If he'd given it any thought, he would have found the idea of her assessing him as a threat on any level utterly ridiculous. Not that he's completely defenseless or anything. He has pretty good reflexes, and an absurdly high pain threshold; and maybe he's never going to be built like Thor or Steve, or even Clint, but the armor weighs more than he does and steering it in flight is a whole-body process. But he's not a fighter by nature. He'd rather talk his way out of a problem; violence was always going to be a distant second choice.
And in any case, he's seen Natasha fight. She moves like a goddamn snake. He's pretty sure she could take each and every one of them out.
He's trying not to tense, to keep his body language relaxed, but it's not easy. It's all he can do not to shy away when she reaches out toward him. A faint shiver runs through him at her touch, muscles jumping and twitching involuntarily under her fingertips. There's hasn't been a whole lot of human contact in his life ever since Afghanistan, for a whole number of reasons. This is...weirdly intimate, and the strange sort of moment they seem to be having here has the automatic smart-ass remark about feeling him up dying on his lips.
"Arc reactor," he explains succinctly, "Levitating dipole magnetic containment fusion reactor, if you wanna get technical, but that just doesn't have the same ring to it." He glances down at it, running a finger along the warm, smooth metal of the casing; it hums reassuringly under his touch. Tension is still evident in every movement he makes. He hates that he feels so vulnerable like this.
It's odd, but seeing Tony this tense is actually making Natasha relax. There's a level of tension in her that never truly goes away, a baseline thrumming through her body at all times. But the extra tension that's been making her shoulders and jaw ache ever since she crept into the workshop? That is slowly seeping out of her, making her features soften slightly. It doesn't take a genius to tell that he isn't comfortable with the situation, but despite that fact, he's staying put and trusting her. And it's oddly comforting not being the only one fighting to trust people here.
Her face goes blank at the words leaving Tony's mouth. Like most of them, she understands individually (except for dipole, what the hell is that?) but string them all together and she doesn't have the first clue what they mean. "Right," she says slowly, dragging the word out. "But what's it doing in your chest?"
Her eyes track Tony's finger as it traces a path along the rim of the... arc reactor. Her own fingers are itching to touch it as well, but she won't do it without his permission, or without knowing that it's safe, for that matter. She's never seen anything like it before. Who knows what it's capable of? Or how much it might hurt? In this case, caution is her friend. So, instead she presses her hand flush against Tony's belly, just by his belly button, thumb rubbing absently along a short, white scar. A solid touch is easier to get used to than the featherlight ones she's been giving him so far, and maybe that'll ease some of the tension out of him.
He catches the blank expression. Oh yeah. He forgets about that sometimes. He takes a few moments to mentally translate what he'd said from Engineer back to English. "Basically it's a power generator," he clarifies. A fleeting grin passes over his face. "Yeah, I know it's on the small side. Size isn't everything. This baby could power a city." Of course after that, her next question is an obvious one. He did more or less see it coming even if he had been holding out some foolishly optimistic hope that she might not ask.
Now normally this isn't the sort of thing he'd just tell someone. Especially not someone who is effectively a complete stranger. But for some reason it's easier to get the words out this time; maybe it's because it's something he feels like she's supposed to know. And maybe the truth is a little thing when he's already letting her this close, leaving himself this exposed. There's something strangely reassuring about the firm, warm touch against his stomach.
In the end he just shrugs and gives the bare bones of the explanation. "It's powering a magnet," he says, tapping his chest. "I've got shrapnel headed into my heart. Inoperable. This keeps it where it can't do any more damage."
Why anyone would need something generating enough power to run a city lodged in their chest is pretty beyond Natasha. Her mind's already spinning to sort out the why (coming up with outlandish ideas like Tony being a cyborg of some kind or him… No, actually. Just that. 'Cause what else could it be?) when Tony tells her.
Natasha blinks. She's pretty sure that Tony just told her how she can kill him, in the most painfully slow way imaginable. The arc reactor looks pretty sturdy, but give her the right tools and she's pretty sure she could break it. Hell, there's probably something in this very workshop that could do irreparable harm to the thing keeping his heart from being torn apart by shrapnel.
"Wow. That's-- That really sucks." She can't help but staring at him, wide-eyed and questioning, her hand stilling completely against his skin. How is he trusting her this much? He said it himself, he barely knows the woman she's supposedly grown into, and yet here he is, giving up all of his secrets. There's a sudden, intense pressure over Natasha's chest and for a moment she forgets how to breathe. This level of trust -- especially when given from someone who is clearly struggling with it -- is immense. The only other person who has trusted her like this is Clint when he dug her dart into his skin to prove himself to her. One act of trusts deserves another, and Natasha owes Tony now.
Before she can stop to think about it (and inevitably talk herself out of it) she grabs the hem of her tanktop and pulls it up to reveal her smooth stomach, mirroring him except she stops just short of flashing him her bra. Tony's not the only one with scars. Sure, hers aren't anywhere near as impressive as his, but she still has quite the collection. Of course, most of them are scattered across her body. Like the smooth, round one just above her clavicle and close to her throat, left by one of Clint's arrows. Or the puckered one at the back of her knee from a throwing star. Or the burn mark on her right wrist that's old to this body, but new to her. But, there are a couple on her abdomen. A few faded, thin, white lines from the knife of someone she'd thought she could trust, and the jagged pink one across her abdomen that she doesn't know where she got.
Swallowing just a touch too tightly, and most of the tension from earlier snapping back into place, she snags one of his hands with her free one, and achingly slowly, giving him plenty of time to pull away, she presses it against her bare stomach so that his fingers brush against the most prominent of her scars. A dozen secrets crowd at the back of her tongue. But to her frustration she can't bring herself to voice a single one, because she doesn't trust him. She wants to, but she can't. Some of her frustration flickers across her face before she shuts it down and hides it with a near apologetic smile. It's going to have to be enough for now that she's letting him touch her at all. "Can I touch it, or would that zap me to death?" Her fingers twitch lightly against his skin, but her hand stays where it is.
"Shit happens, huh?" he says with a half shrug and a wry little smirk. It's the closest thing to a sensible response he can come up with. He feels like he should probably explain why the hell he's telling her this, but to be frank he's not entirely sure himself. He can't come up with any response that doesn't sound totally nonsensical.
His eyebrows go up at- well that was more skin than he was expecting to be seeing today. Or possibly ever. What the hell? But then his eyes catch the scars and all of a sudden everything makes sense again. Tit for tat. Fair enough. Some of them he's seen before, or at least knows of; the round one just below her throat, shown over a bottle of vodka on a night of strangely honest conversation, or the relatively new one on her stomach that has to be from that thing with the glass shards that Clint was bitching about. Others are entirely mysterious. He can't help but wonder about the stories behind them.
