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Sticky:Mayarene Rose here, or you can call me Ann Rei if you want :D I mostly write fics about the Titans and the Batfamily (for now) but I migrate to other fandoms now and again. I wish I can give you all a definite list of fandoms but tbh, I just write whatever feels good at the moment. But right now, for the most part, I am stuck with DC and the MCU. I'm ace and a gen writer for the most part, but I do write shippy things sometimes. No NSFW, though. Feel free to talk about it here but I probably will not write a fic about it.
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The Magnus Archives - Something light and fluffy will be absolutely amazing. Anything with the archives staff having fun despite things being very horrible. Or Gerry Keay not having a horrible life. I just want to see my children being happy đđ
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finding truth between heart and soul
Fandom: DC Comics, Batman
Characters: Tim Drake, Dick Grayson
Warnings: Portrayal of rape from Nightwing #93
Word Count: 2,703
Sequel to this
Also on Ao3
A/N: Set around 2014. I did a ridiculous amount of math for this to work out. Never make an English Major do math.
where the emperor's clothes went
âYou know no one cares right,â Roy says, when heâs finished. He pauses for a while and just looks at Dick. His eyes are older than his face and shrewd. âYouâve been down for a while now and we just wanted to cheer you up. We fucked up with that, but we donât care if you donât like the kissing thing.â
âI know,â Dick says.
âWe love you,â Roy says. âWe just want you to be happy.â
Dick doesn't answer. He doesn't know what to say.
âWe donât care,â Roy says again.
âI care,â Dick says. âItâs stupid and I donât get it, but I care. I just want to figure out what to do.â
In which Dick discovers bits about himself and learns to be okay with it.
Warnings: Mentions of sexual assault, underage kissing. There's also a description of a panic attack towards the middle.
Fandom: DC Comics, Teen Titans, Batman
Characters: Dick Grayson, Bruce Wayne, Donna Troy, Wally West, Roy Harper, Garth
Wordcount: 15, 308
Also on Ao3
Sequel is here
A/N: I am in the process of cross-posting my fics on Ao3 here so expect a lot of this over the next week. Also, goodness, it's been a while since I edited a fic like this *war flashbacks to ffnet days* so feel free to tell me if I did something wrong. Otherwise, please enjoy!
(Also pardon the long post, the cut is, for some unknown reason, not cooperating with me.)
Also, as always, comments give me life <3
Dick pretends nothingâs changed. Heâs not really the type to fall apart. Not anymore.
He wants to tell Bruce that it doesnât matter. That itâs happened a hundred times before and Dick really just wants to figure out what he has to do so it doesnât have to happen in the first place. He wants to tell Bruce that itâs fine and that heâs fine, because he is.
He goes to school in a daze a lot of days, but thatâs normal. It has nothing to do with whatâs going on with his nightlife. If his mind is more scattered than usual, if he has more trouble focusing, more trouble being there, well⊠No one notices, anyway. Dickâs gotten very good at functioning through all the stress.
âItâs perfectly normal to notice the opposite gender at your age,â Mrs. Markle tells them over Homeroom. The class titters. Dick has no idea what sheâs talking about. Heâs still half-asleep. He sits straight in his chair, hoping the expression on his face looks interested. âYouâll be feeling all these brand new emotions about yourselves and thatâs alright as long as you donât let it interfere with your responsibilities. Itâs perfectly normal at your age to fall in love.â
Another wave of giggles. The school dance is coming soon, Dick remembers distantly. He saw a banner about it on the way in. That was probably why Mrs. Markle was talking about this all of a sudden. It feels like it came out of nowhere. Everyone seems to pay more attention than usual, though Dick canât imagine why. Itâs still too early, and Mrs. Markleâs voice hasnât gotten any less dull. He canât imagine what could have changed.
He takes a cursory glance around the room and sees the numerous glances everyone seems to be giving everyone else. All the knowing grins. There are two girls holding hands behind him, hiding nervous smiles through ducked heads.
There are also a lot of people eyeing him out of the corner of their eyes. Nervous glances, passing notes to each other. Whispering.
âGrayson,â Warren hisses from next to him. Theyâve been in most of the same classes since Dick started going to Gotham Academy. Theyâre not quite friends, but teachers like putting them beside each other for some reason. âWhoâre you going with?â
âArenât the girls supposed to ask?â He thinks he heard that in one of the announcements. A special thing Gotham Academyâs trying. Dick doesnât really see how a girl asking is different from a guy asking, or whatâs so special about it, but he doesnât really care enough to find out, either.
âWell yeah,â Warren says. âBut pretty sure youâve got a line of girls already waiting for you. Bet your lockerâs filled with love notes already.â He smirks and winks at Dick. Dick flushes.
His locker had been filled with notes that morning, much to his bafflement. He hadnât known what to do with them. He just stared at the usually pink slips of paper, some of them were perfumed, a lot of them were decorated with hearts, in confusion. He hadnât known what to do. He hadnât even really registered the dance at the time.
How was he supposed to pick? Was he supposed to pick? He wasnât even sure how he was supposed to answer a note. Should he have written a note back? He doesnât know what heâs supposed to say, though.
âThe notes are weird,â he says. Warren just shrugs, unconcerned. Dick shifts away slightly. He really wants this conversation to be over.
âYeah, itâd be cooler if you get asked in person,â Warren says. âThe dance is gonna be totally cool, though. So whoâre you gonna go with?â
Dick shrugs. âI thought Iâd skip it, actually,â he says. Heâs pretty sure that the dance is on a Friday night. Weekends are reserved for the Titans and he usually heads over there after school. Heâd much rather be with the Titans than in some school dance with people who donât know who he really is.
âYou canât skip it,â Warren says, sounding disbelieving. âItâs the best thing ever! Everyoneâs going!â
Dick pauses. âDoesnât mean I have to do it, too,â he says.
Warren nudges him in the arm. âThought you liked this kind of thing, Grayson,â he says. âAll the girls are already lining up for you. Are you really going to let them down?â
Dick takes a deep breath and puts on a smile. He doesnât know what to say to that, either. He thinks he should be flattered and not confused.
âAre you going with someone?â he asks Warren. Warren instantly brightens and he doesnât seem to notice the rough subject change because he begins waxing about Mary from two seats over. Dick lets him, listening with half an ear. Warren says that Mary is pretty, that sheâs really nice, that he hopes they get to kiss by the end, and maybe even something more. Mrs. Markle is still giving relationship advice in front.
Dick keeps his smile in place and pretends heâs not completely aware of exactly how many eyes are flickering towards him. His attention keeps faltering, mind wandering to the Titans and Robin and other things. Dickâs always had trouble focusing on things he doesnât care about. Itâs a problem sometimes, though heâs gotten used to compensating for it. He wonders what Donnaâs doing, if Wally is as bored as he is. Neither of them could really sit still in class, though Dickâs better at pretending he is.
âEveryone falls in love eventually,â he hears Mrs. Markle say through the buzz in his brain. âItâd be wrong if you didnât, so donât feel ashamed of it, no matter what form it takes.â
The bell rings. Class ends and it couldnât be sooner. Dick wanders through the hallway, mind still on what heâs going to do when he gets to Titans Tower. He wants to train with Garth and Donna. Maybe Roy would even be there, though he still seems to be under the impression they donât like him. Dick still wants to learn how to use a bow and arrow and heâll manage to convince Roy to teach him. Maybe even stay with the Titans.
âRichard! Hey Richard!â Dick turns and sees a familiar blonde girl bounding towards him, breathless. Dick stops in the middle of the hallway and waits for her. Sheâs smiling wide when she reaches him. Wide but kinda hesitant, too. Almost shy. Dick is confused enough to stop his train of thought.
