➵ for
usavatar ● there's no justice in the world and there never was
( In battle, he can forget. Eyes on a target, a mission to fulfill, and no room for error, there is no time to think about who he is or what’s been done to him. In battle, there is purpose, and the adrenaline of living each moment between life and death, and the thrilling feeling of victory.
And then, it is over, and he is left with the things he has done.
Eating shawarma does not give him purpose. It does not help him forget. It’s delicious, to be sure, but Natasha’s presence beside him is really the only thing keeping him grounded, the only thing stopping him from bolting. He doesn’t belong at this table—the men around him are heroes, and Natasha as much as any of them. And he? He spent his week sniping innocent security guards and his own associates.
He puts his leg up on her chair, and she touches his knee, briefly. If one woman was capable of absolving him of everything, it would be her. But even she can’t do that for him, so he munches into his sandwich and smacks his lips and tells Banner that green is really his color. And Stark is going on about how he deserves a statue, and Thor is clapping him on the back, and the captain? The captain Clint can’t get a read on. He’s an American hero, a living legend. And Clint Barton is nothing but a man with blood on his hands.
They wrap up their food and get up, and Natasha is touching his shoulder and whispering something about keeping a promise (he finds out later that she’s conferring with Banner, finding him a way to vanish and a place to vanish to), and Thor and Stark are still wrapped up in their conversation, so despite Clint’s best efforts, he finds himself face-to-face with Steve Rogers, genuine American hero. )
And then, it is over, and he is left with the things he has done.
Eating shawarma does not give him purpose. It does not help him forget. It’s delicious, to be sure, but Natasha’s presence beside him is really the only thing keeping him grounded, the only thing stopping him from bolting. He doesn’t belong at this table—the men around him are heroes, and Natasha as much as any of them. And he? He spent his week sniping innocent security guards and his own associates.
He puts his leg up on her chair, and she touches his knee, briefly. If one woman was capable of absolving him of everything, it would be her. But even she can’t do that for him, so he munches into his sandwich and smacks his lips and tells Banner that green is really his color. And Stark is going on about how he deserves a statue, and Thor is clapping him on the back, and the captain? The captain Clint can’t get a read on. He’s an American hero, a living legend. And Clint Barton is nothing but a man with blood on his hands.
They wrap up their food and get up, and Natasha is touching his shoulder and whispering something about keeping a promise (he finds out later that she’s conferring with Banner, finding him a way to vanish and a place to vanish to), and Thor and Stark are still wrapped up in their conversation, so despite Clint’s best efforts, he finds himself face-to-face with Steve Rogers, genuine American hero. )
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( Clint likes girl scouts better, personally. They sell cookies. )
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[He's not making fun, Clint. Srsly.]
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( He rolls his eyes, and gives Steve a look. You know the one.
Then he just shrugs. )
I grew up in a circus. You learn some interesting tricks.
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The Coney Island Circus is where "Hawkeye" made his first appearance.
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[He's well aware that he's parroting Clint's earlier statement. The more he thinks about it - about all of them, each one a broken piece of something that just fits when you put it all together - the more it seems fated, in some cruel and wonderful way.]
How on earth did you end up with SHIELD?
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Finally, Clint just runs his hands through his hair and offers Steve the simplest explanation. )
It was SHIELD, or death-row. I weighed my options.
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How did you and Agent Romanoff meet?
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( Which is, Clint thinks, a fair answer. Never mind that Natasha would tell Steve the opposite, if he ever asked her.
Natasha Romanoff, the Beautiful Spider--the only target Clint had ever missed. Now, years later, he can't quite remember what his state of mind had been when that arrow had missed the mark, when he'd extended a hand instead of a knife. And he doesn't know what she was thinking, either, when she took his hand, and they began an unbreakable partnership.
He smiles, now, at the memory. )
We come from similar backgrounds, though hers is about a hundred times more glamorous. She's the best there is, so that was going to make her either a target, or an asset. I asked her to be the latter before being the first got her killed.
