Whiskey, Whiskey, Whiskey | Jason and Eddie | Flashback

thewhysarewise:

“Ah. Well, all in a day’s work, I suppose, but one can get too much.”

He observed Jay’s face as it reconstructed happiness into sadness—or at the very least, world weariness. How did a man die and come back to life? How did he talk about it nonchalantly, all the while looking like he lost an integral piece of himself somewhere deep and dark and cavernous? 

"An ideal way to die, some might say—briefly, and returned with a clean bill of health. Do you hide them, normally—your eyes? And…how exactly does one wind up in a Gulag?”

The first question was merely etiquette, a logical thing to ask, watered down with a limited amount of curiosity. As for the second, Eddie did not expect an honest answer. Nothing verbal, at least. But perhaps he could salvage a piece of this jigsaw puzzle and put it back together. At least he wouldn’t be bored.

Please,” he took another sip of whiskey, settled an arm across the back of the booth as he leaned into it, uncoiling. “There’s nothing honest about it. It’s hardly to my benefit to be insane in this city—the market’s very well cornered—tends to wear a purple coat, or a mask and cape…”

Or tell drunken tales of regeneration and glowing irises.

“No, I leave the theatrics to others—the last new world order that was attempted here didn’t go so well for the instigators in the end… Gotham’s grand flaw is that everyone is stupid and they all care so much, about one thing or another. Let the criminals and the mobs and the vigilantes tear each other apart—they loosen things up, all I do is…rearrange the pieces. And, for the record—I’m far too well dressed for most people.”

"Yeah man, a gulag.”

Leaning in, he whispered conspiratorially.

“Most people think they disappeared with the fall of the U.S.S.R. But they didn’t. In fact, there’s a massive network of them, some old coal mines, others fallout bunkers, all throughout Ukraine.”

He winked before leaning back, he swallowed a third of his drink.

“There’s a reason no one is allowed in Chernobyl. It’s not just the radiation, Comrade. There’s things hidden there that would make your nosing around in Wall Street seem like stealing candy from a dead baby.”

A sudden quiet came over the bar, and Jason’s gaze flicked to the entrance. A broad shouldered man was visible, making his way through the crowd. Once at the bar, he ordered a martini, then found a seat with the man whose collarbone had been tweaked by Jason. He turned his attention back to Eddie.

“Heads up. Our boy called for backup. I can’t promise we won’t get in a fight.”

Again, a wink.

“I’ll take lead, if it comes to it. You strapped?”

He hadn’t noticed a piece on Eddie, but it could be in his waistband. Everyone carried around here. Mostly illegal. People were too careless with guns, Jason thought with a snort. Like I’m one to talk.

“Doesn’t matter. No one will pull a firearm here; too many people and too many witnesses. Better off using your hands.”

Jason enjoyed fucking with people; it was one of his favorite activities. The look of nonplussed calm, twinged with just a hint of you’re fucking crazy, dude, was just evidence he was succeeding.

Whiskey, Whiskey, Whiskey | Jason and Eddie | Flashback

thewhysarewise:

Jay’s mouth said friend. His eyes did not. Eddie doubted he had many—otherwise they would be present, especially if there was so much as a shred of truth to his next grandiose statement. He certainly couldn’t complain of uninteresting conversation He felt like he was trapped inside an hourglass, searching for the one illuminating grain of sand that would reveal just how much truth was in the concoction of Jay’s tale. But the sand kept raining down on his head, getting in his mouth and eyes—everything was distorted. Eddie’s eyes narrowed by a fraction, irritated because he didn’t disbelieve.

“That is quite an achievement,” he said carefully, lifting his glass to take a sip. 27 years of brewed gasoline was what he tasted, but not a trace of his  displeasure showed on his face. “How does one go about coming back from the dead—without a considerable amount of paper work? Though I suppose it is rather a hobby for Gotham’s wealthy.”

If Jay hadn’t been part of his company’s unsanctioned missions—if he had never seen a battle before, Eddie supposed he might as well walk off the nearest bridge because his deductive skills were slipping. He nodded, biding time more than offering courtesy.

"Me?” he drawled the word as harmlessly as he could, before flicking his eyes up to meet Jay’s iridescent ones. “I own half the patrons in here—and they’re all so…blissfully unaware of the fact.”

Eddie allowed the smallest of smiles to tug at his lips. Two could play at the game of vagueness.

“Let’s just call me an entrepreneur." 

Jay’s eyes twinkled, the humor of Eddie’s words not lost on him.

