Close to Home - chapter 17
Dec. 6th, 2009 11:21 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Kon lay on his back in bed, staring up at the scorch-marks on the ceiling over his bed from before he'd gotten his heat vision under control. He could hear everyone moving around downstairs.
Kon had not gotten enough sleep to deal with the teasing he was sure to get if he went downstairs. He'd spent half the night holding Tim's hand in the
By the time they got home, Lois had already sent off an article about the night's events - which meant that Kon was too late to stop her, even if she didn't still terrify him a little when she was mad. Martha had given up on him and Tim and finally dragged the whole story out of
Kon hadn't known what to tell her, when she'd cornered him afterward to ask what had happened between him and Tim. He couldn't lie to Ma - he'd never been able to - which meant he couldn't assure her that there was nothing going on. He'd tried - even opened his mouth to protest his innocence - but he'd flashed on the sense memory of Tim's slim, hard thigh sliding between his own, of Tim's tongue tracing the curve of his ear, and he hadn't been able to say a word.
Kon couldn't tell her, because he didn't know. Tim was a hell of an actor - he really got into his undercover roles - but knowing that hadn't prepared Kon for what it would feel like to have that focus turned on him. Tim had done a damned good impression of someone who wanted into Kon's pants - good enough to fool even Kon, momentarily.
That had been an act. Kon had no doubt about it, now, in the light of day. It was his own reaction that Kon was so unsure of.
Tim and Lois were arguing about something now, so Kon tuned them out and listened to
"
Which probably meant they all knew he was awake. Kon sighed and rolled over to grab his pants. He levitated up enough to yank them up over his boxers, and then sat up on the edge of the bed and scrubbed his hands through his hair.
For a moment, Kon debated just telling him no. He could hide up here all day, or maybe fly out the window and escape. Maybe they needed a superhero in
Breakfast suddenly sounded like a great idea. It was too late, though -
"Um,"
"Right," Kon agreed, hoping to get this over with quickly.
"And...I didn't mean to insult you. Or Tim. When I said..."
Kon looked up at him in surprise. "Really?"
Not since
"You've been so honest, from the day I met you,"
Kon pulled his legs up and turned to face
Kon looked down at his hands.
"If I was angry..."
"Tim asks me for help," Kon protested. After a moment of considering the vastly uneven ratio of favors between them, though, he amended the statement. "Sometimes."
"As often as you'd be willing to help him?"
"Well," Kon said, looking over at the wall. "No. But only because I'd always help, if he asked me. That's...we're friends. That's what you do." When Kon glanced back over at
"Nothing,"
Kon quickly looked away again. "Not so fast," he said. "Superboy, remember? Don't got expecting me to be all mature, and stuff."
"Oh,"
"Oh God, no," Kon said, grinning. "And please, please don't say that in front of Ma, or she'll make me do extra chores or something."
"Because I cheat," Kon admitted. He put his hand to the blanket and it shook itself out into neat rows, like the corn outside his window.
"You say that like Pa actually hooked the plow up to the tractor at some point since I turned fifteen."
Kon smiled and rested his head against the headboard. This wasn't so bad. Usually, when he tried to talk to
"What I wanted to say, though,"
"Tim's not..." Kon started, and then trailed off. He wouldn't have called him a bastard, anyway. Unless, of course, he was fresh from one Tim's particularly sneaky and manipulative tricks. Hmm. "Batman's like that, too?"
"Oh, yes,"
Kon frowned. "If he thinks he might need backup?"
"Sometimes."
Oh. Oh. Kon felt his face heat, and he looked away. Oh.
What if he was right?
"I'll let you get dressed,"
"Yeah," Kon said, hoarse. "Yeah, I know."
As soon as
*
Once he'd had a shower and brushed his teeth - and spent kind of an embarrassing amount of time on his hair, considering he was just going down for breakfast - Kon pulled on a fresh pair of jeans and the blue pullover Martha said made his eyes look nice and headed down the stairs.
"Well, hello, sleepyhead," Martha greeted him as he entered the kitchen. "I thought you were going to laze the day away, up there."
"Hm," Tim said without looking up from his laptop. His eye looked even worse this morning. "I could've just dragged him to
Martha chuckled, but
Tim was sitting at the head of the little rectangular table, as far from Clark and Lois as he could get. That made Kon slide his own chair a little closer and deliberately bump Tim's foot with his own, even though he had to shoo Krypto out of the way to do it. "Hey," he said, uncertainly.
Tim shut his laptop. "I was hoping to head to the Tower after breakfast."
"Okay," Kon said, because maybe that wasn't what he'd wanted to talk about, but he really didn't want to have the conversation they apparently needed in front of his family, anyway.
