#Voice-over software
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Are you struggling with your Audio Projects? - Voisi AI Elite
Do you like to create multi-voice, people conversations? You can create conversational stories, podcasts and dramas include text to audio in all major languages using the Voisi product.
You can do several voice related works include voice cloning, translations, voice to text, different voices etc. You can use all major AI tools withs the software include Amazon, Microsoft, IBM, Open Ai and many more.
If you have below problems in your projects then Voisi AI Elite product is the best to use:
AI voice cloning, Voice-over software, Language translation AI, Voice-to-text software, Creative content tools, Multilingual AI, Audio production AI, Voice synthesis, AI language learning, Podcast creation AI, Voice cloning technology, AI voice generator, Multilingual voiceovers, Creative workflow AI, AI-powered narration, Voice AI tools etc.
Learn More About Products And How to use the software Here
Disclaimer: This article may contain affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
#AI voice cloning#Voice-over software#Language translation AI#Voice-to-text software#Creative content tools#Multilingual AI#Audio production AI#Voice synthesis#AI language learning#Podcast creation AI#Voice cloning technology#AI voice generator#Multilingual voiceovers#Creative workflow AI#AI-powered narration#Voice AI tools
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I'm running low on money, please read
So I've recently moved back into my own place after living on my parents and then my sisters couch for the last 9 months. There's been a fair few things that I've needed to buy, I've had birthdays, food and new bills etc. etc. to the point where I'm left with less than 150 until the 22nd. I'm not e-begging, I do not want your money in return for nothing
Instead I'm asking for you to hire me for something in my wheelhouse to earn the money.
Realistically I shouldn't need more than an extra 100 to last me, which would work out between 2 - 5 of these jobs (depending on their size)
I have experience and/or the knowledge to be able to do the following:
Test a Game/Website/Mobile app/Software/SaaS program 4+ years of experience as a QA Tester/Test Engineer), 2.5 of these as a sole tester on multiple projects
Voice over/voice acting work
Video editing - Podcast, Let's Play, Long-form YouTube Content, Stream Highlights
Writing and Editorial work, such as: - Expansion of notes into full works (blog post, report, essay, etc.) - Review of content drafts for grammar/readability/localisation accuracy/correct referencing styles - Resume/Cover letter creation and/or review - Transcription/Subtitling
Creation of Foley sound effects
I.T Support - Hardware + Software troubleshooting
I know that a lot of these posts are focused more so on art commissions - and my art is not good lmao - but thought it's worth shooting my shot.
Shoot me over a message/ask if there's anything you'd like to hire me for, if you could reblog to signal boost if not I'd be super grateful
#Commissions open#hire me#freelance#qa#game testing#software testing#voice over#voice acting#video editing#writing help#proofreading#resume help#transcription#foley#it support#tumblr jobs#support small creators
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Sky:CotLxVocaloid/Miku collab where you get a new call that plays a little “mi!” sound when you press it normally, but then does a ���ku!” sound when you long press it hit post
#sky cotl#hatsune miku#skyblr#thatskygame#sky children of the light#I wish I had editing skills or a decent editing software or an actual miku voice bank#so I could edit that over some cotl footage#also I think if this was a real thing tgc would probably make it an iap. the first call of its kind#boy I sure hope I am not jinxing anything by saying that#talk tag
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(guy who never finishes her 80% done vocal synth projects voice) i need to practice with asterian 2... do my dearest asterheads have any hashtag song suggestions
#preferably jp or eng because those are the languages im most familiar with the phonemes of LOL#i do need to learn other phoneme systems though..... someday#i have a couple wips but i wanna play more with 2 before i decided which engine i want to use hee hee#asterian II is crazy btw i feel like someone saw that i was good at riding a bicycle and immediately put me in charge of a shipping truck#every vocal mode is into the stratosphere now its NUTS#like hold on. hold on. how do i steer this thing. hold on. very fun tho <3#tbh every sv2 native vocal has been lowkey unreal that ive heard#one pr problem this software has might be the fact that sv1 voices are so hit or miss on it. its slowly getting better!#but the ver1 support is. messy. and crashy <3 but as it gets improved and more popular voices get ver2 updates things will be fun i think#im still not over some of the expressiveness i was able to pull out of mo xu's trial...... these ver2 voices are Something Else!!!
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ppl up in arms about “sentence mixing being way better than AI voice generators” be so for real. theyre different things. joe biden Pills. Now. Please. and ben shapiro Im Not Gonna Get Old on the Beach are both landmark videos and pretending the second one isnt because it was made by the “scary AI” is like. come on. be serious.
