an illustration I made for my fic that I'm writing. This one is based on a scene from the first chapter in Marked
sorry leon, my narrative required enrichment

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
AnasAbdin
noise dept.
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
No title available
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Product Placement
occasionally subtle

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
YOU ARE THE REASON
almost home

No title available
NASA

roma★
taylor price
RMH
Peter Solarz
i don't do bad sauce passes
d e v o n
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Belgium
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Poland
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Belgium

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
@lalachuga
an illustration I made for my fic that I'm writing. This one is based on a scene from the first chapter in Marked
sorry leon, my narrative required enrichment
Marked
Forced deeper into the abandoned warehouse complex, Chris and Leon race against blood loss, dwindling time, and a hunter who's right behind them. This is Chapter 3 of 6 ≪ ◦ Previous Chapter ❖ Next Chapter ... ✎ ... ◦ ≫ ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ MARKED
A routine undercover operation turns into a nightmare when Leon Kennedy becomes the target of a professional assassin.
Trapped in a sprawling warehouse complex with a sniper on their trail, Chris Redfield must keep Leon alive long enough for help to arrive.
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
Chapter Three For several seconds after Jill's announcement, neither of them moved. The building seemed to grow quieter around them. Not actually quieter; Chris could still hear the distant groan of old steel settling somewhere overhead. Water continued dripping from a broken pipe deeper inside the building. Wind rattled loose sheet metal on the roof. But now every sound carried a different meaning because the threat wasn't hundreds of yards away anymore; it was somewhere nearby. Chris checked on the bandage he'd secured across Leon's chest and shoulder. Blood had already begun to soak through the center. Not enough to panic over, but enough to annoy him, enough to remind him that every minute they spent sitting still was another minute he was losing blood. Leon’s eyes were closed. "Stay awake." Chris barked. No response. "Leon." One tired blue eye opened.
"I'm awake..." The eye closed again. Chris grabbed his shoulder, careful not to jar him.
"Leon."
"I'm awake." He responded with both eyes open this time before closing them again. The answer came slower this time, but stronger. Chris knew how bad the situation was. He couldn't pretend not to notice the slight tremble in Leon's body and the goosebumps forming on his skin. Beads of sweat were starting to collect near his temples. He knew the effects of blood loss well and knew he was probably getting cold but was too stubborn to admit it. Chris took off his own coat and laid it across Leon's shoulders as he thought of a plan. They were unprotected and out in the open. If Leon had any chance of surviving, they needed to find cover, and fast. Chris stood, pistol at the ready and sweeping around them. “We need to move.” Leon’s expression tightened. Not because he disagreed, but because he knew Chris was right.
"Yeah, just… give me a second…" The request came out softly. Some of the tension eased from Chris’s features. His emotions clashed with every instinct he possessed. He wanted to give him ten minutes. An hour. A medical team. A trauma surgeon. Instead he got a few seconds on a concrete floor in a decrepit building. Life was funny that way.
"Sixty seconds." He said, sighing softly. Leon huffed through his nose.
"Generous."
"I know."
A faint smile appeared, then vanished beneath another grimace. Chris watched him carefully. He took out a pain reliever from the emergency kit. It was laughable in this situation. It wouldn't be enough to eliminate the pain or make movement comfortable, but just enough to take the sharpest edge off. Leon would still feel every damaged muscle, every broken bone, every breath that expanded injured tissue. Chris knew exactly how much that hurt and the knowledge sat heavily in his chest. He reached for Leon's hand.
“Here.” He pressed the pills into Leon's weak hand and he accepted them without question, eyes still closed as he slipped them into his mouth. Chris watched his throat work with effort from swallowing them dry and his nose scrunched in discomfort before his expression settled again. The comm crackled.
"Hunnigan to Alpha One." Chris adjusted the earpiece.
"Go ahead." He crouched beside Leon, slightly hovering over him.
"We've been reviewing surveillance footage." Keyboard clicks echoed faintly in the background. "There's something strange." Chris frowned.
"How strange?"
"The shooter had additional opportunities." That got his attention. Beside him, Leon's eyes opened. Hunnigan continued. "He had line of sight on Chris multiple times before the first shot." Chris felt a chill crawl down his spine.
"What are you saying?"
"I'm saying if he wanted you dead, Chris, you would've been dead." The silence that followed felt heavy. Very heavy. Leon was the one who finally spoke.
"So it wasn't a missed shot..."
"No." Hunnigan's voice grew quieter. More careful. "It looked intentional."
The implication landed immediately. The sniper hadn't missed Chris with the second shot, the sniper had chosen Leon and by some miracle, missed. Chris's jaw tightened. Beside him, Leon slowly looked away. Neither acknowledged the thought because there was nothing useful to say about it. A metallic clang echoed somewhere outside, far closer than before. Chris was already on his feet before the sound finished fading.
"We're moving."
This time Leon didn't argue. A complaint was expected, but he simply attempted to push himself upright. The attempt went poorly. His legs almost immediately buckled and a low grunt escaped him before he could stop it and Chris caught him under the arm. Leon looked annoyed that Chris had heard it. Chris looked worried that it had happened. Neither commented, and together they started moving. Hunnigan’s voice broke through the silence.
“The warehouse is connected to several others through old service corridors and maintenance passages. Most had been abandoned years ago when shipping operations relocated elsewhere.” Chris frowned. The result was a sprawling industrial labyrinth. Rusted machinery occupied cavernous rooms. Catwalks stretched overhead like skeletal bridges. Collapsed walls opened into neighboring structures. The place felt dead, but not empty. Chris kept expecting to see movement and the anticipation gnawed at him. Beside him, Leon stumbled again. Chris immediately slowed.
"You okay?" The question was stupid. Obviously he wasn't okay. Leon shot him a tired look with a weak thumbs up.
"Outstanding."
Chris found himself constantly adjusting, shortening his stride and matching Leon's speed. The signs were becoming impossible to ignore now. His breathing, his posture, the increasing number of pauses. Small pauses, but accumulating. Chris hated every single one because he wanted nothing more than to put Leon down somewhere and wait for help. Instead he had to drag him to keep him moving, forcing him to push through the pain.
A cough suddenly tore through the silence and Leon immediately turned away. The cough became two, then three. By the time it stopped, Leon was wheezing hard. His hand moved away from his mouth, more blood speckled on his knuckles. He shook his head. “Still hate that.” Somehow that was almost funny. The comm crackled again. This time Jill.
"Movement." Both men froze. Chris immediately scanned the darkness.
"Where?"
"South side." A pause. "Negative visual." Chris frowned.
"That's not helpful."