Martha set a plate and a mug in front of Kon and went back to fix her own breakfast. Kon grabbed the coffee and clutched it like a warm, fragrant lifeline. When he looked down at his plate, it was piled with blueberry pancakes. He shot a glance at Tim, whose own plate was missing a portion of food probably mathematically determined to be the minimum he could eat without causing offence. The adoring looks Krypto kept giving Tim suddenly made a lot more sense.
Tim set down his coffee. "Lois managed to get some interesting information out of a sheriff's deputy while we were making the emergency staff uncomfortable," he said with a nod in her direction.
"Mm," Lois swallowed her mouthful of pancake. "They got a full confession," she said, cheerfully. "Your wingnut admitted to all three crimes you pinned him for, and a bunch more."
Kon dropped his fork to his plate with a clatter. "More?"
"Several deaths previously believed to be accidents," Tim explained, "and the unsolved murder of a vagrant, last year."
Kon planted his elbows on the table and rested his head in his hands.
"Elbows," Martha scolded without looking up from her own plate.
Kon dropped his hands to his lap. "So...he's going away, at least? I guess to
"If the confessions are admissible," Tim said, "then maybe."
"Maybe?"
"There's a good chance he'll be ruled incompetent."
Kon swore.
"Conner
"I think it's a fair comment," Lois said dryly. She took a sip of coffee. "It'll be a while before they finish the testing and the hearings, but for now he's in up in Keystone, in holding."
"He'll be locked up, either way,"
Tim snorted. "Even assuming that your local high security treatment facility for the criminally insane is somehow better than Arkham..." he shook his head, "in my experience, it's very difficult to cure religion."
Martha looked disapproving, but it was Clark who spoke. "That's awfully cynical, Tim. Even for you."
"Hm," Tim said, frowning. "Did you ever meet Valley?"
"Who?" Kon asked.
Tim turned his eyes heavenward before shooting Kon an amused look. "I'll tell you later. The point is, we get our fair share of religious nut-jobs in
Martha cleared her throat before
"Hm," Tim said, his eyes sparkling. "Lois - about that exposé you wrote on Senator Kasey's unauthorized use of campaign funds..."
"Do you mean the one about the yacht or the one about the underage prostitutes?"
Kon's foot connected with Tim's ankle just as
Kon heard a familiar rumble from up the road, and it made him sit up with a jolt.
"What?" Tim asked, suddenly alert.
"Oh," she said, casually. "Didn't I say? Jake called. Said he'd be swinging by." She shot a look at Kon that made him fumble with his silverware. "He was so concerned. I told him he ought to come see you himself."
"Oh, how nice," Tim said, flatly. He stood. "I'll go change."
"What?" Kon said, getting to his feet as well. "Why? You look-" like Tim, he realized, taking in his t-shirt and slightly baggy jeans.
"Well, darling," Tim said in a voice that made Martha's eyes narrow, "I just can't be seen at less than my best." Lois laughed as he swanned out of the room, but Martha's expression remained dour.
Kon grabbed his and Tim's plates and headed for the sink. Krypto followed with his best begging face on, so Kon scrapped the rest of Tim's breakfast into the dog bowl before setting the plates in the sink and running some dishwater. He washed and dried his hands, and then went to get the door when he heard Jake's engine cut off.
Jake was getting out of the truck when Kon stepped out onto the porch. He reached across the seat and grabbed a flat white box, and then mounted the steps at a jog, coming to a stop in front of Kon with the box held out like an offering.
"How's, uh. How's Tim?" he asked, sounding nervous.
"Oh," Kon said. "He's fine. I mean - well, he made a big deal out of it, but Doc Gomer says he's fine. What's, ah..."
"Pie," Jake said quickly. He thrust the box forward a little more, and Kon took it. "It's um, cherry. Nell made it. It's really good."
Kon looked down at the box in his hands. "Thanks."
Jake shuffled his weight from one foot to the other. "Anyway," he said, "I just wanted to, ah. To make sure you were all right. Both of you, I mean. Tim too."
"He's got a hell of a black eye," Kon said with a chuckle, "but he heals pretty fast."
"Oh," Jake said, sounding like Kon had said something surprising and important. He narrowed his eyes a little bit, but Kon wasn't sure what the look meant. After a few seconds, he shook his head and looked back down at his feet. "I, uh...got the impression he didn't like me very much," he said, quietly. "You didn't tell him...um..."
Kon coughed. "We don't-" he stopped and changed his statement after a moment's thought. "I don't keep a lot of secrets from Tim. It would be kind of pointless, anyway. He always finds everything out eventually." He shrugged. "He's too smart for me."
"Don't say that," Jake said, looking back up at Kon with sudden ferocity. "Does he say that?"
