#exit technology
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Sam's Club Revolutionizes Shopping with AI-Powered Exit Technology
“Experience the future of retail! Sam’s Club’s AI-powered exit technology sets a new standard for customer satisfaction.” Sam’s Club has taken a giant leap in retail innovation by introducing the largest-scale member-facing AI technology in the industry! This cutting-edge AI-powered exit technology is transforming the shopping experience, making it faster, more convenient, and more…

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#Innovation#ai#AI-powered exit technology#checkout#customer experience#customer satisfaction#efficiency#exit technology#Machine Learning#member-facing AI technology#retail#retail innovation#Sam&039;s Club#seamless shopping experience#security#shopping#technology
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#gl!ranboo are you okaaaay [they are not]#talos stimboards#stimboard#stim#generation loss#genloss#gl!ranboo#ranboo#horror stim#tech stim#wires#technology#exit sign#malls#vhs#crt tvs#static#irl hands#cabin#glow#red#black#green#brown#gif ids#id in alt#favetag
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V funny to me that fandom usually complains about unexpected design choices in the absence of lore, but they also complain with the presence of lore explaining why it is what it is (they just didn’t read)
#kittybee games#is the about the wild natlan technology/phlogiston-dependent tech? yes it is#also a nation Constantly At War will logically have way faster developments in devices to traverse long distances#(travel between combat zones/ I.e. nascent jetpack tech) and fighting (big flying gun/heavy artillery npc)#it has canonically inherited tech from the prev dragon civilization and access to their source of raw power (phlogiston)#that is region locked to the nation’s borders as it cannot exist outside preventing phlogi-tech from exiting the country#like I get being mad but for once it’s actually grounded in lore LOL#I’m just like yea I don’t get to be mad because they Did cover their bases on this one lol
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I miss when phones had buttons
#you want to exit out of an app that just started playing an ad? well you're gonna have to swipe up to get to your homescreen button#guess what else that's gonna do! correct! open the goddamn appstore!#i hate modern technology it's so FUCKING IMPRACTICAL!!!!!!#rayrambles
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im going to denmark on my birthday to visit my baby cousins🤭🥰
#im so exited i miss them sooooo much#and the youngest one has gotten so old#she will be 13 months when i see her in april#and she was only nine when i saw her last#and it was only for one day last time too#but yeah we were going to go earlier but the tickets were sooo expensive#so we picked another lol#also helping my mom with technology is hell. why are parents so bad at technology#!mine
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the prevalence of QR codes needs to cease. why should i have to download an app so i can scan a QR code to utilize a PARKING GARAGE???
Using QR codes to link things in circumstances where it would be inconvenient to laboriously type in a url by hand are all well and good, practical, I see it. But now I get emails like "Here's our event! Scan the qr code to register!" with a jpeg of a flyer and no url in the email or on the image. Oh you want me to...hold up my phone to a computer screen to scan a jpeg email attachment to get to a website? Instead of you just linking it to me, in the email you have already sent me, that I am already looking at on my computer? That's what you want me to do? Are you sure?
#also some of us (i.e. me) do not have smartphones#if you present me with a qr code for your menu i will simply leave#and not even out of principle but becuz i simply cannot access it#technology#queerical contributions#also also the parking garage thing happened to my family while we were out and about#and my dad couldnt get the app to work when we returned to our car#if it hadnt been at the specific time that the parking garage just leaves its exit bars open#who even knows how long we would have been stuck there
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Exit Signs: A Lifesaving Necessity

When it comes to emergency preparedness, exit signs are among the most crucial elements in any building, whether commercial, industrial, or residential. These simple yet life-saving tools play a vital role in guiding occupants to safety during emergencies, such as fires, power outages, or natural disasters. In this article, we’ll delve into the importance of exit signs, explore their evolution and regulations, compare different types of exit signs, and highlight how modern LED technology has revolutionized exit signage for enhanced safety.
The Importance of Exit Signs in Emergency Situations
Exit signs are more than just a legal requirement—they are essential to saving lives in emergency situations. According to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), over 1.3 million fires are reported annually in the United States, leading to thousands of injuries and deaths. Properly illuminated exit signs are crucial for guiding people to safety in these critical moments.
In large, complex buildings, such as office complexes, shopping malls, or industrial facilities, exit signs ensure that individuals can quickly locate emergency exits and evacuate efficiently. In fact, studies have shown that proper evacuation procedures, including clear exit signage, can reduce the likelihood of injuries or fatalities by up to 50% during emergencies.
Moreover, exit signs are designed to be visible even during power outages, providing continuous guidance in situations where visibility is compromised. This reliability is particularly important for buildings that may experience fire, smoke, or other hazards that limit visibility. Exit signs, when properly placed and maintained, ensure that individuals can escape quickly and safely.
A Brief History and Evolution of Exit Signs in the USA
Exit signs have evolved significantly over time, both in terms of design and regulation. In the early 20th century, exit signage was relatively simple, typically a painted word on a door or above a stairwell. However, as the need for building safety increased, particularly after major incidents like the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911, which claimed the lives of 146 workers due to inadequate exit signage and blocked emergency exits, safety regulations began to tighten.
By the mid-20th century, the rise of fire codes and safety standards mandated the use of illuminated exit signs to ensure visibility in emergency situations. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) were instrumental in setting regulations that govern the design, placement, and illumination of exit signs. These codes require that exit signs be clearly visible, provide adequate contrast with their surroundings, and remain illuminated even during power failures.
Over time, innovations in materials and technology have further shaped exit signage. While older models used incandescent bulbs and even painted signage, today's modern exit signs are more efficient, durable, and effective due to the advancements in lighting technology, such as LED.
Types of Exit Signs: A Comparison
Exit signs come in various designs and technologies, each with its advantages. Here's a comparison of the most common types:
1. Incandescent Exit Signs
These were the first types of exit signs widely used in commercial buildings. They rely on a standard incandescent light bulb, which emits light to illuminate the sign. While these signs were effective in their time, they have largely fallen out of favor due to several limitations:
High energy consumption
Frequent bulb replacement
Limited durability
2. Fluorescent Exit Signs
Fluorescent exit signs became popular as a more energy-efficient option in the late 20th century. They use fluorescent tubes that provide consistent illumination. However, they still require regular maintenance, and the bulbs can burn out over time. Though more energy-efficient than incandescent lights, they still have drawbacks such as the potential for flickering and the need for disposal of hazardous materials like mercury.
3. LED Exit Signs
LED technology has revolutionized exit signage, offering numerous advantages over traditional options. LED exit signs are energy-efficient, long-lasting, and highly durable. They also provide bright, clear illumination without flickering, even in challenging conditions like smoke or power failure. LED exit signs are quickly becoming the industry standard for both commercial and industrial settings.
The Role of LED Technology in Exit Signage
LED (Light Emitting Diode) technology has had a profound impact on the design and functionality of exit signs. Here are several reasons why LED exit signs are considered superior:
1. Energy Efficiency
LED exit signs use a fraction of the energy consumed by traditional incandescent or fluorescent signs. In fact, they can be up to 90% more energy-efficient, making them an eco-friendly choice for businesses looking to reduce their carbon footprint.
2. Longevity
LED exit signs have an impressive lifespan, often lasting up to 25 years or more with minimal maintenance. This is a significant improvement over incandescent and fluorescent options, which require frequent bulb replacements.
3. Cost Savings
Although LED exit signs may have a higher upfront cost, their long lifespan and energy efficiency translate into significant cost savings over time. With reduced energy consumption and lower maintenance costs, businesses can expect to recover the initial investment in just a few years.
4. Reliability
LED exit signs are designed to be reliable under all conditions. Unlike traditional exit signs, LEDs do not burn out, flicker, or fail in the same way. This ensures that exit signs will continue to operate during power outages and other emergencies.
5. Environmental Benefits
LEDs are free of hazardous materials like mercury, which is found in some fluorescent lights. As a result, LED exit signs are safer for both the environment and building occupants.
Sign Lights LED by Havells: The Top Brand in Industrial Lighting
When it comes to industrial lighting solutions, Sign Lights LED by Havells stands out as a leading brand in the industry. Havells is renowned for providing high-quality, durable, and energy-efficient lighting solutions, including exit signs, which are crucial in ensuring safety during emergencies.
Havells’ LED exit signs are designed to meet the highest safety standards, offering superior visibility and reliability in all conditions. With a focus on innovation and sustainability, Havells continues to lead the way in the lighting industry by providing advanced LED exit signage that helps protect both people and the planet.
Conclusion
Exit signs are a vital component of emergency preparedness and fire safety regulations, guiding individuals to safety in life-threatening situations. The evolution of exit signage, from basic painted signs to today’s highly efficient LED models, reflects ongoing advancements in safety and technology. As we’ve seen, LED exit signs offer unparalleled energy efficiency, longevity, and reliability compared to older options, making them the ideal choice for modern buildings.
Whether you're a business owner, building manager, or safety professional, investing in high-quality exit signs like Sign Lights LED by Havells ensures that your facility is prepared for emergencies, keeping both your staff and visitors safe. As regulations continue to evolve, the importance of properly placed and maintained exit signs will remain a fundamental aspect of building safety.