He tenses again as she catches his hand in hers, but he doesn't pull away. He's pretty sure he knows where she's going with this. Her skin is warm and smooth under his touch, textured by scars here and there. His fingertips leave faint trails of slick black oil behind. The damn stuff gets everywhere. He's still curious about the stories behind the scars; but contrary to popular opinion he's not a complete idiot, and asking when it's a coin toss whether or not she knows the story seems like a massive dick move.
His eyes flick up to hers at the question. "Uh...no, but no," he replies, which...made more sense in his head than it did aloud. After a moment he translates; "That is...no, no zapping, but still not a great idea." There are very, very few people he trusts enough for them to be able to touch the reactor without inducing a freakout of epic proportions. Pepper's one; Rhodey's another. Bruce or Clint could probably get away with it in theory, though it hasn't been tested in practice yet. But Natasha was never one. Not even the Natasha he knew and fought beside, before this whole mess.
On some level he does feel kind of bad about that. It's not that he mistrusts her entirely: he trusts her to have his back in the field, to get the job done. But with this? No. On an intellectual he was pretty sure she didn't intend to kill him, but apparently his subconscious would not be moved on this one. Risking it regardless seems to involve an unacceptably high chance of ending in a humiliating panic attack.
"It sure does." Natasha couldn't agree more. Hell, she apparently had a nice life carved out for herself when her brain short-circuited and tossed her ten years back in time, mentally. It's not the same as the shrapnel trying to inch its way to his heart, but it still fucking sucks. Just in a different way.
Considering the tension in Tony's wrist as she guides his hand to her skin, she's actually kind of surprised that he doesn't pull away. But with the way his eyes lock on her skin, she guesses that he might be as fascinated by her scars as she is by his.
The slight slickness of Tony's fingertips against her skin sparks another memory. This one longer but more disjointed than the last. The hum of an engine. The dark battle suit she's been assured is hers open as far down as it goes, her skin flashing pale and streaked with grease through the opening. Calloused fingers running down her skin-- This is apparently not the first time a man with calloused hands has left dark smudges on her skin. It sure as hell wasn't Tony though. His touch against her skin is warm and solid, and the light brush of his fingers tickles enough to send a slight shiver up her spine, but it doesn't send sparks flying across her skin. Based on the last precious flash of a memory, she's just going to go ahead and assume that it's Clint. (The circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. Like the fact that they're married and that his brief touches always leave her craving more.)
After Tony has stumbled through the words that basically boil down to no, don't, Natasha just nods. "Okay." Whether it's because touching it would hurt her or because he simply wants her hands nowhere near the device keeping him alive, doesn't really matter. The end result is the same; she's not going to touch it. She has enough trust issues of her own to respect a clearly set boundary.
Standing there, hands pressed against each others' scars (her fingers still circled around his wrist, thumb resting at the jut of bone at the back of his wrist), is oddly intimate. Which is-- scary, really. Natasha can count on the finges of one hand (and still have fingers left over) the number of times that she's been truly intimate with someone. And this? It's making the list. Her jaw tightens imperceptibly, and something dark flits through her eyes.
"How did it happen?" In casting a glance down at his abdomen for emphasis, Natasha gets caught by the road map of scars yet again and achingly slowly she shifts her hand, fingers tracing the few scattered scars lower down on his skin, careful to not touch him anywhere near the sternum.
He gets that. Maybe not the specifics, but in general. It's a fundamental law of the universe or something: every time life levels off for any member of the Avengers, it needs to find even crazier new ways to fuck with them. Whenever he thinks nothing that happens can possibly surprise him any more, events just have to go and prove him wrong.
Her simple acceptance of his refusal send a wave of relief washing through him. Maybe they're having a moment of sorts here, but he's glad to have avoided having to explain just why he can't deal with anyone touching the reactor.
Gaze still tracing the lines of old scars on her skin, he misses the tightening in her expression. There's something strange and hypnotic about this quiet little moment; one of her hands warm just below his ribs, the other wrapped around his wrist, his own fingers spread out on her stomach as he follows the line of one particularly prominent scar with the pad of this thumb.
He doesn't look up at the question. Somehow it's easier to find an answer when he doesn't have to meet her eyes. "I caught one of my own bombs in the face," he replies. "Woke up in a cave with a car battery hooked up to my chest." He's still not sure how much she knows. But she said he wasn't what she expected, and if Clint hadn't said anything then any expectations must have come from the media. And Afghanistan had been plastered all over every news outlet for the duration: the attack on the convoy, the three months where he was 'missing, presumed dead', his miraculous escape and return to the land of the living.
Of course all but the bare bones were half speculation and half shameless gossip. For all that Natasha had shown up in his life apparently well acquainted with his history, there are some things he is absolutely certain she never knew, because no-one knows them. He's never told anyone the whole truth about Afghanistan. Rhodey knows more than anyone else - if only because he was the first friendly face around when Tony was delirious with heat and thirst and pain, half-crazed by the sudden return to reality and desperate for someone he could lean on - but even he doesn't know the full story. Tony's never told anyone the full story, and those who saw it first-hand are long dead.
The steady brush of Tony's thumb along one of her scars drives some of the tension out of Natasha's shoulders. Though she couldn't tell you why if questioned. It just settles her, the mutual tracing of scars. She can tell without even looking which scar he's following because of the curious way sensation fades in and out. This one cut deep, and it severed some of the nerve-endings, leaving segments of the scar tissue numb and dead. It's not an entirely pleasant feeling, but it's not unpleasant.
As he tells her about the shrapnel, Natasha's eyes flick up to his face and her gaze stays on his ducked head and lowered eyes as he talks. Something in the way he won't look at her, tells her that this isn't an easy subject. And yet he tells her. Again, with this strange trust in her. It's disconcerting and touching and she doesn't know how to begin to process it. Not that she hasn't been able to make men trust her with things they oughtn't have before. Of course she has. She'd be a pretty crap spy if she hadn't. But, generally, she'd been making an effort then, being charming or flirtatious or simply sympathetic. She's pretty sure she's been none of those things since entering the workshop. She's too off-balance, too raw and lost now to even think about making a play at being a person deserving of trust. But here he is, just giving it to her unbidden.
If her hands hadn't been occupied -- one with mirroring his hand against his stomach, the other with making sure that his hand doesn't stray somewhere she doesn't want it -- she might've brushed her fingers across his cheek rather pointedly. His face isn't the piece of him that's littered with scars after all. So, she doubts that the bomb blew up literally in his face.
