Whatever passed between Nolan and Rogers in those monts remained unspoken to anyone else.
But sothing shifted in the super-soldier's deanor. The rigid defiance drained from his posture, replaced by sothing harder to read. His swollen face settled into blank neutrality, bruised features revealing nothing of the thoughts behind them.
He hefted the shield strapped to his arm, testing its weight one more ti. Then, with deliberate force, he brought it down against the empty power armor shell. The vibranium edge struck ceramite with a resounding crash that echoed through the ruined corridor. Again. And again. Each impact adding another dent, another scorch mark, another layer to the fabricated narrative of desperate combat.
Under Nolan's silent observation, Rogers moved through the destroyed passage with grim purpose. He directed the servo drone with curt hand signals, pointing out where additional damage would sell the illusion. Here, a deeper gouge in the wall to suggest an explosion. There, scattering of brass casings to indicate sustained fire.
At one point, Rogers paused beside a particularly large crater. He knelt, examining the angle, then looked up at Nolan.
"The body." His voice ca out flat, professional. "There's no corpse in the armor. How do we explain that?"
They discussed it quietly, Rogers' tactical mind working through the problem despite everything. How to account for a dead leader when no remains existed. How to make the scene read correctly to investigators who would inevitably pick through every detail.
Nolan went still, his armored form motionless except for the faint hum of idling power systems. Then his helt tilted slightly, the gesture of soone struck by sudden inspiration.
"The Butcher." The filtered voice carried certainty. "His corpse. We still have it, frozen and mostly intact."
Minutes later, servo-robots returned carrying a stasis-sealed forms. The body, preserved in cryo-containnt, showed the grey-blue pallor of deep freeze. Working together with clinical detachnt, they positioned the remains inside the gutted armor shell. The fit was imperfect, but fire would obscure the inconsistencies.
Nolan reached out, accepting a flar from an automatic servo-robot's extended chanical tentacle.
He triggered the ignition sequence.
Prothium roared to life with a deep whooshing sound, and a torrent of liquid fire engulfed the assembled corpse-armor combination. The flas burned hot enough that the air shimred and warped, heat washing over them in waves that made exposed skin prickle. The ceramite began to blacken and char, organic matter inside crackling and popping as moisture boiled away.
The firelight painted Rogers' face in shifting orange and red, shadows dancing across swollen features. His eyes reflected the flas, twin points of light in otherwise empty sockets. The flickering illumination made his expression impossible to read, constantly shifting between anger, grief, resignation, and nothing at all.
He stood there, shield at his side, watching the leader of Terra's Guardian of Terra burn. Watching the lie take physical form. Saying nothing.
Natasha drifted through fog and pain, her consciousness barely tethered to reality.
The automatic servo-robot carried her with surprising gentleness, chanical limbs cradling her broken body as it navigated through corridors she couldn't focus on. Everything blurred at the edges, colors bleeding together, sounds muffled and distant.
She caught fragnts. A room, bright enough to hurt her eyes even through closed lids. Movent, shapes resolving into sothing tall and skeletal, all tal bones and empty spaces where flesh should be. A smaller figure beside it, wearing power armor that glead under harsh lighting.
Their voices reached her, but the words wouldn't form aning. Just sounds, rising and falling in conversation about... sothing. Sothing important, maybe. She tried to concentrate, to use her training to pierce through the haze and gather intelligence.
But her body betrayed her. Her mind, usually sharp as any blade, couldn't hold onto thoughts. They slipped away like water through cupped hands, leaving only exhaustion behind.
Her breathing slowed. Shallow. Erratic. Even her legendary willpower, forged in the Red Room's crucible, couldn't overco the simple physics of massive blood loss and traumatic injury.
Images surfaced unbidden from mory. The Red Room. Young girls in formation, moving through combat drills with chanical precision. The instructor's voice, cold and clinical, explaining how pain was just information to be processed and dismissed. The operating table, steel cold against her bare back, restraints biting into her wrists as soone in a surgical mask leaned over her with instrunts that glead under fluorescent light.
The missions ca next. Cities blurring together. Targets whose nas she couldn't rember. Blood on her hands that never quite washed clean no matter how long she scrubbed. Orders from people whose faces changed but whose demands remained constant.
"I'm so tired." The thought ford clear and sharp amid the chaos. "Even if I die... I don't want to work for anyone anymore."
Darkness rose to claim her, gentle and inviting.
Sothing hard pressed against her lips, forcing her mouth open. She tried to resist but had no strength left. A solid object pushed past her teeth, resting heavy on her tongue. It tasted of rust and old tal, bitter and chemical.
Then it dissolved.
Cold energy flooded through her, racing along every nerve pathway. The sensation was shocking, almost electric, driving back the darkness that had been pulling her under. Even the screaming agony of her severed arm retreated, muted to a dull throb instead of the all-consuming fire it had been.
But the cold didn't last. Heat blood in her lower abdon, spreading outward with intensity that bordered on painful. Her arm stump burned, tissue knitting and rebuilding with speed that shouldn't be possible. The sensations overwheld her nervous system entirely.
Consciousness fled, and Natasha fell into a deeper blackness than before.
Ti passed. How much, she couldn't say.
Awareness returned like surfacing from deep water. One mont, nothing. The next, sudden and complete alertness.
Natasha's eyes snapped open. Her body moved on pure instinct, rolling into a defensive crouch, hands coming up to guard her face and throat. Every muscle coiled, ready to strike or flee.
Then she saw it. Saw them.
Two arms. Both intact. Both moving in perfect synchronization as she'd commanded.
