof? You stared back at him while he laid out his plan, starting to wonder if Bruce was actually a masochist.
"I know you got that Wayne guy in your pocket."
It was whiplash having them mentioned so close to each other, and made you paranoid the man was reading your mind. You began to shake your head but he cocked the gun again, grazing the trigger. "You're gonna leave, and you're gonna get him on our side."
"I don't—"
"If you alert anyone to this shit, I'll hunt you down and kill you with my bare fucking hands."
"I only did an interv—"
"That's more than anyone else fucking gets." He bared his teeth in a snarl. "You're gonna get him to give me his best fuckin lawyers. And get me back in school, full fucking ride."
You didn't have a response queued, which seemed to escalate him. He lunged, grabbing you by the throat with his left hand. He smelled like cigarettes, booze, and Drops. That familiar citrus scent; the type that made you afraid to put it in your eyes. The type of acidic smell that made you wonder how every Drophead hadn't yet lost their vision. Some did. His hands were rough and dirty as his fingers closed on your larynx.
"That's the only money I fucking get; I'll get life before going back to Pointe." He sniffed, adjusting his posture. His arm strength was faltering. You wondered if you could disarm him yourself… knock his left arm into his right before he pulled the trigger... "If he gets wind of this little deal, I'm ending you."
Crown Pointe. A neighborhood absolutely decimated by the flood, and more or less abandoned by the local government. It was entirely written off, as the highest percentage of the houseless and impoverished population lived there. You didn't know too much about Gotham's ecosystem, but you did know that they didn't give a fuck about Pointe. You nodded. "Okay." It came out in a croak. "I won't tell." It was surreal feeling a wash of relaxation pour over you, but you understood it was either being held like this, or looking down the barrel of something that could kill you before you'd even realize what was happening.
He released his grip and you sputtered. "You have until the thirteenth to kill it. I'll kill you and your friend." His gun was lowered, but still pointed to you, like he'd forgotten he was holding a powerful, terrifying weapon. His gaze focused above you and his glare set. He spun in his seat and floored it before you even realized what was happening; the alley was long and straight, but thin. As the bricks around you blurred, you thought about what had the highest survival rate—staying in the car, or jumping?
The speed of the car made you stay inside; you even thought about buckling your seatbelt as you noticed the end creep closer and closer; a giant brick wall with a hard ninety-degree turn. Miller kept looking in his rearview mirror, each time nearly slamming the car into the side of the tight alley.
The wall was a football field away. Your hand shot for the seatbelt as Miller realized he needed to brake, squealing tires skidding, slipping on the concrete. Pure instinct, nothing more, made your call; you jammed open the door as far as it could, sparks flying off of it as it slammed against the brick, and tossed yourself out ass-first.
The first part of your body to hit was your left thigh, leaving you screeching on the impact. The second was your back, knocking the wind entirely out of you. You had the good sense to tuck your hands behind your head, and you felt the knuckles skid against the rough, chunky street. Almost in unison, you heard a petrifying, deafening crash of metal crunching. You laid there gasping at the sky, your vision swirling, heart racing, leg throbbing, hands numb.
The dark sky above only made you more dizzy, giving you nothing to concentrate on and cling to. You heard footsteps further back from whence you came, and the sound of a car door wrenching open. You sat up on your elbows, forcing yourself back up. Your body felt battered and bruised, your left leg now bordering on unusable, but you managed to get up to your knees. You panted at the ground until you caught Bruce's cologne run past. He wasn't in the suit. No!
You reached out and grabbed his ankle, shouting weakly for him to stop. He shook you off but you yelled louder, lunging forward, scraping your elbows as you barely caught his calf with both hands. You heard more creaking, and suddenly Bruce's face was inches from yours, dropped to a squat. His cheeks were flushed and his breath was hard and full against your sweaty, spit-sodden cheeks. His brow furrowed, his mouth curled down into an exasperated scowl. "What are you doing?!"
