Mohinder Suresh (
seekevolution) wrote2016-07-12 01:08 pm
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If there was one thing that Mohinder Suresh was good at, it was getting into trouble. He did it to himself, falling into patterns that placed him in dangerous situations and in league with dangerous people. Yes, he always meant well, chasing after research that would save mankind from and for itself, but the personal toll to himself and those around him tended to be extremely high. This time was no different. A distraction and a slip of a normally very careful hand left a jab through a double layered glove that had him throwing down his tools and heading to the sink to see if he had gotten through the skin. He had only torn off the latex when the first wave of dizziness hit.
Mohinder woke up over an hour later, sweat soaked and shivering on the floor of the lab. Nothing felt broken and for a little while, he forgot what had happened. He sat up slowly, pushed the hair back from his eyes, and glanced down at one blue hand and one skin-coloured palm. Memory rushed back to him and he leaped to his feet to call the company whose drug it was that he was testing and perfecting. There was just a dial tone and a friendly voice telling him that the number had been disconnected. He glanced up and the little red light that usually signaled he was being taped (standard procedure in this lab) was off. The door was unlocked and he shivered again, feeling something move through him.
He should be dead. The catalyst in the drug was enough to kill a man twice his size, the purest form of the component that would make the medicine work against the virus affecting evolved humans. No, he shouldn’t just be dead. He should have exploded all over these walls…and he did not.
The cell phone in his pocket didn’t have reception until he stepped, shaking, into the loading dock. He called the only person he knew might be able to help him. He hadn’t seen Bruce Banner in years. He’d become a consultant for the Avengers in the time since doing humanitarian work in Calcutta, or so the internet said, a frequent guest of Tony Stark of all people. Mohinder didn’t actually have Bruce’s number so he just called the Stark Relief Foundation, where Banner was supposed to be working. It took an hour for him to track down his old acquaintance from his time volunteering with Banner in the slums of Indian. “Doctor Banner? I don’t know if you remember me… My name is Mohinder Suresh. I interned briefly with you overseas?”
Mohinder woke up over an hour later, sweat soaked and shivering on the floor of the lab. Nothing felt broken and for a little while, he forgot what had happened. He sat up slowly, pushed the hair back from his eyes, and glanced down at one blue hand and one skin-coloured palm. Memory rushed back to him and he leaped to his feet to call the company whose drug it was that he was testing and perfecting. There was just a dial tone and a friendly voice telling him that the number had been disconnected. He glanced up and the little red light that usually signaled he was being taped (standard procedure in this lab) was off. The door was unlocked and he shivered again, feeling something move through him.
He should be dead. The catalyst in the drug was enough to kill a man twice his size, the purest form of the component that would make the medicine work against the virus affecting evolved humans. No, he shouldn’t just be dead. He should have exploded all over these walls…and he did not.
The cell phone in his pocket didn’t have reception until he stepped, shaking, into the loading dock. He called the only person he knew might be able to help him. He hadn’t seen Bruce Banner in years. He’d become a consultant for the Avengers in the time since doing humanitarian work in Calcutta, or so the internet said, a frequent guest of Tony Stark of all people. Mohinder didn’t actually have Bruce’s number so he just called the Stark Relief Foundation, where Banner was supposed to be working. It took an hour for him to track down his old acquaintance from his time volunteering with Banner in the slums of Indian. “Doctor Banner? I don’t know if you remember me… My name is Mohinder Suresh. I interned briefly with you overseas?”
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His voice softened, a hand gesturing slightly towards Mohinder. "You can't lose me. I don't want to go into details, so let's leave it at that. We need to understand something of what's happening here, and if you're alone, it gives them all that much more chance to capture you."
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People. Swimming on the ceiling.
"But you should come with me. I might need an anchor. My friends have long since left and I have no one to remind me of what i once was." He was already collecting his things. He bent to hand Bruce his brief case back.
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"Let me pack a bag and I'll be going with you." And leave a note for Tony because he had a feeling the other man would have severe issues if he was suddenly gone after an attack by HYDRA.
