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Supermanfic: Apotheosis (Part 3: Repercussions, or What Oliver Did) (Clark/Oliver)
Author: ladybugkay
Fandom: DCU/Smallville
Pairing: Clark/Oliver
Rating: R (for adult language and sexual situations)
Word Count: 4417
Summary: Clark is going to become Superman. In this part: Meanwhile, during the five years Clark is in training, Oliver deals with what he saw in the alley and whiles away the time being a voyeur and working with the Justice League. (Consider this the Oliver Vignettes, and as such, the somewhat disjointed narrative feel is appropriate. The scenes are meant to be snapshots of Oliver's life, more than anything else.)
Disclaimer: DC and Gough & Millar and all those people are the owners. I am borrowing the characters, world, and certain events for entertainment purposes and intend no copyright infringement.
Note: This was part of the "An Arrow to a Quiver" contest over at
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Part One: Nadir
Part Two: Genesis
A/N: Oliver’s voice eluded me for a long time in this particular fic, and even now, I can’t quite get a handle on him. He also has a surprising tendency toward verbosity in his thoughts, sometimes, so be forewarned. Despite my best efforts, this part is definitely not the best-written or the most interesting. Maybe it’s because the
Gratuitous A/N: As for my Justice League, well, Smallville is all about rewriting the Superman mythos, and apparently, I’m all about rewriting Smallville, so my League is a new combination of heroes that Oliver forms and leads for a while (I’m building off of existing SV canon). It includes, so far, Oliver, Bart, Victor, A.C., my Bruce, and my Diana. Consider this a unique League in its earliest stages. Also, I’m not very nice to A.C. here, but that has a lot to do with my intense dislike of the actor’s portrayal of him on the show, and has very little to do with the character himself. My apologies if you are a fan.
Part Three: Repercussions, or What Oliver Did
He thought someone was in pain. The strangled cry brought Green Arrow running to the rescue, his bow already in his hands, before he realized what was actually going down in the alley. So to speak.
Oliver was about to walk away without disturbing the still-entwined couple, one side of his mouth already turning up at the thought that at least someone was getting some that night, when the man with black hair turned his head. And Oliver found himself looking into the unforgettable eyes of
Oliver stood there, pinned to the spot like some Kafka-esque reenactment of a butterfly collection, and had no idea what to do.
Discovering that Clark had called Oliver’s name while fucking the guy who looked just like him made everything infinitely more complicated and confusing, and Oliver didn’t want to deal with any of the implications following that stunning revelation.
So he ran.
He didn’t know what to do, what to say, what to think, and he honestly didn’t know what could have been a greater shock.
The whole thing made no sense, and it was all just so…unexpected.
Oliver was supposed to be in Metropolis for a few days only, on Queen Industries business. He had intended to look into a few Lexcorp properties while he was there, because one could never be too suspicious of a Luthor, but he hadn’t expected to have to deal with anything but routine business. There had been no reason for Oliver to call Clark, or Lois, for that matter, because he was supposed to be there only a couple of days. Just a couple of days.
Finding
So he ran. And after he ran, fast and far away, Oliver tried to put it out of his mind and forget that he had ever seen something he had no business seeing in the first place.
But it didn’t work.
Oliver surprised himself that first night. He fell asleep reminiscing about Lois and woke up hard having dreamt of
There was no choice but for Oliver to conclude that he was more into voyeurism than he ever suspected. He had always considered himself a doer, a man of action; someone who got off on being in the middle of things and not on the sidelines. Passivity was not a quality Oliver had ever associated with himself.
Yet it could not be denied that he hadn’t woken up in quite such a state since he was thirteen years old. If he had had a roommate, Oliver suspected he would have faced an embarrassing ‘talk’ about volume levels when jerking off.
Oliver had never had occasion to appreciate living alone for quite that reason, before.
However, who was he to judge himself for his sexual tastes? So in between attending board meetings at Queen Industries and chasing down Lexcorp testing facilities around the world, Oliver began adding the playing of voyeur to his sexual résumé.
