Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow (
unmakeme) wrote in
riverviewlogs2018-05-24 09:43 pm
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may catch-all
who: Natasha Romanoff and your character
what: lots of walking, fair amount of drinking, little bit of rescuing
when: month of May
where: all around town, particularly bars or clubs
warnings:
1 dino-fight
There’s something about throwing herself into work. It’s not satisfying, that’s not the word she would use. It’s… well, it’s familiar. Leaving a whole lot of death in her wake, that’s what she was built for. Usually it’s very bad people, but she’s almost used to it being weird lizard monsters, freaky insects, giant crocodiles, various dinosaur like creatures. It’s almost becoming the norm. Even better when they turn out to taste good. Save some money on a food bill. Clint would probably find that morbidly funny.
The flying ones are the worst, not because of the difficulty, but because of familiarity. Fighting with her eyes on the sky, with a mind to vertical action, that’s a throw-back to something real.
Luckily, that train of thought is cut off by a surprised shriek and a call for help, and she has something else to focus on. That something being a pterodactyl monster with a person in its claws. Not ideal. Natasha turns her attention, assesses the way the creature is moving with the additional weight, and takes the last two shots in her clip. Both connect, neither take it down. So she ejects the empty clip, slams another one into her gun, flips herself up onto the awning of a building, and takes a slower and more careful shot. This one travels through the creature’s eye, and the heavy, meaty sound of it hitting the ground would be a lot more satisfying if not for the fact that it’s landed on the intended meal.
Natasha jumps down, and jogs over, bracing her shoulder underneath the hulking corpse and shoving it up and off of the person beneath. “You ok?”
2 getting as drunk as humanly possible
It’s not just the latest monster attack that’s got her drinking. It would be nice to pretend that’s the case. It would be slightly healthier. Sadly, it’s not true. She was drinking before the dinosaurs turned up, and she’ll be drinking after they’re gone. Some nights, she goes to clubs, gets lost in the loud music and the dark corners, lets other people buy her drinks. Most of the time, she just ends up in a bar that doesn’t look to her like it’s full of people who will want to talk, and stays until closing so that she can be alone without feeling completely alone.
Which does not mean she always stays alone. It’s impossible to get away from everyone. Occasionally she ends up seeing someone she knows from work, from her building or gym, and there’s no longer an easy way to tell them to get lost. Or maybe she’s just tired. Perhaps, deep down, she doesn’t really want to be alone.
3 walking after dark
Even after the bars close, or when Natasha realizes that if she keeps going, she’s going to end up falling asleep there, she doesn’t always want to go back to her apartment. It’s not home. It’s about as far from home as any place she’s ever lived.
So she walks, just to put it all off.
She walks through streets of closed up shops, lights off and shades drawn, and most of the time she’s thinking about the stillness of Manhattan after the alien attack. Occasionally a certain stretch of the road or cluster of stores will make her think of even earlier times, of dead drops and fleeting connections in deserted town centers, dancing through camera blind spots like it was effortless, like it wasn’t a heart-pounding jumble of precision and uncertainty, tempting fate with every step.
She walks along the perimeter, checking the guards, looking for faces she knows, ones she doesn’t, listening for movement beyond the fence. She tries to imagine what’s coming next. She’s rarely correct, but that doesn’t mean she’ll stop wondering. This is not the kind of life she can predict. It’s not the kind of life she ever wanted to be living. Sometimes that circuit will carry her through until morning, and she can skip sleep entirely, grab a quick shower and head to the gym, pretend she’s fine.
wildcard!
Everybody knows how to do this one. Want to do something I haven’t talked about already? This is the option for you.
what: lots of walking, fair amount of drinking, little bit of rescuing
when: month of May
where: all around town, particularly bars or clubs
warnings:
1 dino-fight
There’s something about throwing herself into work. It’s not satisfying, that’s not the word she would use. It’s… well, it’s familiar. Leaving a whole lot of death in her wake, that’s what she was built for. Usually it’s very bad people, but she’s almost used to it being weird lizard monsters, freaky insects, giant crocodiles, various dinosaur like creatures. It’s almost becoming the norm. Even better when they turn out to taste good. Save some money on a food bill. Clint would probably find that morbidly funny.
