fixedpointintime: (Default)
fixedpointintime ([personal profile] fixedpointintime) wrote in [community profile] alphalogs2017-03-04 09:55 pm

operation: oh, yeah, it totally happened

WHO: Jack Harkness, Clint Barton, Natasha Romanoff, and open options coming
WHAT: the three watch news of the riot be suppressed, and do something about it
WHEN: daycycle 127 & 128
WHERE: the clubhouse, the Teela show, other places

Jack watches, waits, expecting to see something about the riot. Nothing comes. So he continues to wait. He asks around, vague enough to keep himself off the radar. He hopes. No one is talking about it. Not really. He waits through two days of nothing, and then he reaches out. To Clint and Natasha. Which... all right, they could blow him off, they have no reason not to. They don't, though. They meet with him, listen to his idea, and are actually game. Which is one of the best silver linings Jack's had in a while.

They work out a rough plan, take the next day to perfect it, and then it's go time. Ready or not, they need to move. Every day that passes, the riot gets closer to being something no one will care about, the violence against them gets closer to being something no one will care about.

It's a pretty solid plan, he thinks. Well, it's the best they can come up with, and it might actually work.

OPEN OPTION

On Daycycle 128, Jack is to the hospital after he collapses during the interview with Clint and Natasha. When his doctors insist on knowing what's happened to him, he will begrudgingly admit that the injuries he sustained during the riot turned out to be more than he could handle and he was too embarrassed to seek treatment. His doctors patch him up, and he's sure that some version of his story is being relayed to Friend Computer. He just hopes he's thought of every angle, that it holds water, and that he'll be able to keep CLint and Natasha from getting into trouble if it doesn't.

From about 1400 on, he's given a positive prognosis and cleared to be able to receive visitors. Given that most of the Specials have no idea that he did this all to himself, he's prepared to field some concerned friends and already thinking of ways to assure them that he's all right. Morgana in particular. Part of him wishes he could have told her, but a much larger part knows she's safer not knowing. He still hates to do it to her. She deserves a better friend than him. Clint and Natasha may stop by. It was supposed to be a surprise to them, too, after all.

[[OOC: If you have any questions about what went down, as it's still being written out, feel free to ask them here and I will get right on that. Also, if your character would come to visit Jack, please let me know what time they would get there so I can figure out the timeline. Thanks!]]
pretendtoneedme: (you think you can do better?)

[personal profile] pretendtoneedme 2017-03-12 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
There’s another eyerolling at Jack’s quip, but by now Clint’s got the idea that although a lot of that flirtatiousness is a real, genuine part of Jack’s personality, it’s also somewhat of a cover for other things. What those things are, he’s not sure yet, but in the long run it doesn’t matter: Jack wants out of here as badly as they do, and is willing to work to achieve that goal. He lets the comment go by without saying anything, judging those bruises and wondering how often Jack had thrown himself in front of pipes in that riot. Score another point for him: he was willing to take the blows for other people. That or he’s just really bad at getting out of the way of an attack, but that didn’t fit with what Clint himself had witnessed. He’s judging the bruises with a professional eye, pulling up his memories of Jack from the fight, short as they were, and placing him in the layout of the commissary in comparison to the cameras in the area. “Were you buried under anyone in the fight, or were you always visible?” If there was a point, even a short one, where Jack hadn’t been seen, they could take advantage of it. “And I’m not gonna hit you in the face with this - cheekbone’s gonna be the best place for that, you’ll still be able to talk and it bruises really spectacularly. But I can punch you, elbow you, or knee you there. A baton’s just too risky on a bone that fragile.”
pretendtoneedme: (preparing to shoot)

[personal profile] pretendtoneedme 2017-03-14 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
“Too many things can go wrong with kidneys - do you still have a spleen, or an appendix? The medical team here can probably fix anything wrong, but I’d rather not risk it if we can help it.” This is going to be a delicate job, and Clint’s taking a long moment to study the bruises on Jack’s back, the direction they’re angled, the depth they reached. “You’re really lucky you didn’t crack the tenth thoracic vertebra, you know that? One of those assholes may’ve hit your pancreas, too. Hope you made them pay.”

Nodding at Jack’s suggestion about locations and degree of injury, Clint starts to raise the baton for the first hit - before he’s interrupted by Jack’s question. There’s a moment of quiet as Clint process that rather odd question before just going for the blunt answer. “No. Look, you’re doing it for all of us here, right? You’re trying to keep everyone safe. If you get hurt, you get hurt, and if getting hurt means that things’re better for someone else, you’ll do it. Right? It’s better to get me to do it than someone who’s not used to this kind of thing. Long as it’s not some kind of fetish thing, it’s no problem. Ready?”
pretendtoneedme: (shield uniform)

[personal profile] pretendtoneedme 2017-03-14 05:41 am (UTC)(link)
That opening definitely wasn’t intentional as Jack would likely figure out by Clint raising his off hand to smack his forehead. He should’ve guessed, he really should have. But too late now, and anyway it doesn’t matter. Maybe he should be nervous about this, but Clint’s been an agent too long to not recognize the benefits that a little playing to expectations brings with it. If people underestimate the Specials - or just have the wrong view of them entirely, given how many of them have some form of martial training or military-type history - it’s all for the best. Distract them, throw them off the scent.

“All right, brace up.” Because he’s not going to be pulling his swings too much. Hopefully Jack will grab onto something, because Clint doesn’t hesitate to bring his baton in in a fast arc to hit the first of the bruises, with the exact angle and direction the faded pattern reveals to him. He doesn’t leave much time between hits either, since it often hurts more (or at least feels like it does) if the pain fades away before getting started again, rather than just blurring into one whole. He resets his feet, angles his hand a different direction, and swings for the next bruise.