Warnings: short drabble written during the commute to uni, mistakes (as per usual), riding without a helmet (please wear appropriate protection when engaging in dangerous activities), bikers being hot as f..., you can't change my mind
Enjoy
- you cut him in traffic one day, he has to press hard on the brakes to avoid you, a stream of curses leaving his covered mouth
- he gives chace after you, in a moment of unexepected road rage, so rare to see such raw display of emotion from the mountain of a man
- he catches up to you at a gas station
- he comes toward you with full intent on ripping you a new one
- you take your helmet off and tilt your pretty head in amusement
- he loses it on you
- you just laugh in his face 'bloody right I did. You drive like an old lady'
- he's stunned, never had he get this kind of reaction from anyone, except his colleagues in 141, who are like brothers to him
- he knows he's intimidating
- he knows he could twist your pretty neck right there and there
- but your stance is countering all his desire for violence
- your hands rest on your hips, head tilted, weight rested on one foot, as if to say 'you done?'
- he gets silent, panting with annoyance and adrenaline from earlier
- you huff a laugh and leave him there as you walk inside to pay and buy a snack
- when you return you find a small white piece of rectangular paper
- he left you his number followed by a small drawing of a skull
- you huff a small laugh the audacity
- but you take it and put it in your breast pocket and ride off
- you send him a message
- it's the emoji of a red motorcycle đď¸
- you don't get a reply until weeks later
- it's the skull emoji đ
- you smile at that, but don't indulge him anymore
- he has your number now, he can make a move if he wants, you're done chasing after men
- and a move he makes
- another message follows a month later
- no greeting, no sweet talk, just some coordinates and a date and time, little skull at the end
- you grin, it's on, old man
- you meet him there
- there being the most beautiful place in the British isles
- a parking lot at the curve of the road, high up on the hillside
- the city sparkles in the distance
- you seat with him at the wooden bench and table
- you talk, it's a forth an back, light banter fills the night air
- he's not putting pressure on you, he just enjoys your presence
- it's refreshing
- you depart on the promise that you'll see each other again, when he's in town
- a while passes until you meet again
- it's as unexpected as the firs time
- he's just leaving base quietly listening to his colleagues plans for the off time they got
- you're riding your bike stopping at the red light in the intersection
- your bent over position and tight leather suit catch the attention of the men
- one of them, a tall bulky Scott sporting a close-cropped mawhawk whistles in apreciation
- the engine rumble and the music in your earphones prevent you from hearing the lewd sound
- simon spots imediately, eyes shrouded in recognition, an infenetly small change that other wise anyone would overlook
- Johnny has a keen eye and a fascination with his Lt. Making him much more interested in noticing such traitorous change in the stoic man's posture
- Johnny starts commenting on the hooked stare to your form, Kyle's attention piques at that
- but the comment dies on his lips as you turn, visor pointed at the group
- and then you wave at them, at Simon, but the two sergeants don't know that
- not until the massive shadow moves toward you ignoring his companions protests, brown eyes glued to you
- the moment he gets near your bike you pat the seat behind you
- Simon barely has time to get his feet on the stands, grabbing your waist by instinct, which, due to his far taller stature makes him fold his body flush against yours, one hand on the gas rezervoir and one hand snaked around your stomach
- the light turns green and you turn the acceleration lurching you forward
- both Johnny and Kyle remain dumbfounded at the events witnessed, not quite believing the reality at this point
- they turn to look at eachother, shock plastered on their handsome faces
- 'steaming jesus' the utterance hangs in the air
- they will make their personal mission to find out more about the mysterious rider that just whisked their superior from under their noses
Warnings: violence, gore, kidnappings, threats of murder, feelings, and others.
CoD MW2/3
Simon 'Ghost' Riley đ
Echoes of Salvation. Simon 'Ghost' Riley x afab reader (zombie AU)
Ongoing series
Part I Part II Part III
Ghost x undercover!reader - Head Cannons
(little mention of female characteristics in parts IV and V; it can be read as neutral reader: parts I, II and III)
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI
Husband!Ghost x teacher!reader HC
Part I Part II
Works that I will write in the future
Ghost x afab reader (Old Guard AU)
spirit!Ghost x witch!reader (forest spirit monster AU)
I just came across a really nice fic, while I was reading my phone died due to low battery, and because Tumblr refreshed the page it is now gone. I spent the last hour trying to find it.
I don´t know the author and I don´t remember if it even had a title. This is what I can remember:
it´s a 3 part fic, not very long
it didn't have images or gifs, I think...
the reader is a sergeant in the TF 141 and is suspected to have leaked information, aka be a mole
one part is about Ghost training reader about resisting interrogation via torture; she is bound to a chair, he does waterboarding, she manages to cut herself free of the zip ties; she tells him a koi fish joke, and asks him how many mistakes did he make, he tells her the joke with mustard gas and pepper spray
one part is about the whole 141 taking down a target, and when Soap and Gaz look through the PC they find evidence that reader is the mole; Price threatens reader with his gun
there was a masterlist and it had the parts listed like this:
part II
part I
interlude
If you know what I´m talking about please leave the link in the comments, reposting and liking this probably helps too. Thank you!
"I like your voice" ok the let me read to you while your head rests on my chest and i scratch your head until you fall asleep
Warnings: blood, violence, kidnapping, mistakes hehe, a bit of fluff
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI
- the second time you meet you donât even recognize him
- you are sent to meet up with a freshly assembled team, a few hand-picked men and women with various skills, the most capable, for a new sensitive covert mission
- with your experience and prone eye to details, youâre quickly made team leader alongside an S.A.S. Lieutenant
- he wears a skull mask sewn on a black balaclava, 6â4 wall of hard muscle, and the most intimidating gaze youâve ever seen in someoneâs eyes
- you donât back down when you are introduced to one another, handshake firm, brown eyes meeting your own for a long time, as if caught in a duel of gazes
- you learn his name, in fact his callsign âGhostâ
- you deem it fit for his choice of gear and his mannerisms
- he rarely speaks and when he does it is short and to the point, making astute observations or asking good questions, the rest of his time is spent in silence, sharp eyes scanning the room full of people or the files handed to him
- for how big he is he sure likes to disappear unnoticed acting just like his namesake
- nothing is known about him, in truth no one on the team knows much about the others, no more than the essentials: their callsign and specialization, the rest is redacted
- you are not a curious person and you leave him be, but you can deny that heâs intriguing
- you find out you work well together; you plan and scheme for the operation, making up fictional scenarios and coming up with backup plans for every backup plan there is
- you donât socialize much outside your work, but the silence between you two doesnât feel awkward, more like understanding, a silent pact to not disturb the other from mental preparations and other thoughts regarding the near future danger that awaits you
- the plan is quite simple: youâll pose as an ex-military expert in explosive devices, who just got dishonourably dismissed for having slept with a superior office at the base, and with no pension and a wish for revenge on the government that failed you; you get recruited by a terrorist cell via dark web that wants a large amount of explosive for a big hit on London;
- the buyer wants a meetup in a couple of days and a live demonstration that your devices work and do the desired amount of damage
- youâre the main piece on the chess board, the rest are there to support you and extract you in case the meetup goes awry
- and you prepare accordingly, mastering the art of explosives in just a few days, you are a fast learner, you work very clean and organized which make you look the part
- one day before the expected meetup, everything is ready, all the plans have been poured over, every detail accounted for
- itâs the calm before the storm as they say, youâre more quiet than usual, mentally going over every possibility and carefully repeating answers to possible questions
- Ghost notices this and in a small gesture of kindness or maybe just good fellowship he brings you a mug of tea, your favourite Earl Gray with a splash of soy milk; youâre surprised to find out that itâs perfect, from temperature to ratio to taste; heâs been watching you and taking notes of your methodical way of making tea; you canât help but appreciate that and the attention to details; a man after your own heart
- you thank him and he smirks under his balaclava at your reaction of pleasant surprise that you quickly school with a small nod focusing your gaze to a fixed point on the coffee table in front of you
- the last few hours before the mission starts is spent in the lounge room; you read your notes for the final time and he listens to music on his headphones, so loud you can hear the rhythm
- he sees you absentmindedly bouncing your leg to the music, not once asking him to turn it off; he smirks again noting that you probably have similar tastes in music as well, heâll have to test that theory
- when you carpool together to head towards the location sent to you by the target, he senses your tension and tells you a joke, a dark one that makes you smile a bit; he seems to be smirking a lot at your interactions lately
- he pulls the SUV a few blocks further away and before you make your way out of the passenger seat he grabs your upper arm making you freeze entirely, heâd never touch intentionally until now
- you make eye contact and reminds you to pull out if something feels wrong and you nod in agreement
- he reminds that he wonât be able to listen to you because you canât take a wire with you (youâll surely be patted down), but heâll be close, and heâll have eyes on you on all times through the scope of his sniper rifle; the bravo team will be close by to provide back-up; this time youâre not alone
- that thought is a lot more reassuring than you thought, you trust him completely, having seen his marksmanship skills at the firing range
- with that your mission begins
- you walk towards the alley youâre suppose to meet your target and youâre not surprised to see a black van pulling over, two brutes climbing out of it grabbing you and putting a cowl on your feet while dragging you inside the car
- your plan included this situation and you know that Ghost will follow the car at a safe distance until you reach the final destination
- you feel hands on you, patting down hard and pulling your shirt up looking for any hidden device; it makes your skin crawl but you manage
- you count around 45 minutes of driving and when the asphalt ends and gravel begins you know you are close to the actual destination Â
- when the car stops you are shoved out of the car and they drag you somewhere inside
- when the cowl is ripped off you find yourself in a hangar with windows on both sides and a thick concrete wall in the middle thatâs only connected to the floor
- you are surrounded by men in dark clothes, faces covered by shemagh scarves and in the middle a man dressed in a suit beckons you forth greetings kept to a minimum
- you are brought to a table where explosives and an array of electrical components lie in a heap
- his voice is deep, not as deep as that of Ghost and is laced with an eastern Asian accentÂ
- the instructions are simple, make an IED with whatâs on the table in under 20 minutes, it has to work and it has to take down that wallÂ
- a timer is set before you and you get to work
- 16 minute and 54 seconds later youâre done and you mount the device in the middle of the wall
- every one gets as far as possible, turning away from the blast
- when the dust settles the buyer claps impressed that little remains of that wall
- you begin negotiations; you push for ÂŁ1.000.000.000 he refuses, you argue that you need to buy supplies and theyâre not cheap; he proposes a lower fee and that heâll provide what is needed; you agree on the condition that he brings you to his supplier arguing that you want to do a quality check first, eliminating all and any error in the manufacturing process; he takes a moment to think about it; you argument that he can be double crossed and buy useless crap at huge prices and that you can lower those prices based on what the seller has to offer; he agrees and tells you that soon you will be contacted the same way you were today; you hum and ask for part of the payment now âfor the troubleâ you say as you nod towards his brutes; he accepts.
