How are you doing? The official finishing time for stories should be the 12th, so please check up with me by then and tell me how you’re doing!
Also because of some unfortunate events (thanks for letting me know! and I hope life will get better for you guys soon!) we’re going to need two back up authors.Anyone almost finished/finished with their story who might help?
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: DC's Legends of Tomorrow (TV)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Ray Palmer/Leonard Snart
Characters: Leonard Snart, Ray Palmer, Mick Rory, Sara Lance
Additional Tags: Eating Disorders
Summary:
Leonard is back from being dead and struggles with the unfamiliarity of both the Waverider and himself.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: DC's Legends of Tomorrow (TV)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Ray Palmer/Leonard Snart
Characters: Ray Palmer, Leonard Snart, Mick Rory, Nate Heywood
Additional Tags: Coldatom Secret Santa, Alternate Universe - High School, i guess?, this doesnt really take place at school, but they are teenagers, ray's pet snake is sick, leonard is here to help, also ray and nate play dnd with cisco barry and felicity on friday nights
Summary:
So it wasn’t exactly the brightest of his ideas, dumping out all of his school books from his backpack on to the floor and replacing them with a 3 ft long snake, but it seemed like the only logical solution at the time.
for @shiveringray !!! i love u ruth!!! hope u like it!!!
title: makes us feel alive
show: Legends Of Tomorrow
ship: Ray/Len
summary: Nobody quite knew how it happened. How Leonard Snart was standing in front of them. Nobody quite cared, either.It had happened, and he was alive.That was all that mattered to the team.
for @dubiousculturalartifact‘s prompt: Leonard Snart is alive, again. Raymond is delighted. Raymond is angry. Raymond wants to punch him. Or maybe kiss him. It's complicated.
fill for: ColdAtom Secret Santa
Joining the Starfleet is all Ray expected and all he didn’t. All in all, as he stands on the bridge it feels like the right decision. He smiles as he listens to the Captain explain the mission – it’s nothing bit, not yet, the ship is full of new people, but it’s a real two years long adventure and Ray’s heart is thudding in his chest as he watches the ship pull away from the dock, before speeding off into the further corner of the galaxy. His eyes don’t stray to the Earth, he wouldn’t be able to see the person he wants to anyway.
The two years old mission turns into three, three turns into five and five into six. Not that Ray minds too much. Being on the ship and discovering new galaxies, finding new worlds and being able to make contact with new races is as exciting as he always imagined. He forgets about his old life, about his broken heart.
At least until the message comes. Ray still remembers it as if it was yesterday.
The dwarf star they discovered was responding better than any of them thought and Ray couldn’t keep the big smile from his face when Captain Hunter stepped inside the lab.
“You would not believe what we can do with this thing, Captain. Forget the alloys we’re using for the ships. If we get enough of this, we can change the space travel for the better. Maybe we can get enough of it, we can get some to the Vulcans, maybe then they would feel better about the cooperation with the Academy and Starfleet itself.” He knows he’s rambling, but there’s excitement bubbling under his skin, making him feel giddy.
Rip’s not smiling though, not even the smile stuck somewhere in between confused and amused. He’s frowning instead. Ray swallows and runs his mind over the things he was supposed to do before coming to play around with the star. He’s sure he finished all the Starfleet projects on time and even send the needed paperwork for the dwarf star study.
There’s only one time when Rip looked even a bit similar to this and Ray suddenly fights the need to throw himself over the dwarf star to shield it from Rip’s thoughts.
“No.” He says, standing between Rip and the star, hiding it behind his frame. “We’re not giving this to Enterprise as well! They already took all the interesting stuff from that big mission, you can’t take this from me as well!”
‘That big mission’ means the first mission Ray was on, right after he joined as seventeen years old boy. He grew up since then, as both, human being and an officer and now he has proper means to change the opinion of the higher ups, not just getting Nate and pouting at Rip together, until he either gave up, or told them off.
“Ray…” Rip whispers, the sound so small, quiet and sad that fear suddenly grips at Ray’s heart and he forgets all about the dwarf star. He has no idea what could’ve happened, but the last time Rip sounded like that, it was to tell Sara about her sister. Ray’s terrified. “It’s not about the dwarf star. We got a call.”
A call is never anything good. Ray swallows and sits down when Rip motions for him to.
“It’s Miss Loring.”
“Anna?” Ray’s eyes widen. Anna, the nicest woman, no, nicest person he ever met. Anna, his crush in the academy that ended up in few wonderful months. Anna who made him think about giving up his Starfeelt dream, who told him not to be foolish. Anna, who broke up with him, just so Ray wouldn’t have a reason to stay back. Sweet, warm Anna, that was still around, writing to Ray as often as she could.
“What’s with Anna?” Ray asks, his voice shaky and he prays to all the gods, human or any other’s race, that he’s wrong. That the sad look on Rip’s face doesn’t mean anything. That what he fears isn’t true.
“The science station Miss Loring was visiting was attack by a Klingon ship.” Ray can feel his heart stopping in his chest and he shakes his head. No. No, whatever Rip’s going to tell him, Ray doesn’t want to hear it, doesn’t want to – “She didn’t make it.”
Ray’s not sure if it’s the ship falling apart or if it’s him. His eyes are burning and the vision of Rip starts swimming. He shakes his head, trying to wake up from the dream, before hiding his face in his hands.
“That’s not all.” Rip says quietly, walking over and touching Ray’s shoulder. “She has a son. He’s five years old. His name is Leo and in her last will, she asks you to take care of him.”
The hands drop down in an instant and Ray stares up at Rip.
Five years old. Anna asking him to take care of the kid.
… Ray has a son. Ray has a son, who just lost his mother.
“I already asked for your leave. The Waverider is on course to Earth.” Rip adds and Ray nods, thankful. As he is right now, he wouldn’t follow the right procedures, he is sure.
The kid is small for his age, looks even smaller huddled in the big chair in the waiting room and Ray can feel his heart break. He’s not even sure if he says anything as he kneels in front of the boy, pulling him in his arms, hugging him closely and asking him if he wants to come with Ray, promising to take care of him, and promising him a family.
He’s crying, he knows, and Leo is crying as well, his little hands clutching at Ray’s Starfleet uniform. The two of them ignore everyone in their shared grief, trying to find comfort in the other person that loved Anna just as much as they did.
Living with Leo… is different. There’s a lot Ray’s not used to, and first months are painful. Not because Leo’s not the most amazing kid in the world – he is. He has his mother’s face, the good heart and Ray’s sure his smile is hers too. Only Ray never sees him smile and he worries. Because not only he doesn’t smile and the most Ray has heard him say so far were two short sentences in a row.
At first, he’s sure it’s the grief. He knows he feels like breaking up all the time, trying to keep it together only for Leo’s sake. He quits his job on the Waverider, even though it breaks his heart, and plans to research from home, when he’ll have more time. When they’ll hearts will be more healed. Only half a year in nothing changes, Leo is still his usual quiet self, playing in his room by his own.
“I worry.” Ray says while he’s on the call and bites his lip. “Kids in his age aren’t supposed to be like that.”
“Weren’t you like that as well?” Felicity asks, always the voice of reason, even when Ray’s panicking. “Also he went through a trauma. You can’t expect everything to be alright. It’s his mother, you know.”
Ray knows. He knows very well, because there are the days where Leo sits by the window, staring outside as if waiting for something. When Ray asks Leo’s nanny (one that is still around sometimes because the doctors said it would be better for the kid to have some kind of the old routine still) she tells him, it’s those days Leo used to wait for his mother and they went out together.
“Ray, you’re doing a great job with him.” Felicity says, dragging his attention back to present. “He’s lucky to have you. Some people wouldn’t bother. They’d put him to the orphanage so they could return to their own lives. You try so hard with him. He sees that.”
“You think so?” There’s hope in Ray’s voice as he looks at Felicity who smiles.
“Of course he does Ray. Just give him time. Kids are better than adults they can jump back from anything as long as they have enough time. There’s not grief in the world that wouldn’t hurt less with that.” Felicity is right of course. She always is, and Ray doesn’t feel good, but he feels a bit better. He nods and opens his mouth. But Felicity’s eyes aren’t focused on him anymore, instead they fly over the camera and Ray had enough of video calls like that himself to know what it means.
“It’s fine. Go make sure that Oliver’s still in one piece and that he didn’t mess up the possibility of interdimensional treaty or something.” He grins, waving his hand. Felicity hesitates, but then she sighs and nods.
“I’ll talk to you soon, Ray, alright? Take care. I’m still looking to meeting Leo in person. Let me know what kind of toys he likes so I can bribe him. Not that I’m planning to, but you know-“ Felicity rolls her eyes. “Yes! I’m coming!” She yells to the what Ray guesses is hallway and turns to him one more time. “I’ll call you. And you’re required of making fun of Oliver with me about whatever thing just happened.” She adds, spares Ray a smile, before the screen blinks black once again.
Ray sighs, before standing up and walking to the kitchen, just to be met with the sigh of Leo standing near the window, his hand pressed against the cold glass and tears rolling down his cheeks. Ray knows he shouldn’t. He knows what the doctors said about habits, but Leo’s expression is so heartbreaking, that Ray picks up the keys from the stand. He walks over, kneeling in front of the boy and touching his hand, pulling him so he would face Ray.
Ray can feel his own eyes growing wet when Leo sniffles, but he blinks the tears back as he lifts his hand, brushing the tear stains from Leo’s cheeks with his thumb.
“Do you want to go out shopping with me?” he asks, his hand warm against Leo’s neck and waits. It’s not his decision. It’s Leo’s and whatever the boy wants, he’ll get. If he wants to be alone here, Ray’s going to accept that. But if they can make their own habits, ones that wouldn’t be so different from the ones he had with his mom, maybe that wouldn’t be so bad.
The kid is staring at him, the eyes big and wide and still so watery, but then he nods, small, hesitant and barely there. But it still makes Ray smile big enough for both of them and Ray nods himself. His hand slips from Leo’s neck to his hand and he leads him to the door.
“You can get dressed yourself?” He asks and when Leo nods he smiles. “You’re wonderful boy. So smart. I’m so proud.” Ray’s sure that’s not enough. Ray is not Leo’s mother, he can’t ever be enough, but he’s going to try with all he has at least.
The shopping is better than Ray expects. Leo still doesn’t talk too much, but there’s a moment when he takes and squeezes Ray’s hand on his own accord. When they are coming home there’s the tiniest of smiles on his face as well. Ray takes it as success.
Ray spends all of his time with Leo, and he’s sure the kid’s getting better. At least when it comes to Ray. When it comes to talking to, or being around other people, he’s not doing that much progress. He’s still sitting as far from everyone as he can without getting too much attention. He plays by himself even outside on the playground and Ray’s worried. Especially because Leo’s supposed to be starting the school this year. Felicity tells him to calm down when she meets Ray and Leo with Oliver, that that’s exactly what Leo needs and that he’ll fit right in.
Ray is not so sure, especially when he watches Leo stuck between embarrassed and uncomfortable as Oliver hands him the biggest stuffed bear Ray has ever seen (not needing to bribe Leo, yeah sure). That doesn’t help too much though, and when the big day finally comes, Ray’s trembling and feeling nauseous and he’s sure he’s more nervous than Leo himself is. But he wants Leo to have a good time, to think back at school fondly, not feel like he doesn’t make a difference.
“Are you sure you’re going to be fine?” Ray asks as he’s kneeling in front of Leo. Leo is looking around, his eyes round and scared like Ray didn’t see them in a while and he takes a step closer to Ray, but he still nods like the brave little boy he is. Ray wants to feel proud, but all he can think about is that maybe he could have Leo one more year home for himself. Maybe he could just say that he came to school late. Or maybe Felicity could hack the files or something. Surely, Ray could find a way to make that work, to push this horrible occasion further down the line. To a date that maybe Leo would be okay. Or at least better.
He half manages to convince himself to kidnap Leo and drag him home, tell the AI to block all windows and pretend they are not home, when he gets a text from Felicity.
‘You’re both strong. Trust yourselves a little.’
Ray sighs and stands up, catching Leo’s hand.
“How about I’ll go with you to your classroom? I want to talk to your teacher anyway.” He says with a smile. Maybe if he talks to the teacher about Leo’s problems, she can keep an eye on him and maybe even get him to interact with other kids. Slowly. Carefully. Not forcing him at all.
There are more parents in the classroom, all of them saying goodbye to their kids and getting ready to watch the first lesson from the outside of the class. It’s a good move from the school – parents will be able to be part of the ‘first’ day of school for the little ones, they can see how everything works and it’s calmer for both groups, the adults and children.
There’s a sweet elderly woman talking to a guy with a daughter and Ray squeezes Leo’s shoulder, before leading him over there.
“Excuse me.” He says smiling bright, hoping for making a great first impression. It the teacher likes him, it can help Leo as well, after all.
The guy glances at him, before he nods to the woman.
“Yes, Mrs. Lance, it’s no problem that Laurel didn’t come with her kid today.” He huffs, and Ray blinks. “Now if you’ll excuse me, there’s whole room of people that have actually something worthwhile to say.”
Ray’s mouth falls open when the woman stomps off, obviously offended and the guy turns to him.
“At least I hope so.” The guy grumbles and Ray stares. There’s little less he can do, because what is this supposed to mean?! The guy lifts an eyebrow, waiting and Ray stammers over his own words.
“I- I’m looking for the teacher.”
“Yes, that’s obvious, Mr. Palmer.” The man rolls his eyes, before he pats the girl’s cheek lightly. “Go sit down Annalise.” The girl doesn’t move though, instead she’s staring at Leo like he’s the most interesting little animal she’s ever seen. Leo, on the other hand is moving from one foot to the other, looking at the ground, trying his best to pretend he doesn’t see Annalise’s looks. He’s fooling no one, as the girl grabs Leo’s hand suddenly.
“Come.” She doesn’t ask, she commands, and then she’s pulling Leo over to the seats before Ray can as much as move. He opens his mouth and turns, but hand on his arms prevents him from doing anything else.
“Leave them. What did you want to talk about?”
Ray turns back to look at the man, the teacher and finds himself at loss of words. Ray is sure Leo’s teacher is supposed to be a woman. He checked the board several times and there was a woman’s name. Along with the whole ‘Mrs.’ Part. He looks the man up and down. Maybe he shouldn’t judge. Just because someone looks like a man, doesn’t mean they are a man and –
“Whatever you’re thinking about stop it.” The guy says before he sighs. “My name is Leonard Snart. I’ll be your son’s teacher for this year in case it’s not clear enough.”
“Wasn’t Mrs. Stein supposed to teach him?” Ray asks, because that’s what the school page said.
“You didn’t check the date on top of the page, did you? That wasn’t update for years now. Mrs. Stein is enjoying her time at home by now.”
Oh. Now that might explain it.
“Did you want to talk about Leo?” Snart asks and Ray blinks again. That’s right. Snart knows Leo’s name and he knew Ray’s own as well. Suddenly Ray feels horribly unprepared.
“Yes. Uh…” Ray swallows and nods. “I’m just… I wasn’t sure if it would be good idea for him to start the school already, because his mother-“ the words get stuck in Ray’s throat and he frowns. “Anna, she…” The words won’t go out. No matter what Ray does, they feel like a torn in his throat, something painful, but still something that he can’t get rid of. His eyes burn a little and he shakes his head, opening his mouth again.
A hand on his arm stops him. When Ray opens his eyes, Snart’s looking at him, the warm hand contrast to his indifferent expression.
“I’m aware of his grief. In this case, school is the best choice you could make for him. He needs to meet new people. He needs to see his life didn’t stop because of one event, even if it feels like that sometimes.”
Ray frowns, because that’s not what the doctors said, but Snart’s motioning with his head to the desks and when Ray turns, the girl from before – the one that was next to Snart is sitting next to Leo, rambling at him about something, offering him different colored pencils while the other draws. And Leo… Leo doesn’t seem uncomfortable. He seems a bit shocked, but Ray can see him nodding every once in a while. There are even moments when he lifts his head, looks at the girl, actually looks at her, not just a fleeting glance or pretending he’s not around, but looks, takes the pencil and turns back to his masterpiece.
There’s a dull ache in Ray’s chest that he doesn’t understand at all.
“Annalise can be bad influence though.” Snart huffs. Looking at the children, Ray can’t believe that. Because Annalise seems to be a personal light that fate put in Leo’s way. Ray’s just… thankful.
He can feel the smile pulling at his lips, too wide, too happy and it feels like the stupid tears are back in his eyes, but Ray can’t help it. Something heavy drops from his shoulder and he feels like he can breathe for the first time since that day. There’s still some stress left, he still worries, but there’s so much hope, hope that one little girl brought to both, Leo and Ray that he really can’t help himself.
“Is she your daughter?” He asks, smiling wide at Snart. “She’s really nice.”
The guy is staring at him, a puzzled expression on his face as he looks at Raymond again. There’s something about that expression, something that Ray can’t put his finger on, but he’s not focusing on it too much either. That’s reserved for the joy he feels for his son.
“…she’s adopted.” Snart grumbles, almost offended. Ray blinks, once and again, then he chuckles, and then, before he knows it, he’s flat out laughing.
“That’s not what people usually say when people compliment their children.” Ray manages to gasp out once the snickers cease. Snart’s staring at him, like he never saw a person laugh, then he snorts himself and shrugs.
“To be fair, ‘she’s nice’ aren’t usually the first words people use to describe Annalise.” He drawls, his eyes jumping from Ray to his daughter for half a second, before returning to the man, running up and down over him.
Ray has to fight the need to shiver under the half-lidded gaze. There’s something different in those eyes now than it was few moments before and Ray tries to put his finger on it, but can’t. Way too soon Snart turns away, attention back on the room when the bell rings. The shields come down around the classroom and the parents are teleported outside, where they can still watch their children.
Most parents don’t. The moment they are in the hallway, they either leave – counting on the school to inform them just before the end of the class, give them enough time to come back to pick up (or send someone to pick up) their little ones, or take out their pads, looking through the news. There are very few that are just like Ray – staring at the class, at the way his kid is finally part of something. At the way he perhaps has a chance on friends now, thanks to one little girl.
His eyes stray for a moment and he glances at Snart – whose whole demeanor changes, when he walks between the seats, when he leans down to say something to the kids. There’s a smile too, one that is very different from the smirk Snart had when he was talking to him. Ray has to admit, Snart seems like a good teacher.
