#this oneshot feels like i speedran a full fic
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Dual Loop
[AO3]
(Note: TW for suicidal idation, mild gore, self harm, depression. That being said, there's no MCD, and it has a happy ending. This one is a little heavier than my usual stuff, stay safe <3)
So... I expected this to be like... 5-6k words. It ended up being over double that. Enjoy!
Also, I decided to have a sort of mini post-script in comments in AO3, so you're welcome to check it if you're interested!
The 141âs common room might be Soapâs favorite. Itâs nothing fancy, a couple of ratty couches shoved into one corner, and a kitchenette in the other. It doesnât have a TV like the other common room, and they have to constantly clean off mold from beneath the sink.
Soap wouldnât have it any other way, as it has something no other room on base has - his taskforce. Despite not having much to do, just lying beside Gaz and shit talking the rookies with the Captain is pleasant, Ghost moving about in the kitchen.
He watches the giant man turn around and reveal a steaming mug of (probably) tea, and decides to call him over, âoi, LT! Come over âere, Iâm sure ye got some horror stories from your recruits.â
Ghostâs dark eyes drag over him for a few tense seconds, before he responds, âgot paperwork to finish, MacTavish.â he nods toward the others, âGarrick, Captain.â and leaves.
His displeasure mustâve shown on his face, because Gaz reaches over to pat his head, âawwh, maybe youâll convince him next time Soapyâ.
âAwaâ wiâ ya, yer messinâ mah hair!â he bats his hands away, pouting at Priceâs laughter.
The Captainâs moustache twitches with a hidden grin, âSimon values his alone time, Soap. Itâs nothing personal.â
âI know, I know. Wish he could stay around at least one night, thoughâŚâ he frowns.
âHe will in his own time.â Price groans as he gets up from the couch, âright lads, rather not stay out of bed after eleven. Donât go to sleep too late.â
Soap and Gaz both answer âokay dad!â in unison, cackling when Price flips them off as he exits the common room.
They fuck around for a little longer before calling it a night as well and separating ways to their barracks. He spends a while tossing and turning in bed, mind too restless for him to fall asleep.
Maybe thereâs one thing heâd like to change about the common room, and perhaps in the 141 in general. And it all starts and ends with the masked bastard they call Ghost.
What they have right now is fine, relatively close work relationship, joking around on lookout duties, trusting each other with their sixes. Itâs good.
Soap huffs and finally settles down under his scratchy blanket. He battles with opposing emotions, daydreams of him and Ghost being close, closer than a Sergeant and a Lieutenant have to be, and anger at his own ridiculous thoughts.
He falls asleep to memories of brown eyes staring at his.
Soap wakes up to a knock on his door. He quickly blinks away the remaining drowsiness in his mind, and reaches for the handle.
Out of all the people he expected to find, Ghost was definitely not one of them, âmorning, Johnny.â
Johnny? Soap tilts his head, âLT, did something happen?â they must have gotten some time sensitive intel about their latest target, if Ghost himself has to come and get him first thing in the morning. Last he heard, they were operating within the UKâŚ
Ghostâs eyes crease in a way heâs never seen, and for a moment Soap wonders if heâs still dreaming, âno, was about to go to mess. Know you were gonna go there soon.â
âOhâ he says intelligently.
Ghost lets out a half-laugh, âyou coming?â
His brain finally wakes enough to process his invitation, âoh! Uh, aye, just gonna changeâŚâ he motions awkwardly to his rumpled clothes.
âI can wait.â Ghost leans back against the wall, and Soap slowly closes the door. He stares at it for a second before walking to his closet, pulling out a shirt and a new pair of pants. His mind wanders as he automatically goes about getting dressed.
He never sees Ghost before noon, and thatâs if heâs lucky. The masked man doesnât eat with them in mess, wakes up before the sun rises, and begins working before most soldiers have blinked away the last of their sleep. Itâs⌠certainly a first.
Then again, you shouldnât really look a gift horse in the mouth. He adjusts his fatigues and exits his room. Ghost is still leaning against the wall, motionless as a very foreboding statue.
He wordlessly motions Soap to start walking, and they make their way to mess. They should bring Gaz and Price along, really take advantage of Ghostâs practically unheard of great mood. Gazâs room is just a few doors from his, he could knock as they pass-
Ghost places a hand on his shoulder and stops him. Soap opens his mouth to question him, but not a second later, Gazâs door opens, almost hitting him square in the face, and Kyle busts out.
âOh shit- sorry Soap, didnât see you there.â Gaz straightens his baseball cap, and clocks in Ghostâs presence, âLieutenant, sir! Didnât see you either.â
Soap tenses. Well, there goes that once in a lifetime opportunity to see Ghost actually socialize with the team-
âAll good, Garrick. In a rush to get the chocolate pudding?â Ghost asks calmly. What the fuck?
âYeah, Smith texted me.â Gaz grabs his arm, dislodging Ghostâs, âcâmon, we have to get there before they run out!â
He lets Kyle drag him, throwing a cautious look back at Ghost, relieved to see heâs still following. As much as he wants to reach mess fast, no pudding in the world is worth leaving Ghost behind.
Mess, expectedly, is chock-full of hungry soldiers, and the table serving the pudding is barely visible between the bodies.
Soap almost instantly loses all hope of reaching the table in time, but Ghost once again surprises him by diving head first into the crowd. His reputation and imposing appearance clearly aids him in making his way to the table, and Gaz sends him an incredulous look.
âAm I seeing things, or is the Lieutenant carrying two cups of pudding for us?â Gaz grins.
Soap canât help but join him, âaye, donât know whatâs gotten into him today, but Ghost is certainly in a special mood.â
âHearing Simonâs in a âspecialâ mood doesnât calm me in the slightest.â the Captainâs voice appears behind them.
âCome and see for yourself, Cap. Itâs a bloody miracle!â Gaz subtly points to Ghost, who at last reached them with the prized puddings.Â
He hands each Sergeant a cup, and greets the Captain, âI know you donât like this sweet shite, Price. Maybe theyâll have sausages tomorrow.â
Price blinks a couple of times, âright⌠well, letâs get to our table. You two better eat some actual food before you start shoveling that garbage into your mouths.â
They sit down, Gaz taking his right, and Ghost his left. He takes a moment to marvel at the simple act of Ghost existing in a nonwork related situation, a calmness in his movements that Soap didnât know he needed to see. He has to temp down a goofy smile at the sight.
It really shouldnât shock him anymore, but Soap senses all three pairs of eyes in the table snap to Ghost, who rolled up his mask above his mouth like he doesnât care if anyone else sees, and started eating.
âItâs⌠nice to see you here with us, Ghost.â Price says slowly.
âWouldnât want to miss this five-star meal.â Ghost points his fork to the grey sludge on his tray. He decides to go along with whatever Ghostâs odd behaviour throws at him.
He elbows him gently, âhey, LTâ the giant man hums, âwhy did the skeleton need to go to the barbecue?â
Soap waits for a beat before continuing, âbecause he wanted to get a spare ribâ
Gaz groans to his right, absolutely done with his awful sense of humor, but GhostâŚ
Ghost smiles. It crinkles the scars bisecting his lips in an unexpectedly endearing way, and his dark eyes crease into little half moons, and his stomach drops because fuck, heâd do anything to see that smile again.
Those brown eyes linger on his, and Soap knows he should look away, that his infatuation could be dangerously visible on his face, but he canât.
Price saves him after all, âKyle, you got recruits in 20, make sure they donât pass out in this heat.â
Gaz just groans louder.
âIâll go with âim.â Ghost pushes away from the table, Kyle jumping from his sit, âyou will?! I mean, uh, the more the merrier, I guess.â and rushes after him.
Priceâs eyes meet his, and Soap gives him a hesitant smile, âtold ye he was in a special mood.â
The Captain picks up his tray, âcanât say Iâve ever seen Ghost act like this in the time weâve known each other.â
And thatâs saying something, coming from Price. Soap has only been on the team for a few months, the newest member of the taskforce, but even he can tell this is unprecedented. It worries him a little, if heâs honest. People donât just⌠wake up one day and decide to completely change everything about the way they act.
But then again, Ghost isnât like most people. That has also become obvious very quickly.
He could write a book worth of Ghostâs little oddities, like the way he shoves knives up his sleeves even while on base, how he likes to go to the gym at night, how he somehow has a mask for every occasion.
Itâs infuriatingly charming, it makes him want to know more, find all the little things that make Ghost the way he is, open his chest like he does with explosives, and see the way everything ticks. Find that off switch that keeps the Lieutenant calm, learn which wires go where.
By now, Soap can confidently say he knows a lot about Gaz and Price, but Ghost remains an enigma to him. Today just solidified that.
Price rises from his chair, stretching his back with a groan, âdo remember you have paperwork due today, Sergeant. You donât have time to play with your Lieutenant until thatâs on my desk.â
Fuckinâ hell. He forgot to finish that last night. Dejectedly, Soap answers, âyes sir.â
Writing down reports might be Soapâs least favorite part of his job. They went on a mission, killed some guys, found a bloody USB stick, came back at an ungodly hour. Why does he have to write several pages on that is beyond him.
After hours of semi successfully trying to harness the last of his attention span towards that, Soap enters Priceâs office to place the accursed reports on his desk. The Captain isnât there, but that way thereâs no risk of him giving him even more menial tasks.
Soap wonders about base, searching for someone to entertain him (perhaps someone very specific, whose name starts with G, and ends with host).