"Oh, you know. The heart stops, you get supposed brain death. They toe tag you, then you wake up in a body bag. The usual, right?”

Amusement crossed his face, then sadness. The thousand yard stare is back, aimed at nothing in particular.

“Oddly enough, they say I’m healthy as an ox now. No lasting effects, but…well, for some reason, the eyes changed. Nothing I could do about it. Kinda funny that way, you know? You never get to control the things that matter most to you.”

“Managed to stay alive after that, however. From Gulags to the plains of Africa to the alleys here at home, nothing else was as bad as that night.”

Why the hell was he talking so much? The challenge of knowing that this stranger was dangerously smart? The whiskey? Maybe, although Jay’s liver was nearly indestructible these days. Maybe it was the sentimentality of it being his dying day.

“A businessman. Good ol’ honest capitalism! Except, come on now Eddie. You’re not a frontman for any company. What are you, on a board? Shadow organization for a new world order? You’re far too well dressed to be insane, so I’d have to assume you’re well off-or very good at pretending.”

Whiskey, Whiskey, Whiskey | Jason and Eddie | Flashback

thewhysarewise:

“Sure,” he supplies as if the answer absolutely doesn’t matter. “If you like…”

The man was entirely too stable as the tipped glass hovered over the tumbler, especially when one considered his rather prolonged state of inebriation. There was limited-if any-swaying, he poured the drinks with precision, Eddie watched the ripples fill the glass. They barely trembled. He glanced at the bottle, now almost entirely emptied. Jay’s level of balance would take a control that was more than practiced, that was instinctual. A need to defend, to be sentient at all times, it was ingrained in him. Even by Gothamite standards it was excessive—it had to be bred. Childhood habits either shed themselves like snake skins against bark and stones, or clung on like an armor—eternal.

Eddie’s blood had been shaped into a consistent state of flight over fight—until he’d clawed it all out of his system. He had been a pitiful, frightened child…But this, this was not a man born out of fear—or at least, not fear cut of the same cloth as Eddie’s. This man had realized his power much earlier—and Eddie wondered why.

“So, Jay…Tell me, what is it you do?” he kept his tone polite but vaguely disinterested, people felt more obliged to reveal secrets when he pretended he had no interest in hearing them. “No offence…but this bar seems a tad…snooty for your tastes.”

“Snooty?” Jason snorted. “This is twenty-seven year old whiskey, Friend. Not just every bar has this stuff.”

But he was right. Men of Jason’s size and disposition didn’t normally associate with coked out Wall Street types, not in Gotham. There was a caste, a system of who-was and who-wasn’t. Jason was not in his assigned group.

“You’ve got a point, though. I’m here for an-oh, how do you say this. Fifteen years ago, I was murdered. I came back. It’s a celebration party.”

He cocked an eyebrow, waiting the shrewd man’s response. It wasn’t often that he told truths like this, but there were just so many variables to dying that he felt confident in his ambiguity. Plus, no one would believe the real story.

“I have a private security business. Army for hire, government contractors, the works. Cut my teeth in the East, mostly Mongolia and Russia. A little bit of Italy.”

He grinned, swirling his whiskey. 

“Man of many hats, Eddie. You?”

Fireside | Jason and Kory | Blackout

lifebetweenthedeath:

She couldn’t help the small chuckled that passed her lips as he mentioned metahumans — the fact that he was sitting next to one of the people deemed crazy was comedic to her. And perhaps not far off. Then again, no one running around Gotham at night in a costume could be totally sane.

The chuckle was short, replaced with guilt as her gaze fell once more. Kori had let Jason down, leaving him on his own. What happened with Roy hadn’t been fair to any of them, of course it hadn’t, but Kori hadn’t realised what she was doing would impact everyone else so severely.

Her face contorted as their eyes met, and Kori pursed her lips in an effort to regain control over her features. She could feel the tears beginning to form and blinked them back quickly. The princess felt horrible — how could she ever forget those who needed her just because she needed her space?

“I’m so sorry, Jason,” she said, still holding back tears. It wasn’t often people saw Jason Todd on the verge of tears, and it was much more effective than Kori wanted to admit. Another long moment passed before Kori gained her composure and began to speak again.

“If you ever need me and I’m not working, just shoot me a text and I’ll come by. We can go on patrol together. I mean, I’ll need to start training again — I had assumed tonight was a one-time thing, but…” She offered him a small smile. “One thing at a time, though. Let’s just go find Dick, yes?”

