i sound like a corrido tumbado of tito double p mixed with a unreleased song of lana del rey.

shark vs the universe

Acquired Stardust
Sade Olutola

Discoholic đŞŠ
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Claire Keane

çĽćĽ / Permanent Vacation
we're not kids anymore.
d e v o n
Jules of Nature
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
wallacepolsom
trying on a metaphor

romaâ

@theartofmadeline
hello vonnie
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@madcrayola
i sound like a corrido tumbado of tito double p mixed with a unreleased song of lana del rey.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Somos muy jĂłvenes para tanto desgaste emocional.
Una de mis mayores demostraciones de amor es mi paciencia
Diego Luna as Cassian Andor ANDOR (1.07) | Announcement
°â˘âChildhood Crushesââ˘Â°
Basil - The Great Mouse Detective
Robin Hood - Disney's Robin Hood
Kovu - Lion King 2: Simba's Pride
Frodo Baggins - Lord of the Rings
Luke Skywalker - Star Wars
The Once-Ler - The Lorax
Lloyd Garmadon - LEGO Ninjago
Dimitri - Anastasia
Flynn Ryder/Eugene Fitzherbert - Tangled
Peter Pan - Disney's Peter Pan
yeah

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absofuckinlutely
i miss my husband
lana made this song for the witchy community đŻď¸đŽđ¤
I LOVEEEE IT
âyeah i read a lot!â
âoh awesome! What books do you read?â

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Sam Riley as Mr. Darcy in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (2016)
My GIF masterlist
dark mr darcy kindaaađŤŚ
I NEED THAT
GIRL- WHAAAAAAAAAT đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛đ
I have NOTHING appropriate to say.
oh, it's hard to leave you (when i get you everywhere!)
pairing: congressman!bucky barnes x pr manager!reader summary: you tweet one (1) mildly unhinged critique of congressman james buchanan barnesâ pr strategyâsomething about ghosting the press and weaponizing cheekbonesâand three hours later heâs in your dms asking if you want a job. now you manage his social media, his public image, and occasionally his existential spirals. heâs got a metal arm, a rescue cat named alpine, and the digital instincts of a dad trying to facetime from the tv remote. somehow, against all odds, heâs good. earnest. dangerously hot. you're so screwed. word count: 10.6k content warnings: 18+ mdni, fem!reader, soft dom!bucky, sloppy make-out sesh for the win, fingering, oral (f!receiving), face riding, praise kink, unprotected sex, rough sex, size kink, creampie, use of pet names like sweetheart and pretty baby, unprecedented levels of yearning, overstimulation, multiple orgasms, unhinged tweets
You donât mean to go viral.
You really donât. Itâs not a bit or a career move or a desperate plea to the algorithm gods. Itâs just that you were in line for coffee at 8:47 a.m., hungover from exactly one and a half spicy margaritas (because you're a real adult now and your liver hates you), and the man in front of you was vaping indoors. You needed to direct your rage somewhere. That somewhere happened to be Twitter.
Well. That and the soft target of Rep. James B. Barnes.
Your actual tweet really isn't that scathing, in your opinion:
âNot to be rude before 9 a.m., but Rep. James B. Barnes has the digital strategy of a man who thinks âradio silenceâ is the same as âmessaging control.â Ghosting the press isn't mysterious, it's lazy. And the Instagram? Sir, it's giving retired uncle who discovered portrait mode last week. You're hot, sureâbut public goodwill isnât built on brooding black-and-white cat photos and the occasional quote that reads like it was ripped from a thirteen year old's diary. Hire literally anyone.â
You hit post, tuck your phone away, and move on with your morning, which includes trying not to scream during a client call where a fitness influencer earnestly asks if she should âlean into a divorce arc.â
By the time you check Twitter again, itâs⌠carnage. In the good way.
The notifications are stacked like an avalanche. A dozen quote tweets, then a hundred, then you stop counting because your phone is hot to the touch and your Slack has stopped functioning. Youâre about to text your best friend when you see it:
@RepBarnes:
Noted. Would you like to try fixing it?
You stare. Blink. Blink again. Surely not.
Surely the Winter Soldier, now U.S. House Representative for New Yorkâs 9th Congressional District, is not quote-tweeting you like this is a casual Tuesday.
Surely the man who once jumped off a highway overpass and punched a terrorist in the face is not lurking on Twitter Dot Com past midnight, scrolling his name like a sad girl with an ex-boyfriend playlist.
You reread it.Â
Then again. And again. Your fingers are shaking a little, like youâve had three too many shots of espresso, whichâfineâyou have.
Youâre halfway through an existential crisis about how a minor PR manager can possibly be noticed by a former Avenger turned Congressman when your phone starts vibrating off the desk. Nina texts you first:
NINA
DUDE DUDE HE KNOWS WHO YOU ARE do you think he read your pinned tweet where you said youâd marry Thor in a Walgreens parking lot???
You donât answer. Youâre too busy spiraling. Because now your professional website is getting hits. And your LinkedIn. And, insult to injury, your ancient Tumblr blog from college, where you once posted a 2,000-word thinkpiece on how Steve Rogers is a metaphor for millennial burnout. You know this because someone found it and tagged you with a screenshot.
Youâre spiraling when your phone pings again.
This time itâs not public.
@RepBarnes has sent you a direct message.
If youâre interested, I could use someone like you. NY/DC split. Health benefits included. Let me know.
You read it once. Then again. Then walk away from your desk, lie down on your kitchen floor, and stare at the ceiling like it might have answers. It does not. It has a water stain from your upstairs neighborâs failed attempt at DIY plumbing. You feel that deeply.
You, who spent three years post-grad slowly circling the corporate America drainâclutching your Communications degree like itâs a winning lottery ticket while negotiating brand partnerships for YouTubers who think âmillennialâ means âanyone over 26ââhave just been headhunted by Bucky Barnes.
You should probably be flattered. Or terrified. Or calling your mom. Instead, you fire off the only response that makes sense:
are u joking?
His reply comes five minutes later.
No. Youâre good. And Iâm very tired of people telling me to post more cat content.
You stare at your screen.
You should absolutely say no. This is clearly a trap. At best, a weird stunt. At worst, the kind of surreal pivot that leads to you being mentioned in Politico under âquestionable staffing decisions.â
But also⌠your rent just went up. Again. Your clients are spiraling. You havenât had health insurance that covers dental since 2021.
And Bucky Barnes wants to hire you?
You exhale. Then type,
i'll clear my schedule. when and where?
A beat.
Meet me in D.C. Iâll have coffee. You bring strategy.
You stare at that last part andâGod help youâyou start to grin.
You're pretty sure youâve just accepted a job from the Winter Soldier.
.
Once upon a time, you had hopes.
Real, annoying ones. Back when you still believed in upward mobility and the promise of networking events with warm chardonnay. You were going to climb the ranks. Not to the top, necessarilyâyou were realistic, not delusionalâbut to a place with an actual title. "Director" maybe, or "Head of Strategy." Something crisp and important-sounding that could be printed on business cards without irony. Youâd wear smart blazers and carry a leather tote that didnât smell like stale granola bars. Youâd have power lunches.
Instead, youâre three years out of grad school with an inbox full of âcircling backâs, a calendar that reads like a sacrificial offering to the content gods, and a job that involves convincing lifestyle micro-influencers to stop posting QAnon-adjacent smoothie recipes.
