Natasha Romanoff (
ofmarble) wrote in
clandestinement2022-11-15 08:33 pm
Unexpected Aid - for wereperrito
The burning wing of the laboratory facility is just a smudge of smoke on the horizon when the snowmobile dies beneath her. Natasha blinks in confusion for a moment, then tries to restart it. Tries again. Notices, finally, that the fuel gauge rests on empty, which is distantly worrying, but less so than the fact that she no longer feels the cracked ribs, or the roughly bound wound that punches through the meat of her thigh, or the laceration along the side of her head that has turned her hair to a frozen, bloody horror in the alpine wind.
Of course it's empty. She'd had barely enough time to steal a vehicle in the chaos of the explosion she'd set off to cover her escape, let alone find one in ideal condition to make it to her rendezvous point. Just more proof that an op designed for two people is a disaster for just one, even one at the top of her field.
Natasha smacks dash of the snowmobile with one hand in helpless frustration, then slides off the saddle - and keeps sliding, wounded leg going out from under her in the snow. She digs in her pack for a moment until she finds her communicator and - no signal. Of course there isn't. This entire network of valleys is a dead zone, which is what had attracted her attention in the first place.
No choice but to get to her extraction point - which would be difficult enough on foot if she were whole. She estimates it's at least 20 miles off, and that's if her tunnel vision hadn't been bad enough that she veered off course. At least she can't hear the sound of engines approaching. The pursuit had dropped off half an hour ago.
Maybe because they knew her fuel would run out, and expected her to bleed out and be easy enough to find and mop up later.
She bows her head, then snaps upright again when exhaustion tugs at her, forcing herself to her feet. Her leg holds this time, but she should probably find something to use as a walking stick if she wants to stay standing.
She makes it all of a mile from the vehicle, in an increasingly-weaving line, before her leg goes out from under her again, and she falls, clutching the gnarled branch she'd picked up along the way to give her some semblance of control in her descent. Black spots dance at the corners of her vision, and when she shakes her head to try to clear them, they flood inward, and her stomach rolls in protest.
Her last coherent thought is that it's a bitter sort of irony to have survived the death of half the universe only to wind up here, alone in the forest, because the one person she'd been absolutely certain she could count on had decided abruptly that it was more important to chase ghosts than to try to put the rest of a broken world back together.
Of course it's empty. She'd had barely enough time to steal a vehicle in the chaos of the explosion she'd set off to cover her escape, let alone find one in ideal condition to make it to her rendezvous point. Just more proof that an op designed for two people is a disaster for just one, even one at the top of her field.
Natasha smacks dash of the snowmobile with one hand in helpless frustration, then slides off the saddle - and keeps sliding, wounded leg going out from under her in the snow. She digs in her pack for a moment until she finds her communicator and - no signal. Of course there isn't. This entire network of valleys is a dead zone, which is what had attracted her attention in the first place.
No choice but to get to her extraction point - which would be difficult enough on foot if she were whole. She estimates it's at least 20 miles off, and that's if her tunnel vision hadn't been bad enough that she veered off course. At least she can't hear the sound of engines approaching. The pursuit had dropped off half an hour ago.
Maybe because they knew her fuel would run out, and expected her to bleed out and be easy enough to find and mop up later.
She bows her head, then snaps upright again when exhaustion tugs at her, forcing herself to her feet. Her leg holds this time, but she should probably find something to use as a walking stick if she wants to stay standing.
She makes it all of a mile from the vehicle, in an increasingly-weaving line, before her leg goes out from under her again, and she falls, clutching the gnarled branch she'd picked up along the way to give her some semblance of control in her descent. Black spots dance at the corners of her vision, and when she shakes her head to try to clear them, they flood inward, and her stomach rolls in protest.
Her last coherent thought is that it's a bitter sort of irony to have survived the death of half the universe only to wind up here, alone in the forest, because the one person she'd been absolutely certain she could count on had decided abruptly that it was more important to chase ghosts than to try to put the rest of a broken world back together.

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"You've done this before." It's not really a question - someone inexperienced would have tried to strip her pants off rather than cut away the parts that interfered with tending her wound, would've used cloth bandages to wrap her head. The placement of the bandages suggest practice, not just training.
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"I haven't brought any half-dead people to a cabin in a snowstorm before," he protests, but he quickly adds, more seriously, "But I have treated wounds before, if that's what you mean. I have lots of experience with that."
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"Ow," she says. "Don't make me laugh. --Medic on a vacation retreat?"
It's more curious than deliberately probing: interested, but not overtly concerned.
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Or, more accurately, would have been locked in the basement and unable to help her out. The full moon is tonight. He's not looking forward to trying to talk his way around that with her, because there's no way he's getting her out of here in time.
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That, at least, won't be hard to interpret - it hasn't been that long since half the world was reduced to dust.
"This is a bit out of the way for a one-night stay, though. I was starting to think I'd actually found the literal middle of nowhere."
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The teapot behind him starts to whistle, so he lifts it off the fire, picking himself up again to collect the heavy mugs he'd left behind. "I only have tea here, I'm afraid. Will that be all right? I was working on a soup when you woke up, I'll have that cooking soon."
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"Besides, it would be tacky to complain about the refreshments when I've just been rescued."
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It also makes getting stitched up an adventure, but she'll worry about that when she's found a way to rendezvous with her extraction team.
She carefully pushes herself up, scooching back against the armrest of the couch to borrow a little leverage, keep her core as still as she can. It still hurts enough that there are lines of tension around her eyes and lips by the time she's something resembling upright. She hasn't gone any paler, but that may well just be the blood loss masking things.
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It is, in fact, a pretty heavy-duty pain med. He won't feel bad if she turns him down, he is in fact a stranger, but he has to offer.
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Even aside from the fact that he's a complete stranger, she's still in what might be classed as hostile territory. Much as she might want the pain relief, she can't afford to be impaired.
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"Is there a radio here? I have some friends expecting me."
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It occurs to her belatedly that she's just made a dangerous admission, and she grimaces to herself. Blood loss has definitely turned her thoughts to sludge, and she takes a sip of tea in hope that it will jolt her back to form. Jack doesn't seem like a threat, but that doesn't excuse getting sloppy.
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He just isn't aware they're superheroes yet. Of course, he might be even less worried then, since superheroes usually don't shoot first and ask questions of the bodies later.
He comes back around the couch lugging a heavy pot, which he hangs over the fire where the tea kettle had been a moment before. "There's no real stove in here," he explains apologetically. "And the oven is part of the fireplace, too. Really, we're pretty lucky that there is power at all."
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She watches him hang the pot, and smiles faintly in response to his explanation. "This far out from any towns, I can imagine. Your friend must be handy, if they're able to keep a generator running."
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He picks himself up. "I know there's a radio that receives things in the other room. I used it this morning when I was cleaning up. I don't think you can use that to contact your friends, though. Can you?"
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She takes another small sip of tea, eyes briefly flickering shut in enjoyment of the warmth. "If they were close by, maybe, depending on how the radio's put together, but it'd be more like a walkie-talkie than an emergency broadcast."
Tony, she thinks, could probably put something together from a walkman and a teacup, but Tony isn't here. He'd left even before Clint had, before Bruce had. There are so few of them left trying to hold things together.
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They might not manage very well in the storm, but they might have planes. Or magic. Or teleporters, for all he knows.
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There's a flicker of humour in the last sentence - long would be more accurately translated as impossible in her current condition.
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