- youâre taken back to the alley you were picked up from, the ride played in reverse, once again the cowl is thrown over your head
- Ghost picks you up from the park nearby, your established pick-up point
- once inside the passenger seat he notices the small exhale of relief you try to mask as yawn
- he drives in complete silence eyes front; he breaks it asking for the deal; you summarize; not only did you manage to meet the buyer and impress him but you managed to convince him to bring you to his supplier; he whistles in appreciation
- you feel your cheeks warm up; shock: you never blush, never, not at compliments not ever; you hate it but also like it a little.
- you ask him in return, and he clarifies that he had you in his sights all the time, ready to drop anyone that dared as little as breathing wrong in your direction, just as promised; you hum in a show of respect and appreciation, he nods in return; you are amazed how easily you can communicate non-verbally with one another - you make a great team       Â
Next part here.
Previous part here.
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI
Warnings: torture, violence, gore, mistakes.
- the sixth time you meet itâs after a lot of frenzied searches
- the missions have been slow a while now; you mostly act as a handler for TF141, alongside Laswell; the boys got used to your calm voice in their earpieces, guiding and directing them through buildings and underground bases; your âhackingâ skills come in handy when Laswell gets caught up with something else
- they always come home in time for you to get supper together; itâs a nice way of living; so different from the loneliness you felt before; now you have a small family to call your own; the banter between you and the sergeants feels the air; you throw jokes to one another; Price quietly chuckles at his younger subalterns; Ghost on the other hand stays silent most of the time;
- you always sit next to him, in the mess hall, in briefing rooms, in helis, or cars; itâs something heâs not sure yet how to interpret; yes, the two of you got along just fine; you have the same dark humour that makes the other soldiers in the base shiver when they hear you laugh at your jokes; you can sit in comfortable silence for hours; you donât pry into each otherâs lives, which heâs thankful; you hadnât even asked him his name, and you already know one another for more than two years; he wonât admit but he doesnât like the way his heart feels when you laugh at one of Soapâs jokes, or discuss with Gaz one of the new books youâve bought, or even when Price comes close to you, peaking over your shoulder and talking quietly with you about the files youâve got in front of you;
- Ghost does not allow the thought, that he might be jealous on his comradesâ interactions with you, take roots inside his mind; he canât; youâre just doing your job and you just happen to enjoy the 141âs company, in the most platonic way; he knows that your bond is far superior to that of the otherâs; you saved his life, saw his face, and he in turned saved yours; that must add up to something;
- yet he feels that somethingâs wrong with him; Price pointed out that ever since you joined TF141 he seems quieter, and less present; heâs becoming more and more his namesake; he denies that, and argues that heâs just tired, now that heâs getting older; Price calls out his shite; the captain is older than him, and heâs far more active than him;
- but the captain canât do more than that, a friendly conversation; yours and Ghostâs relationship is extremely professional; he rarely sees the two of you interact in the common room, or anywhere else for that matter, thatâs not the battle field or the briefing room; you also work incredibly well; you two and Soap had made quite the trio when it comes to field work; he affectionately calls you the Unholy Trinity of Task Force 141; trails of body are left in your wake and almost all missions go well without the tinniest hitch; the men joke around that surely you are some kind of witch that made a deal with the devil to have success; you laugh and chalk it all up to skill, hard work, and a shite ton of sheer luck;
- though you keep reminding them that your luck will run out one day, they ignore you, joking that youâll have to tolerate them until you retire; youâre not as optimistic; youâre the realist of the whole team; you know the risks are ten times bigger than theirs
- most of the times you go in alone, unarmed, no back up, no communication; you only have yourself to rely on; and you know that when the fatigue catches up with you, youâll slip up, make a mistake, thatâll get you killed or worse
- and then the worst you feared happens; you go MIA during a simple infiltration; the boys find no trace to indicate where youâd been taken to or by whom; Laswell canât find any sign of you, no matter how hard she tries, or how far sheâs stretching her informant network; nothing; denial turns to angry searches, busting down doors and torturing anyone they come across; that turns to desperation, they start looking into the most unrelated events they find, hoping that maybe, just maybe, they get a glimpse of your name, or an alias, or something, no matter how small; and that turns to silence, they stop bringing you up, start avoiding your name or anything that might point out youâre not there; after Laswell mentions you in one of their briefings, that the time to change your status to KIA is due, Ghost smashes the chair you used to sit in
- itâs one of the most violent reactions heâs had outside the battlefield since youâd disappeared, and Price starts to worry that his lieutenant will do something stupid if they donât find out what happened to you; he threatens Laswell to not touch that file of yours; âNot yet, Kate. Not yet.â He says in a sadder and calmer voice   Â
- acceptance never came; the thought that maybe youâre not even alive, buried somewhere unmarked, or body burned beyond recognition is a thought theyâd long banished; wherever they went they kept their eyes peeled for you; their hope of finding you never wavers
- and then their prayers are answered; they get something; itâs not much; a 3-second clip; itâs blurred, to few pixels to really make out any details; and the camera seems to be moved violently, barely catching the hunched posture of a person tied to a chair; Laswell got it form one of her contacts; itâs from a half destroyed hard drive they recovered from heli the dropped out of the sky
- itâs not much; actually, is far too little to go on with; the video doesnât show a face, nor reveals any names; the background so dark they canât make out anything; But they agree itâs you; from the size of your body, to your complexion to the colour of your hair, now longer and falling over your face; itâs been months since they last saw you but they know itâs you Â
- âProof of lifeâ Price concludes; âBut fur who?â Soap voices the question they all thought of that; âIt donât matterâ Ghost points out, voice gruffer than ever; âWhere is more important.â Gaz specifies
- they get to work; they comb the crash site, having received the location from Laswell; at first they donât find anything; but Ghostâs keen eyes find it; itâs a small piece of silvery metal, wedged in the dirt; itâs only half, but he can make out the letters clearly; cyrillic letter; he grunts; âPriceâŚâ he shouts to get everyoneâs attention; when they come closer he shows it to them; âRussiansâ they conclude
- the hunt begins; Nik is there to smuggle the Brits over the Russian borders and to provide them with an extraction vehicle, in his case an old rusty Russian helicopter, that can barely fly under the radar, it flinches and grunts at every gust of wind, but itâs as covert as can be; they donât bear any insignia visible on their black camo uniforms; their faces tucked under black balaclavas; even their guns are Russian, some AK-47 Nik provided them with no striations on the barrels; they even agreed to keep their mouths shut, letting the captain converse with anyone that they might encounter; no one can no that a team of Brits put their feet on Russian soil
- they carefully went over all the details just like you got them used to when you did infiltrations; they are as prepared as ever; the plan is simple; take out the guards that make their rounds through the facility and take their place; that will give them sufficient time to look for you and find a way out to get you out; âifâ they find you; the information came through Laswell and it was already a couple weeks old; chances are youâve been moved;
- they search everywhere; youâre not there; time for plan B: infiltrate their data base; Price gets his hand on a computer and plugs the USB containing the backdoor virus; it takes some time to install, then to reboot the whole system; Laswell gives the green light that theyâre in; they get out of there leaving no trace that they ever were inside
- the next two weeks are gruesome; Ghost spends most of his time destroying the punching bags in the gym; he barely eats and barely sleeps; he starts hearing your voice in the night when he climbs the ladder to the roof, perched up like an owl, having a smoke away from everyone; he hears a soft whisper, or a small chuckle; heâs going crazy, he thinks; crazy with worry for you;
- itâs been years since Simon felt worry for someone; when his family was killed, he vowed to never get close to another soul again; but then you had to save him; you didnât even know him; risked your life for a stranger that cannot repay you for that act of kindness
- but he can; he can make sure youâre safe on missions; thatâs why heâd always stalk your figure through the scope; thatâs why heâd have you with him and Soap every time youâd split up; so he can keep his eyes on that pretty face of yours; thatâs why heâd threaten the other marines on base with the court martial when heâd hear lewd comments about you being their whore and so much worse; heâd be wringing their necks if Price didnât keep such a close eyes on his actions Â
- he misses you, and your presence, and your sweet perfume, and your voice, and your eyes that would look straight into his when he told you a joke, smirk matching his own; he missed the way youâd drink your tea together in the morning, in silence broken only by soft sighs and the sound of the sofa under your weights; if he got up before you heâd make sure to boil enough water for two mugs and heâd put the tea in the moment he could hear your footsteps heading to the common room; he was so accustomed to you that he could make out your footsteps even in the busiest corridors; lighter than most, almost quiet but quick, lively; he misses that too
- the way youâd make your away towards him and with a nod take the seat next to his, softly brushing his shoulder with yours in an unspoken acknowledgement⌠Iâm here, next to you⌠your simple touch made his skin boil underneath his clothes and yearn for more; heâd take advantage of situations out in the field; heâd grab you and help you climb over obstacles, heâd give you a head anytime he felt you needed it; and youâd never refuse his help;
- heâll be dammed if he doesnât find you; just like you found him when you first met
- two weeks pass by slower when youâre almost always awake, Simon knew that already; but heâs the first to get on the tarmac when Price gives the order for heading out; Laswell managed to pinpoint your location; one of the Russian commanders moved you to an off the record, but not really cause âRussians are shit at keeping a low profile.â Laswell adds, compound where theyâd keep foreign prisoners for interrogations; the American woman sends them out to get you out and wipe any witness that has seen your face
- exactly what Simon wanted; the green light to do what heâs best at: mauling his enemies;
