PLM, she/her , 24, southern usa âČ | @occultlibra
Libra ⌠Cancer â Aquarius ⟠|| ENTP, 8w7
general blog info:
i. I don't care if my work offends you, if you don't like it, don't read it.
ii. If you want to argue with me about how any of my work offends you, that's fine. I love winning, and your logic is probs biased and opinions based anyway.
iii. Please feel free to give me criticism on the quality of my work. If you don't like it because of the way it reads, please let me know, as I enjoy the critiques.
I only write female x reader fanfics--well, unless you are interested in a commissioned pieceâŠin that case DM me đ
long time x reader fanfic enjoyer with probs better taste than you, here are my fic recs if you are curious about what I read. đđąđ đ«đđđŹ
Here are my links to everything I have ever done below â
Current: âLONGSHOTâ | Bucky x Reader | 18+
Previous: âFREQUENCYâ | Soldier Boy x Reader | 18+
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being in love with a fictional character is wild like what do you MEAN iâll never feel their hands on my waist?? what do you MEAN theyâll never lean in real slow and say my name like it means something?? and what do you MEAN theyâre not real??
bucky just absolutely drilling your shit and youâre being so loud but heâs kinda shy about it oh my god
Bucky had you bent over the edge of the mattress, chest pressed into the rumpled sheets, ass up and thighs trembling as he drove into you from behind.
The room was filthy with sound.
Wet skin slapping together. The creak of the old bedframe. Your broken moans echoing off the walls every single time he buried himself deep enough to punch the air from your lungs.
He was relentless.
Every thrust shoved you forward across the mattress, cock stretching you open so perfectly it bordered on too much. Thick. Deep. Unforgiving in the best possible way.
âFuckâBucky!â you cried, voice cracking around his name when he hit that spot inside you again.
Your fingers clawed helplessly at the sheets.
You couldnât stop the noises spilling out of you. Every stroke dragged another shameless sound from your throatâhigh, needy, wrecked.
Behind you, Bucky faltered for half a second.
His hips stuttered.
âBaby⊠Jesus,â he muttered under his breath, voice rough with strain.
His metal hand tightened around your hip while his other slid up your spine uncertainly, fingers flexing like he didnât know what to do with himself.
âYouâre so loud,â he rasped. âThe neighborsââ
âDonât care,â you gasped immediately, pushing back against him desperately. âHarder. Pleaseââ
That completely destroyed him.
Bucky groaned low in his chest before snapping his hips forward harder, giving you exactly what you asked for. The force of it knocked a loud cry from your throat, your whole body jolting from the impact.
âShhhâfuck, doll,â he hissed, though there was no real warning in it.
Just embarrassment.
That shy little edge in his voice that always surfaced when he realized exactly how much noise he could pull from you.
It wouldâve been adorable if it wasnât so fucking hot.
His metal fingers dug deeper into your hip, almost bruising, while he kept pounding into you at that brutal pace. Each thrust dragged another wet moan from your lips.
He leaned over you suddenly, broad chest covering your back.
His stubble scraped your shoulder as he pressed closer, trying to hide you beneath him while his flesh hand slid around to cover your mouth.
âGotta quiet down,â he whispered against your ear, voice husky with restraint. âCanât have the whole block knowing Iâm fucking you like this.â
The words only made you louder.
A muffled whimper vibrated against his palm as he thrust deep again, cock dragging perfectly against that sensitive spot inside you.
Your legs shook violently.
Slick sounds filled the room every time he bottomed out, your arousal coating his thighs and dripping down your own.
Bucky cursed softly against the back of your neck.
âYouâre killinâ me here,â he groaned. âSo goddamn loud⊠and so wet. Shit.â
His hips slowed for one deep grind instead of a thrust, forcing you to feel every inch of him buried inside you.
Pleasure hit so hard it bordered on painful.
You sobbed against his hand.
âFuck,â he whispered shakily.
Then he pulled his hand away just enough for you to gasp in airâand immediately cry out again when he picked up speed.
The headboard started knocking against the wall in a punishing rhythm.
âBuckâBucky, oh my godâright thereââ
âQuiet, sweetheart,â he begged, but his own voice cracked with arousal.
His face was burning hot where it pressed into your hair.
The terrifying Winter Soldierâthe man who could dismantle a room full of enemies without blinkingâwas somehow shy about how loud he made you in bed.
You loved it.
So you deliberately moaned louder on the next thrust.
Bucky choked on a breath behind you.
âYouâre doing this on purpose,â he growled, though there was a breathless laugh tangled in the words.
His arm slid beneath your stomach suddenly, hauling you upward so your back arched deeper.
The new angle was devastating.
He drilled into you harder immediately, each stroke punching stars behind your eyelids.
âYesâfuck, yes!â
The cry tore out of you loud enough that you were positive the neighbors could hear every word.
Your walls fluttered around him as your orgasm started building hard and fast.
Bucky made a helpless sound.
Then his hand returned to your mouthâexcept this time two fingers slipped between your lips.
âSuck,â he whispered.
Shy voice.
Commanding tone.
You moaned around his fingers obediently while he kept railing you from behind, hips snapping forward with brutal precision.
The wet sounds in the room were obscene now.
Your muffled cries.
His uneven breathing.
The slick drag of his cock driving into you over and over again.
Bucky was losing control.
You could feel it in the way his thrusts turned erraticâdeeper, rougher, desperate for the way your body clenched around him.
âYou feel so good,â he rasped into your ear. âSo tight. So loud for me. Fuck⊠shouldnât like it this muchâŠâ
That did it.
Your orgasm hit like a wave.
Your entire body seized as you came with a scream that his fingers barely managed to muffle. Your pussy pulsed hard around him, milking him while your legs nearly gave out beneath you.
Bucky groaned brokenly behind you, hips stuttering as he fucked you through it anyway, dragging the orgasm out until you were shaking.
Only then did he finally ease you down onto the mattress.
But he didnât pull out.
Instead, he followed you down completely, covering your body with his own while staying buried deep inside you.
Slow rolls of his hips replaced the punishing thrusts from before, keeping the pleasure simmering low in your stomach while you both fought to catch your breath.
âGonna be the death of me,â he murmured softly against your temple before pressing a kiss there.
His voice had gone bashful again.
Sweet.
âCanât believe how loud you get,â he admitted. âMakes me crazy.â
You turned your head enough to grin at him despite how completely wrecked you felt.
âGood,â you whispered. âWant the whole world to know what you do to me, Sergeant.â
Bucky groaned immediately and buried his burning face into your neck.
But his hips still gave one firm, possessive thrust anyway.
You moaned againâquieter this time, but not quiet enough.
âBabyâŠâ he warned weakly, half laughing, half desperate.
âSo Walker,â you drawled, drink in hand as you leaned back in your chair beneath the crisp night air. âIs there any other proof you need?â
He smiled at you, but there wasnât much warmth in it.
Instead, he leaned toward one of the guys from his unit and asked casually, âWhat was the last time?â
The soldier looked up from his beer, then over at CURJ, who sat beside you with a cigarette dangling from his mouth and the smug satisfaction of someone witnessing a public execution.
âThat one was five minutes,â he shrugged, lifting his can toward you in salute.
Walker rolled his eyes immediately, leaning back in his chair as his gaze locked onto yours.
âI can beat that.â
âOh, please,â you scoffed. âJust drop it already. I proved what I needed to prove to youânot that I even needed to in the first place.â
You leaned forward slightly then, lowering your voice, âYouâre not gonna beat that.â
Walker leaned in too. Your faces ended up only inches apart, the two of you slipping effortlessly into the same dance you always seemed to perform whenever your units crossed paths. Whenever command left all of you unsupervised long enough for tensions to become entertainment.
âSure,â he breathed finally, not backing away. âYeah, okay. I wonât beat your time finding everyoneââ
He grabbed his beer from the table, still holding your stare.
âBut I bet I could find you in less than two minutes.â
You blinked at him, âSo could anyone.â
You dropped back into your chair again, leaving him leaned forward on his elbows by himself.
âSee, thatâs the thing,â he grinned. âNo changes to the hiding zone. Same area restrictions. You can go wherever you want.â
His grin widened.
âAnd honestly? I think I could do it in a minute.â
âYou could find me in a minute?â you repeated incredulously. âThen youâd be getting close to beating my own record.â
âWell, thatâs the thing,â he teased. âI could do it without using smell. Could you?â
âYeah,â you shrugged easily. âI could track your footsteps. Hear your heartbeatââ
âWithout any help,â he clarified.
You laughed through a scoff.
âWell, if Iâm being honest, almost anyone here could do that.â You gestured lazily with your drink. âI mean, whatâyou think Iâm serving here because of my enviable levels of valor and leadership skills?â
CURJ snorted beside you as you stole the cigarette from his hand.
âNo,â you admitted. âBut if Iâm being honestâand I think most people here would agreeâhowever the hell you got here wasnât because of those things either.â
Walker rolled his eyes, crossing his arms over his chest.
But you pointed the cigarette toward him anyway.
âBut,â you continued, âif you really can find meââ
You gestured broadly toward the sprawling black-site compound around you.
âIn all this space, in under a minuteâactually, you know what? Iâll even give you twoââ You leaned back again, nodding toward him. âThen maybe youâll finally prove yourself worthy of your title through sheerâŠcontentment.â
You squinted at him thoughtfully, âAnd maybe skill.â
Walker laughed under his breath, âIâll take that bet.â
âAnd if you lose?â you asked.
âI wonât.â
You rolled your eyes dramatically, âAnd if you do?â
His jaw tilted toward you. âThen Iâll spend the rest of my life listening to you, and everyone else, tell this story.â
âHah, alright.â you shook your head at him. âIt will be so nice in a few minutes when youâre wallowing in your disillusionment.â
A few people around the table laughed.
âAnd if you lose?â he asked.
You shrugged lazily, âThen I guess Iâll tell everyone you beat me in hide and seek.â
And what happened then?
Well, in black sites they sayâ
John Walkerâs ego grew three sizes that day!
Starting from ninety, CURJ counted down while Walker stood with his back turned.
The second the countdown started, you bolted. Boots slamming against packed dirt as you darted through base camp looking for somewhere to hide.
Not that the choice had been particularly difficult.
