Зимний солдат (
reconstitution) wrote in
driftfleet2016-07-09 11:57 am
Winter & Vision's (not so) Excellent Adventure
Who: Winter, Vision, & You
Broadcast: n/a
Action: Forest, planetside
When: July 9th
[ This thread is going to serve both as a canon update to post Captain America: Civil War for Winter and Vision, but also be used as a monthly catch-all with prompts. ]
[ It's been a few weeks since they've landed, so Winter's finally gotten over most of his initial uneasiness. Enough to finally venture into the forest for a hike and get the lay of the land. He's familiar with the beach and the markets, and he's heard things about the forest and a certain tree, so he needs to see for himself if the rumors are true.
It's relatively peaceful, and he hasn't come across anyone else yet. He's making his way around a fallen tree when an animal jumps out of a nearby bush and startles him. Winter stumbles back, and his immediate reaction is to reach out with his left hand to steady himself. Unfortunately it's still broken, so it doesn't cooperate like it's meant to. Which means that he trips and falls. Down a steep hill. Only having one functioning arm means he raises his right to shield his head until he can manage to slow down or run into something. Which is exactly what he does before his head smacks solidly against a hard surface. ]
[Meanwhile, the Vision is similarly engaged in heading toward the tree to investigate it. He’s heard you need someone’s hand to hold in order for the magic to work, but his curiosity has the better of him and he’d like to observe it in action first. A scuffle down below his flight path catches his attention, and he swoops into the forest to see what’s going on just in time to see Winter, of all people, taking a tumble down a steep hillside. He rushes over to try and intercept the man before he seriously hurts himself, and in his rush he miscalculates his own density and slams down hard enough that Winter smacks his head against the Vision instead of catching himself safely.
Oops.
The impact is enough to snap the Vision’s head back and hit it against the tree he’d been trying to prevent Winter from hitting. So now there are two enhanced individuals knocked out on the forest floor. How very impressive.]
Broadcast: n/a
Action: Forest, planetside
When: July 9th
[ This thread is going to serve both as a canon update to post Captain America: Civil War for Winter and Vision, but also be used as a monthly catch-all with prompts. ]
[ It's been a few weeks since they've landed, so Winter's finally gotten over most of his initial uneasiness. Enough to finally venture into the forest for a hike and get the lay of the land. He's familiar with the beach and the markets, and he's heard things about the forest and a certain tree, so he needs to see for himself if the rumors are true.
It's relatively peaceful, and he hasn't come across anyone else yet. He's making his way around a fallen tree when an animal jumps out of a nearby bush and startles him. Winter stumbles back, and his immediate reaction is to reach out with his left hand to steady himself. Unfortunately it's still broken, so it doesn't cooperate like it's meant to. Which means that he trips and falls. Down a steep hill. Only having one functioning arm means he raises his right to shield his head until he can manage to slow down or run into something. Which is exactly what he does before his head smacks solidly against a hard surface. ]
[Meanwhile, the Vision is similarly engaged in heading toward the tree to investigate it. He’s heard you need someone’s hand to hold in order for the magic to work, but his curiosity has the better of him and he’d like to observe it in action first. A scuffle down below his flight path catches his attention, and he swoops into the forest to see what’s going on just in time to see Winter, of all people, taking a tumble down a steep hillside. He rushes over to try and intercept the man before he seriously hurts himself, and in his rush he miscalculates his own density and slams down hard enough that Winter smacks his head against the Vision instead of catching himself safely.
Oops.
The impact is enough to snap the Vision’s head back and hit it against the tree he’d been trying to prevent Winter from hitting. So now there are two enhanced individuals knocked out on the forest floor. How very impressive.]

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What happened?
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[He looks down at the ground, unfocused.]
In the hour or so I was out, I gained memories of over a year at home.
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[But now his expression becomes an actual frown.]
I must wonder if I'm becoming unstable.
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I became distracted during a critical moment in battle.
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And someone got hurt?
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A friend, yes.
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[That he can use assistance at all is thanks to Stark medical tech. A mere five years ago and he'd have been written off entirely.]
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[ it's a shallow comfort—she knows how she would feel in that situation, and it's difficult. ]
One of the dangers of what we do.
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Others had, though.]
To others, perhaps. It shouldn't have been possible for me, and yet it occurred.
[And if he can't be trusted with a simple battle, why should anyone trust in him at all?]
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[ she's not going to argue with him about it. She doesn't know very much about him, and even though she thinks he probably isnt' responsible, she knows that arguing is not the road to go down ]
Is that the only thing you remembered?
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It's the most significant. There was quite a large amount of other memories, and I did gain a better control over certain of my other abilities.
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[He shakes his head.]
I wouldn't trust myself.
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Kara, you must understand I'm held to a very high standard because of the destruction I could cause. The only reason I am permitted to exist is because there is a small chance I can contain the chaos of the Mind Stone. I cannot afford to fail, and yet I am shown to be fallible.
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My mother sent me away from Krypton. She could have come with me, but I think her guilt over her decisions which led to the destruction of my planet was too strong. I think... she didn't believe she deserved the chance she was giving me.
It haunts me every day that I could follow the same path. That I could make choices that destroy my new home, too, or hurt the people I've grown to love. Her voice is always in my head, telling me I must protect my new home. It wasn't until recently I really realized that it's tinged with regret.
My cousin doesn't remember Krypton, but I do. I'm the one who's left with language, culture... the humanity of a dead planet. I cannot afford to fail, either. But one of the pitfalls of free will is that our choices and actions have consequences we can't always see.
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He looks away, not yet ready to take that step with himself. It's good to hear, very good to hear--but the guilt is still raw. He's still feeling like the one who doesn't deserve a chance at a normal life anymore, if he'd ever even had it to begin with.]
And when those consequences outweigh the good the actions have done? The memory of a threat stopped is forgotten more easily than that of the damage caused in stopping it.
[He crosses his arms and looks at her again.]
For example, recently my team stopped a group of mercenaries who had secured a biological weapon and prevented the agent from being released into a crowded urban area. Yet during the battle, an explosion in a building caused directly by us killed several dozen people. Do you think we were praised for saving millions, or condemned for the deaths? Were they wrong, to focus on that?
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If you let everyone else define you, then you're already behind. But I think that the media should hold people like us accountable, too. It's a balance. Was it as bad as it could have been? No. Was it as good as it could've been? Also no. But the media—their job is to make money. They're going to find the angle that generates the most views and gets people to stop what they're doing to follow the story. And "not as bad as it could've been" doesn't make for a good news story. It sucks, and sometimes there's no way to win. I think people can be thankful you saved more while still mourning those who died. I wouldn't be satisfied, personally, with that result, so I get it. But if we stop protecting everyone because we can't protect one person, then what's the point?
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And if the people themselves should decide they wouldn't like our interference, are we still responsible for them? At what point do we disregard so selfish a wish?
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At the risk of sounding paternalistic... There are some things we have to do because of the opportunities afforded to us. To have these powers and do nothing is, to me, worse than trying.
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