He eventually comes across Gaz in the larger common room, âhow was training with Ghost?â.
Soap flops down onto the couch, jostling Kyle, who kicks him in retaliation, âwas a lot less annoying than with you cunt.â
He gasps theatrically and puts a hand over his heart, âyou donât mean that!â
Gaz laughs, âno, butâŚâ
â...but?â
Gazâs brows furrow, and his tone becomes more serious, âwe had a⌠surprisingly deep conversation. He kinda helped me through a few things, with responsibility and death and... Never expected him to be this understanding.â
Soap puts his legs in Gazâs lap, getting comfortable, âyou told me before that he cares, even when it doesnât look like it.â
He still remembers the talks both Price and Gaz gave him, about Ghost. They were quite protective of their most legendary member, and for Soap it cemented his love for this taskforce; they donât act like other teams heâs been on at all. They actually care about each other, beyond watching the otherâs six.
Gaz sighs, âI still stand by that, but the reason I said it is that Ghost usually doesnât show it. And if he does, itâs in a roundabout way.â
âWhere is he now?â
âHe dragged the Captain out of his office after we finished with the rookies. Dunno to where.â
Soap pouts, crossing his arms and staring at the ceiling. Everyone gets to have one-on-one time with Ghost but him, it seems. It feels only a little unfair.
Gaz coos, âare you sulking because our scary Lieutenant didnât come to spend time with you today?â
âAhâm not sulking!â Soap kicks Gaz, the Brit giggling and pushing his legs away, âand you have no place to talk! I was alone the whole day doinâ steaming paperwork!â
Kyle picks his legs back up, giving them a comforting pat, âyouâll have tomorrow, and the days after that. I donât understand why youâre in such a rush.â
He exhales roughly, âwhat if he wonât be in a mood to talk after today?â
âThen heâll just go back to how we all know Ghost to be. Was that that bad?â Gaz asks.
â...no.â
âThere you go. Now, I heard thereâs a footie match with Scotland in a few minutes-â
Soap reaches for the remote before he could finish the sentence, âthey better fuckinâ win this time!â
Scotland did not win this time, but he and Gaz enjoyed shouting at the players and howling whenever they missed a goal. As much as he complained about not hanging out with Ghost, Kyle is as good company in his eyes.
Gaz left him after the match, too tired from a day of standing in the sun and running after recruits, leaving Soap alone with his thoughts.Â
The hour was still too early for the gym to be completely empty, and he really wasnât in the mood for some small talk, so Soap made his way to the shooting range. The lights were on, but heâs not likely to be pestered if he takes the furthest stall.
He stops in his tracks when he sees someone leaning against the opening. No, not just any someone.
âGhost? What are you doinâ here at this hour?â
Ghost kicks off the door frame, âwaiting for you.â
Soap brows furrow, âbut- how did ye know Iâm gonna-?â
âYouâre predictable.â Ghost drawls, bone-white skull mask reflecting the moonlight, âalso heard you were sulking from Gaz.â
He steps closer to the Lieutenant, âI was not sulking! Itâs justâŚâ he looks away, âyou were busy, I get it-â
Ghost puts a hand on his shoulder, directing him to the step in front of the shooting rangeâs door, âI understand. Wanted to see you as well.â
âYe did?â a little voice in his head cheers loudly. Soap shoves it back into the hole it crawled out of.
âAffirmativeâ, they sit down, knees knocking into each other. Soap expects Ghost to move. He doesnât. âNoticed the looks you were giving me all day.â
Soap grimaces, âI was just-â
âConfused?â Ghostâs eyes are hidden in shadows, but he can still feel the weight of that stare on him, âthatâs what I wanted to talk about, Johnny.â
Thereâs that nickname again. Ghost has never called him that.
âI decided something this morning.â Ghost looks away, to the dark training grounds and the base, âIâm⌠tired. Done in. So Iâm not going to try anymore, Iâll take whatever I can get, and if it means this little bits of time with each of you, then so be it.â
Soap feels even more out of the loop than before. Furthermore, heâs even more concerned. What does Ghost mean by ânot going to try anymoreâ?
âGhost-â
âSimonâ, Ghost corrects him, âI like it when you call me Simon.â
âI⌠I never called you that.â
Ghostâs head bows, his shoulders tense, â...right. Go on.â
âYou- Iâll be honest, Yer worrying me. Donât get me wrong, I enjoy seeing ye finally talking with us, hanging out with Gaz and Price, but Ah just⌠are you solid, Simon?â
Simon lifts his head then, the meager light from the range finally allowing Soap to see his eyes, and it feels like a knife in his chest.
This calm demeanor has had for the whole day⌠isnât from him being relaxed and content.
No⌠thatâs the calm of a man in the gallows. Accepting his fate. Waiting to die.
Simonâs eyes crease again, his voice almost brittle, âI am, Johnny. Really. I understand now that Iâll never escape this. Itâs fine. It will be fine as long as I have you, and Garrick, and Price.â
âWhat is âthisâ?â Soap wants to help, wants to know what is making those brown eyes so somber, but Simon is keeping something from him.
A gloved hand lifts, takes hold of the mask, and with it Soapâs breath, and slides the fabric and skull off.
Blond hair, curled when the strands have enough length, long nose that has been broken and reset one too many times, and scars, so many scars. Dark eyes surrounded by darker paint, running down pale cheeks.
Soap couldnât have imagined a more heart-stopping face under that mask.
âYouâve asked this before, and I always answer. All it does is bother you, makes you sad, angry. I donât want to see you burdened like that.â Simon murmurs, face oddly relaxed.
âIâm already worried, you numpty, so just let it out.â irritation bleeds into his words.
And the man simply smiles, an emotion Soap canât identify in his eyes, âyou never saw me as just the Ghost. Somehow, you can read me even through the mask.â Simon leans in a little closer, âalways liked thaâ about you.â
The lights in the range abruptly cut off, plunging the both of them into inky darkness. Soap swivels his head to the rest of the base, where everything is dark as well. That⌠that shouldnât happen. They have a generator, a backup source of power for situations like these.
Awareness prickles at his nape, an air of danger that isnât supposed to permeate their home base.
Soap attempts to get up, âIâm going to check what-â
Simon pulls him back down, grip gentle, âstay.â
âWhat?â Soap turns to where he knows Simon is, nothing but a silhouette in the night now, âwhat if something happened, we should-â
âYou wonât be able to fix this, Johnny. They destroyed the generators before going for the main power.â
âHow-?!â flashes of light cut him off, distant explosions at the walls on the other side of base. Soapâs heart starts beating faster at the echoing sounds of battle crossing the desolate grounds, shots and screams and-
âGhost, someone is fuckinâ attacking our base, we need to warn the others-!â
Simon doesnât let him go, âtoo late now.â
âToo late- are you just going teh leave Price and Gaz-â
âTheyâre dead.â Simonâs voice is terrifyingly cold, no shadow of a doubt in it, âor, they will be within the next few minutes.â
Soap slumps back, shock shooting through his limbs, âhow⌠Simon, whatâŚ?â
How could he know? He canât, right? Gaz and Price⌠they canât just be dead like thatâŚright?
âSoapâ, Simon pulls him closer, bodies leaning against each other, âwhat Iâm going to ask of you is selfish, and weak of me, but I-â Simon exhales shakily, âI canât do this anymore.â
His hand moves to his belt, and Simon pulls out a revolver, one of the models they have on range. He places it in Soapâs hand. Without uttering a word, Simon rearranges Soapâs fingers to be on the trigger, and lifts the barrel to line with his head.
He instinctually flinches away, but Simon holdâs on him tightens, keeping the gun aimed at himself.
âSimon-â
âShoot me. No matter what I do, I canât save all of you. I canât watch you die anymore.â Simonâs voice quivers, âI canât- canât see your eyes like that, looking through me-â he feels the tremors in Simonâs body travelling down from his arms to their joined hands.
Soap shakes his head minutely, eyes wide open staring at Simonâs dark form, âAh donât want teh kill ye, Simon.â
Simonâs finger caresses his, gently lowers to his trigger finger. âI know, Iâm- Iâm sorry, Johnny. But you wonât remember any of this.â
Soapâs breath catches, his body frozen in shock, âdonât-â
Simon squeezes both of their fingers on the trigger.
Soapâs body startles awake, breaths coming out in small puffs. He rips the blanket off his sweaty skin, sitting up in bed.
This⌠nightmare, was more realistic than anything heâs ever experienced. He can still feel the revolver in his hand, Ghostâs pressed against his, pulling the trigger-
A knock startles him from his thoughts, and automatically Soap rises to open the door.
The last person he expected to see was Ghost.
âMorning, Johnny.â he greets.
Ice-cold shock shoots through his veins along with a sense of dĂŠjĂ vu, âGhostâŚâ
Ghost tilts his head, eyes narrowing, â...you solid, Sergeant?â
âA-aye.â snap out of it, it was just a fuckinâ dream, âsomething happen, LT?â
Ghost takes a moment to answer, âno, I was about to go to mess. Came to ask you to join.â
Soap nods, opening the door wider to step through, âyeah, yeah of course. Letâs go.â He starts walking towards mess, stopping after a few steps when he notices Ghost isnât following.
âYouâre going like this?â Ghost motions to his shirt. His moth-eaten, sleeping shirt.
Fuck. âRight. Give me a secâ he rushes back to his room, shutting the door loudly behind him.