Snart is a good teacher, Ray finds out. He’s not sure what class is it, that he picks Leo from, but Leo doesn’t really smile a lot more, but he spends more time around Ray. He sits at the table next to him while Ray works, watches movies with him when Ray asks Leo to. He also starts talking a little bit more and most of his words belong to either whatever exciting things they did at school, or Annalise.
Leo doesn’t mention any more friends, and Ray’s not sure if he does have any other friends, but even if he doesn’t, Ray’s much calmer than he was before.
“Should we ask Mr. Snart and Annalise for a play date then?” Ray asks when Leo’s quiet again and the way his son all but beams at him, tells him it was a good question.
It’s not required for parents to come for more than one class. It’s not done usually, because people get busy and most of them are happy when their kids finally start school. The teleport the school has if one of the newer ones, and the teleport platform is big and is able to transport more people to several places at the same time without a hitch. Most of the adults jump at the chance of normalcy, at the chance to grasp at their own lives again, even if for just few hours. Ray doesn’t remember what is normal anymore, he doesn’t think back to the time before Leo. So he’s one of the few (only one) of the parents that still comes to school an hour before the day ends for his kid.
Ray’s watching the lesson, as always bewitched with the way Len is so patient with children when he does little less than snort at the adults whenever one asks what Len believes to be an unimportant question. With kids, no question can be dumb, it’s just ‘uninformed’. At least that’s what Len said when Ray asked him.
There aren’t many hands in the air, the children are focused on the pads in front of them, some of the tiny tongues sticking out as they move and repeat whatever shape they are working on while Len’s walking between the seats, checking here and there and sometimes stopping, and helping tracing the lines, or offering advice or praise.
When Len stops by Leo’s seat, smiling and his hand slips into Leo’s hair and his kid looks up and smiles at Snart, wide and happy, Ray tells himself his heart doesn’t tremble. When he can’t fool even himself, he pretends it’s the jealousy that his kid is opening up to Len so quickly when it took ages for him. It’s that. What else could it be.
Only Ray never heard of jealousy having a happy undertone or making people grin like fools.
The classroom doors open all over the corridor and the kids fly out.
“Ray!” That’s the only warning he gets before Annalise hits him, the impact making him grunt as the little arms close around him. “I’m making daddy adopt you and Leo!” Ray’s heart jumps again and he blinks.
“What?” He asks more confused than anything, and then Len’s already there, Leo’s little hand holding Len’s and Ray’s sure he should get his heart checked, with all this jumping around his chest that it’s doing. That can’t be healthy.
“Raymond.” Single word, almost a purr, and it makes Ray’s throat run dry. Just why? Aren’t kids supposed to be the ones crushing at their teachers? They are. They are supposed to be, not their fathers. Ray knew he was going to do something about this parenting job wrong.
“Len.” Ray smiles, before he takes Annalise’s hand into one of his own, and the other curls around Leo’s fingers. “Leo.” He says in greeting.
Leo nods, his little hand squeezing Ray’s, all warm and wonderful and Ray smiles.
“So. What’s the adopting talk about?” He leans his head to the side, looking at Len as they make their way to the teleport platforms.
“We’re working on the word ‘adoption’. She goes around the whole day, adopting flowers, pens, windows, Leo’s scribbles, and now, apparently also the two of you.” Len rolls his eyes. “I think she got ‘adopting’ and ‘commandeering’ confused.”
Ray snickers at the idea of Annalise just… taking all the stuff she wanted. Then he smiles when he imagines Len’s tired but patient face as he tries to explain (and apparently fails) what adoption means to Annalise.
He’s not thinking that being adopted by those two, wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world. He’s not thinking it would be a lot less lonely, and a lot warmer, either.
“We’re coming over to yours.” Len turns to him, once they are standing on the transporter. It’s a question, even if it’s not formed as one, but it’s already part of their little habit. (Ray’s not even sure how long they are doing this. A week? A month? Two? Between work, the school and their play dates the time flies like crazy.)
“Of course.” He nods, the motion familiar already. They get beamed home, Annalise catches Leo’s hand and drags him to Leo’s room to play like always as Ray turns to pick the cookies prepared for the kids – another part of the habit. What is not a part of the habit, is the hand curling around his wrist, preventing him from moving.
Ray’s heart flutters and he turns to Len, his mouth opened in question already. But before a tone can get out, Len’s lips are on his own, warm and wet and demanding, and Ray can feel his knees shaking. But there’s something else too, the hot feeling curling in his stomach and chest and his hands grab at Len’s face, kissing him right back, giving as good as he takes. Len’s hand is leaving a burning trail behind as it moves from his wrist up his arm to his neck and –
“Adults are icky.”
Ray pulls away as if burnt, turns and stares at Annalise, who’s looking at him, before shrugging and taking the plate with cookies from the counter herself, even though she has to get to the tips of her feet.
“Hope none of you has cooties.” She grumbles as she turns and Ray gasps, pointing her way and turning to Len. Len rolls his eyes.
“Well I don’t have any for sure.” When Ray gapes, Len just smirks and leans in, stealing another kiss.
Kissing becomes a new habit. They don’t talk about it, but they kiss a lot. A lot.
“No.” Ray shakes his head as soon as Len mentions it, as soon as Len asks. He tries to keep his voice down, but he’s not sure how well he manages and he just hopes the kids are watching the cartoons with the volume high enough. “You need my consent for that, and I’m not giving it to you.” He adds, glaring at Len.
“Raymond-“
“Don’t ‘Raymond’ me.” Ray huffs and takes a deep breath. “I’m not… He’s not going to the Star City. He’s not going to the research station and I don’t get why the school even allowed that trip. It’s not safe. We have proof of it not being safe.” He’s rambling he knows, but there’s no way he could allow Leo on a trip like that. No matter what Len says, not matter how many puppy dog eyes Leo shoots Ray’s way. No matter how many times Annalise glares at him during the dinner and holds Leo’s hand pointedly. “I’m not going to risk the life of my child this way, just because, just because-“
“That was years ago, Raymond.” Len says, interrupting Ray. His hands rest on both sides of his face when Ray shakes his head, imprisoning him and forcing him to look at Len. “Our borders moved much further into the space and there’s peace with the Klingon’s. Nothing’s going to happen.” His voice is quiet but firm and there’s something else, something he’s not saying, something Ray’s not sure he wants to hear. He’s going to though, he’s sure, because this is Len. Len always does the things he thinks he should and he might not think he’s wrong, but he sometimes is and-
“I think you should come too.” Len adds and no. No. Len’s wrong to ask that of him, he’s wrong to ask him or his son to the place where Anna lost her life, it’s unfair. “I think you need to move on. I think you need to see Leo can move on.”
Ray’s hands curl up into fists on his sides.
“What gives you the right-“
“I love you.” Len says and Ray’s eyes widen. They don’t… Ray knows how he feels and he hoped that Len felt the same, but they never talk about it. They kiss, they go to bed together when Lisa can keep an eye on the kids (even though it’s not always worth her lecherous comments, wide grins and winks), but they don’t talk about feelings. Len never does and Ray’s not going to push him.
“What?”
“I love you.” Len repeats, the words same as few seconds ago, and Ray can feel his heart beating in his ears. It’s so loud, Ray’s worried that he won’t hear Len’s next words, but he does. “I love you and I can’t watch you being stuck in the past.”
“I cannot forget-“
“I’m not asking you to. I’m not asking you to forget or even to stop grieving. I just want you to move on from stupid regrets. I want you to give yourself a chance. To give us, you, Leo, Annalise, me… a chance.” Len’s starting at him, his eyes hard, but there’s a hint of doubt too and Ray can’t watch that. Ray’s scared. He’s worried he’s going to break to millions of pieces if he goes, if he sees… but he can’t watch Len unsure of them like that.
He gives the tiniest of nods and the fingers on his face tighten for a second. Ray’s not even aware he’s crying, not until Len’s thumbs brush the tears away from his face and Len leans in, pressing a kiss to Ray’s lips in silent thanks.
When Len’s mouth and hands move hot over Ray’s body later that night, Ray can’t be blamed for holding onto the man more than ever before.
“Can I talk to her?” Leo asks, quiet and unsure looking up at Ray. It doesn’t happen often, and the only thing Ray can do is nod. He wants to take a step back, wants to give Leo and the cold dark stone a bit of privacy, but Leo’s hand curls around his fingers, their warmth keeping him in place.
“We’re doing fine, mom.” Leo whispers and Ray bites his lip. “School is fun. Annalise is there. She’s kind even though she colors out of the lines.” He says and Ray smiles. “She beats the other kids for me when they aren’t nice. She always picks my favorite crayons for me too. She never uses blue, always lets me have all of it.” He knows about all of that, of course, Leo told him. Well, Leo told him about the crayons bit, he had to hear the other kids part from Annalise, and while Len just rolled his eyes and repeated his not fighting rules (‘or at least don’t fight so that others can catch you, Annalise’), Ray was so thankful he gave Annalise more cookies that evening.
“Thank you for giving me to daddy.” The kid adds, pulling Ray out of his thoughts and Ray’s sure he can’t breathe. That’s the first time he heard Leo call him that and his heart stopped in his chest and it hurts, and it’s so good and … Ray squeezes Leo’s hand in his own.
“Thank you for sending daddy’s boyfriend too. Mr. Snart is nice too. He showed me your ship the other day. He said you were in…” Leo frowns, looking for the right words. “The fleet of stars. That you found some cures. That you were a hero with the way you were doing.” His voice is breaking and Ray bites his lip, before he pulls Leo in his arms, hugging him closely. Ray can feel the hot tears on his neck as Leo sobs quietly.
“She was a legend, your mom.” Ray whispers. He’s not sure how long they are standing there, Leo clutching at him and Ray hugging him as close as he can without hurting him, when he hears Annalise move.
“Thank you for having such wonderful family, Miss.” She says. Ray can feel Leo turning his head to look at the girl and when Ray looks over himself, he sees Annalise standing tall, her head high up in the air, Len standing behind her with his hands on her shoulders. “You don’t have to worry. I’m going to beat up anyone who even looks wrong at Leo. And my dad is going to do the same for Uncle Ray!”
“…she’s not wrong.” Len mutters, before putting the flowers on the black tombstone.
Ray’s not even sure what he feels anymore. He’s only half aware of reaching over, of grasping Len’s hand and leaning over, of pressing his lips against Len’s. The kiss is little less than a peck, but Ray still hopes it conveys the warmth he feels as he presses against Len’s side and turns to the grave.
“Thank you, Anna.” He whispers. “For everything.”
Len’s arm’s around Ray’s waist as they walk back, Leo still in his arms and Annalise walking next to her father, her hand holding Len’s.
And as they drive home, the kids in the back and Len’s hand warm on Ray’s knee, Ray thinks that maybe he can really move on. With Len and Annalise, with their family… maybe both, Leo and Ray, can find their happiness again.
A/N: for my secret santa, who wanted a story where Ray and Len get stranded. I'm sorry if this isn't exactly what you asked for, I did take a lot of liberties with this one. I tried to incorporate as many of the things you've requested, but also sorry if it didn't really fit your expectations. I hope you do enjoy what I have written!
The mission was supposed to be simple. It wasn't even really a mission, to be honest. More like an errand run.
It was an ordinary day, with the Waverider hiding out in the temporal zone and the team all busying themselves with various activities until the next Aberration. Ray wasn't surprised when he was the only one who noticed they were short on food.
Even less surprised when he brought it up during breakfast and almost all of them excused themselves from going on a supply run with him.
Nate and Sara simultaneously called out, “Not it!” and both scrambled to escape the galley with as much food as the either of them could individually carry. Jax and Martin glanced at each other in what Ray was ninety percent sure was a psychic conversation before the younger of the two stated that he wanted to run some maintenance on the ship and Martin all too eagerly claimed to want to help. Mick glared at him until Ray threw his hands up in surrender, indicating that he knew Mick didn't want to go. Amaya was already nowhere to be seen.
Slowly he turned his attention to the last two members of the team.
Two only recently recovered members.
Rip met his eyes and sighed. “As much as I'd love to help, Dr. Palmer, I still have to catch up on the missions I've missed. I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to decline.”
Well, at least Rip was polite about it. Ray nodded at his words and gave a smile in understanding.
That left only one.
Ray swallowed as his eyes landed on him. Leonard, for his part, just calmly stared back.
The team had managed to get him back from the Legion of Doom and reset his memory. Ray was ecstatic to have Leonard back, there was no doubt about that, but he also wasn't sure how to approach this…different version of Leonard Snart. It was clear that he remembered the team, remembered his life before the Oculus explosion, but he no longer acted like he did before. He’d been a lot more quiet, often staying at the edge of the room whenever the entire team was present, and most of the time in between missions and meals was either in his room, Mick’s room, or literally nowhere to be found.
He had, somehow, become even more secluded than before, and while Ray wanted to try and at least befriend Leonard again, he honestly didn't know where to start.
“Leonard,” he said softly, “you don't have to come if you don't want to. I can go by myself.”
There was a stretch of silence as he waited for an answer, or at least a reaction, from the other man. Just as Ray was about take the silence as a “no”, Leonard spoke.
“Fine.”
Ray blinked.
“I'll go with you.” Leonard didn't say anything more as he stood, presumably to throw away his empty plate, but Ray beamed at him anyway. This was more than he had expected from him.
“Meet me at the jump ship in 10 minutes!” he called, earning a grunt of confirmation from Leonard, before turning to leave the galley to get ready for the trip, suddenly looking forward to it a lot more than he had before.
That was how it all started, anyway.
The supply run was rather dull and uneventful. They took the jump ship and both the ride to the in-the-middle-of-nowhere grocery store in 2016 and the shopping itself were carried out in silence. Ray took it in stride, deciding to appreciate the time he had been gifted to spend alone with Leonard for what it is, even if barely a sentence was passed between them aside from simple instructions and food suggestions.
To be honest, Ray missed the banter and borderline childish jabs they used to throw at each other. He didn’t even realize how much so until they got Leonard back and those things just…didn’t happen. He knew Leonard had been distancing himself, from pretty much the entire team except for Mick, and maybe Sara. He wasn’t really sure about the latter, since Sara had been spending more and more time with Rip.
At the very least Ray wanted to know why.
Maybe it was the fact that he was so lost in these thoughts on the way back to the Waverider that he genuinely jumped when a hand suddenly clamped down on his shoulder.
His eyes darted away from the controls to look up at Leonard, who hadn’t let go of him, but the other man’s eyes were fixated on something else outside the windshield, and he looked tense.
“What is that?” he asked tersely. Ray finally focused on the view in front of him, and his eyes widened when he saw what could only be called an ominous dark green energy cloud rolling in straight for their little jump ship.
“Shit,” he cursed without thinking, and upon feeling Leonard’s hand tighten further on his shoulder quickly answered, “that’s, uh, that’s a time storm. A bad one.”
“Time storm?”
In any other situation, Ray would have appreciated return of the sarcastic tone in Leonard’s words, but now he could only nod frantically as he gripped the controls of the time ship a bit tighter, panic already threatening to overtake him.
“We’ve encountered a few of them in the past year. They’re like, uh, residual energies accumulated from the time jumps that occur in the temporal zone and they’re very destructive. The Waverider would be able to withstand it, barely, but I honestly don’t think the jump ship can?” The pitch of his voice rose with each word and by the end of his explanation he was squeaking more than anything. Ray desperately tried to maneuver the ship around and plot a course to somewhere, anywhere, as he also threw a glance at Leonard. “You, uh, you might want to strap yourself in.”
Leonard met his eyes, and a split second later he was gone. Ray could only hope he was rushing back to the passengers area to do as suggested, as he fully pulled his focus back on the controls and did his best to get out of this spot as quickly as possible.
The random coordinates that he had keyed into the jump ship registered and he could see an opening forming on the green walls of the temporal zone. Ray accelerated the ship to its maximum speed, hoping with all his might that they’ll be able to make it.
They didn’t.
The storm hit the jump ship without warning and preamble and Ray felt the entire ship shake and spin wildly out of control. The metal clasp of the pilot’s seat dug into his muscles, fighting to keep him in place, as his body threatened to go with the momentum. Everything was flashing red and green and Ray felt himself lose his grip on the controls. Giving up on the controls, he raised his arms to protect himself from whatever was ahead.
The last thing he heard was the sound of shattering glass, and he only got a split second to look up at the rapidly approaching blinding white light ahead before something large and dark blocked his view and grew larger and-
Suddenly there was another swerve of his chair, knocking Ray’s head back against something hard, and everything went black.
The first thing Ray felt was cold.
Then something warm hitting gently at his face pulled Ray back into consciousness. Ray drew in a sharp breath as he opened his eyes by a crack. Everything was still blurry and he couldn't seem to focus.
The warmth reappeared against the skin of his cheek, and this time Ray leaned into it, hoping to stop it from disappearing again. In contrast to the numbing cold, it felt nice.
The warmth stilled, breaking the rhythm it had been tapping. But it also stiffened.
Slowly, whatever it was withdrew completely, and Ray let out a whimper at the loss of contact. He blinked rapidly to clear his vision, and slowly, the interior of the jump ship came into focus.
What was left of it, anyway. His pilot seat was facing right, and to his left he can see the windshield simply gone as branches of what appeared to be evergreens along with - was that snow? - poked in from the outside. Black smoke coming up from the control panel escaped from the gaping hole left behind, while nothing seemed to be online.
He turned his head toward the passenger's area. First he noticed that most of the supplies they had bought were gone as well. What little is left behind were strewn about on the floor in odd lonely spots. Then his eyes landed on the other man present, leaning against the wall and watching him quietly.
“Len-” he tried to speak, but it came out more as a croak than anything. Ray cleared his throat to try again. “Leonard?”
“Welcome back to the living.” Leonard didn't sound impressed.
Suddenly, like a flip was switched, Ray could feel pain again, and his body ached. Everywhere.
He groaned as he tried to stretch his muscles. Metal dug into his side as he was reminded of the clasp still over his chest. Quickly he removed it, pushing it up and over his head, and he found it a bit easier to breathe.