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xerox ; robert reynolds ; part two.
part one. | part three.
pairing ; robert (bob) reynolds x reader, thunderbolts & reader
synopsis ; you had one last job before you were free. no more splitting, no more deaths. unfortunately, that job seemed to rope in four other assassins and a... a man in hospital-wear?
words ; 11.8k
themes ; action, angst, slowburn, the beginnings of romance
warnings / includes ; much more intense violence/gore/death than in part one, suicide, self-harm, human experimentation, child abuse, reader has the ability to split into multiple bodies (think dupli-kate from invincible), foul language, mentions of pregnancy, everyone's mental health sucks!
a/n ; the support so far has been so sick guys! thank you so much! i initially wanted to cover all the events of the movie in two parts and move on to avengers tower type of stuff in the next part but i decided this part was already long enough and was itching to post LMAOO regardless, i hope you all enjoy!
main masterlist. read on ao3!
There was rarely a time in your early life when you weren’t being under surveillance. Cameras, everywhere. Nurses making their rounds. Scientists probing you. Surgeons with their hands on you, over you, inside you.
But once, when you were sixteen, there was a black-out in the facility, which you later learned to be a total power outage through the entire city. No cameras to watch you. The nurses who had been drawing your blood scurried out with owlish eyes, spooked. Moving gingerly, you pulled the needle out of your arm, bandaged it with the gauze on the medical cart, and glanced out of your barred window. The past few weeks, the scientists had been trying to use your DNA to perfect biological cloning technology. As revolutionary as it sounded, you really didn’t like the idea of someone having to live your reality, death and pain constantly hovering over your shoulder.
For a few minutes, however, you got to be alone with yourself. Nothing but you and your own thoughts. You began to shake, but you didn’t register it. The only thing you clearly remembered was the scalpel on the medical cart. A pale silver, but reflecting the hazy green of the emergency exit signs from outside your cell. You’d always thought the sign taunted you. Exit here, just in case you have to, even though you can’t.
The blade was cold in your touch, cutting the warmth of your skin.
You watched the blood drip down the first arm, and then sliced through the next. It hurt, of course it did. But then it wouldn’t hurt anymore, and it would all be over.
Your shaking had intensified so much that the bed frame rattled like bones. Then, you began to split. Whether it was subconscious or your body’s natural, instinctive reaction, you weren’t sure. You sobbed, a mangled noise caught in the back of your throat, trying to merge back together. But this had never occurred before—you had never tried to stop yourself from duplicating. Typically when you split, you carried forth the same wounds as the original, but that wasn’t the case this time.
It was as if your body had stored a clean, woundless back-up in case of a singular copy’s dire emergencies. You still felt it—the throbbing, searing pain on your arms—but no signs of the gash on you at all. You were wiped clean from your choice. A fresh restart.
That was the first time you had to watch yourself die by your own hand. You tried to give your copy some sense of comfort during the last few moments, but it felt futile knowing you craved the very same thing. You never tried committing suicide again. Mostly because, well, you were a walking paradox. Unkillable, yet you’ve died a thousand and one deaths.
And so—when you watched Valentina’s cavalry pierce poor, innocent Bob with round after round of bullets, a guilty, nasty part of you thought about how lucky he was to be able to die so quickly. Of course, you felt terrible as soon as the thought entered your mind. You rather liked Bob and his warbly doe eyes, his skittish but considerate demeanor, and his eagerness to help. It was an awful shame you didn’t get to know him better. You were still reeling over seeing him in your nightmare—was that your mind playing cruel tricks on you or was Bob less innocent than he came off to be?
His sacrifice certainly wasn’t going to be in vain. Walker had begun to drive the truck out of the compound down winding, sandy paths.
Except—it seemed Bob was a lot more similar to you than you thought. When someone shot you down, another cropped right back up. Bob, to your relief and utter confusion, did just the same.
The streaking figure across the sky was no star. It was flailing about amongst the grey clouds and bore the pale, baggy silhouette of hospital clothes.
Bob. Your Bob. He was alive!
“Palindrome,” you whispered in awe, face just about pressed up against the warm glass of the truck’s window. It was only a few seconds that he was suspended up in the air, but it felt like ages. Then, he began to plummet back down to the earth. “Oh, no.”
His landing was not a graceful descent—in fact, the impact was so massive that it sent a strong gust of wind billowing across the base, knocking your truck clean off its path. The vehicle tumbled in rotation as it made its way down the sandy slopes. You would’ve likely gotten a concussion from being jostled about had you not split yourself into as many copies as you could fit, which was nearly forty, and stayed nice and tight amongst your own nervous copies.
It landed on its side, and you reabsorbed all the duplicates into one body. Moonlight spilled into the vehicle when John hacked at the truck’s metal with his shield. It caved noisily beneath the initial strikes, then eventually split. You might not have liked the man, but he was impressively strong. Was he super-serumed up just like the previous Captain America? The scientists in Madripoor that had been working on you were sure as hell trying their best to make their own formula of super serum, to no avail.
“Oh,” he said, peering into the dark belly of the truck and seeing your deer-in-headlights expression. “I was worried you’d died in here. Good.”
“Xerox,” Yelena had said, helping you climb out of the truck. You took caution to avoid the sharp edges of the gap Walker carved for you. “Are you okay? Did you see that?”
You nodded. “That was Pal—Bob. Right? I wasn’t just seeing things?”
“Not unless all of us had a collective hallucination,” Ava put in. The group began to walk away from the totaled truck. There was no point in trying to get it up and running now—it was ruined beyond saving from the crash.
“Weirder things have happened,” you said, looking around the great expanse of nighttime desert. “Where did he land? Maybe we can help him.”
“On the other side of the base. We couldn’t possibly get to him in time before Val and her crew,” Yelena said. Then, she handed you a file. “Valentina did this. To test on someone like that… it’s inhuman. She plans to use him.”
Your brows furrowed in confusion, then you looked down. It was designs of superhero suits—a collage of striking gold and blue, all sharp angles and bold flares. Lacking all the soft gentleness you would’ve attributed to Bob. It even had a cape.
“The power of a thousand exploding suns? Golden Guardian of Good?” Ava read over your shoulder, scoffing. “That’s a mouthful.”
“Sentry,” said Walker, taking the case file from you, to your annoyance. He wrinkled his nose in distaste as he took a quick gander. “Very shiny. I didn’t think any of them were still around.”
“Did you know about this?” you asked.
Walker shoved the file back into your awaiting hands. “There was a rumor that O.X.E. had some kind of big breakthrough. I don’t know much, but whatever it was, it was apparently way too extreme. Test subjects were dying. And then when the government looked into it, Val shut it down, and she put me on clean-up duty. I was meant to take care of him.”
“Take care of him,” you scathingly echoed. “Kill him.”
“Well, yeah,” John bit back. “We all were sent to kill each other. Haven’t you gotten over it by now?”
Your eye twitched. “I’m sorry I haven’t warmed up to the idea just yet!”
Ava drew a large, heaving sigh. It seemed she had no energy left to bicker. “Let’s just get home without getting caught.”
John, to your delight, found cactus berries for everyone to eat. You were starving. When you thanked him, quietly, he twisted his mouth to the side and nodded. Not embarrassed, not prideful, but… something more muted, as if he wasn’t sure how to accept gratitude.
The rest of the group ate and walked in relative silence, save for the occasional complaint, grumble, and irritated tongue-click.
The Red Guardian—and Yelena’s adoptive father, which you later came to find out—had come to pick her and everyone else up in the middle of the desert, waving his arms about and screaming like a madman. He was a giant of a man, so large that he had to drive his beat-up limo hunched over the steering wheel, despite putting his seat as far back as it would go. His shoulders were broader than the sticky leather seat itself. He donned a shoddy red suit that looked like it belonged in a museum dedicated to decades-old artifacts. And he was terribly loud, always spouting out something about collaboration, family, and the terrific rag-tag team the lot of you made. He seemed intent on calling the group the Thunderbolts in honor of Yelena’s peewee soccer team.
You found him rather amusing, even if he was obnoxious, overstimulating, and smelled of stale tortilla chips.
Both Yelena and Alexei were arguing about the next course of action—the former wanting to hunker down and hide, while the boisterous latter seemed intent on defeating Valentina with the power of… friendship. You decided to stay silent on the matter. You couldn’t deny that going home sounded like a brilliant idea. But… so did saving Bob.
Before a proper conclusion could be reached, Walker announced a convoy approaching the limo from behind, three chunky vehicles gaining speed. Alexei tried to engage “defensive measures”, but he’d forgotten which of the several buttons to press, and instead engaged a “party mode”, where the lights turned flashy pinks and purples, and a ridiculous EDM song began to blare from the built-in speaker system, nearly shocking you into splitting.
And then the gunshots started firing. Walker made himself useful by deflecting the majority of the bullets with his shield. Ghost tried to climb out one of the windows, only to be met by a piercing blast of concentrated, high-frequency sound waves, instantly disabling her suit’s phasing abilities. Yelena currently had nothing but a gun, and Alexei was busy driving. That left you.
With a determined puff of breath, you multiplied once, then climbed out the car window. Distantly, John barked at you to stay behind the shield but he went largely ignored.
This was going to hurt like hell. But, on the plus side, you never really knew if you had a limit to the number of clones you could produce before you exhausted yourself. Maybe today you could find out. Within the blink of an eye, there were a hundred of you, growing exponentially by the second.
Yelena realized what you were doing before the others. You were forming a human wall.
