Yelena Belova (
musicdied) wrote in
clandestinement2023-03-24 01:11 am
Apocalypse children - for
worthallthis
There's an alarm sounding somewhere in the compound, harsh and urgent and ignored, and somehow still less jarring than the occasional creak of metal. Beneath that, voices sound, quick and quiet and tense, the pitch entirely wrong for any technicians, any handlers, anyone who belongs in this room.
"...sure you did it right?"
"I entered the sequence exactly like I was supposed to!"
"Then why isn't it--"
The first voice cuts off at the hydraulic hiss of the cryo tube opening. The inrush of air brings with it the smell of smoke, and the acrid taste of heated metal, and the sound of nervous gasps and small feet on grated metal flooring.
Outside the cryo tube stands a group of girls, the oldest somewhere around twelve or thirteen, the youngest perhaps four, clinging tight to the leg of one of the older girls and peering at the tube with wide-eyed fascination.
The girl who positions herself at the front of the pack - and they are a pack, all but the smallest fierce-eyed and wary - doesn't look like the oldest, round-faced, blonde hair straggling loose from her braids, clothing and skin streaked with blood and a bruise darkening beneath one eye. She lifts her chin, and looks with bright defiance at the man she and her sisters have just pulled from the dreamless grip of cryo-stasis.
"Winter Soldier," she says in clear Russian, and despite her fierce air, there's something like hope in her voice. "Can you understand me?"

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Then he shies away from the idea, because he doesn't want things. He shouldn't. He has his mission, and that mission is keeping these girls safe, not hearing the end of stories.
He picks himself up when Yelena tells the little ones to go to sleep. He thinks he has a room somewhere. A pallet on a floor behind a locked door. Maybe he should be there, instead of here... even if the idea is kind of unpleasant.
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She watches him come to his feet, expression shifting to one of - not distress, exactly, but certainly surprise. Concern.
"You're going?" A pause, and then, almost hopeful: "One last patrol before bed? We'll help." She beckons to two of the older girls, and while they may have a year or two on her, they also don't protest.
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That's... probably better. They aren't like handlers. They won't want him contained, they'll want him where he can watch over them. Keep them safe. So he should be with them, not in whatever room they kept him in. It makes sense.
So he nods. "Just a quick one," he promises. "We can set a watch schedule on the door after, while the little ones sleep." He doesn't expect anyone to come to a room buried this deep in the bunker, he doesn't expect anyone at all gien everything, but it will make them all feel safer to have someone on watch.
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Yelena nods briskly, and hops off the bed to pad over to his side, the two patrol recruits trailing her. "A watch would be good," she agrees. "Just in case."
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And conveniently avoid the medical rooms and said cryo chamber, in his case. That was on purpose.
He's also splitting up from Yelena, because he's spent a large chunk of his time awake with her now. He needs to spend time with the other girls, too. It's going to take him a while to get to know all of them, but he will put in the work to learn their skills, preferences, and temperaments. They're his sisters.
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The patrols turn up nothing out of the ordinary. By the time they return, most of the little ones are asleep, or feigning it remarkably convincingly. That, too, is a lesson the girls learned early.
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Katya gives him a small, solemn smile, and adds, "We'll make sure Alisa doesn't try to sneak in with you while you're sleeping."
None of the older girls has missed how quickly that particular tiny duckling has imprinted.
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He doesn't know that he'll need waking up, since he's not sure if he'll manage to sleep, and even if he doesn't the other girls stirring would probably wake him. But he seems prudent to give a warning since he has no idea what waking up will be like.
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It doesn't take long for his little trio of deputies to get themselves ready for bed, taking three of the bunks near the door - between the younger children and any threat that might make it through, for all that anything that could get past their new Brother would be far more than a few adolescents, however well-trained, can handle. Sleep is slower coming - but they've begun to learn the knack of sleeping when they have the chance, and gradually they all drift off, waiting for their turns at watch.
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He'll slip back inside and wake Yelena with her name spoken quietly from a pace or so away, only touching her hesitantly if she seems to need it-- she probably won't-- then regards the sleeping options dubiously. He winds up sitting upright against the wall in a corner, arms tucked around his chest, with no way to get behind him or take him by surprise in his moment of weakness.
He does sleep, but only after Yelena's watch ends and she trades off with Irena, and even then it's fitful. Still, it's better than none at all.
