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#like fuck you man if you’d paid for the actual staffing you needed you wouldn’t be getting emails at 10 pm
thetriggeredhappy · 4 years
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I love your idea of scout bein born early. Would it be too much trouble for you to write abt him bein in the hospital? And maybe possibly spy findin out?
this feels like a slightly different angle than the prompt, anon, but in my defense that’s what always happens
(warnings for alcohol mention, non-graphic injury and briefly being in a hospital)
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The phone rang three times before it was picked up, and Scout used all three of those rings to try and get his story straight in his head. Then it was picked up and a familiar and very pleasant voice said “Hey, this is Pauling,” and he wasted exactly zero seconds to start talking.
“Alright so I kinda need some help, Miss P,” he opened with, because frankly those were some cards he knew were gonna end up on the table no matter how he played this.
“What did you do?” she asked immediately, and fuck, she was on to him.
“I—listen, I didn’t even do anything.”
“What did you do?” she asked again.
“...So, okay, promise you won’t be mad.”
“I’m already mad, Scout. What did you do?”
Scout worked hard for about three seconds to figure out a good way to phrase the next few sentences. “...So I was just at this bar, right, and I was minding my own goddamn business—“
“Scout.”
“I was!” he said, a little defensive. “Seriously! And this guy sees me across the bar, and, y’know, figures out I’m one of those guys from the newspaper who keeps causing trouble—“
“Were you in uniform?” she asked dryly.
“Nah, but, uh, Soldier and Cyclops were there, and some of the other guys were there earlier, and Soldier had his stupid helmet on, so, y’know. Bunch of foreigners and some G.I. Joe lookin’ guy, wouldn’t be hard to piece it together. And most of the guys left, and Soldier and Demo walk off, and I’m left alone just finishing my drink before I head out, like ya do.”
“Like you do,” Miss Pauling hesitantly agreed.
“And this guy goes, hey, three dudes is a lot, but I could take this one guy. And he comes up to me, right, all like ‘Hey what’s up I’m a drunk dude who wants to get in a fight like an asshole’ and I’m like ‘Hey nah I’m good actually’ because like, I’m busy and that’s stupid, right?”
“Right,” Miss Pauling agreed. “Really stupid.”
“Right! So I’m like, ‘Hey, fuck off pal’ and he just takes a fuckin’ swing at me, and I’m like ‘Hey actually fuck this I already paid I’m just gonna get outta here’ and I try to leave, but the dude just like—just grabs me by the arm and breaks my fuckin’ wrist, and I knock my whole glass over because holy shit, and a whole fuckin’ brawl kicks off, right—?”
“So long story short you need me to pick you up from jail again,” Miss Pauling cut in, voice laced with heavy exasperation.
“Nah, bartender saw everything and I didn’t get in any trouble. I, uh. I need you to pick me up from the hospital, actually,” he said, glancing over his shoulder as a nurse wheeled a cart by.
“Scout.”
“Look, I would’a just headed back to base, but it was like two in the morning and Medic was probably asleep and the bartender guy was bein’ all nice about it and how am I supposed to tell him I’ve got this crazy German guy who fixes all my bones and shit and don’t gotta go to a real hospital?” he asked, a little defensive. “Then they wouldn’t let me leave unless someone drove me because I’ve got a cast on and can’t drive, and I figured I shouldn’t wake you up or whatever at like four in the morning, so, I ended up taking a nap on a bench, and now it’s like ten so I figured you wouldn’t be mad.”
“Well, I can’t drive you back to base—“
“Aww, what?” he whined.
“—because I’m currently in Japan on business.”
“Oh. Okay, that’s fair,” he admitted.
“But I’ll send someone to pick you up,” she said. “Be ready to go in two hours.”
“Sure thing. Who are you sending?” Scout asked.
“I’ll send Spy,” she replied, and kept talking before Scout could start to complain. “Look, maybe now you’ll learn not to get in bar fights.”
