“--and if you change the world, then you could be happy.”
independent, selective LOIS LANE of dc comics. dceu-based. est 2016 / rebooted 2021. low activity. * promo credit glassesandcape
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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@reportcrlady
“--and if you change the world, then you could be happy.”
independent, selective LOIS LANE of dc comics. dceu-based. est 2016 / rebooted 2021. low activity. * promo credit glassesandcape
rest your head on my chest when the world feels heavy on you
glassesandcape:
Maybe, under different circumstances, Clark would tease her, something about how he never expected Lois Lane to call any morning beautiful. But right now, he just smiled. “Yeah. They are.” She started to get dressed, and he ran a hand through his hair, finger-combing into some semblance of place with the least effort possible, just to have something to do while he waited for her to get ready.
She wrapped an arm around his waist and his hugged her shoulders. “Good morning,” Clark said, before his arm slipped down to take her hand. Then they made their way down the stairs – still slightly creaky, familiar – and past the living room, where Bruce was still sleeping, crunched onto the couch. Clark carefully closed the screen door and the front door behind them, locking them and slipping the keys into his jacket pocket. (His clothes were that slightly uncomfortable sort of new, having only been bought a few days ago, but it was what it was.) It was that morning coolness still, orange lining the horizon but getting no further, the deep blue of the sky the sign that night was loosening.
It was… still a little unsteady, was the best way he could think to describe it. He was back, yes. Everything he remembered, everything he could think of, was back, and he was fine. But there were still moments where he would notice something and remember a small detail he hadn’t before, like going down stairs and hitting the next step a second earlier than expected. Clark had the feeling it would fade in time, that everything would even out eventually, so to speak, but sometimes it still struck him, like particularly strong deja vu.
“Okay,” Clark said as he turned back to her, heading down the porch steps, hands in his pockets. “So we’ve got two options. Ma said you could borrow the truck. Or we can walk into town. It’s not too far.” He reached for her hand again. The cornfield rustled in the breeze, still a little more shadow than green yet.
His arms come around her, and Lois takes the opportunity to bask in the warmth of his flannel shirt: new and yet so fundamentally Clark that she has to smile at the familiarity. “Morning,” she says, stepping back and accepting his hand as they continue to the first floor.
Each gentle creak of the stairs is magnified by the quiet morning. Luckily, Bruce is still sound asleep, which Lois sees as they pass through the living room. Only then does it strike her how worn out he looks. It’s at least as worn down by the last several months as she feels, and there’s some comfort to that.
Soon enough, they’re soundly outside, and Lois releases a breath she had been unknowingly holding in. Then, as her hand slips from Clark’s hold, she walks to the edge of the porch and brings both hands atop the railing. This is a much better view of the farm than of that through the curtains upstairs, but it’s nice to know that her original conjecture still stands. The sound of the fields rustling in the wind, the orange peaking above the horizon, the calmness―it’s beautiful.
“Two options,” she prompts. The same smile plays on her lips, but falters just slightly as he continues. Neither option is exactly in her comfort zone, but something about the idea of walking into town and back before construction restarts, all with five sets of breakfast in hand, has her sighing. So, “I don’t think I’ve ever driven a truck before.” But if anything positive could be said about fifteen-year-old Lois getting driving lessons from General Lane, it’s that no experience on the road could be any more stressful. “Keys?” Following him down the last few steps, Lois reaches a hand out to him.
LOIS | at the Kent farm, post ZSJL | @reportcrlady
It was a bit of an ordeal, the way moving always was. All the furniture was still slightly askew, boxes piled on the porch and half-open inside the kitchen. Sawdust was still littered in the grass from where John had been cutting new planks, and there would be more joining it later in the day. Most of the cooking implements were nowhere to be found and the fridge was still empty, so it’d be their second day of eating out. Or, takeout, as the case may be.
When Clark opened his eyes, the sky was still that dark blue stretched over the horizons, gold light holding its breath before creeping over the edge of the treeline, a distant smudge way off. He looked over his shoulder and smiled. Then he pulled himself out from under the covers, feet on the old, flat carpet before he started getting dressed. He heard a shift behind him, sheets rustling.
“Hey, Lo,” he said, his voice pitched low and quiet. “It’s our turn to get breakfast for everyone, so probably time to head into town.” He settled his jacket over his shoulders, before turning back to look at her, his gaze fond. The creeping, barely-there light through the drawn curtains gave the room a dim edge to the shadows. “I’ll come with you, if you still want.”
He would just go into town and pick them up himself, but there was still a headstone for him in Smallville Cemetery, and it made things complicated. John hadn’t seemed too surprised to see him, but then again, he didn’t seem to be surprised by anything. A few farms away, Clark could hear chickens starting to wake up. His Ma was down the hall and Bruce had stubbornly put himself on the couch downstairs, and John would be back later in the morning, probably. It’d be easier to juggle five breakfasts and coffees between the two of them.
First it’s the empty space beside her, and then it’s the loss of warmth that causes Lois to stir. Every morning after losing Clark, there had been a second, right after waking up, in which the memory of his death was but an unconscious thought, blissfully unremembered under the early morning haze. The feeling only ever lasted a second, but that quickly became the highlight of her day.
Of course, then she would reach out to the empty space beside her and feel how cold the bed was. Her eyes would open. Clark’s untouched half of the bedroom would come into focus, and then it would hit her all over again. So this time, once he stands and moves out of sight, Lois finds herself reaching to the other side of the bed. Empty. Her eyes shoot open to confirm, but before her mind gets ahead of her, she hears him calling out from the other side of the room.
“Clark.” An unexpected vein of relief is reflected in her voice as she props herself up against the headboard. “Right.” Smallville. The farm. Bruce sleeping downstairs. It’s a much better reality than the one to which she had become accustomed.
A deep breath filters in through her nose and is released all at once in a sigh. The early rays of the sunrise peak through the corners of the curtains, and Lois turns her head to take it all in. How different it is to be awoken by the sun rather than by a never-ending stream of impatient traffic far below her apartment window. For all of her teasing through the years, maybe she understands it now. “Mornings here are beautiful.”
“Anyway, yes. Just give me a minute.” Then, coming to her feet, she walks over to one of the many boxes in the corner to begin getting ready, which only takes her a few minutes. (Another Smallville perk) After, she makes her way back to him, a fond smile playing on her lips as she wraps an arm around his waist. “Ready.”
character moodboard → lois lane