Natasha Romanoff (
fallaces_sunt) wrote2014-10-26 11:36 pm
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[Home] Steve
Professionalism is a wonderful thing.
A flash of light and Natasha is standing in her office. She's wearing different than when she left, different shoes, different earrings; she's missing her gauntlets.
She's also missing a few hours.
Shit.
-- --
It's hours before she manages to get home. She calls Clint's phone first (and he's back, he's back, thank god, he's back), she calls Steve's phone (no answer, damn) she calls Fury and her SO, she rouses Dr Ishikawa. There are tests to be run.
She calls Clint, again, once she locks her front door. He sounds...strained. But he's in a different city, and tells her to go have a shower and stop being a mother hen. There's nothing she can do here, so she agrees, and then leaves another message on Steve's phone.
Then she has a shower.
(And if she ends up sitting in the tub, clutching her knees to her chest and just letting the hot water hit her back, well.
No one's watching.)
-- --
After, she tries to put herself back together. She pulls on comfort-clothes and carefully, deliberately straightens her hair like nothing is wrong. Dinner is a reheated soup pulled from her massive freezer (she leaves another message on Steve's phone while the microwave hums) and if she was sensible, this is where she'd put on some DVDs. A history on the English language, maybe. A ridiculous b-grade sci-fi show from the '90s which she could play on her laptop while she cooks, but she'd been on the Enterprise.
She finishes her soup. She puts the bowl in the sink to soak. Then she goes to her bedroom, lifts up the secret trap door at the bottom of her closet, unlocks the safe, and pulls out the only photograph she'd been able to find of her husband. Moving over to her couch, Natasha tucks her feet up underneath her, and traces the side of Alexei's face with her finger. She has other people and things that she uses almost as totems to help ground her, but they'd taken Alexei away from her once. If she can remember him, she's fine.
She's in her right mind.
She's fine.
(She'd thank Steve for the nostalgia trip, except their argument is too close at hand and he's not answering his phone and she was on the Enterprise, and she cannot quip about it, even in her head.)
A flash of light and Natasha is standing in her office. She's wearing different than when she left, different shoes, different earrings; she's missing her gauntlets.
She's also missing a few hours.
Shit.
-- --
It's hours before she manages to get home. She calls Clint's phone first (and he's back, he's back, thank god, he's back), she calls Steve's phone (no answer, damn) she calls Fury and her SO, she rouses Dr Ishikawa. There are tests to be run.
She calls Clint, again, once she locks her front door. He sounds...strained. But he's in a different city, and tells her to go have a shower and stop being a mother hen. There's nothing she can do here, so she agrees, and then leaves another message on Steve's phone.
Then she has a shower.
(And if she ends up sitting in the tub, clutching her knees to her chest and just letting the hot water hit her back, well.
No one's watching.)
-- --
After, she tries to put herself back together. She pulls on comfort-clothes and carefully, deliberately straightens her hair like nothing is wrong. Dinner is a reheated soup pulled from her massive freezer (she leaves another message on Steve's phone while the microwave hums) and if she was sensible, this is where she'd put on some DVDs. A history on the English language, maybe. A ridiculous b-grade sci-fi show from the '90s which she could play on her laptop while she cooks, but she'd been on the Enterprise.
She finishes her soup. She puts the bowl in the sink to soak. Then she goes to her bedroom, lifts up the secret trap door at the bottom of her closet, unlocks the safe, and pulls out the only photograph she'd been able to find of her husband. Moving over to her couch, Natasha tucks her feet up underneath her, and traces the side of Alexei's face with her finger. She has other people and things that she uses almost as totems to help ground her, but they'd taken Alexei away from her once. If she can remember him, she's fine.
She's in her right mind.
She's fine.
(She'd thank Steve for the nostalgia trip, except their argument is too close at hand and he's not answering his phone and she was on the Enterprise, and she cannot quip about it, even in her head.)
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Natasha breathes something that could be a laugh.
"I know, Steve. It's just..." She looks away, as if searching for something to say, when her gaze lands on the photo-frame on her coffee-table. Well. All right.
She hesitates and then leans over to pick it up, keeping the face towards her.
"Let me...explain something. Before we go into the rest.
There was a boy.
He was a bit older than me, but we lived in the same apartment building. When the war came, he enlisted. By the end of the war, well. You heard the stories of what the Eastern Front was like. I thought he was dead, like everyone else.
Moscow, after the war, I was in a park and someone said my name. 'Natalia', it's common. 'Natalia Alianovna' is not. I turned and there he was. Alive. Well. Very dashing in his uniform," she adds, and despite how tense and bitter she's been, here her smile is almost happy. It doesn't last.
"We were married for about ten years before he was killed. Plane crash, into the Pacific. He was the only person I really had left, so I think you know what that would have felt like.
I don't..." Natasha hesitates and then looks up. Her mouth is bitter and her green eyes are shiny with unshed tears. "My point is he," and she turns the photograph around so he can see, "he is not the kind of person you forget."