âWill you--I mean, uh--Will you go to the dance with me?â She says the last part in a rush, like sheâs afraid sheâll lose the words if she doesnât get them out quick enough.
Dick stares. The girl, Stacey whoâs in his chemistry class, is smiling shyly at him. Sheâs pretty and popular. A theater kid and definitely one of the friendliest and most outgoing people in the school. They did a couple of plays together, back when Dick still had the time for that kind of thing. He knows that sheâs generous and always has a kind word for everyone. She has this way of smiling and then being friends with everyone. Itâs practically impossible to dislike her.
He doesnât think that youâre allowed to say no to people you donât dislike.
Dick wonders what Bruce would do. Scratch that, he knows exactly what Bruce would do. Bruce is predictable when it comes to dealing with people when heâs not Batman. Heâd smirk and throw an arm around Staceyâs shoulder and say, âyes, of course.â
Maybe not Stacey specifically, because that would be really weird, but the point still stands.
Dick wonders if he should do that, too. It seems like a logical thing to do. Bruce is always telling him to be his own person, though. He probably wouldnât approve. Dick never liked copying Bruce anyway.
So then he wonders what Richard Grayson is supposed to do. Dick has to admit that he doesnât really know the guy that well. Heâs a nice, charming boy whenever Bruce drags him to one of the galas. Heâs a model student to his teachers. Heâs fun, a little mischievous, but mostly a dork with too much money on his hands to the students of Gotham Academy. Heâs friendly and usually people like him well enough. More than anything, heâs perfectly predictable. Predictable and a bit boring, when you think about it.
Sometimes, though that was way back then when he was new to Gotham, Richard Grayson is the kid who got into fights and had fire in his expression that every other kid stayed away from. Who was from a rough place and talked and fought rougher. Almost everyone has forgotten that version of him. Heâd worked really hard to make sure they forget.
Richard Grayson isnât really much of a person. Heâs whatever Dick needs him to be, when he needs it. Dickâs not sure what he needs right now, though. Heâs not sure what everyoneâs expecting out of him, so heâs not sure who he should be. Does he have a reputation to protect? Is there an answer Richard Grayson is expected to give? Dick sometimes really wishes he had guidelines for this kind of thing. It can get hard to keep track.
He feels as if the entire hallway has fallen into a standstill around them. All around them, people are waiting for his reaction. Or maybe thatâs just him. Heâs not used to not knowing what to do. It makes him nervous.
He imagines what it must look from the outside. Stacey is one of the most popular people in school and Dick is Bruce Wayneâs ward, making him one of the most popular kids by default. Stacey is pretty, he supposes, and Dick isnât bad looking, either. Theyâre both nice.
He realizes that he may not have a good reason to say no. Saying that he doesnât really want to go to the dance, and it generally seems like a really stupid idea, seems to be the wrong thing to say.
Dick bites his lip and says, âsure,â with a smile. Stacey breaks into a grin and gives him a quick peck on the cheek.
âAmazing,â she says.
âAmazing,â Dick echoes. His cheeks feel like theyâre burning, though he doesnât think anyone notices. The hallway bursts back into life, having the answer they expected. Itâs a bit like the movies but not quite. His stomach is rolling and his chest feels a bit empty.
Dick feels lost.
Donna turns to him, then her eyes flicker back to what sheâs reading. She looks confused and a bit interested. Her feet are raised on the coffee table, limbs sprawled and lazy. Sheâs more interested in her magazine than him. Dick doesnât mind. âOh,â she says. âThat doesnât seem like you. Youâre usually the first one here.â
âA girl asked me out yesterday,â Dick tells her. He sinks down right next to her.
She looks up at Dickâs words and her eyebrows jump in surprise, which comes as a bit of a surprise to Dick. Donnaâs known him for so long now. Sheâs rarely surprised around Dick these days.
âWhat did you say?â she asks.
Dick shrugs. Heâs in his Robin costume and his legs are a bit cold. Donna makes room for him and produces a blanket out of nowhere. Donnaâs cool that way. She always seems to know what would make him feel better. He asked her once if that was one of her superpowers. She just laughed, punched him in the shoulder that was more of a warning than friendly, and told him to stop being stupid.
âI said yes,â he says.
Donna turns to him fully. She looks confused for some reason. Dick can relate, though. He feels confused, too.
âTell me everything,â she says, so Dick does.
Itâs easy to talk to Donna because Donna is awesome. All the Titans are awesome. Weekends with the Titans are easier than weekdays at Gotham. He really wants to skip the dance and just spend the night with them like he usually does.
Part of it is of course because he doesnât actually have to go to school, which is great. Dickâs good at school, but he doesnât like a lot of it very much. Thereâs too many things he has to figure out on the fly, too many things he canât say, canât know, and canât do. There are so many things heâs supposed to know just because, and a million other things heâs not supposed to. Itâs hard to figure out which is which. Being the right person to hundreds of people at once is hard.
But most of it is just because being with the Titans are easier. Thereâs less expectation there. Heâs just Dick with them, which is a rare enough thing these days that he knows he has to treasure it. They knew him as Robin in the beginning, but the two personas have this way of blending together into one thing when heâs with them. He has no secrets with them, not in the way it matters. Being with the Titans means that he doesnât have to pretend, that he has no one to please or prove himself to. The Titans see him, the him thatâs as real as it can get, and just⊠loves that version of him. Itâs exhilarating as it is terrifying.
âBut do you like her?â Donna asks, when heâs done.
Dick shrugs. âSheâs fine. Sheâs really nice,â he say, and Donnaâs eyebrow scrunch in confusion more.
âYouâve told me more about the hallway than about the girl, you know?â
âWell thereâs not much to tell about her,â he says. âSheâs really nice, we were in some plays together, and sheâs not very good at Chemistry. She asked me out so I said yes.â
âBut do you like her,â she presses.
Dick tilts his head. âDonna, you just asked me that.â
âAnd you didnât answer me.â
âI told you sheâs fine,â he says.
She smiles at him. Her eyes are alight with laughter, like maybe sheâs laughing at him a bit. Like she thinks heâs done something cute. She scoots closer to Dick, until their shoulders are brushing against each other.
âWhat?â Dick asks.
âYou know sheâs probably expecting you to kiss her by the end, right?â she says. âI mean itâs a school dance. People always kiss there at the end unless itâs a complete disaster. And considering Bruce and you know, you. â
âMe?â
"Youâre not exactly unattractive,â she tells him. âYouâre totally a catch.â
Dick makes a face. He snuggles closer to her and she lets him, even laying her head on his shoulders. âWhat is it with people and wanting to kiss me?â he says. âSeriously? And how do I make it stop?â
Being a catch, like heâs some kind of fish or a carnival prize. He gets the image of a fishing line with a thousand different fish being there, just minding their own business, and above them, fishermen arguing which fish is the prettiest.
The fish donât want to be caught, though. Theyâre perfectly fine on their own.
Is that what itâs like? Is it a game? He wonders when someone will tell him the rules. As far as heâs concerned, kissing is pretty disgusting. Granted, heâs not had the best experiences with it, but he canât really imagine it getting any better. He canât imagine it not being awkward to shove your face towards someone and push their lips against each other. It will probably more awkward if you actually knew the person you were shoving your face at.
âItâs not so bad,â Donna says. âIt can even be cool if circumstances are right. The more important question here is who are all these people who want to kiss you anyway, and why donât I know about them?â
Dick shrugs again. âItâs nothing. Just some criminals.â And well, there are some people at school, too, who want to do it. He knows how eyes follow him wherever he goes, and that wouldnât have bothered him so much, except, heâs not deaf either, and he can hear what they whisper about him when they donât know heâs listening. Itâs all in good fun and perfectly innocent, and Dick doesnât really count them on the same level as criminals. Itâs just also really, really weird, and completely indecipherable.