He stood from the chair, and then swayed on his feet until his shoulder hit the wall beside him. Ray took the time to let the blood catch up with his brain, leaning against the wall to steady himself as he gave his body a quick check over.
His muscles ached, but nothing seemed broken. He didn't even seem to be bleeding all that much, aside from a few scratches here and there. Ray gave a huff and slowly pushed off the wall, then stretched.
“You alright?” Leonard’s voice rang out again. Ray nodded, rubbing the back of his head, “Yeah, yeah, a bit sore, but I'm okay.”
There was a huff of breath that Ray could've sworn sounded like a sigh of relief. “Good.”
“What about you?” Ray asked, gingerly stepping over the shards of broken glass and various pieces of the metal that covered the floor to get closer to the other man. “Are you okay?”
There was a beat of silence. Ray frowned when he still didn't get an answer a few seconds later. Leonard wasn't looking at him anymore, instead seemingly fixated on something on the floor.
Then finally, he let out a sigh. Quietly, his hand moved to touch the right side of his abdomen, and Ray let out a gasp when he pulled the hand back and it came away red.
“No.”
“Leonard!” Everything was forgotten as Ray rushed forward and grabbed hold of the other man's shoulder in one hand and the blood stained hand in the other. Suddenly he was aware of just how much Leonard was leaning against the wall behind him, letting the solid metal take almost all of his weight. And now that he was closer, he could make out a slightly darker patch of cloth against the already dark material of Leonard’s sweater.
“You're- you're bleeding,” Ray managed to say, overwhelming panic preventing him from saying more.
“I noticed.” The words didn't hold as much snark as they probably should have. Ray shot a quick fearful glance up at Leonard, then focused back on the blood.
“May I…?”
Leonard gave a grunt but otherwise no other answer or resistance, so Ray took it as permission and pulled up the sweater to reveal the wound underneath.
He gasped again at the sight. A deep cut about three inches wide clipped into Leonard’s side, as blood poured out of the gash in a steady flow. Without hesitation, Ray shrugged off his own jacket and bunched it up before pressing it to the wound.
Leonard made a sound that was somewhere between a gasp and a hiss. “You didn't need to do that.”
“Yes, I did. You're bleeding and we need it to stop.” Ray was still on the verge of panic, as he firmly but gently pushed Leonard down into one of the passengers seats. “How did you even get hurt from here? From the glass? But you weren't even close to the windshield for it to graze you. What the hell happened?”
He was rambling at this point, saying whatever that came to mind, and he didn't actually expect a response from the other man, especially considering how distant he'd been since returning to the team. Ray's mind moved on.
“We don't have a first aid kit on board, which is not okay. We've become so used to having Gideon…I'm going to have discuss this with Rip. I can maybe bandage it with my jacket? For now. The jump ship is broken, this means we're going to have to find help outside. God I hope we're near civilization, it would be horrible if we had to treat this wound with natural resources because not only do we not know where we are, we don't know when we are and if anything here is poisonous I wouldn't-”
“It was headed for your head.”
Leonard’s voice was quiet, but it still cut through Ray's significantly louder panic-induced rant like a blade and Ray blinked, falling silent and instead looking back up at Leonard, full of confusion.
His eyes met with the other's, and Leonard frowned at him before averting his gaze. There was another beat of silence before he elaborated.
“A piece of the jump ship. It tore off from the wing and crashed through the windshield. You were in its trajectory.”
Ray's throat was suddenly very, very dry.
“You spun my chair?” he managed to choke out. His eyes darted back down at the wound, hidden from sight by his jacket, and suddenly Ray felt sick. “This is because of me?”
Leonard didn't reply, didn't even look back at him. And as the silence stretched on, Ray only felt worse.
Finally, he swallowed. “We need to get you help.”
Ray prayed that they will find it.
Of course the universe never made anything easy.
They had managed to make a makeshift bandage out of Ray's jacket, using a knife that Leonard had quietly pulled seemingly out of nowhere and Ray had stared at it for half a second before deciding not to ask. Of course Leonard would have additional weapon on hand. It made sense.
Getting out of the destroyed jump ship was another ordeal. The door didn’t respond to Ray’s DNA - not that it was likely to work, considering the whole ship was offline, but he had to at least try - but luckily it was damaged enough that Ray was able to brute force it open with a few running starts.
The ache in his shoulder was quickly forgotten when he was greeted by the world beyond the door.
“Oh no,” Ray muttered. He heard Leonard shifting behind him - to get a better look himself, maybe - and then a sigh. “Just our luck.”
They were, as it would appear, in a forest. A forest of tall, dark pines with a layer of white, glistening snow covering everything in sight. The only disturbance to the otherwise postcard-worthy scene was the trail of destruction the jump ship had left behind when it crashed. Broken branches and upturned snow and frosted dirt led a path to where Ray stood.
There was no sign of civilization in sight.
An involuntary shiver traveled up Ray’s spine, and only then did he notice the drastic drop in temperature compared to inside the smoking jump ship. He let out a huff of air and watched it fog in front of him before dispersing in the slight breeze.
Dread pooled in his stomach as Ray spun around to take in more of their surroundings, hoping to catch sight of anything that would counter the very likely possibility that they had managed to crash land in the middle of nowhere in a less than ideal environment.
A grunt of pain snapped his attention back to inside the jump ship, and his eyes widened upon seeing Leonard, obviously fighting back pain, struggling to stand.
“No,” Ray gasped before rushing forward to stop him, “Leonard, no, you shouldn’t move.” He pushed the man back down on the seat. “Just…just stay here, okay? Stay still. I’m going to go look for help and see if I can find any-”
He was abruptly cut off as Leonard suddenly reached out and yanked him down to eye level by the front of his shirt with a growl. “You’re wearing a single layer of shirt, Raymond. You’re going to freeze out there, then what? Think before trying to save someone else.”
Ray blinked, too shocked by this sudden turn of events to do much else. But then Leonard’s words finally sunk in, and he gulped.
This was the first time he’d called him by name since returning to the team.
But that was a thought for another time. There were more pressing matters at hand.
Ray nodded a few times, not really trusting himself to speak, and Leonard released his shirt and leaned back into the chair.
Ray straightened hesitantly. As much as Leonard was right, he couldn't just stay here. They still needed help, Leonard still needed help. The chances of them dying would not be lowered by him staying here. If anything, Leonard’s chances of survival were diminished by every second Ray wasn’t out there looking for help.
Ray would never risk that.
He set his jaw in resolution. Just as he was about to announce his decision, a familiar piece of clothing was shoved against his chest.
Ray’s hand flew up to grab hold of it on reflex, and he stared down at Leonard when he realized what it was.
“I can’t take your jacket,” he blurted out before he could stop himself. He wasn’t the one bleeding to his death. He wasn’t the one who needs to conserve his strength and warmth.
Leonard closed his eyes and let out a controlled breath through his nose. “I'm wearing a sweater. I’ll be inside the jump ship. I’ll be fine. If you insist on going out there then it’ll do neither of us any good if you die of hypothermia, which is exactly what will happen if I let you walk out there in that. Take it.”
His tone left no room for argument, and any objection Ray might have had was swallowed back down his throat as Leonard opened his eyes again to fix him with a glare.
“Alright. Okay.” Ray nodded before putting on the jacket. The way the leather hugged his frame was familiar, and he felt a pang of guilt as he was reminded of the first and last time he had worn it.
Taking a deep breath to push away the memories, he turned towards the door of the jump ship, but not before throwing one last glance back at his injured teammate.
“I'll be right back,” he promised.
He could feel Leonard’s eyes on his back as he exited out into the cold.
It took surprisingly very little time for Ray to find an obviously man-made trail in the forest. As luck would have it, the sky was clear and other than the below freezing temperatures it was actually a rather pleasant day.
Which Ray would have given more appreciation for if it wasn’t for the fact that he still had an injured teammate waiting for him.
Following the trail led him to a clearing, and Ray almost cried in relief when he saw a house sitting at the edge of it.
He ran the rest of the way there, and it was only after he had knocked on the door and was waiting for an answer did he realize that he had no idea what place or time they had crash landed in.
Would the people here even understand him?
As a precaution he reached for translation pills that the team had made a rule to always carry at least two on their person in case of emergencies. His hand landed where his jacket pocket should be, then he abruptly remembered that this wasn’t his jacket.
While he was certain Leonard would have some, he didn’t exactly want to go through his pockets. It felt…wrong.
His hesitation lasted long enough for him to find it strange that no one had come to the door. Ray peered through the windows and circled the house once before confirming that there seemed to be no one inside.
But this was shelter, nonetheless. He felt bad about having to break in, but there was not much else he could do. They needed a place where they can be out of the cold and have the supplies necessary to treat Leonard’s wound.
His mind made up, Ray turned and headed back for the jump ship, retracing his own footprints in the snow that had been left unperturbed.
”Can you walk?”
Ray knew it was a stupid question as soon as it left his mouth. The blank stare Leonard was giving him right now confirmed as much.
But to his credit, Leonard didn't scoff at him. Instead he just sighed. “If you help me, maybe.”
“Of course I'll help you.” It didn't even occur to Ray that he wouldn't.
Soon, both of them were standing by the broken entrance of the jump ship. Leonard was trying to support his own weight, but Ray could feel the arm that was slung over his neck clinging to him tightly. Ray didn't comment, and instead tightened his own grips on Leonard’s wrist and side.
Slowly, almost clumsily, they made their way to the trail in the forest and down to the clearing.
The entire walk was once again done in silence. There were times when Ray noticed Leonard’s breathing become too labored, and he would stop to let the other man catch his breath, until he gave a nod to signal that he was ready to keep moving.
Ray also noticed that Leonard was a lot more jumpy. He flinched at the smallest of movements that wasn't caused by them, from a rustle of leaves by a breeze or a scurry from the wildlife. The hand that wasn't around Ray's neck seemed to have found a permanent perch on the handle of the cold gun.
Ray bit his lip, and he couldn't help but wonder if this heightened alertness while injured had anything to do with past experiences.
It most likely did.
They finally arrived at the house. The five steps it took to take them up on the porch to the front door proved to be the most challenging part of their quest. By the time they made it up, Leonard was pretty much leaning his entire weight into Ray, and his breaths were hurried, shallow, and weak.
“Hang on, Leonard,” Ray whispered, unable to keep the worried tremor out of his voice.
With another stroke of luck, the front door wasn’t locked. Ray wasted no time bringing Leonard through the door and only hesitated for a split second at the entrance before guiding them to a couch that was facing the fireplace and a small analog TV.
He gently - well, as gently as he could - lowered Leonard onto the couch, and immediately he saw that the wound was bleeding again. The move here must have aggravated it, and Ray felt a pang of helplessness at how he hadn’t noticed until now. Leonard was breathing in harsh breaths, as if trying to control it, and his eyes were shut tight.
Ray swallowed down the guilt and shook his head to focus. “We have to get it clean,” he croaked, then stood.
After closing the front door to shut out the cold, Ray headed deeper into the house.
Five minutes later he was back with a basin of warm water and more than a few towels. A first aid kit would have been more ideal, but Ray felt like he was running out of time with each second he wasted looking for it. He knelt down by his injured friend and, with one apologetic glance at Leonard, pulled up the edge of the sweater and carefully peeled back his own ruined jacket.
Leonard let out a hiss of pain in response.
“Sorry, sorry!” The words tumbled out of Ray’s lips as he continued to remove the clothing, and after bundling it up in a ball, placed it aside.
The gash wasn’t bleeding as much as it had, but blood still trickled out the edges of it. Some dried blood had crusted where the makeshift bandage had been pressed against, and it was a mess to look at. Ray swallowed before taking one of the towels and drenching it in the warm water.
He was so focused on wiping the wound clean that the only warning he had was the tensing of Leonard’s muscles before his teammate suddenly shot up from the couch and used one hand to push Ray’s head down, as his eyes barely registered Leonard’s right hand swiftly unholstering and powering up the cold gun to aim it at something behind him.
Ray took a moment to regain his balance, then he twisted in Leonard’s rather weak grip to see what the threat was.
A woman stood in the doorway leading to the kitchen. She looked aged, but not old, maybe around mid-fifties. Her plump frame blocked the way entirely, her gray eyes trained steadily on them.
And in her arms, she held a hunting rifle, aimed straight on them.
The shocked silence from all of them was broken when the woman spoke, and Ray frowned. It was a rough sounding language, and while he couldn't understand it, it sounded familiar. He had heard it before, he just couldn't remember where.
“Wait, wait,” he said frantically, turning around to face the woman fully while holding up his hands in surrender. “Please, we don't mean any harm.”
The woman’s eyes narrowed, but she didn't lower the gun.
As Ray's mind began chanting in a panicked what do I do what do I do what do I do, Leonard’s hand landed on his shoulder.
“Translation pills. Left bottom pocket.”
Ray gulped before slowly reaching for the pocket. The familiar shape of the green pills at his fingertips was both reassuring and relieving.
He quickly popped one into his mouth and swallowed, then cleared his throat and tried again.
“Please.” The woman’s eyes widened. Ray slowly stood up from his kneeling position next to the couch, pulling out of Leonard’s grip on his shoulder, and purposely moved between the barrels of the two weapons pointed at each other. The woman took a small step back in surprise.
“We don't mean any harm,” he repeated, his hands still held up in a show of surrender. “My friend is hurt, and we really needed a place to stay out of the cold where I can help him. Please, just let us rest up for a while and we'll be on our way.”
No one moved as they waited for the woman to respond. She looked between Ray, Leonard, and various object around them, seemingly unsure how to proceed. Just as Ray was about to make another appeal, a loud clatter behind him drew his attention instead.
He spun around, and gasped. The cold gun had slipped out of Leonard’s fingers, and the man himself had fallen back down into the couch. But one arm propped him up shakily, as if Leonard was trying with all his might to prevent himself from completely collapsing.
“Len-!” The woman flew out of Ray's mind as he knelt back down next to the injured man in an instant. Leonard’s breathing was even faster than before, and his skin was clammy and his pupils dilated, and Ray felt panic surge through him when he realized that Leonard was finally going into shock.
Leonard looked up at him, face locked in a pained but otherwise unreadable expression, before the arm finally gave out and his body went limp on the couch.
Ray's own hands were shaking as he tried to force down the bile in his throat and recall what he should do. Stopping the bleeding was top priority, there was no doubt about that. But Ray wasn't confident enough in his own skills to be certain if he could patch up the wound without damaging it further.
“Move over.”
The voice didn't register in his head and Ray was taken by surprise when another hand landed on his shoulder.
He glanced up to see the woman peering down at him with a grim but resolute expression, and in her hands she had a medical kit. “I said move over, young man. I can help you.”
Disbelief and relief simultaneously crashed through him as he did as he was told. The woman knelt down next to him and began examining the wound on Leonard herself, then she frowned.
“This is serious. You did well to keep the wound undisturbed, but it's going to need stitches if we want to stop the bleeding altogether. Luckily I have some experience in that.”
It took a few seconds for the words to sink in, but once it did, Ray put a hand over his mouth as tears threatened to spill over.
“I- thank you,” he managed to push out, “thank you.”
The woman glanced at him, and there was something in her eyes that made her face look softer. “Don't thank me yet,” she said, opening the medical case next to her. “I'm still going to need your help.”
Ray nodded, then shook his head to clear it, slapping his own cheeks a few times. It was already a miracle that this woman had turned out to be friendly and willing to help. He couldn't bet Leonard’s survival on another.
He needed to focus.
“Of course, what do you need me to do?”
Len didn't wake up straight away. It happened in stages. First he was aware of a much softer surface beneath him than the couch he had been laying on. Then he noticed his side didn't hurt as much as it did before.
Everything around him was quiet, but not unnerving so. He'd even call it serene, if he wanted to go that far.
Finally he opened his eyes.
Immediately Len saw the woman from before, sitting next to what he supposed was the bed he was lying in. She was reading a book, and had on a pair of glasses that Len didn't recall seeing before. The woman glanced up after a few seconds of staring, and gave very little reaction to seeing him awake.
Quietly the woman reached for something on the nightstand next to her, and she came back to offer him a familiar green pill.
Len stared at it warily for a moment, but he understood. Taking it out of her hands, he didn't hesitate as he put it to his mouth and swallowed.
“You are awake,” the woman stated simply. “I was told I wouldn't be able to speak to you unless you ate that.”
He gave a grunt of acknowledgement. Speaking of which…
“Your companion is sleeping in the next room. He exhausted himself with worry, and still refused to rest. Had to give my word that I wouldn't let you die for him to even think about leaving your bedside.” The woman continued as she directed her attention back to her book. “You're very lucky to have him.”
Len stayed quiet. The reassurance that Raymond was, in fact, unharmed, put his mind at a bit more ease than he'd like to admit. But now that that was out of the way, another problem floated to the forefront of his mind, as he stared at the book in the woman's hands. The writing on it he couldn't read, but he definitely recognized. And he recalled seeing a calendar on the wall back in the living room, when Raymond had gone to explore the house.
Wariness settled in his stomach again as he quietly asked, “Why are you helping us?”
The woman didn't miss a beat. “Because you needed it.”
Len frowned. “You know what I meant.”
There was a pause as the woman looked up from her book again and met his eyes steadily. There was almost an amused glint in her eyes, but her face was also guarded. “What? Should I not have helped a bleeding and helpless man and his fearful friend, just because they are Americans?”
She shook her head. “And you say we Russians are prejudiced. Ha! Now who is the one to be mistrustful just because I'm Russian?”
“Trust isn't in my nature.”
She snorted. “I suppose not. Makes me wonder how you ended up with someone like Ray. Surely he must have gone against everything you stood for.”
Len blinked, the unexpected mention of Raymond catching him off guard. He was at a loss of how to respond, mostly because the woman was right. Raymond did go against everything he stood for, and yet…somehow, here they were. And he had no idea what to say to that.
Not that he had any right to say anything.
The woman gave him a small smile, one that carried a knowing look that made Len frown. “Rest up, Leonard. We can continue this when you're better.”
She turned back to her book. And Len only continued to stare for a few more minutes before letting the exhaustion from the entire day pull him back to sleep.
The next few days Len shifted between consciousness and sleep. He hated it, feeling this weak and helpless, but Raymond wouldn't let him get up until the wound healed, which is taking considerably more time than he liked, especially since he had become so used to Gideon’s accelerated healing.
