THIS IS A MATURE STORY. IT HAS SOME SEXUAL SENCES, IF YOU DONT LIKE DON'T READ. Ok yall ik i said i was gonna post this last night but i hated it so i rewrote it! if it sucks don't say anything pls. sorry if it's repetitive, lmk whose team ur on!!! And what you want to happen next. comments, reblogs, likes and kind asks are always appreciated. If this one random anon keeps sending theses crazy things, i'll have to remove anon asks, which I dont want to do. I love my anons, so pls be nice. Send in asks, I miss yall, I've been sooooo busy with school lately and I havent had time to get on here. THIS IS MY 1ST TIME WRITNG ANYTHING LIKE THIS SO LMK HOW IT ISSSSS
WHY AM I GETTING THE FEWLINF EVERYONE HATES THIS??? IM ABT TO DELEYEB TS NGL đ
Six months had passed since that nightâthe night you let Sladeâs words sink into your skin like venom and made the choice that changed everything. For better and worse.
You hadn't accepted his offer easily. Not after what happened with Two-Face. That betrayal still sat in your chest like a dull ache, a constant reminder of how easily people could take what they wanted and leave you with nothing. You had sworn not to trust so easily again, not to let yourself fall into another cycle of being used and discarded. So when Slade made his offer, you hesitated.
"You're smarter than this," you had told yourself that night. "You know what happens when you trust the wrong person. You know what men like him want."
And yet, here you were. Living in his world.
Not as a prisoner, not as a puppet, but as something more. The lines were blurred, shifting with every glance, every order he gave that you didnât question, every moment that stretched too long in the dim glow of your shared space. Because thatâs what it was now, shared.
The apartment Slade had set up was far from a safe house. It was huge and spacious, Slade wasn't a cheap man. It felt lived in. Your things mingled with his, your scent lingering in the air. You bought vases and filled them with flowers, you organized the kitchen and bought him real groceries, not just canned food. You hung pictures you developed of you and him. Ones he didn't know you took. You roped him into painting your room a baby blue, a color he swore he hated, yet he still slept in your room every night. It was comical to see such a large man laying in a pastel colored room on your floral bedsheets, the last man you let into your bed was equally large. But we don't talk about him.
Slade cared for you deeply, or at least tolerated you. At first you were always at each others throats, each person throwing a more cutting remark than the other. When your arguements got so bad that you began to ignore him, he brought home women, made sure he heard them moaning through the walls till you snapped and began screaming.
You hated Slade Wilson
But after the first month things began to change, Slade never said anything about it, but you caught the way his eyes would darken when he returned from a mission, his gaze sweeping over you like he needed to confirm you were still here. Like he expected you to disappear.
You leaned against the counter, watching him from the corner of your eye as he cleaned his weapons. The rhythmic motion of his hands, the way he handled each blade with the kind of care most reserved for something fragile, it was almost mesmerizing. Everything he does is.
âYouâre staring,â he said, not looking up. God, he's so smug.
You scoffed. "No, you are. I don't stare at creepy old men. In fact, it's usually the opposite."
His lips curled into that knowing smirk, the one that made something tighten in your chest. âIf you say so, sweetheart.â
The nickname used to irritate you. Now, you werenât sure what it did. All you knew was that it made your heart race the way only one person had before. He used to call you sweetheart too.
Sladeâs presence in your life was suffocating, an unshakable force that wrapped itself around you, squeezing tighter with every passing day. He was cruel in the way he trained you, brutal in his expectations. If you failed, he had no patience for it. Slade trained you for greatness and he wouldn't tolerate anything less.
âYou call that a punch?â he sneered one evening in your early days of training, after you had barely managed to land a hit on him. âPathetic. Iâve seen senior citizens put up more of a fight,"
Gritting your teeth, you launched at him again, only for him to sidestep effortlessly. A sharp pain bloomed across your ribs as he shoved you down, hard. The thing that you loved and hated most about Slade was that he treated you like an equal. He didn't see you as his younger, fragile, kind-of girlfriend; he saw you as an equal opponent.
âYou hesitated,â he said, standing over you. âThat hesitation will get you killed.â
You spat blood onto the mat and glared up at him. âOr maybe I just donât care if I live or die. Nothing is ever really this serious.â
Something flickered in his eye, dark and unreadable, before he crouched beside you. His fingers dug into your chin, forcing you to meet his gaze. He didn't understand your humor sometimes, considering he's old enough to be your father.
âOh, but you do, you want to survive. To be great, â he murmured, voice dangerously soft. âIf you didnât, you wouldnât be here.â
He let go of you with a sharp shove and stood. âGet up. Weâre not done.â
The tension between you both had only grown over the months. Slade had a way of pressing in, invading your space without ever needing to touch you. Sure you guys fucked almost twice, sometimes three times a week, but there was that small sliver of confusion and hesitation.
Sure, he slept in your bed ever night now, called it "our room," and sure you stayed up waiting when his missions would take too long. Yeah, you would run and jump into his open arms, feeling nothing but content as he kissed your forehead and took you to the bed, it's normal that ya'll didn't even have sex some nights, that you just cuddled.
Sometimes, you swore he was waiting, waiting for you to be the one to close that final inch between you. But you never did. You couldn't bring yourself to do it.
Instead, you fell into a rhythm. Training. Fighting. Learning with him and laughing with him. He pushed you harder than anyone ever had, demanding perfection, never letting you slip back into old habits. He didnât coddle you like they did. He didnât pretend you were something delicate. He made you strong.
Most nights, after an exhausting day of training, you would sit on the brown leather couch cuddled up to him with your head on his chest and his arms around you, the dim glow of the television flickering between you. Slade wasnât much for small talk, you talked enough for the both of you, but the silence between you felt... comfortable, almost warm
âWhy did you take me in?â you had asked once, voice barely above a whisper.
He had taken a slow sip of his whiskey, eyes never leaving yours. âBecause I saw something in you,â he finally answered. âPotential. Something youâre too afraid to admit to yourself.â
You wanted to argue, to tell him he was wrong, but deep down, you wondered if there was truth in his words. You liked that he believed in you, no one had done that before.
Then there were the other moments. The ones that made your chest tighten in ways you didnât want to acknowledge. The way he stood too close when showing you how to hold a blade properly, his breath warm against your skin. The way his hands lingered too long when correcting your stance. The way his gaze dropped to your lips before he forced himself to look away.
Neither of you ever acknowledged it. You werenât sure if you wanted to. It's completely normal for your teacher/mentor/enemy to sleep in the same bed as you every night. It'd be weird if you didn't make breakfast and dinner for the two of you. It'd be weird if you didn't know his favorite foods and if he didn't know how to braid your hair. It'd be even weirder if he didn't make you coffee exactly how you like it and help you put away the dishes.
Slade had become an inescapable presence, his control over you extending far beyond training. He knew where you were at all times, had a way of appearing when you least expected it, his eyes always sharp, always knowing. Some nights, when you tried to slip out for air, youâd find him already outside, leaning against a wall as if heâd been waiting for you. He let you do what you wanted, think you were free, but he was always watching you.
If you were singing at a bar, you could count on him to be in the crowd. If you met with Selina at a restaurant you could count on him to drive you home. Slade was always there. Selina thought it was strange, you took comfort in it.
âYou really think you can go anywhere without me knowing?â he had mused once, a shadow of amusement in his voice.
It should have bothered you. Maybe it did. But part of you had started to crave it, the way he made you feel like you belonged to him, even if neither of you would ever admit it.
Slade had been⌠watchful lately. More than usual. He came back late from missions, missions he didn't let you come to, sometimes with a tension in his jaw that hadnât been there before. He was hesitant to let you go and preform at bars, sometimes convincing you to just play the songs on your guitar in the living room and run your fingers through his hair as you both laid on the couch.
There were the callsâbrief, coded. You were offended, Slade told you almost everything these days but somehow no amount of sweet talk and bedroom eyes could get him to budge this time. And then there were the other things. The subtle shifts in the cityâs underworld. More movement in Gotham than usual. The quiet whispers of old ghosts stirring, names you hadnât spoken in almost a year.
Dick. Jason. Tim. Damian. Bruce.
You saw it in the way certain streets had too many eyes. As if waiting. As if listening.
And then there was the whisper of something else. Something darker, something clawing at the edge of your awareness. A name that had once sent a thrill through you, now only bringing unease and resentment.
Harvey Dent.
A name you hadnât spoken in months, yet it clung to you like a shadow you couldnât shake. A man you couldn't bare to even think of. A drink left for you at a bar you hadn't performed at in weeks, a coat draped over the back of a chair that looked too familiar.
Slade noticed before you did. âYouâve got a ghost,â he murmured one evening, the flicker of a knife between his fingers. âOne that doesnât know how to stay buried.â
You didnât ask him what he meant. You didnât have to. You already knew. You just didn't know why. Had he finally seen through Tiffany, now that it was too late?
At first, you didnât question it. Slade had always been territorialâwatchful, overbearing when he wanted to be. He had a way of controlling things without seeming like he was. That was how he worked.
So when you first noticed the shifts, you didnât react. Your schedule changed, but not because you changed it.
You used to go out when you wanted. Walk the streets when they were quiet, feel the Gotham night press against your skin, the air cold and sharp. Not anymore.
Things began to change this week. Now, every time you thought about leaving, something stopped you.
The fridge was always stocked, eliminating any reason to step outside. Your favorite food. Your favorite drinks. Little things appeared when you needed them; new clothes, supplies, anything that might have made you leave for even a moment. Things you mentioned only in passing, like the new lipstick you wanted or a pair of vintage heels or a new bag.
If you reached for your coat, Slade would speak before you even touched the door. Asking where you were going, trying to be casual.
It was never a command. Never outright control. But the implication was there. And every time you hesitated, he won. If you needed to leave or just wanted to go out, he would come with; a silent yet protective figure always in the shadows.
The night was quiet, the kind of stillness that should have been peaceful but wasnât. The apartment smelled like old wood and gun oil, the faintest trace of smoke lingering from Sladeâs cigar earlier. You had just stepped out of the shower, skin still warm from the heat, hair damp as you walked barefoot across the floor in your towel.
Your hand brushed against the pretty golden door knob absentmindedly.
And then you froze. Something was different.
Your fingers curled around the lock, tracing over the new ridges, the reinforced structure. The weight of it felt wrong.
It wasnât your lock. Not the cute one you insisted on buying at the antique shop that Slade hated. It didn't match the walls.
Your stomach twisted. You turned slowly, your damp hair clinging to your skin as your mind raced. This wasnât an accident. You hadnât imagined it. Slade had changed the locks. The thought sent something icy down your spine. Alarm bells blared in your mind.
You tried to shake it off, tried to tell yourself it was nothing. Maybe it was security. Maybe he just wanted better protection.
But deep down, you knew that wasnât it. Because he didnât tell you. Because Slade never did anything without a purpose. Because Slade Wilson didn't need a lock to keep people out. And because you hadnât noticed until now. You took a slow, steady breath and turned toward the living room.
Slade was there, like always, seated in his usual chair by the window, sharpening a knife. The sound of steel against whetstone was rhythmic, deliberate. His posture was relaxed, but you werenât fooled. His fingers were too steady, his shoulders just a little too still.
He was waiting. Watching. Like he had already predicted this moment, like he was ready for an argeument. You leaned against the doorway, arms crossed, heart pounding too fast, not caring if you were in a towel.
"Planning on keeping me in a cage?" you muttered.
Slade didnât pause. Didnât even look up. âPlanning on keeping you alive.â The words were so smooth, so easy, that your stomach turned.
Your breath caught. Because he wasnât hiding it. He wasn't denying it. Not anymore. This wasnât a mistake. This was intentional.
You forced a laugh, though it felt hollow in your throat. âRight. Because Iâm just so incapable of keeping myself safe. Even after all the training we've done. Even with my literal super-human abilities.â
Slade finally looked up. His eye locked onto yours.
There was no humor in his gaze. No smirk, like he usually had on while teasing. Just that slow, assessing stare that made your pulse stutter.
"If I thought you were capable of that," he murmured, voice quiet, too quiet, "we wouldnât be having this conversation."
Your chest tightened. Because the way he said it sent something sinking into the pit of your stomach. This wasnât just about protecting you. This was about making sure you never left.
Two days later, you decided to test it. Just to see what would happen. Slade had stepped outâor so he wanted you to believe. The moment you heard the door shut behind him, you moved.
Your fingers curled around the knob.
Turned itâ but a large, scared hand beat you two it
"Going somewhere?"
Your entire body locked up. You gulped and licked your suddenly dry lips, he had you cornered with one hand on the knob and the other caging you in as he towered over you. His voice was smooth, calmâtoo calm. You turned slowly, pulse thrumming in your throat. Slade stood right behind you.