Dick doesnât know how heâs supposed to react to any of it, is all.
âOh, yeah, those are horrible,â Donna agrees. âTheyâre not really the best example. Itâs better when you both actually want to do it.â
âI know that,â Dick says, because he does. âI canât imagine it not being weird, though.â
Saliva and lips and weird positions. Where are you supposed to put your hands? How are you supposed to breathe? In all of Dickâs experience, kissing requires holding your breath a lot, or breathing in other peopleâs breath, which is never appealing. Dick has no idea how to deal with any of that.
âItâs not that weird,â she says. âWhen you do it right, itâs really, really fun.â
It occurs to him that Donna actually knows what sheâs talking about, way more than he does. Sheâs been with Roy for a while now, more or less. Theyâve kissed. Dickâs seen them kiss. Heâs seen them kiss a lot, because the two of them together have no shame. They seem to enjoy it. If anyone would be able to explain it to him, it would be Donna.
âI just want to know what itâs supposed to feel like,â he tells her. The two of them are still sitting side by side on the couch. Theyâre so close to each other and it feels like heâs sharing a secret to her. He doesnât know why, but it feels like it should be just that. He can barely understand it himself. He doesnât want anyone else finding out. âWhen theyâre notâŠâ
âGroping you in the middle of a fight. And you know, criminals I donât actually know.â Donna raises an eyebrow at his startled look. âWhat? Youâre not the only one fighting with bare legs, Boy Wonder. Manâs world is strange. A lot of you donât seem to understand the meaning of permission.â
âOh,â Dick says, suddenly unsure. âIâm sorry.â
Donna waves him off dismissively. âDonât be,â she says. âI usually just punch them in the face and knock them out. Most of them havenât met an Amazon, either.â
Dick pauses, thinking about it. Criminals are stupid, he thinks. Theyâve been at it for years and they still get underestimated like crazy. Who would try to fight Donna over something like that, anyway? Itâs stupid. Why would anyone ever want to pick a fight with Donna when sheâs the nicest person who can very definitely and very easily kick their ass without a sweat?
âI kick them in the crotch and punch them in the face,â he offers, and Donna grins at him. She produces a bag of chips from somewhere, opens it, and offers it to Dick. Itâs Dickâs favorite kind. They eat in silence for a while, shoulders still brushing against each other.
âDo you want to find out what itâs supposed to feel like?â Donna asks, once theyâve finished the chips.
âWhat?â Dick asks.
âKissing, doofus,â Donna says, with a roll of her eyes. âWanna know what it feels like if itâs from someone you actually like? Or, you know, know as a person and not just as a punching bag.â
Dick thinks about it. He thinks that he does want to know what it feels like, just so he can understand what all the fuss is about.
It must feel pretty cool if so many people talk about it so much. He wants to know the âright wayâ that Donnaâs talking about. It must be a really good feeling if so many people are willing to face getting punched in the face or kicked in the crotch for it.
âSometimes,â he admits.
Silence. Donna stares at him expectantly. Sheâs sitting a bit apart now, facing him, body tilted towards him. Dick looks back, a little confused.
âDick,â she says after a while. âYou do understand Iâm offering, right?â
âOffering?â
âOffering to kiss you.â
Dickâs eyebrows furrow. âArenât you with Roy?â he asks, because heâs pretty sure she is. The two of them get together and break up every other day, but heâs pretty sure theyâre still together right now.
Donna shrugs. âHe wonât mind,â she says. âYou know him. Heâd probably just be offended we didnât invite him.â
Donna says it like itâs supposed to explain everything. It really just makes him more confused. It does sound like something Roy would say, if he were here or heard about this conversation. He can even imagine the laugh that comes alongside it, loud and boisterous.
Actually, now that he thinks about it, heâs pretty sure Roy actually has offered at some point. He might have been a little drunk at the time.
Still, Dick was under the impression that kissing people you know was a one person kind of thing. A bit like a promise.
âNothing like that,â Donna says, as if reading his mind. âBecause that would be so weird and you know it. More of a friend kiss. But a kiss is a kiss, right? So you could have some reference.â
âWhatâs the difference,â Dick asks, âbetween a friend kiss and a not-friend kiss?â
A pause. Dick shuffles on the couch. For a moment, Donna looks confused too. She tilts her head, putting her hand on her chin, looking thoughtful.
âI donât actually know. There just is, you know?â she says, and Dick opens his mouth to tell her, that no, he doesnât actually know. Thatâs kind of why he actually wants to find out. Itâs definitely why heâs asking her. She nudges him in the knee before he can say that, though. âYouâll know it when you feel it. I tried with some of the Amazons when I was on Themyscira, and itâs just--Itâs just different, you know? So? Wanna try or not?â
Dick shrugs. Donnaâs explanation still doesnât make any sense. But why not, right? It doesnât seem like a big thing. And Donna said it would just be a friend kiss. It seems harmless. Just so he could have some reference, Donna said.
People are weird about kissing sometimes, though. They always tell him that it is a big thing, a special thing that should matter a lot. They say itâs wrong when it doesnât matter. Donna says itâs fun, and Roy canât stop waxing poetic about it. Wally dreams of doing it, and even Garth talks about it sometimes. It seems like itâs a really, really, really big deal. Dick doesnât want it to be a big deal, though. He just wants to know.
Itâs Donna, though, and Donna knows him probably better than anyone else in the world. She knows how to deal with him, and not to make big fusses over of things that donât have to be a big deal. Heâs pretty sure things wonât get weird with them after this. Sheâs reasonable. He doesnât really know why things get weird in the first place.
Dick shrugs again, steeling himself. He leans forward. Donnaâs hand wanders towards his shoulder. She pulls him closer. Their forehead bumps together, and then their noses, and itâs weird and awkward, but theyâre heroes and neither of them know how to give up.
Their lips finally find each other. Donnaâs lips are really soft, but a bit chafed. He can taste some of the chips on her lips and hints of strawberry. Her breath is hot and humid. His entire body is stiff and frozen in place, so he forces himself to relax. He leans into Donna more and it takes all of his self-control to not just fall on top of her. He doesnât actually know what to do, like where to put his arms or how far to lean, and oh god Donnaâs eyes are closed so does that mean he should close his eyes, too?
All he can think is that kissing looks way more comfortable than it actually feels. He doesnât think this is the right way Donnaâs talking about.
He pulls away and Donna does too. Her eyes flutter open and she smiles at him. Dick smiles back at her tentatively.
âSo?â she asks. Dick hesitates, but she just raises an eyebrow at him.
"Itâs really weird,â he says, because it was. He doesnât know what else to say. Leaning forward and pushing your lips towards anything is weird, let alone another person. Other peopleâs saliva feels weird and a bit disgusting. Everything about the situation is weird. Donna laughs. Her arm shifts so that itâs around Dickâs shoulder. He leans into her touch. Itâs a much more comfortable position than whatever they were doing before.
âI knew youâd say that,â she says. âYouâre not so bad at it, though.â
âThanks?â
Donna laughs again, but itâs not mean or anything. Donnaâs probably the only person Dick knows that laughs at you and is still really, really nice about it.
âDonât think too much about it,â she tells him. âItâs not that big of a deal. Youâll probably be fine for your dance. Weâll even throw you a party for getting through it.â
Dick bites his lip. Heâd almost forgotten that that was what started this entire thing in the first place. Heâd almost completely forgotten about the dance altogether. He wishes he did. Heâs starting to panic all over again.
