An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A @batfam-christmas-stocking written for @sqoiler!! Happy holidays <3
----
âIâm stealing you,â a voice announces over his shoulder. Itâs a voice he recognizes, one that belongs to Stephanie. Bruce turns around, totally unconcerned about the people heâd just been talking to. Sure enough, Steph is standing there, dressed up more than heâd ever seen before. Her dress is purple, a more subdued shade than her old costume. There arenât any shoulders, but long sleeves cover her arms, and a built-in belt sits high on her waist, just under where the neckline dips. Thereâs a slit for her leg in the flowing fabric, which brushes the ground.
He recalls that when the children were discussing what theyâd be wearing to this event, Damian mentioned how low the temperature can get in an effort to not overheat everyone. She and Dick had commiserated about fashion and how sometimes looking fabulous is worth freezing to death.
Hmm. Heâll have to watch out and make sure she doesnât get too cold.
Stephanie looks behind him for a moment, eyes falsely wide. She plays the naive debutante role very well. âThis isnât important, right?â
âNo, not really,â Bruce says, even though it kind of is. One of the people heâd been speaking with scoffs, but he ignores them and steps towards her. She usually doesnât interact with him unless she wants or needs somethingâclearly his attention needs to be aimed at her right now. These society people and their business can wait. âWhatâs up?â
âLetâs dance.â She doesnât wait for a response, just grabs Bruceâs wrist and tugs him out onto the dance floor. Itâs been set up between the tables, but there are less people dancing than ones standing around the edges of it, talking and sipping at champagne. Thereâs a band on a small stage playing classical songs that are always played at these stupid galas, and luckily, theyâre beginning a new song just as Bruce and Stephanie reach the floor.
Itâs like dancing with Cassâthey assume the position for a waltz, a few inches of space between their bodies. Sheâs taller than his daughter, and while it doesnât quite put him on the wrong foot, it does make their dance feel unfamiliar. Thankfully, her presence in his life has been increasing over the past year, enough that itâs not uncomfortable. Thankfully, he thinks with what can only be described as fond exasperation. When did that happen?
âSo,â Steph says once theyâre moving around the dance floor. People are staring. Everyone wants to know who the new kid with the Waynes is. Heâll have to have Damian make a post on social media about her to clear up her relationship to the family. âThis is a gala.â
But what is her relationship? he wonders. Sheâs not quite just a family friend anymore. But heâs not her dad. Not really. Her mom is alive and well, occasionally contacting him with concerns and questions. Boundaries with Steph and her mom and himself are very firmly setâboundaries with Steph and the kids are not. Dick is already big-brothering her. âYes.â
âMy first.â
âIâm aware.â She must be feeling nervous, he surmises. Her eyes are flitting every which way. Though, why sheâs coming to him and not Cass, heâs unsure.
âItâsâŠnot like what I expected it to be. Iâve always heard Tim complain about them, but I donât know, itâs not as terrible as he made them out to be? But on the other hand, I havenât talked to many people yet. Theyâre probably all judging me, arenât they. Ugh.â She rolls her eyes. âHey, what rich person insult will piss them off the most?â
âYouâd be better off asking Duke that,â Bruce says. Or Jason. But Steph and Jason havenât, as far as he knows, bonded much. Met a few times, yes. Talked shit about him for several hours one night, yes. But bonded over anything but that? No. He isnât sure theyâll get along if the conversation is about something else, even with their similar backgrounds.
âI just figured since youâre, ya know, a rich asshole, youâd know which one is best. If I heavily imply I think theyâre overcompensating with their big houses and cars and shit, will someone actually turn red with rage? Because seriously, I would love to see that.â
Bruce takes a moment to consider it, eyes sweeping over the other people in the room. He skips over his children, focusing more on the insecure men and women that Steph could easily take down a notch. Not wanting to be overheard by the others on the dance floor, he tells her in an undertone which ones are the best targets.
She listens attentively, a grin widening on her face with every new name. When heâs done, she says, âThanks! Iâm gonna need those in writing, though. Donât wanna forget.â
Unsure if sheâs joking or not, he leads them into a turn. âJust remind me after weâre done here and Iâll get you a more complete list.â
âCool.â They dance for a few more moments in silence, both of them noticing how close some of the other dancers are getting. Rather loudly, Steph clears her throat. âThey really think theyâre being subtle, huh?â
Amused, Bruce glances at the faces around them. Everyone hears her words, and while a few seem undeterred, most pale at being caught, moving away in a very obvious manner. âCuriosity makes the cat brave,â he quips, repeating a sentiment Cass shared with him recently. When she doesnât respond, he looks down to her face, finding her staring in the direction of the doors they came in through. âSomething on your mind?â
Heâs really asking, why did you come and get me? If itâs just nerves, she wouldâve been better off with one of the others. No, it must be something else.
Steph blinks, turning her gaze upwards. Never one to back down, she meets his eyes long enough for him to see sheâs not in any distress, at least. âJust thinking.â
âAbout?â
âI donât know,â she mumbles. âEverything. Nothing.â
âHrn,â he replies, a gentle reminder that heâs listening and she can keep going.
âItâs justâwhy did you even bring me here, B? I stick out like a sore thumb. Itâs so obvious everyone here is judging me and probably think Iâm with Tim or something,â she makes a face to show just how unappealing that sounds. And honestly, Bruce has to agree, knowing that the two work much better as friends than partners. âAnd I donât even know why I asked if theyâre judging me, because I know they are! I heard someone ask if I was another one of your charity cases! They know I donât belong here. And I know it too, soââ
âStephanie.â
ââso why ?â
âBecause,â he says, lowering his voice as the music stops. He doesnât want anyone overhearing this. âBecause you are a family friend, at the very least. Youâve helped save my childrenâs lives as well as my own. You deserve to be here with the rest of us. If you want to go home, Iâll happily call Alfred to come and get you, but can I tell you what I think?â
âWhat?â She asks, sniffling quietly. Her eyes are wet but sheâs not crying. To anyone else, her eyes would just look a little shiny, probably from all the twinkling lights.
âI think youâll have more if you stick around and help me subtly insult all of these assholes.â
A surprised laugh bubbles out of her, and she leans forward, her forehead resting on his chest. He pats her back, letting her calm down without having to worry about people seeing.
Spotting Duke sitting by himself at a nearby table and hoping thatâs all that needs to be said, Bruce taps her shoulder and asks, âWhy donât we go sit down and eat, hm?â
Pulling away, Steph exhales loudly and says, âYeah, okay. As long as I get to actually eat something, I mean. Tim always said the portions are way too small.â
Together, they walk to where Duke is sitting. When he sees them, he grins and stands, meeting them both with hugs. Hugs from Duke are a more common occurrence than from any of the other kids except Dick and Cass.
Bruce makes sure to hold on until Duke is ready to let go, having heard the sentiment from Alfred once and internalizing it. Itâs made it easier to handle hugsâthough still a little uncomfortable, theyâre nice. Really nice. Â
âHey kid,â Steph says, slinging her arm over Dukeâs shoulders.
Duke leans obnoxiously into her side. âIâm only like 3 years younger than you, you know.â
âEh, details,â Steph replies. âAnyway, we were gonna eat. You hungry? Wanna join us?â
âHell yeah,â he says, grinning. âI wasnât sure how to get something to eat, so I was like, just sitting around hoping someone would come and help me.â
âYour pouting was very potent,â Steph tells him. âI think Bruce saw it and almost combusted with a need to be fatherly and stuff.â
âHere, Iâll show you both,â Bruce says, steering them towards the bar where orders are taken. Duke has been with them for a year now, but they havenât exactly discussed the father stuff. Other than a few times where Duke has accidentally called him dadâand good god, did that always make Bruce flush with happiness and prideâthe only thing Bruce knows for sure is that Duke misses his real parents and still occasionally looks for them.
Standing between them, he canât help but notice the looks people are giving all three of them. This event was supposed to be a more casual one, hence the bar, but the people Bruce is forced to invite are some of the worst and most judgmental assholes heâs ever met. Theyâre used to Duke by now, but Duke plus Steph is clearly too much for them. He glares back, trying to seem stoic and protective rather than pissed off.
