Yelena Belova (
musicdied) wrote in
clandestinement2025-12-24 03:58 pm
Hybridization - for
makingitworse
There's something off about the facility set in what Yelena suspects was at one point an old mine - there are the bones of what might once have been a town along the overgrown track she'd used as an approach. As important as it's apparently supposed to be, it's sparsely guarded, and that's not just her training as a Widow colouring her judgment. Sparsely guarded, but not entirely unguarded - by the time she gets through the secure door to the facility's server room, she has maybe forty-five minutes before someone realizes the guard she'd had to incapacitate has missed check-in.
It takes her ten of those minutes to interface and get the download set up, and a bit of effort splices her into the security feeds so she can keep an eye on any unusual movement on her tablet. The feeds are conveniently labelled by floor and sector and - there are too many. A subfloor that hadn't been on the schematics lurks on one of the cameras.
"If I was hiding something really nasty..." she murmurs to herself. Still, she wrestles with her options for a long moment, weighing the possibility of valuable information against the sense behind sticking to the plan.
She won't get another shot at this place. Possibility wins out.
She slips her exploits in, system failure to kill cameras and communications and mimic the atmospheric interference she'd heard the guards bitching about, and sets them on a timer, then slips down the hall to the elevator shaft. The elevator's already locked up on the top level; it's a long climb down a narrow ladder that reeks of rust, but she's handled far worse.
She hadn't been able to see much with the angle of the one camera on this level, and what she does find is disappointing. Crates, all numerically labelled, nothing clearly showing what may or may not be important. She winds her way carefully through the metal maze until she finds - another box. This one, though, is white and sleek, with controls attached. There's a screen that appears to be intended to monitor something, but it's blank, and poking carefully at the buttons doesn't bring up a display. Eventually, though, she finds the sequence to unlock the box, and there's a dull thunk, followed by a hiss as it depressurizes. She steps back carefully as the low hum of hydraulics lifts the lid up and back, a small amber warning light blinking beneath the blank screen display.
It takes her ten of those minutes to interface and get the download set up, and a bit of effort splices her into the security feeds so she can keep an eye on any unusual movement on her tablet. The feeds are conveniently labelled by floor and sector and - there are too many. A subfloor that hadn't been on the schematics lurks on one of the cameras.
"If I was hiding something really nasty..." she murmurs to herself. Still, she wrestles with her options for a long moment, weighing the possibility of valuable information against the sense behind sticking to the plan.
She won't get another shot at this place. Possibility wins out.
She slips her exploits in, system failure to kill cameras and communications and mimic the atmospheric interference she'd heard the guards bitching about, and sets them on a timer, then slips down the hall to the elevator shaft. The elevator's already locked up on the top level; it's a long climb down a narrow ladder that reeks of rust, but she's handled far worse.
She hadn't been able to see much with the angle of the one camera on this level, and what she does find is disappointing. Crates, all numerically labelled, nothing clearly showing what may or may not be important. She winds her way carefully through the metal maze until she finds - another box. This one, though, is white and sleek, with controls attached. There's a screen that appears to be intended to monitor something, but it's blank, and poking carefully at the buttons doesn't bring up a display. Eventually, though, she finds the sequence to unlock the box, and there's a dull thunk, followed by a hiss as it depressurizes. She steps back carefully as the low hum of hydraulics lifts the lid up and back, a small amber warning light blinking beneath the blank screen display.

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Clearly he is not in one know, if those are the obvious symptoms, though he is kind of wringing his hands a little.
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Hopefully, it won't come to that. She's not expecting any miracles.
She reaches into one of her pockets and draws out a pair of heavy duty chemical sticks, cracking them and tossing them into the elevator shaft, where they bloom into an eerie green glow. It's not day-bright, but it provides at least some illumination.
"I'll start up first, so you do not have to reverse after I pop the doors on our floor. The ladder's on the left, a long step." A brief pause, and then, "Maybe not so long for you."
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And then she's past him, reaching for the ladder and swinging onto it with the smooth ease of someone used to much more precarious manoeuvring. She starts up, setting a pace deliberately slower than she's accustomed to, the better to keep the gap from growing too large.