âYouâll be fine,â Donna repeats. âTrust me, Dick, it really doesnât matter.â
"It kinda does, though,â Dick says. It looks like a big deal with Donna and Roy, and he thinks itâs kind of a big deal to those criminals, too. Itâll probably be a big deal to Stacey as well, alongside everyone else in school. So many people wouldnât have been doing it if itâs not important.
The kiss with Donna was heavy and kinda forceful. It carried weight. Donnaâs eyes had been closed, as if she was dreaming really hard. Dick canât imagine going through it and it not being a big deal.
Donna shrugs. âMaybe,â she says. âI havenât really thought about it much. But I swear youâll be fine. Do you want to try again? Not with me, though. Iâve had enough friend kisses with you for forever. Maybe--Let me think⊠Oi, Wally! Wally--â
âDonna!â Dick tackles her off the couch. They land on the floor with a thud. âDonna, what are you doing,â he hisses.
A flash of yellow lightning and Wally is there all of a sudden, looking at them expectantly. Heâs fiddling with a yo-yo. Dick thinks itâs a yo-yo, anyway, from the up and down motions Wallyâs arms seem to be making. Heâs getting better at spotting Wallyâs high-speed movements.
âYou called,â Wally says.
âWally,â Donna says cheerfully, âweâre kissing Dick so he knows how amazing it is.â
âOh.â Wallyâs arm falls still suddenly and, yeah, he was playing with a yo-yo. It is somehow not tangled. It doesnât really matter now, though. Dick just really wants the ground to swallow him whole right now. âCan I try?â
Donna grins.
Dick, face burning, buries his face in his hand, completely embarrassed. He is still on top of Donna, effectively pinning her to the floor if she didnât have superstrength.
Everything is quiet for a while. Dick would almost call it awkward, except theyâre the Titans and they donât really do awkward. He hears Wally fidgeting. Nervously, Dick thinks. Donnaâs not saying anything, either.
Oh god. It is awkward.
Then, Donna pats him on the shoulder, and he sees her smiling at him. Dick rolls over so heâs no longer on top of her. They get back on the couch. Dick looks at her and forces himself to smile. Donna and Wally probably see right through it, but theyâre nice enough not to mention it. Then, Wally chuckles nervously and sits on Dickâs other side. He nudges him on the arm and hands him the yo-yo. Dick looks up and stares.
âCâmon,â Wally says. âPlay with it.â
âI donât know how to use this,â Dick says, taking the yo-yo.
âOh man, youâre going to love it!â Wally says. âCâmon Iâll teach you. Wow, this is weird. I know a thing you donât. You sure youâre okay, Rob?â
Dick opens his mouth then closes it again. Heâs not really sure how to answer Wallyâs question. His heart is still pounding in his chest. There are still a thousand questions in his head that donât have answers, and heâs not in Gotham. Heâs with the Titans. This is the place where heâs supposed to get the answers he needs because theyâre the Titans and they know him better than just about anyone.
He schools his expression. Donna and Wally are staring at him. Theyâre happy, grinning and playful, but theyâre also wary. Theyâre watching him carefully, waiting for his reaction. The three of them are treading on fragile ground, and theyâre waiting to catch Dick if he were to fall.
Dickâs not falling, though. He refuses. Not over anything, and especially not over something so stupid and trivial. Heâs going to get over it and they can all believe that nothing was ever wrong in the first place.
Itâs really hard to lie to speedsters, though, and Donna will hit him again if he lies. Heâs good at it, though. Heâll probably manage.
âSounds fun,â he finally settles on. Wally beams at him.
âHeâs doing okay,â Donna says, arms wrapped around is shoulders. She turns to Dick and tells him, âyouâre doing okay,â real firm, like sheâs going to make it true through sheer force of will.
And Dick believes in her, he really does, and he really hopes that sheâll manage it.
Alfred frets about it in his way of not fretting, which seems like a very British thing to do. He fusses over Dickâs suit and quizzes him on his manners and smiles when he thinks Dick isnât watching. He lays out Dickâs suit and tuts when he messes up with the bowtie. Bruce just watches him, and Dick is very aware of the fact that Bruce is watching him. He lingers in the drawing room and Dick canât decipher the look on his face. He kinda wishes Bruce would offer some advice, but that really would be asking for too much.
Dick is a nervous mess through it, and he almost slips up and has a breakdown before getting into the car.
Dick doesnât have breakdowns. Not anymore. The world seems intent on proving him wrong, though, and heâs really not happy with it.
Bruce is wary. He seems more resigned than confused, the way he always does when Dick does something he doesnât expect. He looks like he wants to say something as well but canât quite figure out how. Dick would really appreciate it if Bruce figured it out, just this once. He thinks he could really use some help on this.
Bruce must know something about it. Dick hasnât exactly been keeping it secret. Heâs good at pretending heâs okay, but Bruce has always been better at seeing through Dickâs lies before Dick can come up with them. And this oneâs been going on for a while. Itâs painful, even if it shouldnât be, and Dick is so lonely and confused, and he wants Bruce to swoop down in his dark cape and fix it and take all the uncertainty away.
Bruce doesnât. He just frowns and doesnât say anything, like he always does.
âEnjoy yourself,â Bruce says, clasping his shoulder, when Alfred finally manages to Dickâs bowtie. âAnd donât get into trouble.â
âHow much trouble can I get in a school dance?â
âIn Gotham Academy?â Bruce says, dark and amused at the same time. âA lot.â He sounds like heâs speaking from experience.
Alfred drives him to Staceyâs house, then to the dance. Dick gives her a corsage and holds her hand and smiles and laughs in all the right places. Staceyâs delighted through all of it. She chatters through it, telling stories about her friends and the school play, and Dick even manages to pay attention. He smiles and laughs and the beginning of it is actually really fun. It goes really well in the beginning.
The dance is all bright lights and balloons. Itâs held in the school dance hall, which is probably a thing that only exists in Gotham Academy. There are lights hanging from the ceiling and soft music playing from near the walls. All the students are dressed up like theyâre going down the red carpet. It doesnât make them any less awkward. Nothing on this earth will make high schoolers not awkward.
There are already some people hiding in the dark corners of the room, hands wandering awkwardly on each otherâs bodies. Itâs still early. It can only get worse from there.
Dick dances with Stacey and she smiles at him. Dick smiles back and it all goes really well. Itâs a waltz. Then it becomes more modern. Staceyâs a good dancer. Her hands are soft and her steps are sure. Theyâre smiling at each other because itâs fun. The dance goes on, and a lot more students go on to do stupid stuff, but the two of them just dance. They stop for drinks and snacks once in a while, but the two of them likes dancing too much to be away from it much.
He almost relaxes even, almost enjoys himself and shut his head up.
âThis is really fun,â Stacey says.
âYeah,â he says, and itâs actually the truth.
The rest of it passes through a blur. Dick loses track a lot of the time. The music is loud. Everyone seems delighted to be there. Stacey smiles and they dance and eat and joke and laugh.
Then the music goes slow for a waltz again like it was in the beginning. It must be getting late, he thinks. Theyâve been here a while.
He and Stacey dance again. Stacey lays his head on his shoulder. Dick is almost relaxed enough. He almost believed it wouldnât be so bad.
Then, he blinks and theyâre suddenly too close to each other. He blinks and he and Stacey have their foreheads pressed together, bodies too close, and Dick blinks. He blinks and blinks and blinks.
Then, he pulls away.
âWhatâs happening,â he says, just in time to see the look of hurt and embarrassment flashing through Staceyâs face. Dick kinda feels sick. Heâs lost, too, like heâs floating in the middle of the sea with no land in sight. He canât find where heâs supposed to go. He doesnât know if heâs supposed to go anywhere.