They look away. Good.
The kids chat as they walk, and chat some more once they have their meals and are seated at a table near where Cass and Dick are dancing. Damian spots them and immediately makes a beeline to the empty chair, stopping long enough to set down his drink before going to get something to eat for himself.
Bruce takes a sip of his drink, eyeing Stephanie. She seems calmer now that sheâs not alone, but heâll have to keep checking on her. The night is going to wear long, he can already tell, and he doesnât want her to keep feeling so out of place, so judged.
He joins in on the conversation, which has somehow turned to Pokemon, and for a while, he and three of his kidsâor whatever Steph is to himâjust talk and eat. Itâs surprisingly relaxing, considering where they are.
Eventually, though, it comes to an end. Dick and Cass come by, Dick only sticking around long enough to steal something off Bruceâs plate before he goes to find Tim. Cass, however, holds out her hand to Steph, who gleefully takes it. Before leaving, she turns to Bruce and sticks out a closed fist. âYouâre cool sometimes, I guess.â
Pretending to be exasperated, he fist bumps her. âThank you. Now go have fun, hm?â
She hesitates for a moment. Then, âHell yeah,â and his girls are gone, grinning happily and dancing.
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An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A @batfam-christmas-stocking fic written for @renecdote!! happy holidays <3
----
Alternate universes suck so much. Tim has always known that, but heâs never really grasped it, not until he and Dick were forcibly thrown into one a week ago.
Gotham feels different, even though it doesnât appear that way on the surface. The violence is more personal, less showy, and as far as theyâve seen, there are almost no super villains. Somehow, though, thereâs more crime on the whole, every corner of every street host to pimps and drug dealers and traffickers.
Tim tries to fight it, tries to intervene, but Dick pulls him back. âWe canât risk it, you know that.â
He does. But that doesnât make it easier. âThey need our help,â Tim fires back, everything heâs ever been taught about bettering the world, the pressure of saving people, battering around in his mind.
âItâs not our world or our place,â Dick explains, and for all that he sounds apologetic, his eyes donât stray away from the shadowy parts of the street where they can hear people being hurt.
Dick is a good actor, but Tim can read him like a book. Heâs following the protocols put in place for dimensional travel, playing the Iâm The Big Brother And Iâm In Charge card, but he doesnât like it anymore than Tim does.
The rules are what they are for a reason, and Tim knows that. Grudgingly, he lets Dick pull him away, go back to their own little shadowy corners. They sleep on cardboard they find in dumpsters, huddling up for warmth. In the mornings, they go to the local library, hoping to fill out some of their knowledge on this world, since no rescue or way out otherwise is forthcoming.
There, sitting at the outdated computers, they find out that Martha and Thomas Wayne are still dead. Bruce wasnât 8 when it happened, thoughâhe was 16. He got shot too, making it painful and difficult to walk or move in general. According to one interview from a few years before, heâs kept on bedrest a lot, and has been in and out of physical therapy ever since it happened, now fifteen years prior. When heâs not doing that, heâs campaigning for control of Wayne Enterprises and tweeting about coffee.
Thereâs no Batman. Not like how they know him, at least.
One day, Dick flirts with a cop and Tim pickpockets the manâs scanner, and they learn that whole case files, suspects and evidence all neatly put together, have been sent to the GCPD over the past six years. They never see anyone fly overhead, though. At first, they think it might be Babs, but when they try to look her up, Tim finds that sheâs been locked up in Arkham for at least the last four years.
Neither one of them want to know why, so they just donât look into it any further. âThis isnât our Babs,â Dick reminds himself, and Tim, too. But mostly himself. âSheâs not .â
They share a look, and donât have to say anything to know itâs time to compartmentalize. This Babs isnât their Babs. This Bruce isnât their Bruce. This world doesnât have the Joker or Poison Ivy or any of them except Two Face and the Penguin. This isnât their world .
âCome on,â Dick murmurs, sticking close to his side as they leave the library. As they head to their latest alley, they pass all kinds of drug deals and gang members beating the shit out of people. By the time they actually get to where theyâve been staying, theyâre both so tense, one smartass comment from Tim is all it takes to snap them into an argument.
âIâm sorry,â Tim says after theyâve gone back and forth a few times, sounding hostile even to himself. âIâm so sorry I canât see things the same way you do. Iâm sorry Iâm not perfect Dick Grayson , who always knows what to do without even having to think about it, who always does the right thing, who is totally fine letting all these people suffer, because itâs in the protocol!â
He doesnât even believe his own words. Timâs just upset, unable to handle living on the streets for a week in a universe where everything is unfamiliar and grim, lashing out against one of the only things he can control. Dick is all he has hereâand spending that much time with someone, let alone one of his brothers, would be hard even in the best of circumstances.
Dick flinches, and Tim only has a second to feel bad before the flash of a reflection from a gun in the window above them catches his attention. He moves on instinct, stepping forward and trying to pull Dick down even as Dick tries to move towards the mouth of the alley, protective to a fault. The bullet hits Dickâs left shoulder with a sickening and familiar crack-thwack .
For a moment, everything is silent, slow motion. Dick sucks in a pained breath, stumbling back a few steps, and Tim hopes and prays the bullet hasnât hit an artery.
And then Tim twists to face the mouth of the alley and books it towards him, jumping on the bastard and bringing him to the ground. He rips the gun away and lets all of his pent-up anger and stress out, punching and punching. Itâs only Dick, gritting his teeth and clutching his shoulder, calling out his name that saves the guyâs teeth from actually being knocked out.
Panting and shaking with fury and adrenaline, Tim stands. âAre you okay?â He demands.
âFine,â Dick replies. âWeâwe should go.â
âYeah, okay.â But he bends down instead, patting the guyâs pockets until he finds what heâs looking for: a wallet. As he rifles through, searching for a driverâs license or state ID, he explains. âWe need to know who he is. If heâs working for HarveyâŠ.â
They both shudder at the thought, but the truth is worse. The name is Italian, familiar to Tim from a bust a few years before. Heâs one of Maroniâs men.
Another thing they learned during their hours of research at the library: seven years ago, Halyâs Circus came through town. Bruce Wayne didnât attend, or more likely, couldnât. Mary and John Grayson fell to their deaths, and once it became clear that little Dick Grayson, only eight years old, knew something about the murderers, he ran. Heâs been missing ever since, and if heâs still alive, then the Maronis are probably still on the lookout for him. Tony Zucco, apparently, is still alive. Still working Gothamâs underbelly, terrorizing and murdering. The Dick Grayson native to this universe is a threat to them.
They probably heard me say Dickâs name , Tim realizes, tucking the wallet away in the manâs pockets. Which means he was shot because of me. Fuck.
----
Big brothers, Tim finds, are fucking heavy. Especially when theyâve been shot and are steadily losing blood. When theyâre dead weight, fading in and out of consciousness. When theyâre relying totally on Tim to drag the both of them to uncertain refuge in an unfamiliar city.
And TimâŠhe wants to be someone Dick can rely on. (Obviously, he already is, but his anxiety says maybe this is just who Dick is. Tim could be anyone and the situation would be the same. Still, it would be better for Dick if Tim was Damian, instead. Or Bruce. Or Donna. Or anyone but himself, really.) But more than anything, he wants someone who can help Dick, who can keep him alive. Living on the streets the way they are just doesnât lend much in the way of medical supplies.
Tim drags Dick all the way to the clinic, based on a vague awareness that it exists here, too. When they get there, though, the building is obviously abandoned, Leslie nowhere to be found. Wherever she is, he doesnât know, but he hopes sheâs okay. He canât think of a situation that would keep her from helping the people of Gotham. Still, he sets Dick up against the wall and breaks in, hoping for something useful, and finding nothing inside but rubble and evidence of homeless people using the space for shelter.
He goes back to Dick, feeling like the world is ending. They donât have any first aid supplies, and even if they did, even if a first aid kit fell out of the sky right now and Tim could patch Dick up, it wouldnât mean anything. This only happened because Tim wasnât paying attention, wasnât thinking to be careful. It could happen again. What does he do then?
