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Coldflarrow? Len's protective instincts going through the roof when he hears about all the unnecessary risks his vigilante boyfriends keep taking. Ollie assumes he's got freer reigns than Barry since he lives in Star rather than Central, but nope, turns out Len is perfectly capable and willing to drive out to Star to keep Ollie in line. Barry makes a classic you're-in-trouble grin at Ollie.
Didnât quite hit everything, but I hope you like? :)Â
Read on AO3.Â
âWell, look at you two. Arenât you a pair?â Len says as he makes his way past the bedraggled assembly of Team Arrow and Team Flash members. Theyâre gathered in chairs in the hall outside of Barry and Oliverâs room. Sleepy and bruised, they sort of flutter nervously in his wake, still unused to Lenâs presence in proximity to their favorite vigilantes.
Well, Felicity flutters. John Diggle sort of looms. Laurel, the last member who likely elected to stand guard while the Arrow recovered, just looks on with a calculating appraisal that reminds Len a little too much of her younger sister. Team Flash, on the other hand, barely acknowledges him. Not bothering to look up from the game on his phone, Cisco offers him an absent minded fist-bump, which Len summarily ignores. Iris and Caitlin donât stir from where theyâve fallen asleep on each other. Itâs one too many team-ups, he thinks with some chagrin. Even before he started⌠doing whatever heâs doing with Barry, he ended up helping out Team Flash just a little too often. Really damaged his reputation.
In the hospital room that the teams commandeered, beds pushed close together, lie the Dynamic Dolts. Barry lights up when he walks in, which will never not be weird but will also never get old (itâs nice, Len thinks, to always be the center of someoneâs attention. He could get used to it).
Weirdly, Oliver lights up, too. âHeey!â He says, a little too loudly, blue eyes very nearly dancing in excitement. âLen! Lenny! Len!â
Barry shushes him and Oliver blinks, seemingly chastised, and nods seriously.
âRight, sorry,â Oliver whispers, except itâs not particularly quiet. He turns back to Len and smiles big and wide like Len just walked through the door again. âYouâre here!â He says at the exact same loud volume he was at earlier. âI didnât know you were here!â
Len stops his forward progress and points at Oliver while looking at Barry with a raised eyebrow.
âDoppelganger?â He guesses.
Barry snorts and shakes his head.
âAlternate timeline?â He ventures next. And then, when Barry indicates another negative, tries, âAliens? Lazarus Pit? Demon possession?â
Barry collapses into a heap of giggles, pulling the IV as he curls in on himself and wheezes.
âNo!â Barry gasps between his absurd chortling (these are perfectly legitimate questions in their world, in Lenâs opinion). âOh man,â he sighs, wiping at the tears in his face. âI needed that. Oliverâs just high.â
âAs a kite,â Oliver agrees with an over-enthusiastic shake of his head. And then his eyes widen in awe as he looks around the room. âWoah.â
âDear God,â Len sighs. Barry breaks off into another round of giggles.
âHe was reciting poetry a few minutes ago,â Barry says gleefully. âShel Silverstein. And then he recited all of the lyrics of "My Neck, My Backâ in a British accent and I didnât even know he knew that song and I canât. You want to see the video?â He waves his phone around. Unfortunately, this same arm is the one connected to the saline and medicine bags by an IV. The movement actually makes the IV pole jolt and tugs at the needle in Barryâs arm.
Barry hisses, dropping his arm to cradle it, frowning confusedly at the brief spark of pain.
Len rolls his eyes, feeling very put upon and a little like heâs being laughed at by whatever powers that be, and stalks over to Barry. He puts his cold gun down on one of the two guest chairs in the room, followed after some thought by his parka. Then he wedges himself between the two beds and takes Barryâs arm in his hands, checking the needle and carefully removing the phone from Barryâs long fingers.