One of the military vehicles plowed right through the weakest part of the wall, your blood and guts splattering every which way, staining the sand a deep shade of crimson. Another tried to swerve around, but ended up skidding too quickly, tipping over and crashing to the side, tires moving fruitlessly in the air. Your copies, still multiplying, swarmed the vehicle like angry, hell-bent ants, slipping into the open windows and pummeling the few soldiers in there. You could feel the bullets empty into your body, but you swallowed down the pain and kept going. But exactly as you told Yelena before—limited bullets, inifinite of you. And good Lord, did it hurt like—well, like you were being run over a thousand times over because you quite literally were.
The remaining car was taken care of by an explosion so loud that it seemed to reverberate through the very ground. Initially, you wondered if someone from the car had thrown back a grenade, but when you caught sight of the sleek motorbike, you knew it was a newcomer.
You heard Walker distantly yell, “Bucky!”
And true to his word, It was Bucky Barnes, in the flesh. Your eyes widened ever so slightly. You reabsorbed your copies—the few remaining that were still alive—and watched from a distance as he swerved past the last car’s gunfire, pinned a cable to its underbelly, and fell back to hold the wire down with his metal arm. The car flipped in the air as if it were an omelet on an oiled skillet. You blinked, impressed.
Then, to your dismay, Bucky took off his sunglasses, and proceeded to shoot an explosive disk at Alexei’s limo. Similar to the previous car, it did an uneven pirouette before crashing onto the road upside-down. You winced, hoping none of them were killed in the crash. Even if they weren’t your friends, you thought that killing them went a step too far.
Bucky was a little ways ahead of you, but he turned and fixed you with an expectant stare. Was he going to shoot you, too?
But you should’ve known—Bucky Barnes was smarter than that. He pulled out a different gun—and when he shot, electric ropes shot out as if they were sticky webs. You came crashing to the ground as they wound about your body, spasming with the sharp current frying your skin. To your panic, duplicating was not an option if you were bound.
“If—” you choked out as he drew nearer to you. “If you’re going to kill me, please do it quickly.”
The ex-Winter Soldier looked down at you with a cocked head. “I’m not going to kill you. You’re evidence.”
Bob couldn’t remember the last time he woke up in a nice bed. In fact, this was probably the nicest bed he’s ever been in. His fingers twitched beside him—silk sheets. Just from that, he knew that this wasn’t his home (thank God for that), nor was it a hospital. He sat up.
There was a woman sitting by his bedside, watching him.
“Hi,” she said, voice soft and meticulously tender. “How are you feeling, Robert? Are you comfortable?”
He stared at her for a moment before awkwardly saying, “Yeah.”
She nodded in satisfaction. “Good, good. My name is Valentina Allegra de Fontaine.”
The name immediately had Robert backing up to the headboard, pointing an accusatory finger at her. “No, you—you tried to kill us!”
She began shushing him as if he were a child throwing a fit. On the glass table beside her, she put down what looked and sounded to be a metal plate.
“Let me explain. Would you like that?”
Bob stared at her for a moment, before looking down at his hands fidgeting with the silk. “Yeah,” he whispered.
“You signed up for a medical study, which was, as advertised, at the cutting edge of human improvement. But not everybody could handle the amount of greatness that we had in mind—”
As she spoke, Bob took to looking around. The room was rather empty save for the bed, the glass table, and the chair Valentina was sitting on. Where was he? He hoped he wouldn’t have to stay here long… he didn’t like empty spaces very much. The blankness of the walls always made him worse than usual. When he was younger, he wasn’t even allowed to put up posters because his father would tear them down the minute he saw them. Bob swallowed the lump in his throat, realizing he hadn’t been listening to what Valentina was saying.
“Where—where is everyone?” he asked, interrupting her long-winded explanation. “Xerox? Yelena?”
“Xerox?” she repeated, pulling a distasteful face. Bob frowned. “Yelena… Oh, Bob, those people you were with… they’re not honest people. They’re criminals. Villains, really.”
Bob inched closer to the headboard until his back was flush against the leather. “No, but they… they helped me.”
Well, if they weren’t here, he hoped everyone managed to get to safety. That he was useful for once in his damn life and not just… in the way.
Valentina stood up from the chair and sat down on the bed, inches away from him. Bob stiffened at the sudden movement.
“Let’s just forget about them for a bit. Let’s focus on you,” the woman said, “and how perfect you are.”
Perfect? Him, perfect? Perfect Bob. It sounded like an oxymoron. An embedded contradiction.
“You always thought of yourself as the victim. But you overcame it! You went to Malaysia—you were lost. You were searching for something, someone to help you. And you found me,” she crooned.
Bob could feel his breath hitch in his throat. “How do you know about that?”
It was embarrassing—mortifying, even—that someone found out that he was looking for help because he was a pathetic loser who couldn’t do anything on his own, as if he even deserved help to begin with. And now she was confronting him about it! Bob wanted a hole to open in the ground so he could crawl inside of it and hide away for the rest of his stupid life.
“I know all of it,” Valentina assured, though it wasn’t very reassuring. “I know about your mom’s mental illness, I know about your addiction, your juvenile record, and, you know—I even know about the times your father—”
Bob felt his insides seize at the mention of his father. “Stop!” he said, hands immediately coming up to cup his ears. “No, I didn’t say you could know that.” The lights began to flicker, a dangerous hum filling the room.
Valentina shook her head, scooching even closer. “Robert, I know everything about you—and I still want you to be my guy! All the bad things you’ve done… and I accept it. I accept you. Isn’t that what you want? To be chosen? No one else sees it. But I do. I see you. And I think, Robert, that your past is what makes you so special.”
At this, Bob could feel a small part of him cave. She wanted him. Out of all people, she thought he was capable! Capable of what? Did it even matter? He was picked. Wanted, chosen, special, needed, valuable, a true asset!
That was what he wanted. Yes, a dark voice whispered in the back of his mind. She’s your ticket out. You won’t be a useless fucking loser anymore.
Then, Valentina took his hand. His eyes narrowed a fraction. He dove into her mind and he saw it all—her father, the tears on her chubby nine-year-old cheeks, the bullet in his chest. When he pulled away, he regarded her with a mixture of pity and confusion.
This woman was just as sad as him. Was everyone equally messed up in the head or did he just attract like-minded people?
Valentina cleared her throat, trying her best to give him a warm smile, but it ended up looking more like a grimace than anything. “Would you excuse me for just a moment?” she said, getting up from the bed. She looked a bit frazzled. Bob supposed being forced to live your most traumatic memory again did that to someone.
Before she could leave, she picked up the metal disk. He caught a glimpse of the shiny golden S engraved on the front side.
Your ticket! the dark voice hissed. You fucking idiot.
“No,” he croaked out, scrambling away from the headboard. “No, wait!” He swallowed the bile in his throat. “I can control it.”
She smiled, victorious. “Great,” she said. Then, she turned and left, leaving Bob alone in the empty room.
Bucky Barnes was very good at ignoring you. He only seemed to listen after tying the super soldiers up with bent metal rods, and you, Ava, and Yelena with special power-defusing cuffs. And even then, he dismissed everyone trying to tell him about Bob, Project Sentry, and how Valentina betrayed all of you. He made a scathing remark to John about his wife and kid deciding to leave him—it was clear the two had a tense, troubled history.
Finally, after about half an hour sitting around and wasting time, Bucky got a phone call. Who with, you didn’t know. Someone close to Valentina, maybe. But she mentioned Bob, and suddenly Bucky straightened. His scowl deepened upon realizing that this group of misfits and criminals—were telling him the truth all along.
“So…” he said after hanging up the phone. “Bob.”
“Bob,” the rest of the group echoed in both exasperation and relief.
“We have to help him,” you said, emphatically wriggling your wrists and shoulders to indicate the cuffs. “Valentina is only going to hurt him or use him to hurt others.”
“Or both,” Ava chimed.
Bucky thought on it for a long second, a muscle in his jaw twitching. Finally, he stalked over and uncuffed you, Yelena, then Ava. He unwound the metal pipe around Alexei as if he was snapping a string. He paused behind Walker, clearly unhappy to let him back on his feet, but he also broke him free of his bonds.
“You guys know Valentina,” he said. His eyes met yours. “Like you said—people are going to get hurt. And if your knowledge of this Bob can help… then you’re coming with me.”
“Us?” Yelena said, incredulous. “Bucky, you have the wrong people. Isn’t there anyone else you can call? Thor?”
“Off-world.”
“Captain America?” you asked, venturing a glance at Walker.
“Busy. Out of the country.”
“The Hulk?” Ava asked.
Bucky shook his head, patience wearing thin. “Listen. I’ve been where you are. You can run, but it catches up. It doesn’t go away. I’m giving you guys the opportunity to do something about it now. It’s either you come with me, or it’s a prison cell. Take your pick.”
Alexei needed no convincing. “This is great!” he roared. “All of us will be fighting together, like a team!”
More reluctant, Yelena drew in a breath. “Stop Val. Save Bob.”
You nodded. “I’m in.”
Walker pursed his lips. “Fine,” he gruffed.
Ava nodded, solemn. “Come on, then.”
Alexei looked around with a wide, oafish grin on his face. “YES!” he yelled. “Come on, then, you slowpokes! What are we waiting for?”
The plan to save Bob was really no plan at all—which was to be expected from a group of mercenaries and assassins who were typically used to working alone.
Crash into the Avengers Tower. Beat up the guards. Find Valentina. Take care of her (you still weren’t very sure what this bit meant). Save Bob. Easy, right?
Well, crashing into the tower and beating up the guards certainly were a piece of cake. Finding Valentina, which you suspected to be one of the harder steps, turned out to be handed over to you on a silver platter.