What would Bruce do? Roy? Wally? Diana or Clark? Hell, Kon ? Any of them could help Dick so much more right now. More than Tim can or will ever be able to. And really, what good is Tim if he canât even keep his brother alive?
Aware the thoughts arenât helpful right now, he shelves them for later and looks back at Dick, cataloguing everything he sees like Bruce taught them to do. Dickâs still steadily bleeding out, and though thatâs most concerning of all, Tim finds the only thing he can think about is how they donât have clean clothes so Dick can walk around in something not soaked in blood.
With a strangled shout, Tim kicks the wall. It doesnât affect him, muchâthank god heâd been wearing steel-toed shoes when they were transported hereâbut the brief release feels good. Sort of. Itâd be a lot better if he were still laying into the Maroni guy, if heâs honest.
âTim,â Dick says, both reproachful and concerned.
âShut up,â Tim replies, dragging his fingers through his hair. His mind is racing. He wants to go home so badly his chest aches with it.
Dick knows him well enough that he can sense what Tim is thinking. Slowly, he shakes his head. âNo, Tim. No . We canât.â
âWhere else are we supposed to go?â Tim cries out. Itâs a stupid idea, itâs against the protocol, and theyâve already talked about it anyway. Theyâd agreed itâs stupid and they canât do it and moved on. But he canât help feeling the impulse, especially now.
âStephanieâs,â Dick shoots back immediately. But they both know itâs not possibleâhere, Steph is another face on the dozens of missing persons posters that litter the city. He realizes it a second too late, and stumbles over his next words. âJust, anywhere but there.â
Jason is dead, has been for years now. Damian doesnât exist. Cass is in Star City with Dinah Lance. Luke and the other members of the Fox family have never lived in this Gotham. Dukeâs parents are still aliveâthey recently moved to BlĂŒdhaven, and took their young son with them. Harper and Cullen are nowhere to be found, but Tim tells himself thatâs a good thingâit means they arenât in the obituaries. Kate is overseas on a honeymoon with her wife. Half of the Titans and Justice League donât seem to exist, and the ones that do wouldnât step foot in this cesspit of crime and drugs.
âAnywhere but thereâ means nothing. Nowhere. Thereâs no place for them to go, no one who can or even would help.
The words, or maybe the thoughts that come with them, wear Dick out. He starts to fade again, eyes slipping closed, and that means Timâs in charge.
And Tim? Tim wants to go home .
He grabs Dick, keeping him from sliding down the wall, throws his brotherâs arm over his shoulder, and starts off towards the Manor with every ounce of determination he can muster.
----
Several hours later, when itâs dark and Dick is pale and mostly silent, barely keeping up, they make it home. Everything feels different: the security that allows them to get all the way up the drive (after only a little effort on Timâs part), the trees oddly placed and the doors and shutters all painted a light blue instead of the rusty red heâs used to. Itâs disorienting and upsetting. Home is supposed to be familiar and itâs not and he hates it.
Tim knocks on a side door that only family knows about, hoping against hope it wonât be Bruce that answers. He doubts it, but heâs positive he wonât be able to keep his composure in front of his dad. Itâll be a little easier with Alfred. Probably. In any case, Alfred is the better option of the two.
While they wait, Dick mumbles, âThis is stupid.â
Tim presses his hand against the wound, trying not to be impatient. Trying not to feel sick with nerves. He doesnât reply, knowing Dick isnât really paying attention right now.
When the door finally opens, Tim could collapse with relief. Alfred stands there, one hand hiding his rifle out of their sight in an all-too-familiar pose, while the other holds onto the doorjamb. His hair is darker than Tim is used to, his face less wrinkled. Heâs staring at them like theyâre weird, strange boys, standing at whatâs supposed to be a virtually unknown entrance to a private, secure home in the late hours of the night.
Blood covers Dickâs upper body and Timâs hands, and they both look and smell rough. They donât make a pretty picture, and Tim knows that, but thereâs nothing he can do except get Alfred to let them in somehow. Heâs been thinking about what he wants to say, whatâll appeal to Alfredâs compassion or curiosity or both. Please, help my brother before he loses too much blood. Please, donât tell Bruce about this. Please, Iâm so exhausted and I need a cup of your chamomile and a cookie and also maybe a hug or Iâm going to explode.
What he says instead is, â Alfred .â Itâs a relieved sob, leaving him without permission, and Alfredâs shocked and confused reaction is much more noticeable than it should be. âIâwe didnât know where else to go. Heâs hurt.â
There are more words on his tongue, an avalanche of them wanting to come out, but Alfred stops him there with a raised hand. He doesnât put the rifle down, but he says, âCome in, then,â and opens the door wide enough for them.
Dick groans when Tim drags him up the steps. Blinking sluggishly at Alfred, he says, âAlfâŠ?â
âYeah, itâs Alfred. Come on, help out here a little bit. Weâre just gonna sit down and hopefully get you patched up, alright, Dickie?â
âHrn.â
Tim bites his lip at the Bruce noise, stupid tears stinging in his eyes.
Heâs home. Itâs unfamiliar. Dick is hurt. Heâs in charge.
Now is so not the time to cry.
Alfred leads them to a nearby couch in a sitting room theyâve never used in all the years Timâs known Bruce. Rifle still in hand, he seems much more unsure than their Alfred, who wouldâve already had the situation on lock by now.
âWe need a first aid kit, please,â Tim says. He glances at the weapon, and adds, âWe wonât cause any trouble, I promise. IâI know this is probably super weird, butâŠ.â
But what? Tim canât think of a way to end the sentence so he just doesnât. Instead, he turns to Dick and starts pulling his brotherâs shirt off, something they really shouldâve done hours ago. While he uses the fabric to put pressure on the wound again, he hears Alfred moving around behind him.
If this Bruce is anything like theirs, a first aid kit shouldnât be too far away. Thereâs one in every bathroom back home.
Itâs not long before Alfred is back, shooing Tim away and setting a large first aid kit on the couch. His rifle is gone, but Tim knows it canât be far. Thereâs no way this Alfred trusts them enough to not have it close at hand. âDo I dare ask what happened?â
God, itâs good to hear his voice. âMy brother got shot,â Tim says, reverting to his natural instinct to reveal as little as possible. Normally Alfred is someone he can give a full mission report to, but Tim is just Tim right now, not Red Robin, and this is not his Alfred, so heâs going to keep his mouth shut up tight.
âWell, my word. You wouldnât know it from looking at him.â And thereâs that Alfred sass. It doesnât make him laugh like it usually doesâno, it just reminds him again that he isnât actually home. âCare to explain more? Should I be concerned you were followed?â
Tim thinks on it for a minute, but really, thereâs no way Maroniâs guy got up in time to tail them. The rest of the mob family have probably heard about them by now, but Tim isnât too worried about it. He canât find it within himself to be. All he can really think about is Dick, Alfred, Bruce. If coming here was a mistake after all. If theyâll ever make it home to see their Bruce and Alfred. Eventually, he says, âNo. We werenât followed.â
Dick groans as Alfred starts to prep the gunshot wound to get the bullet out. He sways a little, dizzy, and mumbles an apology when Alfred has to readjust him.
Alfred says, âJust hold as still as you can, and youâll be alright.â
Hearing the tenderness in Alfredâs voice does something to Tim. This is Alfred , he thinks. He can help us with more than just this. Â
He blurts out, âIt was one of Maroniâs men.â
âSal Maroni?â Alfred sounds suspiciously uninterested, not even bothering to look away from his work. âThe mob boss?â
âYeah.â
âHmm. Alright, young man, Iâm going to get this bullet out now.â
âTim,â Dick grits out, reaching out his hand. Tim takes it, sitting down on the other side of his brother. He forces himself to watch as Alfred goes through the familiar motions. Dick doesnât actually squeeze his hand that much, too used to this kind of pain, but Tim thinks maybe they both feel better having the lifeline.
He stays there until Dick is stitched up and accepts a dose of Tylenolâno matter how much Alfred gives them concerned looks and insists on something stronger, a Bat doesnât take hard drugs.