Soap violently opens his closet and drawers, pulling out the same clothes he did in his dream. Because that was all it was, a dream. A stupid nightmare, not a premonition of any kind. Because people donât get visions of their friendsâ untimely death the night before it happens.
He just needs to screw his head on right. He opens the door again, giving Ghost a sheepish smile and restarting their walk to mess.
When they almost reach Gazâs door, Soap stalls. Heâs about to move again, scolding himself for even entertaining the idea that Gaz is about to burst out, just because it also happened in the nightmare-
Except he does, not a moment later, âOh shit- sorry Soap, didnât see you there.â Gaz rights his hat, stare drifting away to Ghost, âLieutenant, sir! Didnât see you either.â
Soap turns to look at Ghost as well, only to find him already looking at him, with wide eyes and stock still body.
â...Ghost?â Gaz asks after a few seconds of silence.
Ghost blinks rapidly, âaffirmative. Youâre in a rush for-â
âThe chocolate pudding in mess.â Soap finishes for him, gaze still boring into Ghost.
Every single thing that happened in the nightmareâŚ
âYeah, Smith texted me.â Gaz continues, oblivious that heâs simply reciting lines from a predetermined text. âAre you two sure youâre alright-?â
Ghostâs arm shoots forward to grab his, something akin to fear and rage in his eyes. Soap gets dragged away with a considerable amount of force, his legs almost tripping on nothing. He can hear Gaz exclaiming behind them, but all of his attention stays on the bastard crushing his bicep.
âGhost- fuckinâ hell, let me walk-!â
The Lieutenant is silent, walking with quick strides and shouldering the door to the training grounds open.
âSimon, stop-â
Ghost slams him against the outer wall of the base, Soap hissing when his head bounces off the rough concrete.
âHow long?â Ghost growls.
âWhaâ?â
Ghost shakes him once, shouting, âfor how long have you been stuck?!â
Soap stares up confusingly, âstuck- what the fuck are you talking about?!â he yells back.
âThe time loop, Soap! You fucking remember yesterday!â
âTime loop-â his muscles slacken, the fight instantly leaving him, â...it wasnât a nightmare?â
His hearing becomes muffled with the sound of blood rushing past them, vision blurring. Ghostâs grips becomes lighter, until it leaves him completely.
His voice is gentler when he answers, ânot a nightmare, Johnny.â
âI-â he looks up at him, âI killed you.â
Ghost stiffens, before he exhales roughly and turns away from Soap, âfuckâŚâ
They stay silent, and the reality of their situation sinks in. Theyâre both stuck in a time loop, like some kind of steaming sci-fi movie. Soap wants to laugh, part of him grasping desperately at the notion that this must be some sort of prank. But he knows Ghost wouldnât, couldnât have known what happened in the ânightmareâ otherwise.
Their conversation in the dark resurfaces in his memory, âGhost⌠this is the first time Iâm repeating a day.â
Dark eyes return to his, a sort of relief loosening Ghostâs muscles. He nods, taking in a slow breath, âgood. Wouldnât want you hiding it from me.â
âHow long have you been stuckâŚ?â
Ghost hums, eyes unfocusing, âstopped counting after the second month.â
âSteaminâ JesusâŚâ
Things start clicking in Soapâs mind rapidly. Ghostâs odd change in behaviour, the way he knew when each and every event in the day happens, how he knew where to find himâŚ
When the attack will beginâŚ
Ghostâs entire speech before it⌠how heâll never âescape thisâ...
âYou gave up.â Soap walks around Ghost, attempting to catch his eye contact, âyesterday. Is that why ye wanted me to kill ye?â
Ghost avoids him again, murmuring quietly, âthought it would stop it.â
âYou-â realization hits him, âyou thought youâd stay dead. Have ye never died in the loop before?â
Ghost sneaks a hand under his mask, scrubbing at his eyes, ânever had anyone else kill me. Killed myself plenty, but whenever I tried getting killed by someone else⌠never works.â the gloved hands retreat from under the balaclava, marred with greasepaint, and it strikes Soap just how tired Ghost looks. Body bowing under the invisible burden of countless days, countless deaths.
Simon doesnât have anything left to give. A flicker of determination lights up in Soapâs chest, a decision to do anything to lessen that burden.
âThen go on, tell me the rules of this shite.â
Ghost squints, âthe time loop?â he sighs, âday resets when I die or kill myself, and if I donât, it will the moment the clock strikes midnight.â
Soap nods. It sounds like itâs not Ghostâs survival that is the requirement to break the loop. ThenâŚ
âYe think if we manage to save everyone, weâll stop repeatinâ days?â
Ghost leans back against the wall Soap was slammed into earlier, âundoubtedly.â
Soap tilts his head at Ghostâs solemn tone, âbutâŚ?â he prompts.
âItâs impossible.â
âCâmon LT, you canât just-â
Ghost pushes off, stomping to tower over Soap with a sudden burst of movement, âyou think I havenât tried everything already, MacTavish?! I can save one of you, but the other two die. If we separate, you all die. If I tell everyone about the loop, Price reports me to medical because he thinks I bloody lost my mind, and if I donât, I canât explain how I know an attack is incoming.â Ghost exhales harshly, âI tried⌠everything.â
Soap doesnât back down despite the sheer amount of rage dripping from Ghostâs tone. Because he recognizes what that rage is hiding.
âBut itâs different, now.â
Ghostâs shoulders drop, âyes. Now I fucked you over as well. Weâll never escape this.â
Soap shakes his head, âwe havenât tried doing it together yet, ye canât jusâ give up!â he decides to risk placing a hand on his shoulder, âplease, Simon.â
He didnât expect the words to budge anything in Ghostâs grim resolve to abandon hope, and he watches in astonishment as Ghost sighs and nods, âalright, Johnny.â
Soap wonders what has happened to Ghost before, what he has experienced with other versions of himself that made him trust him so readily. A pang of jealousy at them rings through him, that they got to see Simon open up to them.
What could they have told him? Which one called him âSimonâ first? When did Simon start calling him âJohnnyâ?
A heartbeat later, he shook it off, choosing to be grateful to them instead. Without them, Soap isnât sure he wouldâve been able to convince Ghost.
Soap smiles at him, letting his arm fall from his shoulder, âright. What intel do we have?â approaching this as any other mission is probably the only way he could keep from losing his mind.
He watches as Ghost enters the same mindset, âPower shuts off at 2125, but a rat causes a malfunction in the generators at the start of the day. I canât wake up before 0600, so I canât catch him.â
âDo ye know who it is?â
âAffirm. Got access to the cameras once, they leave base at 0530.â Ghost continues, âwe canât prevent the power outage, if we canât fix the generator. Main power failure at night comes from somewhere outside base.â
So theyâll have to fight in the dark in any possible outcomeâŚÂ
Soap is reminded of the explosions he heard yesterday, âwhat about the charges that went off?â
Ghost sighs, âthey run along the outside, placed approximately at 2136.â
âIâll be able to disarm them.â
âTheyâll catch you before you get a pinky on âem.â
âWell, good thing we got infinite tries, aye?â Soap smirks. âWait⌠will the loop reset if I die?â
âIâŚâ Ghost looks away, âI donât know.â
Soap frowns, looking at the recruits making their way to the training grounds. Gaz should arrive here soonâŚ
âWe should test it.â Soap reaches for Ghostâs sleeve, telegraphing his movements clearly so the man doesnât spook.
Ghost bristles, âJohnny-â
He rolls the dark fabric back, revealing a long blade hidden beneath it, âI killed ye when you asked, only fair you do the same.â
âI didnât think youâd remember.â Ghost mutters quietly, allowing Soap to take the knife despite his verbal protests.
Soap flips the blade in his hand, offering the hilt to Ghost. He doesnât reach for it for several long seconds. âYe rather I do it myself? Wonât be pretty.â
Ghostâs frowned brows regard the blade, before he takes it with a heavy sigh, âturn around.â he orders gently. Soap complies, feeling his heart rate jump at the touch of gloved hands on his nape.Â
Heâs not sure if itâs fear or exhilaration.
The hands tilt his head forward, and the tip of the knife barely scrapes the ends of his hair.
Ghost almost whispers into his ear, ârelax. I wonât let you feel a thing.â he angles the knife so the blade will drive straight into his brain with a push, âtell me when youâre ready, Johnny.â
Soap takes a big breath in, forcing his muscles to loosen. He just needs to trust Ghost. Trust Simon.
Itâs⌠scarily easy to.
âIâm ready.â
The world goes dark in a blink.
Soap opens his eyes to the sight of his barrackâs ceiling. He sits up slowly, rubbing the back of his neck. It felt painful for only a short moment.
Well, that answers his question, he muses to himself.
As the minutes trickle by without a knock at his door, Soap becomes worried. Whereâs Ghost?
He quickly changes to his fatigues and walks out, feet taking him to Ghostâs door at the very far end of the hallway. Itâs surrounded by supply closets and sits at a dead end, so most people donât pass through here, making it unnaturally silent for how crowded the other parts of base are.
Soap knocks on the only door with a nameplate, âGhost? Ye there?â
Nothing. Soap tries the handle, finding it unlocked, and slowly pushes in, âhope yer decent, LTâŚâ
He spots Ghost sitting at the edge of his cot, elbows resting on his knees and eyes staring blankly at the bare wall in front of him.
âSimon?â he carefully walks over, crouching in front of him, â...ye solid?â
â...Didnât reset.â Ghost eventually murmurs, jaw tight under his balaclava, âyour death doesnât reset it.â
Soap sits back on his haunches.
