Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

Truthfully, she hadn’t even noticed his hair. In fact, she was trying desperately not to look at his face at all. Her eyes had darted everywhere but. Now, she couldn’t help but stare. Barbara hadn’t known a lot of men that dyed their hair, let alone highlighted it, but to each their own. Shoulders shrugged up as she focused on the more important feature of his frame: a bleeding wound.

Kneeling back down, lines creased on her forehead, more than likely invisible through the cowl, as she stared blankly at the gash. However, her tight, pursed lips were plainly visible, unable to hide her obvious concern.  She was going to have to work on her poker face. Green eyes flicked up to him as he gave her his best nonchalant look, but she didn’t buy it for a second. This had to hurt. There was no way he was immune to pain.

“Yeah, cute was exactly what I was going for.” Barbara stood up, holding out the gun she had confiscated towards him. She swallowed hard, looking from the Hood to the only conscious guard.  This situation kept getting worse and she was completely over her head. She could feel her heart beat pounding in her ears, a thrumming echo as her breathing increased. Trying desperately to keep herself calm, she looked at the floor, her boots, her hands, anywhere else.  Never in a million years would she have even remotely thought she would be working with the Red Hood and never in a million years would she have thought she would be facing down death and dismemberment so quickly after it had just begun.

Nodding her affirmation, Barbara spun around and jogged out of the room in the direction the guard had pointed, hoping to find the helmet as quickly as possible. They needed to pick up their pace if they had any hope of making it out before the remainder of the guards were alerted. Focus switched, though, as soon the sound of gunfire resonated through the stuffy warehouse air. Stopping dead in her tracks, her jaw slacked, mouth agape.

She should have known.

Stupid, stupid, stupid.

With growing rage, Barbara threw open the utility closet and grabbed the red helmet, slamming the door shut so hard she almost took the door off its hinges. There was that famous Gordon temper.

Reentering the room, Barbara’s mouth was a taut, harsh line across her face. She didn’t bother looking at the guards, she already knew their fate. Instead, her vision narrowed on the Hood as she forced the helmet into his abdomen, just centimeters from the open wound. Huffing out a lungful of air, she twirled around, heading for the exit. “We have some girls to free. Push your guts back in and come help me or get the hell out of the building.”

He’d already reloaded and reholstered the revolver by the time she returned. The spent casings went into a belt pouch, and the gun went back in the holster at the small of his back. 

He was leaning against the wall, grimacing and poking a finger into the wound when she slammed the helmet into him, grinding his glove into muscle fibers and driving the wind out of him. 

Ouch. Maybe she’s not as into guns as I thought. That’s fine, we’ve got a long fight ahead of us.

“Right.”

No quip, no snark. Maybe it was the blood loss, but she was gone before he had a comeback prepared. 

He took a moment to stuff a quick clot bag into the bullet hole-fuck, that hurts like a motherfucker-and held it for a few moments. Then, he was out the same way she went.

She was leaning on the second floor railing, peering down to the basement level of cells and guards. Kneeling next to her, he set his helmet down in front of him. At her inquisitive look, he shrugged.

“Face hurts too bad. Don’t wanna have it on any longer than I have to. Tight fit, and all.”

There were approximately twenty men left, some of which had been sent back to the matrix after being found unconscious of injured. They looked confused, scared; almost like they’d been threatened with death if they failed. 

Not untrue, though. They didn’t deserve the air they breathed. 

“I can’t take them out in a fight, not like this. It’s barely slowed down.” Lifting his hand, he showed her the ugly opening. The muscle was ripped apart, and there was a jagged hole roughly four inches long and two wide. He groaned.

“I think that’s peritoneum at the bottom. That’s good. Means nothing is gonna spill out.” He stuffed the clot bag back inside, wrapping a few passes of electrical tape around himself to hold it in. 

“That’s gonna have to do, I think. Let’s hope it stays there for the fight. Got a plan?”

He had several, but most of them involved more blood loss, and he didn’t feel like dying tonight.

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

She was woefully unprepared.

The sight made her stomach churn. Dozens of girls ranging in age but the majority appeared to be teenagers. All the young women were locked away like cattle – like animals ready for the slaughter. Her hand went to her mouth as she sucked in a lungful of air. She crouched down near the seam of where concrete met steel grating, just staring, eyes wide, unbelieving.

There were forty-four guards in total, she had counted twice. There was no way the two of them could take out that many men. The Hood had a reputation but she doubted even he was that good. She sure as hell wasn’t. He was dropping down to the sub-floor before she could protest, but she shot him a nasty look, lips pursed together so tightly she was sure the delicate skin would crack. It wasn’t the time or place for arguments, they needed as much stealth as possible, but it took all her will not to shout a nasty quip his way. Barbara had a feeling cocky and brash were his default setting.