You glanced above him to the left, noticing Miller jump face-first out of the car, bolting down the turn in the alley. Bruce turned to look with you, but felt the tightening of your hands around him when he tried to move forward. Your fingernails dug into his skin, even through his pant leg. "Stop, don't."
"He's gonna get away—"
"STAY!"
This was the first time you'd yelled at him, and it was like scolding a dog. You didn't have time to feel bad yet, letting your arms limp and lying flat on your stomach. Disgusting, wet, smelly ground. You caught the rest of your breath, staring intently at his feet. You could hear him scowling, groaning and mumbling.
You took a few beats to catch your breath and orient to your surroundings. It took a few minutes to catch yourself, bring your chest back to a normal percussion. Took half as long for your eyes to unblur, but they kept darting across the ground, and the first few bricks along the sides of the alley.
"Let's go," Bruce grabbed your wrist and tried to help you up, but you weren't ready yet. Your head swirled, the pain was just beginning to surpass the adrenaline…
"Let's go." He pulled harder, his voice cracking. You yelped, your knee skidding on the upheaval. You slammed back down on all fours, tears springing to your eyes. You couldn't see him, but you could see his feet pacing. Tight, muffled sounds came from above you. You dry-heaved against the cement, nothing spurring but hot bile that soured you, furthering more pitiful attempts at retching. Your arms shook and fingers scraped the jagged ground as you tried to sit up on your own again.
Every time he saw you in an alleyway, he wanted to jump off a cliff; seeing you unable to stand, gasping, sputtering against the ground in one threatened to kill him. His cheeks got hot, the world got wobbly, and his legs felt like jello. He probably looked like an asshole, but the flashbacks were ripping at him, his feet unable to be stilled. If you were anyone else he might've just ran. Phoned Gordon. Maybe if it were anyone else he wouldn't have panicked, though, and he didn't want to interrogate that.
You held out your arms for him to help you up. He took a deep breath and knelt down, focusing on the mechanics of the moment. He held the brunt of your weight, and you stumbled like that to his car on the street, your left leg a mess of pain, your head rapidly catching up. You gasped into the back seat as your thigh scraped against the leather. He shut the door gently, but quickly.
He drove you around until you were on the outskirts of town, and pulled over beside a throng of trees, the gravel loud under the tires as he parked. He turned to look at you from the driver's seat and you flinched, glancing down at where the gun had been. Without fanfare, he got out and sidled in beside you in the backseat. It hurt to turn your head, but you did enough to at least see some of his body in your vision.
"What happened?"
You opened your mouth to answer, but he pummeled more questions your way. "Why'd you get in the car with him?" "Couldn't you tell it was him?" "What was he doing?" "What did he want?"
You held a feeble hand out to him before moving it to your temple. Gently, you set your head against the leather seat, needing a moment to gather yourself. Your blood was still pumping like you were sprinting fifty miles, everything, everything wildly unstable. By some miracle Bruce obliged and stopped talking.
You didn't know if it had been ten seconds or ten minutes by the time you opened your eyes again and started to speak, and you kept an arm outstretched to keep his interrogations at bay. "He wants the charges dropped." You swallowed hard, trying to think of anything else besides the pain in your head and leg—or how bad the chip might be. Your voice was dry and scratchy. "Wanted me to use your connection. For lawyers. Retract our statements." You took another breather, heard him draw in a breath to speak, and shoved the rest out before he could. "I stopped you going after him." Another gulp, a wince. You'd never been more desperate for sweet, sweet Tylenol… "Because he also." It was impossible to speak. You let your head fall back in failure. He needs to know this. "He knows whoever fought him last night was Batman. Felt it. Same fighting. Feeling. Booking." Your lashes fluttered open with a rush of pain in a circle around your skull.
