At nine o'clock in the evening, the streets of Brooklyn had finally shed the frantic bustle of the day, leaving only a scattering of streetlights burning through the dark.
The warm, yellow glow threw long, distorted shadows across the damp asphalt. A cool evening breeze rolled dead autumn leaves across the sidewalk, and aside from the occasional passing car, the streets were almost entirely empty.
I walked slowly down the sidewalk, my hands buried deep in the pockets of my hoodie. Having just escaped the supermarket, I was in no rush to get back to my apartnt. I wanted to enjoy a rare, quiet stroll in the cool air to help my food digest. Technically, my Siren biochanics operated at an efficiency level that ant I didn't actually need to digest anything—I could go decades without eating. But the human habits etched into my soul still craved the relaxed, comfortable feeling of a post-dinner walk.
This particular street was only two blocks away from my apartnt, and it was usually incredibly peaceful. I was just debating whether to glaze my braised pork belly with a savory-sweet reduction or a heavy, traditional soy sauce profile, when the deafening crack of a gunshot violently shattered the quiet.
BANG!
The gunshot was imdiately followed by a woman's terrified scream, the sharp crash of shattering safety glass, and the gruff, violent roar of a man echoing from the bank branch directly across the street.
My footsteps slamd to a halt. The relaxed smile completely froze on my face.
Only one thought echoed through my cybernetic brain.
Are you kidding ? Since when is the cri rate in Brooklyn this heavily caffeinated?!
This was my first ti encountering a live bank robbery in real life. And it was happening exactly two blocks from my front door. I had been separated from S.H.I.E.L.D.'s apex assassin for less than thirty minutes before physically stumbling into a classic "Land of the Free" cinematic set piece.
Across the street, four n wearing heavy ballistic masks and carrying modified assault rifles burst through the shattered glass doors of the bank. The lead robber fired a short, terrifying burst into the air to suppress the crowd, while the other three dragged massive, bulging canvas bags toward a black getaway van idling at the curb.
The few pedestrians on the street scread and scattered in absolute panic. The quiet Brooklyn block instantly descended into total chaos.
I instinctively took a step backward, pressing my spine flat against the brick wall of a nearby brownstone to completely conceal my presence in the shadows.
I did not want to get involved.
I really did not want to get involved.
This kind of generic street-level violence was exactly what the NYPD and the FBI were paid to handle. It was absolutely not the place for an extradinsional Siren to intervene. If I engaged those robbers, my physical capabilities would instantly be exposed. S.H.I.E.L.D. would imdiately flag as a high-priority enhanced threat, and the quiet, boring life I had fought so hard to build would be permanently destroyed.
It was just a bank robbery. As long as they didn't point their rifles at or detonate a bomb near my apartnt, it was none of my business.
Stay low, don't show off. Stay low, don't show off, I repeated the mantra three tis in my head.
I was just about to bypass the chaos and cut through a side alley to get ho when the heavy, sickening thud of kinetic impact and the sudden, panicked screams of the robbers echoed across the street.
I looked up, and my eyes widened in sheer disbelief.
A silhouette had just launched out of the adjacent alleyway, moving with the terrifying, explosive speed of a striking cheetah. It was so fast it practically left afterimages in the dim light.
There was no gunfire. There was no unnecessary shouting. There was only a flurry of flawlessly executed, hyper-lethal close-quarters combat. The four heavily ard n didn't even have the reaction ti to raise their rifles before they were systematically dismantled. They hit the pavent one by one, groaning in agony as their bones were snapped and their joints dislocated.
The assault rifles and the canvas bags of cash scattered uselessly across the asphalt.
The entire engagent took exactly twenty-eight seconds.
The yellow light of the streetlamp finally illuminated the silhouette standing over the broken bodies.
Reddish-brown hair. Black, fitted leather jacket.
It was Natasha Romanoff. The exact sa woman I had just parted ways with at the grocery store half an hour ago.
She casually brushed the dust off her jacket, looked down at the unconscious n groaning at her feet, and pulled out her cell phone to dial 911. She rattled off the address and the situation to the NYPD dispatcher, her tone as incredibly bored as if she had just swatted a few annoying flies.
She hung up the phone. She looked up, her eyes imdiately locking onto my shadowy figure pressed against the brick wall. A flash of genuine surprise crossed her face, and she quickly jogged across the street toward .
"Mira? Why are you still standing here?" Natasha asked, quickly looking up and down to ensure I hadn't caught a stray bullet. Seeing I was unhard, she sighed in relief, though her tone carried a sharp edge of professional scolding. "Didn't you hear the gunfire? Why didn't you imdiately break line of sight and run instead of standing by the road?"
I looked at the Black Widow, ntally cursing the absolute absurdity of my current tiline.
Outwardly, however, I projected the perfect image of a terrified teenager in shock. I let my shoulders slump, forcing my voice to tremble slightly. "I... I was just about to run down the alley, but it happened so fast. Thank you."