The door was still closed.
Your heart stuttered. You hadnât heard him come back. Hadnât even realized he was there. So much for super hearing. Nothing worked on Slade Wilson. You kept your expression neutral. Didnât let him see the panic creeping up your throat.
"Didnât realize I had a curfew," you muttered with an uneasy grin, trying to start your usual banter. Slade didnât smile. Didnât smirk. Just watched you.
âYou donât.â He leaned against the wall, arms crossed. But he didnât move. Didnât step aside. Didnât let you leave. The silence stretched too long.
Finally, you forced a smile, tilting your head. âThen Iâll be back in an hour.â Nothing changed in his expression. But you could feel the weight of his stare. Then he tilted his head, eye dark and calculating.
âIt's not safe out there anymore. Not for you.â
You blinked. Something in his tone shifted.Not amusement. Not control. Something else. Something darker. Like he was waiting for you to figure it out.
Your stomach twisted. âWhat are you talking about?â He didnât answer. Didnât even move.
Just let the question hang in the air, stretching the silence tight between you. And thatâs when it hit you.
He wasnât stopping you because he was afraid youâd leave.
He was stopping you because something else was waiting outside.
Something he wasnât telling you about.
Your mouth went dry. Slade finally let out a slow, amused breath, pushing off the wall.
And thenâ
He stepped aside. A challenge. Daring you to open the door. You hesitated. And that was all it took.
The moment you hesitated, you lost. Slade smirked, shaking his head like he had already predicted every move you would make. "Let's get to bed." He rasped out, looking at you with dark, seductive eyes.
And then he turned, walking past you like the conversation was over. Because it was. Because he knew you wouldnât leave now.
The next morning, the locks changed again. The windows were reinforced. Your pretty pink curtains replaced with black shutters. Your phone stopped working. You couldn't call Selina. Every excuse to leave was removed before you could even think about it. You tried not to panic. Tried not to question it.
But Slade was closing the walls in. And you werenât sure if it was to keep someone outâ
Or to keep you in.
The first time, you thought it was a coincidence.
You had slipped into a bar down the street, needing to breathe, needing something normal.
The moment you stepped in, your stomach turned. Something familiar. Cologne. Not just any cologne. Expensive. Sharply tailored. The scent of whiskey and authority.
You froze.
Your mind screamed at you. Itâs just someone else wearing it. Itâs just your imagination. And then you saw it. A glass at the bar. Untouched. Neat. No ice. A double pour. your breath hitched.
Harveyâs drink.
It wasnât until you came home that you truly realized. Because thatâs when you saw the rose.
A single red rose on the kitchen counter.
Waiting for you. Your entire body went cold. It wasnât from Slade. It couldnât be from Slade. Slade would never bring you roses, he wasn't a gentleman. And he knew you liked hydrangeas and peonies now.
You turned slowly and nearly threw up.
Slade was already standing there. Watching. Waiting. His jaw was tight. His fingers twitched at his side. He didnât say anything. And thatâs when you knew,
He had seen this coming.
âWhere did that come from?â you asked, voice thin. Why was he doing this? Was shattering your heart not enough? Did he want to ruin things with you and Slade?
Slade didnât answer. Instead, he walked forward, plucked the rose from the counter, and rolled it between his fingers. Slowly. Deliberately. Then, he crushed it.
Your stomach dropped. The petals crumbled to the floor. His voice was dangerously calm. "You tell me, sweetheart."
For the rest of the night, he didnât let you out of his sight. Not directly holding you hostage, but you felt it. The way he lingered in doorways. The way his hand ghosted too close when you passed him.
Like he was waiting. Waiting for you to ask. Waiting for you to figure it out. Waiting for Harvey to stop playing games and make a real move.
You werenât sure when it had happened; when you had stopped keeping track of time, stopped caring about the difference between one night and the next. Slade made sure you had no reason to count the days. He made sure you had no reason to want anything. You woke up every morning in his arms and went to bed satisfied and well loved. It wasnât a prison but it wasnât freedom either. It was something in between. A limbo of his design. A small slice of heaven in hell.
You were happy. But something was off, Slade was being more paranoid and he got less subtle about it each day.
You werenât trapped, not physically. Slade let you leave the apartment. You werenât chained to the walls, werenât locked in a room. He took you out on missions, let you get your hands dirty alongside him, let you breathe in the crisp Gotham air under the cover of night. In some ways, those nights were the only times you felt alive, other than when you were with Slade. The weight of a blade in your hand, the burn in your muscles from the chase, the sharp adrenaline rush of the fight, of using your powers on someone they affected; it reminded you that you still existed outside of this quiet game he played with you. Because thatâs what it was. A game.
Slade never said it outright, never told you he was keeping you on a leash, but you could feel it tightening with every passing week. At first, it was small things. The way he subtly redirected missions away from Gothamâs city center, keeping you to the outskirts, where the shadows were deeper and the chances of running into familiar faces were slimmer. The way he always made sure you stayed close during a job, always just within armâs reach. It wasnât just protection. You knew better than that. It was control. He was testing you, waiting to see if you would try to slip away, if you would give him a reason to remind you just how easily he could pull you back.
You werenât stupid. You knew the real test wasnât in the field. It was what happened after.
After the job was done, after the adrenaline had settled into exhaustion, after the long, banter filled walk back to wherever Slade had decided to keep you that night. It was in the way he never let you wander too far. The way his hand would hover at the small of your back without quite touching, guiding you down the streets like he was the one who decided where you went. It was in the way he never left you alone for too long.
At first, you told yourself it was coincidence. Slade was always working, always had something that needed his attention. But then you started to notice the patterns. You ate together, you slept together, trained together, hell; you even showered together. You were never alone for more than a few hours. If he had business elsewhere, you were given something to occupy your timeâtraining, surveillance, a task that kept you exactly where he wanted you.
You tested it once again, just to see what would happen. After he had left for what you thought was a routine meeting, you had grabbed your coat and made your way to the door. You werenât even thinking about leaving him, not really. You just wanted to see if you could. If there was still a part of you that could step outside without feeling the weight of his presence pressing against you.
Your fingers had just curled around the doorknob when you heard his voice. Low. Even. Inevitable.
âGoing somewhere?â
You were getting de ja vu. This happened last time too. You had swallowed hard, pulse spiking in your throat as you turned. He was standing right behind you.
You hadnât heard the door open. Hadnât heard his footsteps. He was just there, watching, waiting. The worst part was that he wasnât even angry. He wasnât trying to intimidate you, wasnât raising his voice or blocking your way. He didnât have to.
Slade had simply leaned against the wall, arms crossed over his chest, eye scanning you with that sharp, unreadable expression that made your stomach twist. âDidnât realize I needed permission,â you had said, forcing your voice to stay steady. You wouldn't let him control everything, not another man would be in charge of your life.
âYou donât.â He tilted his head slightly, studying you like you were a puzzle he had already solved. âJust wondering if you really think itâs safe out there.â
Not this odd shit again.
That made you pause. The way he said it. Not like a threat. Not like he was trying to scare you into staying. He said it the same way as last time. Like he already knew something you didnât.
Your grip on the doorknob tightened. âWhat are you talking about? You said this last time.â
Slade didnât answer right away. He just let the silence stretch, let you feel the weight of your own hesitation. Then, slowly, he took a step back. Another challenge.
âIf you want to go,â he said, gesturing toward the door, âgo.â
Your breath caught. You should have. You should have walked out.
But you didnât.
Because you knew that if you did, if you stepped outside now, you wouldnât just be walking into Gotham. You would be walking into something else. Something waiting.
Slade knew it. And now, so did you.
You swallowed hard, stepping back from the door. Slade huffed a quiet laugh, shaking his head like you had just proven his point. Then, without another word, he walked past you and disappeared into the other room. That was the moment you knew, whatever was waiting for you out there was worse than what was waiting inside. You just didnât know what it was yet.
You found out a week later. A part of it, at least.
The envelope was waiting for you when you returned from a job with Slade, slipped under the apartment door like a whisper of something you had tried to forget. You had bent down, fingers hesitating just for a second before picking it up. The paper was thick, expensive. No return address. No markings. But you didnât have to open it to know who it was from. The sharp smell of cologne gave it away.
Your stomach twisted, nausea rising in the back of your throat as you tore it open, your hands gripping the edges a little too tightly. The letter inside was simple. Only four words.
You won't forget me.
Your breath hitched. Your hands trembled. Because the worst part was, he was right. No matter how much Slade consumed you, or your occasional fantasy about Clark; he also stayed on your mind
You barely had time to process it before you heard the apartment door shut behind you. Your fingers snapped the letter closed, chest tightening, but it was too late.
Slade had already seen.
His expression didnât change, but you could feel it. The shift in the air. The way his shoulders set just a little too still, the way his single eye flickered from your face to the envelope with something dark and unreadable. He stepped forward, not rushing, just closing the distance between you with the kind of inevitability that made your breath come short.
You turned, but before you could move, his hand shot out. Not rough, not gentle like usual, just firm. His fingers wrapped around your wrist, halting you in place.
âLet go,â you muttered, voice barely above a whisper.
He didnât.
Instead, he reached for the letter.
You pulled back.
Sladeâs grip tightened. âLet me see,â he said, his voice low, controlled. He wasn't used to you denying him these days, not when you loved him.
Your stomach clenched. You didnât let go, but it didnât matter. Because Slade never asked twice.
With one sharp tug, he tore the letter from your grasp, unfolding it with a lazy flick of his wrist. You watched as his eye scanned the words, his jaw tensing, his fingers tightening around the paper just slightly.
Then, finally, a quiet chuckle. A dark, amused sound. âYouâve got to be fucking kidding me.â
Your breath hitched. Slade looked at you now. Expression unreadable.
âDo you miss him?â Your heart stopped. You denied it, but you could see in Slade's eyes that he didn't believe you. In the way he turned away from you that night. You didn't blame him, you didn't even believe yourself.
Harvey always knew how to play the long game.
Small things began to shift in your life and you knew who was behind it. The song on the radio. A scarf. A photo photo. They were never coincidences, he didnât believe in coincidence. The man was calculated, meticulous in his pursuits. When he wanted something, he played patient, steady, unyielding, watching from the shadows, striking when you least expected it.
Slade was the same way, but Slade never needed patience. Slade took what he wanted. Harvey waited for it to come back to him.
The jazz playing in the bar was nothing, just white noise in the background while you sat beside Slade, nursing your drink, your head still fogged from the last mission. You werenât thinking of anything other than how good it felt to finally sit still.
Then, days later, the scarf appeared. Neatly folded on the couch, like a gift wrapped in silence, waiting for you to pick it up. You hadnât touched it at first, just stood there, staring at it, fingers twitching at your sides. It was a trick of the mind, an old memory manifesting in a way that didnât make sense.
Except it wasnât.
He had been here. Or close enough to touch. You should have told Slade. But you didnât. You couldnât. And then, the photo. A photo Selina took of you and him dancing at the Pink Pony Club. It smelled like him too.
That was what shattered the illusion of security, the idea that you had control over this. The moment you saw it, you knew.
Harvey had always been a sentimentalist, clinging to memories long past, treasuring things most people would discard.
You, once upon a time, had been one of those things. And now? You werenât sure. You weren't sure what he wanted, especially since he had Tiffany. You had placed the photo down carefully, afraid to crumple it, afraid to acknowledge what it meant.
You had kept your movements neutral, your breath steady, but Slade had been watching. His presence in the other room was a solid weight pressing into your chest. The shuffle of files, the slow deliberate sound of metal being set down, he was waiting.
He had noticed. Of course, he had. Slade noticed everything. And yet, he didnât say a word.
You lay awake that night, staring at the ceiling, feeling Sladeâs presence next to you like a silent storm waiting to break. He wasnât asking. He was waiting for you to give yourself away. To tell him the truth, to trust him like he trusted you.
Slade had been watching you too closely, keeping his invisible leash tight without ever pulling. That was the way he worked, he let you think you had freedom while keeping you within his reach. If you had tried to leave through the door, he would have known.
So, you didnât.
You waited, feigned sleep, forced your breathing into something slow, even, something convincing. You heard him move in the other room, heard the creak of his chair, the slow inhale of a cigar.
You moved the moment he shifted. Window, not the door. Silent steps. A fire escape that groaned beneath your weight. By the time Slade glanced back toward the couch, you were already gone.
Harvey knew you would come.
You knew that from the moment you stepped onto the rooftop, the Gotham skyline stretched out behind him like a kingdom.
He turned before you could say anything, a slow, easy movement, his face shadowed beneath the dim glow of the streetlights. And then, he smiled. Not a smirk. Not the sharp, dangerous grin you had been expecting. It was something softer. Something more desperate. Like a man in the desert coming across a well.