"Donât wave your arms around like an errant windmill,â he reprimands as he lays Barryâs arm back down on the bed. And if he continues to cradle said arm, well, itâs to prevent the dope from injuring himself further and thus extending his (and Lenâs) stay in this godforsaken city.
Barry blinks at him, clearly trying to remember the definitions of Lenâs words, before smiling wide and lazy up at him.
âOK, Len.â
Len narrows his eyes, immediately suspicious at the complacency, and leans forward a bit to take in Barryâs features. âThey got you on some good stuff too, huh?â
Barry shrugs drowsily. âItâs already wearing off again. Caitlin says I should be healed enough to not need more next time.â
Len frowns. Barry unthinkingly mirrors it. âI wish I could have more, though. Wish it lasted longer. It hurts.â
Len rubs his thumb along the crook of Barryâs arm, before he takes his hands away from Barryâs skin completely. Barry pouts at him. âHey! No! Touch me!â
Oliver snorts. Barry glares at him. âI didnât mean it like that!â
âYou wish you meant it like that,â Oliver points out, and Len thinks thatâs in the top three of the most ridiculous things heâs ever heard Oliver utter (right after his âyou have failed this cityâ mantra). It still seems to incense Barry, as the man goes for his phone again, this time with the clear intention to chuck it at Oliverâs head.
Len swipes the phone out of Barryâs hand and presses his arm back down on the bed. This time Len doesnât remove his hold, keeps his hand curled around Barryâs fingers.
Just to make sure the kid doesnât injure himself. Again. Thatâs all.
âBoys,â he drawls. âI think youâve made asses of yourselves enough for one day.â
And thatâs when Oliver freaking Queen sticks his tongue out at him.
Len is actually forced to facepalm. There is no other action to take. Barry giggles again.
And then, very belatedly and sounding quite affronted, Oliver says, âHey! I am not an ass of myself!â
Barry starts laughing so much he groans in pain, clutching at his ribs with the arm not currently being held captive by Len. Echoing laughter sounds from the doorway and Len looks up to see Laurel and Cisco, both with hands covering their mouths in an effort to stay quiet in the hall.
âIâm just stating the facts, Ollie,â Len says and quite enjoys the way Oliverâs nose scrunches at the name. From Barry, the moniker is gentle and doting, something almost soothing to Oliver. From Len? Fighting words.
Which is, of course, why Len likes to throw in the nickname occasionally as a barb. Itâs too interesting to see Queen bristle in a way more reminiscent of a disgruntled house cat than a tiger capable of easily snapping the neck of its prey. Len is all about leveling the playing field by any means necessary.
âSo,â he says, faux-conversationally. âWhose asinine plan was this?â
Barry shoots a not-at-all inconspicuous look at Oliver. Itâs a wide-eyed âoh no, youâre in trouble!â look that would be cute if Len wasnât so done with them both. Oliver, meanwhile, becomes very interested in the hem of the sheet. Len almost regrets that Oliver is a little too mellowed out by the drugs. He kind of likes that dark, cold resolve Oliver has whenever his plans, motivations, or actions are questioned. The way he shuts down and all that peeks out from behind shuttered eyes is the hardened, scarred regard of an old, primordial soul.
Well, Len doesnât like that aspect of Oliver, actually. It sets his teeth on edge, raws his nerves. Itâs too close to his own self for him to be comfortable with it, much less like it.
But he can respect it.
Now, sharp edges dulled by the drugs, whatâs left behind is the scared boy lost at sea. Once, not too long ago, when he thought Oliver was taking one of the few things that ever mattered to him away, he might have triumphed in this sort of vulnerability, might have picked apart the exposed wound until it bled. Lenâs a monster like that, and he knows it. He likes surgically cutting in and ripping out the weak parts of someone else, likes to put it in their face as if to say youâre not better than me, youâre just like me. Whatever it took to level the playing field, to leverage power over something or someone else.
