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Rosario has made herself quite at home in Kate’s own place. Nothing drastic, she hasn’t added or rearranged or really done anything to how Kate has been living her life. Instead, there were small additions: another pair of slippers, a towel hung next to Kate’s, two mugs at coffee. So, when Kate brings her to the Gotham apartment she owns, Rosario begins her mental mapping of where her husband may have been, her life here. She looks around the highrise, the incredible view, and her eyebrows shift up.

Kate was initially worried, having Rosario in Gotham, but it’s turned out all right—in fact, Kate’s thinking Walter likely doesn’t know that Rosario’s alive, that it wouldn’t even cross his deranged mind. Besides, it’s a good place to venture her next thoughts, make them clear. Here in the heart of things. “Everything okay, Mama?”

Rosario nods. “Si, mi amor,” she responds, automatically, and though her body language reads as timid or shy, there is excitement shining in her eyes as she glances around the kitchen, the same coffee machine that was in her apartment, and looks at her daughter. “This is yours..?”

Kate blinks a little, because it’s been a long time since the 70s, for her, and a long road onwards. Privilege, what she has of it, has been a gradual step change. “Si, mine and Ollie’s,” she says, almost distractedly, as if it’s a given. “We got this one last year.” Last year when they were trailing Bruce…time passes.

mother is the name of god )
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Alfred holds the boy’s hand steady in his own, as they move the tubing of icing along the top of the cake: it was a decent enough job for a double layer, cream filled confection, and Alfred was pleased, his voice warm: “That’s it. Just a touch of pressure, not too much.” He steps back, wiping his hands on his apron as he moves around the Wayne Manor kitchen with ease. An animal in his natural environment.

Bruce stands behind the boy, watching Alfred, his expression barely contained: the smile tugs at the edges of his lips, from where he sits, sneaking a green bean from the casserole to the side of him.

Kate has been invited to Wayne Manor, which feels a bit odd, but then again, she always feels a little bit like a fish out of water on a day like today. She paces in the library a little, stares out at the just-about-to-bloom garden for a long moment or two.

Ramsey has what is definitely the worst icing handwriting but delights in this task, since Alfred uses the metal icing tops, which seem far more legitimate than Momma Julie’s store-bought plastic ones. Although, of course, Ramsey loves his stepmother too, and has ensured that a giant bouquet of flowers — bought on Peter’s credit card — will arrive at their Canadian home.

Bruce comments, as he watches Ramsey, a diffused sense of pride making the edges of his words honey-warm, sunshine bright: “Your cursive is getting better.”

Alfred leans in, as he walks past Bruce, “..but your stealth could use a touch up, sir—you’ll ruin your appetite,” and he pushes the casserole away from the man, patting him on the arm as he walks to the oven.

Kate wanders out of the library. She’s spent enough time now living in this place that she no longer gets lost in the main corridors, has little fear of their dark corners, and she can smell dinner cooking all the way from here through some alchemy of Alfred’s. Kitchen. Coffee. This she can do.

unmixed and heroic joy )
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You are fighting a dragon in Skyrim in your mother’s apartment when it appears, in a flash of red light.

The bull-like entity charges through your home, down your halls, into your room, and pins you against the wall in a flurry of red-hot rage. Its breath billows down your neck as your head goes fuzzy with fury.

«CALF» it roars inside your mind. «CALF, YOU ARE FULL OF ANGER, YOU WILL BE MY HOST UNTIL THE DARKNESS HAS PASSED. I AM THE BUTCHER.»
Ramsey didn’t know why one of his family members had installed the train mod, but watching a massive train descend from the sky and pummel the dragon was more than entertaining. He approached the body, in game, about to scavenge for items, when he felt it shake the apartment with the sheer force it used to materialize through the walls and down the halls.

Super-strength was no good against an emotional entity—particularly not one like The Butcher, who was comprised entirely of hate and anger, abstract concepts turned to burning crimson reality. He squealed as it pinned him between its tusks, forcing his little body up against the Superman blue walls he had his mother paint a few years prior. Try as he might, Ramsey could not stop the being, not even with a concentrated blast of his secondary powers.