Her voice echoed on the intercom, effectively halting everyone mid-punch or mid-kick. As for Bucky, he dropped the guard he’d been strangling. “Jesus, you guys,” Valentina sighed. “I literally just had a new drywall installed. Should’ve known you lot would mess that up, too. I left the door unlocked for you. Come up.”
Yelena stood beside you, chest heaving. “Think it’s a trap?”
“Probably,” you said. “But do we have a better plan?”
“We didn’t have one to begin with,” Ava retorted. She gestured to the elevator. “Come on.”
The elevator took the group up to one of the very top floors of the tower. You stepped in with wide, scrutinizing eyes. Most of the original Avengers were dead now, weren’t they? Dead or retired. A vague memory of heroism and destruction. You were gone during the Blip—and you thanked God for that—so the Avengers bringing you back was more of a curse than a blessing on your end.
“Crazy, isn’t it?” Valentina greeted everyone from behind an island counter. There was the pop of a champagne bottle as she poured herself a glass. “Think of all the monumental fights that happened exactly where you’re standing. I mean, I don’t really care—the place wasn’t cheap, but it’s got good optics.”
That’s all she ever seemed to care about, wasn’t it? Image. Branding. It was no wonder she always sent you on undercover missions. You weren’t marketable. No little girl or boy would buy your figurine when there was an Iron Man or Black Widow to pick from.
“It’s over, Valentina,” Bucky said, expression stoic. “This ends now.”
“Congressman Barnes,” Valentina greeted, voice snippy. “I never thought you’d have a promising career but—you managed to disappoint even the lowest of expectations. Not even half a term, huh? Yikes.”
“We’re taking you in, Val,” Walker interrupted.
This made her laugh, though it was inauthentic and hollow. “I don’t think so… junior varsity Captain America.”
His hand fell on his gun, and he only paused when Bucky said his name with a warning tone.
“It’s good to see you, Ava. Yelena. You look awful, by the way. You sure you’re really ready for that public-facing role you asked me about?”
“Eat shit, Valentina.”
“Where’s Bob?” you said, feeling the tensions creeping up until it felt near suffocating. “What did you do to him?”
“Xerox. I thought you wanted to leave… And yet here you are. Just makes me wonder why you haven’t left. You had every opportunity to. Are you getting attached already? That was always a weakness of yours, wasn’t it?” She took a long sip from her champagne flute. “You know, he asked about you. Even mentioned the little nickname you gave him. Palindrome, right? It’s a little bit of a mouthful, but that’s just me.”
You didn’t know what to say to that. Why were you still here? You didn’t owe Bob—or anyone else in this group—anything.
Your evident hesitation made Valentina’s eyes light up. “Just look at you guys! So adorable, really. I sent you all down there to kill each other… but you made nice, and you form a team. Who would’ve thought?”
To your relief, Bucky cut through her condescending tirade by asking for Mel, who you assumed to be the person he was on the phone with earlier.
“Oh, Mel,” she said, dismissive. “She’s having loyalty issues. But I’m just so grateful that she stuck around long enough to lure you all in—”
As she spoke, Bucky took the flute of champagne from her hands and placed it onto the island with a resounding tink. His hand then moved to close around Valentina’s throat.
But it never got there.
His hand froze mid-air, vibrating with strain. Bucky stared down at his arm with furrowed brows.
With a sharp, satisfactory grin, Valentina hummed, “I’m not alone. Robert?”
You turned to see a pair of dark boots descend down a flight of stairs. Each step revealed more of him—flashy golden suit, cinched blue belt, a dark, flowing cape. Blonde hair. A confident stance. A set jaw.
“Oh, my God,” Yelena said.
“That’s Bob?” Bucky asked, words laced with disbelief.
“He looks… a little different from when we last saw him,” Ava said.
You stayed silent, watching him with what could only be described as a crestfallen expression. This wasn’t the Palindrome you remembered. What did Valentina do to him?
“It is my great honor to introduce to you… the Sentry,” Valentina beckoned to Bob as if he were a shiny new car she was parading.
Bob nodded at the rest of you. “Hey, guys.” His eyes met yours for a brief second, but he was quick to look away. Your insides felt as if they were curdling.
“All powerful. Invincible. Stronger than all the Avengers combined—and soon to be known as Earth’s mightiest hero,” Valentina announced.
Ava narrowed her eyes at him. “Have you dyed your hair?”
Bob blinked. “Yeah. It was—”
“My idea,” Valentina nodded.
“I preferred the dark hair,” you said, though you weren’t sure if you were saying it to spite Valentina or because it was the genuine truth. Perhaps both. “Brought out your eyes.”
Bob looked at you as if you had slapped him.
“People love a classic hero,” Valentina said. “All the strongest and most beloved were blondes. The original Captain America, blonde. Thor, blonde. Hawkeye, blonde-ish. Black Widow… blonde for some time.”
The mention of her sister made Yelena flinch. Valentina didn’t seem to notice.
“So what’s the plan?” Bucky said. He wasn’t here to discuss frivolities like hair color.
“You haven’t figured it out yet, Bucky? Geez. Did all that time in the freezer slow your brain down? At least you’re kinda cute—you have that going for you.”
“You’re not going to hurt people?” the Guardian intervened, his inflection cautious and mildly confused.
“Oh, no! No. I’m not going to hurt people. I’m going to hurt you—or, well, Robert here will. You see, the press is on their way here now. They’re going to witness the magnificent power of Sentry as he takes down this group of ruthless, rogue agents. Thus beginning a new era where I decide how to keep the American people safe, answering to no one. I’ll be unimpeachable.”
“Cool,” you snarked, lips curling into a snarl. “You got the villain monologue down and everything.” Then, you turned to Bob, trying your best to ignore Valentina’s presence right beside him. Your expression softened considerably. “You told her about Palindrome?”
Bob froze, as if pondering if he’d done something wrong. “Ye–yeah. I thought—at first, I thought it would be a cool hero name. But yeah, uhm… Sentry is… better. Rolls off the tongue.”
You nodded. “Okay. No, you’re right, maybe. But Palindrome—same backwards as it is forwards, remember? Are you the same Bob I met down in the vault? Because I liked that Bob a lot more than what I see in front of me now.”
Initially, Bob’s expression crumpled. Any hope of seeking the team’s approval was immediately crushed under the heel of your foot. Then, to your dismay, Bob—no, Sentry’s—face grew stony.
“Valentina fixed me,” he said. “I’m better now.”
The team’s incredulous, disbelieving faces told Bob all he needed to know. None of you were on his side.
Valentina nodded at the tall, now-blonde super. “Sentry. Your first mission is to take out these criminals.”
Bob swallowed heavily, brows furrowed as he weighed between his options. “I don’t want to hurt you guys,” he finally said. “Why don’t you just turn yourselves in?”
With a scoff, Walker said, “You don’t wanna do this, Bobby.”
A vein jumped on the side of Bob’s neck. “You can call me Sentry.”
“Please, you do not need to listen to her,” Yelena attempted to rationalize.
“See?” Valentina exclaimed. “It’s exactly as I told you—they don’t think you’re good enough.”
“That’s not true!” Yelena asserted. “You can trust me, Bob! I know you!”
Bob fixed her with what looked to be a disappointed gaze. “I don’t think that you do.”
“But—you saved us. Only a few hours ago, you sacrificed yourself to help us escape. What was any of that for?” You loathed how your voice broke with desperation.
Bob had a hard time swallowing around the rising lump in his throat. His mind darted back to the many times you died just to save him. None of this sat well with him, but… it needed to be done.
“It was a mistake,” he said, simply. He chanced a glance to Valentina, who nodded in approval.
You recoiled like a wounded snake.
“ENOUGH TALKING!” Alexei bellowed. Bob still wasn’t very sure who he was. “No one messes with the West Chesapeake Valley Thunderbolts!”
Just as Val incredulously echoed, “Thunderbolts?” Alexei stormed forward, pulling all his weight into a barrel-slam. It was as if he were hit with a solid, thick wall of dense lead. Bob punched him straight in his round belly, and like a ragdoll, the super soldier went flying backwards, crumpling into a red heap against a nearby pillar. Immediately, the rest of the team dove into action and attacked Bob. Save for Yelena, who was still trying to make peace with him.
Bob was, as Valentina had alluded to earlier, seemingly invincible. Able to fling people away without having to disturb a single dyed hair on his head. Stop special-grade bullets mid-air and send them right back to the assailant at twice the speed. Withstood the sharpest of blades and the strongest of punches.
You split into two copies. One to assist Walker, whose shield was embedded into a sofa, nearly cleaving it in two, and another running after Valentina, who you spotted hurrying to hide behind a corner.
“You lied to us,” you hissed, grabbing the collar of her dress shirt, yanking her close until her nose was inches away from yours. “I came to you for help. I thought you would save me.”
“I did,” she said, and began to howl and laugh like a maniac. “When I found you, you were an empty husk of a person. Now look at you. Fighting with your friends. There’s a spark that wasn’t there before. You know, if I hadn’t only stuck you to do my dirty work, you would’ve made a good hero. A lack of planning on my end, I’m afraid.”
You felt your eyes sting with the promise of tears. “I could’ve been good?”
“Yes,” she said, shrugging. “But you chose this. Sure, I gave you the order… but who, in the end, pulled the trigger?” Without giving you the chance to respond, she lolled her head to the side. “Oh, Sentry!”
