Tony Stark (
in_extremis) wrote in
revivalproject2023-09-15 10:47 am
Scoria
WHO: Tony and...you?
WHERE: The forge, the hospital
WHAT: Dealing with Iron Man
WHEN: Mid-September
WARNINGS: Tony's depression is a rich bouquet of alcoholism and self-destruction. It's a touch gory.
a. forge
This wasn't a completely unusual scent in the close air of the forge. The acridity was standard, the taste of coal and slag even before the regularly singed hair. It was the richness, like oil that shouldn't have been so close to the mouth of the fire, that Tony could taste in the back of his throat and had him blinking out of his distant focus to finally feel the sear that seemed to reach straight to his heart. He sucked in a sharp, wakeful breath, any other sound cut off by the metal clanging to the ground as he dropped the crucible, tearing the deadened skin of his palm with it and leaving him still again as he watched silver spread across the floor and held his scorched hand shakily aloft, struggling to remember what his intended next step was meant to be. His glove dangled from his other hand, along with a glass, chosen primarily for its cleanliness as he searched through the Deep End, and was now smudged liberally with fingerprints as Tony endlessly twisted it at his side.
The criteria for the bottle he had taken had been significantly different, though no less straightforward; as long as it wasn't a terribly lurid colour, it would probably do the job. Tony backed away from the fire, to return to the bottle on the workbench, dropping the gloves and the glass alongside it to consider his blistering hand with a sigh of disappointment. It did hurt a little more when he tried to stretch out his fingers, and he couldn't quite bring himself to, instead leaving it with a glare and propped up on the table as he searched carelessly through nearby boxes and baskets for something to wrap it in so he could keep working. Not that he was going to get much further. Dedicating the amount of resources that he had in the first place to the Iron Man had been a profound waste, and now anything else was best applied to regrouping and rebuilding, and actually protecting them against a future disaster. If he was going to build something like the armor, he was really going to have to recycle what he already had. Which meant he was going to have to go get it again.
b. hospital
When a gentle knock returned only silence in the darkened hallway of the hospital, and Tony easily pushed the door open to a largely empty room, there was an unspooling of disappointment in his chest. Not that he was exactly prepared for what he might say to Wesker, but it didn't seem like he'd have to carefully calculate the kind of provocation that would get him pinned to a wall. A cheerful 'good morning' would have been perfectly effective. Leaving a small puddle of water behind, Tony went drifting into the abandoned room, and slowly sank down onto his knees in front of the lumpy rag that he knew when he tweaked up would reveal the slightly battered scales of the Iron Man. "Morning, dear," he mumbled to it in lieu of someone that would punch him, and slid the scattered pieces he'd dredged out of the fountain alongside it. They jangled delicately, while the bottle he set down at his other side clanked on the ground with conviction. Now what? It wasn't like he could lift the imposing weight of the full set of armor and cradle it back to the forge to be melted. It wasn't even all here; there were more parts yet, glowing like embers behind his eyes, somewhere further down the hall, the full list of their individual destructive power and itemized armament scrolling endlessly at the back of his skull like white noise drowning out everything around it. He was squeezing the glass in his lap, and had to take a deep breath to release it again, and shake out his stinging, bandaged hand. He could have at least filled it with water while he was at the fountain, so he could also have something to sip.
He unstopped the bottle, so he could watch the pour, just a couple inches, then carefully set the arrangement aside. He could just ask the armor to assemble and walk itself out of here. It was probably fine. What was the worst that could happen? Plenty of people could have one drink. He wasn't doing anything anyway. He took another breath so he could push himself back up, and set out for those last few pieces. Once the full set of armor was together, then he would have to think about tearing it apart.
WHERE: The forge, the hospital
WHAT: Dealing with Iron Man
WHEN: Mid-September
WARNINGS: Tony's depression is a rich bouquet of alcoholism and self-destruction. It's a touch gory.
a. forge
This wasn't a completely unusual scent in the close air of the forge. The acridity was standard, the taste of coal and slag even before the regularly singed hair. It was the richness, like oil that shouldn't have been so close to the mouth of the fire, that Tony could taste in the back of his throat and had him blinking out of his distant focus to finally feel the sear that seemed to reach straight to his heart. He sucked in a sharp, wakeful breath, any other sound cut off by the metal clanging to the ground as he dropped the crucible, tearing the deadened skin of his palm with it and leaving him still again as he watched silver spread across the floor and held his scorched hand shakily aloft, struggling to remember what his intended next step was meant to be. His glove dangled from his other hand, along with a glass, chosen primarily for its cleanliness as he searched through the Deep End, and was now smudged liberally with fingerprints as Tony endlessly twisted it at his side.
