#jazz casually mentioning the dungeon in her parents basement
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
obsessedwithstarwars · 2 years ago
Text
I love this SO MUCH!!!
Friendly neighborhood vigilante. Chapter 18
BatmanxDP crossover. JasonxJazz
[Read on AO3] [Read on FF.net]
Based on this post
First chapter || << Previous chapter || Next chapter >>
---
“Are you still mad at me?”
Jason sighed. “I’m not mad.”
She didn’t like his answer, but contained herself. Like she did all the thousand times in the last hour.
“I promise I’m not mad.”
Her eyes were deep turquoise pools without end. He usually didn’t feel analyzed when she looked at him, she was very firm on never using her skills on him despite joking about not being a good doctor; but now he could almost feel her poke around in his head. He didn’t like it.
“I was mad, but I‘m not anymore. Promise.”
She liked that answer even less than the other one. “I’m sorry.”
She was being honest. Like she had been the first thousand times she apologized.
It wasn’t about being sorry or being mad with her. It was just—
“I shouldn’t have said yes without asking.”
He stopped walking, took a deep breath and turned to look at his girlfriend. She was twisting the hem of her blouse, her bottom lip between her teeth, her eyebrows furrowed. He had no doubt that Jazz was sorry about making that deal with Bruce the previous day, but it didn’t mean that her actions didn’t hurt.
He ignored the pinch in his chest.
Jazz was not like his family, he tried to remind himself once more. She didn’t act because she thought she knew what he wanted better than him, or because she was so sure she was in the right that she wouldn’t waste time asking him if he agreed.
The moment Bruce was out of that window she looked at him with wide eyes. “I fucked up,” she had said without hesitation, throwing him off the spiraling thoughts of betrayal.
How he was feeling was probably written in his face, he had no doubt. Sure, the Pit wasn’t clouding his thoughts — and it hasn’t done so in a while, not even when he thought that Jazz had used him as a guinea pig with the Lazarus Waters — but even with a clear head he was still not okay.
They had talked. For hours.
Figures that his first real argument with his girlfriend would be Bruce’s fault — he was not counting the whole drama of that week as a “couple’s argument".
Jazz's usual ramblings, which in any other situation would be endearing, was then grating to his ears. Excuse after excuse, she kept explaining, or trying to, that she thought he needed to go to that dinner. That his problems with Bruce, while valid, shouldn’t deny him a relationship with the others. That she would be there and could act as a shield—
He had to stop her right there.
It was an awful lot of assumptions, he told her. She didn’t even know about his past, he growled.
That made her stop. “You are right, I don’t. I wish to know, when you want to tell me. I want to know everything about you.” She finally looked him in the eyes properly. “But I still think that deep inside you want to go to the dinner.”
He wanted to go. He wanted to see Alfred and see his second childhood home (the nicer one) and meet the new people in the family.
She knew he wanted to go, because she was one of the few people in the world that could see past his tough guy exterior and actually made an effort to see what was inside.
Still, he would like it if next time, his girlfriend didn’t make a decision for him. He told her so and the argument ended in a better tone, with a hug and soft kiss goodnight.
Why was Jazz insisting again, you ask?
“You shouldn’t have, no. But you apologized and I think I’ve told you to not apologize if nobody was hurt. I’m fine. Shall we go to that damn dinner?” He gestured towards the elevator, and of course Jazz didn’t move.
She stopped biting her lip, but her hands kept torturing the hem of her blouse.
“You don’t look fine.”
Okay. Not only were they going to that stupid dinner because of her, but they were going to be late because of her as well.
He sighed, rubbing his face.
“Well I’m perfectly okay. Can we please get moving?”
Jazz frowned, like he just kicked a puppy or something.
“Danny always—”
“Well I’m not Danny!”
The silence was only broken by the echo of his shout in the empty hallway. It was only then that he noticed he was breathing heavily.
Jason stopped, straightened his back and took a deep breath. Only then he looked back at Jazz, finding those hurt eyes that he had only seen back at his other safehouse, when he accused her of so many horrible things.
The image of a bruised wrist passed behind his eyes.
He was not his father. Either of them.
“Listen—”
“I’m—”
Both stopped talking, looking at each other in a tense silence.
When she didn’t say anything else, he continued. “I’m not your brother, Jazz. I understand that you feel sorry and I understand why you jumped like that. Yes, I’m upset, but I just— I don’t need a talk about feelings right now, ok?”
