Chapter 43
The next morning, Matt smiled as he walked passed the florist on his way to work, the rich, heady scent of roses filling the air.
Yesterday, that fragrant reminder of the upcoming romantic celebration had only added to his bad mood - the bad mood caused by a week spent worrying about Calina and her strange phone call, and a month and a half spent missing her. The fact that Valentine's Day was approaching meant he was bitterly reminded of what was taken from them, and what other couple's took for granted - the chance to be with each other.
But today, he was actually feeling...optimistic.
Calina may have been a few days early, but she'd given him the perfect Valentine's gift:
Hope.
Her brief visit last night had spurned him out of his morose despondency. It was the catalyst he'd needed to realise that it was time to stop dwelling on the negatives and obsessing over what they'd lost.
Instead, it was time to focus on the positives. They were both still alive. Still healthy. And still fighting for each other. Distance didn't matter. Being temporarily separated didn't matter. They loved each other. They would have the rest of their lives together. A few months apart was nothing compared to the years to come.
Matt had been dealt some crap hands throughout his life - losing his sight. Losing his father. Losing again and again. But he'd always found a reason to stay in the game. To accept the defeats and find the will to carry on playing.
This was no different.
He just had to have faith that God's plan would reveal itself.
And this morning, he felt like he was finally getting a glimpse of the tapestry. He was finally seeing the beauty in the chaos. This separation would only strengthen them as a couple. It would serve to reinforce their bond, and ensure that they never took each other - or their happiness together - for granted.
"You seem...better," Karen commented when Matt reached the office.
Matt shrugged. "I feel better."
"That's good." She gifted him with a wide smile, and Foggy patted him on the shoulder.
It made Matt realise how much his foul mood had been impacting his friends and their workplace. "I'm sorry, guys," he said. "For being such a miserable bastard the last couple of months."
"I wouldn't say 'miserable bastard'," Foggy replied. "That's a bit harsh. 'Forlorn asshole', maybe. Or 'wretched son of a bitch' would be more accurate."
Matt laughed. "Okay, okay, I get it. I'll try to be more upbeat from now on."
"What brought on this sudden change in attitude?" Foggy asked.
Matt couldn't help his smile. "I saw Calina last night."
"So you got laid! That explains everything!"
Karen slapped Foggy's chest with the back of her hand. "God, Foggy."
Matt just laughed. "No, it was just a quick visit. But it helped give me some perspective. It's like you said, Fog - this is just a long distance relationship. It won't last forever...and other couples go through similar experiences all the time."
"Exactly, man. Astronauts."
Matt smiled. "Yeah. Astronauts."
"She's Neil Armstrong, and you're the little lady waiting back on earth."
Matt rolled his eyes. "Something like that."
"Okay," Foggy said, rubbing his hands together. "Well, since you're in such a good mood, you can take point on the meeting with the new nightmare client, while I finish off the brief for the Chisholm case."
"Nightmare client?" Matt asked.
"Yeah, a tenant dispute case. They're arriving at 10."
"Fine," Matt agreed. Liaising with a difficult client was the least he could do to make up for his less than stellar performance the last couple of months. "But I have something to do first." He held up the USB drive that Calina had slipped to him last night.
"What's that?" Karen asked.
"I'll let you know as soon as I do."
Matt booted up his computer and plugged in the device. It contained a single large document which he printed off in braille and started scanning through. At first there was just a list of chemicals - the results of the analysis by the Widow scientist - but then Calina added some context.
And it changed everything.
"Guys?" he called out. "You gotta hear this."
"What is it?" Karen said, taking a seat on the other side of his desk. Foggy joined them a moment later and leaned against the door frame.
"Calina found something." Matt spun his monitor around to show the document on the screen. "Apparently, one of the main ingredients of the fear pheromone is something called Arsonium bromide. Its a chemical that environmental groups have been calling for greater regulation on, because it's disposal has been linked to soil contamination which is affecting agriculture yields across the country. Those environmental groups were successful in convincing a prominent politician to lobby their cause to the EPA last year."
"Okay," Karen said slowly. "How does this help us?"
"That prominent politician was Governor Andrew Benson."
"The guy Calina was supposed to assassinate?"
"Yes." Matt leaned forward as he laid out Calina's theory. "Two days after the failed assassination, Benson suddenly, and without warning, withdrew his petition to the EPA, and walked back all his previous objections to the chemical."