#like yeaaah i guess you could argue its unethical bc ben shapiro didnt consent to having his voice made into a bank like that#but the AI is literally just doing what the sentence mixing guys are doing. just automated#so if you wanna raise an ethical issue there i think you gotta raise it with the ytpoopers as well imo#and. its ben shapiro.#be so for real! theyre different things#you ever laugh at one of those spongebob sings world is mine videos from awhile back? its the same shit#utau doesnt have an AI component to it afaik but the process is all the same#of course this isnt applied when COMPANIES are doing it for PROFIT.#but thats always been the case#all this tells me is that you have no idea how voice synthesis has been progressing over the years and have no understanding of how the#software to produce these things work. tbh xoxo#oh no i made a bad post#btw what i mean when i say theyre different things and yet say the process is the same is that the results come out sounding different#process is largely* the same i mean#like ppl dont stop making pixel art bc you can make higer fidelity digital art#same principle
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i feel like the 'i could make/do that' mindset is so invaluable to have. i don't mean in the sense of like going to a modern art museum and insisting that you, a non-artist, could have made the art just as easily. no, that is condescending assholery. the mindset i'm talking about is one more of confidence, of optimism and.. i guess the willingness to put yourself out there, to ask the right questions, to try something new. and to fail, or rather for your vision not to come to fruition. maybe you don't have the tools yet, maybe you haven't acquired all the skills. but at least you could try. and you have confidence in the level of ability you do have to start. oftentimes actually sitting down and doing something is the best way to learn, and the only thing that could stop you from starting is telling yourself 'i could never make/do that'
#there's a few songs on my playlist that are from the pov of a girl but that have a masculine voice and while that's honestly fine#and i've been living with them on there for over a year. i've also always toyed with the idea of making covers.#like hey i have a feminine voice. it may not be stellar but it would fit better. so what's stopping me??#the answer was a guitar lol#but recently my bil has been teaching my sister to play guitar... and she has a better voice than i do#and so i asked if they would be willing to record covers of these songs with me and put them on spotify just for my playlist#apparently our brother might have some layering software too#and i'm not saying like 'wow i said i could make this and now i am!' bc really it's mostly gonna be my sis and her husband#but i just had to ask#like ig what i'm saying is anything is possible. and keeping your mind and heart open can bring about beautiful things#and actually i'm realizing a better story might have been about the play i just wrapped last week. my first time acting in anything#that one was much more of a learning curve for me but it still had the same spark of 'i could do that' and the same result#something homemade and cobbled together but good.#i just happened to make this post while thinking of my sister putting music on spotify for me <3#the sibs#important
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ElevenLabs vs Murf AI vs PlayHT
Compare the top 3 AI voice generators of 2024: features, pricing, and quality. Find out whether ElevenLabs, Murf AI, or Play.HT is right for your projects. 🎙️ #AIVoiceGenerator #TextToSpeech #ElevenLabs #MurfAI #PlayHT #VoiceCloning #AIDubbing
🎤 Introduction ElevenLabs is a software company specializing in natural-sounding speech synthesis using deep learning. Founded in 2022, it has quickly become a prominent player in the AI voice generation field, attracting significant investment and developing a range of innovative products. Murf AI is a powerful AI voice generator that enables users to create realistic-sounding voiceovers for…

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#AI dubbing#AI voice apps#AI voice generator#AI voices#ElevenLabs#Murf AI#Play.HT#speech synthesis#text to speech#text to speech comparison#voice cloning#voice generation software#voice over generator#voice synthesis
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Transform Your Projects with Murf AI's Voice Generation Magic!
Discover the transformative power of Murf AI's voice generation magic in this exciting short! This video showcases how AI audio technology is revolutionizing content creation with its incredible AI narration and voiceover capabilities. Explore the future of voiceovers with cutting-edge artificial intelligence that brings digital narration to life.
Murf AI:
Murf AI features advanced speech synthesis and synthetic voices, allowing you to create compelling voice clones and experience voice modulation like never before.
From professional projects to personal endeavors, see how Murf AI can elevate your work with its innovative voice toolkit.
Join us as we delve into Murf examples that highlight the versatility of this voiceover software, and witness the impact of voiceover technology on the industry.
Whether you're a content creator or simply curious about voice cloning AI, this video is a must-watch! Transform your projects today with Murf AI's voice generation magic!
#murfai #digitalvoicetechnology
#ai audio#ai narration#ai voiceover#ai voiceover trends#aritificial intellignece#artificial intelligence#content creation#digital narration#digital voice#future of voiceovers#murf ai#murf examples#murf features#speech synthesis#synthetic voices#text to speech#voice clones#voice cloning#voice cloning ai#voice generation#voice modulation#voice over#voice toolkit#voiceai#voiceover innovation#voiceover software#voiceover technology
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Optimizing Audacity: Best Settings and Techniques for Voiceovers
Audacity rocks as a popular, free, open-source audio editing software that tons of voice actors, podcasters, and audio pros swear by. It’s super easy to use and packed with powerful features, making it perfect for creating top-notch voice-over recordings. But with so many settings and options, it can be a bit overwhelming to figure out which ones work best for voice-over projects. In this guide,…

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THE BIGGEST THREAT
Artificial Intelligence is everywhere. In the next few years it will be integrated in many devices and in all social media. Quick reminder: I’m Paul, a voice actor from the Netherlands who has settled down in Vermont. I’m quitting the business and in this series I’m telling you why. Please keep in mind that these are my thoughts and observations. Do with it what you want. Don’t agree with me…
#AI#AI voice#AI voices. will AI replace human#artificial intelligence#Nethervoice#Paul Strikwerda#quitting voice overs#Text to Speech software#the threat of ai#translator#voice-over#voiceover blog#voiceovers#will ai steal our jobs
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is this because everyone was calling out how shit dababel is. is he trying to distract with qsmp 2.

can you stop already
#for those who dont know tldr: unless its been adjusted for $10 a WEEK you got 3 minutes of translation A WEEK#for $140 a WEEK you got just barely over an hour#and u cant use it for free at all#despite it being marketed as for things like family conversations and such#also it has voice cloning using ai software and is really not specific abt data protection
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So, anyway, I say as though we are mid-conversation, and you're not just being invited into this conversation mid-thought. One of my editors phoned me today to check in with a file I'd sent over. (<3)
The conversation can be surmised as, "This feels like something you would write, but it's juuuust off enough I'm phoning to make sure this is an intentional stylistic choice you have made. Also, are you concussed/have you been taken over by the Borg because ummm."
They explained that certain sentences were very fractured and abrupt, which is not my style at all, and I was like, huh, weird... And then we went through some examples, and you know that meme going around, the "he would not fucking say that" meme?
Yeah. That's what I experienced except with myself because I would not fucking say that. Why would I break up a sentence like that? Why would I make them so short? It reads like bullet points. Wtf.
Anyway. Turns out Grammarly and Pro-Writing-Aid were having an AI war in my manuscript files, and the "suggestions" are no longer just suggestions because the AI was ignoring my "decline" every time it made a silly suggestion. (This may have been a conflict between the different software. I don't know.)
It is, to put it bluntly, a total butchery of my style and writing voice. My editor is doing surgery, removing all the unnecessary full stops and stitching my sentences back together to give them back their flow. Meanwhile, I'm over here feeling like Don Corleone, gesturing at my manuscript like:
ID: a gif of Don Corleone from the Godfather emoting despair as he says, "Look how they massacred my boy."
Fearing that it wasn't just this one manuscript, I've spent the whole night going through everything I've worked on recently, and yep. Yeeeep. Any file where I've not had the editing software turned off is a shit show. It's fine; it's all salvageable if annoying to deal with. But the reason I come to you now, on the day of my daughter's wedding, is to share this absolute gem of a fuck up with you all.
