✦✧ MASTERLIST✧✦
| 𝔚𝔥𝔦𝔰𝔭𝔢𝔯𝔰 𝔬𝔣 𝔇𝔢𝔳𝔬𝔱𝔦𝔬𝔫 | Series of House of the dragon
| 𝔖𝔱𝔞𝔫𝔡𝔞𝔩𝔬𝔫𝔢 | One-Shots of DC, HOTD and more
| ℌ𝔢𝔞𝔡𝔠𝔞𝔫𝔬𝔫𝔰 | Of DC, HOTD and more
| TAG LIST |

⁂
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

★

tannertan36

pixel skylines
🪼
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
sheepfilms

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Product Placement
Peter Solarz
dirt enthusiast

shark vs the universe

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
styofa doing anything
Three Goblin Art
d e v o n
occasionally subtle
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Janaina Medeiros

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Thailand
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Finland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from New Zealand
@0silver0dreams0
✦✧ MASTERLIST✧✦
| 𝔚𝔥𝔦𝔰𝔭𝔢𝔯𝔰 𝔬𝔣 𝔇𝔢𝔳𝔬𝔱𝔦𝔬𝔫 | Series of House of the dragon
| 𝔖𝔱𝔞𝔫𝔡𝔞𝔩𝔬𝔫𝔢 | One-Shots of DC, HOTD and more
| ℌ𝔢𝔞𝔡𝔠𝔞𝔫𝔬𝔫𝔰 | Of DC, HOTD and more
| TAG LIST |
i need more jealous! whitaker x reader fics pspsps 😞🤲
── ✶ SILVER MEDIEVAL DIVIDERS !
please credit ; like & reblog to use, thanks <3 for recolors, ask me !
Ever since I started watching HOTD last summer I've have the idea for a fic of Targaryen!reader that's Rhaenyra's sister who's not really close to Alicent, and doesn't even hate her when she married Viserys, but switches up on Alicent after she wears green to Rhaenyra's wedding and is basically like "Oh no she did not!" Like Damian from mean girls
and for the next few weeks she's bugging Viserys and convinces him to marry her off earlier than he wanted since she's his youngest, and she chooses Otto just to spite Alicent and of COURSE Otto doesn't deny and viserys is old and tired of both his daughters bs because he's too tempted by the idea of having Targaryen children with the PRINCESS. Better than targ grandchildren. Basically she just becomes her step-moms own step-mom just to piss her off and to sway Otto into not usurping the throne for Rhaenyra's sake (not that he'd drop his plan, he'd just edit it...) so Alicent married Viserys for nothing
Don’t mind me if I…
🕊 Nadin’s Hope: A Mother, A Memory, A Future
Hello, my name is Nadin. I’m from Gaza. I’m a graphic design graduate, a wife—and now, a mother.
I finished my design studies just before the war began. I had dreams of starting a small studio, of creating art that told stories. I used to think about colors and fonts and the future.
Then, the war came. And the future became something we tried to hold onto, moment by moment.
On October 22, 2023, I learned I was pregnant when a missile destroyed my husband’s family home, killing 25 members—his mother, siblings, nieces and nephews—entire branches of our family in seconds.
We were displaced twice. Everything was gone—home, safety, routine, rest.
A few weeks later, I gave birth to our daughter. There was no crib, no celebration—not even stillness. But she arrived, quietly and beautifully. In her eyes I saw something I hadn’t felt in weeks: life that still wanted to grow.
Now, our days are shaped by decisions that could dismantle the future we are trying to build together.
Today, Israel’s government is discussing plans for a full military occupation of the Gaza Strip, including Gaza City and southern regions. The stated aim: to eliminate Hamas and later hand governing control to allied Arab forces—not Israel—but with no clear path to peace or normalcy.
The humanitarian fallout is devastating. More than 61,000 Palestinians have died in this war; hunger and malnutrition are rising sharply. Hospitals in north Gaza have shut down, and 193 people have now died of starvation, nearly half of them children.
Aid remains blocked, water is scarce, and many risk dying of hunger or disease long before future promises arrive.
We Don’t Know What Comes Next There’s no clear path forward—only uncertainty for our daughter’s life and our ability to survive another day.
My name is Nadin, and I’m a mother from Gaza.
How You Can Help I’m asking for support—not for comfort, but for survival:
Help us meet basic needs so we can breathe, heal, and preserve a world for our daughter.
Support us as I try to stand again on my own feet—even a glimmer of stability matters.
If you’ve read this far, thank you. If you can give—thank you. If you can’t—just sharing this post is a lifeline I will never forget.
Just me, waiting for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms fanfics…
Would you ever do another like whispers of devotion, but it's just Aemond as the love interest, and since she remembered her past life she has been waiting for the fight at laena's feunral using the chaos to get on her dragon and escape the fucked up family having no idea that Aemond Yandere wouldn't take that well and years later he would hunt her down now able to as Prince Regent. Or something like that what do you think 🤔
Actually, I don't think so. The more I've developed the story, the more I see Aemond less as a romantic partner and more as a... gross, incestuous sibling love. The whole romance angle is weird there for me. Even so, I still want to write more stories with Aemond as a love interest.
I just read and in the spaces between and omg the angst scratched the right spot. But please tell me dick gets his own happy ending 😫😫😫
He ended up with Kory, and honestly I think he got the better outcome.
"Whispers of Devotion"
Pt. IV
Yandere House of the dragon x ModernReborn!Reader
Summarized:In the devastating aftermath of her discovery with Jacaerys, (your name) faces the brutal consequences orchestrated by Queen Alicent. A public execution, built on a lie, cements her disgrace and leads to her sentencing: exile to Oldtown under Aemond's watch. While confined, she is visited by a manipulative Jacaerys, who offers a dangerous escape to Dragonstone, and haunted by prophetic dreams that culminate in a terrifying encounter with a witch. This confrontation unveils a shocking truth about (Y/N)'s own origin and delivers a dire prophecy about King Viserys's imminent death, plunging her into a crisis far greater than her personal scandal on the eve of her departure.
Warnings: Graphic violence (public execution), extreme emotional and psychological manipulation, parental abuse (physical and emotional), forced confinement, sexual coercion and attempted non-consensual intimacy, intense possessive jealousy, major character death (implied and prophesied), themes of guilt and trauma, supernatural elements (prophetic dreams/visions), and revelations of existential crisis (transmigration/isekai).
<< Pt. 4 — masterlist — Pt. 6 >> (Coming Soon)
The ghost of Aegon’s smirk seemed etched into the very air of the courtyard. Your lungs burned as if you’d been running, though you’d barely moved. The taste of Jacaerys—of desperation, salt, and betrayal—was a brand on your mouth. Shame was a cold sweat sheening your skin, but terror was the icy fist closing around your throat. Alicent. Aemond. Your Father. The titles cycled like a death knell in your mind.
“I have to… I must go,” you choked out, staggering back from Jacaerys, your voice barely a whisper. Your only coherent thought was the desperate, animal need for the false sanctuary of your chambers. To hide. To disappear.
Jacaerys’s hand shot out, fingers closing around your forearm. “(your name), stop! We must—"
You wrenched your arm free with a strength born of pure panic, not even hearing the rest of his plea. You turned and fled, the soft soles of your shoes silent on the flagstones as you bolted for the arched entrance to the Keep.
You had barely passed from the cool night air into the torch-smoked gloom of the corridor when an iron grip seized your upper arm, yanking you sideways into the deep shadow of a stone buttress. You cried out, the sound stifled against a familiar leather jerkin.
Alaric’s face loomed inches from yours. All the charming softness, the boyish humour, was gone. In the flickering light, his features were a stark landscape of devastation and a fury so deep it seemed to bleed from his pores. His eyes, usually bright with mischief, were black pits of betrayal.
“I saw,” he rasped, his voice scraped raw. “I came to beg your forgiveness for being late, to explain… and I saw you. Letting him touch you. Letting that bastard prince put his hands on what is mine.”
“Alaric, please, it wasn’t—” The lie died, pathetic.
“Wasn’t?” he snarled, his composure shattering. His free hand came up to grip your jaw, his fingers pressing painfully into your flesh. “I saw his mouth on you. I saw you kiss him back. After everything… after all my promises, my plans for us…” His voice broke, and the fracture seemed to unleash something wild and dangerous. “No more explanations. You’re coming with me.”
He didn’t ask. He dragged you, his hold on your arm vicelike, down a narrow, disused servant’s passage. Your protests were feeble, lost in the roar of your own guilt. He was taking you to the library—the heart of your shared secret, now to be the chapel of his furious reckoning.
He kicked the heavy door open, the boom echoing in the vast, silent space, and hauled you inside. The door slammed shut, the lock engaging with a final, metallic clunk that sealed your fate.
He turned on you. The man before you was a stranger, stripped bare of all pretence of courtly love. “All your sighs, your distance,” he seethed, advancing. “Was I just a diversion? A practice run for a real prince? Am I not dangerous enough for you? Not noble enough?” His hands flew up, tangling in your hair, not to caress, but to hold you still, to force you to meet his gaze. “Tell me. What does he have that I lack? His name? His blood? The thrill of his fucking claim?”
You tried to shake your head, tears springing to your eyes. “You don’t understand—”
“I understand perfectly!”
His mouth crashed onto yours. It was nothing like the tender, exploratory kisses you’d once shared. This was a conquest, a violation. It was hard, punishing, all teeth and desperate tongue, a furious attempt to scour the taste of Jacaerys from your lips. You whimpered, pushing against his chest, but he was immovable, a wall of armoured muscle and rage. One arm locked like a steel band around your lower back, crushing you against him so tightly you could scarcely breathe.
When he tore his mouth away, you were gasping. “You. Are. Mine,” he growled, each word a hammer blow. “You made me believe it. You don’t get to revoke it.”
