Nothing broken, at least, Clark's head bowed as he studies Bruce's hand. If it was dislocated, it seems to have righted itself in the flurry. A sprain, then. He gently wraps his hand around the site where he knows it'll be sore, uncomfortably cold which nevertheless throws a blanket over the ache.
Not that Bruce isn't good with pain, but it'll help recovery. Clark looks up when he's done this. It's hard not to think in terms of colleteral damage. There was none, save for Bruce's hand. So it's fine. But it's not.
"I tried waking you," he says, quietly. "And I think that made it worse."
He's not sure he can parcel up Bruce's guilt and take it from him, much as he'd like to, and so he leaves that where it is, and asks, instead, "Tell me about it?"
Not that Bruce isn't good with pain, but it'll help recovery. Clark looks up when he's done this. It's hard not to think in terms of colleteral damage. There was none, save for Bruce's hand. So it's fine. But it's not.
"I tried waking you," he says, quietly. "And I think that made it worse."
He's not sure he can parcel up Bruce's guilt and take it from him, much as he'd like to, and so he leaves that where it is, and asks, instead, "Tell me about it?"
Clark holds his hand and keeps it still, letting Bruce flex his fingers without much in the way of returning gesture save to keep his hand in his. Being careful. He watches Bruce watch the water.
That icy cold is starting to warm up. It was never going to last very long anyway.
"What kind of future?" asks Clark, after hesitating over this last part. There are a few first sightings. Clark tends to think of Bruce Wayne at a fancy event, the Batman lurking like a shadow at the edges, his own churn of distrust and confusion that had not yet resolved into something more—something more.
But he's peripherally aware that a lot of people saw him all at the same time, and he also remembers a car chase at night, and a show of strength.
(The implications inherent of a Barry Allen sending a message from the future, of Bruce being able to see it in his dreams, are quietly absorbed for the moment in the project of getting more information.)
That icy cold is starting to warm up. It was never going to last very long anyway.
"What kind of future?" asks Clark, after hesitating over this last part. There are a few first sightings. Clark tends to think of Bruce Wayne at a fancy event, the Batman lurking like a shadow at the edges, his own churn of distrust and confusion that had not yet resolved into something more—something more.
But he's peripherally aware that a lot of people saw him all at the same time, and he also remembers a car chase at night, and a show of strength.
(The implications inherent of a Barry Allen sending a message from the future, of Bruce being able to see it in his dreams, are quietly absorbed for the moment in the project of getting more information.)
Edited 2021-03-26 22:44 (UTC)
Side bar.
Clark Kent has zero journalism education despite his desk at an internationally accaimed news organisation. It's a thing, and he'd had to learn as he went. If he did not have some kind of natural inclination to the craft along with a propensity to pick things up fast, he's sure Perry White would have left his ass on the side of the street a long time ago, Superman or no Superman. He had to get good at writing, for one thing, very fast. Late night discussions with Lois as she scribbled red pen all over his copy.
When it came to managing sources, though, that all had made a logical sense to him. Comes naturally. Create rapport, look and sound like you're interested, find the follow up, the right moment to challenge something, the right moment to question, or agree.
The right moment to be quiet, too. Silence is there to be filled. It doesn't often work on Bruce Wayne, who can live in that silence longer than most.
There's a small and affectionate smile, fleeting, for parental nicknames. His other hand, cool but not cold now, finds a place to be above Bruce's wrist, holding him in some small way. He knows about nightmares, and dead parents, and all the little details that lodge splinters of glass in tender spots. That reflection of empathy gives way to silent prompt, a prickle of curiousity for dreams that are about a son and a mother, but aren't. Go on.
Clark Kent has zero journalism education despite his desk at an internationally accaimed news organisation. It's a thing, and he'd had to learn as he went. If he did not have some kind of natural inclination to the craft along with a propensity to pick things up fast, he's sure Perry White would have left his ass on the side of the street a long time ago, Superman or no Superman. He had to get good at writing, for one thing, very fast. Late night discussions with Lois as she scribbled red pen all over his copy.
When it came to managing sources, though, that all had made a logical sense to him. Comes naturally. Create rapport, look and sound like you're interested, find the follow up, the right moment to challenge something, the right moment to question, or agree.
The right moment to be quiet, too. Silence is there to be filled. It doesn't often work on Bruce Wayne, who can live in that silence longer than most.
There's a small and affectionate smile, fleeting, for parental nicknames. His other hand, cool but not cold now, finds a place to be above Bruce's wrist, holding him in some small way. He knows about nightmares, and dead parents, and all the little details that lodge splinters of glass in tender spots. That reflection of empathy gives way to silent prompt, a prickle of curiousity for dreams that are about a son and a mother, but aren't. Go on.
