Yandere Batfam x Ringleader!Reader
The rain-slicked streets of Gotham had always been your cradle. Commissioner Gordon found you at fourteenâcurled behind a dumpster in the Narrows, knuckles split from a fight you hadnât asked for, eyes too old for your face. Heâd wrapped his coat around your shoulders and driven you to Wayne Manor himself.
Bruce adopted you the next week. Paperwork, a room on the third floor, a trust fund you never touched. The family smiled at the press conference, called you âsisterâ for the cameras, then went back to their orbits. Dick was off-planet half the year. Jason was busy resurrecting himself. Tim buried himself in case files. Damian trained like the world would end if he stopped. Bruce⊠Bruce was Batman. You learned early that âdaughterâ was a title, not a presence.
You became furniture.
So you left the manor the way ghosts doâquietly, nightly, slipping out the library window after lights-out. You werenât running toward anything. You were just tired of being the only one in the house who didnât have a mask that fit.
That was the night Selina found you.
Youâd taken a shortcut through the old meat-packing district, hood up, fists already bruised from the night before. Three men cornered you for your jacket. You swung onceâsloppy, desperateâand the biggest one laughed, backhanding you into the bricks.
A shadow dropped from the fire escape like liquid night.
âBoys,â Selina purred, whip cracking once, âdidnât your mothers teach you to play nice?â
She dismantled them in twenty seconds flat. Then she crouched in front of you, green eyes sharp behind the domino mask, and tilted your chin up with a gloved finger.
âKid,â she said, voice softer than velvet, âyou hit like youâre apologizing for existing. Thatâs cute. Also gonna get you killed.â
You spat blood. âWhat do you care?â
She smiled, slow and feline. âBecause I see myself. And I donât like unfinished business.â
That was the beginning.
She never asked for your name at first. Just called you âlittle sisterâ like it was already decided. Every night she met you on rooftops, teaching you how to breathe through a punch, how to turn pain into momentum, how to smile while your knuckles split. She brought you protein bars and stolen chocolate, listened when you talked about the empty dining room at Wayne Manor, and never once told you to go home.
âYouâre not broken, kid,â sheâd say, wrapping your bleeding hands. âYouâre just unclaimed. Thereâs a difference.â
Months blurred. You fought in back-alley rings firstâillegal, bloody, cash-only. Then you won. Then you won bigger. Then you started organizing. The underground circuit needed someone who could keep the cops out, the bets fair, and the fighters alive long enough to collect. You became that someone. The Shadow Queen, they called you. Masked, hooded, voice modulator low and steady. No one knew the girl under the hood was Bruce Wayneâs forgotten daughter.
The fighting ring grew teeth. Warehouses in the Bowery. Betting apps routed through three countries. A code of conduct stricter than the GCPD: no killing, no weapons, medical on site. You ruled it with an iron fist wrapped in Selinaâs grace. And every time you stepped into the cage, you felt her watching from the raftersâyour big sister, proud and feral.
You hadnât been back to the manor in six months.
The Batfam noticed eventually. Of course they did. When their own underground sources started whispering about a new queen running the most efficient illegal circuit Gotham had ever seen, they started digging.
They found the connection to Catwoman on a Tuesday.
The interrogation room beneath the Clock Tower was cold. Selina sat cuffed to the table, legs crossed like she was at brunch, tail of her suit flicking lazily. Nightwing, Red Hood, Red Robin, Robin, and Batman himself stood in a half-circle. The air was thick with tension and Bat-glares.
âWhere is she?â Bruceâs voice was gravel.
Selina examined her nails. âWho, darling?â
âYou know who,â Tim snapped, sliding a tablet across the table. Security footage: youâhood down for onceâstepping out of a blacked-out SUV outside the newest arena. âOur sister. The one running the Shadow Ring.â
Jasonâs helmet tilted. âWeâve been looking for months. Sheâs good. Too good. And you trained her.â
Damianâs katana rested against his shoulder. âIf you harmed herââ
Selina laughed, bright and unbothered. âHarmed her? I gave her what you lot never did. A purpose. A family that actually showed up.â
Dick stepped forward, voice gentler. âSelina. Please. Sheâs our family. Bruceâs daughter. We⊠we messed up. We want to bring her home.â
Selinaâs eyes softened for half a secondâthen sharpened again. She leaned forward, cuffs clinking.
âHome?â she echoed. âThe place where she ate dinner alone for two years? Where none of you noticed when she stopped coming to galas? Where the only person who ever asked how her day was⊠was me?â
The room went still.
Bruceâs jaw flexed. âSelinaââ
She cut him off with a wink. Slow. Deliberate. Full of older-sister mischief.
âTell my little sister I said hi, Bats. And that the new venue in the Narrows needs better ventilation.â
Then she moved.
One fluid twistâsomething small and silver slipped from her glove, a pellet no bigger than a marble. Smoke exploded in a soft pop, sweet and cloying. The Bats surged forward, but Selina was already goneâcuffs empty, chair spinning, the high window grate swinging open like it had never been locked.
Her laughter echoed down the alley outside, fading into the Gotham night.
âCatch me if you can, boys. But youâll never catch her unless she wants to be caught.â
The smoke cleared.
The table was empty except for a single playing card: the Queen of Hearts.
Scribbled on the back in elegant script:
Sheâs not lost, little bats. Sheâs finally found.
Somewhere across the city, in a warehouse lit by red neon, you stood in the center of the cage, sweat on your skin, crowd roaring your name. Your mask hid the small, secret smile.
You felt her out thereâyour older sister, watching, proud.
And for the first time in your life, you werenât invisible.
You were the queen.
And the game had only just begun.













