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No. 3384
Well, there is one pairing that *might* have a little influence on this story...
Man, I wish I could edit posts so I can go back and fix those goofy errors. Oh, well. Just have to keep the FF.Net version cleaner.
/***/
The Medic's nostrils were filled with the scent of motor oil and greasy eggs. He grimaced, wiping one hand across his nose. The first complication that he noticed was that his glasses were missing. He was somewhat functional without them, but reading anything with font smaller than what could be found on a billboard was out of the question. As he sat upright, a pain socked him on the right side of his chest. Relief rolled like a cold wave over him as he examined his wound. The bullet had gone straight through him. How fortunate. Not that it would have been a big deal if he'd died, all things considered, but it would have been difficult to cover up his disappearance and revival afterwards. If news about the respawn computers were ever leaked to the public…
Well, that didn't matter right now. He had more important questions, at the moment. While he wasn't sure of his exact location, he knew he was in a trucker's motel. He'd spent a few nights in them before, mostly when his team was relocating to a far region and they couldn't travel through the night. He pushed red-brown sheets aside, stumbling out of bed. Gathering as much dignity as he had left, he ambled towards a dresser mirror. He'd slept the night in his formal attire. His jacket was torn, coated with dried blood. His hair was an oily mess. The Medic grumbled once, wondering if he would have been better off dying.
A flush came from the attached bathroom. After a few seconds, the Demoman stumbled out of the bathroom. He gave the Medic a big grin as he stumbled towards a bottom-of-the-line coffee pot. After he poured two cups, he passed one to the Medic and sat down on the bed with the other. "This'll get ya goin'."
"Vhere are ve?" the Medic asked.
The Demoman shrugged. "Damned if I know. Outside 'a town by quite a bit. Probably a couple 'a hours or so."
The Medic took a sip of coffee, the warmth surging through his bloodstream. "How did ve get here? Ze—Ze Spy's car?"
The Demoman shook his head. "Didn't have the blighter's keys. Threw us in the back 'a one 'a those big ol' trucks. Semis. Whatever. Got us outta town."
"Zen ze Spy is—" the Medic began.
"Lost 'im, I'm afraid." The Demoman took another swallow, not flinching at the bitter taste in his mouth. "Ain't seen hide nor hair 'a the Sniper, either."
The Medic pinched his nose. He sat down on the other end of the bed, still somewhat anemic. "Vhatever you did to save mein life, zank you. I can't seem to recall much, right now."
"Ya bled all over the bloomin' place, that's what happened! Least ya didn't die on me, I guess," the Demoman smirked. "Coulda been bad, ya know."
The Medic nodded. "It might still be." He fidgeted through his suit pockets, looking for a scrap of paper. After a few moments of rummaging, he produced it. There was a faint telephone number written on it in pencil. "Have you called zem, yet? Our comrades?"
"No. I blacked out as soon as I got your tuckus in here. By the way—thanks fer havin' yer checkbook with ya!" He nudged the Medic on his left side, getting a little bit of a glare out of the German.
As the Medic scrounged for the phone, he smirked. "Next time, vhen you feel ze need to take mein geld, feel free to get us a double room, hmm?"
The Demoman rolled his one good eye. "Like ya cared last night."
After searching for a few moments, the Medic found the phone for the room. It wasn't hard to miss. The cheap model was constructed out of tacky orange plastic. As he dropped it on the bed, the rotary dial made a little clang. He fumbled with his paper for a moment, then started dialing the number. It did no good to have their team out in the ether, worrying about them. Well, of course, there was a good reason to be concerned. They did have to locate their Spy and Sniper, after all. Still, the least they could do is alleviate some anguish.
A few seconds went by, and then the Medic smirked. "It's ringing."
/***/
The Spy was a man of great patience. His job required it. He could wait for hours in one spot, still as a statue, until the right target came scurrying past his hiding place. He could woo any person, tolerate hundreds of slights, all for that one shot at getting what he wanted. After several hours strapped to a plane seat, his patience had evaporated. He'd gotten a few moments of sleep, but he'd spent most of his time staring out the window into the abyss below the plane. That was, of course, when he could turn his head to see it. The Sniper had been using the crook of his neck for a pillow for the past couple of hours. He'd managed to at least knock the Australian's hat off so he wasn't quite so uncomfortable. Despite his tolerance, his bladder was the final straw. After waiting for an eternity for something to happen, he decided to take matters into his own hands.
So, he spammed the flight attendant's call button on his chair until someone showed up.
To his surprise, someone did. A heavyset titan burst out of the front of the plane, his face ashen and set in stone. He strode to the Spy's seat in halting steps, then snapped to face the Frenchman. "Yes?"
"I need to use la salle de bain. You know? Ze…ze restroom," the Spy said. He scrunched up his face, realizing that the stoic demigod didn't understand him. "Could you undo zese?"
The titan didn't question his needs. He reached down with one hand, grabbing a key out of his back pocket. He snapped both locks off the Spy's wrists. Grabbing the Spy by the scruff of his neck, he yanked the Frenchman out of his seat and pushed him towards the restroom. The Spy grumbled, but did no rash act. He wasn't familiar with flying a plane like this, anyhow. Wouldn't do him any good to fight his way to the cockpit. He certainly didn't want to fall out into whatever void was below the plane, either. His curiosity was outweighing his need to kill himself, for now.
