Who: Batfamily and the usual hangers on, tag yourselves in
When: Night of the 7th, morning of the 8th
Where: The Batcave, and then the East shore of the city
Summary: Tears. Lots and lots of tears. All the heartache. Then we set fire to Batman.
Warnings: Violence, character death, funeral, heartbreak, blood, batkids fighting. Will probably add to this
(
Read more... )
This wasn't right. This wasn't right at all.
His cowl was gone. She cast her eyes around until she found it. Silently, she reminded herself to check the video feed from it later so she would know how he died, who killed him, and what they could do to prevent it from ever happening again.
She turned to Clark. "Thank you," she said quietly. She didn't elaborate on what she was thanking him for; he would know. Then she looked over at Jason, imploring with her eyes. He could come over. She crossed to the other side of the table to give him room to be with his father too, if he wished.
Reply
And here they were far beyond the crossroads, far beyond the point of no return. He knew as soon as he left, the entrance would be changed, he would never be invited back.
This was it. The last of his family had died. His father. Bruce. Bruce. It was done.
His expression flickered, anger sparking through his eyes as his chest burned, his exposed fingers twitched.
Reply
Bruce would have wanted her to. More importantly, she wanted to.
She reached out a hand for him, trying to encourage him over. "Jason," she murmured quietly. Please, understand. "He's your father." She would leave if he wanted her to, if he wanted to be alone with Bruce. But she wanted him to at least say goodbye to the father he had.
Reply
Wasn't this what he wanted? Bruce dead? It's what he'd tried to do on his own but not done so. Hadn't his anger against Bruce now been exacted?
But seeing his father dead brought none of that relief, none of that peace he imagined so long ago. Instead there was more anger, more hate, more pain.
"I don't care." The words are stiff and forced, the worst lie he's ever told because even he can almost see through the fog to the fact that he does care.
Reply
A lie. It's easy to tell the difference because usually he tells them so easily. And Cass... Cass is trying to cope by comforting the others. He wants to thank her but he can't find the strength. Instead he says only:
"Tell him. For once he might actually listen."
Reply
"I'm done with this freakshow." The response was barely a growl, barely even coherent words stirred with so much hate and anger he can barely speak them.
And he began to stiffly pull his blood-spattered jacket back on, not at all caring what they might think of him leaving without him even beginning the mourning process and instead shoving it off on to some later day.
Reply
Leave a comment