Everyone always wanted to play this game with you, but you never really got to be the one hiding. Which was unfortunate. Because for months now, youâd already had the perfect spot picked out.Â
Every single time you played seeker, you passed it thinking: Who the hell wouldnât hide there?
So often, in fact, that youâd even checked it a few times yourself just to see if anyone else had figured it out. Nobody ever had. It was cramped, sureâbut completely empty.
A midsized reinforced gun safe that had been cleared out earlier that evening after everyone grabbed ammunition for the mission none of you had been invited on.
Ten seconds left.
You glanced around once, then shoved yourself inside, pulling the heavy door nearly closed behind you and forcing yourself perfectly still.
The muffled shout of âGO!â echoed faintly through the steel. Then silence. And within thirty seconds, you realized something horrifying. You never heard Walker coming.
Your eyes widened at the sudden metallic creak of the handle turning. And thenâLight flooded the safe. You found yourself face-to-face with him, the green wash of a nearby lamp casting strange shadows across his features.
âFound you,â he grinned.
You rolled your eyes instantly, âLucky guess.â
You pushed off the back wall to climb out past himâBut his hand caught your shoulder immediately. Hard.
He shoved you backward again until your skull thudded against the back of the safe with a metallic clang. The heavy door swung shut behind him. Now the two of you were crammed inside together in near darkness, forced chest-to-chest in the tiny space.
Your pulse jumped. Not fear. Never fear. Something worse.
âWhat are you doing?â you spat, glaring up at him.
Your eyes dragged over his face automatically anyway. His eyes. His nose. His mouth.
Walker only grinned wider.
âIâve watched you walk past this spot at least four different times now,â he said. âNobodyâs ever hidden here before.â
âBut you knew I wanted to,â you finished for him.
Your eyes narrowed. A small smile tugged at your mouth despite yourself.
âWhy didnât you just say that in front of everyone else?â You gestured vaguely around the cramped metal box currently trapping both of you together.
âOh, I will,â he promised casually.
Then he stepped closer. Much closer, âBut Iâm interested in something else first.â
âYeah?â you breathed.
Your head tilted back against the steel wall to look up at him properly as his face started leaning down toward yours, âAnd whatâs that?â
He didnât answer. Just reached up, grabbed your jaw in one handâAnd kissed you.
And thenâ
The true meaning of honor came through.
And Walkerâs cock grew the length of one flaccid, plus two.
The two of you stayed inside that safe for ten minutes. Neither of you went all the way. Neither of you even acted like this would become a regular thing afterward.
But despite your own usual arrogance, you didnât entirely hate the feeling of someone finally putting you in your place for once. Someone who wasnât your superior officer. Someone who wasnât trying to parent you. Just someone capable of matching you blow for blow.
And now that his cock didn't feel quite so wound tight, he spurted his load from your handjob that night!Â
John Walker. Cocky, arrogant idiot that he was. Was the only person there who had ever truly outsmarted you.
With a smile to his soul, he went back to his unit,Â
Cheerily shouting âI beat longshot,â and âshe fuckinâ blew it!â
PRESENT DAY
âIâm surprised youâre so spry for an old man.â
âWhat?â Barnes huffs out a laugh against your skin.
âI mean it,â you mumble sleepily, fingers combing through his hair while his head rests heavy against your chest. âSerum and all, you are pushing a hundred, arenât you?â
âOh, God,â he groans immediately, biting lightly into your shoulder. âDonât bring up my age while Iâm still inside of you.â
A laugh vibrates through your chest at that.
âMmm,â you hum, peeking down at him through half-lidded eyes. âThere is kind of a monumental age gap, isnât there?â
âI donât feel that old.â
âI donât think you do either,â you agree softly.
The room had long since fallen quiet around the two of you. The frantic violence from earlier dissolved into something warm and heavy now. Sweat cooling slowly on your skin beneath the dim bedroom lighting. The sheets twisted around both your legs. His broad body half covering yours still, warm enough that you could feel the lingering heat radiating off his chest every time he breathed.
And despite the joking, despite the casualness of the conversationâ
Neither of you had actually moved very far.
He was still buried deep inside you, softened now but unwilling to leave yet, like separating too soon would somehow ruin whatever this was becoming.
Barnes shifts slightly with a tired groan before finally rolling off your chest and onto his side beside you, one arm tucked beneath his head.
âBut then again,â you continue, turning your face toward him. âSteve definitely seems old.â
That gets a real laugh out of him.
Low. Worn out. Warm. His head tips back against the pillow as he shakes it slowly.
âWhat?â you grin.
âIâm older than him,â he admits.
Thereâs a beat of silence. Then your hand flies over your mouth.
Barnesâ eyes narrow instantly. He turns his head toward you slowly, âAre you laughing at me?â
âNo,â you choke out immediately through muffled laughter. âNo, itâs justââ
You fail miserably at finishing the sentence. Because the look heâs giving you completely derails your train of thought.
Heâs propped up on one elbow now, metal hand wrapping around your wrist as he tugs your hand away from your mouth. His hair is wrecked beneath the warm bedroom lighting, lips swollen from kissing, eyes dragging slowly across your face before landing on your mouth. Then back up. And suddenly the air changes all over again.
Your stomach tightens. Because somehowâeven after everything that just happenedâhe still looks at you like heâs starving.
Your fingers twitch against the sheets. And thenâ
Your ear flicks sharply toward the sound of the front door opening somewhere out in the compound hallway.
Both of you freeze instantly. The spell breaks hard enough to be almost comical. Barnesâ eyes widen. Yours do too.
âOh fuck,â you whisper.
Neither of you speaks for a second after that. Just stare at each other in mutual panic while your enhanced hearing picks up muffled footsteps somewhere outside his bedroom.
Instinct takes over immediately.
You shove lightly at his chest, untangling yourself from him with visible reluctance despite the urgency of it. Your body protests the separation instantlyâwarmth leaving, emptiness replacing itâand judging by the look on his face, he feels it too.
You grab your dress from where it had been discarded on the floor and tug it back over your head as quickly as possible, fingers fumbling slightly from exhaustion.
Barnes just watches you from the bed. Still naked. Still completely dazed looking. Hair flattened on one side from the pillow. His lips part slightly as if he wants to stop you from leaving. As if heâs physically fighting the urge to tell you to come back.
And honestly? Every nerve in your body is screaming at you to crawl back into that bed. To ignore whoever just came home. To let him pull you back underneath him and stay there until morning.
But instead, you move toward the bedroom door barefoot, thighs aching slightly with every step.
Just before reaching the handle, though, you pause. Then glance down. Your discarded panties still lay abandoned near the foot of the bed.
You bend down quickly, scoop them up between two fingersâand without warning, sling them directly across the room. Perfect aim. The fabric smacks lightly against Barnesâ face.
He blinks in stunned silence while he takes hold of them, eyes dropping down to the delicate material in his hand. Then slowly lift back toward you.
And the expression on his faceâcompletely wrecked. Like that somehow affected him more than half the things youâd done earlier.
You fight back a grin. Then wink at him as you slip out the bedroom door, quietly pulling it shut behind you. And as you disappear into the hallway all either of you can think about is that his come is still dripping down your thighs beneath the hem of your dress.
AFGHANISTAN, MAY 2015
âHow come I never get to go?â you complained.
Your head rested against Thomasâ chest, the two of you cramped together in the tiny twin bed shoved against the wall of the darkened barracks. Early morning still clung to everything around you. Cold air. Dim blue light slipping through the narrow windows. The distant metallic clatter of people already beginning to prepare for the day outside.
âYouâre too young,â he smiled, brushing a strand of hair away from your face and tucking it carefully behind your ear.
âThatâs hilarious coming from you,â you retorted immediately, âconsidering you screw me after all.â
âStop being so crass,â he laughed, swatting lightly at your shoulder before leaning down to bite gently at the side of your neck.
Then he pushed himself out of bed with a groan.
âYou like it,â you grinned.
âHardly,â he answered, though the smile pulling at his mouth ruined the lie instantly.
He glanced around the floor for his clothes while you remained sprawled dramatically across the cot, stealing as much warmth from the blankets as possible.
âIs it unbecoming?â you teased, mimicking his polished accent. âPerhaps I ought to comport myself more professionally.â
Thomas paused halfway through reaching for his pants, staring at you in disbelief, âThat was awful.â
You burst out laughing while he shook his head under his breath and pulled his trousers on.
âYouâre projecting because your American accent is terrible,â you informed him smugly. âRemember, I only have to hear something once.â
âAnd read, and smell, andââ
âWhich is why,â you interrupted, pointing at him from the bed, âgoing back to the original questionâwhy am I not allowed on the intel missions? Iâd gather more information than literally anyone else there.â
âYou donât know that.â
âHow would that not be the case?â you pressed, raising an eyebrow.
âWellâŠâ he started slowly, threading his belt through the loops of his pants as he thought. âOne, you are too young, darling.â
âButââ
âAnd two,â he interrupted firmly, glancing over at you, âmost of the men going on these assignments also spent time in the CIA or MI6.â
The buckle of his belt clicked sharply into place.
âI was trained in espionage my entire life,â you muttered, pouting harder now.
âMhm. And at what ages exactly?â he asked knowingly.
âI dunnoââ
âYour entire childhood,â he corrected for you.
âWhat the fuck? With that logic, learning to ride a bike doesnât count until youâre eighteen.â
âRight,â he nodded seriously while searching the floor for his undershirt, âand how old do you have to be to do an Ironman?â
You grimaced immediately, âThatâs disgusting.â
âOh, for Christâs sake.â He laughed tiredly, sticking a hand out toward you. âI meant the triathlon, and you know that.â
You mumbled something incoherent into the blanket.
âHow old?â he pressed.
âEighteen,â you admitted reluctantly.
âExactly. And how old are you now?â
He tugged the shirt over his head as you stared up at the ceiling thoughtfully.
âTwentyâŠprobably,â you answered after a moment. âAlthough honestly, I could be younger than that. They go by the start of the year instead of my actual birthday, so Iâve never really known.â
Thomas paused.
Slowly, he looked over at you.
âChrist,â he muttered. âYou couldâve been a minor this entire time and Iâd have absolutely no idea.â
âMmm,â you hummed smugly. âSome MI6 operative you are.â
A weak smile tugged at his mouth before he exhaled and began pacing slowly in front of the bed, finishing dressing while he talked.