Ghost continues, âthey found me, Price and Gaz. I didnât- didnât just want to leave your body there. TheyâŚâ his voice breaks, and he clears his throat. Soapâs gut wrenches. âThey apprehended me and shoved me in a cell. Interrogated me âtill midnight. Never seen Price that angry, Gaz-â he shakes his head, as if to expel the memories, âkept screaming, threatened to come into the cell to off me, and-â
âSimon.â
Simon gets up with no warning, hands flexing by his side, unable to meet his eyes, âIâm- Johnny-â
Soap rises to his feet as well, and in the spur of the moment wraps his arms around Ghost, pulling him into a tight hug. Instantly, Simon sags into him, his head dropping to his shoulder.
He was callous to think Simon could kill him and think nothing of it. This is not the Ghost he knew a few days ago â this is a Ghost that saw his team die again and again, stuck in a loop he couldnât break, for months.
Soap doesnât think he could conceive of a crueler method of torture.
âAhâm sorry.â
Simonâs fingers twist into his shirt.Â
âPromise me⌠that you wonât die.â Simon whispers, sounding so much like a young child, afraid of the monster under his bed, and not like a decorated SAS operator. âI canât- canât-â
âIâll do my best.â
He feels Simonâs head shake, âpromise.â
â...I promise.â
They stay silent after that, holding onto each other like theyâll fall apart once their hands retreat. Soap lost in regret, and fear, and unfathomable worry, that Simon really will just give up. Even with him here, stuck in the same loop.
They may have all the time in the world, but how long will it take until thereâs nothing of Ghost left to save?
They leave Ghostâs room, hands still unable to leave the other. Soap wants to get back to making progress on their mission, but he worries Simonâs drained. As if sensing it, Simon squeezes his hand, making Soap look at him.
âI think we should tell Price and Gaz.â
Soap blinks, âbut ye said it never worked?â
Simon nods, eyes half-lidded, âBecause it was only me. They wonât be able to excuse it with hallucinations when two people experience the same thing.â he lets go of Soap, his hand instantly mourning the loss, âtheyâve left mess already, if theyâre still behaving like usual.â
Right. This is new territory for Ghost, so he canât rely on previous days anymore, âIâll call Gaz, can you get Price?â
âAffirm. Weâll meet in the Captainâs office.â the Lieutenant turns to leave, and Soap opens and closes his mouth a couple of times, wanting to say something to encourage Ghost, or help him in any way, before he gives up and pulls out his phone.
The call rings only twice before Gaz picks up, âwhere were you this morning?! You missed the chocolate pudding!â
âGood morning to you too, Kyle.â he huffs, âhad to deal with an emergency.â
Gaz instantly starts interrogating him, âwhat? You alright, mate?â
âAye, but we need to get to Priceâs office.â
âCopy. Stay safe, Soap.â
âYou too.â he ends the call, and makes his way to the office. Anticipation roils in his gut. He had a hard time believing the time loop, and he saw it first hand. How are they going to convince the others of it?
Gaz is waiting outside the Captainâs office when Soap arrives. He gives him a reassuring nod, before knocking on the door.
âOpen.â Priceâs gruff voice calls.
Ghost is already inside, leaning against the far wall, and if Soap didnât know better, heâd look as composed as he is every day. But he does know better, and the tension in his shoulders doesnât go unnoticed.
âRight.â Price addresses Soap, âGhost told me he and you have something important to tell us, and that it absolutely canât wait for later, so let it out.â
Soap looks towards Ghost, a little lost with how to begin.
He regrets letting him start when he simply states, with no prior warning, âWeâre stuck in a time loop.â
The office is quiet for a few seconds, before Gaz half-coughs, half-laughs. Soap sends him an unimpressed stare when he sees his lips tighten in an attempt to stay silent.
Price doesnât sound amused in the slightest, â...if this is some sort of joke, itâs not very funny.â his tone becomes gentler, âbut if youâre serious, Ghost, we can go to medical-â
Ghost takes a step towards Price, âIâm not having a psychosis episode, John.â
âSon-â
Soap intervenes, âAhâm also in the loop, Captain.â
âMacTavish, this is not the time to fuck around!â
Shite, this is not working at all. He watches Ghost deflate, practically hears him give up again. He canât watch him like this.
âGazâ he turns to Kyle, âSmith texted ye in the morning, thatâs how you knew about the pudding, right?â
Gazâs brows shoot up, âyeah? How did youâŚ?â
âThereâs going to be a football match with Scotland today, ye were gonna invite me to watch with you.â
âYou couldâve looked that up, Soap.â Price doesnât sound convinced, but his expression loses the edge of anger it previously had.
âScotland is gonna lose 0-2.â
The Captain sighs, âthe match is at 1900, and even if youâre right, it still can be a lucky guess.â he leans back against his chair, âlook, I can tell youâre serious about this, but Iâll need more proof before I can believe something like time loops exists.â
There must be something that could prove it, something one of them said that he shouldnât know-
âYour favorite food is sausages, a specific recipe your father made. He died when you were nineteen, and you havenât had them since.â Ghost murmurs. Price freezes, and his head turns slowly to stare at the Lieutenant.
â...Iâve never told that to anyone-â
âGarrickâs biggest fear is to watch his squad die.â Ghost continues, âhe feels responsible for any injury any of us get, any loss. When one of us goes on a solo mission, he stays awake for as long as he can so he wonât miss any information about us.â
Gaz gapes, âHow-â
âPrice calls me Simon because he worries Iâll stop being used to the name.â Ghost crosses his arms, almost hugging himself, âGarrick was mocked during basic, was called weaker because he showed care to other soldiers, until he beat the records on several tests.â he doesnât meet anyoneâs eyes.
The Captain removes his hat, brushing a hand through his short-cropped hair, âfucking hell. Okay. I believe you.â
âYeahâŚâ Gaz shakes his head, âalright. You two are stuck in a bloody time loop. How do we get you out?â
A weight lifts from his heart. Soap smiles in relief, and it broadens when Ghost finally looks at him.
âThereâs going to be an attack on our base this night. At least two of you will die, caught off guard.â Ghost explains, the soldiers in the room listening with rapt attention, âwe need to keep you alive.â
âA surprise attack? How is that possible?â Price frowns.
Soap joins in, âthey sabotaged emergency power this morning, and theyâll cut off the main source tonight, while breaching the south wall with explosives. And âfore ye ask, we canât fix it, unless any of ye know how to operate a generator.â
âDo we know who it is?â Gaz asks.
âAnthony Simmons. Our latest target.â Ghost grounds bitterly, âthink we disrupted his business enough he decided attacking an SAS base is worth the risk.â
Simmons⌠responsible for most illegal arms dealing in the UK. He mustâve joined forces with some of the 141âs enemies to have enough manpower to storm a base, but then again, those arenât hard to come by, are they?
âWait,â Gaz frowns and turns to face Soap, âhow many times have you repeated a day to know all of that?â
âThis is only the second time for me. Ghost has been stuck for⌠much longer.â
âAnd out of those loops, how many times have you tried telling us?â Price looks over to Ghost, concerned.
â...Twice.â the masked man answers, like it doesnât twist Priceâs features in shocked anger.
âTwiceâ, Price scoffs, âIâm⌠do you really trust us that little-â
âHe trusts you plenty, Captain.â Soap cuts him off, hands clenching and nostrils flaring with anger, because he wonât let him insinuate Simon hasnât been trying, âye donât trust his word, you always jump to the conclusion he mustâve lost his mind instead of telling the truth. Youâve done the same today, and if Ah wasnât also stuck in this shite, ye wouldâve sent âim to a shrink ten minutes ago.â
âSoapâŚâ Gaz tries to placate, but he ignores it in favor of sending death glares at Price.
âJohnny.â Ghost breaks his resolve, âenough. He doesnât need to apologize for something a different version of him did.â
Price sighs, âI donât need to, but I will. Iâm sorry, Simon. For not believing you.â
Ghostâs eyes widen, and Soap thinks they become a little shinier. He drops his head to the ground, clearing his throat. âDonât worry about it, Captain.â
âWe should each tell you a secret.â Gaz says, âsomething that will instantly make us know youâre telling the truth.â
âGood idea.â Soap hums. He hates approaching this day knowing theyâll likely will have to repeat this conversation again, but if they could speed it up tomorrow itâll make it less demoralizing. âDo ye have anything in mind?â
Gaz blinks, and looks away with a bashful smile, âitâll have to be something I would never admit under any other circumstance⌠yeah, I think I got something, unfortunately.â he plays with the strings on his sweatpants, âCaptain, you remember Farah and Alex?â
The names are unfamiliar to Soap, but a glint of recognition lights in Priceâs eyes, âof course. What about them?â
âUhm⌠fuck, I really would not say it if it didnât help you.â Gazâs voice lowers, âI might be a little⌠interested in them.â
â...In what way?â one of Priceâs brows lift inquisitively.
Gaz pulls on the bill of his baseball hat to hide his face, âin a romantic way.â he almost whispers.
âOh.â the Captain softly exclaims. âThatâs⌠completely fine, son-â
Kyle hides behind his hands and groans, âcan we please not talk about it, sir?â
Soap pats Gazâs shoulder, âwe wonât ask, mate.â he grins towards the Captain, âyer turn, sir.â
Price sighs, and strokes his beard in thought. When he grimaces, Soap knows he found a suitable secret.