"I know." Jill sounded just as frustrated. “I heard something.”
The words settled uneasily between them, because hearing something without seeing it was exactly how people got killed. They continued deeper into the warehouse complex. More rust, more machinery, more shadows, and more places for somebody to hide. The air smelled increasingly stale and dust coated nearly every surface. At one point Chris brushed against an old conveyor belt and disturbed enough grime to send a cloud drifting through the air. Leon immediately regretted breathing it. The resulting cough nearly folded him in half and the sound echoed around the warehouse.Chris reached for him immediately. Leon waved him off, then immediately leaned into him anyway when another spike of pain hit. The contradiction would've been amusing under different circumstances, instead it was terrifying, because Leon looked exhausted. The kind of exhaustion that made people stop fighting. Chris refused to let him get there.
"Hunnigan."
"I'm here."
"Talk to him." A brief pause.
"Leon." The agent blinked tiredly.
"Hm?"
"You still owe me paperwork." Leon groaned, not in pain, but annoyance.
“...That was mean.” It was enough proof that Leon was still here and still fighting. Ahead, a massive loading doorway stood partially collapsed. Beyond it sat another warehouse much larger than the others. Chris studied it. It wasn't perfect, but it was defensible, and more importantly, hidden.
"That'll work."
Leon followed his gaze. The relief on his face was immediate and brief. Because relief didn't change reality. It didn't stop the bleeding or bring backup any faster. It definitely didn't remove the assassin stalking them through the darkness. Together they crossed the threshold, the enormous warehouse swallowing them whole. Then Jill's voice came through the comm. The kind of voice that made his stomach drop immediately.
"Chris." He froze.
"What?"
"I… I think he wanted you to come here."
The warehouse in front of them suddenly felt much more dangerous. Somewhere behind them, something metallic scraped softly against concrete. Not water leaking from a pipe. Not the wind creeping through the walls, but a deliberate sound. A human sound. Chris slowly scanned the darkness between the debris.
The hunter had arrived. ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ ≪ ◦ Previous Chapter ❖ Next Chapter ... ✎ ... ◦ ≫
Marked
Chris and Leon can catch their breath for just a moment.
This is Chapter 2 of 6
≪ ◦ Previous Chapter ❖ Next Chapter ◦ ≫
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
MARKED
A routine undercover operation turns into a nightmare when Leon Kennedy becomes the target of a professional assassin.
Trapped in a sprawling warehouse complex with a sniper on their trail, Chris Redfield must keep Leon alive long enough for help to arrive.
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
Chapter Two
The moment Jill’s rifle cracked across the harbor district, Chris moved. He didn’t wait to see if she’d hit the shooter and didn’t wait for confirmation from Hunnigan. The brief opening was all they were going to get, and every second Leon spent bleeding in the open felt borrowed.
“Move!” The word came out harsher than intended.
Leon nodded once and that was all he could manage. Together they pushed forward and the alley became a blur of movement, echoing gunfire, and wet pavement. Chris kept one hand on Leon’s waist as they moved between cover, constantly adjusting his pace to match the injured man beside him. Every few seconds he glanced behind them toward the rooftops, searching for the slightest hint of movement. He never found it and that worried him. Shooters made mistakes. This one wasn’t.
Another rifle round split the night. It struck glass somewhere above them and Chris felt Leon jolt. For a horrifying second, Chris thought Leon was hit again. He shot him a look, his eyes frantic. He relaxed when Leon cursed under his breath in annoyance. Chris immediately ducked into another alley. The shot had come close on purpose. The sniper wasn’t simply firing at them anymore; they were controlling where they could move, steering them. It was obvious they were being blocked from going back to the north and Chris desperately wanted to head back that direction, back to their vehicle so they could make an escape. With that route no longer an option, their best alternative was to build distance between the threat.
Chris looked for Leon's eyes, “You good?”. He could only muster a small huff.
“Keep going.”
The realization crept in gradually as they moved. At first Leon had been helping, pushing off walls, catching himself when he stumbled, keeping his feet beneath him. Now, more and more of his weight was settling onto Chris's shoulders. The adrenaline was burning off and the injury was starting to collect its debt. A sharp breath escaped Leon’s lips as pain lanced through him and he immediately tried to hide it but failed. Chris pretended not to notice, but the agent was paler now. The tension around his eyes, the way he held his left arm tight to his body, the increasing effort it took to stay upright. His body was reaching its limit, and all of it painted a picture Chris didn’t like.
“Condor. Status.” Hunnigan’s voice crackled through the comm. Leon took a second too long to answer.
“Still here.” The response sounded rough. Tighter than before, as though every word required effort. A brief silence followed. She continued.
“How bad?” Leon glanced at Chris, then away.
“Bad enough.”
Nobody pressed further. The answer was enough. Another shot echoed somewhere overhead.
"Jill?" Chris snapped into the comm.
"I see the nest." The answer came immediately and a second later Jill returned fire.
The exchange sounded distant and strangely controlled. Neither shooter was firing wildly or rushing. They were trading opportunities, each waiting for the other to make a mistake. The annex finally came into view at the far end of the alley. A rusted steel door set into the side of a decaying warehouse. A beautiful sanctuary in this scenario. Leon saw it too. The relief that crossed his face lasted all of half a second before another wave of pain caught up with him. His body curled inwards toward the wound and a low sound escaped him. Chris’s jaw tightened.
“We’re almost there.”
Leon looked over with tired eyes. “You say that like we’re running a marathon.”
“Just keep moving.”
“Yes sir.”
They reached the door seconds later. Chris kicked it open hard enough to rattle the hinges and the interior stretched away into darkness. The smell hit them first. Years of mildew and dust gave it a horrible stench. Somewhere in the darkness, water dropping on asphalt could be heard and the faint whistle of wind sweeping through unseen cracks. Rows of abandoned equipment sat beneath broken skylights. Moonlight filtered through shattered glass overhead, painting pale streaks across the concrete floor. Good enough. Chris pulled Leon inside and slammed the door shut behind them. The clang echoed through the warehouse. For the first time since the shooting, they stopped moving. Leon made it exactly three steps before his legs gave out and Chris barely caught him.
The wounded agent sagged heavily against him, one hand clutching his chest as a low groan escaped before he could stop it. The sound lingered in the darkness. Chris guided him carefully against the nearest wall and he froze for a moment, his eyes locked on the red smear he left behind. The moment Leon stopped moving, he lowered his head and closed his eyes. Chris searched his face.
“Leon?”
“I'm here,” He winced, gritting his teeth, “The room's doing something stupid.” Chris walked over to him and dropped down to one knee, taking out an emergency field kit from under his coat. It was barely enough to handle a wound like this, just a few small rolls of gauze for scrapes and scratches.