Not quite huffing in exasperation, Alfred acquiesces and leaves Dick alone, sitting back against the cushions. Then he turns to Tim. With his hands on his hips and his sleeves rolled up, heâs honestly kind of intimidating. âNow you, young man,â he says.
âUm. What? Iâm fine. I didnât get shot, I donât need anything.â
Alfred raises an eyebrow. Tim can out-stubborn almost anybody, even his other family members, but Alfred Pennyworth is not one of them. Everyone bows down to him.
Tim sighs and scoots a few inches away from Dick, and when Alfred shoos him all the way into the other corner, he goes. Surprisingly, the older man sits next to Tim, between him and Dick, and instead of reaching for the kit, he just. Puts a hand on Timâs shoulder. Which Tim finds extremely weird, considering how British and physically distant Alfred is. Oh sure, he hugs them all. He catches them when they fall, he reassures them with arm pats and shoulder squeezes. But itâs unlike him to just... sit here and rest his hand on Timâs shoulder, looking him in the face with an expression Tim finds he canât read.
Not being able to read people, especially someone he knows so well, freaks him out.
Tense, Tim says, âWhat?â
Alfred is quiet for a moment, then asks, âWhere have you boys been staying?â
Oh. Yeah, okay. Heâs suspicious of them. Tim can understand why. âWe have a place.â Itâs a disgusting alley behind a pizzeria they canât afford to eat at, scraping by with the last of the money they had on them when they were sent here, but itâs not a lie.
Alfred backs off, picking his battles and probably recognizing this one for what it is: unwinnable. Heâs more than perceptive enough to read between the lines anyway, add up all the cluesâtheir clothes are dirty, their hair greasy, and Tim knows heâs looking pretty gaunt. And considering how jumpy Tim is acting, itâs likely Alfred thinks theyâre homeless. Which they are.
âAre you injured anywhere?â
Tim holds out his hand, his knuckles split and raw from earlier, and ignores how badly heâs shaking. Alfred takes his hand, and grabs alcohol wipes from the kit. He dabs at the wounds, glancing at Timâs face like heâs expecting a reaction. And yeah, it stings a little, but heâs had much worse. This is nothing.
âHmm.â Alfred moves Timâs hand around, looking for other wounds, finding a few little cuts. âSo your brotherâs name is Dickie?â
âDick,â Tim corrects. Bruce and Jason are the only ones who call Dick that usually, and Jason almost always does it because itâs his âlittle brother dutyâ or something. The only reason he said it earlier is because he hoped it would be comforting. âShort forââ
âRichard, I assume.â
âYeah.â Tim falls silent, trying to keep his hand still. When a few moments of silence go by, he looks up at Alfred, finding him making an expectant face. âOh! Yeah, sorry. Iâm Tim.â
âItâs nice to meet you, Tim. You seem to already know my name.â
Yeah. Shit. Unable to think of a lie beyond âyou look like my grandpaâ, Tim laughs nervously. âLucky guess?â
Dick snorts. âYou jusâ look like our granâpa, thatâs all. His nameâs Alfred. Yours too, huh?â
Alfred doesnât look convinced, but he goes along with it anyway. âYes, mine too.â What an odd coincidence , he doesnât say, but Tim hears it anyway.
It doesnât take long after that for Alfred to finish up Timâs knuckles. He offers to put some band-aids on, but Tim shakes his head. âNo, no, Iâm fine. Thank you.â
Dick gives him a look, and despite the fact that heâs still acting loopy, thereâs a strength to it. Tim can tell what heâs thinkingâthat if the cuts werenât on the knuckles, a very awkward place to put bandages, Dick would be insisting on it. Well, whatever , he thinks, resisting the urge to stick out his tongue. Youâre not in charge right now anyway.
Alfred stands and looks them over for a brief moment, hesitation obvious in the way he pauses, inhaling deeply. Then, with determination, he says, âI will prepare you something to eat. Do either of you have any allergies I should be aware of?â
âSulfites,â Tim says at the same time Dick says, âShellfish. And pet dander.â
âDick, man, Iâm pretty sure they donât have pets. And even if they did, pets arenât allowed in the kitchen under any circumstances.â
âOh yeah,â Dick says with a faint chuckle. âForgot.â
âMister Tim,â Alfred cuts in before Tim can reply. Itâs unspeakably weird to be called Mister Tim instead of Master Tim, even though Alfred called him that for years. âWill sandwiches suffice?â
The thought of eating Alfredâs foodâand even more than that, something they havenât fished out of a dumpsterâis drool-worthy. Quickly, he agrees, âYes, thatâs perfect. Thank you.â
Alfred nods and leaves, probably thankful to get the heck away from them for a few minutes. Once heâs gone, the brothers fall quiet, both a blessing and a curse. Not having Alfred asking questions that Tim has to evade is great, but it does give him the opportunity to keep freaking out.
What do they do next? Alfred might not let them leave while Dick is healing, and that means the chances of running into Bruce raise astronomically. Tim knows that he wonât be able to handle that. Not at all.
âStop it,â Dick whispers, loud in the overwhelming quiet. âI can see your forehead vein from here.â
âShut up. Iâm trying to think.â
âDonât hurt yourself.â
Tim sighs, letting the banter drop for a moment. âLook, Iâm sorry you got shot. I know itâs not my fault,â he says, speaking over Dickâs immediate protest. âI know that. But Iâm still sorry.â
ââŠThanks. Iâm accepting your apology but not your responsibility.â
âDuh.â Tim fiddles with his hands, satisfied but also knowing, in his heart of hearts, that it is in fact his fault and Dick is totally wrong. âIâm not sorry I brought us here, though.â
âDuh,â Dick repeats, sounding more than a little peeved. Not that Tim can blame him, really. If Tim and Damian had agreed to something, and then Damian went back on it⊠thatâd be really annoying.
Still, that little brother duty Jason talks about means he has to defend himself. âDick, we were gonna end up coming here anyway, donât you see that?â He shoots to his feet and drags his hands through his hair, pacing in front of the couch. Despite his earlier flip-flopping, heâs sure now. This was the right decision even if it does suck a lot. âWhere else could we possibly go? We donât belong here. The only way we can get home is by askââ
Tim cuts off immediately when footsteps echo down the hall. They sound different from Alfredâs, a third tap that sounds a lot like a cane.
This Alfred doesnât use a cane. The only person who could isâ
Both Dick and Tim tense as the doorway is filled up by Bruce freaking Wayne.
âUm,â Tim says.
Bruce looks different. Not just in the sense that he is, in fact, using a cane, but just. Everything. He looks younger, a neat beard covering much of his face. Thereâs barely any salt in it at all. The scars that litter the skin of his face and arms, mostly bare considering heâs wearing only a t-shirt and pajama pants, arenât there. Worst of all, thereâs no recognition in his eyes.
His sons have become strangers. But no, this man is not their father. Tim has to shout it at himself. Heâs not! Bruce Wayne would never look at them like this. Especially not Dick.
Dick makes a noise, a small and sad little whimper, and Tim thinks, shit. Shit shit shit. Unable to do anything to help, Tim shuffles closer to him, hoping itâs enough to comfort.
âWho are you?â Bruce asks, moving further into the room. He says it casually, like this is a totally normal situation, but thereâs steel there, too. Of course there is. This is Bruce Wayne. He doesnât mess around, especially when it comes to strangers invading his home. And as much as that feels like a knife to the chest, thatâs what they are. Strangers . The word lingers in his mind, leaving a bad aftertaste.
Tim gets the distinct feeling that the cane, for all that it serves to help Bruce walk, is a weapon. One this Bruce will have no issue using against them. âUm. Weâweâre homeless,â he blurts out, trying to push the thought away. âAnd my brother got shot, so we came here looking for help. Weâll be gone soon, I promise. Donât worry about us, this is just a one time thing, and we wonât tell anyone else. I know this is a house and not a triage center.â
Bruce is already looking at him like heâs an intruder, but at that, the manâs eyebrows furrow in confusion. Oh, right. Thatâs something the otherâthe right âBruce would say. Has said many times. Because itâs something their Alfred has always said, and apparently this Alfred too.