Clark is easy to read. Surprise first, and early dismay.
"Oh."
And he goes quiet, thinking, letting that simple statement alone sink in. Remembering the looming shadow of a galactic titan, eyes burning, the oddly primal sense of feeling a little like a guard dog standing fixed at the gate and bristling its hackles at some unknown threat in the darkness. That maybe a warning show of fangs would be enough, for right now.
The idea of being anything else twists something in his heart. Of Bruce carrying that—
"Why?"
Very open ended. Too open ended. Bad technique. He keeps a hold of Bruce, prepared to firm up if the older man pulls away.
"Oh."
And he goes quiet, thinking, letting that simple statement alone sink in. Remembering the looming shadow of a galactic titan, eyes burning, the oddly primal sense of feeling a little like a guard dog standing fixed at the gate and bristling its hackles at some unknown threat in the darkness. That maybe a warning show of fangs would be enough, for right now.
The idea of being anything else twists something in his heart. Of Bruce carrying that—
"Why?"
Very open ended. Too open ended. Bad technique. He keeps a hold of Bruce, prepared to firm up if the older man pulls away.
Edited 2021-03-27 00:19 (UTC)
It hurts, of course, and there's no point packing that away somewhere unseen. Clark's hands on Bruce are gentle and steady the whole time, perfect control in the way he also can't seem to help the crumple at his brow, the drop of his gaze to somewhere around Bruce's breastbone.
"We're not gonna let it," he says, quietly. Whatever it is.
It's not that simple. They would not be standing here, like this, after that, if all that was necessary was a hopeful attitude, but it's not nothing. He (gently) squeezes Bruce's arm, as if that alone could articulate and communicate something better than words might.
On account of he doesn't know how to say that he's not murderously angry at Bruce over the prospect of his wife dying from some tactical mistake. That, altogether, feels too large and unwieldy a thing to have a complex feeling about just yet. Still listening, in spite of that slip.
"'Whenever'?" he prompts, once he draws focus back up to Bruce's eyes.
"We're not gonna let it," he says, quietly. Whatever it is.
It's not that simple. They would not be standing here, like this, after that, if all that was necessary was a hopeful attitude, but it's not nothing. He (gently) squeezes Bruce's arm, as if that alone could articulate and communicate something better than words might.
On account of he doesn't know how to say that he's not murderously angry at Bruce over the prospect of his wife dying from some tactical mistake. That, altogether, feels too large and unwieldy a thing to have a complex feeling about just yet. Still listening, in spite of that slip.
"'Whenever'?" he prompts, once he draws focus back up to Bruce's eyes.
Edited 2021-03-27 01:34 (UTC)
Clark's hands are by now back to a more human temperature as they allow Bruce out of arm's range. A touch in return is enough, momentously enough, to quiet the rising anxiety of some kind of split between them. A small thing, given the staggering nature of prophetic dreams and their implications, but inevitable. He knows, intellectually, it would take more. They've been through more.
(Lois, unrecognisable and destroyed, collapsed to black bones and papery ash. And Clark, who knows grief, as susceptible to its influence as if he didn't.)
He follows. He insists on collecting the kit and on helping, I got it, what with Bruce being down a hand. Everything he knows about administering medical care is X-ray related intuition and being around Bruce long enough by now to become familiar, and so if he is trying to make himself feel better about the situation at all, it at least isn't to Bruce's physical detriment.
"What did you want to show me?", mid-action.
(Lois, unrecognisable and destroyed, collapsed to black bones and papery ash. And Clark, who knows grief, as susceptible to its influence as if he didn't.)
He follows. He insists on collecting the kit and on helping, I got it, what with Bruce being down a hand. Everything he knows about administering medical care is X-ray related intuition and being around Bruce long enough by now to become familiar, and so if he is trying to make himself feel better about the situation at all, it at least isn't to Bruce's physical detriment.
"What did you want to show me?", mid-action.
Clark trades medical kit for book. Bruce's hand will need ice, some kind of NSAID, but he's done his bit, careful and particular.
Now, his attention turns to pages, pausing over the first drawing before he begins leafing through. The cast of characters, expanding, diminishing. His presence, and his absence. The blasted landscape, worse than he'd previously imagined the world looking like under Darkseid's influence. Parademons like locusts, stripping down cities. The dates, the notes. Once he stops seeig and starts reading, he can kind of imagine it more like a branching tree, but with pieces missing.
He spends the time, absorbing it all, expression serious. Like he wants to share this, wants to stand where Bruce is standing, where Vic is standing. It has occurred to him he could feel a way about Bruce keeping this from him, but what's the point, when he can understand why?
He starts from the beginning with better context, but doesn't get all the way back to the end again before commenting.