- the compound they keep you in is underground, ventilation system outdated, like pretty much any piece of technology they keep; they record the interrogation on an old Sony camera; you doubt it can register your mumbled responses, not that youâd say anything useful; youâd match every question with a curse in a clear American accent; you donât want to give them anything that might be traced back to your British boys;
- they canât get anything out of you; not your name, not whom do you work for, or where youâre from, what you were looking for when you infiltrated their operation, etc.; they were met with an unsurmountable resistance; no matter how many times theyâd beat you, drown you, burn you, cut you, electrocute you, or humiliate you; they took away most of your clothes, leaving you in your underwear and what little remained from your tank top, enough to cover only your upper torso; you were cold, hungry and in pain; you had been in this condition for months; but you wouldnât give up
- in the academy they taught you that the longer you lasted the more chances of being found; that thought has crossed your mind more than once; but you donât allow yourself to hope; that would only weigh you down the more time passes; no, you look for ways to free yourself and learn the personnelâs schedule; and you wait for the best opportunity
- that window of opportunity is near; for a week now you worked on pulling out the nail in the chair that holds the chairâs handle together; you managed to pull out the nail and twist your wrist to try and scratch at the rope; the motion is uncomfortable and painful, the skin of your wrist is cut open by the rope that soaks up your blood; youâve been at it for hours, trying to cut yourself loose; and you finally manage; surprise overtakes you as the rope unravels and your hand is free; the limb aches with exertion as you shake it to get the flow of circulation to get back to normal
- then you lean forward and grab at the knife left there from the previous session, still wet with your blood; freeing yourself is more strenuous than you would have imagined; as you bend down to free your ankles you almost pass out from the sudden rush of blood to your head; you lost of it, enough to hinder you in your escape; but you push through
- when you stand up you grab the chair for support and move in slow motion afraid youâll pass out; you have a plan in mind already; get dresses in the coat left on the hanger by the door, and lay in wait for the interrogator to come back for another round; now that your body is filled with adrenaline times moves slower, but it doesnât take long for the door handle to start to move; you wait for the tall and skinny man to enter; if he were a little leaner you wouldnât have had a chance; but this failed physician that took to torture wonât even know what hit him; you stab him in the neck with a somewhat quick strike;
- he dies drowning in his own blood; you manage to drag his corpse under the table, leaving the pool of blood untouched; maybe theyâll think that you finally bled out and someone took your corpse to the morgue to be burned; you donât care as you grab the handgun off his waist; the same one heâd threaten you with when you wouldnât answer;
- judging by the thick clothes your assailant wears you know outside is cold; so you do what they told you at the academy; you undress the corpse an take his pants an shoes; theyâre huge on you but you canât complain; you shiver at the warmth still trapped in the wool fibres;
- you make your way outside checking for any guards; you found none, as expected; you heard the Russian complain that is too cold and stuffy down here that nobody but him frequents the lower levels; some people donât know to shut up and you are glad to exploit that; with his gun, knife and car keys in hand you make your way through the dark corridors; you follow the boot prints left on the filthy floors;
- the only guards you encounter are the ones stationed by the door that leads to the stairs; you make quick work of them; one shot for each of their heads; you almost fall down on your ass as the gun kicks back in recoil; you take a moment to lean on the wall taking a few calming breaths
- your ascend is slow, laboured breaths escaping your gaping mouth; you strain your eyes and try to decipher the word on the walls marking the level and the facility; youâre looking for the parking lot; you find it after climbing to the second to last level; Russians really donât know how to keep a facility secure; as you climb the emergency stairs there is no one to stop you; they underestimated your ability to escape this hell hole; their mistake
- as you reach the parking lot you look for the physicianâs car; itâs a rusty red Lada; itâll do just fine; as you get in the passenger side you start hearing gunshots; itâs faint; maybe you imagined it; but no, itâs there; you donât wait to find out whatâs happening, as you turn the key in the ignition you pull out of the spot and quickly drive towards the exit; whatever firefight broke out in there, pulled away every guard from their stationary position; for a moment you think about TF 141, but you quickly dismiss it
- you make your way out, a little dizzy from the spiral ascension; once out of there you notice that thereâs forest around, and some snow; you hit gravel and as you look back you notice the exit; the only indication that there is something men made here; you doubt that tunnel can be spotted from a drone; the trees block the line of sight; that confirms your suspicions
- the gun fire must be coming from another escapee, not as lucky as you; you drive down the dirt road following every twist and turn hoping you wonât see any other cars; you check the glove compartment; now that the adrenaline rush is over your body aches like never before; you search for some pain meds but you only find a wallet with some cash in it; Russian rubbles, enough to keep the car going for a while; maybe youâll find a gas station; itâs risky but you are I dire need of food and water; that might give you enough strength to push forward
- the 141 moves quickly taking care of the two sentinels at the mouth of the tunnel; two well placed shots and theyâre down; Gaz and Soap move the bodies in a bush and hide their car in the tree line; hopefully nobody will come looking for this two in the next crucial minutes; they comb through the facility dropping anyone they encounter; their pistols bear silencers masking the loud sounds; they move deeper and deeper, but soon the alarm is sounded and a full fight ensues; the guards are no match for the 141; they drop like flies; but the fight costs them precious minutes;
- Ghost breaks away from the rest of his teammates; he knows they got it; he needs to hurry to find you; he needs to make sure you are still breathing, and that your pretty eyes still hold fire in them; he gets to lowest level where the holding cells are; he checks behind every grate and every door until a he gets to what seems to be the place they torture the prisoners
- he notices how filthy and cold it is; but what makes his blood freeze is the chair and the large pool of fresh blood; noâŚ, heâs too late; he came to late; a wave of blinding fury surges and like a tsunami Ghost thrashes the room; he stops only when he discovers the body of a tall Russian man behind the desk; his throat slit; pants and boots missing; atta girl he canât help the smirk taking over his face under the balaclava; you were capable, he knew that, but you still manage to surprise him; he gets out trying to radio in the discovery to the rest of his teammates
- the radio crackles with static, concrete walls too thick for the signal to penetrate; heâs made his decision; heâs going after you even though he knows Price will kick his ass later; you need him; probably not as much as he needs you; he chases the droplets of blood you left on the ground as you walked towards the emergency staircase; at the door, two more casualties; no, you didnât need him; you had it handled
- in the parking lot he finds a military truck with the key in the ignition; he follows you as quickly as the car gets on the dirt road
- you drive for what feels like hours; your mind is struggling, eyes out of focus and body feeling heavier with every minute; you donât know why or when the car starts to shake and tilt, you feel yourself flying out of the seat; everything goes black
- Ghostâs eyes scan the road in front of him through the thick snowfall; he almost misses the red car that swerved of the road and now rests on the side in a ditch, snow piles on top almost making it disappear; he gets out of the truck and approaches the car pistol pointed at it; he wipes away the snow that covers the window on the driverâs side; inside he can make out a body thatâs laying on its side face obscured by the thick collar of the jacket; he pulls the door open carefully and nudges the body to see if theyâre conscious or not; when thereâs no movement he peels the collar from their face
- Simon thinks he is no longer able to panic; he survived through his fatherâs and brotherâs abuse; then he joined the military where they taught him to surpass any fears and to control himself; then the Mexican cartel who buried him alive; that experience showed him what terror looks like; only to return home and find all the people that he held dear massacred; Ghost is the result of so many horrifying events; he is the cautionary tale of what prolonged survival in a malignant environment looks like
- the level of fear matches that of when he found the body of Beth hugging Josepâs smaller one; he acts without thinking, grabbing your limp and cold body and pulling you out of the wreckage; your head is bleeding from where you hit it on the window; lips are blue and your skin cold to the touch; he checks for a pulse; he canât tell if he feels yours or his own; his hands are trembling with rage and powerlessness; he grabs for the radioâ telling Price heâd found you but you need medical assistance immediately; thereâs no answer on the other side; just static
- he hoists you up and takes you to the stolen truck placing you in the front seat; he climbs in the driverâs seat letting you down slowly over the seat head resting on his lap; he puts the heat on high trying to make you warm again; he checks for your breathing and heâs thrilled to find that small puffs of air come from your open mouth
- he starts driving, he doesnât know where; he neds a safe house to treat your wounds and to keep you safe; the snow is falling heavy, making impossible to see where heâs driving; then he sees it; to the side he can make out a building in the tree line
- the abandoned cottage is nothing more than a ruin; but it has four walls and a roof and heâs glad to see a small fireplace, dry wood abandoned next to it; he puts you down on what he can only assume is what remained of a thick rug long forgotten by its previous owners; he works quickly and efficiently, in mere minutes a fire burns casting a warm glow in the barren room
- he moves to work on you; he peels the jacket off only to find that you are nearly naked under the stolen clothes; he gets angrier at the Russians wishing he could bring them back only to subject them to the same kind of torture they did you and some more; he quickly checks for deeper cuts or signs of infection; but he canât find none; they mustâve given you antibiotics to keep you alive as much as possible;
- he cleans the cuts with the antiseptic wet wipes his med kit contains; then he dresses the wounds with gauze; your thin body looks like a mummy from the amount gauze; he addresses your head next wiping the blood of and bandaging your forehead; he sighs in relief when your lips and skin slowly turn pink from the warmth; you lay in between his legs as he sits on the floor, your head laying on his thigh
- he tries contacting 141 again, but to no avail; looks like heâll have to hold out here tonight; heâll stay awake to protect you until you wake up