She processed his words for a moment.
“You need time.” It wasn’t a question.
“I— Yes.”
She tilted her head. “Time away from ‘us’?”
“What? No!” What the actual fuck? “No, I just got you back, why would I want to be apart from you?”
Jazz’s cheeks tinted a bit red just as she looked down at her hands, finally letting go of the piece of clothing.
“Just wanted to check,” she said with a small shrug, still looking down. “Didn’t want to assume things.”
This made him chuckle.
“You are silly.”
At least she was smiling when she looked up at him. “Can I hug you?”
Instead of an answer, Jason walked towards her and pulled her into his chest, easily circling his arms around her body. It was comfortable and it felt right, having her so close. He kissed the top of her head, breathing in her shampoo.
“We cool?” She asked against his chest.
He nodded, even if she wouldn’t be able to see it. “We cool.”
By the time they got to the bike, all the bad feelings had been replaced with tender kisses. Jazz offered to bail on the dinner and blame it on her if necessary, but at that point Jason was so fed up with the stupid dinner he wanted to go out of spite.
The ride was uneventful, Jazz’s long dress pants and heeled sandals weren’t a problem to ride a motorbike.
They made the trip to the Manor in silence, Jason’s mind disconnected from the motions as familiar landscape passed by them at high speed. It has been a while since he climbed the hills towards Bristol, but he couldn’t remember if the last time was when he brought that first edition to Alfred so he knew he was alive, or if there was a more recent instance.
In any case, the familiar shape of Wayne Manor was impossible to miss, nor were the empty roads that were far from civilization and the common people living in the rest of the city.
Jason expected to feel rage, to feel dread, to feel the painful anticipation before facing something that you really don’t want to experience — but as troubling thoughts started to plague his mind, he felt strong but gentle arms tighten around his waist, not giving the thoughts enough time to settle in his mind.
That’s right, he wasn’t alone. He didn’t need to face things alone. Not anymore.
The silence was broken as he parked close to the door and both got out of the vehicle.
“It’s… big.”
He snorted at her comment. “Don’t let the opulence get to you.”
Jazz hummed in thought. “Oh it doesn’t. Is not my first time in a mansion this big.” She turned to look at him with a little smile. “I haven’t told you about the time we lived in a mansion?”
He chuckled as he stored the helmets away. “Sounds like a fun story. Wanna share with the class?”
Her eyes glazed over for a moment, and he knew she was considering if she needed to lie to him. It didn’t hurt that much, especially not now that he knew why she needed to measure her words.
“The GIW paid my parents an absurd amount of money in exchange of our house and all the ghost hunting technology. Danny was thrilled, of course, since he always wanted to be rich. We had our own butler and everything.” She sighed dramatically. “It ended quickly when Danny found out that what the GIW truly wanted was access to the portal to nuke the Ghost Zone. He barely stopped them in time and the day was saved once again.”
“Nuke the Ghost Zone?” He asked as they started walking towards the Manor. “Sounds dangerous.”
“Very. The Ghost Zone, or the Infinite Realms, are like… what was the word?” Jazz thought about it for a moment, one finger on her lips with smudged pale pink lipstick. Which reminded him to check that he didn’t have lipstick stains on his face. He would never live that down. “It is like… a mirror dimension of this one! Yes, that was the thing. Anyway, if that one is destroyed, this one goes as well.”
He lifted an eyebrow, stopping right at the front door. “You guys have dealt with crazy stuff, haven't you?”
Her smile was tired. “You have no idea.”
There was more she wanted to say, but both knew it wasn’t the moment or the place. There was so much pain, so many secrets, in her teal eyes that he wondered how he hadn’t noticed before. Had she been hiding all of that from him? Of course she had, she was good and hiding and lying. Jazz was burdened by secrets that weren’t her own and a past she couldn’t share.
Once again she reminded him so much of Dick, and how his brother was all smiles and circus tricks to distract you from the pain Jason could see in his eyes when Dick thought nobody was looking. He knew there were things his brother wasn’t telling him, and he never pressed. Everybody had their secrets. Even him. Even his girlfriend.
But, unlike with his brother, Jason wanted to know those secrets — not to make sure she was not a supervillain, but because he wanted to carry that burden with her. It hurt to see her in pain. He wanted to take away her sorrows so she didn’t have to look like this.