If anything, The Butcher only grew as he did so. Its snarling laugh tore through the little boy’s skull, resounding off the bone with images of the people who would hate Ramsey for everything he was, everything he would grow up to be. Ramsey’s own rage was burning up his throat like stomach acid, and he couldn’t seem to quell it back down.

"S-stop," he groaned, pushing at the beast’s head, careful of the sharp fangs that protruded forward. "Please l-leave me—"

The Butcher opened its mouth now, and laughed. The force of the action sent hot blood from its core splashing against the boy’s face, and Ramsey gagged and squirmed even harder against the disgusting warmth.

«NO» it replied, lips curling ferally as it dropped the boy. «NO, RAMSEY, I THINK I WILL STAY»
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Kate dozes off on a QT breakroom sofa.

Ramsey sits beside his mother, playing what is surely the seven-hundredth game of Zelda today.

Kate stirs a little, and as she wakes, realizes she’s started to drool. It’s a good thing she sorta technically owns these sofas now. “Ugh, Ram, how long was I asleep, honey?”

Ramsey glances over at his mother, then at the clock on the wall behind her. “Couple’a hours,” he mumbles, clicking a button that causes an oversized sword to start causing damage before he actually looks back over at the screen.

"Oh geez. Oh my god," says Kate. "You could have woke me up so we could go home, it would have been okay." She gathers, somehow, that Ramsey is either okay with sitting there playing with his 3DS or doesn’t care enough about where he is yet. She’d thought the latter was getting better, what with him wanting to be in LA, but…she doesn’t know. What needs to happen, really, is she needs to be able to ask. As Ollie said, Ram is clearly her son, and he’s reacting almost exactly as she has—and had, at his age.

Ramsey shrugs, frowning at the little blinking ‘charge battery’ light. “It’s okay, I didn’t want chili for dinner anyway.” He breaks a few pots, gathering up all the coins, and asks, without looking at her: “Did you and Pa and Mr. Bruce break up?”

Kate is startled, then clears her throat, gently. “You better save that, dulcito. And no, actually, we didn’t break up at all. Did someone say something?”

Ramsey looks up at her, for a long moment, then nods. “Okay, that’s good. I didn’t know.” He saves the game, shutting his console with a satisfying click. “Do you think we could have pozole from somewhere instead of chili?”

Ramsey shakes his head. “No, but Pa moved back home.”

schism )
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It feels like they’ve been walking for days.

Bruce estimates this to be true by the sheer nature of fatigue in his limbs, by the time they reach the next in a series of corridors. Staircase after staircase, the sunless horizon giving him no measure of days or the passage of time, Bruce swallows deeply, his mouth chapped, and turns to look at Dick.

Bruce looks back at where Diana and Ollie are bringing up the rear, and speaks in a low tone. “..alright?”

Demon watches them, unseen and undetected by both.

Dick stares ahead with an almost too-fervent determination, and when he looks at Bruce, his eyes are a little too wide. The brooch his mother gave him is still clenched tight in his hand and it’s that feeling of it that’s keeping him steady. He nods. “I’m all right.” He reaches out with his other hand, rubbing the back of his knuckles against Bruce’s shoulder. “You?”

Bruce moves his own hand out, to wrap over the top of Dick’s shoulder, squeezing the muscles there before dropping his hand. He exhales, and rather than respond with a normal, communicative answer, he states: “There’s something we’re missing.”

Bruce looks around the castle they are in, and he isn’t sure what floor they’re on, as the windows are too high, too narrow, and the sky outside doesn’t change for the altitude. He exhales again, and it seems like he is doing that more than inhaling, and clenches his jaw as he attempts to steady the impulsive urge to exit, determine where they are.

