Hartley Rathaway | Pied Piper (
hypnoticsong) wrote2013-05-20 04:33 pm
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The doctors would keep the amnesiac Dick Grayson another day for observation but aside from still not remembering his identity, his brainscans were good so they eventually released him into Hartley's care. He was the only visitor the man had received and no one had thus far reported a man matching Dick's description missing unfortunately.
So as they stood there outside the lobby of the ER, the former Rogue found himself hesitating. What now? He couldn't just take the man home like he was a stray. That would be both presumptions and just a little bit creepy.
"So...what now? Do you want to go find your car? Maybe we'll get lucky and there's some kind of identification in it? You didn't have a wallet on you, after all. I sometimes forget to grab mine too so maybe it's just waiting for you stuck between two seats?" He was babbling a little and he knew it. "Or we can go clothes."
Piper shot Dick a wry smile. The shirt he'd picked out for the man was probably a size too small and was distractingly tight around his shoulders. But at least he couldn't really go wrong with sweatpants, right?
So as they stood there outside the lobby of the ER, the former Rogue found himself hesitating. What now? He couldn't just take the man home like he was a stray. That would be both presumptions and just a little bit creepy.
"So...what now? Do you want to go find your car? Maybe we'll get lucky and there's some kind of identification in it? You didn't have a wallet on you, after all. I sometimes forget to grab mine too so maybe it's just waiting for you stuck between two seats?" He was babbling a little and he knew it. "Or we can go clothes."
Piper shot Dick a wry smile. The shirt he'd picked out for the man was probably a size too small and was distractingly tight around his shoulders. But at least he couldn't really go wrong with sweatpants, right?
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Here-and-now. Focus on the here-and-now, he told himself, and, by the time he slipped into the passenger seat, a 'light' version of his smile was back in his eyes.
"Thanks. For... having patience with me." Oh, yes, his thoughts not making sense reminded him that it was the case. Patience. "Doesn't seem to be something I do very well with."
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Hartley leaned over and looped one arm around Dick's shoulders and pulled him in for a hug. He leaned his head against the younger man's affectionately over the console separating their seats. "Luckily for you, I happen to have an over-abundance of patience." He teased affectionately before pulling away.
"And I meant it, you're doing great so far. Once we get back to your hotel room, I'm sure we'll find plenty of other things that will jog your memory."
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The emotional whiplash was draining, actually. He could keep going, would keep going, but he wasn't firing on all cylinders, and it was taking a tall.
Hartley's presence, his support, helped more than he had words to say. Or even think. And the gratitude was real.
After a few moments, Dick gently pulled back enough to look up into the blue eyes. Into the warmth and comfort there. And he smiled.
"So long as I don't start tripping over my feet and make a fool out of myself, I think I'll survive."
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"You're welcome and I know this is a lot but you'll get through it and I'll stick with you the whole way if you need me to."
For his own sanity's sake, Hartley finally let the hug drop and focused his attention on driving the car and not the warm look in the younger man's eyes.
"Somehow, I doubt that will be a problem with you, Dick. You're pretty light on your feet." Which was to say he was one of the most graceful people he'd ever clapped eyes on.
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When the redhead let go and turned ahead, he sat back and buckled up. Grinned slightly.
"Well. It kind of feels easier to be light, yes. I'm pretty sure I stumble, too." Without explosions and concussions. "Probably."
Yeah. Right.
"But, yeah, light. Almost like I should try to fly, which is silly, isn't it?"
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"Not really, I know a couple of people like that. One guy I know, James, he was actually an acrobat when he was younger. His family is apparently some famous tightrope and trapeze act called the Flying Jesses but James is actually afraid of heights. Sufficing to say, that went over well with his family."
Piper murmured a little sadly. James had confided that to him one night when he'd been especially drunk. His father had been a harsh man supposedly and despite James's fear of heights, he'd forced the young man up on the high wire anyway. It had been what drove the Trickster to invent his first pair of flying shoes actually.
