You don't know how you got here
Mar. 14th, 2015 08:06 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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WHO: Korra and Hei.
WHAT: Two Contractors after a messy hit.
[ The assignment is complete. After a fashion. ]
[ The target's stretch limousine explodes, a time-bomb hurtling at eighty miles per hour. Hei verifies the detonation in the side-view mirror of their getaway van. The brilliant flames glow across the express lane, a bonfire on a humid July night, the deadly cacophony fifty yards behind him on the I-95. The ferocity from the detonation rolls through the atmosphere, juddering both sides of the interstate and adjacent roads like in a San Francisco earthquake. Brake lights flare in a screeching chorus. Behind Hei, beyond the blazing limousine, four lanes of interstate crowded with cars, trucks, and motorcycles careen to an ear-splitting halt, too late for speed demons to swerve and avoid flying debris. ]
[ Their van keeps going. The target is dead. The botched mission completed in less than forty-eight hours. The teflon-coated politician inside the limo had coasted through a dream-life of caviar and champagne, bodyguards at his side, girls in his lap, boys paid to shoot and kill and girls trained to smile and please. A man who didn't hesitate to have his enemies dragged to the desert and fed to the buzzards. ]
[ A prominent Syndicate faction had become one of his problems. And so the politician became one of theirs. ]
[ All BK201 knows is what he'd been briefed on, during the overseas assignment. And that, in itself, isn't much. The less the killing-machines knew, the better. What mattered was that they rectified the situation as they'd been ordered to. ]
[ The remote trigger that sparked blast is still in Hei's gloved hand. With a zzzt and a curl of smoke, he shorts it out. Tosses it out the window, while their van lurches from right lane to left lane to right lane, threading traffic like a bulky needle, becoming a fast-moving blur vanishing down I-95. Hei exhales, absorbing the metal's chill; the van is a freezer. Across him is the only other survivor of the hit: NC-108. Korra. Both their faces are crusted in dried blood, clothes grimy, hair in tufts. But everything else is intact -- unlike the rest of their teammates. The politician managed to weed them out before they'd fully infiltrated his base. Two were murdered in their hotel room by a hitman dressed as a waiter. The other three were machine-gunned on the street last night during dinner in a café by hostiles in police uniforms. The Syndicate is still recovering their mangled bodies. ]
[ Hei and Korra were advised to abort the operation and contact their respective handlers. Neither had bothered. Hei, because his inner-completionist refused to leave the job undone. Korra, because -- let's face it -- she has a streak, miles wide, that compels her to throw herself into the maelstrom of disaster, daredevilry the cover for an easy exit. During their firefight with the politician's hitmen, Hei had to drag her away a few times from almost certain disembowelment or death -- narrow saves that made Korra grin like she was high, the fevery glow off her skin like an irradiated firefly. ]
[ Hei can't say it bodes well. Not for her -- or her long-term career. ]
[ It doesn't matter. They've both succeeded at this mission. Five dead teammates equal five less cuts on the final payment. There's a tidy sum waiting for the two of them. A quarter of a million dollars, each. Hei's cellphone has already vibrated with the message: FUNDS TRANSFERRED. ]
[ It's a living, he thinks, gazing out the window with a sedate veneer but a tensile edge to his jaw. Forty-eight hours, five eliminated associates, and he's earned $250,000. And all it took was a few scrapes and bruises, a tricky full-immersion identity, and a block of old-fashioned C-4. ]
[ The Syndicate's safehouse is in an old motel, one of twelve pink stucco cottages strung out around a gravel parking lot. The cabin reeks of must, and like everything that night, humidly salty. Switching on the rattling air-conditioner, Hei conducts his careful sweep for bugs across the room. Satisfied, he shrugs off his coat -- stiff with caked blood -- before glancing impassively toward Korra, ]
Take the first shower.
[ He's not being a gentleman. But the widest window for enemy retaliation -- and the Syndicate's own post-mission clean-ups -- occurs in the twelve hours after the successful hit. If they're ambushed, Hei doesn't plan to be naked, dripping wet and unarmed. ]
WHAT: Two Contractors after a messy hit.