Dick nods, rocking toward him a little at the contact. “She said we couldn’t find him alone. Or, I couldn’t find him alone, but maybe we meant all of us. Maybe that’s what….” He brings his fist up slightly to finish his statement. “It’d just be nice to have a clue about what exactly we’re missing.”

deep and crisp )
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Hoodie moves when the scent is gone. He doesn’t linger where Kyle is, now that the magician had removed what he’d needed. There was no point. He leaves the knucklebones scattered across the floor, not bothering to pick them up as he shifts across space and time, buoyed by the power that is growing. The scent still lingers, there is still hope, and the promise of revenge whets his appetite.

Hoodie is, while the Magician and her Lantern mend what has been broken, across in San Franscisco, speaking to Diana, daughter of Hippolyta. Hoodie is, while the populace grows more and more content in their feasting—their FEASTING— tearing the sheet of metal from the armor he’d been denied access to, and when it peels back, like the soft skin of a grape, the hunt is on again and Hoodie—He—

Hoodie is, while the Magician and her Lantern mend what has been broken, across in San Franscisco, speaking to Diana, daughter of Hippolyta. Hoodie is, while the populace grows more and more content in their feasting—their FEASTING— tearing the sheet of metal from the armor he’d been denied access to, and when it peels back, like the soft skin of a grape, the hunt is on again and Hoodie—He—

Hoodie races across space and time on the currents of pure human energy bubbling under his fingers, his teeth bared and straining. Straining, because the boy has left. He can smell him.

Hoodie removes the fruit stolen from his uncle’s garden from within the pockets of his sweatshirt—that is where his hands have travelled, everytime— and leaves it upon the plate and waits. Waits.

Damian has snuck out of his prison for the second time this day. He glares up at the gray sky as if its caused him some great grievance, while he cracks the pomegranate open with his small fingers. The movements are precise, powerful. The boy picks out a few of the precious, staining seeds and places them on his tongue. Without a moment’s haste, he crushes them between his back teeth, not yet graced with twelve-year molars. The pomegranate was an appeasement, it seemed, for the longevity of his stay. The boy accepts it without hesitation.

six seeds )
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Despite it being the first time, Alfred was not, in fact, surprised to find Ramsey where he was—half buried under a large book in the large armchair in the library—but he was a.. bit taken aback at the tome the boy had chosen and was thumbing through: The Art of Making Bread.

He chuckled, a low dry sound, and moved over into sight with the tray he carried: tea, biscuits, and a small platter of apples, the remainders from that year’s haul. The butler set it down, on a small table near Ramsey, and scanned for Lian. Hiding in the stacks, more than likely. He proceeded to cut one of the apples, then another, as he stood next to the boy, and nearly chortled as he spoke next.

"Sating your appetite for knowledge, young Master Robinson?"

Ramsey stuck his entire hand between the entries on “challah” and “chapati,” marking the page and smiling up at the older man. The smell of the apples as Alfred cut them was tangy and sharp, and for some reason Ramsey’s mind went straight back to that awful place with bungalows and monsters who took mothers in the middle of the night. Unconsciously, his fingers on his free hand rubbed at the spot where his moon-scar had once been. The bread book had been no coincidence either—it had elicited the same memories.

"Mr. Bruce let me help him coo—bake bread over the summer," he responded helpfully, spreading the book out on the ottoman in front of him—a footrest to a man, a table to a child—-and flipped the pages until the loaves of bread Bruce had baked and he had delivered came into sight. "I saw this too…" he began again, flipping more pages until he found the thing he was looking for. Ramsey hoisted the book up, entirely too bulky in his tiny hands, and squinted at the page, reading in his best fourth grade voice.

the staff of life )
bossymarmalade: hermione granger lugs books  (he marries someone JUST LIKE YOU)
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…you wake up in Grampa’s penthouse, on the couch. You are wearing one of your favorite sun dresses. Beside you is Ramsey Robinson. Thor is licking his hand, and Kiki is standing and pacing, standing and pacing, whining slightly.

Rose Wilson trots downstairs, occupied in texting until she sees you on the couch.