The woman, Galina (or Galya, as Raymond had been calling her), was patient and kind, both of which made Len uneasy at first but slowly grew to appreciate. He knew from Raymond that the man had been helping her with the houses and chores to repay her for her hospitality, and he also knew that Raymond apparently didn't even think of the implications of them, two Americans, being taken care of like this in a Russian home in the year 1996.
Still he was wary. And the one time Raymond left with Galina to go into town for groceries on a pickup truck, Len found himself tense and agitated until they returned.
That didn't stop Raymond from telling all about the shopping trip. They didn't just go for food, but also bought some winter appropriate clothes for the both of them. Raymond had gotten him a parka that looked incredibly similar to his old one, and he all but beamed at him as he showed it to him.
Len wasn't entirely sure if he had smiled or not.
Raymond went on to talk about the trip itself.
“It was a little weird, the social cues here are so different from what I know. It's going to take a while to get used to,” he had explained, “but I do like the town. It's a lot more quiet. I don't get overstimulated.”
Which revealed a part of Raymond that Len had always suspected, but since the other man didn't think much of it, Len didn't bring it up, either.
While he spent his time in bed, Raymond spent his either helping Galina or next to him, telling Len about his day. That was how he found out that Raymond had taken the pickup truck and salvaged the wreckage of the jump ship as much as he could, and was working on repairing it.
“Well, I'm not Jax,” he had said, expression serious and yet hopeful, “but I think I'll be able to at least get the comms and homing beacon functioning again.”
Galina, for her part, didn't question the ship or their unusual tech, taking it all in stride and Raymond stated that the only way he could think of to show his gratitude is to help her even more around the house.
It was a full two weeks later when Len was deemed well enough to move around on his own. By that time, he'd grown so restless that he couldn't stay in bed for the night.
Careful not to make too much noise, he made his way to the living room, then to the kitchen. He hadn't had the chance to case the entire house, but the kitchen was the first room other than his and Raymond’s rooms that he did scan over. He knew which cabinet he was going for, and frowned when he opened it and his item of interest was nowhere to be found.
“Looking for this?”
Len sighed. He didn't need to turn to know that Galina was standing at the doorway, looking at him with that same amused and knowing look that he'd grown to love to hate.
“Should've known you'd do this.” He drawled, slipping back into the version of himself that he'd tried to destroy. He grimaced, then finally turned fully to face the older woman and crossed his arms over his chest. “I suppose you're going to lecture me about the hazards of drinking while healing.”
The look was still in place as Galina raised the bottle of vodka in her hand. “Actually, I was about to ask you to join me.”
Len raised an eyebrow.
Ten minutes later both were sitting at the dining table with the bottle open and their glasses half empty.
At first they drank in silence, until one of them started talking. Somehow the conversation shifted from day to day annoyances to their sleeping habits and finally, it shifted to Raymond.
“Such a warm and caring man. Both qualities are rare, these days. And it is clear how much he cares for you,” Galina said with a laugh, “I stand by what I said when I first met the two of you: you're very lucky to have him.”
Len fell silent at that, staring at the far wall. He could feel Galina’s eyes on him. “Clearly you do, too. Care about him, that is.” Her voice had grown soft. “What is stopping you?”
Instead of responding, he took another swig of alcohol.
The silence stretched on into the night, until finally Len sighed. “I shouldn't.”
Galina didn't say anything in response, but the question was there, hanging heavily in the air, until Len felt like it was going to crush him.
“I almost killed him.” The words rolled out of his lips before he could stop them. He had never talked about this with anyone, not even Mick. “I wanted to kill him.”
He could still remember it, clear as day, how he had lodged the cold gun’s barrel underneath Raymond’s chin, with every intend to pull the trigger, to freeze that shocked look of hurt and plea in place for eternity before shattering it, wiping the world clean of his stupid optimism forever.
He had wanted that. Had genuinely intended to hurt, to kill Raymond. Just knowing that it was part of his memory, part of him, made him sick.
“But you didn't.” Galina’s voice cut in.
Len let out a humorless laugh. “Not by choice.”
He would never tell Heywood this, but he was more grateful than anyone could ever imagine that the guy had been there to stop him in time.
Galina hummed, then drank some more from her own glass. “But. You've clearly changed since then.”
Well, technically, yes. He changed back, but he also changed more. That wasn't something Len felt like explaining. “More or less.”
“Then I think you should give yourself a chance.”
Galina put down her empty glass. Len stared at the bottle to avoid looking at her.
“It's up to you,” the woman concluded warmly, then she stood and stretched. “I think that's enough for me tonight.”
She placed a hand on his shoulder, and Len surprised himself when he didn't feel the urge to shrug it off.
“Good night, Leonard.”
The next few days crawled by and nothing really changed, aside from that Len now helped out with less straining chores as well. Raymond now spent more time working on fixing what he could of the jump ship, which meant he spent more time in the rather spacious garage Galina had than the actual house.
Occasionally Len would go over to check on the scientist, but those trips usually ended up with him watching uselessly from the sidelines as Raymond rambled on about science. And while Len was able to understand it enough to know what Raymond was trying to do, ultimately there was no way for him to help. Instead, Len watched the time for him and forced him to take a break from the jump ship when needed.
One morning Len woke up with an uneasy feeling already brewing in his gut.
He made his way into the living room and immediately noticed what was wrong.
“Where's Raymond?”
Galina glanced up from another book and looked back down. “He went into town with the pickup truck. Something about needing some hardware supplies to fix your ship.”
He stared. “You let him go alone?”
Galina looked up fully this time, looking surprised. “Yes? It's not the first time he's done it. Ray's been to town alone a few times when you were still confined to the bed.”
There was nothing he could say to oppose that. But still the feeling lingered and Len found himself pacing the floor restlessly as the day wore on.
Finally, Galina came to him. “You're really that worried?”
Len's only reply was a sharp look towards the front door.
“Ray has told me about this, that you have a sixth sense for danger.” She crossed her arms over her chest. “I suppose I should believe him.”
A nod. “Come, I have another car.”
Len followed Galina out after putting on the appropriate clothes. Together they got into a small Russian car and sped away towards the town.
The town wasn't small, but it wasn't big either. Just the right size to have a city hall and a building for a train station, but other than that was rather dull. Good. This meant they could find Raymond faster.
Twenty minutes later they spotted the pickup truck parked in front of a hardware store, but Raymond was nowhere to be seen.
Len began pacing around the truck to look for any signs of him as Galina went into store to ask the clerk for information. The uneasy feeling in his stomach had only gotten stronger with each passing minute and he hated it, hated the helplessness and the dread, and hated that he couldn't stop himself from worrying about the other man.
Galina returned from the store with a grim look on her face.
“They said they last saw Ray leaving the store with a group of young men following him.”
The two of them shared a look before nodding at each other and heading in opposite directions to look for Raymond.
Len hurried through the streets, cursing the entire time as he looked for something, anything that could tell him where Raymond could have gone.
Finally he saw the scarf he remembered Raymond showing off from that first trip into town, discarded on the pavement just at the entrance of an alleyway. Len picked up the piece of clothing and glanced around once before making his way down the alley.
He heard the sounds first. It made him clench his teeth and spurred him to speed up, but still he froze the moment he rounded the corner.
There was Raymond, currently backed against a wall and curled on the ground, as six men surrounded him, punching and kicking at him while jeering and laughing.
Len saw red.
He didn't even know when he had moved, but the next instant he was standing right behind one of the attackers and with a series of moves had punched the guy in the face and bodily tossed him into a wall.
The other five started at this sudden development, but none of them took much time to pin him as the newest threat and turn to him. Len growled at them, daring them to come closer to him, and lashed out at them without mercy.
Soon he had taken down four more guys, and the last remaining man took a desperate swing with a fist at his face, which Len caught and twisted around to send the guy crying out to the ground. Len sneered at him, too caught up in his anger, and swiftly he drew out his cold gun.
“Wait, Len.”
He powered it up, took aim, and pulled the trigger.
“Len! Wait!” Suddenly something grabbed hold of his arm and forced his aim away, and the ice blast hit the wall next to him instead of the intended target. Len stared in incredulous silence at Raymond, who was now peering at him with a bruised face with his arms wrapped around his own, as he demanded for an explanation.
“They're just kids.” Raymond gasped, still breathing hard from the beating he had taken. “They're just kids, Len, please, don't kill them.”
Finally, for the first time, Len got a good look at the man on the ground before him. He scowled when he realized the “man” couldn't have been older than eighteen. And he looked downright terrified.
A look around told him that the rest of the attackers were either the same age or slightly older. Len glared at the kid still awake and powered down the cold gun and twisted his arm out of Raymond’s grip.
“Get out of here and don't let me see you again,” he snarled at the kid. The kid gave a frantic nod before making his escape from the alley with a whimper.
With the danger over, Len finally allowed himself to relax. A little. Then he turned to face Raymond, who was leaning against the wall, still trying to catch his breath.
Without thinking Len moved forward, and he reached out with one hand to cup Raymond’s face, running his thumb lightly over a particular dark bruise on the cheek. That had got to hurt.
Suddenly Raymond’s eyes snapped and he stared.
“It was you,” he whispered. And the confusion must have shown on Len’s face, because the other man laughed a bit before bringing up his own hand to touch Len’s, which was still pressed against his cheek. “Back on the jump ship, when we just crashed. The warmth. It was you. You were trying to wake me up.”
Let blinked. Then suddenly he was very aware of what exactly he was doing. Tensing up, he tried drawing back his hand, but Raymond held it in place.
“Raymond,” he tried to warn, but he sounded desperate even to himself. He wasn't ready for this, whatever this was. He couldn't. Not now. “Please.”
He could see the slight hurt in Raymond’s eyes, but at the same time he saw a hint of understanding, as the man smiled brightly at him, and released his hand. “Of course, Len. I'm sorry.”
Relief and guilt coursed through him in equal parts as he turned away.
They made their way back to the pickup truck where Galina stood waiting. The woman took one look at Ray and her eyes hardened. Curtly she instructed them to take the car while she drove the truck.
Raymond was silent most of the way back to the house, and Len used his concentration on the road in front of him as an excuse to not have to talk.
After they got back and were treating Ray’s injuries (mostly bruises and slight cuts, thankfully), Len purposely refused to meet Galina’s eyes, which sent a loud and clear message of “we need to talk”.
Ray was very frustrated.
On one hand, he knew that somehow, he and Len had been able to patch things up to a certain degree. At least he didn't actively try to avoid him anymore. That was progress, as far as he's concerned.
Yet at the same time, Len still seemed to hold him at arm's length.
Which he understood. To a degree. Didn't mean he liked it, though.
But after that last trip into town that had gone wrong, Len had been more and more…soft, for lack of a better word. Ray knew the Galya had been talking to him, but he didn't dare to hope that this could mean anything. Instead, Ray threw all of his concentration into fixing the jump ship. He was so close to actually fixing the homing beacon, and he hoped that the Waverider would be able to find them right away when he did.
They couldn't afford to get stranded too long, after all.
Not again.
Len was less than impressed by his antics, to say the least.
It was another late night of working on the device when Len promptly stormed into the garage.
“You need to rest, Raymond. You've been working at it nonstop for six hours.”
“I'm almost done.” He replied on reflex, then winced at this automated response. He could feel Len rolling his eyes.
“That's what you said before passing out in here at four a.m. last night.”
“I mean it this time.” Ray said weakly. And he really did. He was nearly done, he just needed a bit more time.
A hand on his shoulder. “Raymond.”
Ray sighed, putting down the wielder in his hands before letting smile spread on his face. “Glad to know you care.” He looked up at the other man, smiling at him again before standing and turning away to hang the apron he'd been wearing back up on the wall.
When he turned back he found Len close. Very close.
“Um,” he swallowed, meeting Len's eyes as the other man steadily stared back. “Len?”
Len didn't say anything, but he took a step forward, and Ray took one back to match him. This continued until Ray hit the wall behind him, and they were brought to a standstill. But then Len moved in closer.
Len had him trapped against the wall, his right hand planted firmly next to his head while his left hand landed on his hip. Ray’s breath caught in his throat and he audibly swallowed, but he couldn't keep the smile off his face.
Deciding to be bold, he moved his own hands to touch Len, both coming up to rest on the other man’s shoulders. Ray didn't know if he should do more, if Len would allow him, so he stayed still, but the smile on his face was growing into a stupid grin with each passing instant that Len didn't pull away, and he couldn't stop himself from getting lost in those piercing blue eyes staring back at him, pulling him in, enchanting him, luring and mesmerizing and, God, he’d never seen anything more beautiful.
Suddenly Len shifted, coming even closer, and Ray only got one second to register the hand next to his head moving to wrap itself around the back of his neck and pulling him forward and-
Just like that, all trains of thought came to a screeching halt in his mind, as he felt Len’s lips on his own, pushing and demanding and so, so passionate that it stole Ray’s breath away, and immediately Ray reacted, kissing back, returning the intensity with his own earnestness, and there was nothing that can stop the atomic explosion of pure joy from detonating in his chest and spreading to every inch of him. He’d wanted this, dreamed about this, pined after this for so long and Ray could barely comprehend that it was really, truly, finally, happening.
His hands moved from Len’s shoulders. The right one hooked itself around Len’s neck and the other traveled up and rested against his cheek. Len gently nibbled at his lips, a sensation that shoots jolts of stars through his vision and Ray barely managed to hold back the moan that tries to escape.
Then something else, something warm and soft, pushed against his lips and deliberately traced over them, and Ray cracked open his eyes that he didn't even remember closing and saw Len staring at him again, with that penetrating gaze, but this time, Ray could see the silent request for permission in those ice blue eyes.
Ray only paused for a millisecond, to ground himself, to remind himself that this is real, and then he dutifully parted his lips and teeth.
Len’s tongue shot forward instantly, filling his mouth, exploring and touching everything it can, the hand at the back of his head keeping him in place, and Ray couldn't stop the moans from getting out this time. Then Len swirled his tongue around his own, and Ray’s knees gave out from under him.
But he was still propped up by the wall he was pinned against, with Len's chest firm against his own, and Len’s hand that was on his hip had moved to the small of his back, effectively holding him up by tucking the arm into Ray’s side. Ray himself clung onto Len’s neck and shoulder like his life depended on it, and used the added weight of his loss of footing to aid him in returning the heated french kiss, pushing his own tongue against Len’s and dared to try and enter Len’s mouth himself.
Len let him, and everything fell away into bliss as Ray allowed himself to take his time, licking up every inch of Len’s mouth, tasting the criminal and savoring the flavor.
It felt like heaven.
They broke apart eventually, both breathing hard. Ray was leaning his weight completely into Len by now, only still held up by the chest pressing him into the wall behind him, and the knee that Len had managed to wedge between his legs. Len was looking up at him, and Ray could feel tears of joy pricking at his eyes at the pure adoration in his gaze. He laughed, leaning down to touch his forehead to Len’s and closed his eyes again.
“Len,” he breathed, barely just a whisper, “I love you.”
Ray heard Len take in a sharp breath, and he didn't have the courage to open his eyes to see his reaction, to see his face, because he knew the weight of the words he just spoke, and he didn't think he had the heart to have his hopes crushed right now, not when he just experienced something so wonderful, not when he could still pretend that this moment could stretch on forever.
But then Len’s hand moved, from the back of his neck to his chin, and he was guided into another kiss, this one soft and chaste. Ray found himself holding his breath as Len moved further, wrapping his arms around Ray entirely, and held him in the embrace.
“Raymond,” Len whispered into his ear. Then, pressing his lips to his temple, very quietly, “I love you, too.”
The two of them stayed like that until a knock sounded from the doorway into the house. Ray looked up to see Galya smiling warmly at them.
“You are very cute,” she teased. Then she turned around and gestured for them to follow her, “I have some midnight snack we can have to celebrate, then you can go to bed.”
Ray looked back at Len and met his eyes. They smiled at each other, Ray's wide and beaming and Len's small but content, then Ray leaned in for one more quick kiss before taking Len's hand in his own and gently guiding them after Galya.
He felt Len's fingers tighten around his own, and Ray knew everything was right.
A/N: sorry if it seemed a bit more rushed at the end. I have no excuse for that. QwQ
One thing I do want to clarify, is that I grew up in Russia in the 90’s, and the various things that happened in the fic and the character of Galina/Galya are based on true experiences that me and my family and friends had gone through. While not everyone in Russia were like the ones I had written about, those kind of people did exist. People that were super prejudiced against Americans and even Asians and anyone who spoke English, and people who genuinely didn't care and just wanted to live their life in peace. And it'll often surprise which people are which.
I wish my secret santa and everyone else happy holidays~ Or if you don't celebrate anything, just a nice December in general. :D
AN-from your prompt “Something happy – Sara putting a mistletoe and Ray and Len having to kiss under it.”
Hope you don’t mind that it’s kind of ridiculously long, and a little bit bittersweet at times, but my brain kind of took the initial prompt and decided to run a marathon of FEELS.
It’s set during a nebulous future point where Leonard is just recently back from the dead, and I sort of hand-waved, extrapolated, and pulled out my own version of how that all went down. It’s shamelessly not in keeping with how canon is likely to go on this front, but weird time stuff is the best stuff.
Hope you like it, and Merry Christmas!
It’s been strange enough, being…back.
Back to life. Back on the ship. He’s alive, again, and there’s a heady kind of satisfaction in that, almost overwhelmingly so. But he’s dealing with new status quos, and figuring out how he fits into the old ones. There’s a surreality to it, one that he just can’t quite shake.
Sara Lance pouncing on him in the hallway of the Waverider, and shoving an inexplicable box of craft supplies and ornaments into his hands?
Wasn’t helping.
“We’re time-travelers, Sara. Any day could be Christmas if we wanted.” He points out, contrary more out of habit, than anything.
He’s rusty at this. One half-step out of touch with everyone else’s sense of time. All the things he’s missed, and he doesn’t know how to catch up.
“Look. We busted the Time Drive a little bit, anchoring you back into the timeline. So we’re stuck here, in this time, for at least another week, unless Jax figures out a quicker fix on the engine. We might as well make something out of that.”
“Fine. I just hope you’re not asking me to go playing Santa. Breaking into houses and leaving nice thing behind? Kind of the opposite of my typical MO.”