But nowâŚ
Len averts his eyes from the soft expression on Oliverâs face, the aching allure of his downcast eyes, the curve of his neck and shoulders, still broad but made less intimidating by the oversized hospital gown. Lenâs thumb traces patterns over Barryâs knuckles, and he does that while he shores up his anger and frustration again like a suit of armor. He dares not meet Barryâs eyes. Theyâd be all-knowing, like he can actually begin to understand Len, like he can read Lenâs thoughts and desires of late towards Barryâs other lover.
(And the absolutely discombobulating thing is⌠Barry does know him, has always known him, and Len hates that. He hates the imbalance of it, because how Barry can know Len for what he is and still say that he loves him remains unfathomable to Len.)
âItâs not Oliverâs fault,â Barry says quietly. And then, more insistently, âOliver, itâs not your fault.â
Oliver sighs, lays back a little more on the bed, shifts so he doesnât have to look at Barry, at Len. The movement pulls at whatever wounds he has underneath the gown and sheets and he winces, breath hitching as he looks confusedly down at himself, too far removed from his own body to remember that heâs injured.
Barry nearly lunges across the small gap between the beds at Oliver, eyes worried, always diving after loved ones, always reaching out to dig his hands into them and never let them go (not again, never again, and itâs weak flaw thatâs so easy to take advantage, that has been taken advantage of time and again, and yet Barry still pours out love like heâll never run out of it).
Len catches him mid-motion, which is good because Barry has gone sheet-white, blood pressure dropping at the sudden movement.
âI told you,â Len says softly as he turns Barryâs shoulders and presses them firmly into the mattress. âYouâve made enough of an ass of yourself for one day.â
Barryâs eyes are fluttering but the corner of his mouth quirks in a rueful smile. âLove you, too. Oliver?â
Len sighs and says, âStay.â Itâs pretty futile, Barry is the worst at following orders, but his pallor indicates that heâs not feeling well enough to fight it at the moment. So Len takes a fortifying breath, stands up and turns fully toward Oliverâs bed.
Sea blue eyes dart up to him when Len wraps a hand around his shoulder and presses him back down on the mattress, much like heâd just done with Barry. He pulls the sheets down, wondering again how the muscle-bound, imposing figure of the Arrow can be reduced to looking so small in the hospital bed. He easily sees bandages peeking from underneath the sleeves and neckline of the gown, as well as beneath the hem, white tape stretching over his thighs.
Len returns the sheets and definitely does not tuck the asshole vigilante in. âWell, at least you werenât dumb enough to make yourself bleed again,â he announces.
Oliver blinks slowly at him before giving him a small smile, a huff of laughter escaping through his nose. âOur new nurse has a terrible bedside manner.â
Len scoffs, and Oliverâs smile widens when Barry laughs, too. Drugged up and in pain, Oliver is still disproportionately pleased to make Barry laugh.
âYou wouldnât be getting poor bedside treatment if you werenât so monumentally stupid,â Len reminds him, because itâs impossible for him not to. He digs in and pulls out the vulnerable parts. Levels the playing field. Itâs all he knows how to do, the only way he knows how to communicate.
âLen,â Barry admonishes, still a little weak and breathy.
âIt was a terrible plan,â Len continues. âLetting Barry be bait? Acting like you were turning sides? No back-up?â
(It belatedly occurs to Len that the part about back-up is the Legends in him talking, and was not something he would have ever uttered two or more years ago. He wonders if this new reliance makes him weak, or if it makes him the smarter player. Itâs most likely a bit of both.)
The lost look that Oliverâs been wearing, that kicked puppy guilty one that kind of pisses Len off but always makes Barry melt into comfort-overdrive starts crumbling at the edges.
âDoes your life mean so little to you? Does Barry?â Len continues.
âHey,â Barry interjects, the rustle of bedsheets indicating that heâs moving to sit up again.
But though Oliver likes to have someone on his team, likes to have someone believe in him on the days when he cannot do it for himself, heâs never been fine with someone else fighting his battles for him. He doesnât sit up, Lenâs looming over him a little too much for that, but that look is back, those features frozen into a resolute scowl, the animal behind his eyes awake and pacing, itâs figurative fangs flashing as it burns to tear its way out of Oliver.