âAlso,â he cleared his throat, âRhinoâs coming on this one. Theyâre trying to start integrating him intoââ
âHAH!â You sat upright immediately, âRhino is going, but not me?â
âRhino has served his time,â Thomas defended.
You rolled your eyes so hard it nearly hurt.
âAnd besides,â he continued carefully, âeven if I had wanted you thereâŠhe requested otherwise.â
You blinked, âHe requested otherwise?â
Thomas visibly regretted saying it the second the words left his mouth.
âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?â
âNot everyone likes you, you know.â
âI know that, butââ
âAnd,â he continued over you, âyou do occasionally have a tendency to be somewhatâŠabrasive.â
You stared at him in disbelief while he bent down to retrieve his overshirt from the floor.
âHe starts every argument weâve ever had!â you whisper-yelled, still mindful of the other soldiers sleeping nearby.
âAnd you,â Thomas pointed out calmly while slipping his arms through the sleeves, âhave a habit of escalating arguments into psychological warfare.â
âWhatever,â you grumbled, crossing your arms. âHe just doesnât want me there because he wants you to himself.â
Thomas pinched the bridge of his nose immediately, âNot this again.â
âHe is jealous,â you insisted, beginning the same argument the two of you had apparently been having for months now. âYou know that. Donât make me feel like a homophobe.â
âMaybe heâs jealous of your abilities,â Thomas sighed, crouching down to lace his boots, âbut he is certainly not jealous of me.â
âOh, yes he is,â you argued immediately. âHe and I got along perfectly fine before he found out you and I were fornicating.â
Thomas physically recoiled, âChrist, âfornicatingâ makes it sound so clinical.â
âThatâs because thatâs what Rhino says!â you whisper-shouted dramatically, lowering your voice into a poor imitation of him. ââWhere were you? You and Thomas fornicating again? Donât you know we have a job to do?ââ
You waved your hand dismissively, âFuck off.â
Thomas blinked at you slowly after finishing tying his boot. Then he stood upright again, arms crossing over his chest.
âHeâs jealous,â you shrugged confidently. âI know it. CURJ knows itââ
âCURJ is an atrocious judge of character,â Thomas interrupted. âPart of the reason he stays behind with you, by the way.â
âOh, please.â
Thomas ignored you entirely after that, focusing instead on buttoning the rest of his shirt before finally turning back toward you with his hands on his hips. Posing dramatically.
âHow do I look?â he asked.
Then he leaned down and kissed you softly.
âGreat,â you murmured against his mouth. âI hope Rhino appreciates it as much as I do.â
Thomas laughed under his breath.
âGoodbye, Staff Sergeant,â he drawled, already cracking the bedroom door open.
âYeah, yeah,â you scoffed, waving him off dismissively.
He winked once.
Then disappeared into the cold blue light of early morning.
PRESENT DAY
And if the universe truly had it out for you and Barnes, it had now been five full days since youâd last gotten to properly bask in each otherâs presence.
Partially because classes had started again, and apparently your masterâs degree wasnât going to earn itself. And partially because you were stillâŠapprehensive. Not about him. Never about him.
See, you craved him in ways that bordered on humiliating. Your body mourned his absence constantly now, warmth curling low between your thighs at the mere thought of him. Sometimes youâd catch traces of his scent lingering in places around the compound and nearly lose your mind over it.
But you were still haunted. Still dragged around by ghosts that refused to die quietly. And if you were being honest with yourself, Barnes was too.
The two of you were scarred in matching places. Equally ruined. Equally frightened of what it might mean to actually let someone close enough to touch those wounds.
So had you been avoiding him? Yes. And no.
You genuinely had been busy. Busy enough that youâd even slept at the Tower the night before to avoid commuting before an early morning class. And honestly, heâd been busy too. Steve kept Barnes occupied as often as possible. Training. Missions. Recovery work. Sam occasionally tagging along, albeit somewhat reluctantly depending on the nature of the exercise.
The two of you had crossed paths briefly a few days ago while discussing the next phase of the mission. Russia. This upcoming weekend. A quick in and out to check if the location youâd both found in Pierreâs office was truly anything of interest. Satellite imagery littered across the conference table. Maps spread out beneath everyoneâs hands. Plans. Timelines. Entry points.
Steve had been talking almost the entire time. Only Sam seemed to actually be listening. Because you and Barnes had spent the meeting doing something else entirely. Watching each other. Your eyes dragging back and forth in that same dangerous rhythm youâd been stuck in long before the two of you finally ended up ruining each other in his bedroom.
That meeting hadnât lasted nearly long enough.
And now, by Friday afternoon, as you sat tucked away in one of Columbiaâs libraries surrounded by exhausted graduate students and the smell of old paper, all you could think about was the fact that youâd inevitably be around Barnes again this weekend. And you genuinely couldnât decide whether that thought turned you on or terrified you. Maybe both.
Part of you wanted to tease him relentlessly. The other part wanted to drag him into the nearest empty room the second you got the chance. But honestly? Where was the fun in making it easy for him? You wanted him to chase you. You wanted him irritated. Wanted that pent-up frustration wound so tight inside him that he finally snapped again just like he had the other nightâ
âWhatâre you doing your thesis on again?â Keatonâs voice yanked you violently back to reality.Â
Christ. If anyone else in this room could smell as well as you could right now, theyâd probably realize the entire library had become saturated with the thick weight of your arousal. Just the thought of Barnes did this to you now? Pathetic.
âI never told you,â you grumbled, fingers continuing to move across your keyboard despite your mind being somewhere else entirely.
âOkay,â he frowned at you. âThen what the fuck are you doing your thesis on?â
Your eyes flicked up briefly before dropping back to your screen.
âWhat are you doing your thesis on?â you countered flatly.
He rolled his eyes.
âUnbelievable,â he muttered. âAnd I asked first.â
âBombs.â
You said it casually enough that he blinked.
âWhat, thatâs it?â
âWhat do you want from me?â
âJesus,â he scoffed. âI always forget youâre majoring in counter-terrorism.â
âAnd forensic analytics,â you added absently.
âCan I be honest?â
âYou usually are.â
âYou definitely do not look like the type to study either of those things.â
âIt intrigues me,â you shrugged.
Not really. But he didnât need to know that. Keaton had absolutely no idea those were probably the subjects you understood better than almost anyone else your age. Maybe better than most professionals.
âWhat, are you trying to work for the CIA or something?â
You shrugged again. You had considered it. Honestly, life seemed to keep shoving you in that direction whether you wanted it to or not.
âSure,â you answered vaguely.
âOkay,â he shook his head. âWhatever.â
Your eyes flicked toward him again before you cleared your throat.
âMilitary family,â you muttered finally. âAnd itâs not really just bombs. More the psychology behind the people who make them.â
That got his attention, âWhat do you mean?â
âWhat kinds of people gravitate toward certain compounds. What personalities correlate with different construction methods. Whoâs more likely to use a pressure cooker versus an IED. Stuff like that.â
Keaton leaned back slightly, âHave you already researched all that?â
âObviously.â
âWhat kind do you think Iâd make?â
You slowly looked up from your laptop, âUh oh.â
âUh oh what?â
âIs this some sort of test? Should I be reporting you to the police?â
âOh, please.â
âHm.â A grin tugged slowly at the corner of your mouth. âProbably some kind of IED.â
Keaton barked out a laugh.
âNo seriously,â you continued casually. âYouâd probably use propane tanks. Something incendiary enough to rupture pressurized fuel and ignite it.â
His smile slowly started fading as you kept talking.
âMaybe stuff them inside duffel bags,â you added thoughtfully. âLeave them in the school cafeteria and wait for ignitionââ
âDude,â he groaned immediately. âSeriously? Columbine?â
You dragged your hand toward your mouth, biting down hard on your finger to stop yourself from laughing.
âThose ones didnât even explode!â he whisper-shouted, earning an aggressive shhh from a nearby student.
âI know,â you mumbled, "that's the point.â
âIâm literally majoring in chemistry,â he reminded you incredulously.
Shrugging, you reached into your bag and pulled out a thick stack of papers before dropping them onto the table in front of him.
âHere,â you sighed. âRead it if you want. Tell me what you think.â
You stood then, stretching your legs until several joints popped loudly beneath the silence of the library. Grabbing your bag, you started backing away from the table.
âYou know,â you added thoughtfully, âoriginally I wouldnât have guessed bomb at all.â
Keaton narrowed his eyes suspiciously.
You looked him up and down once. Slowly, âYou seem more like a Virginia Tech kind of guy to me.â
Then you turned and started walking toward the library exit.
Behind you, you heard him shove his chair back loudly as he hurried after you.
âOkay, first of all,â he started indignantly, âthat is an insane stereotype against educated and socially awkward white guysââ
âŠ
You ended up debating Keaton for another few hours after that, the two of you sitting inside of your car, probably saying things that you shouldnât have been speaking out loud.Â
Most of it was hypothetical nonsenseâthe two of you deliberately arguing against your own beliefs solely for the satisfaction of continuing the argument. Playing devilâs advocate until neither of you even remembered what side youâd originally been defending.
At some point, Keaton texted some guy from his Electrodynamics class to come smoke the two of you out. Which was how all three of you eventually ended up parked near the north side of Central Park, sprawled out in the grass beneath the fading winter sky, passing joints back and forth while discussing domestic terrorism like it was a philosophy lecture.
The city buzzed around you endlessly. Distant sirens. Honking traffic. The hum of people moving through sidewalks several blocks over.
And slowlyâvery slowlyâthe ability to debate at all started dissolving entirely. Sentences stopped making sense halfway through speaking them. The world around you became too saturated somehow. Streetlights glowing too orange. Taxi signs too yellow. The sky too blue even as the sun dipped lower.
You kept remembering you were high every few minutes and having tiny internal panic attacks over it before one of them inevitably distracted you again.
There were momentsâbrief ones, but sharpâwhere it almost felt like your life before this didnât exist at all. Like the three of you had always been here. Always been sprawled out in the grass beneath the city lights with smoke curling into the cold evening air. Your past dissolving upward with it, burning away slowly like ash at the end of the joint passing between your fingers.
And maybe that thought shouldâve disturbed you more than it did.
Because for a few fleeting moments, laying there half-sunken into the hill beside Central Park, you got a glimpse into something dangerously close to normalcy. Maybe this was what your life wouldâve looked like if youâd been born someone else.