Scrambling, Tim keeps going, pasting a fake smile on his face. âAlfred knows weâre here. Heâll be right back. Itâs okay, weâll just wait right here and not steal anything, so you can go back to bed. Goodnight.â
âTim,â Dick bites out, obviously trying to communicate that he thinks Tim is being a weirdo, and that heâs doing nothing but tipping Bruce off to the fact that something is wrong.
âIâm freaking out, okay?â Tim exclaims back, curling and relaxing his fingers in an effort to control himself. Itâs impossible, thoughâthis is their dad , for crying out loud. Their dad, who they havenât seen in a long time, not since before they were attacked as civilians and flung through the wormhole that deposited them here. Their dad, who Tim really, seriously needs a hug from right now.
Bruce comes closer, leaning against one of the two unused chairs. Where Tim tenses further, unsure of what heâs about to do or say, Dick relaxes. Heâs really out of it now, the blood loss and medicine finally catching up with him. Â Heâs blinking heavily and listing to the side. âHand me that, will you?â He asks Bruce, gesturing to a throw blanket resting on the top of the chair.
Suddenly feeling very protective of Dick, Tim says, âI canââ
âNo,â Bruce interrupts, the corner of his mouth curling up like he thinks this is funny. âIâve got it.â
He grabs the blanket and walks over to the couch. Tim stumbles back a few steps to give him room. For a second, it seems like none of them breatheâbut then Bruce leans on his cane like a crutch, bends down, and lays the blanket over Dick.
Tim has seen Bruce tuck people in before, usually Damian. All those times, he either didnât care much, or a swirl of jealousy had tightened in his stomach. He can remember wondering why Bruce didnât tuck him in. Why his parents never did it, why Mrs. Mac and all the nannies hadnât either.
This time, his eyes sting with tears. Â He forces them back, biting the inside of his cheek.
Dick snuggles into the cushions behind his back, pulling the blanket tighter around himself. âThanks, dad,â he mumbles, slipping off into a nap.
Bruce and Tim both freeze.
âUm,â Tim says, because something has to be said, this needs to be nipped in the bud and stopped right now before Bruce can ask anything. But really, the chances of Bruce Wayne not asking questions? Less than zero. And Timâs brain is screaming, because what the hell could he possibly say to explain that ?
Alfred enters the room again before anything can happen, carrying a tray holding a few sandwiches. He sets it down on a side table before looking up.
âOh,â he stops short when he sees Bruce, hands hovering above the food. âMaster Bruce, I thought you were downstairs.â
âI was just doing some reading,â he waves off, but he canât quite manage to sound casual. âNow⊠did he just call me dad ?â
Oh fuck , Tim thinks. Awkwardly, he laughs, âNo! What? No, thatâs ridiculous.â Seeing that this tactic isnât workingâBruce and Alfred both have legendary âbitch pleaseâ looks that go beyond the confines of time and space, apparentlyâhe shifts gears. âI mean, okay, yes he did. Butâbut itâs just because you look like our dad! A lot like him, actually. Haha.â
Bruce and Alfred stare at him, concern building as he keeps laughing, spurred on by a week of non-stop stress and the pressure of being in chargeâ maybe , he thinks, this was a bad idea all along and we shouldnât have come here and Dick was totally right. Itâs only when his laughter turns to hiccuping sobs that either of them move, Bruce managing to grab his bicep in time before Tim can sink to the floor like a puppet with its strings cut. Alfred hurries to his other side, fretting, âCome on, young sir, just sit down now.â
They lead him to one of the chairs, where he collapses, his head in his hands. Dick is better at thisâat leading, at interacting, at not breaking apart. It should all be the opposite: Tim sleeping off a GSW while Dick lies through his teeth as he explains whatâs going on. Not that Dick wouldâve gotten them into this situation, anyway.
âIâm sorry,â he sniffles, refusing to look up. Theyâre both staring at him again, clearly unsure what to do with a strange, crying teenager.
After a moment, Alfred says, âYou boys say I look like your grandfather, and now Master Bruce looks like your father. By chance, what is his name?â
âBruce Wayne,â Tim replies to the floor. âBut⊠not him. A different one.â
âA different Bruce Wayne?â The confusion and curiosity is clear as day in Bruceâs voice, and Tim canât help but snort a little.
âYeah. Um, this is going to sound really crazy, but my brother and I are from a different universe.â He peeks at their faces, not surprised at all by the blatant disbelief he sees. âI can prove it.â
Alfred and Bruce share a wide-eyed look.âHow?â
âI know youâre the one whoâs been sending the GCPD all those case files. And before you say youâre not, you just said you were doing some reading. Downstairs. In the cave below this property, right? Back home, itâs called the Batcave and youâre Batman.â
âGo on, Mister Tim,â Alfred says after a moment. âWe believe you.â
Relief crashes down on him and more tears slip out against his will. âI need your help. We need your help. Weâve been here for a week, andâandâand we have no idea how to get home. None. Thereâs no one else we can turn to, âcause the people who would usually help us either canât or wouldnât, since they donât know us here. And god, this world is nothing at all like oursâŠ. I just want to go home. I donât know what to do. Please,â he begs, desperate. âI need advice.â
Bruce hesitantly sets a hand on Timâs back, rubbing up and down in a motion that is, wow, extremely soothing. âWeâll figure this out, Tim. I promise you, Alfred and I will help you boys any way we can.â
Before Tim can ask if itâs just because theyâre his sons in some other universe, Alfred clears his throat. âIt may take some time, mind you. But you and your brother will need to stay here anyway, seeing as that wound needs time to heal. I canât, in good conscience, let that happen out on the streets.â
Tim wants to refuse. Wants to say thanks but no thanks, you can put us up in a motel or something until everything is worked out. Wants to cry and cry and wake up from this nightmare. Instead, mentally and physically exhausted, he just says, âOkay.â
Both men are concerned by the response, he can tell. Though he isnât looking, he can practically hear the silent conversation theyâre having over his head. Then Alfred stands. âI will make up two of the guest rooms, then, sirs. Mister Tim, could you help bring Mister Dick upstairs?â
âJust set up one, we can share,â Tim replies. Itâs late and he doesnât want Alfred to have to do anything more than heâs already done. Than heâs already doing.
âIf youâre certainâŠ.â
âI am. Thank you.â
Heâs not gone for long, and thank god, because Tim can hardly stand to be alone with Bruce without spilling even more. Heâs already said so much tonight, he feels empty and hollowed out, kind of like a balloon thatâs been blown up only for all the air to wheeze out of it, leaving it sad and stretched. Holy shit, that metaphor. He needs to go to bed, and he needs a mattress instead of another cardboard box laid over hard cobblestone and concrete.
Shaking his head to stop his thoughts, he moves over to Dick and wakes him, a hand on his uninjured shoulder. âDick, wake up,â he says a few times until his brother is blinking heavily at him.
âWhaâ?â
âWeâre gonna go upstairs and sleep. Come on, Iâll help you.â
âHrn,â he says again, and this time, Bruce hears it. Tim glances at him, almost surprised to see the emotions on Bruceâs face. Apparently thatâs a Bruce noise in this universe too, and it only helps to cement Timâs story.
Tim helps Dick stand up, swinging Dickâs good arm over his shoulders. Together, they slowly ascend the stairs, something Tim is more than familiar with considering how many times something like this has happened at home. At the top, they meet up with Alfred, who takes them to a guest room that is thankfully unused in their version of the Manor.
Alfred helps Dick get settled into the mattress, his shoes and belt shed. âI could get you both some pajamas,â Alfred says when he sees the way Tim flops down, both of them still in battered, dirty, expensive chinos.