"A fixed point," Clark says. "Darkseid, on earth." Lois, dead. Clark, taken. "And then variations. Even if they look similar, they're not set in stone."
Now, his attention turns to pages, pausing over the first drawing before he begins leafing through. The cast of characters, expanding, diminishing. His presence, and his absence. The blasted landscape, worse than he'd previously imagined the world looking like under Darkseid's influence. Parademons like locusts, stripping down cities. The dates, the notes. Once he stops seeig and starts reading, he can kind of imagine it more like a branching tree, but with pieces missing.
He spends the time, absorbing it all, expression serious. Like he wants to share this, wants to stand where Bruce is standing, where Vic is standing. It has occurred to him he could feel a way about Bruce keeping this from him, but what's the point, when he can understand why?
He starts from the beginning with better context, but doesn't get all the way back to the end again before commenting.
"A fixed point," Clark says. "Darkseid, on earth." Lois, dead. Clark, taken. "And then variations. Even if they look similar, they're not set in stone."
Clark looks up, an open kind of puzzlement at the proposition that these dreams mean nothing, that they aren't authentic views of a possible and disastrous future. He suppposes he hadn't come down on either side until viewing Vic's notes solidified them one way or another, along with the a premonition of Barry Allen, and if he has to think about it—
Sure, coincidence, let's try that on for size. Vic could have seen all kinds of things. Bruce could be operating beneath some subconscious aftereffect if his steel trap of a brain had ever seen Barry Allen before and noticed something different about him, if the substance of that dream had only materialised after the fact which leads to the conclusion that Bruce is unstable. An unreliable narrator.
Clark offers an alternative. "Maybe it's sabotage," he says, book open and neglected in his hand. "External psychic influence, a campaign. You brought us altogether, maybe something out there thinks they could drive us all apart with enough—of this."
He closes the book. "I think you'd know," quietly.
Sure, coincidence, let's try that on for size. Vic could have seen all kinds of things. Bruce could be operating beneath some subconscious aftereffect if his steel trap of a brain had ever seen Barry Allen before and noticed something different about him, if the substance of that dream had only materialised after the fact which leads to the conclusion that Bruce is unstable. An unreliable narrator.
Clark offers an alternative. "Maybe it's sabotage," he says, book open and neglected in his hand. "External psychic influence, a campaign. You brought us altogether, maybe something out there thinks they could drive us all apart with enough—of this."
He closes the book. "I think you'd know," quietly.
"I don't know."
The book is set aside, focus forwards, now. He believes Bruce, that he's not afraid of him, and the summoning of the fact that it has to be said prickles cold over his heart, but it's part of the deal. Whatever their deal is.
"I'm sorry you are," Clark adds. You don't deserve it. Like Bruce Wayne needs encouragement to place the world on his shoulders. "And if I could take it away, I would. But if there is anyone on this whole world who could do something good with it, whatever it might be, whatever it means, it's you."
Faith is a two-way street. One of those simple concepts that a scared and isolated little boy in Kansas had a hard time with, the adult version not much better, not until lately.
The book is set aside, focus forwards, now. He believes Bruce, that he's not afraid of him, and the summoning of the fact that it has to be said prickles cold over his heart, but it's part of the deal. Whatever their deal is.
"I'm sorry you are," Clark adds. You don't deserve it. Like Bruce Wayne needs encouragement to place the world on his shoulders. "And if I could take it away, I would. But if there is anyone on this whole world who could do something good with it, whatever it might be, whatever it means, it's you."
Faith is a two-way street. One of those simple concepts that a scared and isolated little boy in Kansas had a hard time with, the adult version not much better, not until lately.
Edited 2021-03-27 06:38 (UTC)
Clark scoots nearer, having claimed a rolly chair to sit and read. Near enough that he can reach out and snag Bruce's unfucked hand, use it to lever himself closer. They've exchanged enough tenderness between wild swings on waking and now that he feels it won't be unwelcome.
"You," he says, "brought me back. After these dreams started."
And maybe they'd been dismissed as nightmares only at the time, but he doesn't think so. Is that what he looks like?, written beside his portrait. Bruce believed, either way, that regardless of the risk, Superman was better to have than have not. That whatever he'd seen in him, in those last moments of hardly knowing each other, and whatever came after, had been enough.
Believing right back feels natural. Necessary. He thinks about saying that, and then says instead, "You know I love you, right?"
"You," he says, "brought me back. After these dreams started."
And maybe they'd been dismissed as nightmares only at the time, but he doesn't think so. Is that what he looks like?, written beside his portrait. Bruce believed, either way, that regardless of the risk, Superman was better to have than have not. That whatever he'd seen in him, in those last moments of hardly knowing each other, and whatever came after, had been enough.
Believing right back feels natural. Necessary. He thinks about saying that, and then says instead, "You know I love you, right?"