“Let's see how bad this really is.” Leon immediately groaned, half in pain, half in annoyance for knowing what was about to come. Chris took out his knife and cut away at his coat so it could fall off his shoulders. He didn’t want to cause him any unnecessary pain. Leon slowly glanced down, watching his rough work.
“Hey.. I liked that jacket.” Chris continued working, face tight with concentration.
“I’ll buy you another one.”
The adrenaline that had carried him through the alley was fading now as it exposed the damage underneath. His face had gone pale beneath the grime and sweat and every breath looked measured, as though he was carefully calculating how much air his lungs were allowed to take. Chris finished cutting away the blood-soaked fabric and immediately found the source. The wound sat high on the left side of Leon's chest, ugly and still bleeding, though not nearly as badly as it had been outside. Chris tried to feel his back.
"Turn."
Leon obeyed and shifted carefully, catching the grunt that followed in his throat. Chris checked for an exit wound and felt a wave of relief when he found one. The round had gone straight through. That didn't make the situation good, but it made it survivable. He coiled fresh gauze around his fingers and packed it into the wound, watching Leon's reaction more than the injury itself. Leon barely made a sound, but Chris could see it anyway. The tightening around his eyes, the way his fingers clenched into a tight fist, the slight tremor that ran through his shoulders whenever Chris pressed harder. Every now and then the silence would be broken by a deep groan that Leon couldn’t contain, which would make Chris check in with him.
"You still with me?"
Leon would nod or hum quietly in response, eyes closed, conserving energy wherever he could. The fact that he wasn't talking bothered Chris more than the blood. Usually he'd be complaining, making jokes, saying something sarcastic just to fill the silence. Instead, he sat with his head tipped back against the wall, breathing shallowly while Chris worked. A cough eventually broke the silence. Leon turned away immediately, trying to hide it, but not before Chris saw the flash of red on his hand. When he looked back, there was something apologetic in his expression, as if the situation he was in was somehow an inconvenience for everyone else. Chris handed him a clean cloth without comment. A crackle sounded through the comm.
"Hunnigan to Alpha One."
Chris nearly answered with relief. "Go."
"Backup is twenty minutes out."
Twenty minutes. It might as well have been twenty hours. Before he could say anything, a metallic scrape echoed faintly somewhere beyond the annex. Both men immediately looked toward the darkness.
“Jill. Talk to me.” Chris’s eyes scanned the warehouse, searching the shadows and beyond.
"I lost him." She answered quietly. The words settled heavily between them. His eyes tracked the dark corners of the building, searching for movement, his hand still pressed firmly over Leon's bandaged chest.
The sniper hadn't disappeared. He was coming for them.
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
≪ ◦ Previous Chapter ❖ Next Chapter ◦ ≫
Marked
fic inspired by @citrine_elephant and their bootiful prompt "thinking about the possibility of leon being targetted for assassination and getting shot right in front of chris."
this is first time posting a fanfic. i've been writing for myself for a few years but never had the balls to post. til now hurhur. this is a reupload so i can post the new chapters directly to this.
hope yall enjoy because my brain has been craving some leon suffering.
This is chapter 1 of 6 ◦ Next Chapter ◦ ≫
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MARKED
A routine undercover operation turns into a nightmare when Leon Kennedy becomes the target of a professional assassin.
Trapped in a sprawling warehouse complex with a sniper on their trail, Chris Redfield must keep Leon alive long enough for help to arrive.
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
Chapter One
Chris Redfield was listening intently to the mission re-brief, a gentle blue light washing over his features from the TV monitor. An operations officer stood next to the screen, gesturing towards an aerial view of a warehouse. He had studied this plan for days, but he never let himself get too comfortable. When you get comfortable, that’s when mistakes happen. The BSAA and DSO were running a joint operation; DSO had the intelligence, the BSAA contributed personnel and resources. Rumors of a black market bioweapon organization started to stir, eventually making its way to the DSO. Only recently did they receive intel that a seller was meeting with multiple buyers, and promptly made arrangements to apprehend their target.
A soft breeze rattled the tent they were in, allowing a metaphorical breath of air to shift the energy as Chris adjusted his weight. He drew out a cigarette and lighter, the soft glow of the flame reflecting off his face as he tried lighting it before feeling a slight bump on his shoulder. Chris feigned an offended look.
Leon’s eyebrow was raised as he peeked sidelong at him while listening to the briefing. Chris pretended to ignore him, continuing to light the cigarette, which prompted a sharp jab in his ribs. With a quiet grunt, he quickly raised his hands in defeat, discarding the unlit cigarette back into its box. He returned his attention to the monitor. They had both had their personal briefings days earlier from their own superiors, but for some reason, the BSAA felt the need to explain it to Leon. After all, he was on their base. What a waste of time, Leon couldn’t help but think.
“Remember, this is a covert operation. The seller’s identity is unconfirmed, so observation is crucial. If intel from the DSO is correct,” the officer shot Leon a judgmental look, “the sale is happening approximately 80 miles south of our command post. If things get hot, help won’t be so easily available. Am I clear?” He finished his briefing, the question hanging heavy in the air. It was directed at both of them, but for some reason, his gaze was fixed hard on Leon.
“Yes, sir.” Chris acknowledged. Leon nodded in silent agreement.
“Good. You leave in five minutes. You’re dismissed.” A loud snap was heard as he shut his binder and turned away from them.
Both men swiftly exited the tent, Leon stretching as he walked towards the truck they’d be using. He tilted his head back where they came from, an exasperated sigh escaping from his nostrils, “He seems fun. Do you think he likes me?” He was being sarcastic, of course, but Chris could tell the officer struck a nerve.
His cheek tugged as a smirk briefly flashed on his face. “Don’t mind him, he’s like that anytime there’s a joint op. Don’t take it personally.” Chris moved towards the driver’s seat, and Leon naturally headed to the passenger side, sitting down with a huff as he got comfortable. His arms crossed in front of his chest.
“I don’t think he realizes we’re on the same team.” A pause, and a crooked smile appeared. “Maybe I should tell him,” Leon looked far too pleased with himself. A static crackled through their earpieces.
“I think he knows that, Leon.” Hunnigan responded flatly. “Sending the location now.” Chris started the truck, engine roaring to life as it vibrated smoothly under them. Leon shrugged his shoulders, not pleased with her answer.
“I’ve got to make sure, for all I know, he could be the seller.” Chris let out a skeptical hum at that.