âI just thought. I mean everyoneâs doing it and weâre--â
Dick looks around. Sheâs not lying. Everyone on the dance floor is standing too close to each other, hands intimate on their partnerâs bodies. Dick and Stacey are probably the only one who arenât doing that.
âIâm sorry,â Dick says.
âI thought we were--I thought--I mean itâs fine if you donât want to--â
âWe--Iâm sorry,â Dick manages. âI didnât--â
Things go downhill from there.
Staceyâs eyes are wide, mouth parted in shock. Sheâs staring at Dick. Her hands have fallen to the side. Theyâve fallen still. Around them, there are couples dancing around them. She shakes her head and her mouth opens and he knows that sheâs about to apologize and Dick doesnât think he can take that. Itâs his own fault. He should have noticed. He should have seen the signs. Heâs seen this a thousand times before and he never seems to learn.
Dick doesnât let her speak. He just runs.
It takes a moment for the panic to truly settle in. He canât go back to the dance, canât face anyone there, especially not Stacey who was nice and great and Dick just ruined his night and god, heâs such a horrible person--
He canât keep playing this role he has no idea how to do. Heâs tired and exhausted and he just really canât do any of this right now.
He canât go back to the Manor on his own, either. He didnât bring any money. He canât face Bruce and Alfred, not like this. He needs to be better than this.
He can probably leap through the rooftops, even without equipment and with his ridiculous formal shoes on. But his headâs not right. Too light-headed. Thoughts too scattered. Each thought seems to slip through his mind like grains of sand through the palm of a hand. The world feels hazy. Dick canât concentrate. It wouldnât be safe.
Heâd probably fall.
His hands move of their own accord, reaching for his communicator, fumbling slightly. Dickâs trembling, he realizes. Only slightly, but heâs trembling. The night feels really cold.
He presses the communicator to his ear. He never not carries it. Itâs meant for emergencies but his body is moving faster than his mind can think. He tries to get his breathing under control. Itâs too ragged and shaky. Heâs not getting enough air. Everything feels too tight, feels too cold. The wind is cold and Dickâs body is trembling all over.
âRobin.â
Dick swallows. His voice is gone. His breathing is still rattling too loud in his chest. His head is spinning a bit. He canât find the words for anything, canât find the anything for anything. It was a stupid idea. Everything that happened the entire night is stupid. Dickâs just being stupid and he really needs to get a hold of himself right now.
âRobin,â Batman says again. âWhatâs wrong?â
Dick tries to make his throat work, tries to find Robin who was quick and sharp and always answered Batman, but to no avail. Heâs just Dick right now, and he feels only like a scared, little boy.
He hasnât had an attack like this in a long time. Heâd almost how terrifying the moment itself was, more terrifying than what originally scared him. It feels like falling and knowing youâre never going to land.
Batmanâs voice always helps him focus when he gets like this, always clears his head. Thatâs how Robin had been born, really, even before all the crime fighting. Because Robin doesnât panic. He doesnât tremble and get scared or anything. He laughs and fights and never, ever falls. When Batman calls Robin, heâs not supposed to freeze up. Freezing means dying.
The crime fighting came later, when Robin is already fully formed and more than willing to take over when things get too much for Dick.
Heâs not Robin right now, though. Heâs not even Richard Grayson, even with the fancy shoes and the expensive suit. Heâs just Dick and he canât remember how to breathe.
âRobin.â Batmanâs voice has gotten urgent, kinda low and growly. Itâs as scared as heâll ever get to sound. âDick. Where are you?â
Dick tries to breathe. Tries to remember the feeling of the ground, the feeling of flying through the skyline of Gotham, his grapple lines sure and strong.
âDick where are you--â
âIâm fine,â he blurts out. âIâm fine.â
Batman hadnât really asked, but it seemed important that he say so. Maybe if he says it enough, itâll actually happen and itâll be true.
It occurs to him, for the first time, that heâs lying to himself and itâs stopped working a long time ago. Come to think of it, it probably never worked in the first place.
âIâm fine,â he tries again and still doesnât believe it. He hopes Batman does, though. âIâm fine, really. Iâm at school. Iâm just--Itâs stupid. Iâm sorry I called. I shouldnât have. I know Iâm not supposed to. Iâll justâŠâ
He trails off. He doesnât actually know what heâs going to do. He feels young and scared and alone and hates it.
âDick,â Bruce--because it is Bruce talking to him now. Thereâs no hint of Batman in his voice. His voice just changed, without warning--says softly. âIâm glad you called me. Do you want to talk about what happened?â
Dick shakes his head, and manages to choke out a âno.â
âThatâs okay, chum,â Bruce says. âStay where you are, okay? Alfredâs on his way to get you.â
âDonât--Itâs fine. Iâm fine. Iâll get over it soon. I justâŠâ
âFor his sake then,â Bruce says. âYou know how he worries.â
âHe shouldnât have to worry about me.â Dickâs been able to take care of himself for a long time now. He wants to take care of other people. He doesnât want to be taken care of.
âWe always do,â Bruce says.
Dick doesnât say anything. Heâs sort of run out of things to say. He lets his mind just draw up a blank. Itâs too exhausting to try and and focus on anything other than breathing and making sure he doesnât accidentally drop the communicator.
âWhat are you doing right now?â Bruce asks.
âUh, Iâm sitting,â he says. âOn the ground. On the grounds, I mean. Iâm on the school grounds. At the front of the school.â Dick hadnât realized it until now. Itâs dark. Heâd just been moving, not paying attention to anything around him. The stars are out but thereâs no moon. Dickâs leaning against the brick wall near the fences. No one notices him here. Heâs almost completely shrouded in darkness.
âBruce?â
âYeah, chum?â
âI--I messed things up with Stacey. She wanted--and I couldnât--I canât--â Dick cuts himself off. Heâd almost said that he canât do it anymore, but Bruce never liked him saying that. Dick understands. He knows that there are things he has to do, even if he doesnât like them. There are a lot of things that are like that. He has to do things he doesnât like so that eventually, heâll get to do the things he doesnât like.
Everything has a price. It feels like cheating, running away like this.
âWeâll talk about it later,â Bruce says, sounding almost gentle. âI just need you to try and keep calm for now. Can you do that for me?â
Dick bites his lip. âIâm sorry,â he says again. âIâm really sorry. Youâre probably on patrol, arenât you? And communicators arenât supposed to be used for--â
âDonât.â Bruceâs voice comes across sharp and Dick flinches. âItâs fine, Dick, as I said. Weâll talk about it later, alright? Alfredâs nearly there.â
âAlright,â Dick says. He barely stops himself from apologizing again.
Alfred arrives within a few minutes. Bruce talks to him in soft words, making him recite crime families, then aikido moves, then the footwork. It calms him down a little. Dick doesnât ask about patrol--he still feels guilty for making Bruce cut it short to take care of him for the second time--and Bruce doesnât mention it. Dick watches the stars while they talked. Theyâre unnaturally still. Dick knows that theyâre supposed to be twinkling, constantly in motion, but he canât see it. His eyesight is too blurry. He thinks that he may have started crying at some point.
Alfred finds him quickly. Dick knows itâs him from the sound of his footsteps and the way he clears his throat. Dick looks at him, feeling all of a sudden lethargic and exhausted. Alfredâs face is achingly gentle and kind. Dick wants to hide from it.
âI want to go home,â he says, voice hoarse.
âOf course Master Dick,â Alfred says, helping him to his feet.