Then his hands were everywhere, moving with a frantic, clumsy aggression that held none of his former practised seduction. The laces at the back of your gown snapped under his brutal tugging. The delicate fabric of your sleeve tore with a sickening rip. Cool air assaulted your skin, followed by the scorching, possessive heat of his palms. He was mapping your body not with reverence, but with a frantic urgency, as if trying to imprint himself over the ghost of Jacaerys’s touch.
“He will never have you like this,” Alaric muttered against your throat, his breath hot and ragged. “Never. This is mine. You are mine.”
He backed you roughly against the unforgiving edge of a heavy oak reading table. A cascade of scrolls and a thick, leather-bound tome crashed to the floor. The world narrowed to the painful dig of the wood into your spine, the harsh rasp of his breathing, the overwhelming, suffocating sense of your own catastrophic folly. His touch, once the source of thrilling secret warmth, now felt alien, rough, and tainted with a bitter anger. A treacherous, shameful heat began to coil low in your belly, a visceral reaction warring with your revulsion. His hand shoved your skirts up, his fingers—calloused from swordplay—digging into the soft skin of your thigh with a possessiveness that bordered on cruelty.
“See?” he panted, his movements growing more frantic, less controlled. “You see? This is what you wanted. This is what you chose.”
You were teetering on a terrifying precipice, the unwanted, guilty tension winding tighter within you, a scream trapped in your throat. He was fumbling with the laces of his own breeches, his eyes glazed with a mix of heartbreak and furious need.
And then, the library doors exploded inwards.
Not a opening, but a violent splintering of wood as they were struck with tremendous force from the outside. The cacophony was apocalyptic in the silence.
You froze. Alaric jerked back, his body instinctively twisting to shield yours in a last, futile gesture of protection.
Framed in the ruined doorway, illuminated by the blazing torches of the corridor behind her, stood Queen Alicent.
She was a vision of apocalyptic wrath. Her usually pristine posture was rigid, every line of her body vibrating with a fury so absolute it seemed to chill the air. Her gaze, like a lance of ice, swept over the scene: your torn dress, your exposed skin, your dishevelled hair, Alaric in his state of undress. The expression that settled on her face was not mere anger. It was a profound, cataclysmic contempt that promised annihilation.
Time seemed to fracture. She moved.
Her stride was swift, silent, and deadly. You had no time to speak, to cover yourself, to even draw breath. Her arm, powered by a lifetime of stifled rage and bitter disappointment, drew back and swung forward.
The slap connected with your cheek with a sound like a cracking whip. The force was staggering. Your head snapped sideways, a constellation of white pain bursting across your vision. The metallic taste of blood bloomed on your tongue where your teeth had cut the inside of your cheek. The physical pain was a mere spark compared to the inferno of dread that engulfed you.
Before you could even register the blow, her voice cut through the ringing in your ears, low, venomous, and trembling with intensity.
“You filthy, witless slut.”
She didn’t spare Alaric a glance. She raised her voice, and it was no longer that of a queen but of a general on a battlefield. “GUARDS! TO ME!”
They flooded in—not just two, but four, in the green of House Hightower, led by the hulking form of Ser Rickard Thorne. Alicent pointed a single, unwavering finger at Alaric, who stood paralysed, his face ashen with the sudden, absolute understanding of his doom.
“That creature has assaulted the royal person. Drag him to the black cells. Now.”
“Your Grace, I beg you—” Alaric began, taking a step forward.
Ser Rickard’s fist, encased in steel, drove into his stomach with a dull, sickening thud. Alaric collapsed to his knees, retching, all air driven from his lungs. He was hauled up like a sack of grain, his arms wrenched behind his back and bound with coarse rope that bit into his wrists.
It was then that two more figures appeared in the shattered doorway, drawn by the commotion.
Aemond and Aegon.
Aemond took in the scene with a single, sweeping glance—your state, your mother’s fury, the subdued knight. His single eye narrowed, the pupil contracting to a pinprick of cold, satisfied fury. A grim, cruel smile touched his lips. He had warned you. He had known.
Aegon, leaning against the broken doorframe, let out a low, appreciative whistle. “Seven hells,” he murmured, a grin spreading across his face. “I leave for a few moments and miss the main performance. And here I thought my evening couldn’t get any better.”
“Enough, Aegon,” Alicent spat, without looking at him. Her gaze was fixed on Alaric as the guards began to drag him away. As they passed her, she stopped them with a raised hand. She leaned close to Alaric’s ear, her words meant only for him, but the library’s acoustics carried her icy whisper to all.
“You touched what was not yours. You thought to soil a daughter of the dragon with your base hands. You will learn the price of such arrogance. You will not see another sunrise.”
Alaric’s eyes, wide with terror, found yours for one last, fleeting moment—a look of utter despair—before he was jerked forward and vanished into the dark corridor, his muted pleas fading into nothing.
Alicent then turned her terrifying focus back to you. “Cover your disgrace,” she commanded, her voice like the scraping of stone on stone.
With shaking, numb fingers, you clutched the torn fabric of your gown to your chest, unable to meet anyone’s eyes.
“Did you think yourself clever?” she began, her tone deceptively quiet now, which was infinitely worse. “Rumours of your little… dalliance… have been whispered to me for weeks. I dismissed them. I told myself my daughter had more sense, more pride, more worth than to grovel in the dirt with a landless knight.” Her voice rose, sharpening like a blade. “But this? To be caught not just in a tryst, but in a state of animal defilement? To be seen rutting in a library like a common whore?”
She closed the distance between you in two swift steps. Her hand flashed out again, not to slap, but to entangle itself in the hair at the nape of your neck. She twisted her fist, yanking your head back so you were forced to look up at her, the pain sharp and humiliating.
“You are an imbecile,” she hissed, her face inches from yours. “A vain, thoughtless, puerile fool. Every lesson, every warning, every effort I have poured into you—wasted! You have made yourself cheap. You have handed Rhaenyra a blade to hold at the throat of your own brothers, your own sister!”
She began to walk, dragging you by the hair alongside her as if you were a disobedient pet. You stumbled, a cry of pain escaping you as you scrambled to keep pace, your feet tangling in your skirts. Aemond watched, his expression inscrutable, a silent sentinel of judgement. Aegon chuckled softly from the doorway.
Through the halls they marched, this grotesque procession. Servants scurried out of sight. Guards averted their eyes. Your scalp screamed, tears of pain and shame streaming down your stinging cheek, but you dared not make another sound.
When you reached your chambers, she did not release you. She shoved the door open with her free hand and, with a final, brutal yank, propelled you inside. You sprawled onto the cold floor, gasping.
She stood over you, her chest heaving, a towering figure of maternal wrath. “You will remain in this room until I decide what is to be done with the ruin you have made of yourself. You will see no one. You will speak to no one. Your food will be passed through the door. Consider this not a punishment, but a quarantine for your shame.”
She turned to leave, then paused at the threshold, looking back at you curled on the floor. Her voice dropped to a lethal whisper. “Pray, daughter. Pray that the knight dies quickly in the night. Pray that this sordid little tale can be buried with him. And pray that I can find some remnant of the girl I thought I raised, because the creature I saw tonight is nothing to me but a threat to this family.”
She stepped out. The heavy door slammed shut. The distinct, final sounds of a key turning and a heavy bolt being thrown on the outside echoed with a dreadful finality.
Then, from beyond the thick wood, Aemond’s voice, cold and clear, reached you. “Sleep well, sister.”
Aegon’s laughter, bright and mocking, followed. “Sweet dreams!”
You were alone. The phantom sensations of Alaric’s rough hands, the burning imprint of your mother’s slap, the taste of Jacaerys’s kiss, and the echoing taunts of your brothers swirled in the dark, suffocating silence. The luxurious fabrics, the soft bed, the gilded walls—all of it was now just the opulent lining of your tomb.
The night in your chambers was an eternity of silent, chilling dread. You did not sleep. You sat on the cold floor, your back against the ornate bed, listening to the fortress breathe around you. The phantom sensations of the evening—the bruising grip on your arm, the searing slap, the tearing of fabric—replayed in a relentless loop. The luxurious tapestries seemed to leer at you, the gilded dragons on the walls now looking less like symbols of power and more like silent judges.
Just before dawn, the heavy bolt scraped back with a sound that shot through you like a blade. The door swung open to reveal Queen Alicent, already dressed in severe, high-necked black velvet, her hair covered by a delicate but imposing gossamer veil. She looked as if she had been carved from obsidian, her eyes holding the cold, unforgiving light of a settled verdict.
“On your feet,” she commanded, her voice allowing no dissent. “Wash your face. Put this on.” A silent handmaid slipped past her, laying a gown of unadorned charcoal grey wool on the bed—the colour of hearth-ash and penitence.
You moved like an automaton, your limbs heavy with a fatigue that went bone-deep. As you changed, Alicent watched, a silent warden. When you were done, she stepped forward, her fingers cold as they grasped your chin, tilting your face towards the grey light seeping through the window. The mark on your cheek, now a livid purple bloom, met her inspection.
“Good,” she stated flatly. “Let the court see the evidence of his villainy.”
She took your arm, her grip a circlet of unyielding pressure, and led you into the corridor. The Red Keep was shrouded in an unnatural, solemn hush. Servants melted into doorways, courtiers bowed their heads as if in the presence of a funeral bier. Word had spread.
She did not lead you to her solar or the throne room. Her destination was the main inner bailey. As you approached the archway leading outside, the murmur of a gathered crowd reached your ears—a low, expectant hum.
The scene that greeted you was meticulously staged. The entire court seemed to be in attendance, arrayed in a wide semicircle around the cobbled yard. It was a grim tableau of power and punishment.
At the forefront of the spectators stood your family.