Climbing the bare metal studs and risers, Barbara pulled herself up to the second floor. She had a much better view of the perimeter from here and could see that the bulk of the guards were centered in the holding area under the grating. Double edged sword; they wouldn’t have to worry about a second wave, but Hood was about to be swarmed.

Splitting up been the wrong strategy and if she got out of this alive she was never letting him hear the end of it. Peering from around a decaying column she saw everything in fragments and she swore her heart momentarily stopped. Glints of red metal, his hands over his head and assault rifles. She was up and running before she could see the rest play out. “Goddamn it.” Her voice barely above a whisper but she knew he could hear it over the comm.

Batgirl, get out! Get out while you can!”

She shook him off, obviously he didn’t know how determined she was. Her father had always said she was too stubborn for her own good. There was no way in hell she was leaving him behind. Leaving him behind was a death sentence and the Russian mob didn’t take prisoners.

He had already taken out a good thirteen or so of the guards and she had removed six earlier. She could easily take out twenty five armed men, right? Her resolve was beginning to falter but the adrenaline was already pumping and before she knew it was she was heading straight into the fire without an extinguisher. Really stupid, Gordon.

Barbara had already put in a call to the GCPD, backup would be here soon, but that was too long for the Red Hood. He had minutes, maybe, and that was only if he could manage to bite his tongue long enough to not piss of the men more than she was sure he already had.

With little effort, Barbara took down the first wave of guards and the next group had been the victims of a combination of smoke pellets, gauntlets, and her taser. The remainder were at the opposite end of the complex and her attack had proved surreptitious enough to prevent any additional attention. Pressing her ear to the door, Barbara could hear the men holding Hood speak a combination of broken English and Russian. She cursed herself internally for taking Latin in college. Four years of a dead language had proved incredibly useless.

Riding a wave of temporary bravery, she kicked open the door, immediately dropping down to the floor and kicking out her leg, side sweeping the first of the men, grabbing his riffle and hitting him in the nose with the butt of the gun. The next man took an elbow to the clavicle and a right hook to the jaw, just enough to incapacitate him and allow her to snatch his pistol. Barbara turned on heel just in time to see the third and final guard squeeze a round off at Hood. Her fist was in his face before he could take another shot, slamming him against the wall. Slumping to the ground, the man laughed, spitting blood in her direction. With one hand on the trigger, the other cradling the base of the the gun, she aimed.

“You’re not going to shoot me, you’re with the Batman.” There was sarcasm laced in every syllable, like he was taunting her. “You don’t even know how to shoot a gun.”

“Funny story,” Barbara’s tone was relaxed and casual, not betraying how truly frightened she was. “My dad taught me how to shoot a gun after the captain of the football team asked me to prom. So, I know how to use this. Although…” Her words trailed off as she lowered the weapon towards the man’s groin. “It has been years since I’ve used one of these things, my aim could be way off.”

She could see realization flash in the man’s features and he dropped his own gun, kicking it across the room towards her. Smirking, Barbara scooped up the weapon before rushing over to the Red Hood, trying to not look at his exposed face. She pulled a knife out of her belt and cut the ligatures restraining his hands. Wincing, she stared at his wound. “Can you walk?”

“Remember, Jason. Interrogation is about the manipulation of fear and power. If you do not fear your captor, you cannot be intimidated. You will hold the power, not him.”

Ra’s’ words bounced around his head like a mantra, giving him a target to focus on while the Russian did his best Tyson impression. Sure, Jason had been worked over a few times in his life, but getting an orbital blowout wasn’t on his list of things to accomplish. So he did his best to take the blows on his chin and forehead, much to the fury of his torturer. 

His teeth rattled in his jaw; this guy had some serious stopping power. The domino did little to protect his face, but he supposed it was better than nothing.

Ten or twelve punches later and the room was starting to spin. Red haze was creeping in around the edges of his vision. He steeled himself against the encroaching blackout, rapidly exhaling to psyche himself up for the next blow.

It never came.

A navy and silver figure danced through the splintered door, taking out the first of the three men that had been tormenting Jason. The second dropped almost as fast, and the third was-

Fuck.

Wrenching his entire body weight to the right, he toppled the chair on its side, attempting to take the bullet that had been fired at his head in his pectoral armor. It struck with a hammer’s blow, knocking the chair back almost a foot.

Fuck, that hurt.

She was cutting his zipties now, helping him up. Asking if he was okay, if he could walk. Staring at him in abject horror.

“Yeah, the hair, I know. Where’s my helmet?”

She shook her head, pointing at his hip. Finally looking down, he found that the bullet had clipped the side of one plate of armor, ricocheted, and dug itself into his abdomen, shredding the polykevlar that his suit was made from. 

