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.

no subject
There is, in fact, a person in that fitted indentation. He's got shaggy, curly hair, dressed in pale blue scrubs, with bare feet.
For a beat, he looks asleep, but then his eyes blink open and he frowns in confusion at the lid of the box hovering over his head.
no subject
She jerks back, with a slightly strangled, “What the fuck?”
no subject
no subject
"I am not going to hurt you," she says, stepping back to give him a little more space. "Are you all right?"
no subject
She doesn't seem pissed off, though. She seems-- confused. And wary. He doesn't know how she knows that, her expression is not particularly revealing.
"I, um, I don't know. I just woke up. I don't-- where is this?" He doesn't know if strange-operative-lady will give him a real answer, but the question pops out anyway.
no subject
"Why were you sleeping in a box?"
no subject
"The last place I remember was a lab in southeast Asia. I don't know how I... got here." He prods a little at the fitted foam he'd been lying in. That is very weird. And creepy.
no subject
"Shit," she says. She studies him for a few seconds, then gives herself a curt nod and holds out one gloved hand in his direction, palm up, offering him a hand up in case he's shaky from, well. Being in some sort of stasis for at least long enough to get from somewhere in Asia to the bowels of an O.X.E. facility in the middle of nowhere, West Virginia. "Okay, out of the box. I am thinking we both have a lot of questions, but I do not want to find out the hard way that waking you up tripped an alarm."
no subject
He also doesn't want to find out of opening the box and waking him up triggered an alarm. He's not sure if going with her is the best idea, but staying here is definitely worse, and while he could try to strike out on his own, he could always do that later, too.
"What are you doing here?" he asks.
no subject
"Corporate espionage," she says, with a sort of easy flippancy that invites him to believe or disbelieve at his own discretion. "And now a bit of light jailbreaking, apparently. Do you - I guess you would not know if there is anyone else unconscious down here, but do you know if there was anyone else at the lab, besides whoever put you in there?"