No boots on the cave floor at 3 a.m.
Just the slow ticking of a clock and the soft creak of an old house settling around Bruce Wayne.
He sits by the window in the same chair every day.
He doesn’t remember why he likes that chair.
But he always asks for it.
Dick Grayson visits first every morning.
He learned not to wear the Nightwing blue anymore. It makes Bruce stare too hard, like he’s trying to solve a puzzle he can’t finish.
Dick kneels beside the chair.
“Yeah. Something like that.”
Bruce’s hands shake too much to hold the spoon now. Dick feeds him slowly, careful and patient.
Sometimes Bruce misses and the food spills.
Dick wipes his chin without saying anything.
Like Bruce used to do for him when he was eight.
Jason Todd only comes at night.
He stands in Bruce’s doorway like someone who doesn’t belong in the house.
Bruce is smaller in the bed now.
Jason remembers a man who could break criminals with a look.
Now Jason just pulls the blanket up to Bruce’s shoulders.
“…Still mad at you,” he mutters.
Jason stays until sunrise anyway.
Tim Drake manages the medications.
He treats it like a mission briefing.
Because if he thinks about it like strategy, he doesn’t have to think about the fact that the world’s greatest detective now forgets what pills are for.
One afternoon Bruce squints at him.
He hasn’t heard that word in years.
“Yeah,” Tim whispers. “It’s me.”
Tim leaves the room immediately.
No one mentions the red in his eyes.
Damian Wayne reads to him.
Bruce once said knowledge was a weapon.
So Damian reads anything.
Even when Bruce doesn’t understand.
One evening Bruce studies him carefully.
“I inherited that from you.”
Bruce forgets the conversation five minutes later.
Damian keeps reading anyway.
Barbara Gordon handles the house.
Schedules for everyone rotating through the Manor.
She used to coordinate entire citywide operations from a wheelchair and a keyboard.
Now she organizes who sits with Bruce during lunch.
One afternoon Bruce looks at her curiously.
“I used to work with you.”
Barbara turns away quickly before anyone sees her crying.
Stephanie Brown refuses to let the house become quiet.
“Okay Bruce, so Tim once tried to analyze cereal brands like it was a crime scene.”
Not because he remembers.
Just because Stephanie’s laughter is contagious.
When Bruce falls asleep in the chair, she tucks the blanket around him.
“…You scared the hell out of all of us, you know,” she whispers softly.
Cassandra Cain doesn’t talk much.
She never needed words with him.
She sits beside Bruce and holds his hand.
Her thumbs trace the old scars across his knuckles.
Bruce studies her face one afternoon.
Cass’s eyes shine slightly.
That was always the only praise she ever wanted.
Duke Thomas comes during the afternoons.
He opens the curtains wide.
Lets sunlight fill the room.
Bruce used to own the night.
“Thought you might want some sun today, Mr. Wayne.”
“That’s nice of you… son.”
Duke freezes for a moment.
The worst day comes in winter.
Snow falling outside the Manor.
Bruce wakes up confused and frightened.
Bruce grabs Dick’s sleeve with shaking hands.
“Please… someone call him.”
Stephanie covers her mouth.
Barbara grips the back of a chair.
Cass squeezes Bruce’s hand.
Dick kneels in front of him.
Bruce looks at him with desperate hope.
“Can you tell him Gotham needs him?”
Ten minutes later he asks again.
Weeks later Bruce sits by the window.
Dick helps him drink tea.
Bruce studies his face very carefully.
Like he’s solving a puzzle.
Then he looks back out the window.
But all eight of them stay in the room.
Because even if Batman fades…
None of them will ever forget the man who made them a family