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Mia in DC-verse
It was supposed to just be a little pill. One pill (instead of all the anti-anxiety pills every day for as long as it takes) that would solve all her social anxiety by just telling her what to do in social situations instead of leaving her to freak out over it by herself. And it did, for a while? It helped. The SQUIP advised her on how to be prettier and cooler and better, and she let it, even if sometimes its methods sucked a lot and made her feel even worse about herself than she did before.
It's when the SQUIP gets it into its head that helping Mia isn't enough, it needs to get a SQUIP into everyone at her school that shit goes way too far. She tries refusing to do what it wants, but it physically takes over her body and uses it to start stealing the materials needed to make more SQUIPs. What follows is basically a waking nightmare until her best friend Michael gets in touch with some mysterious Oracle person online, who figures out a way to temporarily shut down the SQUIP.
Mostly by drugging her. Which sucks, but you know what? Feeling weird and fuzzy and kind of disconnected from herself but still herself is way better than the SQUIP using her as a human meat puppet. This is literally the first time in months that he hasn't been there, telling her what to say and do and threatening her with electrical shocks and worse if she didn't comply.
Also, it's definitely helping her feel less anxious about hanging out with the Red Hood. Because she's hanging out with the Red Hood, total badass but sometimes morally-questionable vigilante, while Michael coordinates with Oracle to find a better, more permanent solution. And yeah, everyone knows that the Red Hood doesn't hurt kids and she's technically a kid, but she also has a dangerous computer in her head that could maybe take back over at any time.
So, yeah. Mostly since meeting him, she's been kind of sitting quietly and watching him nervously when she's not thoroughly spacing out. It really does not help her social skills right now that the voice in her ear that's been guiding her through pretty much every situation for a quarter of a year is gone.
It's when the SQUIP gets it into its head that helping Mia isn't enough, it needs to get a SQUIP into everyone at her school that shit goes way too far. She tries refusing to do what it wants, but it physically takes over her body and uses it to start stealing the materials needed to make more SQUIPs. What follows is basically a waking nightmare until her best friend Michael gets in touch with some mysterious Oracle person online, who figures out a way to temporarily shut down the SQUIP.
Mostly by drugging her. Which sucks, but you know what? Feeling weird and fuzzy and kind of disconnected from herself but still herself is way better than the SQUIP using her as a human meat puppet. This is literally the first time in months that he hasn't been there, telling her what to say and do and threatening her with electrical shocks and worse if she didn't comply.
Also, it's definitely helping her feel less anxious about hanging out with the Red Hood. Because she's hanging out with the Red Hood, total badass but sometimes morally-questionable vigilante, while Michael coordinates with Oracle to find a better, more permanent solution. And yeah, everyone knows that the Red Hood doesn't hurt kids and she's technically a kid, but she also has a dangerous computer in her head that could maybe take back over at any time.
So, yeah. Mostly since meeting him, she's been kind of sitting quietly and watching him nervously when she's not thoroughly spacing out. It really does not help her social skills right now that the voice in her ear that's been guiding her through pretty much every situation for a quarter of a year is gone.
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Everyone knows he hates it when kids get hurt and it was clear Mia had already gone through a lot. He only wants to help her.
Her needing to keep taking drugs to keep the SQUIP at bay isn't something Jason's comfortable with. The way she spaces out and looks glass-eyed at times is painfully familiar to him. But until Barbara and Michael find a more permanent solution, Jason isn't going to protest. He's aware that his discomfort largely comes from the trauma of having a drug-addicted mother. He knows he's not exactly looking at the situation objectively. He keeps reminding himself that Mia's situation isn't the same as his mother's.
That issue aside, Jason focuses on the present and on taking care of Mia. He had readjusted his patrol schedule to spend more time at home while still making it very clear that any criminal acting out in his territory was dead.
This modified schedule also meant being awake in the morning instead of sleeping in. To make Mia feel more comfortable, Jason began doing more domestic things like making breakfast for the both of them. Everyone likes breakfast, right?
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She can smell breakfast coming from the kitchen, which is cool - seriously, the Red Hood is surprisingly nice for guy who's also kind of a killer? - and the smell is tempting, which is why she's drifting in. For a glass of water. Not because she's hungry.
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Jason knows that the SQUIP had controlled virtually every aspect of Mia's life, including her diet. How she is now is apparently better than before but he knows she's still adjusting to not having that voice try to control her. So he tries to be patient and not push her while also making it clear he's available to help.
He was the middle of making omelets when he hears her come in.
"'Morning," he greets with a small smile.
A large stack of pancakes and a plate of breakfast sausages sat in the middle of the dining table.
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" - Morning," she says, after way too long a pause.
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