Scarecrow X Reader - Tumblr Posts
đđđđđđđđđđ | professor!jonathan crane x batgirl!reader
đđđđđđđ | it can be difficult, living a double life: spending your days as a scholarship student at gotham university, and your nights as batgirl, the legendary heroine, fighting alongside batman and robin. though it proves to take a toll on you mentally and physically, flunked term papers and missed lectures will be the least of your problems when you encounter the scarecrow somewhere in the shadowy alleyways of gotham...
đđđđ đđđđđ | 7k
đđđđđđđđ | NONCON SMUT (18+ only; violent/rough sex, use of fear toxin, degradation, semi-public sex/exhibitionism, bondage), professor/student dynamic (therefore implied age gap), some angst and depiction of ptsd/aftermath, reader is dating robin/tim drake

âAnd so,â Professor Crane continued, looking towards the class from the board, chalk in hand, "this triggers the fear response, and all that comes with it. You're probably familiar with the symptoms of fear: heart rate increase, cold sweat, overall heightened arousal."
A few giggles could be heard at that, and he rolled his eyes.
"Not that sort of arousal, necessarily," he frowned.
Everyone else just brushed off the childish humor of the moment, but you narrowed your eyes, getting a sense that the word necessarily was doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.
He returned to his lecture, drawing lines in chalk over his crude diagram of the human brain, explaining how each area of the brain contributed to fear and the fight-or-flight response. As he spoke, you re-read the handout heâd given todayâ and you chewed on your lip absent-mindedly as you reviewed the bibliography.
"Dr. Crane?" you raised your hand, interrupting his lecture mid-sentence. "I had a question about some of the studies you reference here."
"Yes?" he returned, turning to face you with a slightly confused expression.
"Well you cite a paper out of Berkeley from 2002, to support the conclusion that exposure therapy is the best response to aggressive phobiasâ however, if you actually read the paperâ"
"I read the paper, Miss," he interrupted sternly.
"Then, if you actually understood the paper," you continued, a few students gasping and laughing softly at your insubordination, "then you would see that the conclusions indicate the perceived decrease in fear response comes at the expense of long-term stability. Don't you think that negates any positive implications?"
The silence in the room was tense: everyone was waiting for how he would respond to your critique. Instead, he just smiled at you slightly. "I think you may have more context for how research is conducted, and reevaluate your conclusions, when you get a chance to organize your own researchâ in about a decade."
"Actually, Professor, I'll be leading my own experiment this quarter," you corrected, just as he was about to turn away from you and keep lecturing. "I'm the recipient of the Wayne Enterprises Collegiate Scholarshipâ which pays for my education here and also comes with a fifty thousand dollar research grant."
âAh,â he said, bitterness dripping from his tone as he set his hands on the desk and leaned forward a bit. âMay I ask what topic you hope to explore with your research?â
âCrime,â you explained, âand criminal behavior.â
âHm,â he nodded, frowning slightly in an impressed sort of way, taking his weight off the desk. âAnd it doesnât bother you that youâre here studying psychology?â
You lowered your brow, confused by his question. âIâm sorry?â
âCriminology is a subfield of sociology, which is related to but distinct from psychology,â he explained.
âWould you recommend that I switch majors, Doctor?â you asked simply.
âWell, itâs no secret that youâve set the curve on our last two exams,â Dr. Crane smiled, tilting his head slightly. âSo, noâ I think Iâd rather keep you here.â
You straightened up slightly, taken aback by his wording.
âPlus, while youâre still in my department,â he continued, âI have a better chance of talking some sense into you.â
With that, he returned to teaching, and you noticed how the other students were watching you before you sighed and tried to listen to the rest of class.
~
You caught up with him on a long stretch of hallway, just as he stepped up to his office door. âProfessor!â you got his attention, and he turned to you with a slightly smug look as he held his hands together.
âAh, yes,â he greeted, âI see youâre here to apologize for how you spoke to me in class today?â
You knew he didnât actually expect that, he knew better after having you under him for the last two quartersâ um, so to speak. âJust as soon as you do,â you offered with a smirk in return, shifting your weight on your hip.