âStaceyâŠâ
âIâve already contacted Miss Richardsonâs parents and explained what happened,â Alfred says. âThey are on their way to take her home.â
âOh,â Dick says. He wonders what Alfred said. Dick doesnât even know what happened.
Alfredâs face doesnât so much as twitch, he just puts an arm on Dickâs shoulder and squeezes. Dick almost flinches away from the touch. If Alfred notices, he doesnât say anything. He doesnât say anything as he shuffles Dick into the car and wraps him up in his favorite blanket. Dick doesnât meet his eyes. He hasnât had an attack like this in years. Heâd thought heâd gotten it under control.
He doesnât have breakdowns, because heâs Robin and Robin is always perfectly calm and is always in control. He doesnât have breakdowns, except when he does because he slipped up and Robin disappears and only Dick Grayson is left, and heâs really just a kid who canât get a hold of himself for anything. When he does, thereâs no holding them back.
He wants to curl up into a ball until he can pretend that things are okay again.
Theyâre silent throughout the drive home. Dick can feel Alfredâs eyes on him. Dick keeps his gaze outside. He likes watching the stars. Theyâre twinkling again. His breathing is easier. He doesnât feel like heâs about to fall apart anymore, mostly because he feels really, really empty.
Alfred takes the two of them through the cave entrance. Bruce would probably be there, still in his Batman costume, waiting for him. Dick closes his eyes. Heâs always liked the cave better than the manor, anyway. Bruce is there when they arrive. Dick wants to shrink back into the car and disappear.
But Dick hasnât run away from danger in a long time. He steels himself and forces himself to go to where Bruce is. Bruce is watching him from the console. Dick tells him that this is just like their after-patrol briefing. That heâs Robin and just giving a report and not Dick Grayson whoâs in a ruined suit and who had a panic attack at having to kiss a pretty girl.
Bruce nods to one of the chairs near the console. âSit,â he says.
Dick does. He still doesnât say anything, just stares at his shoes.
âDo you want to tell me what happened?â Bruce asks. âWhat upset you, Dick?â
âItâs not important,â Dick mutters. âItâs really stupid. Can we just pretend it never happened and go to sleep? Iâm really tired.â
âWe can do that if that is what you want,â Bruce says, after a beat. âBut it is important to you and itâs not stupid if it upset you. Talking about it might help.â
âYouâre not really one to talk about open communication,â Dick says. He looks up. Bruceâs face stares back at him, impassive. Dick feels a well of guilt settling deep in his stomach. He looks back down to his shoes. âSorry. I didnât--â
âIt doesnât matter,â Bruce says. âBut talking does help you.â I donât want you to be upset, please let me help. Dick hears what Bruce doesnât say.
He sighs. He canât say no to Bruce, not like this.
âIt was Stacey. We were dancing and then suddenly she was moving and then she was--â He stops. His face is on fire.
Bruce is silent for a long time. Dick almost think that heâs not going to say anything at all. Bruce usually doesnât. But still⊠The stupid, childlike part of him still believes that Bruce will find a way to fix all of his problems.
âDoes this have to do with what happened with the criminal on patrol?â
Dick opens his mouth. Closes it then opens it again. He doesnât have to ask what Bruce meant. It happened weeks ago, but the memory hasnât left yet. Itâs probably not going to anytime soon. Heâs not sure what that has to do with anything, though. âNo--Yes? I donât know. Just--â
âKeep calm,â Bruce says.
âI am calm,â he snaps.
Bruceâs eyebrows furrow. He continues to look at Dick.
âItâs not about that,â Dick says. âIt may be related, I donât know, but itâs not about that.â
Theyâre completely different things, Dick knows this. The only thing that brings them together is that, either way, Dick is lost and the acts remain indecipherable to him.
He takes a deep breath. âIs something wrong with me?â he makes himself ask. âI know you said there isnât, but there must be becauseâŠâ Because people arenât supposed to do what heâs doing. Theyâre not supposed to run away from something completely harmless. Theyâre supposed to like all this, the kissing and the hands and all those kinds of things. Itâs supposed to come easy. âIt feels like somethingâs missing with me.â
âWhy do you think that?â Bruce finally asks.
âBecause!â It feels like his earliest days in Gotham all over again, when things were happening so fast and out of his control. When heâs just a spectator and people did things that he couldnât understand. He wants to get angry again, wants to rage and shout and break things. âBecause they see me and want something and I donât get it. I donât get it and I canât be what they want me to be.â
The dance was supposed to be easy in the way that being Robin isnât. Just do it and be he who heâs supposed to be in Gotham Academy, except he didnât notice.
Heâs fraying at the edges. Heâs been playing so many roles for so long, and now itâs all falling apart because of one missing piece he canât seem to find. Robin is freezing in fights, Richard Grayson is suddenly something other than predictably charming, and Dickâs back to being an angry kid. He canât mess this up,though. He canât. Thereâs too much riding on it and Dick canât afford to stand out more than he already does.
âIt doesnât matter,â Bruce says. âIt doesnât matter who you are, Dick. Not in that way.â
Dick lets out a breath, chest painfully tight. âJust tell me if somethingâs wrong with me,â he says. âI just--I need to know.â
If thereâs something missing, if thereâs something heâs just incapable of doing--Maybe heâs less of a person because of it. Maybe heâs not. That part doesnât matter yet. He just needs to know if thereâs something wrong first.
Maybe heâll never be able to fix it, but he needs to know.
âThereâs nothing wrong with you,â Bruce says. âOf course thereâs nothing wrong with you. Donât you ever think that.â
âBut what if there is,â Dick says. âWhy is it--I donât understand. Everyone sees it but me and I donât know why.â
Sometimes, Dick wonders if thereâs a hollowed out part of his chest where this thing is supposed to go. It feels like heâs trapped in a dream that feels too real, while everyone is just real and thereâs a glass wall dividing them. They see something he doesnât, and it has to be him, doesnât it? So many people want to take something and Dick just stands lost and confused, unsure what he even lost.
Bruceâs hand finds Dickâs shoulder. He kneels, so that theyâre staring into each otherâs eyes. Bruceâs eyes are wide, worried. and concerned Dick swallows past the sudden thickness in his throat.
âIt doesnât matter,â Bruce says. âWe go at our own pace at these things. Itâs not a race. We find our own way, it doesnât matter how. You will understand eventually.â
âItâs not a race because Iâm not running.â Dick is standing still in a world that is in constant movement. He longs for the feeling of falling, of being faster than everyone else, moving past them. Instead, heâs just trapped, thoughts circling his own head. âIâm not even moving. I wonât ever understand.â
His voice catches on the last part. Itâs a truth heâs never even dared even think, let alone say. Now that he has, it feels like a stab to the chest, and now the wound is bleeding freely, draining all of the poison out along with all the life. He knows within his soul that this is a question heâll never get the answer to, itâs something that comes as easy to everyone else as breathing and that heâll never understand. Heâll always be missing something. The thought of it hurts.
âThen you donât,â Bruce says. âIt doesnât matter.â
His chest tightens some more. Dick swallows. âI hate this,â he says. âI hate this so much.â
"There is nothing wrong with you,â Bruce says again. âYouâre not broken. Youâre not missing anything. Whatever you feel is yours and there will never be anything wrong with feeling. Anything else doesnât matter.â
Dick breathes and hopes itâs enough. It comes out as a sob. His body crumples and collapses against Bruceâs. His heart feels wretched and frayed.
Bruce holds him tight, like heâs holding him together, and Dick is grateful. His entire being feels wrung out, exhausted and drained.
He feels empty. Not in a bad or good way. Just empty.
âTell me what you need, chum,â Bruce says, against his ear.