"What?" Kon asked, taken aback. "No! I don't - Jake, I'm not being self-deprecating, and I don't think I'm an idiot. Tim's just really smart."
Jake made a noncommittal noise. He frowned and looked down at his feet again. He scuffed his toe on the edge of the step, knocking a clod of dried mud to the ground. "I've got to admit," he said, quietly, "he...isn't exactly what I'd expected."
To be fair, he hadn't been quite what Kon had expected, either, but he couldn't tell Jake that. Urgh, he'd been right. All his friends were going to be wondering what the hell he was doing with a jerk like Tim Wayne, or else they'd all go Chase's route and assume he was dating him for money, or something. "You have to get to know him," Kon said. "He's kind of...prickly, I guess, at first. He used to drive me crazy. We fought, like, all the time. But once he trusts you...once he opens up, he's really a completely different guy. A really good guy."
Jake looked uncertain, but he nodded. "Do you think he was serious? About me coming to
"Oh, for heaven's sake," Tim said from the doorway, making Kon and Jake both jump and turn, guiltily. He'd changed into something stylish and probably expensive and done his hair and...was the bruise darker? "Conner, invite your friend inside." He rolled his eyes dramatically. "Honestly, were you raised in a barn?" He held up his hand. "Don't answer that."
Kon glared at him.
"Unless," Tim added, archly, "you two wanted to be alone together."
Kon shook his head and rubbed the bridge of his nose with the hand not holding the pie. "Come on in," he said to Jake. Tim held the door for them, and Kon motioned for Jake to go through first, so that he could kick Tim in the shin without arousing suspicion.
Tim, of course, dodged.
They all headed into the kitchen, where Jake stopped dead still at the sight of Clark and Lois finishing their pancakes. "Oh," he said quietly. "Good morning."
"Jacob!" Martha said, happily. "Come have some breakfast."
"Oh I - I couldn't, really," Jake said awkwardly. "I just..." his eyes lit up. "Are those blueberry?"
Martha grinned and pulled another plate out of the cabinet.
"Jake brought a pie," Kon said as he set it on the counter and opened the box to peek inside. It did look good - dark like real cherries, and not the artificial red of canned filling. It smelled good, too. Kon scooped up a drip of filling with one finger and sucked it clean, only to look up and notice everyone watching him. "Oh," he said, "Clark, Lois, this is Jake. He's a friend from school."
Jake just sort of...let his hand be grabbed and shaken, busily looking everywhere but at
"Shot up a bit, hasn't he?" Martha said, affectionately. She patted Jake's shoulder and handed him a plate piled high with pancakes. "Eat up, now."
"Thank you, Mrs.
Martha waved a hand. "Oh, child, call me Martha. Ma, if you like. Everyone does." She glanced at Tim. "Mostly."
"Yes, ma'am," Jake mumbled, smiling. He pulled out a chair and sat down. Krypto sat down on his feet to beg, and got a pat on the head for his trouble.
"To answer your question," Tim said, "I was perfectly serious when I invited you to visit. You're Conner's friend, which means we ought to get to know each other, and I really do think Giles would be thrilled to meet you." He flicked back a strand of hair. "The party's only semi-formal, so you won't need a tuxedo. Feel free to bring a date, but it's hardly required," he glanced at Kon and broke off. "Oh, come here," he said, sounding exasperated.
"What?" Kon said, guiltily, shutting the lid of the pie box behind his back.
Tim just beckoned him forward, so Kon took a few steps toward him, until Tim lunged forward and grabbed his chin. He fished a handkerchief out of his pocket and licked it before scrubbing the corner of Kon's mouth, making him wince.
Lois did a very poor job of hiding her snicker in her coffee mug.
"Shall I hire a car?" Tim asked, stepping back and folding the - monogrammed, Kon realized - handkerchief into a neat square before pocketing it. "I hate to think of you leaving your poor aunt without transportation all evening. I'd come get you myself, but I won't be back from
Kon blinked ans swallowed. "Both?" he said. Somehow it hadn't sunk in that he'd be going, too. And if he and Jake were both going...
Oh God. Kon suddenly realized what that meant. More Tim Wayne. More Conner Kent, Tim Wayne's boyfriend. The act wasn't over. Kon wasn't even sure how he felt about that, beyond a pronounced uneasiness in his stomach. He couldn't refuse, either, with Jake sitting right there, or even try to talk it out, - to figure out what Tim was thinking, what he wanted...
"Er," he said, hoping Jake was too focused on his pancakes to notice Kon's sudden discomfort. "Ah. What time, Thursday?"
Across the room,
THE END
Index | Epilogue
no subject
Date: 2010-03-19 07:36 am (UTC)