Bruce didn't know how to respond; he didn't want you to have to speak more without medication, so he instead faced the back seat, head spinning. You spoke anyway, confirming a fear he'd had since the day his parents died in that alley, a fear that had been poked, prodded, and split entirely open seeing Alfred in the hospital. "Said if you got wind of it, he'd kill me. And Mar."
You bolted up, startling him. "Mar!"
He sat up and shook his head at you. "I'll watch her. I'm taking you back to my place."
You did not want to go there, but your brain was slow to think of anything, slow to form words, and by the time he shut the driver's door and started for Wayne Tower, you realized he was right. His house was a fortress of safety. Wasn't like he could be in two places at once.
As the trees thinned out and gravel turned to road, he told you to lay back as flat as you could. He'd be going through the front entry, which had ramped up security now. He muttered something about reporters lingering on the grounds after the interview, and you struggled to focus on it. Being horizontal in a moving car was nauseating when you weren't in body-buzzing misery, but it was excruciating now. If you had the strength to sit up again, you would've. Fuck the paparazzi.
Bruce's mind was a mess.
Not even one week since the interview's release and you'd been held at gunpoint over him.
It was hellish attempting to concentrate on the road. It would be hard to convince you to leave Gotham, but it had to be done. Another conversation with you, and one he would ensure didn't go awry. He swore he felt his teeth splitting against each other as he mulled over how to bring it up, and when. Not now. Tomorrow. You needed to recuperate, and he needed to find Miller.
Once in his garage, you scooted yourself up by fumes of sheer will so Bruce didn't have to help you out. Forcing each foot in front of the other as he pushed the door open to the foyer, where Alfred stood, holding his glasses in his hands. Bruce walked ahead of you and gestured for Alfred to step into the kitchen for a minute. You supported yourself against the doorframe, taking out your phone to message Mar.
The screen assaulted you, peppering your vision with black spots and squiggly lines.
The guy from last night got released on bail, and he held me at gunpoint trying to get information out of me. I was able to escape, but I'm worried he'll come after you. Stay inside, officers will be watching the area to see if he tries to come after you.
Her location showed she was at home; apparently, the 'jam session' was being held at her place; you looked up to remind Bruce to leave, but he was already gone, Alfred walking toward you with a lukewarm smile. He handed over a glass of water and the same little white pill, both of which you took with a desperate gulp. "Miss. So glad you're alright. Bruce informed me about what happened. Do you know the address of your friend?"
You told him, and he texted it to him. A strange, temporary thrill flit through you thinking that he was just a few levels below, suiting up. So fucking weird. So fucking wild. Alfred helped you up the stairs, escorting you to the same room as last Spring. "Our housekeeper keeps things tidy, so you shouldn't be left wanting. I'll grab fresh clothing."
Standing in the room again was one of the most disorienting experiences of your life. Everything was the same, as if you had left it yesterday. Almost as if he hadn't left, Alfred reappeared in the doorway, holding a pair of black sweatpants and matching tee. Before he left, he asked if you wanted anything to eat, or any company. "These events can be traumatizing."
You declined it all, wanting desperately to both be alone and be smothered by someone else, but confused enough by it you chose solitude. You thanked him, grabbed the clothes, and exchanged a solemn look. After an encouraging nod, he left, letting you know the same standards were in place; if you wanted anything from the kitchen, or to visit in his study, you were free to.
You slunk out of your dress and threw it into the corner, hastily pulling on the outfit you were desperate to forget was likely Bruce's. The feat was easily won, though it was tight in some places, loose in others, and entirely too tall—because your nose was too blocked with snot you couldn't smell anything.
The next two hours passed in a montage. Sitting on the side of the bed in a blurry haze. Every time you looked at your phone was like a knife to the chest recalling your dad's text in June, which led to the room with the doctor, which led to the wheelchair, which led to the trial, which, which… your brain was numb to pain at this point.