You had dreams. Now you have bills.
Which is why the Bucky Barnes situation feels less like a win and more like a symptom. A brain glitch, maybe. You refresh your inbox. Again. Youâve been doing that for the last hour and a half. The DM is still there, as if it might disappear if you blink too hard.
You open a Google Doc. Title it âProject: Barnes?â with the tentative, quizzical punctuation of someone who is very much not okay.Â
And then, like any self-respecting PR person who has just been contacted by a former war hero turned sitting U.S. Representative, you type the most professional research query you can think of:
bucky barnes political platform site:gov
Then:
bucky barnes cat
And then, after five minutes of increasingly weird search results, you cave:
bucky barnes shirtless
For research purposes, obviously. To understand the optics. You are nothing if not committed to analyzing the full spectrum of a person's public persona.
(Also, look. Itâs not your fault that James Buchanan Barnes is stupidly, distractingly attractive in a way that should be a federal offense. The man has the bone structure of a war-weary marble statue. The jawline of a vintage cologne ad. And donât even get started on the armâthe armâbecause thatâs a whole separate thesis.)
Itâs Wakandan tech, sleek and black with gold accents that catch the light like something out of myth. Youâve seen pictures of him at press conferences, sleeves pushed up, glinting like some kind of tactical Greek god. It is, objectively, an optics goldmine. Which makes it even more baffling that his current social strategy is âpost like a cryptid and hope people like based on vibes.â
You learn that heâs been in Congress for just under six months. That he ran on a progressive platform with a heavy emphasis on veteran care, climate resilience, and âactually listening to the people,â which, yes, is vagueâbut less vague than the average politician, so thatâs something. You find clips from a debate where he tells a super PAC-backed opponent, with all the calm menace of a man who once fought a Nazi on top of a train, âI didnât survive a handful of wars to let people like you sell this country for parts.â
Itâs not fair. He shouldnât be allowed to be hot and principled and grumpy in a compelling way. Thatâs too many character traits. Youâre fairly certain it violates some kind of congressional ethics code.
You click out of the tab. Open another.Â
Watch a video of him dodging a question on CNN with a non-answer so blunt it circles back around to being honest. He has a dry, clipped delivery. A little awkward. A little old. Not in a cringey, old-man wayâbut like he hasnât quite caught up with the TikTokification of discourse.Â
You hate how much you want to fix it.
Your fingers twitch. You scroll through his feed. Itâs mostly retweets of policy initiatives, local labor union updates, and cat picturesâgrainy, candid shots of a very fluffy white feline with the disdainful elegance of old money and the personal boundaries of a cryptid. Sheâs usually perched somewhere she shouldnât be: on top of his kitchen cabinets, wedged behind a stack of legislative binders, once half-asleep inside his empty duffel bag. Once in a while, he posts a weirdly poetic thought. Like:
Not all roads lead to war. But I remember the ones that did.
You stare at it.
It has thirty-two retweets, all from mutuals you know to be deeply online. One has responded âwhoâs running this account and do they need therapy.â Another has written simply: âsir.â
You breathe out a laugh.
You should be panicking. Or preparing. Or calling someone smarter than you. But instead youâre refreshing his feed and scrolling like a girl with a crush.Â
Whichâno. Nope. Absolutely not. This is research. Professional curiosity. Intellectual rigor.
You check your calendar. Nothing but a call at four with your client who wants to rebrand herself as an âedible wellness guruâ and refuses to define what that means. You sigh. Close the tab.
Then reopen it. One more scroll for the road.
In one photo, his cat is curled up in Buckyâs lap, a fluffy white loaf of judgement and chaos, her paw resting on his vibranium arm like she owns both it and the man itâs attached to. The caption reads:
She snored through my security briefing. I wish I could too.
Jesus Christ, you think. Iâm in trouble.
.
You spend the next forty-eight hours overthinking everything.
Your research doc is now twenty pages long. Youâve compiled notes on his legislative record, his key voting blocs, public sentiment analysis, andâbecause you are fundamentally brokenâa list of his most viral thirst tweets. Thereâs one that simply reads âhe could kill me and Iâd say thank you.â You are not proud to admit it made you snort.
You board the train to D.C. with your headphones in, your anxiety clutched to your chest like a carry-on, and your very best business casual. You donât even read on the train. You just sit there and wonder what the hell youâre doing.
By the time you arrive, youâre exhausted from spiraling.
The coffee shop is in Capitol Hillâof course it is. Quiet and wood-paneled, with the kind of soft lighting that makes everyone look like theyâre about to confess something.Â
Youâre early. Heâs not there yet. You order a black coffee and a croissant you wonât eat and choose the table in the back, where you can see the door.
Five minutes later, he walks in.
And yes, fine. It is a little cinematic.
James Buchanan Barnes in the flesh is not the brooding, hyper-composed figure from press photos. Heâs rougher around the edges in person, like someone who never quite got used to peacetime. His hair is slicked back but starting to come undone at the edges. The navy suit jacket heâs wearing is slightly creased, like heâs been rolling up the sleeves and taking it off and putting it back on all morning. No tie. Just the white collar of his shirt open at the throat, exposing the soft brush of stubble across his neck and jaw.
God. This is so unfair.
His eyes land on you and something flickersârecognition, maybe, or skepticism. You canât tell.
He walks over. You stand too quickly. Your chair makes a horrible screech.
âHi,â you say, thenâbecause youâre flustered and your brain is full of staticââI almost didnât recognize you without the strategically vague tweets.â
His brow lifts, just slightly. The corner of his mouth pulls. Could be amusement. Could be confusion.
âYou came,â he says, as if the possibility you wouldnât had been very real.
âOf course,â you reply, forcing a half-smile. âI go where the digital crises call.â
He nods once, slowly. Watches you as you open your laptop and set your coffee down. Itâs too quiet for a momentâthe hum of the cafĂŠ, the hiss of the espresso machine, the clink of someone stirring sugar behind the counter. You pull up the notes you made at two in the morning while spiral-reading his press history, trying not to fidget.
âI figured,â you offer, âweâd start with a social audit. Clarify some core messaging, maybe put together a soft content strategy for the next two weeks. Weâll do a tone reset, pull the last six months of analytics, identify whatâs actually landingâbecause no offense, but your engagement rates are being carried by your cat.â
A pause.
âI mean, I get it. Sheâs adorable. But still.â
He huffs something that could be a laugh, if it werenât so dry. Then leans back slightly, the line between his brows easing as he studies you.
Then he says, slowly, like heâs still feeling out the words: âYou actually know what youâre talking about.â
And you blink. âYou thought I didnât?â
He shrugs, glancing out the window for a beat before returning to you. âI kind of thought you were⌠just someone online. Making noise.â
You sip your coffee. âI mean. I am. But I also have a masterâs in communication strategy and ten thousand hours of dealing with manchildren who think posting a thirst trap is a branding pivot.â
His mouth twitches. âSounds promising.â
You smile. Tight. âSo. What exactly do you really need help with?â
And just like thatâyouâre in it.
You expect him to start with a question. Or a joke. Or maybe something awkward and vaguely threatening, like âhow do you know so much about me?â (You donât. You just have Wi-Fi and a dangerous relationship with your search bar.)