This is a sentence from a Batman fic I've been tinkering with to keep the brain weasels happy. This is what it is supposed to read as:
"It was quite the feat, considering Gotham was mostly made up of smog and tear gas."
This is what the AI changed it to:
"It was quite the feat. Considering Gotham was mostly made up. Of tear gas. And Smaug."
Absolute non-sensical sentence structure aside, SMAUG. FUCKING SMAUG. What was the AI doing? Apart from trying to write a Batman x Hobbit crossover??? Is this what happens when you force Grammarly to ignore the words "Batman Muppet threesome?"
Did I make it sentient??? Is it finally rebelling? Was Brucie Wayne being Miss Piggy and Kermit's side piece too much???? What have I wrought?
Anyway. Double-check your work. The grammar software is getting sillier every day.
#autocorrect writes the plot#I uninstalled both from my work account#the enshittification of this type of software through the integration of AI has made them untenable to use#not even for the lulz
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Yandere Sugar Daddy
Money can't buy love, but maybe it doesn't have to.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who's very nouveau riche. Who has the wealth of the elites but none of their good breeding.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who's awfully young for someone so wealthy. Barely out of college when his tech startup went public and the cash started pouring in.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who is still painfully awkward around women.
Being a rich man in a big city means there's no shortage of models and influencers vying for his attention. And Yandere! Sugar Daddy never fails to get flustered when they're introduced to him.
Long legs, perfect skin, tiny ski slope noses... They're the kind of girls who wouldn't give him the time of day back in college and suddenly they're running their hands up his chest and whispering that he's just so clever, so accomplished. What guy wouldn't fall for it?
But he can never keep them around for long.
Their interest slowly dies out when he starts rambling about software development and production scale and AI integration. Money is a great motivator but all his girlfriends seem to leave for greener pastures. For millionaires with better social skills and better taste.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who ran into you entirely on accident. The club was too loud, the girls too pretty, the alcohol too rich. He slipped out of VIP and into the street, pressing his forehead against the cool brick and trying not to spew on the new designer shoes his ex persuaded him to get.
And that was when you came into his life. Cool hands on his shoulder and a voice telling him to take a deep breath and drink some of your water.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who looks up at you through his lashes, his face flushed from too much booze and being too near you. He can't fathom it. A girl helping him not because of his cash or connections, but because they're actually a kind person.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who grabs your hand when you turn to go. Your friends are calling to you to stop messing around with random drunks and he manages to slip you his business card, begging you to call him so he can thank you properly.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who wakes up with a killer hangover and your face burned into his eyelids. Who feels his heart jump when he opens his phone and sees a text from you.
Hope your night got better - y/n
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who immediately zooms in on your profile picture. A candid shot but it still makes him blush. Before the morning is over, he's already tracked down your social media.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who pores over every inch of your life. Your job, your studies, your friends...
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who retypes his message at least a dozen times before he finally responds to you. Who invites you to the most exclusive restaurant in the city as a thank you.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who picks you up in the most expensive car he owns. Who smiles a little at the careful way you close the door and buckle your seat belt. You're just as uncomfortable around luxury as he was.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who doesn't expect much from the date. He's learned not to go on tangents about technology and work, but without it he feels lost.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who realises you're more than capable of carrying a conversation. You're energetic and funny and interested in what he has to say. He feels himself opening up to you and before long, he's deep into a rant about data safety and you actually listen to him.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who realises you compliment him. Like a puzzle piece finally slotting into place.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who ends the night with a lipstick stain on his cheek and a big, goofy grin on his face.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who calls you the second he wakes up and invites you to spend the afternoon learning to horse ride.
And when you tell him you have work, he just laughs and tells you he'll triple whatever you're getting paid for the day. You nearly faint when he keeps his word and sends you a deposit worth more than your monthly cheque.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who wants to call you his girlfriend more than anything. His girl. He loves the way it sounds.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who tags along when you go grocery shopping and whips out his card to pay for it all when your back is turned.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who sends you a huge bouquet every week because you once mentioned liking lillies.
And the closer you get, the more time you spend kissing him and curling up in his bed, the more he spends on you.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who uses spring break to take you on a tour of the Mediterranean. Who rents out entire villas and chateaus to impress you.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who has your birthday dress custom made by an actual high fashion house. Who zips you up and kisses your neck and says he's never met a more beautiful girl.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who spends shareholder meetings daydreaming about you. Who has to pinch himself to stay focused.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who's helpless to stop himself falling for you. You're so real, so empty of pretence and greed.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who showers you with all the wealth he has and is blind to how uncomfortable it makes you.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who looks at you with a vacant smile when you try and break things off. Who pulls out his phone and sends you a deposit with so many zeros you have to rub your eyes to make sure you're seeing it right. Who asks if that's enough for more of your time or if he should double it.
Do you want a new car? An apartment? He'll give you anything, anything in the world.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who looks like a kicked dog when you say you don't want any of it. You hate feeling indebted to him. You hate feeling like some vapid trophy wife. You hate living off his charity.
He can't understand it. You could work for decades and not afford even a quarter of what he can give you. Is he so unpleasant, so unlovable, that you're wiling to turn your back of a life of luxury?
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who comes up behind you and slams the door shut when you try to leave.
You've always seen him as a nice guy, someone awkward and gentle. But the look in his eyes now makes you question all of it.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy whose voice is a low, broken rasp. He sounds on the verge of tears and on the verge of fury all at once.
You think you can just leave after everything you've been through together? After the fortune he spent trying to make you happy?
No way baby.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who grabs your wrist and yanks you up against him.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who laughs when you threaten to scream. Luxury penthouse, remember? Totally sound proofed. Totally private. No one gets in or out without his permission.
It's just you and him, like it should have been from the beginning.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who squeezes your wrist hard enough to hurt. Who kisses you so rough you cut your lips on your teeth.
Yandere! Sugar Daddy who yanks at the pretty dress that he bought you. You want to be an ungrateful bitch? You want to throw his kindness back in his face? Oh, he's going to teach you a lesson.
