ᴛɪᴍᴏᴛʜʏ ᴅʀᴀᴋᴇ ǝuʎɐʍ (
ployboy) wrote in
singillatim2024-12-04 06:58 pm
from enemies of mankind to their protective spirits (closed)
Who: Tim, the Bats, potential others
What: December catch-all
When: Month of December to early January
Where: Lakeside
Content Warnings: Keep an eye on thread headers (animal death, casual suicidality, past injury to start us off:)
It's been a week since-
Well, whatever, it's best to start from the beginning.
The beginning: it's dark. Not your average everyday darkness: advanced darkness. Because of this, and because of a lame(ish) leg, the trek to Lakeside takes longer than Tim would've liked. But he had been to Lakeside before (Kieren knows) and he had swapped out locks to the Blackbear resort cabin: out with the old, in with the new seemed fitting and it was always top of the lists of things to do when searching for tips for a big move.
So: new town, same darkness, same snow, new locks.
(Tim, being Tim, had been unable to resist rigging his bear traps to launch themselves to any successful intruder- boobytrapping is illegal but who gives a fuck? This is Canada.)
It's freshly December, he thinks, when he knows he's been followed.
It would be less unnerving if he didn't have the nagging suspicion of who stalked him- Tim distinctly remembers praying for a grizzly attack when his suspicion turns to certainty. But he needs to hunt, and the bo staff with the retractable blade makes for a fine spear (and after so many month of maintenance he had been unable to find a substitute for keeping the thing ready that's as effective as keeping it in use). He returns with two rabbits, dead and tied to his pack, and Blackbear cabin has yet to procure an actual bear to maim him. Tim digs out his keys to the front door, simply because he has keys to the front door, and so: suck it.
He wonders if his brothers are aware that this is what his nightmares are made of:
Jason Todd and Damian Wayne are in this house Tim's been convinced he'll be using, and Tim knows he's outgunned. He remembers the pirate Edward's cabin, had popped in there every once in a while. But it was tiny and unsafe. And this resort cabin is now very unsafe, and tiny.
(It's not tiny.)
Tim unlatches the rabbits from his pack and decides to not acknowledge-- (oh, who is he kidding-?)
"This is the worst intervention I've ever seen."
There's not even a banner.
And Tim hates himself, because he's frowning (he's always frowning) and as he lays out the rabbit to skin and dress, he can't even grasp his one knife as he turns to the yahoos and asks, loathing the words- "Is everything okay?"
What: December catch-all
When: Month of December to early January
Where: Lakeside
Content Warnings: Keep an eye on thread headers (animal death, casual suicidality, past injury to start us off:)
It's been a week since-
Well, whatever, it's best to start from the beginning.
The beginning: it's dark. Not your average everyday darkness: advanced darkness. Because of this, and because of a lame(ish) leg, the trek to Lakeside takes longer than Tim would've liked. But he had been to Lakeside before (Kieren knows) and he had swapped out locks to the Blackbear resort cabin: out with the old, in with the new seemed fitting and it was always top of the lists of things to do when searching for tips for a big move.
So: new town, same darkness, same snow, new locks.
(Tim, being Tim, had been unable to resist rigging his bear traps to launch themselves to any successful intruder- boobytrapping is illegal but who gives a fuck? This is Canada.)
It's freshly December, he thinks, when he knows he's been followed.
It would be less unnerving if he didn't have the nagging suspicion of who stalked him- Tim distinctly remembers praying for a grizzly attack when his suspicion turns to certainty. But he needs to hunt, and the bo staff with the retractable blade makes for a fine spear (and after so many month of maintenance he had been unable to find a substitute for keeping the thing ready that's as effective as keeping it in use). He returns with two rabbits, dead and tied to his pack, and Blackbear cabin has yet to procure an actual bear to maim him. Tim digs out his keys to the front door, simply because he has keys to the front door, and so: suck it.
He wonders if his brothers are aware that this is what his nightmares are made of:
Jason Todd and Damian Wayne are in this house Tim's been convinced he'll be using, and Tim knows he's outgunned. He remembers the pirate Edward's cabin, had popped in there every once in a while. But it was tiny and unsafe. And this resort cabin is now very unsafe, and tiny.
(It's not tiny.)
Tim unlatches the rabbits from his pack and decides to not acknowledge-- (oh, who is he kidding-?)
"This is the worst intervention I've ever seen."
There's not even a banner.
And Tim hates himself, because he's frowning (he's always frowning) and as he lays out the rabbit to skin and dress, he can't even grasp his one knife as he turns to the yahoos and asks, loathing the words- "Is everything okay?"

cw SI,
Tim had believed this was going well.
Natural as his (stupid) apprehension at finalizing his end, his big stupid plan, aloud, to a boy bred and raised to be his better in every way, Tim bristles. It's short lived.