But instead, Bucky leans back in his chair, crosses his arms, and says, âItâs just not working.â
You blink. âYouâll have to be more specific. Whatâs not working?â
âMy comms strategy. My messaging. All of it.â
He sounds vaguely exasperated, but not angry. Just tired. You get the sense thatâs his baseline. He gestures with one hand, the movement sharp and utilitarian. âIâm supposed to be building a digital presence that connects with people. Makes them trust me. Instead Iâm getting tagged in memes about how hot I am.â
You nod, solemn. âTo be fair, you do look like that.â
He doesnât laugh, but he quirks an eyebrow like heâs maybe a little impressed you said it. âThanks.â
You swallow the lump in your throat with a sip of coffee. Itâs going lukewarm. âSo what was the issue? Your team too old school? Too hands-off?â
He gives you a look thatâs equal parts apology and confession. âI donât really have a team.â
You blink again. âYou⌠donât have a team.â
âOne guy. Used to run PR for a congressman from Montana. Thought hiring someone low-profile would keep things clean.â
You squint. âYouâre a former Avenger. Thereâs no such thing as clean.â
âYeah,â he says. âStarting to notice that.â
You press your fingers to your temples. âOkay. So let me get this straight. You have no digital strategy lead, no content calendar, no brand consultant, and youâre navigating one of the most publicly scrutinized jobs in America with a guy whose last success story was getting a local paper to stop calling his boss âthe Beef Tariff Czar.ââ
He shifts. Slightly. Doesnât deny it.
You put your coffee down. Carefully. Deliberately. Then say, as diplomatically as you can:
âWith all due respect, Mr. Barnesâthis is a disaster.â
He meets your eyes. Dead-on. âThatâs why I messaged you.â
Itâs almost⌠earnest. That quiet, unflinching way he says it. Like he knows just how far in over his head he is. Like he doesnât enjoy asking for help, but heâs smart enough to do it anyway.Â
That, more than anything, is what knocks you sideways.
Because the guy sitting across from you does not radiate âcompetent politician.â Heâs stiff in the way people are when theyâre always anticipating a fight. He looks like someone whoâs only recently stopped treating doorknobs like potential traps.Â
But he also looks at you like heâs listening. Like he wants to get this right, even if he doesnât know how.
And you hate how that pulls at you.
You fold your hands. Steady your tone. âIf I take this job, Iâm not just managing your Twitter. Iâll need full accessâmessaging, public statements, policy framing. Youâll have to be okay with me pushing back. Hard.â
He nods. âUnderstood.â
âAnd Iâll need to redo everything your current guyâs done.â
âI was hoping you would.â
You raise an eyebrow. âIncluding the website that looks like it was designed in 2007?â
A ghost of a smirk. âI designed that one myself.â
âOf course you did.â
A beat. Thenâquietly, without the usual edge. âI didnât expect to win. When I ran. It wasnât about the campaign. I just thought⌠if I could stand up, maybe someone else would too.â
Itâs not a speech. Itâs not even polished. But it hits.
You sit with it for a second. Then say, âThatâs the part people need to hear.â
He frowns. âWhat, the not-expecting-to-win part?â
âNo. The rest. The standing up.â You pause. âYou want to help. And thatâs rare. Itâs worth something. We can build on that.â
Thereâs a shift then, subtle but real. He straightens a little. Like your words have landed somewhere deep. Like maybeâmaybeâyouâre the first person whoâs said that in a while.
You donât say anything else. Neither does he.
But somethingâs settled between you. A quiet, unspoken agreement.
Youâre in. Actually.
God help you.
.
Your first day working for Congressman James Buchanan Barnes begins with a minor existential crisis and a yogurt you eat standing up.
Capitol Hill is less glamorous than it looks on TV. A lot more beige. A lot more linoleum. Everything smells like government-grade carpet and desperation. You get stopped at security twice. First because of your laptop. Then because you muttered âkill meâ under your breath in line and a very serious-looking man with an earpiece asked if you were making a threat.
Youâre not. But itâs touch and go.
Buckyâs office is on the third floor of the Cannon Building. Itâs functional in the same way a DMV is functionalâtechnically operating, but held together by anxiety and one overworked assistant. The plaque outside his door reads:
REP. JAMES BARNES
New Yorkâs 9th District
Inside, itâs⌠chaos.
Not loud chaos. Weird chaos. Subtle. Like someone tried to copy a normal congressional office from memory but forgot a few key details. Thereâs a framed photo of Brooklyn from the â40s. A desk with approximately forty-nine paperweightsâno papers, just the weights. A bowl of wrapped Wertherâs Originals. You are immediately suspicious.
Before you can process that, Bucky appears in the doorway, sleeves rolled up, tie in hand like he hasnât figured out if heâs putting it on or strangling it.
âYou made it,â he says. Deadpan.
âNo thanks to Homeland Security,â you mutter, stepping inside.
He gives you the tour, if you can call it that.Â
Thereâs the bullpen (three desks, one of which has a sword leaning against it for reasons no one explains), a coffee station with a âdonât drink this, itâs poisonâ Post-it, and his actual office, which is larger than you expected and somehow still incredibly bare.
You spot a half-empty bookcase, a red file folder labeled âCRISIS?â and a punching bag tucked behind the door.
âIs that for stress relief or intimidation purposes?â you ask, pointing at the bag.
âYes,â he replies.
The next hour is a whirlwind of introductions, vague directives, and increasingly unhinged email threads. His comms inbox is a minefield.Â
You get a badge, a desk, and a monitor that still has a Post-it from your predecessor that just says, Good luck, youâre gonna need it. You also learn that the thermostat in the office only has two settings: Arctic Military Base and Surface of the Sun.
By the end of your first day, your inbox has refreshed for the fifth time and youâve flagged three crisis-adjacent threadsâone involving a scheduling mix-up, one involving a meme account, and one involving a conspiracy theory about cyborgs in Congress.
Maybe, just maybe, this job might be more than you bargained for.
The next week is only slightly less chaotic.
Yourâwell, his, technicallyâfirst press briefing is scheduled for 2 p.m. sharp, but by 1:17 youâre already mentally preparing the post-mortem. Youâve seen the rehearsal footage, such as it wasâhim standing in front of his desk, arms crossed like a bouncer, muttering responses like they physically pained him.
When you gently suggested he try smiling, he looked at you like youâd asked him to perform open-heart surgery with a spoon.
âItâll be fine,â An intern chirps, shoving a protein bar in your hand as they breeze past. âHe does better under pressure. Like a reverse soufflĂŠ.â
âWhat does that mean,â you whisper, but sheâs already gone.
Youâre standing behind the curtain in a room that smells like too many folding chairs and not enough trust in government when he walks in, adjusting the cuffs of his shirt. No tie today. He says it feels like a leash. His sleeves are rolled with military precision, though. His hairâs slicked back. He looks more like a man going to war than one about to deliver a ten-minute statement on infrastructure funding.
âYou ready?â you ask, clipboard clutched like a lifeline.
âNo,â he says. âBut Iâll do it anyway.â
You almost smile.
The press corps is already seated, eyes trained, pens poised. He walks out with the focus of someone trained to enter dangerous rooms. You can see the shift in himâquiet alertness, head high, every movement efficient. Thereâs still something a little stiff in the way he grips the podium, like he doesnât fully trust it not to fall apart under his hands.
Then he starts to speak.
And damn.
Okay.
You hadnât expected this.
Itâs not polished. He stumbles over a couple phrases. Uses âainâtâ once. Drops a note card and mutters âshitâ under his breath into a hot mic.