"Good."
Vitals point to that it hadn't sunk in, but Clark's not about to make him out to be a liar. He's going to smile at him (dimmer, the occasion puts kind of a pall over the place, but no less warm), and then duck his head and bring Bruce's hand closer to his mouth so he can lay a kiss against his knuckles. And linger there, a short sigh felt against his skin, a flutter of eyelashes.
It should be crippling, this kind of pressure. Maybe later, if signs indicate that Bruce is receiving actionable intel on something inevitable, Clark will be appropriately scared shitless. Maybe. It takes a lot. (This is a lot.) But the way Bruce says that, of what he is, doesn't sound like expectation, but like fact.
But it's not just what Clark does or does not become. It's the thing that Bruce is hurtling to, supposedly, something terrible. Lois' death, unacceptable, and Bruce deserves better than being locked into some awful mistake, whether it's fear of his own making or something real.
"We'll figure it out," Clark says.
Vitals point to that it hadn't sunk in, but Clark's not about to make him out to be a liar. He's going to smile at him (dimmer, the occasion puts kind of a pall over the place, but no less warm), and then duck his head and bring Bruce's hand closer to his mouth so he can lay a kiss against his knuckles. And linger there, a short sigh felt against his skin, a flutter of eyelashes.
It should be crippling, this kind of pressure. Maybe later, if signs indicate that Bruce is receiving actionable intel on something inevitable, Clark will be appropriately scared shitless. Maybe. It takes a lot. (This is a lot.) But the way Bruce says that, of what he is, doesn't sound like expectation, but like fact.
But it's not just what Clark does or does not become. It's the thing that Bruce is hurtling to, supposedly, something terrible. Lois' death, unacceptable, and Bruce deserves better than being locked into some awful mistake, whether it's fear of his own making or something real.
"We'll figure it out," Clark says.
Edited 2021-03-27 09:30 (UTC)
Clark's arm curls loose around the back of Bruce's thighs. Easy to lean into his hip, and just stay there, both of them half held, in the odd silence of—all this. Bruce says he should have told him sooner while he's calculating the worth in telling Lois, and it feels like something he will inevitably do. It's less he doesn't want to distress her
which he doesn't
and more that he's not sure what she could do with that information, and she always wants to do something with information. But who knows. She's good at finding angles.
He doesn't verbalise an answer here, and now, and instead just hugs Bruce a little tighter before he lists backwards, looking back up at him. "How's sleep sound?" A subtle :/-ish smile, conscious that sleep probably sounds, like, bad, and rephrases; "Do you want to try?"
which he doesn't
and more that he's not sure what she could do with that information, and she always wants to do something with information. But who knows. She's good at finding angles.
He doesn't verbalise an answer here, and now, and instead just hugs Bruce a little tighter before he lists backwards, looking back up at him. "How's sleep sound?" A subtle :/-ish smile, conscious that sleep probably sounds, like, bad, and rephrases; "Do you want to try?"
There's a lot of thinking happening up there, probably, and Clark is content to sit patiently while it happens. Bruce's hand in his hair is nice, too.
Bruce is human and humans don't have prophetic dreams. It's a thought he turns over in his own mind, a concept smooth as a river stone and curious all the same. There was a good portion of Clark's childhood where he'd believed himself human-but-different, and maybe even long after, until he stepped foot inside the Kryptonian scout ship and spoke to the holographic memory of Jor-El and learned of his home planet, and maybe even after then, sometimes.
The concept of human-but-different feels easy. The hard line logic of his ancestry doesn't take away from it. He finds that he can believe that Bruce Wayne, human, has visions of the future. That such things can happen. Who's to say they don't?
If they're not sleeping, he thinks about options. Breakfast, obviously. A walk outside while the night is pulled back from the sky. Maybe something's on TV.
He smiles when Bruce asks that question, crinkled amusement at the corners of his eyes, and says, "No, I haven't. They open?"
Bruce is human and humans don't have prophetic dreams. It's a thought he turns over in his own mind, a concept smooth as a river stone and curious all the same. There was a good portion of Clark's childhood where he'd believed himself human-but-different, and maybe even long after, until he stepped foot inside the Kryptonian scout ship and spoke to the holographic memory of Jor-El and learned of his home planet, and maybe even after then, sometimes.
The concept of human-but-different feels easy. The hard line logic of his ancestry doesn't take away from it. He finds that he can believe that Bruce Wayne, human, has visions of the future. That such things can happen. Who's to say they don't?
If they're not sleeping, he thinks about options. Breakfast, obviously. A walk outside while the night is pulled back from the sky. Maybe something's on TV.
He smiles when Bruce asks that question, crinkled amusement at the corners of his eyes, and says, "No, I haven't. They open?"
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