The criteria for the bottle he had taken had been significantly different, though no less straightforward; as long as it wasn't a terribly lurid colour, it would probably do the job. Tony backed away from the fire, to return to the bottle on the workbench, dropping the gloves and the glass alongside it to consider his blistering hand with a sigh of disappointment. It did hurt a little more when he tried to stretch out his fingers, and he couldn't quite bring himself to, instead leaving it with a glare and propped up on the table as he searched carelessly through nearby boxes and baskets for something to wrap it in so he could keep working. Not that he was going to get much further. Dedicating the amount of resources that he had in the first place to the Iron Man had been a profound waste, and now anything else was best applied to regrouping and rebuilding, and actually protecting them against a future disaster. If he was going to build something like the armor, he was really going to have to recycle what he already had. Which meant he was going to have to go get it again.
b. hospital
When a gentle knock returned only silence in the darkened hallway of the hospital, and Tony easily pushed the door open to a largely empty room, there was an unspooling of disappointment in his chest. Not that he was exactly prepared for what he might say to Wesker, but it didn't seem like he'd have to carefully calculate the kind of provocation that would get him pinned to a wall. A cheerful 'good morning' would have been perfectly effective. Leaving a small puddle of water behind, Tony went drifting into the abandoned room, and slowly sank down onto his knees in front of the lumpy rag that he knew when he tweaked up would reveal the slightly battered scales of the Iron Man. "Morning, dear," he mumbled to it in lieu of someone that would punch him, and slid the scattered pieces he'd dredged out of the fountain alongside it. They jangled delicately, while the bottle he set down at his other side clanked on the ground with conviction. Now what? It wasn't like he could lift the imposing weight of the full set of armor and cradle it back to the forge to be melted. It wasn't even all here; there were more parts yet, glowing like embers behind his eyes, somewhere further down the hall, the full list of their individual destructive power and itemized armament scrolling endlessly at the back of his skull like white noise drowning out everything around it. He was squeezing the glass in his lap, and had to take a deep breath to release it again, and shake out his stinging, bandaged hand. He could have at least filled it with water while he was at the fountain, so he could also have something to sip.
He unstopped the bottle, so he could watch the pour, just a couple inches, then carefully set the arrangement aside. He could just ask the armor to assemble and walk itself out of here. It was probably fine. What was the worst that could happen? Plenty of people could have one drink. He wasn't doing anything anyway. He took another breath so he could push himself back up, and set out for those last few pieces. Once the full set of armor was together, then he would have to think about tearing it apart.

b
"Hey," he greeted carefully, head tilting as he took in the sight of him, and that mangled armor. "...what happened?"
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His face brightened then, some colour in his cheeks and he nodded. "I saw him too. Guess all that crying before was...dumb," he tried to laugh it off and flashed Tony a grateful smile. "...thank you for that though...helping me down there."
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"...you wanna talk about it?"
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"I'm going to get this back to the forge," he finally answered, to convince Billy that he wasn't entirely useless, he had plans and everything. "Scrap most of it, use the parts for this other suit I've been working on, that I've been...Figure if Jon has it, he'll be able to be more effective, instead of arguing with idiots over what he knows. And I've been talking about a school, you know, it's like another kid shows up here every day, half of them have never even seen sunlight, it'll be good for them, with the right people."
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"I mean...the school part sounds good, actually. That'd be really nice for everyone. But..."
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"Believe me, if I had my credit card, there'd be one in every colour," he excused, like the reason was entirely an economic one and he just had to prioritize the armor for Jon. That was kind of true. The school was a little easier to address, "It should keep them busy. Do you think you could do it? Teach some kids algebra and...whatever it is you do in grade school..separation processes?" Maybe Tony was fundamentally unequipped for this venture, what he remembered about school before college was patchy and mostly painful. "What was your thing?"
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"...History," he admitted with an embarrassed laugh, "But I dunno if I'd be a good teacher. I definitely don't remember separation processes if they taught them. What about you, wouldn't you teach? You have like 7 doctorates, don't you?"
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"So, then, the volcano--Avengers are supposed to help, this is our home. Do you know why I'm an Avenger?" Billy definitely had an answer for that, when he said his thing in high school was 'history', Tony was pretty sure he had a specific area of history that he really meant. He didn't wait for Billy's answer. "When the Mansion came down, and I didn't have the money to rebuild it, that was the end of the team. Everyone agreed, there was no reason to continue. We said goodbye. Most of them, that didn't mean they stopped being heroes--that didn't even mean they stopped working together. They were still doing the necessary work. I spent my time building my company. Building the Tower. And as soon as it was up, and the vault was full again, Cap shows up at the door, saying, let's get the band back together." Tony narrowed his eyes, cocking his head inquisitively, to ask if Billy was following the math. Neither of them could deny Tony's worth to the team.
"I don't have that here. I don't have the vault. I have to protect what we have. And I couldn't do that."
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He wondered if Kate ever felt that way as their benefactor. If he'd ever left her feeling that way. If he'd ever left Tony feeling that way...
"...I know it doesn't take away from what you said, but- there's a whole world of people who see you as a hero, with or without the vault. With or without the suit... You're worth more than what you can give. And place- it's never going to let us win. I couldn't touch the thing with my magic. We were never going to win that. But...we tried. That's what makes us Avengers. Not the vault. Not that-" he nodded towards the suit.
He felt like Cap would have done better with the speech, brows creasing anxiously.
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"I've been in a lot of fights that nobody thought we could win," he pointed out, with a small smile that was supposed to be impishly encouraging, but in the context he had to drop his gaze and give a brief shake of his head in apology because it sounded more like he had no excuse for letting it go on this long. None of those other hopeless battles had been so drawn out.
...I don't know how i lost this
"It's still hard. No matter how many impossible fights we win. It's hard every time..." He paused, not sure exactly what he was trying to say. "...I'm glad you're here, Tony. Even when you're mad at me, I feel safer when you're around."
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"Tell me those dreams were more exciting than this," he encouraged, hands open to the room and Billy bravely battling Tony's misery, or the lonely planet they were stranded on. "My dreams when I was fifteen involved a lot more skin."
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"...it's not all on you, you know," he reminded softly, "You've done more than enough for all of us. Just try and remember that when you're feeling low. Okay?"
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