King Viserys was there, supported by a Kingsguard and his cupbearer. He looked terribly frail, his face pale and pained, propped up in a cushioned chair brought out for the occasion. His milky eyes held a deep sorrow, but also a profound weariness. He believed he was here to witness justice for his wronged daughter, to lend the weight of the crown to her protection.
Beside him, a deliberate space between them, stood Rhaenyra. She was clad in Targaryen black and red, her expression unreadable, a mask of royal composure. But her eyes, as they found yours, were sharp and assessing, missing nothing—your dishevelled state, the bruise, your mother’s possessive grip. Jacaerys stood just behind her shoulder, his face ashen. His hands were clenched into white-knuckled fists at his sides, his gaze darting from your bruised cheek to the centre of the yard and back, a storm of helpless rage and guilt twisting his features. Lucerys stood beside him, wide-eyed and confused by the grim adult theatre.
And then there were your brothers. Aemond was positioned slightly apart, a sentinel of cold approval. He stood perfectly still, his single eye fixed not on you, but on the centre of the yard, his lips set in a thin, satisfied line. Aegon, in contrast, looked around with detached amusement, as if calculating the odds on some macabre wager. Helaena was not present. You were grateful for that small mercy.
In the centre of it all, on his knees before a rough-hewn wooden block, was Alaric.
He was barely recognisable. Stripped of his white cloak and fine clothes, he wore a coarse, sack-like tunic. His face was a map of fresh bruises, one eye swollen shut, his lip split and caked with dried blood. He trembled, not from the morning chill, but from a terror so absolute it seemed to radiate from him. As you were paraded to the front of the crowd, his one good eye found you. All the defiance, the jealousy, the passion was gone, scoured away by fear. What remained was a raw, silent plea—a desperate, final appeal to a connection he still, foolishly, believed in.
Your stomach lurched violently. You tried to recoil, a strangled sound escaping your throat, but Alicent’s hand tightened like a manacle, her nails biting through the wool of your sleeve.
“You will watch,” she whispered, her voice a venomous thread meant for your ear alone. “You will understand the cost of filth. This is the cleaning of your mistake.”
The Lord Confessor stepped forward, his voice cutting through the murmur like a cleaver.
“Ser Alaric, of no notable house,” he began, his tone dismissive, ensuring everyone understood the vast gulf between the accused and the royal house he had allegedly affronted. “You stand convicted of the most heinous crimes: the obsessive, unwelcome pursuit of Her Royal Highness, the Princess (your name); the attempted defilement of her royal person, against her express will and virtue; and the act of striking her in your rage when she, in her courage, resisted your base advances.”
A ripple went through the crowd. All eyes swivelled to your face, to the undeniable, lurid evidence of the blow. Viserys let out a pained sigh, shifting in his chair. “Monstrous,” he muttered, his voice thin but carrying. “To raise a hand to a princess…”
Rhaenyra’s gaze remained analytical, but Jacaerys flinched as if struck himself, a muscle jumping in his jaw. He knew. He knew the truth of that mark, and the knowledge was a torture.
“No!” Alaric’s voice was a raw croak, struggling against his bonds. He looked directly at you, his words tumbling out in a desperate rush. “Princess, please! Tell them! You know it wasn’t— I would never strike you! You know why I was there! Tell them the truth!”
His plea was met with a sharp crack as the guardsman beside him drove a gauntleted fist into his kidney. Alaric crumpled forward with a gasp, the air driven from him.
The Confessor continued, unimpeded. “The evidence is incontrovertible. The Princess’s distress and her injury speak louder than the lies of a condemned man. For crimes against the royal blood, the sentence is death. May the gods judge you more mercifully than the Crown.”
Alicent leaned in, her breath cold against your ear. “That,” she hissed, “is the sound of your stupidity dying. Remember it.”
The headsman, a mountain of a man in a leather apron, stepped forward. Alaric was hauled up and forced back onto his knees, his neck positioned over the dark-stained wood. His frantic, weeping search found your eyes one last time. In that final, shattered glance, there was no knight, no lover, no conspirator. There was only a boy, terrified and betrayed, seeing the author of his ruin.
The axe rose, a high arc of polished steel against the leaden sky.
THWUMP.
The sound was wet, final, profoundly physical. You jerked violently, a full-body spasm, but Alicent’s hold was iron, keeping you upright, forcing you to be a part of the spectacle. The head rolled, the body slumped, a crimson tide spreading across the grey cobbles.
A collective, shuddering inhalation swept the crowd. Aegon clicked his tongue softly. Aemond gave a single, slow, deliberate nod. Viserys looked away, his face etched with sorrowful relief. Rhaenyra remained impassive, though you saw her hand tighten slightly on Jace’s shoulder, a silent command for him to stay still. Jacaerys had gone a sickly shade of grey, his eyes wide with a horror that mirrored your own but was laced with a furious, impotent guilt.
Before you could vomit or faint, Alicent was turning you, marching you back inside, away from the gore and the staring eyes. The walk to her solar was a blur of stone and shadow.
Once inside the sanctum, with the door closed, the public façade shattered. She released you, and you stumbled against her heavy desk.
“You see?” she spat, the regal mask gone, replaced by the furious, betrayed mother. “That is the rubbish your poor judgement consorts with! That is what becomes of those who dare to smudge the brightness of this house!”
The horror congealed into a hard, sharp knot of rebellion in your chest. You straightened, your voice trembling but clear with a defiance born of despair. “You lied! To all of them! You told them he struck me! You told them I refused him! It was your hand! You did this! He didn’t… it wasn’t like that!”
Alicent stared at you, momentarily stunned by the outburst. Then her face darkened with a renewed, scorching fury. She crossed the space between you in two strides.
“You will hold your tongue!” The command was a whip-crack that echoed off the stone walls. “What was spoken in that yard is the truth! It is the truth that will be recorded in the White Book, the truth that will preserve the last shreds of your honour and this family’s security! Do you think the actual sordid little tale matters? That anyone would pity a princess who played at love with a guardsman? They would scorn you! They would call you a gullible slut and him an ambitious climber! This lie is the armour I have forged for you!”
She seized your shoulders, her fingers like talons. “This is the reality of power, you foolish girl! I have taken a messy, shameful little tragedy and turned it into a clean, noble narrative of attempted assault and royal resilience! That is what a Queen does! That is what a mother must do to salvage something from the wreckage her child has made!”
Tears of rage and helplessness burned tracks down your cheeks. “You killed him for a story!”
“I saved you with a story!” she roared, shaking you once. “And you are still too much of a mewling infant to see the gift you’ve been given! A quick death for him, a chance at a life for you. But you are a liability here now. The stink of this scandal, even neatly packaged, will linger. Your judgement is proven to be ashes.”
She shoved you away, turning to pace before the cold hearth. “You will leave King’s Landing. You will go to Oldtown, to the Hightower. Your uncle will host you. You will reflect, you will relearn discipline and duty, and you will be kept far from the… distractions of this court.”
Oldtown. Exile. Banishment to the ancestral seat, a gilded cage under the watchful, pious eyes of the Hightowers. The sentence was a new kind of death.
“No… please, not…” you stammered, the thought of that cold, unfamiliar fortress closing in around you.
“It is decided,” Alicent said, her voice final. She walked to the door and opened it. Outside, in the antechamber, Viserys was being helped into the room by a servant, his breathing laboured. He must have followed, seeking to offer comfort.
“Father…” you whispered, a last, desperate hope.
Viserys looked at you, his eyes clouded with pain and sympathy. “My dear child,” he wheezed, reaching a trembling hand towards your bruised cheek but not touching it. “To suffer such a vile attack… in the very heart of our home. Your mother has acted with… with necessary strength. The beast is gone. You are safe now.”
He believed it. Every word. The lie had been tailor-made for a kind, weary king who wanted only to protect his daughter. The truth would have broken him. Alicent had calculated that, too.
“The Princess,” Alicent interjected, her voice softening into a convincing blend of maternal concern and regal duty, “needs time to heal, Your Grace. The memory of this place… it is too fresh, too painful. The whispers of court will not aid her recovery. I propose she convalesce in Oldtown. The air is cleaner there. The guidance of my family will be wholesome. Aemond can escort her—his presence will ensure her safety on the journey and be a comfort.”
Viserys nodded slowly, the motion seeming to cost him great effort. “Yes… yes, a sensible course. A respite. Aemond is a steadfast lad.” He looked at you with rheumy affection. “Fifteen days. Rest, my child. Gather your strength. Then go to Oldtown. It will be good for you.”
Fifteen days. Not tonight. A small, bitter mercy. Two weeks in this gilded prison, with the ghost of Alaric haunting the halls and the knowledge of your impending exile hanging over you.
Alicent’s gaze met yours over the King’s bowed head. In it was no triumph, only cold, absolute victory. She had orchestrated it all: the narrative, the execution, the exile, and even the King’s blessing. You were checkmated.
“Thank you, Father,” you heard yourself say, the words ash in your mouth.
As Viserys was led away, murmuring about justice being served, Alicent turned her final, merciless decree on you. “You have your reprieve. Use it wisely. Reflect on the consequences of passion without purpose. Aemond will be informed of his duty. You will not speak to anyone of this matter again. Is that understood?”
You could only nod, the fight utterly drained from you.
“Return to your chambers. You will be confined there until the journey. Your lessons in what it means to be a Princess of the Blood are now your only occupation.”
You walked back to your room alone, the echoing corridors now feeling like the hollow bones of a beast that had just consumed a part of you. The court had seen a justice performed. Viserys saw a daughter protected. Rhaenyra and Jacaerys saw a masterful, brutal political play. Aemond saw a problem being efficiently removed to his custody. Aegon saw a fine morning’s entertainment.
And you saw the ruthless machinery of your mother’s love, oiled with the blood of a boy who loved you, ready to grind you into the shape she required. Oldtown awaited, a shining tower at the end of a road you would travel under the cold, watchful eye of a brother who saw your punishment not as a burden, but as his rightful due.