"Oh. So you guys are all back" she says, sounding slightly disappointed. "Next time your parents should tell me if you’re gonna be gone for a while, geez." Rose heads into the kitchen, muttering. "I coulda gone to get my chocha waxed or something…"

——————————————

"ROSE!!!" Lian screams and hops off the couch as if it’s on fire. She screams again and hugs Kiki. Then one more time, as she hugs Thor. Both dogs tails are wagging in excitement now, and Lian looks at Ramsey, who seems to be waking up.

"RAMSEY, WE’RE HOME!" she bawls and runs to her room, and checks. Everything is there - all of her beautiful angel babies (she can take inventory just by sight alone), her posters, her binder full of her songs, her tambourine, her dinglehopper, her fourteen books - all of it. She jumps and makes a squeak like her Aunt Mar’i and then tumbles down the stairs, catapulting herself onto Rose.

"Get OFF," Rose says angrily, even though she just sits there on the stool and keeps playing Angry Birds. Lian purrs and hums and then finally asks:

"Where’s Papa?"

By the time Ramsey registers what’s happening and where he is, Lian has already bounded off the couch and up the stairs to her room. Ramsey, on the other hand, slides bonelessly off the couch, straight onto the floor, and wraps his arms around Thor’s chest. He buries himself in the flush of lighter fur that goes around the dog’s neck down his chest, and for a few minutes, Ramsey cries. Thor smells like the shampoo Lian insisted they should wash the dogs with months before they were thrown into Cachement, and he doesn’t mind when Ramsey sobs and hiccups against him.

After all, that’s what best friends are for. And Thor missed his boy, too. Androids dream of electric sheep, but robotic dogs only dream of endless fields of tennis balls and their smiling owners.

Vaguely, Ramsey remembers the weight of his cell phone in his pocket. There are no missed calls, no frantic Skype messages. Just a snapchat of his little sister’s blonde curls and gap-ridden toddler’s mouth pressed between his father and stepmother, all their cheeks depressed against one another, all smiles and best wishes.

The message that flashes across the screen reads: "Hope you’re having a great day, Ram!"

Ramsey quickly saves the picture before it can delete itself, then goes to look through his phone’s photo albums for it. He finds it easily enough, the last in the list, or at least, he thought it would be…

The boy blinks and clicks the thumbnail right beside it, the new last picture in the album. There, as if scanned perfectly, is the watercolor of the Child dancing on the apple tree stump.

Ramsey smiles.




The room is spinning when he wakes up. He’s not sure exactly where or why it’s spinning, but it definitely is spinning. Every time he blinks, the wall and ceiling turn, so he decides that leaving his eyes closed is the better option. It isn’t until he realizes that he’s actually in a room and lying tucked into a comfy bed that Dick figures maybe it’s worth it to try and open his eyes again.

It all looks very familiar, despite the spinning. There’s a poster for the Flying Graysons, a calendar he hasn’t seen in a while of old cartoons, a console with games he hasn’t played yet, and a light blue ceiling above him. He looks down at himself, tucked into the covers, but still naked. Well, at least one thing is right here.

The door opens and someone walks in and Dick could see that if only the room would quit spinning.

"Oh! I’m sorry, I didn’t realize you were home."

"…Alfred?"
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Kate’s arms are brown and warm, as if she’s absorbed every last morsel of the Cachement summer heat before the snow settled in, but Ramsey nonetheless wiggles out of her grasp as soon as the sun rises. He murmurs vaguely something about ‘bathroom,’ and she releases him without fully awakening.

Ramsey does not lie to his mother. He goes to the bathroom down the hall first, and stares at himself in the mirror. He has to stand on tip-toes, but he can see the single bruise bloomed under the skin of his neck. Ramsey stares at it for a long time, memorizing the exact placement of the bruise, remembering the way Damian brought his elbow out and across to hit him so quickly. So effectively.

His little sneakers were brand new when they came here. Kate had helped him pick them out the day she took him to work in Los Angeles. She had sat him down in the chair at the shoe store, and knelt before him. Vaguely, Ramsey had thought of Cinderella and the Prince—glass slippers and magical destinies, and he had chosen the ones Kate liked most, because they were dark red like her costume, with bright blue accents, like the glow of her Manhunter staff.