"Somebody got to him," Karen added. "Somebody with a vested interest in the use of Arsonium bromide."
"Exactly. With Benson's support, the environmental groups were gaining traction in their fight. So someone tried to take Benson out. And when that failed, they likely played off the assassination attempt as a warning."
"Do as we say, or next time it'll be for real," Foggy guessed. "Which means whoever is behind the manufacture of the fear pheromone-"
"Is the same person who arranged for Calina to be reactivated," Karen finished.
"It's all connected," Matt said. "If we find out who created the pheromone, we find out who ordered Calina's mind control. And vice versa - if we can find out who paid to have their very own Widow assassin, we find our pheromone guy."
"Holy shit," Karen whispered, tilting the monitor so she could read through the information on the screen.
"I take it the Widows are concentrating on finding out who bought Calina's 'services', for want of a better term?" Foggy asked, reading the screen over Karen's shoulder.
"As much as they can - but they're more focussed on hunting down Volkov. He's the bigger threat to them right now. Which means we'll be doing them a favour if we find this information first."
"So where do we begin?" Foggy asked.
"I say we concentrate on researching this chemical. Where its manufactured, who buys it, and how."
"I'll start today," Karen answered, scribbling in her notebook.
"What does this mean?" Foggy said, pointing to something on Matt's screen.
"Which part?" Matt asked, shuffling through his print outs.
"The last sentence. It says, 'I hope this helps, shereen-am.' What is 'shereen-am'?"
Matt tried to control his reaction. "It's nothing. Just an inside joke."
It wasn't nothing. And it wasn't a joke. But it was something private, just between Matt and Calina. He'd googled the phrase before calling the others into his office and found that it was a Persian term of endearment. Roughly translated from Farsi into English it meant 'Honey'.
By using that term, Calina was reminding him of Christmas Day, when she'd whispered all those terms of endearment into his ear as they'd made love on the couch.
She was reminding him of a happier time, to help get him through the dark and lonely days to come.
Matt smiled as he skimmed his fingers over that word again: Shereen-am.
Calina's visit last night had given him hope. The information on the USB had given him a lead. And the affectionate nickname on the end of her message had given him a glimpse of how things would be between them in the future.
It was a promise, of better times ahead.
———
"And then he grabbed her and kissed her!"
"It was like something out of a movie - the way he dipped her back, and with the two of them bathed in the moonlight with the stars twinkling overhead..."
Calina groaned and sank into her chair as Katya and Inessa gushed to the other Widows about Matt's antics on the boat last night. The three of them had arrived back at the mansion at dawn, and after a brief nap, they were now debriefing the rest of the team.
But it had gotten a little side-tracked.
"'Bathed in the moonlight'?" Sofia repeated. "Come on, Inessa, I think you've been reading too many of those romance novels."
"But that's exactly what it was like!" the younger Widow protested. "It was the most romantic, swoon-worthy thing I've ever seen!"
"That's not really saying much, given the way we were raised," Viktoria commented.
Inessa rolled her eyes, and opened her mouth to respond but Anya cut her off. "Enough about Calina's love life. Did you find the warehouse?"
Calina sat up again. "Yes, enough about me. Tell them what you found."
Anya had found mention on Ranieri's laptop of a recent real estate transaction. Which wasn't unusual in itself - the Ranieri family seemed to prioritise property and commercial investments over gambling on the stock market. But while the rest of Salvatore's portfolio made sense for a party guy in his late twenties - night clubs, bars, trendy apartments in major cities across the world - a former wholesale carpet warehouse in an industrial estate in New Jersey did not.
So Katya and Inessa had been tasked with scoping it out.
Katya tossed a USB stick to Anya. "Photographs and schematics as requested. The place was deserted - no personnel on the grounds - but it was spotless, with signs of a recent professional clean. It's definitely being prepped for something."
"Like a lab to manufacture the mind control serum," Sofia guessed.
"Possibly," Yelena interjected. "But we can't get ahead of ourselves. We need more evidence. We need to be sure before we make any moves."
"Agreed," Anya chimed in.
"Which is why we planted a few cameras," Inessa said with a cocky grin. "And several bugs. We'll know soon enough what the plan is for that building."
"Good," Yelena responded. She looked around the room at the rest of the Widows. And a rare smile graced her face. "I know I just told you all to be cautious...but I have a good feeling about this. I think this is how we get Volkov. I think this will all be over soon."