He cleared his throat, swallowing the lump there. Reaching over, he grasped her hand, holding it tightly. 

“I love you, Kory. I always have.”

Those words held truth, in ways both deeper and shallower than the surface. They’d had a chance to be a power couple, reshaping the city as they’d desired. Gods know there was enough chemistry. But they’d spent their chance on saving Roy from the hell he’d found them in, and quickly, he had realized that this team needed an unbiased leader. Yeah, right.

But he did love her-all of her. The flaws she hid well, and the ones on the surface. From the supermodel body to the shrewd, proud mind so often overlooked by the world, to wounds in her psyche that would never heal, he loved her. He knew her.

He didn’t let her hand go until the Dragon came to a halt, several hundred feet above and outside the cells where Dick was being held. From the scans, it looked like a full blown riot had set in. Blackgate was loose, at least partially, and the inflow of prisoners colliding with the County lockup had caused trouble that GCPD would have had a nightmare with in the best of circumstances. At night, with no power and chaos reigning? There was no chance. They’d have to get to Dick the hard way.

The Outlaw way.

Racking a load into the twin Sig Sauer’s he carried, he shoved them into the shoulder holsters. The Mossberg 12-gauge was loaded to capacity and slung over one shoulder; the compact MP5 went over the other. Two sets of bandoliers and a belt full of ammunition followed suit. Finally, he hefted the hammer he’d stolen off of…well, Mister Hammer’s dead body. He grinned, winking once at Kory before tugging the helmet down and sealing it.

“Ready to bring hell back to Gotham?”

Fireside | Jason and Kory | Blackout

lifebetweenthedeath:

Jason turned to face her and the princess’ eyes met his dead-on, fingertips curling around the armrest of her seat. She listened to him, silent as he spoke, despite the fact that there were multiple points she could have — and should have — interjected at. He trailed off as he mentioned Dick, and Kori’s gaze finally lowered. How could she forget the true purpose of why she’d suited up, even for a moment? The young boy would always be their priority; they couldn’t necessarily save him from ending up as fucked up as they were, but they could very well try.

Her line of vision was still pointed toward the floor as Jason swiveled back to look out the front of the Dragon, and Kori sighed. They’d both failed Dick. Jason was at least around, but Kori? She’d all but relinquished every responsibility she had, distanced herself from the people that mattered, left Dick in the wake. How was that fair to the boy? She looked up when she heard Roy’s name and had Jason still been facing her, he would have noticed the flare of anger that made itself visible via the brightening of her hair. That was a low card to play, even for him. Kori shook her head at his words, eyes cast toward the ceiling.

“Of course not,” she replied, tone sharp, “My leaving was in my control, yes, but you and I both know I would have been more of a hindrance than a help back then.” Her jaw clenched. “I’m still not of much help as it is, and you seem to be functioning well enough without me, anyway.”

“Functioning, sure. I could have used the backup, though. Why do you think I have this new armor? People out there, they’re crazy. Metahumans. Aliens, for fuck’s sake. Look at what happened to Metropolis! A quarter of the city got destroyed." 

Jason stopped talking abruptly, running a hand through his long hair. With a sigh, he resumed speaking.

"Shit’s rough, Princess. I missed you. Can’t tell you how hard it is to be alone against the city.”

Sad eyes met hers, and the emotion revealed there was unsettling. He never let himself get like this, not ever. Not since the showdown between himself and Bruce had he even teared up. But here he was.

“I need you. Starfire.”

Whiskey, Whiskey, Whiskey | Jason and Eddie | Flashback

thewhysarewise:

“Luckily for you, I am not in the uncomfortable habit of following people into bathrooms, then. Besides, it would only make you hostile, willing to disclose less.”

Eddie’s gaze did not waver beneath the scrutiny, though perhaps it would have been wiser to fake it. He had endured a life time of people trying to stare him down, because they were bigger, brutish, and thought they could frighten him. There was no malice here though, instead, Eddie felt as if this man with his strange iridescent irises was trying to bait him into asking questions. He wasn’t sure if it was bait he was willing to take.

“It is…an interesting effect." 

How did you do it? Surely it had to be natural….But it didn’t look it at all. No infection he could think of off the top of his head, expansive database that it was, would produce such an effect. Jay didn’t appear to be high, and he would know if a new drug had been introduced into the respective club and bar scenes. And still, it was rare to find something that effected the eyes so profusely. 

"Eddie,” he said evenly, watching the bottle with mild interest. Definitely not fond of not getting his own way, this one. “Nicknames don’t suit me.”