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It takes him a long minute of just clinging to the rungs, hearing everything echo weirdly around him, before he starts moving. He can't stay down here forever. And climbing back down again would mean looking down and he's not going to be able to do that, he's sure.
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"Are you all right?" she asks, and her voice echoes weirdly as well, even as she pitches it quiet so it doesn't carry to anyone who might be patrolling near the elevators above.
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It crosses his mind that this shaft might be deep enough to just let go and not have to get up again, but if he was going to go, it probably wouldn't be in a way that would terrify him.
"Keep going," he adds, because if he can keep moving, they can get out of here. He hopes.
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But there isn't a damn thing she can do about that now.
"Okay," she says. "Tell me if you need to stop."
She picks up climbing again, pace careful, much of her attention on the man ascending below her. Bad practice, maybe, but he's her responsibility until they're clear of this place, back to civilization and people who can keep him safe better than one Widow who hadn't expected this to turn into a rescue.
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But he does keep going, so there's that. Hopefully they aren't stuck in here for too long, and he can flop down on solid ground once they're at the top.
And thank goodness they're not crab-walking up back to back.no subject
Finally, Yelena halts again. "This is our stop," she says, voice pitched quiet, though she isn't quite whispering. "Give me a minute to get the door open."
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He freezes when she speaks, clinging tight to the ladder, but also listening hard for any sound above him. "Wait," he says, hoarse but quiet. "I think. I think there's someone out there?" It sounds like footsteps, above and to the right, on the other side of what is probably the elevator door.
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Or if maybe he hadn't been telling the truth about not being a Guide or a Sentinel, for his own reasons - maybe nothing more than the fact that a strange woman met in the secret basement of a shady facility doesn't exactly scream trustworthy.
"Coming or going?"
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He can kind of feel him on the edge of his awareness. Bored, tired, sore feet. Wanting to get off his shift and go home. Surely he's imagining that, though.
"I think he's just. Um. Just patrolling?" Is that the right word for it?
If he's right, that means they have to wait, or pick another flood. God, he hopes they don't have to wait long.
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She knows layout of the building, can calculate how long it should take the guard to get to the bend in the hall and out of sight from there. As long as he doesn't know they're there, there's no reason for him to override the elevator doors and look inside.
Still, it's a tense sort of quiet as they wait there in the dark.
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"He's going," he whispers at last. "I don't know how far away he is, but I can't-- I can't hear him anymore?" Can't feel him anymore, but that sounds so impossible to say.
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Once the opening is wide enough, Yelena levers herself up and over, scrambling into the hall and giving it a quick visual sweep before she turns to offer Bob a hand to help him across.
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He also tries not to cling to the floor, on hands and knees, for too long once he's safely out of the elevator shaft. They need to get moving. He hopes she knows where they're going from here, because he's afraid he's going to be useless.
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"Stay behind me," she says quietly once he's picked himself back up again, and starts the slow progress forward, stopping at the corner to press against the wall and peek around for any guards.
There are two of them, more than halfway down the hall. She closes her eyes for a moment, mentally calculating an approach that gives her the best chance of disabling them before they can call for backup, then turns to Bob and mouths, "Stay here."
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Also, he can't ask to help without giving them away. He finally nods a little.
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The second guard starts to say something, then cuts off with a choked gasp. There's the sound of scuffling, of cartilage crunching, and then another electric crackle.
Then comes the rustling of fabric and rip of velcro, and a series of sharp, metallic clicks as Yelena strips the guards of their weapons.
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He stays where he is, biting at his knuckles in an attempt to keep his stomach under control, until she comes back around the corner.
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"How are you holding up?" she asks.
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But maybe not in a place where they might be caught at any moment.
He shakes his head a little, swallows hard, and unhunches with effort. "We should go, right?"
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Because they aren't dead - there might be a nagging sense of them from down the hall, if his newly-formed empathy isn't too scalded from the fight to pick up on the dull signature of unconscious minds. It isn't mercy, on Yelena's part, just expedience, but it does make the psychic backlash a little better than it could be.
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He can't tell if they're alive just yet, he's still too wound up and trying to sort out what different things mean, but when they get closer, to move past them, he'll be very relieved to notice it.
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