That was what moved your button-down slightly, and his eyes drifted down to your neckâ when they did, confusion and concern suddenly painted his expression. âMy,â he gasped a little, pulling on the collar of your shirt with one finger to expose a healing scrape on your chest; his fingertip brushed over your skin and the golden chain of your necklace, and you jumped away slightly. âHowâd you get that?â
âItâs nothingââ you blurted out, blinking quickly, âI tripped, on campus, actually.â
âThat wonky step up to the Commons?â he assumed. âIâve filed two complaints about that loose brickâŚâ
âYes,â you agreed quickly, smiling. âYeah, I wasnât looking where I was going, and I didnât catch myself well while holding my booksââ
âHm,â he nodded back, âthatâs a shame. A girl as smart as you, forgetting the Commons building doesnât have brick stepsâ or steps at all, in fact.â
You swallowed thickly, glancing away.Â
âYou sure were eager for an explanation, though,â he smiled. âHowâd you really get such a nasty scrape? It does look like concrete, but Iâm guessing it didnât happen on campusââ
âItâs no matter,â you assured.
âIt wasnât that boyfriend of yours, was it?â he pressed. âMr. Drake, as I recall?â
âWhaâ no!â you gasped.
âHeâs not your boyfriend?â
âWell, he is,â you explained, âbut he didnâtââ
âYou know you can tell me anything, right?â Crane offered, lowering his voice slightly. Â
âOf course,â you sighed, âbut thereâs nothing to tell. Things are fine with Tim, I promise.âÂ
âHe shared your interest in criminal studies, didnât he?â Professor Crane recalled. âClearly, he didnât share your scholarly aptitude, though, seeing as heâs dropped out.â
âH-he was smart enough,â you justified, âhe left because of stress.â
âAh,â the Professor nodded, âand he doesnât take that stress out on you at all?â
âCâmon, Professor, Timâs a good person,â you promised.
âIâm inclined to agree,â Crane replied, âbut itâs the ones that act the kindest that have the most to hide, isnât it?â
You knew there was another meaning to that statement, but there were so many possibilities that you couldnât settle on one.
âYou understand that if I suspect anything, Iâm required to alert our student wellness services,â he reminded you. âTheyâll have a counselor reach out to youââ
âListen, Dr. Craneâ I didnât come here to speak to you about my personal life,â you reminded him, âI wanted to ask you about my performance in the class so far, in your opinion.â
He paused before sighing in relent. âIâm a little concerned, actually,â he admitted, âabout your most recent paper.â
He pulled it from the folder under his arm and handed it back to youâ covered in red ink. You blinked at him, biting your lip in confusion. âI thought these wouldnât be returned untilââ
âI worked on yours first,â he explained quickly, even though that explanation only brought more questions than answers. âItâs still very strong, but itâs not what I expect from you at this point. It feels rushed.â
Rushedâ yeah, I remember this one. I wrote it all the night it was due because I spent the three days before recovering from that fight with Falconeâs thugs at the docksâ
âIâll let you rewrite it,â he offered, âif you can get it back to me before I return the rest of your classmatesâ work.â
You laughed a little, looking at the paper in front of you, and Crane knitted his brows together. âYou know, Professor, sometimes I canât tell if Iâm your favorite student, or your most hated.â
He smiled a little, glancing down briefly at the floor in a sort of self-effacing way. âI donât have favorites,â he assured, unconvincingly. âYouâre not my best student, or my worstâ youâre an entirely different kind of student. Youâre nothing like those other⌠juvenile, moronic co-eds looking in the exact wrong place for an easy A.â
Your eyes widened a little, seeing the way he let a little irritationâ disdain, reallyâ paint his tone. He snarled a bit as he spoke, his nostrils flaring; like he was holding it back, how much resentment he really had for your classmates. Â
As quickly as it came, he seemed to shake it off, and then he smiled again⌠but it was tight, and forced, you could see that just as easily. âYou challenge me,â he finished quickly. âI appreciate that as much as I detest it.â
You smiled back, somewhat genuinely despite the icky feeling that suddenly wiggled in your stomach. âI suppose I feel the same way,â you admitted.
He opened his mouth, hesitating slightly, before tilting his head the other way and starting over. âCould you come into my office for a minute?â he asked suddenly, a strange glimmer in his eyes behind the thin silver glasses. âIâd like to show you my latest workâ I think youâll find it quite intriguingâŚâ
He reached into his pocket, pulling out a ring of keys and started to unlock his office door, and you didnât feel too excellent about it.