[ The assignment is complete. After a fashion. ]
[ The target's stretch limousine explodes, a time-bomb hurtling at eighty miles per hour. Hei verifies the detonation in the side-view mirror of their getaway van. The brilliant flames glow across the express lane, a bonfire on a humid July night, the deadly cacophony fifty yards behind him on the I-95. The ferocity from the detonation rolls through the atmosphere, juddering both sides of the interstate and adjacent roads like in a San Francisco earthquake. Brake lights flare in a screeching chorus. Behind Hei, beyond the blazing limousine, four lanes of interstate crowded with cars, trucks, and motorcycles careen to an ear-splitting halt, too late for speed demons to swerve and avoid flying debris. ]
[ Their van keeps going. The target is dead. The botched mission completed in less than forty-eight hours. The teflon-coated politician inside the limo had coasted through a dream-life of caviar and champagne, bodyguards at his side, girls in his lap, boys paid to shoot and kill and girls trained to smile and please. A man who didn't hesitate to have his enemies dragged to the desert and fed to the buzzards. ]
[ A prominent Syndicate faction had become one of his problems. And so the politician became one of theirs. ]
[ All BK201 knows is what he'd been briefed on, during the overseas assignment. And that, in itself, isn't much. The less the killing-machines knew, the better. What mattered was that they rectified the situation as they'd been ordered to. ]
[ The remote trigger that sparked blast is still in Hei's gloved hand. With a zzzt and a curl of smoke, he shorts it out. Tosses it out the window, while their van lurches from right lane to left lane to right lane, threading traffic like a bulky needle, becoming a fast-moving blur vanishing down I-95. Hei exhales, absorbing the metal's chill; the van is a freezer. Across him is the only other survivor of the hit: NC-108. Korra. Both their faces are crusted in dried blood, clothes grimy, hair in tufts. But everything else is intact -- unlike the rest of their teammates. The politician managed to weed them out before they'd fully infiltrated his base. Two were murdered in their hotel room by a hitman dressed as a waiter. The other three were machine-gunned on the street last night during dinner in a café by hostiles in police uniforms. The Syndicate is still recovering their mangled bodies. ]
[ Hei and Korra were advised to abort the operation and contact their respective handlers. Neither had bothered. Hei, because his inner-completionist refused to leave the job undone. Korra, because -- let's face it -- she has a streak, miles wide, that compels her to throw herself into the maelstrom of disaster, daredevilry the cover for an easy exit. During their firefight with the politician's hitmen, Hei had to drag her away a few times from almost certain disembowelment or death -- narrow saves that made Korra grin like she was high, the fevery glow off her skin like an irradiated firefly. ]
[ Hei can't say it bodes well. Not for her -- or her long-term career. ]
[ It doesn't matter. They've both succeeded at this mission. Five dead teammates equal five less cuts on the final payment. There's a tidy sum waiting for the two of them. A quarter of a million dollars, each. Hei's cellphone has already vibrated with the message: FUNDS TRANSFERRED. ]
[ It's a living, he thinks, gazing out the window with a sedate veneer but a tensile edge to his jaw. Forty-eight hours, five eliminated associates, and he's earned $250,000. And all it took was a few scrapes and bruises, a tricky full-immersion identity, and a block of old-fashioned C-4. ]
[ The Syndicate's safehouse is in an old motel, one of twelve pink stucco cottages strung out around a gravel parking lot. The cabin reeks of must, and like everything that night, humidly salty. Switching on the rattling air-conditioner, Hei conducts his careful sweep for bugs across the room. Satisfied, he shrugs off his coat -- stiff with caked blood -- before glancing impassively toward Korra, ]
Take the first shower.