He's tired.
Fine, he thinks.
Hanging it is.]
You do understand the definition of favor, right?
[As he looks on, indifference in his voice so transparently forced.]
Of course you do. But. Fine. Thanks. [And then, he breaks-] But fucking tell me you understand that your dad is wrong. You quit? Cool. Now don't go back.
no subject
If you actually believed that, you wouldn't be asking me this.
[His tone is sharp. Precise. Not quite letting his anger and hurt show beneath it, though the agitation is obviously mutual. It always is, they just take turns deciding who gets to play at being above it all.
Of course he knows his dad is wrong. On many things. Even the things Damian wants to believe aren't wrong. The things that made him want to be better.
He killed people and they stopped hurting others. They stopped terrorizing his friends, stopped murdering his family, burning down the hopes and dreams of innocent people, and despite what he's supposed to feel about it, he can't quite feel regret. They would all be better off.]
What exactly in this whole scenario have you done that he wouldn't? Set up a contingency to kill you if you go off the rails? Manipulate those around you with half sincere sympathy to serve your myopic self destruction and grief? Drive yourself to the brink of collapse until you're a liability to yourself and everyone around you? Framing the use of a gun as the inevitable moment you cross a line you can never come back from?
I know what you're capable of. I've seen it. [And his so-called friends saw it too and decided to trust Tim's judgement instead.] And I've been prepared to prevent it from the moment I arrived.
But no. If I'm going to kill someone, it won't be you. [The last thing he wants to deal with when he inevitably returns to hell is Tim's nasally fucking voice.]
cw suicidality continues, now with alluded animal death, physical/ emotional abuse of children
Something about high costs at the dentist's.]
I am nothing like him.
[Not a snarl, not a bite, but Tim's keenly aware of the electric pains of scars and poorly set bones in merciless winter.
Hanging is messy.
He has a gun.
Fine.
Won't be the first time he puts the gun to his head and now he knows to aim the muzzle between his eyes, not the temple- less Hollywood, more real-world results. And he knows he will pull that trigger this time, before someone- anyone- derails his plans. Because Tim knows he's falling.
When has he ever had the safety net of... oh my god he misses his brother.
Again, Tim wishes he had had the chance to say a Goodbye- say something... heartfelt. substantial. But Dick will understand and Tim swallows- he hates that Dick will get it. But catching his fall was nothing but a lucky break.
Tim's anger is... it's not meant to ever go away, is it. He felt it when his mom died and Bruce had told him to wait. He felt it when his dad died and Bruce had told him to keep going. And he feels it now when Bruce is nowhere except between them. It's such a small room.
Damian is wrong, or lying. About knowing what he can do, knowing who he is, about stopping him.
No, Tim is nothing like Bruce.
Bruce wouldn't have- the barn-]
Your creep of a grandfather could at least see that much.
[Cheap shots are fair game, though it's Tim growing goosebumps and feeling like he's wearing nothing.
Nightmare material, truly.]
But like I said, [because he's always a coward for confrontation, he doesn't want it,] fine. Forget it. Silly me for thinking you'd ever do me a favor.
[Look ma, no shouting.
Tim crosses his arms.
He looks at the book. Mew Mew. Gotham public schools. Whatever happened to Hudman and Callie, anyway? Ives and Zo would be freshman, but what the hell were they majoring in? Last time he saw his best friend, he had never even asked.] But since you won't kill me I guess you'll have to hear me out instead.
[There's a blizzard howling out there. Tim's at the door.
Dumb kid is stuck.]
Don't go back to someone who breaks their kid's arm. You can't fix someone that's messed up like that. And you shouldn't have to try.
cw for multiple layers of child abuse, dehumanization, child soldiering, internalized victim blaming
[Hypocrite.
When it was up to Damian to save Alfred it was Jason who blamed him, to his face. When Damian confronted Jason about his duplicity, it was Jason that broke his ribs and nose (He had admittedly stabbed him first). Jason shot him in the spine.
Does that make it okay? At what point do you stop being a child and start being a villain? Damian was a villain and he was much younger, he destroyed countless lives and sacrificed hundreds of others, all for a destiny he abandoned.
His mother killed him. She created his clones, the ones sacrificed so that he could find redemption, and she...
And he still misses her.]
That wasn't ever how I saw being Robin. I know I can't - I've never thought that I could. I was never capable of fixing anyone. [No doubt that's where Tim is, right now. Back at home, acting as a therapy animal. A morality chain. He feels... a pang of guilt, at that responsibility left on his brother's lap.
Mara's furious snarl comes to mind. The scar that he left serving as a constant reminder of her humiliation. All that and for what?
"That wasn't your fault," Alfred says. "You were just a little boy. Blaming yourself like this doesn't help anything."