Just then, a group of students walked by, and you heard them talking amongst each other as one looked at a text message on her phone. âOh my god,â one said as she explained to those around her, âmy friendâs at the bank right nowâ she said someoneâs holding up the placeâŚâ
âWhat?â another student asked, and you tilted your head a bit to hear them better.
âYeah, the one on Main and 57th? The police arenât there yetâ she said they have gunsâŚâÂ
Your heart started to race. Sounds like a job for Batgirl.
Crane was in his own world, though, about to open the door. âMaybe I can even convince you to change some of your conclusions about the study of fear,â he posited.
You stepped back, motivated to leave just as much by a strange suspicion of Professor Crane as the opportunity to stop the nearby bank robbery. âI-I have to go,â you said, before youâd thought of a good excuseâ and that hadnât gone well for you last time, but hopefully he wasnât going to quiz you on campus architecture again to trip you up.
He looked confused, a little sad even, as he turned to you again. âThis wonât take long,â he promised, âIâd just like to show youââ
âSorry,â you blurted out as you kept backing up, âI gotta⌠you know, um⌠buy tampons.â
Hoping something that awkward would get him to stop asking questions, you turned on your heel and darted off down the hall, looking for the best way off campus and to a secluded spot where you could pull your Batgirl get-up out of the false compartment in your bag and get to work.
~
âI donât like you going out there alone,â Bruce said flatly, not looking up from his hands clasped in his lap.
âWow, really?â you rolled your eyes, feigning surprise. âNews to me.â
âYouâre too young, and itâs dangerous,â he continued anyway.
âDoing all the greatest hits tonight, huh?â you smirked. âNext youâll say you need to keep up your identity better, study hard so no one suspects you and then finish it off with donât touch the Batmobile.â
He sighed and shook his head. âYou can touch it, you just canât drive it.â
âRight,â you agreed flatly, sighing as you adjusted in your spot on the couch. Youâd taken up shop here in the Wayne Manor private library: something about your interaction with Professor Crane yesterday made you want to study off-campus for the afternoonâŚ
You knew Bruce had a point about working aloneâ you didnât really want to be alone, you were certainly safer when you had Batman by your side. The problem was that you were too safe⌠Bruce protected you so well that he hindered you; youâd accused him of wanting you to just stay behind and patch him up after fights rather than actually helping. He denied it, obviously, but actions speak louder than wordsâ and there was such a difference in the way he treated you and Robin was obvious.
In fact, that itself had driven a wedge between you and your boyfriendâ one of many reasons Bruce had implored you both not to get involved in that way, but it was sort of unavoidable. You can only do such high intensity, high pressure work alongside someone for so long before the tension is too much to bearâŚÂ
Then again, that very tension that made your relationship with Tim threatened to break it, and you knew thatâ you felt that, even now, as he looked at you with a sympathetic sort of stare. You cleared your throat and focused on your book again.
âPlease donât go out without us again,â Tim askedâ softer, sweeter, lacking that father-figure-sternness Bruce was always trying to muster.
âI think the people in that bank are pretty happy that I did,â you replied with a snarky smile.
âWe were on our wayââ Bruce began.
âIt was a one man job!â you insisted.
âThere were seven men on that heist teamâ and two more parked outside,â Bruce explained, getting more frustrated as this discussion continued. âIt doesnât matter. We work as a team.â
âExcept when you go out alone,â you reminded him.
âIâve been doing this longer,â he explained, standing up, âIâve been doing it better, and Iâve been doing it on my own since you were still in high school.â
âThen why did you take me in?â you returned sharply, knitting your brows together in confusion and frustration. âWhy did you train me, why did you bring me here and tell me the truth?â
âBecause I saw your potential,â he answered as he began to walk away, ânot because youâre ready to save the whole fucking world by yourself.â
You shook your head in frustrationâ almost disbelief, except of course he would do thisâ as Bruce shut the door behind him. Conversation didnât go his way, he just leftâ that was normal. Ironic, for a man who interrogated criminals on the street almost daily.
âHeâs right,â Tim informed you after a pregnant pause, and you glared at him.
âWould you excuse me? I have to study,â you explained sharply as you motioned to the textbooks and notepads laid out on the table, as youâd had them before you were interrupted by these two, âbecause apparently the best thing Batgirl can do is not be Batgirl.â
âHey,â Tim sighed, âhe doesnât mean it like that⌠he just wants you to keep focusing on your studies, thatâs all.â
âI just think itâs funnyââ you began.