Jason cupped her face with one hand, for once not worrying about his calloused palm being rough on her soft skin. She leaned into the touch.
He put his other hand on her waist, leaning in for a last kiss. She eagerly placed her hands on his chest, responding to the kiss with a little smile against his lips. He felt her sigh and melt into his arms, all worrying thoughts escaping her mind this time.
He may not be able to take away all her sorrows, but he was happy to distract her from them for the moment.
When they parted, he saw a curtain quickly be closed in a nearby window.
He sighed, knowing that it was showtime.
“Ready?”
At her nod, he rang the bell.
Of course, the door was opened immediately. Alfred had been waiting behind the closed door, with half the family standing there, trying to not make it obvious they've been eavesdropping.
“Welcome,” the butler said with a smile. Jason answered with one of his own, happy to see the old man. “May I take your coats?”
Jazz hid her nervousness as she gave her denim jacket to the butler, softly introducing herself to him.
“Jason.”
He looked up, finding Bruce standing there with a stupid turtleneck and sensible jeans, selling the whole “dad” thing. He kept an open and non-aggressive stance, with a small smile. He even wore stupid superhero slippers.
“Bruce.”
Jazz came back to the tense silence, tapping him on the shoulder.
“Your jacket, dear?”
He looked away from Bruce and took off his jacket, deciding to not give it to the man to ruin this night for him and his girlfriend. Jazz deserved to have a good time, and he would not be the one that fucks this up for her.
“Jasmine—”
“Jazz is fine,” her smile was polite, although not as warm as the ones she gave him. “Thank you for inviting us.”
It was a charged sentence, of course, since Bruce never intended to actually personally invite anyone — he always sent Dick to mediate between them. And they only accepted to come after he fucked up so bad he had to make a deal to even start apologizing.
He knew. They knew. The others knew.
Jason snorted.
He loved his girlfriend to bits.
“So…”
Everyone turned to look at Dick, who was smiling in that specific way. The one where he was trying hard to become a distraction.
“Aren’t you going to introduce us?”
“She knows who you are.”
“Well, maybe she wants to have a more formal introduction, given the circumstances.”
“She is right here.”
Now everyone looked at Jazz, who didn’t seem amused at being talked over like she wasn’t there.
“Right. Okay.” Jason sighed dramatically and got ready for grating night. “Jazz, these are Dickolas, Timbit, and Bruce, who you have already met.” He vaguely made a gesture towards them. Tim was biting his lips, trying not to laugh. “This is Alfred,” he put a hand on his shoulder, smiling when the older man placed one of his gloved hands over his, “he taught me how to cook.”
Jazz’s eyes widened when she made the connection — right, he had scarcely talked about his childhood that dinner when they kissed for the first time.
“Pleased to make your acquaintance.” Alfred said with a slight bow.
She answered with one of her own. “The pleasure is all mine. Jason has talked a lot about you.”
He hadn’t, right? Now he couldn’t remember exactly how much he had told her.
To hide his blush, he continued. “And this is Cass.” He pointed at the silent and observant figure of Cassandra next to Bruce. “She is—”
“Black Bat.”
Cass smiled broadly at Jazz’s words, nodding and approaching her to sneak her arms around her before anybody could stop her. She pet Jazz’s long red hair a few times before letting her go.
“Welcome.” She said.
Jazz blinked in confusion for a moment before smiling back.
“Thanks!”
Both smiled at each other for a few moments, his girlfriend’s shoulders finally relaxing. She was nervous, he knew, and she was hiding it well. Did Cass notice that as well?
She was some of the few he interacted less with, and he didn’t know her as much as the others. From his investigation he knew who she was and where she came from, what she was capable of and why she didn’t kill; but he had never seen her without her suit, or from this close. Black Bat was a shadow, barely seen but always there.
But Cassandra was all smiles when she took Jazz’s hand in hers and pulled her further into the house with a skip in her step, visibly excited to meet the new person.
“The others are in the living room.” Alfred answered Jason’s unasked question. “Dinner will be served in an hour.”
With that, he disappeared through a door and went probably to the kitchen to finish preparing everything.
Right.
Dinner.
“Everything alright?” Tim’s question brought him back to the group already walking away from him. He rushed to Jazz’s side.
“Uh?” Jazz’s attention snapped back to Tim, her eyes had been fixed on a corner in the ceiling. “Sorry, can you repeat that?”