Damian flexes his hand into a fist. He feels weaker, the anger fading and being replaced with something more helpless.]
Everything he taught me... My mother's love for him, her resentment for him, and her desire to be free. Everything good in me comes from...
Tim. If I accept that my - that our father - the greatest hero in the entire world - is unfixable.
Then what fucking hope do I have?
no subject
Is this a cry for help Louis had asked. And Tim had spent the weeks after that wondering if he was speaking English this entire time at all. Maybe Tim had been stuck on the Esperanto setting. Maybe Klingon.
But anyway.
The line of his shoulders hurts because he can't hike them up; Damian already knows so much about him that Tim is tempted to ask how many times he ran the cloning program on the delusion of bringing Kon back into his life. His eyes are sharp, narrow, and not focused on the bait that... actually, doesn't come. Tim makes a conscious effort to breathe out through his nose, far too mechanical. (He feels the building pressure of a coughing fit behind his lungs. Or maybe that's sepsis.)
Anyway.
Everything can be wildly simple. If he lets it be. He mumbles a disgruntled,] Well, first of all, Batman is not the greatest hero in the entire world. [Because the fact of the matter is that (Superman exists, is what Steph would say)
(Batgirl exists, Cass would smirk.)
Dick Grayson was Robin. And Robin is light, is that light at the end of the tunnel.
Batman is Bruce's punishment. It shouldn't have been any of theirs. So Tim lets that mistake slide, though it hurts like every old scar on him: Bruce, his father? No. No, and it's obvious now: they were partners. Business partners. Not much more. It hurts, so Tim doesn't drag himself into that world of misunderstanding, not now.
Tim, leg aching as if he's been sliced by a machete (wait-), shifts his weight again. And then he relents. He likes the path of least resistance, thanks. Defeat is a natural state of his. (Right?) But his life, his purpose, has never been about what he likes. Tim, simply, lets himself sit on that bed that Damian's occupied.]
The thing about people is that our pedigrees don't define us.
[Even now, hating her as he does and always will, Tim Drake loves Stephanie Brown more than she'll ever know.]
no subject
I'm terrified that you don't care about anyone but yourself.
Family. Pedigrees.
They say that. His father said it often. He says it too sometimes, to others, to Mara and Maya and all the other assassins he's stumbled on. A mantra he wishes were true, the inherent contradictions between his proud use of the Wayne name, the Robin legacy, and his secret dread at what that means for his future. The nightmares of a long trench coat and a fight that never ends, of demons that have haunted him since he was small. He was meant to be a vessel. R'as Al Ghul or Batman, he would become one of them. That should fill him with pride. He will change the world, leave it unrecognizable, no matter what.
But there's a low feeling of dread sitting in his chest as he thinks about his father, as he thinks about his mother, and he thinks about all the millions of ways he hates and loves them both.
Damian's fist clenches.]
That's never been your perspective before. Not on me.
[Not that Tim was wrong, per se. Brother Blood's mutilated corpse could attest to that. As could the arrow through Deathstroke's brain.]
I'm not going to go back with my tail between my legs. But I'm not interested in abandoning all the ideals he taught me either.
Even if he can't live up to them.
[He lets out a huff of breath.]
And if I was going to, I'd start by taking out Cannibal Goatee.
no subject
[this is what a panic attack feels like, but Tim's taken care of useless men; he's not burdening Damian with the slight quake of his hands, the breathlessness of his hollow chest. He lets himself fall back on this bed and he blinks at a dark ceiling.
It'll be fine.]
Cassandra won't kick your ass 'til next Tuesday because she's too nice. [And not here, and he misses his sister so bad that it hurts.] But she should.
[And he mouths the.... name? Cannibal. Goatee. That's not leaving much to the imagination. That's just fine for Tim's runaway fantasies.
Huh.
Children shouldn't be in this bullshit.]
Who are your friends, here?
no subject
He doesn't comment on it.
He's not sure what to say.]
I think we must be talking about a different Cassandra. [He remembers telling her she was in the wrong room and being tossed to the floor.]
I don't have friends here. [Obviously. Tim's the Robin that makes friends. Damian just burns bridges.] There's few people I even like. [And it feels wrong to call them "friends". Maybe Ruby and Levi, at a stretch. Chloe... is old and frustrating.]
no subject
Okay.
He wets his lips.
(Cassandra wouldn't-)
(He feels crushed. Not, like, figuratively. Cassandra can lay down a beating. It's fine. Especially if (since) Damian's been an ass. It's fine. But Tim feels crushed. And he swallows, because he can't breathe. Not like. Not really.)]
Tough.
[Tim scatters a lot of... small, trivial...
So he can eventually, if needed:] Doesn't your puppy need to see its littermates? Jason keep thinking a puppy playdate would be nice.