âI bet itâs not gonna be very funny,â Tim noticed with a frown.
ââ that Bruce thinks itâs so important that I keep my grades up so nobody knows what Iâm doing at nightâ so nobody knows that Iâm not getting any goddamn sleepâ but you got to drop out and that apparently wasnât going to make anybody suspicious?â you noticed. âYou know, I had a professor ask me about you todayâ wondering what was up with you leaving so suddenly. Why is nobody worried about that?â
âWe worry about you because we care about you,â he explained.
You tossed your books aside, standing up to face Tim properly. âThatâs bullshit,â you spat.
âYou think I donât care about you, seriously?â he asked.
âI know you care about me, but you donât respect me,â you explained, âneither of you do. You two go off and do what you want, youâd rather me be your nurse than actually be out thereâ when you know damn well that you need me!â
âI need you,â Tim promised, âin so many ways. Thatâs why I canât let anything happen to youââ
âWell, things need to happen to me sometimes! Isnât that what life is, things happening to you?!â you laughed exasperatedly. âI mean, shit, why do I go to school at all? Why donât you guys just lock me at the top of Wayne Tower and Iâll never ever leave and you can just climb up my hair when you wanna come visit!â
âChrist,â Tim groaned, âyou are so fucking ridiculous sometimesâ what are you trying to prove? Why do you need to be out there every night beating up bad guys, whether Bruce tells you to or not?â
Instead of answering that, you simply accused: âHe obviously likes you better than me.â
âIs that really what this is about? You want Bruce to like you?!â Tim scoffed. âAre you that shallow?â
âI want him to trust me!â you clarified. âI want him to understand what Iâm capable of!â
âYou know what youâre capable of,â he replied, grabbing your shoulders. âI know. Is that not enough?â
You let out a long breath, looking down at the floor.
âI love you,â Tim sighedâ but it didnât sound very sweet when he said it like that, it sounded sad.
âI love you too,â you replied instinctively, but it felt oddly hollow leaving your lips.
âPlease,â he breathed as he pressed his forehead to yours, âplease stay safe. Youâre stronger than me, you can take a lot more than I can.â
You were about to ask him what he meant by that, since you both knew he was physically stronger and more resilient than you, walking away from fights that couldâve put you in a stretcher. But before you could ask, he spoke again.
âMy heart can only take so much.â
But that only proved your point, though you didnât tell him out loud: that what him and Bruce wanted you to do had nothing to do with your strength, and everything to do with their weakness.
~
In your defense, you took the night off.
But the next night, you had to get out thereâ Bruce and Tim told you to stay behind so Batman and Robin could go save the day, and you? You were holding down the fort, keeping the couch warm. What a fucking waste; there was more evil in this city than two men could purgeâ there was more for you to do. As tempting as it was to meet them at the rendezvous location theyâd figured out and try to help clear out the gangsters there buying an illegal weapons shipment, you knew that would just lead to the same fight again. This time, the plan was to go out, kick some criminal ass, come back, and leave Bruce none the wiser.
You scanned police radios patiently, waiting for just the right thingâ small enough to fix on your own, big enough to matter. You wished, sometimes, that you had less to choose fromâŚ
Units respond, units respond â 10-79 reported at West Main and 88th.
Bomb threat. That felt manageable, and you were pretty handy with defusal in case that threat had any credibility. You turned off the radio and stood up, looking down over the city from your vantage point on a highrise fire escape. It was beautiful, in its grimy Gotham way: a light rainfall coated everything in a fuzzy static like old film; it made the concrete reflect the neon lights a little clearer, the whole skyline sort of slick and steamy. Â
Running and jumping to the next roof, you made a path to your destination and navigated the city unseen, like any good Bat-person would.
You were nearly there when you stopped on a roof above an abandoned manufacturing plantâ well, thatâs the thing, it wasnât as abandoned as you thought. There was a glass sunroof, and even though it was dark and rainy, the light inside brought your attention to a group of men inside. Not to profile or anything, but 4 bald guys with guns standing around is usually a good sign that someoneâs up to no goodâŚ
Trying to get a better look at what was going on inside, you carefully lifted one of the glass panels and slipped inside, sneaking around the metal scaffolding as the sound of the rain was muffled and replaced with distance, echoing voices.