But he knows his stuff. Not just the numbers. Not just the bill. The context. The human angle. He tells a story about the neighborhood he grew up in, back when it still had corner shops and streetcar tracks. Talks about a single mom who wrote in last week about her buildingâs pipes freezing every winter. Doesnât make promisesâjust outlines what heâs doing and what he wonât let happen again.
And itâs good.
Itâs honest.
He doesnât charm the press. He earns them.
You see it in the way pens pause halfway through notes. Phones lowered. Eyebrows raised. Thereâs a momentâa beat in the middle of a sentenceâwhere he talks about reconstruction efforts in Red Hook and says, âWe donât need heroes. We need decent plumbing and warm classrooms,â and it lands like a punch.
You feel it, too.
By the end, theyâre asking thoughtful questions. Real ones. He handles them with a dry kind of grace. Doesnât deflect. Doesnât lie. Says âI donât knowâ more than once, but follows it with âIâll find out.â
When itâs over, he steps backstage, exhales slowly, and immediately unbuttons the top of his shirt like itâs a reward.
You hand him a bottle of water.
He takes it with a nod and says, âWell?â
You blink. âYou were⌠actually incredible?â
He raises an eyebrow. âThat so shocking?â
âYes!â you blurt, then soften. âI mean. A little. Youâre not exactly a poster child for press-friendly vibes.â
He leans against the wall, sipping. âYeah, well. Iâm not a fan of the stage.â
âBut you like the mission.â
He looks at you. And for once, doesnât deflect.
âI like helping people. I like when things are fair. And if this is what I gotta do to make that happenâŚâ He shrugs. âThen I do it.â
You file that away. Noted: Bucky Barnes does not enjoy politics, but he endures them for the sake of something bigger.
You offer, âYou want to decompress? Thereâs a decent cafĂŠ two blocks away. Youâve earned, like, three cookies.â
He tilts his head. âYou buying?â
âI work for the government now. Iâm broke.â
âFair,â he says. âIâll buy the cookies.â
You walk the few blocks in relative silence, save for the traffic and your boots scuffing against the pavement. The cafĂŠ is small, warm, full of people with laptops and disillusionment. You order coffee. He orders a black Americano and two oatmeal raisin cookies, like a war crime.
âDonât judge,â he says, catching your expression. âI like raisins.â
âOf course you do,â you mutter. âYou probably eat Bran Flakes and think theyâre spicy.â
He gives you a look over the rim of his cup. âDidnât realize I hired a bully.â
You grin. âNot a bully. Just aggressively helpful.â
He snorts. And you sit there, in the quiet aftermath of his first real public win, watching him pull the napkin apart like it personally wronged him. There's something calming about itâlike youâre both still wound a little tight, but not as tight as before.Â
You let the silence stretch a beat longer before speaking. âCan I ask you something?â
He glances at you. Shrugs. âYouâve already asked me worse.â
You huff a soft laugh. âFair.â
He waits.
You roll your cup between your palms. âWhyâd you hire me?â
Thereâs a pause. Not the kind that makes you nervousâjust one that feels like heâs actually going to answer. Eventually. When the words are ready.
When he does speak, his voice is low, deliberate. âYou were honest.â
You blink. âAbout what?â
âThat tweet,â he says. âAbout me ghosting the press. Most people either kiss my ass or assume Iâm gonna punch them in the face. You didnât do either.â
You snort. âI did call you hot, though.â
A small tug at the corner of his mouth. âYeah. That, too.â
Then, quieter, âYou said what everyone else was thinking. But you said it like it wasnât personal. Just... necessary.â
You donât speak. Youâre not sure heâs done.
âIâve had a lot of people tell me who I am. What Iâm supposed to be. Some of them were wrong. Some werenât. Doesnât mean I liked hearing it.â
His fingers tap against the cup once. Twice. âBut you were right. I didnât have a handle on any of this. The job, the people watching, the way it all gets twisted. You called it out.â
âAnd that worked in my favor?â you ask, half-joking.
His gaze flickers to yours. âYou didnât lie to me. That means something.â
It lands heavier than expected.
You look down at your lap. Then, after a second: âI thought you were gonna say it was because I tweeted about your cat.â
He huffs. âThat helped.â
You smile, and when you glance back up, heâs watching you. Not like heâs searching for something. More like heâs found something and isnât sure what to do with it.
âI could tell that you'd keep me grounded,â he says.
Itâs simple. Uncomplicated. But your chest goes tight anyway.
âThanks,â you say softly.
âDonât get used to the compliments,â he mutters, sipping from his long-cold coffee. âIâve got a reputation to maintain.â
You nudge his shoulder. âYou mean the mysterious, broody one?â
He arches a brow. âBetter than ex-assassin with a PR manager.â
âHey,â you say, mock offended. âI'm rebranding you.â
And this time, his smile is smallâbut real. The kind that says youâre staying.
.
Briefings, memos, social strategy calls take up the next month. You update his official bio, overhaul his campaign site, start a new newsletter format that doesnât look like it was designed in the throes of dial-up internet. You start drafting tweets in his voice, but youâre surprised at how often he wants to write them himself.
Sometimes he sends them to you first, via email, labeled âdraft?â and rarely punctuated.
The kids who emailed about lunch debt were right. They shouldnât have to be the ones fixing it.
You write back:
itâs missing caps and grammar and polish âŚitâs also perfect. i hate you a little
He replies ten minutes later:
Good. Keep hating me. Makes your edits stronger.
You start seeing him more. At first, itâs meetings. Then lunch breaks. Then youâre just⌠there.Â
In his office while he sorts through constituent letters. Sitting across from him on the Capitol steps, scrolling through your phone while he mutters about zoning regulations and offers you the second half of whatever sandwich heâs picked up from the Hill cafĂŠ.
One Thursday, around 6:45 p.m., youâre still at the office. Your laptopâs overheating. Your shoulders ache from the stress of trying to politely tell a PAC liaison that no, Bucky will not be attending the âPatriots for Policyâ fundraiser, and no, their âStar-Spangled Selfie Stationâ is not an appealing incentive.
You lean back in your chair, eyes closed, and say out loud, âIf one more intern sends me a Google Doc titled âshitposts to own the opposition,â Iâm going to walk into traffic.â
âThat bad, huh?â comes Buckyâs voice from the doorway.
You open one eye. Heâs holding two cups of coffee. Itâs late. His sleeves are rolled againâhe does that a lot, like heâs always preparing to do something with his hands. He sets a cup on your desk.
âItâs decaf,â he says. âIâm not trying to kill you.â
You sit up. âDecaf? Wow. You are learning.â
He doesnât smile, but the corners of his mouth twitch. âBaby steps.â
You sip. Itâs good. And quiet stretches out between you. The lights overhead buzz faintly. Someoneâs laughing two rooms over. The city is folding in on itself outside, another dayâs worth of bad traffic and moral compromises settling over D.C. like a weighted blanket.
.
Another few months pass in a rhythm that starts to feel dangerously like routine.
He insists on responding to every constituent letter about veteransâ benefits himself, even the ones written in glitter gel pen. One morning you find him on the floor of his office, surrounded by stacks of envelopes, Alpine curled up on a pile marked âurgent.â
âJust scanning,â he says, gesturing vaguely at the chaos. âShe likes the important stuff.â
You start to learn things about him. Little things, dropped like breadcrumbs.
