1) The following is a work of erotic fiction. Those under 18 (or whatever is the age of majority in your jurisdiction) should stop reading now.
2) This story contains characters and settings copyrighted by DC Comics. This story should be considered a parody of those characters and settings. It is also distributed free of charge and is a non-commercial enterprise; the author derives no profit from its distribution. No copyright infringement is intended.
3) I'm no continuity buff, so for simplicity's sake this story uses the TV show
Batman: the Animated Series
and its successors as its model, with bits and pieces picked up from the comics as I'm familiar with them. Please accept it as the best knowledge I had when the story was written. This caveat applies especially to Poison Ivy's menu of powers; these appear to have changed from treatment to treatment and over time, so I suppose the version I've given her is appropriate to some incarnation of the character.
4) Stories like this take time and effort to write. The chief reward an author receives for this labor is the knowledge that other people have found them good. If you enjoyed this story, or if you have constructive criticism, please drop the author and let him know. The more feedback I receive, the more likely it is I'll keep writing new stories.
* * * * *
Heroes are supposed to be lucky. It comes with the territory. What he couldn't figure out was, had he had two pieces of good luck that day, or three? He couldn't tell.
His first piece of good luck was that he noticed the drop at all. There were any number of reasons he should have missed it. One reason was anxiety. The breakout at Arkham a few days before had everyone worried. The whole crew of psychos— Two-Face, Killer Croc, the Ventriloquist, the Riddler, Harley Quinn, and Poison Ivy—had gotten out. Who knew what sort of horrors the city would endure with them all loose at once? Another reason was fatigue. Bruce, even more tightly wound than usual, had unleashed his pack. Bruce, Babs, Dick, and even Helena were all out on the streets, working alone; there was too much ground to cover to shrink their forces into pairs. That meant he, Tim Drake, was working without a net. In his opinion, he should have begun working solo a long time ago. Batgirl worked alone. Huntress worked alone. Now that he was a man—he'd just had his eighteenth birthday a few weeks past—he was entitled to work alone too.
I'm still called Robin, but I'm not a Boy Wonder any more.
His pleasure at finally being free of the older crimefighters' supervision quickly melted away: operating without backup was hard. He'd gotten a rumor from one of his sources—to be honest, his only source, a drunken ex-con he'd helped out once—that the Ventriloquist's gang meant to hit a particular jewelry store, sometime after two o'clock that very night. So he'd taken up a position across the street, on top of a commercial art gallery, and was patiently waiting for the string to make its move.
With all of his attention focused on the store and the alley next to it, there was no reason for him to have given the guy any thought, but a quick glance at him prompted a thoughtful double-take. This fellow had just rounded the corner and was walking nonchalantly up the street... but wasn't that nonchalance a trifle forced? The more Tim watched him, the more he felt sure something was up. You couldn't spend all that time with Bruce and not become attuned to the signs of someone acting out a role, however subtly. Sure enough, the guy was up to something. As he passed a trash bin, the open-topped kind, made of wire, he dipped into his pocket and threw an envelope in. Not an envelope for a letter, but a bigger one, for documents, rolled up. He hadn't stopped, fumbled around in his pockets, grabbed the envelope and tossed it in, as a normal person would do. He'd tried to hide it, as if his arms didn't know what the rest of his body was doing. That confirmed it; it had been a drop. He'd been lucky to notice it at all.
Robin, secure in the shadows, stared down at the trash bin, brows furrowed. What should he do? Go get the envelope, or wait to see who came to take it? Protocol was to wait, and then shadow the recipient; but a good tail needed two people to work it right, and he was alone. Also, his gut told him this had nothing to do with the jewelry heist. That envelope was too small to hold explosives or some other distraction. He couldn't follow the envelope and stop the robbery.
Crimefighters didn't have the luxury of indecision. Attaching a zip line, he jumped off the roof. He did a slow fall, reaching out and catching eaves, diverting some of his downward momentum into dips and darts to the side, landing on his feet on the pavement. The shock ran up his spine, and then was gone. It was a move any gymnast or stuntman would give eyeteeth to perform, but nothing special for Robin. He didn't even think about what he had just done as he smoothly approached the bin, grabbed the envelope, pulled on the zip line and snapped back into the sky as the line retracted. Tumbling to a crouch on the rooftop, he examined the envelope. From decision, to descent, to grab and return, fifteen seconds had elapsed.
The envelope was unmarked and unsealed. Reaching in, he pulled out a single sheet of paper. It had a single line of text, written in pen. It was just gibberish—an apparently random sequence of numbers and letters. He scowled; someone was playing games, and at the moment, he couldn't afford to join in. It was time for another one of Bruce's tricks. With a moment's effort, he hypnotized himself, as he had been trained to do. His face blank, he stared at the sheet for a few seconds before his conscious mind reasserted itself. Now, with a moment's effort, he'd be able to recall that string of characters until the day he died. He put the paper back in the envelope, crushed the envelope into a ball, and put in one of his utility belt's spare pockets to consider later. He returned to his stakeout of the jewelry store.