You crouched in the rafters, watching with narrowed eyes as the group of men faced against a figure you couldnât make out with the shadows and pillars in the way.
âSo, are we good for this deal, or what?â the leader of the group asked.
A modulated, deeper voice answered: âThis is half of what we agreed.â
âMy team had some⌠road bumps, trying to bring this to you,â the man explained, stepping forward slightly. âWe lost some of the compound. This is what weâre offering, take it or leave it.â
âIâll take it,â the shadowy figure agreed. âHow much for whatâs left?â
âThe same price we discussed.â
âFor half the amount? How does that work?â
âItâs a flat rate,â the smugglerâ thatâs what he must have been, right?â explained with a smug smirk. âIn fact, I should charge you moreâ call it hazard pay, for what my men had to go through to get this here.â
âI see,â the deeper voice replied. âHow about this: I kill all of you, and take it.â
Your eyes widened; isnât this guy alone? Heâs sure got some ballsâŚ
The group of men paused before beginning to laugh. âYou?â the leader repeated. âThis skinny guy in the suit is gonna kill all of us?â
âI can do worse than thatâ Iâll make you beg for me to kill you.â
Feeling the tension of this discussion reach its breaking point, you realized you needed to intervene now: leaning over to make sure you had the right spot under you, you took the grappling hook off of your belt and pointed it down.
Firing it with a metallic whooshing sort of sound, the device grabbed one of the men and yanked him up into the shadows of the ceiling with you. Everyone on the ground looked up in shock and fear, pointing their guns aimlessly into the darkness. Before he could even really react to what had just occurred, you dropped the man back downâ onto one of his friends, of course, which incapacitated them both but saved him from a much worse fate than if heâd landed on that concrete warehouse floor.
âWhat the fuck?â the leader of the group yelled as he tried to fire indiscriminately up at youâ but you were already running along the steel beam, following one of the men as he tried to make a dash for the exit.
A blast from your long-distance taser gun brought him to the ground instantly, and as the last one left searched for the source of your attacks, you jumped down to the ground just behind him, landing in a crouched position. As soon as heâd turned around to face you, youâd grabbed a loose metal pipe from nearby and hit him over the head with an oddly-satisfying bong noise.
You knew the other man was still somewhere in the dark nearby, and you called out for him: âWhoever you are, stop hiding in the shadows: thatâs kinda my thing,â you informed him.
He stepped forward in the cool, gray light: a man in a torn and tattered suit, with a burlap mask that had massive stitches like scars. Batman had just warned you about this guy, what was his name again?
"My," he purred with pleasant shock, his voice clearly deepened electronically by something in that sack on his head. "If it isn't Batgirl. Nice outfit, very⌠shiny."
"Yours looks pretty rough," you noticed.
He shrugged. "It does the job."
You smiled back, remembering finally who you were dealing with. "Not with me. I'm not scared of you, Scarecrow."
"You will be," he promised.
You swung first, a roundhouse kick right at his head, but he ducked and came back up at youâ he tried to grab you but you slipped away.
Instead of going after you again, he ranâ grabbed one of the suitcases off of the palette nearby, whatever this âshipmentâ was, and bolted for the door into the alleyway. You almost laughed, impressed that he thought he could outrun you, but then again this was the guy who threatened to kill four armed men straight to their face.
You chased him right out the door, but as you dashed into the alley behind the manufacturing plantâ the one that faced the northern streetâ you learned a moment too late that he hadnât run at all, but was waiting for you there.
He sprayed something in your face, and you coughed as a cloud of vapor filled your lungs. You assumed it was pepper spray at first, but it didn't burnâ actually, it smelled a little sweet, sort of herbal. But the effects were almost instantaneous, the pounding in your chest and the sinking feeling in your gut, the world spinning around you.
The fear response: heart rate increase, cold sweat, overall heightened arousal.
Instantly you felt old memories rushing inâ awful, horrifying ones, and even worse than you remembered them. For a moment, there was fear with no real object, just the feeling⌠until he grabbed your face and forced you to look at him, at the wicked mask that seemed impossibly closeâ that seemed like it could swallow you whole. You screamed, trying to turn away or shut your eyes or something, but nothing assuaged the terror.