It is, on the face of it, a very ordinary post-World War II wedding photograph. The groom in his best uniform and still looking a bit nervous, the bride wearing a dark winter coat with her veil almost defiantly in place. The couple are young, and while the bride is more at ease than her new husband (indeed, her smile is only just short of a grin), the sheer closeness of their stance is telling. More than any vow or legal authority, they are determined to stay together, for better or for anything worse than the war they just survived.
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He's careful when he reaches for the photograph, taking it like he's just been handed an emblem in church. It's the first time he's seen Natasha like this, evidence that what she's told him is true. Young, couldn't be more than twenty with that face, and the groom beside her barely more than a kid himself. Like so many who fought in that war.
His brows knit together.
"You were married," he begins with the obvious, but there's so much more behind the words. It's understanding, at last. The things she's lost go beyond her service to the Russian government, to the Red Room. "I'm sorry, Nat."
He hands the photo back to her. "How long after was it, before -- ?" He hesitates, and when Natasha looks puzzled he clarifies in the gentlest way possible. "What year were you brought into the Red Room?"
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I'm sorry, Nat, Steve says and there's a flicker of a smile in response. It means something, coming from him.
"Um. I'm...not great with dates for back then," she replies once he clarifies his question. "But very soon after the war. The academy was in Moscow, Alexei was stationed at the Air Force base close by. We went out while I was studying. We didn't get married until a couple years later, when the Red Room was shut down. Then the Red Room came back, Alexei's plane crashed, and, oh look, I have transfer orders back to Moscow."
Her voice is dry as grave dust, and her thumb runs down the edge of the photo-frame protectively.
"My original point was that the Red Room...at some point, I don't know when, they went into my head, and took everything and everyone I loved out. They replaced it with something pretty and fake. Certainly didn't involve a murdered husband. And sometimes, even now, I wake up. And I can't tell which memories are real."
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He looks at the back of the photo-frame clutched to her heart for a long, long time.
It isn't until her explanation starts to sink in that he looks at her again, face drawn and open like the words mean something to him personally. What she's describing only makes him think of Bucky again, snatches of conversations rushing through his mind, the memory of Bucky's haunted eyes and pleading expression, the nightmares...
He blinks, letting out a small puff of air, and he does what he can to wipe that look off his face. It could be nothing. At any rate, now's not the time to bring it up.
"So when I talk about my friends coming back from the dead, it hits a nerve," he surmises, eyes on his glass. He tenses his jaw once, twice, and shakes his head. "I'll be honest with you, Natasha. Even right now, I'm not 100% sure that the Enterprise is real. I know that there's something off about it, about the whole situation, and my allegiances haven't shifted. My duty, my responsibility, is always gonna be here. But if there's a chance it's real-- if the possibility exists that I was brought there for a reason, that we both were, that I can do some good ... I can't turn my back on that."
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She huffs out a sigh and listens to him as he continues.
"I know," Natasha says then. "If Alexei was there, or...other people...
I get it. Except. How you planning on getting back, Rogers? You got a wormhole parked out the back?"
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He looks at his hands, nodding almost imperceptibly when she peters off. He hasn't even mentioned Peggy yet, or this new guy, Sam, but he figures commentary on what it would be like for Natasha should her dead husband show up wouldn't be appreciated.
The wormhole line is what finally makes him laugh. "Not quite. I met him. Q. He's the one who sent me back, but he made it pretty obvious that it wasn't going to be for good. And I'm OK with that."
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"Did he give you a time-limit? And..."
Natasha's eyes narrow, faintly.
"You said a reason that we both were on that ship. I didn't really do anything while I was there."
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"Would you take him at his word if he did?" he counters, finishing off his kvass. Men like Q aren't to be trusted, as much as Steve wants to believe there's some honor between opponents. "It could be any minute. Personally, I'm hoping it's not."
He sets his empty glass on the coffee table, and leans into the back of the couch. "We're not the only ones from S.H.I.E.L.D. who have been on that ship. Q plays the part of the typical villain, talking in riddles and trying to keep his intentions secret, but it feels like he's got some agenda. Like what happened -- it wasn't just random. Maybe I'm wrong, but I've seen that look on other faces before. Like something's about to happen, but only he knows what it is."
Then again, Q could be bluffing. Toying with him. Steve's usually good at reading people, but he hasn't had enough time to figure Q out.
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"Did you get a sense of what he felt about this? Expectation, amusement...?"
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"Both," he nods, eyebrows arched. "The confusion gives him some kind of pleasure. It's obvious he likes pulling everyone's strings, and not telling them why. But, considering the kind of people he's messing with, I think he wants to see them figure it out for themselves."
He rubs his hands together in thought, absently picking at his nails to remove paint and charcoal that isn't there, a nervous tic he's carried with him all his life. He looks down. "But I need you there too, Nat. No matter what the end game is-- you're my partner."
Those three words are as close to vulnerable as Steve ever gets, both an apology for the way he acted and reassurance that he's still on her side, no matter what. He half-cocks a smirk.
"I might need someone there to tell me when I'm crazy," he adds, to lighten the mood.
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Partners.
Still, she gives him one of her flickering, slightly wry smiles and laughs a little breathlessly.