He hates cilantro. Keeps a dog-eared copy of All the Kingâs Men on his desk. Organizes his paperwork with military precision but leaves mugs half-finished all over the office. Heâs still learning to take a break during the day. Sometimes he doesnât.
One evening, while youâre both trying to pick a header image for the new landing page (he hates stock photos, insists they feel like âhollow propagandaâ), he mutters, âI used to think if I could just disappear, Iâd stop hurting people.â
You freeze. âAnd now?â
He doesnât look away from the screen. âNow Iâm trying to build something instead.â
Your throat tightens. You change the subject. You always do.
The tension between you simmers. Unspoken, unnamed. He starts saying your name more often. You start noticing when he does.
He always says it like it matters.
One Friday, he brings you a donut. Doesnât mention it. Just leaves it on your desk and walks away like a man who doesnât realize small gestures are dangerous.
You stare at it for a full minute before a staffer walks by, clocks the look on your face, and mutters, âOh, youâre gone-gone.â
You pretend not to hear her.
One night, you find yourselves outside a community rec center after a Q&A event, both of you too wired to go home. You walk a few blocks together, hands brushing once. Neither of you acknowledges it.
âYou ever think about leaving?â you ask, staring up at the streetlight.
âSometimes,â he says. âThen I remember I already ran for almost fifty years.â
You laugh. He looks over, soft.
And then, quietly, âNot sure Iâd want to go anywhere without you anyway.â
You blink. âYou mean⌠as staff?â
He hums, like heâs choosing not to answer that.
He looks at you too long sometimes. Like heâs memorizing you. You assume itâs habitâold instincts. Soldierâs reflex. You donât let yourself think about what else it could be.
Because it canât be. Heâs your boss. Youâre his PR handler. This is all fine. Normal. Entirely professional, except for when he looks at you like that.
Which is how it buildsâslow, steady, suffocating.
Until one night heâs sitting too close. Youâre laughing too hard. His hand brushes your knee, and he doesnât move it. And you still donât realize.
Not really.
.
Itâs a Tuesday night.
Wellâtechnically Wednesday. 1:12 a.m., according to your phone. Your apartment is dark except for the glow of your laptop and the soft blue from the streetlamp outside your window. You should be sleeping. Instead, youâre re-reading policy notes and trying not to think about the email from your landlord marked âurgent.â
The city is quiet, but your mind is loud.
Your phone buzzes.
BUCKY
Are you awake
No punctuation. Of course. You stare at it. Itâs not like him to text unpromptedâespecially not at this hour. You wonder for a second if itâs a mistake. Or if somethingâs wrong.
You call him.
It only rings once.
âHey,â he says, voice rough with sleep or something that isnât quite.
âYou okay?â you ask, softly.
A pause. âYeah. Just⌠couldnât sleep.â
You settle back against your pillows. âBad dream?â
He doesnât answer right away.
Then, quietly. âMore like a bad memory.â
You let the silence stretch, but you donât fill it. Youâve learned that about himâheâs not afraid of quiet. He just doesnât always know what to do with it. You hear a faint rustle, like heâs sitting down, maybe at his kitchen table. Maybe the couch. Maybe the floor. Heâs the kind of guy who sits on the floor without thinking about it.
âYou want to talk about it?â you ask.
âNot really.â
You nod, even though he canât see it. âOkay.â
A breath. Then, with a strange kind of gentleness: âYou ever feel like youâre⌠still in the middle of something, but everyone else thinks youâre past it?â
You exhale, slow. âYeah. All the time.â
Another pause. And then: âI thought when the shield went to Sam, that was it. That was my end point. Like Iâd done my part and now I could just⌠blend into the wallpaper. Fix things. Be useful. Pay back some debt I canât ever really name.â
He exhales.
âBut I still wake up and feel like Iâm waiting for orders.â
Your throat tightens.
âIâm not a soldier anymore,â he says, like heâs trying to convince himself. âI know that. But sometimes it feels like I lost the war and no one told me.â
You sit with that. Itâs a kind of grief, what heâs saying. The loss of purpose. Of identity. You think about what it means to carry history in your body. To be made of violence and guilt and memory, and still try to build something from it.
âYouâre not wallpaper,â you say. âAnd youâre not a soldier. Not unless you decide to be.â
A faint, surprised sound. âYou think I can just choose who I am now?â
âI think thatâs what healing is,â you say. âItâs not forgetting. Itâs choosing who you are in spite of it.â
Itâs quiet again. But softer, this time.
âThank you,â he says, and he means it.
Thereâs a beat.
Then he says, âYou want to come over?â
Your heart stumbles. âNow?â
âI justâŚâ he trails off. âI donât want to be alone.â
You hesitate. Not because you donât want to. You do. Too much, maybe.
âIâm in sweatpants,â you warn.
âI donât care,â he says. âIâm in worse.â
.
Which isânot fair.
Heâs in flannel pants and a faded Brooklyn Public Library tee, hair damp like he just stepped out of a shower, like this isnât his worst week in office or the worst day in months. He looks too human. Too close. Not like Congressman Barnes, not like the Winter Soldierâjust like a man who lives here. Alone.
âHi,â you say, because youâre a coward with a communication degree.
âHey,â he replies, voice low.
He steps back. You step in.
You move past him. He doesnât touch you, but he lingers close as you settle onto his couch. Thereâs a record playing low in the backgroundâsomething instrumental. Maybe jazz. Maybe something older. He sits next to you. Not quite touching, but near enough that you feel it.
Neither of you says much at first.
You sip the tea he makes you. Let your shoulders drop. And after a while, youâre both leaning back, side by side, staring at the ceiling like maybe itâll explain something.
âI donât let people in here much,â he says, out of nowhere.
You glance at him. âWhy not?â
He shrugs. âUsed to be a habit. Kept things safe. Controlled.â
âAnd now?â
He looks at you. Really looks. Like heâs cataloguing something important.
âI trust you."
The silence sharpens.
You feel itâsomewhere between your chest and your breath and the skin of your palms, warm where they rest against your knees.
He turns toward you, like heâs going to say something. His thigh brushes yours. Your heart skips.
You say his name. Soft.
âBucky.â
He leans in. Slow. So slow it hurts. His eyes flicker to your mouth.
And thenâ
He stops.
Youâre close enough to feel the warmth of his breath.
Close enough to break.
But he doesnât kiss you.
He just sits there, tension in his jaw, fingers curling against his leg like heâs holding himself back.
âI donât want to mess this up,â he says, barely a whisper.
You nod. You understand.
.
You donât sleep well that night. You don't even know how you got home.
Not because anything happenedâand maybe thatâs the problem. Something almost did. Something close enough to taste. But close doesnât keep you up at night. Hope does. Ambiguity. The memory of his breath near your cheek, the exact second he pulled away, and the way your name sounded in his mouth just before it.
You wake up tangled in sheets that smell like lavender detergent and stress. Your shoulder aches from the way you curled in on yourself, as if pretending sleep would solve the question of him.
It hasnât.
So you do what you always do: you compartmentalize. Ruthlessly. Viciously. Like a goddamn professional.
You slap concealer under your eyes, burn your tongue on gas station coffee, and tell yourself that youâre not thinking about Bucky Barnes. You are not thinking about how he almost kissed you. How his hand hovered at your knee like a promise he wasnât ready to make. How you wanted him to make it.