The fifteen days allotted before your exile to Oldtown stretched before you like a sentence within a sentence. Your chambers, once a sanctuary, had become a palatial cage. The world beyond your door was a muted echo—the distant clatter of the yard, the faint strains of courtly music from far-off halls, all serving as reminders of a life from which you were now utterly severed. Time lost its meaning, measured only in the trays of bland food passed through the door by silent servants and the slow march of shadows across your floor.
The ghost of Alaric was your constant companion. Not the passionate, jealous lover of the library, but the broken, terrified boy in the yard, his one good eye holding yours in that final, pleading moment before the axe fell. You saw it when you closed your eyes. You saw it in the pattern of the rug, in the dancing flames of the hearth. The metallic scent of blood seemed to have permeated the very stone, a phantom smell that haunted your every breath. Your mother’s lie was a shroud you were forced to wear, and its weight was crushing.
It was on the fourth night, deep in the silent hour when the Keep truly slept, that the faintest of scrapes sounded at your balcony door.
You sat bolt upright in bed, heart hammering. It couldn’t be a guard; they were posted at your main door. The scraping came again, followed by the soft, strained groan of the latticed door being inched open against its frame.
A figure slipped through, silhouetted against the indigo night sky. Tall, lithe, moving with a predatory grace you knew instantly. Jacaerys.
He closed the door silently and turned. In the dim glow of the single, guttering candle you kept lit, his face was a tapestry of conflict. The handsome, earnest features were strained, shadows pooling under his eyes. There was anger there, a simmering, jealous fury you could feel radiating from him across the room. But layered over it was something else—a desperate concern, a painful longing, and a calculating intensity that made your skin prickle.
“(Your name),” he breathed, the single word laden with a world of emotion.
You pulled the bedcovers tighter around yourself, a feeble defence. “Jacaerys. You shouldn’t be here. If my mother or Aemond—”
“Do you think I care about them right now?” he interrupted, his voice low but fervent. He took a step closer, then another, stopping at the foot of your bed. His gaze travelled over you—your rumpled nightclothes, your unbound hair, the fading bruise on your cheek that was now a sickly yellow-green. The sight of it made his jaw tighten, but his eyes softened with what looked like genuine pain.
“I saw it all,” he said, his voice rough. “In the yard. I had to stand there and watch that… that farce. Watch you be used as a prop in your mother’s play.” He ran a hand through his dark hair, the gesture agitated. “That mark… they said he did it. But I know, (Y/N). I saw you that night, just before. I know whose hand that truly came from.”
He knew. The truth of it was a secret shared, a dangerous, intimate thread between you. You looked away, shame heating your cheeks. “It doesn’t matter. He’s dead because of me. Because of my… stupidity.” The word your mother had used felt like ground glass in your mouth.
“Don’t,” Jacaerys said sharply, moving to sit on the edge of the bed, just out of reach. “Don’t say that. Don’t take her words into yourself.” He leaned forward, his elbows on his knees, his hands clasped tightly. “What happened with that knight… it was a mistake. A terrible, tragic mistake. But it was born from being trapped, from being suffocated! Can’t you see that?”
His words were a balm and a poison. They acknowledged your guilt but reframed it as a consequence, not a flaw. It was what you desperately wanted to believe.
“He wanted to run away,” you whispered, the confession torn from you. “He wanted me to steal my family’s jewels to pay for it.”
Jacaerys’s eyes flashed with a dark, vindicated anger. “Of course he did,” he said, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial hush. “He saw a princess and thought of what he could take. He was never worthy of you, (Y/N). Not for a moment. His feelings, his ‘love’… it was just another kind of possession, baser than my uncle’s, but possession all the same.”
He was weaving a narrative, subtle as a spider’s silk, aligning himself with your pain, separating himself from the other men who sought to claim you. He made it sound as if his own obsession was of a purer, more understanding kind.
“And now she’s sending you away,” he continued, his voice thick with a frustration that seemed to border on heartbreak. “To Oldtown. To rot under the gaze of those pious Hightowers and under Aemond’s thumb. It’s not exile, it’s an execution of the spirit. She’s killing the vibrant, beautiful girl I… the girl I know you to be, and replacing her with a silent, obedient statue.”
A tear escaped, tracing a hot path down your cheek. He saw it, and his own expression crumpled for a moment, the mask of the shrewd prince slipping to reveal the raw, jealous, longing boy beneath.
“I was so angry with you,” he admitted, the words forced out as if painful. “When I saw you with him in the gardens. When I saw you kiss him back in the courtyard. It felt like you’d carved out my heart. I thought… I thought after everything, after the connection we’ve always had, you would see me.” He reached out, slowly, giving you time to pull away. When you didn’t, his fingers brushed the tear from your cheek, his touch feather-light. “But seeing you like this… broken under the weight of their lies and their punishments… my anger is for them. For what they’ve done to you.”
His thumb stroked your cheekbone, near but not touching the fading bruise. His proximity was intoxicating, a dangerous warmth in the cold isolation of your prison. He smelled of leather and night air, a scent of freedom.
“You don’t have to go to Oldtown,” he murmured, his eyes holding yours, a deep, compelling ocean of earnest intent. “Come to Dragonstone with me. With us. It’s a place of strength, not stifling piety. The air is clean and sharp. You could breathe there. You could be yourself. Not a perfect Hightower princess, not a problem to be shipped away… just (your name).”
The offer was a lifeline thrown into the stormy sea of your despair. Dragonstone. The ancient seat of House Targaryen. A place beyond your mother’s reach, beyond Aemond’s watchful eye. An escape.
The image shimmered before you—black sand beaches, the roar of the sea, the cries of dragons—but as quickly as it formed, it shattered against the memory of a rolling head and a spreading pool of crimson. You flinched, pulling back from his touch.
“I can’t,” you choked out. “Jace, I… Alaric… he’s dead. Because of choices I made. If I run with you now, it would be the same. Another reckless choice, another person hurt because of me. I carry his blood on my hands. I can’t… I can’t just fly away from that. It would haunt me. It does haunt me.”
The frustration you saw flash in his eyes was genuine, a spark of the anger he was trying so hard to suppress. He wanted you to say yes. He needed your compliance, your willing flight, to complete his own narrative of rescue and possession. Your guilt was an inconvenient obstacle.
He mastered it quickly, his expression softening into one of profound, patient sorrow. He cupped your face with both hands now, forcing you to look at him.
“That guilt,” he said, his voice achingly tender, “is a testament to your heart. To the goodness in you that he exploited, that your mother is trying to stamp out. Don’t let them use it as a chain to bind you. Come to Dragonstone, and we can bear that weight together. I will help you carry it. We can start anew.”
He leaned in closer, his breath mingling with yours. The space between you crackled with all the unsaid things, the stolen kiss in the dark, the years of shared glances, the rivalry and the strange, twisted affection. “You are not what happened in that library or that yard. You are so much more. Let me show you.”
His lips met yours.
It was not like the angry, desperate kiss in the courtyard. This was different. It was slow, deep, and devastatingly persuasive. It was a kiss that promised understanding, refuge, and a love that saw past your sins. It was a physical argument, a seduction of the soul. His hands slid from your face to tangle in your hair, pulling you gently closer. You felt yourself responding, a part of you yearning to lose yourself in this fantasy of rescue, to let him convince you that your guilt could be absolved in his arms.
For a long, breathless moment, you were adrift in it.
But as his kiss deepened, as one hand slid to the small of your back to draw you firmly against him, the phantom scent of blood seemed to rise again. The face of Alaric, not jealous but terrified, superimposed itself behind your closed eyelids.
You broke the kiss with a ragged gasp, turning your head away. “I can’t, Jace. I want to… gods, I want to believe you. But I can’t run. Not now. Not like this. The guilt would follow me. It would poison everything.”
The mask of the patient suitor faltered. A flicker of that raw, impatient anger returned to his eyes, a flash of the prince who was not used to being denied, especially not after offering what he saw as salvation. He took a deep, controlled breath, the muscles in his jaw working.
He stood up abruptly, putting distance between you, running a hand through his hair again. He turned his back to you for a moment, gathering himself. When he turned back, the expression was one of pained, noble resignation—a carefully constructed pose.
“I see,” he said, his voice quieter, laced with a sorrow that felt both real and performative. “Your heart is too burdened. Your conscience, too kind.” He approached the bed once more, but did not sit. He looked down at you, a prince in the shadows, his offer formally rejected but not withdrawn.
“Then I will wait,” he declared, the words a vow that sounded both romantic and ominously final. “I will wait for the chains of this guilt to loosen. I will wait for you to see that you deserve more than a life sentence in a Hightower tower for a crime you did not commit.” He leaned down, his hand brushing a strand of hair from your forehead in a gesture that was painfully intimate. “Dragonstone will be there. I will be there. When you are ready. When you can finally see that your place is not in the shadows of Oldtown, but in the fire and salt of your true heritage. With me.”
He straightened, his gaze lingering on you, imprinting the moment. “Remember this, (your name). Remember that when all others cast you out or locked you away, I offered you a throne by the sea. The offer stands. For as long as it takes.”
With one last, long look that was a mixture of yearning, frustration, and unwavering determination, he turned and slipped back out onto the balcony, disappearing into the night as silently as he had come.
You were left alone, the ghost of his kiss on your lips, the phantom of Alaric’s blood on your hands, and the echoing promise of a prince who would wait—a promise that felt less like hope and more like another, more gilded, cage being built around you, its door held open by a hand you were too afraid and too guilty to take.