It was a large wound, to say the least. Not very deep, but wide, and probably all the way through the muscle wall. Taking a deep breath, he shook Batgirl off.

“I’ve had worse. Good job, by the way. I didn’t think you had it in you, picking up a gun. Cute story, with prom and all.” He stooped, ignoring the screams of protest from his wounded oblique as he drew his revolver.

The men would all have to die, he decided. The first two weren’t going to go anywhere soon; both were unconscious. The third man-Tyson, as he’d been dubbed by Jason-was sliding backwards in fear as a visibly bloody Red Hood knelt down, black and white hair inches from a scarred and ruddy face.

“Now, you’re going to tell me where my helmet is. If I think you’re lying, I’m going to have Batgirl here shoot your dick off. Got it?”

The man urinated on himself, pointing with a shaking hand at the adjacent utility room. 

Standing back up, he smiled widely at Batgirl.

“See, Batsie? All you gotta do is ask nicely. This is starting to hurt, so grab the Hood, would ya?" 

As soon as she went through the doorframe, his revolver was out and he was plugging shots into the men, one in each forehead. Tyson was last, slumping backwards against the wall as a pink cloud exploded out of the back of his skull.

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

Barbara was not the great detective, but she had honed the craft while standing in his shadow. She had a feeling, though, Hood didn’t want to involve the bat in this business. Why come to her directly if he wanted him?

“You’ve put me in a bad position, I’m sure you’re aware.” Barbara’s gut was telling her he wasn’t manipulating her, that his cards were on the table, displayed clearly for her to see. There was an inkling of doubt, a tiny nagging voice in her head telling her to cut her losses, run in the opposite direction. Bats and Outlaws didn’t mingle and they didn’t play nice together.

Then again, when had she ever played by anyone’s rules but her own?

The Batgirl mantle had been hers and hers alone – even if she hadn’t come up with the stupid name. Batgirl was born of frustration and a deep-rooted desire for independence. There was no tragic back story in Barbara’s life that had bred her vigilantism. She did this because she could, because it was the right thing to do.

“When do we start?”

Batgirl, get out! Get out while you can!”
These were the last words Jason said before his helmet was forcibly removed from his head.

Everyone who sees my face is going to die.
This was his last thought, before someone started punching him in the skull.

The recon hadn’t shown much of a threat, not really. A few guards here and there, and a thermal scan had showed less than a dozen men throughout the warehouse. They’d made their way in together, stealth and surprise their allies. A well placed ‘rang from Batgirl had knocked out the lead, and the drop from the third story, two feet landing on the guard’s shoulders had left the other one incapacitated. 

“You good?” It wasn’t a question, more of a statement. She’d nodded, and Jason had taken the lead when they made their way inside. 

The warehouse was empty, but there was a significant feature that the thermal hadn’t caught. Half the floor was a grate, revealing a matrix of cells, each with several young women inside. Nearly fifty guards patrolled underground, and the Red Hood flung a hand out behind him to stop Batgirl. 

“Stay high. I’ll handle this." 

The first dozen had come easy; after all, he was an assassin. No killing blows, but enough damage to make sure that none of them would get up anytime soon. Freeing the girls was where he screwed up. None of the guards had keys, and firing a shot off would ruin the small element of surprise that he had. So he muttered in Russian, over and over, that he’d be back to set them free as soon as he could.

It wasn’t until he’s made his way to the far end of the cells that he’d found the ambush, a group of twenty very angry mobsters with AK-47’s pointed at him from the main floor. He dived forward with a handspring, crossing the concrete as quickly as he could. From under the small balcony, he was able to take out a few of the men, but the numbers proved to be too much for him.

He’d walked out with his hands over his head, fingers interlocked over red alloy. The words in his ear were telling him that she was coming, but that just wasn’t going to be an option. As the leader approached him, he shouted at her, then made up his mind as to his plan.

"Why are you here, Krasnyy Kapot!?” The fists struck him again, and Jason had to grit his teeth to remain in the chair they’d chained him to.

Shaking his head to clear it, he spat out a reply.
“You lokhi took someone that I care about. I’m here to get her back.”

A round of laughs ensued. 

“That won’t be happening, Kapot. You will die here, Bditel’nosti.”

Jason didn’t doubt him.

*note: “Krasnyy Kapot” translates to “Red Hood”. “Lokhi” loosely means “motherfuckers”. "Bditel’nosti“ means "vigilante”.

You Probably Couldn’t See For All The Lights But You Were Staring Straight At Me | Zatanna Zatara and Jason Todd | Oner

To explain Jason Todd and Zatanna Zatara’s relationship is to attempt to capture love in a bottle. That’s to say, I mean, that it’s impossible to properly describe the factors and feelings that it entailed, but I’ll do the best I can.

