A/N: Heyo! I have an angsty Natasha fic for you here today. It's inspired by the song Dead Hearts and I strongly recommend listening to it while reading. This is crossposted to Tumblr and AO3 (thestrawberrygirl) on both sooo yeah! Enjoy!
I don't own the Avengers, if I did I would have explored Nat's backstory
Warnings: don't read on if torture, abuse and death of children (it's the Red Room stuff), hypothermia, grief, pain, anything like that triggers you.
Tell me everything that happened
Tell me everything you saw
They had lights inside their eyes
They had lights inside their eyes
"JARVIS, show me the article," Nat asked, her voice trembling ever so slightly.
"Of course, Ms. Romanoff."
The headline streamed across the TV in her room. Russian training academy, Red Room, has been destroyed and burned by the US government.
Her stomach dropped. No. It can't be true. The Red Room doesn't just get destroyed. That's not possible, it's not true.
But it was. It was true. The Red Room had been reduced to a pile of burning cinder blocks.
She felt a strange feeling in her heart. She definitely wasn't nostalgic. The Red Room had kidnapped her from that house fire when she was 4, leaving her parents to die. They tortured her, made her into a killer, messed with her mind and memories.
They made her kill her friends.
When she had escaped when she was 16 and Clint had found her, she never looked back. She ran and ran because running was what she knew, it was all she knew.
But now, she couldn't run away. No, for once in her life, it was time to run towards something.
"JARVIS, is the quinjet fueled up?"
"Yes, Ms. Romanoff, but-"
"Get me 29 roses please. I'm leaving in 10 minutes." JARVIS didn't answer her, but she knew he was listening.
It was late, around 2 in the morning. Tony would be in his lab. The others would hopefully be asleep. Clint… well, he was a wild card at night. He could be anywhere. But she had known him for years. She knew how to avoid him.
She threw some essentials in a bag before heading towards the quinjet. JARVIS had been listening, because a bundle of blood-red roses laid on the countertop.
She picked them up on her way out to one of the jets. She needed to do this. Not just for herself.
But for them.
Did you see the closing window?
Did you hear the slamming door?
They moved forward, and my heart died
They moved forward, and my heart died
"Mr. Stark, Ms. Romanoff has just entered the roof."
"What? Why?" Tony asked, actually pausing his newest project to listen to JARVIS.
"She asked me to make sure one of the quinjets had fuel and to get her roses."
"That's helpful," Tony grumbled. "Is Barton still up?"
"Mr. Barton is currently downstairs in the archery range."
"Typical. Tell him to come up here, will ya J?"
"Right away, Mr. Stark."
Tony didn't go back to his tinkering. He wanted to give Natasha her space, since she'd probably kill him if he didn't. But at the same time, if this was something important, he didn't want her to be alone.
"Tony? What's up?" Clint had arrived in the lab, his bow on his back.
"Hey, do you know if today is anything important for Nat? An anniversary or something?"
"...no? Not that I know of anyways. Why? She alright?"
"I'm not sure, Katniss. JARVIS just told me that she was going up to the jet with roses."
"Where is she going?"
"The GPS coordinates are set for an area approximately 50 miles West of Vorkuta, Russia."
"Russia? Why would she be going back to-"
"JARVIS, how many roses did she want?" Clint interjected.
"29, sir."
"That's specific," Tony commented.
Clint didn't say anything. He wordlessly picked up one of the laptops Tony had laying around and typed something into the search bar.
"Oh no, Tasha… I knew you talked about it doing something, but..."
"What? What is it?"
Clint spun the laptop around for him to see. "The Red Room. It's gone. And I think I know why she's going back"
Please, please tell me what they looked like
Did they seem afraid of you?
They were kids that I once knew
They were kids that I once knew...
Even in a quinjet, the ride from New York to Northern Russia was pretty long, giving her plenty of time to think and contemplate.
She did not want to think. Not about the Red Room, or Madame B, or the other girls, anything.
You owe it to them to remember.
All of her memories before 16 were jumbled. But some things… some things can't be erased or altered by drugs.
She remembers their names. All of them. All 29.
She had been the youngest girl in her class of Black Widows. Some said that was a weakness. Others said it was an advantage.
But when they brought little Natalia Romanova to that place, still covered in burns and ash, she didn't care about becoming the Black Widow. She wanted her mother, and father, in their little one-bedroom apartment, with her stuffed rabbit Alexei. It was always cold in that apartment, but when she was snuggled between her mother and father, she felt safe.
She learned quickly that safety was not a feeling in the Red Room. That was something for children, and she was not a child. She was Natalia, made of marble.