Natasha's done research on everyone of the Avengers (including herself, though details on her and Clint are pretty scarce), and Tony's life has been the easiest by far to find information on. But, it's not like she's sat down and made an exhaustive timeline of his entire life (yet). More like, she's read countless of articles on him (often out of order) to try to puzzle together a sense of who he is. She knows about Afghanistan. It's pretty hard to miss considering the intense news coverage of the incident. But, she only knows the bare bones of the story. The unit he was travelling with for a PR-stunt was ambushed and he was captured. After a lengthy captivity he was rescued through the tireless efforts of the U.S. military and brought home. Upon his return, he dismantled the weapons manufacturing branch of Stark Industries (aka most of the company) and after that the stories delve into speculation.
Getting caught in the blast of one of his own bombs sounds like a pretty good reason to stop making bombs, but Natasha doesn't like to assume things. For all she knows the bomb may've been on a separate occasion entirely.
"That must've been fun," she says drily. It sounds like the beginning of a nightmare. She kindly doesn't point out the irony in the fact that it's a piece of one of his own bombs trying to crawl its way into his heart. He's a smart guy, she's sure he's figured that one out all on his own. "Why a car battery?" Her fingers have absently been trailing the faint scars low on his belly, and now they bump against the worn denim of his jeans, and she stops, vaguely aware that she should probably move her hand, but too caught up in the story to act on the distant impulse.
If she had touched a hand to his blatantly unscarred cheek he would have casually dismissed it as a figure of speech. And god but he's grateful it's only a figure of speech. At least the face survived intact; maybe it was a stretch to consider what had happened to him lucky, but it could have been so much worse. A little pain and what he liked to refer to as a 'heart condition' when he felt like being an asshole isn't all that hard to live with. He couldn't have dealt with being blinded.
"Oh yeah, it was great," he responds dryly, gaze flicking up to her face with a humorless little half-smirk. It's easier than it should be to talk to her about this. It doesn't make sense. He couldn't have had this conversation with her before. But his distrust of Natasha was never personal, stabbing-related incidents notwithstanding; it was always a byproduct of her loyalty to SHIELD, who he doesn't trust an inch. Except it's gone now, isn't it? As far as this Natasha knows SHIELD are still her enemies. That really shouldn't put him more at ease, but it does. After all, how can she have an agenda right now when she barely knows who or where she is?
He shrugs. "It was all they had going spare. There was a-" His voice catches momentarily in his throat. "-surgeon they'd grabbed. He put me back together. Got most of the shrapnel out, and then rigged up the battery to keep the rest out of the way. It woulda ran flat in a couple of weeks at the outside, but this thing..." He tilts his head and shifts his shoulders slightly in a gesture which indicates the arc reactor "...kept me going after that."
The irony of it all is that the Natasha Tony knows is probably the more trustworthy. Sure, her loyalty lies with SHIELD (though always with herself and Clint first -- long gone are the days of blindly following any and all orders), but she's more reigned in, controlled. And honestly, there are certain situations where she would value Tony's life above her own. Not many but a few.
The younger self that she's been thrown back to though? She has the morals of a particularly vicious predator. Okay, that's not fair, she has some morals, it's just that they're horribly skewed from the way she was brought up to perceive everyone outside of the Red Room as either a threat or an asset to be used or disposed of. At any rate, she's dangerous, unpredictable and extremely volatile. Especially now that all her strings have been cut. She hasn't learned yet how to control herself without an outside force guiding her. The last time when she found herself outside the Red Room's control the death toll was immense and it was only brought to an end when Clint was sent after her.
But, then again, Tony probably doesn't know that. Because Clint wouldn't give up Natasha's secrets without a Norse god probing through his mind. And though everyone at SHIELD knows that Natasha used to work for the other side, few are aware of the details of the jobs she took when she went freelance.
If it came down to it, Natasha'd smash Tony's arc reactor to pieces and leave him gasping and dying on the floor. Except-- Right now? With his hand pressed against her stomach and her hand pressed against his stomach in turn? She thinks that maybe she'd feel bad about it afterwards.
Of course, there's no reason for her to kill Tony. Or anyone in the tower. Even if there was, the tenuous connection she has built with Clint is probably going to hold her back, because these people matter to him. And he is her guiding star in the darkness she's found herself in.
But Tony's right, there's no secret agenda here, just the burning need to find out who she is and where she fits into this new world.
His dry smirk draws a flicker of a real smile from her in return. "Like a vacation, I imagine. Except far better than some tropical island somewhere." Her voice has gone from dry to joking, and she's also surprised at the ease of their conversation and how quickly this-- thing between them has settled her. Because she feels settled. What tension had worked its way into her muscles between crawling into the air duct and now has simply dropped away, leaving her not relaxed exactly, but not achingly tense at least.
Natasha catches the way Tony's voice breaks ever so slightly mid-sentence, but she doesn't know how to interpret it. For all she knows, the surgeon may've been instrumental in torturing him or something. Because it doesn't sound like he was in that cave voluntarily. Slowly, she's working things out from the few clues he's giving her, and unlike piecing together the bits of and pieces of her own history, this is intriguing rather than frustrating. "They had one of those lying around in a cave?" Natasha's eyes flick up to the arc reactor again, her fingertips twitching against his stomach in the effort of keeping herself from just reaching up and touching it. She knows that she can't, but damn she's curious.
He's not going to pretend that being more comfortable with Natasha now than before makes any real sort of sense at all. His subconscious has its own opinions on things and arguing with it never gets him anywhere. He's seen her file - after all, when hacking into exceptionally classified SHIELD data anyway it only seemed reasonable to take a look at the other interesting bits while he was in there - and it's one hell of a read.
Of course he knows better than to assume it's complete, or accurate. His own file is a tissue of complete lies in places. But there was enough there to make him really curious about the bits that have to have been omitted.
There's a huff of breath that's something close to a laugh and he grins at her. "Oh yeah. It was a lovely spot. All the sand you could eat, hot and cold running rats..." Hey, at least he's not the only one way more at ease than is in any way sensible right now.
He feels that little twitch of her hand and his own fingers tense almost imperceptibly in response. "I built it," he responds, and for all that this is an awful set of memories to recall, there's a note of fierce pride in his voice. There are plenty of things in his past he's not proud of, but goddamnit, if he's proud of anything he's proud of this. Of the reactor, of the fact that it all came together in his head in a cave in Afghanistan when he was facing blackmail or death and in so much pain he could barely think straight.