His shoes had been brand new when they came here. Now they were covered in dust and mud and sap and blood and all the things that oozed around here, oozed from every orifice of every single thing, monster or not. Deep cracks had risen in the sides, and Ramsey hadn’t told anyone about the cold that seeped in when he had run through the snow.

He tugs the shoes on now, ties the laces like Peter showed him, rolls his heel into place like Momma Julie does, and heads outside the bungalow.

It’s hot and wet outside, humid with the melted snow, but Ramsey doesn’t pay much attention to that. He makes his way to the far end of camp, where once his Pa and siblings had worked on an archery range. Roy’s handmade targets still stand there, the paint slightly faded and the grass around them higher than before, but standing nonetheless. Ramsey finds a smaller wooden bow discarded nearby and tries his hand at pulling the string back. Without his powers, Ramsey’s arms are weak, and the string barely moves.

He discards the bow back into the tall grass and makes his way to the target. It’s one of the shorter ones, but it still towers over him. He stares up at it for a long time. Walt’s voice drifts into his mind, holding his hand as he took the boy from the school, saying things like “potential” and “family.”

Ramsey has a lot of family. But only some of them are blood. And he knows Walt is blood.

He looks down at the scar on his arm, then the one on his thumb, and remembers his promise to Cass. She’s his sister now, and for some reason he knows she’ll understand. He doesn’t quite understand yet, but she does.

His hand pulls back, in imitation of Damian’s the night before, and he thinks about the third power he had developed. It had shown up exactly one time, it hadn’t stayed long, and it wasn’t much. But now, two years later, without his strength or his durability, Ramsey wonders.

He draws his elbow back, remembers the look on Walt’s face, cold and distant, and imitates it. He jumps up, swinging his elbow and the target’s stick-neck. He overestimates the balance he needs, though, and after he strikes it, he tumbles to the ground, emitting a soft oomph as he rolls onto his back to look up at the fissured sky.

The target’s head rolls to the ground, and Ramsey’s lower arm glows a violently bright blue, like the staff that once sent him to the hospital, the staff his mother holds so proudly. He puffs out a hot breath, and smiles.
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Ramsey rolls over in his sleep, curling more tightly against Kate’s side, murmuring something unintelligible in his dreaming before sitting up suddenly for no real reason. His dark hair is puffed out around his head and from underneath a mess of curls and thick eyelashes he drowsily looks over and up at his mother’s reclining figure. “Ma…ma,” he begins, sounding almost drugged, before he throws himself around her waist, burying his face in her stomach. “Mama!”

Kate has been reading, not quite able to get up out of bed for more than a moment or two. Someone’s left a mass market paperback of The Massacre at Fall Creek by her bedside—whether it was a person or one of them, she doesn’t really know or care—and so she’s been reading, off and on, finding her attention gets easier to corral with every passing hour.

Kate notices Ramsey moving, and if she weren’t half dizzy herself yet, would probably be alarmed by the way he sounds. She reaches down, strokes his hair gently. “Mi’jo.”

Ramsey is very likely teary-eyed against the sheets around Kate’s lower body, but his voice is too muffled to make heads or tails out of it. “Mama ah mithed ooh,” he murmurs, little shoulders relaxing as her fingers thread through his hair. He looks up—yes, those are tears making his brown eyes into little watery mirrors—and his lower lip quivers slightly. “Did they put a machine in you, Mama?”

Kate can just feel her eyes well up too at his first statement, but she bites her lip, clears her throat, smiles softly down at him just a little. “I missed you too, niño,” she says quietly. “I tried to get back to you as soon as I could.” She frowns a little, then, trying to figure out how she can tell him without breaking the…curse or whatever it is on her that keeps her from talking about it. She doesn’t want to scare him even more. “I don’t think so,” she says finally, biting back a cough.

Kate pauses, brain finally catching up, as she remembers what she saw, and she reaches to graze her fingers against the bandage Ramsey’s sporting still. “Sweetie…”

like never before )
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Bruce approaches Clark as he exits the showers, his own shirt drenched in sweat. He brings a forearm up to wipe at his brow, stopping barely a foot away from the other man. His voice is firm, leaving very little room for the other man to argue when he speaks. “We need to talk.”