Need? Dick hasnât needed anything in a while. Thereâs a lot of things he wants, but he knows there are also a lot of things he can manage to live without. Heâs lost everything before. He doesnât need much.
He thinks he may need something now, though, but heâs not sure what. He doesnât know how to ask.
âI want you here,â he says. âPlease. Just stay. For tonight. Please.â Itâs stupid and it makes him sound like a little kid, but Dickâs too tired to care.
âIâm here for you,â Bruce says, grip tightening. âIâll always be here for you.â
And maybe that was enough. Maybe Dick can make do with that. Maybe heâll manage to work through it eventually.
Maybe Dick is tired of trying to figure this out and he can afford to give up, even just for tonight.
âAnd Iâm staying with the Titans tomorrow,â he says. He doesnât need permission, hasnât needed it for a while, but he still feels like he needs to say it.âThat is probably for the best,â Bruce says. He doesnât let go of Dick. Just keeps on holding on.
âI love you, Bruce,â Dick murmurs. Heâs not sure if Bruce hears him, but it doesnât matter. Itâs real and itâs there and Dick holds onto that.
âSurprise!â
Dick jumps in surprise. Titans Tower is fully decorated, a banner saying, âCONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR FIRST DATEâ on it, and the floor is fill with balloons. Thereâs also a huge table of food and a really huge, dangerous looking, lopsided cake right on the center in colors of purple and white and black.
All the Titans are there, even Roy, and theyâre all grinning at him, happy and delighted and DickâŠ
His breath hitches in his throat. Itâs already late afternoon. It had taken a few hours of Dick staring into the mirror before he feels normal enough to go to the Tower. He still feels empty, still feels lost, and exhausted, but heâs also able to function, which is good.
Seeing the Titans like this, so happy for him for something he messed up so bad makes all of those hours disappear and Dickâs falling without anything to catch him all over again. His breathing is too fast and Dick is getting really tired of it, but heâs panicking again and thereâs not really anything he can do to stop it.
He notices Wallyâs face fall out of the corner of his eye and the next second, Wallyâs grabbed him, run him to his room, and seated him on the bed.
âBreathe Dick,â Wally says. âJust breathe.â
Wallyâs probably the only Titan who knows about the attacks; Donna might, but heâs not sure. Dick had an attack the first time he worked together with Wally and the speedster nearly fell off a ten-storey building. It had been only a year since his parents. Dick hadnât really handled it well.
âBreathe,â Wally says. He rubs Dickâs back and the weight of it is warm and familiar. Dick doesnât answer, just places his head in his hands. Heâs focusing on breathing.
The moment Dick finally manages to calm down, thereâs a flash of lightning, and Wally is very suddenly sitting right beside him.
"What happened?â he demands. âWhy do you look like that? Who do I need to beat up? Can I beat them up? Or at least threaten them? Please? Are you okay? IsthereanythingIcan--â
âWally.â Dick rubs at his eyes. Heâd made an effort to appear normal, and not pale and exhausted and upset, but heâs apparently really bad at it.
âIâm fine,â he says, answer coming automatically.
Wally stops and takes a breath. He gives Dick the stink eye. âYou look terrible, Rob,â he says frankly. âIâve never seen you look this bad before, not since⊠Whatâs wrong?â
âI just need a nap,â he says. âIâll probably be better when I wake up.â Probably. Probably not, though. He had a long talk with Bruce, earlier. It hadnât really made anything better, just mostly left him drained and exhausted. Dick isnât avoiding his problems so much as he really doesnât have the energy to think about them anymore.
âCool. Okay Iâll leave you to it and then you can tell us all about what happened in your big dance and date. Donnaâs looking for updates--â
Dick has no idea what kind of face he makes, but itâs enough to make Wally falter, looking stricken.
âRight,â Wally says. âNo talking about the dance. Didnât go well?â
Dick shakes his head. Wally lets out a low curse. He opens his mouth to say something when Garthâs head pops through Dickâs door.
âYou doing okay?â he asks. Dick doesnât nod. He doesnât shake his head, but he doesnât nod, either. Dick considers this progress.
Garth turns to Wally. âDonna and Roy are worried,â he says. âYou might want to hold them off. Iâll keep him company.â Wallyâs eyes widen, and heâs gone in a rush of wind and a flash of lightning. Dick sighs, burying his face in his hands.
Garth sits down right next to him. âI made cake for you,â he says.
Dick remembers the terrifying looking cake heâd seen. He doesnât say anything. It seemed like Garth worked really hard on it.
âArenât you going to ask me to talk about it?â Dick asks. âWally did.â
âAquaman says Batman doesnât talk about anything.â Garth bumps his shoulder against Dickâs. âI think youâre worse than him sometimes. Just smile-ier about it.â
Dick tilts his head. He doesnât know if he should be insulted or touched.
âIâm not going to ask you to talk if you donât want me to,â Garth says. âThough you know how Donna and Roy are. How long do you think Wally can hold them off?â
Dick thinks of it for a moment. âIâm climbing out the window and going to the roof,â he tells Garth.
âTake some cake with you,â Garth says. Dick notices for the first time that heâs holding a plate with a thick size of cake. It looks stone hard. âNo offense, but you look like you need it. You look terrible.â
âThanks butâŠâ
Garth rolls his eyes. âItâs perfectly edible,â he says. âAnd this is how cakes look in Atlantis, you know.â
âGarth Iâve been to Atlantis and--â
âOh shut up, Rob.â Garth shoves the cake towards him, cheeks pink. It thuds ominously. Dick grins weakly at him. âGo and hide from your friends.â
âThanks Garth,â he says, and begins climbing out of the window, mindful of the cake.
âIâm not covering for you by the way!â Garth shouts.
Dick makes easy work of climbing out the window.
His friends mean well, but Dickâs really tired of talking about it. Tired of trying to explain how a thing just isnât there and he doesnât think itâs ever going to be. Heâs tired. Heâs just really, really tired. Itâs a funny feeling in his chest, like heâs all alone in a big room. Dick has no idea how to explain any of it.
He sits on the roof of the tower and just thinks. Thinks really, really hard. Maybe itâs like a puzzle. Maybe if Dick thinks about it hard enough, turns it enough times over in his head, then heâll figure it out.
A voice in his head that sounds an awful lot like Batman tells him that the most obvious answer is usually the correct one. That if he has to think about it too hard, then heâs probably looking at it wrong. Dick furiously tells it that there is no obvious answer so it can shut the hell up.
Heâs missing something and itâs⊠frustrating. It feels like heâs trapped on a high place, about to jump, with no lines or trapezes, with his hands bound behind his back. Itâs like a fight where the enemy comes from the shadows of a room without light. Itâs like stepping into a tub expecting water and finding a void instead.
It feels a lot like overreacting, too. Dick doesnât know whatâs wrong, even if thereâs anything wrong to begin with, so he canât really complain. All he knows is that thereâs something missing and he canât seem to find it.
âDick?â
Dickâs head whirls around. Itâs Roy, climbing out of the same window Dick came out of. He considers running away, but that didnât work out so well before so. Roy fumbles slightly. Dick wordlessly offers him a hand in help. Roy takes it, smiling at Dick.
âWally needs to get better at holding people off,â Dick says. Roy snorts.
âWest canât hold me off for anything and you know it,â he says.
Dick doesnât say anything. Instead, he says, âI really donât want to talk right now, Roy.â
Roy crouches next to Dick. âNo surprise there, but weâre gonna talk anyway. You disappeared on us.â Dick budges a little to make room for him. He hands the plate of cake to Roy who takes it with a raised eyebrow.
âYou doing okay?â Roy asks.
âIâm always okay,â Dick says. Heâs trying to be honest and end this conversation all at once. Itâs a hard balance to do, and always ends up tipping towards too much to one side.