“Oh yeah? And what would you do to find that out?” He didn’t bother to look in his direction, his attention instead on his phone as the coordinates came through. ETA 1 hour, 34 minutes. Chris shifted into drive and started driving to the main road, heading south.
“Pfft, I don’t know. Maybe I can charm my way into his nefarious plans. Invite him to a nice dinner, you know?” He lifted his chin with a quiet confidence, trying to playfully provoke a reaction from Chris. It failed. Chris just kept his eyes on the road, the moonlight bathing the interior of the truck in a gentle silvery light. An unheard sigh slipped from his nostrils.
This is going to be a long drive. He smiled to himself.
—
Leon and Chris parked three blocks away from the docks where the warehouse was located, traveling the rest on foot. Chris was mentally replaying the mission plans in his mind while scanning his surroundings. Their cover had them posing as security consultants for a buyer who didn’t officially exist. Leon had the paperwork, the charm, and the easy arrogance that made criminals assume he was too expensive to be a cop. Chris had the build, the dark expression, and enough scar tissue to make people believe he spent his whole life hurting people for money. It was a little too easy and a bit uncomfortable realizing how little they had to act. Chris scanned the windows of the building they passed by. Unnoticeable to the random person who might see him, but Leon was watching him.
“You’ve been doing that for the past few blocks.” Chris gave him a flat look.
“Doing what?”
“Counting windows. Scanning rooftops. Watching to see if the rats make an attempt on our lives.”
“It’s called situational awareness.”
“I call it turning a romantic walk into a threat assessment.” A faint smile tugged on Chris’s lips.
“Romantic?” He teased.
“We’re undercover as business partners aren’t we?”
“Business partners don’t usually call this romantic.” Leon offered a playful wink.
“Depends how committed they are to the bit.” He said, an imperceivable shoulder nudge followed.
Their target warehouse finally came into view, code named Site Iron. They waited across the street, studying the surroundings. It was a large complex; multiple buildings and warehouses surrounded the area. Chain link fence bordered the entire perimeter, albeit with a few posts that were knocked over or ripped away, and in the middle was Site Iron. Broken glass littered the concrete around the windows and rusted metal siding flickered briefly in the breeze, the metal quietly tapping. Some of the walls were completely torn away. Tarps spread across the openings made for a lame attempt at blocking elements from entering. Perfect for someone to use for illegal means. The smell of seawater was stronger now, seagulls called occasionally from the bay and the air smelled like rain that hadn’t quite decided if it wanted to come down.
The few neighboring blocks were quiet, but not quite abandoned. Nearby, local dockworkers could be seen arguing with each other, arms waving around furiously. Down the street, a drunk man stumbled out of a bar, talking loudly to himself. Half of the streetlights in the district flickered with a broken orange glow. Definitely perfect for someone to use for illegal means. Chris adjusted the cuff of his jacket and resisted the urge to touch the handgun concealed beneath it while the earpiece tucked snugly into his right ear crackled softly.
“Alpha One, status check,” Hunnigan’s voice said. Leon glanced at Chris from the corner of his eye, the movement small enough that anyone watching would have mistaken it for boredom.
“Alpha One is green,” he murmured.
“Condor, status check,” Hunnigan asked.
Leon gave a quiet sigh. “I keep telling you, if we’re doing undercover work, I need a better callsign.”
“Condor. Status,” she repeated, utterly unmoved.
“Condor is green,” he acknowledged, “and emotionally wounded”.
Chris didn’t look at him, but he felt the corner of his mouth twitch. There was a brief pause over the line. Somewhere behind Hunnigan, someone coughed like they were trying not to laugh.
“Try to survive your emotional injury,” she said. “Thermal confirms six bodies inside Site Iron. No sign of additional perimeter security.” Chris shifted uncomfortably.
“That’s either good news or very bad news pretending to be good news,” Chris noted.
“That optimism is why people love working with you,” Leon responded.
“They love working with me because I keep them alive.”
“That too.”
They crossed the street at an unhurried pace, keeping to the rhythm of two men who belonged there. Chris glanced at him, quick and quiet. Leon’s hair had been combed back for the cover, revealing pale blue eyes sharp as ever. A few strands of hair had already escaped and fallen near his cheek. He had to admit he appreciated the look. He wore a dark coat over a fitted shirt, clean enough to sell wealth, worn enough not to look like a costume. His eyes were moving constantly despite his loose posture, tracking doors, hands, and sightlines. To anyone else, he looked relaxed, but Chris knew better. Leon was coiled wire under silk.
“Perch to Alpha One,” another voice came through the comms. Jill. She was posted two blocks away with overwatch from a neighboring structure to the north. She had already been briefed on the mission but arrived earlier in the day to get a good nest. “I’ve got eyes on your approach. No visible tails.”
“Copy,” Chris said.
“Condor,” Jill added, “your left shoe is untied.”
Leon looked down, and Chris looked too. Both shoes were tied. Leon clicked his tongue.
“Cruel. Very cruel.”
“Just checking your situational awareness.”
“I am seriously hurt by my own team tonight.”
“Still operational?” Hunnigan asked dryly. She couldn’t see him, but he rolled his eyes.
“Unfortunately.”
Chris exhaled through his nose. The sound was almost a laugh.
They reached the mouth of an alley opposite Site Iron, where they were to wait for the other buyers to show up so their arrival blended in. From here, they had a partial view through a broken strip of windows near the loading dock. Nothing clear other than the faint silhouettes shifting behind dirty glass. One person was pacing. Another was seated. A third standing still to the far wall, possibly armed. Chris slowed as if checking his phone and Leon stepped beside him, angling his body so the movement looked casual while shielding Chris's hand from the street. He opened a secure message, glanced at the latest image capture, then tucked the phone away.
"Target's inside," Chris said quietly.
"Ugly tie?" Leon asked.
"I couldn't tell from the thermal."
"Then how are we supposed to know he's the villain?"
"International bio-weapons trafficking probably helps."
"Sure, but aesthetics matter."
Chris murmured, "Hunnigan, confirm the other buyer’s ETA."
"Three minutes," she replied. "Your job is still observation only until we have confirmation of the seller’s identity and product exchange."
"Copy."
Leon shifted his weight, shoulder brushing Chris's for half a second. Not accidental, but a tiny point of contact. A quiet check-in. Chris didn't respond visibly, but some part of him settled. They had done this too many times to need words for everything. The wind moved down the street in a cold blanket, rattling a chain link fence and a few metal sidings. Somewhere nearby, a sign creaked against its post. The harbor lights glittered in puddles left by earlier rain. Leon leaned closer, still facing the warehouse.
"You know what I miss?"
"What?" Chris already regretted being curious.
"Government salaries."