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And then the easy, cheerful, eager voice that comes with remembering some things just clamped up, Dick freezing in the passenger seat, the flash of flight on the trapeze, the sure touch and hold of his mother's hands around his arms, the whistle of air against his ears as he rolls through it, one, two, three, four times... that memory flashed into watching them fall, kneeling before their still bodies, sprawled on the ground. There was a thin trickle of blood from the corner of his mom's mouth.
After maybe a full minute, he finally managed, "I'm not afraid of heights, even if some could say that the heights took my parents from me."
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Piper asked with a quiet laugh. A glance at Dick however struck him dumb. The dark-haired man had grown ashen and there was a decidedly glassy look in the man's eyes which he could only take to mean he was digging through something in his mind. A memory perhaps? Not a pleasant one if Hartley were to guess judging by the subtle twitch of grief that briefly flickered across the man's face.
"Oh...Dick. I'm so sorry." Sympathy touched Piper's face and the rude honking of the car behind suddenly reminded him that they were in fact in the middle of the road and the light had just gone green. He stomped on the accelerator a little harder than was necessary and headed down the street the next four blocks until they reached the coffee shop he'd told Dick about.
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He moved, for the first time since remembering ... that, to run a hand back through his hair. "Somebody frayed a rope before a show. No safety net. In Gotham. That's how I stayed there, I think. It... seems like it was a long time ago."
He couldn't say it was all right, because right now, it wasn't.
By the time the car stopped, he'd recovered some of his color, though not quite the smile. He stepped out of the car, rolling his shoulders a bit.
"Right. Coffee. Sorry for... dumping this out." He wasn't quite lost to memory enough to miss Hartley's reactions. "It all just hit me when I thought of circus and trapeze..."
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He put the car into park in front of the coffee shop that had a rainbow flag hanging proudly in the window and proclaimed itself a LGBT friendly establishment.
"Alright. I've got my laptop with me we'll hop on the wifi and figure out all we can about Dick Grayson from Gothan City, how about that?" Hartley suggested solicitously and grabbed his laptop bag from the back seat before crossing onto the sidewalk next to Dick. "Don't ever apologize, I'm just sorry that memory was so bittersweet."
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Thing is, though, after that memory, his eagerness to regain his memories was curbed, a little. He eyed the laptop, then managed a small smile.
"Thanks, but... how about we just get coffee and talk? I'm... we can probably do the research at the hotel? I'm just - I can use a bit of a break from remembering, if that's the kind of stuff it'll bring." He swallowed. "If that's all right."
It wasn't firm or commanding, of course. More like begging that, what, quarter of an hour of delay before he had to deal with more such flashbacks. Dick was just pretty much still reeling from this one. It hadn't been just visual remembering. The sense of loss had cut him deep, to the core. A breather was reasonable, right?
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"Of course," he reassured him and locked the laptop in the trunk before approaching Dick. "No more talk about memory stuff, I promise." Hartley smiled and reached out to grab Dick's hands so he could squeeze them comfortingly.
"I guess...we can talk about me instead while we drink our coffee."
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Then he hesitated for a moment, letting the smile deepen a little.
"Fine, but no talk about the things that make you worry, either. Mutual break."
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"Afternoon, Piper. You want your usual?"
"Yes, please." A curious glance was sent Dick's way. "You need a few minutes to decide what you want, Dick?"
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He skimmed over the displayed menu, then fixed the guy with those blue eyes and asked, as though this was the most natural thing for him to do (and not a front put up a few minutes after he'd been ready to fall apart), "do you have anything that's close to a double frappuchino that thinks 'decaf' is a dirty word?"
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Piper surreptitiously watched Dick as he studied the menu with those stunningly beautiful blue eyes.
The man behind the counter laughed boisterously when Dick put in his order and shot Piper a conspiratorial grin. "I like this new friend of yours, Piper. Cute and he has good taste."
Now Hartley's ears were starting to go pink.
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Enough that he smirked at the man behind the counter. "Thanks, but I thought you repeated yourself, you had it all at 'friend of Hartley's,' as far as the good taste part is concerned."
He spoke with a confidence as though he knew what he was talking about, rather than just improvising, except for the part where the affection was there, too.
Then he gave him a once over, and turned the smile back at the redhead beside him, suddenly acutely aware of the kiss from the parking lot... and how wanted more of the same was. "Anything you'll recommend to go with the coffee?"