Len shivers, equal parts ready to run from that look and ready to clash with it tooth and claw.
âI did what I had to do,â Oliver says like heâs voicing the mantra in his head by rote.
âYou did what you wanted,â Len corrects, crossing his arms. âRegardless of consequences.â
Barry snorts. âLook whoâs talking.â
Len throws a shushing gesture at Barry without even looking at him. Barry stutters a chorus of indignant noises, and Len hardly bothers to hide the resulting smirk.
âLook,â Oliver cuts in, voice hard. âI already apologized to Barry, if thatâs what youâre looking for.â
âWhereâs my apology?â Len asks. âI had to come all the way here to this godforsaken cityâa lot of good youâre doing here, Ollie. I was almost mugged in the hospital parking lot, did you know?â
âHeâs probably lying about that for dramatic effect,â Barry interrupts.
âI know,â Oliver says, taking his eyes off Len and sharing a small smile with Barry.
The shared moment between the two cuts, but not like it used to, a sharp and cold hurt. This moment is shared because itâs about Len, about their mutual understanding of him, and it hurts still, but in an achingly warm way almost entirely foreign to him.
âYou didnât have to come,â Oliver continues. âCaitlin was here, Barry will be fine.â And, see? That right there is why Len had to come. Oliver still sounds like heâs trying to convince himself about Barryâs survival and health.
But admitting that, yes, he had to come is not possible. He canât tell them that when Iris first called him and told him Barryâs heart stopped, that his heart had stopped, too. That when she told him about how they couldnât stop Oliverâs bleeding, Len had had to sit down and remember to breathe. He couldnât say out loud that he had been on his bike before heâd finished hanging up with her, that he refused to stand still one more minute when Barryâwhen theyâwere dying.
Len couldnât say any of that. He wouldnât. (Though he suspects that Barry might come to know, in the way he just does sometimes.) He had to keep the playing field level. Had to keep some power in his hands.
âAnd miss the opportunity to rub your face in your terrible planning skills?â Len asks with a careless shrug. Oliver rolls his eyes and reaches up, shoving at Len to get off of his bed.
The shove is distressingly weak, and Oliverâs arm drops too quick and boneless on to to Lenâs lap. Oliverâs face scrunches up, his shoulders tightening, hating the feeling of weakness as much as Len does, maybe more so, always expecting an army of enemies to attack from all sides, to surround him and beat him while heâs down.
Len lays his hand over Oliverâs. The skin is pale and cool to the touch. He tucks it back under the sheets and blankets and if the look Oliver gives him is calculating, like heâs trying to dig past Lenâs skin to unearth his motivations, then Len looks away too quickly for him to get very far.
He hopes.
He moves back onto Barryâs bed. Barry reaches out for him and that'sâthatâs disconcerting still, to have someone like Barry seek him out. Like Len could ever be anything remotely close to safety and comfort. How ridiculous.
He cradles Barryâs hand in both of his, anyway, checking for the IV needle first. Heâs relieved that Barryâs skin is warming, meaning that his powers are strengthening.
Not for the first time, Len wishes he had the same kind of healing factor, wishes he could go through life knowing heâd heal from whatever his enemies threw at him.
(It doesnât work like that, Len knows. The Speed Force heals Barryâs skin, keeps him soft and smooth and whole, but it doesnât heal his heart, doesnât prevent all kinds of hurts from being tattooed under his skin, invisible to anyone who looks and all the more painful for it.)
For the first time, he wishes that Oliver had a healing factor, too. Len doesnât know what his injuries are, will probably steal a look at the medical sheets later, but those had been a lot of bandages heâd seen. Oliverâs recovery would be much slower, his susceptibility last long after Barry has to return to Central and Len meets back up with the Legends.
âSorry you had to come all the way out here,â Barry whispers.