"Don't thank , I was just walking to the subway," Natasha said, offering a reassuring smile. Her sharp green eyes swept the empty street in a tactical assessnt before returning to . She looked at my five-foot-three fra, and her brow furrowed with genuine concern. "This was a highly organized heist. They likely have accomplices monitoring the periter. It is entirely unsafe for you to walk ho alone right now. Co on. I'll escort you back to your apartnt."
My cybernetic brain flatlined. I instinctively wanted to reject the offer.
Let the Black Widow escort ho? That was the literal definition of inviting a wolf into the hen house. If Natasha stepped into my apartnt and noticed a single, microscopic anomaly, my entire cover identity was dead.
But the rejection died in my throat before I could vocalize it.
Refusing her offer after surviving a shootout would make look incredibly suspicious. Furthermore, Natasha's tactical logic was completely sound. If I refused her protection and walked into a dark alley by myself, her operative instincts would imdiately trigger. She would absolutely tail through the shadows, which would make exposing my Siren capabilities infinitely easier.
It was mathematically safer to just agree. My apartnt was entirely sterile. There was absolutely nothing inside that could compromise my identity. Even if she tossed the place, she wouldn't find a single shred of evidence.
"Thank you, Ms. Romanoff. I'd appreciate that," I said, offering a polite, shaky nod.
"Just call Natasha," she smiled, waving a hand dismissively.
We fell into step, walking side by side down the street. She instinctively shortened her long, athletic strides to match my slower, supposedly terrified pace.
As we walked, the distant wail of NYPD sirens finally began echoing through the Brooklyn blocks. Natasha glanced over her shoulder at the flashing red and blue lights, letting out a quiet, exasperated sigh.
"The NYPD response ti is always exactly one minute too late to actually catch anybody," she complained.
"Well, it is the Land of the Free," I replied, layering my voice with the heavy, cynical exhaustion of a traumatized international student. "Before I moved to the States, the brochures made New York sound so incredibly safe. I really didn't expect to walk out of a grocery store and straight into an active combat zone."
"You get used to it. Queens and Brooklyn are actually on the safer side. If you cross into Hell's Kitchen, nobody with any sense walks alone after eight o'clock," Natasha smiled.
Her eyes lingered on . I was walking quietly beside her, my head slightly bowed, looking exactly like a soft, terrified kitten. Her internal curiosity spiked significantly.
In her line of work, she had dealt with dozens of world-class cyber-warfare specialists. Almost universally, they were arrogant, highly eccentric, socially abrasive shut-ins. But this teenager was entirely different. Her technical capabilities were terrifying enough to casually bypass S.H.I.E.L.D. firewalls, yet she lived the quiet, disciplined life of a straight-A high schooler. She spoke politely, possessed zero physical threat indicators, and yet, she consistently displayed a level of psychological composure that vastly exceeded a normal nineteen-year-old's baseline.
Searching for a way to break the silence and probe my psychological state, Natasha thought for a mont before finally asking a question.
"So, how are your grades holding up? You ntioned earlier that you're still in high school, right?"
The mont the words left her mouth, Natasha ntally cringed. Really, Romanoff? You're a master interrogator, and your best conversational pivot is asking a teenager about her report card?
I was equally caught off guard. I honestly hadn't expected the apex assassin of the MCU to ask about my GPA.
I paused for a second before answering smoothly. "They're fine. Straight A's. I haven't dropped a single credit."
"Straight A's?" Natasha raised an eyebrow, genuinely surprised. "With scores like that, you should easily qualify for the Columbia University Pre-College intensive. I hear the campus environnt is beautiful this ti of year."
"I'm considering the application, but I haven't finalized my decision," I replied neutrally.
I knew exactly what she was doing. Natasha had undoubtedly morized my entire background file. She already knew my GPA. She knew I hung out with Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy. She was just using the academic angle to close the conversational distance and monitor my baseline reactions.
We traded a few more pieces of idle, utterly aningless small talk until we finally reached the front steps of my apartnt building.
It wasn't a luxury high-rise, but it had decent security and a quiet courtyard. I stopped at the glass doors, turned to Natasha, and smiled.
"We're here. Thank you for walking back, Natasha. Would you like to co upstairs for a glass of water?"
It was intended to be a purely polite, socially mandated gesture that I fully expected her to decline.
To my absolute horror, Natasha smiled and nodded. "Actually, yes. I'm incredibly thirsty after that sprint. Assuming I'm not intruding?"
My cybernetic heart skipped a massive beat. I forced my facial muscles to remain entirely relaxed and shook my head. "Not at all. Co on up."
I led the Black Widow up to the third floor, unlocked my door, and flicked the entryway switch.
Warm, comfortable yellow light flooded the apartnt. It was a spacious one-bedroom unit, kept impeccably clean. The living room featured a large floor-to-ceiling window overlooking the street. A sturdy desk sat by the glass, holding a sleek laptop and several dense programming manuals. The nearby bookshelf was split evenly—half held heavy AP high school textbooks, and the other half was packed with advanced quantum physics texts and classical Chinese literature.
The open-concept kitchen was fully stocked. A massive cast-iron wok, a clay braising pot, and a heavy stewing cauldron sat neatly on the stove. The adjacent spice rack was overflowing with imported Chinese seasonings, heavily implying soone who cooked complex als on a daily basis.