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Piper looked decidedly chagrined by this little byplay of theirs. "Antonio, this is Dick. Dick, this is Antonio."
Still, the man began to work on their drinks and the espresso machine hissed and brewed under his careful hands.
"Everything is good here. Seriously. Everything." Piper murmured aside to Dick.
The man behind the counter finished making their drinks and slid them across the counter towards them.
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Hmm. Dick waited until Antonio's attention was on the preparation, before murmuring back to Hartley, "I can share... the muffin. If you want some."
... he was getting some flirting of his own, did that work?
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"I'm not a very big fan of chocolate though." Piper teased right back at him as the man behind the counter finished whipping up their drinks.
Piper moved automatically to pay for their purchase and shot Dick a questioning look. "Where would you like to sit?"
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He pointed to a table by the window. And he meant to pay, but, after a moment, opted for not getting into that discussion just now. He didn't seem to be impoverished, at least; when he had the full story, he was going to pay Hartley back. Or treat him, which sounded like the more fun idea.
He picked up the order, ready to go, if the redhead didn't object to his choice.
"And thanks. Mmm, coffee."
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He looked in the direction Dick indicated and smiled. Piper hadn't even thought about it or the fact that Dick might have wanted to pay. On a subconscious level, he thought of the other man as his responsibility.
The redhead laughed quietly at the somewhat blissed expression on Dick's face. "Wow, you really like coffee, huh?"
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Now that they were out of the hospital and not moving, it didn't take long for Dick to get a little restless. Not the kind that meant his attention was straying (it wasn't, his eyes were focused in a way that split between the man across from him and the coffee), just an excess of energy finding its way out. Tapping toes. Fingers playing with the handle of his mug. That kind of a thing.
And he looked up with a wide grin, a lot of the uncertainty that went with not knowing melting away because of the simplicity of the question. "Feels like it's finally possible to catch up with the world. Besides, this is awesome stuff!"
His eyes crinkled briefly in the direction of Antonio, in gratitude, then returned to Hartley. "It shows, huh?"
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Piper watched Dick's fidgeting with no small amount of amusement. Trickster was the same way sometimes. The man couldn't seem to sit still. Of course, unlike James, Hartley knew he could get away with something as daring as reaching across the table and laying his hand across Dick's to help stem the restless staccato of his fingers against the tabletop. Trickster was just as wrapped up in the pseudo-homophobia of so many of the other Rogues. He'd gotten better over the years as he'd matured but Piper still smarted on the inside just a little when he found himself at the center of those unpleasant digs and barbs against his sexuality. Only Rory and Cold had seemed disinterested in the Pied Piper's inclinations back in the day.
But that was the past, Hartley had to mentally remind himself. "I'm happy for you, Dick. At this rate I imagine we'll solve the mystery of your identity by the end of the day." Piper encouraged with a quiet laugh.
Mischief gleamed in Piper's eyes though his gaze didn't follow Dick's as it briefly wandered to Antonio who was all but beaming from behind his place at the counter. "Yes, it does show. But I'm sure Antonio will appreciate seeing how much you enjoy his coffee." Those fingers hadn't moved away from Dick's hand yet either.
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"Yeah, I'd love to try it, please." Dick's pulse sped up at the touch over his wrist, and he laid his palm flat on the table, smiling over at Hartley. Of course, that meant that his foot took up the tapping, but he kept his knee away from the table, so it shouldn't be too bad. His eyes crinkled a bit more. "Then I'll be sure to get some of those, next time."
It was - he felt good, here. With Hartley. And now with coffee. He felt like his whole body was thrumming with an easy energy that he could put to use. That he could make something good out of. And he wanted to, despite what the multiple IDs in his car said, or what anything else meant or could mean.
But the reminder of his past dialed down the brightness of his smile, the feeling of - well. Happiness. He took a long breath, eyes down on the table, then looked up at Hartley again.
"Yeah, probably. Though Gotham or not, I'll totally be coming over to visit. Whatever the reason I had for coming here in the first place, I've got a better one, to revisit."
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