Your limbs moved in slow-motion when they did adjust to laying. Mar had texted you that she was okay, and she'd heeded your warning. She'd asked if you were okay, and you'd said you were safe. She didn't comment past that, only giving occasional check-ins to let you know she hadn't been captured. At one point you'd texted Alfred through a mess of tears, asking him if he'd heard any updates from Bruce. He responded immediately, explaining that his suit was active and on Mar's street. You let your head hit the pillow hard after that, which reminded you of the clack of the gun against your teeth and its pressure against your head.
Your head ached. Jabbed. Punctured. Shouted to be witnessed. You chose not to do anything about it. You took a selfie on your phone to check on your tooth, and noticed a noticeable tick on an incisor. Your cheeks were crunchy with dried spit, and you bolted to the bathroom as fast as your hobbling leg would allow. You scrubbed your face in the sink, taking the soap bar and shredding it against your skin to erase the attack.
In the mirror you noticed the bleeding crusties along your knuckles and the rippled shreds of skin hanging off your elbows. You plucked the shreds off carefully, giving your arms and hands a thorough wash. The skinning was artificial. No gravel lodged anywhere. You felt the wear on your body and slumped back to the room, landing hard against the pillow.
・。。・・。。・・。。・・。。・
You woke up with a scream.
The gun's muzzle had penetrated your skin, digging deep into your flesh, making hot, wet blood stream down your face in a thick river. You'd tried to scream, but blood had erupted from your esophagus, mixing with the vomit curdling your stomach. It felt like you sat there like that forever, screaming and gurgling and writhing before he'd pulled the trigger.
Apparently it'd been a dream.
A knock on your door made you jump, another yelp escaping.
"Can I come in?"
Bruce. You shouted a yes, or at least something similar, as you tried to catch your breath. It felt so impossibly real, every sensation filling you still, like your head was still dripping, your mouth was still full…
He opened the door, fiddling with the button on his pants. He was shirtless, his torso and hair dripping wet from what appeared to be him fresh out of the shower. His eyes were wide, searching around the room before landing on you trembling in bed. He noticed Alfred brought you the outfit he'd set out for himself—no wonder he couldn't find it. The sight of you in it made him anxious.
"What happened?"
You thought you mumbled "Nightmare" but you weren't sure. Sniffled, soft cries filled the space between the both of you. You were staring down at your hands fiddling with the top sheet, rubbing along the seam.
"Are you okay?"
You nodded, then shook your head, his question propelling barely-quelled sobs out of you.
Bruce didn't know what to do. At all. He figured all he could do was offer logistical support. "Need more Tylenol?"
The vulnerable peculiarity of the situation spurred a laugh as you sniffed up more tears, your voice muffled from your stuffed nose. "It's like I'm a toddler."
He didn't know what to say to that. He had no idea what a toddler acted like. He waited, awkwardly, for your sniffing to pause, and spoke. "Miller's been booked." You looked up to him, interest piqued.
"Found him walking around your friend's neighborhood. Watched Gordon take him in. He had an unregistered weapon on him too. He'll be in there a while." He hoped it would be some consolation, because you looked like you needed it. He forced himself not to think about what else you might need; thinking about you was starting to feel like holding his breath.
You sighed, your shoulders dropping a few inches. He looked away, too much relief filling him seeing it. "Thanks."
He nodded, then turned to leave. "If you need anything, just shout."
You nodded in response, and the door had almost shut when you spoke, tentative. The question not only gnawed at you now, it had been one of the first things you'd thought about with a fucking gun to your skull. "How do you do it?"
He did not want to go back in… He propped the door open and sidled halfway. "Do what?"
"Get shot at every night, it's fucking horrifying." More heat sprung to your face, and you pressed your palms to your eyes to force them back.
Admittedly, he'd forgotten how affecting those experiences could be. Even two decades later he couldn't think too specifically back to Crime Alley or he'd succumb to panic. He stepped the rest of the way in, ashamed that he'd been subtly trying to slip away and ignore you.