A soft, knitted blanket was draped casually over the couch. A half-finished glass of water sat on the coffee table next to a bowl of washed strawberries. The entire space radiated the quiet, comfortable warmth of a deeply loved ho.
It was the absolute polar opposite of what Natasha had expected. She had anticipated a dark, chaotic hacker den overflowing with proxy servers, tangled ethernet cables, and empty energy drink cans. Instead, she was standing in the bright, peaceful ho of a completely normal teenage girl.
Natasha looked around, unable to hide the flash of surprise in her eyes. She smiled softly.
"Your apartnt is beautiful, Mira. And incredibly clean. I honestly assud a computer prodigy like you would be living inside a server rack."
"That's just a Hollywood stereotype," I smiled, walking into the kitchen to pour her a glass of warm, filtered water. I handed it to her over the counter. "I'm just a normal student. I don't need a server farm to do my howork."
Natasha took a slow sip of the water. Her sharp eyes casually swept over the pristine kitchen counters, and she suddenly paused.
"Speaking of groceries," Natasha asked, her smile perfectly innocent. "Where are those two massive bags you were carrying when you left the store? They looked incredibly heavy, but I don't see them anywhere."
And there's the trap.
I had fully prepared for this exact question. My expression didn't shift a milliter.
"I ran into one of my neighbors in the lobby when I got ho," I lied smoothly. "He was just getting off work and offered to carry them upstairs for . I already unpacked everything into the fridge before I went back out for my walk."
To prove the point, I reached over and pulled open the heavy stainless-steel door of the refrigerator.
The shelves were packed to capacity. The premium pork belly, the fresh prawns, the leafy greens, the strawberries, the milk, and the eggs were all ticulously organized inside, perfectly matching the contents of my shopping cart from thirty minutes ago.
I had, of course, used my Siren matter reconstruction to materialize the food directly into the fridge the mont I unlocked my front door.
Natasha glanced at the fully stocked shelves. She nodded, her smile returning, and didn't press the issue.
As an apex spy, she obviously didn't entirely believe the convenient "helpful neighbor" story, but she had absolutely zero physical evidence to contradict it. More importantly, her finely tuned instincts registered absolutely zero malice, deception, or danger radiating from the girl standing in front of her.
I closed the fridge. I walked over to the small console table in the entryway, opened a drawer, and pulled out a small, intricate pendant woven from red silk string.
I walked back and held it out to Natasha.
Hanging from the red silk was a small, beautifully polished tal plate, deeply engraved with the traditional Chinese characters for Peace and Safety. It wasn't an expensive piece of jewelry, but the tal was smooth and warm to the touch.
"This is for you," I said, my voice dropping its sarcastic edge, becoming entirely serious. "Thank you for protecting tonight, and for walking ho. This is a traditional Peace Talisman from my hotown. It's ant to ward off danger. It isn't worth any money, but it works."
Natasha froze.
She looked down at the red silk resting in my palm. For a fraction of a second, the impenetrable armor of the Black Widow cracked, and a flash of genuine, vulnerable warmth crossed her eyes.
She reached out and gently took the talisman. Her fingertips brushed the cool tal, and an inexplicable, profound sense of quiet peace washed over her chest.
"Thank you, Mira. It's beautiful," Natasha said softly. She carefully slipped the talisman into the interior breast pocket of her leather jacket, close to her heart. "I'll keep it safe."
She stayed for another five minutes, finishing her water before finally moving toward the door to leave.
She paused in the doorfra, looking back at with a stern, protective gaze. "Try to avoid walking alone at night. If you run into any trouble, or if you ever need anything, call the number on that card. Anyti."
"I will. Thank you, Natasha," I nodded, offering her a final wave.
I watched her silhouette disappear into the stairwell, waiting until I heard the heavy security door on the ground floor click shut.
I slamd my apartnt door, threw the deadbolt, and slumped heavily against the wood, letting out a massive, exhausted exhale.
God, interacting with the Black Widow is absolute psychological torture.
Every single sentence had to be run through a threat-assessnt algorithm before I spoke, terrified of leaking a single micro-expression that would give away.
I kicked off my shoes, walked over to the living room couch, and collapsed into the cushions. I instinctively expanded my cyberpathic consciousness, sweeping the Fire Control Radar over the entirety of Queens one last ti to ensure she hadn't left a strike team behind.
The grid was clear.
I let out another long sigh, my digital heart finally settling back into a normal rhythm.
I pushed myself off the couch, stretched my arms over my head, and walked into the kitchen. I tied a heavy apron around my waist, pulled the premium pork belly out of the fridge, and began washing the at under the cold tap.
As the heavy cast-iron wok slowly heated up on the stove, the rich, savory aroma of caralizing at and soy sauce began to fill the apartnt.
Outside my window, the New York night deepened. The wail of the police sirens had finally faded into nothing, and the streets of Brooklyn returned to their quiet, unbroken silence.
User Comments
0 comments from readers