He’d never know why he stepped into the bar; to this day, he’s not sure. Something changed his mind-he had been headed home, after a long night at the office-but for this reason or another, he ducked inside The Looper, the nightclub in question. There, halfway into a bottle of the finest vodka Gotham could produce, he’d locked eyes with a stage magician on her last show of the night. The magician, of course, was Zatanna. You could call it love at first sight, of course; many would. To the man, however, it was more the start of an obsession, one that would forever reshape the path his life would take.

Immediately after the show, he’d approached her with a smile and an arrogance that no one she’d met would ever match. Some small talk, a few more drinks, and the pair were taking a taxi back to the closest safe house Jason owned. Small, but well furnished, the house contained a queen sized bed that the two of them shared almost immediately. The morning afterward, Jason woke to find takeout on the table, and a still-nude Zatanna munching on General Tso’s spiciest pork. This casual air would set the tone for their relationship; for the rest of the months they’d spend together, up until the Event, they didn’t argue once.

The next night, she was performing again, and Jason was front row. The things she could do! It was incredible, really-impossible. Still, magicians don’t tell their secrets, and he knew about keeping them. So the routine began. She’d perform four times a week, 11 to 3, all over Gotham. He’d patrol as Red Hood during her on nights, cutting his circuit short as soon as she was done. The nights she was off, they’d spend in bed, or off following whatever whims Zat had for the evening. And they were many, as you must understand. She was all moonbeams and mysterious smiles and unbridled passion; he was dark and cynical and doubt and barely restrained distaste at the chaotic nights she had.

“No, Jay, it’s not just a psychic, he’s a friend! He can tell you things about yourself that you didn’t even know were true!”

“Jason, just come with me, okay? The show is really tasteful, I promise. Just cause they got banned from Broadway doesn’t mean it’s porn on stage!”

“The food here is great, just go with it. Yes, I know that the building is condemned.”

He stopped resisting soon after the tangle with the cops-that had been an adventure. Still, even someone as meticulous as Jason couldn’t deny the fun that her particular brand of spontaneity brought.

They soon accepted that both had pasts that weren’t kosher. Jason, from his death and resurrection to his League training to his kill count to his vigilante activities, would evade and change the subject the few times she pried. Her, with her actual Homo Magi pedigree, wasn’t able to give details. That worked, too. Mysterious was sexy, and it only served to increase the chemistry and attraction the two had for the other. Sure, there were times that got awkward.

“Jason, what does Redstone Security actually do? Everyone says you’re private security; that means mercenaries, right?”

“Zatanna, how the hell did you get us past security? This concert has been sold out for weeks! All you did was whisper in the guard’s ear. The fuck?”

“Jay, these bloodstains aren’t gonna come out. You sure it’s all from a nosebleed?”

“Zat, Honey. You made dinner in the time I showered. I know for a fact, you can’t roast a pig in fifteen minutes.”

The prods for information were all handled with the awkward graces of a homeschooled teenager, stammered excuses and lame attempts at explaining the impossible. They both let the other’s reasoning slide, because neither had any real desire to ruin a good thing. The result was an indefinite trust; both knew that they were only getting a portion of a whole, but neither was able to let their walls down far enough to let another in.

Vacations in France led to intimate moments, such as the time Zat let it slip that her father had disappeared on her eighteenth birthday. Once, during a candlelit dinner atop the Complex roof, Jason drunkenly serenaded her with the story of the Temple burning. Both were quickly moved past, as their love was not one for emotional support, but for passion and romance. Jason never attempted to dig further into her obviously clipped past, and she never questioned where exactly he’d been all those years overseas. 

The months passed, and Jason had slowed his Hood activities to the bare minimum. Zatanna had gotten a steady gig at a couple bars, and only performed twice a week now. He alternated between her days on for the Red Hood, not wanting to develop a pattern that she could follow. Kory and Roy weren’t happy about this; they’d grown to rely upon their friend and leader. Still, love was strange, and neither could change his mind one way or the other about Zatanna.

After almost six months of this romance, Gotham’s Curse struck again. At a commemoration of the one year anniversary of the Batman’s sacrifice, both Arkham and Blackgate were set loose upon the gathered citizens, forcing Jason’s hand. Donning the hood he always kept stashed in his truck, he set out on a purely defensive mission to defend the innocents being attacked. He didn’t miss a single shot; after the initial volley of inmates, over one hundred lay dead at his feet. Unfortunately, Zatanna had been a witness to his rampage, and an incredulous accusation had left him unable to lie to the woman he loved.

You’re the Red Hood? The murdering Outlaw smearing the good name of vigilantism that Bruce left for you?”

That night, after the smoke and bodies and blood running through the street had been cleared, they’d had their last conversation.  

“Zatanna, wait.”

She didn’t even look at him as she continued to throw her things into a massive suitcase, a blur of multicolored clothes that never managed to land outside the target. 