âWhen I was about fifteen, I smoked my first cigarette. Couldnât take more than a couple of breaths of it before I puked.â
Gaz removes his hands from his face to point at Price, âthereâs no way this is the most embarrassing thing youâve ever done!â
Price gives him an unimpressed look, âI puked directly on my crush at the time.â
â...Oh.â Gaz winces in sympathy.
âYes, âohâ.â Price rolls his eyes, ânow, letâs get back to that attack. You got anything else we can use, Ghost?â
âAffirm. I know how each of you dies.â
Soap almost laughs at how chilling that statement is, coming from a guy dressed like the grim reaper.
Ghost shoots him a look that makes Soap sober up, âPrice leaves his office at 2122, gets caught on his way to our common room. Garrick fights along a few other soldiers from the rooms next to his barracks, they all die to a frag. And JohnnyâŚâ Ghostâs eyes meet his, âSoapâs the only one with a decent gun inside base at the moment of the attack, so he runs off to help the others. He dies last, with an empty mag and a knife in his throat.â
Soap swallows around the bitter taste on his tongue at the mental image of Ghost finding his body like that, âYou said ye can save one of us, but never more. What happens then?â
âOnly reason youâre saved is by either knowing of the attack beforehand or by acquiring gear.â Ghost grounds, hand flexing in an odd way, and Soap realizes heâs fidgeting with the knife up his sleeve, âand as Iâve said before, I canât warn you because you wonât believe me. I canât carry enough gear for four.â
âBut we know now.â Gaz interjects, âwe can go to the armory, ask them for our vests and rifles.â
âWe can. But that wonât save the rest of the base.â Price sighs.
âI have no reason to believe itâs necessary for breaking the loop.â Ghost states firmly, arms crossing.
The Captainâs brows lift, and he narrows his eyes at the Lieutenant, âyou⌠we canât just let the base fend for itself, while we know somethingâs going to happen.â
âI donât care-â
âSimon Riley, I swear to all thatâs good and holy if you finish that sentence-â
âI canât care, Price!â Ghost growls, hunching over the desk menacingly, âI canât save three people, you think I can afford to try and save hundreds?!â
Price stares at Ghost, his expression mellowing. âWe have to try.â
Ghost lets out a laugh that sounds closer to a sob than anything else, âsick of trying, Captain.â
Price pushes off his chair, and puts a hand on his bicep, âI understand, son. I⌠canât say I can imagine what youâve been going through.â
Ghost takes a few deep breaths, nodding slowly and gently stepping away from Priceâs touch, âweâre burning daylight. We need to come up with a plan.â
Soap wants to pull Ghost into another hug, the way he did this morning, but he doesnât think thatâs what he would want right now.
Instead, he says, âI got an idea.â
âSoap, Gaz, whatâs your status?â
He lowers into a crouch, walking along the outer wall of the base, âsolid. Still not in position.â
âCopy, you got twenty before powerâs off.â Ghostâs low tone rumbles over their comms.
The area surrounding the base is made up of mostly flat land, to allow the huge floodlights around the walls to illuminate it and leave no place for a hostile (or a confused tourist, mostly) to hide.
Tonight, this will be a disadvantage for their side, as they wonât have any cover if they get caught by hostiles out here.
Gaz, whose been walking in front of Soap, motions him to stop, and points to one of the watchtowers above them. The soldier on duty seems to be alert, and Soap resists the urge to hold his breath while they wait. Not a few seconds later, the soldier startles, and pulls out his radio. He exchanges a few words with the caller before getting up and leaving the tower. That would be Priceâs work.
The Captain reconnects to their line, âWatchtowerâs empty, boys, youâre clear to proceed.â
âCopy.â
They continue their careful walk to the wall between this watchtower and the next - the planting site for the charges that will breach it.
Their plan, which was mostly Soapâs idea, is to separate to 2 teams; the first stays on base, making sure the soldiers are gathered together and ready for an attack, and the second slows the infiltration of Simmonâs men.
Both teams have to do so covertly, since theyâve come to the conclusion that even if they alert the higher ups of an approaching attack, without any more concrete evidence than âtwo of our elite operators are stuck in a fucking time loopâ, nobody would believe them. They decided that Price and Ghost will stay, as they have higher ranks and therefore are able to order around more soldiers with less need to explain their reasoning.
Soap and Gaz, then, were left to be here, waiting for the hostiles to plunge the base into darkness.
Before leaving, Ghost pulled Soap to the side, his eyes a fake veneer of professionalism, but shaking fingers betraying him. Soap only gave him a smile, a soft punch to his shoulder, and walked before he could allow his nerves to show.
Because he is nervous, in a way he hasnât been on a mission since he joined the 141. Not because heâs afraid to die, but because he doesnât want Ghost to hurt any more than he already is.
Soap promised Ghost heâll try to not die - and he will drag himself back to him with broken arms if he has to.
âTwo minutes to power shutdown, get ready.â Ghost rips him away from his thoughts.
Soap flips his NVGâs over his eyes, blinking while they get used to the muted green-blue hues. Gaz ahead of him does the same.
âCopy, in position and ready.â Gaz radios back.
The seconds trickle by slowly, Soap feeling his heart rate rise in anticipation, and mentally chiding himself for being this anxious. He shouldnât, considering he knows he canât die (or stay dead, really). But somehow, the stakes feel higher than any other mission heâs been on before.
Maybe just like Simon, Soap too canât watch someone he cares about fall apart.
The power shuts down, the electrical hum that previously filled the night air abruptly cutting off. Sop checks his clock.
2126. Ten minutes left.
He quickly pulls out the several kilograms of explosives he packed into his tacvest. Ghost gave him an approximation of the enemyâs trucks parking locations, but he hasnât spent enough time in his previous loops here to give him exact coordinates. Soap decided to stay on the safer side, and pack more than he wouldâve.
He throws the packs of C4 a good distance from Gaz, as the last thing he needs right now is to explode both of them. It might not be enough, but hopefully it will slow the hostiles down enough for their soldiers to realize something is wrong.
In the unnatural silence, Soap can hear the engines of several trucks approaching their position. Gaz clicks off the safety on his assault rifle. He gives one last check that the explosives are connected correctly to each other and the detonator, and returns to Kyleâs side.
His heart screams that theyâre not going to win this time around.
âHey Gaz?â
âYeah?â
Soap gives in to the sinking feeling in his gut, âif I donât make it⌠can you make sure Ghost doesnât see myâŚâ
âI wonât, Soap.â Gaz reaches for him, putting an arm around him as much as he can with all the gear on them, âletâs try to not get to that, though.â
âAye.â he can make out the shapes of trucks filled to the brim with hostiles hurtling towards the base. Gaz switches the sights on his gun.
âYou got about 5 seconds before they reach the explosives.â
Soapâs finger hovers over the detonator, counting under his breath.
ThreeâŚ
TwoâŚ
The trucks roll over the half-circle of charges around them. Soap presses the button.
One second the vehicles are there, the next a flash of light blinds them both. Even though he knew to squeeze his eyes shut, Soap could still see colorful shapes dancing in his vision when he opened them. A smaller explosion shakes the ground, Simmonâs men screaming at the surprise attack. Serves them right.
Unfortunately, they regain their footing quickly enough, and soon bullets started ricocheting off of the baseâs walls.
âSoap! On your two, three hostiles!â Gaz shouts while aiming to his left, fire messing with their NVGs.
Soap shoots two men down, the third ducking away and only getting grazed. He takes out a Semtex, throwing it in the last manâs direction and averting his attention to Gaz right as he yells.
âKyle!â he watches in horror as a bullet rips through his thigh, a matching wound in the other. Gaz goes down hard, with grunts of pain and bared teeth. Soap runs towards him, shooting another hostile down, but heâs not fast enough.
Gaz stares at him, eyes full of horror, gaze flickering back to the fight when a bullet almost hits his head. Heâs stuck, unable to get to cover, fate practically sealed.
Soap slides to a stop. He changes course to the nearest wrecked truck, more mangled steel than a vehicle. The lingering fire singes his arm hairs, but he doesnât feel a thing.
Theyâre trapped, pushed against the wall with no backup in sight. They may be able to fend off by themselves, but the moment they run out of bulletsâŚ
He lifts a shaky hand to his comms.
âGhost?â Soap whispers.
âSoap. Whatâs your status?â
He swallows thickly, âDonât come to the wall.â
âWhat?â Ghostâs voice sharpen.
âAhâm sorry, Simon. Gaz, heâs- his legs are fucking shot, theyâve got us surrounded, not gettinâ out of this alive-â
He cuts himself off when he hears a small sigh, clothes rustling on the other side, Priceâs voice shouting from far away, âSIMON DONâT-â
And like a curtain at the end of a show, Soapâs vision goes black.
Soap wakes up with a sharp inhale, clean air jarring, when all he smelled a moment ago was smoke. He jumps out of bed, changing quickly and running out of his room.
He almost runs into Ghost in his hurry. Ghost, who was on his way to his room.
âEasy, Johnny.â he gets caught by his shoulders.
Soap pants, âGhost- it was my fault, I shouldâve placed the explosives farther ahead, detonated them later-â
âSergeant.â Ghost squeezes his arms lightly, âIâm not mad.â
And he really isnât, when Soap actually takes the time to look at Ghost, he discovers him completely calm.