Steve asked him, once, what he was without the armor. It was a question aimed to hurt, to strike at the fact that his strength in the field is entirely artificial. It was also completely missing the point. So maybe he doesn't have the raw brute strength Steve and Thor and the Hulk do, or the decades of training Clint and Natasha do. But although he might be vulnerable out of the armor, he's never been weak; when backed into a corner he will change the world to fight back if that's what it takes.
It's his mind that makes him dangerous. Why would he ever be ashamed of wearing the armor to fight when it's his design every step of the way, his hands that built it, with tech that was supposed to be impossible lying at its very heart?
Natasha's smile widens at his grin and she actually laughs at the joke. The sound is unexpected in the near silence of the workshop, and cut short when she catches herself at it. She can't remember the last time that she laughed without an uncomfortable twist of her stomach reminding her of her rather unique predicament. It gets to her belatedly of course, as punishment for noticing the lack of it in the first place. "All the luxuries one could wish for," she says with mock-wistfulness. "Tell me, did you splurge and get the cockroaches as well?" She is too aware of Tony's touch against her skin (ready to pull his hand away in a heartbeat) not to notice the sudden tension to his hand in response to the light twitch of hers. The cause and effect of that shouldn't be fascinating, but somehow it is. It makes them feel… connected.
"You built that?" Natasha asks and there's honest to god wonder in her voice. Even without touching it, and without any knowledge of advanced engineering, she can tell that it's a complicated piece of technology and he built that. "In a cave?" Natasha has always responded well to talent and skill, and building that thing would've taken both, plus an ingenuity she could never hope to possess. Now, Natasha can tear things down, burn them to ground and pull them apart. But she could never build something. Much less something as intricate as the arc reactor.
Glancing down at the softly glowing circle, her eyes are caught instead by the scars scattered across Tony's chest and abdomen and the realization slowly sinks in that not only did he build that thing in a cave, he must've been in incredible pain at the time. Natasha's never taken a direct shrapnel hit, but she's seen it happen and heard the screams of the survivors. When her gaze returns to his face, there's a new kind of respect in her eyes. Pain is an old friend of hers. She's learned how to deal with it and accept it. But, most people haven't, and that he could go through something like that? Well, it's damn impressive and it pushes her image of him even further away from the one perpetrated by the media.
The subject of pain brings up a question that hasn't crossed her mind before, but ought to have been obvious. It makes her forehead crease in a light frown. Her hand slides up -- slowly and easily -- to the base of his ribs, her thumb brushing along the sweep of the lowest one on the left. She shifts her weight from one foot to the other, the slight movement pressing her abdomen closer against his hand, her fingers curling a little tighter around his wrist in unconscious response. "Does it hurt still? The shrapnel?"
His grin broadens at the laugh, and for a moment he's caught by how young she seems. It's a strange impression to be getting. Physically she hasn't changed. But it's in the way she speaks, the way she carries herself, an edge of uncertainty he's never seen in her before. If he was anyone other than him it might inspire a protective urge. But he's not, and in any case, he's entirely aware that she could still kill him with her bare hands. "Oh yeah," he says, amusement gleaming in his eyes, "We really went for the five-star treatment. They even laid on the spiders."
He can't help but look pleased at her reaction to the arc reactor. He also can't help but wonder if she'd always had some level of respect for this if nothing else, somewhere beneath the personal distaste. "Yeah, in a cave," he confirms with a nod, "Had to cannibalize a few missiles to do it." It was...a challenge, to say the least. Even leaving aside the less than favorable circumstances - whoever said the prospect of hanging concentrates the mind obviously wasn't speaking from first-hand experience - the equipment left a lot be be desired. Seriously, oxy-acetylene torches. Who the hell still welds with those?
His breath catches ever so slightly at the movement of her hand, his fingers flexing where they're still pressed against her skin, and he gives a soft, strange little smile. "All the time."
Young isn't that far off the mark, actually. This is Natasha with ten years worth of experience and growing up stripped away from her. Back when she was still struggling with the idea that she could ever be anything but the weapon they raised her into. Mentally, she's currently one messed up teenager right on the verge of adulthood. At least technically. Actually? Natasha never had much of a childhood, and her teenage years were spent training or going out on missions. It's like she skipped her youth and just emerged a fully-fledged spy and assassin. Can you blame her for being a little bit fucked up as a result?
At the moment though? She's caught up in his wide grin and their ridiculous joke, and the smile on her face is solid and momentarily unguarded. "Shit, you guys got spiders as well?" She makes a show of looking around at the state of the art workshop, which may not be exactly pristine, but still must be a hell of a lot cleaner than a goddamn cave. "I have to say, I'm surprised you can live in a hovel like this after that experience."
Natasha's eyes are drawn back down to the arc reactor and they widen just a touch. Damn. Not only did he build it in a cave, he built it out of missiles. And it's about the size of her fist and can -- if he's not lying to her, which to be honest, he might be -- power a whole city. She's going to have to ask Clint to verify everything that Tony tells her. Because it can't all be true. "You're kidding me..."
The flex of his fingers against her skin earns him a light press of her fingertips in return. Her eyes snap back up to his at the answer to her question though. She gives him a long and searching look. Sometimes, you see pain in people's faces, in the lines around their eyes and mouth. But Tony just looks like he's a quirk of the mouth away from a grin all the time. Natasha isn't even aware that her fingers have unfurled from around his wrist -- leaving her wide open to attack -- until her hand is halfway to his face. You can see the moment when she catches herself at it, her hand sort of hesitates in the air like she's not sure if she should continue the motion or capture his wrist again. In the end, she slowly makes herself finish what she started. Her hand cups the side of his jaw, thumb nearly touching the corner of his mouth. Her other hand follows the curve of his ribs to his left side and settles there. Her eyes meet his, and she's frowning as she tries to catch so much as a flicker of pain in them.
"You can't even tell," she finally says and it's part compliment, part admiration, and part suspicion. He could be lying after all.
He gives a long-suffering sigh, assuming an expression of spurious forbearance. "Somehow I cope," he replies with dignity. There's a faintly bemused edge to his grin. This is...weird. He likes it, but it's undeniably weird.
"Scout's honor," is his response, coupled with a smirk. Clint will confirm everything he's said, as will the file SHIELD keeps on him. Many things have been said about Tony over the years. People have questioned his morals, his personal habits, and occasionally his sanity. But one thing that even the harshest critics have never questioned is that he's damn good at what he does. There's a reason Stark Industries is the leader in its field. He may get a bit too much of a kick out of tossing the word 'genius' around, but it really is merited.