Chris stared ahead. "You do make a government salary."
"Exactly. That's the problem."
"Leon–"
"I'm serious. You ever look at what private contractors charge for consulting? We should've retired into morally gray paperwork years ago."
"You'd last two days behind a desk."
"I’d have a comfy chair."
"You'd spin in it until Hunnigan revoked your clearance."
"Maybe, but for those two days, I'd be comfortable."
Jill's voice cut in. "For the record, I would pay money to see that."
"Thank you, Jill."
"I didn't say I'd support it. I said I'd watch."
Chris let the banter flow around him while his attention moved elsewhere. A dark window across the street reflected a sliver of movement, but when he focused on it, there was nothing there. His jaw tightened, and Leon noticed. The humor in his face softened by a fraction.
"What?" He asked, his gaze trying to match Chris.
"Something's off."
Leon didn't ask if he was sure. That was one of the reasons Chris trusted him more than almost anyone. He simply let his gaze drift, lazy on the surface, predatory underneath.
"Where?"
"High ground, maybe. Could be nothing."
"Your nothing has a bad habit of turning into something." Chris touched his comm, static cutting through the silence.
"Perch, sweep rooftops to the south and west again."
"Already on it," Jill said. "Give me ten seconds."
The street seemed to stretch during the wait. The rain made a decision to start coming down. It was a very misty light rain, the type to seem like you’ll be ok without an umbrella, only to be soaked in 5 minutes. So much for Leon’s combed back hair. A man exited a bar at the far corner, laughing too loudly into his phone. The dockworkers near the loading bay stopped arguing and lit cigarettes. A motorcycle passed at the end of the block, its engine roaring and fading into the dark. Leon's breathing stayed even beside him. Chris heard it because he was listening to everything.
Hunnigan broke the silence, "Buyers are one minute out."
Jill followed almost immediately. "West rooftops clear. The south roofline’s partially obstructed by old signage, but I'm not seeing movement."
Chris didn't like partially. Leon gave him a sidelong look.
"We can reposition?”
"If we move now, we might spook the meeting."
"Well if we stay here, your blood pressure files for divorce."
Despite himself, Chris huffed. Leon smiled, pleased with the small victory, and turned his head just enough for the streetlight to catch the edge of his face. For one second, he looked almost untouched by all of it. The years, the missions, the things neither of them talked about unless the night was very late and the room was very quiet. Jill’s voice crackled through the static.
“Perch to Alpha One, visual confirmed on the buyers. Four SUV’s approaching from the west.”
Chris and Leon watched from their position as the SUVs pulled in front of Site Iron. Multiple men emerged from the vehicles, and the identities were obvious who the buyers and hired protection were. Chris and Leon started to move from the alley, casually making their way to the warehouse. Leon sighed.
"After this, when Hunnigan inevitably tells us we need to write six reports, I say we fake our deaths and move to–"
The loud crack split the air.
Chris didn't see the muzzle flash, but he saw Leon's body react.
The impact struck high through his torso with a sickening force that twisted him sideways. The rest of the sentence disappeared from his mouth, tearing a harsh grunt from him before he could even process what happened. Blood burst across the front of his shirt and sprayed warm against Chris's neck, jaw, and collar. For half a heartbeat, Chris could not understand what he was seeing.
Leon stared at him. Not scared, not yet anyway, only startled. His brows drew together in a mild, almost offended confusion. His hand lifted slowly toward his chest, fingers spreading over the sudden red blooming beneath his shirt.
Chris heard Hunnigan say something sharp in his ear. He heard Jill swear, heard himself say Leon's name, but it came out wrong. It was too quiet. Too human.
Then the second shot came.
It screamed past Chris's shoulder close enough that he swore he felt the air move before it punched through the brick wall somewhere behind them and the world snapped back into motion.
Chris grabbed Leon’s waist and drove them both down and sideways behind a parked delivery truck. Leon's weight folded into him wrong, all the strength gone from his legs in one horrifying rush. Chris took most of the fall on his hip and shoulder, bracing Leon’s fall as they crashed into the ground. One arm was locked around Leon's middle, the other already dragging his weapon free. He positioned them in front of the delivery truck’s wheel, knowing it was their best cover.
"Sniper!" Chris barked into comms. "Leon’s hit. Shooter to the west, high ground, exact position unknown."
"Perch moving," Jill said, voice hard now, all humor gone. "I need a line."
Chris could hear men shouting towards the warehouse, orders being directed. Doors slammed shut as tires screamed, and within seconds, the sound faded in the distance. They seemed spooked, panicked even, which made Chris confused. Was this a trap? A setup for them? Or a lone gunman who waited for them alone?
Leon made a small sound against him and Chris looked down, his attention back on the situation. Blood was spreading fast, too fast. Leon had nearly collapsed when Chris dragged him behind the truck, and now he sat half-slumped against him, his back braced against Chris's kneeling form. Chris kept his sidearm trained toward the alley, refusing to take his eyes off the surrounding rooftops for more than a second at a time. His free arm was hooked across Leon's chest, reaching down to press hard against the wound on his left. The position felt awkward and insufficient, more like trying to hold somebody together than actually treating them. Blood continued to force its way between his fingers and ran in dark lines toward Leon's belt.
A wet cough rattled from Leon's lips, harsh enough to make Chris wince. It sounded and looked painful, judging by the way Leon curled inward towards his injury. When it finally passed, he was left breathing in short, uneven pants, carefully avoiding anything deeper.
"You’re ok," Chris said, trying to reassure Leon as well as himself. Leon blinked up at him, eyes unfocused for one dangerous second before they found Chris's face.
"You've got..." Leon swallowed, his throat working around pain. "You've got blood on you." Chris almost lost his mind.
"Yeah, I noticed."
"Not mine, I hope." Chris drew a deep sigh, trying to compose his thoughts.
"Bad joke?"
"Bad timing."
"Still funny." Leon chuckled. A violent cough wracked him again, forcing him to double over. Leon wiped his mouth instinctively, but not before Chris caught the flash of red on his fingers. Another round punched through the truck's side panel with a scream of twisting metal. Chris reacted instantly, flattening himself over Leon as debris rattled around them. Beneath him, Leon sucked in a sharp breath and went rigid, his face tightening as the movement jarred the injury.
"Alpha One! Get out of the open," Hunnigan ordered. "Backup is thirty-five minutes out."
"We don't have thirty-five minutes!" Chris shouted. Unfortunately, they didn’t have a choice. Leon tried to take a deep breath and failed halfway through. His face was growing pale beneath the streetlight. Chris pressed harder against the wound and Leon gasped, body arching under his hand as a groan betrayed him.
