Truthfully, she hadn’t even noticed his hair. In fact, she was trying desperately not to look at his face at all. Her eyes had darted everywhere but. Now, she couldn’t help but stare. Barbara hadn’t known a lot of men that dyed their hair, let alone highlighted it, but to each their own. Shoulders shrugged up as she focused on the more important feature of his frame: a bleeding wound.
Kneeling back down, lines creased on her forehead, more than likely invisible through the cowl, as she stared blankly at the gash. However, her tight, pursed lips were plainly visible, unable to hide her obvious concern. She was going to have to work on her poker face. Green eyes flicked up to him as he gave her his best nonchalant look, but she didn’t buy it for a second. This had to hurt. There was no way he was immune to pain.
“Yeah, cute was exactly what I was going for.” Barbara stood up, holding out the gun she had confiscated towards him. She swallowed hard, looking from the Hood to the only conscious guard. This situation kept getting worse and she was completely over her head. She could feel her heart beat pounding in her ears, a thrumming echo as her breathing increased. Trying desperately to keep herself calm, she looked at the floor, her boots, her hands, anywhere else. Never in a million years would she have even remotely thought she would be working with the Red Hood and never in a million years would she have thought she would be facing down death and dismemberment so quickly after it had just begun.
Nodding her affirmation, Barbara spun around and jogged out of the room in the direction the guard had pointed, hoping to find the helmet as quickly as possible. They needed to pick up their pace if they had any hope of making it out before the remainder of the guards were alerted. Focus switched, though, as soon the sound of gunfire resonated through the stuffy warehouse air. Stopping dead in her tracks, her jaw slacked, mouth agape.
She should have known.
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
With growing rage, Barbara threw open the utility closet and grabbed the red helmet, slamming the door shut so hard she almost took the door off its hinges. There was that famous Gordon temper.
Reentering the room, Barbara’s mouth was a taut, harsh line across her face. She didn’t bother looking at the guards, she already knew their fate. Instead, her vision narrowed on the Hood as she forced the helmet into his abdomen, just centimeters from the open wound. Huffing out a lungful of air, she twirled around, heading for the exit. “We have some girls to free. Push your guts back in and come help me or get the hell out of the building.”
He’d already reloaded and reholstered the revolver by the time she returned. The spent casings went into a belt pouch, and the gun went back in the holster at the small of his back.
He was leaning against the wall, grimacing and poking a finger into the wound when she slammed the helmet into him, grinding his glove into muscle fibers and driving the wind out of him.
Ouch. Maybe she’s not as into guns as I thought. That’s fine, we’ve got a long fight ahead of us.
“Right.”
No quip, no snark. Maybe it was the blood loss, but she was gone before he had a comeback prepared.
He took a moment to stuff a quick clot bag into the bullet hole-fuck, that hurts like a motherfucker-and held it for a few moments. Then, he was out the same way she went.
She was leaning on the second floor railing, peering down to the basement level of cells and guards. Kneeling next to her, he set his helmet down in front of him. At her inquisitive look, he shrugged.
“Face hurts too bad. Don’t wanna have it on any longer than I have to. Tight fit, and all.”
There were approximately twenty men left, some of which had been sent back to the matrix after being found unconscious of injured. They looked confused, scared; almost like they’d been threatened with death if they failed.
Not untrue, though. They didn’t deserve the air they breathed.
“I can’t take them out in a fight, not like this. It’s barely slowed down.” Lifting his hand, he showed her the ugly opening. The muscle was ripped apart, and there was a jagged hole roughly four inches long and two wide. He groaned.
“I think that’s peritoneum at the bottom. That’s good. Means nothing is gonna spill out.” He stuffed the clot bag back inside, wrapping a few passes of electrical tape around himself to hold it in.
“That’s gonna have to do, I think. Let’s hope it stays there for the fight. Got a plan?”
He had several, but most of them involved more blood loss, and he didn’t feel like dying tonight.