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Well yeah he'd have severe issues! Banner came to visit, had a party, left a mess and didn't even wait for him to get back?! Rude. That note would maybe keep the angry voice mails from Bruce's Stark Relief Fund phone down to a minimum. Maybe.
Bruce was given something of a shocked look from Mohinder. He was pretty sure that he could convince Bruce to stay but he found that he didn't want to. He needed some sort of reminder here that he was still human despite his lack of some vital signs and the addition and over abundance of others.
"All right. I won't leave without you," he promised, bending for a moment to gather up what had been dropped. He made sure that his laptop had been put away and that he took extra notebooks from one of the desks.
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You better keep that promise, Bruce thought briefly to himself, but nodded as he quickly left to do exactly what he said. He was used to living out of a single bag or nothing at all, so it almost felt like a luxury to take just a few minutes to gather some things together, almost like he was packing for a vacation (almost). Leaving a note for Tony was simple as well, though he tried not to think on the wording too long:
Tony,
An old friend needed help. Will return when able. Sorry about the blood stains. Thank you for getting the Legion to clean up. Don't worry about me.
He read it again and ended up just shaking his head, leaving it where he was fairly sure Tony would spot it before he returned to his lab, half expecting to not find Mohinder there.
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When Bruce came in, he let out a breath he had been holding and stood.
"Thank you for not telling him where we're going," Mohinder said as if he knew the contents of the hastily scratched letter. "Or for mentioning my name. He should not be in danger. They'll come after me. I've taken the liberty of erasing the data you collected on me too." No reason letting it potentially fall into the wrong hands. "We shouldn't take a cab. The subway is much faster and more anonymous. Do you have everything?"
He almost sounded cheerful.
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He wasn't fond of the subway, so crowded, but this was more about Mohinder so he ended up just nodding. "Subway is fine," he lied easily.
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He couldn't telepathically bond with the beast in Bruce's head either. He just felt him stirring, like a fly caught on his web.
Mohinder gave Bruce a tight smile. "You're under no obligation to stay with me. If it gets too troublesome, I would understand if you returned to your own work." His eyes flashed like a cat's in low light before he turned to bring up the elevator and head down to street level.
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Still, he chose to say nothing on it. "I told you, I'm coming with you, or I wouldn't still be here." He stepped up beside the other, adjusting the shoulder strap to his bag. Maybe it was insane to be doing this at all, given that it could go very poorly very quickly, but the idea of sending Mohinder out alone to deal with this would never have settled well on his conscience.
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Without thinking, or lifting his arm as was customary to call a cab, Mohinder called the nearest one over with a glance and after it pulled up, tha passenger riding inside of it eased out of the back seat and Mohinder took his place. Bruce could gawk or follow. It didn't matter. Mohinder was already giving directions to the lab.
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His fingers tightened over the handle of the briefcase he didn't allow out of his grip, staring down at the dull surface. A part of him wondered if they would find anything at all in the lab, or even if the lab remained. Whatever Mohinder had gotten himself messed into, possibly HYDRA the more Bruce thought on it, the more obvious it became that they would not allow much to slip through their fingers. Perhaps they had no idea just what their little experiment would become in his full power, strong enough to resist them.
But Bruce knew how ruthless HYDRA could be when they wanted something. It was what he chewed on during the cab ride, remaining silent in a mix of thought and displeasure.
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The back door, thick metal, of what looked like an Indy record shop with a complicated keypad stood in the way of their progress. There were dumpsters to flanked it, and Mohinder used one to climb up and grab a folding fire escape ladder that hung just above it. He pulled it down for Bruce and slipped up to the third floor. A window there had a similar keypad and into this one, Mohinder punched a code. The window flung itself open, the brick around it slipping up as well to provide a door for them.
"It's one of the side entry ways," he said. He hadn't known about it until he felt it in his fingers upon passing one of the images actually. He didn't fill Bruce in on that either.