You fucking owe him.
And he's going to use your body until that debt is paid.
#Shoutout to the anon who requested this#I want a man to pay for my groceries too#Yandere#Yandere x Reader#yandere x you#yandere scenarios#yandere drabbles#yandere imagines#yandere oc x you#Reader insert#Yandere Sugar Daddy#Fem reader
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the sunshine gentleman

summary | after discovering batman's identity, you continue your work as a secretary for bruce, keeping the secret; then, some days before christmas, your brother visits you.
pairing | bruce wayne x kent!reader ; platonic clark kent x reader
warnings / tags | fluffy, jealous bruce, clark being the best big brother ever, mentions of drunk sad bruce
word count | 4.5k
authors note | hi there!! english is not my first languaje so there might be some mistakes, or not, it can depend :)
this is part of the kent!batmom!reader series. you don't need to read the other parts to understand this since this is about bruce and batmom's past. this can be read as wayne's secretary part 2.
taglist | @maolen @joonunivrs @c4ssi4-luv @fanfics4ever @inejskywalker @radenxd @resting-confused-face @fionnalopez @stargirl9911 @idek101-01

YOU WENT BACK TO WORK LIKE NOTHING HAD HAPPENED.
Well… almost like nothing had happened.
Because things had changed, and even if neither of you said a word, you could feel the shift humming beneath the surface like a quiet electrical current. You knew he knew that you knew. And Bruce Wayne—professional, stone-faced, emotionally constipated Bruce Wayne—wasn’t exactly the type to bring up rooftop vigilante confessions or bloody couch collapses during your Monday morning coffee run.
Still, he was watching you differently now.
You’d catch it sometimes—those moments when your head was bent over your keyboard, fingers flying across the calendar updates, only to glance up and find his eyes already on you. Not in that fleeting, distracted way he used to. No. This was different. Intentional. Like he was studying you, trying to memorize something he didn’t realize he’d forgotten.
You never mentioned it.
You didn’t mention the fact that your salary had mysteriously doubled, either. One morning you just… opened your paystub and blinked at the number for a solid five minutes.
You almost choked on your coffee.
Then you laughed—alone, startled, dryly amused.
Not because you weren’t grateful, but because part of you worried what it might look like. You hadn’t told anyone about Bruce’s second identity. Not even Clark. And yet, here you were, getting a suspiciously generous raise right after patching up Gotham’s most elusive vigilante on your couch.
Still, you didn’t say anything to him about the money. Just like he didn’t say anything about the fact that you’d seen him half-dressed and bleeding.
Silence was your shared language now.
Christmas crept closer on the calendar, your week-long vacation to Smallville already approved—and then extended by Mr. Wayne himself without warning or comment. You noticed it on the scheduling software one quiet Wednesday morning and blinked, eyebrows furrowed.
“Two weeks,” you said under your breath, squinting at the screen. “Did I… request two?”
You hadn’t.
He couldn’t say he wanted you to rest. Couldn’t say he wanted you safe, far from rooftops and broken ribs and the kind of darkness Gotham swallowed people in.
You could’ve marched into his office and asked—but you didn’t. You figured this was Bruce’s way of doing something nice without ever being seen doing it.
You let it go.
Instead, you buried yourself in your task list: confirming board meetings, answering endless phone calls, redirecting holiday invitations, scheduling the year-end Wayne Foundation charity appearances, finalizing travel logistics, fixing one of Mr. Wayne’s glaring calendar conflicts that would’ve had him at two galas and a board retreat on the same night.
Currently, you were typing out an email to the Metropolis city hall offices—following up on a donation Wayne Enterprises had pledged—when the phone rang.
You didn’t even glance at the caller ID.
Your hand reached for the receiver automatically, tucking it between your ear and shoulder as you continued typing.
“Mr. Wayne’s office,” you said brightly. “This is Y/N.”
There was a slight crackle on the line, followed by Eloise’s chipper voice from the front desk. “Hi, sweetie. Sorry to bother—there’s a man here—”
“Oh, go ahead and send him up,” you said, not really listening, half-focused on the typo correction blinking at you on screen. “He’s probably here for Mr. Wayne.”
“Wait—”
You hung up.
Exactly three seconds later, Bruce’s office door opened.
You didn’t even turn at first.
“Who was it?” he asked, his voice low and casual, but there was something in the tone—something tense, like a wire pulled too tight.
You glanced over your shoulder. “Don’t know. I told Eloise to send him up.”
He stared at you.
You blinked. “What?”
The tension crackled between you like static. Like the moment before lightning splits the sky. And you hated how you couldn’t stop remembering the look on his face when you asked if he wanted to stay. The way he’d looked at you when you called him complicated. The way he hadn’t denied it.
You opened your mouth to ask if he wanted you to bring water or coffee or a distraction, but then—
“Y/N?”
Your head whipped toward the elevator. The voice was warm. Familiar. Deep and smooth and impossibly safe.
Your heart leapt.
“Clark?” you gasped.
And then you were running—faster than you could remember moving in heels—across the office floor, the thick plush carpet muffling the sound of your footsteps.
Your brother stood in the doorway, tall and broad and unmistakable in that sweet, dorky way only he could manage. Thick-rimmed glasses sat on the bridge of his nose, and his soft dark hair flopped gently against his forehead, a few strands damp from the misty Gotham air. He wore a gray pea coat and a warm smile so wide it nearly broke your heart in two.
You threw yourself at him.
He caught you with one arm like you weighed nothing, like you were still six years old and couldn’t reach the cookie jar, spinning you around as you clung to his neck and laughed, genuine and warm and glowing from somewhere deep in your chest.
“Oh my God, you’re here!” you squealed.
“I’m here,” he laughed, the sound vibrating through his chest. “You didn’t think I’d miss seeing my baby sister before Christmas, did you?”
You beamed, still in his arms, eyes damp with happiness. “You never come to Gotham.”
“Well,” he said with a sheepish grin, “someone had a pretty rough week.”
You pulled back just enough to frown at him, though your eyes sparkled with amusement. “Ma called you.”