The five days following Jacaerys’s secret visit passed in a suffocating limbo. Word filtered through the servants that Prince Jacaerys, along with his mother and brothers, had departed King’s Landing for Dragonstone. Their leaving was quiet, almost hurried, a strategic retreat from a court still buzzing with the after-shocks of the execution. His absence should have felt like a relief, the closing of a door on a dangerous temptation. Instead, it felt like the severing of the last fragile tether to a version of yourself that still dared to want something. The promise of Dragonstone now hung in the air of your chamber like a fading perfume—sweet, haunting, and utterly unreachable.
It was on the first night after his departure that the dreams began.
You were walking through a forest of bone-white trees, their branches clawing at a twilight sky. In a clearing stood a woman. She was young, no older than you, with hair the colour of tarnished silver and eyes that held the gleam of deep, still water. She was beautiful, but her beauty was cold, alien. On her wrist, she wore a simple bracelet of woven iron and what looked like dried blossoms. She raised her other hand, her fingers hovering over the clasp.
“See,” she whispered, though her lips did not move. The voice was inside your skull.
She unclasped the bracelet. It fell to the mossy ground.
And before your eyes, she… unfolded. It was not a transformation of magic, but a horrifying acceleration of time. Smooth skin puckered and drew tight over sharpening bones. The silver hair bleached to a brittle white, then thinned. The straight spine curved. The bright eyes clouded with milky cataracts. In the span of a single, shuddering breath, the maiden became a crone, hunched and ancient, leaning on a staff of gnarled blackwood.
The crone’s clouded eyes fixed on you, seeing through the dream. “You walk in two streams,” she croaked, her voice the sound of dry leaves scraping stone. “One is here. The other… is an echo of a world that sang a different song.”
You woke with a gasp, your heart hammering, the image of the decaying woman seared onto the backs of your eyelids. The guilt, a constant companion, immediately supplied an explanation. Alaric. It was a message. A warning from beyond the grave, his spirit angry, showing you the decay your actions had wrought. You spent the day jumpy and pale, starting at shadows, jumping at every sound from the corridor.
The next night, the dream returned. The same bone-wood forest. The same young woman. This time, she did not wait. She tore the bracelet from her wrist the moment she saw you. The violent aging was even faster, more grotesque. The crone stood amidst a shower of her own falling hair.
“You are seen,” the crone hissed, pointing a gnarled, trembling finger. “By eyes that are not of this earth. Your soul bears a fingerprint from another forge. You are a graft on this tree of time, princess.”
You woke drenched in a cold sweat, a silent scream locked in your throat. It was him. It had to be. Alaric was haunting you, showing you the rot at your core, the foreign, wrong thing you were. The guilt metastasised, becoming a physical sickness. You could barely eat.
On the third night, the eve of your departure to Oldtown, the dream did not wait for sleep.
You were staring into the low fire, trying to banish the images, when the air in your chamber grew suddenly, piercingly cold. The flames in the hearth guttered and died, not with a sigh, but as if snuffed by an unseen hand. In the sudden, profound darkness, a figure coalesced by the window—not the young woman, nor the crone from the woods, but the ancient hag herself, standing in your very chamber. She was translucent, like smoke, but her presence was a physical weight, pressing the air from your lungs.
“No more dreams,” the spectre rasped. “The veil is thin. He is near.”
Your blood froze. He. She confirmed it. Alaric’s spirit was near, restless, communicating through this phantom. You had to know. You had to understand his final message, to beg his forgiveness, to make the visions stop.
A reckless, desperate energy, born of terror and a crushing need for absolution, surged through you. The guards were at your main door. But the balcony… Jacaerys had used it. Could you?
As if reading your thought, the spectral crone raised her staff and pointed not at you, but at the intricate lattice of your balcony door. With a sound like cracking ice, the lock splintered. The door drifted open an inch, inviting the night.
You didn’t think. You acted. Slipping from your bed, you threw the simplest, darkest cloak you had over your nightgown. With one last look at the ghostly figure—who merely watched with those terrible, knowing eyes—you slipped out onto the cold balcony. The climb down was a blur of sheer terror and animal instinct, using the thick, ancient vines that clung to the Keep’s stone as a perilous ladder. You scraped your hands and knees, but you felt no pain, only the desperate drive to follow this apparition, to find the source of the haunting and silence it.
You dropped the last few feet into a shadowed courtyard, your breath coming in ragged gasps. The spectre was ahead, floating just at the edge of your vision, a wisp of darker shadow leading you through a maze of servant’s passages and forgotten gates at the base of the city walls. You were leaving the Keep, descending into the belly of King’s Landing itself, into the Warrens, where the stench of the city was thick and the only light came from guttering tallow candles in windows.
Finally, in a dead-end alley that reeked of stale urine and decay, the spectre stopped before a crooked door. It turned its head, the movement unnaturally stiff, and flowed through the wood.
You were alone in the stinking dark. This was madness. But the need for answers, for an end to the torment, was greater than your fear. You pushed the door. It swung open silently.
Inside was a single room, lit by a single, sickly green flame dancing in a crude brazier. The air was thick with the smell of strange herbs and old earth. And there, seated on a stool, was the crone from your dreams. She was flesh and blood now, solid, the most real thing in the room. Her milky eyes fixed on you.
“You came,” she said, her voice no longer a dream-whisper but a dry, papery reality. “Good. The pulled thread often seeks its needle.”
“What are you?” you demanded, your voice trembling but loud in the small space. “Are you… are you his messenger? Alaric’s? What does he want from me? I’m sorry! Tell him I’m so sorry!”
The crone’s head tilted, a grotesque parody of curiosity. “The dead knight? His spirit is gone. Fled to whatever peace or torment awaits. No, girl. This is not about him. This is about the stain on your soul. The one you were born with.”
She gestured with a claw-like hand, and the green flame in the brazier flared violently. Within its heart, images swirled—not of Alaric, but of you.
But a you from a before.
You saw yourself in a world of impossible things—gleaming metal carriages that moved without horses, tiny glowing slabs in people’s hands showing moving pictures, towers of glass that scraped a smog-choked sky. You saw yourself laughing with people in strange clothes, in a small room lit by a harsh, steady light. You felt a pang of recognition so profound it was a physical ache, followed immediately by a wave of nausea and disorientation. The memories were not memories; they were ghosts of a life that had never happened, yet they felt more real than the silk of your gown.
Then you saw the end. A blinding light, a screech of tearing metal, a moment of searing pain… and then darkness.
And then… a squalling infant in a grand bed, a worried man with a pinched face (Otto Hightower) looking on, and a young, exhausted Alicent holding a newborn with your eyes.
“You died,” the crone stated flatly, as the visions vanished, leaving you staggering, gripping the grimy wall for support. “In that other-song world. And you were born again, here. A soul displaced. A ripple in the pond of fate. You do not belong. Your very presence here… it warps the stream.”
The world tilted on its axis. The constant feeling of being an outsider, of never quite fitting the mould your mother demanded, the strange thoughts and instincts you could never explain… it wasn’t madness. It wasn’t a flaw. It was a truth far more terrifying.
You were not just a failed princess. You were a ghost in a living girl’s skin. A mistake of the cosmos.
“Why?” you whispered, the word barely audible. “Why show me this?”
“Because the warp is tightening,” the crone said, leaning forward, her scent of dust and grave-earth filling your nostrils. “Your displacement has consequences. It has woven new threads into the tapestry of this realm. Bloodier threads. A war is coming. A war of fire and blood that will crack the very spine of Westeros. And your existence… is part of its kindling.”
The Dance. The whispers you’d heard, the tension between your mother and Rhaenyra, the glares between your brothers and your nephews… it wasn’t just rivalry. It was a countdown to annihilation.
“When?” you breathed, the horror a cold stone in your gut. “When does it start?”
The crone’s milky eyes seemed to look through you, into a future only she could see. “The first true spark flies tonight,” she croaked. “The old king, the weary lion who holds the pride together… his time ends. With his last breath, the chain that holds the beasts snaps. You have time, perhaps, to say farewell. To look upon the face of the peace that dies with him.”
Father. King Viserys. He was to die. Tonight.
The information hit you with the force of a physical blow. This was no vague prophecy. It was specific, immediate, and horrifying. The kind, weary man who had believed a lie to protect you… was living his final hours.
You stared at the crone, the last vestiges of the ‘Alaric haunting’ theory crumbling to ash. This was infinitely bigger than your guilt, your shame, your doomed romance. This was about the fate of kingdoms, and you, a relic of another world, were somehow caught in the heart of the storm.
Without another word, you turned and fled from the foul little room, from the bearer of impossible truths. You had to get back. You had to see him. The ‘why’ and the ‘how’ of your existence were questions for another time, drowning in the tidal wave of a single, crushing certainty: your father was going to die, and hell was going to follow.
You ran through the stinking alleys, the climb back up the vines a frantic, graceless scramble. You slipped back into your chamber just as the first, faint hint of grey touched the eastern sky. You stood there, shivering in your muddy nightclothes, no longer a princess imprisoned for a scandal, but a secret oracle carrying the weight of a doomed future, the taste of another world’s death and this world’s impending birth of fire on your tongue.
The journey to Oldtown, Aemond’s cold custody, your mother’s disappointed wrath—all of it shrank into insignificance. A greater clock was ticking, its hands closing on the hour of the king’s last breath, and you were perhaps the only soul in the Red Keep who knew the true, cataclysmic significance of the bell about to toll.
Pt. 6 >> (Coming Soon)
Author’s note: Hello, everyone. I hope you're well. First and foremost, my sincerest apologies for the significant delay. I had several pressing commitments with my university, alongside a few minor personal matters to attend to. Thankfully, everything has settled down now. I truly hope you enjoyed this latest instalment. Please don't worry—the sixth chapter will be with you very soon.
