Entry tags:
questions would not be asked
From the moment the bathysphere surfaces, I wonder if I've made a mistake. The type of oversight that would have, in Gotham, possibly gotten me killed. On some level, I can recognize that the two situations are not the same. Gotham is a city that I've lived in all my life, no street unwalked and no corner unturned. I know it as well as the back of my own hand, or even better, for to know Gotham is to know the collective minds that inhabit it, the peculiarities and fear alike, practically palpable in the air. In Gotham, the face guarding the sole entrance to a building, let alone an entire civilization past, would not be unfamiliar to me. Questions would not be asked. Fear would lace itself into the pale blue of the woman's eyes, and her shock of red hair would rightfully send a jolt to the pit of my stomach— but the pieces don't fit well, and so I continue to wonder if I've made a mistake, etching each question into the back of my mind for safe-keeping, for when I know I'll return to the spot, requesting access to Jason.
But if there is one thing that all people should learn about mistakes, it's that retracing is rarely a fix. Apologies are thin, at best, a gesture more than a solution. No way to keep a bridge standing. So for all that a part of me wonders if I should have stayed in the depths below, I find myself pushing forward with the original plan, quickly covering territory and scouting the terrain. Wherever I sense people in the distance, I veer in the opposite direction, knowing that Damian isn't likely to remain there for long, or that Tim would also have a hideout somewhere hidden from the general populace. I press forward and towards higher altitudes, feeling the wind unseasonably warm against my skin. There's a light rustling in the distance, almost silent, but lumbering with all the ease of a beast unconcerned by my presence; in the distance, I spot a pylon clear above the canopy, then decide to walk its perimeter.
I can't speak for Tim, but if this fence is safe to cross, something tells me Damian might be on the other side.
And if it isn't, I'd be willing to double those odds.
But if there is one thing that all people should learn about mistakes, it's that retracing is rarely a fix. Apologies are thin, at best, a gesture more than a solution. No way to keep a bridge standing. So for all that a part of me wonders if I should have stayed in the depths below, I find myself pushing forward with the original plan, quickly covering territory and scouting the terrain. Wherever I sense people in the distance, I veer in the opposite direction, knowing that Damian isn't likely to remain there for long, or that Tim would also have a hideout somewhere hidden from the general populace. I press forward and towards higher altitudes, feeling the wind unseasonably warm against my skin. There's a light rustling in the distance, almost silent, but lumbering with all the ease of a beast unconcerned by my presence; in the distance, I spot a pylon clear above the canopy, then decide to walk its perimeter.
I can't speak for Tim, but if this fence is safe to cross, something tells me Damian might be on the other side.
And if it isn't, I'd be willing to double those odds.
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He's just about the only one from their world who can say as much.
"Have you already run into your crazy ex-partner, then?" he asks, scoffing. Todd's been nowhere to find topside tonight, which means he's probably underground. Damian has only a vague idea as to Rapture's size, but he has little doubt that those two found each other, if only briefly. "You have to admit, Grayson has better taste."
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It isn't a question about taste. Culpability is the only factor that remains in the air. Dick can learn from my mistakes, and draw from the experience he had with his family, memories clutched tight in his hand; I've never done anything to take that from him. Dick understands what is necessary, possibly better than I did— with Barbara, with Jason, Stephanie.
If there's any greater of a reason to keep Damian from this mantle for a few years yet, I've yet to hear it.
"Batgirl is on the island, isn't she?" I cut out, the words feeling harsh, if not sharp. "You'll stay with her, Damian."
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"Why? I can help you."
How, even Damian isn't sure. He knows the lay of the land better. He knows of the players. But what good either will do in returning to Rapture is negligible given that Batman's just come from there.
"Do you even know who Batgirl is?"
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I try, carefully, for a concession or two. Cassandra— or, the thought crosses my mind and turns my stomach, anyone else who might have taken up the position since— isn't invited to join. This is a challenge that I'm fully aware is drawn solely between Jason and me.
"And that stands regardless of who wears the cape."
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"The only one. The others would have the entire island know of the family's identities!"
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In spite of myself, I find that my steps slow to a halt, and I glance at Damian. "Then that means the island will be more difficult for the both of us to navigate, son," I reply, finding it too easy to imagine the details that Jason's shared. "But their missteps don't change the fact that I can't take you to Rapture."
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(Technically speaking, this was just a returned favor, but Damian has the excuse of being raised by assassins and master criminals. His father's favorite pet does not.)
Grayson gave him a chance, at Pennyworth's urging. Batgirl, too, in her way. But Damian's never had much opportunity to spend with his father, and the consequences of this are clear, now. Something in his chest feels tight and it's a challenge to keep his face free of emotion. It's only out of pride that he meets it.
"Is this how it's going to be?"
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I can already hear Alfred's encouragement in the back of my mind, even in his absence.
I turn to face him fully; it's the most I can offer. "No," I reply, firm. No, this is not going to be the way things remain. No, I don't plan on keeping him at a distance. No, after what I've seen of his actions, I know that he is not solely his mother's son. If anything, he's more of mine.
"Damian, I expect you to be here when I return."
In many ways, he holds the greatest amount of potential on his shoulders. Tonight, I wonder if that's the very reason I've shied away.
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He'll return here as instructed, that much isn't in question, but there's no mistaking Damian as happy, now. Whatever spark of trust Todd might have ignited with his actions on Halloween faded into nothingness the moment Batman decided he was more important.
"Whatever," Damian says, reeling himself up into the air, and then he's gone into the darkness.
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But he's not.
So I wait, until the last sound brush of leaves falls quiet under the evening wind, before I turn on my heel to return to the place I came from.
Wondering if, in trying to correct one mistake, I'll only make countless more in turn.