Sitting on the bleachers behind a public high school after dark, laughing with other burnout teenagers while someone passed around cheap weed they stole from an older sibling. Going home afterward to some quiet suburb. A nuclear family. A golden retriever waiting at the front door. Sneaking out into your boyfriendâs car at night just because you could. Walking through a shopping mall with your friends on a Saturday afternoon without needing a full day and a half afterward to recover from the sensory overload of it all.
The thoughts crept in slowly. Heavy. Painful. Not quite grief, but close enough to sting. A strange sort of mourning for a life you never actually had the chance to miss. But every time the spiral started dragging you under, something would interrupt it. Redirect it.
Like when Keaton laughed so violently at something youâd said that he literally slid halfway down the hill into a patch of muddy grass. The thing youâd said wasnât even remotely funny. That somehow made it funnier.
By the time you finally drove back toward the compound, the winter sun hung low on the horizon in molten shades of gold and pale pink.
The city had experienced one of those strangely warm winter daysâthe kind that made people temporarily forget it was still January. Enough snow had melted into slush along the roadsides that your entire Socratic seminar earlier had somehow devolved into climate change discourse completely unrelated to the actual lesson.
By the time you pulled into the compound driveway, the air still wasnât cold. Not really. Your dashboard glowed softly back at you. 65°F. You sat in the parked car for a second too long after shutting the engine off. Blinking. Thinking very hard about whether you looked high.
You definitely looked high.
And then, naturally, your brain spiraled againâbecause this must be what normal teenagers felt like after sneaking home from a party. Sitting in the driveway trying to sober up enough that their parents wouldnât notice they were fucked up.
The thought almost made you laugh.
Your eyes felt dry and heavy, every blink slightly delayed. Your tongue kept sticking awkwardly to the roof of your mouth from cottonmouth. Your body existed in that strange floaty disconnect where your limbs somehow felt both too heavy and too light at the exact same time.
The heat inside the car hummed softly around you while the dashboard lights glowed dim blue against your face. And one final thought kept circling your head. Repeating itself over and over like a hymn the entire drive back.Â
Youâd asked Keaton what his childhood had been like.
He told you he grew up in a suburb outside Chicago. Somewhere near where the Home Alone house was filmed. Parents divorced, but amicably. Happily remarried afterward. Everyone still friendly enough to spend holidays together.
He said both sides of his family were full of academics and artists. Professors. Musicians. Architects. He had a sister and a younger brother. His family apparently had enough money to send him to private school, but according to him, his parents thought private schools were âcorny and entitled,â so they shoved him into public school instead.
He played trombone in marching band. And during spring semester, he was a forward on the boys soccer team.
Then he told you about getting caught smoking weed before homecoming with a bunch of other kids. How the school nearly put it on his permanent record. How his parents panicked over the possibility of it affecting college admissions, internships, scholarshipsâhis entire future hinging on one stupid decision made behind a football field at fifteen.
Apparently that scare was what finally forced him to get serious academically.
And then the story that kept replaying in your head the most; He told you that after high school graduation, the first thing he did when he got home was sit in the kitchen with his mom and split a pot brownie together. But then, thirty minutes later, both of them realized the family pug had also gotten into the stash.Â
Apparently the dog survived.
And for some reason, that stupid fucking story lingered. Not because it was particularly interesting. But because it sounded so painfullyâŠordinary. So warm. So harmless. No covert facilities. No military compounds. No handlers. No sensory dampeners shoved into your skull before puberty. Just a teenage boy redeeming himself, and then getting high with his mother while a pug stole edibles off the counter.
You stared blankly out the windshield for another few seconds. Then, before the spiral could repeat itself again, you grabbed your bag and headed inside.
The second you stepped into the compound, the overhead lighting hit you like a flashbang.
âJesus Christ,â you hissed under your breath, squinting immediately.
And just like that, you became painfully aware of how high you still were. The room slowly faded into focus around you. Too many people. Too many eyes. Two figures in the kitchen. Three in front of the television. And despite being slightly noseblind to it nowâThe smell was probably horrific.
See, that was the nice thing about prescription medication. Most of it barely smelled like anything. Usually the only giveaway was behavioral.
This? This smelled like youâd been hotboxed inside a skunkâs asshole.
You stopped dead in the middle of the living room, lips pulling inward as you fought back lingering laughter from earlier.
On the couch sat Steve, Wanda, and fucking Vision. All three staring at you. Wellâ Vision wasnât really staring at you. Which honestly made the situation infinitely funnier. He remained completely glued to the television, utterly entranced by the movie currently playing. Top Gun.
You had the sudden hilarious realization that none of them had probably seen it before. You start laughing out loud to yourself as you turn your head from them.Â
Meanwhile, from the kitchen came the exact opposite energy. Sam stood behind the island staring at you like heâd just watched a deer walk into traffic.
And behind himâLeaning against the fridge with his arms crossedâJames. Your stomach tightened instantly. God. Even high, your body reacted to him immediately.
âHeyyyy,â you greeted far too loudly as you wandered past the kitchen, dropping your bag carelessly onto the floor before squeezing yourself between Steve and Vision on the couch.
âOh, my God,â Sam said from somewhere behind you.
Someone sniffed audibly. Then Steve leaned away from you with visible concern.
âHey,â he frowned, âdid you hit a skunk on your way over here?â
âOh my God,â Sam repeated.
You could hear his footsteps approaching from behind the couch, echoing strangely in your head as he rounded into view in front of you, silhouetted against the television.
âStaff Sergeant,â he drawled dramatically, crossing his arms. âAre you stoned?â
âCould you move?â you scoffed immediately, waving a hand at him. âYouâre blocking the TV.â
Sam shook his head in disbelief before reaching into his pocket and pulling out his phone. The flashlight turned on instantly.
âWhat the fuck!â you shouted, recoiling violently as he shined it directly into your eyes. âMy eyes are sensitive to light!â
âYeah,â he laughed, turning it back off, âwell they definitely are now.â
Ignoring him entirely, you leaned conspiratorially toward Steve instead who is still leaning away from the lingering weed smell with deep suspicion. To be fair, the extra joint the guy had given you may have been smoked in the car on the drive home.
âYou know,â you whispered loudly to Steve while gesturing toward the television, âthe two guys in this?â
You pointed dramatically at the screen, âGay.â
Steve blinked at you, âWhat?â
Pursing your lips together seriously, you nodded, âYup. Gay.â
âNo way,â Steve scoffed immediately. âNo. IceMan is not gay.â
âOh, well on the contraryââ Your sentence trails slightly as Barnes drifts into your peripheral vision, finally leaving the kitchen and walking into the living room.
Even from several feet away, your attention locked onto him immediately.
âIceMan,â you continue slowly, eyes now entirely on Barnes, âis the most gay.â
Barnesâ mouth twitched. Just barely.
Then suddenly Wanda grabbed the remote off the coffee table and shut the TV off entirely. Vision looked genuinely devastated.
âWhat the hell,â you groaned dramatically, though your eyes still hadnât left Barnes. âIt wasnât over yet.â
âYou just got here.â Wanda gestured an unamused hand towards you.
âSo?â You scoff. âItâs an American classic.â
âSee!â Sam shouts, pointing a finger at Steve. âI told you, everyone has seen it. You three are late.â
âYeah, yeah,â Steve brushes him off.Â
Sam grins, then looks away from his friend, taking in the rest of the room around him.Â
âIâm bored,â Wanda announced plainly. âIs there anything to drink? Or do? At all? Itâs Friday.â
Wandaâs voice faded in and out just a moment as Sam took in you and Barnes. Because, again, with the staring. The way you and Barnes have apparently forgotten other people existed.
Barnes standing there with his arms crossed, head tilted slightly as he watched you carefully. Studied you. And despite the haze in your head, despite the weed, despite the noiseâYou could still feel the weight of him perfectly.
Sam pulls a hand up to his mouth, cheeky smile pulling at the corners as he replays an old conversation with you in his head:Â
âAlso, heâs just looking at you. Cut the guy a break. Hell, for all you know he could be into you, and you just outed him in front of the whole compound!â
âPlease,â you scoffed. âThat was the first time heâs ever even spoken to me.â
âThe one person here that probably can empathize with you â that can even begin to understand â is Barnes.â
âI donât know,â you announced suddenly, still staring at Bucky. âItâs nice outside tonight. The poolâs heated.â
Finally, you turned toward Wanda with an enormous grin, âWhy donât we go swimming?â
Wanda considered it for a second, âI could be convinced,â she admitted. âBut I donât have a swimsuit.â
âUh, no,â Sam interrupted immediately. âI hate to remind you kid, but you, me, and the two dinosaurs will be headed out of the country in the morning.â
Then he pointed directly at you, âAnd youâre high already, so, I think a cold shower and a bed may be more appropriate.â
âOh, please,â you waved him off dismissively, rolling your eyes, moving to stand up.
âWait,â Steve interrupted suddenly, brows furrowing. âDid you smoke reefer?â
âReefer?â Wanda repeated in disgust.
âHe was hanginâ around with the jazz cats back in the day,â Sam snorted. âAinât that right, Rogers?â
Ignoring the current line of conversationâand the newly simmering headache from the overhead lightsâyou brush past Barnes carefully. Deliberately. Your eyes dragged slowly up and down his body as you made your way towards the hallway.Â
His jaw tightened almost instantly.
âWhatâs wrong with reefer?â Steve asked defensively as Wanda stood from the couch. âWhat do they even call it now?â
âLiterally anything else,â she muttered.
Your ears ringing for a moment, skin tingling where you and Barnes had just brushed.Â
And behind everyone else, behind your silhouette as it sauntered away, he quietly watched you disappear with an expression that made heat crawl all the way down your spineâone you could feel burning sharp into your back.Â
âŠ
Surprisingly, considering the amount of prescription medication and alcohol youâd consumed throughout your life, cannabis had never really become part of the equation.
Sure, youâd dabbled in it a handful of times overseas. Afghanistan had a way of making people willing to try almost anything at least once.
But most of the time, it did exactly what it had done yesterday: Paranoia. Panic. A slow, spiraling avalanche of thoughts you couldnât shut off once they started. And the remnants of that spiral haunted you through most of the night. Eyes wide open in the dark. Staring at the ceiling. Heart pounding so hard in your ears you kept having to consciously ground yourself, genuinely convincing your own brain you were not about to randomly have a stroke.