- itâs morning when you stir, he watches your face intently from above you; your eyelids groggily open eyes trying to focus; as you lay eyes on brown ones, hidden behind a black balaclava you start to panic; you weakly push at his hands and chest, mumbling and trying to get away from him; he doesnât relent though; his grip is firm on you and in a commanding voice he orders you to sit still; hearing your name does the trick; you didnât tell those fuckers your name; and his embrace is not restraining more like protecting; you think hard and try to remember eyes flickering over the balaclava; âGhostâŚâ you croak when your vocal chords decide to vibrate; âGhoâŚâ you repeat even more brokenly; he shushes you and reassures you that yes, heâs here and no, he wonât go anywhere; not without you; that puts your mind at ease and you close your eyes again
-when you wake up again is noon; he feeds you some water through cracked and dry lips and he gives you a dose of morphine to help with the pain; that sends you back to sleep
- the third time you wake, you are being carried by strong arms; the sound of blades cutting air becomes louder and louder; Ghost walks backwards shielding you from the snow thatâs being picked up by the gusts of wind;
- he climbs the heli; Nik greets Ghost, as Soap and Gaz pull him and you inside; the ride is silent, no one says anything; the Russian pilot takes you to a better equipped safehouse
- you wake up to someone entering the room; youâre in a warm comfortable bed, IV connected to your wrist fluid being pumped in your veins; you open your eyes to a dark-haired man bringing in a tray of food; you panic again when you hear him greet you, voice laced with a deep Russian accent; he sees the look on your face and he slowly puts the tray on the table; âDonât vorry, Iâm Nick. A friend ov 141. I vonât hurt yu, agentâ; he tells you itâs nice to finally put a face to the name, and that you are prettier than Gaz told him; you watch him in silence, regarding him with apprehension; when he stops talking, you look to the door and ask for Ghost
- he chuckles knowingly and then informs you that âyour boyâ is being ripped a new one by the captain just outside, and he leaves you to tell Price that your awake; you donât have time to correct him cause he already out the door; Price walks in soon after, youâre glad to see him; âAh, there you areâ he smiles but it doesnât reach his eyes; he asks you how youâre feeling; numb thanks to the morphine; he wants to know what happened
- it was a trap; they were waiting for you, Russians; they wanted to know who you were and who did you work for; you told them nothing; he knows; he asks you about your time in the facility; you donât quite remember much, just the torture and the questions; he tells you that you did good, and that you need to rest now;
- Gaz and Soap stop by to talk to you a bit; you tell them youâll be fine; and then you ask for Ghost; they rub their necks a little ashamed; you asked them what happened; Ghost got scolded for going AWOL in search for you; Price even threatened him with the court martial; you huff; and swing the blanket off; you sit at the ledge of the bed; youâre glad to find youâve been clothed in a pair of slacks and a long sleeve shirt; you grab the IV needle and pull hard on it; then you stand grabbing the table for support
- the two sergeants move forward to catch you if you fall; you wave them away and move towards the door; you search the living room for any signs of Ghost; instead, Price and Nik talk about something at the dinner table; when Price sees you up and about, despite him telling you to rest, he mutters a âBloody stubborn they areâ and points toward the kitchen; you thank him; you can hear Nik commenting something about you and Ghost deserving each other; but you keep walking, slowly, one hand on the wall for balance
- Ghost stands by the window, his back turned to you; he ignores your poor attempt at greeting him; without thinking you cross the distance and hug his waist burying your nose in his hoodie; he tenses
- âIâm probably high right now,â you nuzzle your face in his back inhaling his scent: soap, cigarettes and something you canât quite tell; âthank you, for coming after meâ; you let go of him turning to go back to rest; he grabs your upper arm and gently turns you; he watches you closely, you can feel his breath on your face, and smell the cigarette on his lips; his balaclava is pushed up his nose; he stares into your eyes as he speaks âTell me to stopâ his eyes shift to your lips
- âPlease donâtâ; he kisses you, deeply and for a long time; you pull away for air âGhost, IâŚâ âNo,â he cuts you off; âSimon, my name is Simonâ you smile lost in his pretty brown eyes; âSimon Rileyâ and he surprises you taking his balaclava off; you stare at him, trying to memorize every scar and blemish; heâs handsome, in a rugged way; blonde hair, pale skin, and brown eye; you kiss him again.                                               Â
Previous part here.
Part II
The story starts after the dash.
Warnings: some gore, some mistakes, some bad writing (eh⌠we all have to start somewhere), not proof read, some independent woman surviving on her own without the need of help from men (cause I like self reliant women and people in general, they are a great inspiration to us all, really).
Disclaimer:
Dear readers,
Please be kind. This is my first fanfiction ever that I wrote and posted, so please be kind and overlook any potential inaccuracies, mistakes, grammatical errors as Iâm not a professional writer and also English isnât my native tongue. Though I have studied British English I am sure I havenât really managed to accurately portray the British way of speaking, so please, feel free to point out anything that might poke you in the eye while reading this.
Also, I would like to tell you that this fan-fic is the love child of my obsession with our favourite masked man Simon âGhostâ Riley, and my love for anything zombie apocalypse or world-ending alternate universe or actual universe. Tbh If I wasnât a poor student I would probably be a prepper, just like Frank from HBOâs TLoU. Most likely will be. Iâm a little weird like that, youâll see more in the future.
To close this little rant, I hope youâll enjoy it, even if itâs short, I would really like to continue this if you deem it worth it enough. This will probably be a slow-burn kind of romance: 1. because Iâm a sucker for the kind of slow-burn strangers/enemies to lovers fanfics, and 2. because itâs more realistic, letâs calm the whore-y instincts and be reasonable people that donât climb masked 6-feet-tall strangers like trees.
With everything said I do not own the Call of Duty character Simon âGhostâ Riley (*whispers*Though I wish I did*) BUT I do own this piece of fanfic. Please donât steal it. Repost it but please do give credit to other peopleâs work. You may notice some similarities to other fanfics, cause duh, I also read a lot of that, (isnât that one of the incipient stages to becoming a fanfic writer?), but I would really like to give a shout out to the fanfic author that really inspired me to put fingers to keyboard and a fanfic into Tumblr, please, *drum rolls* a round of applause for @nsharks with her lovely fanfic âBleeding Blueâ. Sheâs really wonderful and you should really check her out.
Have fun reading and donât forget to leave a comment or a heart. I wouldnât mind suggestions of what to name Simonsâ daughter. That would really make my day đ
P.S. Sorry to all the fishing loving people out there, what I said was based on my impression of the fishing experience and should be taken with a grain of salt.
            Yours truly <3
Synopsis:
Itâs been five years since the outbreak happened. Five years ago, in London, a terrorist group released a virus in the city center. 24 hours later, people start developing flu-like symptoms. 48 hours later the infected turn into mindless ghouls biting healthy people and spreading the infection. Everything happened so fast. The army came in and tried to contain the outbreak but soon chaos engulfed the whole country. You learn that similar attacks happened all over the world: New York, Beijing, Moscow, Athens, and Tokyo. City by city, the whole world is ending.
You survived thanks to your mid-twenties life crisis that made you move into a cottage house by the lake in Lake District. The land you own is surrounded by thick lush forest that offers perfect cover for the tiny brick house that is your safe haven. With a water source close, off-the-grid energy, and a garden full of plants, fruit trees chickens, and whatnot, you live a comfortable life tucked away, far from the dangers of the cities. You are so far out of reach that in the past years you only saw a handful of infected, survivors that traveled far to escape and distant neighbours that got infected in the towns nearby. You canât remember the last time you saw another person. But you are used to your loneliness. The end of the world brought only a mild inconvenience, now that you can no longer order things online and watch movies on Netflix or HBO. But with a library full of books, a homestead to keep you active and your Border Collie companion, Bellamy, life is good. Life is peaceful.
One day, while you are out fishing, a masked man, armed to the teeth and carrying a young girl in his arms threatens to kill you if you donât provide him with medicine for his sick daughter. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
-
The sky is cloudy above but some sunbeams break through to warm the crisp air this fine early spring morning. Itâs a good time for fishing now that the water is warmer, they come closer to the bank in search of food. Itâs a boring task after you arrange all your tools and launch the line in the water. Itâs a game of waiting and watching for any small tugs or movement of the neon-coloured fishing line. You picked up fishing after a couple of months into moving here, when everything was a mess and so many repairs and renovations had to be made around the house. The guy from the tutorials you used to watch on YouTube talked about the calmness and relaxation fishing brought to him. Maybe you werenât cut out to stand all day on shore and gawk like an idiot for hours at the thin plastic line submerged in the lake water. But you cannot deny the proud feeling catching a fish brought to you when the line finally went taught.
You try and ward off the boredom and instead try to focus on the warmth that spring brings after months of endless cold. The birds are singing in trees, preparing nests for future offspring, and the lake is calm, with bubbles on the surface indicating the abundance of fish. Life is good. Bellamy enjoys sunbathing next to you rolling in a patch of grass. Everything is peaceful. Nothing really happens here anyway. You close your eyes basking in the good feeling that overtakes you.
A branch snapping behind you wakes you from the meditation you have fallen into. You raise and turn from where you are crouched over your equipment. You come face to face with a strange figure. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
âShow me yer handsâ he tells you in a thick British accent, eyes focused on you and handgun aimed at your chest. He wears all black and a haunting white skull mask. He is tall, at least 6 feet tall, body poised to kill. In his other arm, you can see a little girl hugging his neck.
You slowly raise your hands. At your foot, Bellamy growls baring her teeth at the stranger sensing danger. You shush her grabbing her by the caller to keep her from attacking the armed man. You stand still watching in apprehension as the man studies you. You look at the ground where you left your backpack and your hatchet.
âDonât even think about itâ comes the gruff order. You nod trying to convey that you understand the situation. âThereâs nothing in that bag worth a bulletâ you tell him in an even tone despite fear creeping down your spine. He hums in agreement. âAnd if you wanted to kill me you wouldâve done it by now.â He watches you like a hawk its prey. âSoâŚâ you pause carefully measuring your words, âwhat it is that you want from me?â he gestures you to take a few steps back and you drag Bellamy by her collar.