[ He's not being a gentleman. But the widest window for enemy retaliation -- and the Syndicate's own post-mission clean-ups -- occurs in the twelve hours after the successful hit. If they're ambushed, Hei doesn't plan to be naked, dripping wet and unarmed. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-19 01:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-03-19 02:19 am (UTC)[ He ignores her killing pout. Drops his hands, and steps past her. He knows she's probably used to her allure exerting its power. To men bending, complying, making the time pass for her. And while Hei is used to being the lowest common denominator, just a body, just a dick, a blank slate onto which a lover projects illusions -- that is exclusively on assignments. Beyond that, he prefers expediency: sex doesn't rank high on his list of priorities. After the life he's lived, after the red-rippling disaster with Amber, the scorching ruin of Heaven's War, even the linked drama between orgasm and death has become astonishingly flaccid. ]
[ Sidling away from her, he checks the perimeter. The windows and doors are secure: no rusty locks, no decaying wood. A set of steeply-angled steps lead to the upstairs: spacious, paneled, wooden beams and a prettily peaked ceiling, the furniture indistinguishable lumps beneath a cover of sheets. The whole darkened house has an almost melodious, haunted echo to it, like a spiral inside a conch shell. ]
[ Briskly, he tugs the sheet off a couch. Dust swirls. Without looking at Korra, he says, ]
You should contact your handler tomorrow. Tell him to figure out who those agents were, then make arrangements for you to exit the country.
[ He'll formulate an escape-plan of his own. Whatever gives him a secure passage out of the USA, and back to Japan. ]
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Date: 2015-03-19 02:41 am (UTC)[Fuck it. If he's not going to wear her out enough to sleep, she'll just get wasted with the cache of liquor she keeps down here. While he futzes about with that stupid couch, Korra heads for the cabinet. Fishes the key out from behind it, unlocks & pulls out three bottles of plum wine. Locks the cabinet up again and drops the key into her bra. No, she isn't planning on sharing. And sure, he could always pick the lock. But him picking the lock just to get booze would be delightfully pathetic enough to make her feel better. So it's a win/win shitshow.]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-19 03:21 am (UTC)[ He's not sure if Korra has reached that point yet. Or if she's crossed it. Reminds himself that it isn't his concern. She isn't his concern. ]
[ There is no tub in the bathroom. Just a rusty shower with lousy water pressure. But he stays there a while, letting the weak stream patter across his body, willing the buzzing tension in his muscles to subside. Dried and dressed, he walks around the wine-redolent heap of Korra and throws himself down on the couch, rolling a stale-smelling afghan around himself, scrunching down. ]
[ In a half-mutter, ]
Don't pass out. One of us needs to keep watch every two hours.
no subject
Date: 2015-03-19 11:55 pm (UTC)And it's Hei's fault. Sure, if it hadn't been him, it would have been someone else, but it wasn't. He was the one who destroyed her life. He was the one who brought her to this point. And now he doesn't even have the decency to give her the good fuck she needs to sleep.
He mutters, and she hurls an empty wine bottle at him. She doesn't want to hear him talk.]
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Date: 2015-03-20 12:52 am (UTC)[ It's irrelevant. If not for him, she wouldn't be here. The knowledge, the ambivalence, still twines in Hei's gut with more equivocal and disturbing feelings. Self-hatred. Regret. Rage. Just to name a few. ]
[ Her empty bottle bounces harmlessly off the couch. He doesn't acknowledge her violent display -- or even her presence. With the lights off, all the colors turn to shades of grey, and it seems as if his thoughts are caught and pinned in a similar twilight. Sleep drags him slowly past the surface of hard-wired alertness: his dreams are a blur -- nights in Heaven's War, full of star-silvered steel and blood the color of tar. ]
[ Vaguely, he registers cool fingers on his arm. A familiar scent: apples and cordite. He opens his heavy-lidded eyes. There is curl of green hair at the edges of his vision. Something is inscribed into his wrist: ink or blood. A pair of cool lips touch the point of his cheekbone: he gazes blearily up into golden eyes, at that familiar mona-lisa smile. ]
[ This isn't a dream, he thinks numbly. This is happening. ]
[ He tries to struggle, to shout, but his whole body is deadweight. A dopplering white light sears his vision. Jerking awake -- free from that eerie not-dream -- Hei glances around. The place is undisturbed: Korra is curled at the corner, empty bottles scattered around her like fallen soldiers. ]
[ But the apples-and-cordite scent lingers in the air. Along with the address imprinted on Hei's arm. The handwriting, in a red liquidy-seeming ink, is all curlicues and strange shapes and no punctuation. But he knows at once whose it is. ]
...Amber.