Because somewhere during the high, youâd suddenly become overwhelmed with this awful feeling that you had missed out on something monumental. Like everyone else had attended some universal event youâd somehow skipped. As if your life had been one long series of watching other people exist normally from behind reinforced glass.
And the worst part? You knew it wasnât even your fault. Your lifeâreally, your entire existence up until nowâhad never truly belonged to you in the first place.
So by morning, running on almost no sleep and lingering waves of cannabis-induced anxiety wrapped tightly around your nervous system, even the freezing shower hadnât helped. Even the cold water pounding against your skin couldnât drag you fully back into yourself.
And somehowâeven the sight of Barnes waiting in the kitchen with Steve and Sam before boarding the quinjet hadnât helped either. Which was saying something.
Now, sitting across from him in the back of the jet with the engines humming loudly around you, you still felt detached somehow. Distant. And worst of allâyou could tell he noticed.
The realization sat heavily between the two of you for almost the entire flight so far. Because youâd already done this once before. Two weeks ago in the same jet, headed back home from Paris. The memory of the look on his face back then still made your stomach twist nowâhurt flashing across his expression like he genuinely thought you were avoiding him on purpose again.
After nearly half an hour of nervously chewing at your bottom lip, your eyes finally drift upward toward his. The two of you lock eyes silently across the quinjet. And despite the noise of the engines, despite Sam and Steve talking toward the front, despite everythingâyou still somehow feel painfully alone with him.
Your brows pull together slightly. A tiny expression. Something hopeful. Something trying to say: Iâm okay. It isnât you.
And just like that, the coldness heâd been wearing the entire flight starts melting almost instantly. His eyes flick cautiously toward Steve and Sam first, checking whether either of them were paying attention. Then back to you.
âAre you alright?â he asks quietly, leaning forward onto his elbows.
âYes,â you whisper back. âRemind me never to smoke pot again.â
His head tilts slightly. He opens his mouthâthen immediately has to fight back a smile, looking down toward the floor instead.
You scoff, âI already know what you were gonna say, asshole.â
âI wasnât gonna say it,â he mutters. Then slowly lifts his eyes back to yours, âbut I was thinking it.â
Immediately, your brain supplies his voice for him: Thereâs a few things Iâd like to remind you not to do again. Fucking old bastard.
You roll your eyes dramatically toward the ceiling.
âUmâŠâ he clears his throat awkwardly, suddenly struggling to maintain eye contact. âDo youâŠwanna talk about it?â
âYou know the answer to that question,â you grumble, crossing your arms over your chest and leaning back in your seat.
âWorth a try.â
Your eyes drift over him again despite yourself. And Christ. He looked good today. Better than good. Your gaze moves slowlyâfrom his eyes, to his chest, down the broad lines of his shoulders and stomachâThen lower. Toward the front of his pants. Your eyebrows lift slightly.
A smile threatens immediately at the corners of your mouth when you realize he notices exactly where your attention lands. Barnes mirrors your posture almost instantly, crossing his own arms tighter over his chest.
âDonât start with that,â he warns, jaw flexing hard.
âStart what?â you ask innocently.
Then, very deliberately, you uncross your legs and relax back into the seat wider. His eyes flick downward immediately. His jaw clenches. The muscle in his cheek twitches visibly before he exhales sharply through his nose.
âYouâre a fuckinâ witch,â he mutters.
âWhat was that?â you ask sweetly, tucking your hair behind your ear before leaning forward slightlyâ
Making sure he gets a perfect inhale of the scent gathering warm along the skin of your throat. His eyes darken immediately, âdonât act like you didnât hear me.â
You smile to yourself and lean back again, âhow was your week?â you ask casually.
Barnes lets out a sharp laugh through his nose, âhow do you think it was?â
âJesus Christ,â you sigh. âIâm trying to make small talk.â
âAre you?â he leans toward you now. âWhy donât you tell me how you think it was.â
The two of you stare each other down.
âProbably not much better than mine,â you bite back.
âI feel likeâŠâ he starts. Then stops.
You wait, âwhat?â you finally ask quietly.
He shrugs awkwardly, and to your immense satisfaction, you notice faint pink beginning to rise across his cheeks.
âI dunno,â he mutters. âFeels like I should take you out properly.â
Your brows raise slowly, âhm,â you hum. âIâm hoping you mean on a date and not as a target.â
That finally gets a real laugh out of him.
âOh trust me,â he scoffs. âIâve definitely considered the second option.â
âTell me, Barnes,â you grin. âhow exactly do you think taking me out would go?â
He visibly braces himself.
âDinner and an argument?â you offer. âOr maybe dinner, a movie, and an argument?â
To your surprise, he actually considers it. Then shrugs, âhonestly? Neither of those sound too bad.â
The crinkles around his eyes deepen as he laughs again, warmth lighting his entire face, âI usually donât mind arguing with you,â he admits.
Your thighs press together instantly beneath the seat. Because fuck. Yeah. You agree with that statement entirely.
âYeah?â you tease softly. âLike getting me all riled up?â
Now itâs his turn. His turn to lean back smugly. His turn to inhale the subtle shift in your scent from halfway across the jet. His turn to watch you unravel.
âI like putting you in your fuckinâ place when you start mouthing off,â he says quietly, eyes dragging slowly down your body before returning to your face. âSeems like I might be the only one who gets that kinda reaction outta you.â
You swallow hard. Because the bastard is completely right. And you hate how easily he reads you.
âWhat?â he asks with a smirk. âCock got your tongue?â
You shake your head slowly. Unbelievable.
âI dunno,â you drawl, straightening yourself back up again. âHavenât had a taste yet.â
Your lip disappears between your teeth as your gaze drifts back down toward the obvious tightening in his pants.
âYou wanna know something crazy though, James?â you ask softly.
His tongue flicks quickly across his lips, âWhat?â
âI sure do crave it like I have.â
His entire face goes still. Stone. Jaw clenching hard enough to grind. His legs spread wider unconsciously.
And your eyes immediately drop toward the outline growing more obvious beneath the fabric.
âWeâll be there in an hour,â Steve suddenly calls back.
The two of you practically jolt apart from whatever trance youâd just slipped into. Inhaling sharply at the exact same timeâthe same mirroring you always do. Only then to pauseâlooking back at each other with an unamused raised eyebrow. Then continuing to groan simultaneously upon realizing youâd done it again.
Same breathing. Same reactions. Same rhythm.
The air inside the jet suddenly feels dangerously thick. You can only pray the ventilation system is doing its job well enough to keep Steve from smelling whatever chemical disaster the two of you were currently creating.
âFuck,â you whisper under your breath. âOkay. UmâŠâ
Your eyes dart upward toward the peeling section of the jet ceiling while you scramble desperately for a normal conversation topic, âWhatâs your favorite color?â
Barnes immediately bends forward, pinching the bridge of his nose as his shoulders start shaking. Heâs laughing.
You grin despite yourself, âWhat?â you giggle. âYou said you wanted to take me out. We should probably learn things about each other besides our shared psychological damage and overwhelming sexual tension.â
âJesus Christ,â he laughs. âOkay, KidâŠuhâŠred used to be my favorite, I think.â
âUsed to?â
âYeah.â He shrugs. âThese days I prefer blue.â
âRed a little too close to home?â you tease.
âWatch it,â he warns immediately. âWhat about you?â
Your eyes drift back toward his again. Those eyes. God. Nothing in nature shouldâve been allowed to look like that. Not unless it was ocean water off some isolated coast in Greece somewhere.
âI like blue too,â you admit quietly. âWhatâs your sign?â
âMy sign?â he repeats blankly. âWhat, like stop signs?â
That gets an actual laugh out of you, âYeah, James,â you mock. âWhatâs your favorite fuckinâ traffic sign?â
âI donât know what else you mean!â
âAstrology,â you explain. âZodiac signs.â
âOh.â He frowns thoughtfully. âI donât know mine.â
âYou know your birthday though, right?â
âMarch tenth.â
âPisces,â you nod immediately. âThat tracks.â
âHow?â
âYouâre emotional.â
âOh, fuck off.â You brushes you off with a wave of his hand, only to pause for just a moment, clearing his throat. âWhat about you?â he asks. âWhatâs the zodiac sign for instigators?â
âThereâs several,â you shrug. âBut technically I donât know my actual birthday.â
His face changes immediately, âWhat?â
âThey never documented the exact date.â You shrug again. âI think it was to stop me from becoming attached to whatever surrogate carried me. Usually I just turn a year older after New Yearâs.â
Barnes stares at you for a long moment, âYou donât have a birthday?â
âI mean, technically January first,â you mutter. âBut I doubt thatâs accurate.â
Something soft passes across his face then, âWhat do you think you are?â
You smile faintly. âWellâŠpersonality considering I might be an aries,â you start, then shake your head.Â
âBut also if my birthday actually was January first, then Capricorn would also make sense considering my...generally pessimistic outlook on life,â and then your eyes land back onto him. âBut if I got to choose? Venus-ruled signs sound prettier, so hopefully one of those.â
He nods slowly despite clearly understanding absolutely none of that, âRight,â he says carefully. âNo idea what any of that means.â
You roll your eyes.
âBut,â he shrugs, eyes lingering on your face again, âI could listen to you yap about it all day.â
Your stomach flips violently. Thatâokay. That was unfair. That borderline insult-compliment should not have you reeling the way that you are. And suddenly, you become intensely interested in literally anything else.
âWhatâs your favorite season?â you blurt quickly. âMineâs spring because it smells best outside.â
âI agree with that,â he says.
âReally?â you blink. âYou seem more like a winter person.â
Barnes groans so loudly Steve actually glances backward briefly.
âWould you fuck off?â he laughs. âChrist, youâre brutal.â
And somehow, the rest of the hour passes exactly like that. Simple questions. Stupid conversations. Tiny pieces of each other slowly traded back and forth. Trying desperately to build something between the two of you that wasnât exclusively made of trauma and sex.