âTook you long enough, didn't think you got my message. I started thinking that maybe the note didn't reach you.â he murmured. The message he left in the women's bathroom at a bar you and Slade frequented.
Your throat felt tight. You felt hurt all over again. Like someone reopened the wound of his betrayal. Like the same broken girl Slade took in six months ago. You came here for closure. So that it wouldn't hurt when you said his name or sang the songs you wrote for him. âHow did you find me?â
What did he want? To torture you? Rub salt in your wounds?
Harvey exhaled sharply, shaking his head. âSweetheart, I never lost you.â
Only Slade called you that now. The words made your stomach twist, a cold knot settling in your chest. You should have walked away then. But you didnât. Because you had to know.
âWhy are you doing this? Why are you haunting me? Not letting me move on?â Your voice shook as you said it. This conversation was long overdue.
Harveyâs fingers gripped the railing, his knuckles white. âBecause I need you to listen to me. Just once. Just this once. Hear me out.â
Your heart hammered. Hear him out? He could've started with an apology.
âYou think Iâll forgive you?â you spat. You would, because when you looked at him, you still felt the same warmth you did all those months ago; only this time it was mixed with resentment and longing.
He flinched. And for the first time, you saw itâthe raw, desperate emotion that he had always hidden behind sharp words and confident grins. The mask cracked, just for a second.
His voice turned rough, unsteady. âI donât deserve forgiveness. I know that. But I need you to hear me out.â
You shook your head, stepping back, but he reached outânot touching, not yet, but close.
âYou donât know whatâs happening,â he continued, his voice dropping into something urgent, pleading. âYour familyâTim, Dick, all of themâtheyâre figuring it out. Theyâre finding out the truth about Tiffany. They'll realize what she's doing, like I did.They'll know soon, maybe not today or tomorrow; but soon. They'll realize she's been using her powers on them like she did to me.â
Your breath came too short. No. This was not happening. Not when you were finally happy again. Not when you think you've fallen in love with Slade.
âNo,â you whispered.
Your vision blurred. It was happening. Everything you had tried to scream about for years, everything they had ignored, it was going to come to light. Harveyâs fingers brushed your wrist.
Soft. Careful. Like he was trying not to scare you away.
âAnd when they realize what they did to you,â he murmured, âtheyâre going to come running. Crawling back like I am.â
Your stomach twisted.
âTheyâre going to act like they care,â he continued, voice soft, insidious. âLike theyâre sorry. But theyâre not. Not like I am. You know that, donât you?â
Your lips parted. You hated how much sense it made. Hated how deep the doubt had already burrowed into your skin. Hated how genuine and honest he was being, you could sense it. Harvey tilted his head.
And then, voice lower, almost fragile he said, âYou donât have to go back to them.â
Your stomach dropped. You stepped back. âIâm not going back,â you said, voice shaking. Never.
Harvey swallowed hard. And for a moment, you thought he might break, that the weight of what he had done, what he had lost, might finally crush him. But then, he looked at you.
And you saw it, the shift. The danger. Not Two-Face. Not the cold, calculated criminal.
Just Harvey Dent. The man who never let go. âYou think youâre free?â he murmured.
The words sent a chill down your spine. Harvey smiled, but it wasnât kind. âYou think he just let you leave?â
Your chest tightened. You tried not to show the flicker of doubt, the small crack in your resolve. But Harvey saw it.
And then, voice so soft, so dangerousââHeâs not going to let you go either. He'll keep you locked up. I won't.â
You should have never gone to him.
You had known it was a mistake the second you saw him standing there, leaning against the rooftop railing, the glow of Gothamâs skyline making him look almost human.
But you had gone anyway. Because Harvey had always been a mistake you kept making.
You clenched your fists, how dare he talk about Slade? What right did he have to tell you who to trust. "Yeah and I'm gonna take advice from you. That's rich."
He softened immediately, his regret and remorse so obvious; yet he refused to apologize. You wanted to hit him, hurt him like he hurt you; yet when he stood in front of you in the moonlight, your treacherous heart still beat for him. Your heart didn't want to hurt the man who showed you what love is. The man who picked up the shattered pieces your family and Clark left and rearranged them beautifully. It didn't care that he broke them again; he could fix it.
âI made a mistake. I paid for it, I know the truth now.â He said steadily stepping closer, sensing your reluctance.
Your pulse pounded. âWhat do you want from me?â You were here for answers, not to rekindle an old flame. Not when you were starting one.
Harvey exhaled sharply, shaking his head. âNothing from you. â
The words hit you too hard. You understood what he was implying, what he wanted. You knew he would come crawling back someday, you just didn't expect it so soon
You clenched your jaw, forcing yourself to keep your voice steady. âWhy?â
His smile faltered. His hands curled around the railing, gripping it like he needed something solid to hold on to.
"You know why. But that's not what i called you for. I called you to warn you about your family and Tiffany,â he said, his voice lower now, rougher. More desperate. âI can throw them off for a little while, lead them off track and make sure they don't know the truth. If that's what you want. But once they know the truth, they won't leave you alone. Certainly not with him.â
You hated the way your chest tightened with affection at his consideration. You hated that you were here. You hated that he still had a hold on you. You hated how he talked about Slade. You hated hearing him say Tiffany's name, it brought back so much hurt and hatred.
âI don't care about them Keep them away for as long as you want. You know I'm not here to hear about them or your whore.â you said viciously, your eyes shining and your teeth sharpening.
Slade would be proud.
Harvey didn't react to your fangs, he wasn't afraid of you. He came closer and grasped your hand, his eyes so heartbroken that it gave you satisfaction, only for a minute.
His voice cracked slightly. âNothing I do or say can make up for what I did.â His jaw tightened. âI know that.â
You should have walked away. But you didnât. Because Harveyâs voice dropped lower, his words curling around you like a trap you should have seen coming. âBut I need you to know something,â he whispered.
You swallowed hard. He stepped closer, slow and deliberate, watching your reaction. âShe wanted to be you, she tried so hard.â
Your breath hitched. You knew this. But hearing Harvey say it made you feel so much better.
Harveyâs voice was soft, almost reverent. âBut she never could.â
Your stomach dropped. Why did this have to happen now? Why now when you finally forgot about him?
âShe dressed like you,â he continued. âTalked like you. Watched the way you moved. The way you laughed.â His voice hardened. âThe way you loved.â
You shook your head, backing away. You couldn't take this anymore. You wanted to run back into Slade's arms, where nothing could touch you. âShut up.â
Harvey didnât.
âShe wanted to take everything from you.â His expression twisted. âAnd maybe, if I had been a different man, I would have let her.â
Your skin crawled at the thought. Harvey let out a breathless laugh, bitter and sharp. âBut I couldnât. I had to go digging, looking for clues.â
His hands clenched at his sides. âBecause she wasnât you. No matter how hard she tried to be. No matter how much she played with my mind, she could never replace you.â
You hated him.
You hated that you believed him.
You hated how you still loved him.
Harvey exhaled sharply, tilting his head, watching you with something frighteningly raw. âEvery time she touched me, every time she tried to take something that wasnât hersââ his voice dropped into something dangerous, low and dark and brokenâ âI was thinking of you.â
Your breathing came too fast.
Harvey stepped closer.
âEvery time I kissed her,â he whispered, âI wanted it to be you.â
You squeezed your eyes shut. âStop. I don't care.â Lies.
âShe wasnât you,â he repeated, voice almost pleading. âShe never could be.â
Your throat closed. Your eyes watered and your teeth burned with unshed venom just thinking of his betrayal. Why was this happening.
Harveyâs fingers ghosted over your wrist. Not touching, not quite.
âI never wanted her, not reallyâ he murmured. âNot once.â
Silence stretched between you, thick and suffocating. This was all you wanted to hear, all you wished for for so long. So why did you feel trapped. Harveyâs voice dropped even lower. He moved even closer
âTell me, sweetheart.â
You forced yourself to look at him.
âIf you donât care,â he whispered, eyes burning, âwhy are you still here? Why do you want answers so bad? Why do you still look at me like that?â
You shouldnât have come.
But you hadnât been able to help yourself.
Because Harvey always knew what to say, how to linger in your mind like an open wound that refused to heal.
And now here you were, standing under the dim glow of the rooftopâs city lights, your eyes watering, the weight of his gaze pressing into you, sinking into your bones like something familiar, something dangerous.
You forced yourself to keep your stance steady, your pulse even. âYou donât get to ask me those questions.â
Harvey let out a breath, almost a chuckle, but there was no humor in it. His hands curled around the railing as he moved away from you again, gripping the cold metal like it was the only thing keeping him from reaching for you.
âDo you know how many times I told myself you were gone? That I lost you, â His voice was steady now, but there was an edge to itâsomething dangerous. âHow many times I tried to let you go, to let you move on?â
Your chest tightened. You werenât sure if it was anger or something else, something more dangerous. âI didnât ask you to wait for me. I didn't want you to regret your choice. I didn't want anything but happiness for you. No matter how much you hurt me.â
Harveyâs fingers twitched.
âNo.â His lips pressed together in a thin line, he knew the truth, that you always wished the best for him. âNo, you didnât.â
The wind curled between you, cold and sharp, carrying the weight of everything unsaid. You should have turned away. Should have walked back the way you came.
But then Harvey laughed, a bitter, broken sound.
âShe used her little snake charm but somehow,â he continued, âafter a week I was thinking of you. I never loved her. Couldn't even bring myself to like her, honestly.â
Your stomach dropped. It was a gut punch, sharp and unforgiving. He saw itâthe flicker of emotion in your face, the tightening of your jaw, the way your breathing caught for just a second too long.
And Harvey, Two-Face, the man who never let go, moved forward, voice soft, eyes burning.
âI love you,â he murmured. âI never stopped loving youâ
Your fingers curled into fists at your sides. âShut up.â
He ignored you. Again.
âI love you so much,â he said, voice low. âYou love me too or you wouldn't be here.â
âI said shut up.â He was right, he always is.
Harvey smirked, but there was nothing victorious in it. It was almost self-loathing.
âI never loved her,â he whispered again. He was making sure you knew.
âShe wanted me to,â he continued. âShe wanted to take everything from you.â His jaw tightened. âAnd maybe, if you had been a different woman, I would have let her.â
The thought of it made your skin crawl.
Harvey, Tiffany. Together. The ultimate betrayal.
âBut I couldnât.â His voice cracked slightly. âBecause she wasnât you.â
He kept repeating it, trying to speak his remorse into your heart directly. You hated how much it affected you. Hated how your chest ached, how your mind burned with the thought of what could have been. You shouldnât care. But you did. And Harvey knew it.
âYouâre lying,â you whispered, forcing steel into your voice. âYou used her, just like she used you. You wanted to spy on Bruce and I wouldn't do it.â
Harvey let out a sharp breath. âYeah.â His eyes met yours. Unflinching. âI did.â
There was no shame in his voice. Just cold, simple truth. No regret anymore. He didn't regret using her, he regretted hurting you.
âBut it wasnât revenge, sweetheart,â he murmured, his Gotham accent slipping in the angrier he got. âIt was survival. She had me under her little spell at first; when that stopped working, her little dream team made sure I never stepped outta line. Never came crawling back to you, never told anyone the truth. But I'm done with them now.â
Your heartbeat pounded in your ears. Harvey stepped closer.
âEvery time I kissed her, every time I played along, I was thinking of you.â His voice dipped, lower, darker. More desperate. âEvery time I called her by her name, I wanted to say yours.â
Your breathing came too fast. This wasnât fair. Harvey was not supposed to be able to do this to you. Not anymore. He was supposed to be dead to you. He had killed himself in your mind the day he let himself be used, the day he betrayed you.
And yetâ
Yet.
You couldnât move.
Because deep down, a part of you knewâyou had thought of him, too. When you weren't with Slade, Harvey consumed your thoughts.
Your stomach twisted as he stepped closer again. âYouâre smart, sweetheart,â he whispered. âYou always were. Choose carefully.â
You swallowed hard. This wasn't about your family anymore. This was about him and Slade.
âYou donât have to go back to them.â He repeated himself again trying to convince you. His words settled in your bones, heavy, unshakable.
You clenched your jaw again. âI wasnât planning on it.â
Harveyâs eyes flickered, something dark and pleased curling at the edges. And then, voice low, almost dangerous, âThen why are you still with him?â
Your breath hitched. Slade. Your body went rigid.
Harvey took another step closer. Your noses almost touched and you nearly threw yourself into his arms.
âYou think he's better than me?â
Your chest tightened. Doubt crept in. You had been so careful. So quiet. Hadnât you? Harvey saw it. And he smiled.
A slow, knowing smirk. âHeâs not going to let you go, he won't give you a choice. I don't blame the man, if I hadn't fucked everything up; I wouldn't let you go either.â
Your stomach dropped. The realization hit you all at once, suffocating, crushing. You hadnât been careful. You had been playing into Sladeâs hands all along.
