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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After a few steps of silence, he asks, "Did they ever put you or the other girls. Did they ever." He frowns and points in the direction of the Chair, which is also the direction of the cryotube. Either one. He'll take either answer, really.
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Well, what there's a 50/50 chance he's referring to, at least. Fortunately, the answer's the same either way. "No," she says. "Maybe the older Widows, the graduates, but I've never heard of it. I think we're meant to be a different kind of weapon."
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He moves into the hall, turning the corner, and frowns at another body before kicking it to one side. He'll drag it out on their way back out. "I don't remember much," he warns her. "You know I don't remember you. Not really. But that thing. It. It takes everything except the training."
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She reaches up to rest one small hand on his flesh-and-blood arm, squeezing gently. "It's okay if you don't remember us right now. You will make new memories, and we won't let anyone take them away."
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But breaking the Chair. He wants that. (The soldier is not supposed to want. He does anyway.)
Finally, after a long pause and a heavy swallow, eyes burning a little with some unfamiliar emotion, he says, "Good. That's. Thank you."
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"You're one of us now," she says. "We protect each other."
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Not even an hour out of the ice, and the programming is already degrading this much. But if there's no more Chair (no more Chair no more Chair), then there's no way to fix it. He thinks these girls wouldn't try to fix it, anyway. New memories. New programming, maybe.
He swipes at his face with the flesh hand and resumes walking. "The records room is in here," he says.
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That turns out to mean more bodies - and while the two that have been left where they fell had both belonged to grown men, there are streaks on the bloody floor that suggest at least one smaller corpse that had been removed.
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"How many did you lose," he asks, without looking at the place where another person clearly fell. "Taking this place."
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"They started with - Alisa is the only one of the very little girls we have left. The trainees who could fight - we have a little less than half left."
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He wants to kick the bodies, again, but he knows it's pointless. They're dead. It wouldn't do anything. He does drop them with a little more force than necessary when he puts them down, though. "It won't happen again," he promises instead, managing to inject something fierce into his voice somehow. "It won't."
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"I hope they're all dead," she says, and there's an edge of brittle defiance in her voice, as though she's half-expecting one of the corpses to rise to exact punishment. "The handlers, the doctors, the guards. All of them, everywhere."
A pause, brief, and then, "--The equipment should still be able to play back the recordings we have. We didn't damage it in the fight."
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He moves over to the monitor and keyboard, frowns at it a moment until he remembers how to use it, then starts typing to activate the system. The most recent records should already be in the system, if it went down shortly after the meteor strike. Two hours were corrupted, the girl said. There's still almost two days of records.
"Check that shelf. See if there is a tape marked with yesterday's date," he tells Yelena.
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Finally, she finds the right tape, and stretches up on tip-toe to retrieve it, then trots back over to join him at the console.
"It's going to be bad," she warns. "If it scared them that much."
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The current video feed seems to show... snow. Maybe. Maybe it's ash. There aren't any people in the field of the cameras outside the bunker, at least not immediately. He tries to see through the poor quality video to whether there are buildings nearby. His memory seems to say there won't be, but his memory is unreliable.
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"There is cold weather gear here," Yelena offers, almost automatically. "Radiation gear, I am not so sure of."
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He doesn't know how he knows that. It feels like very old knowledge. (His original self, after all, did love dinosaurs and would follow the theories for why they died out...)
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The shapes shrink as he rewinds; it becomes clear in short order that a few are merely drifts blown by the wind. Others...are not. They resolve slowly into a man in uniform similar to the guards, and two women, one in her mid-twenties, the other in her late thirties or early forties, both dressed in cold-weather gear. Yelena makes a small sound of protest as she sees the latter, eyes wide.
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When Yelena makes a noise, he looks away, over at her. "Do you know them."
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Fake mother. Or real mother. When you're that small, is there any difference?
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"We should check them anyway. In case they're carrying things we can use, or intel about the other bases."
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"We will," he promises, then continues rolling the tape back, looking for what actually happened to them. "Maybe don't watch this part," he suggests to her.
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If he continues rolling the tape back, he'll see the younger of the two Widows apparently pleading with whoever's manning security - to let them get in, or perhaps to let them walk away now that they've found the installation locked down. It isn't clear - even if the footage were being played in the normal order, there's no audio.
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