Taglist: @ursinaw @dakota-rain666 @laura-naruto-fan1998 @pookiedragonfire @jjggdfvvy @maryldrsstuff @1soultaken @ceramic-raven @eissaaaa @moodyblueberrytree @xadaboo @labryel @zoeyburton @hopingtoclearmedschool
How it feels logging onto Tumblr to read fics after joining a new fandom
when you're trying to find a [female character] x fem!reader but the authors genderbend the [F/C] to a guy for literally no reason 💔
like bro just let me smooch The Condesce in peace
Omg I just realised that Sven's birthday and mine are barely a few days apart. Is this a sign?🤨🤨🤨 Are you trying to tell me something, Author™? 🤨🤨(Would HE take it as a sign from the universe or something?)
Sven doesn't care about his own birthday! He would be too busy thinking about yours c:
In the Spaces Between
Dick Grayson x Fem!Reader x Jason Todd Best friends with Dick Grayson, you built a comfortable life together in Blüdhaven. But that life fractures when a clandestine romance with his estranged brother, Jason, unfolds under his nose. They thought they could keep it hidden, never anticipating that the greatest wound wouldn't be the secret, but the truth of Dick's own unrequited love.
The first time Dick Grayson saw you, you were arguing passionately with a philosophy professor about moral absolutism in a postmodern world. Your hands moved animatedly, your eyes sparking with a fire that was both intellectual and fiercely beautiful. He was captivated instantly.
He made it his mission to “run into” you at the library, then at the campus coffee shop. The friendship that blossomed was easy, natural. You were sharp, witty, and possessed a kindness that ran deep. He was the charming, athletic older student — a beacon of confidence. You became his confidant, the person he could unwind with after a long day of classes and, though you didn’t know it then, after his late-night patrols.
It was Dick who suggested you move in together after graduation. “It just makes sense,” he’d said, his smile effortless. “We’re best friends, the rent in Blüdhaven is a nightmare, and I promise I won’t leave my leggings in the dryer.” It was a perfect arrangement. You built a life together in that cosy apartment — a life of shared takeout, movie marathons, and easy companionship.
There was only one problem — a secret that grew heavier in Dick’s heart with each passing day: he was deeply, hopelessly in love with you.
The first flicker of jealousy wasn’t even about Jason. It was about a guy from your work — Chase.
Dick had come to pick you up from your company’s holiday party. He leaned against the doorway, looking every bit the handsome, supportive best friend everyone assumed he was. He saw you laughing, a glass of wine in your hand, talking to a colleague — Chase from Marketing. He was tall, had a nice smile, and his hand rested a little too familiarly on the small of your back as he leaned in to hear you over the music.
A cold knot tightened in Dick’s stomach. His smile, usually so ready, felt frozen on his face. You were his person. He was the one who made you laugh like that. He was the one who should be guiding you through the crowd with a touch that intimate.
When you finally spotted him and bounded over, your smile widening just for him, the knot loosened slightly. “You ready to go?” you asked, slipping your arm through his.
“More than ready,” he said, his voice a tad tighter than usual. He shot a look over your head at Chase — a look that was pure, unadulterated Nightwing warning: Back off.
You noticed. “You okay, Dick?”
“Perfect,” he lied, squeezing your arm. “Just thinking about how much I hate small talk.”
But it wasn’t the small talk. It was the possessive, primal urge to stake a claim he knew he had no right to.
The jealousy evolved, becoming a constant, low hum in the background of his life. He’d feel it when you got a text and smiled secretively at your phone. He’d feel it when you dressed up for a “girls’ night” he secretly worried wasn’t entirely for girls.
Then, the focus of his unease sharpened — zeroing in on the most dangerous target imaginable: his little brother.
You met Jason Todd at one of Bruce Wayne’s infamously stuffy charity galas that Dick had dragged you to. “Moral support,” he’d pleaded. “Otherwise, I’ll die of boredom between old money and older scandals.”
You were clinging to a champagne flute, feeling out of place, when a presence materialised beside you. He was broad-shouldered, taller than Dick, with a white streak in his hair and a defiant set to his jaw that clashed deliciously with the tailored tuxedo he wore.
“So, you’re the famous roommate,” he said, his voice a low rumble.
You looked up, meeting a pair of startlingly blue eyes that scrutinised you with an intensity that was almost unnerving. “And you must be Jason. Dick’s told me a lot about you.”
“All lies, I’m sure,” Jason retorted, though a corner of his mouth quirked up. He snatched a glass of whiskey from a passing tray. “What’s a nice girl like you doing trapped in a den of vipers with a circus performer?”
The insult to Dick was automatic, but you caught the teasing glint in his eyes and decided to play along. “Someone has to make sure he doesn’t try to use the chandelier as a trapeze.”
Jason let out a short, genuine bark of laughter. “I like you. You’ve got spine.”
Dick chose that moment to find you, his smile faltering for a fraction of a second when he saw who you were talking to. “Jason. I see you’ve met (Your Name).”
“Just sizing up the new member of the family,” Jason said, his eyes lingering on you a moment too long before sliding back to Dick. “She’s a definite improvement over your usual crowd.”
The comment was meant to needle Dick, and it worked. Dick’s arm slipped around your shoulders — a friendly, possessive gesture that felt heavier than usual. “(Your Name) is my best friend, not part of the ‘crowd’. Come on, (Your Name), I think Alfred was looking for you.”
He led you away, and you glanced back at Jason. He was still watching you, a thoughtful, almost challenging expression on his face. You felt a confusing, electric thrill.
A few weeks later, Dick had convinced everyone to make the trip to Blüdhaven for a “family dinner” at the apartment, hoping to bridge the ever-widening gap between him and Jason.
You were cooking, and Jason — instead of staying in the living room with Dick — planted himself in the kitchen, leaning against the counter. “Need a hand?” he asked.
“I’ve got it, thanks,” you said, but he was already reaching for the knife to chop the vegetables. His fingers brushed against yours, and a jolt went through you. You both froze for a second.
“Sorry,” he muttered, voice low.
“It’s fine,” you breathed out.
From the living room, Dick watched the entire exchange. He saw the way Jason’s large frame seemed to curve protectively, almost intimately, toward you. He saw the way you didn’t move away. He saw the unspoken communication that passed between you in that single touch. The jealousy was a hot, bitter taste in his mouth.
Throughout dinner, it continued. Jason would make a dry, sarcastic comment, and you’d be the only one who laughed. You’d tell a story, and Jason’s intense gaze would be fixed on you — listening with a focus he never gave anyone else. He was different around you — softer, less angry, more present.
“Since when do you like Italian food, Jason?” Dick asked, trying to reclaim control of the conversation. “I thought you were a burger-and-fries guy.”
Jason didn’t even look at him. His eyes were still on you. “(Your Name) makes it better,” he said simply — and the way he said your name, like a private confession, made Dick’s knuckles turn white around his fork.
The fall was slow, terrifying, and utterly irresistible. It didn’t happen through grand gestures, but in stolen, quiet moments that built a world Dick wasn’t part of.
It started with your shared love for forgotten literature. You’d mentioned an obscure poet to Jason during that first gala. A week later, a first edition of that poet’s work appeared on your desk at the apartment with a simple handwritten note: “Saw this and thought you’d appreciate it. – J.T.” No flourish. No demand for thanks.
Touched, you tracked down his favourite, dog-eared pulp noir novel and left it in his usual spot in the Manor’s library with a note: “A trade. Thanks. – (Y.N).”
That was the beginning — a silent exchange of books and notes, a conversation that existed outside of time and beyond Dick’s awareness. You’d find Jason in the library, and instead of the usual tension, there was a comfortable silence. You’d read in the same room for hours, speaking only to point out a passage. He was calmer then — his presence less of a storm warning, more of a steady, grounding force.
The change in Jason Todd when he was near you was subtle at first, but to the observant eyes of the Bat-family, it became as glaring as a signal in the Gotham sky.
The grand library at Wayne Manor was often a place of quiet tension, especially when Jason was present. He’d prowl the shelves like a caged animal, his movements sharp and restless.
One afternoon, Dick, Tim, and Damian were researching a case on one side of the room. Jason was on the other, attempting to translate an obscure dialect from a recovered ledger. His frustration was a palpable force — he’d slam books shut, run his hands through his hair, and mutter curses under his breath.
“You’re going to set the manuscript on fire with that glare, Todd,” Damian remarked snidely.
Jason shot him a look that could curdle milk. “Mind your own business, brat.”
Just then, you entered, having promised Alfred you’d return a book. You spotted Jason immediately, a small smile gracing your lips. You didn’t say anything. You simply walked over, pulled out the chair beside him, and sat down. You placed a gentle hand on his tense forearm.
Dick watched — his own research forgotten.
He saw Jason’s shoulders, which had been hunched up to his ears, slowly drop. The furious line of his jaw softened. He let out a long, slow breath, his eyes closing for a second as if your touch were balm. You leaned over, pointing at a word in the ledger, and whispered something. Jason nodded, his voice a low, calm rumble in response — completely different from the snarl he’d used moments before.
“He’s... quiet,” Tim observed, pushing his glasses up his nose, disbelief colouring his voice.
Dick couldn’t form words. He had spent years trying to get Jason to lower his defences, with little success. Yet you’d done it with a single, silent touch.
The jealousy was a cold stone in his gut. He was the charismatic one, the people person. Why couldn’t he calm the tempest in his brother?
One night, Dick was away on a mission in Blüdhaven. A violent storm crashed against your apartment windows. There was a knock. It was Jason — soaked to the bone, holding a bottle of expensive whiskey. He looked... lost.
“Grayson’s not here,” you said, stating the obvious.
“I know,” he replied, his voice rough. “Can I... come in?”
You let him in. He didn’t offer excuses. He just sat on your sofa, and you sat with him. You talked — not about vigilante work or family drama, but about things that hurt in the quiet of the night: childhood fears, feelings of inadequacy, the weight of expectations. He spoke in low, gravelly tones, and you listened. You shared your own.
At some point, his pinky brushed against yours on the couch cushion. Neither of you moved it away. The space between you crackled with an unspoken understanding. When he finally left, as the storm subsided, the air in the apartment felt different. Charged.