â...You expected this to happen.â
Ghostâs eyes crease, in the way Soap has learned means heâs smiling, âthis is what always happens. Iâm just happy I ended the day before all of you were dead.â
Soap feels his lips twist downwards, adrenaline leaving him unmoored and tired. Heâs not sure if heâs telling it to Ghost or to himself, when he says, âwe have to keep trying.â
Ghost doesnât answer, instead letting his hands fall away. âYou got a new plan?â
A door behind them opens loudly before he can answer, âwhereâs-â Gaz turns his head to them, âoh, Soap! And Ghost. Câmon, we need to go to the cafeteria, Smith texted me-â
Soap drops his head, slightly irritated for having to repeat this conversation again, but happy to see Gaz nonetheless, âaye, thereâs chocolate pudding in mess.â
âYeah! How did you know?â Kyle gives him a lopsided smile.
He sighs and throws a thumb behind him, âstuck in a time loop with Ghost.â
Gaz stares at him before a laugh erupts from his throat, and he bends over giggling. Soap allows him a few moments before he comments, âare ye done?â
âFuck mate you canât do that to me this early in the morning, the look on Ghostâs face-â he laughs a little more, before forcing a serious expression, âyeah, yeah Iâm done.â
âGood. You have a crush on Alex and Farah.â
Gaz freezes for a moment, and his brows shoot up, âhow the fuck- how do you even know who they are-â
âI donât. Ye told me yesterday.â Soap frowns, âor, well, today⌠was yesterday for me.â
Ghost taps him on the shoulder, âwe need to get going, Johnny. Earlier we get everyone together, the more time we got to prepare.â
âRightâ, he takes Kyleâs arm, nudging him in the direction of Priceâs office, âletâs go.â
Gaz makes a confused sound, âprepare for what?â
Ghost mutters quietly, so lowly that Soap almost misses it, âanother death.â
Fifteen times. Theyâve tried fifteen times since that day.
The first three were similar, the same plan as before with minimal variation. One time, he went out with Ghost instead of Gaz. Soap ended up with a bullet to the shoulder, incapacitated and waiting to die. Ghost made sure he didnât wait long.
After that, they tried telling more people. Alert the soldiers at the watchtowers, supply others with weapons. For the most part, they didnât believe them, even when Price and Gaz vouched for the credibility of their story. And when they were believed, it wasnât enough. The base too big, their enemy too strong.
On the fifteenth try, Soap managed to slow the infiltration with precisely placed explosives, toppling a recently vacated watchtower over the entrance. Ghost was alone, using the cover of night to pick off anyone getting close to the barracks, where most soldiers are at the time. Gaz and Price were with Soap, leading the charge on the main group of hostiles.
It went well. They reached 2240, the furthest theyâve ever seen.
Maybe it was that fact, or the fact that Soap has done this so many times, each day starting to blend together, each defeat the same shade of bright red.
He doesnât know what it was, but he lost focus, and while the others were fighting ahead of him, he got blindsided by a heavy body slamming into his.
The hostile tackled him to the ground, and Soap barely managed to get his arms up in time to block the knife heading for his throat. He grunted as the blade dug into his forearm, and attempted to push off the enemy. The man was built like Ghost, big and muscular, and Soap mightâve been able to win, if he wasnât on his fifteenth day.
But he was, and the hostile breaks his guard, stabbing Soap in the chest, then the shoulder, then the stomach. Soap canât breathe, but by instinct alone his arm reaches for the pistol at his hip, and shoots the heavy bastard three times in the head, until the body drops.
Every single part of him hurts. Most of all, the vile taste of another loss on his tongue, and a broken promise.
Soap futilely tries to get the lifeless body crushing him off, but his muscles feel like jelly, and every small movement shoots fire through the several holes littering his torso, making more blood bubble up.
So Soap gives up. He clicks his radio on, listens to the others check in, notice his absence. He knows he should say something, let Ghost know this loop is a bust and restart, butâŚ
He finds he doesnât want to. For once, he just wants to stay here, bathing in his own blood, pain so blinding he can almost pretend itâs not there.
âMacTavish, fucking answer me! Whatâs your status?!â Ghostâs voice sounds⌠frantic. Soap doesnât like it.
It takes a lot of effort just to click the button to answer, âsârry, Ghost. Ahâm⌠Ahâm here.â
â...Johnny? Where are you?â
He coughs a little, a flush of cold making his vision swim, âin general? Stuck.â he laughs at his own stupid joke, the sound turning into a bitten off cry when pain shoots through his body again. âFuck-â
âHow bad is it?â Ghost asks, gently, in a way Soap doesnât think heâs earned to hear from him.
âBad. H-hurts.â Soap feels tears run to his hairline, âbut Ah donât want to die. Donâ want ye teh die. I can survive, just-â a whine rips from his throat without his permission, âjust a wee bit over one hour till midnight, righâ?â
âIâm not going to let you keep suffering-â
âWe are s-so close.â Soapâs eyes cease to see, blood loss taking his vision and plunging him back into the darkness he grew to despise more than anything, âAh donâ want teh do this again, Ghost⌠pleaseâŚâ
Ghost sounds more muffled when he murmurs, âIâll see you in a few, Johnny.â a finality in his voice that tells Soap heâs putting a gun to his temple yet again.
âNoâŚâ Soap wants to beg, but talking is starting to become more difficult than it should be, âSimon⌠please⌠donâtâŚ..â
He hears a gunshot, and then nothing at all.
When Soap wakes up, he doesnât bother opening his eyes. He knows what heâll see, the same ceiling, in the same washed-out white shade, bathed in the same morning sunlight of the same fucking day.
It mustâve been a few minutes of him drifting into uncomfortable consciousness, when thereâs a knock on the door. Same one heâs heard all the way back when this shit started.
âSoap? You still there?â Ghost asks behind the thin plywood. Soap can hear the handle rattle as Ghost checks if itâs locked.
Apparently, âyesterday Soapâ locked it. He couldnât remember if he tried - itâs been weeks since âyesterdayâ.
âJohnny?â
How did Ghost survive this long alone? The world around him oblivious to the glitch in time, lives around him continuing like normal, as if they arenât also stuck?
A heavy weight squeezes his lungs, a despair in a magnitude heâs never felt, the knowledge theyâre not going to ever escape this caving in his rib cage. Soap keeps his eyes closed, because if he opens them, heâll need to face another day, fight and die, like he wonât just do it again in the next.
The flimsy lock on his door clicks, and it slides open slowly, âIâm coming inâ, Ghost warns, not that Soap cares.
Heâs facing the wall, but he can sense Ghost walking towards the bed, and sitting down after a few moments of silence. Soap lets one eye blink open, still staring at the wall in front of him. Somehow, with just his presence, Ghost lends him strength.
Soap clears his throat quietly, words spilling out before he can stop them, âI donât know if I can keep going.â
A hand finds his calf, slowly caressing him through the thin blanket, âwe can stop.â Ghost murmurs, his tone similar to the way he talked when he understood theyâre not making it out this time.
âStop? And what, stay stuck?â Soap scoffs.
The hand warms his skin, more than this sun ever could, âyes.â Soap hears clothes rustling, âgive up. But thatâs not what you want, is it?â
âAnâ how do ye know what Ah want?â anger starts bubbling within him, Soap regretting his harsh tone a moment after he lets it out. Ghost doesnât deserve it, never does.
The hand leaves him, and Soap raises his head in alarm, because if Ghost leaves, there really is no point to continue-
His eyes widen when he sees him, mask in his hand, knee coming up to rest on the bed. Gentle blond curls almost glowing in the sunlight, brown eyes like dark pools that anchor him in the spiral he found himself in.
Simonâs thin lips move slowly, Soap enchanted by the way they pull on the scars, âI know, because you kept me going.â
âBut-â Soap brings his knees up, âAh didnât know what ye were going through before. Didnât know it really isâŚâ
âImpossible?â
âAyeâŚâ he drops his head to stare at his own lap. A gloved hand appears at the edges of his vision.
Ghost nudges his shoulder softly, âmove over.â
Soap blinks up in confusion, and scoots closer to the wall, allowing Ghost to sit beside him. The bed was certainly not made for two people their size, and their bodies are pressed together. Itâs comforting.
âThat day wasnât the first time I tried to get you to kill me.â Ghost lets out eventually.
Soap stares at him, âwhat happened the other times?â
âYou got mad.â Ghost smiles sadly, âthrew the gun away, as far as you could. Grabbed me by the face and forced me to look, really look, at you. And you talked.â
âAnd what did Ah say?â
Ghostâs light eyelashes flutter, âyouâd always let me know, before anything else, how much of a âdaftyâ I am.â Soap laughs a little at that, while Ghost continues, âthen youâd say that Iâm not allowed to give up.â
Soap frowns. âWhy?â
Ghost turns to stare at him, âyou said I havenât seen everything this world has to offer yet. You promised to show me, if I stay. You were soâŚâ he sighs, mind clearly far away in an unreachable fantasy, âdetermined. Sure that you could change my mind. I didnât understand why you cared so much.â
Soapâs heart hammers loudly in his chest, his own words swirling with distant memories. Of yesterday, and the days before it.
âI called you Johnny, once, on a whim. Wanted to see your reaction.â Ghost huffs, âand in all the days Iâve been through, you never acknowledged it, never told me to stop. Always smiled wider instead.â
âSimonâŚâ
He leans closer to Soap, their noses almost touching, âI know you want to live, because you made me continue living. I know how you look when you lie, and you never lied to me.â
Soap exhales shakily, âbut Ahâm not that person anymore. Neither of us are.â
Simon wraps a hand around his nape, pulls his head to rest on his shoulder, âno. But we havenât seen everything yet. Weâll keep changing, and maybe weâll become something better by the end of it.â
Soap buries his nose in Simonâs neck, âand what if we wonât? What if this is really how the rest of our lives is gonna go?â
What if there really is no way out?