“No, Jason. You lied to me. You tarnished my dead best friend’s legacy, and you did it with willful abandon." With a snap of her fingers, the suitcase closed, and she was headed towards the door.

Snaking a hand forwards, he grabbed her upper arm in a grip firm enough to stop her in her tracks.

"I love you, Zat. Can’t we work this out?”

Her whispered words and the flash of light that surged outward from her hand told him otherwise. His world danced crazily around him, and he landed parallel with the floor. With a click of heels on hardwood, he watched Zatanna Zatara walk out of his life, not looking back once.

He laid there, silent tears seeping out of closed eyes, for what was probably close to an hour.

She took a cab to the airport. Destination: London. She wouldn’t set foot in Gotham again for several years.

That’s the story; a summary of what transpired between Jason Todd and Zatanna Zatara during their courtship. I’ve told it best I can, the ups and the downs. 

There’s a Rat at Your Boot || Jason & Dick || Flashback

waywardacrobat:

Nearly all of the heroes in this city were chalked up to “just stories.” People used to tell their kids that The Batman would come and get them if they were bad. Dick remembered when his mother did the exact same thing and it worked, too, because he always ended up in bed on time. Nowadays, everyone knew Batman was real. Batman had saved the day. Batman had sacrificed himself and given up his legacy to his little ineffective underlings.

The lesser known vigilantes were the ones stuck in legends and folktales, either struggling hard to find recognition or trying their damnedest to stay in the shadows. Hardly anyone knew about the Black Canary or the Spoiler or Manhunter. It was a bat that shined in the sky when the GCPD was having trouble, not an arrow or a fancy “S.” The Red Hood (and his Outlaws, to a lesser degree) was an enigma to most people. The rumors about him had spread like wildfire after The Occupation, but the general populace didn’t believe in his existence. Dick knew that he had gone underground right after the terrorist cells were rounded up and shipped off to some prison in Louisiana. Only those who had seen him in action knew that he was real— knew who he was, what he did and how he did it. He was merciless and successful in his brutality. He knew what he was doing and exactly how to do it. Dick desperately needed that.

The Hood operated almost exclusively within a twenty mile radius of the Narrows. Dick hadn’t managed to catalogue any sighting of the vigilante anywhere else and he had stationed himself around all parts of the city over the last few weeks. He had been tracking Hood’s movements for one purpose—to meet. After watching the Outlaws protect their little patch of territory during Bane’s war, Dick knew that he had found someone to help him and do for him what Bruce, in all his self-righteousness, wouldn’t even think about.

At fourteen, he wasn’t much of a vandal. What possessions he had were kept clean and utterly safe, so destroying property was a new thing for him. It was the only way to get Hood’s attention, however—short of tracking the guy for months upon months to see if he had a pattern to intercept. It was easier to get Hood to come to him. 

After smashing in three storefront windows, hijacking a motorcycle and crashing it into a shady mafia-owned restaurant, causing three alley fires, and starting a mad brawl between about six or seven smelly vagrants all within three successive nights, Dick made his way up to the top of his usual building to wait, perching himself on the edge of the roof so he could watch the fight he started play out. He had made sure to leave evidence of himself along with a ‘calling card’—a crudely spray-painted red bat—wherever he could. The brick building he was at had the same bat painted on its side and the teenager had made sure to come here every night, just in case.

If he were lucky, Red Hood would show up. (If he were very unlucky, Batman would show up instead, but Dick liked to think that the universe couldn’t possibly hate him that much.) If he never showed, he’d keep at it until he landed himself in prison, until he got what he wanted, until it killed him. He had already acquired a few bruises and some glass shards in his arm. Neither of the injuries hurt too badly, but it wasn’t exactly what he would call fun.

Still, he hoped this wouldn’t take too much longer. He had plans and this was only the beginning of everything.

Spring had hit Gotham in full force. The sunshine, along with rising temperatures, had woken the city from the long winter, and the crime rate had followed suit. Murder rate was back up, and there were actual cops patrolling-however poorly-his territory. Drug dealers were back out on corners that had long been abandoned; so far, there had been over a dozen overdoses just on Narrows Island. There was a new drug going around, one called not-so-affectionately “thumper”, for the way it spiked your heart rate. It’s (significant) side effect was a one in ten cardiac episode, and one that had claimed thousands of lives in Dubai before making a home in Gotham.

To top it all off, somebody had been causing trouble around Park Street, just north of the Narrows Bridge. Not unusual in it’s own right, but the fact that the culprit had been tagging a bat everywhere he went was a problem. More specifically, it was a red bat, a copy of the one that Jason wore on his chest. 