"I know, I know," Chris said, “I'm sorry”. He hated how useless the word was.
"Don't be." Leon's hand closed weakly around Chris's sleeve. "Just... maybe don't make that your bedside manner."
"You can complain later."
"I'm planning to."
The truck wouldn't hold. The shooter had elevation, patience, and enough angle to chew through their cover one piece at a time. Chris glanced toward the alley they had just come from. Fifteen meters, maybe less, and exposed to the sniper. It was far with Leon bleeding like this, but not impossible. Nothing was impossible until Leon stopped breathing. Chris tightened his grip.
"Jill, give me suppressing fire on the west roofline. Hunnigan, map me to the closest enclosed structure east of our position."
"Old warehouse annex," Hunnigan answered immediately. "One hundred-twenty meters. Door is on the north side. It should be empty."
"Should be?" Chris repeated.
"Records say condemned."
Leon gave a breathless laugh that sounded dangerously wet. "Great. Romantic and condemned."
“I think I see their position, laying down cover fire.” Jill announced through the comms. Chris hauled Leon closer.
"Hold onto me."
Leon looked at him, pale and sweating, but still somehow Leon.
"Always do."
Chris didn't let that land. He couldn't. Not yet. He waited for Jill's first shot to crack across the rooftops, then lifted Leon against him and ran.
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ ◦ Next Chapter ◦ ≫
thinking about the possibility of leon being targetted for assassination and getting shot right in front of chris.
leon falling right into chris' arms when another shot barely misses chris.
maybe its the miracle "shot in the head and survived" route, maybe he gets hit in the torso and is saved by a bulletproof vest. but in the moment, chris doesnt have to know. he just drags his limp husband from danger...
fic inspired by citrine-elephant's bootiful prompt
this is first time posting a fanfic. i've been writing for myself for a few years but never had the balls to post. til now hurhur.
hope yall enjoy because my brain has been craving some leon suffering.
This is chapter 1 of 6
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MARKED
A routine undercover operation turns into a nightmare when Leon Kennedy becomes the target of a professional assassin.
Trapped in a sprawling warehouse complex with a sniper on their trail, Chris Redfield must keep Leon alive long enough for help to arrive.
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Chapter One
Chris Redfield was listening intently to the mission re-brief, a gentle blue light washing over his features from the TV monitor. An operations officer stood next to the screen, gesturing towards an aerial view of a warehouse. He had studied this plan for days, but he never let himself get too comfortable. When you get comfortable, that’s when mistakes happen. The BSAA and DSO were running a joint operation; DSO had the intelligence, the BSAA contributed personnel and resources. Rumors of a black market bioweapon organization started to stir, eventually making its way to the DSO. Only recently did they receive intel that a seller was meeting with multiple buyers, and promptly made arrangements to apprehend their target.
A soft breeze rattled the tent they were in, allowing a metaphorical breath of air to shift the energy as Chris adjusted his weight. He drew out a cigarette and lighter, the soft glow of the flame reflecting off his face as he tried lighting it before feeling a slight bump on his shoulder. Chris feigned an offended look.
Leon’s eyebrow was raised as he peeked sidelong at him while listening to the briefing. Chris pretended to ignore him, continuing to light the cigarette, which prompted a sharp jab in his ribs. With a quiet grunt, he quickly raised his hands in defeat, discarding the unlit cigarette back into its box. He returned his attention to the monitor. They had both had their personal briefings days earlier from their own superiors, but for some reason, the BSAA felt the need to explain it to Leon. After all, he was on their base. What a waste of time, Leon couldn’t help but think.
“Remember, this is a covert operation. The seller’s identity is unconfirmed, so observation is crucial. If intel from the DSO is correct,” the officer shot Leon a judgmental look, “the sale is happening approximately 80 miles south of our command post. If things get hot, help won’t be so easily available. Am I clear?” He finished his briefing, the question hanging heavy in the air. It was directed at both of them, but for some reason, his gaze was fixed hard on Leon.
“Yes, sir.” Chris acknowledged. Leon nodded in silent agreement.
“Good. You leave in five minutes. You’re dismissed.” A loud snap was heard as he shut his binder and turned away from them.
Both men swiftly exited the tent, Leon stretching as he walked towards the truck they’d be using. He tilted his head back where they came from, an exasperated sigh escaping from his nostrils, “He seems fun. Do you think he likes me?” He was being sarcastic, of course, but Chris could tell the officer struck a nerve.
His cheek tugged as a smirk briefly flashed on his face. “Don’t mind him, he’s like that anytime there’s a joint op. Don’t take it personally.” Chris moved towards the driver’s seat, and Leon naturally headed to the passenger side, sitting down with a huff as he got comfortable. His arms crossed in front of his chest.
“I don’t think he realizes we’re on the same team.” A pause, and a crooked smile appeared. “Maybe I should tell him,” Leon looked far too pleased with himself. A static crackled through their earpieces.
“I think he knows that, Leon.” Hunnigan responded flatly. “Sending the location now.” Chris started the truck, engine roaring to life as it vibrated smoothly under them. Leon shrugged his shoulders, not pleased with her answer.
“I’ve got to make sure, for all I know, he could be the seller.” Chris let out a skeptical hum at that.
“Oh yeah? And what would you do to find that out?” He didn’t bother to look in his direction, his attention instead on his phone as the coordinates came through. ETA 1 hour, 34 minutes. Chris shifted into drive and started driving to the main road, heading south.
“Pfft, I don’t know. Maybe I can charm my way into his nefarious plans. Invite him to a nice dinner, you know?” He lifted his chin with a quiet confidence, trying to playfully provoke a reaction from Chris. It failed. Chris just kept his eyes on the road, the moonlight bathing the interior of the truck in a gentle silvery light. An unheard sigh slipped from his nostrils.
This is going to be a long drive. He smiled to himself.
—
Leon and Chris parked three blocks away from the docks where the warehouse was located, traveling the rest on foot. Chris was mentally replaying the mission plans in his mind while scanning his surroundings. Their cover had them posing as security consultants for a buyer who didn’t officially exist. Leon had the paperwork, the charm, and the easy arrogance that made criminals assume he was too expensive to be a cop. Chris had the build, the dark expression, and enough scar tissue to make people believe he spent his whole life hurting people for money. It was a little too easy and a bit uncomfortable realizing how little they had to act. Chris scanned the windows of the building they passed by. Unnoticeable to the random person who might see him, but Leon was watching him.
“You’ve been doing that for the past few blocks.” Chris gave him a flat look.
“Doing what?”
“Counting windows. Scanning rooftops. Watching to see if the rats make an attempt on our lives.”