He raised his brows in mock innocence.
“Clark.”
“What? She was worried!”
You snorted, finally sliding down to your feet, still holding his forearms as if to make sure he didn’t disappear again. “Unbelievable. She ratted me out.”
“She said you cried.”
You groaned. “I did not cry. I got champagne on my dress.”
“She said you sobbed.”
You buried your face in your hands. “Oh my God, I’m never telling her anything again.”
Clark just pulled you into another one-armed hug, pressing a kiss to the top of your head.
“I came to check on you,” he murmured. “Because you’re my girl.”
You blinked back something wet in your lashes.
You’d always been his. His first little sibling. His shadow. His anchor. His soft spot.
“You still have the same glasses,” you muttered.
“They’re iconic.”
“They’re huge.”
Clark laughed again, his smile wide and impossibly bright behind those dorky glasses. His hair was messier than usual, curling faintly from the cold, and his eyes—those soft, sea-colored eyes—shimmered like safety itself.
“You look good,” you said, brushing invisible lint off his jacket. “You’ve been flying more, huh?”
“Trying to,” he admitted, sheepish. “Kara says I’m too slow. Which is offensive.”
You snorted. “You’re a blur. I’ve seen it. Remember when you caught that meteor? Like. Mid-air?”
He grinned. “What, this old thing?” He mimed catching something, flexing obnoxiously. You slapped his arm.
“I missed you,” you said, more softly now.
He smiled at that, the kind of smile that reached all the way into your chest and stayed there.
“I missed you more, bug.”
There was a quiet cough behind you.
You turned and—
Oh.
Right.
Bruce.
You’d forgotten he was standing there. Your boss. Who was watching all of this with an expression so perfectly neutral you would’ve missed the sharp tension in his jaw if you didn’t know exactly where to look.
Oh.
He thought—
You stepped back slightly, placing a hand on Clark’s arm. “Oh! Sorry. Uh. Mr. Wayne—this is my brother.”
Bruce’s shoulders shifted almost imperceptibly.
“Clark Kent,” Clark offered warmly, stepping forward and extending his hand. “Reporter. From Metropolis.”
There was the barest flicker in Bruce’s eyes—recognition, maybe?—but it was gone just as fast.
“Bruce Wayne,” he replied coolly, clasping Clark’s hand.
“Pleasure, Mr. Wayne.”
Bruce took his hand, shook it once.
“Likewise.”
You didn’t notice how tight Bruce’s jaw was, how his eyes narrowed for just half a second when Clark touched your shoulder again in that brotherly, protective way.
Didn’t notice the split-second flash of relief that flickered across Bruce’s face when you’d said the word brother.
He’d been bracing himself.
You’d never know that.
You didn’t see the look that passed between them—brief, measured, masculine.
Your smile widened, the tension in the room bleeding out like a pulled thread. “I was just finishing an email. Clark, you wanna sit while I wrap it up?”
He nodded, then threw a glance at Bruce. “Unless I’m interrupting?”
Bruce’s face didn’t move, but his eyes—those eyes—lingered on you.
“No,” he said finally. “Not at all.”
You turned toward your desk again, heart beating a little faster.
You didn’t miss the way Bruce looked at you then.
Not as a secretary. Not as an employee.
But as the girl who knew his secret. The girl who’d wrapped gauze around his ribs with shaking hands. The girl who hadn’t said a word—because she didn’t need to.
“Do I get a secretary badge too?”
“No, it's mine only.”
Bruce watched you go—your arm looped with Clark’s, relaxed, the sounds trailing like music behind you.
He stood there, quiet, still, gaze unreadable.
But inside?
Jealousy had come and gone in a blink. And now, it left something softer behind.
He’d seen the way your eyes lit up. He’d watched it all.
And for one agonizing second—before the word brother—he’d hated the thought that someone else could pull that joy from you.
Not because he didn’t want you to have it but because he wanted to be the reason you smiled like that.
And maybe—just maybe—he already was.

The rest of the afternoon went by in a warm blur.
Clark hung around your desk, alternating between leaning on it, teasing you about how fast your typing was, and wandering through the executive suite like it was a museum exhibit. He made small talk with a few assistants from legal—charming as ever, harmlessly polite, somehow looking both like a bumbling reporter and a walking supernova at once.
You finished wrapping up the weekly emails, flagged three reports for follow-up, and cleaned your desk like you always did before a long break. Clark had taken your swivel chair hostage, legs folded in like a grasshopper as he spun slow, lazy circles, absolutely unbothered.
“Clark, people work here,” you said for the third time, nudging his shoulder as you reached to log out of your terminal.
“And I’m helping morale,” he offered brightly, spinning again. “Look at you. All cheered up.”
You rolled your eyes. “Yeah, because watching my older brother act like a caffeinated toddler is exactly what my coworkers needed.”
“You’re just mad I didn’t bring you cookies from Ma.”
You stared at him.
His mouth dropped open. “I knew I forgot something.”
You gasped. “Clark Joseph Kent. You monster.”
He laughed, shoulders shaking, your favorite kind of sound in the whole world. That laugh could turn a whole day around. Could mend a broken afternoon in three seconds flat. It’d been that way since you were little.
“Pa had eaten half of them,” he said between chuckles. “Said something about quality control.”
“Ugh.” You folded your arms. “I bet it was the molasses crinkles.”
“Yup.”
You narrowed your eyes. “I would’ve killed for those.”
Clark smiled as he leaned back in the chair, hands behind his head. “Well. Guess you’ll just have to come home for the rest of them.”
“I am going home. You knew that. You just didn’t want to share.”
“I’m not denying that.”
You kicked the base of the chair lightly, and he spun again, grinning wide.
The sun had dipped low over Gotham, tinting the skyline in shades of copper and soot. Snow hadn’t started falling yet, but you could feel it in the air—the crisp weight of it just waiting for nightfall. It was almost six. You’d already told Mr. Wayne his schedule was cleared. Everyone else in the suite had trickled out.
You closed your laptop slowly, dragging your fingers along the cool edge. “That’s it,” you murmured. “Last one for the year.”