That symbol had been a source of much consternation in Gotham, when it had first been picked up by an enterprising reporter. “RED BAT STOPS GANG RAPE”, the papers had said. And Jason had; he’d plugged eight men gathered around a nude fifty-eight year old woman with a fake leg. Gang bangers were the scum of the earth. The woman had sold her story to the tabloids, and suddenly, stories of the monstrous Red Bat were everywhere. He’d had to track down the editor, break into her apartment, scare her shitless, and score an interview to fix that moniker.

So he’d explained, in a one off publicity stunt, that he wore the crimson bat to prove that the symbol Batman used could mean something lasting, something other than failure. She’d not understood, and so he’d very patiently expanded upon that. “You see, Miss Vale, vigilantes are supposed to stop crime, to change their city. They aren’t meant as a sign of hope, as some urban legend to frighten the weak minded. They’re meant as a warning, as a sign of what undoubtedly will come to those who continue to cross that line in the sand." After that interview, the name Red Hood was on everyone’s lips, as the Gazette sold out a record nine printings. 

So to see his symbol used as a signature for some new gang, or whomever this merry mischief maker was, was unacceptable. Already he’d started a mafia beef, by sending a bike colored in a rival family’s colors into the boss’s restaurant. The fires were less damaging, as most of the alleyways were stone and cement, but it still left scorched earth behind, with the offending symbol. It was the brawl that finally got Jason to interfere. The men-drugged, drunk, homeless, ignorant-had raised enough clamor to warrant no less than seven calls to 911, four of which Henri managed to reroute to Jason. Finally, he had an active event with which to track this new prey.

The men were winding down, fatigue and lack of muscle tone breaking their fight far sooner than normal men would have given up. Taking a vantage point up high, he watched as they wandered their separate ways, with a few still halfheartedly throwing punches underneath yet another red symbol. Actually, now that Jason looked closer, there were several dozen symbols on this particular building. A quick scan with his helmet showed a lone occupant, seated on the roof. Zooming in, he spotted the red cans of paint next to this…boy?, as well as several gas cans. Odd, but Gotham had seen weirder.

A grapple took him to the far side of the condemned building, and slow, purposeful footsteps took him within twenty feet of the boy. He was small, but not skinny; he had muscle tone, and a decent wideness of the shoulders. A swimmer maybe, or a gymnast. Neither of which explained why this teenager was tearing Park Street apart. Speaking through the vents of the helmet, he called out.

"Nice work, Kid. I’m not dumb enough to think this wasn’t intentional. You have my attention. Use it wisely.” Hooking his thumbs in his belt, just inside his holsters, he leaned back on his heels and waited for an explanation.

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

Back against the railing, Barbara slid down until she was seated on the roof. Chin in the palm of her hand, she looked at the Red Hood, curious expression plastered across her face. It was infuriating how difficult to read this guy was. The kind of frustration that got on your skin like a rash, a rash you couldn’t stop scratching.  It wasn’t just the fact that he wore a helmet that completely covered his face. She was good, damn good, at reading body language, voice intonations, everything. But he was better at alluding her.  It was maddening.

He was a puzzle, the kind that had no obvious resolution. She detested that more than anything. Her scientific, over calculating mind could figure out damn near anything. His reputation and actions were in direct conflict with each other. When she expected him to weave, he bobbed.  When she expected him to be just another faceless killer in the Gotham night, he was rescuing a restaurateur’s daughter. He was unpredictable – and erratic wasn’t good, not when you needed to trust someone to have your back.

And now he wanted help with what she could only assume was preventing a girl from being sold into an underground sex trafficking ring.

Barbara rubbed her eyes, pinching the bridge of her nose as she took in a deep breath.  She couldn’t say no, declining his offer would mean someone would suffer and she wasn’t prepared to use an innocent as a pawn.  Both gloved palms splayed out on the concrete roof, fingers idly playing with a rock.

“I’m not saying yes because I want you to owe me a favor. I’m saying yes because I can’t say no.” Hoisting herself back into a standing position, she turned on heel back towards him, eyes following the dark horizon. “Do you have anymore intel, because that’s not a lot to go on.”

Jason did, in fact, have more intel. The problem was proving it. The Dimitrov family was notoriously insular, and the only contact he had with them was a man who had also escaped the Gulag with Jason, all those years ago. Not a problem, usually, but Maxim Dominina was not most men. After returning to Russia, he had defected to the United States, joining a counterspy operation with the CIA. To involve him was to invite the government into Red Hood business, something Jason hoped to avoid.

“I know a little. Just enough to pinpoint their warehouse. It’ll take observation and surveillance to get anywhere real. Stakeout, like. You up for it?” The ‘imnottakinganyofyourshit’ look she gave him didn’t make him feel good about the operation, but he supposed that reluctant help was better than going it alone. 