On her first night there, when she had silently cried from the pain of cold metal handcuff cutting her wrist, one of the older girls had helped her. She was 8. Her name was Nadia.
Nadia had stolen one of the handcuff keys from the guards. She had unlocked the cuffs and hugged her. Made her a makeshift doll out of an old sock and toilet paper. Told her stories of magic and heros.
In the morning, they found out about what Nadia had done. They punished her until she couldn't scream anymore. Just before they killed her, she looked at Natalia. "It's ok", she whispered. Just before they pulled the trigger.
Magic had not been in that place in a very long time.
After Nadia had been killed, Natalia funneled her grief and fear into her training. She rose to the top, taking down girls who were twice her age and twice her size. She used untraditional methods on the mat, using her legs to take them down since that was where she was strongest.
Her handlers were very impressed with her sudden prowess. She became the best dancer, best fighter, best liar. She picked up the languages quickly. She was as stoic as stone, never flinching or backing down from the threat of a punishment.
They never knew what fueled her excellence. Never knew that she was motivated by rage and grief. For her parents. For Nadia.
When she turned 9 years old, she decided that it was time to repay her debt to Nadia. There was a new girl, the last one for their class. The thirtieth. Sasha.
No one knew what had happened to Sasha. But they did know that she was good. She was unwavering, unmoving. During the day, anyways.
At night, Natalia could hear the girl in the bed next to her trying to muffle her cries. She took out the key that one of the guards had foolishly left in the washrooms. She carefully unlocked her own cuff and Sasha's.
She rubbed her back silently. Rebraided her French braids that had come undone in the night. Made her a crude doll out of an old sock and toilet paper. Just as Nadia had done for her.
The next morning, Natalia had waited all day for someone to take her to a room to be killed. But they never did. They hadn't been caught.
Sasha and Natalia continued their routine every night. It was nice to have a friend in a place where friends were a myth.
They were friends for 2 years. They learned to master sneaking around. When Sasha turned 11, someone took her into a room alone. They did this all the time for training, interrogation practice, or just a mental test.
When Sasha didn't come back that night, she knew something was wrong.
She never saw Sasha again. She didn't know what happened to her. She still didn't.
"Landing in 10 minutes," the jet intercom told her. A wave of anxiety washed over her. She didn't want to be here. She wanted to turn around, go home, and never come back.
She hated the memories associated with this place. This was the closest she had ever been in the 12 years since Clint saved her. She avoided it like the plague.
The clearing the jet had landed in was still about 2 miles from the old academy. She pulled her coat and hat on and began her march through the barren fields and forest.
Tank tops and shorts. No shoes, she thought to herself. When she was 13, Madame B had given them all black tank tops and shorts. She took away their combat boots and forced them out into the bitter winds.
"Only the strongest will survive this challenge. Only those worthy of the Black Widow title will make it through this. If you are not ready, well, hypothermia isn't a bad way to go," she had told them. 2 girls out of the remaining 18 had died that day.
Then they had gone inside to train. The cold made their muscles achey and stiff, but the Red Room was not a place for complaints.
Then they did it all again the next day.
By the end of the week, 7 of the remaining 18 girls were dead, either from exhaustion or the cold. 11 remained from a group that was once 30.
Anastasia. Irina. Svetlana. Alina. Manya. Eva. Kyana.
Their dead hearts were everywhere. The lights inside their eyes extinguished. They're still out there. And she still cares.
She always will.
I could say it, but you won't believe me
You say you do, but you don't deceive me
It's hard to know they're out there
It's hard to know that you still care
Pepper, Tony, Clint, Bruce, Thor, Steve, and Fury had all boarded a jet to Russia as soon as Clint told them what had happened. They weren't going to let her go through this alone.
Natasha Romanoff liked to pretend she didn't feel things. But they were her family. And family helped each other.
They all sat in silence. Natasha only had an hour on them, but that was still an hour where she was alone and hurting. Even Tony didn't say anything.
Clint was playing with the spider necklace he always wore. Natasha had a matching one with an arrow. It was a symbol of how deep their friendship went.
Fury was completely still. He had his arms resting on his knees, looking straight ahead. His lips were more downturned than usual, and his forehead was more tense. You could only tell if you had known him for a long time, but Fury was upset. Upset that the woman he looked at as a daughter had to relive this. That she even had to live through it at all.
Clint and Fury were probably getting hit the hardest. They knew the most about what went down in the Red Room. They knew the most about how painful this had to be for their friend.
As the jet lightly set down in the field near the jet that Natasha had taken, they all prepared to walk the 2 miles in the cold weather.