âWeâre okay,â Tim says, aware that the only pajamas in the house must belong to Bruce and Alfred, and that neither size would fit them. Heâs not sure he could handle it right now even if they did. âThank you though. ForâŠfor all of this. It means a lot.â
Alfred graces him with a gentle smile. âOf course, young sir. I would like to think that your Bruce will appreciate this.â
He leaves, and then itâs just Tim and Dick. Theyâve shared a bed plenty of times before, on nights when there was no one else around and they didnât want to be alone. Dick was the one who taught Tim one of the best parts about having siblings: cuddles. Dick is a cuddle monster, but maybe tonight Tim wonât wake up being held protectively to his brotherâs chest.
Under the covers, Tim stares at the ceiling. His mind refuses to shut off even though theyâre finally somewhere safe. Somewhere he can sleep and not worry about what might happen when heâs not paying attention.
He feels a little better, now that there are actual adults in charge, who are going to help. Who can keep Dick from getting hurt again, especially from Timâs carelessness. But it makes him miss home, just reminds him how far away he and Dick are from their real family. Heâs curious, on some level, about this Bruce Wayne. He trusts him to take care of them long enough for them to return home. How long thatâs going to take is a question, though, one that he thinks can probably be answered by: a long time.
Itâll be good for Dick, at least. Give him time to heal.
God, Dick shouldnât have been hurt in the first place. But of course he did, and of course it was because of some dumb argument, because of Timâ
ââM not perfect,â Dick whispers, making Tim, who was certain he was asleep, jump. When he turns to look, he finds Dickâs eyes are closed. Squeezed shut. ââM not . I donât know what Iâm doing, Tim. I didnât wanna come here âcause of the rules, and âcause itâs hard⊠hard to see them. âM lucky I getta sleep through it, I guess.â
âDickââ
âI woulda done the same thing, okay?â And now he opens his eyes, meeting Timâs head on. âThis was the right choice. Coming here. Alfred gives the best advice.â
âYeah.â Timâs throat feels thick, the word hard to get out.
Dick reaches out his good hand and rests it on Timâs cheek. âThank you for bringing me here. You saved me. Now go to sleep,â he says, and then teasingly smacks him. âI can hear you thinking all the way from here.â
âYouâre like two feet away,â Tim points out, but he tries to listen anyway. He closes his eyes, thinking maybe he will be able to rest. Dick is the best at comforting people.
âShhhh,â Dick says, grinning. âDoesnât matter. Sleep.â
âYes, mom.â
â Shhh !â
Tim laughs, and for the first time in a while, itâs real. He feels safe and warm and not alone, and while he canât exactly say heâs happy right now, heâs a lot closer than he was just a few hours before.
Tomorrow , he decides, settling down, Iâm going to take a shower and eat a real meal. And then, then I can finally start figuring out how to get us home.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A @batfam-christmas-stocking fic written for @dawnseternallight!! Happy holidays <3
----
Grayson is laying in bed.
Itâs not an uncommon sightâhis brother does need sleep, no matter what he might thinkâbut itâs different today. Heâs stuck in a neck brace, one leg in a cast up to his knee and the other ankle bandaged tightly. Three of the fingers on his right hand are splinted together. His ribs are bruised. Even from the doorway, Damian can see that his eyes are glassy with pain or medication or both.
Damian can admit to himself that he feels uncomfortable seeing Grayson this way. Grayson is Batman, after all, even if he doesnât wear the cowl anymore. And Batman? Batman doesnât get hurt. Heâs strong and capable and imposing, and nothing can get through the armor he wearsâboth literal and figurative. So to see Grayson like this, so beaten down, it makes his stomach twist and tighten. Itâs fundamentally wrong.
Heâs never seen an adult wounded this badly before. Mother was never injured to this extent. Father hasnât been either. Pennyworth has had scarcely any injuries at all in the time Damian has known him.
Heâs not sure how heâs supposed to handle it now, especially when itâs Grayson whoâs been brought so low. Â
Standing straighter, he finally speaks, voice as soft as he can make it. âYou look pathetic.â
Grayson gingerly turns his head, the corners of his mouth curled up. Only he could still be smiling right now. âThank you so much, kiddo. Really.â
Nose scrunching up at the despised term, Damian huffs and tries to ignore how raspy Graysonâs voice sounds. Brown would describe it as being shot to hell. He doesnât like it. âDonât call me that.â
Grayson hums, turning back to his television. One of those old sitcoms from the 1990s is on, volume turned almost all the way down. Why? Does he have a headache? Is he tired? Damian decides heâll speak quieter next time.
âSorry. Habit.â Grayson shifts a little and grimaces.
âIâm sure Drake wouldnât mind if you continued to refer to him that way,â Damian says generously. He means it, sort of. Drake does seem to enjoy when Grayson reaches out and shows his affections with silly nicknames. If Damian happens to know that he isnât particularly fond of âkiddoâ⊠well, that doesnât really matter. Heâs just trying to help his brother feel better. Two of them, even.
âYou think so?â Grayson laughs. He grimaces immediately after, a low whine of pain slipping out.
Damian edges into the room, fingers stretching open and closed, open and closed. Itâs a tell, but it calms him a little, and Grayson is too distracted to notice anyway. Feeling foolish, he asks, âDo you need that heating pad thing?â Those help with aches, donât they? Damian has never used one, but itâs the only thing he can think to offer.
His older brother shakes his head. âNah, mâfine. Just donât make me laugh again, or I might croak.â
âDonât joke about that,â Damian mutters. He steps closer, enough that Grayson reaches out and grabs a handful of Damianâs hoodie. Heâs going to stretch out the fabric, but Damian doesnât mind.
âIâm bored,â he declares, infusing as much grandeur in his words as he can manage. Which is, unfortunately, a lot. âAnd you made the mistake of coming in here, so now you have to entertain me. Tell me, Dami, how was school?â
âBoring.â
Grayson makes a âgo onâ noise, gently shaking him.
Sighing, Damian says, âI could hardly concentrate. I donât remember much of what was taught.â
âWhy not? Did something happen?â
âYes.â Dumbass , Damian mentally adds.
Of course Grayson, that fool, tries to sit up, worry coming over his face. âAre you okay? Donât have a concussion, do you? I know you hit your head last night, did anyone checkââ
Damian pushes him back down, trying to avoid all of the bruising. Itâs much more difficult than should ever be the case. âIâm fine, Grayson. It wasnât anything that happened to me. You mightâve heard, but my brother got severely hurt over the weekend doing something extremely stupid .â
âIt wasnât stupid,â Grayson protests. Of course he does. âIt saved your life. Nothing that saves your life will ever be stupid, as far as Iâm concerned.â
Damian makes an outraged noise. Sweeping his hand to encompass his brother, he demands, âAnd this is better?â
âIâm an adult. I can take a beatingââ
âThat is so not the pointâ!â
âBoys,â Father says from the doorway. He doesnât sound angry, but Damian stiffens and twists anyway, acutely aware that both Father and Pennyworth told him not to bother Grayson. They wonât understand that he couldnât help it, that he had to come and check on him, had to see for himself that his older brother was okay. Really and truly. Titus is the only one who does understand, or at least, the only member of the household who mightâve seen him sneaking around in the hall without going to get Father.
For a moment, Father eyes them both. He lingers on how Grayson is still holding onto Damianâs hoodie, and the horrible neck brace. Then he meets their eyes, first Damianâs, then Graysonâs. âCan whatever youâre bickering about wait until Dick can breathe comfortably?â
âDaaaad,â Grayson complains, âI can breathe comfortably. Look.â
âLook at you breathing.â
âYes.â Duh , Grayson doesnât say, but Damian hears it anyway. Grayson breathes deeply, only to groan, âOh god, ow ow ow.â
âSounds comfortable to me.â
Grayson moves, a shrug aborted at the last second, and his face tightens with what must be pain. âDami said heâd go and get me the heating pad. Which is why heâs in here.â
âAnd why youâre arguing?â Father asks, raising an eyebrow.
âWe are disagreeing because he thinks this is preferable to me getting a little hurt,â Damian tells him. No, Father wonât be happy heâs in here, but he will be on Damianâs side in this. Father hates to see any of them so injured.
âIt wasnât a little !â
âYes, it was!â It wasnât, and Damian knows that. Killer Croc couldâve killed them both last night, and most certainly would have if Grayson hadnât intervened. But itâs not like Damian is going to just admit to that.