“All I ask is that you back me on this play. Can you manage that, Little Red?” With another shrug, he held his hands up, miming innocence. Couldn’t hurt, right?

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

With pursed lips and a scrunched up nose, she looked at him with feigned disgust. “Should we add littering to your no doubt long list of criminal acts?” Bending down, Barbara picked up the spent cigarette and strolled over to the helmeted man. Yanking out his hand, she placed the the trash in his palm. “You should be more careful next time, Darth. Wouldn’t want your DNA getting into the wrong hands.”

A scoff escaped her lips, eyebrows drawn and arched in disbelief. “The great and powerful Red Hood needs my help? Are you concussed? You don’t seem like the type to ask for assistance, let alone from an ally of the bat.”

He raised his hands up and she sensed he was being sincere. Which was an incredibly odd feeling and one she was certain she couldn’t one hundred percent trust. Barbara dropped the sarcastic tone, switching to something a bit more serious. Leaning against one of the railings, she looked over the skyline, taking a moment to consider his request, still stunned he was asking for aid. “How do I know you are being honest? How do I know you aren’t lying to me?”

Barbara didn’t trust him farther than she could throw him – which considering his height and bulk was probably not far at all. But she probably owed him a favor, he had sort of gotten her out of a jam. A really stupid jam, but a jam none the less. She could at least humor his request.  

He couldn’t help himself. He smiled when he saw her pick up his scattered bad habit, a genuine smile too. Good thing she’d never know. He accepted the handful of butts, crushing them in his fist before depositing them into a jacket pocket. “Nice to see you again, Padme. Good to see you’re still trying to earn that anti-littering merit badge.” She scoffed. 

Despite her accusations of nefarious deeds, crimes, and various other skullduggery, he actually needed her help. Wanted it, too. So he endured her cautious looks, the dripping sarcasm in her voice. Finally, when she finished talking, he spoke.

“You don’t know I’m not lying to you. That’s where trust comes in, Batsie. Just hear me out, okay?” He put his hands in front of him, signalling for her to just let him explain. 

“A contact of mine, Boris Ilyinykh, called me this morning. His daughter, Ylena, has been missing since yesterday afternoon. Shit out of luck normally, but Boris tells me she’d been seeing one of the Dimitrov leader’s kid. Some asshole named Anatoly. They’re sex traffickers, primarily.” He stopped, sighing. “I need reliable help, here. Someone I can trust to not storm in there and tip the Russians off. That’s why I’m not using the others here. Too volatile. The Dimitrovs have a warehouse in Randall, and that’s where I want to start.”

He knew she couldn’t see his eyes, but he still bored his into hers. “I need someone here, Batsie. Plus, I’ll owe you one.”

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

divine-my-own-future:

It was like a scene from a noir film: streaky clouds and smog surrounding dark structures rising up into the night. The new temples of man – high-rise buildings and billboards – stretching so far it looked like they would impale the stars in the sky.  Batgirl stood sentry on the roof of one such building, observing the city as it citizens drifted towards slumber.

Barbara was exhausted. She had been working the ‘sex bugs’ case, as Dinah had so eloquently dubbed it, for the last two weeks. Every spare moment that she wasn’t on patrol or at work she was researching; sifting and gathering intel in attempt to piece everything together. Somehow she had even managed to fit in an undercover mission to the thinly veiled ball over the weekend to get additional information. Her feet were still aching from the five-inch heels Dinah had forced her to wear.

Eyes darted back and forth over the Gotham horizon, legs dangling over the side of the superstructure. The comm lines were quiet tonight and Barbara was thankful for the reprieve, no matter how temporary or slight. Out of the corner of tired, emerald eyes she spotted the light – an entirely new signal gracing the Gotham skies. Lips pressed together into a tight smirk, she pushed herself up with the aide of the safety railing and took a running leap off the building.

Within ten minutes, Batgirl was standing near the source of her amusement and she couldn’t hide the smile on her face. “You know,” Barbara declared into the shadows. “I would say that it’s a crime to deface police property.” Hands went to rest on her hips. “I would say that, if it weren’t so funny.” 

“There may be angry Bats and police commissioners arriving soon.  Might want to douse the light. Unless your intention was to bring more attention to yourself, then by all means, keep it on.” Crossing her arms over her chest, hip jutting to one side, Barbara stood with cheeky demeanor. 

His helmet was in his hand, and a cigarette was dangling from his lips as he scanned the skyline. The signal was blazing in the air, a brilliant amethyst bat in the heavens. The weather wasn’t cold enough to seep through his armor, but the wind was brisk, biting at his face. It had been a good thirty minutes since the light went up. A small pile of black butts littered the ground at his feet, a sign of his impatience. 