Bob, who had been preoccupied smashing Alexei through the windows as if he were playing frisbee, snapped his head to see you holding Valentina. Immediately, his eyes started glowing, and you were ripped away.
There was no hope in fighting against a man more powerful than all the Avengers rolled into one. You braced yourself for pain, squeezing your eyes shut. But there came none. Instead, when you cracked an eye open you were suspended midair outside of the penthouse.
“How far?” he asked you, striding to the window, its frames lined with shattered bullet-proof glass.
“What?” you choked out, trying to struggle, though you knew that if he dropped you, you would be met with a terrible fall that was likely worse than the fall you had in the vault.
“How far until you lose control and get a seizure?” He turned and bent Walker’s shield until it caved around his arm, now shaped like a curved taco shell. “I don’t want to send you too far. I’d prefer not to hurt you.”
“Fuck you!” you snarled. A second too late, you realized that was probably a terrible thing to say to him when he had you floating mid-air, completely at his mercy. “Wait, Bob—please just stop this—!” The rest of your plea was lost to the wind as he sent you streaking further away from the tower, going so fast that the civilians down below must have thought you were some sort of high-tech drone.
Your duplicate watched in horror, knowing there was nothing you could do for your other-you. You were taken farther and farther until you grew limp, convulsing hundreds of feet above the ground. The copy in the tower crumpled to the ground with not a sound. Ava, battered and bruised, dragged your convulsing body away from the action so you were less likely to be struck while down.
And when the rest of the team gave up and turned to retreat, Bucky was the one to pick you up by the scruff of your dark suit, dragging you into the elevator. He was missing his metal arm, which Sentry had torn off like it had been attached with paperclips, hot glue, and a dream. Ava picked it up on her way into the lift.
Sentry advanced on them with glowing eyes. “Forgetting someone?”
He reached out behind him, fingers curled into a beckoning motion. Your copy came flying back into the tower, crashing into the rest of the team as if you were a bowling ball, and the rest of the team the pins. Your skull rattled as it knocked into Alexei’s, and you gasped for air, dizzy and disoriented. If you had been more lucid, you would have apologized to Walker for your boot crashing into his eye. That was likely going to leave a terrible bruise. Yelena took your arm and wound it around her to help you stay upright.
“I’m so glad you were able to catch a glimpse before your… retirement,” Valentina called out, slinking out from the shadows she was hiding in. “Camera crews are assembling. Finish the job, Robert.”
Bob waited until the elevator doors slid to a close, hiding all the fearful faces from his observant gaze, and he could hear the lift move downwards.
“Finish the job?” he echoed. “No. They’re not a threat to me, so… why do I need to kill them?”
Valentina gave him a tight-lipped smile. “You need to do what I say, Robert.”
Confusion washed over his polished, golden features. “Why?”
“Why?” Valentina parroted, almost mocking. Bob could feel anger bubble behind his chest.
“I just…” He exhaled in frustration. “I feel like there’s an… unwarranted power imbalance here.” He motioned between himself and her. “There needs to be more of a collaboration between us if this is going to work. Like, the hair—I don’t know. Maybe I should have more of a say.”
She rolled her eyes to the broken ceiling from when Yelena was flung upwards. “Don’t let those idiots get to your head. The blonde is great.”
“You sure?” said Bob, now pacing back and forth, wringing his hands. “I thought I liked it, but now I’m not so sure. Xerox said—”
“Forget Xerox!” Valentina exclaimed. “That’s enough about the hair, Sentry.”
“It’s not just about the hair, though—”
“Well, you keep bringing it up, so—”
“No, but it’s everything!” Bob asserted. “It’s all of it. My suit, my name, my missions. I didn’t even want to be Sentry. I thought Palindrome was good. It… it is good.”
As if she were consoling a child, Valentina relented. “Fine. If you want to change it so bad, be my guest. We’ll just have to re-do all the paperwork all over again and—”
Bob shook his head. “Why would a god… take orders from anyone at all?”
Brow cocked, Valentina slowly said, “I think you’re throwing the word god a bit loosely there.”
“No,” Bob said. “No, but you said… I was all-powerful and stronger than the entire team of Avengers, which includes at least one God. I’m starting to think that maybe you don’t actually know what I am, nor what I’m capable of. I’m the only survivor from the medical trials, aren’t I? I’m the only one left.”
Val drew in a sharp breath, folding her hands behind her back. “Oh, God.”
“Yeah,” said Bob. “Yes, that’s more like it.”
Before she could draw out the emergency killswitch, Bob took her by the throat and sent her flying across the room, pinning her against a metal support frame. She struggled against his hold fruitlessly.
“You were going to turn on me,” said Bob, narrowing his eyes. “Just like the rest of them.”
“I’m not afraid of you, Robert,” she croaked before he began to apply more pressure against her esophagus.
“It’s not Robert you have to be afraid of,” he said, voice as cold as the steel behind her. His eyes began to glow a terrifying golden hue and—
There was a click and a zap, and Bob’s hold on her loosened. Sentry crumpled to the ground in a heap of golds and blues. Mel was standing behind the pair, holding the killswitch, legs shaking.
“I want a raise,” she demanded.
“Fine. Order cleanup and it’s yours,” said Val, gripping the support beam with shaking hands. “And help me up, damn it!”
The two eventually stumbled into the elevator, leaving Bob’s body alone in the Avengers tower. A minute after Val abandoned his corpse, however, the floors darkened to an inky blank around him. His suit and face was now pitch-dark, absent of any sort of color. His finger twitched. First his pinky, then his thumb, then his whole hand. By the second minute, he began levitating, floating a meter above the cracked floors.
Bob, Palindrome, Robert, Sentry, the Golden Guardian of Who Gives a Flying Fuck—what he used to be… was gone now. And what was left of him?
Nothing. Nothing at all.
Just a void.
Once outside the Avengers Tower, you reabsorbed into one body, stumbling away from Yelena to sit on the curb. Behind you, they were bickering, as always. Alexei wanted to go somewhere to regroup and try again. As if being completely beaten to a pulp wasn’t enough.
Yelena was done. She was fed up with his bullshit.
“Stop. Just stop! There is no us. There is no we. Bob is gone. He changed into that thing—and there is nothing that any of you could do about it,” she hissed.
“Right,” Ava said, rolling her eyes. “And what did you do, exactly? Because I seem to remember you getting your ass beat way worse than mine. Xerox didn’t even try to stop Bob.”
“Because we didn’t stand a chance. There was no point,” you gritted out, getting back up to your feet. “Sorry I prioritized getting Valentina over him.”
“Fat load of good that did!” Ava exclaimed, throwing her hands up in defeat.
“Yeah, I get it! I suck! We suck! We’re all terrible!” Yelena screamed. The pedestrians going about their day eyed the rag-tag team of bloodied, bruised, suited individuals. “Ava, you’re not a hero. You’re not even a good person.”
Ava pretended that didn’t sting. “Bitch,” she muttered under her breath.
When Alexei tried to step in, Yelena exploded at him, too. “I am not your little girl! I haven’t heard from you or seen you in a year! It’s like you didn’t even care about Natasha. You’re a fucking fake and a coward and I wish you never pretended to be my father!”
Walker stepped in, saying, “Come on, go easy on him.”
“Oh, so you’re nice now?” Yelena said, rounding on him.
“What, is it my turn?” he said, tone flat and unimpressed.
“No, you know you’re a piece of trash,” Yelena spat. “And so does your family.”
“Jesus,” said Walker, grimacing at how much that stung.
“Yelena,” you said, weary of her biting your head off for even speaking. “We tried. We failed. We move on. Can we do that?”
“No, but you didn’t try, did you? I saw you talking to Valentina. You could’ve done it. You had the chance to kill her, but you didn’t. You were too caught up in your selfish fantasies of self-fulfillment that you’ve doomed the rest of us!”
You nodded, withdrawing, clearly wounded. “Mhm. Okay.”
Maybe she was right. Maybe it was your fault. You had Valentina. You did. Was your need for closure selfish? Did it cost everyone a potential victory?
“We lost,” Yelena said with a tone of finality. She turned around and began to stalk away. “This fucking team was built on delusions. We were never anything, not ever.”
Alexei went after her. The rest of the group slowly started to retreat into different directions. You looked to Bucky with sad eyes he thought resembled a kicked animal.
“Does it get better?” you asked. Your gesture to your head was vague and hard to interpret, but Bucky seemed to understand you almost instantly.
“I wish I had an easy answer for you, kid.” The soldier pursed his lips, regarding you with furrowed brows. “But not like this, it won’t. Not like this.”
“What are you going to do now?” you whispered.
Bucky clenched his jaw. It was clear that he had no idea what the protocol was for a situation like this. “As of now, Valentina’s intentions with Sentry are unclear. She could be planning out acts of terrorism as we speak. I think the smartest course of action is evacuating the premises.” He eyed you warily. “You can go home. You’ve done enough.”
“I want…” The words lodged in your throat. “Bucky, I know I’m a fuck-up. I’ve done bad, terrible things. I know there’s no coming back from that. But I want to help. I want to be better.”
Something flickered in the blue of his eyes, as if he was recalling something. Someone. “Okay, kid,” he said after a brief pause. “Come on.”
The two of you began to usher the crowd away. You multiplied a few dozen times, scattering to hoard as many people you could off the streets. You heard many shocked whispers amongst the passerby. Is that Congressman Barnes? No fucking way—that’s the Winter Soldier. Is Captain America around? Why are there four of you? That’s freaky as shit.