“Miss P, c’mon!” he whined.
“I’m sending him. Two hours,” Miss Pauling said, and hung up on him, at which point he sighed so hard he got looks from two nurses down the hall.
Spy pulled up in his nice shiny car an hour and forty-five minutes later, and gave him a look that immediately made him feel guilty even though it totally wasn’t his fault that he was in this situation. He shifted on his feet for a second before heading over to the car. Silence.
“Wanna sign my cast?” Scout joked.
“Just get in the car.”
He did, deciding that maybe further hilarious commentary wasn’t going to help him out this time. Silence for a second. 
He reached for the radio. Spy smacked his hand away. “Put on your seatbelt,” Spy said flatly, and Scout did, although it was a bit of a struggle one-handed, and they pulled out of the hospital parking lot.
About thirty seconds of quiet again before Spy broke it. “So you’re a hired mercenary, but one drunk man in a bar can break your arm?” Spy asked.
“Go to hell, Spy,” Scout mumbled.
“I just find it interesting is all,” Spy said, tone light. “That we apparently need to babysit you or else you’ll end up in the morning paper.”
“What?”
Spy reached down between his door and the seat and pulled forth a newspaper, which he promptly tossed into Scout’s lap. “Third page.”
Scout flipped the newspaper open and found that there was indeed an article there. A brawl at the bar, minor property damage, five people arrested and several more fined, two sent to the hospital. He wasn’t mentioned by name, but he did see himself in the background of the picture beside the title.
“You’d think you would have the awareness not to get caught in a... brawl, I believe they called it?” Spy asked.
“Hey, I keep my head on a swivel,” Scout defended, closing the newspaper and tossing it into the backseat. “Everything was fine until Cyclops and Helmet-Head ditched me.”
“Oh, I’m sure it was,” Spy hummed.
Scout frowned. “The hell is that supposed to mean?”
“No, I’m just certain that you’re giving the full unbiased truth, even though I theoretically have no way of verifying anything you say to me about what happened,” Spy shrugged, eyes on the road.
Scout frowned further. “You callin’ me a liar?”
“No, I’m calling you a bad liar,” Spy said dryly.
“Well it’s true, that’s really what happened,” Scout said, a little offended.
“It doesn’t matter to me either way, I just wanted you to know that you need better cover stories if you want to continue getting away with your usual shenanigans.”
“Whatever, Spy,” Scout scoffed, glaring out the window.
About a minute and a half of complete silence. Scout got bored glancing around his side of the car and spent a good minute just picking at his cast before he realized he probably shouldn’t do that. He ended up reaching for the radio.
“No,” Spy droned.
“Aw, c’mon! Can’t we listen to something?” Scout complained. “It’s like forty minutes until we get back to base.”
“If you didn’t get in a bar fight and break your arm, it would be zero minutes. But you did, and I’m not listening to your terrible taste in music for forty minutes just because you can’t keep yourself out of trouble.”
Scout pouted over that for a minute or two before he thought of a good retort. “...Y’know, technically the guy probably only even jumped me because I was alone,” he said.
“Correct.”
“And I was only alone because you and all the other guys ditched me.”
“Succinct.”
“So this is kinda sorta basically your fault.”
Spy’s expression didn’t change. “...My fault?” he repeated.
“Yeah. If you didn’t ditch me, I wouldn’t have gotten jumped.”
Spy’s expression didn’t change.
“So you should let me turn on the radio.”
“Mon dieu, perhaps you should have been a lawyer,” he deadpanned.
Silence. “...So can I turn on the radio?”
“Don’t make me regret it,” Spy said, and Scout leaned over to fiddle with the dial, grinning.
He really didn’t think Spy would put up with the sort of stuff he usually listened to in the car, so he ended up putting on a station with something old enough that Spy probably didn’t hate it. And Spy didn’t turn it off or pull over to dump him on the side of the road, so apparently he picked something alright.