He kicks at the backpack spilling the contents. A bottle of water and a half-eaten sandwich, a hunting knife, and a rectangular box in which you keep the hooks, lures, fishing lines, and other small fishing equipment. He turns his gaze back at you and nods toward your dog. âPut a muzzle on it or Iâll shoot itâ. your blood runs cold at the thought of losing your sole companion. You scramble to untie the scarf you keep tied around your wrist that you use to wipe away sweat from your forehead. You wrap the piece of cloth around the dogâs snout tight enough to not slip away. Next, the dark-clad man tells you to pack your fishing gear and collect your backpack, with one hand keeping it outstretched to the side and the other one grabbing at Bellamyâs collar guiding her forward. âMove. Eyes forward. Any sudden moves and I drop you.â
He walks a couple paces behind you. For how big he is you can barely hear him walk on the path. You can feel his gaze burning in the back of your head and the gun pointed at your back. As you start down the path you can make out the roof of your small house. Once you get at the gate you stop. âopen itâ he instructs. âThe key is in my right pocketâ you say slowly gesturing to said pocket. âMhm,â you hear him grunt. You slowly release Bellamy and fish for the key in your jacketâs pocket. You slowly take it out and put it in the keyhole turning it and opening the gate.
The familiar sight of your front garden does nothing to appease you in this situation. Bushes full of colourful flowers hug the narrow path toward the house. The wind catcher hung above your porch clinks melodically as a gust of warm wind catches on it. you take a few more steps on the stone path before you and you hear the gate closing behind you. What once was your safe space now traps you in with a stranger ready to shoot you or worse.
âTie the dog to that poleâ he orders you again. On your right, there is a small pole stuck in the ground. He throws a roll of paracord next to you. You donât move at first. You had never tied Bellamy down before. You canât even remember when you last put a leash on her. She likes to roam free and run around. The click of the gun behind you tells you that you have no choice. You drop the backpack and start to drag her to the pole. She tries to resist but you shush her and urge her to move. Once you finish tying her you turn towards the stranger. He nods towards the house and you start walking hands raised on either side of your head. Once you open the door he urges you inside.
âWhere do you keep the medicine?â he grumbles urgently. âBathroom.â you nod to the right of your living room. âGo get it!â you donât wait around you spring toward the white door. After a couple of minutes grabbing most of what you keep in the over-sink cabinet you emerge hands filled with gauze of all sizes and different bottled pills. You return to find the man placing the girl on the couch. She appears to be asleep. You almost forgot about her. She looks about 8-years-old. Brown hair is chopped short in a pixie cut. Sheâs wearing blue-washed jeans and a dark green hoodie thatâs too big on her.
You watch as he peels the hoodie from her limp body. Underneath she wears a striped t-shirt, but what catches your attention is her left upper arm. Red stained gauze is wrapped around. You are still in your approach keeping a safe distance. âWas she bit?â the words rush out in apprehension. From where he kneels next to her his eyes snap at you. âNoâ he denies the implication of your words. âPut that on the table and go sit by the doorâ You do as you're told eyes darting between the girl and the man. You drop everything on the coffee table and go sit by the entrance door hugging your knees. You watch as he works on bandaging the kid. Your eyes are glued to the girlâs arm.
Even though you lived so far out into the wilderness you saw pictures on the internet of bites from the infected. You read the posts of the survivors and heard the news broadcast on all channels. Then everything went quiet. The cable didnât work and your phone had no signal. You knew shit hit the fan and that it was serious. Then, a few weeks later you saw your closest neighbour, Neil, an elderly farmer who lived about half a mile further up the riverâs bank, growling and stumbling trying to catch Bellamy who was running scared towards you. You tried to talk him out of the trance-like state but to no avail. He kept stalking towards you, ready to take a bite out of you. You tried to tell him to keep his distance and warned him that you would protect yourself. The rest was a blur. You faintly remember grabbing the hatchet that you used to cut down logs for your stove. And then the struggle with the man, Bellamy barking, you crying out pleas for him to stop. In the cacophony of noises, you hit him with the blade right in the neck. The next thing you knew, your neighbour lay in a pool of dark blood hatchet still. It took you a while to register what you have done. You just killed a man. You couldnât forget the way he lay there, on the gravel, hands stretched outwards bloodshot eyes staring emptily at the sky. That was the first time you encountered an infected. You distinctly remember the fear and adrenaline that took hold of you. The feelings that gripped your heart so tight and that made you take a life take over you as you watch the little girl, possibly infected, unconscious but on her way to the same madness that turned Neil into a savage monster all those years ago. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
'She's feverish. You got meds or something to bring the fever down?' his question brings down from your rising panic at the thought of being stuck inside with a possible infected. âThere should be some anti-inflammatory pills and some antibiotics. They are out of date but they could still work.' He grabs hold of the med kit you brought. He sorts through the drugs checking the expiration dates. When he comes across the antibiotics, he studies the pack carefully, his eyes darting back and forth from the label to the girl. 'How much can I give her?' he asks with a hint of concern his stern facade crumbling slightly.
You look at him unsure what to say. Those pills have been bought before the start of the outbreak. You doubt expired drugs have any effect anymore. You refrain from saying that though. He is stressed, he might take his anger on you. âSheâs a kid, you mumble, so, about half of each.â He carefully considers his next action. âSheâll need water to take them, you add from down the floor. And some foodâŚâ He nods in understanding. âMay I?â you donât know why you offer this stranger help. First, he disturbs you from catching dinner, next, he threatens to kill you and your dog, now he takes over your house and medicine. But you can recognize the desperation in his look, the way he fumbles with the packaging. He is a parent trying to save his kid. Even though you donât have any of your own you recognize the parental instincts, the same ones you exert on Bellamy.
He looks at you unsure of what to do. He surrenders in defeat and nods at you to go on. You rise to your full height, which doesnât add up to much compared to him. You walk past them all the way to the back of the living room where you disappear behind a white door. After a couple minutes, you reemerge from the kitchen with a glass of water in one hand and a bowl of steaming vegetable soup you made this morning. You slowly approach the couch watching him for any sign that you might cross a line. Instead of any aggression he takes a step back and allows you to go closer to the girl. You place the bowl and the glass on the coffee table and kneel next to the couch.
The girl opens her eyes and looks at you with distrust. Like father like daughter⌠you think to yourself. But you try to smile at her try to reassure her. âI brought you some soup, loveâ you say in your most sincere and kind voice. âYou must eat a little and then take some pills that will make you feel betterâ. You try to persuade her. She stares at you for a minute then at the man. They are suspicious of you and they have all the reason to be. You are a stranger to them as much as they are to you. Funny you are in the position to try and win their trust in your own home. You take the spoon you brought for her and dip it in the bowl. You take a spoonful and hover it close to your face blowing a little over it and then you swallow it. You canât help the little moan of appreciation for your own cooking skills. âSee? Itâs good.â You look at her with a small smile.
You donât know where this came from; you blame it on the 6-foot-tall armored stranger whose stare drives daggers at the back of your head and your desire to keep your head on your shoulders and all your blood in your body. You donât outright hate kids but you were never good around them. With a sigh, she sits upright and takes the spoon from you. She eats slowly. You keep watching her. She is a pretty kid. She has blue eyes and freckles on her small button nose. You wonder if she looks anything like the man behind you. She is pale and sweat collects on her little forehead most likely from her fever. She eats half of the soup you brought her and then turns her gaze towards the man. He hands her the two halves of the pills. She takes them in her small hand and grabs the glass. She hesitates. âItâs okayâ you reassure her and with a nod, she puts the half tablets on her tongue following up with large gulps from the glass. She scrunches her little nose in disgust at the chalky taste. âAtta girlâ you hear him utter from behind you. âNow lay down and rest.' he says to the girl in a stern yet gentle voice. He watches her nod and lie back on the couch her eyes half-lidded. He sighs, 'Good for now. ' he mutters under his breath. His eyes are fixed on her as he gestures to you. 'Come with me.' You rise from the floor and follow him outside the front door.
He leads you outside. When you cross the threshold, he takes a deep breath and a look of relief washes over his stern features. He gestures for you to sit on the front porch with him. 'We need to talk...' 'Yeah' you say crossing your arms defensively over your chest and standing as far away as the length of your porch allows. you take a moment to study him as he fixes you with a cold stare. You notice the many pockets on his vest and belt. A patch on his chest reads S.A.S. He's ex-military, you muse. His uniform makes much more sense now. But the mask still unnerves you.
He leans against one of the wooden porch support beams right hand hovering on the pistol holster. You think it's an act to intimidate you, to remind you that he is still armed and ready to strike you down in your own home. Â You stare at him a little defiantly. Youâll be damned before you let this weirdo intimidate you on your turf. He studies you from head to boots and back up. You sigh and square your shoulders showing him you are not afraid of him. âIâve been watching you.â He tells you in a matter-of-fact tone. You try to suppress the surprise on your face. You look down at his boots avoiding his icy gaze.
Heâs been stalking you, and the realization dawns on you. You didnât even notice his presence around the house. Stupid, you think to yourself, Iâm growing complacent. But not even Bellamy caught his smell and she usually barks when someone or something comes close to the house. But earlier at the lake, he took you both by surprise. Heâs good at keeping his presence concealed, you have to give it to him. You nod to yourself in understanding. He probably knows the layout of your house by now, he knows you are alone, and he waited for you to be outside and ambush you. You start imagining all the horrible things he could have done to you. But no, he instead approached you, gun pointed at you, nevertheless, when he could have already killed you and taken over your house by now. You hum and make eye contact with him.
âWhy keep me alive then?â you ask him without beating around the bush. You study his mannerisms trying to catch something, anything to prove you heâs human. But heâs as unreadable as a statue. His gaze remains fixed on you, unblinking and stoic. You feel him studying you, taking in every detail of your person. He seems intent on reading into your every move.