You peered at him with a tear-streaked face and he averted his eyes, goosebumps prickling his skin. He swallowed back a lump that'd found its way to his throat. "Already happened, so. Not much to lose I guess."
He wasn't looking at you, but you couldn't stop looking at him. Why did he think so low of himself? Why didn't he think his life was worth protecting? That night he'd talked about feeling like he'd died with his parents, and suddenly his ghostlike demeanor made a lot of sense. "I'm sorry you had to go through that." You'd caught your breath by this point, the haunting images falling back the longer he hung around. "I know you probably hate to hear it, but I am."
You weren't surprised when he deflected it. "I'm sorry you had to go through that."
You wiped the pool of tears in the troughs of your cheeks. "It's not even close."
That struck a nerve. Few things had been more exasperating to him growing up than having every person's problems minimized while he was around. "Sorry, Bruce, I mean, it's nothing compared to what you went through." "I shouldn't be talking." "What do I have to complain about?" Somehow, his words blurted out harsher and gentler than intended. "You're allowed to be hurt by it."
His face was contorted into a grimace. You didn't know what else to do, the vibe entirely shifted, so you just sat, and nodded. When he turned to leave again, anxiety barreled into you like a truck. "Can you turn on the light?"
Tick. You squinted to adjust, the monsters creeping back into the closet.
"If you want anything, don't hesitate." He shut the door.
・。。・・。。・・。。・・。。・
Your dreams had been shitty, but they hadn't been horrifying.
It was four in the morning when you woke up next, officially well past needing another dose. Forgetting Bruce had essentially offered on-call service, you padded your way out to the stairwell, and jumped with his shadow already at the foot of the stairs. "I told you to shout if you need anything."
He had a shirt on now, something you were grateful for. "I wanted more meds, thought I might want a walk."
"How's your leg?" His voice echoed in the foyer as he walked to the kitchen. He returned in a similar fashion as Alfred, but faster. You'd only made it down a few steps. As he walked to hand you them, you saw the bags under his eyes, creeping in under the moonlight. How every blink looked intentional and forced, designed to keep him standing and conscious. His shoulders were pulled forward, ragged with exhaustion.
You didn't want to trouble him, scooping the pill out of his hand and grabbing the glass. "Hurts." You drank it, popped it, and walked slowly back to your sleeping quarters. "Thanks."
Except… standing in the doorway made you pathetically sad. Gazing at the big, empty room that wasn't yours in the big, empty tower. Every anxious, miserable thought crowded closer. Your body ached, your spirit was absolutely obliterated. You'd almost died today. I almost DIED today.
More than anything, you wanted to be held. And you didn't hear his footsteps leaving.
You squeezed your eyes shut until you saw stars, as if it would make it easier. "Can I have a hug?" The request was needy, breathy, feeble. You couldn't muster a shit to give as the abyss circled you. It was silent.
Bruce froze. He wanted to deny you; after all, what good was a hug if it was hollow? If he was to force you out in the morning, planning ways to convince you to never, ever come back?
You looked over your shoulder, a slow, shakey glance dripping with sorrow. His lashes fluttered as his lips pressed into a thin line. He set the glass on the ground, and his body finished walking up the steps before he nodded. "Sure." Your eyes focused on the floor as you stepped toward each other, as if looking him in the eye would scare you both off.
When you fell into him it didn't feel hollow. He felt so full of empathy he could burst, his arms moving instinctually around your back like he'd hugged you a thousand times. His face naturally settled into concern, his chest caving in ever so slightly to welcome yours. You whimpered at the collision of your bodies. In dissent to his earlier apprehension, he pulled you closer, deepening the hug he realized you both so desperately needed.
Falling into his arms was easy. Wrapping your arms around his back was easier. Wailing into his shirt while you clumped fists of it around his back felt as simple as breathing; without beckoning, instinctual, like hot sand lapping up its first wave. The release fell out of you, and you didn't even register you could be too loud, too much, or too rough. He was as sturdy as the oak tree in his backyard, and just as unyielding—except for now, as his strong hands wrapped around your back and squeezed.