“It’s called situational awareness.”
“I call it turning a romantic walk into a threat assessment.” A faint smile tugged on Chris’s lips.
“Romantic?” He teased.
“We’re undercover as business partners aren’t we?”
“Business partners don’t usually call this romantic.” Leon offered a playful wink.
“Depends how committed they are to the bit.” He said, an imperceivable shoulder nudge followed.
Their target warehouse finally came into view, code named Site Iron. They waited across the street, studying the surroundings. It was a large complex; multiple buildings and warehouses surrounded the area. Chain link fence bordered the entire perimeter, albeit with a few posts that were knocked over or ripped away, and in the middle was Site Iron. Broken glass littered the concrete around the windows and rusted metal siding flickered briefly in the breeze, the metal quietly tapping. Some of the walls were completely torn away. Tarps spread across the openings made for a lame attempt at blocking elements from entering. Perfect for someone to use for illegal means. The smell of seawater was stronger now, seagulls called occasionally from the bay and the air smelled like rain that hadn’t quite decided if it wanted to come down.
The few neighboring blocks were quiet, but not quite abandoned. Nearby, local dockworkers could be seen arguing with each other, arms waving around furiously. Down the street, a drunk man stumbled out of a bar, talking loudly to himself. Half of the streetlights in the district flickered with a broken orange glow. Definitely perfect for someone to use for illegal means. Chris adjusted the cuff of his jacket and resisted the urge to touch the handgun concealed beneath it while the earpiece tucked snugly into his right ear crackled softly.
“Alpha One, status check,” Hunnigan’s voice said. Leon glanced at Chris from the corner of his eye, the movement small enough that anyone watching would have mistaken it for boredom.
“Alpha One is green,” he murmured.
“Condor, status check,” Hunnigan asked.
Leon gave a quiet sigh. “I keep telling you, if we’re doing undercover work, I need a better callsign.”
“Condor. Status,” she repeated, utterly unmoved.
“Condor is green,” he acknowledged, “and emotionally wounded”.
Chris didn’t look at him, but he felt the corner of his mouth twitch. There was a brief pause over the line. Somewhere behind Hunnigan, someone coughed like they were trying not to laugh.
“Try to survive your emotional injury,” she said. “Thermal confirms six bodies inside Site Iron. No sign of additional perimeter security.” Chris shifted uncomfortably.
“That’s either good news or very bad news pretending to be good news,” Chris noted.
“That optimism is why people love working with you,” Leon responded.
“They love working with me because I keep them alive.”
“That too.”
They crossed the street at an unhurried pace, keeping to the rhythm of two men who belonged there. Chris glanced at him, quick and quiet. Leon’s hair had been combed back for the cover, revealing pale blue eyes sharp as ever. A few strands of hair had already escaped and fallen near his cheek. He had to admit he appreciated the look. He wore a dark coat over a fitted shirt, clean enough to sell wealth, worn enough not to look like a costume. His eyes were moving constantly despite his loose posture, tracking doors, hands, and sightlines. To anyone else, he looked relaxed, but Chris knew better. Leon was coiled wire under silk.
“Perch to Alpha One,” another voice came through the comms. Jill. She was posted two blocks away with overwatch from a neighboring structure to the north. She had already been briefed on the mission but arrived earlier in the day to get a good nest. “I’ve got eyes on your approach. No visible tails.”
“Copy,” Chris said.
“Condor,” Jill added, “your left shoe is untied.”
Leon looked down, and Chris looked too. Both shoes were tied. Leon clicked his tongue.
“Cruel. Very cruel.”
“Just checking your situational awareness.”
“I am seriously hurt by my own team tonight.”
“Still operational?” Hunnigan asked dryly. She couldn’t see him, but he rolled his eyes.
“Unfortunately.”
Chris exhaled through his nose. The sound was almost a laugh.
They reached the mouth of an alley opposite Site Iron, where they were to wait for the other buyers to show up so their arrival blended in. From here, they had a partial view through a broken strip of windows near the loading dock. Nothing clear other than the faint silhouettes shifting behind dirty glass. One person was pacing. Another was seated. A third standing still to the far wall, possibly armed. Chris slowed as if checking his phone and Leon stepped beside him, angling his body so the movement looked casual while shielding Chris's hand from the street. He opened a secure message, glanced at the latest image capture, then tucked the phone away.
"Target's inside," Chris said quietly.
"Ugly tie?" Leon asked.
"I couldn't tell from the thermal."
"Then how are we supposed to know he's the villain?"
"International bio-weapons trafficking probably helps."
"Sure, but aesthetics matter."
Chris murmured, "Hunnigan, confirm the other buyer’s ETA."
"Three minutes," she replied. "Your job is still observation only until we have confirmation of the seller’s identity and product exchange."
"Copy."
Leon shifted his weight, shoulder brushing Chris's for half a second. Not accidental, but a tiny point of contact. A quiet check-in. Chris didn't respond visibly, but some part of him settled. They had done this too many times to need words for everything. The wind moved down the street in a cold blanket, rattling a chain link fence and a few metal sidings. Somewhere nearby, a sign creaked against its post. The harbor lights glittered in puddles left by earlier rain. Leon leaned closer, still facing the warehouse.
"You know what I miss?"
"What?" Chris already regretted being curious.
"Government salaries."
Chris stared ahead. "You do make a government salary."
"Exactly. That's the problem."
"Leon–"
"I'm serious. You ever look at what private contractors charge for consulting? We should've retired into morally gray paperwork years ago."
"You'd last two days behind a desk."
"I’d have a comfy chair."
"You'd spin in it until Hunnigan revoked your clearance."
"Maybe, but for those two days, I'd be comfortable."
Jill's voice cut in. "For the record, I would pay money to see that."
"Thank you, Jill."
"I didn't say I'd support it. I said I'd watch."
Chris let the banter flow around him while his attention moved elsewhere. A dark window across the street reflected a sliver of movement, but when he focused on it, there was nothing there. His jaw tightened, and Leon noticed. The humor in his face softened by a fraction.
"What?" He asked, his gaze trying to match Chris.
"Something's off."
Leon didn't ask if he was sure. That was one of the reasons Chris trusted him more than almost anyone. He simply let his gaze drift, lazy on the surface, predatory underneath.
"Where?"
"High ground, maybe. Could be nothing."
"Your nothing has a bad habit of turning into something." Chris touched his comm, static cutting through the silence.
"Perch, sweep rooftops to the south and west again."
"Already on it," Jill said. "Give me ten seconds."