"Please," you sobbed. "Make it stop! Please!"
âNothing can stop it now,â his voice returnedâ even rougher and darker than before, the deep bass of it making you shiver. âThis is who you are. Give in to the fear.â
If nothing else, he had a point that fighting it wasnât proving very usefulâ but giving in meant letting the world collapse in on you, letting the darkness pull you back⌠the darkness youâd fought so hard to make into an ally was becoming your enemy again. Â
He grabbed your mask and tugged it away; even overwhelmed with primal terror, enough logic remained for you to reach up and try to cover your face.
But he simply grabbed your hands and shoved them away. You heard a laugh behind that horrible mask, just before he suddenly took it off.
The toxin changed his face, tooâ his smile was wider and his teeth sharper, his eyes totally blackâ and you couldn't recognize him at first. Only when he addressed you by name did you finally put it together; "Professor Crane?" you realized with a horrified gasp.
"I imagine you haven't finished rewriting that paper yet?"
"Oh god," you sobbed, "youâ you'reâ how can you do this?"
You struggled against him again, but he held you back effortlessly. âI said I liked you because youâre a challenge,â he remembered with a laugh. âBut out here, youâre no challenge at all. Just a stupid little girl in a mask.â
He slapped you hard across the face, making you stumble even more as you lost your balance, colliding with the damp black asphalt.
He descended onto you, turning you on your back when you tried to hide your face in your arm as an escape from the terrifying visions. âIâve been waiting for a chance to put you in your place,â he admitted with a growl as he started to pull your armored clothes off of you roughly. âYou act a little too fearless for my liking⌠good to know itâs all an act.â
You cried, shaking and flailing beneath him, but you couldnât actually put up a fight like thisâ the darkness throbbed around you, shadows reaching out to pull you into their abyss. âPlease,â you begged again, âno! Stop, please!â
You werenât even sure yourself if you were talking to him or to the hallucinated, anthropomorphized energy in the dark, but neither stopped. He struggled at times to get your clothes off, they werenât exactly designed to come off quickly but you shuddered violently from the cool night air when your chest was exposed. You heard a deep growl from him, and you whimpered loudly as his hands ran over your skin. âWhat are you so scared of?â he asked, sounding amusedâ but in your mind, those hands were claws that could shred you to pieces at any moment, and you breathed so fast that your chest just spasmed and quaked. âI think youâve been needing this for a whileâŚâ
He roughly turned you onto your stomach, face down against the street, and started to tug down your pants. You were too scared to even beg him to stop, to try to bargain or reason with himâ you just shuddered and cried, hiding your face and hoping for relief from the dread.
He smacked you on your bare ass, once it was exposed, and chuckled to himself at your whine in response. The next thing you heard was the sound of a belt opening, a zipper unzippedâŚ
Was it the toxin that made you afraid he would rip you in half, when he pressed his erection against your thigh? Or was that just common sense?
You grimaced when you heard him spit into his hand, but it fell into a whining cry as he pushed his tip against your opening. With your pants only down to your knees, you couldnât even spread your legs at all, making you feel even more like there was no chance he could fit. The sick, anxious fear felt a little different nowâ maybe not as strong, but mostly just something new⌠something deeper and subtler and heavier. It wasnât visions of monsters or memories of suffering, it was just this inevitable violation and the sureness that you were completely helpless.
He pushed his hips forward sharply, making you scream out and instantly reach back to try to grab his hips and push them away. He ignored it and kept going forward with a low groan. âMm, you can take it,â he promised gruffly. âFucking take it.â
You cried as he put a hand on your shoulders, keeping you pressed down painfully into the ground, as he slid the rest of the way in.
It stung, it stretched you in an awful way and went far too deep⌠but you were wet, you could feel it. Overall heightened arousal⌠not that sort of arousal, necessarily. He obviously noticed as well, growling a bit. âYou like this, hm?â he accused.
âN-no,â you managed to slur, but it was hard to even breathe with his weight pressing you down. You pushed back harder against his thighs through his undone trousers, but he growled and grab your hand to pin it down above your head. He brought the other up beside it, and quickly pulled his belt out from the loops to tie around your wrists. âProfessor,â you pleaded under your breath, feeling your warm tears mix with the cold rain on the ground.