It’s a lie, in a way, but Sara doesn’t need to know that.
He always did try. For Lisa, he’d tried. Year after year, when he wasn’t stuck in juvie, when they weren’t separated. But it wasn’t a substitute. It didn’t fix everything, and he’d been young enough then, there hadn’t been much he could do.
He’d never admit it, but fact was? He loved the idea of the holidays. The brightness. The weather, of course, and the unabashed cheesiness.
It just never felt like something that really welcomed him back, was the thing. Too many bad times, that no amount of tinsel covered up quite right. Too many missed moments and awful memories for the special magic of the season to not ring a little false, most of the time.
And yet.
Maybe this time is different. He’s different, after all.
Maybe this does help, already, with how things are. Sara poking him in the shoulder, the feeling oddly muted though it is, and walking with him to the galley. The box in his hands is a comfortable weight, even if it’s a bit tacky.
Things just didn’t quite feel tangible, the way they used to.
He’d been… Ephemeral too long, enough that it still didn’t feel real. Any of it. Like he’ll be lost, again, if he can’t find an anchor, something to help him hold steady.
But his feet are hitting on the floor, solidly, and each footstep echoes. His cold gun is on his hip, a reminder of what is still his. It’s there, it’s real, and that means he is, too.
Sara is talking, he realizes, so he tunes back in, and if she notices his ongoing crisis of existentialism? She has the grace not to mention it. “Snart, you just got back from the dead. Live a little. And it’s not just about you, okay? Let us celebrate, because believe it or not, we’re all really glad that you’re back.”
“All of you?” Leonard said, and hadn’t even been sure who he was asking about, until they turn the corner, and he sees who else is getting into the Noel spirit.
Raymond Palmer.
Sitting at the table, cutting out paper snowflakes, with a funny sort of intensity on his face, his brow wrinkling just a little bit. It’s not endearing. Definitely not.
“Hey Sara, did you… Oh.” Raymond trails off, as he looks up. Spends a moment, just looking, and Leonard almost wants to let him.
It shouldn’t feel that welcome, seeing Raymond at all. There shouldn’t be this rush of emotion, complicating every effort he has to maintain objectivity. Rationality.
Control, over his own circumstances.
So he doesn’t enter the room just yet. He leans against the wall, and looks away, and mutters, “Feel free to stop staring at me anytime, Raymond.”
Anyone looking at him, and seeing him? Not seeing a projection of a part of himself, not looking right through? That alone feels like enough of a miracle these days; let alone with eyes that bright, or warm, or open.
But it’s not personal, he has to remind himself. Raymond would look at anyone like that. It’s in his nature.
Besides, just like Christmas, Leonard Snart has never wholly believed in miracles. They’re something other people get. Not him.
When the apology comes from Raymond, it’s soft. “I’m sorry. I’m not…”
Leonard tries not to feel guilty about it, because he has no reason to. He wants to just… Walk away, but somehow he can’t. Not just yet.
It was almost easier, in that in-between time. When he could just… fade out of an uncomfortable conversation. When he’d been half himself, and half whatever someone else was projecting onto him.
“Brought more decorations, Palmer,” Sara pipes up, brushing past Leonard, and relieving him of the box at the same time.
“He’s helping?” Raymond says, talking about him like he’s not even in the room. It stings, a little.
“Only because Sara ordered me.” Leonard drawls, as he takes a step into the room, letting his shoulders roll back into a shrug, “What? It’s not the worst thing I’ve ever done. Dying kind of covers that box for the foreseeable future.”
If he jokes about it, it feels less real. It’s how he dealt with a lot of things... Before. The more things are obvious, the less people ask. Talking about his death, so nobody gets the chance. Burying his layers under surface layers, that sometimes look exactly the same.
Raymond is standing, abruptly, letting bits of paper flutter to the floor, little pieces of snow. “I’ve got to, um…”
Right.
Because Raymond hasn’t been in the same room as him for more than ten minutes since Leonard has… Gotten back. Returned from the dead. Whatever.
Is it possible to miss someone, when you’ve been dead for most of the time you’ve been separated? When you weren’t even sure you liked them, before. When everything you thought about them was a confusing jumble, and you’re only just putting yourself back together, so you don’t quite—
“I’m sure it’s crucial.” Leonard says, with more bite in his voice that he meant. Fragments of ice.
“To be honest, I didn’t think you’d want to go help Jax fix the Time Drive. But someone has to.” Raymond says, lightly, but with a patience that cuts far deeper than any harsh words could. Enough that Leonard’s blood runs cold, because Raymond noticed.
He knows it isn’t the same as the Oculus. He knows the Time Drive on the Waverider never did what the Oculus did to him, that it was the reverse. Raymond, Stein, and Jax had imploded it, nearly gave up the entire ship on the chance of pulling him back to the normal flow of time. Bringing him back to life..
He knows that. But the light is the same. The feel of it. Like it could pull him back in, fracture him again, until he’s lost, and nobody will bother to look for him, next time.
Raymond had seen all that, somehow. Those fears.
But admitting that won’t get him anywhere.
“Raymond, I don’t think you don’t know me well enough to dictate what I…”
“No. You’re right. I… I don’t.” Raymond looks like he got punched in the chest, and somehow that hurts to look at, so Leonard looks away again.
He can’t figure Raymond out, he realizes. That’s the problem. He never has. Most people are easy to crack. Safes with a simple combination. Boxes crack with the right pressure applied. It was always easy to get a reaction, but not to figure out what that meant, or how he felt about it. How he’d react, in turn.
Somehow he wants to placate, instead of wound. It’s an odd instinct, but he indulges it, anyway. “I’m good, Raymond. I’m fine. Why don’t I take over snowflake duty, alright? Nothing like crafts with children’s scissors to make me feel like my presence counts.”
He isn’t really very good at this.
But then Raymond walks past him, very close, and his hands enter Leonard’s field of vision, holding out the pair of scissors by the handle. That presence, in his personal space, is oddly rattling, enough that he fumbles while grabbing the scissors. Allows their fingers brush together, before pulling the scissors away, roughly.
The sensation had felt a shock, like the first blast of warmth to frostbite. Something welcome, but almost painfully so.
He isn’t going to thinking about it. He’s going to clip out tiny little pieces of stupid paper for stupid construction-paper snowflakes. Maybe get a papercut, knowing his luck. But he is going to focus on that.
On making something faintly cliché & ice-related, because he’s Captain Cold, after all. That doesn’t have to change. He doesn’t even have to look at Raymond, if he doesn’t want to. If he can’t, not without….
“It does count. For a lot, actually,” He hears Raymond say, in what sounds dangerously like a confession.
So maybe Leonard lets himself look up, just a little bit, because, what?
Raymond is leaning in the doorway, an echo of Leonard’s own habits, a mirror. The same way Leonard can see himself reflected in Raymond’s eyes, just for a moment.
Sara’s eyes flit back and forth between the two of them, measuring.
“Your presence. That you’re back. It actually kinda counts more than I… I mean…I’ll see you later” Raymond stutters out, makes a look of consternation, and flees.
Leonard listens to him go, as he sits down in Raymond’s place. Counts off the footsteps, just to make sure.
A beat or two of silence passes, as Leonard slumps down a little more in the chair, as if that will keep Sara from noticing him.
Time fades out again. Nothing like before, just the natural process of losing oneself in a menial task. Eventually, there’s a pile of snowflakes in front of him, and he blinks, looking up to find the rest of the box of decorations nearly empty.
He catches Sara’s eye, expectant that she’ll give him something else to fill the minutes.
Instead, she just says, “You know, you could always just talk to him.”
“That’s not an option.”
“Why not?”
“Nothing to talk about. Raymond and I aren’t even friends, and we don’t have to be.” He says, and it’s not a lie, exactly, but it doesn’t quite sit on his tongue, the way the truth usually does.
“Right.”
It occurs to him that Sara hadn’t mentioned a name. Just… ‘Him’. That Sara could, technically, have been referring to any number of people. Mick, for instance.
He’d let it slip, anyway. That Raymond had been on his mind.
“Shut up.” He mutters.
“I didn’t say anything.” Sara says, because she doesn’t need to. Just sighs.
“Go get changed. And maybe take a nap.”
“I slept when I was dead,” Snart snarks, because he feels fragile again. Grasping at something, when he doesn’t know what he’s looking for. “And I’m not wearing the sweater.”
“Captain’s orders!” she says, an eyebrow raised. “I’ll finish up here.”
“Fine.”
He makes his exit, hastier than he meant to, and not noticing the glance that Sara throws at the ceiling, as he leaves. Her smile, conspiratorial with only herself.
Or how she calls for one last thing from the replicators, for a final touch.
———
Music is playing, when he returns to the galley, a couple hours later, something soft and saccharine. There’s murmured conversation, and the sound of laughter.
It’s never been the kind of place he belonged, before. Somewhere that brimming with camaraderie. Somewhere where he’s not in charge, not in control, just somewhere where the people there will simply let him be who he is.
So he hesitates, entering the room. A minute. Maybe several. Linear time is still something he’s having to reacquaint himself, with.
Then lets himself take one slow breath, and another, before pasting on the nonchalance, and slipping into the room, and looking at everyone there. Who are, yes, apparently nearly all wearing an ugly sweater, with varying degrees of success.
Leonard admits, that out of all of them, this blue snowflake-patterned sweater that he had reluctantly donned isn’t the worst. It’s a bit… Sparkly, but the color scheme is actually pretty decent. Besides, nobody is going to make fun of a guy who just came back from the dead, right?
He’s wrong.
Mick is the first to notice, and walks up to elbow him in his side, hard. “Just checking that you’re real, this time. Drink?”
“No thanks.”
“ What’s with the froofy sweater? You look like an idiot.”
Right. He’d forgotten about Mick’s charming brand of expressing ‘affection’.
“Team unity, or something. Where’s yours?”
“I set in on fire. ”
Pursed lips, but there’s some fondness creeping in, because almost despite himself, he really had missed Mick. “Of course you did.”
“My suspenders are red. That’s festive enough.
”
“Looking very cool, Snart!” Great. Even Jax joins in on the teasing action. He doesn’t mind it so much, even though Jax’s own sweater is way, way uglier. A genuine level up in ugly. It’s all… Puce.
“Speak for yourself.” He snarks back, but without any bite to it.
“Hey, this isn’t a Waverider original. My mom made it, it’s immune from criticism.”
Leonard chuckles, and it’s strange. How easy that feels. How much it makes him feel more settled, even with that lingering sense of depersonalization.
He likes Jax. He’d forgotten how much, barring their scattered conversations when he’d been a temporal echo, ones that had never lasted very long.
The sweater is comfortable, at least. And his coat had gotten trashed during the whole ‘let’s resurrect Leonard, in the middle of the epic battle with the Legion of Doom, then punch him and accidentally set his coat on fire.’ Because not even Rip’s disappearance had made this team any better at plans.
“Well, if it isn’t the ghost of Christmas past, present, and future.” Stein says, with a smug face that said he’d been sitting on that joke, just waiting for the right opportunity.
“Nice to see you, too.” Leonard says, and almost halfway means it. Weirdly.
And just for a moment, he thinks about holiday cheer, and it feels oddly reachable, this time.
But that really was the key point, wasn’t it? Time.
He’d stood in front of the Oculus, looking into time itself, and just for a moment before it blew, he’d seen every moment of time. Every person who had ever lived, right before he’d been scattered to dust. He’d tried to find an anchor for himself in that, at the last moment of having any self. Collect the fragments of himself, and send them to the places where someone could put him back together.
He’d tried to find Lisa, because she’d always mattered so much, but it was too quick, too fleeting. He’d only had time to find the largest ripples, the strongest presences in the timeline, that seemed familiar. Right before he’d let go, and every atom of himself had been lost. Falling throughout time, every part of who he was. Drifting.
It had taken so many tries, so many false starts, but…these are the people he died for, and these are the people he came home to. That means something, he thinks.
“You did most of the snowflakes, I hear?” Amaya says. “Very on theme, apparently. Sorry I didn’t have any wild animals to add to the decor choices.”
“I helped with the snowflakes, actually,” comes a voice, one that Leonard can’t help but search out the source of, even if he isn’t sure how he feels about that.
Or how he feels, seeing Raymond walking into the room, seeing the delighted awe in him. Hand in his pockets, self-consciously, his hair is a little slicked-back, almost styled, but in a way that looks good on him. “But, oh. Wow. You guys really put in the effort.”
It’s strange, seeing that much joy in someone’s face. Over a handful of snowflakes, a fake plastic tree. Little trinkets and fairy lights. It hadn’t taken much, really.
Raymond shouldn’t be looking at it all, like it means so much. He certainly shouldn’t be looking at Leonard like that. Like he’s someone who matters.
When he’d shattered into time, it had been along the… Stress points. Moments in himself that were warring against each other. Past/present/future, all the maybes and could be’s. A lifetime worth of potential selves. He hadn’t known, in those moments when he could think about it, if he would ever come back at all, wholly, or what kind of person he’d be, when he did. A gamble with time, with himself. With how they would remember him.
He’d been almost afraid, when that angry, bitterly cold part of himself, had appeared to Mick, first. But that version of himself had been oddly content to be dead. To stay out in the cold, resenting.
Then Sara had seen him, a different version, one a little bit more in-between. Then Jax, and that self of his was younger.
The child, he’d used to be, once.
Those parts of himself are still there. They aren’t going anywhere. For him to be whole, he couldn’t have left them behind.
But there’s to more in him, now, that there used to be. And what about the version of him that Raymond had seen? Was that just as much there, as the rest of it?
He doesn’t know.
Maybe it doesn’t matter, because Raymond isn’t looking at him, anymore. Raymond is ducking his head, and moving to the other side of the room, and that’s fine.
So if Leonard keeps staring, it’s for a different reason now, he supposes.
He can’t believe it wasn’t the first thing he’d seen. How he’d been so caught up in the way Raymond had been looking at him, in more obnoxiously existentialist introspection, it had taken him a full minute to notice.
Now he’s staring, because Raymond shouldn’t look that nice in a sweater that ugly. He has no damn right to look that nice in a sweater like that.
It’s just so…
Festive, is about the best adjective he could use to describe it. Objectively, it’s a heinously acrylic monstrosity of glittery thread, sequins, overly busy motifs, and actual miniaturized lights. They’re all red, green, and… blinky. It’s distracting, to say the least.
“Nice sweater, by the way,” he says, because he’s still perfectly capable of being an asshole. And that’s the only reason he said it. Not because a tiny part of him really did find it cute.
Not because part of him does want Raymond to keep looking at him.
“Oh! Thanks?” Raymond says, in a tone that says he’s uncertain of Leonard’s sincerity. Which…maybe that makes two of them, really.
He’s uncertain about a lot of things, really.
So he winks, because flirting with Raymond was never the hard part.
Except, Raymond’s expression twists, with something unreadable, and just like that, it’s back to the distance between the two of them. That gulf, he never quite managed to cross.
It’s fine, really.
Then Stein decides to try and talk everyone into carol-singing. Which. No. He is not going to. He is not…
Maybe one or two songs.
So that’s how the evening starts, and somehow, Leonard finds himself almost enjoying himself. Almost.
Mick continued to make fun of him for the sweater. A lot, but Mick is a bastard like that. Then again, Mick was also not actively setting anything else on fire, yet, so he counted it as a win. Someone gives Nate way too much of the very alcoholic cider, Sara and Amaya dance a little bit. Leonard remembers his cold gun’s ability to make actual, genuine snowflakes.
There’s only a few, because no sense leaving puddles of water everywhere, but it’s weirdly pretty, watching them falling, surrounded by friends.
It’s strange how much this echoey, odd ship, almost feels like home.
Even if it’s almost why he took so long, getting there. Because coming home meant admitting to it. That this was what he wanted to return to. That dying had changed him, and he couldn’t cling to his own past anymore.
“Am I remembering wrong, or are you being uncharacteristically quiet?” Leonard says, finally shuffling up beside Raymond, some time later.
Because Raymond has been quiet, in a way. The pretense is there, all hyperverbal in that way that he is, when he’s too afraid to say what he means. Laughing with the new guy, cracking jokes, shoving shortbread into his face. But there’s a wariness to him, around him, and Leonard can’t help but poke at it.
Raymond looks up at him, with his sad-puppy eyes. Which is, again, rude. Raymond really doesn’t understand how powerful they are. Decline to join your lifelong friend’s mission to team up with actual pirates in favour of choosing to be a good person, kind of powerful. Nearly let a crazy Russian lady destroy the world because he won’t let you die, kind of powerful.
Finally decide to let the team bring the lost parts of you home, kind.
“I could say the same, actually.”
“Raymond, has it occurred to that, that maybe you really don’t know me that well?” Leonard says, repeating himself again, and why does it always feel like they go in circles? Why does he always have to push back?
“I…” Raymond huffs, furrowing his brow in that particular way he does. “This is weird for me.”
“And being dead wasn’t weird?”
“Actually, you being dead is kind of closer to my normal, actually.” Raymond laughs. It’s the lying kind of laugh. The one Raymond uses, when someone means too much. “Or are you forgetting? Between the two years I spent in 1958, thinking you were dead, and now all these months since you actually died? The weeks of seeing you as a… temporal echo, or whatever that was? I’ve kinda spent more time with you as a ghost, than anything else.”
Raymond runs his hands though his hair, mussing it the smoothness of it, and Leonard’s own hands itch. An odd instinct to touch, as Raymond keeps talking. “Morbid as it sounds, the weird part is you being alive, Leonard. The weird part is trying to deal with the idea that… I mean. Sorry. I’m sorry. This isn’t about me. It shouldn’t… Are you okay? I should have asked that.. I didn’t even ask that when you…”
It was a mistake to try and talk to Raymond. He should have just left well enough alone. But this is the longest conversation they’ve had, since… He isn’t sure, but he’s also oddly unwilling to let it go. So he grimaces. “ I’ve… Been gone for a while. And half the team doesn’t even know me. That’s all it is. I’ll get over it.”
Raymond blinks, earnestly. The lights on his sweater continue to blink in and out, in a strange kind of unison. “I know. That’s why I haven’t… Look. Just take as much time as you need, okay?”
“Right. Time.” He wants to laugh, again. He doesn’t.
Raymond looks so alive. It’s beautiful. God help him, but it is.