âThen⌠Then Iâll be glad it wasnât alone. Iâm glad it was with you.â
In the safety of strong arms, a warm body beside him, Soap nods. In acceptance of their unknown fate, of their hopeless endeavour. An understanding, that they have to try anyway.
Because trying and failing is worth something too, if they get to have this small moment; so insignificant in larger scale.
And yet nothing means more to Soap, than the fingers drawing small loops on his skin.
He doesnât know how long it takes for someone to take notice of their absence, but it becomes obvious that it has, when both Soapâs and Simonâs phones start buzzing with no end.
Soap pulls away first, after several minutes of gearing himself up to it. Doesnât make the jarring shift any easier. He leans over Ghost to grab his phone from the bedside table, and cringes when he sees the number of missed calls from Gaz and Price.
His phone rings again, and he swipes a finger to answer, âheâs still not picking up- Soap?!â Gazâs voice becomes louder, as if he put the phone back near his mouth, âwhere the fuck were you?! Iâve tried calling you all day mate!â
âUh- Phone was on mute, sorry.â he mumbles.
Soap winces a little at the answering sigh from Gaz, â...alright. You solid?â
He doesnât know why that innocent question made tears well up in his eyes. Soap quickly wipes them away, not fast enough for Ghost to miss, though. âAye, Ahâm good.â
Soap can tell from Kyleâs voice heâs not entirely convinced, âgood. Wanna come torture the recruits with me?â
He smiles softly, closing his eyes, âyeah, think Iâd like that right about now.â
Gaz laughs a little, âIâll see you on the training grounds?â
âSee ye.â
Soap tosses the phone on the bed, scrubbing his face. He looks up at Simon, who stayed close for the entire call, âwhatâs on the table for us today? Are we gonna tell âem after training-â
âTake the day off, Johnny. You need it.â Simon gets up with a groan, stretching his back and reaching for his mask. Soap stops him with a gentle hand on his wrist.
âYe need it too. Come with me.â
Simonâs brown eyes turn a honeyed color in the bright morning light, â...alright.â
Itâs been a while since Soap had what almost felt like a normal day, acting like tomorrow will come. Betting on who could come up with the weirdest exercises with Ghost and Gaz was more fun than anything heâs done since entering the loop, shooting the shit with each other and trying not to crack up when the recruits would look at them with bewildered eyes before hurrying to follow their orders.
In the afternoon, they went back to the common room, Gaz inviting them to watch the football match with him. Despite knowing Scotland will lose, Soap agreed, and they even managed to drag Price to sit with them.
And at that moment, Gaz throwing sunflower seeds at the screen, Price confiscating the bowl with a wide smile on his lips, and Ghostâs thigh pressed to his, eyes mirthful, Soap realized something.
He wants to have more days like these. Ones where he can just exist with his team, his friends, the people he holds most dear in the entire world.Â
At about 2100, Gaz and Price say their goodbyes, leaving Soap and Ghost by themselves, TV off and the rest of the room silent. As the clock ticks closer to the attack, it feels as if all of his muscles twist tighter, a coil ready to snap.
He didnât notice his leg started bouncing, until Ghost stops it with a firm hand. âI can stop today right now, if you want.â he asks.
Soapâs breath hitches, and heâs instantly thrown back to the first day, shaky hands wrapped around his, pulling the trigger-
âNo.â he blurts, âI- I donât want ye toâŚâ
Ghost scans his features, before nodding and standing up, offering a hand for Soap. He takes it, a bit flustered when Ghost doesnât let go.
âWe can leave, then.â
âLeave?â
âThe base. For tonight.â Ghost offers, âI have a place in mind. Will take us about thirty to reach it.â
Soap frowns, guilt gnawing at his heart, âand the othersâŚ?â
Ghost lowers his gaze, âwonât remember a thing.â
He swallows his feelings down, nodding weakly. It hurts, to let them die and do nothing to stop it, but they both know it wonât matter by the end of the night.
They wouldâve been dead a dozen times over if it did.
Ghost leads him outside, motioning him to stay low and quiet as they reach the northern side of the wall surrounding the base. The Lieutenant kicks at the fence, a section surprisingly loose, enough for them to crawl out and into the grassy hills outside. Soap sends him a look, to which Ghost just shrugs and says, âIâll report it when we reach tomorrow.â
When, he notes. Not if.
He continues walking beside him, his figure almost melting into the night skies, save for the bone-white skull mask he grew to love.
A gale brushes upon them, the tall grass and bushes sway along with it. Itâs⌠peaceful.
Until a far away explosion rattles the earth.
Soap freezes, hand pulling on Ghostâs. He knows his eyes must be desperate, when they meet his.
Ghost delicately untangles their fingers, to instead wrap a supporting arm around his shoulders. He leans in to whisper, âjust a little more, Johnny.â
Itâs odd, how those arms can instantly make Soap feel safer, that voice guiding his mind away from base, to a little bubble of their own.
They walk up a small hill, where at its top stands a single, ancient looking tree. Soap marvels at the place, the fact that somewhere like this exists so near to their base, oblivious to the horrors of their endless deaths.
Ghost sits down, ignoring the crunch of dry grass beneath him, and lays back to stare up at the stars. Soap, as always, follows.
The sky seems endless this way, like his tether to the ground can break with a small tug. Stars shine brightly across the darkness, tiny specks that are still so beautiful despite being so far away.
Soap turns his head to look at Ghost, those brown eyes almost black now, reflecting the universe back at him. It makes something hurt in his chest, reminds him just how much he has to lose, if he chooses to give up.
And Soap finds he really, truly, doesnât want to give up. If only to see the stars again, feel a cooling wind against his skin again, laugh with Gaz and get a pat on the back from Price, lay back and watch colors swirl in Ghostâs, Simonâs, eyes.
âI want to try again, tomorrow.â Soap whispers, watches the moment Ghost processes the words, âand the day after that, and after that, until we reach an end. Whatever it may be.â
It brings him a significant amount of joy, that he has learned to tell when Ghost smiles by now, âwhatever it may be.â he repeats.
Ghostâs wristwatch beeps three times, and Soap stares at it as he brings it closer to his face to read.
âTwo minutes to midnight.â he informs.
Soap sighs, wishing the day wouldnât have to end so soon, and yet also eager to get up and fight, âIâll see ye in a few, LT?â
Ghost drops his arm, nodding resolutely, âalways, Johnny.â
The stars melt into the void as they stare into each otherâs eyes.Â
A new day greets Soap, as it always does. This time, however, it feels different.
Soap gets out of bed, diligently dressing up, before a knock sounds on his door. Without opening, he knows whose behind it, and asks with a smile, âdid ye ran outta bed today, Simon?â
âYouâre just slow, Soap.â a muffled answer comes back, making him smile wider.
He unlocked the door, taking in the sight of Ghost. Same dark clothes he wears every single day (even before the loop, if heâs being honest), but the look in his eyesâŚ
Seems like they both needed yesterday.
âReady to talk with Price and Gaz?â Ghost motions with his head towards the hallway.
Soap cracks his knuckles, âletâs get teh work.â
Five minutes to power shutdown. The watchtower above him has been cleared, Priceâs orders to the soldiers doing their work. Soap finishes planting the last of the charges, nerves somewhat settled by the fact he knows this part will work. There is a comfort in knowing exactly how a mission will go, for once. Well, this part at least.
âGot an eye on you, Johnny.â a low voice murmurs to him through their comms. Soap huffs fondly, sparing a moment to glance back at the base, searching for a sniper glint.
He smirks when he finds it, knows Ghost can read his expression with the scope heâs using, âonly one? Iâm offended, LT. Donât think I deserve your full attention?â
âThink youâve earned it?â
Soap makes a show of thinking over it, âhmm⌠What if I say yes?â
âThen Iâd say youâre right, Sergeant.â Ghost radios back with a warmer tone. âRemember your promise?â
âOf course.â
A promise to try. A swear to fight. A vow to live.
âThis is Price, me and Gaz are in position, whatâs your status?â
âExplosives are set, in position.â Soap answers.
âTwo minutes to power shutoff.â Ghost warns. Soap clenches his jaw and backs away, detonator in hand.
Their plan for this loop is similar to the last one, with Soap dropping the watchtower on the infiltrating group, while Gaz and Price take point at the barracks. They made minor adjustments to positions, using the intel theyâve collected in the previous run, and one major change.
This time, Soap has Ghost to watch his six.
Heâs been through this so many times, he didnât need to watch the clock to know exactly when the lights will go out.
The darkness makes his breaths quicken a tad, but Soap grinds his teeth and pulls the reins on his own mind. Even if they fail today, they have an infinite amount of tries.
He takes a sharp inhale, covers his eyes, and detonates. The familiar sound of dozens of tonnes of metal crashing down is like music to his ears, and Soap opens his eyes to watch bullets flash through the night sky. Ghost picking off the remaining hostiles.
âHow was the light show?â
Ghost sighs, putting on an air of irritation that Soap has learned to see past, âsplendid, Soap. Iâd put a picture of it right next to the definition of a pyromaniac in the dictionary.â
Soap begins running towards the barracks, knowing he has mere minutes before the hostiles reach it, âye say the sweetest things teh me, Simon.â
âWasnât a compliment.â Ghost mutters, âIâll meet you on ground in ten.â
âCopy.â
The barracks building fast approaches, dark windows flaring every few seconds with gunfire. Heâs about to rush in when a hand wraps around his nape. Soap reaches for a knife he slipped up his sleeve when he hears a gravelly voice near his ear.