â No , itââ Grayson tries to sit up again and cuts off, hissing out a breath.
Father sighs, and moves into the room. Sitting down beside Grayson, he helps him sit up, rubbing his back. âDamian,â he says, sounding weary and old. Damian doesnât like it. âCan you go get the heating pad? And ask Alfred to come up here, please?â
âYes, Father.â He hesitates, unsure of how the men will react to what he wants to do. But then he remembers he can do whatever he wants here, so Damian leans in a presses a quick kiss to Graysonâs head. âDonât croak,â he demands, an embarrassing flush rising in his cheeks.
Damian ducks out of the room before either of them can react, Titus falling into place behind him as he hurries down the hall, a little lighter. Grayson will be okay. He has to be.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A @batfam-christmas-stocking fic written for @lurkinglurkerwholurks!! happy holidays <3
----
âYou guys really donât have to do all this for me,â Duke says as he and Alfred step out of the suit fitting place. His words are part uncomfortable and part resigned. Jason and Steph have both already talked to him about what itâs like to be a Wayne kidâto have all that money at his disposal, and adults around who will spend it on him without a second thoughtâbut actually living it is different.
Thereâs some Wayne Foundation event happening soon, and Duke is expected to go. Heâs also expected to have a suit, and since he hasnât had to wear one since his auntâs funeral way back when he was a little kid, Alfred made plans for him to get one. Several ones, actually, but today he only tried on the one meant for the upcoming party.
Alfred slips the cuff links they brought along back into their box. âItâs no matter, Master Duke,â he says, casually handing the box over like it doesnât hold very expensive cuff links that Thomas Wayne once wore. âAll young men need a well-fitting suit.â
Staring down at the box in his hands, he asks, âBut one so⊠much?â
After a brief moment, Alfred closes Dukeâs fingers over the box and guides him gently by the wrist to slip it into his jacket pocket. They start walking, and Alfred pats his shoulder once. âSo much, sir? If you mean the cost, I assure you, this is hardly a drop in the bucket. Master Dick in particular has gone through a great many suits in his lifetime, and there have been no repercussions.â
âThatâs not what Iâm worried about, though.â Feeling like he can confide some in the older man, Duke says, âI donât know, itâs justâŠ. That thing cost so much money, and Iâm only going to wear it once? It just seems like a waste.â
âIf youâd like, you may certainly wear it more than once. People will talk, of course, if you do so more than once every few months, but the opinions of others should have no consequence on how you live your life, Master Duke.â
âI guess. Hey, where are we going? The carâs that way.â
âOh! Iâm sorry, Iâm afraid I forgot to tell you. Thereâs another stop that needs to be made at Trader Joeâs.â
Duke makes a face. That sounds boring, and heâs ready to go home. âHow long do you think youâll be?â
âNot long at all.â
âCan I like, do some window shopping then? I wonât go too far, I just havenât seen much of this part of Gotham, you know? I figure some exploring will help me with my, uh, job.â
Knowingly, Alfred agrees. Soon enough, they get there, and Alfred promises to not dilly-dally. Shrugging, Duke waits until heâs inside to wander off, glancing at the shop windows. One is a toy store, and though Duke is sixteen, much too old to play with toys, he finds himself standing there for a while, staring at all the colorful and expensive items.
Itâs weird, knowing that if he asked for something inside, he could get it easily. His life has never been like thatâeven before the orphanages and group homes, his parentsâ jobs werenât well paying enough that he could ever get something from this place. They did their best, and he canât think of a holiday that went by where he wasnât happy. The memories of his parentsâ smiles, exhausted but content, are never far from his mind. But the facts are that this store wouldâve probably always been out of their reach. And now, if he wanted, he could go and ask Alfred for some money, enough to get something from here, and Alfred wouldnât say no. Maybe heâd say Duke needs to follow a certain rule, like only get what he can hold, but that would be it. He canât imagine Alfred would say anything about only spending so much.
Itâs different and kind of overwhelming, but heâs getting used to it, he thinks.
If Steph is to be believed, he might never be fully used to it, though. Honestly, Duke isnât sure thatâs a bad thing. He doesnât want to lose sight of what itâs like to struggle, but at the same time, itâs nice not having to worry about it anymore.
Seeing two men hustling it down the street, heâs thrown from his thoughts. Relatively well dressed, though not anything like the suits Duke was just trying on, they seem mean and like the thugs heâs come into contact with through his day job as the Signal. Not the ones heâs really used to, the ones who he used to see when he was a kid, who rob people because theyâre starving and thereâs no other way to get money quick enough.
Itâs somehow still surprising when they see him, standing there in a nice outfit and with a visibly expensive watch, and decide that heâs the one theyâre going to target. Not that surprising, granted, but for some reason, he had thought crime wouldnât be so bad here. The rich parts of Gotham always tout themselves as being âsaferâ, after all. He should know better by now.
They descend on him so fast itâs kind of impressive, honestly, or at least it would be if it werenât extremely annoying. The taller of the two speaks first, his voice gravely and deep. âThis is a mugging,â he says, pulling a gun from his pocket and aiming it at Dukeâs chest. âYou gonna make it easy on us, kid? âCause me and my pal here got no issue doing this the hard way.â
The thing is, Duke is a civilian right now. Any other day, any other circumstances, heâd be suited up as The Signal, and he could deal with these losers easy as pie. He can easily envision how he could take them downâthe shorter guy has a weapon, too, but heâs anxiously gripping it in his pocket. Itâs probably not a gun, or heâd have brought it out when his friend did. Maybe a knife, or some other kind of blunt object. Which means that Duke could allow the tall guy to get close so Duke can disarm him, and punch him hard enough to knock him out before moving on to Shorty. No real threat of being shot, and whatever Shortyâs got, it shouldnât be too hard to disarm him too. Duke is getting really good at these petty fights, enough that he doesnât really feel threatened.
Except Duke canât do anything. Duke Thomas, the civilian, is someone who isnât supposed to know how to fight, just another rich wimp.
Raising his hands, he tries to seem weak. Like heâs scared and playing it off like heâs amused. There are layers to this shit, and heâs not about to fail at one of the easier parts of the jobâacting. âW-what do you want? Money?â
âYour watch,â Shorty says. âAnd your jacket.â
âYou got any weapons on you?â Tall Guy shifts his aim up and down, trying to be threatening.
âNo,â Duke says honestly, but they donât believe him. Pulling him roughly to a nearby alleyway, they pat his pockets, and when they find the box, Shorty slips it out and carefully examines it. Itâs a nice box, old but hardly worn at all.
âThought you said you donât got any weapons,â Shorty growls, slowly opening the box while Tall Guy keeps the gun aimed at Duke. When Shorty sees the cuff links, he snorts, puts the lid back on, and slips it into his own pocket. Then he steps forward and keeps patting until he finds Dukeâs wallet. âYou richie-riches. Pah,â he says as he opens it up.
Duke can tell the moment he recognizes the name he sees on Dukeâs driverâs license.
Duke Thomas is a name thatâs becoming well known, same as all the other Wayne kids. Heâs the only one whoâs consistently been in the papers lately, though, since everyone is curious about the newest foster child.
âYou one of them Waynes?â Shorty demands, tone harsher than the grin widening on his face would suggest. To Tall Guy, he says, âWe should kidnap âim, man. Get a ransom offa Wayne. I hear he donât mess around when it comes to the children.â
âYouâre right,â a new voice, a familiar voice, interjects. âHe doesnât. And neither do I.â
As Tall Guy and Shorty turn their attentions to Alfred, Duke⊠doesnât relax like he thought he might. Instead, he tenses, because how likely is it that Alfred is distracting him, blocking out the mouth of the alley, so Duke can have a chance to fight these losers? He knows Alfred isnât helpless, but of the two of them, Duke is the one with more experience dealing with losers like these two.
With their backs to him, he drops his hands and starts to crouch into a fighting position.