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[Steve says it under his breath, smiling a little. Similar backgrounds. Reverse Clint and Natasha's positions and it's almost the way Steve met Peggy - except she was the best, and the one offering him a chance, along with Erskine.]
She saved the whole city today. She saved the world.
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That's not a monumental thought in and of itself. After all, how many times has he wagered his life on this woman? More times that he could count. They had a policy, the two of them against the world. They made sure the other got home safe.
The thing of it was, today they'd gotten both. Saved the world, and both of them had come home safe. Clint liked this new state of affairs, more than he was willing to admit. )
That's Natasha for you. You can keep your shield, and Stark his armor, and Thor his... godliness. Natasha's got a brain, and conviction like no one else. No offense, but between you all, it's still her I want watching my back, the next time we do this.
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[The next time. Steve resists the urge to confirm that Barton is on board, getting the feeling the other man would say something about nothing being guaranteed, just to be contrary. He's not the sort to accept being pushed into things well.]
The Avengers. [He twitches a smile at the portrait on the wall.] It's flashy enough to keep Stark happy, at least.
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( It was strange, including himself in that group. But not unpleasant. )
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[He shakes his head.] Howard had an ego. But never like that.
[Which is a profoundly unreal thing to say, even after aliens. Howard's son. Older than the father.] They're more alike than I thought at first, though.
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( After all, who wanted to be told they were like their parents? )
You must have been close. You and Old Man Stark.
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No, not thinking about that.] Me, Peggy, and Howard. They were the ones that kept us all in one piece in the field. Stark with R and D, obviously, Peggy with intel.
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Yes. Agent Margaret Carter.
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( He says this without much inflection, but it's more than apparent the words are true. And he doesn't envy Steve his position, now, because if there's one thing Clint knows about it is attraction to spy ladies. He can't imagine what not being with her must be like. )
I'm, ah, sorry. It must be hard, for you.
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[There's bitter irony in it. Adrenaline fading, the carnage and chaos miles off, with night pouring in through the windows - he's hit that part of the fight where it feels almost like it never happened, and the only thing he can recall with immediate clarity is Romanoff taking the leap off his shield and thinking as he watched, Peggy will like her, without giving it a second thought.
Except she's not there. There's no citadel to retreat to after blowing the enemy to hell, no Howard to say he could have done it in half the time. No Commandos trying to drag Steve out and see if maybe this time he'll get drunk after all. No Bucky leading the charge. Peggy is a legend, a file, a footnote in a training brochure, and Steve is making himself sick.
He gets up. Then stops. Not sure what he planned to do beyond 'move'.
Which is why he stands there, looking confused. There's always something to do in a war, but this one is over - there's no reports to write, no debriefings to attend that he'd consent to right now. Clean-up will go on for days. They have Loki to worry about. But right now he and Clint are just two fellas in an apartment in Brooklyn - and Steve doesn't have a television, which is probably what two fellas in an apartment in Brooklyn do on an average night.]
They thought they were getting a corpse. [It doesn't occur to him that Clint must know that. Steve glances down, uncomfortable, and slowly sits again.]
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But even so, he can try and empathize. He rises slowly to his feet, and offers Steve a wry smile. )
I heard them radio it in. You've never seen a bunker of tight-lipped secret agents get so excited.
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I don't know about that. I've seen my fair share of secret-agent-filled bunkers. [He rubs the corner of one eye, remembering fondly the looks on the faces of the agents when he walked back through the doors of the facility he'd smashed his way out of after waking up, Director Fury leading the way.]
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They're a fun lot, huh.
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( But he sure does like taking them. He won't pretend there haven't been fun moments, and ones of reckless abandon. Pranking Nick on New Year's and drinking wine with Natasha on Christmas Eve. He's had his moments, they've just been few and far between. )
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