âThought weâre not runninâ off on our own anymore.â Ghost murmurs, scolding him lightly.
Soap sags against his grip. âAttacker doesnât get me for another thirty-four minutes.â
âDonât care. Havenât been through this version of the loop enough times to know where every hostile is.â Ghost guides him to the direction of the side door, âbe careful.â
Soap nods, skin feeling cold when Ghost releases him. They make their way down dark hallways, NVGs on, echoing bullets getting closer and closer. Someone runs out of a door to their left, and Soap has mere seconds to figure out which side theyâre on.
Tactical vest, rifle in hand, ready for combat. A clean shot through the head and the man is dead.
The air around them is charged, his lungs almost choking on the tension, but his hands are steady on his gun, as years of military training drilled into him.
âSoap, Ghost, weâre getting overrun in block B! Where the fuck are you?â Gaz pants into his mic, choppy gunfire slips around his voice.
âClearing block A, but Ah can come yer way-â
Ghost cuts him off, âwe are on our way to you, Garrick. Donât take unnecessary risks.â
âCopy.â Gaz clicks off. Wordlessly, they start running.
So many things can go wrong, finish their loop early, make them fail. Before, it felt like the entire world was fighting against them, the very fabric of time and space coiling around their throats and smothering their lungs.
Ghost sprints ahead of him, a long blade in hand as he opens the door to block B, and the knife gets buried into an unlucky hostile.
Things are different now. Soap lines a shot with another bastard trying to flank Ghost. The Lieutenant turns to give him a thankful nod.
They have to be different.
Block B houses the 141, among other squads. Usually at this hour, its hallways are empty and quiet, the occasional sleepless soldier drifting towards the common room.
Tonight, barracks have been turned into cover for both friendlies and hostiles, every uncleared room a possible hiding hole for a henchman waiting to blow a hole in their face. Soap and Ghost find the rest of their taskforce in the middle of shooting enemies running between the rooms.
âWhatâs the situation, Captain?â Ghost crouches down beside Price, peppering a few shots when hostiles pop their head to return fire.
Price grunts, wiping the sweat off his forehead with the back of his hand, âfuckers keep crawling out like roaches up ahead, we canât push forward like this.â He glances at Soap, âgot anything left that we can use, Sergeant?â
Soap mentally runs through the supplies he gathered this afternoon from the armory, âgot five Semtex, three frags, a drill charge-â
âGive me a Semtex.â Ghost orders, lifting a hand without looking away from the target-rich hallway. Soap places it in his palm, curiously watching him throw it on a hostile rolling to cover. The man had too much momentum to stop his slide, and he shouts when he realizes heâs just brought a grenade into a room full of his teammates.
A loud explosion, and Soap whistles lowly, âfeckinâ ruthless, Ghost.â
The 141, along with the rest of the soldiers who have been sleeping in block B until the base was invaded, use the break in the enemyâs defences to push forward, overwhelming the henchmen and making them scramble back to avoid death.
As they fight, Soap notices a group of hostiles around a single man, seemingly protecting him. When one of them moves, he catches a glimpse of their face, and his blood boils over.
Anthony Simmons, in the flesh. The man responsible for the attack.
Soap knows, somewhere in the recesses of his mind, that Simmons isnât the one responsible for the existence of the time loop. He had no way of knowing, that attacking the base will cause time to break around Soap and Ghost.
But he has watched his teammates, his friends, get shot by his men countless times, felt unimaginable pain, helpless when that pain broke him, broke Simon.
Soap knows itâs not his fault, but fuck if heâs going to let him walk out of this intact.
Before anyone can stop him, he breaks into a run after Simmons. The man has lost more of his henchmen at this point, his little circle of soldiers dead at his feet, so he fled deeper into the building. The rest of his men, however, still stand between Soap and Simmons.
Soap pulls out his knife again, this time intending to use it, slipping under thick arms that try to wrestle him down, and stabbing his opponent in the ribs. He quickly slits his throat and continues the chase.
Voices ring out of his comms, a mix of concern and anger from his squad. Soap plans to ignore them, until one stands out.
âYou fucking promised me Johnny, donât do this to me!â
His steps falter, and after a beat he decides to answer, âAhâm going to end this, once and for all. In pursuit of Anthony Simmons.â
âYouâre going after Simmons alone?!â Gaz grunts, clearly in the middle of fending off an enemy.
Ghostâs voice is dripping with rage, âis he really worth killing yourself for, Sergeant?â
Soap can tell, behind that furious voice, that Simon is scared. That anger for Ghost is a smokescreen for anything else.
âŚThey are the same in that regard, arenât they?
âNo.â Soap realizes, âitâs not.â
The comms are quiet. He scans the way ahead, understands that Simmons has no other place to hide besidesâŚ
âHeâs in our common room. Waiting for backup around the corner.â
â...Copy. Weâre five minutes out.â Ghost sighs, previous anger fizzling out.
Soap stares ahead, at the familiar path to their common room, now dark and lifeless. Itâs a path he never walks alone, and today will not be any different.
His team arrives one minute early, bloody and bruised and worse for wear, but alive, so blessedly, wonderfully, alive.
âGaz, keep an eye on our six, Ghost, Soap, with me.â Price commands, back straight and weapon at the ready.
They take measured steps to their common room, small noises and grunts like gunshots in the silence. Simmons sounds agitated, whispering orders into his radio. He clearly didnât expect anyone to follow him, evident by the door he left wide open, and the fact he left his gun to lean against the wall.
Ghost walks ahead, footsteps perfectly noiseless, slinking behind their target like a predator circling its prey.
Soap cringes inwardly when his boot connects with the end of the couch, a small thunk alerting Simmons. As unprepared as the man was, he still noticed, head perking up and hand dropping from his comms.
Shite.
Simmons gets up with a sudden flurry of movement, hands instantly on his weapon. Ghost attempts to apprehend him, but the man starts shooting wildly all around him while screaming, ânot gonna let you 141 rats fuck with me again!â
Simmons swings his gun to his left, and Soap watches in horror as the barrel lines with Priceâs heart. He makes the split second decision to tackle the Captain.
They both grunt when they hit the floor, Soap feeling hot pain spread through his shoulder. Bastard got lucky.
Ghost takes the opening to Simmonsâ right, and Soap barely sees the meager light in the room reflect onto his blade before it slices into Simmonsâ neck. Ghost twists it once, and pulls it out, allowing the body to fall.
Gaz rushes into the room at that moment, spotting Ghost looming over their targetâs dead body, and him and Price still on the floor, âfuck- Captain, Soap, are you broken?â
Soap pushes off Price with a groan, the Captain answering, ânegative. Soap, whatâs your status?â
Price places a hand on his shoulder, one that would be comforting in any other scenario, but in this one makes him yelp in pain. Price pulls his hand away, Gaz crouching down beside him to inspect the gunshot wound, âshit, Soapâs been hit.â
Soapâs mind transports him to the last loop, to Ghostâs unshakeable decision to reset before he could suffer any longer, and blurts out, âjusâ a gunshot wound teh the shoulder. Iâll live.â
He turns his head back to Ghost, the giant man standing above him like a fucked up guardian angel.
The power chooses at that moment to come back on, blinding all of them. They flip their NVGs up, rubbing their eyes and groaning, when Soap notices Ghostâs watch beeping. They make eye contact.
âTwo minutes to midnight.â Soap whispers. He reaches with his uninjured hand to Simonâs, making him sit back on his haunches. He brings the watch closer to his face, senses Gaz and Price huddle around it as well.
Four pairs of eyes watch the little clock tick closer and closer to midnight with bated breath. Thoughts begin to whirl in his head, that perhaps this wasnât the answer, that there is just no possible solution to this wretched loop.
2359âŚ
0000.
Midnight. Soap looks up, sees his shock reflected in Ghostâs dark eyes.
Theyâre free.
The 141âs common room might be Soapâs favorite. Itâs nothing fancy, a couple of ratty couches, a kitchenette. No TV, and near-constant mold under the sink.
Soap wouldnât have it any other way. Sitting here, chatting with Gaz about nothing and everything, laughing when Price acts in a way that reminds all of them how old he is, feeling Simonâs arms wrapped around him, Soap wouldnât change a thing.
Well⌠one thing has changed. A clock has been mounted on the wall, along with a calendar.
Time continues moving. Soap knows his future will hold unmeasurable amounts of pain, that his end might be closer than he thinks it is. That their little common room will eventually fall silent, for good. But Soap also knows he will get to have more days like these, memories of incomparable comfort and soul-deep calm. Moments that are worth the pain.
And itâs that knowledge, that makes hope bloom in his chest. In his heart, and in deep brown eyes, that now crescent for him more than Soap couldâve ever wished for.
#call of duty modern warfare 2#cod mw2#cod soap#cod ghost#cod gaz#cod price#simon ghost riley#john soap mactavish#kyle gaz garrick#call of duty fic#call of duty fanfic#call of duty modern warfare#cod fic#cod fanfic#ghostsoap#soapghost#ghoap#this oneshot feels like i speedran a full fic#its literally the size of like a third of bloodhunger#while writing this i realized im really leaning into my experiences with depression#back when i was younger... when every day felt the same for me#my struggles with hope#but the original idea for this was just me thinking about how weird would it be to experience a time loop from an outsider's perspective
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