A light sound of footsteps on the far side of the light caught his attention, and he tugged the helmet over his head as he stepped around the buzzing spotlight. He blinked twice as the HUD powered up, changing his visual field from the naked skyline of Gotham to a pulsing stream of information. Batgirl was standing across the roof, looking annoyed. Good. He flicked the butt of his cigarette at her, watching as the coal spun crazily in the night wind. It landed without striking her, rolling into the toe of her left boot.

She spoke. 

With a deft hand, he pulled the handle of the light downward, cutting the power off. The buzzing stopped, and the MCU rooftop plunged into what seemed to be pitch darkness, without the brilliant symbol illuminating their surroundings. He allowed a few seconds for her vision to adjust, then spoke.

"No one is even going to notice, Batsie. There’s a multiple alarm fire on Sandy Hook, plus a hostage situation the new Bat is dealing with up on South Channel Island. No one’s here; certainly no one who’s going to meddle in our affairs.” She looked good. Tired, maybe, but good. Vibrant red hair, sharp eyes. Legs that, had Jason allowed himself to dwell on, would have thrown his concentration fully. He closed his eyes for a brief second, then, in a softer voice, spoke again.

“I need your help, Batsie. I’ve got a kidnapping case I’m working on, and I need someone softer to back me up. Domestic cases aren’t my forte, but this is a favor for a friend. I need someone victims will trust, someone they’ll talk to.” He raised his hands in mock surrender, his tone taking on a sarcastic tone. “No tricks, no trap. This is the Big Bad Wolf asking Little Red for help.”

Arabella | Red Hood and Batgirl | Zero Year Flashback

Jason hated domestic crimes. 

There was the inherent deplorableness of them, men hurting those weaker than themselves. There were the memories of Willis Todd tossing his son across the room when he stepped in front of his mother, at age three. He’d broken his arm then. Catherine had cried over his crumpled body until Willis left, off to get shitfaced before returning to pass out in a heap against the deadbolted front door.

He wasn’t good at handling hysterical women and children, and even in the cases where they were semi-calm, they were loathe to trust him immediately after Jason had put a stop to the man (or men) who had hurt them. He was just too big, too rough around the edges. He lacked a polish, an inherent trustworthiness that connected him with victims.

It was with that mindset that the Red Hood was standing above the Batsignal on the Major Crimes building, watching as the light cut through fog and smog, casting a purple light onto a low flying cloud. Purple, because he wasn’t looking for the lesser Batman tonight. A five eighths thick sheet of plum colored plexiglass was clamped onto the spotlight, and the result was a distinctly different type of call for help. 

If everything worked according to plan, Batgirl would show up.

Eighteen hours earlier, Jason had received a call from Ilya Katsalapov, the CEO of Redstone Security, and one of Jason’s oldest and closest friends. His brother-in-law, Boris Ilyinykh, had a daughter who hadn’t been heard from in three days. In Gotham, that meant you were dead. However, the girl had been involved with some Russian mobsters lately, some kid she’d been seeing. Boris didn’t know his name, just that his father had been big in the Dimitrov family. They were a nasty group, making their bones on human trafficking and the sex trade. Foul play was always suspected when they were involved.

Normally, Jason would have asked one of the Outlaws to back him up, but Kory wasn’t exactly patient when it came to human traffickers. If it were up to her, she’d go in guns-hands, really-blazing, and level their hideout in Uptown. Roy would do whatever she said. Besides, they were new at the vigilante game, and Jason had been itching to see Batgirl again. Their last meeting had ended a little darker than he’d intended, and he’d been trying without avail to run into her in the seven or so weeks following that.

So, with a basic lead about where the Dimitrovs kept their slaves, the Red Hood waited in the shadow of the Bat, hand on his revolver at the small of his back. Ready, watching, waiting.

New Faces | Zero Year Flashback | Red Hood and Batgirl | COMPLETED

divine-my-own-future:

Barbara’s lips parted more from surprise rather than preparing for speech. The comment resonated far more than she was comfortable with. Shocked and slightly bewildered, she stared at him, but before she could retort, the Hood was up and flying across the street. Shaking her head, hands planted firmly on each hip, she cursed him under her breath. Lips pursed together, Barbara turned back, gathering the discarded food containers, throwing them in a trash receptacle as she took the fire escape down the side of the building. Not flashy, but after tonight she needed the break.

The walk back to her bike was uneventful and quiet, but her mind kept wandering to places she didn’t want it to go. Muscles ached, feet screamed. An hour ago she was ready to call the evening a wash – now, she wasn’t so sure. The one thing she was certain of, however, was she wasn’t going to tell anyone about tonight. Barbara was too embarrassed, too confused to even try to piece together the events of the evening. Plus, who’d even believe her?

Reaching her apartment just in time to see the sun awaken from it’s nightly slumber, Barbara hit her bed without much thought other than rest. And after the night she had, she needed it.  

[COMPLETED]