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He followed Mohinder up the complicated way up, a brow raising at the surprising entrance, but he said nothing about it. Nothing about this felt right. Surely there were eyes on this building, waiting for Mohinder to return. Nervously he glanced around, studying the alley and all behind them, but it was silent. His gaze drifted to the rooftops but saw no figures there, either. That didn't mean they weren't being watched. "We can't stay for long," he said quietly before he ducked inside, eyes peering into the gloom.
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"Says the man who requested to come with," Mohinder teased as if all of this was just a jaunt to the grocery store or the pharmacy and they weren't letting themselves into a dangerous underground lab that allowed or coerced Mohinder into killing himself while making him immortal.
Once inside, the facility played exactly as one might suspect. Mohinder found the lights (well no, he touched a wall and the lights came on, but whatever) and cold, white hallways laid out in a grid of mazes in front of them. None of the doors were labeled and all had security pads next to them but Mohinder knew the way. Or at least he walked straight ahead and expected Bruce to follow.
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He did follow Mohinder, listening carefully, knowing they might not be alone. Slow, deep breathes took in any faint lingering scent, trying to make sure not to be too obvious about the motion from long practice. Their steps echoed too loudly in the otherwise silent lab, which made him watch the floor. "...they would have come back to look for you," he whispered on a breath.
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"More accurately, they ought to have had someone here waiting and they did not. I wandered the halls long enough for anyone to come for me. The electricity had been disconnected. There were only emergency lighting by the exits."
A very tiny smile lit upon his face as he slowed down for Bruce and took his wrist somewhat startlingly. He was trying to regulate his heartbeat from outside his body. Hopefully that thunk-thunk-thunk would calm itself down to a reasonable seventy-ish beats per minute.
"But no one is here. Everyone left me. Something must be wrong." He released Bruce's wrist after that and pushed open the door to the stairwell. It was pitch black so Mohinder used his phone for light.
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That didn't mean he liked it, though.
Why would they just up and leave all of this? Something wasn't fully adding up, and it settled badly with him more nad more with each passing second. "...What if they found what they wanted, while you were down?" Bruce murmured softly, his eyes slowly adjusting to the single light source as he strained to see or hear anything down the stairwell. "What was down here?"
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Could he have been so blind? Nothing Bruce said struck him as false. He had been slated to die and had not. They left him here because they did not believe he would wake up. No wonder they had come for him. “Labs. Test subjects. Video recording devices,” Mohinder said to answer Bruce’s question. He could feel the central hub of nerve endings for every electronic device. It was as if they throbbed against the walls, as if they had a pulse.
That Bruce removed himself from Mohinder’s touch did not bother the Indian. He remembered the mousey doctor and his displeasure of actually being physically close to anyone. Strange for a healer. Understandable now that he knew what Banner was about.
They paused on the stairs, but only because Mohinder stopped, turning when he was two steps below Bruce and putting himself physically lower than the older man.
“I’m not reading your thoughts,” he said abruptly. “I’m reading your scent and your breath and your skin. I know about your father. It would be best if we do not touch again.” It was as if Bruce’s skin was made of scales like a moth’s wings and touching them made those scales rub off on his fingertips.
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When Mohinder suddenly stopped and turned, and said those words of any other, Bruce felt a surge of shame and anger that left his teeth gritting and even in the darkness of the stairwell, there was a flicker of green in his eyes. "What did I say?" He said low, taking a breath in through his nose that was loud in the small space. "Nothing about my scent or breath or skin would give away that." His words were that tight, over-enunciated type of real anger, and it would have shown on his face if there was more light.
Bruce's tone turned darker and more firm that Mohinder had ever heard it before out of the doctor. "You need to learn to control this and more importantly, control your mouth. We're in a dangerous situation where someone could be listening in - you don't say those sorts of things but even more so, you don't know what those words could be doing to the other person." As much of a hint as he was giving Mohinder on that particular edge.