Her gaze locked onto her left arm, the one that had been torn away by the servo-robot's crushing grip. Fair skin, unblemished and new, caught the room's lighting. No scars. No surgical marks. Just smooth, healthy tissue that looked like it had always been there.
Natasha stared, breathing suspended, unable to process what her eyes reported.
"Ms. Natasha Romanoff." A chanical voice, precise and asured, spoke from sowhere to her right. "That is indeed your newly grown arm. However, for optimal long-term function, I would advise against strenuous use for at least several days."
Her head whipped toward the speaker.
A black tal skeleton sat in a chair roughly three ters away, its fra humanoid but unmistakably artificial. Blue light glowed from empty eye sockets, twin points of illumination that tracked her movents with eerie precision. The skull tilted slightly, observing her with what might have been curiosity if machines could feel such things.
"My apologies." The skeleton's jaw moved as it spoke, servos clicking softly with each word. "Our base is currently undergoing relocation. The drinking water systems were among the first equipnt removed." A pause, as if the machine recognized the inadequacy of the statent. "If you're thirsty, I hope you can endure the inconvenience temporarily."
Natasha's training kicked in, overriding shock. Her eyes swept the room in rapid assessnt.
Luxurious hospital bed beneath her, sheets high-thread-count and clean. dical monitoring equipnt arrayed along one wall, currently inactive. Sterile white walls and floor, though the space felt more like high-end private care than military dical. No windows. Single door, currently closed.
She sat up in one smooth motion, swinging her legs over the bed's edge. Her face, beautiful even now, showed absolutely nothing. No fear. No confusion. No gratitude. Just cold, professional blankness that made her look less human than the skeleton watching her.
"What's your purpose?" Her voice ca out level and controlled. "Why save ? If you need information, I can provide so. Consider it... paynt for the arm."
David raised one tal finger, the gesture surprisingly human despite the chanical nature of the hand. He tapped his skull with a soft tallic ping, and sothing like a sigh erged from his vox-speakers.
"Ms. Romanoff, my information processing capabilities exceed human neural speeds by several orders of magnitude. If data exists on any network, anywhere, I can access it at will." The blue lights in his eye sockets flickered, dimming slightly. "Modern society's advantage, from a certain perspective. Humans create digital footprints from the mont of birth. Delete what you like, hide what you must, but traces always remain. Waiting for soone with the right tools to find them."
He leaned back slightly, the chair creaking under his tal fra. "Perhaps you do possess intelligence we haven't yet acquired. But what relevance does that hold? Our priorities lie elsewhere."
The skull tilted the other direction. "We rescued you for two reasons. First, you're now a hostage with strategic value. Second, my Lord wished to reward your earlier honesty. You spoke truth when it would have been easier to remain silent. That earned you this."
Silence settled over the room. Natasha's face remained impassive, but her mind raced through calculations and probabilities.
"S.H.I.E.L.D. doesn't negotiate for captured agents." She spoke slowly, choosing each word with care. "Individual lives an nothing weighed against organizational security. If you're hoping to trade us for sothing..."
David's hand cut through the air in a dismissive gesture, interrupting her mid-sentence.
"Ms. Romanoff, consider this scenario." The blue lights in his sockets flickered in what might have been amusent. "Given Mr. Rogers' personality, combined with his recent discovery that S.H.I.E.L.D. operates no differently than Hydra... do you believe he'll choose compromise? Or resistance?"
The question hung between them.
"We harbor no personal animosity toward S.H.I.E.L.D." David's voice took on a contemplative quality. "Our conflict stems from incompatible definitions of justice. If Mr. Rogers' actions result in S.H.I.E.L.D.'s collapse, excellent. If not, eliminating your organization remains rely a matter of timing and opportunity. After all, we must carefully weigh the consequences of our actions against potential collateral damage."
A pause. Then, with sothing that sounded almost like bitter humor: "Yes, we're a 'terrorist' organization guilty of mass civilian casualties. Yet we exercise more caution than S.H.I.E.L.D. ever has. We actively work to minimize harm to innocents. Rather like a joke from hell, isn't it?"
David fell silent, his tal fra utterly still.
Natasha sat on the bed's edge, her expression distant. One hand moved to her abdon, pressing gently, fingers moving in slow circles. An old habit, comforting and familiar.
Then her entire body went rigid.
Her eyes widened, genuine shock breaking through her carefully maintained mask. Both hands pressed flat against her stomach now, feeling sothing that shouldn't be there, couldn't be there.
"Wait." Her voice cracked slightly. "How is this... my..."
"Ah, forgive . I neglected to offer congratulations." David's skull turned toward her fully. "The combined healing effects of the Panacea and Resurrection Potion produced an unexpected side benefit. Your reproductive function has been restored. You are, once again, biologically capable of bearing children."
The words landed like physical blows.
Natasha's face, so carefully controlled monts before, collapsed entirely. Her hands trembled against her stomach, feeling the warmth of living tissue where before there had been only surgical scars and dead space. The Red Room's final cruelty, the graduation ceremony that had left her hollow and broken in ways no mission could fix, suddenly undone.
Tears spilled from her green eyes, tracking down pale cheeks in silent streams. She made no sound, but her shoulders shook, chest heaving with suppressed sobs. Her fingers pressed harder against her abdon, confirming the impossible truth over and over.
She could feel it. The difference. The completeness. Sothing essential, stolen so long ago, inexplicably returned.
The Black Widow, feared assassin and master spy, wept without sha or restraint. And David, the ancient Man of Iron, sat in respectful silence and simply let her.
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