Several of the women whooped and cheered in response - a sign that Calina wasn't the only one who was looking forward to this confinement ending.
And it also proved to Calina how much the Widows had come out of their shells over the last few months. They laughed more readily now. They expressed their emotions without prompting. Conversations flowed instead of stuttered, and there was an easy camaraderie between everyone.
The stilted, angry, and bitter atmosphere that often pervaded the base in South Carolina didn't exist here in Maine. And Calina knew it had nothing to do with the change in scenery - the weather outside the mansion was dark and grey and wet these days, holding little of the sunny, vibrant beauty of Charleston.
Time was the reason.
They'd been given time to start the healing process. To learn about themselves and the world around them. Time to find their little moments of joy.
Joy that even Volkov couldn't take away. If anything, the looming threat that he posed had the opposite effect - as if the Widows were defiantly enjoying themselves even more to spite him and his attempts to force them back into an emotionless, violent existence.
Calina would be sorry to leave this place when the time came. She no longer felt the need to escape this environment. Not like in the beginning, when she'd first been freed. Back then, she'd felt suffocated by all the pain and rage around her. She'd wanted to strike out on her own and discover who she was away from that toxic environment.
But everything was different now. Now she would miss living here with all her sisters.
Though not as much as she missed Matt.
Seeing him last night had been a rollercoaster ride. She'd swung from the lowest low of wanting to escape his presence, to the highest high from that kiss. Because as much as it made Calina cringe, Inessa's description had been spot-on - it had been the most wonderful, romantic, swoon-worthy gesture in the history of the world.
But on the journey back to Maine, the high had worn off. And all her doubts and fears - and all the guilt - had come flooding back.
And all of it boiled down to one thing - she didn't feel worthy of him.
She didn't feel worthy of the kind of man who would fly a hundred feet through the air just to kiss her. She didn't feel worthy of a man as amazing and kind and smart as Matt. A man who fiercely protected the strangers in his city, and could touch her with such reverent tenderness.
The kiss had made her forget all that. It had short-circuited her brain and over-rode all her negative emotions, until the only thing left was passion. She'd given in to the moment, to the feel of being in Matt's arms again.
Which she'd known would happen. It was the reason she'd chosen that cramped, awkward crane jib as their meeting point in the first place. She'd known that if they'd met in his apartment, or on the pier - or anywhere else out in the open - he would have taken her in his arms and she would have been powerless to resist. She would have accepted his embrace and returned his kiss all the while feeling undeserving of him.
So she'd chosen that metal cage instead, as a way to deny herself.
As a punishment.
But he'd gotten around her little ploy. He'd kissed the life out of her on that boat deck, and everything else had faded away. How guilty she felt about Italy. How scared she was that if he truly knew her and everything she'd done as a Widow that he'd hate her.
How terrified she was that they were too good to be true.
"Calina!"
Calina lifted her head at the sound of her name. The other widows were all staring at her. "Huh?" she asked.
"You spaced out there," Inessa explained.
"Sorry. Just tired," she lied. "I'm going to head back to bed."
The chorus of 'Byes' and 'Sleep wells' from her sisters followed Calina up the stairs, but she was already lost in thought again.
She didn't know what to do about Matt and all these doubts she was having.
Did she share them with him? Admit her fears about not being worthy of his love? Could she even explain them without having to divulge all the dirty secrets of her past? Wouldn't that just bring about the end of their relationship and defeat the purpose of the whole 'sharing' thing?
Calina fell forward onto her bed and smothered her frustrated groan with her pillow. Then she flipped onto her back and stared up at the ceiling as she contemplated the alternative scenario: being with Matt, with this constant pit of worry in her stomach. Revelling in his affection and his love whilst always waiting for the other shoe to drop.
A tear leaked from the corner of Calina's eye as she wrestled with all of these unfamiliar emotions. A tiny part of her longed for the days of being an unfeeling automaton...but she quickly squashed that treacherous notion.
This was better.
Despite all the uncertainty and pain and confusion, dealing with these emotions was far better than living as a shell of a human being under the Red Room's control.
"Hey, you okay?"
Calina hastily wiped away the tear as Katya entered their room. "Yeah, I'm fine."
"Liar," Katya teased, taking a seat on the edge of the bed. "You've not been okay since Italy. Did something else happen there?"
Calina levered herself up to rest against the headboard. "What do you mean?"
