Yelena Belova (
musicdied) wrote in
clandestinement2022-08-09 09:44 pm
Early release - for
worthallthis
They survive, in the end. That much is a miracle in and of itself. They survive, mostly intact, still themselves. And then comes the parting. There is no option to stay, to make a real life - so long as they remain, the connection to the place they came from remains, a flaw in the walls of reality that could be pried open or slipped along, the whole cycle restarted on new ground. There is no option to choose a new world to settle on. It's home, or death.
They promise to find each other on their own worlds, so like one another as to be nearly indistinguishable. It will not be the same. It's the best they can do with the hand they've been dealt. Yelena, the one who had walked two years in another world, who had faced monsters and the awful temptation of power, has the easier task in 2023.
Yelena, the one in his time, is still a tool of the Red Room, still under the thrall of a poison that will not have a certain cure for years. The serum distilled from her older counterpart's blood and cerebral fluid may work. There had been no sure way to test it. "It will take years for the neural pathways to repair themselves, if this doesn't work," the older Yelena had warned. "At least two, probably closer to three."
But even before that comes the problem of tracking her down. There is no intel on where the Red Room is, in his time. It moves, and the Widows are drugged both coming and going, aware only of their entry and extraction sites. The older Yelena can only tell him where she will be. It's nearly three months between his date of return and the date on which a suitable mission will present itself - one on which she will be alone, without the risk of other Widows, victims all of the Red Room's poison, interfering. Without the red dust, there is no guarantee of freeing them, and she's not willing to sacrifice them to secure her own early release.
And so: Bern. Yelena, younger, still the Red Room's plaything, is set up in a small apartment, paid for under the alias of one of her handlers, under the pretense of being a young mistress. One with a minor admin role at a scientific institution that is hosting a large conference, at which - regrettably - one of the speakers will suffer a fatal heart attack tomorrow. Tonight, she is running through the plan one last time, accounting for last-minute scheduling changes - nothing that speaks to any interference. Her target's schedule remains the same. Her exit window will just be a little tighter than she'd prefer.
In the living room, her handler is watching television. He'll have nothing to do tomorrow; it's two days before she'll be extracted, if all goes to plan, time built in to go to ground and take down the trappings of this identity.
No one is expecting any visitors.
They promise to find each other on their own worlds, so like one another as to be nearly indistinguishable. It will not be the same. It's the best they can do with the hand they've been dealt. Yelena, the one who had walked two years in another world, who had faced monsters and the awful temptation of power, has the easier task in 2023.
Yelena, the one in his time, is still a tool of the Red Room, still under the thrall of a poison that will not have a certain cure for years. The serum distilled from her older counterpart's blood and cerebral fluid may work. There had been no sure way to test it. "It will take years for the neural pathways to repair themselves, if this doesn't work," the older Yelena had warned. "At least two, probably closer to three."
But even before that comes the problem of tracking her down. There is no intel on where the Red Room is, in his time. It moves, and the Widows are drugged both coming and going, aware only of their entry and extraction sites. The older Yelena can only tell him where she will be. It's nearly three months between his date of return and the date on which a suitable mission will present itself - one on which she will be alone, without the risk of other Widows, victims all of the Red Room's poison, interfering. Without the red dust, there is no guarantee of freeing them, and she's not willing to sacrifice them to secure her own early release.
And so: Bern. Yelena, younger, still the Red Room's plaything, is set up in a small apartment, paid for under the alias of one of her handlers, under the pretense of being a young mistress. One with a minor admin role at a scientific institution that is hosting a large conference, at which - regrettably - one of the speakers will suffer a fatal heart attack tomorrow. Tonight, she is running through the plan one last time, accounting for last-minute scheduling changes - nothing that speaks to any interference. Her target's schedule remains the same. Her exit window will just be a little tighter than she'd prefer.
In the living room, her handler is watching television. He'll have nothing to do tomorrow; it's two days before she'll be extracted, if all goes to plan, time built in to go to ground and take down the trappings of this identity.
No one is expecting any visitors.

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The bell over the door jingles, and she looks up, watching as a small gaggle of teenagers flood into the shop, bickering amiably over the best pizza slices to pick.
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They're distracted from both conversation and teenage girls by the arrival of their pizza, which Winter is glad for. He's hungry. Getting used to his serum's appetite had been a big problem in his first month or two back in this universe.
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Eventually, though, the pizza's gone, and they've had a little time to relax. It's time to move on. "We should find a hotel next," she says. "More anonymous than a private rental, I think."
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As they head out of the pizza shop, he has his phone out again, checking for lodging nearby. "Do you want your own room this time?" he asks. After the weeks of the cruise keeping them in such close quarters, he wouldn't blame her.
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The slight quirk of her smile suggests she's mostly joking, but only mostly. She can endure a lot, but roaches are just disgusting.
She's quiet for a moment, considering the question. A part of her does want a chance at privacy, but--
"I'm fine with sharing. We have a very long road ahead of us, enacting your plan, and there's no way to know how long it will take us to convince the wizard. And besides, your snoring isn't that bad. Spending the extra money for two rooms would be a waste."
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Hell, Yelena would probably have said. He'd shared her room more than once, too.
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They get checked in, a single room with two double beds, even get their meager luggage tucked out of the way. Winter peers out of the heavy curtains in the direction of where he's been told Doctor Strange lives. He's... nervous, to be honest. But they should probably get moving.
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Hopefully, it won't. She has no idea whatsoever about how to fight a wizard.
She finds him at the window when she comes back out, and watches him for a moment, head canting slightly.
"Having second thoughts?"
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And he feels less alone, with her here. It's been so much better, these past couple weeks. Even if it's not the same as before, it's still good.
So Winter smiles a bit, back at her. "Three and a half. A little less. And there are more stones we can get to if this one doesn't work."
This is just the first they can get to. The one with HYDRA is next. Then the ones in space. But they can't start on those until they try this. So he picks up his coat again. "Let's go see a sorcerer."
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And whistles a few bars of We're Off to See the Wizard for good measure.
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A brief pause, and she adds, "For movies. There were a couple of live shows."
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It beats admitting that the live theatre she attended was very much in the realm of work-related expense, even if it was typically the non-lethal branch of her work. She's only ever assassinated one target at the opera, and then only because the person who'd commissioned the murder had wanted the induced heart attack to be very public.
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Not that he knows. The knowledge of how much shows cost just kind of fell into his brain without context.
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"Yes," she decides. "If you know how much they cost, that means you probably went enough for it to make an impression." That little grin widens. "Maybe we should track down a burlesque show. For old time's sake."
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He also thinks that this will not be a deterrent for Yelena. It might be an encouragement.
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For both their comfort, really. Teasing him a little is fun. Genuinely making him uncomfortable wouldn't be.
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He knows where they're going, at least. He's had that particular street map of New York in his head since he started planning this all out, so he could mark out all the potential escape routes if things went badly. It's an older part of town, and the building in question is old stone, very fancy, almost annoyingly so. Winter pauses to look up at it dubiously.
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"I am guessing there's some kind of magical alarm bullshit on the giant skylight," she says. It's a little bit rueful - if there weren't, then one of them might be able to get in that way, if the sorcerers prove to be less than cooperative.
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