Time paused and the world stopped turning as you were gifted a portal for your pain to fall into. A river to erode the rocks piled in your stomach. You clutched him, your chin tucked into your chest, soaking his shirt until it clung to your cheeks. You bawled until you were coughing, until you felt rugburn on your palm from fisting the cotton so tightly. When you started to shake, he hugged you tighter.
You finally managed to croak out a word, but your mind was undecided between 'sorry' and 'thank you'. "Th-orry."
You shriek-laughed and cried some more, feeling a gentle rumble from his chest. The humor was quickly lost as you sunk into the sadness again, beginning to hiccup as your cries intensified. Time evaded you as you stood there sniffing, hiccuping, and crying, with your eyes squeezed shut, for what simultaneously felt like five seconds and twenty years.
As your sobs quieted, and your hiccups intensified, you were forced to right yourself, unlatching your hands from around him and wiping your eyes, peeling your skin off his soaked clothes. Your head throbbed. You needed more water, a shower, to sleep, you needed to do anything besides what you were currently doing. He didn't want this.
You cleared your gummy throat and moved further back to fully wipe your cheeks, tucking your chin under the collar of your shirt—his shirt—to soak up the water. You felt how hot and puffy your face was, the tired sting of your strained eyes. Bruce must not have slept for two days at this rate; what the hell were you doing? I'm just making things worse on him again.
"Do you want to talk about it?"
No conscious thought brought your eyes up to his, only shock at hearing him sound so gentle. His tone was soothing. His face matched it, which sent a jolt through your system remembering, seeing this was BRUCE. You stepped back, embarrassed tears threatening to overwhelm you. "I'm sorry." You shook your head, realization sinking in staring at his wrinkled, soaked shirt that you'd just bawled—
"I don't mind." He gestured toward the kitchen down the steps, turning his body with it like he'd already made up his mind. You didn't know it, but the embrace had temporarily quelled his inhibitions, replacing them with a profound desire to help. At least for tonight, he wanted to sit with you as long as you'd let him. Hear every bit of the pain that kept you from turning off the light. "Let's talk."
Your cheeks heated, intimidated by his new tenderness. "You've been awake so long,"
"Is that a no?"
You sighed, your shoulders rising high and dropping low in a huff. "You need to sleep."
"I'm not tired."
You wanted to cry again. He'd been so obviously weary. "Yes, you are."
"I can wait."
"I can wait. My problems will still be here in the morning."
He hesitated, but obliged. He asked if you wanted more water before he went up, and you let him. He handed it off to you without fanfare, like this was your nightly routine. "Shout if you want anything."
You walked up the stairway above his floor, and walked into the barren bedroom. You took a sip of the chilled water, feeling the weightiness of the glass, and turned off the light.
・。。・・。。・・。。・・。。・
After a few minutes of stirring, you couldn't ignore going to the bathroom. Padding out of your room turned into sneaking to check on Bruce's door, which was half open. It hadn't been that way in Spring. Your heart caught on the thought he'd done it so he wouldn't miss if you yelled.
You'd been correct in your estimation of his fatigue; that, or he was the fastest sleeper you'd ever known. He was fully conked on his bed, facing the door, his mouth slacked ever so slightly open, the deep rise and fall of his—bare—chest matching his gentle snores. He was on his right side, his left arm half slung over. Your eyes followed down to his shirt abandoned on the ground beside the bed. Even in the low light you could see darker patches from where you'd filled the fibers with your tears.
You forced your feet toward the bathroom, struck with self-consciousness at having spied on him. The marble was cool on the soles of your feet, still not used to walking barefoot on floors with no give. You sat in the small hallway bathroom, the toilet seat frigid against your flushed skin.