“Pun not intended, actually.” And there’s that crooked grin of his. “But I mean it. I want to…. Make things less weird, it’s just… Some of us never got to know you as much as we should have. Because we were busy with…other things. Distracted. Or we didn’t know how to…”
“Some of us?” Leonard says, and he’s looking at Raymond, and Raymond is looking back, and this time he’s pretty sure does know who he’s asking about.
Raymond flinches, and, his expression lightens, falsely. Bright shutter-stop smile, sliding off almost as soon as it appears. “Oh, hey, did I tell you about the dinosaurs?”
He really wants to hear about the dinosaurs. Because come on. Dinosaurs. But it suddenly feels like talking to Raymond, right now? Could be a little more dangerous than he expected.
Maybe he really should have that drink.
Except he doesn’t want alcohol. He hasn’t drunk a drop since he’s gotten back. Things are fluid enough in his own perceptions of things, and for a moment the room spins, without any intoxicants to aid it.
It’s too warm, and Raymond is too close. He needs a distraction. He needs tangibility. Something for his hands, something to…
“Maybe another time. Who wants hot cocoa?” Leonard says, tearing his eyes away from Raymond, once again. It’s for the best.
A chorus of ‘yes’es spring up, enough that Leonard almost regrets his uncharacteristic generosity. He regrets it more strongly when Raymond just… Starts helping, without even being asked.
They set up a little station. Snart programming the machine. Raymond getting the cups. Raymond even replicates a bunch of mini marshmallows, and holds them up, triumphantly. “Look!”
Leonard almost lets himself smile, thinking about the last time he’d made hot cocoa like this, in the Flash’s kitchen. Last Christmas. When he’d been wavering between who he wanted to be. Between the hero and the villain, the man who was all cold, or the one who maybe, just maybe, could let in a little warmth. Sometimes.
That feeling lasts a few minutes, as they brush elbows, and he tries not to think about how much he enjoys… All of this. This feeling of having a team. Of how much the ship feels like home, and how much Raymond…
The old doubts are still there, around the edges. Patterns he can’t shake. That it’s not really like that. It never is, for people like him. Not even now.
So they finish up, and Leonard forces himself to not notice how their fingers brush when he hands Raymond the last mug.
He’s so focused on that, on not noticing, not feeling it, and ignoring everything else. That he isn’t very careful where he walks, bringing Sara and Jax their mugs. Nor is Raymond, following right behind him.
Until Sara gives a hollering whoop, and they both stop, abruptly.
“HA! Gotcha.”
Raymond almost bumps into him, and Leonard is just. Frozen, halfway between wanting to run, and wanting to hide.
Sara’s grinning less like a canary, and more like the cat who ate one, while pointing up at the ceiling, and the traitorous little sprig of mistletoe that she’d apparently put up, earlier. The one he hadn’t even seen, until just now, when he’s standing right under it, with Raymond fucking Palmer, of all people.
The one person who…damn it.
“Really, mistletoe?” Jax says, shaking his head.
“So that’s still a thing, huh?” Amaya muses, polishing off her cider.
“Ms Lance, I cannot say that I fully approve…” Stein says, appalled, from across the room.
Leonard’s not saying he’d rather kiss Stein. Because that would be…horrible. But it would, somehow, still definitely be a lot less complicated than kissing the person that he’s apparently about to.
But he knows how to play a distraction, so he gives a false laugh, and stalls, “If you were wanting to kiss me again, Sara, I guess you’ve lost your chance, now.”
Sara snorts, not playing his game. “No. That was one-time offer, and you know it. And definitely only because A. you were about to die, and B. I knew you were bullshitting when you hit on me.”
“Aw, come on, stop stalling, and kiss Raymond already. This is gonna be hilarious.” Jax says, laughing, and Sara laughs too, and that gives it away, somehow.
She’d planned this, hadn’t she?
He can’t get a read on Raymond’s expression, and that scares him, somehow. Leonard just wants this moment to be over with, so he can move on from it as fast as possible.
It wasn’t how he’d wanted it to go. He hadn’t let himself think about it. Not ever, in any real way, but…
Even if the other man somehow manages to still look beautiful in a Christmas sweater that ugly. Even if he has a little trace of chocolate on the side of his mouth.
Even if, when Leonard speaks, it’s more soft, more gentle than he means. An acknowledgement, rather than a rebuke. “Raymond.”
“Leonard,” Raymond says, slowly. Hesitant.
He’s still not used to it. Hearing that man speak his first name. Knowing they’re on such familiar terms, when they hadn’t been, before.
“I’m not stealing a kiss from you, Raymond, if you don’t want one. I might be a thief, but that is one place I draw the line.”
“You’re a lot more than just a thief, Leonard. I do know that much.” And Raymond is looking at him again, with that intensity of regard.
“Look, the mistletoe’s fully optional, okay? You two don’t have to…” Sara says, almost desperately, like she’s picking up on the tension, a lot more than she’d anticipated, and doesn’t know what to do about it.
Leonard knows Sara is giving him an out, and he’s grateful, in some ways. But he’s also too stubborn for his own good, sometimes. Too willing to stand still, when he could run. Too willing to….
It’s his downfall, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t going to keep doing it.
Because Raymond speaks again, and it’s in answer to Sara’s question, but spoken wholly to him.
“It’s not that I don’t want to. It’s really not that.” Raymond says, and bites his lip. It feels like gravity, pulling him in, and maybe it is.
So just like that, Leonard forgets everyone is watching.
Leans in, just like that, it’s happening.
He means to make it something quick and hot. Something like the kiss with Vostok, all that time ago in Russia, in front of... All show, and no feeling.
Only he can’t. He can’t pretend that hard. He’s just too goddamn tired of living for the pretense.
So instead of a challenge, instead of putting on a show, it’s—
It’s delicate, gentle, it’s almost yearning, and Leonard doesn’t know how to feel about it, and he’s worried he feels a little too much. He wants to lift his hands, would have, if they weren’t full of hot cocoa. Wants to touch. But he can’t, because that would mean more than just moving his hands, it would mean playing his hand. It would mean letting the room know, just how much, that this isn’t just one kiss.
It’s just that, somewhere along the way, some time between when they’d first met, and this moment right now, he’d started to think of Raymond differently. The things that grated in the beginning, now feel almost endearing. The parts that felt like a difference too large to bridge….
It’s more than what he’d expected, far more. It’s fire, and warmth, burning away the fog in his mind. Curling into him, driving out the cold and everything that still made him feel like a ghost. Breaking him open, rebuilding, all at once.
Raymond almost seems like he’s kissing back, and Leonard lets his tongue almost—
They break off.
Raymond looks more than a little shaken, and Leonard can’t really blame him, honestly.
He can’t think about that. He can’t notice it, and he hasn’t, he hasn’t, not really. He might not be just a thief, anymore, but Leonard feels caught red-handed, just the same.
But this doesn’t mean anything. It isn’t real, even if that one moment of sensation felt realer than almost anything.
This wasn’t what he’d intended to come back to.
“Leonard, I…”
“The fuck was that.” Mick says, with his characteristic grace, and that’s enough to fracture the tenuous existence of whatever that moment had just been.
Leonard glances his direction, to see Amaya, Nick (Nate? The boring one, anyway) and Jax looking perplexed, Mick shrugging to look back down at his beer, and Stein looking faintly scandalized.
When he looks back, Raymond smiles brightly, but there’s something hollow to it, something almost false, that Leonard can’t figure out.
“Was that so bad?” Leonard can’t help but say. Because he needs to know. He needs…
Except Raymond turns away, and so Leonard lets him. Pastes on the nonchalance, and tries to pretend he isn’t shaken by that.
Sara is looking almost apologetic, but Leonard doesn’t care, because he kind of hates Sara, right now. Maybe it isn’t fair to, she couldn’t have known, not when he hadn’t, not really, not until just now.
Raymond hands out the mugs of cocoa in his hands. Half-turns back to Leonard, then turns away, again. “Um. Bathroom break. I’ll just…”
Leonard doesn’t follow him. Because it’s not like that. And damn it. Damn it.
Nate starts nattering about the cultural history of mistletoe in druidic traditions, and it’s just boring enough to keep most people’s mind off the subject.
Raymond slips back into the party, barely five minutes later. Then avoids Leonard, almost entirely, and, far more than even before. It’s subtle, all in the way he turns his head, the way he moves around the room, but it’s there.
So Leonard begs off early, leaves the party in full ‘Sara throwing knives at the festive streamers on the wall’ swing, and then goes and tries to… Sleep, or something. Anything to wrench his mind away from whatever just happened.
—
It doesn’t work.
He paces the hallways. Takes apart his Cold Gun, and puts it back together, piece by piece, just to keep in practice at it.
But his mind can’t focus. His body is too alert, too alive. Too full of… Potential energy, as he keeps running back to that damn kiss.
He isn’t thinking about the imagery he’d conjured up, in his head, back then. Back, before. Of Raymond dying, for all of them, at the Oculus. How much that had unsettled him, somehow. How it hadn’t seemed right, for Raymond to go out like that. Even if Leonard been telling himself it would happen, all along.
Talking himself into distancing himself from Raymond, because the man cared too much about other people, because Raymond would only get himself killed, playing the hero, so it wasn’t wise to get attached.
How he’d let himself commit to a Raymond’s plan to stop the Time Bastards. The plan he knew was madness, but he’d hoped, just maybe, that it might wind up differently. How he’d still hadn’t had the courage to talk to Raymond, in case it didn’t work, or in case it did.
How he’d played a false hand, to Sara, in claiming he was thinking about the future, and planned out his own death, instead. How he’d laid out the pieces, seen how the game would play out, and chose the only option that had made any sense.
He’d just been too rattled by the idea that his entire life had been outside of his control. That every choice he’d thought he’d made. Every move, had been someone else using him as a pawn. That none of it had been his own. Not being a villain, not trying to be a hero and failing at it.
So he’d done the only things he wasn’t certain of, and one of them had been the right choice, at least. It had just seemed so clear-cut, at the time.
He couldn’t follow his own rules, because maybe they weren’t his own, after all. So he’d followed Raymond’s, instead, because they were the farthest thing he could reach.
Thing was, he hadn’t expected to make it past that. There’s dying as one great cosmic ‘fuck you’ to anyone who would use you as a pawn, dying for the chance to make your own choices… And then there’s living with them.
Whatever mistakes he makes? Are wholly his own now.
He goes back to the galley, anyway. On a whim, or maybe a hope.
It’s late, but maybe just this once, luck is on his side.
Raymond is the only one still there, cleaning up. Leonard watches from the doorway. The record player is spinning in stuttering silence, Raymond’s back is to the door, his hands full of paper snowflakes.
Leonard leans against the doorway, because maybe he still doesn’t know if he’s not making a mistake. Maybe dying gave him a new sense of priorities. Maybe it cemented the ones he already had. Or maybe it just made him reckless.
Either way.
“Can we talk, Raymond?” Leonard offers.
Raymond turns around again, to look at him. And he’s shed the sweater, just wearing a dark red shirt, looking a little worn, but no less beautiful.
It’s not until then that Leonard knows, right then, that he’s not making a mistake. That it’s okay for him to want this.
That when Raymond asks, “You want that?”, it’s a deeper question, than just about the offer to talk.
True. Raymond looks a little nervous, still ill-at-ease, but Leonard is hoping he understands better the cause of that, now.
That, when Raymond half-shakes his head, he also takes several steps towards Leonard. Lets the snowflakes in his hands fall, except for one that still stays, stuck to his hand with a piece of stray tape.
“It’s an option.” Because it is. He’s willing, assuming Raymond is. So he stops leaning against the doorway so much, positions himself, at least halfway into the room, and hopes the gesture is enough. “Or we could go back to ignoring each other, the way we have since I…came back. Either way, really.”
“That might be less complicated.” Raymond half-way jokes, with a wariness, to it. And Leonard realizes a small gesture isn’t going to work, this time. Freezing him out isn’t going to work, this time. It isn’t enough, his old patterns aren’t going to work anymore, he needs to push forward.
This has happened before. Almost. Him letting Raymond get close, then screwing up. Raymond pulling away, and Leonard letting the bridges burn. Trying to leave him behind. But it doesn’t have to go the same way. He’s learned that, now. If he learned one thing from dying, from coming back again…
It’s that nothing is given. Nothing is set in stone. Not time, not destiny, not the person that you think you are, right up until the moment when you realize you’re capable something different. That you can earn that. And he isn’t sure if he deserves it, but maybe that’s not really the point. Maybe he can have this, anyway.
So he steps forward. One step, then another. Heading towards something that has nothing to do with fate, is entirely of his own choosing, but feels inevitable anyway.
As he sits on the bench, beside where Raymond is standing, and feels as Raymond sits down beside him, the warmth and weight of it.
It’s tentative, but it’s there.
For a moment, neither of them speak, until Leonard looks down at Raymond’s hand, and the snowflake half-crumpled in Raymond’s palm. He reaches over to un-stick it, and puts the little fractal of paper in his pocket, folding it away, carefully.
It’s a delicate gesture, balancing on the edge of something. Almost touching Raymond’s hand, but he is too unsure for that, quite yet.
“I would like to talk.” Leonard admits.
“What’s there to talk about?”
“I don’t know, Raymond. That’s why I asked. I die, come back, and nothing feels right. And then…”
“I missed you.” Raymond says, with a sudden fierceness that rattles him, and there’s a speech coming, Leonard can tell.
So he doesn’t interrupt. He just listens.
“I mean that. It’s stupid. I know that. We never even got along, very well. I was so wrapped up in so many other things. I thought I had you all figured out, so I didn’t need to think about it. But there were these moments. There kept being these moments, when you’d chose to do something I didn’t see coming, and I thought… Maybe I’ve got you wrong. Maybe there’s something else to you.”
Maybe they both got each other wrong, Leonard thinks. And how can he blame Raymond, when all along, he’s been getting himself wrong?
“I loved Kendra, I did. I don’t regret that. But everything that happened kept making me think. What would I have done, if I hadn’t been stuck in 1958? Or if… A million different things, a million different choices, that were because of… Fate, or time, and what if I actually would’ve done something different, if it had really been up to me?”
Leonard didn’t regret making the choices he did. He regretted a lot of things in his life, but not that final one. That was the strangest thing. If he could turn back time, stop himself from making that choice, he wouldn’t.
So if he can’t go back, he has to go forward.
So maybe that starts now. With listening to this impossible idiot of a beautiful man, this obnoxiously good person that he has gotten himself all tangled up in.
To listen, as the words just keep flowing, and Raymond lets him in.
“But by the time I started to figure that out, I got scared by it, and then it was too late. I was right. You were the hero I thought you could be. But it didn’t even matter, because you were gone, and… Time kept happening. It just…kept going. We went home, after you died. Rip told us to move on, and my life was my own again, but it didn’t fit me anymore. Nothing did. I didn’t feel like myself, because I didn’t know who that was. I’d given it all up to be a hero, and I couldn’t even get that part right. You’d beaten me to it.
“It didn’t make sense. Every single missed opportunity in my life, everything I could be regretting, everything I could make up for, that I had time for, now…but instead I tracked down Mick, of all people. Because, somehow, even though we didn’t even get along, half the time? I trusted you. I missed you being around. And it should have been me, that died, so maybe… I needed to take your place. So I tried being you. I did. Because I wasn’t good enough, but maybe you would be. And that, that didn’t work, either. You were the Legend I couldn’t live up to.”
This is Raymond’s side of their story. The parts he never saw. The parts he never let himself see, and the parts that are just now beginning to feel real.
“Raymond,” Leonard tries to interrupt, because he can’t deal with this. He can’t hear it, because part of him still says that he knows better than to hope he’s hearing right. That he might be hearing what he actually wants to. Just this once.
Raymond flaps a hand, almost angrily. “No. No. You don’t get it. I was finally figuring it out. I was finding it my new normal, and that was enough. I was friends with Mick, and with Nate, and I was being a hero again, And it was fine. It was okay. I could live with it, and it felt like it made sense. I knew how to deal with you, as something I couldn’t ever be, and something I couldn’t ever have. But then you started showing up in my head. And then you were alive, again. So that all fell apart.”
“Well, sorry for inconveniencing you.”
“It wasn’t inconvenient. It was just… confusing.” Raymond’s brow is furrowed in thought, but guilessly, and Leonard takes the chance to speak.
“I got lost, for a while. I got stuck in time. In anger, and bitterness, and I just wanted to be done with everything. What was the point? I saw where being a hero got me. And you cant be a legend unless you’re already dead. I kept fighting it, I kept trying to return the way I used to be, but it didn’t work. Then I accept it. I accept that I’m a different person. I let you all save me. And you want to know the first thing that I felt in an eternity that felt tangible, getting back? You.”
“When I punched you in the face, again?” Raymond laughs, absurdly. “I swear that made sense at the time.”
“I probably deserved it.” Leonard says, letting his lips curl into a smile, and some of the tension breaks, just like that. “But no. I meant… Earlier. Under the…” He gestures at the ceiling.
“Oh.” Raymond says, quietly.
“Yeah, “.” He admits, and, “but there’s another thing you should probably know. I was thinking about leaving the Waverider.”
“What?” And the betrayal in that one word, the hurt, there.
“When I first got back, I was thinking about it. I chose to let you all pull me back to life, but that didn’t mean I’d made a decision, past that. After Jax fixes the Time Drive, we’re going to see my sister. I get to tell her that I’m alive. After that, I thought… I’m going to decide. Whether or not I want to stick around.”
“Oh.” Raymond says, and Leonard can see the way he’s closing off. “Right. I mean. If that’s what you think is best.”
Raymond huffs a little laugh, and it’s one of the saddest things Leonard has ever heard.
“Of course you’re leaving. I mean, why wouldn’t you, right? You don’t owe us… I guess I just… I thought I’d have more time to figure it out. Because I wasn’t…. I wasn’t ignoring you on purpose, I just… I didn’t let myself think about it. But then…I think I just started letting myself. But. I get it. I do, and…”
“I said I was thinking of leaving. Past-tense.” Leonard interrupts, gently, and watches Raymond’s eyes.
Sees the pieces fall into place.