Ten minutes without talking. Scout looked out his window and tried to remember not to pick at his cast. Because he was looking out the window, he pretty easily caught sight of a sign advertising a diner.
He looked over at a Spy. Spy didn’t look back.
“Can we get diner food?” Scout asked.
“No,” Spy said.
“Please?” Scout asked.
“No,” Spy said.
“Please?” Scout asked.
“Tell me you aren’t seriously going to try this game,” Spy said, already looking annoyed. “You’re a grown man.”
“I’m hungry!”
“Then get something to eat at the base,” Spy said.
“I’m hungry and I have a broken arm and I’m gonna have to deal with Medic fixing my broken arm and also all the guys making fun of me. Can we please get diner food?” Scout asked,
Spy paused for a long moment. Scout’s eyes kept flicking between Spy and the upcoming exit. Spy sighed heavily and moved to take the exit. Scout cheered. “I can still change my mind,” Spy threatened. Scout shut up.
Scout double-checked his pockets for his wallet twice before they even pulled into the parking lot. It didn’t look particularly busy, but Spy didn’t pull up near the door anyways. He put the car into park and gave Scout the single most unimpressed look of his life.
“I’m giving you five minutes to order and get back in this car or I’m leaving without you,” he declared.
“Did you want anything?” Scout asked, fumbling with his seatbelt.
“Do I want terrible greasy American diner food?” Spy scoffed.
“Look, just thought I’d fuckin’ ask, alright? Jesus,” Scout mumbled, managing to get his seatbelt off. “And that doesn’t answer my question. Do you want anything?”
“Four minutes and fifty seconds,” Spy drawled, and Scout quickly got out of the car.
There wasn’t anyone in line, and luckily the diner was staffed by the kind of people who didn’t ask questions beyond giving a pointed glance towards his cast. He kept his order simple and kept an eye on the clock on the wall, and bolted back into the parking lot with the paper bag of food in hand wondering if Spy would seriously actually ditch him.
Surprisingly, Spy had left on the radio, and raised an eyebrow at him as he tried his best to bundle himself into the car one-handed. He managed to get his seatbelt on with only a minor scare about almost spilling the food, and promptly started digging through it as Spy pulled them back out of the parking lot.
“Here,” Scout chirped, holding something out to him. Spy frowned, glancing at his mirrors and taking what was being handed to him distractedly. They were out of the parking lot and back on the road by the time Spy actually looked at it.
“What is this?” he asked dryly, looking at the paper-wrapped something.
“Chicken sandwich,” Scout replied, pulling his own food out. “I uh, I think I got ketchup in here too—“
“Why did you get me a sandwich?”
“Why not?” Scout shrugged, unwrapping his burger and glancing it over before taking a bite and frowning. “Aw, man, I wanted cheese on this. Damn.”
“I didn’t ask for anything.”
“I mean, if you don’t want it, I’ll probably eat it.”
“No,” Spy said, and hesitated. He waited until they were at a stoplight before moving to unwrap the sandwich, glancing it over with a critical eye. Scout noticed that he didn’t take it completely out of the paper even when he did move to start eating it, instead using the paper to hold it. Probably worried about grease or something on his dumb gloves. Usually Scout would make fun of him about it, but he was pretty sure he was very close to getting kicked out of the car.
He wolfed down his hamburger (even without cheese) and started getting to work on his french fries, being extra careful due to the fact that he was pretty sure Spy would kill him if he dropped a fry in his nice, fancy, very very clean car.
He could only play it cool for so long once a joke occurred to him, though. He grinned, taking a fry and holding it between two fingers up near his face. “Hey, look, I’m you,” Scout joked, pretending to take a drag.
Spy spared him a glance and promptly rolled his eyes, returning to glaring at the road. “Not even close.”
“Aww, what?” Scout complained.
“First of all, I’m better dressed,” Spy quipped. “Second of all, I’m taller, and third of all, I didn’t get my arm put in a case because of a bar fight. Shall I continue? The list goes on.”