“I’m Xerox,” you hurriedly told a family loitering by the entrance to the subway station, trying your best to seem friendly but you likely came off as a raving lunatic instead. “You need to evacuate the premises now. Someone dangerous could be—”
“Are you a hero?” a little girl asked you in wonder, taking a gander at your suit, which was battered and covered with dust and soot. It definitely had seen better days. “You don’t really look like one.”
The mother flinched with shock, and began to frantically apologize for her daughter’s lack of a filter.
“It’s okay,” you reassured. “I’m no hero. I just want to help.”
The mother nodded, looking worried. “That’s good enough for me.” It was clear she was no stranger to bizarre happenings in New York. “Come on, Adeline. Let’s go.” They hurried off, and you returned to Bucky, who was urging a gaggle of laughing teenagers not to go into a theater.
“Good. You cleared the street,” said Bucky. “We should set up some sort of blockade to—”
Abruptly, Bucky stopped mid-sentence. His eyes were trained up to the sky, and you turned to follow his gaze. You felt your heart painfully skip a beat in your chest.
A dark figure floated above the city. Caped, with a suspiciously similar silhouette to Sentry. You squinted, straining your vision, barely making out his arm extending out as if he was mimicking grabbing something.
“That’s—” Bucky started.
“Bob,” you breathed out.
You watched in horror as helicopters came flying towards him. At first, you thought they were press, just as Valentina promised—until they started shooting at him. The bullets seemed to disappear through him. And after a second, the helicopters came crashing down, as if they were completely void of pilots. The vehicles spun into construction scaffolding, pieces of unfinished building breaking apart and falling to the world below.
You and Bucky were quick to move then, yanking civilians out from under falling rubble. You multiplied more in an effort to help, even if it meant getting hit by falling concrete once in a while. You caught sight of Alexei using a metal sign he had torn off a shawarma restaurant to protect citizens as they escaped down the subway tunnels, and Yelena saving an elderly woman from getting run over by a news van. Another helicopter was tumbling down from further down the street, and Ghost phased through rapidly-rotating blades to shove people out of the way. Walker was stopping a large slab of concrete from crushing a civilian. Your clones being as scattered as they possibly could meant you had eyes in all directions. A dozen of you hurried over to help him push it upwards, gritting your teeth with the solid weight.
Another one of you dragged the woman out from underneath. She was sobbing profusely, praying in a language you couldn’t understand. But she signed something—the tips of her fingers touching her lips, then beckoning out to you. Thank you.
It felt like something finally clicked into place. Was it inherently selfish of you to want to help people because it made you feel good? Or did it cancel out?
Yelena joined, then Alexei. Ghost phased through and began pushing beside Walker. Bucky put all his weight in with his metal arm, and the slab finally tipped over, crashing onto the street with such a weighty thud that the asphalt beneath fractured.
And then the crowd around you started clapping. Quietly at first, but rising up to a deafening applause.
“Mom?” called a small child across the street. There was a shadow falling over her, growing larger. Alexei was there before anyone else, shielding the little girl from the falling debris that would certainly have crushed her to death if he hadn’t been there.
“You’re safe, little one,” said Alexei, kneeling down to her height.
The dry tear tracks on her chubby cheeks bent as she smiled at the red giant before her.
And then she was gone. The only thing left in her place was a shadow in a blobby, vague shape of the girl, spilling darkness across the street.
You flinched. Three civilians across from you disappeared in the same way. Then two to your left. Another pair behind you. Your eyes flew upwards to see Bob—Sentry—whoever that was descend down to hover only a few feet above the totaled street.
“You will all know the truth,” his voice echoed. “You can’t outrun the emptiness.”
Screams erupted around you as people fled every which way. You reabsorbed your copies closest to the growing darkness.
“Come on,” Walker said, yanking your arm. “We need to get people off the streets!”
You nodded, rushing ahead to direct people into the subway tunnels.
“Yelena!” you heard Alexei bellow. “Yelena, what are you doing?”
You turned to see her calmly striding towards the darkness.
“No,” you whispered. Your closest copy ran towards her, only a few feet away.
“It’s like you said,” the dark figure murmured, his voice somehow loud enough to reverberate in your ears like a piercing drum. “We’re all alone. All of us.”
“Yelena,” you said, taking her forearm. “Yelena, we have to go.”
“Aren’t you tired of fighting?” Bob asked. Instinctively, you knew he was speaking to you. “I can fix it. Let me fix it.”
“No, Pal,” you said, edging away from the darkness, which was eating at the streets. “I don’t need you to fix me, thank you. I haven’t even tried a licensed therapist yet. Come, Yelena, please.”
Your words fell on deaf ears. The assassin shut her eyes and let out a sigh. She stepped forward, and then she was gone. You heard Alexei’s anguished screams somewhere behind you.
The Void reached out and turned a few more panicked civilians into shadows. Before you knew it, the entire street was blackened, leaving only a circle around you.
“I promise it won’t hurt,” The Void said. He floated down to the ground to stand in front of you, just inches away. If you reached out, you would be able to touch him. You could feel the cold emanating off his body, tempting you to just—fall into him. “The darkness will keep you company.”
“And that’s you?” you whispered, trying your best to look for an expression in such a blank canvas of darkness. “Where’s Bob?”
“He doesn’t matter anymore,” the Void said.
“He does,” you insisted. “He did to me.”
“You died for him,” he said, tilting his head.
You nodded. “And I would again.”
“Why?”
The question, though it was just one word, weighed heavy on your mind.
“I’m not the bad guy I thought I was,” you finally told him. You stared at the darkness closing in around you with a heavy heart. “If I went in—would I find Bob in there?”
“Your Palindrome is hiding. He isn’t looking to be saved.” The Void motioned around him. “Look at this mess. This is no place to be. Step in with me. I’ll take care of it. You wouldn’t need to worry anymore… it’ll be just us.”
“Can I try to help him in there?” Your voice broke, betraying your own fear.
The black figure’s shoulders trembled as if he were smothering a laugh. “You can try. I’d advise giving up, though. It’s never worth it. Now… come.”
His arms spread wide open, inviting you in. Distantly, you could hear Bucky and Ava call out your name. You swallowed heavily.
Then you fell forward, willingly embracing someone for the first time since you were a child. He was solid for a split moment. All frigid edges and hard muscle—then you collapsed into the soft darkness, and sat back up in a hospital room.
It was the same vision as before. Two of you. One whole and one cut. Without hesitating, you kicked at the surgeon, grabbing a scalpel from the table and slitting his throat. You watched the blood gush out of his wound, dark and bubbling. Too dark to be real blood.
You turned to free yourself with the missing leg from the operating table, slicing at the leather straps. And then, to your shock, young-you began attacking yourself.
It was disorienting to see your younger self snarl like a rabid animal, leaping from the table to claw at you, sinking sharp little teeth into your exposed throat. You made a garbled noise of pain, and threw the kid off. Your throat stung, but it was a hollow pain that was quick to fade back into nothingness.
“I’m you!” you screamed before the kid could leap at you again. “I’m you!”
“I don’t know you,” little Xerox said. “You’re not real. You can’t be real.”
“I’m you,” you whispered. You put the scalpel down and approached like one would a nervous horse. “Honey, I’m you. I’m okay, see? You’ll be okay.”
Little-you swayed. You began to cry in the silent way you always did, smaller frame wracking.
“It’s okay,” you said with an aching chest, gathering yourself up in your arms, stroking the back of your head. “Let it out. There you go.”
The child began to bawl into your chest. You reached over for the scalpel again, slicing through the bonds of the young, whole copy. “Here. Take care of each other, okay?”
“Okay,” the whole copy said. Both of the younger Xeroxes held onto one another. You stepped away with a heavy heart.
“Palindrome?” you called out. “I’m here to help. Come talk to me.”
Nothing.
With a huff, you turned out of the hospital room, shoving your way through the doors, though not before bidding a respectful goodbye to your younger copies.
You found yourself in a different room now. You had escaped the hospital at this point, now living off of the meager cash you earned by doing the dirty work for Madripoorean crime lords. Your gun was trained on a woman as she sobbed for mercy.
“I didn’t mean to—” she said, wiping away the snot that dribbled from her nose. “I didn’t mean to, please tell him that for me!”
“I don’t speak to my bosses,” your copy said. Current-you rounded about to look at Xerox’s face here. Gaunt, with glassy, empty eyes. “He wants you gone.”
“I can be gone!” she said, nodding. “Please. You can pretend you shot me. I can disappear without a trace.” When you said nothing, she doubled over, wailing out a pitiful noise. “I’m pregnant. Please. Please don’t kill me.”
Past-Xerox’s eyes thinned into disbelieving slits. “Lie.”
“I’m not lying. Please. It’s his child, but I can—”
“Don’t tell me that.”
“Just listen to me—”
Your younger self began to panic. “Why would you tell me that?”
“If you could—”
“Shut up. Shut up, shut up, shut up.”
“Is—do you need money? Is it money you want?”
“No.” Yes. “I don’t need your charity.”
The woman shakily pulled out crumpled bills from her bag, offering them to you. You gritted your jaw and pulled the trigger. She fell to the ground with her mouth frozen mid-plea. Before you left, you took the bills and stuffed them into the holey pockets of your ratty trousers. You took the silver necklace the woman was wearing for good measure, too.
Your past-self looked up at you. “Do we ever find out?”
“What?”
“Was she really pregnant?”
You stared down at the dead woman with horror. “I don’t know.”