[ The word is buoyed up his throat by a strangling anger: zero to sixty in a nannosecond. She was here. She'd used her ability to bring time to a standstill. She'd left a message on his arm: date and place at a venue that practically screams This is a trap. ]
[ Except they both know he'll be there. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-20 01:07 am (UTC)It doesn't frighten her.]
What's going on? Who's Amber?
no subject
Date: 2015-03-20 01:47 am (UTC)[ Jerking up like a shot, he drags his coat on, slips into his shoes. His movements are tight and snapping, like a wind-up toy's. He knows the address written on his arm could lead to an ambush. He knows he ought to think operationally. There's already a hit-team after him and Korra. He's not doing himself any favors by wading deeper into danger. He doesn't care. Every patterned defense, every backup plan, every ounce of lethal training, goes to hell the moment he hears Amber's callsign. He can never formulate a strategy beyond Get to her. Mental gymnastics are his forte, but to dwell in the disaster-stricken funhouse of his psyche at moments like these would melt his brain. So he switches his brain off and navigates on pure instinct. ]
[ For such a stone-cold killer, BK201 has an unfortunate habit of being overruled by emotions. ]
[ At the door, he pauses. Leaves a wad of cash at the table -- the equivalent for breakfast/lunch/dinner, and a bus ticket. In a voice bereft of emotion, ]
Contact your handler. Soon. I have somewhere else to be.
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Date: 2015-03-21 09:34 pm (UTC)Korra wants to know more about this threat, what kind of person could get this strong a reaction from BK-201.
Still, she has to point out the obvious.]
You're being an idiot. We should be going to somewhere more secure.
no subject
Date: 2015-03-21 10:13 pm (UTC)[ It's ironic. Because that's exactly what the espionage world whispers about BK201. ]
[ Korra's words bounce off him as harmlessly as pebbles. He's aware she's right. If they constructed a fifty foot neon sign that screams DANGER, it would be more subtle. Amber's got him in a tizzy, reacting emotionally rather than taking steps to mitigate the situation. ]
[ It doesn't matter. He's already at the door. ]
You need to go somewhere more secure.
[ A bored voice, a conductor saying Tickets, please for the hundred thousandth time. He doesn't stay to argue further. With a rustle of his coat, he's already gone. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-21 11:00 pm (UTC)1/2
Date: 2015-03-22 12:00 am (UTC)[ Hei is aware that she's tailing him. But it will be easy enough to shake her off. It is no reflection on her skills as a street artist. It is just that tailing someone efficiently requires an organized team of associates. In fact, most spycraft is the same: an exercise in uneasy trust, the science of getting people to work with and for you without ever compromising the essential solitude of your position. ]
[ Except for that debacle with Amber. There, he was compromised in every sense. He'd known UB001's reputation as a calculating puppet-master, a ruthless hellraiser. He'd known everything he stood to lose if he misstepped in their chess-game, if he made himself vulnerable to the outpouring of emotion. ]
[ Yet he'd done it anyway. He'd trusted a viper. She'd only been interested in him as prey -- an interest he'd mistaken for affection. He'd invented a heart for her -- only to be bitten by her fangs. That was the rotten core of the truth. ]
[ The trip to the address is a blur. He is wired, hyper-alert, but he isn't fully conscious, either. Mostly he navigates by robotic instinct, a practiced tradecraft of twists and turns to brush off Korra, and tries not to think. Always, before these meetings with Amber, he feels like Schrödinger's cat, trapped in a steel box, neither dead nor alive, waiting for the intervention of some outside event to resolve his ambiguous state once and for all and deliver him from purgatory. ]
[ (Except ... doesn't he feel that way every fucking minute?) ]
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Date: 2015-03-22 12:01 am (UTC)[ The adrenaline -- or is it anticipation? -- that streaks through Hei is incongruously brittle and bright. With a slow exhale, he hangs back. Scans the perimeter again, because this is perfect, too fucking perfect. Left and right: clear. No problems behind him. But further ahead... ]