Weeks later, after a frustrating argument with Dick about his overprotectiveness, you found yourself on the rooftop of your building, seeking air. Jason found you there, as if he’d sensed your distress.
“You don’t have to talk about it,” he said, leaning on the railing beside you, looking out at the Blüdhaven skyline.
“I’m just tired of being everyone’s little friend,” you confessed, your voice thick with unshed tears.
Jason turned to you, his gaze intent. “You’re not little. And you’re certainly not his.”
The way he said it — with such fierce conviction — broke something in you. You looked up at him, the city lights reflecting in your eyes. He cupped your face, his thumb brushing away a stray tear. His touch was calloused but impossibly gentle.
“This is a bad idea,” he whispered, his forehead resting against yours.
“The worst,” you agreed, your breath hitching.
And then he kissed you. It wasn’t gentle or hesitant. It was a claiming, a confession — a release of months of pent-up tension and unspoken words. It was fire and solace all at once. When you pulled apart, breathless, the world had irrevocably shifted.
You were in the kitchen of your shared apartment in Blüdhaven, pressed against the refrigerator, Jason's body a solid, warm wall against yours. His mouth was on your neck, his hands gripping your hips, and you were lost in the sensation, a soft moan escaping your lips.
The sound of a key turning in the front door lock made you freeze.
Jason didn't panic. With a fluidity born of years of stealth training, he slid silently into the shadowed space behind the open pantry door, his finger pressed to his lips, his eyes dark and burning into yours.
Dick walked in, looking tired. "Hey, you okay? You look flushed."
"Fine!" you squeaked, your voice an octave too high. You quickly grabbed a glass and turned to the sink. "Just... hot. I was about to get some water."
Dick's eyes narrowed slightly, scanning the room. He could feel it—a residual energy, a charge in the air. His gaze landed on the pantry door, and for a heart-stopping second, you were sure he knew. But he just shrugged. "Okay. I'm gonna take a shower."
The moment the bathroom door clicked shut, Jason emerged from the shadows, a predatory smirk on his face. He pulled you back against him, his whisper a hot promise against your ear. "That was... exciting."
It was a rare, quiet night in the cave. Batman was running diagnostics on the Batcomputer, Nightwing was stretching after patrol, Red Robin was glued to a holoscreen, and Robin was meticulously cleaning his katana. The one topic they’d all been quietly tiptoeing around was about to boil over.
It was Tim who broke the silence, not looking up from his screen. "So. Are we just not going to talk about it?"
Damian paused his polishing. "Talk about what, Drake? Your abysmal hacking speed on the last firewall?"
"About Todd and (Your name)," Tim clarified, finally looking around. "It's getting... obvious."
Dick’s stretching routine faltered. He tried to play it cool. "What about them? They're friends."
A derisive snort came from the direction of the Batcomputer. Bruce didn't turn around, but his shoulders were tenser than a moment before.
"Friends?" Barbara Gordon's voice chimed in through the comms system, having clearly been listening in. "Dick, I've seen more subtlety in a Gotham City fireworks display. The data doesn't lie."
"What data?" Dick asked, a defensive edge creeping into his voice.
"Oh, you know," Tim began, counting on his fingers. "The 87% decrease in Todd's usage of the word 'idiot' when she's in the room. The way he brings her that specific tea she likes from that shop all the way in the Coventry. And let's not forget the security feed from the library last week." Tim pulled up a clip on a secondary screen. It showed Jason, who was notoriously restless, sitting perfectly still for two hours while you slept with your head on his shoulder, a book open in his lap. His hand was gently stroking your hair.
Dick felt like he’d been punched.
"Tt," Damian scoffed, though he was watching the screen with keen interest. "It is a baffling development. Todd is... less insufferable. It is unnatural. I observed him defer to her opinion on a tactical approach yesterday. He listened. I was prepared to administer a toxin screening."
"That's because he's in love with her, you little gremlin," Stephanie Brown said, popping up from behind a console where she'd been snacking. Everyone jumped. "It's textbook! The brooding loner softened by the one person who isn't afraid of him. It's very 'Beauty and the Beast'."
"Brown, if you compare me to a children's cartoon, I will—"
"See?" Steph interrupted Damian, gesturing with a chip. "Even the demon spawn sees it. The real question is, how long has it been going on? My money's on three months."
"Five," Tim countered. "Remember that gala where they both vanished for forty-five minutes and came back looking... flushed?"
"Six weeks," Barbara chimed in, her voice smug. "I tracked a pattern of encrypted burner pings between a number registered to Jason and (Your name)'s personal device starting exactly forty-two days ago. The frequency and duration suggest... intimate conversations."
All eyes turned to Dick. He was the one who lived with you. He was supposed to know you best.
He felt their gazes, the pity in Barbara's, the curiosity in Tim's, the clinical analysis in Damian's. He had nothing. He'd been blind, willfully or otherwise.
"It doesn't matter," Dick said, his voice tight. He resumed his stretching with a forced casualness. "If they're happy, that's all that matters."
The cave fell into an awkward silence. No one believed him. They had just confirmed his worst fears as a collective, and the truth was now a living, breathing entity in the Batcave. His little brother and the woman he loved were a secret item, and the entire Bat-family was in on the gossip before he was. The humiliation was a bitter pill to swallow.
You were at the Manor, supposedly helping Jason "study" a complex set of blueprints in his old room, without Dick's knowledge. The blueprints were forgotten on the floor, and you were tangled together in his sheets, the room filled with the sound of ragged breaths and the soft creak of the bed.
Your shirt was on the floor, and Jason's mouth was tracing a searing path down your collarbone when a knock came at the door.
"Jason? Alfred made cookies," Dick's voice called out.
You both went perfectly still. Jason's body went rigid above you, his eyes wide. You could hear Dick's hand on the doorknob, testing it. (Thankfully, Jason had locked it out of habit).
"Not hungry, Dickface!" Jason called out, his voice impressively steady given the circumstances.
There was a pause. "You sure? They're chocolate chip."
"I'm in the middle of something," Jason growled, and the double meaning in his voice made you bury your face in his pillow to stifle a laugh.
"...Right. Okay. Later, then." Dick's footsteps retreated, slower than they had arrived, heavy with suspicion.
Jason collapsed onto his back beside you, running a hand over his face. "Christ. I'm getting too old for this."
You turned to him, tracing the line of his jaw. "But the thrill, right?"
He captured your hand, kissing your palm, his eyes smoldering. "Oh, the thrill is just getting started, sweetheart."
It was movie night at the apartment. You, Dick, and Jason were there—a rare, tense truce. You were on the floor leaning against the couch, Dick was in his armchair, and Jason was on the other end of the sofa.
During a quiet moment in the film, you reached for your drink on the coffee table at the same time as Jason. Your hands brushed. It was a simple, accidental touch. But Dick saw it.
He saw how, instead of pulling away, Jason's pinky finger subtly hooked around yours for just a second—a tiny, secret caress. He saw the way your shoulders relaxed, the almost imperceptible sigh of contentment you let out. It was an intimacy that spoke of habit, of a thousand other stolen touches.
Then, you made a mistake.
You were laughing at a joke in the movie, and you leaned your head back, your eyes sparkling as you looked right at Jason. "Jay, this is the part you'd love," you said, your voice warm and fond.
The nickname hung in the air. Jay. It was a name no one used—or rather, one Jason didn't permit. Not from Dick, not from Bruce. It was reserved for... for someone special.
Dick froze in his chair. Jason's posture went rigid for a split second before he forced a noncommittal grunt. "Yeah, maybe."
But the damage was done. Dick's eyes flicked between the two of you, the pieces of the puzzle slamming into place with the force of a physical blow. The shared looks, the private jokes, the way Jason's anger always cooled in your presence, the scent of your conditioner on his jacket, the protective declaration in the Cave, and now this... a private, affectionate nickname.
He didn't say a word. He just stood up, mumbled an excuse about a headache, and retreated to his room. He closed the door and leaned against it, sliding to the floor. The cheerful soundtrack of the movie from the living room felt like a mockery.
After a brutal patrol, Jason was in the Cave's med-bay, getting stitches from a grumpy Damian, who was the only one available. Jason was being a terrible patient, growling at every pull of the thread.
"Hold still, you imbecile, or I will suture your mouth shut as well," Damian snapped.
"Just hurry up, you little—"
The automatic door hissed open, and you walked in, having come to the Cave to bring Dick some files he'd left at your Blüdhaven apartment. Your eyes widened with concern when you saw Jason.
"Jay? Are you okay?"
The change was instantaneous. The fight drained out of Jason like a deflating balloon. He stopped flinching from the needle. "I'm fine, sweetheart. Just a scratch. Didn't mean for you to see this."
His voice had dropped, becoming soft, almost apologetic. Damian, needle poised in the air, stared in open-mouthed shock. He had never heard that tone from Jason Todd. Ever.
You came closer, ignoring the blood, and took Jason's hand. He laced his fingers with yours without a second of hesitation, his thumb stroking soothing circles over your knuckles. He didn't take his eyes off you, a small, reassuring smile on his face as Damian finished the last few stitches in stunned silence.
The evidence was no longer a collection of coincidences. It was a pattern, a truth Dick could feel in his bones, and it was slowly tearing him apart.
It was a small thing, insignificant to anyone else. Dick had come home from a long patrol in Blüdhaven, exhausted and bruised. You were already asleep in your room. The next morning, he went to borrow your fancy hair conditioner—the one with the scent of vanilla and sandalwood that he secretly loved.
He opened the bottle and froze.
Underneath the familiar sweet scent was something else, something distinctly masculine: the smell of Jason's specific brand of leather conditioner, gun oil, and that unique, clean-spice soap he used. The two scents were intertwined, inseparable.
