Who: The Jedi Knight
kingofrooks and his Padawan Apprentice
isitablurredWhen: Monday evening - 22nd August
Where: The Batcave
Summary: Without his superpowers Clark is just a common as muck human, and that's what villains rely on when they strip them away. Bruce can't have someone around him with such an obvious weakness.
Warnings: Violence, maybe some blood. UST. Will edit
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The bike, as it arrived, was making a sound that Clark knew to be 'very unwell'. There were parts that had been shaken loose by overuse, that needed oiling more frequently if it was going to be ridden the way it was. The front strut and wheel was going to tear straight off if Bruce kept on applying the same turning force to it. As the bike came to a stop, Clark paused to eye it with a certain kind of consternation, drawing up plans of how to fix it, how to reenforce the forks without making it too heavy and difficult to drive. If Bruce was going to keep mistreating it like that...
Clark kicked off and span again, moved his hands into the air so that he applied just enough thrust to keep the chair steadily rotating, around and around, until dropping his foot down with a thump he stopped, and looked up at Bruce again.
"Two hours. Not ( ... )
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He tossed the cowl over to lie with the cape and the helmet, and dragged a hand through his hand. And he headed towards the mini-fridge he had managed to salvage from one of the richer sectors, opening it and digging out a bottle of water. Unscrewing it, he dumped half of its contents over his own head. It had been too long since he had slept well, and the chill kickstarted his brain- enough for him to notice that Clark was xraying his motorcycle, looking at it like a doctor would a patient. He rolled his eyes at him and his antics, knocking back the other half of the bottle before he spoke.
"Don't. Even think about it ( ... )
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Even down in the cave it was humid and warm. There were record high temperatures, and it couldn't be pleasant to drive around in hot leathers on a hot, unprotected motorbike on days like this one. He watched Bruce upend the bottle to cool down, but he could see quite clearly that the water did very little to the other man's ambient temperature, past providing a little burst of relief.
"Being childish? Never."
And he took a deep breath and exhaled all ice and cool, blowing straight at Bruce like the maw of an industrial sized air conditioner, and cooling the cave by five or six degrees in a single breath. He could have dropped the temperature all the way to freezing, but the shock of the temperature change would probably have killed ( ... )
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So as strange as the reaction was, it shouldn't surprise him. Bruce was a pretty strange man.
When Bruce raised the Kryptonite, though, heartbeat steady, he almost recoiled. Not the red of before, nor even Lana's green piece, turned crystal white by the ship. It was a shard of blue, hewn into an octahedron just as he remembered, hanging from a silver wire, where Lana's had been on a delicate jewellery chain.
And he was supposed to put it on. Willingly. Because he trusted this man.
Everything in his body screamed that no, this was a horrible idea. He'd spent his life trying to get away from pieces of ( ... )
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This was, in a way, a est for himself. A way of... reaffirming, that he wouldn't be tempted to go off on his temper and hit Clark using kryptonite again. That he wouldn't cross the line again and abuse the trust this man had placed in him.
Dick had always shouted to him that trust was a two-way street. That someone who trusted him should have his trust back, and that he shouldn't take their trust for complete granted. It was something he had trouble with, and which he suspected he would always have problems with - simply because it was impossible for him to trust easily. Not when he could imagine a million and one other reasons for a person to do something for him that had nothing to do with kindness, goodwill, or trustBut this was Clark. If there was ( ... )
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He'd folding his arms, stepping back from Bruce too, sizing him up. There's only a handful of men on the whole planet who would willingly get into a fistfight with Batman, and the entire list of them are clinically insane. So while he was at the very least grateful for the opportunity, for the chance of learning something out of all of this, the wariness was also there. He wasn't crazy, and he knew that without his powers, without being able to break speed down in superspeed mode, he was as good as--well, in a far less priviledged position--than any of Batman's usual opponents.
In fact, a touch of insanity might be pretty useful right about now.
The other problem was that neither he, nor Bruce, was the type of person to strike the first blow. There were no preemptive strikes, not because they were insensible, because at times when he hadn't been expected Clark had come out of nowhere and struck an opponent hard and fast enough to change the battlefield in the blink of an eye, but because you evaluated a ( ... )
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That was why it was easy enough for him to take another step back, his hand reaching out to block Clark's easy punch, his other hand grabbing hold of his wrist. The moment his fingers closed tight, he pulled him forward, and at the same time he shifted his weight entirely onto one leg, sweeping the other outwards ( ... )
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He was grimacing as he found his feet again, saving himself from glaring at Bruce--after all, he'd never had a teacher like this, someone to guide him, someone to show him how to stand, how to fight. For a guy who'd learnt everything he knew from experience, from combat, he wasn't that bad.
But it was true; he was dependant on his powers.
So as much as he wanted to glare and sulk, he was grateful for the chance to learn from someone who actually knew what they were talking about. This way, even if he lost his powers he'd be some use, and with the threat of blue ( ... )
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After all, he had his back broken before. And he recovered. Barely, clawing all the way- but he did. That was what mattered.
Bruce lidded his eyes for a moment, side-stepping the punching. At the same time, he ducked underneath, this time kicking outwards against Clark's hip, trying to destabilise his stance. At the same time, he reached upwards and grabbed hold of Clark's wrist again.
"Stop punching me like you think I'm going to eat your fist raw," he said dryly, his voice coming somewhere in the vicinity of Clark's armpit. "Make sure you know what you're punching at - swinging wildly is just going to open yourself up for attacks ( ... )
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"Aren't you?"
Honestly, like this he felt that even if he did strike home, he'd break his hand. Yes, he'd had experience fist fighting without his powers before. He'd even managed to avoid breaking his fingers. The time he's spent in that Russian prison camp a few years ago had hardened him up no end, forced him to get used to the pain, demanded that he learn a few tricks. In the end his mind had been a greater asset than his strength, because the men there were strong, stronger than him by experience ( ... )
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Like that.
In less than a second Bruce was behind him, thumb smoothing across bare, vulnerable skin to find his pulse, pressing against it in such a way as made him instantly feel lightheaded. Like he'd just been shot. It was only the beginning of the lesson, no matter how he looked at it.
"I won't be making that mistake again."
Softly spoken, barely moving his lips, his eyes angled back as far as they could go, even though he had no chance of looking Bruce in the eye. He was in a headlock, and there were a dozen ways, under normal circumstances, that he could break out of it. But not with Bruce poised to play 'lights out' simply by pressing down a little harder.
"You're faster than they were in Siberia."
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It should have been Bruce, he thought, not Oliver. Just a small, niggling part of him that said that they were so close... That it should have been Bruce buying his life so that he could take it, giving the impression that the dirty foreigner that had been giving them so much grief was going to get his in the hands of this posh rich boy.
When Bruce let go, Clark turned around, putting distance between them again, raising his hand to rub absently at his neck. It was a prickly sort of sensation, the ghost of a touch that could have killed him. Odd, how he could feel it more now that it was gone--another thing to learn.
Faster than anyone you'll meet.
"How do you hit someone who's faster than you?"
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