Tim glanced at Jason with a slight frown, silently asking if he knew what’s up. “You seem distracted.”
He hadn’t even finished his sentence and Jazz was already looking away, this time up the giant stairs that went to the east and west wings of the Manor. Her eyes on the door toward the East Wing, the Family Wing.
“Darling?” Jason gently touched her side.
“I’m…” Her eyes moved with intention, like they were following something running down the stairways and towards the hallway to the left. “Is just…”
When her eyes started to water, Jason pulled on her arm and made her stop. Something was up, he was sure of it.
“What’s wrong?”
“I’m sorry, I…” with her free hand she wiped the tears away. “It’s— This house has belonged to the family for generations, right?”
Everyone looked at Bruce, who tilted his head. “Yes. Why is that important?”
Ah, Bruce. Always demanding.
“Well, huh.” She sighed, wiping away more tears, careful to not smudge her eyeliner too much. “There’s no easy way to say this but… The place is haunted.”
As she said it, she glanced behind Bruce, narrowing her eyes. There was nothing there, of course. Nothing except—
“Ghosts?”
“Yeah, that’s what haunted means.”
Dick rolled his eyes at the answer. “I mean, are there ghosts here?”
Jason didn’t miss Tim’s nervous look at Bruce, or how the man looked around, wary.
“There are ghosts everywhere in this damn city.” She chuckled. “But this place feels like… You know when a cursed place feels wrong? Like you don’t need to know the backstory to know something bad happened there?”
Everyone tensed. Jazz wiped more tears.
“Well, this place is like that, but the opposite. So many lives, so many—” More tears flowed down her face, but she didn’t seem sad. She frowned like she was getting pretty annoyed. “Damn it!” She turned on her heels and glared at the empty stairs. “Yes, I can see you! And hear you! Stop making a show!”
Jason felt it. He didn’t know how, but he felt like something that was there had fled away at the woman’s words.
“Thank you!” She huffed, straightening her back and wiping her wet hands on the hem of her blouse. “So rude!” She shook her head in disbelief, finally turning back to them. “I’m sorry, what was I saying?”
Jason was the one that recovered first. Yes. His girlfriend could see ghosts. That was normal. Just one more thing to the list.
“What did you see?”
Did she see Bruce’s parents? They didn’t die in the Manor, but…
“I couldn’t say… Not every ghost maintains their form when they are created, and these didn’t.” She smiled, apologetic. “They were very chatty, though. I’m sorry.”
There was a moment of silence, broken when Tim clicked his tongue.
“Well, that’s surely something that happened.”
“Uh…”
“So my house is haunted?”
Jazz blinked. “You’ve never noticed? Have you never felt the protection magic around the house? Even mortals are capable of detecting ghost magic, especially as strong as this one is.”
Dick mouthed “ghost magic”, flabbergasted.
“No. I can’t say that I have.” Bruce answered slowly. “If I show you photos, could you identify the ghosts?”
Cass pulled the hand she was still holding and hugged Jazz close to her chest and away from Bruce. “No work talk.”
“Right, um,” he cleared his throat, suddenly very uncomfortable, “sorry about that. Tonight is supposed to be a normal family dinner.”
Jason wondered how many lectures he had gotten before they arrived. He still found it funny that his apology had been coached via comms — sad, but funny. It wasn’t surprising that the old man was incapable of offering an honest apology on his own.
They continued walking, Jazz now more present than before, offering casual explanations about what she was used to with ghosts, why she was crying — she laughed, saying that it was her body’s way of reacting to ghostly presence — and that she had been planning on setting up a protection spell but this was stronger than whatever she could do anyway.
Soon they were in the main living area, the voices of the others bouncing out of the door. Jason recognized the place — that’s where the gaming console was when he was little, and where Bruce usually sat to read with him after school and before patrol.
The memories weren’t as painful as he thought they would be. Sad, of course, given that those moments were from a life he couldn’t get back no matter how much he wished for it.
But the room wasn’t the same quiet haven he remembered. Someone was arguing loudly while someone else was laughing, and sounds coming from the TV, probably a video game, were blasting from speakers.
It was the same place, but at the same time it wasn’t.
Jazz didn’t draw attention to him when he picked her free hand and interlaced their fingers, she kept talking with Dick about something regarding her gymnastics class.