And strangely enoughâYou discover thereâs actually far more underneath all of this than either of you initially realized. You like hearing him talk. He likes hearing you ramble. His smile stays on his mouth almost the entire time you speak, and every time you notice it your ovaries ache in response.Â
And somewhere during the flight, sitting across from him while discussing absolutely nothing important at allâYou realize there may genuinely be nobody else on earth youâd rather spend hours talking nonsense with. Because if it were anyone else, you wouldâve already told them to shut the fuck up by now.Â
And if Barnes were being honest? He feels exactly the same. Though his thoughts are significantly less poetic and substantially more along the lines of: Jesus Christ, bury me in the sound of your voice. And: God, I want to pump you full of my fuckinââ
âŠ
âHowâs it looking down there, you two?â Sam asked over comms.
The original plan had been simple enough. Steve and Barnes would infiltrate the bunker directlyâfaster, quieter, deadlier than either of you above ground. Sam would maintain aerial rotation overhead while you remained near the treeline monitoring the perimeter, the bunker entrance resting in plain sight below.
âI should be in there,â you groaned, pacing aggressively through the forest floor. âThey have no idea what theyâre even looking for.â
âTheyâre not as incapable as you think,â Sam sighed through static. âPlus, you literally gave them a list.â
âYeah, but I donât know if it was detailed enough.â You pick at the skin of your thumb, shifting your weight back and forth between your feet.Â
Youâre anxiousâmore so than usual. Youâd gotten riled up earlier, and now you face the same consequences you always do. Poor decision making. Distraction. Ruminating.Â
The way you wanted Barnes to defile you on the floor of the quinjet still lingers on your subconsciousâso much so you swear you can taste his skin on your tongue. And another thoughtâmore sinisterâis that the conversation with Keaton from the day before had still been sinking its filthy claws into the wrinkles of your psyche.Â
âYou drew reference sketches from memoryââ Sam deadpans.Â
âIt couldâve been a confabulationââ
âA whatââ
âIâll be right back.â
âNo, noâkid, we made a deal with Stark, you are not allowed toââ
But by the time Sam circled back toward the entrance, you were already gone, ââŠdo that,â he finished miserably.
There was a long pause over comms. Then: âShit.â Another pause. âI am so getting fired.â
âŠ
The issue with the current situationâand one nobody had really considered beforehandâwas that most of the facility existed underground. Deep underground. Concrete. Steel reinforcement. Earth packed thick between floors.
The deeper Steve and Barnes moved through the bunker, the weaker the comms became until the connection finally severed completely. Which meant they couldnât warn either of you that the internal schematics had been wrong. The bunker had already been stripped nearly clean. No files. No staff. Nothing useful.
And now youâre wandering half-disoriented through a Soviet-era underground maze while increasingly overstimulated by the understimulation, and deeply irritated by one horrifying realization: Youâre lost. You never get lost.
That fact alone was enough to start making your pulse climb. The bunker itself didnât help. Every hallway looked the sameâlong concrete corridors with peeling paint and dim floodlights hooked up to portable generators. The place felt abandoned in the worst possible way. Vacant. Dead. Like the building itself wanted you gone.
Your entire nervous system screamed at you to leave. And because echolocation was becoming less reliable inside the reinforced structure, frustration finally outweighed caution. You reached up and removed your OSAM. The second it came free, the air hit you harder immediately.
Since you hadnât originally planned on entering the bunker itself, your in-ears had only been turned down instead of fully removed. Now, annoyed and overstimulated already, you muttered a quiet fuck it and yanked those out too.
The world exploded open around you instantly. Every tiny sound sharpened. Water dripping somewhere far down the corridor. Electrical buzzing inside walls. The scrape of Samâs boots several rooms away. Your own heartbeat hammering inside your skull.
And now, as you wandered deeper into the bunker trying to regain your bearings, Sam finally caught up to youâusing the thermal signatures from his suit to track where youâd gone.
âHey,â he called carefully, taking in your wide-eyed expression. âYou know better than this. There are rules for this kinda operation. Youâre notââ
âThereâs nothing in here,â you interrupted abruptly.
The room you stood in resembled an abandoned conference room. A massive wooden table coated in thick dust sat in the center. Cardboard boxes lined the walls, all empty. Mouse droppings scattered across the corners. And somewhere deep in your chest, dread began slowly unfolding itself.
âYeah,â Sam nodded sympathetically. âSometimes these places are a bust. Thatâs why we keep looking.â
He approached slowly. Hands raised carefully. Like someone trying to coax a frightened animal close enough not to bolt.
Your eyes darted around the room rapidly anyway. Thinking. Calculating. Trying to understand why something felt so catastrophically wrong. Still, your shoulders slumped slightly when Sam finally rested a hand gently on your shoulder.
âYou know better,â he sighed.
But standing this close, he noticed something. His eyes narrowed slightly. Your ears were empty. And while the AGSI devices were subtle enough most people wouldnât notice them missing, the team had spent enough time around you by now to recognize when your sensory regulators were gone.
Samâs expression shifted. Then he noticed something else. Your nostrils were flaring rapidly. Tiny movements. Quick. Repetitive. Wrong. Panicked. As if you just caught a trail.Â
âHey,â his voice hardened slightly now. âHey. Where are your sensory regulators?â
You held a hand up immediately to shush him. Your brows pulled together tighter. Confusion slowly morphing into fear.
âSomethingâs not right,â you whispered.
Sam sighed. Stepped closer again.
You immediately stepped back. Trying to create distance. Trying to ground yourself.
âWhat do you mean?â He quizzed.Â
âI donât know, IâŠâ Your head turned sharply, eyes scanning everywhere, âI smellâŠâ
Sam exhaled patiently, âKid, this place is full of dust, mold, rust, mildewâhalf the shit Stark warned us could irritate you.â
But his reassuring smile didnât work. Because now the smell was becoming clearer.
âNo,â you whispered. âNo, this isnâtâŠâ Then interrupted yourself, âSam,â you said suddenly.
Your voice had changed, âThis is sweet.â
âWhatâs sweet?â
You ignored him entirely, moving into the hallway again. You looked almost exactly like the military dogs handlers used to walk through checkpoints. Tracking. Searching. The scent was faint at first. Too faint earlier while your OSAM was still partially active. But now it was undeniable. Something floral. Synthetic. Wrong. Not naturally sensual like human pheromones or skin. Artificial. Civetone, almost.
As you moved farther down the hall, the floral shifted. White florals now. Dense sweetness beginning to coat your sinuses.Â
Your headache sharpened immediately. Pressure building behind your eyes. And underneath the sweetnessâSomething rotten. Something putrid. Like air freshener sprayed over decay. Like perfume trying desperately to hide decomposition. Like chewing watermelon gum with a mouth full of rotting teeth.
Nausea hit you so suddenly you nearly stumbled. Sam kept speaking behind you, but his voice barely registered anymore. You reached the final room in the hallway. And thereâA small air vent. Your stomach dropped.
âIndole,â you whispered.
âWhat?â
âIndole isâŠâ You shook your head slowly. âUsed in a lot of perfumes.â
Sam glanced toward the vent, âKid, the ventilation system isnât even running. These floodlights are generator-powered. This place doesnât have electricity.â
No. No no no no. Your pulse spiked violently.
âI know the vents arenât active,â you snapped. âThe scent isnât aerated enough. Itâs like itâsâŠâ
You gagged.
âRotting.â Your eyes widened suddenly. âItâs been sitting in stagnant air, but now gettingâŠwafted out.â
âGod,â you groaned, doubling over. âShitâthis is a setup.â
âWhat do you mean?â
The room suddenly became impossibly small. Your body moved before your thoughts could catch up. Pure instinct ripping you out of the room.
âIndole is a common fragrance note,â you started rambling rapidly. âHydra tortured me with awful onesâŠfuckââ
Your breathing became shallow. Fast. You gagged violently.
Sam grabbed your arms immediately to steady you, âHeyâhey, letâs get you topsideââ
âFragrance compounds in isolation are horrible,â you choked out. âBut the worstââ
You dry heaved hard enough your vision blurred, âThe worst was indole.â Another gag. âIt smells like someone tried covering fresh human shit with perfume.â You retched again.Â
Then suddenlyâSam straightened. Static crackled loudly through his comm. The signal had returned. Steve and Barnes were getting closer to the surface again.
âHey!â Sam shouted immediately into comms. âWe gottaââ
âGod!â you yelped suddenly, collapsing toward the wall. âSomething in here is pumping that smell!â
And to solidify your set up claim even more, beneath the indole came another scent. Benzaldehyde. Artificial cherry. Cough syrup sweetness flooding the air. Undeniable now, Hydra knew exactly what they were doingâand they had anticipated that youâd be here.
You continued dry heaving violently while Samâs voice grew more frantic over commsâshouting, screaming for Barnesâ and Rogersâ help.
Then suddenlyâDarkness. Every floodlight shut off at once. Complete blindness swallowed the bunker.
But then the lights snapped back onâonly now they strobed violently.
Your scream echoed through the hallway instantly. Because of course they were fucking strobing. Another sensory overload trigger. Another torture method. Then understanding slammed into you all at once.
âFuck!â you shouted. âStop yelling!â
No there areâfuckâfans hidden in the ventsâwhich they knew you wouldnât be able to see intoâthat are connected to a generator. Slowly increasing circulation rates. Most likely sitting behind some sort of chemical compound. Most likely triggered by a wire as Steve and Barnes walked in the door.
âThere are things hidden in the vents!â You screamâa bit vague but youâre surprised you even managed that.
But, fuckâthe lights. How did the lights know to go off without knowing specific timingâAh. Theyâd knew youâd scream, that youâd get loud like you had back in captivity. They equipped aggression detectorsâwhich are made for loud noisesâgunshots, fireworksâŠyelling.Â
But then that meantâmotion sensorsâhad to be. Especially since Hydra had rigged the entire bunker specifically to fuck with you. Not to kill you. No, to overwhelm you. To push your nervous system beyond survivable limits.
Only then do you notice warm blood dripping steadily from your nose and onto the concrete floor.
And above youâTHUMP. THUMP. THUMP. Sam was already trying to smash one of the vents open. But the motion sensorsâ
âNo!â you screamed, reaching toward him desperately. âThey want you to beat on themââ
Too late. The ringing detonated through the bunker instantly. High-pitched. Sharp enough to split your skull apart. Your knees buckled immediately beneath you. The frequency wasnât loud enough to affect Sam much. But for youâIt was agony.
For Steve and Barnes somewhere deeper underground, it registered as an irritating whine. For you, it felt like your brain was liquefying.
Your fingers jammed uselessly into your ears while blood slicked your hands from ruptured eardrums. The ringing screamed louder. Lights strobed faster. Your heartbeat spiraled completely out of rhythm.