Because Slade always knew. And if he hadnât stopped you?
That meant he was letting you dig your own grave. A shiver ran through you.
The moment Harveyâs voice dipped, the second his fingers ghosted over your wrist like a loverâs touchâyou should have walked away. But you didnât. Because part of you needed to hear him say it. Needed to hear him tell you what you already knew.
That he still wanted you. That he never stopped. That you were never meant to be replaced. And it felt amazing to hear the regret in his voice and see the pure longing in his eyes.
The wind curled between you, cold and biting, but Harveyâs presence was stiflingly warm. He was watching you the way he always had; like you belonged to him, like the months between you hadnât changed a thing. And for the first time all night, you let yourself look at him.
Really look at him.
The scars on the left side of his face had deepened, his two-toned gaze more piercing than before. The weight he carried in his shoulders was heavier, more defined. He was still Harvey, but he wasnât just Harvey anymore. He had become something darker, something rough around the edges, something broken in a way that made you feel like a piece of you had broken along with him.
You swallowed. âI have to go.â Before you did something you couldn't take back.
Harvey exhaled, slow and deliberate. He nodded, but he didnât move. He didnât stop you. But he wasnât letting you go, either.
âYouâre going back to him.â It wasnât a question. A statement, like he knew it was coming
Your pulse stuttered. âItâs not like that and you know it.â You still felt the need to defend yourself, even though you knew you didn't owe him an explanation.
You still loved him, that much was clear.
Harvey let out a quiet, humorless laugh. âSure it isnât.â
You took a step back. He didnât reach for you, didnât say anything to stop you, but his presence curled around you like a shadow, wrapping itself around your spine, keeping you anchored in place. And then his voice dropped. Low. Certain.
âIâm letting you walk away. But I'm not letting you go. Not when we still love each other.â
Your throat tightened. He wasnât chasing you. Not yet. But you felt it. The promise in his voice. The inevitability. You didnât respond.
You didn't deny that you still loved him, it was like a child insisting they didn't eat cookies when they have crumbs all over them.
You just turned and forced yourself to walk away.
The apartment was silent when you returned. Slade was waiting, seated in his chair, drink in hand, legs spread, glaring at the walls. He didnât turn when you entered. Didnât move when you stepped further inside, carefully shutting the door behind you. You werenât sure if that was better or worse.
You slipped off your shoes, moving slowly, watching him, waiting. Nothing. No reaction. Just that unshakable stillness. The kind that had always been more dangerous than his anger.
You took a steadying breath. If you didn't speak first, he wouldn't speak at all. âSladeââ
âI knew youâd come back.â
His voice cut through the room, sharp and even. Your fingers curled at your sides. âOf course I came back.â
Now, he looked at you. Finally. And when he did, it felt like a blow. That single eye, cold and assessing, swept over you, taking in every detail, every movement, every breath you tried to keep steady. Then, his lips curved. Slow. Controlled.
âDid he tell you what you wanted to hear? Make you want to run into his loving arms again?â
Your stomach dropped. You didnât let it show. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
Slade exhaled through his nose, the faintest huff of amusement. âDonât insult me.â
Your jaw tightened. Silence stretched between you, heavy and charged. You werenât sure if you were waiting for him to snap, or if he was waiting for you to confess. Then, finallyâSlade leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees, hands clasped together, voice lowering into something dangerous.
âTell me something,â he said lowly.
You didnât move. âWhat?â
Slade tilted his head, watching you like he was already playing out the end of this game. âDid you hesitate?â
The words hit harder than they should have. You swallowed. You could lie. You could tell him what he wanted to hear. But it wouldnât matter. Slade always knew. And that was the worst part.
Slade was quiet for too long. Thenâhe sighed. Tired. Expectant. And that was worse than anger. You hated when he treated you like this, so indifferent. You liked his anger better, at least then you could get a reaction out of him.
âTake off your coat,â he said. You hesitated. Sladeâs expression didnât shift. âNow.â
Slowly, carefully, you did as he asked, slipping the fabric from your shoulders, letting it drop onto the chair beside you. Sladeâs eye flickered toward it. Then, back to you.
You werenât sure what he was looking for. Maybe he was looking for something Harvey left behind. Something you didnât even realize you had carried home with you.
Then, after a long pauseâSlade smirked. And it wasnât kind like the ones you've grown accustomed to.
âYou donât even realize it, do you?â
You stiffened. âRealize what?â
Slade leaned back again, completely relaxed. Like he had already won. âYou'll know soon.â
Your breath caught. Where was he going with this? You hated when he spoke like some ancient being and he knew that. He was gonna be insufferable these next few days; he always is when you do something he doesn't like.
âDoesnât matter where you go,â he continued, his voice so damn certain. His smirk widened, mocking. âYouâll always come back to me.â
Your chest tightened. You hated him. Because he was right. He knew you hated it, too.
You lay awake that night. Not because you couldnât sleep. Not because Slade was in the other room, making you sleep alone for the first time in months, still awake, waiting, watching, knowing.
But because you couldnât shake the way Harvey had looked at you before you left. Not angry. Not resentful. Just patient and remorseful. Like he already knew something you didn't.
Slade never brought it up again. Not directly. You werenât sure if that was worse. You weren't sure if you wanted him to scream at you and demand you never see Harvey Dent again. You would rather anger than the silent treatment.
He didnât demand answers. He didnât press the issue. He simply carried on as if nothing had happened, as if he hadnât watched you walk through the door smelling like another manâs presence.
That should have been a relief. But it wasnât. Because Slade didnât let things go. He let them fester.
It was in the way he touched you now, more deliberate, more possessive. The way his hands lingered a little too long on your waist when he passed you in the kitchen, the way his fingers grazed your wrist, as if reminding you that you were still there, still his.
It was in the way he watched you. He had always been observant, but now it was different. Sharper. He wasnât just looking at you, he was reading you.
Every twitch of your fingers. Every slight shift in your breathing. Every time you looked over your shoulder without realizing it. You had brought something back from that rooftop, and Slade knew it.
And still, he said nothing. Instead, he tightened his hold.
It was late. The apartment was quiet, but neither of you were asleep. Your back pressed into the cool sheets, heartbeat steady but too aware of the man beside you. It'd been three days since Harvey and Slade was finally sleeping next to you again, but you knew he wasn't truly letting things go.
Sladeâs fingers traced slow circles against your wrist, his grip loose but present. âYou havenât been sleeping,â he murmured.
You exhaled, shifting slightly beneath his hold. âAnd you have?â
A quiet chuckle. âI sleep when I need to.â
You turned your head, meeting his gaze in the dim light of the bedroom. âAnd when do you need to?â You missed teasing him.
Sladeâs smirk was lazy, knowing. âWhenever youâre not around to keep me entertained.â
You rolled your eyes, but he didnât let you pull away. His grip tightened, just enough to remind you he was there.
âYou think too much,â he murmured, voice lower now. âKeeps you restless.â
âMaybe I like thinking,â you shot back booping his nose. You lived to annoy him, to push his buttons in a way only you could get away with.
Slade hummed, shifting to prop himself up on his elbow, still watching you. His fingers trailed down your arm, you would've though he was trying to start something if his movements weren't so slow and calculated.
âWhat are you thinking about now?â He said reeling you into his trap, his eyes hard. You hated when he tried to trap you. Your pulse skipped. Nothing you said would be the right answer.
Sladeâs lips quirked up slightly, but there was something in his expressionâsomething darker, something expectant.
âYou can say it,â he mused. âSay his name.â
You were tempted to do it, moan Harvey's name just to piss him off, but that was a line even you knew not to cross. You rolled your eyes, "God, just let it go Slade. It wasn't important."
Why couldn't he just let this go? Slade smirked, mocking. âThatâs what I thought.â
You didnât break his gaze. Didnât look away. Because he knew. He always knew. Nothing goes over Slade Wilson's head.
The next morning, you woke up to a message. Not a text. Not a voicemail. A gift.
The small wooden box sat on the kitchen counter, neat, precise. Like it had been waiting for you. Your blood ran cold. You hadnât heard anyone come in. You hadnât even felt him. But Harvey had been here. You swallowed, fingers brushing over the lid before carefully lifting it open.
Inside was a single playing card.
The Two of Hearts.
And beneath itâfolded carefully, as if it was meant to be unwrapped like some kind of sentimental treasureâwas the same scarf he had left before.
Except this time, there was something else. Perfume. Your perfume. It smelled like you and him. Like Harvey had held onto it. Like he had kept it close. Your stomach twisted.
Harvey had been here. And you hadnât even noticed.
Your fingers curled around the edge of the box, breath coming a little too sharp, too shallow. The walls of the apartment felt smaller. You didnât hear Slade approach, but you felt him before he spoke.
His voice was smooth, dangerous. âSomething I should know about?â
You forced yourself to breathe. âNo.â
Slade leaned against the counter, eyeing the box like he already knew exactly who it was from. And thenâhe laughed. A quiet, amused sound, as if this was a game he had already won. âI should have killed him when I had the chance,â he said, in the same tone some used when regretting not buying a book before it sold out.
Your stomach dropped. Slade tilted his head, eye still locked on you. âBut you wouldnât have liked that, would you?â
You said nothing.
Slade smirked, shaking his head. âSoft spot for old flames.â He reached out, fingers brushing your wrist. âThatâs your problem.â
You clenched your jaw, jerking your arm away. âAnd whatâs yours?â
Sladeâs gaze darkened. âI donât have problems.â
You let out a breathless, humorless laugh. Always with the tough guy persona, honestly it must be tiring always acting untouchable. âRight. Sorry, I forgot. Because you donât feel anything.â
Slade didnât respond right away. He just looked at you, unreadable. His hand reached for your jaw, firm, demanding. His thumb traced your cheek, slow, deliberate. And when he spoke, his voice was quiet.
âI feel plenty.â You swallowed. Slade smirked. âYou just donât like what I feel.â
You stepped back before you could do something stupid. Something that would make you forget about the box on the counter, the scent of Harvey still lingering in the air. Something that would make you forget that you werenât sure who you were more afraid of losing.
Your phone wouldnât stop buzzing. Harvey was right. They were going to find out the full truth soon. And when they did, they would come for you.
Now, a week after your meeting with him, your phone wouldn't stop buzzing. Message after message, call after call, each one from Tim Drake-Wayne. All asking you questions about Tiffany, about yourself. About where you were.
Your breath caught in your throat as you scrolled through the texts, hands shaking, stomach twisting itself into knots so tight you thought you might be sick. Of course Tim was the first to figure out something was wrong. He was about five years too late though.
Tim: We need to talk. Please answer. I have questions. About Tiffany..
You could barely breathe. He wanted to investigate, to look deep into Tiffany. Now?
Now, after years of pushing you aside, after ignoring every cry for help, now he wanted to take your warnings seriously.
Your eyes burned, fingers tightening around the phone, your mind screaming at you to respond, to finally say all the things youâd held in your chest for too long.
But you didnât. Instead, you turned the phone off. You shoved it under the pillow, pressing the heels of your hands into your eyes, trying to push away the tears, trying to ignore the way your chest ached with something ugly and desperate.
The moment you walked out of the bedroom, you knew he had seen.
Slade was leaning against the kitchen counter, arms crossed over his chest, gaze heavy with something unreadable. The phone was still buzzing beneath the pillow in the other room, and somehow, you knew he had heard it.
He had been waiting for this. You swallowed, standing stiffly near the doorway, trying to pretend like everything was fine. Slade didnât say anything at first. He just watched.
âTook him long enough,â he mused, his voice casual, controlled.
You rolled your eyes. He's been bitchy ever since the whole Harvey thing.
Sladeâs eye flickered to your hands, still clenched at your sides. âAnd let me guessâyou ignored him.â
You hated how easily he could see through you. You glared at him, jaw tight. âNone of your business.â
Slade chuckled, shaking his head, pushing off the counter and closing the distance between you in slow, measured steps.
âOh, sweetheart.â His voice was lower now, smoother, curling around your spine like a threat disguised as affection. âEverything about you is my business.â
You tensed. Slade reached up, tracing a gloved finger along your cheek, tilting your chin up slightly, forcing you to meet his gaze.
âHeâll keep calling,â he murmured. âHeâll keep begging. He'll figure it out and tell the rest of the little squad and they'll all come running back. Just like your dear old Dent. â His lips curled into something mocking. âThatâs what they do, isnât it? Make mistakes because they know you'll forgive them?"
You tried to pull away, but his grip tightened. Not to hurt you, just enough to remind you who was in control.
