Natasha Romanoff (
maskirovka) wrote2023-10-22 04:09 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(no subject)
It was snowing in New York. Despite the weather, the city never slept. Hustle and bustle filled the still-crowded streets as citizens went about their usual habits, long-time residents more than used to the Big Apple's idiosyncrasies. Buildings were lit up like star-filled towers, and one in particular was still buzzing busily, even at such a late hour.
On the fortieth floor, two individuals occupied a fairly nondescript conference room, waiting for a third. The man, tall and dark-skinned sported a long black coat and a black eyepatch, and was slowly pacing back and forth. The woman, seated with dangerous nonchalance, was idly smoking a mint-scented cigarette, the smoke drifting around scarlet curls that cascaded around a pale, sharply aristocratic face. Cat-green eyes flicked now and again to the tall man, and it might have been a trick of the fluorescent light, but her upper lip may have lightly lifted in an expression of exasperated derision once or twice.
If so, it was irrelevant, as words had been exchanged, opinions noted (and just as quickly discarded), and decisions made. The time for talk was over. Now was the time for actions. And assignments.
And just possibly, the time to save the world.
Again.
Directory Fury glanced at the silent clock on the wall, then huffed a frustrated sigh.
The woman, Agent Romanoff, gave a light scoff, stubbing out her smoke on the table's perfect surface. Fury shot her a glare. Which she shrugged off, saying in a Russian-accented voice, "It would appear, Director, that your dog is incapable of telling time."
Fury's glare devolved into a glower. "He'll be here. Barnes is the best tracker there is."
"So you keep insisting."
The long black coat whispered as it fell still when he did. "Can it, Romanoff. You know what's at stake here. We're going to have to work together if we all want to survive."
She waved an elegant hand, crossing arms over her chest in marked defiance.
Not missing her silent indignance, Fury lifted a single eyebrow. "Mind your fangs, Romanoff. I don't want to have to put either of you into Time Out."
On the fortieth floor, two individuals occupied a fairly nondescript conference room, waiting for a third. The man, tall and dark-skinned sported a long black coat and a black eyepatch, and was slowly pacing back and forth. The woman, seated with dangerous nonchalance, was idly smoking a mint-scented cigarette, the smoke drifting around scarlet curls that cascaded around a pale, sharply aristocratic face. Cat-green eyes flicked now and again to the tall man, and it might have been a trick of the fluorescent light, but her upper lip may have lightly lifted in an expression of exasperated derision once or twice.
If so, it was irrelevant, as words had been exchanged, opinions noted (and just as quickly discarded), and decisions made. The time for talk was over. Now was the time for actions. And assignments.
And just possibly, the time to save the world.
Again.
Directory Fury glanced at the silent clock on the wall, then huffed a frustrated sigh.
The woman, Agent Romanoff, gave a light scoff, stubbing out her smoke on the table's perfect surface. Fury shot her a glare. Which she shrugged off, saying in a Russian-accented voice, "It would appear, Director, that your dog is incapable of telling time."
Fury's glare devolved into a glower. "He'll be here. Barnes is the best tracker there is."
"So you keep insisting."
The long black coat whispered as it fell still when he did. "Can it, Romanoff. You know what's at stake here. We're going to have to work together if we all want to survive."
She waved an elegant hand, crossing arms over her chest in marked defiance.
Not missing her silent indignance, Fury lifted a single eyebrow. "Mind your fangs, Romanoff. I don't want to have to put either of you into Time Out."
no subject
Her apartment was on the sixth floor, at the far of the end of the carpeted hallway. Sparse but tasteful furniture was placed here and there, with heavy drapes covering every window. An open plan, only the spacious bathroom had its own door and walls, but the rest of the place was spotless, painted in cool grey-white and navy.
After opening the door, Natasha deactivated the security system and turned on the lamps.
"Find a seat," she offered. "I won't be long."
no subject
But paranoia had kept him alive for decades so far, and he wasn't going to stop now.
The apartment itself got a wrinkled nose and no comment. It was nice. Clean. It smelled even more strongly of Romanoff, which was a rich scent. Less unpleasant than he'd admit. It wasn't especially homey though, was it? Not the sort of place you could curl up and feel comfortable. Maybe vampires didn't lower themselves to ideas as pedestrian as coziness?
"Yeah, sure," he said, sitting awkwardly on the corner of a long, low sofa. His legs look too long, folded up sitting there, but standing back up again would just make him look more uncomfortable. "Let me know if you need a hand."
no subject
Then she went to the far wall, which was plain and unadorned, and pressed a certain spot on the side paneling. A section hissed aside, revealing a weapon stash that held everything from throwing axes to bayonets. Black and silver guns, rifles, and shotguns of all shapes and sizes decorated the inner wall, and a range of deadly smaller implements gleamed in their specially-crafted holders. Ammunition was stocked on the far left wall, each caliber neatly in its row.
The vampire began selecting her favorites, carefully placing each in a second duffel, then glanced over her shoulder. "Pick what you like," she invited. "They're all safe, silver's locked in the cabinet." Vampires weren't really fond of it, either.
no subject
And there was no way to know if it wasn't one of their kinds, as outside of normal behavior as it might be.
At her invitation, Bucky stood and surveyed her collection. After a moment, as the full variety of weapons available fully sunk in, he let out a low whistle. He reached for one of the guns, a powerful handgun that would normally be a lot of weapon for a woman Natasha's size. Of course, she'd be more than up to handling it.
"Impressive." He put it back, though, before pulling a combat knife. "Don't usually go for weapons, though."
no subject
"You have a mouthful of teeth and an impressive set of claws," she remarked, adding a few more weapons, three boxes of silver ammunition, as well as three boxes of ultraviolet bullets too, just in case, and zipped up the duffel. "I can't imagine you'd get much use out of a trigger once you shift." More of a hindrance than a help, really.
no subject
"No, if I have to shift a gun's more likely to get lost." And have been. He's had to abandon some nice weapons that way. "Hopefully it won't come to that, but considering the state of those bodies..."
He trailed off meaningfully. They might need the power that comes with the wolf shape.
"I'll send you a card for your birthday if we live through this."
no subject
Just...mind the tire-size hole the thing leaves in whatever it's fired at, Barnes.
Done packing her weapons, Natasha closed the armory and went to the refrigerator after placing that duffel near the other. This time she offered no comment as she packed a small collapsible cooler with cold plasma packets, adding blocks of coolant to keep them from spoiling. Sealing it, she carefully tucked it away in the bag with her clothing.
"Mind taking the artillery downstairs?"
All that was left was to turn out the lights, reset the security alarms, plural, and lock up.
no subject
Besides, his ma would come back from the grave to scold him for being a gentleman.
"Anything else you need to while we're here?" Bucky asked as he cast another glance around the apartment. He sniffs discreetly. "No cat?"
Joking as he said it. Among other reasons, he'd know immediately if there was another living creature in the flat. Still, the idea of this sleek, stylish vampire having a pet was unimaginable.
no subject
And left the back window open on really cold nights, so the feline could come in if she wished. "I'm not really home enough to have anyone waiting for me at night."
Sadly enough.
Back in the Jeep, Natasha handed Bucky the other bags then settled back into the passenger seat, bucking her seat belt again. "We going by your place?"
no subject
Change of clothes, IDs (fake and otherwise), weapons, even some emergency rations.
One of the reasons to take his car.
"Besides, it's not this nice." He slid into the driver seat and started the engine. "I'm ready to head upstate if you are." Which meant nothing but hours on the road, the two of them, and a murderer waiting for them at the end.
"Need anything else before we go. Coffee?"
no subject
This was just work. She could handle it. It was just work.
But that didn't stop her sharp senses from being acutely attuned to the wolf in the driver's seat, although she thankfully managed to keep the rasp out of her voice as she shook her head with a slight smile.
"No, I'm good." Coffee would have her jittering right out of the damned seat. As it was, it was going to be a hellishly long night.
"I'll book us a room somewhere on the way," she opted, praying that the place would even have a motel that hosted online reservations. ...and would, please God, be a few levels above the last room they'd shared.
no subject
He pretended that took more of his attention than it did so he wouldn't have to look at her face when he tried to shoot down one room. Working with her, riding in a car full of her scent, would be bad enough without having to sleep with her one bed over.
Dear god, if there was only one room let there be two beds. Otherwise he'd sleep on the floor and fucking cope with the dog jokes.
"I'd hate not to give a lady her privacy."
no subject
Figured.
So she sighed, lowered her cell, and just stared out of the window at the passing city night, saying after a minute or so, "...we'll just have to do it when we get there." At daylight. Fuck.
The proverbial elephant in the room was a monstrous motherfucker, wasn't it.
no subject
But he can't help but put on a stoic face. He did sigh though, grumbling as he turns.
"It's not like we're going to a real tourist destination. I'm sure it won't be hard to get some place."
How many motels would they even have?
"If you want some music, have at it."
Trying to offer a little bit of an olive branch.
no subject
Smiling slightly to Barnes' offer, Natasha shook her head; no thanks. The quiet was more preferable, the sounds of tires on the road and the soft whoosh of air as they drove was music enough.