But it became apparent rather quickly that there was still something missing. Nothing Oliver observed could compare to his memories of
Discretion was, therefore, the better part of sexual fulfillment, and what
It was a truly inspired plan, if Oliver did say so himself.
The only problem was that
Oliver searched the entire city for him, first as Green Arrow, and then as Oliver Queen with all his resources. Lex was undoubtedly still too embroiled with the murder trial to risk a kidnapping charge being leveled against him, as well, but after Oliver filled Victor and Bart and A.C. in on
All four of them tried repeatedly to get in touch with
Except that it wasn’t.
Not for Oliver.
The others on the team seemed to take
In short, if
But unfortunately, even though he knew where
* * *
A year and a half later, Oliver is forced to accept that either
Or he is dead, but Oliver won’t believe that.
In either case, it makes no sense at all for Oliver to continue searching for
Except that Oliver also can’t stop thinking about
It’s just another Clark Kent mystery to add to the pile.
Oliver doesn’t want to care this much about someone he isn’t even certain he likes a lot of the time. But every dream he’s had for the last eighteen months has been about
Straight as an arrow, my over-privileged, green-clad vigilante ass, Oliver thinks. And then he pictures
Who would have thought some kid from fucking Tiny-ville, U.S.A. would make Oliver Queen face up to some deliciously hard truths about the somewhat prophetic quality of his own name?
It’s just a shame
* * *
When, exactly, does it become pathetic to continue looking for someone who seems to have left the fucking planet, but whose naked ass is still firmly imprinted in your mind?
Victor and Bart are so sick of hearing Oliver’s theories on why
A.C. just stares blankly, then dives back underwater when Oliver stops talking.
* * *
Oliver continues to run his company and subvert Lex’s schemes, and when he has a few hours to himself, he uses his satellite to check random areas of the globe for any possible sightings of
Pathetic, yes, but necessary to his sanity.
* * *
Three years after
Ten days later, he finds himself trying to persuade Bruce Wayne to join the Justice League. (Bart came up with the name; A.C. wanted them to be the Integrity Warriors, but the rest of them had quashed that idea rather quickly, thankfully.) When Oliver brings the conversation around to the subject of superhero alter egos, Bruce tries to pretend he has no idea what Oliver is talking about, and Oliver wonders if the man really expects him to believe that his long-time school friend with the genius-level IQ and the almost frightening dedication and intensity devolved into a witless playboy practically overnight.
The regrettable downside to Bruce’s staggering intellect has always been his tendency to underestimate the intelligence of the people closest to him.
In point of fact, Oliver suspected Bruce Wayne was Batman from the moment he heard about the ‘Dark Knight of Gotham,’ and when Green Arrow came faced to face with Batman while destroying another 33.1 lab, this time in Gotham, Oliver knew instantly that the man under the cowl was Bruce. He also knows that Bruce knows Oliver is Green Arrow, so he can’t understand why Bruce is unable to accept that Oliver could figure out Bruce’s secret identity. Bruce exhibits the same strange mixture of innocence and arrogance, perspicacity and obtuseness, which
Because at some point in the negotiations, before he quite realizes it, Oliver agrees to transfer control of the League to Bruce if Bruce joins them. And control turns out to be the one thing Bruce cannot resist. It is rather humiliating when Oliver understands his own motivations, but he cannot deny that he has taken to considering anything associated with
It’s a very bad habit. (Oliver blames the dreams about
And Bruce does remind Oliver of Clark, not just in his appearance, with the black hair and laser-like blue gaze, but in his insistence on doing things his way and his almost obsessive need to know everything about everyone else, while jealously protecting his own secrets. Privacy is a word that has no meaning to Bruce or Clark, unless it applies to their own lives, and they are exceedingly possessive and protective of the people they care about. They also both live by a strict moral code, even if it isn’t quite the same code.
Yes, Bruce reminds Oliver of Clark in a number of ways.
It’s not the best reason for handing over leadership of the team Oliver formed, but it’s also not the worst. In many respects,
At the time, Oliver had no idea what was behind
* * *
For the most part, the League works well under Batman’s guidance. Efficiency increases dramatically within a matter of days, and if there are a few grumbling complaints about the tightness of Batman’s shorts and the depth to which they have been inserted into his ass, they are never made within Batman’s hearing or anywhere his surveillance equipment is suspected to be located. Not after the mysterious incident with the batarang that leaves Bart with eighteen stitches in one cheek that make sitting down a distinctly unpleasant experience.