"Well. I can't exactly let you run around on a spaceship by yourself, Rogers. Where's the fun in that?"
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"You are the one who told me I needed to catch up on my science fiction," he returns, absently patting his pocket to make sure his notebook is still there. There are a few more entries in it now than there were six months ago. "How will I manage without you there to show me the ropes?"
They both know he'll manage just fine, but the camaraderie is good. It's easy, and calming; something like a salve on what have been frayed nerves for too many months now. "How's Barton readjusting?"
Steve checked in on him, too, but Natasha knows him better than anyone else save for maybe Fury and Hill -- and Coulson, when he was alive.
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"But I...worry. About him."
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"It's not easy coming back from having someone else in your head," he remarks, keeping his voice carefully neutral while not shying away from eye contact.
It's a prompt, in a way. They've made headway tonight, and he wouldn't push her to say more than she already has, but when there's still so much about her he doesn't understand it's natural to wonder, before they go back into an unfamiliar territory, how much she'll let him in. "He's lucky to have you. I think we all needed some rest after New York."
Not that all of them did, but that's another story altogether.
"You should probably know -- Stark's on that boat," he says, lips twitching. "And a guy I think I'm supposed to meet. He knows us. From here."
He hesitates, something unreadable flickering through his eyes. "And Peggy Carter."
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It's not as if Steve hasn't been a nice boy and not provided her with other targets, after all.
She quickly arranges the people into reverse order of importance.
Director Carter and her doomed love affair with Steve.
Tony Stark and just...Tony Stark.
And-
"A guy you're supposed to meet." Natasha arches her eyebrows. "Who also knows me."
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"That's the story," he says, nodding almost imperceptibly. "And it's a pretty convincing one."
The situation he had been in with Sam was embarrassing enough he can't imagine the guy would cop to knowing him when he didn't, if he could spare himself that impression. Steve clears his throat, the tips of his ears just turning this side of rosy.
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"You," she says, "are very lucky I value security over your lack of a dating life."
Yeah, she sees your red ears, Steve.
"On the other hand, I really value security and not being arrested, so care to explain?"
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"What? No, it isn't like -- it's more like we're partners..." Fudge, that was the wrong choice of words. He pinches the bridge of his nose. "Not like-- OK, listen. I think this guy helps us on a mission. I don't know when, I just know he's from here, and he's Air Force."
But like hell is he going to mention the Air Force booty shorts and skimpy top the guy was in, or the USO getup Steve was in, when Natasha is looking at him like that. He swallows, wondering if this is what he looked like to his teachers in Catholic school when he did something wrong.
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"Do you trust him?" she asks then.
Steve, despite his ridiculous tendency to believe the best in people, is hardly a newcomer to street-smarts.
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He tilts his head from shoulder to shoulder, looking unsure if not pragmatic. She isn't far off the mark; Steve did believe Sam, found that he even liked the guy, wouldn't be opposed to the idea of having him at his back, but.
"I don't know," he answers honestly, shaking his head. "But he's given me no reason not to."
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"All right," she says. "Your call. Do we tell SHIELD about him, or let it wait for now?"
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"Considering I don't even know if he's real?" he begins, eyebrows arched. "I already told them about our interactions -- you, me, Barton. I described the kinds of encounters I had. But no names. I want to see if this guy shows up, and I want to see if the Enterprise is really there. If it turns out that was all real, I think they're the only ones on this Earth who will have any idea what to do."
But for the time being? Steve still doesn't know who he can trust. He wants to believe in the system, but the way Fury operates tests his faith. One thing he knows for sure is he can't work as long as SHIELD has him locked in a box or monitored 24/7. If he starts talking about Director Carter and some pigeon without clearance flying missions with Steve, he knows exactly what will happen. "Right now, Natasha, you're the only one I trust with this."
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(But then, she's always maintained she's one of the worst people to show the ropes to.)
"Okay. If things turn up, I'm mentioning it. But until then..." She zips her mouth shut with her finger.
"So. Hit me with Stark and Carter, and then, my vote is for cupcakes and Get Smart. How does that sound?"
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"I appreciate it," he says. He means it, too. The one thing Steve could always count on during the war was his team. No matter what happened, the trust between them was rock solid. Steve will back Natasha up, and it's good to know, even after how they left things, she'll do the same for him.
He chuckles, leaning back against the couch cushions in a much more comfortable position, head propped back so his line of sight is on the corner of her ceiling. "I'm thinking maybe cupcakes first, then Stark and Carter. And definitely Get Smart."
His metabolism may keep him from feeling the effects of alcohol, but chocolate is almost as good. He's quiet for a second, in part because it's some ungodly hour of the morning and he's exhausted, and in part because he's thinking about Peggy, and Bucky, and everything that's happened since Natasha vanished. He tilts his head to one shoulder, and arches an eyebrow at her.
"You think you baked enough for the both of us?" he says. The sarcasm in his voice makes it obvious it's not a real question.
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By now, backing Steve up is as natural as backing up agents and friends she's worked with for years.
So, she grins at him.
"Let's go and see."
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