In an even tone, he answers, 'Because youâre not a threat.â His response catches you off guard, ego a little bruised at that, but you canât argue with his logic. If he wanted to, he could have killed you by now, thatâs for sure. You remain silent for a moment, processing his response. âBut that doesnât mean I trust you.â He adds kicking off the beam and taking a step closer to you. He looks down at you tilting his head a little like a bird of prey watching a mouse, waiting for it to give chase and make the hunt more fun. You donât give in to the urge to run inside and hide in your bedroom. Instead, you take a step towards him and look up at him âBecause you need meâ you speak quietly. You can imagine a raised brow under that mask. You smile in triumph; even though he acts tough he needs help and all the intimidating façade was in a desperate attempt to get it.
âI get itâ you continue having him figured out. âYour kid is sick and out there dangers are lurking at every turn. You need a place to stay until she gets better.â You finish voicing your theory on why heâs really here having this conversation with you. His eyes closed in defeat. Gotcha, you smile even more widely at your deduction. âYou can stay, you say as you turn and walk down the three steps of your porch heading towards the gate. âOn one condition, you add stopping in your track. You turn fully towards him and he watches you curiously as if youâd have any power to demand him anything. âNo harm comes to me or my dogâ you say remembering his earlier threats of him offing you both. âDo we have a deal?â itâs not unreasonable, though it irks you that you have to bargain for your safety with a stranger. âDeal.â He says in his usual gruff voice nodding to you in sign of respect for your demand.
âGoodâ you say as you stalk off towards where Bellamy lays muzzled and tied like a prisoner of war. You free her and she jumps at you happy to be in your proximity. She must have been worried sick here all alone. Poor thing. You then go to the gate and slide the too-large bolts meant to keep any unwanted guests outside. Or inside in your case. âAnd to think nothing interesting ever happens around her, right, Bell?â your rhetorical question is met with a bark of agreement.
Warnings: torture, blood, pain, unconscious Ghost and basically kinda useless, really capable YOU persona ;), rushed writing, possible mistakes, reader is pretty neutral so far
P.S. Donât judge the unexplained inconsistency of how a guy like Ghost gets captured, but spy you get to waltz around unbothered, yeah, youâre that good, so good you got plot armour. Besos! Â Â
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI
- the first time you meet it's messy. He's supposed to extract an agent from behind enemy lines but instead he gets captured
-Â you pose as a computer science PhD who is in charge of the enemy base cyber security, when in reality you're there to install a backdoor with remote access.
- you know someone should come to help make your exit, but when no infiltration is reported panic starts to rise in your chest
- you start investigating, searching through the facility trying to find out if something happened.
- you gain access to a part of the facility you don't have clearance for.
- you stumble upon a gruesome scene in one of the holding cell in the underground levels
- you find a man tied to the ceiling, bare feet barely touching the floor, muscles stretching under the tension ready to snap
- a black hood is thrown over his head and he's shirtless, remnants of once black cargo pants hang on his hips.
- he was tortured, for days by looks of it
- you know enough about that to know that he hasn't cracked yet, otherwise he'd be dead not hanging there in the damp cold cell.
- you take your chances and take the hood off
- he groggily turns his head to look down at you, heâs a big that much you can say
- blonde whisps of hair matted to his scalp stained a dark red, pale skin the same blood oozing from small cuts on his cheeks dripping down on his pectorals. From behind black and blue and inflammation two brown eyes scan your face
- 'the wolf walks alone' you quietly utter the code phrase for identity verification
- he watches you like an owl watches a mouse with cautious patience but he gives no indication that he'll answer
- you can't stay there too long; someone might catch you here or someone could report that you never came back from the bathroom break
- you reach for the hood to place it back on the prisonerâs head, knowing that you can't do anything for him and in this state he can't even provide a distraction for you to slip out unnoticed
-as you get closer tiptoeing to reach above his head he grunts, you stop in your tracks making eye contact
- his dried and busted lips start to quiver you wait for a moment giving him a chance to prove you wrong
- 'But the pack's got its back...' he draws out in a deep guttural voice laced with a thick Manchester accent
- phrase matching your own, you get to work hastily finding a way to get him down
- as you unlock the chains wounded around his wrists you try to support his weight which proves impossible
- you barely manage to break his fall turning yourself in a cushion under his massive form
- you huff and try to pull him up ' I can't carry you' you mutter to him. 'You gotta get up, soldier' you try and nudge him, you slip and talk in the familiar British accent
- he stalls, taking in deep breaths trying to surpass the pain and ache, multiple bones broken, muscles tumefied, and skin bearing to many cuts and bruises. Blood covers him like a deathly veil
- he tries and with your help he manages to stand but he can barely walk on his own, he can barely see, he can barely think, having sustained multiple concussions
- with great difficulty you get moving, praying to yourself that the guard might be gone, taking a piss or having a smoke
- your prayers are answered, no one is on the otherwise busy hallways this late at night, many having called it a night going back to their rooms
- as you pass the med bay your quick thinking finds a credible disguise: you steal a lab coat and a doctor's key card, some glasses that make your vision blurry once you put them on, and get the wounded soldier in a wheel chair
-he huffs but you can clearly see the relief overtaking him as he no longer has to stand
-you throw a medical gown over him concealing the dried blood on his bare torso
-once you clean his face a little and bandage his whole head to cover his identity, you grab a few bottles of morphine and a med kit for later and push the wheelchair out the door
- you aim for the underground parking lot, where civiliansâ workers such as your cover, keep their personal cars
-you hope that the sentinels stationed at the gates won't look too closely at your backseat as you carefully push the wounded man in the car
- everything goes smooth from there, the guards wishing you a good night, no questions ask as to your departure from the base
- once you get farther away you start speeding eyeing for any police cars that might stop you or any military vehicle that might chase you
- to your dumb surprise no one follows you the mountain road dark and deserted
- you head to your safehouse where you have stashed money, fake id's, a new disguise and another car.
- once you change everything and make sure that the soldier still breathes in the back of the SUV, after you've administered some first help giving him the relief of morphine, you burn everything down
- the wooden house the other car, everything, nothing can be left behind to be tracked to you or to the MI6, you have taken precautions that borderline OCD, but you know that you have to be through, no detail to small
- once you're back on the road you contact your handler, a tired voice but you can hear the sound of relief as he hears your voice
- he's pleased that everything went smooth, no alarm was triggered, no shot was fired, no chase happened and you even managed to save your would-be saviour, sent specifically to get you out of that den of wolves
- you announce your E.T.A. to the agreed pickup location and you are annoyed to hear you'll have to wait a bit, your nerves are starting to fray, and body to tire
- you don't have the manpower nor the firepower to make a stand in the woods until the heli gets there
-but you do as you're told, as always
- you grab the pistol you keep under the passenger seat and place it in your lap; the heaviness in your lap gives very little reassurance
- but not long passes and you can hear the lovely sound of an Apache helicopter
- in a whirlwind of dust and voices shouting out instructions both you and the soldier are placed in the metal beast's bowls
-you inform the medics of the dosage of morphine you gave to the soldier as they start hooking him to machines that monitor his vital signs
-you don't even know his name and he definitely doesn't know yours as per protocol, and you doubt you'll ever see him again
-you won't even be there when he'll wake up, he'll probably never know of your act of kindness; you could have left him behind but instead you risked your safety for his
- any other agent would've done it, but not you, you couldn't leave one of your own behind
- you still hold your breath, eager to cross the border and get back to HQ where meetings and debriefs will be held, and rapports will be written then redacted
-you expect the compliments at a job well done and the proud pats on the back from your superiors, even though for you that's just a show
- you know you will get a free month at best to recover and then you'll be shipped somewhere else to do it all over again
- it's a lonely life, and full of danger but it makes you sleep better at night knowing you helped soil some plans that could be used to hurt innocents
- once the pilot announces that you crossed the borders you slightly relax on the padded bench, closing your eyes in relief but not allowing yourself to fall asleep yet
- when you feel the heli dipping down towards the tarmac you open your eyes eager to get off the noisy thing and looking forward for some commodities you know wait ready inside the base
- you watch as the soldier gets rolled toward the med bay and you get pulled by a Sargent that informs you, he's there to take you to the commander of the base
- you'd hopped to at least get a few hours of sleep before the rounds of interrogations start, but the higher-ups are hungry for the confirmation of a successful mission
- you trudge behind the Sargent mentally preparing for the onslaught of questions and can't help but wonder what of the wounded soldier
-you subconsciously hope he'll pull through
Next part here.
Husband!Ghost x teacher!reader HC
As I lay in bed, it's 5 am. My alarm is supposed to ring at 7 am. Insomnia hits again. So here we go! Enjoy the product of my foggy brain!
Warnings: fluff, some mentions of torture, curse words, insomnia, nightmares, threats, stalking but it's good natured, some mistakes ( grammar and spelling), interact at your own discretion.
-
When you first met it happened in the nonstop supermarket at the intersection a couple blocks from his apartment. It was 3 am. You were looking for coloured paper, he was looking for Kentucky burbon.
Both of you couldn't sleep for very different reasons. He just got back from a long mission, unable to sleep in his own bed, his own apartment, not as familiar as the base, always bustling with activity. The house was too quiet. Ears straining to hear something. An understimulated brain makes up sounds, that turn to memories, then night terrors. He was out in search of relief, getting so drunk he'd pass out and get some shut-eye.
You on the other hand were finishing up on materials for your little students. And then you needed coloured paper to finish. You huff and puff, and almost curse out but refrain from doing so, looking at your wristwatch you determine you have a few hours until the school day begins. Do you trudge to the intersection, hopping, begging for mercy and coloured paper.
You were the only ones there besides the half-asleep cashier. Your sound of triumph at having found what you're looking for travels to the liquor aisle. Simon's eyes point in your direction, not really sure he actually heard it or hallucinated it.
