Every superhero seemed to believe that their abilities were given or gifted to them for a reason. They spouted on and on about how they owed civilians peace and harmony and everything else, none of which Tandy necessarily agreed with. If superheroes were so dedicated to keeping the public protected, she and Ty never would have been victims of Maggia’s experiments. Superheroes weren’t foolproof, they owed the public relatively little, but they had saved the day a couple dozen times, she had to admit, staring with the Chiatuari, and ending with the Skrulls, a battle she was a part of, thank you very much. Just because Tandy didn’t feel like she owed the public anything didn’t mean that she didn’t want to protect people — the homeless and overlooked specifically — but the title of ‘superhero’ had never been something she necessarily wanted. When she looked at old Cap videos, she wasn’t inspired so much as she was disappointed. Steve Rogers may have saved the day, but he definitely didn’t seem to be doing that anymore. Ultimately, her superpowers felt a lot less like an honour and more like something forced down her throat, but Ty wanted to save the day so here Tandy was, battling demons.
“I never doubted us for a second,” Tandy said honestly. Though her heart definitely wasn’t in the scene, and most likely never would be, she was a little too selfish, Cloak and Dagger were not a team that anything, even demons, should bother messing with. That was a fact that she was seriously proud of, and something that they had both worked hard to achieve, though they could definitely use further practice. “That makes sense,” she agreed quietly. “The Dark Force can’t really… uh, sustain itself,” she said as tactfully as possible. “But it’s yours and it’s way more bad ass than any other hell dimension.” Tandy was a little bit biased in that regard.
Like when Tandy had originally seen the demons, they continued to nauseate her. She would take human enemies over the scaly assholes any day, but unfortunately, she didn’t get to choose her opponents. If the slimy, oversized snakes wanted to get their asses kicked, Tandy was disgusted, but happy, to oblige. “Please,” she agreed, grinning at Ty. If he was excited to battle these things, Tandy figured she could show a little more enthusiasm, too. As she lodged another dagger into a demons shoulder, she noticed Ty swaying, and then she heard the panicked note in his voice. Before finishing her opponent off, Tandy was rushing to Ty’s side, completely disregarding the battle at hand. “It’s okay, you’re okay,” she said quickly. Like she normally did, Tandy touched Ty with her palm, summoning all the light she could spare without killing herself, but it didn’t seem to be working quickly enough. After a moments contemplation, she kissed him gently, trying to summon her light that way. She could feel it leaving her body quicker, although Tandy wasn’t sure why, but it was what Ty needed.
For most of his life, Ty had been let down by heroes. It wasn’t just limited to superheroes, though they, too, had been disappointing. Police officers were always hailed as heroes, built up by the media through fictional shows and truth-based news stories alike, yet when Ty had needed them most, the Boston police force hadn’t just let him down. They’d made things worse, shot his best friend for no real reason and left him too afraid for his life to stay in the only city he’d ever known. When he came to New York, he’d foolishly hoped that the world of superheroes would be better, easier somehow. Maybe the cops had proven to be irredeemable and worthless, but surely the heroes he’d seen saving lives on the nightly news would be different. He’d been wrong, of course. When he’d needed them, when he and Tandy had been trapped and suffering beyond belief, no one had come to save them. To make matters worse, most of the interactions he had with heroes now consisted of them condemning him for doing what he needed to do in order to survive. Heroes had let Ty down all his life, and he was pretty much prepared for them to continue doing so.
Then, of course, came Tandy.
She was every bit the hero that all those other people had claimed to be, she helped people indiscriminately and without question. Best of all, she had never let Ty down in all the time he’d known her. She was the first person he knew never would. He offered her a smile now. “No reason to doubt,” he agreed. They really did make a great team, there was no denying that. With their powers combined, Cloak and Dagger had complete control over both light and darkness. “No,” he shrugged. “It can’t sustain much of anything.” That was why Ty had to continue feeding on life forces, after all; he couldn’t sustain much of anything, either. He smiled at her as she went on, nodding his head. His relationship with the Dark Force was a complicated one, but there was never any real use in stressing endlessly over it. There wasn’t anything about it he could ever hope to change, and he’d accepted that a long time ago.
Tandy’s show of enthusiasm was clearly more for his sake then her own, but Ty appreciated it all the same. She clearly didn’t care for the demons, and her willingness to face them regardless made him feel warm inside. The warmth, of course, faded as he absorbed more of the demons, replaced by a growing cold that made him feel nauseous. As he always did when he was afraid, he looked for Tandy and, as he always did when he was afraid, he found her. She was right there, just like always. He felt the light coming in, but it wasn’t enough, wasn’t fast enough. Sucking in a breath, Ty wondered if he might die here. It was a better death than he might have asked for, he supposed, with her at his side. He was so distracted by the panicked thoughts that he didn’t notice her leaning in until her lips were pressed against his. The world seemed to stop, seemed to hang suspended in the moment. He felt the light rushing into him, felt his body relax, felt himself kiss her back just as he’d always wanted to. In spite of everything going on around him, it felt right.