Her hand hesitates in midair and he goes completely still, watching her with a strangely blank expression. The wariness in his stance ratchets up a few notches but he still doesn't pull away. One hand stays pressed flat against her stomach; the other moves, slowly and tentatively, to rest against the back of her hand where it's cupped around the side of his face. There's something almost vulnerable in his eyes.
"I don't-" he begins, and then stops, because he really has no idea where that sentence was meant to be going. What is he even supposed to say. It's always there. It's in every move he makes; underpinning every thought, every breath. Half the time it barely even registers on a conscious level it's so all-pervading, the dull ache radiating out from the hot, foreign weight in the center of his chest and cresting with every beat of his heart. Why would it be noticeable when there's nothing for it to stand out against? It is the baseline.
It's there though, when you're looking for it. In the shadows under his eyes which are so easy to attribute to insomnia, the tension in his shoulders, the occasional hitch of breath when he moves the wrong way; in all the little things that slip past the facade. And the 'genius billionaire playboy philanthropist' bit is and has always been a facade. Perhaps he never went through any of the training she did, but a lifetime spent always in the public eye, every move analyzed by a dozen different media outlets, teaches its own lessons about masks.
Natasha's heart stutters in her chest as Tony's hand covers hers. It's a good thing that he moves so slowly, giving her plenty of warning before his hand traps hers against his face. If he goes for her, if he really goes for her, that hand on top of hers is going to lose her valuable seconds. Every last instinct in her body is screaming at her to move away, but she ignores them and stays right where she is, meeting his eyes breathlessly, the world spinning out between them. It's like a wall between them has fallen away, and she thinks she might be able to see the shadow of something in his eyes. It might well be pain. Regardless, there's an openness to him that makes her believe him, even though she can't quite trust him. (Yet.)
The key to handling pain is to remember that it is transient. No matter how much it hurts, one way or another, it'll eventually stop. Except it doesn't for Tony. He has just learned to live with it. Another thing about him that impresses the hell out of her. "Wow. I--"
It all gets too much for her. Their eyes meeting, the way they're touching each other. The intimacy of it all catches in her throat and she damn near chokes on it. She ducks her head, her gaze dropping to his hand pressed against her stomach. There are a couple of oily smudges littering her skin where he has touched her, standing out like dusted fingerprints on a crime scene. Somewhere underneath his hand is the uneven scar from two years back. No. Longer than that. Two years plus the time she's lost. (Dammit.) Her stomach twists and she can feel the bile rising in her throat. She doesn't want to think about that. She wants to be here, in this downright scary moment and just-- not think for a little while. Except the moment is getting a bit too close to something she can't name for comfort.
"Do you see the, uh, scar on my right side. The crooked one?" she says, keeping her head bowed. If she's not looking at him, then it's a little bit less like she's opening herself up and letting her secrets spill out. It's also less like she's running away. The muscles in her stomach tense and shift under his hand. It's not impressive, and it's nothing as personal as what he's just told her, but it's the first thing that comes to mind. "That's from when I had my appendix taken out with a pen knife." Her eyes flick up to meet his and she gives him a quick, self-conscious smile, her fingertips twitching against his cheek and the corner of his jaw.
And in any case, he's seen Natasha fight. She moves like a goddamn snake. He's pretty sure she could take each and every one of them out.
He's trying not to tense, to keep his body language relaxed, but it's not easy. It's all he can do not to shy away when she reaches out toward him. A faint shiver runs through him at her touch, muscles jumping and twitching involuntarily under her fingertips. There's hasn't been a whole lot of human contact in his life ever since Afghanistan, for a whole number of reasons. This is...weirdly intimate, and the strange sort of moment they seem to be having here has the automatic smart-ass remark about feeling him up dying on his lips.
"Arc reactor," he explains succinctly, "Levitating dipole magnetic containment fusion reactor, if you wanna get technical, but that just doesn't have the same ring to it." He glances down at it, running a finger along the warm, smooth metal of the casing; it hums reassuringly under his touch. Tension is still evident in every movement he makes. He hates that he feels so vulnerable like this.
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Her face goes blank at the words leaving Tony's mouth. Like most of them, she understands individually (except for dipole, what the hell is that?) but string them all together and she doesn't have the first clue what they mean. "Right," she says slowly, dragging the word out. "But what's it doing in your chest?"
Her eyes track Tony's finger as it traces a path along the rim of the... arc reactor. Her own fingers are itching to touch it as well, but she won't do it without his permission, or without knowing that it's safe, for that matter. She's never seen anything like it before. Who knows what it's capable of? Or how much it might hurt? In this case, caution is her friend. So, instead she presses her hand flush against Tony's belly, just by his belly button, thumb rubbing absently along a short, white scar. A solid touch is easier to get used to than the featherlight ones she's been giving him so far, and maybe that'll ease some of the tension out of him.
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Now normally this isn't the sort of thing he'd just tell someone. Especially not someone who is effectively a complete stranger. But for some reason it's easier to get the words out this time; maybe it's because it's something he feels like she's supposed to know. And maybe the truth is a little thing when he's already letting her this close, leaving himself this exposed. There's something strangely reassuring about the firm, warm touch against his stomach.
In the end he just shrugs and gives the bare bones of the explanation. "It's powering a magnet," he says, tapping his chest. "I've got shrapnel headed into my heart. Inoperable. This keeps it where it can't do any more damage."
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Natasha blinks. She's pretty sure that Tony just told her how she can kill him, in the most painfully slow way imaginable. The arc reactor looks pretty sturdy, but give her the right tools and she's pretty sure she could break it. Hell, there's probably something in this very workshop that could do irreparable harm to the thing keeping his heart from being torn apart by shrapnel.
"Wow. That's-- That really sucks." She can't help but staring at him, wide-eyed and questioning, her hand stilling completely against his skin. How is he trusting her this much? He said it himself, he barely knows the woman she's supposedly grown into, and yet here he is, giving up all of his secrets. There's a sudden, intense pressure over Natasha's chest and for a moment she forgets how to breathe. This level of trust -- especially when given from someone who is clearly struggling with it -- is immense. The only other person who has trusted her like this is Clint when he dug her dart into his skin to prove himself to her. One act of trusts deserves another, and Natasha owes Tony now.
Before she can stop to think about it (and inevitably talk herself out of it) she grabs the hem of her tanktop and pulls it up to reveal her smooth stomach, mirroring him except she stops just short of flashing him her bra. Tony's not the only one with scars. Sure, hers aren't anywhere near as impressive as his, but she still has quite the collection. Of course, most of them are scattered across her body. Like the smooth, round one just above her clavicle and close to her throat, left by one of Clint's arrows. Or the puckered one at the back of her knee from a throwing star. Or the burn mark on her right wrist that's old to this body, but new to her. But, there are a couple on her abdomen. A few faded, thin, white lines from the knife of someone she'd thought she could trust, and the jagged pink one across her abdomen that she doesn't know where she got.