âThatâs not what you should be apologizing for,â Len sighs when Barry sends him a questioning glance. âWith you both all laid up your friends are going to expect me to be all nurturing.â His lip curls at this, not unlike the way it would if he had bitten into a lemon. âYou know how I feel about that.â
âYou do lack a certain something when it comes to playing nurse,â Oliver says.
âThe outfit, for one,â Barry says with an overly salacious waggle of his eyebrows.
Len rolls his eyes and fastidiously puts a pillow lightly over Barryâs face to muffle his cackling laughter, easily dodging a flailing arm, keeping the one with the IV still.
Len sits with them a long time, Oliver dropping to a drug-induced doze without much preamble. Upon Barryâs request, and after a great deal of bartering and bantering, Len finally agrees to push their beds completely together. Barry scoots closer to Oliver, giving Len more room to sit on his other side. After that, Barry starts wavering in and out of consciousness as his rapid healing saps the energy from him
Because Barry is like a child up past his bedtime and refusing to admit that heâs tired, Barry slurs increasingly delirious conversations at Len whenever he resurfaces to wakefulness.
âSo, you took a video of Oliver making an ass out of himself?â Len asks during one of these times.
Out of absolutely nowhere, Barry brandishes his phone and all of a sudden Oliverâs voice blares through the speakers:
âShake your body, donât stop, donât miss
All you ladies pop yoââ
Len nimbly retrieves the phone from Barryâs grasp and turns the sound off. He glances up, but Oliver doesnât stir. He glances at the door to find Iris leaning over, blinking owlishly at them. Barry smiles happily and waves at her, or tries to, and Iris smiles back at them before receding from the door to curl back into Caitlin and Cisco.
âVery interesting,â Len says, this time pocketing Barryâs phone to keep it out of reach.
âI did it for posterity,â Barry slurs, eyes already closing again.
âBlackmail, you mean. Iâm so proud.â
Exhausted beyond human limits and half-dreaming the fight he just narrowly escaped (Len can tell from the pained moans and the desperate âOliver!â that quietly leaves his lips a time or two), Barryâs a creature of endless motion. Shifting, jerking, half-crying out when the sudden movements pull on still-healing wounds. Agitated by the constant movement, the bedsheets keep working down his body and Len has to work to keep them pulled up around Barryâs chest.
Oliver, by contrast, is ramrod straight in his sleep. Tense and ready for a fight, ready for pain, even in sleep.
After the second distressed sound from Barry, Len sighs, kicks off his boots, gently shifts Barry over a little more, and lies down beside him. He slowly wraps his arm across Barryâs stomach and forearms to keep him still. Barry continues jitter and twitch, and Len thinks he can feel the rapid pulse of his heart, as fast as a hummingbirdâs wings. But, with Lenâs weight over him, Barry gradually settles and quiets.
âI am sorry,â Oliverâs voice unexpectedly sounds, startling Len from his light doze. He glances across Barry to see Oliverâs face turned, watching them with something dark and adrift in his expression. âThat Barry⌠It was stupid. IâI should have accounted for how reckless he is. I should have known there would have been another bomb. I donât know,â he finishes in a whisper so low Len almost doesnât hear it. âI donât know what Iâd do ifâŚâ
They stare at each other for a drawn-out moment of expectations and voiceless words.
Lenâs not Barry. Heâs certainly not Joe West or John Diggle or any of Barry and Oliverâs slew of teammates who, despite sometimes serious personal issues and shortcomings, always seem to have the right thing to say to their downtrodden heroes. And heâs still angry. He doesnât know how to tell Oliver that he almost took Barry away from them both, that if Oliver doesnât know what he would do without his lover than why the hell would Len be any different? He wonât say any of that out loud, though. Heâs not about to admit it, for one thing. But also heâs not made to say it without it hurting, without digging at Oliverâs selfishness, without saying âyou ruin everything you touchâ.