The street seemed to stretch during the wait. The rain made a decision to start coming down. It was a very misty light rain, the type to seem like you’ll be ok without an umbrella, only to be soaked in 5 minutes. So much for Leon’s combed back hair. A man exited a bar at the far corner, laughing too loudly into his phone. The dockworkers near the loading bay stopped arguing and lit cigarettes. A motorcycle passed at the end of the block, its engine roaring and fading into the dark. Leon's breathing stayed even beside him. Chris heard it because he was listening to everything.
Hunnigan broke the silence, "Buyers are one minute out."
Jill followed almost immediately. "West rooftops clear. The south roofline’s partially obstructed by old signage, but I'm not seeing movement."
Chris didn't like partially. Leon gave him a sidelong look.
"We can reposition?”
"If we move now, we might spook the meeting."
"Well if we stay here, your blood pressure files for divorce."
Despite himself, Chris huffed. Leon smiled, pleased with the small victory, and turned his head just enough for the streetlight to catch the edge of his face. For one second, he looked almost untouched by all of it. The years, the missions, the things neither of them talked about unless the night was very late and the room was very quiet. Jill’s voice crackled through the static.
“Perch to Alpha One, visual confirmed on the buyers. Four SUV’s approaching from the west.”
Chris and Leon watched from their position as the SUVs pulled in front of Site Iron. Multiple men emerged from the vehicles, and the identities were obvious who the buyers and hired protection were. Chris and Leon started to move from the alley, casually making their way to the warehouse. Leon sighed.
"After this, when Hunnigan inevitably tells us we need to write six reports, I say we fake our deaths and move to–"
The loud crack split the air.
Chris didn't see the muzzle flash, but he saw Leon's body react.
The impact struck high through his torso with a sickening force that twisted him sideways. The rest of the sentence disappeared from his mouth, tearing a harsh grunt from him before he could even process what happened. Blood burst across the front of his shirt and sprayed warm against Chris's neck, jaw, and collar. For half a heartbeat, Chris could not understand what he was seeing.
Leon stared at him. Not scared, not yet anyway, only startled. His brows drew together in a mild, almost offended confusion. His hand lifted slowly toward his chest, fingers spreading over the sudden red blooming beneath his shirt.
Chris heard Hunnigan say something sharp in his ear. He heard Jill swear, heard himself say Leon's name, but it came out wrong. It was too quiet. Too human.
Then the second shot came.
It screamed past Chris's shoulder close enough that he swore he felt the air move before it punched through the brick wall somewhere behind them and the world snapped back into motion.
Chris grabbed Leon’s waist and drove them both down and sideways behind a parked delivery truck. Leon's weight folded into him wrong, all the strength gone from his legs in one horrifying rush. Chris took most of the fall on his hip and shoulder, bracing Leon’s fall as they crashed into the ground. One arm was locked around Leon's middle, the other already dragging his weapon free. He positioned them in front of the delivery truck’s wheel, knowing it was their best cover.
"Sniper!" Chris barked into comms. "Leon’s hit. Shooter to the west, high ground, exact position unknown."
"Perch moving," Jill said, voice hard now, all humor gone. "I need a line."
Chris could hear men shouting towards the warehouse, orders being directed. Doors slammed shut as tires screamed, and within seconds, the sound faded in the distance. They seemed spooked, panicked even, which made Chris confused. Was this a trap? A setup for them? Or a lone gunman who waited for them alone?
Leon made a small sound against him and Chris looked down, his attention back on the situation. Blood was spreading fast, too fast. Leon had nearly collapsed when Chris dragged him behind the truck, and now he sat half-slumped against him, his back braced against Chris's kneeling form. Chris kept his sidearm trained toward the alley, refusing to take his eyes off the surrounding rooftops for more than a second at a time. His free arm was hooked across Leon's chest, reaching down to press hard against the wound on his left. The position felt awkward and insufficient, more like trying to hold somebody together than actually treating them. Blood continued to force its way between his fingers and ran in dark lines toward Leon's belt.
A wet cough rattled from Leon's lips, harsh enough to make Chris wince. It sounded and looked painful, judging by the way Leon curled inward towards his injury. When it finally passed, he was left breathing in short, uneven pants, carefully avoiding anything deeper.
"You’re ok," Chris said, trying to reassure Leon as well as himself. Leon blinked up at him, eyes unfocused for one dangerous second before they found Chris's face.
"You've got..." Leon swallowed, his throat working around pain. "You've got blood on you." Chris almost lost his mind.
"Yeah, I noticed."
"Not mine, I hope." Chris drew a deep sigh, trying to compose his thoughts.
"Bad joke?"
"Bad timing."
"Still funny." Leon chuckled. A violent cough wracked him again, forcing him to double over. Leon wiped his mouth instinctively, but not before Chris caught the flash of red on his fingers. Another round punched through the truck's side panel with a scream of twisting metal. Chris reacted instantly, flattening himself over Leon as debris rattled around them. Beneath him, Leon sucked in a sharp breath and went rigid, his face tightening as the movement jarred the injury.
"Alpha One! Get out of the open," Hunnigan ordered. "Backup is thirty-five minutes out."
"We don't have thirty-five minutes!" Chris shouted. Unfortunately, they didn’t have a choice. Leon tried to take a deep breath and failed halfway through. His face was growing pale beneath the streetlight. Chris pressed harder against the wound and Leon gasped, body arching under his hand as a groan betrayed him.
"I know, I know," Chris said, “I'm sorry”. He hated how useless the word was.
"Don't be." Leon's hand closed weakly around Chris's sleeve. "Just... maybe don't make that your bedside manner."
"You can complain later."
"I'm planning to."
The truck wouldn't hold. The shooter had elevation, patience, and enough angle to chew through their cover one piece at a time. Chris glanced toward the alley they had just come from. Fifteen meters, maybe less, and exposed to the sniper. It was far with Leon bleeding like this, but not impossible. Nothing was impossible until Leon stopped breathing. Chris tightened his grip.
"Jill, give me suppressing fire on the west roofline. Hunnigan, map me to the closest enclosed structure east of our position."
"Old warehouse annex," Hunnigan answered immediately. "One hundred-twenty meters. Door is on the north side. It should be empty."
"Should be?" Chris repeated.
"Records say condemned."
Leon gave a breathless laugh that sounded dangerously wet. "Great. Romantic and condemned."
“I think I see their position, laying down cover fire.” Jill announced through the comms. Chris hauled Leon closer.
"Hold onto me."
Leon looked at him, pale and sweating, but still somehow Leon.
"Always do."
Chris didn't let that land. He couldn't. Not yet. He waited for Jill's first shot to crack across the rooftops, then lifted Leon against him and ran.
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