But he was already inside you, it was too late for thatâ and with your hands conveniently out of the way, he breathed heavy as he started to pull back and shove back in.
There was no build-up after that, he just fucked you as hard and fast as he wanted with no regard for how you cried and struggled under him. He grabbed your hair and forced your head back awkwardly as you sobbed.
âSay my name,â he ordered, apparently irritated by the title of âProfessorâ â but you didnât know for sure if he wanted to be addressed as Jonathan or Scarecrow, and you feared the consequences if you chose incorrectly. Â
Still, you blurted out the first thing that came to mind: âJ-Jonathan,â you spat out hoarsely, and he grinned happily before dropping you back onto the ground. You struggled against the belt around your wristsâ not actually expecting to get out of it, and not having any plan if you did, just mainly out of instinct. All it did was dig the sharp edge of the leather into your skin, making you cry harder.
It rocked you back and forth on the ground, those rough thrustsâ the friction inside you was hot and fast, and each time he slammed all the way in, you heard the clapping of skin on skin and felt his tip ram against the deepest places inside you. You didnât even realize it was possible to be bruised inside like that, but you knew you would be by the end of this.
He didnât slow down, really, but he changed his rhythm slightly and found an angle to go even just a bit deeper into you, until you whined pathetically with every pump into you. It seemed like the toxin was wearing off, in that you werenât seeing things anymore, but there was still obviously a sick feeling in your stomach, and an unreliable beating in your chest, and a deep throbbing in your ears.
âYouâre getting even wetter,â he noticed with a low chuckle, and you whimpered as you hoped not to have to acknowledge that. âFucking soaking meâ poor girl, I donât think you can help itâŚâ
At least it made this hurt a little less, but no amount of wetness could prevent him from holding your hips painfully tight and fucking you so forcefully it seemed hateful. You whined loudly with every movement, fingers curling into shaky fists even when it was useless with his belt restraining you.
When you turned your face to the side, you saw figures at the other end of the alleyâ not hallucinations, nothing scary, just passersby on the streetâ and you reached out for them instinctively as hope flooded your chest. Blinking the tears from your eyes, you could see them clearer: a man and woman, older, well-dressed. âP-please,â you croaked out in a broken voice, âplease, help meâ call the policeââ
They heard you, and they turned and looked at you, only to grimace and turn away; the man pulled his date closer, shuffling her away with him as they kept walking. You whimpered pathetically, and Crane laughed above you. âThatâs Gotham for you,â he mused. âNo one wants to get involved. These are the people Batgirl wants to save?â
They werenât the only ones who saw, either; later, a small crowd of young men in bandanas and baggy pants passed byâ some of them looked young enough to still be in high school. You prayed to anything that would listen that they would move along without noticing, but one of them saw and pointed at you two with a scoffing laugh. Feeling as if you could throw up, you shut your eyes tight and heard the chorus of jeers as they realized what they were seeing. They laughed and hollered; what the fuck, dude! and ohh shit and hey, sheâs pretty hot declared in juvenile voices between raunchy chuckles. You saw flashes of light when you blinked your eyesâ were they taking pictures of this with their phones? You wondered if Jonathan would be forced to stop them, if he was concerned about evidence, but he didnât react at all⌠he didnât even slow down.
Once theyâd gotten an eyeful and the sight had lost its shock, they wandered awayâ you could still hear their voices echoing around the buildings for a moment until it all faded in with the ambient sounds of the city: sirens, horns, footsteps, and that perpetual Gotham drizzle.
âI can feel it,â he whispered to you suddenly, âit keeps squeezing me. Such a needy fucking cunt.â
You didnât know if the âcuntâ was referring to your anatomy or to you as a person, and either option made your throat a little dryâ but dryness was the least of your problems between your legs, in fact you were pretty sure you were dripping now, you could feel how slippery and sticky youâd become. Your thighs were coated, it was even running down over your swelling and neglected clit.
He lowered himself a bit, resting his arms beside your head and breathing close to your ear. He even brushed some of your hair out of the way with his hand, wanting to get a better look at your face, and you shut your eyes.
Increasingly loud groans and sighs above you made you realize what was about to happen, just as much as the throbbing feeling inside you.
âF-fuck,â he let out in a scratchy voice. âFuck!â
You whimpered yourself just as you heard him choke out a sort of high-pitched, shaky moan, and his thrusts went from erratic and desperate to slower and uneven. He twitched inside you, and you felt the flood of heat in impossible contrast to the cold ground under you.