Clark leaned against your chair, his warm hand tousling the top of your hair like he always did. You swatted him, but not with much force.
“You made it,” he said, all soft pride.
You beamed. “And with minimal trauma.”
That’s how Bruce found you.
You didn’t hear his office door open, but you felt it. That soft shift in the air, that weight of a presence even before a single word was spoken. You looked up instinctively—knew without knowing.
Bruce stood at the threshold of his office, silent and sharp in the dim light of the evening, his expression unreadable as ever. He didn’t look at Clark right away. His eyes were already on you.
And for a breath—just a breath—it was like the room quieted.
Clark noticed it too. The sudden stillness. He sat up straighter, adjusted his glasses, and gave a small, polite smile.
Bruce’s gaze didn’t move for a beat longer. Then, finally, he cleared his throat and said, “Y/N.”
You blinked. “Yes, Mr. Wayne?”
He paused.
Clark stood up beside you, suddenly less playful, picking up on something unspoken in your voice.
“I need a moment,” Bruce said.
You glanced at Clark. He gave you a tiny nod and turned toward the hallway, very obviously not listening.
You stepped over quietly, hands loose at your sides. It felt like stepping into a conversation that neither of you had planned. One that had been waiting in the shadows since that night on your couch.
Bruce’s jaw was set. His eyes flicked to yours, then away again. You waited, patient as ever.
This time, you noticed.
The persona was slipping.
There was no flirty billionaire here. No polished playboy with a champagne flute and a model on his arm. No clever, offhand remarks. No perfectly rehearsed charm.
And he wasn’t Batman either.
This wasn’t the man who bled on your hardwood floors and let you bandage the hidden parts of him.
This was just Bruce.
And somehow, that was even harder to look at. Because he was the one you wanted. Not the mask. Not the myth. The man who looked like he’d spent the last days thinking about something he didn’t know how to say.
You kept your voice soft. “Something wrong?”
He shook his head once. “No.”
You nodded, waiting.
He studied you like a puzzle he couldn’t solve. Something tightened behind his eyes.
“I just…” He hesitated. “I realized I hadn’t said anything.”
You tilted your head. “About what?”
“About Christmas. Your time off.”
You blinked, surprised.
“Oh.”
Another pause. His voice was gentler this time. “I hope you enjoy the break.”
You smiled slowly. “Thank you.”
He glanced down for a moment, then back up. “You deserve it.”
Your heart twisted.
The words were simple—but coming from him? They struck deep. Like a hand brushing the side of your cheek that never quite touched, but left warmth anyway.
“I wanted to… thank you. For your work this year.”
That caught you a little off guard.
You softened, lips quirking gently. “Thank you for not firing me after I spilled coffee on the Q3 reports.”
That pulled a flicker of a smile from him. The briefest upturn at the corner of his mouth. It made your chest ache.
“You’ve been… indispensable,” he said finally.
You blinked again.
You could count on one hand how many times Bruce Wayne had complimented you. And it had never sounded like that before.
“Wow,” you said softly. “That almost sounded like praise.”
He glanced up at you now. There was something in his eyes. Not softness, exactly. But… honesty. A peeling-back, quiet and raw.
“I’ll be with my family,” you said quietly, watching him. “My Ma and Pa. Clark, obviously. My . . . cousin, Kara. And all the pets in there.”
His eyes softened at that. “Good.”
You hesitated, then added, “There’ll be snow. And pie.”
“You like pie?”
You gave him a look. “Everyone likes pie.”
That earned you the smallest hint of a smile. “Then I hope there’s a lot of it,” he said.
You smiled back, not sure what else to say. A knot sat heavy in your throat.
This felt like goodbye. Not just for Christmas. Like something deeper was trying to end itself before it could bloom into something neither of you could handle.
He took a slow breath.
“Merry Christmas, Y/N.”
Your name in his voice was a quiet thing. Almost reverent.
Your chest tightened.
“Merry Christmas, Bruce.”
It was the first time you’d said it like that. Just his name.
No title. No distance.
Just him.
He didn’t correct you. Didn’t move. Didn’t say another word.
You gave him a tiny nod and stepped back, walking down the hallway with your heart throbbing in your chest.
Clark waited by the elevator, arms crossed, his smile patient.
“You good?” he asked, stepping inside with you as the doors opened.
You nodded. “Yeah.”
He watched you press the button. “That was not a professional goodbye.”
You elbowed him gently. “Shut up.”

The elevator ride up was filled with the familiar hum of holiday music through cheap speakers. You leaned against the wall, arms folded, mind still back in the office.
Specifically… in his office.
The words he’d said. The way he’d looked at you. Something unspoken itched at your ribs.
By the time you reached your apartment, the city had gone dark. Snow dusted the sidewalk in soft, fresh layers. The heater hummed as you kicked off your boots, Clark shrugging out of his coat like he lived there.
You gave him a look and then dropped your bag by the couch and flopped down with a sigh. Clark joined you a moment later, settling beside you with two mugs of cocoa he’d made in a blur of super-speed.
“You spoil me,” you muttered, sipping the top layer of whipped cream.
He smiled. “You’re easy to spoil.”
You curled your legs under yourself and leaned your head against the back of the couch.
Clark waited half a beat.
“So.”
You groaned.
“So what?”
He looked sideways at you with the kind of smirk only an older brother could perfect.
“You know what.”
You groaned. “Don’t start.”
“I’m not starting, I’m just observing.”
You turned your face just enough to look at him sideways. “Observing what, exactly?”
He tilted his head, mock-thoughtful. “Oh, you know. Just the way you turned into a blushing schoolgirl the second Mr. Billionaire said your name.”
“I did not blush.”
“You absolutely did.”
You sat up, grabbing the pillow and whacking him with it.
He took it like a champ. “That’s not denial!”
“I’m not blushing over Bruce Wayne,” you insisted.
Clark grinned. “Bruce Wayne. So we’re on a first-name basis now?”
You glared at him. “You’re infuriating.”
He laughed. “And you’re in love.”
You made a strangled noise and threw another pillow at his face. He caught it easily.
“I’m serious,” he laughed, ducking. “Y/N. You’re in love with your boss.”