Dick stood there in your bathroom, holding the bottle, his knuckles white. It wasn't just that Jason had been in your bathroom. It was that his scent had permeated your scent—the one that clung to the pillows on the couch, the one that always welcomed him home. It felt like a violation of his space, of his peace.
He put the conditioner back, the once-comforting aroma now turning his stomach.
Alfred had outdone himself, and the entire family was gathered around the massive dining table. The usual chaotic debate was in full swing, with Bruce looking stoic at the head and Dick trying to play peacemaker.
Jason was, as usual, on the defensive, his replies to Tim's logical deductions and Damian's provocations short and biting.
"Your methodology is reckless, Todd," Tim stated.
"Your face is reckless, Replacement," Jason shot back.
It was you who broke the figth. You simply reached for the salt, and in doing so, your elbow gently nudged Jason's. You didn't even look at him, continuing your conversation with Barbara about a book. But the effect was immediate.
Jason didn't retort. He fell silent, his attention turning inward. He served himself more food, and then, in a move that made Bruce pause with his fork halfway to his mouth, Jason served you more of the roasted potatoes he knew you loved.
"Here," he murmured, his voice barely audible over the din. "You haven't eaten much."
You smiled up at him. "Thanks, Jay."
Dick felt like he was watching a play in a language he didn't understand. This wasn't the brother he knew. This was a man in love—calm, protective, and attentive. The raw, jagged edges of Jason's personality were smoothed over in your presence, creating a version of him that Dick had only ever dreamed was possible.
He saw the knowing look Barbara gave him, one of pity and understanding. He saw the way Bruce's eyes flickered between you, Jason, and him, piecing the puzzle together with quiet, grim finality.
Everyone could see it. Jason Todd, the storm, had found his eye. And in your calm, he was finally, completely, at peace.
All Dick could do was watch, a ghost of a smile on his face for appearance's sake, while his heart shattered in his chest. He had lost you long before he ever had the chance to fight for you.
And in that moment, he knew. This wasn't jealousy or paranoia.
His best friend and his little brother were in a relationship. A serious one. And they were lying to him, right under his roof. The betrayal twisted in his gut like a cold, sharp knife. The final confrontation was no longer a matter of if, but when. And he dreaded it with every fiber of his being.
And one morning, he discovered the truth. It was very early, and Dick didn't even know why, but he felt a compulsion to know. He had to ask you what was happening. Why were you and Jason so close now? Why was he so calm when you were by his side?
He moved on silent feet, his hand trembling as he pushed your door open without a sound.
The scene was a perfect, devastating tableau. You were on your bed, wearing nothing but Jason's shirt, the fabric hanging loosely on you. Jason was getting dressed, buttoning his pants. The intimacy of it was a physical blow.
You gasped. Jason spun around, instantly placing himself between you and the door, his expression shifting from vulnerable to a feral protectiveness.
"All this time," Dick said, his voice dangerously low. "In my home."
"Dick, please—" you started, your voice shaking.
"Don't," he snapped, his gaze, sharp and cold, cutting to you. The warmth he usually reserved for you was gone, replaced by a glacial anger. "All those lies, right to my face. You must have had a good laugh, huh? The stupid, trusting roommate."
Jason took a step forward, his own anger igniting. "Watch your mouth, Grayson. You don't talk to her like that."
"Or what, Jason?" Dick shot back, stepping fully into the room and squaring up to his brother. "You'll what? This is my home. She is my friend. Or was. And you… you just couldn't stand to see me happy, could you? You had to take the one good thing I had that wasn't part of this damn costume."
"Is that what you think this is?" Jason growled, getting in Dick's face. "You think this is some pissing contest to get back at you? You're even more self-centered than I thought."
"I'm self-centered? You're the one sneaking into my apartment like a thief in the night!"
"Stop it! Both of you!" you cried, stepping between them, tears in your eyes. You looked at Dick, pleading. "We didn't tell you because we didn't want to hurt you! Because you're so… you. You're soo protector. We were trying to find the right way—"
"The right way?" Dick let out a bitter, harsh laugh, his eyes boring into you with a scorn that made you flinch. "The right way was months ago, (Your name). Before you started fucking my brother behind my back. Don't you dare paint this as some noble act for my benefit. You're a bitch."
That was it for Jason. He shoved Dick hard, sending him stumbling back a step. "You call her that word again, I'll break your jaw. This is on me. I'm the one who didn't give a damn about your fragile feelings. I'm the one who pursued her. She wanted to tell you weeks ago, but I told her not to. Because I knew you'd react exactly like this—throwing a self-righteous tantrum and blaming everyone but yourself."
The truth of it hung in the air, stark and ugly. Dick’s face contorted, the insult finding its mark. He looked from Jason's furious, protective stance to your heartbroken expression.
"You don't get it," Dick said, his voice dropping to a venomous whisper directed at you. "You chose him. The brooding, violent, emotionally stunted mess. After everything we had… you chose that. What does that say about you?"
It was the lowest blow, designed to wound, and it worked. You recoiled as if slapped.
Jason saw it. He didn't shove Dick this time. He just got right in his face, his voice dropping to a deadly, quiet calm.
"Get out."
"This is my apartment," Dick snarled.
"Get. Out." Jason repeated, each word a hammer strike. "Before I throw you through that wall. You don't get to stand there and spew your venom at her because your pride's hurt. You lost. Be a man about it and get the hell out."
The two brothers stood chest-to-chest, a tempest of shared history and fresh betrayal crackling between them. And then Dick finally looked at you, truly looked at you, and saw the tears streaming down your face, the hurt he had just inflicted. The anger drained from him, leaving a hollow, sickening shame.
He gave one last, long look at Jason—a look of pure, undiluted loss—then turned on his heel and walked out, slamming the front door of the apartment so hard the pictures on the wall rattled.
The ensuing silence was deafening. Jason immediately turned to you, his hands cupping your face, his thumbs wiping away your tears. "Hey, look at me. He's wrong. He's hurt and he's lashing out, and he isn't thinking straight."
But the damage was done. The secret was out, replaced by a chasm of cruel words that shattered a friendship and left you standing in the wreckage, Jason's arms the only thing holding you up.
tilted back against his arm. Jason was smiling, a real, unguarded smile that didn't touch his eyes with cynicism, but with warmth. He looked… happy. At peace.
And Dick finally saw it. Not through the lens of his own wounded heart, but with clear, painful clarity. This wasn't a fling or a secret kept to spite him. This was real. This was good. For both of them.
The last of the resistance inside him crumbled. The confrontation he had dreaded would never come, because there was nothing left to confront. Only a truth to accept. He let out a slow, quiet breath, the final ghost of his hope for something else dissolving into the darkened room. He turned his gaze back to the movie, and for the first time, he simply watched.
BONUS:
It was Bruce’s doing, of course. A series of strategically assigned joint patrols and a few blunt, unarguable conversations had forced a tense, fragile truce between Dick and Jason. The sharpest barbs had been sheathed, the open hostility banked to a simmering, wary acceptance. They weren't close—not like before the Robin suit and the Pit and all the pain that followed—but the air in the Cave no longer crackled with imminent violence when they were in the same room.
Weeks later, a casual movie night was proposed. It felt like a test.
Everyone was scattered around the Cave’s large media room. Bruce was in his usual chair, a silent monument. Tim and Damian were arguing quietly over the film selection. You were nestled into one corner of the largest sofa, and after a moment’s hesitation, Jason settled beside you, his arm resting along the back of the couch, his fingers just brushing your shoulder.
Dick chose a seat off to the side, observing. He watched the easy way you leaned into Jason’s touch, the way Jason’s thumb absently stroked your sleeve. The ghost of that old, sharp pain twinged in his chest, but it was duller now, tempered by exhaustion and Bruce’s stern advice to let it go.
Halfway through the film, a bowl of popcorn was passed around. It was Damian, of all people, who ended up next to Dick for a moment, his focus seemingly on the screen.
“Don’t be a fool, Grayson,” the boy said, his voice low enough that only Dick could hear. He didn’t turn his head.
Dick glanced at him, surprised. “About what?”
Damian gave a quiet, dismissive “Tt.” “About them.” He gestured subtly with his chin towards you and Jason. “You’ve been watching them all night with that pathetic, mournful look. It’s beneath you.”
Dick felt a defensive retort rise to his lips, but Damian continued, his tone not unkind, but matter-of-fact. “Todd is… less. Less angry. Less self-destructive. He is focused. Grounded.” He finally turned his head, his young-old eyes meeting Dick’s. “She did that. No one else could. Not even Father. If you truly care for either of them, you will stop pining and see it for the asset it is.”
With that, Damian stood and moved back to his previous spot, leaving Dick stunned into silence.
An asset. Not a betrayal, not a loss, but a strategic advantage. A stabilization of a volatile element. It was such a purely Batman perspective, yet it cut through the last of Dick’s personal hurt like a scalpel.
He looked back at the couch. Jason had said something quiet, and you were laughing, your head tilted back against his arm. Jason was smiling, a real, unguarded smile that didn't touch his eyes with cynicism, but with warmth. He looked… happy. At peace.
And Dick finally saw it. Not through the lens of his own wounded heart, but with clear, painful clarity. This wasn't a fling or a secret kept to spite him. This was real. This was good. For both of them.
The last of the resistance inside him crumbled. The confrontation he had dreaded would never come, because there was nothing left to confront. Only a truth to accept. He let out a slow, quiet breath, the final ghost of his hope for something else dissolving into the darkened room. He turned his gaze back to the movie, and for the first time, he simply watched.
TAGLIST: DC: @natllo
A/N: Hey guys, I know I haven’t been around much, but I brought you this story to make up for it. I’m sorry if it’s a bit long, but I really hope you like it.
— stars & space dividers (moon edition)
[Free] Masterlist Headers & Dividers!
Please like or reblog if you use 💕 [sun edition]