He relaxed, just barely, as he admitted his name. Something wasn’t right about this man, but what, he couldn’t tell.

“Eddie. Good to meet you. Come here often?”

There was no emotion, no flicker of interest in Eddie’s eyes. It was as if his surroundings utterly disinterested him. It reminded Jay of the Generals that he’d encountered in the Gulag, wholly unimpressed with anything not directly causing them harm. It was the look of a man who had seen hell, seen lives taken and spilled blood. Eddie didn’t seem the type to have served, and unless he had grown up in Eastern Europe, Jason doubted that he had been in war.

So what was it? Sociopathy? Drug addled psychosis? No, not drugs. He was too lucid, too clear. Perhaps just extreme apathy. After all, Jason could sympathize with not caring-hell, he’d made a living out of being uninvolved in his contemporary’s activities. He’d watch. Watch and deduce, see what exactly was going on with this unusual man with the sharp eyes.

Fireside | Jason and Kory | Blackout

lifebetweenthedeath:

She scowled at the use of her full name, eyes shooting daggers in Jason’s direction. His next statement elicited a scoff from her, and she was shaking her head before he’d even finished his sentence.

“Oh, I’m sorry, Jason, I wasn’t aware that the only friends I was allowed to have were people who traipsed around the city at night wearing masks,” she shot back, “They’re nice people, good people. That doesn’t make them my family.”

Kori looked away from Jason then, her gaze falling to the floor. No, her work friends weren’t here family. If anything, they were just a distraction from the growing distance between she and Jason, and the loneliness of her empty apartment. She knew Jason was only saying what he was to upset her, but damn it, he knew better than to think she’d ever value the people she hung out with from work over him — even if they had barely spoken in a year.

Her definition of family had always been a bit skewed; Kori had always been a firm believer in the fact that people chose their own families. Sure, she had a mother and a father, but they hadn’t raised her since she was twelve… she hadn’t even seen them since then. To call them her parents would be a stretch at best. At that age, she wasn’t even old enough to truly know them. Even if she’d only known Jason for a few years, he was her family. They shared a bond Kori would share with no one else, a bond that transcended arguments and distance. He knew that.

“Oh, really?”

She heard enough through the grapevine about what he’d been up to, but Kori was still unclear of any details. Of course, she wanted to know. That was the whole point of the conversation, wasn’t it? He could beat around the bush all he wanted, but they both knew she’d get him to talk in the end.

He took a deep breath, making sure the Dragon’s controls were set to autopilot. Then, he swiveled the seat, facing his angry former best friend in full.

"Kory. Look, man. It’s been months since we had a meaningful conversation. Other than that, I’ll send you a text when I need a pickup for a friend in the bus, or you come over and hang with Dick. Let’s not act like there’s love lost between us. If there was, we’d have worked something out. So focus, Princess. We have to rescue the wayward son, and I…" 

He blinked, suddenly emotional. Dick was his legacy. His duty. His brother. And he’d let him be lost, let him be hurt and captured. 

He swiveled back to the controls, focusing on the Gotham skyline, the small points of light still visible in the darkness.

"They’re more important things than our squabbles. Roy wouldn’t have wanted us to stop working together after his death. I mean, for fuck’s sake. I’ve been working solo. Is that what you wanted?”

It was quiet, barely veiled anger. He already knew the answer.

Behind the Screens || Tim & Jason || Complete

fenceposterror:

likeamantra:

Curiosity killed the cat.” 

“Did it? Last I heard, the Cat was in Bludhaven.” He smiled at his joke, not knowing if the girl would get it. Selina was…complicated. He wasn’t sure if Bruce had managed to tell the others about her yet.

He cocked his head to the side as the image of his student popped up on screen, sitting bored and annoyed in a jail cell. 

“Fuck. What the hell?”

Dick knew better. He wasn’t afraid of his identity getting out, but still. The kid had connections to Jason, and getting arrested wasn’t a good thing. Arrest records meant a paper trail, which meant Dick was a liability. Unless…

“Thanks, Kid. Gotta go save the Padawan, you know.”

Turning on his heel, he walked past Cass, stopping only to hug her tight one last time, not knowing when he’d see her again.

“Be good, Baby Bat." 

Fifteen steps later, he spun around, calling out one last jab at the girl at the computer.

"Dick is friends with Harley Quinn. Wrap it before you tap it, alright Kiddo?”

He was in the Dragon after that, climbing in to see a very pissed off Kory in the copilot chair.