Hydra had thought of everything. The scents. The lighting. The acoustics. The psychology behind your reactions. They knew youâd panic and scream. They knew someone would strike the vents in an attempt to locate the sensors. They knew exactly how your body worked.Â
Your vision blurred violently. Your body rocked instinctively against the floor while blood continued dripping from your nose and ears.
Then suddenlyâWarmth. Softness. Calm. So much so, that for one blissful second, you genuinely thought: Oh. Iâm dying. But the lights still pulsed weakly behind your eyelids. So death, if it was coming, felt strangely slow. Like sinking into warm water. And thenâEverything went black.
âŠ
âSam?!â Steve shouts over the ringing, his voice ricocheting violently through the concrete stairwell while Barnes storms up behind him. âSam!â
âDown here!â Sam yells back.
The two super soldiers burst onto the correct floor a second later, both visibly grimacing at the high-pitched noise still screaming through the ventilation system overhead. The hallway strobes around them in violent pulses of white light. Dust shakes loose from the ceiling. The air smells wrong. Chemical. Sweet. Rotten.
Steve gathers his bearings first, eyes darting frantically through the corridor until they finally land on Sam crouched near the far wall. And youâcompletely limp in his arms.
Steveâs stomach drops instantly. Blood trails from your nose. Your ears. The corner of your mouth. Your eyes remain squeezed shut despite the tears still leaking steadily from beneath your lashes.
âIt was a setup!â Steve shouts over the noise.
âOh, really, man?â Sam snaps back immediately, gesturing wildly down at you. âHad no idea!â
Then Barnes sees you. And everything inside him goes cold. His eyebrows pull together sharply as his gaze locks onto the blood first. Your lips. Your ears. The horrifying stillness of your body. Unconscious. Not asleep. Unconscious.
And somehow that makes it worse. Because he knows this isnât stopping just because youâre not awake anymore. Your nervous system is still being torn apart in real time. There is still damage being done, whether you can feel it or not.Â
âWhat the fuck are you doing?!â Barnes shouts, already moving toward Sam before the sentence even finishes leaving his mouth.
Steve turns sharply toward him, startled by the genuine panic cracking through his voice.
Barnes barely even notices. The strobing lights make his movements look disjointed and jerky as he drops hard to one knee beside you.
âHere,â he says quickly, reaching for you. âIâll get her out faster.â
Sam nods immediately, carefully transferring your body into Barnesâ arms.
The second Barnes takes your weight against his chest, something inside him twists painfully. You feel wrong. Too limp. Too warm. Blood immediately smears against the front of his tactical jacket as he stands again. Then all four of them are moving. Fast. Steve leading. Sam behind him. Barnes close at their heels carrying you tightly against his chest while the ringing continues drilling through the bunker walls.
He tries focusing on the stairs. On his footing. On not missing a step and sending both of you crashing down concrete. But Christâthe sight of your face keeps dragging his attention away. Your lashes flutter weakly against your cheeks with every jostling movement. Blood continues slipping steadily from your nose despite the fact youâre no longer conscious enough to react to it.
And now a new thought starts worming its way into his head. One ugly enough to make panic bloom hot behind his ribs. What if she doesnât wake up? The possibility hits him so hard he nearly stumbles.
âŠ
By the time the four of you finally burst back outside into the freezing forest air, the ringing has faded enough to stop actively shredding Barnes and Steveâs hearing.
For you, thoughânothing improves. You remain limp in Barnesâ arms while blood still slowly leaks from your nose and ears. The cold air turns crimson against your skin almost immediately.
The group manages maybe five minutes through the forest before another argument breaks out over who exactly is supposed to call Tony and explain the situation.
âHold on,â Sam pants suddenly.
He stops moving entirely, hands bracing against his knees as he tries catching his breath.
Steve and Barnes both slow with identical looks of irritation flashing briefly across their faces. The unspoken: Of course the non-serum guy canât keep up.
But then Sam looks back up at you. Really looks at you. And both of their expressions change immediately.
âWhat?â Steve asks sharply.
Sam steps closer toward Barnes, concern growing more visible the longer he studies you. Blood still trickles steadily from your mouth now. Not as heavily as before. But enough. Enough to make all three men increasingly terrified.
âGod damn it,â Sam mutters. âCan she seriously not listen for once?â He drags a hand down his face before stepping closer.
Barnes instinctively tightens his grip on you slightly. Protective. Possessive. Raw.
âI told her not to go down there,â Sam continues bitterly.
âWell stopping to complain about it isnât helping,â Steve shoots back immediately.
âWe need to call Stark,â Sam says firmly, gesturing toward you. âBecause thisâŠâ He swallows hard. âThis looks like the kinda thing where maybe she shouldnât be getting on a plane.â
The sentence makes Barnesâ stomach plummet.
Sam uses the sleeve of his suit to carefully wipe beneath your nose, smearing blood awayâonly for another thin stream to immediately replace it.
âI donât know if this is internal,â Sam says quietly now. âLikeâŠin her brain or something.â
Brain. Barnes physically stiffens. Brain bleed. The phrase detonates inside his head instantly. And suddenly every horrible image imaginable starts flooding through him all at once. You not waking up. You forgetting things. You losing speech. Motor function. Dying halfway through the flight.
He looks back down at you again and feels something dangerously close to helplessness claw up his throat. The urge to do something becomes almost unbearable. Fix it. Stop it. Protect you. Anything. Instead heâs forced to stand there uselessly while blood continues slipping from your nose onto his gloves.
âAltitude wonât help either,â Sam adds grimly. âWe should call Tony before we leave.â
His eyes move between Steve and Barnes, âI donât know if she can fly.â
The forest falls quiet for half a second, then Steve exhales sharply, âIâll do it.â
Heâs already pulling his phone out as he steps away toward another cluster of trees.
âKeep watch,â he mutters over his shoulder.
Barnes barely hears him. His attention stays completely locked on you. On the tiny unconscious movements your body keeps making against him. On the faint twitch beneath your eyes. The way your breathing occasionally catches strangely.
Every second feels too long. Everyone is moving too slowly. Talking too slowly. Thinking too slowly. He wants to scream at all of them to hurry the fuck up.
âŠ
Steve returns quickly, phone already pressed to his ear. Then he suddenly switches it to speaker. Tonyâs voice immediately floods the cold forest around them. Panicked. Sharp. Trying very hard not to sound panicked.
âOne of you idiots has a flashlight, right?â Tony says, sounding like heâs already midway through five other thoughts simultaneously.
âI got one,â Sam mutters, pulling a compact flashlight from his suit.
âAlright,â Tony says quickly. âOne of you hold one of her eyes open. Top and bottom lid. Someone else shine the light in it.â
Sam glances between Barnes and Steve.
Barnes immediately crouches to the ground with you still held tightly against his chest, carefully adjusting your body against him. His fingers shake slightly as he reaches up and pulls one of your eyelids open. The sight alone makes his stomach twist.
âWhat am I looking for?â Sam asks while kneeling beside him.
âJust tell me what it looks like,â Tony says tightly. âAre her eyes still watering?â
âWellâŠâ Sam grimaces. âI mean, yeah, now they definitely are. The flashlightâs probably not helping.â
Tony exhales shakily over the line, âCan you compare both pupils?â
Steve kneels beside Barnes now too, gently opening your other eye while Sam shines the light.
For a second nobody says anything. Then Samâs face changes, ââŠYeah,â he says slowly. âHer left pupil is way bigger than the right.â
âShit,â Tony breathes.
Barnesâ chest tightens violently.
âOkay,â Tony continues rapidly. âThatâs her damaged eyeâfrom summer. AfterâŠeverything.â
Barnes goes rigid. Instantly dragged back to seeing you strapped to that chair. To your bloodied face. Half out of it while Hydra tore into you piece by piece.
âYou need to keep the jet low,â Tony says quickly.
âWhat?â Sam asks. âTony, weâre literally in the Caucasus Mountainsââ
âI know,â Tony cuts him off. âBut altitudeâs already higher than ideal for her. Stay under twenty thousand if possible. Once you cross into Georgia thereâs a government safehouse outside Tbilisi.â
Sam nods immediately, âOkay.â
âHow far from the jet?â
âTen minute run.â
âWhat about flying?â Tony asks sharply. âJostling her around probably isnât helping.â
And thenâa tiny sound escapes you. Small. Weak. Pathetic. Your body tenses briefly before your head turns instinctively toward Barnesâ neck, trying weakly to curl closer against him.
Barnes freezes completely. His eyes go wide as he looks between Steve and Sam like: What the fuck do I do?
âTony,â Sam says quickly. âShe moved.â
âOkay,â Tony says immediately. âSamâcarefully fly her back to the jet. Barnes and Cap sprint ahead so she isnât left waiting. Thereâs a snowstorm moving in.â
Tony exhales harshly, âJust get the hell outta there. Now.â
âHeard.â Sam steps forward carefully, reaching out to take you.
And for one horrible secondâBarnes hesitates. His grip tightens reflexively around you. Mine. The thought crashes through him so violently it almost startles him. Protective instinct overriding logic entirely. But eventually, reluctantly, he forces himself to let go.
Sam carefully takes you into his arms while continuing to talk quietly with Tony over speaker. Then a second later he launches upward through the trees with you held tightly against his chest.
And Barnes stands there frozen beneath the forest canopy, staring after you while the cold settles deep into his bones.
âŠ
Tony had been right about the snowstorm. It moved in fast. Violently fast.
By the time the quinjet cleared the mountain range, visibility had already deteriorated into a swirling wall of white. Wind battered the sides of the aircraft hard enough to make the entire cabin shudder every few seconds.
The turbulence was nauseating. Unsteady air. Sudden drops. Constant violent shaking that forced Barnes to keep one arm wrapped tightly around you the entire flight just to keep your unconscious body from being jostled off the medical cot in the back.
You still hadnât woken up. And worseâYou were still bleeding. Not heavily anymore, but enough. Enough that every time Barnes glanced down at the streaks of red beneath your nose or the dried blood crusting near your ears, something inside his chest twisted tighter.
Tony hadnât mentioned one thing, though. The storm wasnât small. It wasnât something you simply flew around. It was massive. Slow-moving. And by the time the team finally reached the safehouse tucked near the edge of Tbilisi, the same storm was already beginning to bury the entire region beneath snow.