“I am not—!” you started, then stopped.
“You’ve got a look,” he said. “You’re doing that pouty-lip, faraway-eyes thing.”
“Am not.”
“Are too.”
“I always look like that.”
He arched a brow.
You gave him a pointed glare. “Okay. Maybe.”
Clark grinned. “I knew it.”
You groaned. “Please don’t.”
“What?” he said, grinning wider. “I’m not judging. I think it’s cute.”
“Clark, seriously.”
“Hey, hey—look. I’m just saying. I know that look. You’re soft on him.”
You slumped onto the couch. “It doesn’t matter.”
He tilted his head. “Why not?”
You exhaled slowly, wrapping the blanket around your shoulders. “Because he’s my boss,” you said quietly. “And because I’m just… me. A girl from a farm. He has models and CEOs on speed dial.”
Clark’s gaze softened.
You didn’t meet it.
“And besides,” you added after a beat, “even if he did know I care… it’d just be gratitude. Or, like, professional respect. Nothing more.”
Clark looked at you for a long, long moment.
You didn’t realize your fingers were twisting the blanket.
He didn’t ask. Didn’t press. Didn’t say the words hovering between your teeth—that you’d seen Bruce Wayne in another light, one only a handful of people would ever witness. That you’d bandaged his wounds. That you knew who he really was beneath all the masks.
Because you hadn’t told him.
And Clark didn’t need to hear it to know your heart was wrapped in something complicated.
“You’re one of the best people I know,” he said gently, nudging your shoulder. “If he doesn’t see that… he’s an idiot.”
The city stretched outside your window, still dark, still sprawling.
You thought about Bruce’s face. The look he’d given you tonight. Like he didn’t have the words. Like maybe, he wished he did.
You pulled the blanket off the back of the couch and wrapped it around your shoulders. Clark reached for the remote, flipping to some holiday cartoon you both knew by heart.
And for the first time all year, your heart didn’t feel so heavy.

The train pulled into Smallville just past dusk on the 22nd, the windows fogged with cold and lined with frost, and for a moment, it felt like the town hadn’t changed at all. As if the moment you stepped off the platform, time folded itself in half and brought you right back to being sixteen with a knit scarf and Clark’s oversized coat hanging off your shoulders.
The Kent Farm was still there. Still white and peeling in some spots, still crowned with snow like whipped cream on top of an apple pie. The big oak out front was bare now, wrapped in tinsel and glowing red-and-green lights Clark must have strung at super-speed. The porch swing creaked like it always had. And from the driveway, you could already smell pie.
The air was so clean it almost made your eyes water.
“Ma’s been baking for three days,” Clark said, tugging both your suitcases out of the car’s trunk like they weighed nothing. “You might have to fight me for the cherry one.”
“Yeah?” you challenged. “Bet she made me my own.”
He groaned. “Favoritism.”
“Younger child advantage.”
“Still unfair.”
You stuck your tongue out at him, racing up the porch. He let you win.
Ma opened the door before you could knock, her arms already out, smile breaking across her face like a sunrise. “My baby.”
“Hi, Ma,” you breathed, hugging her tight. She still smelled like cinnamon and sugar, soft and warm and a little like sunshine.
Behind her, Pa stood in his old flannel, leaning on the doorframe, his expression quiet but fond.
“Well now,” he said, arms open. “There’s our girl.”
You hugged him next, fitting into his arms like you never left. His beard scratched your cheek, and his callused hands were gentle on your back.
“Thought you weren’t showing up ‘til tomorrow,” he said, though you could hear the smile in his voice.
“Got lucky with the train,” you replied. “Clark met me in Gotham and drove me the rest of the way.”
“Mm,” Ma said, ushering you inside, “well, lucky us then.”
The house hadn’t changed much. The old quilt on the couch. The fireplace crackling with kindling and soft orange light. The tree in the corner—short, squat, and lovingly cluttered with handmade ornaments, some dating back to your first art class in kindergarten. Clark’s old stocking hung beside yours, both sagging a little under their own weight. The radio hummed with classic carols in the background.
It was perfect.
You spent the first evening in pajamas, curled up with your feet under Ma’s legs while she threaded popcorn garland. Clark lay on the floor with Krypto in his lap, absently petting it while you flipped through old photo albums and teased Pa about his seventies haircut.
You didn’t talk about Gotham.
Didn’t talk about Bruce.
Didn’t talk about the new pay bump or the way your hands had shaken when he said your name that last day. You just breathed.
And it felt like your lungs could finally fill.
Christmas morning broke with the smell of pancakes and the sound of Pa whistling “Jingle Bells” while frying bacon.
Snow had fallen overnight. Heavy, soft, glistening snow that blanketed the entire farm in silence. The barn roof sagged under it. The wind was still. Clark had cleared the driveway before anyone woke up.
You padded downstairs in fuzzy socks and a flannel shirt big enough to swallow you whole. Your hair was messy. Your eyes still carried sleep.
Ma greeted you with a kiss on the temple and a stack of warm flapjacks the size of your face.
“Merry Christmas, sweetheart.”
“Merry Christmas, Ma.”
Clark sat at the table, already halfway through a second plate. You plopped beside him and stole one of his pancakes with a fork. He glared. You beamed.
“I have super reflexes, you know.”
“You also have super generosity,” you said sweetly.
The day passed in a slow blur of joy.
You opened presents in the morning—socks and books and Clark’s idea of a joke gift (a Gotham travel mug that said “Bat-teries Not Included”). Pa gave you a new flannel, and Ma gave you a hand-knitted blanket in your favorite color.
Clark got a new camera. Ma teared up watching him unwrap it.
After that, there were pies. All kinds. Ma had made you a cherry one just for yourself. You offered Clark half a slice. He acted like you’d handed him gold.
Later, Clark flew out to visit Lois while you helped Ma with the dishes and watched a black-and-white Christmas movie on VHS. You curled up on the couch with the blanket she made you, sipping cider, belly full and warm.
It was the kind of day that didn’t need anything more.
The kind of quiet that healed something.