Swallowing just a touch too tightly, and most of the tension from earlier snapping back into place, she snags one of his hands with her free one, and achingly slowly, giving him plenty of time to pull away, she presses it against her bare stomach so that his fingers brush against the most prominent of her scars. A dozen secrets crowd at the back of her tongue. But to her frustration she can't bring herself to voice a single one, because she doesn't trust him. She wants to, but she can't. Some of her frustration flickers across her face before she shuts it down and hides it with a near apologetic smile. It's going to have to be enough for now that she's letting him touch her at all. "Can I touch it, or would that zap me to death?" Her fingers twitch lightly against his skin, but her hand stays where it is.
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His eyebrows go up at- well that was more skin than he was expecting to be seeing today. Or possibly ever. What the hell? But then his eyes catch the scars and all of a sudden everything makes sense again. Tit for tat. Fair enough. Some of them he's seen before, or at least knows of; the round one just below her throat, shown over a bottle of vodka on a night of strangely honest conversation, or the relatively new one on her stomach that has to be from that thing with the glass shards that Clint was bitching about. Others are entirely mysterious. He can't help but wonder about the stories behind them.
He tenses again as she catches his hand in hers, but he doesn't pull away. He's pretty sure he knows where she's going with this. Her skin is warm and smooth under his touch, textured by scars here and there. His fingertips leave faint trails of slick black oil behind. The damn stuff gets everywhere. He's still curious about the stories behind the scars; but contrary to popular opinion he's not a complete idiot, and asking when it's a coin toss whether or not she knows the story seems like a massive dick move.
His eyes flick up to hers at the question. "Uh...no, but no," he replies, which...made more sense in his head than it did aloud. After a moment he translates; "That is...no, no zapping, but still not a great idea." There are very, very few people he trusts enough for them to be able to touch the reactor without inducing a freakout of epic proportions. Pepper's one; Rhodey's another. Bruce or Clint could probably get away with it in theory, though it hasn't been tested in practice yet. But Natasha was never one. Not even the Natasha he knew and fought beside, before this whole mess.
On some level he does feel kind of bad about that. It's not that he mistrusts her entirely: he trusts her to have his back in the field, to get the job done. But with this? No. On an intellectual he was pretty sure she didn't intend to kill him, but apparently his subconscious would not be moved on this one. Risking it regardless seems to involve an unacceptably high chance of ending in a humiliating panic attack.
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Considering the tension in Tony's wrist as she guides his hand to her skin, she's actually kind of surprised that he doesn't pull away. But with the way his eyes lock on her skin, she guesses that he might be as fascinated by her scars as she is by his.
The slight slickness of Tony's fingertips against her skin sparks another memory. This one longer but more disjointed than the last. The hum of an engine. The dark battle suit she's been assured is hers open as far down as it goes, her skin flashing pale and streaked with grease through the opening. Calloused fingers running down her skin-- This is apparently not the first time a man with calloused hands has left dark smudges on her skin. It sure as hell wasn't Tony though. His touch against her skin is warm and solid, and the light brush of his fingers tickles enough to send a slight shiver up her spine, but it doesn't send sparks flying across her skin. Based on the last precious flash of a memory, she's just going to go ahead and assume that it's Clint. (The circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. Like the fact that they're married and that his brief touches always leave her craving more.)
After Tony has stumbled through the words that basically boil down to no, don't, Natasha just nods. "Okay." Whether it's because touching it would hurt her or because he simply wants her hands nowhere near the device keeping him alive, doesn't really matter. The end result is the same; she's not going to touch it. She has enough trust issues of her own to respect a clearly set boundary.
Standing there, hands pressed against each others' scars (her fingers still circled around his wrist, thumb resting at the jut of bone at the back of his wrist), is oddly intimate. Which is-- scary, really. Natasha can count on the finges of one hand (and still have fingers left over) the number of times that she's been truly intimate with someone. And this? It's making the list. Her jaw tightens imperceptibly, and something dark flits through her eyes.
"How did it happen?" In casting a glance down at his abdomen for emphasis, Natasha gets caught by the road map of scars yet again and achingly slowly she shifts her hand, fingers tracing the few scattered scars lower down on his skin, careful to not touch him anywhere near the sternum.
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Her simple acceptance of his refusal send a wave of relief washing through him. Maybe they're having a moment of sorts here, but he's glad to have avoided having to explain just why he can't deal with anyone touching the reactor.
Gaze still tracing the lines of old scars on her skin, he misses the tightening in her expression. There's something strange and hypnotic about this quiet little moment; one of her hands warm just below his ribs, the other wrapped around his wrist, his own fingers spread out on her stomach as he follows the line of one particularly prominent scar with the pad of this thumb.
He doesn't look up at the question. Somehow it's easier to find an answer when he doesn't have to meet her eyes. "I caught one of my own bombs in the face," he replies. "Woke up in a cave with a car battery hooked up to my chest." He's still not sure how much she knows. But she said he wasn't what she expected, and if Clint hadn't said anything then any expectations must have come from the media. And Afghanistan had been plastered all over every news outlet for the duration: the attack on the convoy, the three months where he was 'missing, presumed dead', his miraculous escape and return to the land of the living.
Of course all but the bare bones were half speculation and half shameless gossip. For all that Natasha had shown up in his life apparently well acquainted with his history, there are some things he is absolutely certain she never knew, because no-one knows them. He's never told anyone the whole truth about Afghanistan. Rhodey knows more than anyone else - if only because he was the first friendly face around when Tony was delirious with heat and thirst and pain, half-crazed by the sudden return to reality and desperate for someone he could lean on - but even he doesn't know the full story. Tony's never told anyone the full story, and those who saw it first-hand are long dead.
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As he tells her about the shrapnel, Natasha's eyes flick up to his face and her gaze stays on his ducked head and lowered eyes as he talks. Something in the way he won't look at her, tells her that this isn't an easy subject. And yet he tells her. Again, with this strange trust in her. It's disconcerting and touching and she doesn't know how to begin to process it. Not that she hasn't been able to make men trust her with things they oughtn't have before. Of course she has. She'd be a pretty crap spy if she hadn't. But, generally, she'd been making an effort then, being charming or flirtatious or simply sympathetic. She's pretty sure she's been none of those things since entering the workshop. She's too off-balance, too raw and lost now to even think about making a play at being a person deserving of trust. But here he is, just giving it to her unbidden.