No. Youâre thinking about agenda items. Press follow-ups. Intern drama. Your inbox, which has gone feral overnight.
Youâre halfway through drafting a media roundup from your phone when your car buzzes with an intern's name.
You answer on instinct. âHey. Yeah, Iâm on my way inââ
âHave you seen the op-ed?â they cuts in.
Your fingers still on the steering wheel.
âIâwhat?â
They don't wait. âIâm sending it now. Check your messages.â
You pull into a spot on the shoulder, the coffee cup sloshing as you brake. Your phone dings.
The link stares back at you. Your thumb hovers.
You already know itâs going to be bad. You can feel it in their voice. In the silence after their breath. You tap anyway.
And there it is.
Is the Winter Soldier Still Lurking Beneath Congressman Barnes?
Itâs from a major outlet. Not a fringe blog, not some anonymous account online. Itâs written by a seasoned journalist, someone whoâs covered politics for two decades. The tone is surgically polite. It doesnât outright accuse him of anything, but the subtext is razor-sharp: can a man with his past truly be trusted with power?
Thereâs a pull quote in bold, center-page:
âA reformed weapon is still a weapon. No amount of legislation can erase that history.â
The rest of the article is worse.
It dredges everything. Not just his Hydra years, but the killings. The photo evidence. The old footage. The Wakandan reprogramming is mentionedâbriefly, half a paragraph, like itâs a footnote in a larger narrative of violence.
The author's polite language makes it more brutal. Less a hit piece and more⌠a thesis. Something cold. Inarguable.
You call him. He doesnât answer.
You call again. Still nothing.
So you go to his apartment.
Bucky answers the door in that old gray sweatshirt and a pair of worn sweatpants that could belong to any decade. His hairâs half-tied, his mouth set. No smile, but no walls up either. His eyes are dark. Tired in a way that goes bone-deep.
He steps aside and lets you in. You donât say anything about how he looks. You just take off your coat, make yourself at home, and sit down at the kitchen table.
The place is clean, quiet. Too quiet. Alpine is curled on the armrest of the couch like sheâs keeping watch.Â
âI didnât read it,â he says eventually. âDidnât need to.â
âItâs bad.â
He nods.
He doesnât sit. Just stands there, arms crossed, head bowed like heâs waiting for a verdict.
âYouâve been through worse,â you say. âThis isâpolitics. Itâs dirty.â
âItâs not about politics,â he replies, voice flat. âItâs about who I used to be.â
He says it like a fact. Not even bitterâjust exhausted.
âI spent so long trying to fix things,â he continues. âMake it right. Every day, I get up and try to be something new. Someone new. And it doesnât matter. All it takes is one article, one photo, and suddenly Iâm the fucking Winter Soldier again.â
His fists are clenched now. You can see the tension in his frame, the way heâs holding himself together like itâs a full-time job.
âThey didnât say anything that isnât true,â he adds. âThatâs the worst part.â
You stand. Cross to him slowly. Carefully. He watches you with that guarded look he gets when heâs bracing for a hit thatâs already landed.
âThey used the truth to tell a lie,â you say. âYouâre not that person anymore.â
âThen why does everyone keep seeing him?â His voice cracks on the last word. It shatters something in you.
You donât know what to say. Not right away. Because itâs not your job to fix what was done to him.
But maybe itâs your job to remind him whatâs changed.
So you touch his arm. The metal one. He flinchesâbut only for a second.
âYou said you didnât read it,â you say gently. âSo you didnât see the comments.â
His brow furrows.
âThousands of people,â you say. âCalling it a smear job. Defending you. Saying they trust you more than half the people in office. Veterans. Civilians. Kids who look up to you. People who believe in second chances because of you.â
You feel the shift before you see it. His shoulders slacken, just slightly.
âYouâre allowed to be upset,â you add. âYouâre allowed to be angry. But youâre not alone in this.â
He looks at you then. Really looks. And whatever wall he was holding upâwhatever mask he puts on for C-SPAN and strategy meetingsâit drops.
His voice is rough when he finally says, âCan you stay?â
âYeah,â you say. âOf course."
You stay right where you areâyour hand still resting on metal that hums faintly beneath your fingers, warm from him. Heâs quiet, but not calm. Not really. Thereâs tension in the way he breathes, in the slight tremor running down his arm. Like his body still remembers how to brace for impact, even when itâs just words.
Minutes pass like that. Long enough for the quiet to settle around you. For Alpine to leap silently onto the sill and stare out like sheâs keeping watch for both of you.
Then he shiftsâjust slightlyâand the couch creaks under the movement. He leans forward, elbows on knees, head bowed. The line of his spine curved like itâs bearing more than just his weight.
âBucky,â you say, tone softening. âTalk to me.â
Heâs not looking at you. His gaze is on the floor. Like if he meets your eyes, itâll all unravel.
âI say or do one wrong thing,â he says, âand suddenly Iâm a threat again.â
That last part is barely above a whisper.
You pause. Let the silence stretch.
âHey,â you say, carefully. âYouâre not a threat. Youâre a congressman.â
He lets out a dry laugh. âThat doesnât mean anything.â
âI donât know how to do this without screwing it up,â he says.
âThen let me help,â you say. âThatâs what Iâve been trying to do, Bucky. Every day.â
Thatâs when his eyes meet yoursâreally meet them.
âYou always come when I need you,â he says.
Itâs a simple sentence.
But it lands like a match dropped in a dry field.
You stare at him. His face. The way his hairâs falling loose at the front. The soft curve of his mouth, the line between his brows, the glow of his vibranium arm in the lamplightâgold against black against skin.
You stand, like youâre going to fetch water or pace or do something, but you donât make it far. Youâre near his bookshelfâheâs got a handful of novels, mostly well-worn, a few classics. One spine is cracked down the middle. Anotherâs bent in half. You reach for one, just to touch something, ground yourself.
âYou read a lot,â you say, just to fill the space. Just to breathe.
âYeah,â Bucky murmurs, and the sound of his voiceâthat low rasp, Brooklyn tugging at the edgesârakes down your spine. âHelps. When my headâs loud.â
âWhatâs your favorite?â
Thereâs a pause.
Then, quietly: âYou.â
You blink.
âYou,â he says slowly, âyou walk into my life and itâs like someone hit the off switch on the noise. Like thereâs finally room to think again. To want things.â
Your throat goes tight.
He swallows. You hear it. Feel it.
âI didnât mean toââ he stops, drags a hand through his hair, fingers brushing over the back of his neck. âI didnât plan on hiring you. Thought if I kept it distant, maybe I wouldnâtâŚâ
You glance over your shoulder. Heâs watching the floor like it holds answers. His jaw is tight, that line above his brow catching the lamplight. Heâs flushed high on the cheeks. His hair is curling a little from the heat of the day. It softens him.
You canât stop looking.
âWouldnât what?â you ask.
âWouldnât get attached.â
The words fall out of him, too quick, too raw. His accent thickens when heâs like thisâunguarded, unraveling.
He looks up at you then. And you swearâswearâyouâve never seen anyone look more exposed.
âI think about you,â he says, voice hoarse. âAll the damn time. Your voice. The way you talk when youâre excited. The way you wrinkle your nose when you read something stupid. And I tryâbelieve me, I tryânot to want any of it. Because you work with me. And youâre good. And I donât want to drag you down with my shit.â
âBuckyââ you start, but it breaks apart in your throat.