His thumb brushed over your lips, slow, deliberate. âWhat are you gonna do?â
Your breath hitched. Slade leaned in slightly, voice dropping even lower. Dangerous. âDo you want Tim to tell the others? Want your family back? Want him back? Even after he fucked your sister while you were lying sick in your bed?â
Your throat tightened. He was toying with you. Mocking you, trying to hurt you. Making you say it. And you didnât want to say it. Because you didnât know. Your family had been your world.For so long, all you wanted was to be seen.
To be loved.
To be something more than just a ghost standing in the background, watching them fawn over someone who had stolen everything from you. And Harvey gave that to you, before he betrayed you.
And now, he was sorry. Soon, they would all know the truth and be sorry.
The emotions clawed at your throat.
You wanted to scream at Tim. Tell him it was too late. Tell them that he could never fix this. No amount of investigating and apologies could make up for years of neglect.
But another part of you, the part that still ached for their love, the part that still wanted them to prove you wrong,
That part whispered, âWhat if?â What if when they found out the truth, they would love you? What if this time, they actually stayed?
What if this was your chance to finally have the family you always wanted?
The war inside your head made you dizzy. And Slade knew it. He was still holding you, still keeping you rooted to him, while your world spun out of control. After a long, suffocating silence, Slade finally sighed. âYouâre a mess.â
You glared at him, pushing away from his grip. âFuck you.â
Slade chuckled, unfazed. âYou do it almost every night.â
You scoffed, rolling your eyes, "You're a child, you know that?"
You turned away, grabbing a glass from the counter, hands still shaking slightly as you filled it with water. You werenât thirsty, but you needed somethingâanythingâto keep yourself grounded.
Slade leaned against the counter again, watching you with amusement, but something deeper lurked beneath it. Then, in a voice so casual it almost didnât register, âIâll make him stop. I'll make them both stop.â
The glass almost slipped from your fingers. You turned sharply, eyes wide. âWhat?â
Slade shrugged, like it was nothing. âYou donât want to deal with them. You donât want to make a decision. So Iâll make it for you.â
Your breath caught. Slade never dealt with things peacefully, he got rid of problems permanately. âYou canât justââ
âI can.â His smirk deepened. âAnd I will.â
Your stomach twisted. Because the worst part was; you werenât sure if you were relieved or horrified. Because Slade was right. You didnât want to make a choice. You wanted someone to do it for you.
And Slade was more than happy to take that burden.
The first thing you noticed the next morning was the silence. No more buzzing. No more messages lighting up your screen. Slade had done it.
He hadnât waited for you to argue. Hadnât given you the choice. By the time you checked your phone, every number had been blocked. Every contact erased like they had never existed at all.
And maybe thatâs what Slade wanted.
For them to be nothing but ghosts in your past. A clean break. A fresh start. So why did it feel like your chest was splitting open?
You had spent years craving their attention. Years begging for even a scrap of love. And now? Now you had the chance to get it. And you ignored it. You told yourself it didnât matter. That you didnât need them. That you had spent too long chasing something that was never meant to be yours.
And yet, as you stood in the quiet of the apartment, phone gripped too tight in your hands, you ached. Because you had wanted them to fight for you.
Slade had left that morning, his usual teasing smirk in place, but there had been something off.
Maybe it was the fact that his mission was dragging out longer than expected.
Maybe it was the way his fingers had lingered under your chin before he left, thumb brushing over your jaw like he was making sure you were still his.
Or maybe it was the way he had muttered, âBe good while Iâm gone, sweetheart.â as you kissed him goodbye.
Like he already knew you wouldnât be. Like he already knew something was coming. The apartment felt too big without him. His absence wasnât something you should have noticed.
But you did.
It was in the empty space beside you when you sat on the couch. The extra portion of dinner you made out of habit. The lack of footsteps behind you. The missing weight of his presence pressing against your world, keeping you safe.
It was the first time in months you had been truly alone. So you did the only thing you could think of.
You took a nice, long, hot, shower, trying to dull the ache below your hips. You and Slade had sex last night, but somehow you were already wanting more. It was like your body could sense his absense.
You stood under the hot water, letting the steam curl around your skin, letting the heat scald away the thoughts clawing at your mind.
Maybe Slade was right. Maybe it was easier to just let go.
There was a sound. Soft. Distant. A creak where there shouldnât be one. You wouldn't have heard it, wouldn't have sensed the body heat if you didn't have your powers. Your heart stopped. You turned off the water immediately, listening.
Nothing.
Maybe it was justâ
Another creak. Closer this time. You swallowed, pulse hammering, every nerve in your body screaming at you that something was wrong. Slade was gone.
No one should be here. But you werenât alone.
The second you stepped out of the bathroom, towel wrapped around your damp skin, fangs reader and a knife in your hand, you felt him.
The shift in the air. The weight of someone watching. And then, his voice.
âGotta admit,â Harvey mused, voice smooth, mocking, as if he had any right to be angry âdidnât think youâd be the type to shack up with a guy like him.â
Your stomach dropped. You turned sharply, eyes darting across the room, breath catching in your throat when you saw him.
Sitting on your bed. On Sladeâs bed.
Harvey was leaning back against the headboard, one leg crossed over the other, looking far too comfortable. Like he belonged there. Like he wasnât the intruder in this equation.
Harvey sat there like he hadnât broken in, hadnât shattered what little peace you had left. The moment you stepped out of the shower, still dripping, wrapped only in a towel, you knew, he was waiting for you.
Your fingers clenched around the towelâs edge, jaw tight, pulse pounding.
"Youâve got some fucking nerve," you muttered, stepping further into the room, closing the distance between you and him.
Harvey leaned back against the pillows, one arm draped lazily over the headboard, watching you with something smug, something knowing.
"Had to see you," he said simply. Like it was normal. Like it was nothing.
Your stomach twisted. It was never nothing with Harvey.
"And let me guess," you bit back. "You just let yourself in."
His smirk widened. "Door was unlocked, itâs not breaking and entering if you used to live together."
You let out a sharp laugh. "Bullshit. Thatâs exactly what it is, Dent. We don't like together anymore. Never did officially either."
Harvey didnât flinch. Instead, his gaze slid lower. Over the damp strands of your hair. Over your throat. Your collarbone. Your bare legs.
You knew that look. It made something ugly stir inside you.
He looked at you, gaze slow, deliberate, taking in every inch of you. The damp strands of hair clinging to your skin. The way the towel barely covered enough to keep you decent.
His lips curled into a smirk. âDonât stop on my account. Nothing I haven't seen before.â
Your fingers clenched around the towel, pulse thundering. âWhat the hell are you doing here?â
Harvey let out a quiet chuckle, tapping his fingers against his knee. âRelax, sweetheart. Just thought Iâd drop by. Say hello. You wouldnât answer your phone, so I figuredââ he spread his arms in mock innocence, ââwhy not pay a visit?â
You hated how calm he was. How easy he made it look. Like he hadnât just broken into your home. Like he hadn't broken your heart. Your chest rose and fell in quick, shallow breaths, heart hammering against your ribs. Slade was gone. Gone.
No one was coming. But you could handle yourself. And Harvey knew it. His eyes flickered down your body again, this time slow, calculating. Looking at all the marks and love bites Slade had left the night before. âYou always did have a thing for older men,â he mused.
Your jaw clenched. Low blow.
Harvey smirked. âWhatâs the matter? Did you think I wouldnât find out? Thought you could just run off and play house with Gothamâs favorite mercenary and Iâd let it slide?â He tsked, almost disappointed. âThatâs not how this works, sweetheart.â
You glared at him. Where did he get the audacity? âYou donât own me. Especially not now. Especially not after what you did. Your apology didn't change anything. You've got no right to be here.â
Harveyâs expression darkened, but only for a second. Then he grinned. âFunny. Thatâs exactly what I was thinking about him.â
Your stomach twisted. Because you knew what he was doing. He wanted you off balance. He wanted you to doubt. It was working. Because a part of youâa part you hatedâwas already wondering what Slade would do when he found out. Because he would find out. How jealous would he be? Would he finally drop the whole nonchalant act, ask you to be official?
Harveyâs smirk widened. âYou think heâs coming back soon? You waiting for him? That's real cute princess.â
Your throat tightened. âHe'll be back tomorrow.â
Harvey shrugged, stretching out like he had all the time in the world. âItâs funny, isnât it? How missions can just drag out longer than expected?â His grin turned sharp. Cruel. âWould be a real shame if something happened to keep him⌠occupied.â
Your blood froze. Harvey watched you, waiting for the realization to sink in. He knew. He knew Slade wasnât coming home anytime soon.
Your fingers curled into fists and suddenly you were on top of him, fangs bared, âWhat did you do?â
Harvey simply leaned back, enjoying himself and the view of your almost naked body on top of him. He turned his neck, as if trying to give you more access to him.
Harvey raised an eyebrow. âNow, now. Donât go blaming me. I didnât lift a finger.â His grin widened. âBut that doesnât mean I donât know who did.â
Your breath was coming too fast, too shallow, panic creeping up your spine. Slade was gone. Harvey was here. You were trapped. And Harvey knew it. Your pulse pounded. Slade was gone. Harvey was here.
Your fingers dug into his shoulders, pinning him down harder against the mattress, your fangs bared, breath coming in sharp, furious exhales.
"What did you do?" you hissed again, voice low, dangerous, shaking with barely contained rage.
Harvey smirked up at you, completely unbothered. His eyes gleamed with that same smug amusement, like he was playing with his food.
"Relax, sweetheart," he murmured, voice infuriatingly smooth, teasing. "No need to get all worked up."
You pressed your thighs against his sides, pinning him harder. "Answer me, Harvey."
He let out a slow breath, his smirk twitching, dark amusement flickering across his features. "You always were so determined. I love that about you."
Your fingers tightened, nearly scratching his back, sharp acrylics pressing into his skin through the fabric of his white button down. You didn't want to hurt him, not badly at least.
"Tell me why Sladeâs mission is taking so long," you demanded, your weight pressing down on him, your legs gripping him tighter.
Harveyâs hands moved then; sliding slowly up your thighs, gripping just hard enough to make your breath catch.
"You really think Iâm gonna make this easy for you?" he murmured, voice dropping to something lower, something thicker with something he wasnât bothering to hide.
Your stomach flipped, heat creeping down your spine, twisting through your limbs. He knew. He felt it.
His smirk widened, his hips shifting beneath you just slightly.
And thatâs when you felt it.
Hard. Throbbing. Pressing against the thin fabric of his slacks, against the barely-there barrier of your towel. You nearly moaned, stop being a slut, you tried to tell yourself.
You froze, just for a second. And Harvey noticed.
You were straddling him, baring your venomous fangs. You could kill him. And he was hard. You could feel it, it was impossible not to, thick, twitching against your inner thigh, pressed right against you.
Your powers didnât help. They never fucking did. The second you got close enough to feel body heat, it was over. It was a constant hum under your skin, that ache, that need, clawing at your sanity. Your towel barely clinging to your damp skin, the heat of his body seeping into yours, you didn't know how much longer you could hold on.
He let out a low, pleased chuckle, his good hand settling on your waist, just barely gripping. "Didnât know you missed me this much, sweetheart. Thought you were over me?"
Your nails dug into his chest even harder, but he didnât flinch. He never fucking did. "Tell me where Slade is," you demanded.
Harvey hummed, mocking. "You sure you wanna talk about him right now?" His fingers flexed against your skin, his smirk widening as he shifted slightly beneath you again. "Because from where Iâm sitting, you got bigger problems."
Your breath hitched, and you hated it. Hated the way your traitorous body reacted to him. Hated the way he felt so familiar.
His gaze flickered, taking in the flush on your skin, the way your thighs squeezed involuntarily around him. He felt it too. The heat. The tension. The pull that never really disappeared, no matter how many times you had tried to convince yourself that you were done with him.
"You always were greedy," Harvey murmured, tilting his head, eyes dark with something wicked. He was loving this. "You just canât get enough, can you?"
Suddenly, you were angry at him again. You remembered Tiffany. Your grip tightened around his wrists, holding him down, pressing harder into him, and his smirk twitched, just slightly.
Good. Let him fucking squirm. "You still think you have control here?" you whispered, lowering your head, your breath grazing the sharp line of his jaw.
His breathing faltered. Just for a second. Just enough.
Then, just as quickly, his lips curled again, sharp and taunting.
"Sweetheart," he murmured, voice deep, smug, full of sin. "As long as youre on top of me or under me, I don't give a shit who's in control."
Your entire body tensed. Your nails dragged down his chest, slow, teasing, right over his shirt. You could feel his heartbeat pounding beneath your fingertips, fast, erratic, out of sync with the smug bastard act he was putting on.
He was burning for you. Just as much as you were for him. But you werenât going to give in.
"You still think you can do whatever you want to me?" you whispered, leaning in, letting your lips hover just over his.
