lifebetweenthedeath:
“But she’s with him.”
That was enough in Kori’s eyes. If the other woman was an assassin, wouldn’t her talents be wasted fighting alongside Batman? What good could she possibly do? Even more-so, what could she gain from it? She wouldn’t be working to her full potential, so what was the point?
Of course, Kori hadn’t exactly been working to her full potential this past year, either, but that was different. She was shattered by Roy’s death, smashed into little pieces and scattered in the wind. For the first time in the princess’ life, she was selfish. She was afraid. She ran away and tore herself from anything and everything that would remind her of what she lost — Jason included.
Kori knew it was wrong and it only made her more upset at herself, but she couldn’t stop it. While she’d dealt with so much pain and suffering in her life, she’d never lost someone she loved before. She’d never loved anyone before. Being there for Jason, for Dick, wasn’t an option, as much as she wanted it to be. At the time, she couldn’t even look at them without her heart breaking. It killed her to be away from them, to leave them in the dust, but at the time, it seemed to be the lesser of two evils.
Her brows furrowed at the little slip, lips turning downward into a small frown. Great, something else he clearly wasn’t telling her.
"That’s not the point, Jason,” she said, shaking her head, “I shouldn’t have to even think about needing to level whatever they throw at me. I’ve been retired for a year, it shouldn’t be an issue at all.”
She had tried to start over since Roy’s death, cleanse herself of all the negative energy in her life. While Jason wasn’t necessarily negative energy, Kori needed time to figure herself out. After a few months, she realised that she may have taken too long. It wasn’t that she was afraid to go back, per se, she just thought it may have been too late.
Kori’s jaw clenched again at the word family. The little bat certainly wasn’t her family, so if she was Jason’s, then Kori must not have been a part of his anymore. She’d done it to herself, she supposed, but that was a two-way street. Jason had made no move to try and get her to come back to the Outlaws, or even to just come over and hang out. It went both ways.
“I’m done asking,” she said, albeit a bit bitterly, “But, if there’s anything you wish to tell me, perhaps now is a good time to do so.”
It was, in a sense, a veiled threat. She wanted to know what was going on with him — not because she felt entitled to, but because she really did care. Kori was guilty that she’d severed her bond with him; however, that didn’t mean she was going to force information out of him. If he valued their relationship as much as she did (despite her not being very good at showing it as of recent), he’d tell her on his own.
“I don’t care who she’s with, Koriand’r.”
The jibe stung, just like he knew it would. He never used friend’s full names; always a nickname.
“Besides. You can’t seriously be challenging my definition of family, can you? What with your siren friends you have now?”
He was pissed, but her last statement pushed him into sarcasm and venom. He chuckled, darkly.
“Bit of a loaded question, isn’t it?”
There was nearly a year’s worth of shit to tell her. From his own sabbatical to Batgirl to the new government contract Redstone had on High Altitude, Low Orbit combat vehicles, he hadn’t been in a sharing mood since she got her new job.
“I’ve been working alone for a long time now. I don’t-haven’t-gone for flashy since you left. It’s time to change that. We’ll be at the Prison in fifteen minutes.”
He knew she’d call him out, but he wasn’t going to just give up any information ffreely. She was his friend, not his guardian. He didn’t owe her anything, not anymore.