The ground beneath their feet was completely frozen. Permafrost. Snowflakes rushed around their faces. It was painfully beautiful.
The sound of dried grass and leaves under their feet was the only sound on their walk. The wind whistled in their ears. The cold air bit into their exposed skin like needles.
Clint's breath caught in his throat when he saw her.
She was standing on a pile of rubble with her back to them. Her flaming red hair was flying in the wind. In her arms was the bouquet of roses. Each rose had a note attached, written in Natasha's small, elegant penmanship.
As Clint looked closer, he saw what the notes were. Names. All of them.
If Nat had realized they were there, she made no move to acknowledge them.
She just stood there. As if she was in shock. To be honest, she might've been.
"Sometimes, I swear I can see them," Natasha spoke. She sounded so… broken. "Everywhere. In the reflection of a window. When I heard a door slam, it was like they were right there like they used to be. Like how they were in here."
They all stayed quiet. She needed to get this out.
"It's like they're following me. Protecting me. I miss them. I miss them all."
"Inna, Katrina, Larisa, Polina, and Oksana were the first 5 to go." She held the 5 flowers tightly in her hand, like if she squeezed it tightly enough, she could bring them back. "5, 7, 6, 4, and 8. I'm sorry I couldn't save you," she whispered. Her emotions were coming to the surface, hidden by a thin veil of control.
"Raisa, Sonya, Ulyana, Vanka. I didn't know any of you. Not personally. But all of you deserved so much better than what you got."
"Luda, Lubov, and Klara. You were 8 years old. Triplets. Nothing could come between you three. Not the Red Room. Not even death."
Clint started to move closer towards his best friend. He could see the way she was shaking.
"That week when we stood outside for hours. The cold and exhaustion took 7. Anastasia, Irina, Svetlana, Alina, Manya, Eva, Kyana. I hope that you weren't in pain when you died. I hope you're finally resting."
Only 10 roses were left in her arms, the other 19 laid out on the ground in front of her. The bright red petals contrasted sharply with the grey cinder blocks and white snow.
"Yelizaveta. Liz. We were in actual hell together, and yet you somehow managed to make me smile with your fucked-up sense of humor. In a place like that, dark humor is the only kind you have." A small smile joined the tears running down her face. "I hope I'll see you again one day."
"Taisiya, Sonechka, Nikita, Mischa, Maya, Luda. You were all so smart. And so strong. You fought harder than everyone. Even now, I have yet to meet someone as smart as you six, and 2 of my best friends have more than one PhD," she laughed.
She was down to the final three roses. Clint put his arm around her. The dam was threatening to break any moment now.
"Nadia." She let her tears fall for Nadia. "I wouldn't be alive without you. I wouldn't have gotten to meet my family. I wouldn't have gotten to become an aunt without you." Clint had already been crying, they all had, even Fury, but that had struck him deep in his heart. "I owe you. And I'm sorry. I'm so sorry," she choked out. She bit her lip to keep it from trembling as she gently set the rose down on the ground.
"When I was 14, we had to do torture training." Pepper let out a small gasp. "After I had finished the whipping and electrocution day, Anya split her bread with me. She cleaned the cuts that I couldn't reach. In the morning, I-" Her voice began to crack. "They made me be the one to kill her. She was 15." She set Anya's rose on the ground next to the others. "You didn't deserve it, Anya. You were always so good. Better than I ever was."
"Sasha. Sasha and I were best friends," she let out a small bittersweet laugh. "When I was with her, I felt like, maybe, we could lead normal lives. Escape. Be happy. One day, when we were 11, they took her away and never brought her back." She held the rose with Sasha written on it in her hand. "I'm sorry, Sash. I'm so, so sorry. For everything."
"You forgot one," Clint whispered. He held out one more red rose. "Natalia Romanova. A little girl orphaned in a fire, who did what she had to do to survive. Who walked through hell and back and still found herself a family and a home." He set the rose down with the others.
"I'm sorry. I'm so sorry," she cried. Clint hugged her tightly as they sank to the ground.
"We were all so young. We were all kids. Just kids," she sobbed into his shoulder.
Years upon years, over 2 decades worth of grief, sadness, fear, rage, and pain came pouring out. She had been bottling these feelings up for 24 years, shoving them down, and now they were finally being released. Finally being set free.
"They were kids that I once knew. They were kids that I once knew..."
Now they're all dead hearts to you.
They were kids that I once knew
They were kids that I once knew
Now they're all dead hearts to you
Now they're all dead hearts to you
They were kids that I once knew
They were kids that I once knew
Now they're all dead hearts to you...
A/N: pls drop a review it would make my day :)