The flying ones are the worst, not because of the difficulty, but because of familiarity. Fighting with her eyes on the sky, with a mind to vertical action, that’s a throw-back to something real.
Luckily, that train of thought is cut off by a surprised shriek and a call for help, and she has something else to focus on. That something being a pterodactyl monster with a person in its claws. Not ideal. Natasha turns her attention, assesses the way the creature is moving with the additional weight, and takes the last two shots in her clip. Both connect, neither take it down. So she ejects the empty clip, slams another one into her gun, flips herself up onto the awning of a building, and takes a slower and more careful shot. This one travels through the creature’s eye, and the heavy, meaty sound of it hitting the ground would be a lot more satisfying if not for the fact that it’s landed on the intended meal.
Natasha jumps down, and jogs over, bracing her shoulder underneath the hulking corpse and shoving it up and off of the person beneath. “You ok?”
2 getting as drunk as humanly possible
It’s not just the latest monster attack that’s got her drinking. It would be nice to pretend that’s the case. It would be slightly healthier. Sadly, it’s not true. She was drinking before the dinosaurs turned up, and she’ll be drinking after they’re gone. Some nights, she goes to clubs, gets lost in the loud music and the dark corners, lets other people buy her drinks. Most of the time, she just ends up in a bar that doesn’t look to her like it’s full of people who will want to talk, and stays until closing so that she can be alone without feeling completely alone.
Which does not mean she always stays alone. It’s impossible to get away from everyone. Occasionally she ends up seeing someone she knows from work, from her building or gym, and there’s no longer an easy way to tell them to get lost. Or maybe she’s just tired. Perhaps, deep down, she doesn’t really want to be alone.
3 walking after dark
Even after the bars close, or when Natasha realizes that if she keeps going, she’s going to end up falling asleep there, she doesn’t always want to go back to her apartment. It’s not home. It’s about as far from home as any place she’s ever lived.
So she walks, just to put it all off.
She walks through streets of closed up shops, lights off and shades drawn, and most of the time she’s thinking about the stillness of Manhattan after the alien attack. Occasionally a certain stretch of the road or cluster of stores will make her think of even earlier times, of dead drops and fleeting connections in deserted town centers, dancing through camera blind spots like it was effortless, like it wasn’t a heart-pounding jumble of precision and uncertainty, tempting fate with every step.
She walks along the perimeter, checking the guards, looking for faces she knows, ones she doesn’t, listening for movement beyond the fence. She tries to imagine what’s coming next. She’s rarely correct, but that doesn’t mean she’ll stop wondering. This is not the kind of life she can predict. It’s not the kind of life she ever wanted to be living. Sometimes that circuit will carry her through until morning, and she can skip sleep entirely, grab a quick shower and head to the gym, pretend she’s fine.
wildcard!
Everybody knows how to do this one. Want to do something I haven’t talked about already? This is the option for you.
no subject
It is something he'd like to have in a friend, though, and when she says a girl like her is the reason people come to a place like this, he laughs again, the grin widening, "You've got that right."
In more ways than one. Danger. Beauty. Intrigue. Natasha has it all.
"Um, yeah I am. I'm on desk duty, not bedrest." he jokes, nudging his elbow against Natasha's shoulder and ducking his head toward the bar, "And speaking of free alcohol, I'll totally buy you a drink if you go a couple rounds on the floor with me afterward."
no subject
So much for that.
"Desk duty, bed rest, same thing." They've only worked together on a few instances, disasters when everyone whose job entailed looking after the city and its inhabitants in some way had banded together. Still, one time is enough to leave no doubt of just how incredibly physical (and often violent) Natasha's approach to the job is. Monsters tend to leave encounters with her resembling ground chuck. As far as she's concerned, desk duty is the beginning of the end.
Still, he has powers that he could learn to use to keep himself safe. If he's well enough to dance, he's probably well enough to start training. She'll be able to see his comfortable range of motion in a less clinical way. Plus, free drink. So she just smiles brighter. "Thank you, magic dress. Lead the way, you adorable invalid."
no subject
Or maybe she's just intriguing, as a person. Totally possible.