You stared absently at the wooden door. The shiny golden handle. The unmoving glint of the static overhead lighting against it. The total silence was unsettling. Both of your apartments in Gotham had ample noise pollution being downtown. Back at home, there was a small littering of the occasional car passing through, a coyote, or Walter licking himself.
This silence was empty. Your mind didn't waste a second filling it.
You wanted another hug from him. Your heartbeat quickened thinking about it. You moved your focus to the floor, the downward movement bringing Bruce to your nose. You lifted your shirt to bury your nose in it, bringing more depth to the smell. It was ambery and warm. In addition to whatever fragrant detergent he used, he used some sort of masculine body wash.
For a minute you sat there basking in it. Feeling held, wanted, and seen, without shying away. Letting your body relax into its intuitive trust in him. Taking a full, lung-satisfying breath into his comfort. The comfort of being held by him. The comfort of him being alive. The space he'd made for you. Even venturing into the what-if of what he might have said, how he might have looked at you, if you'd poured your grief in front of him.
But it was short-lived. With greater force than your appreciation swept in a current of shame. He didn't want your tears. He probably thought he had to take them. Had to humor you. Had to make sure you were okay after the lie.
You walked back to your room still in a slurry of painful, self-flagellating emotion. You'd have to clarify in the morning. Tell him it was because of your mom, and the stuff online, and your ex-friends, and the gun shoved in your mouth. The attack. The threats. But you couldn't very well leave out his attempt, could you? Would it make it seem like you didn't care about him?
A thought dawned on you before you went to sleep, spurred by the flashback sensation of the gun on your temples. I could've just done my paper on the club shooting. Then none of this pain would've happened. To either of us. You wanted to curl up and die.
Distracted by the mystery of Batman and the reclusiveness of Bruce Wayne. Forcing his hand. Denting the doors of his life breaking in. Shattering all the glass inside, stealing the valuables. It was pathetic. You were pathetic. A pathetic, annoying, disgusting liar sitting in this room for the second time, of your own doing, of your own mistakes, your own fucked priorities and selfish interests.
But it was a lie that was keeping him alive.
After an hour of tossing and turning, fighting the harassment you flung at yourself with reckless abandon, you forced yourself to get up. You remembered something you learned in therapy when you were younger, something to stop these anxious, ruminating thoughts, to help the room feel less like you were drowning in it. Get an orange. Pay attention to it. Peel it slowly. Focus on the texture in your mouth. The zing. The juiciness in its crunch.
Opening up his fridge, you realized they didn't have much outside of veggies, protein shakes, and meat. Absolutely not wanting to cook, and being put off by the grainy texture of past protein supplements, you opted for a stray apple in the back of the fridge. It was a bit bruised. You didn't mind.
When you shut the fridge, the freezer popped slightly open. Instead of just shutting it, you peeked inside—more meat, and a tub of Breyer's. The apple fell out of your hand and you felt wobbly. More memories flooded your veins already primed to panic. Just one week ago. Hospital. Lingering. On autopilot you shut the freezer, swooped the apple and brought it to the sink to rinse. The water was freezing on your hands. You hoped Bruce wasn't a light sleeper. You didn't want to subject him to you again.
The apple was surprisingly crisp, save a few spongy parts. You ate it as you walked up the stairs—one bite per step. You shut your eyes and let your senses guide you, zooming in and slowing down. The tang of the apple. The crunch on the first bite. The coolness of the marble steps. The height and slickness of the railing as it skimmed your palm. Crunch. Step.
You made it back to your room calmer than you left it. The apple was nearly eaten to the core, and you discarded it in the trashcan by the side table. You slipped into bed methodically—left leg, slowly, carefully, then the right. First cover, then comforter, then head to pillow. Eyes closed. Slow, deep, gentle breathing. The only thing you had to do right now was sleep. The only task you had to do was let your body relax. Everything else could wait until morning.
Bruce Wayne could wait until the morning.