They all respect Batman and his abilities, and after he hacks into Lexcorp’s security feed during a mission gone wrong and does something that allows them to escape from Lex’s clutches by mere moments, no one doubts his intelligence or his value to the League.
What Bruce thinks of them, on the other hand, Oliver can’t decipher. There are certain times during A.C.’s ‘presentations’ that he can practically hear the eye-roll behind the lenses of Batman’s mask, and Oliver has to restrain Batman from firing Bart at least twice a month. But the five of them work surprisingly well as a team, and even Batman admits to being pleased with everyone’s performance during the incident with the giant zombie squirrels. (Lex needs to start instituting psychological profiles of the people he has working in his labs.)
When Batman introduces them all to Wonder Woman, he secures his leadership with the others and simultaneously earns their undying loyalty. Even if he still won’t tell the rest of them his real name.
Oliver likes Diana right away. She’s smart and tough and can be disconcertingly kind, and she reminds him a little of Lois on her best days. Or what Oliver suspects Lois’s best days would have been like if he had witnessed any of them.
Diana is also refreshingly unimpressed with their superhero status, and when they learn what she can do, they understand why. The League members’ responses to her are nothing short of hilarious, and Oliver deems obtaining a permanent record of that priceless first gathering to be worth braving Batman’s wrath for hacking into his video surveillance.
Because after ten minutes in Diana’s company, Bart is actually vibrating with lust, and Oliver half expects him to start running in circles around her until either she notices him or he flashes back to his time in Lex’s giant hamster wheel. Victor’s too polite to stare, but he pulls out her chair for her—which makes Diana laugh so hard she almost falls over—and A.C.’s mouth hangs open the entire time she is in the room.
Bruce gloats for days at the unanimous decision to make Diana part of the Justice League, and Oliver can’t deny him this right. They are beyond fortunate to have Diana working with them, and not one of them is stupid enough to think otherwise.
And in a familiar, rational world, Oliver would have five separate plans in effect to convince her to go out with him by the end of the month. But apparently Oliver doesn’t live in that world, anymore, because he has absolutely no desire even to kiss Diana.
Damn
Wherever the hell he is.
* * *
Oliver is trying to convince Bruce to do something about the security at Arkham when Alfred interrupts, apologizing profusely, to inform Master Bruce that the news item he had requested he be informed about has recently aired on Channel 14 and the recorded footage is downstairs awaiting his perusal whenever it is convenient for him.
Bruce heads for the door immediately, and Oliver follows without being asked. He’s accustomed to Bruce and his abrupt changes in focus, and if he waited to be invited to come along, he’d never move again.
When the first visual record of Superman’s existence appears on the screen, Oliver knows instantly that it’s
It would be enough to make Oliver blush, if he hadn’t conquered that particular biological response many years ago. Shame was never a good look on him, although repentance and forthrightness are.
And because Oliver’s second thought is relief at knowing
Bruce is, of course, suspicious of Superman and his incomparable laundry list of powers. He has been since the first article about Superman appeared two days before, absent any corroborating photographic evidence, and Oliver tries to head off the imminent altercation he foresees between Batman and the man Oliver hasn’t been able to forget in five years.
“You don’t need to worry about Superman, Bruce. I know the guy. I didn’t realize who he was until I saw him, but believe me, you can trust him. We want him to work with us.”
“I wasn’t aware you’d been to Metropolis, recently.” Bruce is a paranoid little Bat-freak, but Oliver should have expected that.
“I haven’t. I knew him a few years back.”
“Where the hell has he been, then? Saving the world is not a career for dilettantes, Oliver.”
Oliver turns his head just enough to roll his eyes without Bruce noticing, before he says truthfully and as calmly as he can, “I don’t know where he’s been, Bruce. I wish I could tell you. But believe me when I say that he’s one of the good guys.”