“Oh, hey!” Bernard, Tim’s boyfriend, was the first one that noticed them arrive. He stood up and walked towards Tim, extending his hand to shake Jazz’s. “Hello, I’m Bernard.”
She shook it, confused. “You are…?”
“Tim’s boyfriend.”
She finally made the connection, smiling. “Ah, I remember reading about you.”
“I hope not in those stupid tabloids.”
“That and when I looked up the Dyonysus cult.”
Bernard blushed deep red, quickly withdrawing his hand. “Listen—”
“Hey I’m not judging you. I wasn’t even looking for you,” she laughed. “I just did a research of all the occult stuff happening in Gotham before I moved here.”
“You must have been researching for weeks.” Blondie number two jumped over the sofa she was lounging on and shouldered Bernard out of the way. “Stephanie Brown.”
“Nice to meet you,” Jazz shook the offered hand. “Spoiler?” She asked for confirmation.
“Yup!” The woman beamed. “It’s so nice to have another girl around. Jason should have gotten braver and asked you out before.”
“Hey.”
Jazz looked uncomfortable for a second. “Things happen when they need to happen.” She looked at him, her eyes full of worry. “I— I haven’t told you yet, but I may have found out about you that night?”
This made him stop. “What?”
“Yeah.”
“And you still said yes?”
She blushed, looking away. “Yeah.”
He remembered her flirting back, how she blushed easier than usual, how she looked at him when he finally said the words. His speech had been pathetic and yet she had looked like he hung the moon and stars.
Had she known he was Red Hood then? And she said yes?
“You are weird.”
She chuckled, getting on the tip of her toes to kiss him on the cheek, the hand entwined with his squeezing for a second.
Someone clicked their tongue, the sound clearly displeased. Jazz jumped back to put a bit of space between them, suddenly very aware of their audience.
“Dami, be nice.” Dick said in a tired tone.
“I just don’t see what’s so interesting about her. Is a civilian who just happens to be involved in the supernatural.”
“She can see ghosts!”
“No way!” The last person to introduce themselves, Duke, stood up from where he had been sitting on the floor, leaving his controller aside. “You can see them too?”
“Ah, metahuman, right?” Jazz’s smile was wide. “Signal.”
“Yeah!”
“And you can see ghosts?”
“I can see… well, I call it ‘ghost vision’ but maybe it is not the same thing as you do,” he chuckled, quickly shaking her hand. “I can see auras and a bit on how they move in the past and in the future.”
“You can see the future???”
Aaaaand they lost her. Jazz’s eyes glowed with excitement, ditching Jason to follow Duke to the sofa and sit down to ask him a myriad of questions. She tried not to be too invasive, but he knew she would start asking about his childhood soon.
He sat down next to her, not acknowledging the others as they stood around either on the other sofas, the loveseat or on the floor. They were very obviously looking at him like he was an animal in a zoo, waiting, comparing.
This was exactly what sickened about coming to the Manor — they weren’t looking at him when he was there. Each had a mental image of “Jason Todd” and struggled to match it with the person he actually was. Or, in the case of Bruce, he was still trying to find the little boy that died.
The walls started to feel too narrow, the room too small for him, when he felt a soft touch on the back of his hand. He looked up, finding the smiling face of Jazz, his vision clearing around her.
“Right, Jay?”
He tried to mask his confusion. “About what.”
He saw the worry flash behind her eyes, but she quickly moved on. “About when I told you I saw your suit and I had to pretend I didn’t see anything.”
Oh right. When she drilled onto him about how to properly hide his stuff and how obvious he was.
“It’s not my fault you broke into a poor guy’s apartment late at night. You pervert.”
Her face went red immediately. “I— I didn’t—” She narrowed her eyes at him. “I’m not the scoundrel that likes to break in through the window, like other people.”
“And whose fault is it? You refuse to get that damn lock.”
“I will do it when I do it!”
It was adorable how frustrated she got with the teasing. He couldn’t stop the smile that stretched his lips.
He didn’t care who was watching anymore, or if the others were trying to walk on eggshells around him. Jazz reminded him that it was okay to just be and he knew she would be in his corner if it came to it.
---
First chapter || << Previous chapter || Next chapter >>
Back to Main Archive
Back to Danny Phantom Archive
Do you like my stuff? Buy me a Ko-fi!
206 notes · View notes