[ There. Four punch-permed, stocky men in jeans and nondescript jackets, their mouths twisted in permanent ugly sneers. They are half-turned away from him. But he flags them easily: some guys are built for stealth and skill, others, for intimidation. These four are obviously of the latter variety. Mob central casting -- not Syndicate. But not individuals Amber would hire, either. ]
[ They are the same types who ambushed Hei and Korra at the bar. ]
[ But why are they there? What is Amber doing with them? Had she bargained to lure Hei out, so they could kill him? That makes no sense. If she wanted, she could've disclosed the location of Korra's safehouse. So why...? ]
[ That's when he notices a small flock of pigeons that is crossing through, hanging in the air at eye-level. Blinking, Hei steps closer -- and then the air, except it isn't the air, it is the space that contains the air, the reality that contains the air -- shakes like a square of Jell-o, then freezes. ]
[ The whole park is frozen. Including those men. The realization flares parallel to a sick epiphany: She's called me here ... to kill them. Not the other way around. Incredulous, he glances toward Amber. But the bench is empty. The flapping of the pigeons overhead breaks the silence; the frozen moment is liquid again. ]
[ A beat later, a bullet caraams near Hei's feet, tossing up clods of grassy soil. Whirling, he logs a second group of men, same type as the first, concealed behind the hedgerow. ]
[ Shit. ]
[ Amber is gone. All that remains is the hit-team ordered to take him and Korra out. She's just assembled them -- like inanimate chesspieces -- in a venue where he can fight them. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 01:04 am (UTC)Then - everything freezes. It gives Korra the chance to notice the bruisers. A trap. In the next breath, she changes her mind. Something about it doesn't seem right.
Then she's confronted by a woman with green hair and a disconcerting smile. Let him do this alone. It will make him feel better. Then Shh, no questions.
Korra stares, dumbfounded, as the woman leans in and kisses her, a brief peck on the lips, but enough to leave a trace of her lipstick. And then she's gone.
What the hell was that?]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 01:47 am (UTC)[ There is a brief burst of light in the corner of his vision that disorients Hei. But only for a moment. In the next beat, everything speeds up, time crunching together like pleats in a discordant harmonium. The armed men converge on him like a hailstorm -- a foray of bullets strafing across the grass. They are determined, and merciless, and good shots. And they give him a fight. ]
[ Finally, a real fight. And oh, in the blood-red slipstream of the fugue, it is good. ]
[ Good to wield wires and blades, mind and muscle, with the same deadly synchrony. Good to break into a sweat as they play cat and mouse with him -- and then, better when he flips the tables, makes them the mice instead. Good to cut them down one by one, until there are only a pair of stragglers left. The first, battered and bruised, is trying to stagger to safety, doubled over. Hei trips him up with one sharp kick, sending him sprawling forward onto his face. Rather than zap his lights out with a single touch, he executes a knee drop onto his spine, mashes his face into the grass, and swipes his blade up under his neck, an efficient twist of the wrist. There is a wet gurgling noise, half cry, half bubbling liquid. ]
[ Leaping clear of the spray, Hei turns to the sole survivor -- on his ass now, scuttling backward. He bumps up against a stone wall and starts to struggle to his feet. In the grip of a cold, white-hot rage, Hei kicks him in the balls and the man folds forward with a grunt. Reaches out, gloved palm molded to his skull -- and delivers a sizzling death-charge. His victim thrashes like a live fish across a burning-hot skillet, before crumpling. ]
[ With the bodies littered across the grass, there is no sound left at all but Hei's faltering heart, beating drumlike against muscles in which nothing moves, and this is the center of silence. ]
[ A drum waning, silence growing more full. ]
[ Exhaling slowly, Hei wipes his smeary blade across his pant-leg before sheathing it. His arm throbs: there is deep gash from a bullet-graze across the fleshy part of the bicep, sluicing blood, the skin laid open neat and deep. But nothing fatal. Nothing that can't be ignored over his crashing rage over the knowledge that, once again, Amber played him like a violin, then left the tune aborted, no sense or structure. No coda. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 02:14 am (UTC)What the hell was that all about?