“Well why are you gettin’ personal about it?” Scout asked, bristling. “I was just makin’ a joke, sheesh.”
“How was I meant to know? Usually jokes are funny,” Spy said, raising an eyebrow at him.
Scout didn’t have a good comeback for that, just sinking in his seat and moving to look back out the window.
A good ten minutes of silence again, broken only by the radio and the hum of the car. Scout finished his fries and put his trash back in the bag the way that Spy seemed to be doing, then crossed his arms over himself and just looked out the window at all the nothing. Silence. Road.
Surprisingly, Spy spoke first. “You’ve missed two Volkswagen Beetles,” he noted.
Scout didn’t say anything.
“Usually when we pass one of those you punch me very hard on the arm and I almost crash the car because you’re an idiot.”
Scout sunk further in his seat, but didn’t say anything.
“Am I meant to gather from this that the way to get you to stop doing that is by making you angry with me? Because if so, clearly I’ll need to be much worse to you from now on if I want to keep this vehicle in one piece.”
“Like that’s even possible for you,” Scout said under his breath.
“I didn’t need to come pick you up from the hospital, nor did I need to let you turn on the radio, nor did I need to pull over to allow you to get food from the diner,” Spy pointed out. “All things considered, I’ve been very nice to you so far.”
“What a saint,” Scout mumbled sarcastically.
Silence. “Do you have something to say?”
“I don’t wanna fuckin’ talk about this, alright Spy?” Scout finally huffed.
“And why not?”
“Look, I’ve had a shitty night, okay?” Scout snapped, glaring hard at the desert outside the window. “I got my arm broken in a stupid bar because the guys got annoyed and ditched me and I was up until like four in the morning getting my arm set and put in a cast and then I had to sleep on a shitty bench in a hospital waiting room and then Miss P sent the one person on the planet who hates me more than anyone else to pick me up. I’m not fuckin’ doin’ this right now, okay? Just lay off.”
Silence. Thank god for the radio, or he would’ve suffocated in it.
“Surely I’m not the person who hates you the most in the world,” Spy said after a few moments. “There are nine men being paid to kill you on a daily basis. I’m sure they hate you much more than I do.”
Scout didn’t reply to that.
“And I’m sure none of them would have pulled over to let you get something to eat,” he added.
“Yeah, holy shit, your Peace Prize is in the mail,” Scout huffed.
“That’s not what I meant.”
“Then what did you mean?” Scout snapped, finally looking over at him. Spy couldn’t hold eye contact for long, needing to watch the road. “What was that supposed to mean?”
Spy sighed hard, looking extremely irritated. “It means that have you ever considered that perhaps the team worries when someone goes missing? And that occasionally your teammates might worry about you?”
“How was I supposed to know? Usually teammates are supposed to be nice,” Scout sassed, echoing Spy’s earlier joke.
He watched Spy take a measured inhale, a controlled exhale. When he spoke a long few seconds later, his voice was level. “Fine,” he said. “Alright. You’ve made your point.”
Scout just turned to look back out the window.
“...And I’m sorry we left you alone at the bar.”
His head whipped back around, eyebrows furrowed. Spy wasn’t looking at him.
“And I’m sorry for snapping at you earlier, and thank you for also getting me a sandwich when you didn’t need to,” Spy continued.
Scout waited a good few seconds for the catch, for the ‘gotcha’, for the punchline. For the part where Spy would twist the words around and hit him with something really biting once his guard was down. But nothing came. Just silence.
He needed a long moment to figure out how to reply. “...Thanks,” was all he could manage, and he knew it was lame, but Spy just shrugged and made no further comment.
Minutes of silence. Scout looked out the windshield, picked at his cast. “Punch buggy,” he quipped a few minutes later, slugging Spy on the shoulder with his good hand, and Spy made an appropriate sound of disgust and annoyance and offhandedly threatened to make him walk the rest of the way, but Scout just laughed.
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