After wrestling with evacuating his bladder on a ride as unsettling as a mechanical bull, the Spy was dragged back to his seat. By this time, the Sniper had regained consciousness. He was staring at the Spy, more confused than irritated. "Where'd ya go?"
The Spy replied tersely. "The restroom."
As the grey-faced man forced the Spy back into place, the Sniper nodded. "Roight. Could use one myself." He looked up towards the titan. "Pardon me, but do ya have a jar?"
The stone-cold attendant said nothing. He glared at the Spy, demanding clarification for the Sniper's strange request. The Spy groaned, then shook his head. "Just take him to ze back."
The Sniper barked and cussed as the titan wrenched him out of his cuffs and seat. He put up no greater fight than the Spy. The Frenchman laid back in his seat, closing his eyes. He could use more sleep. The smack to the back of his skull was throbbing, sending jolts of pain through the rest of his brain. He'd forgotten how irritating it was to get chopped in the back of the head. He slowed his breathing, trying to trick his body back into slumber.
He might have been successful, if it weren't for the viper at his ear. "Good morning, Monsieur Spy."
The Spy rolled his head to the left, then opened his eyes. An eerie green light shined off Marian Gray's face, coming up from the lights on the floor. It highlighted wrinkles that he hadn't seen in the dark atmosphere of the yakiniku restaurant last night. He closed his eyes once more, murmuring. "You had better have a good explanation for zis."
"I'd like to think of it as a job offer," Marian replied.
"I've never heard of an abduction being ze prelude to any good job," the Spy said.
Marian's voice wrapped itself around his brain. "There's a first time for everything. But, be patient. Let me give you a pitch." She waited a moment for any objections from the Spy. When they didn't come, she continued. "I need a qualified man for the position I have available. I need a quiet, highly-skilled world traveler. He must be quick with his hands and faster with his brain. Above everything, he must come and go undetected. If he performs this task to the best of his abilities, then I will reward him greatly."
"Part time, or permanent?" the Spy asked.
"It depends on how fast you perform the task," Marian stated. "Think quickly and correctly, and I'd imagine you'd be well on your way sometime next week. Be slow and unreliable? Well, that might complicate things."
The Spy smirked, but kept his eyes shut. "You are making a lot of assumptions about my actions. You assume zat I won't run off or kill myself at ze first opportunity."
"So quick to commit suicide? I hardly see how that would help you or your friend," Marian grinned, her voice coming out no louder than a purr. "Maybe I should give you incentives to take my offer."
"If you zink zat will help your case," the Spy responded.
A hand clasped on his thigh. The Spy grimaced, opening his eyes for just a moment. Long red talons clung to his left leg. She gave him a soft pat, like he was some kind of pet. He frowned, then closed his eyes again. After a few moments of uncomfortable silence, Marian's voice began slithering into his ears again. "I have three good reasons for you to take my job. The first of which, of course, is money. I guarantee that both you and your friend will earn a million dollars apiece."
Not that the Spy didn't make five million dollars a year as an average salary, but the offer was interesting. A million for a few weeks worth of work would be more than what TF Industries was shelling out to him. "Go on."
"The second offer? Well, I won't say that it's fame or immortality, but it's just as good." There was a pause in Marian's voice, just heavy enough to give weight to her words. "You will want it. No matter how little you think of your own life, I guarantee you will want to live to see what I am sending you to find. Then, if we are successful, you will want to use it for yourself."
Immortality? Now, that was a strange offer. The Spy had a level of invincibility as it was. As long as satellites hung in the sky and the respawn computer churned away with his data on Earth, he could be revived as many times as he'd like. It might be a problem someday when he wished to permanently die, of course, but he hadn't reached such a gloomy state. Not while he had things worth continuing his existence, anyway. "Zat is too vague to interest me. But, if you say so."
There was a cruel twist to Marian's voice. "As for the third reason…"
A strange, slick sound echoed in the Spy's ears. Cold rectangles dropped on his lap. He opened his eyes, ruffling through the items on his legs. They grew in size as his mouth fell. There was a gasp from over his shoulder as the Sniper glanced at the photos with him, fresh from his break. Both men thumbed through the small images, each one innocent but stinging. The Spy was struck speechless. In every image was a petite, dark haired woman. She was digging in the ground, planting seeds and patting them with a spade. She had been completely oblivious to whoever held the camera, merely going about her happy work. A pang hit the Spy in his heart.
They'd found out about her. About the Scout's mother.
"You leave her out of zis," the Spy hissed.
"I will. Of course, that's assuming if you both take my offer," Marian smiled. "I understand that a cute little split-level home just went up for sale on her street. I do hope she gets a good neighbor. Someone to help with her flowers. It would be a shame if someone less than trustworthy moved onto her block. She seems to like any fellow that rolls down her lane."
