Nobody Hurts A Wayne
Summary: After Tim Drake stands Y/N up for their date, the heartbreak follows them all the way back to the Kent farmhouse. Surrounded by the love of Clark, Lois, Martha, Jonathan, Jon, and Kon, Y/N slowly begin to recover while their fiercely protective family reminds them exactly how valued they are. Meanwhile, in Gotham, Bruce forces Tim to face the damage he caused and the possibility that “sorry” might not fix everything this time.
A/N Here's a long awaited part two to my Tim Drake x reader fic 'Not a Joke' which was requested by @one-pea-in-a-pod so here you go!
Part 1: Not A Joke
The Kent farmhouse felt warmer the next morning. Not because anything had changed. You still woke up with swollen eyes. Your chest still hurt every time you remembered the empty chair across from you at the restaurant. Tim still never called. Never texted. Never explained. But downstairs smelled like pancakes.
Kon leaned against the counter with crossed arms. Jon sat bside him, already glaring on your behalf before you even spoke. “Morning, sunshine,” Lois said softly. You tried to smile. It failed immediately. Martha opened her arms without hesitation. “Oh, sweetheart.” That was it. You buried your face in your grandmother’s shoulder while she held you tight.
And in a house full of Kents, heartbreak never stayed private for long. You shuffled into the kitchen wearing one of Kon’s oversized hoodies. Immediately, six pairs of eyes turned toward you. Clark stood by the stove in a Smallville High shirt and flannel, spatula frozen midair. Lois sat at the table with a coffee mug in hand. Martha Kent reached for you instantly from her chair while Jonathan Kent looked about five seconds away from marching to Gotham himself.
“I feel stupid,” you mumbled. Jonathan Kent snorted. “You are many things, kiddo. Stupid ain’t one of them.”
“You waited two hours,” Jon said, horrified all over again. “Two. Hours.” Kon looked ready to punch drywall. “Conner,” Clark warned immediately.
“I didn’t say anything.”
“You were thinking it loudly.”
“You heard nothing.”
Clark sighed.
Clark pointed the spatula at him. “No space.”
Lois slid a plate of pancakes toward you. “Eat first. Emotional devastation second.” You let out a weak laugh. Small victory. Jon perked up instantly like he’d won an award. “There it is,” he said. “That’s the sibling laugh. We’re making progress.” Kon dropped into the seat beside you and nudged your shoulder carefully. “For the record, if you want me to throw Tim into the moon, I’ve got the afternoon free.”
“Kon,” Lois warned.
“What? I said if.”
“You’re not throwing anybody into space.”
“Okay. Fine. Near space.”
Jonathan Kent muttered into his coffee, “I still say Bruce oughta tan that boy’s hide.”
“Dad,” Clark scolded. “What? If Clark stood somebody up for two hours when they were young, I would’ve buried him in chores until retirement.” Clark visibly decided silence was the safest option. You looked down at your plate. “Maybe he forgot.” The entire kitchen went quiet. Kon stared at you like you’d personally insulted him. Jon looked offended for you. Lois set her mug down carefully. “Honey.” “No,” Kon cut in sharply. “Absolutely not.” You blinked. Kon leaned forward, voice gentler now. “You don’t get stood up for two hours by somebody who forgot. Tim’s not stupid. He knew what he was doing.”
“That’s the problem,” Jon muttered.
Back in Gotham, the atmosphere inside Wayne Manor felt colder than usual. Tim sat in the cave, staring at the Batcomputer without really seeing it. Bruce stood behind him. Silent. Which was worse. “You embarrassed them publicly,” Bruce finally said. Tim closed his eyes. “I know.” “You ignored every call from Clark. From Lois. From Jon. Conner threatened to come to Gotham personally.” Tim rubbed both hands over his face. “I know.” Bruce’s voice hardened. “You made someone wait alone for two hours wondering why they weren’t enough.” That hit. Hard.
Clark finally sat beside you. His expression softened in that painfully kind dad way that always made emotions worse instead of better. “What Tim did hurt you,” Clark said quietly. “You don’t need to make excuses for him.” Your throat tightened again. “I just…” You swallowed hard. “I thought he liked me.” “He does,” Kon said immediately. Everyone looked at him. Kon rolled his eyes. “Please. I know Tim. That idiot’s been gone on them since day one.” “Then why would he do this?” you asked quietly. Nobody answered immediately. Because nobody had a good answer.
Tim flinched visibly. Because that was the exact thought that had been eating him alive since yesterday. Not enough. “I messed up.” “You did.” Bruce walked around the console until Tim finally looked at him. “When you care about someone, you do not disappear when things become inconvenient,” Bruce said. “You communicate. You show up.”
Tim looked exhausted. “I was trying to protect them.” Bruce stared at him for a long moment. “By hurting them first?” Tim had no answer. Bruce sighed quietly. “Clark was furious.” Tim winced immediately. “Is he still?” “Yes.” “…Fair.” Bruce crossed his arms. “You are going to apologize.” “I know.” “And you are going to accept the possibility they won’t forgive you.” That hurt worse somehow. Tim looked down at the floor. “I know.”
Back in Smallville, Jon and Kon had apparently decided sadness was illegal. Which explained why you were currently trapped between them on the couch under three blankets while watching terrible action movies. “This one’s objectively awful,” you informed them. Jon gasped dramatically. “How dare you.” “The shark has six rows of teeth, Jon.” “That makes him efficient.”
Kon handed you popcorn. “Don’t argue with the film scholar.” Jonathan Kent snorted from his recliner. “That movie looks dumber than a bag of hammers.” “It’s art, Grandpa,” Jon defended. Martha smiled softly from the kitchen doorway while Lois snapped a secret photo of all three of you tangled together on the couch. Clark caught her doing it. “They already saw you take six.”. “I’m documenting healing,” Lois whispered back.
From love.
You leaned your head against Kon’s shoulder. “Thanks,” you said quietly. Kon immediately softened. Jon threw an arm around you from the other side. “Always.” “You’re our sibling,” Kon added simply. “Nobody gets to make you feel unwanted.”
Clark looked at you carefully from across the room. “You know that, right?” Your eyes stung again. This time, not from heartbreak.
For the first time since yesterday, you laughed properly. Real laughter. The entire room relaxed at the sound. And hundreds of miles away in Gotham, Tim Drake stared at his phone for almost twenty straight minutes before finally typing:
Martha crossed the room and kissed the top of your head gently. “One boy disappointing you doesn’t change your worth, sweetheart.” Jonathan pointed toward the window dramatically. “And if it helps, your brothers have been arguing over who gets first punch rights.”
“I said emotionally,” Clark warned immediately. Kon looked offended. “I am being emotional.” Jon nodded seriously. “Violently emotional.”
Then, deleting it.
I’m sorry.
Because somehow, two words didn’t feel big enough for what he’d done.