âGodâŚâ he groaned, his hand on your shoulder tightening and digging a little too deep into your skin. Then he laughed a little as he finally came to a stopâ breathless, light, almost making him sound impressed. With you or himself, itâs hard to say; it sounded like a laugh of relief.
A lump formed in your throat as you considered what you were supposed to do nowâ heâd just come inside you, raw, and it made your stomach sink (but it made your walls clench unexpectedly, too). As he carefully pulled out, you whimpered at the way it reawakened the sting of his first entranceâ especially when he first pushed inside. He sighed heavily when he finally got himself out of you completely, and then his handsâ hot, a little clammy, and strongâ came into view to free your aching wrists from his belt. Â
He stood up over you, and you heard him readjust his trousers before zipping them up and putting back on his belt. âWas it good for you?â he asked with a quiet, but smug, chuckle.
Bringing your hands nearer to press against the ground, you tried to lift yourself up on shaking arms. When your torso was only a few inches off the pavement, Jonathan put his polished shoe on your back between your shoulder blades and pushed you back down. You whimpered as he looked down at you, tilting his head while he admired your helpless form.
âStay down,â he ordered.
Finally taking his foot off of you, he picked his mask up from the ground, sighing as he shook some of the raindrops off of it and put it back on.
âWell,â he began with a sigh, his voice modulated by the sack over his head again, âIâll see you in class. I look forward to seeing what you do with that paper.â
You didnât watch him leave; you just heard the warehouse door shut again. Your eyes were looking blankly forward, blinking away stinging tears, looking at the way the neon lights of the buildings across the street reflected in the puddles on the ground.
~
You jolted, much more than necessary, when someone knocked on the bathroom door; it made the water in your bath ripple, though the fluffy white surface of the bubbles was hardly disturbed. âCan I come in?â you heard Bruceâs voice.
âYeah,â you answered, but he stopped when he opened the door.
âYouâre not decent,â he noticed, turning away.
âThereâs bubbles everywhere, you canât see anything,â you sighed, and he stepped the rest of the way in. A pause that both of you pretended wasnât awkward occurred.
âTim told me that you came back roughed up,â he said eventually.
You said nothing.
âI told you not toââ he began.
âI know.âÂ
He sighed; you kept staring forward at the white tile wall in front of you. "What happened?" he asked simply.
âI know Tim told you alreadyâ two guys, probably Falconeâsâ they went at me in a tunnel by the Southside,â you explained with a sigh. âI was just following a stolen van, I didnât know who took itâ I wouldâve called you if I knew. I just wanted something I could handle on my own.â
You knew the story didnât add up; Falconeâs men wouldâve probably given you a black eye, maybe a broken nose, and bruises on your stomach from kicks and punches. Instead what you had were concrete scrapes on your cheek, fingerprint-sized bruises on your hips and thighs, and thin abrasions all around your wrists. Not to mention the jitters and auditory hallucinations from working Craneâs toxin out of your systemâ his voice, still in your ear: just a stupid little girl in a mask. Youâd stopped looking over your shoulder by now, but your heart still raced every time.
You knew the story didnât add up, but you knew it didnât matter, because Bruce was going to buy it. He wasnât ready to imagine the truth yet. This time, when you heard Craneâs voice, it wasnât a hallucination but a memory: you sure were eager for an explanation.
Bruce nodded and began to walk out of the bathroom. âAlright,â he said. âRest up.â
You scoffed to yourself as he left quietlyâ for a detective, he still had a few blindspots. Surely, we all do.
Left alone in the bathroom again, you were surrounded by silence once more. In silence, it was easier to hear his voice in your ear. Just a stupid little girl in a mask.
The shrill sound of your cell phone startled you, and you awkwardly leaned out of the tub just far enough to grab it off of the pile of towels you'd left it on.
"Hello?" you answered, irritation obvious in your tone.
âHello, maâam, this is Tracy from the Gotham University Student Wellness Center,â the sweet, lilting voice came from the other end of the line. âWe recently received notice of concern that you may be experiencing domestic violence. Weâd love for you to come into our office to discuss this and receive complementary counseling, whenâs a good time that we couldâ?â
You hung up and tossed the phone away, sinking down into the water.