[Even as she speaks, she draws water from the nearby pond to deal with his injury.]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 02:31 am (UTC)[ In her place, there is Korra. She smells like fresh air; it is swirling off her skin, circulating in her clothes -- a reminder of how sweat-soaked and grimy and bloodsplattered he is. ]
[ Hei doesn't answer her. His gaze sweeps across the park, logging anything unusual. Operational faculties kick-start with a drunken jolt, as if the machinery of his mind was jammed: his muscles are still taut with adrenaline, and he forces them to ease into a more innocent shape. ]
We should get out of here.
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 02:59 am (UTC)Any suggestions where we should go? [She'll bug him about the mystery woman once they are safe.]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 03:21 am (UTC)[ A side of him whispers that maybe she isn't up to anything at all -- but that gets lost when the part of him (the same part that automatically maps out exits when he enters a room) scoffs. He can figure out her motives later. What matters is what is happening now. ]
[ Once the torn flesh has sealed itself, he flexes his arm experimentally. Without looking at her, he says, ]
Out of this state, for one.
[ Arizona. Maybe New Mexico. Not Nevada -- especially not Las Vegas. Too many cameras, too easy for tails and threats to blend into the crowds. They need to head somewhere isolated. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 03:59 am (UTC)[Korra returns the water to the pond and wipes her hands on her pants. Most of her safehouses are on the east coast; they'd have to fly, which isn't ideal right now. Bus stations have too many security cameras, and if shit goes down, there are too many people who could complicate matters.]
How are you at hotwiring cars?
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 04:27 am (UTC)[ Blinking through a fog of headache and slow-creeping weariness, he starts walking. Whatever their plans for evading enemy crosshairs, it's imperative to get out of the park first. ]
Depends on the model.
no subject
Date: 2015-03-22 10:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-03-23 12:17 am (UTC)[ He's not planning to leave a paper trail -- even with aliases. There are a dozen venues -- hospitals, auto repair shops, car dealerships, gas stations, schools, underground garages, where the vehicles are easy pickings. Night, day, it doesn't matter. Between the amount of skill shared between them, he and Korra should have little trouble finding a string of getaway cars. ]
[ Using one of his wires as a slim jim, he slips it down the window to unhook the door's lever, springing the lock. Then it's a simple matter of leaning beneath the dashboard, wrenching loose the cover on the steering column, and fishing for the starter wire bundle. After a few fumbling tries, the engine catches life. The upholstery stinks of fried chicken, empty cans and tissues strewn everywhere, a yellow-hair-tangled comb here, a half-empty tube of lipgloss there. Probably a teenage girl's car. ]
[ Theirs now. ]
[ At a sedate pace, he pulls the car onto the road. The night is balmy. A soft breeze is drawn through the open windows as they cruise through the streets; Hei keeps an eye out for cops, but also for tailgaters that might be on enemy payroll. ]
[ Without glancing at Korra, he murmurs, ]
We'll split once we're in New Mexico.
[ He knows a cobbler in Albuquerque who can fix them immaculate passports, visas, ID's -- for a price. Enough to get Hei out of the country, and Korra to wherever she plans to go. ]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-23 12:47 am (UTC)So. Who was that Amber chick? [Why did she lure Hei out of the safe house? What exactly is her ability? And why did she kiss her? (Though Korra is hoping to figure out that question on her own...)]
no subject
Date: 2015-03-23 01:38 am (UTC)[ He doesn't so much as glance at Korra. Yet he can see her in his peripheral vision, the faintest, oblique reflection off the windshield, a full picture solidifying from fragments of color and motion. Her face, even at its most inexpressive, is like a proverbial window to the soul, and Hei feels he can look right through that lucid mask and see all of the girl's inner processes at work: colorful gears turning, a chaos of cogs clicking and tumbling. ]
[ Blandly, ]
There's a Burger-King up ahead. We should stock up on bottled water and snacks.
[ re: It's none of your business. ]
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