"Wow. Rude, much?" he says, but his voice is shaking with laughter as she accepts his offer, smiling at him and thanking her magic dress for the drink. Shaking his head a bit, he heads over to the bar, holding his hand out behind him so she can take it if she wants, to avoid getting separated. He might not be as physical as her, but he is, and he could probably keep track of her and she of him without the hand, but it's a habit of his, holding hands while he moves through a crowd with Cisco, or a friend.
"Anyway, I'm almost off desk duty, and not a minute too soon. It's driving me crazy. I just wish my shields had been strong enough to keep me out of this situation in the first place, you know?"
After all, who wants to be stuck at a desk when you could be out in the field doing real work?
no subject
When he reaches back, offers his hand, she considers it. Years of practice means that she considers it very quickly, but a whole host of considerations still run through her mind. What's the motivator? Taking his hand won't really impede her movement. He's not strong enough to keep his grip on her if she wants to be free. There is more than enough charge in her lightest wearing version of the Bites, currently masquerading as a set of very thick cuff bracelets, to make him pull away from her. He's also recently been injured, and she knows the few places that are still tender by the way he carries himself. They are all easily exploitable. He's not making a move. The laughing acceptance of her calling him on his cheesy line didn't hold a shred of regret or shame.
So he just... wants to hold her hand?
Weird.
Still, she reaches out and takes it, because there is no compelling reason not to, and no cost to her. Her fingers are cool against his, even in the muggy atmosphere of the club.
"Well, it's like any other muscle. You just need to exercise it to make it stronger."
no subject
And when she takes his hand, holds onto it as they thread their way through the crowd. He tugs, just a little, but not because he doesn't think she knows her way to the bar, but to indicate that he's moving forward, so they can move in sync.
Glancing behind him, he blinks a bit as she says that it's like any other muscle, that he just has to exercise it to make it stronger. And okay, yeah, putting it that way, it makes a whole lot of sense. He's pretty familiar with working muscles, after all, it's how he'd lost weight in high school, it's how he'd become a police officer despite all the odds. Boxing. Working out. It makes sense that maybe this new power he has would get better with practice.
"Wow. I think you just blew my mind, Natasha."
He says it with obvious sincerity, his brows raising as he looks at her.
"Just a matter of figuring out how to exercise it, right? What's your poison?"
Because here they are. At the bar.
no subject
"Triple vodka, cold, no ice." The bartender knows at this point what she orders, what she wants to drink. She's been through this way many times tonight, after all, a new person in tow almost every time.
Then her attention is back on Eddie. The bartender moves in her peripherals, and it doesn't take much spare attention to watch the vodka poured through the ice tubing, into the glass, making no detours on its way to her. Safe. "It took you a while to learn to write, walk, dance, even to breathe properly. This won't be any different. If it takes a month of work just to teach a body to touch its toes, why would this come any faster? Maybe some part of it is automatic, but everything can always get stronger. If you work at it."
no subject
But he doesn't.
He's not entirely surprised by her drink of choice, or the fact the bartender knows it, he just orders a local maple lager, and keeps as close an eye on her drink as she is. Instinct, after years of being a cop, of seeing things he wishes he hadn't had to see involving girls in clubs taking drinks from strangers. Not that he doubts Natasha could protect herself, but she is human, after all. Or at least he thinks she is.
"You've got a point there. I've done a bit of training with Cisco, but not anything really...you know, super challenging. Which is kinda the point of working out. You push yourself or you don't grow."
A little sigh, and he shakes his head.
"Guess I better get on that. And maybe some hand to hand training while I'm at it."
no subject
When she's finished, she clicks her tongue at him, head still shaking. "You can't train with him. It won't work. He doesn't want to hurt you." The natural continuation of that thought being that she does. Or, at the very least, that she's willing to. Which is true. She's willing to hurt him to make sure he doesn't end up dead.
no subject
He says it with a bright little smile, eyes lighting up at even the mention of Cisco. Eddie's emotions are always written clear as day on his face, and this is no exception - it's obvious how much he cares for Cisco, how much that relationship means to him.