If her hands hadn't been occupied -- one with mirroring his hand against his stomach, the other with making sure that his hand doesn't stray somewhere she doesn't want it -- she might've brushed her fingers across his cheek rather pointedly. His face isn't the piece of him that's littered with scars after all. So, she doubts that the bomb blew up literally in his face.
Natasha's done research on everyone of the Avengers (including herself, though details on her and Clint are pretty scarce), and Tony's life has been the easiest by far to find information on. But, it's not like she's sat down and made an exhaustive timeline of his entire life (yet). More like, she's read countless of articles on him (often out of order) to try to puzzle together a sense of who he is. She knows about Afghanistan. It's pretty hard to miss considering the intense news coverage of the incident. But, she only knows the bare bones of the story. The unit he was travelling with for a PR-stunt was ambushed and he was captured. After a lengthy captivity he was rescued through the tireless efforts of the U.S. military and brought home. Upon his return, he dismantled the weapons manufacturing branch of Stark Industries (aka most of the company) and after that the stories delve into speculation.
Getting caught in the blast of one of his own bombs sounds like a pretty good reason to stop making bombs, but Natasha doesn't like to assume things. For all she knows the bomb may've been on a separate occasion entirely.
"That must've been fun," she says drily. It sounds like the beginning of a nightmare. She kindly doesn't point out the irony in the fact that it's a piece of one of his own bombs trying to crawl its way into his heart. He's a smart guy, she's sure he's figured that one out all on his own. "Why a car battery?" Her fingers have absently been trailing the faint scars low on his belly, and now they bump against the worn denim of his jeans, and she stops, vaguely aware that she should probably move her hand, but too caught up in the story to act on the distant impulse.
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"Oh yeah, it was great," he responds dryly, gaze flicking up to her face with a humorless little half-smirk. It's easier than it should be to talk to her about this. It doesn't make sense. He couldn't have had this conversation with her before. But his distrust of Natasha was never personal, stabbing-related incidents notwithstanding; it was always a byproduct of her loyalty to SHIELD, who he doesn't trust an inch. Except it's gone now, isn't it? As far as this Natasha knows SHIELD are still her enemies. That really shouldn't put him more at ease, but it does. After all, how can she have an agenda right now when she barely knows who or where she is?
He shrugs. "It was all they had going spare. There was a-" His voice catches momentarily in his throat. "-surgeon they'd grabbed. He put me back together. Got most of the shrapnel out, and then rigged up the battery to keep the rest out of the way. It woulda ran flat in a couple of weeks at the outside, but this thing..." He tilts his head and shifts his shoulders slightly in a gesture which indicates the arc reactor "...kept me going after that."
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The younger self that she's been thrown back to though? She has the morals of a particularly vicious predator. Okay, that's not fair, she has some morals, it's just that they're horribly skewed from the way she was brought up to perceive everyone outside of the Red Room as either a threat or an asset to be used or disposed of. At any rate, she's dangerous, unpredictable and extremely volatile. Especially now that all her strings have been cut. She hasn't learned yet how to control herself without an outside force guiding her. The last time when she found herself outside the Red Room's control the death toll was immense and it was only brought to an end when Clint was sent after her.
But, then again, Tony probably doesn't know that. Because Clint wouldn't give up Natasha's secrets without a Norse god probing through his mind. And though everyone at SHIELD knows that Natasha used to work for the other side, few are aware of the details of the jobs she took when she went freelance.
If it came down to it, Natasha'd smash Tony's arc reactor to pieces and leave him gasping and dying on the floor. Except-- Right now? With his hand pressed against her stomach and her hand pressed against his stomach in turn? She thinks that maybe she'd feel bad about it afterwards.
Of course, there's no reason for her to kill Tony. Or anyone in the tower. Even if there was, the tenuous connection she has built with Clint is probably going to hold her back, because these people matter to him. And he is her guiding star in the darkness she's found herself in.
But Tony's right, there's no secret agenda here, just the burning need to find out who she is and where she fits into this new world.
His dry smirk draws a flicker of a real smile from her in return. "Like a vacation, I imagine. Except far better than some tropical island somewhere." Her voice has gone from dry to joking, and she's also surprised at the ease of their conversation and how quickly this-- thing between them has settled her. Because she feels settled. What tension had worked its way into her muscles between crawling into the air duct and now has simply dropped away, leaving her not relaxed exactly, but not achingly tense at least.
Natasha catches the way Tony's voice breaks ever so slightly mid-sentence, but she doesn't know how to interpret it. For all she knows, the surgeon may've been instrumental in torturing him or something. Because it doesn't sound like he was in that cave voluntarily. Slowly, she's working things out from the few clues he's giving her, and unlike piecing together the bits of and pieces of her own history, this is intriguing rather than frustrating. "They had one of those lying around in a cave?" Natasha's eyes flick up to the arc reactor again, her fingertips twitching against his stomach in the effort of keeping herself from just reaching up and touching it. She knows that she can't, but damn she's curious.
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Of course he knows better than to assume it's complete, or accurate. His own file is a tissue of complete lies in places. But there was enough there to make him really curious about the bits that have to have been omitted.
There's a huff of breath that's something close to a laugh and he grins at her. "Oh yeah. It was a lovely spot. All the sand you could eat, hot and cold running rats..." Hey, at least he's not the only one way more at ease than is in any way sensible right now.
He feels that little twitch of her hand and his own fingers tense almost imperceptibly in response. "I built it," he responds, and for all that this is an awful set of memories to recall, there's a note of fierce pride in his voice. There are plenty of things in his past he's not proud of, but goddamnit, if he's proud of anything he's proud of this. Of the reactor, of the fact that it all came together in his head in a cave in Afghanistan when he was facing blackmail or death and in so much pain he could barely think straight.
Steve asked him, once, what he was without the armor. It was a question aimed to hurt, to strike at the fact that his strength in the field is entirely artificial. It was also completely missing the point. So maybe he doesn't have the raw brute strength Steve and Thor and the Hulk do, or the decades of training Clint and Natasha do. But although he might be vulnerable out of the armor, he's never been weak; when backed into a corner he will change the world to fight back if that's what it takes.
It's his mind that makes him dangerous. Why would he ever be ashamed of wearing the armor to fight when it's his design every step of the way, his hands that built it, with tech that was supposed to be impossible lying at its very heart?