âBut you just kept coming. And youâre kind. And smart. And funny in a way that makes me feel like Iâve been asleep for years. And now I sit in meetings half-listening because Iâm wondering if youâre cold. Or if you ate. Or if you still think Iâm some idiot with a shiny arm and bad instincts.â
Youâre already turning. Reaching for him.
His eyes are so blue. Tired. Beautiful. Like storm glass worn smooth.
And his mouthâGod, his mouthâis parted, breathing shallow, like heâs already halfway to ruin.
âI donât know how to stop,â he whispers.
You donât want him to.
So you close the space, press your mouth to his like itâs the only thing that makes sense anymore.
He answers in kind. Gentle at firstâso carefulâbut then hungrier, hands finally finding you, clutching like maybe youâre real after all. Like maybe he gets to keep you.
His hands find your waist, one warm, one cool. He breathes you in like itâs the first breath after surfacing. You hold onto him, to the solidness of him, to the truth in everything he just said.
When you part, you rest your forehead against his, breathless.
âI didnât plan on you either,â you murmur. âBut I want this too.â
He opens his eyes. And thereâs something thereâtentative, but real. Hope, maybe.
You kiss him again, slow and sure, and this time, you donât stop.
The kiss deepens, and you feel it â the tension of months unspooling all at once. The press briefings, the late-night calls, the shared silences. Itâs in the way his mouth moves against yours, all reverence and restraint barely holding.
Then restraint snaps.
ââHe groans into your mouth, low and rough, the sound vibrating through your chest. One hand slides to your waist, the other cradling the back of your head, fingers threading into your hair with a kind of reverence that borders on desperate. You gasp when your back hits the edge of the bookshelf, books shifting and thudding behind you. His body presses close, firm and solid, muscle molded to muscle.
You donât breathe. You inhale himâhis scent, his heat, the way his tongue strokes into your mouth like heâs trying to stake a claim.
Your hands are greedy, curled into the soft cotton of his shirt before they slip under, dragging over warm skin and the defined ridges of his back. He shudders, hips pressing forward, and the answering moan that slips from your mouth is embarrassingly loud.
His mouth moves to your throat, hot and open, tongue dragging over the place your pulse stutters wildly. He kisses there once, then again, a third time just to hear the way your breath catches.
The shelves dig into your back, but you donât care. His mouth is on your throat now, slow, deliberate, like heâs trying to memorize the shape of your pulse.
âBucky,â you whisper.
His breath stutters. His forehead rests against your jaw for a second, and his voice is rough when he speaks.
âYou have no idea,â he murmurs, lips brushing your skin. âHow long Iâve wanted this.â
Your breath catches. Your hands grip his hoodie like youâre afraid the floor might drop out. Thereâs a pauseâsomething delicate in the airâand then you say, just to ground yourself:
âWow. That almost sounded like a line.â
He pulls back just enough to look at you. Eyes dark, lips kiss-bruised. And thenâfinallyâa real smile. Crooked. Devastating.
âYou think I say that to everyone I push against my bookshelf?â
You grin. âI donât know, Barnes. Youâve got a lot of books. Could be a whole system.â
He laughs. Really laughs. And then kisses you again, harder this time, a groan low in his throat when your hands slip under the hem of his sweatshirt. Skin meets skin and he makes a sound that short-circuits your brain.
Somehow, you make it upstairs.
Itâs clumsy and desperate in the best way. A trail of clothing, soft gasps, hands mapping territory thatâs been off-limits for far too long. He kisses you like youâre something precious and half-forbidden, and you can feel it in every press of his mouth, every whispered praise against your skin.
"Sweetheart, you're killing me," he groans while pressing those lips, those fucking lips, against your collarbone. "Need you to tell me this isnât a dream.â
By the time you hit the bedroom, youâre breathless. Dizzy. Grinning like an idiot.
And Bucky?
Heâs looking at you like heâs just figured out the worldâs best-kept secret.
You barely hit the mattress before heâs on you again, mouth dragging down your neck, hands urgent but careful. Like heâs cataloguing every inch of you, filing it away somewhere behind all the noise. His vibranium hand slips beneath your shirt, cool at first but quick to warm against your skin, gliding up your ribcage with reverence that makes you shiver.
âYou okay?â he murmurs, breath warm against your cheek.
You nod, maybe too fast. âYeah. Justâprocessing.â
He freezes. âProcessing what?â
âThat I used to mock your social media presence,â you whisper, grinning up at him. âAnd now Iâm about to get railed by the human embodiment of a Roman statue.â
His laugh is choked and surprised. âJesus.â
âWhat? You set yourself up for that.â
He drops a kiss to the hinge of your jaw, then your neck, then lowerâhis stubble scraping just enough to make your breath catch. âRemind me to fire you later.â
âYou canât afford me.â
âNot true,â he says, one hand sliding up the back of your thigh, warm and sure. âYouâre already here.â
You open your mouth for a reply, but then his mouth is on you againâtongue tracing a line down your collarbone, fingers tugging at your waistband like heâs been waiting forever.
âTell me if anythingâs too much,â he says, voice low and serious at your ear. âOr if Iââ
âYouâre not,â you breathe. âYouâre perfect.â
That earns you another groan, and then heâs kissing you again, deeper, tongue sliding against yours with filthy precision. You feel him smile against your mouth when you gasp, hands tangling in his hair, thighs bracketing his hips like you were built for this. Built for him.
Clothes disappear in pieces. His sweatshirt, your shirt, the rest in a tangle neither of you cares enough to untangle. And then itâs just skin. Heat. The stretch of him over you, under you, hands braced, mouth hot on your jaw, your throat, your chest. He takes his time.Â
"Bucky," You whisper, searching for the right words. "I want you inside me. Please."
He pushes out a sound akin to pain between his teeth. "Getting there." So impatient, goes unsaid.
The moment his hand falls in between your legs, digging past soft cotton and lace, where you're dripping and soft and needy for him, you don't think you'll ever, ever have enough of him. He's slow, at first, just bordering on exploratory. Stroking the pads of his fingers through your wetness until he finds your clitâoh, fuckâand goes to town, making you moan and clench around nothing.
"There you go. That's it," He coos. "You're doing so good."
You close your eyes, his hand pressing in deeper, harder, finding just the right rhythm to drive you insane, switching between your clit and your entrance until you're going mad. Then you hear him spit, the sound obscene and dripping against your skinâthen, a slap. "Oh my god," You murmur. "Oh, fuck."
"You're so wet," His brows furrow, like he can hardly believe it. Acting like he's not sinking his fingers inside of you, stretching you open with one, two fingers. "Soaked. Like I knew you would be, god. You're so tight and IâI bet you'd feel better around myâ"
He hits a spot that makes you keen, fast and rough and fucking you open. "Yes, yes, oh my god, pleaseâ"
"There?" His breath fans across your cheek. "Right there, huh?"
You nod, delirious and breathless and you black out the rest of the world, lost in the way he looks at you like you're the best damn thing in the world. You clench once, twice around his fingers until you're at the brink andâ
Come on my fingers, come on, sweetheart.
And who were you to resist?
For a moment, you just lay in the aftershocks, his fingers granting you enough mercy to slip out. You think that maybe he'll give you a break, maybe just for once second, but then his whole body shifts downwards, momentarily leaving you confused, and then his breath fans across your thighsâ"Just want a taste."
Those four words cause something in you to snap.