Young Xerox straightened, shoulders rolling back. “We don’t deserve to be forgiven. Not for this.”
“Maybe not,” you agreed. “You’re also only eighteen.”
“So?”
“You were just a kid. You had no money. No food. No home. No family. Just you and your copies and your missions,” you whispered.
“Tch. Sounds like a bunch of excuses to me.”
You nodded. “It is. It’s an excuse.” You looked down the alleyway. “Valentina will be coming soon for you. She’ll be too good to be true at first. A house. A clean bed. Food in the fridge. But it’ll be the same thing again. Just… repackaged.”
Your younger self’s face twisted with a rotten, disappointed look. “Do we ever get better?”
“We try to. I try to.”
“Good.” Young Xerox pointed up a rusty metal fire escape. “He’s up there. Your Pal.”
“Thank you,” you said, about to make your way up the creaky stairs.
“He wants to be found,” said young you, nodding. “He made the rooms easy for you. There’s a lot worse that he could’ve chosen from.”
“That’s true,” you whispered, though saying that made you feel all the more terrible for the dead woman on the ground. “What about you? Did you want to be found?” you asked, unsure if you wanted to hear the answer.
“You tell me,” retorted the younger you with a wolfish grin. “I’m all me, remember?”
Your final room was when you lived in America. It was dark in your apartment. You were twenty-five, looking a bit healthier than you had been at eighteen, but still just as miserable.
You stood in front of the stove, which held a pot that was almost halfway full to the brim with boiling water. “Come on,” younger you said, jumping up and down on the spot, psyching yourself up. Your palm raised to slap yourself across the face. There was a belt tied about your mouth so as to not alert your civilian neighbors. “Come on, you pussy,” you hissed at yourself from behind the belt.
Inhaling sharply, you held in your breath as you dove your left palm into the boiling water. Your scream went muffled behind the belt. After a moment, you quietened to an occasional whimper. It was strange being able to watch yourself and not feel the same pain. Only the memory of it.
It wasn’t self-harm. At least, you didn’t consider it to be so back then. It was endurance training. Upping your pain tolerance for the job. Valentina had told you that you were useless if you couldn’t handle dying.
Younger you pulled your raw hand out of the pot after about thirty seconds, then flipped the tap on to its coldest setting, sticking it beneath the running water with a hiss. The next day, you would repeat the process until you lost all feeling in your left hand, frying your nerve endings to shit.
As the room began to repeat itself, you stopped your younger self from plunging a hand into the pot by grabbing your wrist. “You don’t have to do that,” you said. “There are other ways of being strong.”
“If I don’t do this, I’m not worth anything,” young Xerox said. “I’d be nothing.”
“Hurting yourself doesn’t make you stronger,” you deadpanned. “You’re wasting your time.”
“I know,” the younger you sighed. “I know that. It’s just nice to be in control of my own pain for once.”
“You can be in control by consciously trying to keep yourself from the pain,” came your soft whisper. “Hurting yourself doesn’t fix anything. It doesn’t solve anything. It only leaves scars that take way too long to heal. Trust me. I still can’t wear short sleeves.”
Younger you barked out a laugh. “Oh, I know. Summers are hell.”
“I know, right?” you said, smiling for the first time in what felt like weeks. “You know what helped me?”
“What?”
“Crosswords,” you said. “The newspaper stand across the store sells entire books. Every time I had the urge, I would solve a puzzle or two.”
“Oh, God,” said the younger you, bending over into what sounded like a cry, but it was actually an incredulous laugh. “I’m such a nerd. Seriously?”
“Yes, seriously,” you said, rolling your eyes. “Just try it. It helps.”
“Okay, okay. Fuckin’ geek.”
“We memorized every single element of the periodic table in order by age eleven. I think the nerd has been with us all along.” As you spoke, you took the pot of boiling water and carefully maneuvered to dump the steaming water into the sink. You turned off the stove, and past-you didn’t try to stop you.
Your younger self smiled, and it was clear that it’s been a while since that happened, too. Then, it faded just as quickly as it appeared. “What happens if we run out of crosswords?”
The question didn’t seem to be just about crosswords.
“We can always try something new,” you ventured. “I think crocheting is all the rage now.”
“Is it?”
“Probably not, no. I’m not really sure what the youths are into these days. It changes every other day.”
“We can try crocheting anyway,” past-you laughed. Then, you pointed into the living room. “Look in the TV. He should be there.”
“Alright. Thanks.” You gave mid-twenties Xerox a two-fingered salute, then turned to sit down in front of your TV.
And, as promised, you caught a glimpse of Bob in the reflection. When you looked behind you, it was still your regular, dim living room. You looked back at the dark screen.
“Found you,” you murmured, a relieved smile playing at the corner of your lips. “Hey, Bob? It’s good to see you.”
Despite the warped reflection, you could see him look up with a creased, almost guilty expression. “You found me,” he said, surprise evident in his tone.
“I did. Will you let me in?”
“... I don’t know.”
“Please let me in. I want to help.”
Bob drew his knees up to his chest, cradling himself. The darkness surrounded you, and in the blink of an eye, you were in a different room. One you didn’t recognize. Your gaze flickered about. This must’ve been one of Bob’s rooms. An attic, by the looks of it—cluttered with junk.
You sat down in front of him. He was fiddling with a Rubix cube. “I used to love solving those,” you told him.
“I’m—” He handed the cube over to you. “I’m pretty bad at it. I don’t know.”
“I was, too,” you said, turning the squares about. Bob watched you gradually align the colors together—orange with orange, green with green, blue with blue. You struggled with one side, but after moving back a few paces, you managed to get it right. “I was terrible at it. I kept giving up and reshuffling. But I got better with time and practice.”
You handed the cube back to him, neatly solved. Bob took it with soft fingers, inspecting your handiwork. “I don’t know how.”
“I can help you,” you said. “And there’s people out there that can help you, too.”
“They can’t help me. I’m… broken.”
There was screaming coming from downstairs. The noise made Bob flinch, his hands instinctively going up to his ears. As you listened, you could hear a man yelling, the sound of skin smacking skin, and the sound of a woman crying. A little boy intervened. More thuds, smacks, a shattering glass. The woman began berating the little boy for making things worse. It made your heart sink low to the pits of your stomach.
“Just ignore that, please,” he said once the noise died down, as if afraid you would leave now. “Don’t mind them.”
You drew in a breath. Tentative, you asked, “Can I touch you, Bob?”
“Yeah,” he said, voice croaky. “Yeah, you can. What are you doing?”
“I’m going to give you a hug. Is that okay?”
Bob nodded again. His mom used to give him hugs, but that was a long time ago. Before she…
“Yeah,” he said, and he felt shame wash over him when tears pricked the corner of his eyes. You wrapped your arms around his neck and held him. He patted at your back awkwardly, but eventually took to mimicking your embrace when you sank into him, holding you close.
“This is the first time I’ve hugged someone else in a very long time, you know. I’ve mostly just hugged my clones, as sad as that sounds,” you mumbled into his shoulder.
“I don’t think that’s sad. I like to hold myself, too.”
“I like your hair like this, by the way,” you said as you tried to pull away, but he was holding onto you rather tightly. “Bob.”
“Oh!” He cleared his throat shyly, forcing himself to relinquish his grasp on you. “Sorry. Thanks. That was nice.”
“It was,” you agreed. There was some more silence. Bob put a fist up to his mouth and began to weep, utterly overwhelmed but nearly silent. You placed a hand on his shoulder, rubbing circles over his back. “I’m sorry this happened to you.”
“No, I’m—” Bob let out a quaky breath and began to cry all over again. You scooched closer to him and let your hand lay over his. He enjoyed feeling your fingers trace shapeless patterns over his skin.
“Bob,” you murmured after he began to calm down. “I don’t want to stay here forever. Do you?”
He swallowed around nothing, and avoided the question. “It’s quiet here. Quieter than the other places. The rest are… worse than this.”
“Hm.”
“It’s not me, you know. I wish I could fix it, but I just can’t. I can’t stop it,” he muttered. “It’s—it’s the Void.”
You nodded. “Could you let Yelena in here, at least? I saw the Void take her. We can help you together.”
Bob blinked back his tears. He nodded. The room slowly rotated ninety degrees, and you could hear creaking footsteps outside. Yelena busted the door open with a sharp kick to the doorknob, which you found amusing, considering the door didn’t look to have a lock on it. The team had a troubling tendency not to check if doors could just open on their own without breaking them down first.
“Bob!” she exclaimed. Then, her brows rose upon seeing you. “Xerox.”
“Hi,” you greeted. Bob waved at her besides you.
“What’s going on?” she asked, surveilling her surroundings in typical assassin-fashion.
“Therapy session,” you said, only half-joking, patting the spot beside you.
There was screaming downstairs again. Yelena wandered over to look down the attic’s opening, where she could see a man with a glass bottle in his hands. She looked up at you and Bob, then sat down where you gestured.
“I’m sorry, you had to live through this, Bob. And listen,” she said, lips pursed, meeting his watery gaze. “What I said to you before was wrong. You can’t stuff it down. You can’t hold it in all alone. No one can. Nobody should. We have to let it out. We have to spend time together. Even if it doesn’t make the emptiness go away, I promise you… it’ll make you feel lighter.”
Bob sniffed. “How do you know?” he whispered.
“Because it already has for me,” Yelena told him. “I found a team of people I could trust.”