The original good guy, in fact, if Oliver isn’t mistaken about certain incidents in
“Hmm. Power of that kind makes him one of the biggest threats we’ve faced yet. I don’t care when you knew him or how; people change. We need to assess the danger of this ‘Superman,’ immediately.”
Of course they do.
* * *
The first thing Oliver does when he leaves the Manor is renew his inquiries about
Oliver always had his suspicions about Lois and Clark, and if he’s more concerned these days with how
At the next League meeting, Batman makes noises about keeping an eye on Metropolis’s newest super-powered citizen, and from the looks Victor gives him, Oliver is certain that Cyborg, at least, has also added one and one together and arrived at two. Bart pays attention in the meetings only rarely, so his impassive face reveals nothing, whatsoever, but A.C.’s blank, uncomprehending stare tells Oliver that at least one person who knew Clark Kent is unaware of Superman’s secret identity. Honestly, Oliver can’t say he’s surprised the fish-boy hasn’t figured it out; A.C. has never been the brightest bulb in the chandelier.
Victor, on the other hand, has always been highly intelligent. And regardless of who is officially in control of the League, Cyborg is still willing to take his cues from Green Arrow, so at Oliver’s unobtrusive head-shake, Victor sits back and keeps his mouth shut.
Batman is not unaware of the undercurrents running between certain of the heroes he’s addressing, but he doesn’t have enough information to do anything about it, and the unfamiliar ignorance and impotence make him more irritable than usual. Especially since he’s already angry that Oliver won’t tell him who Superman really is. His comments become increasingly biting, and when he leaves off discussing the latest threat to global security and turns to reviewing individual performances during the last mission, Batman’s analyses descend into vituperative diatribes that lead to Diana calling a halt to the meeting and taking him aside for a lecture on constructive criticism.
Bart tunes back in at this point to roll his eyes as the Dark Knight stalks away, and he catches Oliver’s signal for the original four to hang back until the room is clear.
“What’s up?”
After a few necessary explanations for the less discerning individuals in the room, they decide that they will continue to say nothing to Batman until they speak to
There is no part of Oliver in disagreement with this plan.
It is only once they part ways and Oliver finds himself on a chartered plane changing his clothes for the fourth time that he stops to wonder if he is actually the best person to extend to
Batman would undoubtedly disapprove of Oliver’s preferred method of enticing Superman into their little group.
Then again, Oliver is not Bruce, and his instincts have rarely led him wrong. He changes his clothes one last time, then steps off the plane and heads for the rooftop of the Daily Planet.
Twenty minutes later, Superman appears in the sky and notes Oliver’s presence almost immediately, and it isn’t until Clark touches down on the roof that Oliver remembers he was wearing the Green Arrow suit the last time they saw each other, too, and that possibly he should have changed a sixth time. His instincts can’t be right all the time. Oliver can tell by the look on
Oliver isn’t the one who should be embarrassed by the memory, but he is. Embarrassed and aroused.
Five years is a long time, and
He’s almost guilty at how relieved he is his own eyes are fully obscured by dark lenses.
Experienced voyeur that he’s become, the sunglasses are no impediment to his gaze, and Oliver is able to appreciate, perhaps for the first time in person, the sheer beauty that is Clark Kent. It is difficult to decide what he wants to do first: talk to
Until Oliver remembers it is possible to watch
Hallelujah.
“It’s good to see you, Clark.”
“W-what did you say?”
Apparently, this is one more thing Bruce and Clark have in common: an inherent belief in the unassailable efficacy of one’s own disguise. Wonderful.
Oliver sighs and reaches up with one hand to pull off his shades. “I know it’s you,
“No, I knew you’d know who I was,”
And
Oliver wonders distractedly how wrong it is that he has suddenly developed a truly inspiring erection. He’s in so much trouble, because he has the sudden suspicion that he missed more about
And he is too close to embarrassing himself in his costume to be wrestling with emotional revelations.
Because
Oliver watches the red in
Oh, well, Oliver supposes. There really isn’t any point in being subtle, and he can deal with any emotional discoveries tomorrow.
Voyeurism be damned, he has waited too fucking long to see
Continued in Part Four: Dissatisfaction
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