Natasha Romanoff (
redintheledger) wrote2012-05-20 01:41 am
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March, 2006: Tokyo, Clint

Far more galling.
She locks her bike up without incident, manages to get all the way to her room without incident. Her room-mate is there, but fortunately, the girl is wearing earphones, clearly writing an essay that was due yesterday. Natalie nods at her, grabs her towel, fresh clothes, hair-dryer, and stalks her way to the bathroom.
Again, fortunately, it's free, and she's able to lock the door without exchanging a word to anyone. What she wants to do is dump her things, jump straight into the shower; what she does is carefully place her things down on a counter, and start to remove her make-up.
Slowly, Natalie Rushman is wiped away while Natasha emerges, looking tired and angry around the edges. She braces herself against the counter, and sighs.
Natasha looks at her reflection and, because Natalie is American, says, “God fucking damnit.”
That had all been...mundanely humiliating.
Natasha lets herself indulge in precisely one minute of imagined violence as she lathers up her hair, picturing exactly what she would do to her former boss, her former co-workers, the customers who'd grab her ass, and every single sleazy photographer she could find before S.H.I.E.L.D. put a bullet in her head. By the time she's up to scrubbing the smell of her former place of employ out of her skin, she's moved onto just concentrating on the hot water, the feeling of the sponge on her body.
By the time she's twisting her hair and wringing the excess water out, she's already formulating her next move.
It is, objectively, a stupid move, and she can acknowledge that.
She's also the wrong side of pissed off to really care.
Natalie Rushman firmly back in place, she slips out of the bathroom and into the house itself. She'd hum on her way back to her room, but that would draw attention to herself. She is not, after all, pissed off enough to be careless.
“Natalie!” Valeria says, actually taking out her earphones and looking apologetic. “I'm sorry, I know you have work tomorrow, but I really need to finish this essay, so I'm probably going to be up all night...” The girl (and she is a girl, nineteen and sparkling new in a way that sometimes makes Natasha grit her teeth) is speaking Italian, as is their habit.
Natalie smiles, a little, and shrugs. “It's fine, Val,” she says, her Italian sliding smoothly off her tongue. “I don't have actually have work tomorrow, so I'll probably up all night drowning my sorrows on the internet.”
“Sorry to hear it. But I'm sure you'll find a job soon,” Valeria adds with a bright yet absent smile.
Natalie's smile very carefully doesn't widen at all. “I'm sure I will. Good luck.”
“You, too,” Valeria says, putting her earphones back on.
Natalie draws her laptop out of its bag, plugs it in, and gets comfortable on her bed. She's got a long night ahead of her; as the geekier Westerners would say, one simply does not walk into Mordor, and one does not easily hack into S.H.I.E.L.D.
Well.
Maybe they don't say that last bit.
– –
Twenty-one hours, five cups of coffee, two bowls of noodles, and one serving of the cheap sushi from down the road later, Natasha quickly jots down a phone number on a single sheet of paper and carefully exits S.H.I.E.L.D.'s database. Then she turns off her laptop and allows herself two minutes to lie face down on her bed in victory. Mission accomplished. Granting herself another full minute to contemplate when to use the number is pure indulgence, because she decided when to call within about fifteen seconds.
It's ten past one in the morning in San Diego, US, but Agent Clint(on Francis) Barton is a former military man, according to his records. He can survive.
Sitting up on her bed, Natasha leans over to grab Natalie's phone (it's pink, with some fake diamonds hanging off a cord; it's so very Natalie Rushman) and quickly dials.
If Barton is on a mission, she is going to kill him.
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"Well, you're here, aren't you?"
That means something, and she looks pleased as she sips her own cup.
Pleased as a porcelain doll and, under the smile, just as readable.
"Have to say, though," she says, "it took me hours to find your work phone number. You might want to talk to your company about that."
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He extends his right hand over the table, palm up, so she can take it if she wants to stop tracing the tabletop.
Also, it leaves his left hand free, which is the one he'd need to use at this angle to shoot anyone but her, anyway.
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For a moment - just a fraction of a second - she looks honestly startled. Then, she reaches out and curls her hand around his, like she means it.
She does mean it, but not how anyone watching this would interrupt. Help me, her look and her fingers curled around his hand are saying. Please.