Harveyâs eyes flickered. A muscle in his jaw ticked. And for the first time since he had shown up, his smirk finally fucking dropped.
You grinned. Then you moved your hips and ran your fingers up and down his chest.
Harvey cursed sharply through his teeth, his grip on your waist tightening instantly, fingers digging into your skin like a vice. His dick twitched against you through his slacks, so fucking hard and aching that you could almost feel the pulse of it.
You let out a slow, breathy chuckle. "Guess you do still want me, huh?"
Harveyâs breathing was uneven. "Careful," he rasped, voice lower, darker, more dangerous now. "Youâre playing a real stupid game, princess."
"Why?" you taunted, grinded your hips again, watching the way his fingers twitched like he was fighting the urge to snap. "Because you canât handle it? Because you canât handle me?"
It was fun being in control. Slade never let you do whatever you wanted to him, barely ever in the bedroom. You loved control, especially when it meant having a man at your mercy beneath you.
Harveyâs eyes flashed. Then, he flipped you. Fast. Brutal.
You barely had time to react before you were the one beneath him , your towel barely hanging onto your body, his hand locked around your wrist, pinning you down, his body hovering over yours, pressing you into the mattress.
His breathing was hard, uneven, tense.
"You really think I donât know what youâre doing?" he murmured, so close now.
Your chest heaved. You got too cocky, too confident, and now you were paying the price, "I donât know what youâre talking about."
Harvey laughed softly, mocking, brushing his nose against yours. "Liar."
You swallowed, pulse hammering.
"You love this," he said, voice like gravel against your skin. "The attention. The desperation and groveling. You love seeing me beg. The way you talk like you want to kill me, and the next second," his lips ghosted your cheek, his cock pressing hard against your thigh, "youâre grinding against me like a fucking addict."
Your breath hitched. His grip tightened.
"He ever let you get on top?" he murmured, lips just barely grazing yours.
Your stomach twisted. "Don't."
His voice dropped lower, rougher. "Did you think about me when he had you at first? Did you close your eyes and pretend it was my hands on you even after I broke your heart? Should I tell him that?"
Your nails dug into his shoulder, your body betraying you, the heat between your legs only getting worse, stronger, overwhelming, unbearable.
"You wish," you rasped, but it sounded too breathless, too shaky.
Harvey smirked. He knew. "Say you donât miss me," he challenged.
You clenched your jaw, turning your head away, trying to ignore the way your body burned beneath his.
"Say it," he demanded.
You tried to, but the words wouldn't come out.
Harvey hummed. Then, his fingers slid lower, trailing along your bare thigh, teasing the hem of the towel.
"Yeah," he mused, smug and cruel. "Thatâs what I thought."
His fingers flexed against your thighs, his grip tightening.
"Little desperate, arenât you?" he murmured, his voice thick with something smug, something rough.
You scoffed, but your heart was hammering, your body betraying you. "If I was desperate," you whispered, leaning forward until your lips were just barely brushing against his, taunting, teasing. "Youâd already be inside me."
Harvey let out a low groan. He flipped you back around, giving you full control. Letting you be on top. You lost yourself for a moment, lost the plot. You melted into him and began kissing his neck slowly and unbuttoning his shirt as you slowly moved against him. But then, you saw the picture frame you hung of you and Slade, right behind Harvey.
Slade made you take down all the photos whenever he went away on a mission, in case someone broke in and saw them, and decided to hurt you to get back at him. It was the only one you refused to remove.
It was of you and him, two months ago. Slade had a mission in Paris and he let you tag along, after you were done, you made him go to an ice cream shop. Some sweet old man asked if you wanted a picture together, Slade wasn't smiling, barely even smirking, but you could see the happiness in his eyes as he had his arms around your waist, looking down at you.
You felt nauseous, all the arousal you felt was gone. You were a whore. How could you do this to Slade? You stopped moving as your eyes watered, what if Harvey had done something to him?
Harvey's hands snapped up, gripping your hips, grinding you down onto him. He wasn't gonna let you stop now.
"Fuck, baby, I forgot how good you are at this. Don't stop, please." he exhaled, almost begging, his jaw tightening, his cock pulsing against you.
You bit your lip, trying to fight the heat clawing through your body, the way your nerves lit up at the sheer pressure of him beneath you. It felt so good. You were horny again. But you could use this to your advantage, Harvey wanted you even more that you wanted him.
"Tell me," you whispered, rolling your hips just slightly, torturing him. "Tell me what you mean when you say Slade's occupied.."
Harveyâs smirk curled, his hands dragging you down harder, making you feel every inch of him. " Whatâs it worth to you?"
Your breath hitched. Harveyâs fingers trailed up your back, slow, possessive, teasing. "You wanna make sure your merc comes back in one piece?"
You swallowed hard, your body thrumming with frustration, anger, something else. All control you had was slipping, your powers were making you horny but they weren't working. Harvey wasn't listening to what you told him to do.
"Make me happy, sweetheart. If Iâm happy," his smirk deepened, his voice dripping with dark amusement. " the bastard stays alive."
Your chest tightened, heat roaring up your spine, burning you from the inside out. You hated him. You wanted him. You needed to keep Slade alive. Harveyâs hands slid lower, his thumbs tracing slow, burning circles into your skin.
"Make a decision, pretty girl, his flight leaves soon." he murmured, his dick twitched against you, heavy with need. God, how could he be horny while threatening your teacher/ mentor /situationship's life?
You couldnât lose Slade.
So you kissed him. Hard. Desperate.
Harvey groaned against your lips, his hands flying up to grip your waist, dragging you down harder against him, practically trying to merge your bodies together.
"Thatâs my girl," he muttered, his voice rough, victorious, possessive.
Your stomach burned with shame, with need, with something twisted and terrible. You hated him. You loved him.
You needed Slade to live.
But you couldn't do this to Slade, couldn't betray him on the bed you shared every night. He would be livid, what would he do in this situation? Probably kill Harvey. But you weren't Slade, you weren't as brave or as cruel as him.
So you did what you do best: You ran.
You jumped off of Harvey, punching him in the nose, still only in your towel that somehow stayed on, and shut the bedroom door in his face. You had powers, you were faster than Harvey, maybe even stronger than him. You made it to the front door in seconds, but your heart dropped as you saw the three new deadbolts.
Fucking Slade. You debated letting him die at that point.
Suddenly, you felt him behind you, grabbing you and pinning you against the door.
âGoddamn,â He laughed, amused, mocking, âyou really thought that would work?â
You snarled, struggling harder, but he didnât budge. His grip only tightened.
âLet me go, Harvey.â
His breath hitched at the way you said his name. Not Dent. Not Two-Face. Not some alias meant to keep distance. Just Harvey.
And it made something in his chest clench. His fingers flexed, his other hand dragging up your spine in a slow, deliberate motion, making you shudder.
âYou always run, donât you?â His voice was low, smoothâbut there was something dangerous beneath it. âAlways running from someone.â
His grip tightened on your wrists, pressing them into the wall, âFrom them. From me. From yourself.â
You hated how well he knew you. You hated that he was right. You hated how he got you into bed willingly even as the guilt ate you up. You hated how good he made you feel, how you couldn't bring yourself to say no. If you did, he would stop, and you didn't want that.
"Don't act like you don't want me now. You were all over me not even a minute ago." He sneered, as he ripped off your towel like it offended him.
You didn't know how many times you came, or how long you went for. You felt so good, but somehow you've never felt worse. Even as Harvey made you scream his name, you thought of how Slade would react.
You felt even worse as the night wore on, and instead of rough sex, you began to make love. Harvey buried his face in your neck as he muttered apologies, still buried inside you, and swore he would make it up to you.
You began to cry, it felt so good. But it was so wrong, so disgusting.
And you knew you never felt true regret until you woke up the next morning in Harvey Dent's arms, naked on the bed you slept on with Slade Wilson.
WHAT YALL THINK?? 1-10?? ALSO COMMENT DOWN BELOW TO BE ON THE TAGLIST FOR THIS STORY
ok yall! i couldn't stop thinking of neglected Reader falling for Clark Kent, so instead of writing a new chapter of "I bet on losing dogs" I wrote an AU!!! Batfam's neglect stays till reader is 18, Tiffany isn't exposed till later. I got kinda carried away tbh! Remember, THIS IS AN AU!!!! Ya'll aren't ready for this plot actually. Or who really steals readers heart. Thank you to the wonderful anon who sent me down the rabit hole of this man. Reader is 18 when the romance actually starts.
Part 1:
Part 2: Here
Part 3:
When you were younger, you had always idolized Superman. Clark Kent, the unassuming, nerdy reporter with glasses, was a far cry from the intimidating presence he became when he donned the cape. You first saw him when you were 9, during a charity event your father had taken you to. At first, you thought he was just another well-dressed man who smiled too much. But then, when he lifted a car to save someone from an accident, you felt something shift in your chest.
Thatâs it, you thought. Thatâs what I want. I want him.
From that day on, you couldnât stop thinking about him. The way he saved people with a smile, how gentle his voice was. Youâd daydream about being near him, holding his hand, his deep blue eyes looking down at you with affection. But Clark never saw you that way. To him, you were always just Bruce Wayneâs little girlâthe kid he barely knew.
Maybe it was a result of being neglected by every man in your life that made you so feral for Clark Kent. Maybe it was the fact that he was the only person you knew who didn't prefer Tiffany to you. Whatever it was, it didn't matter, he'd never feel the same.
So, you pushed your feelings aside.
Or at least you tried to.
Youâd flirted with boys before. Youâd flirted with grown men. With your powers, you needed an outlet, a way to let go of your frustrations, to feel good. You lost your virginity only days after gaining your powers. It felt amazing, during those moments you were in control of your body, the pain went away, the neglect went away and you were loved.
But nothing had ever been like the times you found yourself in Clarkâs presence. At 16, youâd started testing the waters, teasing him with subtle remarks. Youâd gotten a little bolder in your attempts over the years, but he always brushed them off as playful jokes.
"Donât you think youâre a little young for me, kiddo?" heâd chuckle every time you got close.
You hated that. He saw you as a kid. That was it.
But you didnât stop. Because you were determined.
And by the time you turned 18, the world around you had shifted. You had grown into someone new, more mature, more confident. Your body had changed. Your personality had changed. But Clark... he still looked at you like you were that little girl from all those years ago.
It hurt. But you told yourself, Just be patient. Itâll come around. I just need more time.
You soon realized time was too long. Clark would never see you as anything more than a kid, he literally had children your age. He was old enough to be your father. His youngest son had a crush on you and Clark is a good man. He would never consider you romantically.
You couldn't keep chasing after another unrequited love. Not after years of chasing your family's. Not after years of being pushed aside for an imposter who always outsmarted your attempts to expose her.
You wanted to move on. To leave everyone behind.
And that's what you did. There was no dramatic breaking point, no emotional stand-off. You were looking out your window one day and you realized you've done nothing. You've never been happy, never once truly happy, you lived for everyone but yourself. Not anymore. One random sunny Tuesday, the summer after you graduated highschool, you packed up and left everything behind, no goodbyes. Not even a note for Alfred. None of them deserved it.
You were tired, tired of chasing people.
You wanted to be chased and that's what you got. Every week it was someone new, your professor, your friends, your boss, anyone who was attracted to you, you slept with. It was so freeing. It was euphoric, making them fall in love, leading them into your bed, then kicking them out as soon as the next one came along.
The only thing that you truly loved now was music, it was all that got you through years and years of mistreatment. No matter what happened in the manor, you could turn your headphones on and forget. You could grab your guitar and strum your worries away.
College sucked. Long ago, you would've pushed yourself to go, even though you hated it, just to make your family proud. To chase approval you would never get. Not anymore, you knew you needed a degree to make a living, but a gap year never hurt anyone.
You began working as a singer in different bars. It let you write songs and make money. There was nothing more addicting than feeling eyes on you, enchanted by you. Your voice was magnetic, drawing people in, and like any good predator, you feasted on their hearts and left as soon as they stopped inspiring you. Yet, no matter how good-looking or good in bed they were, they would never be Clark.
One night, after a few months of your reckless, self-destructive pattern, you found yourself in a dimly lit bar on the outskirts of Gotham, a place where nobody would recognize you. You weren't gonna sing, not tonight.
You werenât here to find love, you werenât here to talk or connect. You were here to forget.
The clink of glasses and low murmur of conversation surrounded you, but it was the figure in the corner that caught your attention.
A man with a commanding presence sat alone at the bar, his back straight, eyes locked on the dim-lit television above the counter. His hair was peppered with gray, but there was something ageless about the way he carried himself; tough, confident, dangerous. The eyepatch over his right eye only enhanced the mystery, adding a cruel allure to his already intimidating presence.