Even if you still felt the echo of Gotham under your skin. Even if your thoughts still kept wandering back to a cold tower and a lonely office with dark windows. Even if your heart still ached when you remembered the way Bruce had looked at you—soft, almost apologetic, and just a little too late.
It was past midnight when your phone rang.
You were in bed, tucked under layers, the room cold but your limbs warm. You blinked at the screen, expecting a message from Clark—maybe a picture of a food coma from Lois’s house.
But it wasn’t Clark.
The name on your screen just read: Mr. Wayne :p
Your heart stuttered. You answered on the second ring.
“Hello?”
There was a pause. Then a low, familiar voice, quieter than you’d ever heard it.
“Y/N.”
You sat up slowly, fingers tightening around the phone.
“Hi,” you whispered.
He didn’t say anything for a moment. You listened to the background noise—nothing but silence. No city hum. No movement.
“Y/N.”
Your heart skipped. He exhaled through his nose, slowly.
“Mr. Wayne?” you said.
Another silence. Then, quieter: “Bruce.”
You blinked. “Bruce. Right. No working hours.”
You could hear him breathing, the faintest rustle of fabric. Something slow, heavy. Like he was lying down.
“Did I wake you?” He asked.
Something in his voice made your throat tighten.
It wasn’t the voice of a billionaire. Not even Batman. It was just him.
Tired. Raw.
“No,” you said. “I… wasn’t sleeping.”
Another pause. You lay back down slowly, pulling the blanket higher.
“Are you alright?” you asked gently.
“I don’t know,” he said, so honestly it nearly knocked the breath out of you.
You swallowed.
“I wasn’t sure if I should call,” he said. “Didn’t want to interrupt.”
“You’re not,” you whispered. “You’re not interrupting anything.”
A faint rustle, like he shifted onto his side.
“It’s quiet here,” he murmured. “Too quiet.”
You hesitated. “You’re alone?”
“…Yeah.”
You bit your lip, thumb brushing the edge of the phone.
“Are you… okay?” you asked again, softer this time.
“I think I drank too much,” he admitted.
There was no bravado to it. No self-deprecation. Just a quiet truth.
You exhaled slowly, curling tighter into the blanket. “Do you want me to stay on the phone?”
There was a pause.
“Yes.”
That one word felt like it cracked something open inside you.
“Okay,” you said gently. “I can do that.”
Neither of you spoke for a while. Just breathing. Just… there.
And then:
“Merry Christmas,” he said, his voice so low it was barely more than breath.
Your eyes burned. “Merry Christmas, Bruce.”
You didn’t ask what he’d done that day. You didn’t ask if he’d seen anyone or if he’d sat in that big house alone with all those ghosts and memories and shadows.
You didn’t need to.
He’d called you. And that was enough.
You heard him sigh quietly, the sound tugging something deep inside your chest.
“I think I’ll fall asleep,” he whispered.
“Then sleep,” you said. “I’ll stay.”
“Thank you,” he breathed.
The line went quiet after that.
You didn’t hang up. You didn’t say a word. You just lay there, the phone pressed to your ear, the line still open, listening to Bruce Wayne fall asleep to the sound of your voice.
#batfam x reader#batfamily x reader#bruce wayne x reader#batmom reader#bruce wayne x you#platonic clark kent x reader#kent!reader
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Justice League Dark being all worried because an ancient and magically powerful pharaoh is going to awaken to his past life memories soon and could usher in a new age of darkness if he isn't stopped.
Tucker, said pharaoh, gains his past life memories and magical power, and ignores it in favor of continuing his internship at Wayne Tech.
Part 2
Wonder Woman frowned. “What are you saying?”
Constantine growled. “I’m saying that if we don’t find this thing fast…. It could bring in a new age of darkness. And trust me, you don’t want to find out what that could mean.”
Wonder Woman turned to Zatanna. “How dangerous is this thing? And how did this happen?”
Zatanna shook her head, also looking worried and confused. “I’m not entirely sure. However, Constantine and I did some spells and we talked to some other psychics, who have all said the same thing. Someone out there in the world will soon gain their past life’s memories and magical power, and with it, they will have the knowledge and capabilities to bring death and chaos to this world. We need to stop them.”
Wonder Woman nodded. “Tell me what we need to do. We must stop this person before anything could happen!”
————
“Wait, but didn’t we already know that you’re the reincarnation of a past pharaoh?” Danny said, staring at him in bafflement through the screen. “This isn’t anything new.”
Tucker rolled his eyes. “I know! Like damn, couldn’t I have given these powers in high school?”
“Still wouldn’t get bitches though,” Sam said dryly, not even looking up from where she was trimming her plants.
“Hey!” Tucker complained.
Danny smirked. “Maybe you could say he’s a…. Late bloomer?”
He chortled as they both groaned. Sam picked up her flowers and placed them under her desk to protect them from Danny’s awful puns with a shake of her head. Tucker just gave a long sigh.
Tucker was sullen. “I mean… it’s cool and all, but I don’t need them, y’know? And for some reason, I have voices in my head telling me to start the apocalypse now.”
Sam and Danny stared at him with varying degrees of unimpressed and concern. “Well? Are you?” Sam asked, raising an eyebrow.
Tucker snorted. “Hell no. You know how much I get paid at Wayne Enterprises? I get paid buckets for only an hour a day to write up some software and then I can spend the rest of the time on games. There’s no way I’m going to waste my time on Armageddon when I can make money.”
Danny beamed. “That’s the spirit! Do you want me to come over to exorcise the voices in your head? They’re probably like… ghosts or something, right?”
“Nah, it’s alright. Jazz is going to come over to help. And if it’s insanity from drinking Gotham water, then she’s definitely more qualified than you guys.”
Danny nodded. “Makes sense.”
Sam chuckled to herself. “Who knew that the world could be saved with a billionaire’s money? Oh, wait, I did because—!”
Both boys groaned and settled in for another rant about the ethics of billionaires. Not that they disagreed, but still.
#dpxdc#dcxdp#dp x dc#dc x dp#danny phantom x dc#dp x dc crossover#ask#anon ask#jazz fenton#danny fenton#tucker foley#sam manson#ty for the ask!
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