[ Most people complain about getting paired up with him. ]
[ Rook doesn’t really take offence to it; he’s abrasive and rude and he knows it. On top of being the unluckiest bastard alive, it just comes with the territory. People don’t like being around him. Don’t like working with him. And he doesn’t really mind that.
Yet, the man beside him doesn’t seem to care about being saddled with the team curse. They’re on infiltration, slipping through darkened halls quiet as a whisper. Taller than Rook, but that’s not hard to do. A bit lanky, nothing like the meathead brutes on the assault team. Covered head to toe, except for focused grey eyes that scan their surroundings.
Completely fuckin’ silent, too. It’s a bit off-putting, actually—Rook would rather be called every foul name under the sun than sit in silence for too long.
They turn a corner, the man pulls out his phone for a second, then pockets it.
“Infiltration team will need a detour, spotted patrols in the area,” comes a text-to-speech voice over the radio. The ever-elusive and mysterious Crow, from overwatch on high. No one's ever met the man—and some people swear he doesn't even exist. Always on overwatch. Always one step ahead. Always gone as soon as the mission's done.
Rook peers around the corner to see he’d been right. Patrols lazily wander through their planned course.
“Take the access hallway to your left.”
“Damn,” he hums. If it had been any other mission, Rook would have plowed right into them and gotten his partner killed. Happened before. Probably will happen again. Probably will happen tonight. “Good thing we’ve got Crow, huh?”
The man just shrugs, nodding towards an access hall to their side. Rook remembers seeing it on the floor plan—it’ll take them a bit out of the way, a bit further into the belly of the compound than originally planned. It’s still silent, the man following behind Rook with no complaints.
Rook isn’t even sure who's the higher rank between them. He’d never introduced himself.
They emerge into the maintenance area, an uncanny forest of pipes and valves. Their footsteps echo strangely amongst the rusted metal. Something’s off. Rook can’t quite place it, but he’s got that feeling. The same one he gets right before shit goes tits up and people around him die.
And then his partner tugs his vest, sharp—dragging him into a thicket of pipes. Rook’s about to open his mouth, to say something stupid, when a hand covers it.
Footsteps pass by, along with the jangle of heavy tac.
They pass and Rook raises a brow. “Good catch," he murmurs, quiet.
And the man shrugs again, stepping out of the alcove. They make it to electrical with entirely too few incidents; it's setting Rook on edge. That can only mean one thing: a storm's brewing.
The storm, as it would turn out, is the men they passed doubling back the second Rook kills the power. Bullets ping near his head, yelling echoes from the doorway, and he ducks on instinct. His partner supplies cover fire, just enough to get Rook behind a decommissioned generator, and just enough that a bullet slams straight into his shoulder.
Of course it's saving Rook's ass that gets him hurt—that's just what being partnered with Rook means.
“Could really use Crow's fuckin’ genius right about now,” Rook complains, popping out of cover long enough to fire a couple rounds. He hears the bullets slam into plate, shattering the ceramic. Before he can celebrate the small victory, he hears ripping of velcro and the swish of a new plate sliding home. “The fuck are guys this well armed doin’ down here, anyways?”
Keeping his curse going, apparently.
His partner shoves gauze into his shoulder with brutal, almost robotic efficiency. He doesn't even flinch, just tapes off the wound and stands again.
Normally whoever had the misfortune of partnering with him would be swearing up a storm. Cursing him out. Bemoaning their rotten luck getting stuck with him. This guy just returns fire as if this is normal. As if Rook isn't some double-edged sword.
With the press of the release, the man drops an empty magazine from his rifle. Reloads. Fires more. Fires until his rifle clicks uselessly in his hands.
And Rook sees it, sees the moment something flickers in those grey eyes: an idea.
For a second, the man hesitates. His eyes flick to Rook, uncertain, before he gestures to a set of pipes near the door.
Rook gets it. He gets it. He pops out, he fires a few rounds that pierce the metal, and steam screams out. The air becomes heavy and humid quickly, but shrieks of pain and furious yelling prove it's worth it.
When they're out, Rook hums.
The man looks at him for a moment, and for a moment Rook thinks he might be wrong.
But the man sighs. He nods, pulling out his phone.