At the register, you cut him off not even noticing his dark-clad 6'3 body, whiskey bottle in hand. He let out a 'bloody hell', an almost whisper, but your teacher's instinct kicked in. 'Language' you'd said in a chastised voice eyes darting to fix him with a glare, the same you'd do to the children in class. But instead of a meager 'apologies, miss' you get a grunt out of him. You glare some more and turn away, making a barely audible comment directed at him. Naturally, he confronted you on that and you went on and gave him a lecture on how people like him make your work 10 times harder and how they are a bad example to future generations.
Both him and the cashier look at you like you've grown two heads. Honestly, the young guy behind the cash register, thought you might start a fight with the graveyard shift regular wearing a balaclava and buying alcohol well into the hours of morning.
But you didn't. After having said what you had to say you turned around on your heels, slapped the two packets of coloured paper in front of the young man, and then angrily put the money in his outstretched hand. You left in a flurry of murmurs, not even acknowledging the farewell words.
'feisty' he had commented eyes trailing on your departing figure. He chuckled at your interaction. That day he drank himself into unconsciousness thinking of you, and your plush lips spewing insults in his face, eyes alight with passion, face scrunched in barely contained annoyance.
You were a primary school teacher, that much he has gathered from your discourse. He wanted to see you again, and walking around aimlessly he came across the nearest school in the neighborhood. He started searching for your face behind closed windows. He had found you and waited for you, like the stalker that he'd turned into. He hoped you wouldn't call the cops on him.
As you near the gates, two rows of 3rd-year students behind you, loudly talking about how much fun they had with you. You laughed at their happy and springy attitude. They were the best students you've had so far.
And then your eyes met brown ones in a staring match. You'd walked closer starting to threaten him to go before you got him removed from the premises. He smiled under his balaclava, eyes watching in admiration. 'let's grab dinner...' he interrupted you. 'huh?' that was the most articulate answer you could muster. 'I owe you a proper apology. So dinner on me.' He explained in chopped sentences the voice deep and laced with a Manchester accent.
You forgot what you were saying and blushed hard, a cute smile plastered to your face. You were so easily swooned by this stranger and his interest in you. He could have been a killer or kidnapper. You threw caution to the wind. You said yes.
And now, now you were happily married, a couple years into it, actually. The house you bought is small but cosy. The living room table is always full of clippings of coloured paper and half finished materials strewn about. It's home for Simon.
He knows you're busy with schoolwork when he's deployed, so he doesn't worry about you missing him too much. But you do, and he misses you tenfold. So you make something for him, a little couloured origami frame that contains a picture of the two of you, for him to have. He carries it in his chest pocket, but only on base, where he knows it's safe to do so. Being captured with personal things like this in his possession could give the enemy leverage over him. He knows that, he's an expert in interrogation techniques. But he doesn't tell you all this, he knows you're sensitive to violence. So he instead promises that he will keep it close to his heart, all the time. His lucky charm. You're enamoured with him and he basks in your love without shame.
To be continued...
Husband!Ghost x teacher!reader HC - Part 2
Part I
Author's block and tummy aches don't make a great team. Apologies that it took some time to post this. Enjoy!
Warnings: none other than mistakes, it's fluff.
-
Being a primary school teacher is far from easy. From the endless hours spent correcting homework or grading tests to preparing visual materials, your work never ends. Maybe you should listen to your colleagues and double down on the work you put into this. But you canât deny the satisfaction you get from seeing your students get excited in class even when you assign extra work for them over weekends and holidays. But now that you came down with the flu, another downside of working with kids, you couldnât care less about the little punks.
You lay down in bed covered in the thickest of blankets, shivering and barely able to breath. The house is empty and youâve never felt so alone. You wish Simon would walk through the door and snuggle you until everything is better again. He was deployed again, and in the past few months you managed to talk to him for a total of 10 minutes. Heâd call you to check on you and let you know he was fine, but heâd be quick to tell you he canât say more about his whereabouts.
Being married to him brought a hell of a lot more stress than you could have imagined. Not knowing where he was or what he did was eating you on the inside. You worried about your husbandâs well being but you always reminded yourself not to pester him too much. His job is stressful as it is, no need for you to put anymore pressure on him when he was home. You painted an image of his coworkers through his brief comments on what they did on base. The most you heard about was the Scot, Johnny, the young lad had made an impression on Simon. Even though heâd complain that Johnny was a âpain in the arseâ, you couldnât miss the small chuckle he let out whenever he spoke of him. You concluded that this young Scottish man was the closest thing to a friend your husband had.
The clock on the nightstand reads 2AM. The fever and headache are back. Your body hurts everywhere. you stand up readying yourself to leave the warm cocoon of the blanket and go to the kitchen to make some tea and take some more medicine. The otherwise short trip to the other side of the house seems now like an endless maze, itâs dark and you can barely see; you keep one hand on the wall just to be safe if nausea takes the better of you. You take a seat at the dinner table as the kettle starts warming up.
There is a faint click at the front door, so soft that at first you believe you imagined it. But it turns out that it was real, that the sound was a key turning the lock and the knob twisted, and the door opened. You watch everything as in slow motion, your brain too fuzzy with the flu. The massive body dressed in all black walks in illuminated from behind by the street lights, leaving their shoes on the rack. Itâs SimonâŚ. Heâs home but you donât have the energy to move. In the still and quiet atmosphere of the house the bloody kettle lets out a blood curling whistle signalling the water is boiling. Simonâs eyes dart towards the kitchen space, not having noticed you until now.
  âWhatâre you doinâ in the dark, love?â he chuckles coming over to you. Heâs becoming suspicious when you donât make a single move to get up and greet him as you would. He first reaches for the knob to turn off the stove, then he pulls off the balaclava, reaching down to your sited position to kiss your forehead. âYou a bit warmâŚâ he hums and you nod sniffling your runny nose. The rest is a blur, you can faintly remember him pouring the tea for you and handing the medicine. Next thing you know strong arms carry you to the bedroom, the same arms you fall asleep until morning.
Simon is trained in the art of staying still no matter what waiting to get a clear shot of the enemy. But since he met you, that skill has been put to a better use. He had no qualms with becoming your body pillow over night. He just loves the feeling of you pressed so closely to him, head rested on his peck near his beating heart. He would gladly stay there for an eternity is you asked him.
Anything for you. Always, no matter how costly or how small, heâd do anything to see you happy. Thatâs his love language, while he struggles to word it he makes up with his actions. And youâd never trade him for anyone else in the world. The following days are spent with him not leaving your side, pampering and loving you the way youâve never been loved before.
Once you feel better, he asks you to go on a date just like first time he asked you accepted with a school girl giggle. Itâs safe to say youâre in love. The date goes well and you find yourself walking through the park like two hopeless romantics, talking and laughing. He tells you that Soap caught a whiff of him being married to you and now he wonât stop pestering him with questions about you two. âMaybe you should invite him to dinner⌠if you want to.â You smile at him. âMaybeâ he grunts not looking at you. Bringing Johnny to your house, to meet you, it involves risks. But he knows that he can trust the sergeant with his life, so what if his only friend meets his wife. Nothing can go wrong, right?
Bonus:
On base, Ghost approaches Soap in the armoury, making sure no one is in ear shot. He gives the Scot a date, time and the name of a bus station somewhere in suburban Manchester. At Soapâs questioning look Ghost lets out a grunt âWife wants you to come to dinner.â At that Soap grins and accepts politely which prompts the lieutenant to threaten to kill him if he tells anyone about this.
The day when Johnny arrives at your doorstep comes faster than expected. You open the door and greet him, rather warmly which is a stark contrast to your husbandâs harsh demeanour. Opposites do attract, he supposes. At dinner you listen to him talk, about their time on base, stories from missions, nothing too detailed though, and about his own family. He shows you pictures of his sisters and his nieces and nephews. Theyâre cute. You talk about your pupils, sharing stories of your own. Johnny perks up at the knowledge that you are a primary school teacher. He asks if he can have your number in case he needs help with their homework. You gladly give it to him, asking in return to keep an eye on Simon for you. He accepts your deal.
Johnny leaves after a couple of hours, going back to the hotel, even though you insist he can take the couch. But you know that Simon is glaring at him over your shoulder daring him to accept. Once he left you turn towards your husband hugging him and kissing him. You thank him for letting you meet his colleague, and he reminds you that heâd do anything for his lovely wife.
A couple of weeks go by. Youâre in bed with Simon having a heated kissing session when your phone rings. Groaning you pull off from him and grab it. Johnnyâs name lights up the screen and you answer. The conversation is short, something about math and how to use the graphic method to solve a problem. Simon listens intently seeing you smile conspiratorially. When you end the call, he grabs you and pushes you underneath him, trapping you between his body and the bed. âWhy does Johnny have your number?â the low rumble pulls a laugh from you. You know you have no chance to lie to him, heâll see right through. You explain to him that he wanted it so he can ask you whenever he doesnât know how to solve his nephewsâ homework. He watches you not really convinced by your answer. âYou hate talking to parents on the phone. What did you get him do? Spy on me on base and report back to you?â Busted. You laugh and let out an even more unconvincing ânoâ for an answer. He knows you too well.
warnings: violence, blood, mistakes, badly written British speech, I got some inspiration from The Rookie for the undercover part
P.S. I loved Frenchie from The Boys and I just couldnât help myself. Apologies đ
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI
- the fourth time you meet itâs no longer up to chance but up to your discretion
- the last mission scored you one of the most prized rewards in your field: a golden ticket; basically you get permission to retire from your field an choose another with less risk and a larger pay check, a âthank you gift cardâ from the director of the MI6, the King and England herself; itâs a type of mobility many dream of, having checked off the bucket list almost dying in al sorts of crazy situations and the young adventurous attitude toward danger having morphed into a veteran hesitant mentality; you are given plenty of time to decide where you want to go     Â
- a month later you hear rumours of a task force newly formed, one-four-one theyâd call it; cheesy you think not really giving anymore attention; and then the briefing about some partnership between under cover specialised agents and this mystery task force for a top tier mission; you think about it, you havenât had any action in three months now and anymore desk work will drive you up a wall if it continues; you skim over the file on the task force with disinterest, mostly because task forces like these were made up of brutes, eager to pick fights with the enemy and partially because most of the words had been redacted; a few are left out in the open among the sea of black ink: task force, covert mission, high-performance, low collateral casualties, you hum in thought
- what makes you not only volunteer with a manic grin, but actually consider having found the place for your relocation; under the captainâs name John Price, follow three more names; the last two are unknown to you and unimportant, two Sergeants, one John âSoapâ MacTavish, and another Kyle âGazâ Garrick; but the one is impossible to mistake: Lt. Ghost; no first name, no last name; the only person whose file you ever read to bear that name.