A few months ago, when Len still wanted Barry to be only his, when he was afraid that the only good thing in his life was going to leave him no matter how many times Barry assured him that âI love you both, I love you, Lenâ, he probably would have said those things to Oliver. Anything to make Oliver hurt like he was hurting.
But something is different, now. For one thing, Oliverâs starting to feel as much his as Barry does.
For another, itâs not like Lenâs any different. He knows that one day his hands, his own wants and desires, are going to break Barry, too. He knows this like he knows his name. Heâs just too selfish to let go.
(Oliver the hero, however, would probably let go before that happened. It rankles that Oliverâs still somehow the better man, though perhaps not as much as it used to.)
âIt was really stupid,â he finally decides to say, and weathers Oliverâs glare with a slow, unaffected blink. âBut, in some fairness, thereâs no accounting for Barryâs recklessness. I donât even pretend to, anymore.â He refuses to look down like a besotted fool at Barry, whoâs still sleeping soundly.
Throw away the plan.
The knowing smile Oliver gives isnât remotely happy, but the way his gaze slowly travels over Barryâs formâover the both of them, if Len isnât mistaken, and he hardly ever isâis at least fond. âI honestly donât know what else I couldâve done,â Oliver admits. Len decides that Oliverâs probably a little too compromised still if heâs in a position where heâs willing to admit a flaw to anyone, much less to Len.
âYou couldâve called me.â
The simple statement rings in the ensuing silence. Their eyes meet again and this time Len refuses to look away. He knows Oliver, more so than Oliver is probably comfortable with. He can guess at the thoughts and gears currently turning in Oliverâs head. Does Len mean that heâd come to Star City, team up with Oliver and Barry to take on the big bad? Does Len mean that heâd come for Oliver, if he needed him?
Len isnât so sure himself what the answer is, but he thinks that itâs more âyesâ than itâs ever been before. But itâs not as heroic as Oliver probably thinks. Len doesnât care about Star City, he doesnât care about some villain or other civilian lives. But Oliver is Barryâs and Barry is his. They are his. And heâs never been interested in losing his possessions, in squandering his investments. Thatâs all.
âAnd you would come?â Oliver asks. His lip twitches, but no matter how much he fights it, heâs being pulled under by exhaustion and the drugs. His blinks are slower and longer, and his mouth becomes slack mid-smirk.
âMy rules, of course,â Len drawls. Oliver breathes out a short laugh.
âNot likely,â he scoffs as he gives up completely on keeping his eyes open. With the last of his strength, Oliver reaches under Barryâs sheet to hold Barryâs hand.
âBut you would come? If we asked?â
Len thinks about Barry and the wounds tattooed under his skin.
âYes,â he says, and is taken aback by his own honesty.
ââŚIf I asked?â
He thinks about broad shoulders, strong and scarred, made small by a hospital gown and stark white sheets.
It takes a long minute for him to answer. He doesnât know if Oliver is still awake when he says, âYes.â
Title: Love Comes (Sometimes Twice)Â (Now Complete!)
Author: Halzbarry
Rating: Explicit
Word Count: 100,162
Summary:Â AVN News Update: Oliver Queen of Vigilante Studios and Leonard Snart of Rogue Studios to film new multi-part production"The Arrow" with AVN Breakout newcomer Sebastian Smythe. Rumors of feud between Snart and Queen are being put to rest as Vigilante Studios hosts what is expected to be the most profitable porn production in history.~
Barry had accepted the offer to film as the Flash in the latest porn series "The Arrow" thinking he'd just have a chance to film with the two porn stars he'd admired and lusted after ever since he started. What he wasn't expecting was to get involved in a feud between Oliver Queen and Leonard Snart, going all the way back to Oliver and Len's college years. He also didn't expect to fall in love with the two of them and try to convince them to make up either.
OR: AU where Barry, Leonard, and Oliver are Porn Stars, and Barry gets a little too involved in Leonard and Oliver's complicated past.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming