missionreport: (mask 009)
bucky barnes ★ winter soldier ([personal profile] missionreport) wrote2016-05-02 05:25 pm
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whothehellissteve: (Default)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2016-07-05 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
The Captain has been interrogated before - never by hostiles, of course, because he is excellent at his job. But HYDRA takes no chances, especially not with an asset of his caliber, and so he has been through round after round of interrogation, questioning, deprivation, torture, all designed specifically to ensure he will not crack. He knows, too, that he is only given the details of each mission that he needs to know, because a good asset should trust in his handler, trust in HYDRA, and trust that he knows exactly what he needs to know, and no more. A good asset cannot be turned against HYDRA if it cannot be broken, and even a broken asset cannot be turned against HYDRA if it has nothing valuable to give to HYDRA’s enemies.

Still, the SSR doesn’t know that, but the Captain can’t help but think it’s strange, their lead-in - the clumsy little scientist isn’t meant to intimidate, the name they call him doesn’t truly mean anything to him (Rogers, Rogers, it’s just a collection of syllables, why does it keep ringing in his head?), and the lie about working for the US is just that - a lie, a clumsy lie, a pointless statement that makes him feel nothing.

If anything, the words that make him feel something are the last - he recoils internally at what the man says, at his ridiculous, unsavory suggestion - the notion of a normal life, the implied yet clear concept of taking him out of the fight. That means something to the asset, and it is unpleasant, to say the least. When he is taken out of the fight, it’s because he will be dead - or, if he hasn’t been killed in action, he’s sure he will be disposed of by his handlers, shortly after. He won’t be left to die of old age, won't be cast out to live a mundane, meaningless life, or even a life filled with joy and love. Those things aren’t for assets. Those things are for people. Maybe those things were for whoever this Captain Rogers and Sergeant Barnes are, but they are not for the Captain, nor are they for the Winter Soldier. That's how it should be. He doesn't want to live a normal life. He doesn't want a life outside of HYDRA. He doesn't know anything else.

The needle slides into his skin and he doesn’t react, other than to pay attention to the number of vials the man takes, watches him begin to label each with a permanent marker. The asset’s blood could be turned into a weapon against HYDRA, and when it comes time to leave, he will have to make sure these samples are destroyed.

But it’s just as the first vial is placed into the holder for collection that the tiny comm in his ear crackles. The Captain doesn’t smile, doesn’t even twitch his lips beneath the mask, his expression doesn't change at all but he feels a sense of calm satisfaction wash through him at the sound. The first vial fills, and is replaced by a second - but it’s only a quarter of the way full when his handler’s voice comes in over the connection, and the Captain needs only a few brief words of instruction, followed by the unique mission passcode to confirm his handler’s authenticity, to act.

The SSR has misjudged the dosage of sedatives required to keep the Captain truly docile enough to pose no threat - an honest mistake, really, given HYDRA’s difficulties and the lack of previous information and trials, before their extensive research had begun. The misjudgment is, admittedly, small, but it’s enough. Coupled with the fact that the SSR has also misjudged his peak strength capacity over short bursts given the right mental focus, the Captain needs only to gather his strength for a few short seconds before he tenses, flexes, and in one short, sharp motion, breaks the makeshift bonds holding his arms in place. The motion knocks the scientist away, and with him, his vials of blood. The Captain’s eyes need only to track the motion for a fraction of a second before his ears confirm what his eyes see - the scientist sprawls backward onto the floor and both vials break with a tinkling sound of glass. The blood, still bright red, begins to pool on the floor, but the Captain is already working to free his feet before either of the two guards can raise their weapons high enough to sight. The Captain doesn’t think they’ll shoot him - they think he’s valuable, they think he’s this Rogers, they want him alive - and he’s not wrong, because just as he gets his feet free, the guard on the left shouts, “Stop! Captain Rogers, stand down!” and maybe they would have ended up pulling those triggers, in the right situation, but none of them will ever know. The Captain dispatches the first with a piece of the now broken restraints, wielding the leather and metal like a whip in a twisting turn that’s almost graceful - and ends with the twisted, broken metal at the end of the strap embedded into the man’s skull. That gives him time to reach the second man and deliver a roundhouse kick that knocks him to the floor while he’s taking the precious time needed to flick the safety off of his weapon - Careless, the Captain thinks - and in the seconds that follow, he takes the weapon from the first guard and shoots all three of the men in the room with him in the head. (The first was likely dead or dying, but he’s not about to make careless mistakes now.)

He tears off the sedative mask and lets it clatter to the floor. The room he’s in has three walls - the fourth is formed by a temporary partition, and he hears noise on the other side of it, prompted by the noise on his. He raises his new weapon just as an alarm begins to wail, but he pays it no mind. The instructions in his earpiece were clear. Find the Winter Soldier and, if the other asset is still alive, escape via any means of egress possible while the handlers and their team create a distraction. It’s a clumsy plan, one he doesn’t particularly like for a number of reasons, given the unknowns, given the way it leaves the original objective unfulfilled, but it is his handler’s plan, and the passcode was correct. It’s now his duty to follow it, even if, he thinks, he’s going to be as efficient about it as possible.

A man comes around the partition - he’s another guard, and he’s not fast enough on the draw, not when faced with the Captain. He goes down with a bullet wound blooming on his forehead, and so does his partner, a moment later. The interrogator doesn’t come around the partition, but he doesn’t have long to wait, because the Captain slips around the fixture, assesses the scene before him, and the interrogator never completes the motion he’s making to draw a weapon before he, too, goes down with a bullet in the head. It’s not as neat a shot as the guards, but it’ll do. Then he’s left facing a groggy Winter Soldier with a disabled left arm, and the soft, almost inaudible snort he gives isn’t mockery, isn’t laughter, isn’t relief, but it might not be far from some combination of all three.

The sedative mask goes first, then the restraints. The Captain places a hand on the Soldier’s right shoulder - almost gentle, but firm and immovable - to hold the other asset in place, let him get a few breaths of clean, clear air into his lungs, while he inspects the device around his left arm. Once he deems that it’s not permanently attached and will likely cause no permanent damage, he crushes it in one hand and lets go of the Soldier’s shoulder to undo the strap, then steps back. He nods to the other asset, eyes asking the question before he opens his mouth to confirm. “Did you receive the transmission?” If yes - they can move. If no - he’ll explain while they move. The Soldier will follow his lead, he knows.

Just then, an explosion that feels distant just shakes the walls - and he knows the handlers and their team have arrived.
whothehellissteve: (i have to be sure)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2016-07-31 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
Something like annoyance flares as the explosion hits - their handlers are well trained and they’re the superior officers on this - and every - op, giving the Captain and the Winter Soldier the slack on their leashes the super soldiers need to carry out their instructions, but maintaining control, asserting HYDRA’s will, reeling the weapons back in when the job is finished. They’re the superior officers, but their actions aren’t strategic - of course, the Solider and the Captain are too valuable to give up into SSR hands, but this rescue operation isn’t protocol, it’s sloppy, and - he’s going to be reconditioned anyway, he knows, so he thinks it - it’s stupid.

The Captain’s expression is displeased, but he cannot control the handlers. He can only work with what they give him, and with what his programming tells him to do. The Winter Soldier, at least, moves like an extension of himself, the two of them have always worked so perfectly together for this reason, like two halves of a whole, because they both understand their roles, and understand protocol, and follow it. It’s protocol, now, to prevent their kit from falling into enemy hands, and when the Solider is on his feet again, unsteady but not unstable, they move as one to the locker, the only logical place for the SSR to have stored their gear, and the Winter Soldier makes quick work of it while the Captain stands guard with his stolen weapon. Their kit is inside; silently, as a team, they gear up again, the Captain taking his shield, then his belt, the pouch at his front right still stocked with the vials he carries as well, with the medication he needs and doesn’t know why, just knows he is to take like clockwork. But in this case, there are two missing - along with two of his favored flash grenades, and two of the ration packs he carries to offset his high metabolism on long or cold ops. If their handlers hadn’t rushed in blind, there might have been time to retrieve them. But their handlers have rushed in, and it’s up to the Captain and the Soldier to make what use they can of the opening they’ve gotten, and get out.

It’s clear, as the Soldier takes point, that he’s not operating at peak capacity, that the sedatives were either stronger or more effective, because there’s something just a little off in his steps, a little too jerky and mistimed about his movements. Behind him, the Captain frowns, a tense, unhappy feeling settling in his gut that makes him want to insist on taking point, but that isn’t protocol, either. Part of him’s thinking, To hell with protocol, but it’s gotten them this far, and as they track their way toward the south end of the compound, he still has to have faith that it will get them out.

It does, in the end - just not as well as he would have liked. The high-caliber bullet bites into his shoulder with the force of a heavy punch; the Captain is too heavy, himself, too well-muscled for it to bowl him over, but he feels the impact nonetheless. It’s a lucky shot - well, the fact that the shot connected at all is luck, he can tell the man behind the rifle is skilled, but if the Winter Soldier weren’t still working the sedatives out of his system, the SSR agent never would have had a chance to pull the trigger.

So the shot connects, and that’s lucky, but the skill behind it means it hits in exactly the right place to do the maximum amount of damage, tearing through muscle and ligament and lodging in the bones of the shoulder joint of his left shoulder in an attempt to render his shield arm useless.

It’s a near thing - the Captain has felt more pain than this, but while pain is relative, it is still pain. Still, he has been conditioned to fight through pain, and he does, even as the lightning-sharp fire of it shoots down his arm like a plant putting out roots, weakens his grip on his shield, and reduces the impact of the attacks on that side. But he ignores it, and when he can’t ignore it, he deals with it, following the Winter Soldier down the concrete hallways until the resistance comes to an end and the light appears in the distance. It isn’t until they stop, though, that the Captain realizes how heavily he’s breathing, how limply the arm is hanging at his side, even with the shield still clutched in his hand, and how soaked through the side of his suit is with the metallic-smelling heat of his blood.

Even so, when they stop, it’s on the tip of his tongue - I’m fine - he wants to say, but the Soldier is already pulling the gauze out of his pack, and the Captain glances behind them to see the trail he’s left. He switches the shield to his right hand, the grips slick with his blood, and tilts his body to angle his right side and the shield back toward the hall, covering them in case trouble comes following that trail, while he holds still and lets the Soldier tend to the wound. It won’t be more than a field dressing, but it should at least stop them from leaving a convenient trail of red. That would be sloppy, and the assets are never sloppy.

“I lost contact, too,” he admits, eyes flicking to the Soldier, then back down the hallway. The chatter-and-static combination that had started up just before the explosion has ceased, and the Captain believes he knows why. The Soldier steps close, working methodically, calmly, and the Captain does his best to get his breathing under control, to hold his arms in a way that will let the Soldier work quickly, to mask the pain he’s feeling because pain is one of the things that you never, ever show in HYDRA. Pain, fear, uncertainty - these things have been flushed from the assets, pushed so deep that a part of him thinks he is incapable of showing it, truly, anymore. He can feel it, naturally. But he cannot show it.

Still, he is showing signs of distress, signs the Soldier is sure to pick up on, as sure as he picked up on the Soldier’s sedative-jumbled reflexes. Pale, clammy skin, rapid heartbeat, defensive stance. Finally, when he feels the Soldier finishing up, he glances back at the other asset. “I think we should assume they’re dead or captured. Our mission is to avoid the same.”

If their handlers are dead or captured, they are in that state because they knew the assets must go free. It’s not the assets’ duty to go back for them, now - it’s the assets’ duty to complete the task, to evade recapture, to report back to HYDRA. They were both shown extensive maps of the area before the mission as part of their briefing; he calls up the mental picture now, overlays it with the compound’s location and the fact that they’re at the south end. “There should be shelter if we keep heading south.” There was a small town about ten kicks southeast of the compound - a ‘tourist town,’ they’d called it, all but abandoned in what passes for summer and fall in this region of the world, with only a few full-time residents. It’s the best place he can think of to rest and regroup, and the two assets can cover that ground much more quickly than normal men, even injured and unsteady as they are.
whothehellissteve: (less sure than i'd like)

o7

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2016-09-13 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
Once the Captain’s shoulder is bound, the two assets set off, leaving the base behind without a second thought for their handlers or the agents they’ve killed. As they walk, the Soldier taking point, the Captain puts the shield at their backs, keeps a pistol in his hand and the safety off. His shoulder throbs, but with a task at hand, it’s easy to put the pain out of his head, to focus on keeping his footfalls silent, his breathing even.

Or, at least, it’s easy to put it out of his head at first. The pain is persistent, insidious, and with the bullet lodged the way it is, his body trying to heal around it is painful and inefficient. He tries to move his arm every so often, roll the shoulder, and he’s greeted by a white-hot burst of pain that makes him clench his teeth and wish for the rubber bite guard, sucking in a sharp inhale of breath. But the arm still moves, albeit painfully - no nerve damage, and it will heal around the bullet. When they’re retrieved, he imagines there will be surgery to find the bullet, remove it, make sure the shoulder socket heals properly. Until then, it’s going to heal as best it can, with no heed for the comfort level of the Captain in the meantime.

Except it’s healing slowly, given the constant motion of walking; he does his best to hold his arm and shoulder still, but it’s impossible to really immobilize it when he needs it for balance in the slippery, unfamiliar landscape. Somewhere during their hike, it begins to bleed again, a second slow, warm blossom of blood that he feels soaking into the uniform, the bandages, doesn’t need to look down to confirm visually. Still, the Captain makes no sound but the harsh panting of his breaths, and he doesn’t complain, doesn’t pull them to a halt, simply walks on, though he’s several more feet behind the Winter Soldier than he’d started out when the other asset spots an outcropping and calls a stop to their march. The Captain wants to push on, knows they should keep going, but he can also admit that it’s not tactically sound. It’s a moonless night, too dark for even HYDRA’s most advanced weapons to see well, and slipping and breaking their necks won’t get the information they need to take back to HYDRA.

Together, they climb carefully down into the natural, if cold, shelter provided by the rocks, wedged side by side with their backs to frozen stone as the green of the glow stick flares to life. The Captain considers the two options briefly, but shakes his head almost immediately. “We stay here. Together. This is fine.” It’s the best place to stop that they’ve passed; the village is still several miles away, and he doesn’t imagine they’ll find another shelter quite like this nearby. With the rock at his back and the Winter Soldier against his side and the small, if sickly glow of the glow stick between them, it feels like a good place to spend the night, for all that it’s less than ideal. “We’ll start walking again at first light.”

His left arm throbs, and the way they’re positioned, his uninjured right side to the Soldier’s left, he’s pressed up against the metal prosthesis and he can feel the cold of it seeping through his uniform and into his skin. Unconsciously, the Captain shifts closer, as if trying to share his body heat with it rather than recoiling, even as the Soldier pulls out a familiar vial, uncaps it; again, the Captain considers only a moment before he simply tilts his head to the side, like an obedient dog, and says, simply, “Neck.”

Once the pinprick and hiss of the injection has passed, the Captain simply tilts his head back against the unforgiving rock and closes his eyes. They don’t stay closed long, though, because now that they’ve stopped moving, there is nothing like putting one foot in front of the other to distract him from the pain - nothing except the memory of the scene he woke up to in the compound, that niggling feeling that has been sitting low in his gut since he opened his eyes and that small, scared little man called him “Captain Rogers.” The scene comes flooding back to him now, and he’d rather concentrate on it, turn it over and over in his head and ask his companion his thoughts on it, than focus on the pain. Pain is irrelevant, and it is counterproductive. But the memory of being called by a name… that is still intriguing in a way he can’t describe. And there’s a part of him that needs to know if the Winter Soldier feels the same way, can put a name to the thing the Captain feels about the letters that, when put together, spell out the name “Rogers.”

Because - They are assets, but they are men. Or - no, not exactly, but they might have been men once. Men with names. Names like Rogers and Barnes.

It’s not something the Captain wants now, and it’s not something he’s capable of missing, because you have to know something, remember it, to miss it, and he doesn’t. He doesn’t remember a time before he was the Captain, before he was HYDRA’s asset, and it doesn’t bother him. But the idea - realization? - that there was a time before he was HYDRA’s asset, when he might have had a name and some clumsy sense of self-direction, is at once terrifying and intriguing. It’s like staring in a mirror, and seeing your reflection distorted ever so slightly, something just a hair off, only you can’t tell what it is, what’s changed, where the mirror is flawed.

So he turns his head toward his companion, expression still pinched, but something in it is both curious and derisive at once as he says, simply, “The scientist that woke me in the compound thought I had a name. He thought we both had names.”

If he were a real man, he’d probably say something like, What a load of bullshit, hey, buddy? Instead, the sentiment just hangs flatly in the cold air between them.

Once the drugs in the vial work through his system, he’ll lose interest, most likely, But for all that he metabolizes everything at quadruple speed, he’s still just curious, just hung up enough right now to speak up.
whothehellissteve: (less sure than i'd like)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2016-10-15 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
The Captain has been trained - as best HYDRA could - to shy away from curiosity, to expect (if not welcome) the clarity of orders, the comfort of obedience that the conditioning sessions in the chair bring. When he has no worries, no past, nothing but the mission, he is most effective, most focused, most efficient. But HYDRA’s grasp on his mind is more tenuous than their hold on the Soldier; it's perhaps part of why they work best as a pair, complementing each other, the Soldier's profound and utter dedication to their organization more easily reflected in the Captain, despite the handlers they give him.

"Could be," the Captain replies, in a tone that betrays the slightest hint of doubt. He knows he's been on past missions, but he doesn't know how many, and rarely remember the details; when he does, it's usually in flashes or disjointed scenes, like a half-forgotten dream. But tools, weapons, don't dream - HYDRA found a way to remove that weakness, to make him stronger. Weapons don't dream because they have no need for dreams. Weapons don't have names, because they have no need for names. 



The Captain and the Soldier don't often talk, no - idle banter is useless, a waste of breath at best and a distraction from the mission at worst. But this feels important, somehow. The Captain is intrigued and disturbed all at once, and some part of him craves the opinion of his companion. Neither of them have the answer to the puzzle, but somehow, some sort of agreement, some sort of mutual curiosity, would make him feel... satisfied. But the Soldier is agitated - the Captain can tell in the look on his face, the sound he makes as he exhales that would almost be too soft to hear, for a baseline human. The Captain hears the frustration, as clearly as if the Soldier had voiced it. He's observant, and he knows his companion's moods, such as they are, better than he knows almost anything else. To most people, the Soldier doesn't even have moods, isn't ever fazed or frustrated or amused. But the Captain knows better, knows the moods that escape others' notice, even when he thinks the Soldier doesn't even notice what he's feeling, himself. Maybe the Soldier knows him just as well. He wouldn't be surprised.

Now, the idea of the Soldier's displeasure is... jarring. The Captain's brow furrows and he wonders if he might be wrong - damaged, broken, failing, to be feeling curiosity at the idea of a name. He knows it's likely a side effect of the duration of the mission - they've lost time during their capture and he doesn't know how much, how long it's been since he last sat in the chair, underwent HYDRA's conditioning. He suddenly feels agitated, himself, wanting the aid of the drugs he knows will take effect soon. He knows he needs them, and suddenly, he wonders if he's gone through this before - this withdrawal, after too long out of the chair, and he simply doesn't remember it. He finds himself disliking the idea, disliking the distraction it causes, and the agitation it elicits in his fellow asset. He wants to be good, to be compliant, not for HYDRA, but for his partner. To preserve the partnership that means more to him than he’s ever cared to explore, and more than he’s ever, ever let on, to anyone. He is obedient. He is not stupid.

But the idea of the SSR lying to sway the assets to their side is plausible - more than plausible, and they both know it. And now, the drugs are starting to work their way through his system, the elevated heart rate associated with the adrenaline spike of injury and healing speeding an already speedy process. "Must've been," he finally agrees, after a few moments of silence that might have been mistaken for the end of the conversation, during which his eyes have started to go dull as the niggling importance of those names starts to lose its luster and fades into the background. Something in the Captain almost visibly relaxes, in those few moments of silence, as the concern starts to simply slide away, and the matter at hand, the mission and its priorities, reassert their importance.

After those few moments, he feels... calm. Focused. Satisfied, and with it comes a sense of relief. He isn't too broken to finish the mission, and his technicians will recondition him once they've reported back and received their retrieval orders.

It only makes sense for the Soldier to take the first watch. The Captain would have suggested it if the Soldier hadn't said it first; he simply nods, eyes that have now gone their familiar shade of dull, glazed blue still flicking around the clearing in an ingrained need to check for potential threats, before he closes his eyes and simply says, "Wake me in four hours and I'll take watch until dawn." Then he drops off into sleep easily and almost imperceptibly, head tilted back and pillowed against the hard rock serving as their shelter, while his body stays pressed up against the Soldier’s warmth, as though seeking that warmth even while trying to share his own.

The Captain is the strongest man on the planet - with the Red Skull long gone, it is unarguably the truth. Stronger than the Winter Soldier, even, although the metal prosthesis levels the playing field somewhat, and the differences in their fighting styles would surely make things interesting, if they truly went toe to toe. For all that there’s plenty of interest in seeing that, HYDRA has never pitted the two assets genuinely against each other, for several reasons that included the possibility of permanently damaging one of them, as well as the possibility of disrupting whatever strange rapport exists between them. While there’s no trace of the friendship shared by the two men that have been alternately buried and erased by years of conditioning, mind wipes, and drug therapy, there’s something in the way that the two assets can function like clockwork that HYDRA hasn’t wanted to touch. It’s too valuable, so long as it’s monitored and regulated, and pitting the two men against each other in a genuine battle would be counterproductive.

Regardless, the Captain is not a vulnerable man, nor does he act like one - no, he acts the part he is meant to play, the weapon, the asset, the tool best suited to many of HYDRA’s best-laid plans to insinuate just a little more order into the world, because its residents can’t be trusted to do it themselves. And yet… there are times when the Captain acts - unintentionally, unaware - vulnerable. Times that the handlers have noted he spends long transport flights huddled up asleep against the Winter Soldier, as though trying to burrow back into the shape and size of a smaller man, as though trying to fit himself beside the other asset in a way that will complement him, rather than overpower him. It’s how he sleeps now, and for all the pain and the cold and the hunger, he sleeps well until he’s woken for his watch and takes over without complaint while his partner gets some rest for himself.

The morning dawns bright and crisp and clear; the Captain’s shoulder throbs in time with his heart, stiff but no longer bleeding, a sign that the wound has started to close up, but it's questionable whether it's a benefit or a drawback. With the bullet still lodged against muscle and bone that began to knit overnight, his arm is less mobile and more painful in the morning. Still, he says nothing, only holds it as still as he can as he keeps watch, calculating how he'll need to adjust his movement and balance and strategies to compensate if they're attacked. He can fight one-armed - has fought one-armed, during training sessions and evaluation scenarios, both planned and unplanned - and he refuses to let the injury slow their progress further. They have a goal: reach the village, find a way to contact HYDRA, and remain invisible until extraction. They only have a few days' worth of injections and emergency rations, and further delay is unacceptable.

They set off in the early morning light; now the Captain is hindered only by pain, and not bleeding, and they make better time because of it. The village turns out to be relatively quiet, and the assets choose a ski lodge on the outskirts of town with a large "CLOSED FOR THE SEASON" sign across the doors. There’s a fine layer of dust on the surfaces inside, but a pantry stocked with nonperishable goods, running water, and electricity.

Until the storm hits.

It’s mid-afternoon when the light outside the lodge’s big windows begin to fade. The assets have eaten a full meal (admittedly, of beans and soup, but neither complains, because both know that nutrition outweighs palatability, and the emergency rations should remain for emergencies) and the Captain has fashioned a sling for his aching, stiff arm from strips of bedsheets. They’ve developed a plan to steal down into the village proper after dusk, to break into one of the buildings and send out a signal, because the lodge may have electricity, but its communications - telephone - are dead. Someone apparently forgot to pay the bill. Or perhaps the service was switched off for the season. Either way, it makes the Captain antsy.

But dusk starts falling too soon - and then the assets discover it’s not dusk, but the big, boiling, dark clouds of a snowstorm that’s blocked out the sun and begun sending pelting pellets of ice and snow against the glass of the windows. They're standing several feet away from the windows - both know better than to approach the glass, where a sniper might reach them - when the lights flicker. The wind picks up, the icy sheets assailing the windows intensify, and everything electronic in the lodge goes quiet and dark at once. The assets look at each other and they know - this is going to complicate a complicated mission even further.
Edited (whoops, typos! ) 2016-10-17 02:12 (UTC)
whothehellissteve: (i have to be sure)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-01-25 05:04 am (UTC)(link)
The Captain turns away from the ice and snow pattering against the window as the other asset speaks. The Soldier is right, of course - going out into a storm like this would be pointless. Even with their enhanced senses and stamina, they could easily become turned around, lost, confused. They’ll do HYDRA no good dead, or worse, recaptured by the SSR. As the blinds close out the quickly-darkening sky, the Captain takes a breath, and then a step back from the window. He nods, all that’s needed to show he agrees, and follows his partner away from the glass and back into the interior of the lodge’s main floor.

As the Soldier shucks his coat, the Captain gives what’s become their current safehouse another look. He catalogued everything about their surroundings as they came in, but now, he looks again. It’s unlikely that he missed anything - missing something is not acceptable, so it’s simply been trained and programmed out of him - but now he considers their surroundings as something that will need to support them for more than just a few hours. Possibly more than a day, though that thought sits sour in his gut. His eyes fall on the lodge's large, central fireplace - this village might be small, but this lodge must be successful, because the interior is dusty but modern (which is a funny term, given that he doesn't know what he's comparing it to, can't remember what buildings looked like in the past, only knows that his eyes follow the clean lines, the open spaces, and think, "contemporary." He doesn't know where he learned the term, but it's there in his head nonetheless). The fireplace is huge, and there's even a stack of (similarly dusty) wood beside it, but then his eyes track up to the large stone chimney and he can visualize without trying the plume of smoke a fire would create.

In a snowstorm, the smoke could be lost. But the SSR is likely watching this village as a potential escape route. His eyes flick back to the covered windows, as though he can see the snow and ice he can still hear faintly tap-tapping against the glass from the outside, and - no. A fire would give away the fact that this lodge is occupied when it shouldn't be. They'll camp cold tonight. 

The question incites a reaction almost like the Captain has been startled out of his thoughts; his eyes refocus on his companion, noting the frown on his face, the way he’s stripped down to his tank-top already. The Captain assesses his arm, pulls away the makeshift sling, and starts to unzip his own uniform jacket, one-handed. When he tries to slide the fabric off his shoulders, it sticks to the injured arm with the distinct slick pull of tacky blood, even though the shoulder’s been field-dressed. The injury hurts, but he’s been trained to disregard pain, withstand torture, so he grits his teeth and pulls the jacket all the way off, letting it drop to the ground. He flexes the fingers of his injured hand, curls them into a fist - and the motion sends hot stabs of pain through his arm, his fingers moving jerkily, as stiffly as if they were machines, like the Soldier’s, in need of repair.

“It’s fine,” he says, shortly - before he even realizes what he’s saying, or why he’s saying it. It’s not fine, and the assets have been trained into honesty, into complete and utter full disclosure, because an asset hiding a hurt or holding on to information is not an asset, but a liability. 

He blinks, shakes his head a little, and this time, he says, “It’s not healing properly. The bullet is preventing the joint from repairing itself.”

The technicians will have to remove it. The technicians should remove it. But this operation is quickly going more FUBAR in each minute than it was the last, and the Captain’s eyes drop down to the Soldier’s steady metal fingers, imagining them gripped around the hilt of a knife. It's not an ideal situation. Digging around in his shoulder joint with a knife could damage it extensively - joints can obviously be replaced, but both the Captain and the Soldier know that one of them is whole, and the other is not. Two assets with metal prostheses is not what HYDRA wants. So he swallows any suggestion he might have made, knowing that although the wound won't heal until the bullet is removed, it will heal cleanly once it is. The pain he'll suffer in the meantime is nothing when compared to his dedication, his importance to HYDRA.

His thoughts settle back on tonight. It’s as the Soldier said - they’ll get situated, clean their kit. Wait a day. Then they’ll reassess. Food and water aren’t a problem - water, least of all, with a snowstorm raging outside - but now the Captain’s eyes drop to the pouch the Soldier is always kitted out with, and his mouth forms the words before he can even really think them. “I need another injection” 

There aren’t many left. He should be afraid of what will happen, if they run out. If the mission goes on long enough, they will. He knows he should fear it, just as HYDRA taught him to fear so much else, but - he doesn’t. There’s something strange curling in his gut, at the possibility, and it’s the same strange, foreign feeling associated with those names - Rogers and Barnes. Not fear, not revulsion, but an almost sort of detached curiosity.
Edited 2017-01-25 23:14 (UTC)
whothehellissteve: (hail hydra)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-04-18 04:40 am (UTC)(link)
The Captain stands quietly while his partner delivers the injection; something in his blood is starting to feel a little wild, and he knows it’s too soon, but he craves the quiet of the medication almost as much as some small, hidden, shunned part of him fears it. He knows it’s for his own good, knows that the quietness that washes over him allows him to do HYDRA’s good work, that he will grow wild and unpredictable, he will break without it.

There’s something in him, as he watches the Soldier silently uncap the needle and inject the contents of the small plastic vial into his neck, that fears for the other asset, if the Captain were to go wild. He can’t remember, exactly, whether he’s ever suffered from withdrawal in the past, although it makes sense to him that HYDRA would have tested it, and tested it extensively. It must be why they’ve warned him so meticulously against it - he does have memories, vague, repetitious, of lab-coated men and women standing in front of him as he’s released from the chair, holding out an injector and explaining he is to use it at regular intervals, that his partner and handlers will carry spares on every mission. It is of vital importance that he stay medicated, but if he’s not…

If he’s not, something terrible must happen. It’s almost enough to push the lingering curiosity about Barnes and Rogers from his mind - or maybe that’s just the injection starting to take effect. He takes a deep breath.

He watches the Soldier crumple the injector like paper in his metal hand, and knows that fearing for the other asset is… a waste of time. Pointless. The Soldier may or may not be as physically strong as the Captain, but he has his own strengths. He is cunning. He can survive on his own.

The Soldier is an asset of HYDRA. He is valuable, but all assets are ultimately expendable.

The Captain has to repeat this to himself, more than once, before it settles, clear in his gut. Now, perhaps, finally, the medication is taking effect. His eyes, duller, flick back up to his partner’s face at the words, and he nods, once - agreement. Partial doses are wiser than the alternative. “I’ll set up a new schedule,” he says, because like the Soldier, the Captain doesn’t like anything approaching free time. His time is always structured, always purposed, and even when he sleeps during transport, it serves the greater purpose of ensuring he is refreshed and clear-headed and ready to further HYDRA’s goals.

But the Soldier is right, too - they’ve done all there is to do here. The Captain considers; then, “We should rest, refuel, and compare our intel,” he decides. “Ensure we both have a clear picture of the base, the personnel who handled us.” Those personnel are dead, of course, but who they were and what they said will be valuable to HYDRA. Writing this intel down would be a mistake, but the assets both have excellent memories. Still, they had different experiences, and what the Captain is really doing is saying, subtly, that if only one of them returns to HYDRA, then both of them should have a full briefing prepared.

Because he knows that the Soldier must have instructions on how to handle him, what to do if the Captain’s medication is unavailable and he becomes a danger to the mission. He holds his partner’s eyes, and perhaps doesn’t really improve on the awkward silence when he asks, in all seriousness, “Are you authorized to tell me your orders regarding my medication withdrawal?”

They both know there are orders. The Captain understands that those orders might be confidential, need-to-know, and he might not need to know.

But it would be - a comfort, to know there is a plan in place to handle him.
whothehellissteve: (oh give me a break)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-05-21 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
The Soldier balks, just for a second - it’s maybe the most human behavior the Captain’s ever observed in him, but he’s not really in a place to acknowledge it at the moment. If this were a normal mission, if the Captain were feeling like himself, the cold, focused precision weapon that he is, he would have noted the expression, the way the Soldier hides his hesitation with a small, seemingly innocuous motion. But the assets waste no motion, and they don’t hesitate when they’re asked questions.

Not unless they’ve been compromised - like the Captain is now, so he doesn’t file that information away, instead simply waiting for the answer.

When it comes, he’s not surprised - of course he’s not, of course that’s exactly what would happen. It’s what should happen. The functional asset should be the one to return to HYDRA, they have no use for a broken tool. He knows his own return is to be prioritized, it’s clear in every mission operating procedure, when the Soldier takes point, clears buildings, provides cover. But if it’s just the two of them, and there is information that HYDRA needs… the more reliable source should survive.

He nods, nothing deceptive in his gaze or his voice when he says, “I understand. Good.” It is good. He can’t say why, but… it is good. There’s no guarantee the Soldier will find an opening, and the Captain can’t guarantee that he’ll give him one. But it’s a plan to follow, and it’s enough. That, he does file away, tries to shrug it on like he shrugs on all his other missions, but it’s not like the fluid ease of stepping out of the chair and knowing what needs to be done. It’s less efficient, it’s less sure, but it’s still a plan, and he can try to follow it.

That plan having been established, the Soldier moves on to the Captain’s suggestion, though in a roundabout way. Still, “I’m concerned, too,” the Captain admits, though there’s little concern in his voice; it’s more detached interest. “If SHIELD has knowledge of past missions, they could decipher a pattern.” And he’s not stupid enough to think that all the files would have been destroyed with the base. There would have been backups, on paper or computer, elsewhere. “But that won’t be a mission for us,” he adds, because while they excel in stealth, they are weapons, first and foremost. Even when they need to infiltrate, blend in, deceive, it’s always with a death as the end goal. This will be a mission for another department - and while thinking that soothes him, in a way, as he feels the utter perfection of HYDRA’s smooth workings, the way the departments and pieces fit together to create a stronger whole, there’s still part of him that does, in fact, feel distressed at the thought of leaving that information in the hands of someone else, while he is taken to a chair and those names, Rogers and Barnes, are wiped from his mind forever.

The Soldier goes on, and the Captain’s lips twitch; one corner lifts, in a small, dry expression that some might call the barest hint of a sardonic smile, as he shifts where he’s standing, trying to ease the ache in his shoulder, which has become a constant white-hot spike in the back of his mind. “It would have given us something to do. Idle hands - “

He stops, frowning. Idle hands… idle hands, what? He doesn’t know why those words came from his mouth, and he doesn’t know what comes after them. But something comes after them. It’s… it’s a phrase, he thinks. (He doesn’t have the context to consider it an idiom.) Did he hear a handler utter the phrase? It must have been on this mission, he doesn’t recall past missions clearly enough, only with a vague sense that actions have been completed, that HYDRA has been satisfied.

He shakes his head slightly, as if to clear the words away. “We’ll just have to report fully on what we saw and heard.” And hope it will be enough that they won’t be punished for it; he’s been punished for incomplete reports, for steps missed, for sketchy intel before. He knows that, deep in his bones, just like he knows he doesn’t want it to happen again. “If our handlers hadn’t - ”

He stops himself again; questioning their handlers is not allowed. It’s not their place. Handlers have been punished before, but never on the words of an asset. The tool has no right to judge the actions of the hand that holds it; even so, the Captain glances at the Soldier, wondering if he feels the same way. If he knows just how… how lame-brained the actions their handlers took were.

The Captain blinks. He’s starting to feel fatigued. He’s starting to feel like he’s fighting an uphill battle, just to think straight. He’s starting to feel, in the pit of his stomach, worried.
whothehellissteve: (determined)

o7 please feel free to fill in anything or let me know if something needs to be changed!

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-06-05 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
The Captain manages to fight off the fatigue for several hours more but eventually, he’s got to admit that he needs to rest. Even for just a little while, because the pain in his arm is wearing, and the waves crashing against the barriers HYDRA has erected in his mind is wearing, and, although he wouldn’t have been able to put it into words, had he been asked, the way the Winter Soldier is watching him, like an evaluator searching for the chinks in the armor, the cracks in the facade, is most wearing of all.

He can feel, under his skin, that the world is waiting for him to crack. He refuses - HYDRA built him stronger than that - but it doesn’t mean he doesn’t notice.

He announces he’s going to sleep for a few hours; couches it in terms of the Soldier taking the next sleeping shift, and the Captain standing guard after that. He doesn’t have long to think about whether it’s safe to sleep or not, because it doesn’t take long after he slumps onto the dusty couch that he’s out like a light.

And he stays out, until the Soldier makes his move.

His eyes fly open only seconds before the other asset is on him; the Captain has the ability to snap from sleep to wakefulness in an instant, but the Soldier is fast and in that instant, he's had enough time to land his body on the Captain's, to slam his head back with a punch, to put a hand to his throat and bring up a bottle of - 

The smell hits him full in the face. It's bleach, and the Captain's mind works lightning-fast, still at a disadvantage but it doesn't take long to catch up. Bleach won't kill him, but it will incapacitate him, subdue him long enough for the Soldier to neutralize him. Part of the Captain's impressed, maybe even a little proud, in a way that's welling up, so telling of the way the suppression is crumbling inside of him that he feels it at all, at the ingenuity of his partner. It's not a bad idea, pal, but you know I'm not gonna go down easy.

But it's that hesitation on his own part that means he gets a faceful of the stuff. His teeth are clenched, so the amount he ingests is minimal, but the rest of it splashes across his face and into his eyes, burning white-hot before the world starts to fuzz out at the edges, even as the Captain brings up his injured arm in a swinging block that shoots pain through him like a lance, but sends the bottle flying out of the Soldier's grip, somewhere behind the couch. He hears it clatter to the ground, its contents gurgling out over the floor, but it's the least of his worries now. He's still face to face with the other asset, and no matter how fast he blinks, the pain in his eyes only gets worse, and the gauze-like curtain that’s descending on his vision grows thicker. 

It'll likely clear up on its own, as the serum in his veins sloughs off the damaged corneal cells, regrows new ones. But it will probably get worse before it gets better, and healing will take time - likely hours - and he doesn't have time right now. He has an asset that will put him down if he doesn't turn the tables first. 

His programming says he should go for the kill. His instincts, if that's what they are, balk, and what happens isn't what he's been trained for. If he acted on programming, on training, the Soldier's neck would have been snapped in seconds, the limp, lifeless body pushed to the ground and let cool. There would be a full report made, once he's re-established contact with HYDRA, an explanation, a mission briefing, and complete and utter submission to the chair for reconditioning - 

Reconditioning, he must need reconditioning, he must be breaking down, but he's not broken; there's something else coming up through the cracks, and that something else fights like a cornered animal, but an animal that only strikes as much and as far as is needed, and no further. An animal capable of feeling... sympathy ? Remorse? Mercy

The way it should have gone down, one asset truly against the other, should have left the lodge with only one asset still breathing. 

The way it does go down, at the end of it, has the Soldier face-down on the ground, cheek pressed hard into the thin carpet with the Captain pinning him down with his sheer bulk and no small amount of will, panting hard, battered on two fronts now by pain that's starting to scream louder than he has the capacity to tune it out. His injured shoulder feels like it's made of liquid fire, the arm hanging loosely, uselessly at his side almost like it's a prosthetic, like the Winter Soldier might look after a nasty EMP blast took out the metal that replaced flesh on one side. His eyes feel like spikes driving into his skull, his vision largely gone (and a decent swath of his face reddened and burning, making him look like a burn victim) as he twists the Soldier's left arm behind him at an angle that's almost certainly unnatural, in a grip as hard as steel locked around the metal wrist with his one good hand, and his elbow dug dangerously into the Soldier's back at the place where his spine curves up from shoulder to neck, a vulnerable spot that the right amount of pressure, applied in the right way with the force of a super soldier behind it could snap the vertebrae, and paralyze, if not kill.
whothehellissteve: (oh give me a break)

welp have a knocked-out bucky and a ridiculously long tag

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-06-13 04:42 am (UTC)(link)
Do it or don’t, the Winter Soldier snarls, and there’s something about the barely-there frustration in his voice that hits the Captain like a punch to the gut. His body flinches - doesn’t let go, doesn’t waver, but still flinches, even as the Soldier’s metal fingers twist in his grip and he grits his own teeth, squeezing the wrist harder, hearing and feeling the give in the metal and mechanics, feeling the instant the mechanism gives out.

He won’t do it. He knows that - he’s known it from the second he got the Soldier in this position, down on the floor under him. He isn’t going to kill the other asset, not even in self-defense, not even when he knows, deep down in this sour knot in his gut, that the Soldier is following orders, the same way he should be. He’s slipping; he can feel it, terrified, shaking, knowing that when HYDRA comes, when they find him, the recalibration will only hurt worse. The pain and the punishment will only last longer for an asset that’s losing its ability to carry out its only function.

And yet, deeper down, past that shaking, desperate thing that wants to know why the injections aren’t working, why his programming is breaking down… there’s something else. There’s something still trying to fight its way to the surface, and that thing… That thing has…

“Mission,” he whispers, almost more to himself, almost for a second as though he’s forgetting the Soldier is there, pinned down and struggling beneath him. “I have a mission,” he says, he promises himself and the Soldier, and he might have said more, might not, but it doesn’t matter, because just then, the body under his jerks and starts struggling, harder than before.

The Captain grits his teeth, and he doesn’t have a choice - lightning-fast, he drops the metal arm and grabs the Soldier by the back of the neck, hand almost a blur. He raises the body under his, and slams it back down onto the floor. He does it again, and then a third time, just to make sure that when the body of the Winter Soldier goes limp, it’s not because he’s faking it.

Even so, he stays where he is for a long, long minute, his own heart pounding and breath coming ragged. There’s the pain, flaring up in his arm, his eyes, his head, and there’s the body under his, now just dead weight, but it won’t stay there for long. And there’s… there’s the mission, this thing he can feel bubbling up from his gut, the parameters foggy, hidden, but they’re there. They’re coming. Like his ruined vision, they’re not something he can grasp right now. But they’ll get there. They’ll slide into focus.

He thinks he saw rope, in the Winter Soldier’s hands, just before he jumped. He has to crawl around like a blind man on the floor, holding his injured arm close and balancing his weight between thighs and abs, but he finds it. He grits his teeth through the pain as he turns the Winter Soldier over by feel, binds his hands and feet, and props him up against the base of the couch.

Then the Captain scoots around and sits, shoulder to shoulder, with the Soldier’s unconscious body. The weight of the Soldier, slumped against his own uninjured shoulder, feels… good. It feels calming, it lets him focus on something other than the burning, white-hot pain from the bullet that won’t let the bones of his shoulder heal around it and the bleach still burning its way through his eyes. Eventually, he can start to see light, shadows, blurred edges. He thinks he can feel his eyes healing, cell by cell, slow going, but doggedly moving forward, rebuilding.

He wonders if that’s what’s happening to his mind, too. He wonders if it’s been damaged, if it’s trying to rebuild. It feels like… like a long-buried, rusty and damaged protocol is surfacing, as the suppression of the drugs and the too-long-ago session in the chair start losing their grip on him. Without the suppression of the drugs keeping it where it belongs -

For a moment, he's terrified - he thinks that he must be broken, that HYDRA had suppressed him for good reason, had kept him on this strict regimen of drugs for a reason, and that this baseline protocol must somehow be so terrible and so strong that it couldn't be wiped, only held at bay, and now it's rearing its ugly head - 

Rearing its ugly head, like a hydra. Like a monster that needs to be put down. Like - 

"Fuck," he says, his head drooping, back bowing until his forehead's nearly touching the his knees as he draws his legs up, feet flat on the floor. They tried to burn something out of his mind, but they couldn’t. So they tried to bury it, and now it’s awake. “There’s something I have to… do.” He’s not sure what, but he knows, now, that there’s some task left unfinished, some aspect of his original protocols that wasn’t fulfilled. Did he fail, is that why HYDRA wipes him again and again, to eliminate his failure, erase it from existence? Or is it something else? “I’m compromised,” he says - admits, really, to the quiet air around them, to the sleeping - unconscious - Winder Soldier. “But I still have a mission.”

He doesn’t know how long they sit like that, with those words, I still have a mission, echoing over and over again through his head.
whothehellissteve: (i have to be sure)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-07-09 09:45 pm (UTC)(link)
The body next to him shudders, and the Captain feels both on edge and more relaxed, all at once. He lets the asset next to him claw his way back up into consciousness, taking as long as he likes, even though right now it feels like their time is limited, running thin. The storm outside is still raging, and likely will for hours to come. It could even be days before the snow and the wind abate; he remembers the briefing, the regional weather reports it had included, the instructions on what they and their handlers would do if weather compromised the mission timetable.

But those handlers are dead, and now it’s just him and the Winter Soldier - and his new (old?) mission, still slowly forming, nebulous and murky but growing sharper, clearly, piece by piece inside his head.

The mission that he isn’t sure how to explain, even as the Soldier lifts his head beside him. The Captain’s eyes are still healing, his vision murky but he can see just enough to imagine the rest of the picture, the blood crusting the Soldier’s nostrils, the way it’s scabbed along the top of his mouth, as he asks that simple question. Of course he’s asking - it’s the thing that has turned the Captain against him, in his mind, only what the Soldier doesn’t understand is that the Captain doesn’t want to stand against him. He never has, he knows that now. Every training session, every time he’d knocked the other asset to the ground, beat him into unconsciousness, was like a thorn twisting in his brain, a voice clamoring out of synch with the rest of the chorus telling him to comply. Telling him to follow HYDRA’s path.

HYDRA’s path… there’s something wrong with it. There’s some reason he’s supposed to sidestep off of it. And it has something to do with the Soldier. After an hour alone with his churning, half-buried thoughts, the Captain knows that much for sure, if not a whole lot else. It’s what makes him grit his teeth and shake his head when the Winter Soldier gives him the party line, the words at once hollow and whole, something the Soldier believes in just as much as the Captain no longer can.

HYDRA can’t help him, he thinks, and it’s like a revelation. It’s like that first spark that sets fire to the tinder, ignites what will soon enough become a blaze. It’s what makes him sit up, shoulder sliding against the other asset’s, looking him in the face, even if his gaze is just a little off, like a blind man trying to look you in the eye, only it’s a couple of inches off. He can see the other asset’s face, but it’s like a pale, shining oval set against the darker hair, the can vaguely see the outlines of features, the blue eyes, the blood-encrusted nose and mouth, in the dim light. The blinds are still closed, the sky still dark with the storm outside.

“I am doing the right thing,” he says, slow but sure, quiet but profound. His voice is plain, flat, clear, but there’s a quality underneath it that wasn’t there before. It’s subtle, but it’s steady. “I don’t know why, but I know that I am.”

He knows that won’t be enough to convince the Soldier. Of course it won’t - it’s vague, it’s unclear, it doesn’t comply. He is no longer compliant, and compliance is the foundation from which the assets were built. It’s why this deviation is the source of so much strife.

So he does something that he has learned never, ever to do in front of a handler. He does something that only the Winter Soldier could ever (has ever, maybe, has this happened before? He doesn’t know, can’t remember, and that frightens him, suddenly) bring him to do. He speaks his mind, he lets out a little of the secret he can feel, buried deep inside: “There’s a different protocol. I don’t think it’s HYDRA’s. I don’t think they can help me understand.”

There’s a pause; when he speaks, that thing coloring his voice has gotten stronger. “I want to understand what it is.”

He wants to know what this thing is they’ve buried, and to do that, they both know what needs to happen. He needs time. He needs to not go back in the chair. He can’t comply, or it will be covered up again, hidden from the light, and maybe he’ll never find it again. Or maybe he’s already found it a hundred times before. Maybe he's forgotten it a hundred times more.
Edited 2017-07-09 21:55 (UTC)
whothehellissteve: (oh give me a break)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-09-09 03:47 am (UTC)(link)
The Captain should know better. The Captain would know better than to believe the offer for help, would know it’s only a ploy, it’s practically SOP, to make someone dangerous that you don’t trust, trust you instead. But there’s something - someone? - inside him that hears those words, in that voice, and immediately gives in, takes a breath, relaxes. There’s something inside him that instantly feels better, more at ease, a knot in his gut that loosens, a spark that runs over and through him. His burning eyes flutter closed for a moment in what’s clearly a show of trust, of comfort around the other asset, of vulnerability he should never have been willing to express in the first place. It’s another clear sign of how far his programming has crumbled, even as the broken vestiges of the codes and failsafes and structure HYDRA put inside of him are still trying to hold, keeping whatever it is that he really wants to know at bay.

But while he can’t access the memories, the knowledge he wants, there are other things slipping through - sense-memories, instincts, things that run deeper than conscious thought, and are far harder to wipe away. They’re the first to return: the soft sound of the Soldier’s voice, the feel of his warm body next to his, the comfort he takes in knowing they’re together.

His vision is still too blurry to really assess the Soldier; he hears the asset shift beside him, more than sees it, but what little information he can get from his eyes, coupled with what he’s getting from his other senses, gives him a pretty clear picture. He knows he’s bound the Soldier tightly enough that he won’t be able to escape easily, can’t just snap the bonds. He knows he doesn’t want to leave his partner tied up, that something about that sits uneasily inside of him, and he’s already reaching clumsily for the other’s hands before he catches himself, pauses, fingertips just brushing the metal of the Soldier’s hand, inches from the knots at most.

“I want to do this together,” he says - again, words he would be backhanded, shot, sliced, burned, electrocuted for. Words that he would never have dared to say, should have known better than to say, known better than to even think while HYDRA still held his mind whole and molded in their hands. Now, his ruined eyes flick up, trying to find and hold the Soldier’s, though the gaze is still off, a little too far to the left and not as piercing as it should be, without that clear focus. But there’s still something genuine in it - genuine, and lost. “I think we’re stronger together. I think we belong together. I think my mission,” whatever it is, “needs you.”

His fingers inch closer to the knots binding the Soldier’s wrists, but even as they touch the rope, he doesn’t untie them. He’s still looking the Soldier in the face as best he can, still struggling with his own sense of duty, of reason, of protocol, all three of them screaming, clashing and disharmonious, inside his head loud enough to nearly drown out the sound of the howling wind outside. “I trust you,” he says quietly, eyes narrowing almost as if in confusion, as if he didn’t mean or didn’t expect to have said the words that just slipped from his lips.