(You extend a hand when you are helping someone up, don't you?)
"Mmm, not much. Apparently I'm entirely the wrong shape for modelling. For normal modelling," she amends. "Mostly, just been...keeping my head down. Being a good girl."
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"The fashion industry has no taste," he assures her, once he's found his footing, "which is ironic, considering."
Ironic, or just unexpected? He won't lie, he got taught all this by Alanis Morissette.
"That doesn't sound like any fun," he adds. "I got a room on company dime, if you're bored of it."
He says that just before the waiter comes back within earshot.
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(And, of course, his reaction is noted, filed neatly away.)
Her smile, still small, is now wicked. "Oh, trust me, I'm very bored." She leans back in her chair, gives a little smile to the waiter.
"Enjoy the coffee."
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"You bring me all the way to Japan," he says, genuinely amused, "and then you rush my coffee."
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"But point made, I'll...settle."
'Settle', in this case, means watching the rest of the cafe as she waits, as still as she can make herself without appearing odd.
It'd be easier calming her nerves if she could be still.
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And it is good coffee.
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The fact that her jacket - black, leather, vintage - is longer than her dress is made very apparent as she walks up the stairs and out onto the street, and most like she was aiming for that.
Also, you know. It's a nice jacket, and only early March.
The Japanese, and her skill with it, makes a reappearance as she talks with a taxi-driver, ordering them to Shinjuku station to go and get lost in before they go to wherever S.H.I.E.L.D. has placed Barton. She's running enough risks as it is that's more than happy for more chances to lose any tails she (or Barton) have acquired.
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(It's also protocol.)
They're maybe quieter than a couple normally would be on a taxi ride, but Clint is clearly tired so it might be written off as giving each other space. He pays the fare, when they arrive, and keeps his door open for Romanova, scanning the crowd.
The rest of the trip is fairly uneventful, even though it does include Clint employing a nasty glare and an arm around Romanova's shoulders a few times, to ward off the usual subway crowding. Normally he wouldn't mind, but he really doesn't want someone to stick either of them with something toxic.
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She doesn't really have anything of particular value in it, anyway. Except for her subway pass.
They can pry her subway pass out of her cold, dead hands.
(Or, warm. Warm dead hands are easier to manage.)
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He shucks his coat to hang by the door, and his briefcase, but not his shoes, and doesn't disarm because it's seriously the only gun in the apartment. Except the ones packed into the bedroom with his bow. Speaking of which.
"Make yourself comfortable, find something to drink. Uh, except the milk if it's low, I don't have time to get a new one before we head out. I'm going to get something from my room, in case your friends pay us a visit."
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"If my friends turn up, do I get a weapon?"
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He shows back up with a brushed steel case, and a smaller black plastic one. His grin is relaxed. "Yours," he says, about the black case, setting it on a table, "and mine."
"I wasn't kidding about that drink you know. Orange juice?" He heads over to the refrigerator.
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She quashes those thoughts and....doesn't sit. She hovers. For someone who is only 5'3, she's remarkably good at hovering.
The restless, edgy air he noticed damped down in the cafe is far, far more noticeable now.
"Just...water for me, thanks. Barton."
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Anyway. "Sure thing," he says, getting the glasses and filling them. (His has orange juice.) He calls over: "If you're hungry, then the table, otherwise the couches have more space for pacing." It's a prod, but a gentle one.
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"You are confusing, American," she declares at last, and stalks over to fridge to hunt for something to eat.
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"There's microwaveables in the freezer."
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Or just being nice?"
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He doesn't point out that if he was just trying to get on her good side, he wouldn't have left his gun on his person where she could get it. He's seen Romanova in more than one fight; unarmed, there's a fair chance she could take him even if she is six months out of the game.
"I'm not a spy, Romanova. Sorry if I'm a little offbeat."
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Then,
"Romanoff. In English, I...prefer Romanoff."
He leaves his weapon within easy enough reach (it'd be ugly, given she hasn't sparred in months), she can actually microwave her lasagne and get a plate.
(The place at the table she chooses has her back to the side wall, leaving her free to watch both door and window.
Once you get shot by a sniper, even with a tranq dart, you start to be much more wary of windows)
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Stab, stab, stab, let's pretend she's doing this to let it all cool down.
"Do you know why I was sent to Japan?"
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