His mouth is sloppy and hot and wet, more focused on cleaning you up and licking up the remnants of your orgasm, leaving your clit sorely, sorely alone in a way that's too purposeful. In a way that has you bucking against the soft stubble of his face, desperate for any kind of stimulation.Â
It doesn't even seem like he's doing it for you, it's like he's doing it for himself. But then you beg and whine, the words reverberating in your throat, "Bucky, pleaseâhigher, please, baby, I need youâ"
A graze of his teeth and a sharp, tugging suck around your clit then and you cum again. Shaking and sighing and falling apart in his mouth.
When you look down, you can see just how much of a mess you've made, his face glistening with you, even in the dark. And he's looking at you so earnestly, so sweetly, like you've just given him the whole entire world.
"Do youâdo you think you can take more?" His eyes look at you, filled with concern, and that's all you need for your legs to start waking up again. "I didn'tâI dind't bring a condom and Iâ"
"I'm clean and I'm on the pill," You smile, lopsided and silly until he's mirroring yours, like he didn't just wrench the two best orgasms of your life out of you. Like he's not about to do it again. Just the way you like it. "And I want you to cum inside me. I wanna feel it. Shut up and get over here."
Bucky clucks his tongue, ever the dutiful man. "Yes, ma'am."
There's a momentâand then he's slotting the head of his cock into your entrance and you try not to be overwhelmed. He's hard and heavy and thick in a way you've never really experienced before, and for a minute, your brain short-circuits, in disbelief. You're doing this. You're really doing this. And suddenly, his cock goes all the way inside you with a pained groan.
His first thrust against you is messy, his hands having to spread your legs wide until you're arching against him. "Jesus, you're soâtight."
Then he's thrusting back in, his hands solid and heavy against your hips, not necessarily like a hammer, but in a way that makes your eyes roll back, slow and steady that you can feel every vein on his cock, lighting you up and finding places that not even your vibrator's been able to reach before. It's mind-numbing, it's relentless, it's perfect.
"Good girl," He whispers, pressing kisses up your neck to soothe the pressure of him inside you. "Taking me so well."
And then, like a reward, his vibranium hand leaves its place on your hip and starts caressing your clit, large fingers made impossibly gentle and finding a rhythm that parallels the way he ruts inside you.
"You're so good to me, so sweet," His words land like a sucker punch, and it makes you clench tighter, his pace faltering just the slightest bit. But he keeps going. "Always looking at me like that, don't know what you do to me, don't know how I can go without this. So much better than my dreams. Fuck."
"Can you come again for me? Pretty baby, can you do it again?"
It takes a harsh, rough swipe against your clit until you arch off the bed, eyes clenched shut and mouth wrenched open in a whine, and you bear down, coming for the third time that night.
And he's right there behind you, it doesn't take long before he speeds up, getting more frantic and desperate, and ohâhe's shoving himself inside you as deep as he can go and you can feel him pulse, achingâ"God, I love you. I love you so much, take it all for me."
You collapse underneath him, spent and so, so full. So perfect.
.
You go viral again.
Not for a tweet this time, but for a thirty-second clip someone posted from a town hall two weeks laterâBucky leaning in to answer a kidâs question about public transit, earnest as ever, saying something about âfreedom meaning more than just car ownership,â with Alpine meowing in the background because sheâd escaped her carrier under the table.
The quote is fine. Thoughtful, even. But itâs the look he gives you afterwardâoff-camera, off-script, soft in a way that has no business being softâthat turns the internet into a firestorm.
The caption?
sir. control yourself. your pr manager is right there.
You wake up to three missed calls, four texts from Nina (two of which are just screaming emojis), and one from your mom:
call me when youâre up
You do. Because you are a good daughter, even when half-asleep and mostly buried in a manâs too-soft duvet that smells like cedar and coffee and very recent sex.
âMorning,â your mom says, casual, like she didnât text you three times in a row at 6:13 a.m. âHowâs the job?â
You blink. âTheâjob?â
âYes, the job,â she says, like itâs the most obvious thing in the world. âThe one you got after insulting a congressman on the internet.â
You glance over at said congressman, currently shuffling out of the bathroom shirtless and towel-damp, rubbing his head with one hand while Alpine chirps at his feet like she owns him. Which she does.
âUh,â you say, eloquently. âItâs going⌠well.â
âGood,â your mom replies. âYou should call your aunt. She saw him on TV and keeps asking if heâs single.â
âMom.â
In the background, a faint beeping. âGotta go. Someoneâs coding. Love you!â
The line goes dead.
You flop back into the pillows, groaning into Buckyâs comforter like it can absorb your entire soul.
âEverything okay?â he asks, voice still rough with sleep.
âYeah. My mom thinks weâre married now.â
He raises an eyebrow. âWeâre not?â
You shoot him a look. He grins.
Then, like itâs nothing: âWhat are you up to today?â
Technically, heâs your boss. A sitting congressman. You manage his image, his agenda, his occasional tendency to go off-script and say things like âburn it all down and start overâ to a room full of journalists.
But now heâs shirtless in grey sweatpants, handing you coffee with Alpine perched on his shoulder like a parrot, and asking you to stay.
Not just for breakfast. For the day. Maybe longer. Maybe always.
It shouldnât hit you like it does. But it does.
âYouâre assuming I can concentrate,â you say, taking the mug like itâs a peace offering. âIn your bed. With you. Shirtless. Existing.â
He smilesâthat rare, lopsided thing he gives you when heâs caught somewhere between amusement and something gentler. âYouâve worked through worse.â
âTrue,â you mutter. âOnce wrote an op-ed from a TikTok house while one of my clients sobbed over a brand deal and a frat boy tried to deep-fry a toaster.â
âSee?â He leans down, presses a kiss to your temple like itâs just another part of your morning routine. âYouâll be fine.â
You look at him. At the man with a metal arm, a rescue cat, and a city full of people who expect him to change the world.
And heâs looking at you like youâre the thing that matters.
You exhale. âYouâre lucky I believe in workplace flexibility.â
âIs that what this is?â he says, already walking toward the kitchen, voice full of barely contained laughter. âWorkplace flexibility?â
You grin into your mug.
God help you, youâre in so deep.
You open your laptop from the warmth of his bed. Bucky pads away, Alpine trailing behind him like a tiny, loyal shadow. You draft emails. Sip coffee. Watch sunlight crawl across his floors. Like this was always where you were meant to be.
SO FUCKING GOOOOOOD
I mean, dafuq? this is my type of fanfic. I want to see more congress bucky x manager, assistant reader. mOorEee moreeeee don't stop writing the đđżđđżđđżđđż
this is me btwđ¤Şđ¤Şđ¤Şđ¤Ş
Sebastian Stan in public transportation (pics by a fan)

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Iâm so obsessed with Buckyâs metal arm.
I want it wrapped around my neck, squeezing my face, and controlling my breath.
I want to lick the cool vibranium plates, not caring if the nicked edges cut my tongue and make me bleed.
I want him to use his inhuman strength to pin me down with it and do whatever he wants to me.
I want to come home to a dark house one night and see the moonlight reflecting off the silver and red or black and gold knowing heâs there, hiding in the shadows and thereâs nothing I can do to stop him from having his way with me.
what is the problem with sabrina carpenter? you all sound like my uncle hating on women even though he had the queen madonna back then.
god forbid a girl who has a sense of humor and likes being sexy.