You couldnât quite place why you were drawn to him, but the moment you saw him, a spark ignited. Slade Wilson. He worked with Bruce somehow one time, everyone hated him, even Clark. You remembered him because he was the only man, other than Clark, not to fall for Tiffany's charm and that was a win in your book.
Youâd heard of him in passing, mostly in rumorsâwhispers of a deadly mercenary, a ghost in the shadows of Gotham, a man you wouldnât want to cross. But here he was, sitting like a predator in a place filled with prey.
You werenât afraid. You never were. Youâd been raised in the shadows of Gotham, after all, with men who didnât even know how to love you. Youâd seen dangerous men before. You knew how to handle yourself.
You sauntered over, taking a seat next to him, your movements casual but purposeful. He glanced at you briefly, his lips twitching into the slightest of smirks before his eyes returned to the screen.
"Mind if I join you?" you asked, leaning into the counter, placing your drink beside his.
His gaze flicked toward you again, this time a little longer. There was something predatory in the way he sized you up, assessing your every move. "Not at all."
You smirked, tilting your head slightly. "Iâve been told Iâm a good time."
A quiet chuckle rumbled in his chest, but it was cold, calculated. "That so?"
You didnât miss the way his eyes dropped briefly to your lips, but he didnât let his attention linger for long. He took a long sip of his drink and leaned back, unbothered, as though you were nothing more than another fleeting distraction.
You were used to this, the indifferent types. But you werenât going to let him slip away that easily.
âYou donât strike me as the kind of guy who spends his nights in places like this,â you said, turning towards him with a sly grin. âI imagine youâve got better places to be.â
Slade didnât look at you when he responded, his voice low and smooth, like gravel being ground underfoot. âIâm where I want to be.â
You laughed, the sound rich and teasing. "So, what does someone like you do for fun, then?"
For a moment, the silence stretched between you, and then he finally turned to meet your eyes, the weight of his gaze making your stomach flutter for reasons you couldnât explain. "Fun... isnât what Iâm here for."
You let out a slow breath, leaning in a little closer, just enough for the scent of his cologne to hit you, something spicy, with a touch of danger.
"Then what are you here for?" you murmured, your voice barely above a whisper. You could see the muscles in his jaw tense slightly, but he didnât pull away. Instead, he met your gaze head-on, his lips curling up ever so slightly at the corners.
"Business."
You raised an eyebrow, intrigued. "Business, huh? I love business."
âI'm sure you doâ he said cryptically, but his voice was thick with unspoken meaning.
The tension between you was palpable, electric. You couldnât deny the pull you felt toward him. It wasnât just his looks, though they were undeniably attractive in their own gritty, dangerous way. No, it was the way he carried himself, like he was someone who could destroy everything in his path if he wanted.
You werenât intimidated, though. If anything, it intrigued you more.
You leaned closer, the warmth of your body pressing against his, your breath hot against his ear. âSo, what do you do when business is done?â
For a moment, he didnât answer. He just stared at you, his eyes hard and calculating. And then, before you could react, his lips brushed against your ear, his voice low and dangerous. "You donât want to know."
You shivered at his words, at the heat of his breath, but you were beyond caring. You were tired of being the one who was always desired but never loved, the one who always chased but was never caught. Tonight, you wanted to be wanted, and you wanted him to want you more than anything.
"Maybe I wanna find out" you breathed, your hand sliding down his arm.
His hand shot out like lightning, grabbing your wrist before you could make contact. His grip was firm, but not painfulâjust a reminder of his control, of how easily he could break you if he wanted.
âNot tonight,â he murmured, voice rough. "Not the way you think."
You stared at him, uncertainty flickering in your gaze for the briefest of moments. You had gotten used to men not wanting you the way you wanted them, it was all you knew growing up. But now things were different with your abilities. This wasnât the first time someone had pulled away, but with him, it felt different, like he was holding back, just as much as you were.
You smirked. "What makes you think you can stop me?"
His lips curled again, this time with something darker in his eyes. "Because Iâm the one who calls the shots."
A challenge. A warning. And for some reason, that only made you want him more.
Before you could react, he stood up, his hand lingering on your wrist for just a beat longer. "If youâre serious about this, Iâll be at the back exit in thirty minutes."
Then, without waiting for a response, he was gone, disappearing into the shadows of the bar.
You sat there for a moment, staring after him, the heat of the moment hanging in the air between you.
You werenât sure whether to follow or not, but you knew one thing for certain: tonight was going to be a night you wouldnât forget.
And so, you found yourself standing outside in the cool night air, your heart racing. You hadn't planned for this, but somehow it felt inevitable.
When you saw him again, waiting by the dark alley, it was clear this was a man who didnât let anything slip through his fingers. And tonight, you werenât going to let him slip away either. You approached him, your steps measured and confident.
He didn't speak immediately, just gave you a slow, knowing smile as you came closer.
This wasnât the start of a love story. This wasnât about feelings or connections. This was something darker, something more primal.
This was a game. And you werenât sure if you were the predator... or the prey.
But you were ready to find out.
The cool Gotham air settled in your lungs as you closed the distance between yourself and Slade, your heels clicking softly on the pavement.
He stood by the alley entrance, leaning casually against the brick wall, his figure lit only by the faint streetlight behind him. The shadows clung to him like a second skin, making his presence feel like an almost dangerous secretâsomething you werenât sure you were ready to unravel, but damn, you were more than willing to try.
Slade didnât say a word as you approached, his one visible eye catching yours with that piercing, unreadable stare of his. You knew that look. It was the same kind of look your father gave you when he had to make tough decisions, when he saw things for what they truly were. Cold, calculating. But this? This felt different. This felt like a challenge. And you were more than ready for it.
âStill think you can handle me?â His voice was low, but it had that same teasing bite, as if he were daring you to prove him wrong.
You were close nowâtoo close for comfort, but you didnât care. You stepped into his space, the heat of his body now radiating against yours, his scent filling your senses. âI donât need to handle you,â you murmured, your lips barely brushing his ear as you leaned in. âI think you need to handle me.â
There was a flicker in his gaze, something almost imperceptible, but it was enough to make your pulse quicken. He didnât move away, didnât flinch like others would have. If anything, the air around you both seemed to crackle with intensity.
âIs that what you think this is about?â Slade asked, his voice rougher now, as though the control he so carefully maintained was slipping just a little. âYouâre not the first woman whoâs come to me thinking they can make me want them.â
You were sure he was referring to Tiffany, there was no way a man like him ever forgot a name or face. Knowing he knew who you were and knowing he didn't care made you want him more.
You smiled, feeling that familiar rush of excitement surge through your veins. It wasnât about making him want you. It was about making him need you.
âMaybe,â you said, leaning even closer, your lips almost touching his. âBut Iâm the first one who might actually make you lose control.â
For a heartbeat, you could have sworn the world around you stopped. Sladeâs eye darkened, the intensity in his stare shifting from challenge to something sharper. More dangerous. But there was something else in his eyes now. Something that made your heart race faster than you cared to admit.
His hand shot out, gripping your wrist with a force that had your breath hitching in your throat. The familiar spark of danger lit up your skin, and you didnât pull away. Instead, you let your body melt into his, feeling the pulse of raw, untamed power that radiated off him.
âYou think you can push me?â he growled, his voice like gravel, each word like a warning and a promise all at once.
You didnât answer him right away. Instead, you let your fingers trail across his chest, feeling the ridged muscles beneath the fabric of his shirt. Your touch was deliberate, slow, each movement a calculated game of power.
âMaybe I want to push you,â you said softly, your breath a whisper against his neck, âuntil I break you.â
The grip on your wrist tightened for a split second, his muscles flexing with controlled restraint. For a moment, you wondered if this was where it would end, that heâd push you away, tell you it was all just a game. But when he finally spoke again, his voice was thick with tension.
âCareful, sweetheart,â Slade murmured, his lips brushing against the curve of your jaw, sending a shiver down your spine. âIâm not sure you know what youâre asking for.â
You let out a breathy laugh, your body pressing even closer to his as your lips hovered dangerously close to his own. âMaybe I donât,â you whispered. âBut Iâm willing to find out.â
Slade didnât move for a long moment, just holding you there in that thin space between danger and desire. And then, finally, he closed the gap, his lips crashing into yours with the force of someone who had been holding back far too long.
The kiss was anything but gentle. It was a brutal, desperate collision of mouths, a clash of power and need. You could feel the tension in every muscle of his body as he claimed your mouth, his hands gripping your arms, his touch insistent and almost hungry. But you didnât break, didnât pull away. Instead, you kissed him back just as fiercely, hands roaming up his chest to grasp the collar of his jacket, pulling him closer.
For a second, you wondered if this would be the point where you lost yourself to the heat of the moment, but the longer you kissed him, the clearer it became that this wasnât just about passion. It was about control. About testing boundaries.
And you were willing to play that game, because you were ready to win.
As the kiss deepened, Slade pulled away suddenly, his breath ragged, eyes darker now with desire and frustration. He wasnât used to this. He wasnât used to someone who didnât give in.
âNot so easy, is it?â you whispered, your voice rough from the kiss, your body still pressed against his.
He glared at you for a moment, lips curling into a knowing smirk, the kind of smirk that made you feel like you were dancing on the edge of a knife.
âYouâre not the first one to test me, Slade said, voice low and dangerous, his hands sliding down your arms with intent. âBut you might be the first one who wants to."
Slade didnât pull back, his chest rising and falling with a steady rhythm, but his gaze never left yours. His hand, still gripping your wrist, was no longer a force of restraint; it was an anchor, a silent promise of just how far this could go.
The weight of his stare sent a shiver down your spine. You werenât sure if it was from anticipation or something deeper, something darker that he carried with him, but you felt it in every inch of your body. You werenât here for games anymore, you were here because you wanted this. You wanted him.
But there was more to it. Something about the way he held you in his gaze told you that, for once, you werenât in control. Slade Wilson was a man who played by his own rules. And now, you were learning the cost of trying to break them.
He released your wrist with slow precision, letting his fingers linger over your skin for just a second longer than necessary. You could feel the heat of his touch as he took a step back, eyes darkening with a new kind of challenge.
âYou really think youâre the one calling the shots here?â His voice was low, rough, as though it had been soaked in whiskey and smoke.
You werenât about to back down now. You smirked, leaning into him again, almost too close for comfort. âI think Iâm just... along for the ride.â
Sladeâs lips twisted into something dangerous, a mix of amusement and something else, something far more raw. He took a step toward you, crowding your space, his presence suffocating in the most exhilarating way.
âNot sure you know what that ride entails,â he murmured, his voice dipping even lower, sending another shiver down your spine.
âIâm starting to,â you replied, reaching for him, but this time, you didnât touch him the way you had before. You trailed your fingers slowly, almost teasingly, down his chest, feeling the firmness of muscle beneath the fabric.
Slade didnât stop you. His body stiffened, though. Just enough for you to feel that tight pull of control he was holding onto. It only made you want him more. You pressed a little closer, your body brushing against his in a subtle reminder that you were still in the game, too.
âI like doing things i'm not supposed toâ you said, your lips grazing his ear as you spoke. âAnd I think you do, too.â
He stiffened at your words, his breath catching in his throat. For a split second, you thought you saw something flash behind his gazeâsomething far more primal than the cold, calculating predator youâd come to know.
Sladeâs hand shot out, gripping your chin with surprising gentleness, forcing you to look up at him. The control was unmistakable in his hold, yet his eyes⌠his eyes were like a storm just about to break. âDonât think you know what youâre asking for.â
âI never said I did.â Your voice was steady, confident, even though the truth was you didnât fully know what this was. But you knew what you wanted, and right now, it was him.
He searched your face, his gaze intense, like he was deciding something. just as you thought he might break, he leaned in, closing the gap between you both.
His lips brushed against yours, barely a touch, but enough to send your pulse skyrocketing. For a moment, it was almost like a game of cat and mouse. He was holding back, just enough to make you ache for more.
His lips moved to your ear, his voice dropping lower, rougher. âYou should walk away now. Because once this starts, thereâs no going back.â
You leaned into him, your breath shaky, but your resolve unwavering. âI never look back. Not anymore.â
Slade didnât hesitate. His lips crushed against yours with an urgency that felt like a storm breaking free. There was no softness. It was rough, driven by something savage, and it made you lose your breath as you kissed him back just as fiercely.
You felt his hands on you, strong and sure, pulling you into him, his grip possessive in a way that made your pulse race even faster. You let him guide you, let him take the leadâbecause, for the first time in so long, you didnât need to be the one in control. You didnât want to be.
That night, Slade Wilson made you forget about every other man in your life, even Clark Kent.
For the next three weeks, you and Slade continued game of cat and mouse. Every other day, you would go to a bar to play and he would somehow appear in the crowd, like a sailor lured by a siren.
Yet everytime, in the morning when you woke, still hot after the previous nights activities, Slade Wilson was nowhere to be found.