"It's all right," she told him. "I prefer the quiet."
no subject
The difference now is that sitting in silence here meant sitting awkwardly with her.
His mind tried to slip back to the last—the only—other time they'd been alone together. Alcohol warm and soft, memory slurred and vivid by turns, he remembered holding her perfect, small face between his hands and looking down at her pure green eyes. He remembered how she tasted.
And he huffed, a growly, annoyed sound, that he pretends is due to traffic, hitting the brakes a little too hard.
no subject
She recalled how her fingernails had gripped, sinking into thick skin, and how she'd keened and moan, each sound swallowed by his hungry mouth, and his own guttural growls of her name amid other sweet endearments, such a strange combination to her eager ears.
The hard brake brought her out of her erotic reverie, and she startled, frowning slightly. And finally saying, "...yeah, turn the radio on."
no subject
Only some of it, though.
He cracks the window to let in a little fresh air, despite the cold night. It stank of the city, but didn't entirely hide the scent of vampire and woman beside him.
"Comfortable?"
no subject
"I'm fine," she assured him when he asked. "Just...thinking. About the mission," she clarified, just to be clear. And in truth she had so many questions. "This seems to be a single creature," Natasha heard herself say. "Hopefully isolated to this specific area." Otherwise they were in trouble.
"I haven't heard any reports of anything elsewhere. Have you?" Surely Fury would have said so.
no subject
He rolled his shoulders, trying to ignore a phantom ache in his left arm. It was fine now, long since healed by his superhuman biology, but that was another memory that he had a hard time shaking. One significantly less pleasant than how Natasha looked in moonlight and nothing else.
"There's only one way to find out for sure: find it, and find out where it came from."
no subject
Speaking of...
"Do you want to use a cover for this? Or go in as badges?" Both had their pros and both had their cons. "This place seems to be...small. They may not be very helpful if a couple of supes roll in and start asking questions."
The "supernatural" movement was still met with a lot of static in some places, especially those that were rural and far from big city limits. Granted, pro-human groups were more prevalent in the larger cities, but out in the sticks, folks still "shot first and asked questions never".
But a cover, on the other hand; a couple of random supes on a vacation, or looking for a quiet place to settle - that might go over better with the locals, but there was always the personal stress of adhering to such a story. And Natasha didn't know if her constitution was entirely up for playing 'besotted vampire lover' to this particular wolf.
no subject
And if he did have to answer questions, he'd have told the truth. He usually isn't much of one for subterfuge. Easier not to say anything at all than lie; can't get caught in a lie that way.
He's not usually the one working with the local humans for a reason.
A beat or two late, he stumbled into his response. "Uh... Could just play it by ear? Not commit to anything until they ask. Maybe it's no one's business why we're there."
He glanced at her then. "If we pretend to be married, we'll definitely have to share a room."
no subject
"So playing it by ear isn't going to work in a situation like this one. We're going to need them to talk to us, because this isn't going to be a job we can do just by hacking around in the bushes looking for clues." And Lord help her, she was going to have to guide him along every step of the way.
But it was necessary, and Fury wouldn't have sent the both of them if they weren't up to it.
Although it was an effort, Natasha managed a shrug, "casually" tossing her ponytail back. "I don't have a problem with sharing a room." To drive the nail right into the coffin, she pointedly asked, "...do you?"
no subject
Whatever she was. A spy.
He wasn't someone who people wanted to open up to.
"If you're all right with it, I am," he said. He glanced her direction and away from the road, his eyes lingering over the line of her throat, the way her red hair curled against her neck, before flicking up to her face. How he remembers it, he wasn't the one who couldn't stand to be in the same room after their night together. "But if you want to do the whole cover story thing, you're going to have to take the lead. That's not what I'm trained for."
happy new year! ❤️
"How about...I handle the locals and you do the ground work? We can meet in the middle, so to speak, and compare notes." A compromise, and one that possibly wouldn't end up causing more trouble than it was worth. "We'll just be a couple of city slickers out on vacation, sight-seeing, maybe looking for a place to settle down."
That way they both had a job that didn't really require the other. And it just might preserve what sanity each of them still possessed. Although Natasha just knew that some sort of monkey wrench would get tossed into the mix; her luck was just that abysmal.
"Sound good?
Happy New Year!
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
apologies; been ill (again, ugh)
Sorry for the delays. Life has been going kind of hard lately.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
sorry for the slow replies!
no worries; i've been down with the allergies myself ugh
don't i feel that. my allergies have been insane this year