Tim ducked further into the hoodie, tugging it forward as his eyes prickled again. His cheeks were itchy, and he rubbed at the drying tear tracks, trying to keep his breathing steady. He didn’t need to be caught crying. Not here. And certainly not now.
It was very late. If Batman was in town, he’d be wrapping up patrol right now, and Tim would’ve headed to the Cave, debriefed, and gone home.
Instead, he was in Crime Alley, forcing himself to walk straight and praying no one caught the trace of a limp. He didn’t need another person looking at him and thinking easy target. Not now. Just—not now.
He was Robin. He—he could fight any of them off, he was trained and—and he’d been Robin earlier in the night too, but it was Tim Drake who’d been pushed over a desk, and it was Tim Drake hobbling through the darkened streets.
No. He—he couldn’t think about that. He was—he was here for a reason. He had to stop—he had to ignore the throbbing pain, the brief, searing slice every time he took too big a step, the ache pressing behind his eyes, the shivering, the way everything felt far away and too close all at once.
The streets were fuzzy, but he could hear his heartbeat in his ears, obnoxiously loud, and that meant everyone else could hear it too, could take one look at him and know—
No. He needed—deep breaths. He couldn’t focus on himself. He wasn’t—he wasn’t in danger. He was Robin. There were actual children in danger, and Tim had to focus on them.
Batman was off-planet, wouldn’t be back for a couple of days. Tim was—Tim was—Tim should’ve been able to do it, to track down details and find the children before they were trafficked, he was Robin, he should’ve—
He’d tried. And it had ended—Tim wasn’t going back there. He couldn’t. He’d started hyperventilating at the very thought, and the children were being shipped tomorrow, and Tim didn’t know where, and he needed—he needed to find someone to help him, someone who wouldn’t ask questions, and the list was distressingly empty.
But there were rumors spreading from the sex workers in Crime Alley, and tracking down Gotham’s latest drug lord was probably a very bad idea, but apparently this was the night for bad ideas. Hood was supposed to be protective of children, and he didn’t seem like the kind of person that would need evidence.
Tim just had to find him, and give him the name.
That was it.
Give him the name, and limp-hobble-wince back home, and curl up in his bed and cry, cry until he couldn’t cry anymore, and maybe just spend the rest of his life in bed, it wasn’t like his parents cared.
He’d known that Tim’s parents weren’t home. He’d known—he’d invited him—our little secret, he’s whispered, like Tim scared of him, like Tim wouldn’t tell anyone, like he’d buttoned his shirt with trembling fingers and walked numbly out of the house, his mind full of panicked static.
The Red Hood was a killer. Right now, Tim didn’t care. He just needed to find him and—
Tim’s steps stuttered to a halt. …How was he going to find Hood? They didn’t know where his base was, they didn’t know how to contact him—the man was half a myth, they barely had enough security camera footage to prove that he existed.
He could ask some dealers, but the streets were near-empty this late at night—maybe Tim should’ve come in the morning, or the afternoon—but he couldn’t stay in his empty house, not when that man knew where it was, and going to Wayne Manor would only led to questions, and Tim didn’t want to talk to anyone right now.
They were all detectives, they’d take one look at him and know, and Tim didn’t want to say it, didn’t want to speak, didn’t want to do anything. Didn’t want to—he could still feel the hands on him, the hot breath on his neck, the paralysis, unable to move, unable to fight back—
His breathing was too loud, shallow and harsh. He was shaking again, and a man crossing the street at the intersection darted a look in his direction. Tim immediately jerked towards the shadows, the darkness, the closest alleyway, and pressed against brick as he tried to remember how to breathe.
He couldn’t have a panic attack in the middle of Crime Alley, someone would gut him and take his wallet without a second thought. Or—no, not thinking about that, not thinking about that—Tim wrapped his arms around himself as he leaned against the alley wall.
He was too exposed down here. He wasn’t going to find Hood by wandering around the streets, he needed a plan, and for that, he needed to calm down, and if he kept losing it in the middle of the street, someone was going to mark him as easy prey.
And they’d probably be right.
Tim dared to go a little further into the alley, spotting a rickety fire escape and using a dumpster to jump up to it. The movement burned inside of him, and Tim nearly lost his balance and fell backwards when he was climbing across the railing, but he was finally on the fire escape. He chose a landing midway up, and curling up tightly in the corner, shoving his face against his knees and trying to breathe.
In, four count. Hold, seven count. Out, eight count. Again. Again. Again.
No one was hurting him. He wasn’t in danger. He was alone, and he was safe. He just needed to focus on breathing.
Breaths tickling his ear, his own breath misting the glass top of the desk as he—
No. No, he had to focus. Breathe. Children were in danger, he had to find Hood.
His thighs still ached where the edge of the desk had bit into them. He could feel the large hand splayed on his back, each individual finger searing into him. That low, dark, satisfied voice. The smirk on his face as he watched Tim leave.