"Well, when you debriefed us after the mission you said Ranieri just got a bit handsy. Did something...more...happen that night? You can tell me."
Calina shook her head. "No, nothing else happened."
"So what is it? What's going on with you?"
Calina's first instinct was to lie again. To keep everything to herself. It was the way she was raised - the way they all had been. Even before the mind control serum took away their emotions they were trained to hide them. To bury their sadness and their loneliness and their pain. To never confide in anyone how they were feeling.
It was a difficult habit to break, but Calina was determined to tear away this next layer of Red Room conditioning. So she took a deep breath and told Katya everything. How she'd called Matt before the party in Italy. How having Ranieri's hands on her felt. And how it was all messing with her head. "I know intellectually that nothing really happened," she explained. "It was just a few unwanted gropes and a kiss on the neck - I've been through much worse on missions like that - but I just feel so...guilty. I keep imagining if it was Matt in that situation, and he'd let some other woman touch him. I would hate it. Which means I can't tell him, because then he'd hate me."
"You don't know that for sure," Katya interjected. "If you just explain to him that it was a mission and you were playing a role-"
"But that would just open up this whole can of worms. About all the other roles I've played in the past, and the things I've done-"
"While under mind control, Calina."
"Again, I know that intellectually...but don't you still feel guilty about everything you did while under the serum?"
Katya smiled. "I feel guilty for stabbing you in Seoul."
Calina rolled her eyes. "I'm being serious. We all did some really messed up shit for Dreykov. Doesn't that...stick with you at all?"
Katya looked down as she picked at a loose thread in the bedspread. "Occasionally. Usually at night - my dreams are sometimes...not fun."
Calina placed her hand over Katya's remembering what it was like when she first arrived in New York - the endless nights spent pacing the rooftop, unable to sleep. "I'm sorry."
Katya shrugged. "It's fine. They're just memories. The important thing is that I don't blame myself for it. And you're not to blame either. We were kids when we were brainwashed, and then we were forced against our will to commit all those acts."
"But what about now? We're acting on our own free will, and we're still murdering and stealing-"
"Yes, to stop the bad guys!" Katya protested. "We're on the side of good now. And we have the rest of our lives to be on that good side, and to make up for everything we've done"
"Can we, though? Can we possibly balance a ledger with so much red in it?"
"Now you sound like Natasha. And look what she's accomplished. She's an Avenger. Little girls all over the world want to be like her, because she's a hero. We can be like that too."
"I don't think I'll ever feel like a hero. Matt's a hero, and he-"
It was Katya's turn to roll her eyes. "You know I like Matt, but he's not exactly squeaky-clean. He's a vigilante - he breaks the law every night."
"It's different. He has a moral code. One I've violated again and again. If he ever found out the truth about me, he'd hate me."
Katya studied her for a few moments, a frown marring her face. "Calina, what is the 'truth' about you?"
Calina swallowed harshly. When she finally answered, her voice was small and shaky. "That I'm not a good person."
Katya reared back. "That's ridiculous! You were brainwashed and under mind control-"
"I'm not talking about that! Since leaving the Red Room, I've abandoned my sisters, I've lied to everyone I've met, I've killed people, and I- I cheated on my boyfriend!"
"You didn't cheat!"
"What would you call it?"
"I call it necessary! We're fighting a war here, Calina. And wars are messy, and they involve sacrifice and difficult decisions. Killing the men who came after you, lying to protect your identity and going undercover to steal from Ranieri were difficult decisions, but necessary."
"But-"
"I'm not finished!"
Calina snapped her mouth closed. She'd never seen Katya like this - so agitated and...loud. She'd always been one of the quieter, more rational Widows.
"As to your other 'sin'," Katya continued. "You did not abandon us. You came to save me in Korea - you risked your life to save me. That's not abandonment. And the other widows told me what you were like after you were freed - they could all see you were struggling. Moving to New York was another necessary decision. You know why?"
"Why?"
"Because you're a good person. You were never cut out for this kind of life. Even as kids we realised that you were too sweet and sensitive. And the Red Room persisted in trying to beat that out of you, but they never could. Despite what you've been through and what you were forced to do, you're still that same sweet, sensitive, good person. It's why you're feeling all of this so much more than the rest of us. And while we all appreciate your help with taking down Volkov, if you want to leave again, not one person would blame you."
She bumped her shoulder against Calina's. "We love you, Calina. You are worthy of love. You just need to convince yourself of that."
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