“You aren’t the only one who can’t stop thinking about it. About… Different choices. Different possibilities. I came back to life, Raymond. And there were all kinds of ways I could have done that. I could see into time. All the combinations of futures I could have. I could have come back for Mick. Been a thief and the bad guy again. I could have come back for the team. The crew. I could have come back for my sister, or for Jax, who’s as good as a kid brother. Or for Sara, or for… But I didn’t. That’s not who made up my mind.”
They sit in a moment of silence, a little bubble of feeling, that neither of them are willing to break.
“This is something, isn’t it?” Raymond says, finally, gesturing between the two of them. “I’m not imagining that.”
“It could be.” Leonard admits, balancing on the precipice, and letting himself embrace the potential of falling.
“I’m not… I’m still not a good person, Raymond. Dying doesn’t fix that. Coming back from the dead, even if it was to be a hero, to be a Legend… This doesn’t come easy to me.”
“Why me?” Raymond asks. “Why not Mick? Why not Sara? Why not…”
And he’s right, in a way. They don’t really match up, by rights. The two of them are a one-in-a-million combination. Something that shouldn’t work, by any logic.
But damn the odds. He wants this.
“Because you don’t follow the rules.”
Raymond laughs, absurdly. “Um. Have you met me?”
“Not your rules. Mine. You know why the Flash always got to me so much?”
From Raymond’s expression, he thinks Leonard is changing the subject. “Not really? I mean, Barry used to talk about you sometimes, but…”
“Because I never saw him coming. I plan everything, it’s what I do, and I always know what I’m going to do. I don’t let anyone else see me. I don’t let anyone else in, because letting anyone else in means letting them hurt you. Letting them get to you.”
“It was easier, before he showed up in the city. Before I had to think about heroes, I didn’t have to be anything different than what the world had made me. I could hurt people, take what I want, do what I wanted. See people as disposable, because nobody in my life had ever really looked at me different. Heroes didn’t exist, so I wasn’t one. There’s no white knights, when everything is a shade of grey. And I liked that. It was easier. It was uncomplicated.”
“Except he didn’t match that. He reacted differently than I thought. And I started reacting differently than I expected. I let it happen. Changed, because he thought I could.. Started thinking about different things.”
“Wait, did you and he…”
“No. It wasn’t like… Not really. But some people are just… Catalysts, in your life. They change you, without even planning on it.”
“You’re one of those people too, Raymond. And then some. I didn’t see you coming either. You never made sense. Most of the team, I could categorize. React to, simply enough. I just never could figure you out.”
“Because I wanted to be a hero?”
“Because you thought I was capable of being one. You saw something… Worthwhile in me. You wouldn’t let me feed you the same bullshit lines that everyone else bought. You wouldn’t let me die, even when it would’ve made sense to. You got under my skin, Raymond, and I let you. And you let me. You trusted me, even when there wasn’t any good reason to. You walked into a shoot-out with only me as your back-up, and you didn’t even blink. But it didn’t matter, because it wasn’t like that. I told myself it wasn’t like that, because how could it be?”
“Before I died, it was like… I was balancing on the edge. Of whether I wanted to be a hero or not. Every time I looked at you, I wanted to cross that line. So I told myself to stop looking, except for all the times I just… Couldn’t help it. And we ran out of time. And… And I thought it was fine. Dying that way. Making up for my mistakes, but not having to deal with the consequences .”.
“Except dying didn’t stick. So now I have to deal with it. And I want to. I want to stay, but if I do…Then that’s it. I’ll have chosen. I have to admit that I care, about something like this? Which terrifies me, because I don’t know how to care about anyone. I don’t know how to be a good person. You are one. It’s easy for you.”
Raymond shakes his head. “I’m not that good, Leonard. I do good things, maybe. Sometimes. But i wanted to be a hero because I was scared. I was scared of being helpless. I was scared my life wasn’t ever going to mean anything. It was selfish, honestly.” Raymond says, gently. “But… I’m not scared, anymore. Being a hero, being a good person, it’s… All I wanted to do, for a long time. But life is about more than that.”
His hand touches Leonard’s. Very gently, with a dizzying sense of possibility, in it. “I meant what I said, Leonard. I never got to know you. Not really. And, I don’t know. I think I… I wanted to. I think I do want to. Whatever that ends up meaning.”
Leonard thinks for a moment, and nods, slowly. “I wouldn’t mind that. I don’t really know who I am, anymore. But I don’t think I’d mind, if you did.”
Raymond laughs. “I’m not sure who I am, either. Not all the time. Maybe that’s okay. Maybe we don’t need to have it figured out, in order to figure this out. ”
And that’s that, then, isn’t it?
Time to choose, once again. And maybe it’s always going to end up like this.
He stands, abruptly, maybe too fast, because he’s spinning with it. And he’s moving, halfway to the door, and he isn’t sure at first, where his feet are taking him.
Until his hands are lifting the needle of the record player, and he’s looking at the box of records.
As he picks something a little old, a smooth, wistful kind of jazz, and sets it going, on another whim that he doesn’t wholly understand.
Takes a breath, breathing in the possibilities, exhaling his fears. And he lets himself, this time.
Turns around, to see Raymond half standing, with alarm fading into something softer in his face, as Leonard walks over once again.
Lets his hand slip down, next to Raymond’s to brush against it, cautiously. Lets Raymond’s hands slide into, and spins him into a standing position.
The snowflakes are mostly down, and all of the fairy-lights, but the ribbons are still hanging, and the cool blue light of the galley is more than enough to see by.
It’s not perfect. There’s an awkward moment where they both try to lead, and Raymond steps on his foot
“Sorry!” Raymond says, trying to step backwards, only for Leonard to pull him out into a spin, then back again, close.
He thinks maybe that’s how it’s going to be, with them, and he’s okay with that. That they’ll both push each other, and pull, and wind up somewhere in the middle.
“Trust me, Raymond,” Leonard says, with a confidence that surprises even him.
The closeness is something so rare. That he gets that, without an ulterior motive. Without it being a game.
That feeling unreality vanishes, somehow, just for a moment. His heartbeat feeling right, when his chest is close enough that he can feel Raymond’s own. His hands moving, holding Raymond’s hands.
They spin, slowly, in the space they have, between the chairs and discarded elements, and Leonard forgets for a moment, where he’s leading them, he’s so caught up.
Walks with him, half-dancing to the song playing on the record player, until they are standing under the mistletoe again.
He smiles at Raymond, lets down his walls enough to let himself show all of him that feels real.
And Raymond smiles back, a little soft, and half-foolish. “You know, I’ve never really known what to do, when I get a second chance at anything. But right now…”
“Raymond, I barely even know what to do with a first chance.” Leonard says, because it’s true. He’s never really had that, but maybe…
“So, we’ll find out.” Raymond challenges, and leans in, for the second time.
Leonard follows Raymond, follows him into their second kiss, their first in this new understanding.
It’s warmth, and it’s a promise, and it’s a question, and an answer.
Leonard doesn’t believe in miracles. He doesn’t believe in perfect, and he’s never been too sure if he believes in most things, really.
But maybe, just maybe, in this one frozen moment of time, unfurling into a thousand possibilities?
“What do you mean there aren’t any left?” Leonard Snart asked in disbelief, “it was released an hour ago and I had one on pre-order,” he explained to the customer services representative of the toy store.
“I’m sorry sir, but we sold out and your online receipt states that you had to be here before the dolls were released to the public.”
“I ordered it instore, I never got an email.” He told the woman. “Look, it’s almost Christmas are you getting any more of them in?”
The woman turned to her screen and began typing, “I’m afraid not, but the release in Gotham isn’t until next week, I can pre-order you one from there.”
“Gotham is across the country,” Len said. “I can’t get there,” he added quietly. There was no way he could get there and back, he couldn’t even afford to go, his car was in the shop and his insurance didn’t include a courtesy car while it was there. Even when it wasn’t, money was a little tighter than usual, and his daughter never asked for anything because although he hated it, she knew, but she’d asked for this one thing. And he desperately wanted to get it for her.
“Excuse me,” a voice asked from behind him, he turned to come face to face with another man. “I couldn’t help overhear, I’m in a similar predicament myself, I was trying to get the same toy, I don’t mind carpooling, I mean, I get it if you don’t wanna go with a stranger or anything but it’s Christmas right? Um, also you wouldn’t have to pay for anything, I promise.”
Len couldn’t believe his luck, he knew he could afford to at least put towards some of the gas, he was speechless, but the woman needed an answer. He turned to her and nodded for her to order it for him and turned back to the man. “I can’t thank you enough.”
“Don’t worry about it, um, it’ll be a few days’ trip, I can pick you up later on if you’d like?”
“I, yes, thank you,” Len said, still in shock at the kindness of the stranger.
“Don’t worry about it, um, here, text me your address, I’ll be over in a couple of hours.”
“Thank you, so much,” he said, he could never repay the man for what he was helping Len give his daughter. Damn, his daughter, he couldn’t exactly take her across the country, she had things planned. He called best friend Mick who agreed to have Annalise since his own daughter would be going to the same activities.
“But daddy it’s Christmas,” Annalise said sadly.
“I promise I’ll be home by then, but the mail company is still on strike and daddy has to go out of town to send this letter to Santa.” Len told her. Annalise sighed, she was a smart kid, and she had figured out early on that Len bought her presents, but she went along with it because seeing her believe in something made her dad happy.
“OK,” she said.
“Besides you re gonna have the best time in the world with your uncle Mick and cousin Aideen.”
“OK, but wait here a minute.”
“OK,” Len said, Annalise ran to her room and back again with her hands behind her back.
“Daddy,” she said.
“Yes sweetie?”
“I want you to take Scotty with you,” she said producing her bear dressed in a red Star Trek shirt, “in case the car breaks again, he can help you fix anything,” she told him. Len looked at the bear for a second. She loved that bear and never slept without it.
“Don’t you want him here with you?”
“I want you to take him. Just in case. Please?”
“OK sweetie, I will,” he said kneeling he took the bear and hugged her tightly. Someone knocked on the door, “that’ll be uncle Mick, go open the door,” he told her picking up his jacket and bag and the bear.
“Daddy it isn’t uncle Mick.” He quickly made his way down the stairs to find the man from the store in the doorway. “Are you driving my daddy to drop off my Christmas letter? Please make sure he gets back for Christmas.”
“Hi, um, this is my daughter, Annalise,” he said.
“Hi, Annalise, I’m Ray and I’ll do my very best to make sure he gets home for Christmas, OK?”
“Thank you,” she smiled. “Uncle Mick!” She shot past Ray and into Mick’s arms.
“Hey cutie, ready to go? Aideen and Axel want to make cookies and could use your help,” he told her. Annalise nodded as Len greeted Mick warmly and handed over her bag. Len watched them go as Ray put his bag in the trunk of his car. It was a nice car.
As they set off Len didn’t really know what to make of Ray, he could tell he was rich, but clearly generous if he was willing to drive a stranger cross country for a doll. He recognised him, but he couldn’t place him. He was sure it would come to him.
Ray’s car was warm so he forwent his jacket and strapped in, “nice bear,” Ray said, “Star Trek right?”
“Yeah, it’s my daughters, she calls him Scotty and says he’ll be able to help out if the car breaks, mines in the shop being fixed,” Len explained.
“That’s really sweet. OK I called ahead to some motels, so we have places to stay, we should get there in a few days and back on the 23rd.” Len nodded.
“Thank you, again, I, I can’t tell you how much this means to me.”
“Don’t worry about it, it’s Christmas. You’re just a dad, like me, trying to make his kid happy.” Ray said smiling. Len smiled because Ray was right, they were the same.
They were nearing their first stop, it was dark and the snow was really coming down on the windscreen. Len was reading the map carefully as the snow was interfering with the SatNav signal. They arrived at their motel without incident and checked into their rooms, they agreed to set off early to avoid the worst of the snow which was to come and said ‘goodnight’ early.
The next evening went off with slightly more of a hitch. They arrived at the motel and went to book in. “Hi I have a booking under Palmer?”
“Yeah, one minute,” the man said looking typing at the computer, “room 7, please return keys by 10 and let us know what we can do to make your stay more special.”
Ray stood confused. “I booked 2 rooms.”
“Not according to this, who did you speak to on the phone? Old sounding?” Ray nodded, “my father-in-law, his hearing ain’t what it was. Sorry guys, it’s the only room, we’re full tonight,” he said apologetically.
“OK, thank you,” Ray said, hoping there was a couch in the room. There wasn’t.
“We can be adults about this,” Len said, “it’s not a bad sized bed. Or I can sleep in the car, I’ve slept in one before, more comfortable then you’d expect.” He offered.
“What? Don’t be silly you’ll freeze out there, you’re right, we can be adults. Come on, let’s go get dinner, I’m fed up of gas station snacks.”
“I hear you there,” Len agreed.
They found a diner a little up the road and ate there, it was the kind of stuff Len was raised on, when his dad would take him on stakeouts because of his precision and timings, diner food was his reward. He used to sneak it into his pockets in a napkin to share with Lisa when she was old enough. She always loved the treat. It was sad but it was some of his nicest memories of his father and he could count them on one hand. It was all downhill from there really.
Len paid for dinner, he insisted it was the least he could do for what Ray was doing for him. They returned to the motel and got ready for bed, laying as far away from each other as possible in the bed, they turned away and said their goodnights, Ray setting his alarm for the morning.
As Ray hit his alarm the next morning he could feel a weight across his torso and smiled briefly before realising it was Len, the man he was helping out. He eased out of Len’s reach and locked himself in the bathroom when something caught his attention, he was hard, he swore, it couldn’t be more inappropriate. Jumping in the shower he took care of himself blushing as he thought of the man in the bed just outside the bathroom. He was attractive, but Ray knew he couldn’t let his feelings or whatever control his life, he had his son to think about. His son, he paused splashing cold water on his face. His son Leo was the reason he was making this journey.
Leo was 3 and he liked playing with dolls. Which for Ray, was fine, there was nothing wrong with it. His overly conservative family however… Did not look so kindly on it. His stupid brother and sister-in-law had already forced him to find a new day care, lest their little boy be exposed to another little boy playing with dolls. Ray hadn’t spoken to his brother since, he still spoke to his mother and father, but rarely. He had refused to leave Leo with them, he was staying with his friends Laurel and Tommy and their little girl Ella.
He pushed his son from his mind and dressed, thankfully having left his bag in reach of the bathroom door. Len was awake and dressed by the time he was ready, rubbing the sleep from his eyes Len smiled at him, he couldn’t have known, Ray thought.
They returned the keys and got on the road quickly stopping at another diner for breakfast a couple of hours later. “Are you OK?” Len asked him as they sipped their coffee, waiting for their food.
“Yeah, I just miss my kid, never been away from him this long before.”
Len nodded, “I miss my daughter too, so you have a son?”
“Yeah,” Ray fished his phone from his pocket, “Leo,” he showed his lock screen, a picture of the little boy smiling widely, Len could see a clear resemblance.
“He looks just like you.”
“Yeah, except the eyes, they’re all his mother.” Ray said fondly.
“How long have you been together?” Len wondered having seen no wedding ring.
“She died when he was a baby, we weren’t married, she was a friend, my whole life, my best friend, she asked if I’d help her have a baby, I’m gay but I agreed, we planned a shared custody and everything and then… You remember the Slade Wilson attacks?”
“Yeah,” Len said, he and Annalise were fortunate enough to be out of town.
“It was my week with him, he was 10 months old and I was taking him to Coast City to visit my grandfather, his mother was attacked, she died in hospital a week later. It crushed us. I never saw any attraction to a girl ever before or since but God I loved Anna. So much.” He said, blinking back tears, “sorry.”
“Don’t be, you shouldn’t apologize for missing a loved one.”
Their food arrived and Len and Ray shared a smile.
Back on the road they drove for hours, taking it in turns so there were no accidents, following Ray’s satnav.
When they arrived at their third destination Ray checked in and was pleasantly surprised to find a decent Wi-Fi signal so he checked the news and found an article from a few hours previous, their breakfast stop, it was him and the back of Len’s head, and the headline read ‘Palmer enjoys romantic breakfast with mysterious stranger.’ He scoffed and rolled his eyes, that morning was anything but romantic. They had been seen in the bar the night before and leaving the same motel. He stopped for a moment when he realised Len could see this and get the wrong idea. He cleared the laptop history and put it away as Len exited the bathroom, ready for bed, they had been driving until late so they weren’t going out that night. Ray hoped they hadn’t been tailed, more pictures of them sharing a room. At least this one had two beds in it.
When Len woke the next morning Ray was already in the shower, he checked his phone to see a message from Mick to call him. He did, “Mick, hey everything OK? Is it Annalise?”
“No she’s fine just wondered what the truth was with this article?”
“What article?” Len asked rubbing the sleep from his eyes.
“The one of you and that guy walkin’ into a motel readin’ ‘Palmer spends second night with mystery man.’ Mystery man is you by the way.”
“Send it to me.” Len said, “Palmer, as in Raymond Palmer?”
“The very same.”
“I knew I recognized him,” Len said quietly. His phone vibrated, the article arrived.
“There’s another from yesterday, two of you eating at some diner.”
“OK, I’ll talk to him, the last thing I need right now is getting mixed up with something like this. Thanks for letting me know, how’s she holding up?”
“She’s good, she’s eatin’ cereal if you wanna talk to her.”
“Sure put her on.”
“Hi daddy” she yawned, Len smiled, his daughter was not a morning person.
“Hey baby, you having fun with uncle Mick and Axel?”
“Yeah, but I miss you, when are you coming home?”
“Soon baby, we have to go all the way to Santa.”
“Daddy, if I said I don’t believe would you come home quicker?” Len’s heart broke.
“Sweetie I have to level with you, I’m going to get you a Christmas present, you’re my sweet girl and you never ask for anything but daddy really wants you to have this, so believe in me OK?”
“OK,” she said sadly. “I love you.”
“Love you too baby.” Annalise hung up the phone and Axel was probably giving her a soothing hug, Len thought he could really use one about now. His little girl just said she’d stop believing to have him back. Tears slid over his cheeks and he threw his phone to the floor, dropping his face to his hands.
“Everything OK?” He jumped a little at Ray’s voice.
“Yeah um, just spoke to my daughter,” Ray sat beside him. “She asked if she told me she didn’t believe in Santa would I come home early.”
“I’m really sorry to hear that,” Ray said, he was shocked, the little girl he met couldn’t have been more than six, how could a kid her age not believe in Santa?