He didn't have long to wait. Maybe ten minutes later, two black sedans appeared in the empty street, rolled up next to the jewelry store, and parked, engines idling. Large men in trench coats came out and hustled around to the back of the store, out of sight.
Showtime
, thought Robin, as he rose to his feet. His attention focused on the events unfolding below him, there was no reason he should have caught the flicker of motion in his peripheral vision, but he did, his second piece of luck that day. Without thinking, he ducked, and the blow that should have knocked him flat only caught his shoulder. His side screaming in pain, he crumpled to the rooftop, turning his fall into a roll at the last second, coming up in a fighting stance.
There were two figures in the darkness, coming closer. One of them giggled, a high-pitched burst of laughter. "Got 'im, Red!"
The other figure's voice was low and sultry. "Get him again, Harl."
The two figures fanned out and moved closer, hemming him into the corner of the roof. Even before they emerged into the dim light cast by the streetlights below, he knew whom they were: Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy. This was bad, very bad. Two against one; they had the drop on him; and his shoulder still hurt.
Focus, man, focus. You can get through this. Just stay focused.
The mantra steadied his nerves. He backed away, slowly, watching them as they came near. They were both in costume: Harley in her clown suit, jester's cap, domino mask, and whiteface; Ivy in her slinky green leotard, complemented with long olive gloves and boots. Her outfit seemed an inky black in the twilight, as did her mane of red hair, which set off her pale white cleavage and legs.
Focus.
Harley had a big mallet in her hands, which he presumed she had mashed him with; Ivy's hands were cupped. She had something in her right hand, but he couldn't see what.
Seize the initiative.
"Hello, ladies!" he sang, his voice exuding a confidence he didn't feel. "You know, you could have turned yourselves in. You don't need me to escort you, but I'll be happy to oblige." He shifted his weight to the balls of his feet, ready to spring.
Harley growled and swung her mallet in a long arc, swooping from right to left. She wasn't a trained fighter, so she telegraphed the blow, but she still had the advantage of reach. Robin undulated backwards, the mallet sizzling past his gut, and then rocked forwards into combat position. "You'll have to do better than that..."
Normally, his lines had more zing, but he was too worried to crack wise. With his shoulder banged up, he couldn't drop to the street safely, at least not for a few minutes. If he tried to escape on a zip line, he'd need to pull it out, aim properly, fire, wait for the bolt to strike home, then pull the release; they'd be all over him long before he was done. He couldn't go down, he couldn't go up, he couldn't go forward, and in a moment he wouldn't be able to go backwards either. He was only a few paces from the building's side. He needed an advantage.
"Believe it or not, we don't want to fight you, Boy Wonder," Ivy purred. Even as Robin bristled at the name, he felt a twinge. Somehow she could be sexy even in mid-battle. "Just give us our envelope, and we'll be on our way. You can take Arnold and his boys in. That'll keep the big man happy."
"Or we can give the robin a red breast!" burbled Harley, making short jabs with her mallet.
The envelope. That was his edge. "Oh, you want this?" he asked. His voice cracked a bit on "this".
Damn
.
Don't let them know you're not in control.
Reaching into his belt, he pulled out the crumpled envelope. "Then go get it!" He tossed it over the side of the building, aiming low so they couldn't grab it.
Ivy cursed and turned to the street; Harley, less calculating, gaped as the envelope went over. Robin seized the moment. Pulling his zip line from his belt, he turned and in one smooth motion aimed and fired at a tall building on the far side of the block. The bolt sped through the night. This time, though, his luck had run out. His shoulder, still weak, interfered with his aim, and the bolt missed its mark, falling uselessly to the street, embedding itself in nothing. Without an anchor, he couldn't pull himself out of here. He wasted no time cursing his fate; instead, he braced himself to leap across the gap he had been pushed to, to the next building. It was at least ten feet. It would have been a difficult feat, but not impossible, but he never found out if he could have made it. Harley, with a hiss of frustration, stepped forward and clubbed him on the back of the neck. He dropped like a stone and sprawled across the rooftop, unconscious.
* * * * *
Criminals didn't have the luxury of indecision either. "Harley!" Ivy snapped. "Take him to the car. Put him in the trunk. I'll join you in a moment."
"You're the boss!" If Harley had any doubts about this course of action, she didn't express them. Humming snatches of 'Turkey in the Straw', she grabbed Robin by the shoulders and dragged him to the fire escape.
Ivy planted the ironvine seed she'd been holding in a crevice by the side of the building. She'd planned to use it to incapacitate her masked opponent, but this would do. In a moment, it sprang up, growing in seconds to thirty feet in length. Gripping it, Ivy lithely rappelled down the side of the building, crossed the alley, and entered the street.
Where was that envelope?