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Once Bruce was back to trying to be stern, to trying to set the world back together somehow that didn't reflect the way that Mohinder now saw it, the Indian allowed him to finish his scolding. Mohinder's eyes shone in the dark. It wasn't at all like a cat's reflective gaze, it was as if there was a light source behind the lens, inside of his skull. He didn't blink of breathe while Bruce told him off. He just tilted his head to the side.
"I need you to know what I know," he started simply. "If you're to stay with me through this, I need you to understand. You're wrong about everything, Doctor. What happens to you imprints on your skin in a physical way. It changes how you smell. You leave pieces and clues on everything you touch and if anyone touches you-- You must start to believe the things I tell you. Our minds don't connect. That's the one beautiful thing about this. Everything else connects. I didn't get into the heads of those people back at the Tower, you see? I whispered a suggestion into the air and that suggestion, my breath, touched them. I think I can see and feel and touch everything if I really try..."
He turned to start back down the steps.
"But I can't control the information pinging off of my skin when you're nearby. I am truly sorry. I should never have involved you." Through it all, no matter what he knew, at least Mohinder didn't judge... Even if Bruce was judging him pretty heavily. "Perhaps you should wait here. I'll get the information alone."
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"Be careful," Bruce finally said, more gentle, more friend-to-friend in the lines of his body and softness of his voice. "This... no matter what it does to function... is going to lead you down a dangerous path." From someone painfully experienced in what it was like to live on that path, by their own hand. "Let's get through this-" without touching any further, his mind added, "-and deal with what we find. I began this with you and I'm not going to leave you to finish it alone." That much he could do, and to point Mohinder towards the only person he knew who might be able to help.
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In the darkness of the stairwell, Mohinder seemed to shimmer. He led Bruce down and down and down into the bowels of the city itself, five stories and then eight and finally ten before he pushed open the door. Climbing back up all of those stairs was going to be a nightmare.
Mohinder paused and tested the air. "There are dead people here. Thirteen. Gunshot wounds to the head." He was breathing more rapidly now. They would avoid that room.
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"Move carefully," Bruce only breathed, not sure what might be listening to them. The light from Mohinder's phone was barely enough to make out the hall that they ended staring down behind the door, but Bruce could see the outline of doors that meant they were somewhere more important.
Every inch of him said that going back, getting the others, was the logical move. More safety in numbers, go through this lab like they had others they had found, scour all information that could be obtained and use it to keep fighting, but there was the horrible feeling they had gone too far and more so, that Mohinder wouldn't feel the need to bother in an over confidence of these new abilities.
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Mohinder didn't want to involve anyone else. He felt badly enough about Bruce. He could have done this on his own, probably. Once he had gotten over the fact that he had essentially died, at least. Mohinder understood the physical changes a little better now. He hasn't died, he had just evolved. And not the way human's had to allow for them to develop fantastic strengths and abilities, but he had literally been physically evolved to the next stage of life for humanity.
This form would make amazing soldiers without a corrupted super soldier serum. He was strong. He was smarter. He was more agile. He could see in the dark. He could almost force his will on others. He didn't have to breathe and his heart didn't beat. He could taste and smell the future and the past. Unscrupulous people might be dangerous to the safety of the entire world if presented to them.
He wasn't sure how to move carefully so he simply gripped the door and pushed it inward. The electronic lock holding it closed broke under the pressure and a red glow spilled out. The room was empty and most of the monitors dark save for the bank focused on the labs.
Many screens showed blood and carnage. Mohinder's lab looked as he had left it. And the lab he had avoided was stacked with bodies. No. Body parts. Evidently hydra had simply shoved the remains of their kills in one room and locked them in--
Mohinder swallowed. Those parts... They were still moving. Each had been shot in the head and dismembered and they were still moving!
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They could be simply not dead, and he had to check. A quick breath in, tight in his chest, before he stepped forward. "Check them," he said roughly. "We need to make sure they're- they're not simply badly hurt. Be ready if they- do anything." If they should try and attack. If they were like Mohinder. If... whatever. They had no idea.
He very slowly started to move forward, eyes wide and pupils large in the low hellish light, looking carefully over the first body he came across as he started to kneel down, prepared for anything.
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