At this, she looked to you, expression apologetic. “I’m sorry for what I said to you out there, too. You are not selfish. In fact, you’re probably the most selfless person I know. Not a lot of people are willing to die all the time for others.”
“Thanks, Yelena,” you said, simultaneously warm with sincerity and stiff because you weren’t at all used to receiving compliments. “So what do you say, Bob? Will you help us get out of here?”
To your delight, Bob nodded. You smiled, taking his hand. Yelena’s eyes bounced between the two of you—absent-mindedly wondering what the two of you were talking about before she arrived. She didn’t have much time to dwell on it, however, because the walls and furniture began to hum with a low-tone frequency.
“Look out!” Bob exclaimed, pulling Yelena down as a lamp flew across the room, nearly hitting her square in the head. A plastic kiddie chair whizzed into his back, striking him painfully. There were papers—monstrous childhood drawings—flying every which way. The curtains broke free of their hooks on the railing, wrapping around you and Yelena. Bob hurried over to try to claw the fabric off you, to no avail. It wouldn’t let go.
“Just try to get used to it, okay?” he called out over the whizzing and smashing of objects. “If you try to resist—the pain only gets worse!”
You could feel your vision swim with black dots as you gasped for breath—and all of a sudden, there was a slicing noise, and you were falling to your knees, filling your lungs with air. It was Ava, holding a sharp blade in one hand.
She nodded at you, helping you up to your feet. “I should start keeping track of how many times I’ve saved you.”
Before you could respond, Walker and Alexei burst in through the walls, followed by Bucky through one of the windows. You only narrowly managed to dodge his metal arm cuffing you across the head with his dramatic entrance.
“You came for us,” Yelena said, looking at her father with a touched frown. “What did you see? Are you all okay?”
Bucky only shrugged. “Oh, I’m fine. I have a great past, so I’m totally fine.”
“We’re probably going to need another one group therapy session once we’re out of here,” you said, which made both Bob and Yelena smile to themselves, nodding.
“Thank you guys,” said Bob. “Really.” He was about to say something about how he didn’t deserve this—but when you put a hand on his arm, he bobbed his head again and kept his mouth shut.
“How do we get out of here?” asked Walker, glancing back at the ruined walls. “I’d prefer not to have to go through my rooms again.”
Bob scratched at the back of his head. “As far as I know, it’s just… endless rooms.”
“You said that this was the quietest room, right? That all the others are worse?” you asked, and Bob nodded hesitantly.
The Thunderbolts team all exchanged determined looks. Alexei cracked his neck, John rolled his shoulders, and Ava flexed her fists.
You gave Bob a gentle push towards the broken doorway. “Okay, Palindrome. Show us the worst of ‘em. We’ll take on whatever comes our way together.”
#thunderbolts x reader#robert reynolds x reader#bob reynolds x reader#thunderbolts bob x reader#thunderbolts bob#robert reynolds fanfiction#robert reynolds x you#robert reynolds fanfic#thunderbolts fanfiction#robert reynolds#bob reynolds fanfiction#thunderbolts
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Sam's Club Rolls Out AI-Powered Exit Technology
“Goodbye long lines! Sam’s Club’s new AI-powered exit technology makes checkout a breeze.”ok Sam’s Club, a leading American membership-only warehouse club, has introduced an innovative AI-powered exit technology at its warehouse locations. This cutting-edge solution aims to streamline the shopping experience, allowing customers to exit the store 23% faster. How it Works The AI-powered exit…

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#Innovation#checkout#customer experience#digital transformation#efficiency#exit technology#future of retail.#I#Machine Learning#retail#retail tech#Sam&039;s Club#shopping#smart shopping#technology
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my phone is so fucking stupid. every time i plug in or unplug my headphones it restarts the tumblr app specifically
#how the fuck does that even happen#it literally does this for no other app. none. just tumblr#it also keeps recording me clicking the tabs button (bottom left) as me clicking the back button (bottom right) & exiting the app altogether#stupidest phone on the fucking planet istg#maybe i should switch back to my old one#i didnt even WANT a new phone. they just gave me a new one#oh also sometimes the keyboard is NOT like. synced up or whatever#i will be clicking the buttons but it thinks everything is slightly to the left abs ai ur qukk kiij kujw rgua#fuck modern technology tbh
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As sketchy as the oceangate submarine was... you can bet your ass every single one of musky's endeavors would look just as sketchy if it wasn't for the fact that he's forced to work with government regulators.
Hell, most of his projects are this sketchy if you look a bit closer. For example: the tesla tunnels.

No fire suppression system, no emergency exits, no emergency lighting, no way for EMS to get through, no fucking nothing. I am pretty sure it's not even big enough to open the car's doors.
Or the Cybertruck that's a deathtrap for both the people on the outside and the people on the inside because it utterly disregards the last 50 or so years of advancements in car safety technology such as crumple zones or safety glass
Or the tesla model 3 where you can't even open the back doors without power. So if you're in an accident and lose power... good luck getting your kids out of the back, especially when the huge battery is turning into a huge, unextinguishable flamethrower.
Or the fucking starship launchpad that was utterly destroyed by the rocket and threw huge concrete chunks and other debris around for miles... which, incidentally, also destroyed the rocket.


That's what all these self-proclaimed Silicon Valley tech bro geniuses are like.
They all think they know better than everyone else, and that rules or consequences don't apply to them, and they see safety as little more than an afterthought.
It's why Ai and social media algorithms are used sooooo ethically. It's why amazon and facebook try to find out everything about you and happily sell that data with no disregard for what it could be used for.
It's about damn time one of these CEO dipshits got killed by their own dipshitery, I just wish it had been musk or bezos instead...
Once again, in conclusion:

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yandere! prince who got cursed and became a statue for like hundreds of years. only the kiss of his soulmate will break the curse that got cast on him by a silly wizard.
enter, you.
innocent and silly you, walking through the forest (maybe trying to look for your next monster hookup) before bumping into this... this beautiful marble statue of some prince??? what? who even is he?? why is he here???
is this... your main character moment? where you kiss him and the two of you fall in love and- haha! that won't happen! you're just being delusional!
of course, being the silly specimen you are, you still kiss his lips without thinking much of it. i mean, you fucked some monsters before. what's a marble statue gonna do? he's hot, might as well right?
WRONG.
you shouldn't have done that because the second you kissed him this bright light came bursting from his chest and now you were being kissed back by this random oldie who's now supposedly human again.
"ah...ah... are you my soulmate? god you're beautiful-"
"dude i just wanted to fuck some monsters."
unfortunately, no more monster fucking for you :( because this geriatric prince is jealous as FUCK and will absolutely go batshit bonkers if you as much as suggest looking at someone else.
"lol, that drider looks kinda hot-"
"ahaha what drider? *cleaning blood from his sword*"
he's made himself a part of your life, without your consent by the way, and it's going to stay that way. no, he doesn't care if he's from centuries ago, you're his and he's yours. that much is certain to him.
so now you have a god of a prince hovering by your side 24/7. plus side is you get to see him act like a grandpa with all the new technology and lingo!
"my dear, what is... sk... skebeede? skibidi? how do i exit this app? ah, i want to take a picture, how do i- *breaks phone screen*"
he's trying his best :( just love him dearly, won't you?

#yandere#tw yandere#yandere x reader#yandere drabbles#yandere imagines#yandere scenarios#yandere concept#yandere prince#yandere prince x reader#gn reader#suiana rambling#suiana brainrotting
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Smash-and-Grab Burglars Strike Macy's Store in Arcadia: Police Launch Search for Suspects
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In a brazen and unsettling incident, a group of smash-and-grab burglars targeted a Macy's store in Arcadia, prompting swift action from local law enforcement agencies. The audacious burglary, captured on video from inside the store, highlights the increasing challenges faced by retailers and the urgent need for vigilance in safeguarding commercial spaces.
The incident unfolded with startling efficiency, as the masked suspects stormed the Macy's store with their faces and heads concealed, leaving no doubt about their intent. Video footage from the scene reveals a disturbing scene—the burglars systematically placing boxed sets of perfume into bags, knowing that time was of the essence.
The smash-and-grab spree, a criminal tactic characterized by swift entry and exit, is not only a threat to businesses but also a concern for public safety. The organized nature of such burglaries underscores the level of planning and coordination that these criminal groups employ.
As authorities launch a search for the suspects involved, the incident brings into focus the challenges faced by law enforcement in tracking and apprehending those responsible for such audacious crimes. The safety of both retail employees and shoppers is paramount, and efforts to bring these criminals to justice are of utmost importance.
The incident also serves as a reminder for businesses to remain proactive in fortifying their security measures. Retailers are increasingly investing in surveillance technology, alarm systems, and collaboration with law enforcement to prevent and mitigate such incidents.
In a time when commercial spaces can become targets for opportunistic criminals, the incident at Macy's store in Arcadia underscores the critical need for a united front in combating crime. The community, law enforcement, and business owners must work hand in hand to ensure the safety and security of public spaces.
As the investigation unfolds and the search for the smash-and-grab burglars continues, the incident stands as a stark reminder of the challenges faced by law enforcement in maintaining order and safeguarding businesses and communities alike.
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#trapLA#Smash-and-Grab Burglars#Macy's Store#Arcadia#Police Search#Video Footage#Masked Suspects#Audacious Burglary#Retail Security#Public Safety#Criminal Tactic#Swift Entry and Exit#Organized Crime#Surveillance Technology#Community Safety#Law Enforcement Collaboration
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