Dick is really, really tired of it, but he doesn't know how to stop, either.
A moment of silence. Then, Roy cuffs him on the back of the head. Painfully. Dick glares at him.
âYouâre doing your Gotham face,â Roy tells him. âYour brooding âoh no Iâm angsting all aloneâ face.â
Dick raises an eyebrow. Roy just rolls his eyes.
âAnd now youâre doing your Donna face.â
âI didnât know I had so many faces,â Dick says.
Roy snorts. âDonât you ever,â he says, and Dick doesnât really want to say anything to that, so he doesnât. He just stares at the horizon. Part of him is grateful Roy is here and keeping him company, part of him just wants to sit alone and brood. Heâs still trying to decide which part he likes better.
Roy takes a bite of the cake and winces. âGod, why do we leave Garth alone in the kitchen? This is horrible.â
âIt was your idea to have this party,â Dick says.
âWell, youâve been looking like you needed one. Or so Donna says. Garth says you need cake.â
âHe shouldnât have,â Dick says. âIâm doing amazing.â It comes out too sarcastic, he thinks.
âPeople always need cake,â Roy says. He glares at the cake in his hands. âThough maybe not Garthâs cake.â
Dick shrugs. The sun is beginning to set. Heâs exhausted and just wants to curl up somewhere and sleep.
âSeriously, though, whatâs wrong?â Roy asks. âWe threw the party for you, you know. Itâs kind of pointless if youâre not there. You know if you donât answer me, Donnaâs next, right?â
Dick shrugs. The thought of getting interrogated by Donna is a bit scary, but he really just wants to brood right now. Sue him. He can be a Gothamite for a while.
âYouâre not gonna talk are you?â Dick doesnât say anything and Roy sighs. âAlright Iâll talk. Thereâs something bothering you and youâre not handling it as well as youâd like, so youâre hiding away from everyone. You know you donât have to be okay all the time, right? Thatâs why weâre here.â
Dick shrugs again. He almost wants to laugh. If only that were true. Heâs spent his entire life putting on a show and give people what they want. Shows donât just stop because one person feels bad. Dick doesnât know if heâll ever be able to stop. He doesnât know if he even knows how to be a person without all the masks.
âLooking back, I think we fucked up a bit. You gotta tell us what we did wrong, though, so we donât do it again,â Roy says. âWe hate seeing you like this and we'd really like to make you feel better." He takes a deep breath. "Okay, Iâm done.â
And weirdly enough, he is. He doesnât say anything else after that, just sits there quiet for a while. Itâs weird. Roy doesnât really do quiet or thoughtful. Quite the opposite, actually. It makes Dick feel a bit wretched. Heâs getting worked up over nothing and everything around him is changing, trying to figure out whatâs wrong. Theyâre doing so much over nothing. Theyâre all tentative steps and wary glances and Dick wants to tell them to stop.
But to do that, heâd have to figure out whatâs wrong and itâs like heâs back to the beginning all over again.
Dick opens his mouth and the words just come out. He doesnât let himself think about it. He tells Roy about the criminals. About the dance. About Stacey. He talks about kisses and everything Dick doesnât understand. He talks about the way people look at him, about feeling like heâs lost at sea with nothing to hold onto. He talks about not being whole. About just wanting to understand and never getting it.
Dick still thinks itâs a stupid thing to get upset about, but that doesnât really make him any less upset. The thought probably makes it worse.
âYou know no one cares right,â Roy says, when heâs finished. He pauses for a while and just looks at Dick. His eyes are older than his face and shrewd. âYouâve been down for a while now and we just wanted to cheer you up. We fucked up with that, but we donât care if you donât like the kissing thing.â
âI know,â Dick says.
âWe love you,â Roy says. âWe just want you to be happy.â
Intellectually, Dick knows that this is true. The Titans are amazing and the best friends he could ever ask for. He wants nothing more than to put on a smile on his face and give his friends what they want, so they can move on and do better things. But this isnât Gotham. The Titans wonât look at his fake smiles and grunt and pretend nothing is wrong. They donât really stand for that kind of bullshit, as Donna is so very fond of telling him.
Dick would really want nothing more than to pretend nothingâs wrong, though, because there is nothing wrong and this isnât making mountains out of molehills so much as making mountains out of thin air.
âWe donât care,â Roy says again.
âI care,â Dick says. âItâs stupid and I donât get it, but I care. I just want to figure out what to do.â
It matters. It matters because it matters to him. And that should matter enough.
Roy is quiet for a long time. Dick is too tired of fretting to try and break it. Itâs quiet below them, too, like all the Titans are holding their breath. Dick wouldn't be surprised if they're spying on the conversation.
âMaybe you donât have to do anything,â Roy finally says. âJust come in for tonight and have fun. Donât think about it for tonight. Weâll do Monopoly. You donât have to have everything figured out, Rob.â
Dick swallows. âAnd when I do need to have it figured out?â he asks. âWhat if I need to do something about it?â
Roy shrugs. âThen weâll figure it out.â He offers a hand to Dick. His voice is unusually soft and gentle. âTitans together, right?â
âTitans together,â Dick says quietly. He takes Royâs hand and thatâs not really the end of anything. Thereâs still a lot of things to figure out. He needs to apologize to Stacey, needs to stop getting groped by random criminals, needs to keep up the appearances of Richard Grayson, and stop panicking about it.
But for tonight, maybe just for tonight, maybe for even longer, it doesnât have to matter. He's with his friends and they don't care, not in the way other people care. It doesn't fix anything, but maybe for tonight, Dick can breathe easier and he can be okay with himself.
And maybe he can accept that he doesn't have to be everything, all the time, though that's going to take a lot longer. He can work with that, though. Being okay with himself.
It's easier than having everyone be okay with something he isn't.
He can work with that.
Then, maybe heâll learn how to be okay with himself tomorrow, too.
ramblings about superheroes
This isn't a problem I have with the show, per se. It's more about the bigger trend towards 'hero' backstories. I guess it just makes me sad that we often situate wanting to be a hero with being a person who came from a life of violence and wanting to do something about it. I get it. Motivation is always cool. But framing it that way makes it seem like it's a form of retribution, some weird sick twisted version of an abuse cycle. It's people who had experienced violence and is working through this violence by producing more violence. It's an incorrect interpretation. It's actually pretty valid. It just makes me sad that it seems to be the most common interpretation of wanting to be a superhero right now.
I have to admit I'm not as familiar with Hawk and Dove as comic book stories, but I know that their comic book origins did not have that element of child abuse that the show inserted. And this isn't the first time the show. Bruce's level of abuse and manipulation vs. genuine love and altruism with regards to the creation of Robin changes depending on whoever you read, but the show is definitely leaning towards the more abusive side. It doesn't really help that the show can't seem to decide whether they want their heroes to be killers or not.
So, we have this pattern of attaching being a superhero with abuse. And like I said, it's not an invalid interpretation, but is that all we can say about it? Somehow, at some point, a lot of people have stopped looking and seeing heroes. There's a fixation on violence now and that's sad. Is there no more room in storytelling now for people who go out in masks not to beat people up, but to save lives? Superheroes were created to show on that there is good in the world. It wasn't that deep once and I don't think it should be that deep now. Let superheroes save people because they're good people and helping people is good. And yeah, sometimes people fuck up, but I wish I saw more of that. That goodness is at the heart of being of superhero. Not abuse, not violence, but a genuine desire to do good.
I'm so tired of this cynicism. I know it's a trend and there's a reason for it in the world we live in today, but it's a bit heartbreaking. I wish more people believed that heroes are heroes and not just a conduit of violence.