- your application for the mission gets accepted almost instantly your reputation proceeding you almost any briefing room now; youâre informed that youâll depart within the hour and other things you need to know about it; nothing really matters as you know youâll get the chance to confront that knobhead that has plagued all your waking hours and some dreams with his obscure choice of words as you departed;
- youâre ready in 30, not really owning much and usually being moved from HQ to HQ, or base, or house within small time frames, which doesnât allow for many personal things anyway; you wait in the shade, dragging from a cigarette, to pass the time, until the heli lands on the heli-pad; you donât get to wait much, the pilot is here a little early; good; you donât like to wait
- the flight is short the base not, far from the MI6 HQ; you pass the time reading a book you took, some title that caught your attention at the library across the street of where you usually buy cigarettes; the story doesnât raise to your expectations, the writing style is mediocre and the characters have as much depth as a glass of water; you contemplate throwing it out the window, but refrain when the pilot announces ETA: less than 5; you hum heart beating a little quicker at the excitement you feel for finally being able to decipher the meaning behind those blood words
- as soon as the heli touches down on tarmac youâre out the door, no words of goodbye to the pilot; heâs used to itâ
- the welcoming committee consists of the two Sergeants, now finally connecting faces to the names you read on the files; theyâre casual in your attitude towards you which is a little invigorating, but they wouldnât drop the âmaâamâ; theyâll get over it; youâre probably a little older than them
- John âSoapâ MacTavish is chatty Scott, whoâs a little to nosy for your liking, but within reasonable limits; youâre not sure if is actually trying to charm the pants off of you or thatâs just how he is usually, throwing compliments left and right, but those have no effect on you and slide right off without much care; he sports an unusual haircut for some of the strictest branches of army thatâs ever existed, SAS you see the patch on his shoulder, and a wacky tattoo representing the Task Force 141 insignia on his huge forearm
- Kyle âGazâ Garrick is almost opposite to âSoapâ, heâs more laid back, observing more than talking, making small comments when the Scottâs cascade off words gets interrupted, chuckling at his comrade poor attempts at complimenting you; heâs not as well built as Soap, but he stands a couple inches taller than you
- âHeâs always like that?â you direct your attention to âGazâ as the two of them walk in front of you like two loyal guard dogs
- âYes maâam, though he getâs easier to ignore with time.â You both chuckle, a huge disservice to the Scott that protests âOiâ followed by a 'What's that suppose tae mean?' in the thickest Scottish accent youâve had the chance to hear
- âYouâre bothersome, bruv.â Soap hits Gazâs shoulder in brotherly fashion and the playful banter begins; you tune them up, and think about finally getting to change out of your civilian clothes and into something blacker, more unflattering and less eye catching than the light blue skinny jeans that have managed to flare out more than one whistle as you passed; arseholes and jar-heads come to the forefront of your mind
- youâre led first to your room and left there with the promise that one of them, most likely Soap, cause he already volunteered to do it, will come collect you for the briefing before supper
- youâre left alone to install, unpack, get changed and unwind from the irksome travel and the fact that you are being watched like deer in the headlights, fresh faces always attract the interest of the crowd in places like this
- the walk towards the briefing room is short but Soap manages to pour so many words in that interval that youâre almost sure heâs going to run out; once inside Soapâs chatter dies down and you make eye contact with the captain
- John Price gives off the energy of a strong father figure, his facial hair adding to his age; he not much older than you but the stress of leadership is visible on his face, eyes winged with crowâs feet; he gives a tight-lipped smile and a curt nod as you and the sergeant enter; he waits for Gaz to join you before he begins the briefing
-Â Â as for the hulking beast of a man, clad in black, brown eyes surrounded by black army issued face paint and hidden behind that grotesque mask of his, oh no, you havenât miss him, just ignored him; you felt his gaze burning your skin, searching for eye contact, which you vehemently denied; suffer just like I did, bloke
- Gaz comes in and is witness to the unthinkable; you the new face, pretty one might say without lying, so much different from these hardened man, more in common with the civvies than them, go and sit right next to Ghost, no space left in between the two of you; and whatâs even crazier, you donât acknowledge him; Soap and Gaz share a look; the captain seems amused by your actions and the sergeants confusion; no one, absolutely no-fucking-body ever sat next to Ghost, willingly and without starring dumbly and frightened at him; no one, never
- you take your seat, and place your notebook and pen neatly in front of you, facing the whiteboard as if nothing out of the ordinary had happened; the two chaps sit down slowly, eyes trained on you half expecting you to realize your mistake and jump out of the chair; but you surprise them once again when you finally decide to meet the glare directed at you head on and to crack a smirk at the lieutenant
- their minds are blown, mouth open in disbelief, they glance at one another; their minds are set, you get labelled as the agent who clearly lost their mind somewhere in some gone wrong mission; theyâll bombard you with questions later
- as for Ghost, heâs as still as puma waiting to spring to attack; if looks could kill, youâd be disintegrated to the last atom; youâre as unbothered as a new born foal, unaware of its impending doom
- Price clears his voice, catching your attention and diminishing the tension that clouds around the semicircle table
- he makes an introduction for you, stating the reason youâre here, and what youâre specialized in: undercover espionage; you give a nod to all the men
- on a laptop in the furthermost side of the table a connection is established and a blonde American woman greets you; sheâs CIA, their handler and yours for the upcoming mission; you have no qualms to work with the other most prominent intelligence agency, the one from over the pond, as long as you get to do your job as you know best; you feel the respect the men have for her and the fondness in the captainâs eyes once they greet each other; theyâre old friends, that much you can tell  Â
- you decide youâll respect Kate Laswell and trust her, as much as one can trust when one builds their carrier on lying to others and distrusting everyone; sheâs pleasant so far, familiar with the men, and cuts straight to the chase just how you like it
- the target is one drug overlord who decided to take things up a notch and deal in arms with terrorists; the goal: disrupt the block-chain and cut the heads off the snakes; simple enough nothing that you havenât tackled before
- youâre given green light to propose how to approach and infiltrate this business; you explain that you have to get quite high in their hierarchy if you want a shot at real damage; you skim over the information available on his deals: fentanyl, the most recent drug thatâs flooded the streets; you know how to âcookâ it from a previous cartel you took down; youâll enter as just that âa cookerâ, but youâll also need a bodyguard to make yourself seem more important, but more on that later; you point out the name of the current one, the first target
- if you manage to get that person out of the game, youâll have a chance to fill that spot, maybe the most important chain link in the whole operation
- you already have in mind the persona youâll assume, a chemistry drop-out that took to cooking drugs; you know that your skills far surpass the targetâs and you know how to cook a purer form of fentanyl; as for your bodyguardsâ: a crook; fresh out of prison on the lookout for work that pays well; one with knowledge of guns and explosives, surely to pique the terrorist cellâs interest in their skill
- Soap offers for the role, impressed so far with your knowledge and method of operating; youâre through, and heâd like to learn more on infiltration; you agree hearing heâs got what it takes to be convincing enough
- Laswell, Price and Gaz all hum in agreement at your plan waiting to hear their part in it; simple: Laswell can help with credentials and all the raw materials youâll need to pull this off; Gaz, the captain and Ghost will be your back up, providing fire power
- the first target is easy to take down: heâs a middle-aged creep, who likes pretty young women and heavy drinks, parties like heâs twenty not fifty something; they already have info on his preferred hotspots; youâll go in lure him out for the men to bag him and make him disappear
- everyone agrees so far adding small details here and there; itâs only your first few hours or so and every single one understands why youâre held in so high regard; itâs all warranted
- Ghost is the only one who hasnât said anything, allowing you to direct the briefing, already know youâre more than capable and have far more experience with such delicate planning
- once everything is settled you start planning out the preparations youâll need to make beforehand; Soap will train under your supervision; you point out he already looks the part, a delinquent; the comment lacks any trace of ill intent, but everyone canât help but chuckle at his huff of indignation followed by â âM notâ; you sweeten the deal praising his charming nature and easy-going attitude; he smiles at that but itâs short lived by your next comment
- âYou'll do fine as long as you let me do the talking. I doubt you calling anyone 'bonnie lass' will get you very far.â That gets everyone to let out a chuckle, everyone knowing Soaps anticks; even Ghost lets out a grunt reminiscent of a laugh; the bruised ego Scott follows up with a âPish offâ thatâs met with laughter from you; you let the insult roll off in good humour
- the briefing ends, Laswell disconnects, and the rest of you stand up to make your way to the mess hall in time for dinner; Price holds you back, and you obey; you talk a little, mostly him, praises fly at you, for good planning, attention to details and overall how well you managed to fit in with them in such a short time; you thank him, having heard this all the time; you try, really hard, to be pliant and easy to work with; no need to be a hard-ass; youâre all on the same side
- he agrees with your well-spoken point of view; but he canât help but ask whatâs the deal with you and Ghost
- âWorked together before. We get along well.â Your answer seems to put at ease some of his worries about the teams chemistry; with that out of the way he leads you to the mess hall where he gets you to sit with them at the table; you can feel everyone elseâs eyes on you as the new face of the 141âs; but you ignore them chatting with âyourâ team; you kind of like the sound of that; you can quite imagine working along side them for the rest of your carrier, however short, as you know the death rates among undercover agents grow the further they go; very few get to retire in one piece, actually you can count them on one hand, at least the ones they tell you about at the academy
Previous part here.
Next part here.