“I’m in trouble, aren’t I.”

Tim rolled his eyes. He assumed it was a joke about Catwoman, Childish, not to mention necessary. Thought while that was true, it  did give the boy information he didn’t have before. He knew where Selina had been all this time.

Whatever response Tim had for the new nickname bestowed upon him by Hood was lost at the man’s next remarks. Not only was the vigilante under the completely inaccurate impression that they were sleeping together, the man assumed that, had Tim slept with him in the past, he would still be doing so now. Tim choked on his next breath and shook his head.

The young hacker hadn’t seen Dick in years, hadn’t spoken to him, and now, he knew why. He had been with the Red hood all this time and just forgotten all about him. It made an anger flare up inside Tim that he hadn’t felt in a long time, and though he wanted to ignore the feeling, he let it fuel his next words instead. Calling after the man, Tim made sure he would get to the bottom of this, regardless of what Hood thought of him. 

“Tell him to call me.”

[Completed]

Whiskey, Whiskey, Whiskey | Jason and Eddie | Flashback

thewhysarewise:

Alright. In hindsight, it may have been better to have just let bygones be bygones—not mention the untreated heart condition he suspected the lout to have, stolen his car keys and, far more importantly, the flash-drive in his pocket and called it a productive night. He probably shouldn’t have suggested that the bodyguard was having an affair with the man’s wife either. He had no basis of that knowledge, but he was…unimpressed with the dialogue exchange and felt like ruining a few lives would be pleasant. For him, anyway. Too much long term gratification, not enough immediate planning.

And then the standing and the swearing, spittle flying everywhere and of course, the shoving. He had no time to plant his feet, and doubted it would have made much of a difference. He stumbled back, tripping over his own shoes, landed heavily in a nearby booth. Right. Bottle of some expensive liquor or other to his left. A sigh, barely concealed. Addicts were such animals. He used to be one of them—dreadful. Disgusting. He considered his options, calculating. Smash the bottle on the table and jab into the eyes? Or smash the bottle over big-wig’s head and hope for a concussion? Not hard to aim for the temple. Eyes were more effective though, a far better target. He supposes he could kick out and break the nose. As it turned out, he didn’t have to because the booth’s patron is standing.

He, whoever he was, was quite frankly, huge. Easily over two hundred pounds, and even at a glance, this was a man who knew how to handle himself. Went straight for a pressure point—maximum pain, minimal force or exertion. Knew what he was doing, definitely. Interesting. Protective too, didn’t like authoritative figures. People pushing weaker people around. Eddie folded one long leg over the other, settling back against the bench to observe the rest of the scene. The finance…whoever he was—lab rat really, inconsequential—his employers were far more interesting…went staggering off. He suppressed a chuckle, rearranged his lapels.

When the man turned…His eyes. There was something wrong with them. Not heterochromia, no he had that himself. Iris implants, perhaps? Unlikely, hard to schedule and to justify. He felt like it was rude to stare and to ask fbgj he wanted to blurt out the question, regardless. He considered the volume of liquid missing from the bottle, decided to hold his tongue. The tone was friendly enough when he was spoken to, Eddie refrained from rolling his eyes.

“God, no.” Extremely evident disdain. “You couldn’t pay me to touch a hooker of his”

Blunt, as always. He supposed he could summon up a thank you, make it sound relatively genuine.

"Thankfully I’m not his waitress, and thank you…Jay, for your…intervention. Well timed.”

He’d avoided the main question, wondered if he ought to buy another bottle for his new acquaintance.

He wasn’t blind, and the stranger wasn’t subtle. He caught the lingering stare, knowing what had caught his attention. Jason’s eyes weren’t exactly normal, and they attracted attention. Very nearly luminescent, and a pale blue that seemed to glow with an electricity that came off as supernatural. Blame Talia, and her secrets about his resurrection. 

“That’s probably best, man. She’s damaged goods." 

He laughed, then swirled the remnants of his whiskey around his glass, looking down.

"You show a lot more restraint than most at a bar, friend. I’ve had people follow me to the bathroom just to ask about my eyes. Nice tact." 

He was looking up now, drilling into the man’s own eyes, letting him see just what Jay was talking about. 

"Don’t mention the rescue. I’ve wanted an excuse to hurt him for a while now. Drink?" 

He lifted the bottle, tipping it to the stranger. 

"And I need a name, pal. It’s that, or you get a new nickname.”

The smile showed it as a joke, but it didn’t reach his eyes.

Fireside | Jason and Kory | Blackout

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.