“She’s a smart kid, and I know she knows, we aren’t the most… Well off, my business got destroyed during the Slade Wilson stuff and it’s been tough ever since, the insurance company refused to pay damages, that’s why she never asks for anything, ever, and when she asked for this one thing I couldn’t deny it to her. I want to be able to give her the world and right now I can’t and that hurts.” Len sighed, “I’m sorry for dumping that on you, but when you offered to bring me I couldn’t believe my luck, you’re a really good guy and I can’t thank you enough for this.”
“You don’t have to, seeing you make your daughter happy is enough for me. I’m trying to make my son happy.”
“What’s he like?”
“He’s the sweetest little thing you’ve ever met, he just loves to make people happy, the Christmas after we lost his mother I took him with me for her favourite tradition, we take toys to the children in hospital, he just wants everyone to be happy. Leo plays with dolls, that’s why I’m going to get this toy, my parents and brother don’t approve and tell him all the time there’s something wrong with him, but I keep telling him, ‘don’t listen, you play with whatever you want, there’s no such thing as a girl or a boy toy.’ And then he smiles. But I just want to show him it’s OK, my sister-in-law had him kicked out of his day care centre for it. Explaining why broke my heart but he’s perceptive, he’d know if I were lying.”
“You’re a good father,” Len said smiling.
“You too,” Ray smiled back. “We should really be getting off soon, but, um, hug it out?” Len chuckled and nodded.
On the road again they made short stops at gas stations until nightfall, they were nearing their destination but wouldn’t make it for another three hours. There was another room mix-up but the pair didn’t seem to mind, they had grown very close.
“I think we need to talk,” Ray said as they prepared to go out for food.
“The articles?”
“There’s more than one?”
“Yeah, a third one popped up this afternoon.” Len told him handing over his cell phone.
“For crying out loud, my dad is gonna kill me, he knows I’m gay but asks I be discrete.” He rolled his eyes.
“So what do we do?”
“The only thing we can do is ignore them, we know it isn’t true, they’ll get bored soon, try not to worry about it.” Len nodded and they went out for dinner before bed.
The next morning Ray woke to his alarm wrapped around Len who also woke up, “I am so sorry,” Ray stammered.
“Relax, it was an accident, it happens.” Len shrugged and Ray went to the bathroom first, shamed to realise he was once again hard. He reminded himself it was a perfectly natural reaction to being wrapped around an attractive man.
Few words were spoken as they made the last part of their drive into the City of Gotham. They went straight to the toy store, they had minutes to spare before the cut-off point of their pick up. Deciding it better to stretch their legs a little Ray said he knew where they could leave their stuff. He had a penthouse in the city which he used for business traveling.
They dropped off their things deciding it would be better for them to stay the night and take a break from driving all together.
Ray and Len relax in the penthouse and get ready to go out for the evening, the gifts safely stored upstairs. They find a small hidden place; a small neon umbrella is their only indication it exists. Inside is the opposite of outside, it’s lavishly decorated and there’s a jazz band playing on the stage. A girl behind the bar took their order with a wink and their drinks are placed in front of them on a napkin.
“To making our kids happy,” Ray said holding his drink between them. Len smiled.
“To makin’ ‘em happy.”
Ray wasn’t sure how they got onto the topic that lead to their current state but he wasn’t complaining. Len had him pressed against the inside of the door of his penthouse, the way he’d had Len against the walls of the elevator bringing them to their floor. “This would be more comfortable somewhere else,” Ray said breathlessly as Len turned his attention to his shirt and chest. Ray pushed off of the door and pulled Len by the wrist to his room where he turned and claimed Len’s lips once more.
Backing up they tumbled onto the large, soft bed, Ray straddled Len’s stomach and kissed him, removing their shirts with his hands. Ray littered kisses down his chest, sliding to his knees on the floor as he tugged open Len’s jeans, kissing the bulge there. Len moaned but his mind wandered to the future. Ray was a successful man, there was no way this would continue and even if they tried, could he do that to his daughter? His daughter, the reason he was here. “Wait,” he said as Ray had his hands ready to pull off his jeans. “I’m sorry, I can’t do this,” he sat up and searched for his shirt.
“Len?”
“No, I’m sorry Ray, I can’t do this to her?”
“Do what to who?”
“This to Annalise, I can’t sleep with you and get her hopes up about me meeting someone,” he slipped his arms back into the sleeves of his shirt, “I’m really sorry.”
“Len slow down, what’s the matter?”
“I- You- Us? It could never work in reality, you own a multi-million-dollar company and I’m struggling while to raise funds to reopen a bakery, I can’t get her hopes up or expose her to another life she can never realistically have right now. I mean you’re doing a really nice thing for me and I can never repay you but let’s face it, we can never be together, realistically.” He said sadly, “I should go-”
“We could make it work.” Ray said dejected.
“Maybe in another world,” Len replied quietly. He climbed off of the bed and Ray didn’t try to stop him as he left the room. In his own room he swore and cursed his sensibleness and got in his shower before going to bed for an uneasy night of rest.
Back in his room Ray was shocked by what had just happened. Where in the world would Len get the idea Ray would just abandon him like that? He thought they had something. He must have been wrong. Though maybe Len had a point, could he bring someone else into Leo’s life? Someone he technically just met? Damn, Oliver was right, he could be impulsive sometimes. Ray got ready for bed, but sleep did not come easy.
The next morning was tense and uneasy, they ate breakfast Len had made in silence and silently agreed to get ready and just go. Ray called ahead to more motels, estimating about a three night four-day journey home. Home, he thought, back to his son. He quickly facetimed Laurel and asked to speak to Leo. “Hey buddy, daddy just finished work and I’ll be back in a few days,” he said.
“In time for Christmas?”
“In time for Christmas,” Ray smiled assuring him.
Leo cheered, “Ella my daddy is coming home for Christmas!” He could hear the smile in his voice.
“OK, I gotta go though, OK?”
“OK, daddy, love you.”
“Love you too.”
Their first day was silent and awkward, they were both thankful there wasn’t a mix-up with their rooms again. Neither was sure they would survive it. Len declined Ray’s invitation to a Diner for dinner, claiming he wasn’t hungry and was turning in early. Ray sighed as he laid in his own bed, he’d fucked up what could have been a great friendship.
The next morning, they set off, returning their keys. Len was driving first, Ray sitting in the passenger seat nervously. “Something on your mind?” Len asked.
“Not re- Kinda,” he replied.
“Feel like sharing?” Len pressed.
Ray sighed, “I just feel like I screwed up the other night-”
“Ray we’re consenting adults, we both wanted it or we wouldn’t have started anything.”
“Not that. I mean letting you go.”
Now it was Len’s turn to sigh, “We’ve been over this-”
“No, you freaked out and said some stuff, Len I-, I think we could work.”
“Raymond-”
“No, hear me out a minute, because I’ve been thinking about this for days now and my head may explode. OK, so I think we could work because let’s face it, we clearly have feelings for each other.”
“Ray it’s not just about us though, it’s about our kids.”
“You mean our amazing kids that we love and would protect no matter what?”
“Exactly and that’s what I’m doing I’m protecting Annalise from me and my bad decisions again.”
“Again?” Len sighed, he’d said too much. “Len what do you mean again?”
“When she was 2, I met someone, Todd, he was great and I let him in, I let him meet her, he had a kid of his own, a girl, older than Annalise. Things got serious, pretty quickly, we moved in with them, he was between jobs so he looked after her while I went to work. Our lives seemed perfect, I should have known something was wrong but I was blinded. One night I came home, Annalise was and his daughter were nowhere to be found and the house was trashed. I called out for them, I found them in a barricaded closet upstairs. They were crying and shaking. His daughter, her name’s Abigail, she told me about her dad’s gambling problems, he’d lost a big pay out, freaked out, Abigail grabbed Annalise and hid, she said he could be violent when he was like that.” Len paused.
“What happened?”
“I called my sister, she was a rookie cop at the time, her then partner was now Captain Lance, his oldest daughter got an emergency remove from care order and we went to my sister’s, she was dating Lance’s other daughter, he wasn’t too happy with that but there was nothing he could do about it,” he said smiling, “anyway, turns out Todd was wanted for a string of robberies and he’d been investigated before when Abigail’s kindergarten teacher raised suspicions about bruises, but nothing came of it. Sorry, I’m getting off topic, because of my situation social services wouldn’t let me take in Abigail, Sara, my sister’s girlfriend said they’d look after her. They adopted her officially last year, but Todd, he was furious, he’s in prison, and doesn’t know who has his daughter but Annalise was different afterwards. She’s really aware, she knows. The last time I started seeing someone she had a panic attack when I introduced her to them. I can’t put her through that. I’m her dad, I’m supposed to protect her.”
Len went silent and Ray was lost for words. “I-”
“Y’see Raymond, I can’t and won’t hurt my little girl again. No matter how much I really want to be with you, she comes first.”
“Len I know we just met but I would never put you, either of you through that, you have to know that.”
“I do, but Raymond, what happens when your parents find out, or your friends?”
“I barely talk to my parents since the incident with Leo and day care, and my brother, well he isn’t on the speaking to list either. Len I would never do anything to hurt you, or your daughter,” Len sighed and pulled into a gas station.
“Look, I’m not saying a definite no, but it isn’t a yes either.”
Ray smiled to himself as they filled the car and switched so he was taking a turn driving. Ray didn’t push the subject of giving this thing, whatever it was, a try and Len was thankful. They arrived at their motel and checked in, into separate rooms and freshened up before heading to a nearby bar for some food, in Ray’s opinion, the best kind of food.
They left the bar with rosy glows in their cheeks in the cold weather and walked back to the motel through the town. It was quiet out, despite being early. Len paused outside his room and turned to Ray, tentatively he reached out and threaded together their fingers, leading Ray inside with a smile. Ray closed the door and stepped up to Len, who he was just about taller than and lowered his lips to Len’s. Len’s arms slipped around his waist and his hands slide up over his hips and biceps.
Ray deepened the kiss holding Len around the waist, fingers brushing up Len’s spine, lifting his shirt. Len moaned, Ray’s fingers were cold against his skin. He stroked up Len’s back and over his shoulders, sliding to his knees as his hands slipped lower to undo Leonard’s belt. He stroked Len’s cock through his underwear and reached into the waistband to stroke it in his hand. Len’s fingers moved through Ray’s soft hair as Ray took his cock into his mouth. Len released the breath he was holding as Ray licked the underside of his cock.
Len focused his attention on staying stood while Ray sucked his cock like it hadn’t been sucked in a long time. “Ray, fuck you gotta stop,” he said heavy and breathless. Ray let his cock fall from his lips and looked confused up at Len who bent at the waist to cup his face and kiss him again. Ray stood and they parted undressing, each trying not to look eager. “Shit, I don’t have-” Ray shot him a look and pulled a small bottle of lube and a couple of condoms from his pocket.
“The machine in the bar was well stocked.”
“How do we do this?”
“Fuck me this time, we can switch another time,” Ray said handing over the bottle and foil and Len shuddered at the promise of doing this again. Len nodded tossing them in easy reach on the bed. Ray, now naked, sat on Len’s bed and Len pushed him gently by the shoulder he lay down and move up the bed, kneeling on the floor. He uncapped the lube and applied it liberally to his fingers, he could sense Ray getting nervous and wanted to make it easy on him. He pushed Ray’s legs apart and stroked over his hole with two fingers.
Ray moaned and pulled his legs wider if only so he had something to do with his hands. Len’s finger breached his hole and a moaned loudly as Len’s finger sank in deeper. “You OK?” He asked.
“Yeah,” Ray breathed, “just, just uh, give me a sec,” he said, beads of sweat glistening on his forehead. He slowed his breathing and gave the go ahead. Len stretched him slowly, his thick calloused fingers dragging against Ray’s puckered rim. Ray was barely holding it together as Len added a second and third finger to stretch him. His leaking cock was heavy against his stomach muscles, remaining untouched, Ray didn’t dare, he knew this would be over quick once Len was inside of him. “Fuck Leonard, just fuck me please,” he moaned as Len’s fingers slid slowly out of him.
Len’s fingers left him and he heard the muffled rip of foil and Len pushing his hip. Quickly he rolled the spare condom onto his own length, wanting to keep mess to a minimum. He rolled over onto his knees and Len nudged him further up the bed. He felt a hand stroke of her ass and knees knock his own wider apart. He felt the blunt tip of Len’s cock rub against his ass and cold lube being poured over.
Ray breathed deeply as he felt Len press his cock inside of him, pulling a pillow to him to rest on, cursing as Len slid into him slowly. It seemed to go on forever, he moaned feeling the ribbed condom against his skin and insides. He felt Len’s hips come to a stop against his ass and released a breath. “Oh fuck,” he groaned, “Len you gotta move,” he said and Len complied, pulling back out of him, only by half before coming to a stop.
“You OK Raymond?”
“Yeah, yeah I’m good, I just need a minute,” he said, his forehead to the cool side of the pillow.
“Alright,” Len said, trying to be still, Ray’s ass was tight around him, he needed to take this slow if he wanted to last.
“OK,” Ray said after a long, torturing moment, “you can move,” his voice was straining. Len moved slowly, pushing forwards into him, deciding on slow shallow thrusts, gradually giving him more of his cock, working his way up to longer thrusts, gently adding to his speed. Ray’s hand slipped between his legs to stroke his own cock. Len leaned over Ray’s back, their bodies connecting as he fucked into Ray, his lips pressing kisses to Ray’s shoulders. Len could feel the tight coiling in his stomach, his orgasm hit, intense like nothing he’d ever felt, his ass contracting around Len’s cock. Len kept fucking into him until his came a minute or two later, careful not to fall onto Ray he pulled out and laid beside him to catch his breath.
The remaining nights of their journey followed a similar fashion. They would check into their single double room, go to a nearby bar or diner, then have hot, intense sex like they’d been apart for weeks.
Eventually they saw a signed for Starling City and Len knew this fairy-tale would come to an end. Ray pulled up outside of Len’s house. Mick would bring Annalise over later, so they were alone. Ray leaned across the seats to kiss him deeply. They had made plans to meet up in the coming weeks after Christmas.
“What’re you doing tomorrow, Christmas Eve?”
“Nothing, probably baking cookies for Santa.”
“Would you and Annalise like to come to the hospital with me and Leo, we take toys and read to the kids on the wards.”
“That would be nice.” Len smiled.
Len collected his things and Annalise’s Christmas gift and went inside after one last lingering kiss. Mick brought Annalise back just as he had finished wrapping her gift when he realised his mistake, he’d left Scotty in the back seat of Ray’s car. He tried calling but the line was busy, so he left a message right before Annalise leapt into his arms.
“I missed you,” she said to him.
“I missed you too, but we found Santa and delivered your letter personally.”
“Thank you, daddy.”
The next day Len and his daughter baked cookies for Santa in the morning and spent the afternoon watching a How the Grinch Stole Christmas together as it continued to snow heavily out of the window.
He had arranged for Ray to pick them up just after six but he was running late and there was no text of explanation. He was getting anxious. He was about to tell Annalise to take off her coat when someone knocked at the door. He opened it and found Ray and a small boy shivering in his arms with a bear. “Are you OK?”
“My car broke down in the snow, but Leo found this little guy by his car seat,” Annalise’s eyes widened. “And he helped us fix the car, told Leo exactly what was wrong. I believe this belongs to you.”
“Scotty,” she smiled hugging him tightly.
“Come inside and warm up, I’ll make hot chocolate, Annalise turn up the thermostat a little.”
“OK.” His daughter hurried off holding her bear in her arms.
“Leo right? Do you like cookies?” He nodded, “Annalise and me made some earlier would you like one?” He nodded again as his dad pulled off his hat, revealing his fluffy hair, a mirror image of his father. “come on, I’ll warm one up.”
Len lifted Leo onto one of his high chairs so he could sit at the bar and warmed him up some hot chocolate and a cookie. Annalise arrived back and Ray lifted her to sit by Leo as they ate and drank and warmed.
Once they were warm they wrapped up again to get to the hospital before lights out, Annalise was excited to give out the toys to other children and make them happy. The kids fell asleep on the drive back to Len’s and the adults talked quietly in the front of the car. “What’re you doing tomorrow?” Len asked.
“Nothing special really, just a quiet Christmas.”
“You could join us if you like, me and Annalise, my sister can’t make it this year, her father-in-law took them away with a trip he got from the department raffle.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yeah, it’d be nice, they get on well, if we’re going to do this we should really give it a go.”
“I’d like that. Thank you.” Ray smiled.
“I’m no chef though, don’t expect anything too amazing.”
“I won’t.”
The next morning Len was woken by a very excited Annalise. “Daddy he was here, Santa came!” She called out excitedly. Smiling he forced himself out of bed and followed her down stairs. She opened her presents excitedly thanking him for each one leaving the last one she crawled under the tree and brought out a box, neatly wrapped and presented it to him.
“Happy Christmas daddy.”
“For me?”
“Mmhmm. I saved my allowance money and Uncle Mick took me shopping while you were gone.”
“That’s really thoughtful sweetie, should I open it?” She nodded proudly. He unwrapped the gift and got a box. Opening the box, he found a book.
“It’s a rare edition of the Arthur Conan Doyle books with his annotations in the margins.”
“Sweetheart,” he was speechless, this must have cost her a fortune. “Thank you, so much,” he pulled her into his arms. “I love it,” he smiled. “Now for your special present, go get it,” he smiled as she rushed to pull her remaining gift from under the tree. She opened it with care and her face lit up as she found the doll she had asked for.
“Thank you, daddy!” She cried running to hug him.
“You’re welcome baby,” he smiled and kissed her hair.
Ray and Leo arrived later on in the day after Len had started cooking dinner. Annalise was watching a movie on the TV and Leo joined her, Ray helped him cook.
They found themselves almost sharing kisses when they heard giggling. They looked up to see their children laughing from the door. “What’s funny?” Ray asked. The children pointed. Mistletoe.
“Who put that there?” Len asked and Annalise raised her hand.
“You know the rules daddy. You two has to kiss.”
“Rules is rules,” Leo added giggling. Len shrugged and Ray smiled pressing their lips together, leaping apart as the timer for the turkey sounded much to the amusement and delight of their children.