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He may not need them, may be warm enough now that he's thawed and eaten, but she still feels a little bad for not thinking to offer them before.
The third watch passes without incident. Irena returns, and Katya hands off Alisa - who had decided she needed to sleep with someone, and only been corralled into bunking down with one of her sister Widows because they were sleeping in proper beds - before going to take her shift.
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So he dozes under the blankets, waking each time the door opens to admit or release a young widow, never quite getting to the point of dreams. It's weird and a little uncomfortable, losing time, but at the same time familiar. Apparently he has slept before.
He picks himself up when Katya slips inside, collecting his blankets to fold and set on one of the spare beds he'd spurned. "I will go start breakfast," he tells her quietly. "If you wake everyone." The timer should run out around mid-afternoon, and he doesn't want anyone to still be here when some other base decides to come check on them, so they need to get a good start on fixing up one of the trucks and packing it up with everything useful left in the base.
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"Once we identify the transport to use, we were thinking to put the girls in pairs to begin loading it," Yelena says.
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He looks up at the soft chatter of approaching children, and would smile if he remembered how. It's nice to hear, though, and he watches Yelena and Katya come to join him. "Yes. They can do that while I make any necessary repairs. This is what we should bring with us," he says, pointing to the stacks of canned food, jars of jam and preserves, and cartons of broth and dehydrated milk. There's also the rest of the oatmeal and plenty of protein bars, as awful as that's going to be to have to feed little girls. There's even a gallon each of maple syrup and honey, and something tells him that those will never go bad, and will help give the girls a treat.
"We should also fill whatever containers we can close with water," he adds, thoughtfully.
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The first bowl he tops with a bit of sugar from the big box-- another thing to pack-- and several of the cranberries, and offers directly to Yelena. "For you. I'll pass them out to the others girls."
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The girls are, all of them, orderly about eating their meals. Even the smaller ones have had that drilled into them - the chatter stops as food is passed out, and they eat quickly, as though they're still half-afraid that if they take too long, it will be taken away from them.
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Except that's a waste of time, when they're going to be leaving shortly. He sets two of the middle-aged girls to rinsing the bowls so they can use them for the stew at lunch, then lets the rest start carrying cans and cartons and even kitchen towels with him down to the garage, where he scrounges up the keys to the half-dozen vehicles there and starts turning them on one by one, checking the sound of their engines and strength of their tires before choosing the best of the lot to load up. There aren't even a lot of repairs to make, just a single cracked hose and frayed wire to replace, so he can focus on getting the heavy water and remaining food on board.
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They also do manage to find the meal replacements, though the powders look revolting enough that neither of the girls like the thought of Brother having to eat them.
Once they've assembled everything that can reasonably be brought along, they load it onto a pair of wheeled stretchers, and trundle them carefully along to the garage.
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He eyes the stretchers with something not quite wary, he was rarely strapped to those. Why carry the soldier when he can usually walk himself just fine, no matter how injured, after all? He takes the cases of his meal replacement, as the heaviest bits, to slot into the piles of goods in the truck's bed. The little cartons don't look right. It should be liquid. Maybe it has to be mixed with water?
"This is it?" he asks Yelena. If they don't have to go back, then-- they're almost ready, he thinks. Just outfit the girls, kit him up, and eat their stew, and they can be gone from this place.
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And then, because she didn't miss the way he looked at the stretchers, she adds, "We don't need to bring these. There should be a backboard, in the emergency kit, if anyone gets hurt badly enough to need to be kept still. They were just the best way to move things without needing extra trips."
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And then he steps back to let them, surveying the truck, trying to think of anything else they might need. "This might be it," he says after a moment. The trunk's fuel tank is full, he added what tools and parts there were to repair it if necessary, there's food and bedding and medical supplies.... "Just got to get us ready, now."
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The girls make quick work of bundling the supplies into the sheets, and shifting them from the stretchers into the transport.
"Katya and I will do a last equipment check," Yelena suggests. "So we're all ready to go once everyone has eaten."
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He takes a breath, and finishes, "And then it will be time to go."
Which, if he lets himself think too hard about it, will be terrifying. Going out into the world, handlerless, backupless, with a pack of children to protect. But it's the mission. No matter how terrifying it is, he always completes his missions.
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