Tim tightened his grip on his shins, fingernails digging in until the pressure was enough to bring him back to the present. He inhaled slowly, and his breath hitched, eyes burning as fresh tears slid down his cheeks. He had to find Hood. He had to find Hood and tell him about the children, because otherwise the only person that knew was him, otherwise Tim would have to do something about it, dress up as Robin and go back and—and— It felt like a spike of horror lodged into his heart. He tried to swallow, and couldn’t.Â
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.
âś“ Live Streamingâś“ Interactive Chatâś“ Private Showsâś“ HD Qualityâś“ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
“But you apologized!” the pint-size Robin fiercely protested, and Jason closed his eyes in the face of the growing headache.
“Okay, first of all, I didn’t apologize,” Jason said—and then hastily backtracked, “Which I should’ve done, I’m sorry, I should’ve never gone after you and hurt you.  It was wrong, and I won’t do it again.”
The kid beamed at him, like he’d proven his point.
“Secondly,” Jason stressed, “That’s besides the point.  I hurt you, kid.  I hurt you for no other reason than you existed.  That’s not something you should forget or forgive.”
“But—”
“No, kid.  You can’t go running around pretending like it didn’t happen!”
“Okay.  What about if someone accidentally hurts me?” the kid asked.
“Accidentally?”
“Yeah, like I got in the way of their punch, or they didn’t see me, or something like that.”
“Uh, if it was an accident, and they apologize, then it’s up to you,” Jason said slowly—he could sense that the kid was plotting something, but he didn’t quite know what.  “They should still be more careful.”
“What if it’s not their fault?” the kid pressed, “What if they were drugged?”
“Drugged?  Drugged with what?”
“I don’t know—how about fear toxin?” the kid asked.
“You’re not responsible for your actions if someone drugs you with fear toxin,” Jason said uneasily.
“What about mind control?”
“Uh, no, still not your fault.”
“What about a creepy green pool of water that imparts magical rage issues?”
Jason closed his eyes and resisted the urge to strangle the little shit. Â So that was where the trap was.
“Come on, baby bird.” The gun nudges his face.  “Open your eyes.”
Tim feels hollow. Empty.  His face is wet and he doesn’t know if it’s tears or blood. Everything hurts.
“Open your eyes.”  The voice is gentle.  It reminds him of a boy who was brighter than every star in the sky, loud and happy and brilliant, flying through the air on a robin’s wings. Tim would’ve done anything for that boy.
He cracks his eyes open.
Everything is blurry and the light burns in tune to his throbbing headache.  The helmet is off.  The mask is off.  Jason Todd is staring down at him with a gun pointed between Tim’s eyes.
“I faced death with my eyes open,” he says, “You should too.”
Tim woke up blurrily, the slow, dragging-through-molasses feeling of fighting his way through drugs. Everything was…floaty, and he felt curiously numb.
He managed to pry his eyes open, and stared fuzzily at an off-white ceiling. Â His bedroom was blue. Â This room was not blue.
“Awake?” a tinny voice asked, and Tim—through a herculean effort—managed to twist his head sideways, looking at the doorway and the broad figure standing in it.  Leather jacket.  Red helmet.
It took his mind a few seconds to put the pieces together.  “Hood?” he asked—croaked, and Hood straightened out of the doorway and came closer.
There was a glass of water on the side table, and Tim let himself be maneuvered up, one hand cradling the back of his head, to sip at the glass pressed to his lips. Â The water felt like bliss and Tim groaned when it was empty and sunk back into the bed.
“You know, I was expecting a little more fear,” Hood said, staring down at him, “Maybe not shrieking hysteria, but at least some wariness.  Suspicion.  Minor flinching.”
Tim blinked at him. Hood reached out and poked his shoulder. Tim blinked again.
“You’re not scared of me,” Hood said flatly.
Tim wasn’t sure if it was a question, but he answered it anyway.  “You don’t hurt kids,” Tim reminded him.
Summary:Â Jason begrudgingly gets saddled with protecting this weird little kid who runs around Gotham stalking Batman and trying to get himself killed, months before he meets the man himself and becomes Robin.
Reader’s Comments: Tim decides that the nice street kid who protected him once will now be his friend, and after some persistence, Jason agrees.
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.
âś“ Live Streamingâś“ Interactive Chatâś“ Private Showsâś“ HD Qualityâś“ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Summary: “You want me to be your brother?” Jason asks in a daze. Why? Why would anyone want him as a brother? Especially a rich little kid who can probably have whatever he wants.
Reader’s Comments: Basically Tim wants to have a real family and claims Jason as his brother. Jason decides to go with it and be the best big brother ever
Summary:Â How many Tim Drakes does it take to work through a set of personal problems?
Two, it turns out. Two Tim Drakes and a-whole-nother universe.
Reader’s Comments: I love this story. Definitely one of my all time favorites. It has awesome bonding and discussion about how different pasts make different people (it is a age-reversal universe where Jason lived and Tim died). Also both Tims like causing chaos while Red Robin!Tim fixes all of Red Hood!Tim’s relationships.Â