You knew he was too old for you, too rough and unstable, but he could be kind at times, when he wanted.
And he was fun.
And you're sure your family would have a joint aneurysum if they found out.
It was fun until one night, he didn't find you.
Two months later, nothing changed. No word from your 'family' asking where you were, only Alfred's weekly check up, and Damian's insufferable posting of him, Tiffany, and the rest the family having fun without you on Instagram. He didn't even bother to block you.
No word from Slade either, yet you still hoped he would show one night. Seems like you had a thing for men ignoring you.
But tonight, something felt electric in the air.
Sladeâs shadow stretched across the dimly lit bar, his presence pulling every ounce of warmth from the room. You hadnât seen him in two months, not since heâd walked away without a word, leaving you to pick up the pieces of everything. Youâd told yourself you didnât care, that his absence meant nothing. But seeing him again, standing there with that predatory stare of his, you couldnât help but feel the heat rise in your chest.
You were busy, sure, singing and flirting, giving the crowd exactly what they wanted. But you couldnât ignore the sudden heaviness in the air. The way the music seemed to fade as his eyes locked onto yours from across the room. The same gaze that had always made you feel like you were hisâlike he could take whatever he wanted and leave you with nothing.
You kept the smile on your face, tossing your hair over your shoulder, a flirtatious laugh escaping your lips as you tossed a wink at one of the men leaning against the bar. You could feel Slade watching you, not just with his eyes but with every inch of his body. He hadnât come to listen to the music. He didnât give a damn about the crowd or the drinks. He was here for you.
And he was pissed.
He approached you with slow, deliberate steps, his frame imposing, his eyes cold with that familiar edge. When he spoke, his voice was a low rumble, almost drowned out by the noise of the bar, but it cut through everything like a blade.
âWell, well, well⌠look at you, darlinâ. Didnât take you long to move on, huh?â
Your pulse quickened, but you kept your head high. âDidnât realize I needed your permission, babe.â
He ignored the jab, his lips twitching in a smile that didnât reach his eyes. âHavenât seen you in two months, and this is what I come back to? Youâre out here playing with the other boys now?â
You didnât flinch. âYou didnât exactly leave me with much of a choice. You were the one who disappeared, remember?â
Slade's gaze hardened, and before you knew it, he was right in front of you, close enough that his breath stirred the strands of your hair. He leaned down, his voice dropping low, rough. âYou really think you can just forget about me? Move on with them? Cute little act you've got going, sweetheart, but I can see right through it.â
You pushed back, trying to ignore the flutter in your chest. âIâm not doing anything. Iâm just having fun. Iâm living my life, Slade. You should try it sometime.â
His smirk curled, but there was no warmth in it. âI donât need advice from you. And I donât give a damn about your âfun.ââ His hand shot out, grabbing your wrist with a brutal grip, pulling you closer. âWhereâs your old man? Whereâs your daddy been? What about your brothers? Do they even know what the hell youâve been up to?â
The sharpness of his words cut deeper than you wanted to admit. Slade always knew how to hit you where it hurt, and he wasnât giving you any room to breathe. âDonât touch me,â you snapped, but the defiance didnât reach your voice the way you wanted it to.
âFunny, thatâs what I thought youâd say.â He released your wrist, but not before giving it a firm squeeze. âI already know whatâs been going on with your family. Theyâve been too busy holding onto their precious Tiffany, havenât they?â
You flinched at the mention of her name. Everyone knew Tiffany was the golden child, the one your family had actually cared about. The one theyâd all protected, even when she turned out to be the one using them. Youâd known for a while that she was a spy, but it didnât make it any easier to swallow.
Sladeâs eyes glinted with that sharp, calculating look. âYou knew what she was doing, didnât you? All this time, she was playing them like puppets, and now theyâre gonna come crawling back, pretending they care. Theyâll be looking for you soon enough, you know. Guiltâs a hell of a thing.â
The words sank into you, twisting painfully. You hated how right he was. Your family had always been so focused on Tiffany that they hadnât noticed how you were slipping through the cracks. And now, with her gone, they were going to realize their mistake. They were going to come for you, but it wouldnât be because they cared. It would be because they felt guilty.
Slade took a step closer, his hand lightly grazing your cheek, the touch cold and commanding. âTheyâll come running for you when they realize what theyâve lost, sweetheart. But donât fool yourself. It wonât be about you. Itâll be about guilt. About making things right because they fucked up. But you know better than anyone, those kinds of people always forget when the next shiny thing comes along.â
You swallowed, trying to keep your composure. âWhat do you want from me?â
His smirk widened, his fingers trailing down your jaw with a casualness that made your skin crawl in a way you couldnât quite explain. âWhat do I want from you, sweetheart? Maybe just the same thing Iâve always wanted. But letâs be clear: Iâm not here to save you from them. Hell, I donât even know if you want saving.â
You glared at him, feeling the bitter edge of your own anger. âThen why the hell are you here?â
Slade's eyes softened for a brief secondâjust long enough to make you wonder if this was something more than just a game to him. Then, as quickly as it appeared, the moment was gone, replaced by that familiar coldness. âIâm here because youâre a hell of a lot smarter than theyâll ever give you credit for. And youâre not stupid enough to think you need them. You know they never cared, not really.â
You opened your mouth to argue, but the words died in your throat. He was right. You did know it, deep down. Youâd always known. It stung, more than you cared to admit, but you were done being angry about it.
He leaned in, his lips brushing just below your ear. âWhen they come, and they will come, you can show them what it feels like to be abandoned. You can make them feel just how you felt. But donât think for a second you can do it without me.â
You didnât respond right away, your heart pounding in your chest. He wasnât offering you a way out, he was offering you a choice. A choice between playing the victim to your familyâs guilt, or standing beside him as he carved his own path. Neither option was a clean one, but something about him made it feel like the one youâd always been meant to choose.
Slade stepped back, his eyes scanning you as if he was trying to figure you out. âYouâre not like them, sweetheart. And youâre not gonna let them walk all over you. Not this time.â
You finally met his gaze, the anger and frustration swirling in your chest. âYou donât know anything about me.â
Slade grinned, that predatory, dangerous grin that made you feel like you were in over your head. âOh, I know more than you think.â
Sladeâs presence was suffocating, his shadow looming over you like something darker than the night itself. Heâd always had that effect on you, but tonight, with the way he leaned in so close, his words cutting through the air like daggers, you couldn't help but feel a chill creep down your spine.
His eyes never left yours, not for a second, his smirk tightening as if he knew exactly how to push every button. "You know, sweetheart, you always think youâve got everything figured out, donât you?â His voice was soft, dangerous, like a whisper in a dark alley. âBut youâve been running from something for a long time. Something you canât hide from anymore."
You felt your heart beat a little faster, but you refused to show it. Youâd dealt with him long enough to know that showing weakness only made him more dangerous. âWhat the hell are you talking about?â
Sladeâs gaze slid over you, dismissive yet calculating. âI think you know exactly what I mean. But letâs not play coy here. You used to be close with Jason. Back when he was alive, at least. You were a team, werenât you?â
The mention of Jason made your stomach twist, but you clenched your jaw and forced your face into something resembling indifference. You refused to let Slade see you hurt. âWhat about it?â
âNothing, just... funny, isnât it?â Sladeâs lips curved into a grin that made your skin crawl. âYou two were close. But then, Jason died, and who was left? The family? They couldnât be bothered to pay attention to you. They didnât notice when Tiffany came around, and they sure as hell havenât noticed since.â
Your breath caught in your throat, the truth hitting a little too hard. But you kept your composure, refusing to give him the satisfaction of seeing how much it stung. âWhat do you want, Slade?â
His eyes softened just enough to make you think for a second that he mightâve been telling the truthâonly for that same grin to return, sharper than before. âWhat I want? You're not getting it, sweetheart. Itâs not about me. Itâs about you.â
You narrowed your eyes at him, trying to figure out just how much of this conversation was manipulation. And how much was something more... personal? The tension between you two was so thick, it felt like it might snap at any moment.
Slade took a step closer, his movements slow, deliberate. âYouâve been wasting your time, havenât you? Hiding behind that bar, singing, flirting with men whoâll never understand you. You could do so much more than this, you know. Youâve got potential.â
He said the word like it was something sacred. A promise or a curse, you couldnât quite decide.
You shook your head, taking a small step back. "I donât need you or anyone else to tell me what I can and canât do."
Sladeâs eyes darkened, his smirk turning predatory. âOh, I think you do. I think you want to know. Deep down, youâre craving someone to show you how to unlock it. Your powers. Your real potential. You want something bigger, something more than this.â
Your pulse quickened, and a sickening unease washed over you. How the hell did he know about your powers? How much did he really know? The idea that heâd been watching you from afar, or worse, had been tracking your every move, made your skin crawl.
You tried to push that thought away. âI donât know what you think you know about me, but youâre wrong. I donât need anyoneâs help.â
Slade studied you for a long moment, his gaze never faltering. He was evaluating you, and you could feel the weight of it pressing on your chest. When he spoke again, his tone was almost... too calm, too casual.
âLetâs be real here, darlin'. You do need help. Youâve got power, and Iâm not talking about the small-time tricks youâve been playing with. You could be so much more. But you're stuck. Trapped in this little life youâve built for yourself because youâre too afraid to face what's really inside you.â
âWhy are you even here?â You asked, trying to keep your voice steady, but the edge was starting to creep in. You wanted answers, and you wanted them now. âYou disappeared for two months, and now youâre showing up like you know everything about me. Whatâs your game?â
He took a slow, deliberate step forward, his figure blocking the dim light above you. âMy game? Iâm not here to play games. Iâm here because Iâm offering you an opportunity. An opportunity to stop hiding from yourself. To work with me. To really figure out what youâre capable of. Iâve seen the way you move. The way you think. And I know youâre capable of so much more than this little bar. But youâll need training. Youâll need guidance. My guidance.â
Your eyes narrowed, and you couldnât stop the involuntary shiver that ran through you. He was offering you something, something you didnât quite understand, but the implication was clear: he wanted you to join him. To work together.
But there was something... off. The way he was talking. The way he seemed to know everything about you, the things you hadnât told anyone, not even yourself.
âHow do you know all this?â You demanded, your voice cracking despite your best efforts to sound confident. âHow do you know about Jason? About Tiffany? About whats happening to me?â
Sladeâs grin widened, a strange glint in his eyes as he leaned in, almost as if savoring the tension. âThere's nothing I don't know. I know more than you think. But hereâs the thing: you donât need to understand everything right away. You just need to trust me. Trust that I know what you need. And trust that I can give you what youâve been searching for. What they could never give you.â
His words were like a knife, each one digging deeper. âIâm not asking for your loyalty. Not yet. But think about it, yeah? Iâm offering you something bigger than this... this place, these people. I can offer you something real. Power. Freedom.â
Your eyes were still locked with his, but your mind was racing. You couldn't stop the unease creeping through you. There was a part of you that wanted to know what he meant. Wanted to know how far your powers could go. Wanted to trust him, even though everything in your gut told you not to.
âAnd what about Clark?â You blurted out, unable to stop yourself. âIâm supposed to just... forget about him too? You donât think I notice? You think Iâm some naive little girl who doesnât know whatâs going on? You think I can't see you using me? Trying to groom me?â
Sladeâs eyes flickered, just for a moment, before his lips curled into a snide smile. âClark.â He scoffed. âThe big, shiny boy scout with all the answers. I wouldnât worry too much about him. You and I both know how far that age gap really stretches. Heâs too good for you, always will be.â
He took a step closer, his eyes glinting with something dark. âBut me? I donât need to pretend. I know exactly what you need. And I wonât keep running from it like your little superhero friend. Iâm offering you something real, and youâre smart enough to see that.â
His words, sharp and possessive, lingered in the air. You swallowed, your throat dry.
âIâll think about it.â The words came out more breathless than you intended, but Slade didnât seem to mind.
âGood girl.â His tone was sharp, like an order, but there was something more in it, something possessive, like a claim. He reached out, his fingers brushing your arm as if he had every right to touch you. And the worst part was, you didnât pull away.
âDonât take too long,â he murmured, his lips close to your ear. âIâm not the patient type. And when I come back, youâll have an answer. Iâll be waiting, sweetheart.â
You hated how that sent a chill down your spine.
OKKKKKK WHAT DO YALL THINK??? IS IT GOOD??? BE HONEST!! I BARELY KNEW WHO SLADE WAS BEFORE THIS SO IT MIGHT BE OOC! REMEBER THIS IS AN AU! SORRY IF THERE'S TYPOS I WROTE THIS ON MY PHONE IN BED. I FEEL LIKE IT SUCKS SO I MIGHT TAKE IT DOWN AND NEVER SPEAK OF IT AGAIN!!!!