Agent Phil Coulson (
reasonability) wrote2014-08-03 07:08 pm
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Why is it always the Southwest? Is there something about Arizona and New Mexico that just attracts the bizarre? If it's not the Southwest, it's New York, and if it's not New York, it's not in America. Ridiculous.
Coulson makes a note to set someone on studying that, if they ever have time.
The three black SUVs turn off the road where the desert stretches flat. They're getting closer to the coordinates given to them by the Martian (Martian) scientist. And that's the reason Coulson won't complain too hard about the location: having the coordinates, knowing where the alien is going to appear, is a lot better than the alternative.
Reinforced tires bounce over scrub, swerving to avoid the worst of the cacti. The heat is blasting, though it's not even into the worst of summer. Heat shimmers along the road they've left. The air conditioning is on full blast.
May starts braking the car. She insisted on being the one to drive Coulson, and he didn't fight that hard. The other two, he sees, swerve out to either direction and stop, pointed inward to, theoretically, the coordinate point.
"It's about twenty meters ahead," she tells Coulson, glancing back. He sees it; scramble up the slope, and there's the entrance to a box canyon. Presumably the cave is further back.
Coulson nods. "Time?"
"Half an hour."
There's not really any traffic along the long, empty highway out here, but Coulson didn't want to take any chances.
He pulls himself out of the seat.
The heat hits him like a sledgehammer, but he doesn't flinch. Doesn't even take off the suit jacket. He takes a drink of water, and then leaves the SUV, May and a handful of others nearby. He didn't take most of his team this time. He's got to spread out his most precious resources.
A short, winding walk leads them in to where he can see the cave. He holds up a hand, stopping the operatives there. A couple of them scatter to cover, nearby. May moves a little ahead of him. He lets her; he's come to the point in his life where his life is more important than the lives of those around him. Which, honestly, is a situation he kind of loathes.
He checks his watch again.
Coulson makes a note to set someone on studying that, if they ever have time.
The three black SUVs turn off the road where the desert stretches flat. They're getting closer to the coordinates given to them by the Martian (Martian) scientist. And that's the reason Coulson won't complain too hard about the location: having the coordinates, knowing where the alien is going to appear, is a lot better than the alternative.
Reinforced tires bounce over scrub, swerving to avoid the worst of the cacti. The heat is blasting, though it's not even into the worst of summer. Heat shimmers along the road they've left. The air conditioning is on full blast.
May starts braking the car. She insisted on being the one to drive Coulson, and he didn't fight that hard. The other two, he sees, swerve out to either direction and stop, pointed inward to, theoretically, the coordinate point.
"It's about twenty meters ahead," she tells Coulson, glancing back. He sees it; scramble up the slope, and there's the entrance to a box canyon. Presumably the cave is further back.
Coulson nods. "Time?"
"Half an hour."
There's not really any traffic along the long, empty highway out here, but Coulson didn't want to take any chances.
He pulls himself out of the seat.
The heat hits him like a sledgehammer, but he doesn't flinch. Doesn't even take off the suit jacket. He takes a drink of water, and then leaves the SUV, May and a handful of others nearby. He didn't take most of his team this time. He's got to spread out his most precious resources.
A short, winding walk leads them in to where he can see the cave. He holds up a hand, stopping the operatives there. A couple of them scatter to cover, nearby. May moves a little ahead of him. He lets her; he's come to the point in his life where his life is more important than the lives of those around him. Which, honestly, is a situation he kind of loathes.
He checks his watch again.
no subject
She looks down, grins, bites her lip. (It's not the chocolate. As much as she'd like to think that.)
"Well, it's important for me to know. With the Director, I would feel the need to maintain a certain decorum. But with Phil..." She gives a little half shrug, looks back at him. "The possibilities are endless."
no subject
Such a busybody, that Phil.
no subject
"And what would he have to say about me, I wonder?"
no subject
He's an aging guy with not much hair and a face that disappears into a crowd. She's a princess.
The whistle of the kettle interrupts his almost-words. He exhales, and glances away, reaching to the hot water.
What he's thinking is too serious for good flirtation. He gropes for something a little lighter.
"Well, you know, the Director only wants one thing." He pours, carefully. "He wants Earth safe."
Nope, that wasn't lighter.
no subject
"The Director and I feel the same about many things, I know that much. He is largely why I am still here." She doesn't pull back as he fills the mugs with steaming hot water. "But Phil... He is a mystery to me, and I confess. I love a good mystery."
no subject
Yeah, he's got it bad.
"I'm not that complicated," he says. "Might not be too interesting, once you get down to it." Little bit of a smile, holding her gaze - a real smile, weirdly, because he finds he's not actually that nervous for her to find out who he is; hell, that's the least complicated part of this whole complicated endeavor - then he pulls back and goes for the table, slides into a seat.
no subject
Where Dejah is from, very few people dare to touch her. Casual contact is not a thing that happens to the Jeddak of Helium. Her attendants help her in and out of her clothes, brush her hair, and bring her her meals. But they do not ever touch her. Her admiral and best friend sometimes places his right hand on her left shoulder, and that's as close as she gets to a hug. Well, except from her father, and that only happens on rare occasions.
His hand is not soft, but it is warm. For the second time that day, bare skin meets bare skin and she cannot help the goosebumps that flare up her arm. Maybe he doesn't see it. And then again, maybe the moon will float down and kiss her cheek before bedtime. She glances down to the mug, grinning as she follows him to the table, a flush of color across her cheeks.
"You are many things, Phil. Simple is not one of them." She settles across from him, and finally dares to lift her gaze. Her eyes are bright, despite the quiet, measured quality of her words. "As much as I am a woman of reason, of science and intellect, there are times when I must trust my instincts. I've found, if I follow where they lead me? Inevitably, good fortune awaits me at the end of the day."