"Wait, second best? If he's second best, who's best?" he asks, both brows raised, totally ready and willing to give her a good solid counter-argument. Personally, he thinks Cisco has the best everything in Riverview. But...well, he admits he may be biased as well.
When she comments that he can't train with Cisco because he doesn't want to hurt him, Eddie blinks a bit, eyes on her face, "What? I don't get it, why wouldn't that work?"
Pausing for a moment, Eddie turns and orders another of Natasha's drinks from the bartender, watches to make sure it's safe before he picks it up and hands it to her. Taking a swig of his beer, he raises his brows again, questioningly.
no subject
Natasha takes the drink, and once she has it, she turns away from Eddie. Her free hand comes up to pull the hair sticks out of hair, and a sharp shake of her head sends deep red curls spilling down to just past her shoulder blades, sleek and shiny. She hasn't really cut it since arriving. When she turns back to Eddie, she does it quickly enough that her hair fans out behind her, follows the movement and comes spilling over her shoulder before bouncing back slightly. She points the surprisingly sharp ends of the hair sticks at the fall of deep red against her glittering dress and pale shoulder. "Best."
It's warm in the room, the press of too many bodies in the space. Already her hair is blocking the minimal amount of breeze she was getting against the back of her neck as she moved through the crowd and occasionally stumbled into the path of one of the few air conditioning vents so high above them. She won't leave it down. She's just trying to make a cheeky point.
no subject
"Huh. I get you. So you're saying you'd be a better trainer because you would want to hurt me?"
He says it with a hint of humor, but he means what he says, at the same time. And he thinks she would actually be a pretty good trainer. When she goes for her hair, though, and lets the mass of it fall over her shoulders, looks behind herself at him, he laughs.
"Nice try, but Cisco's is still the best. No offense."
A wink, and he takes another pull of his beer.
no subject
Natasha pulls a fake mew of pity onto her face when he concludes, though it does not reach her eyes. Those are still far too amused. "How sad. So the brain damage is permanent, is it? Well, at least you've still got your sparkling personality and your cute little butt." She downs her second drink because, once again, it's a shot. Then she quickly puts her very lethal hair sticks back into a hastily twisted messy bun on top of her head. "And the support of your boyfriend." She's smirking again now. "With his second best hair."
He's nursing that beer pretty slowly, but you can dance with a beer. "Now, I seem to recall a promise of a couple rounds out there," she hooks her thumb back over her shoulder at the press of frantically dancing bodies, "and not just rounds up here. You're not the type to disappoint a lady, are you?"
no subject
"Um, excuse me? Have you seen Cisco's hair?"
He raises an eyebrow in return, snorting when she comments on his personality and butt, "I've got a lot more going for me than that, Natasha."
When she asks him if he wants to take her on the promised couple rounds on the dance floor, he chugs down the last of his beer, sets it on the bar, and grins at her, "Now you're speaking my language."
Holding out his elbow to her, he raises a brow again, smirking a little.
"Let's go."
no subject
There's the same awareness of the way he moves as they make their way through the crowd. This gives him a larger advantage than just having her hand, but she could still get away. Even with the vodka very quickly saturating her bloodstream. It would be more difficult if he were determined, it would cause more of a fuss, but she could do it.
Of course, she'd prefer the dance. Which is why there's a little bubble of almost relief when they make it back to the press of bodies and Eddie is still all guileless smiles and happy energy. Just a pleasant normal guy, having a night out, looking to enjoy himself. Sometimes Natasha has to marvel that people like that can even still exist. In any world.
no subject
Eddie says it fondly, his eyes crinkling a bit as he smiles at her, takes her arm and leads her out onto the floor, both of them moving gracefully as they dodge other people in the crowd, and anything beyond that, beyond dancing and relaxing and having fun, isn't even on his mind. It's never been on his mind, not with her, and not with anyone else.
And when they get out on the floor, he grins as he releases her arm but holds lightly to her hand so he doesn't lose her on the floor, swaying his hips and moving in time with the beat. The grin stays in place, because this is one of those things that makes him feel alive, present, that makes him feel like this is really a second chance. One of those things that makes him really feel joy in life.
Giving her hand a little tug, he raises his brows, lifting his hand in an offer to twirl her, silly and casual and fun.