The Spy glanced upward, his teeth clenched. "You try, and I'll—"
"Do what you will, Monsieur. Cross me, and it won't matter what you'll do. It won't do her any good, at any rate," Marian growled back. Her expression softened, her demeanor brought back into its cage like a tamed tiger. "Stick with me, and you'll be able to go back to her. If you're very good, I'll even chip in on a wedding. What do you say to that?"
The Spy collected himself as well. "Keep her out of zis."
"Then, you are taking my offer?" Marian asked. The Spy did not keep her hanging for long. He nodded once, then tipped his fedora over his face. She grinned widely, proud of her catch, then turned to the lanky man still standing dumb-founded in the isle. "Well? What are you, then? Are you his best man, or are you his worst enemy?"
"Don't need ta twist me about on this one," the Sniper agreed. As he was shoved into his seat by the stone-faced attendant, he muttered, "Coulda had a better time if ya didn't go scarin' off our mates."
Marian flicked the Sniper on the nose, just to rustle the Australian. "There are doctors in every port. As for that other fellow of yours? Let's say I don't need the attention he'd attract. He's quite the noisy fellow, from what Helen tells me."
The Spy grimaced, still staring at the photos on his lap. "Zis is a personal matter. You shouldn't drag him into zis."
"I need a sharp pair of eyes and a skilled outdoorsman. One that can fight and thrive in any environment. He fits the bill perfectly," Marian said.
Scratching at the back of his neck, the Sniper frowned. "Where in the hell d'ya think we'll be going?"
"I don't know about our journey, but I do know our destination." Marian clapped a hand on the Spy's shoulder. She placed a finger under his chin, snapping his attention upward. Giving him a saccharine smile, she tilted her head. A slow, cold shiver travelled through the Spy's extremities. Any thoughts of protecting or rescuing the Scout's mother disappeared with Marian's wicked grin.
As she hissed, another shock jolted through the Spy's brain. "What do you gentlemen know about the Fountain of Youth?"
/***/
Thousands of miles away and unaware of the threat against his mother's life, the Scout wanted to take his own. He bashed his head against the wall, groaning in disgust. The goddamn Texan cowboy was singing in the bathroom again. It wasn't that he couldn't hold a tune. It was that he sang the most backwoods, rootinest tootinest crap. Today was even worse than usual. The Soldier was joining him, less singing and more grunting lyrics. It was just lucky for him that the Heavy didn't know the words, or—
He thought too soon. A bass line kicked in with the other two in the bathroom. God damn it.
As the Pyro began patting his back in sympathy, the phone in the kitchen began ringing. The Scout shuffled towards the sound, dragging his feet as the Soldier kicked out some lyrics about winking cows or some crap. He picked up the line, short with his greeting. "Yeah? What?"
"Scout? Is zat you?" Oh, it was the Medic. Good.
The Scout nodded, twisting the cord with one finger. "Yeah, it's me. 'Sup, ya quack?"
"Ze Demoman and I have had un mishap. Ve have lost ze Spy and ze Sniper. Have zey appeared on ze base?" the Medic asked.
"I ain't seen eidder 'a dose chucklenuts. Hang on the line, would ya? I'll go see if dat egghead can find 'em." The Scout passed off the phone to a dumbfounded Pyro. He stormed through the hall, then banged three times on the bathroom door. "Hey, Hardhat! Get out here!"
It wasn't long before the short Texan scurried out, his head half-shaved. "What is it?"
"Doc's on da phone. Sounds like he and da Demoman got separated from da Spy and Sniper. Have ya seen dem?" the Scout questioned the Engineer.
The Texan shook his head. "No, but give me a sec. Think I got somethin' that might work." With that, he trotted towards his work room. The Scout shrugged, then grimaced as the Soldier and the Heavy started belting out a new song. God, it was even worse than the first song. He scampered back to the kitchen, then yanked the phone away from the Pyro again.
"Ai fuffn't fun fawkin," the Pyro said.
"Yeah, ya were," the Scout argued. "Yo, Doc. Got Overalls on the case."
A soft sigh came over the phone. "Zank you, Scout. Now, if you could please give me back to ze Pyro? Ve were in ze middle of somezing when you so rudely—"
"Jumpin' Jehoshaphat's jimmies!"
All conversations and songs stopped as the Engineer ran from one end of the barracks to the other. He slammed into the kitchen, halting just fast enough to avoid hitting the walls. The Soldier and the Heavy followed him in, curious about the Texan's unusual behavior. He pulled the receiver out of the dumbfounded Scout's hands. "Doc, thanks fer callin'. Good ta know both the Demoman and you are doin' okay. Gonna have ta star sixty-nine and call ya back. Can ya stay put?"
"Vell, yes, but vat's vrong?" the Medic asked. "Are zey okay?"
The Engineer nodded. "Yeah, but I gotta get the Administrator on the line. This is a bad one."
"Engie?" The Soldier placed a hand on the Texan's shoulder. "What's wrong? Where are they?"
As the Engineer pressed down on the phone, cutting the Medic's words off, he began dialing so hard that the phone looked like it was going to crack. "If I've got their velocity calculated correctly, they're in one hell of a plane, and they're passing over the Mediterranean Sea."
"Oh my God," the Soldier dropped his jaw. "Where in the hell is that?"
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