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"You built that?" Natasha asks and there's honest to god wonder in her voice. Even without touching it, and without any knowledge of advanced engineering, she can tell that it's a complicated piece of technology and he built that. "In a cave?" Natasha has always responded well to talent and skill, and building that thing would've taken both, plus an ingenuity she could never hope to possess. Now, Natasha can tear things down, burn them to ground and pull them apart. But she could never build something. Much less something as intricate as the arc reactor.
Glancing down at the softly glowing circle, her eyes are caught instead by the scars scattered across Tony's chest and abdomen and the realization slowly sinks in that not only did he build that thing in a cave, he must've been in incredible pain at the time. Natasha's never taken a direct shrapnel hit, but she's seen it happen and heard the screams of the survivors. When her gaze returns to his face, there's a new kind of respect in her eyes. Pain is an old friend of hers. She's learned how to deal with it and accept it. But, most people haven't, and that he could go through something like that? Well, it's damn impressive and it pushes her image of him even further away from the one perpetrated by the media.
The subject of pain brings up a question that hasn't crossed her mind before, but ought to have been obvious. It makes her forehead crease in a light frown. Her hand slides up -- slowly and easily -- to the base of his ribs, her thumb brushing along the sweep of the lowest one on the left. She shifts her weight from one foot to the other, the slight movement pressing her abdomen closer against his hand, her fingers curling a little tighter around his wrist in unconscious response. "Does it hurt still? The shrapnel?"
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He can't help but look pleased at her reaction to the arc reactor. He also can't help but wonder if she'd always had some level of respect for this if nothing else, somewhere beneath the personal distaste. "Yeah, in a cave," he confirms with a nod, "Had to cannibalize a few missiles to do it." It was...a challenge, to say the least. Even leaving aside the less than favorable circumstances - whoever said the prospect of hanging concentrates the mind obviously wasn't speaking from first-hand experience - the equipment left a lot be be desired. Seriously, oxy-acetylene torches. Who the hell still welds with those?
His breath catches ever so slightly at the movement of her hand, his fingers flexing where they're still pressed against her skin, and he gives a soft, strange little smile. "All the time."
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At the moment though? She's caught up in his wide grin and their ridiculous joke, and the smile on her face is solid and momentarily unguarded. "Shit, you guys got spiders as well?" She makes a show of looking around at the state of the art workshop, which may not be exactly pristine, but still must be a hell of a lot cleaner than a goddamn cave. "I have to say, I'm surprised you can live in a hovel like this after that experience."
Natasha's eyes are drawn back down to the arc reactor and they widen just a touch. Damn. Not only did he build it in a cave, he built it out of missiles. And it's about the size of her fist and can -- if he's not lying to her, which to be honest, he might be -- power a whole city. She's going to have to ask Clint to verify everything that Tony tells her. Because it can't all be true. "You're kidding me..."
The flex of his fingers against her skin earns him a light press of her fingertips in return. Her eyes snap back up to his at the answer to her question though. She gives him a long and searching look. Sometimes, you see pain in people's faces, in the lines around their eyes and mouth. But Tony just looks like he's a quirk of the mouth away from a grin all the time. Natasha isn't even aware that her fingers have unfurled from around his wrist -- leaving her wide open to attack -- until her hand is halfway to his face. You can see the moment when she catches herself at it, her hand sort of hesitates in the air like she's not sure if she should continue the motion or capture his wrist again. In the end, she slowly makes herself finish what she started. Her hand cups the side of his jaw, thumb nearly touching the corner of his mouth. Her other hand follows the curve of his ribs to his left side and settles there. Her eyes meet his, and she's frowning as she tries to catch so much as a flicker of pain in them.
"You can't even tell," she finally says and it's part compliment, part admiration, and part suspicion. He could be lying after all.
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"Scout's honor," is his response, coupled with a smirk. Clint will confirm everything he's said, as will the file SHIELD keeps on him. Many things have been said about Tony over the years. People have questioned his morals, his personal habits, and occasionally his sanity. But one thing that even the harshest critics have never questioned is that he's damn good at what he does. There's a reason Stark Industries is the leader in its field. He may get a bit too much of a kick out of tossing the word 'genius' around, but it really is merited.
Her hand hesitates in midair and he goes completely still, watching her with a strangely blank expression. The wariness in his stance ratchets up a few notches but he still doesn't pull away. One hand stays pressed flat against her stomach; the other moves, slowly and tentatively, to rest against the back of her hand where it's cupped around the side of his face. There's something almost vulnerable in his eyes.
"I don't-" he begins, and then stops, because he really has no idea where that sentence was meant to be going. What is he even supposed to say. It's always there. It's in every move he makes; underpinning every thought, every breath. Half the time it barely even registers on a conscious level it's so all-pervading, the dull ache radiating out from the hot, foreign weight in the center of his chest and cresting with every beat of his heart. Why would it be noticeable when there's nothing for it to stand out against? It is the baseline.
It's there though, when you're looking for it. In the shadows under his eyes which are so easy to attribute to insomnia, the tension in his shoulders, the occasional hitch of breath when he moves the wrong way; in all the little things that slip past the facade. And the 'genius billionaire playboy philanthropist' bit is and has always been a facade. Perhaps he never went through any of the training she did, but a lifetime spent always in the public eye, every move analyzed by a dozen different media outlets, teaches its own lessons about masks.
In the end he just shrugs. "You get used to it."
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The key to handling pain is to remember that it is transient. No matter how much it hurts, one way or another, it'll eventually stop. Except it doesn't for Tony. He has just learned to live with it. Another thing about him that impresses the hell out of her. "Wow. I--"
It all gets too much for her. Their eyes meeting, the way they're touching each other. The intimacy of it all catches in her throat and she damn near chokes on it. She ducks her head, her gaze dropping to his hand pressed against her stomach. There are a couple of oily smudges littering her skin where he has touched her, standing out like dusted fingerprints on a crime scene. Somewhere underneath his hand is the uneven scar from two years back. No. Longer than that. Two years plus the time she's lost. (Dammit.) Her stomach twists and she can feel the bile rising in her throat. She doesn't want to think about that. She wants to be here, in this downright scary moment and just-- not think for a little while. Except the moment is getting a bit too close to something she can't name for comfort.
"Do you see the, uh, scar on my right side. The crooked one?" she says, keeping her head bowed. If she's not looking at him, then it's a little bit less like she's opening herself up and letting her secrets spill out. It's also less like she's running away. The muscles in her stomach tense and shift under his hand. It's not impressive, and it's nothing as personal as what he's just told her, but it's the first thing that comes to mind. "That's from when I had my appendix taken out with a pen knife." Her eyes flick up to meet his and she gives him a quick, self-conscious smile, her fingertips twitching against his cheek and the corner of his jaw.
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