Clark treads the darkened patch of earth where once trees stood, ashy remnants of bark coating his boots with fine gray powder. He touches the scorched trunk of an elm, hand lingering there as if he’s trying to siphon something from it, before Bruce’s voice cuts into his thoughts. “Yes, I suppose so,” he says as he turns to face him. He looks him over once. “How are you feeling now?”

Bruce waves a hand. “Fine,” he states, almost irritated with the man’s inquiry, as if it were the last thing on his mind. He tilts his head a bit, eyes narrowing as he looks at Clark. “How are /you/ feeling, Clark?” Bruce, after a beat, clarifies: “Hallucinations, memory lapses, waking up from fugue states?”

Clark echoes, “Fine,” in a less terse tone, but just as noncommittal. He shoves his hands into his pockets and looks around the clearing. “No. I haven’t lost it, Bruce, if that’s what you want to know. At least, I don’t think I have,” he adds, any defensiveness in his tone ebbing away.

Bruce gestures with a hand at the scorched forest around them. “And this?”

Clark closes his eyes as his chin falls toward his chest. “I know. I know. He called me Kal-El. He started talking about her.” He looks up again, into the sky, sunlight warming the cerulean undertones in his eyes. “I didn’t remember it before Kyle asked, but I was on Krypton before I woke up in the pool.”

Bruce’s eyes narrow more, his arms folding over his chest, and he tempers the the amber tones of alarm in his voice as he repeats back: “You were on Krypton?”

Clark nods hesitantly. “I don’t know how, but that’s what I recall. Flying over the Morstil Ocean.” His gaze cuts to Bruce, sharp and wondering. “Where were you?”

small and significant )
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Found pasted up against the backwall of the bookshelf in the Longhouse. It is partially hidden behind old paperbacks from the 70’s.

When he first finds the paper up behind the old children’s novels, Ramsey doesn’t give it much thought. He’s nine years old, not even in fifth grade yet, and stuck in an unknown place without his mother. His cognitive processes are not that advanced.

The second time he sees it, as he’s removing the next in the Hardy Boys series he’s been reading when Lian gives him breaks from Cacheena-watching (because the doll apparently needs a supervisor or else she’ll go missing, an idea Ramsey can’t even begin to process in its entirety), he takes it from where it’s posted. He reads it, twice, and then tucks it into his pocket. He doesn’t think about the meaning because for his situation it cannot hold a higher meaning.

His mother is gone and his step-brother has appeared from nowhere. Ramsey spends a long time underneath a table in the Longhouse reading the comic, thinking about it. At first he thinks it’s Transformers—that Gallant is going to turn into some sort of sentient big-rig and, at nine years old, that sounds pretty appealing. At least big-rigs can escape wherever they’re at.

Ramsey follows his stepfather, everywhere. He can’t help it, he’s a child autotuned for adult assistance—in his very nature he wants to be compliant to his parents, and with one missing and two far, far away, he only has one left.

He notices the first bump under his skin the next time he reads the paper. Right where the doctor gives Gallant the injection, a hard knot like something lodged beneath his skin. His mother is not there to look at it.

Ollie begins talking to himself. Heaving up needles and mud and apples. Ramsey watches, behind trees, behind buildings, behind anything that can hide his small form. There are many things that can hide his small form in this place.

The bumps multiply. They’re hard on his bone, immovable, like spines coming from the marrow itself, seeping through to harden just under his skin. He touches them, counts them, daily, and daily their numbers change. One to two to ten to twenty. All over his body. No one asks. No one cares. They are all talking to themselves, whispering to themselves, all of them have the machine in them too, and Ramsey can’t see a reason to disobey when he’s never disobeyed before. If the adults can’t stop it, then maybe it shouldn’t be stopped.

Cacheena is missing, his mother is missing, one of the small paring knives from the kitchen is missing.

Ramsey sticks it under his skin to see what the machine has made for him.

January 2015

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