Except he does mean them. “We’re partners,” he says… because they are. They’re partners, and… and something else, but he can’t find the word, can’t grasp it long enough to form it. “And partners trust each other.”

It’s a statement, almost as much as it might be a warning, as his fingers finally touch the knots, but then they still. Something in him says he shouldn’t unknot them; something in him balks at the idea that he tied them at all.
whothehellissteve: (closeup)

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2017-12-18 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
So what now? It’s a valid question - a good question, a question anyone would ask. And normally, the Captain would have an immediate, effortless answer for him - missions always have parameters, after all, always a clear path to follow, even when there are contingencies branching out like the roots of a tree, racing away in a hundred different directions. Even then, the path is clear - follow the main objective, and if a problem arises, follow the next option to the next, and keep going until the mission is complete.

This mission is murkier - unclear. It’s a gut feeling - if the Captain knew what gut feelings were, could call them by name. He’s had them before - they’re actually part of what makes him valuable as a breathing, reasoning weapon, why they pull him out of cryo again and again - but the understanding of gut feelings and how they work and what they are has been burned from him, and it hasn’t yet returned. All he has is a certainty that this mission trumps all others, that this protocol is vital, and that he needs to drop everything else to pursue it.

So - that’s what now. That’s what they’ll do. The problem is, “We need information,” he says, fingers still poised above the knots holding the Soldier’s hands uncomfortably in place. It seems like the next logical step - you don’t act without intel, that’s just insane, but the problem is - he has the intel, and it’s locked away. The barriers are crumbling, but -

That’s it. “We need time,” he says next, burning eyes flicking to the shuttered windows, to the howling just beyond them. “I need time, to remember. We need to stay here, and you need to stop giving me injections.” It’s the reasonable move, after all - they’re not really working, but they're still slowing things down, barring the way, even though the barriers eventually give way. Stopping them would likely speed the process, let his synapses rebuild ruined pathways, let the burned-out bridges in his mind reroute. His lips twitch into something that’s barely an expression, barely a motion at all, but that the other asset might recognize as the Captain’s equivalent of a wry smile. “The weather seems to be accommodating for right now, at least.”

There’s still no telling how long the storm itself will last, but the longer it does, the more snow their lodge is buried under, and the longer they have before HYDRA comes looking for them. If they sit tight, and if they forego all contact protocols, if they sit and wait and let his mind keep recovering… the Captain is sure that what he needs will bob to the surface, will slough off the mud it’s under, and become clear.

His fingers flex a little, as the Solder’s shoulder bumps his own. Partners. That’s what they are, what they always have been, for the entire existence that he knows (can remember). They work well together, like two moving parts of a whole, like the trigger and the hammer of a gun, one complementing the other. The missions where they’re sent out together always feel the most complete, the most satisfying, and he wants to save that, to preserve it. He hopes, somewhere deep inside himself, that this new, desperate protocol won’t change that. If it does… if it does, he’ll deal with it then. He’ll have a choice to make.

But not right now. His fingers start to loosen the knots by touch, slowly but efficiently. He doesn’t simply remove the rope all at once, but he first gives the Soldier some slack, and then some more, ruined, still hard-to-focus eyes on the other asset’s face, watching for tells, watching for twitches, even as his fingertips feel for tremors in the other’s arms, signs that he’s going to fight back, to fight this. It’s only if he gets none of it that he’ll finally loosen the bonds, because if they’re in this for the long haul, together, then he can’t (he can, he doesn’t want to, he shouldn’t -) leave the Soldier tied and bound.

“We’re good - as partners,” he says, half a statement, half a question, seeking confirmation, agreement. “We always have been.” He can’t remember much, between the screaming and the hot-white-slicing pain of the chair, the beat-downs, the small army of guards it takes to subdue him and drag him into cryo, every time. He can’t remember past missions in detail, but he has enough - enough of those gut feelings, those sense memories - to be sure of what he’s saying. “We’re the best HYDRA has, together. I want to find out what else we can be.” And the answer, he’s so sure, is buried inside him, just beneath the surface, trying to claw its way free.
whothehellissteve: (determined)

maybe timeskip a little to the next day or so?

[personal profile] whothehellissteve 2018-03-12 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
Part of the Captain is… frightened isn’t the right word, but unsure, at the very least - he hasn’t been without his medication that he knows of, can’t remember a mission where it ran out, can’t remember a time before the daily injections he required between trips to the chair. He’s sure, in his gut, that stopping them will let what needs to break through come free, but even given that surety, there are hairline cracks, the last vestiges of his active and dormant programming, telling him that he shouldn’t stop, even when he thinks he should.

He ignores it - he’s made a decision, and he’s not going back on it now. To falter would show weakness, and HYDRA does not tolerate weakness. They built him to be strong, to be unstoppable, and even as he’s crumbling and unsure, he can’t give up the strength he still has, the conviction that this old, deep programming needs to come to light. It makes everything worth it - the excruciating pain in his shoulder, his ruined face, the way he’s tied up the Soldier, even if only temporarily. What little he can see of the expression on the other asset’s face makes him uncomfortable, in this deep, dark place, and he doesn’t like that feeling at all.

But the pit of unhappiness shrinks, when the asset finally speaks. When he confirms that they’ll do this together, that he doesn’t want to be alone. The lines of the Captain’s broad frame relax, as much as they can with the pain, and he nods, leg splaying out just a little, bumping the Soldier’s thigh with his own in this subtle, small gesture that none of their handlers have ever caught. “You won’t,” he says, and his conviction swells as he says it, beats back the unease just a little further. “I won’t let that happen.”

It’s not like the Captain to make empty threats; it’s unclear how he might carry this one out, when he is but a tool, a thing for HYDRA to point and punish and choose to use or lock away, but he means it, nonetheless. He won’t let them be separated, if he has to lie through his teeth when their handlers find them. He’ll deal with that when it happens, when he has the intel slowly shaking loose inside of him, when he can make an informed plan of action.

For now, they’ll wait.

“I don’t know,” he says, aware of the other asset’s gaze on his face, but steadfastly refusing to let anything but surety show on it. “If there’s a mission, we’ll complete it.” If it’s a mission, it will have parameters and an objective and an endpoint and a followup plan, just like all the others. Once he can grasp that information, he’ll feel infinitely better. “If it’s not, we’ll complete this mission, and I’ll handle the consequences.”

It’s clear he means by whatever means necessary, whether it’s lying or telling the truth. It’s clear that he means to handle those consequences himself, to ensure that no harm comes to his partner, nothing worse than the usual end-of-mission protocol. “We’ll stay together,” he promises. “We’re too valuable for them to split apart. I know how to make sure of that.”

For now, though, “Being knocked unconscious isn’t rest,” he points out. “And you had watch last night. Get some rest. You probably have a concussion. I can keep watch.” Even with eyes that aren't yet clear and sharp, his other senses are good enough to do as he proposes. And in a few hours, at most, his face and eyes will have healed enough that, while he still won't look as "handsome" as usual, he'll be fully operational - at least, in that respect. His arm still aches sharply, deep in the ruined joint, and he will endure it forever if he has to, but he doesn't like the idea of the injured arm slowing them down, if what he digs up from inside of himself doesn't include returning to HYDRA.

He'll deal with it then, though. Just like everything else.

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No worries at alllll

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Not at all!

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