ExceptâŠit turns out, Alfred doesnât really need him to do anything. Tall Guy steps forward with the gun aimed high, his finger on the trigger. âWhoâre you?â He demands, standing straight and tense as Alfred approaches. âThe nanny?â
âThe butler, actually. In any case, that is my grandson youâre threatening, and really, sir, simply so you can steal his watch?â
Tall Guy and Shorty donât seem to know what to say. Shorty pulls out a knife.
Alfred disarms and knocks both of them out within a few minutes, and Duke hardly even has to help, just punches Shorty when he comes staggering over, dazed and in pain. A few punches is all it takes before Dukeâs knocking the guy out. Before they leave the scene, he makes sure to retrieve the cuff links, not wanting to lose them.
They hurry back to the car, and once theyâre both settled in their seats, on the road back to the Manor, Duke canât keep quiet anymore. âWhy did you do that? I couldâve handled it.â
âYes, I have every faith you could have, Master Duke,â Alfred says. âBut your identity must be protected. If this gets out, no one will be much surprised to hear that I fought them off. No suspicion will be slung at you. And even if that were not the case, you are family.â
âIâm only Bruceâs foster kid,â Duke refutes. Itâs easy to think of the Waynes as family. Itâs not as easy to think about his real parents, and what they would think about all this, what they would want for him. They would want him to be happy, he knows that, and heâs happy with Bruce. But he canât ignore that his parents could still be out there somewhere, that for all everyone knows, this could be temporary. It doesnât feel great to put distance between himself and the others, but right now, he kind of needs it.
âYes, but still, you are family. You always will be, my boy. And while you are part of us, I will defend you. Unfortunately, youâll just have to get used to it.â Alfred smiles, then, and though Duke is feeling a big mess of emotions, he canât help but smile back. It felt really nice to be defended. He hasnât always had someone who would do that, and even if in the past few years his friends have filled that role, he remembers being a young kid, no one in his corner once his parents were gone.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A @batfam-christmas-stocking fic for @writtenskyes!! Happy holidays <3
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Jason stumbles out of his room, idly scratching at his temple as he yawns. Heâs barely awake, having only slept two hours, and heâs so hungry he wouldnât be surprised if his stomach started to actually eat itself. This is why Alfred always harps on me about three meals a day, he thinks, only a little self reproach in his inner voice.
Three meals a day is way harder to maintain than people might think. Facts are, he usually only eats one meal and a few snacks a day. But this morning, heâs going to eat, dammit.
He doesnât realize Cass is sitting on his couch until he accidentally stubs his toe. At his loud and abrupt cursing, she snickers, though he notices immediately itâs not quite as lively as it usually is.
Shaking his head at himself, he rubs his toes, trying to soothe the pain. As he does, he thinks about how really, itâs not surprising sheâs here. Here being his actual place instead of one of his many safehouses, only a few of which are known to Bruce. The other kids and Alfred know more locations than dear old dad does, but of them, Cass and Alfred are the only ones who knows where he actually lives.
After a nasty accident a few years ago in which case Jason needed a blood transfusion, theyâve known about how Shiva actually was Jasonâs mom, not Sheila. And yeah, okay, it took months for Jason to come to terms with that, but ever since? He and Cass have been cool. Heâs softened quite a bit to the idea of having a sister, and hell, a family. Well, mostly the sister part. The family part is a work in progress.
His relationship with Cass is totally different, thoughâsheâs the only one he can really, truly relax with. Plus, when they train together, she always kicks his ass seven ways to Sunday. Itâs fun, and more than that, thereâs way less pressure to be better than there is when he trains with his brothers. Itâs only partly because he knows heâll never win against her.
All of this is just to say: duh. Of course she knows where he lives.
She doesnât know everything, though. Case in point: the surprise on her face when Lizzy trots out from behind him, only briefly interested in the new person as opposed to breakfast.
âSup,â says Jason, not waiting for a response to walk into the kitchen. He can still see her over the counter, though, and makes sure to wait to get Lizzyâs food until he sees Cass sign a greeting back.
Theyâre quiet while he gets her bowl filled up, and then he offers, âYou want some cereal?â
Her response is a signed âyesâ.
Yeah, definitely not having a good day. Thatâs okay, he can deal. The more time they spend with each other, the more theyâre both getting used to how to act when one is going through a rough time.
Silently, he makes them both bowls, cereal first and then the milk. He brings them out to the living room carefully, and after handing her bowl over, he joins her on the couch. Mirroring her, he ends up with his legs curled criss-cross, his back to the corner where the arm meets the back.
For a while, the only sounds are the munching of their Frosted Flakes and Lizzy moving her bowl around on the floor as she noses around for more.
Lizzy ambles over to the couch just as Jason is finishing his last bite. Instead of putting her head in Jasonâs lap like he expects her to, she goes over to Cass.
As far as Jason knows, Cass doesnât like dogsâheâs certainly heard Damian happily regale Duke about how she never wants to steal Titus away like some people do.
âLiz,â he says, about to lean forward to pull her off by the collar. A big dog like her is probably the last thing Cass wants bothering her right now.
Cass surprises him, though. She welcomes Lizzy into her lap with a little coo, barely vocalized, and Jason watches with some awe as Lizzy starts to whine and nudge at Cassâs neck and shoulders, the exact same way she does to him when he needs help calming down.
See, the thing about Lizzyâsomething Cass most assuredly doesnât know, something nobody knowsâis that sheâs a service dog. A PTSD-trained service dog. Sheâs not really supposed to go to other people, seeing as sheâs Jasonâs.
Cass doesnât seek him out much during the day, especially not at his place. Her presence here alone is a sign that she isnât feeling well. Another thing is that she isnât talkingâshe still prefers to sign most days, but she can speak and often does. Her sentences are on the shorter side, yeah, but she also jokes and every once in a while, insults. When she gets like this, nonverbal, it usually means sheâs needing a break and isnât up to expending all the mental energy it takes to talk.
Which is fine with Jason. Itâs nice to have someone he can be quiet with. Most of the time when they hang out, he reads while she practices ASL or ballet. Neither of them can really have that with the other kidsâthe ones who come closest are Tim and Damian, when Tim is working and Damian drawing, but together, they bicker a lot. And even alone, Dick is always coming to find one of them, Duke wanting to show a video he just saw, Bruce needing one or the other for this or that reason.
So, yeah. He understands.
But itâs still kind of surprising to see how Cass reacts to Lizzy. She welcomes the dog into her lap and immediately starts to pet her, gently scratching behind her ears. Lizzy, for her part, whines and sniffles and is generally just there for Cass in a way he is intimately familiar with. Being on the receiving end of a dogâs care and attention is great anyway, but Lizzy, having been trained since she was a pup, is amazing at it.
Jason relaxes back into the cushions, making sure not to stare too much as the tension in Cassâ shoulders loosens and her lips curl up.
He finishes his bowl before she does, trying not to slurp the milk. He stands with a groan and heads to the sink. From the different vantage point, he has to say Lizzy looks adorable in his sisterâs lap.
He spends some time cleaning up the kitchen, letting Cass and Lizzy be as alone as they can be. But eventually, he starts feeling twitchy, bored by the tedious work. He isnât here often enough that itâs all that dirty, anyway.
When he steps back into the living room, he goes right to his bookshelves and finds one of his old favorites, Pride and Prejudice . Itâs where he got Lizzyâs name fromâElizabeth Bennett, one of his favorite characters, sometimes goes by Lizzy in the book. Jane Austen has been a comfort to him for so long, it honestly felt wrong to name his dog after anything or anyone else.
He finds his place back on the couch, and asks, âWant me to read out loud?â
She scrunches up her nose like she always does before giving a negative answerâlike, the answer is obviously no and heâs silly for not realizing that. Amused but also understanding, he nods and settles in, opening up to where he left his bookmark yesterday morning.
For over an hour, they sit together, the only sounds coming from outsideâah, good ole Gotham and her non-stop police sirensâand Lizzyâs gentle snores and sighs and content little grumbles, the brush of Cassâ fingers over her fur.
Itâs peaceful and grounding, and maybe thereâs a jealous worry in the back of his head that Cass is totally stealing his dog right now, but whatever. Itâs a perfect morning.
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