StillâThe safehouse had power. Heat. Lower altitude. And for now, that was enough.
âŠ
The atmosphere inside the cabin-sized house quickly became tense. Quiet. But tense in the sort of way where every small sound suddenly felt too loud. The crackle of the fireplace. The wind screaming against the windows. Boots shifting across old wooden floors.
You lay motionless across the kitchen table, a pillow shoved beneath your head to elevate it slightly. The overhead light cast a pale yellow glow across your skin. Too pale. Your nose was still bloodied. One eye now partially crusted shut.Â
Your breathing remained steadyâfor nowâbut shallow enough that Barnes found himself unconsciously counting each inhale from across the room. He paced restlessly near the opposite wall, trying and failing to appear calm. One hand pressed against his mouth. Eyes never leaving you for more than a second.
âHe said heâd call back an hour ago,â Sam muttered.
âHeâll call,â Steve answered automatically.
âWell he hasnât,â Sam snapped quietly, gesturing toward your unconscious body, âand thatâs making me nervous.â
Steve sighed heavily before moving toward the table again. His expression softened immediately the second he looked down at you. Blood dried beneath your nose. Blood at your ears. Tiny flecks against your lips. He hated this. God, he hated this.
âDoes she feel hot?â Sam asked suddenly.
Steve frowned slightly before placing the back of his hand gently against your forehead, âHard to tell,â he admitted. âDo we have a thermometer?â
âNo,â Sam sighed.
He stepped closer himself, carefully reaching down to unzip the upper portion of your tactical suit slightly. The second the fabric peeled away from your skin, the light caught the sheen of sweat covering your chest and throat.
Sam stiffened, âShit.â
Across the room, Barnesâ head snapped upward immediately.
The concern in Samâs voice alone was enough to pull him across the room without thinking.
âWhatâs wrong?â Steve asked sharply.
Sam shook his head once before pressing his palm carefully against your chest, âSheâs got a fever.â
Barnes stared down at you. At your flushed skin. The dampness clinging to strands of hair near your temples.
âHer cheeks are flushed,â he said suddenly.
Steve and Sam both looked up at him. Barnes immediately cleared his throat awkwardly.
âWell,â he muttered, suddenly aware of how intensely heâd been staring at you, âmore flushed than usual, I think.â
Neither of them commented. Thankfully. Because before the silence could become awkward, Steveâs phone suddenly rang again.
âOne second.â He stepped a few feet away while answering.
At first it sounded like Tony was already midway through some stressed-out lecture before Steve finally managed to interrupt him.
âYeah, Sam says sheâs got a fever.â Pause. âUh huh.â Another pause.
Then Steveâs expression changed completely, âWhat?â he snapped. âTwo days? I thought you said two hours.â
Barnes took an involuntary step toward him at the tone. But his attention drifted back toward you almost immediately afterward. Because fuck. All he wanted to do right now was wrap you up in blankets and somehow physically force your body back into safety through sheer proximity alone.
The sight of you like thisâHelpless. Unconscious. Covered in blood. It clawed at something old and rotten inside him. Something tied directly to Siberia. To that chair. To standing there frozen while Hydra tore pieces out of you and he couldnât stop it. To being in the same position you had been a hundred times before.Â
Sam had kept mentioning indole earlier. That was what youâd been repeating over and over. And it made sense now. Barnes had smelled it too once the concentration got stronger underground.
Theyâd used olfactory torture on Barnes too over the decades. But his senses werenât yours. Not even close. It had been horrible for him. But for you? Christ. The thought alone made his stomach turn.
Steveâs conversation with Tony slowly faded into background noise while Barnes spiraled quietly into himself.
At some point, Steve crouched beside you and carefully held the phone near your ear. Tony was saying something. Trying to coax you awake. Trying to hear your voice. But you never responded. Never moved.
Barnes realized after a while that his eyes had started drying out from not blinking enough. His stare locked onto you so intensely it almost hurt.
Finally Steve lowered the phone again and exhaled heavily.
âOkay,â he said, setting the phone onto the counter before rubbing both hands down his face. âLooks like weâre stuck here for at least two days until the storm clears.â
âMaybe sooner,â Sam offered weakly.
âMaybe,â Steve sighed. âBut right now one of us needs to get her medication. Something to bring the fever down.â
He looked toward the door, âIâll go. Faster metabolism. Better cold tolerance. You two stay here.â
Sam looked horrified, âDude, what? Weâre thirty miles from the nearest town and we donât even have a car.â
âI can move quickly.â Steve looked toward Barnes âHow long do you think?â
Barnes thought for a second, âWellâŠdepends if you can find transportation coming back.â
âThatâs actually not a bad idea,â Steve admitted.
Sam stared at him, âYouâre gonna steal a car?â
âMaybe they have rentals.â
âEither way,â Barnes interrupted quietly, âwithout one youâre still looking at around four hours there and four back.â
âIâd be sprinting.â
âWeâre enhanced,â Barnes said flatly. âNot immortal.â His eyes flicked briefly toward the storm raging outside, âIâve run through woods like this before in worse temperatures. Youâre gonna need to conserve energy whether you like it or not.â
...
By the time Steve finally left, the fireplace had already been lit. Warm orange light danced softly across the safehouse walls while snow slammed relentlessly against the windows outside.
Sam and Barnes sat opposite one another at the kitchen table. You remained between them. Still unconscious. Sam leaned back in his chair, stress practically radiating off him in waves. Barnes sat forward instead, elbows on his knees, hands clasped tightly together while he stared at you like concentration alone might somehow keep you alive.
After several minutes of silence, Barnes finally spoke, âWe should clean the blood off her.â
Sam looked up at him slowly. Expression unreadable.
Barnes cleared his throat awkwardly, âSheâŠâ he started quietly. âShe doesnât like feeling dirty. Says it gets overstimulating.â
Samâs expression softened slightly, âWell,â he muttered tiredly, âgo get a washcloth then.â
Barnes stood immediately.Â
The bathroom smelled old. Bleach. Dust. Mildew trapped in ancient tile. He rummaged through the closet until he finally found a single worn washcloth folded near the back. At least it smelled clean. Probably washed a hundred times over after years of agents rotating through the safehouse. He ran warm water over it carefully, adding a tiny amount of soap before wringing it out.
Then he returned to the kitchen. The room suddenly felt too quiet again. Barnes stopped beside you. Held his breath. His hands were trembling. Actually trembling. And it irritated him immediately.
Stillâhe carefully reached down with the cloth. Slowly. Gently. The second his knuckles brushed your skinâyou jolted violently awake with a sharp gasp. Both eyes flew open instantly. Chest heaving. Blood still staining your face while pure panic exploded across your expression.
âŠ
The second Barnes touches you, your body reacts before your mind does. A sharp gasp rips violently from your lungs. Both eyes fly open. For one terrible second, all you see is blinding white light and shadow. Your chest seizes. You jerk backward so suddenly the kitchen table legs screech hard against the floorboards.
The room tilts violently around you. Warm lighting. Wood walls. Firelight. But your brain doesnât process any of it correctly. Because your hearing is ruined. Everything sounds underwater. Muffled beneath violent ringing.
Your left eye refuses to focus properly, blurring strangely at the edges while your depth perception stutters in and out hard enough to make your stomach churn.
And your noseâGod. Your nose burns. Like the inside of your sinuses have been flayed raw.
Panic detonates instantly. Your breathing turns ragged as your eyes dart frantically around the room trying to understand where you are. The walls close inward inside your head. Concrete. Chains. Metal drains in the floor. That room. Siberia.
Your body moves before thought catches up. You scramble backward hard enough to nearly throw yourself off the table completely. Someone is speaking, you canât tell from where, or from who. You hit the wall behind the table with a violent thud, chest heaving.
âNetânetââ (No, Noâ) Your own voice comes out shredded and terrifiedâand completely in Russian.Â
Barnes freezes immediately. The language shift guts him on the spot. It isnât calculated. Isnât intentional. It sounds instinctive. Like some terrified piece of you thinks you just woke up back where he found you only months ago.
âHey,â Sam says again carefully, hands raised slightly. âYouâre okay.â
âYA otdam vso chto ugodno,â (Iâll give anything,) You barely hear him, âPozhaluysta, ne zastavlyayte menya delat' eto snova.â (Please donât make me do it again.)
Your hands fly to your face immediately. Wet. Sticky. Your fingers come away bloody. And suddenly panic spikes harder. Your breathing becomes sharp and frantic as your eyes scan wildly around the room looking for restraints.
âYA zhe tebe govorila, chto moy organizm otkazhet, yesli ty budesh' prodolzhat' v tom zhe dukheââ (I told you my body would fail if you continued like this.) The sentence dies halfway through as dizziness slams into you.
You nearly collapse sideways off the table. Barnes catches you instantly. The second his hands touch your waist, your entire body stiffens violently beneath him. Not because youâre afraid of him. Because your nervous system is still trapped somewhere underground in Siberia.
âNe trogay menyaââ (Donât touch meâ)
âKid.â He says once, metal hand resting on your forehead to ground you, cool you down.Â
And although barely, he sees that itâs done something.Â
âUbeyte menya uzhe,â (kill me already,) You respond one last time, distancing your face away from him. âYA etogo vynesti ne mogu.â (I canât take it anymore.)
âKid,â Â His voice cuts through the ringing differently than everything else. Lower. Steadier. Familiar. And firm.
Your head snaps toward him immediately. Barnes. Not Maxim. Barnes. Your breathing stutters.
Heâs crouched directly beside you now, metal hand now hovering uncertainly near your arm like heâs terrified touching you wrong will make this worse.
âLook at me,â he says carefully.
Your eyes try to focus on him. One works. The other lags slightly behind. The realization alone sends another pulse of nausea through your stomach.
âFuck,â you whisper, hand flying toward your left eye immediately as if you were going to smack it back into the correct position.Â
Barnes catches your wrist before you can press into it. Gentle. Instinctive. And the second he does it, the room goes quiet. Not literally. The ringing still screams inside your skull. But something about the gesture grounds you just enough to finally notice the details around you.
Fireplace. Kitchen. Wood. Snow hammering softly against windows somewhere nearby. No concrete. No restraints. No Hydra. Your eyes slowly drag back toward Barnes. Then Sam.
That realization confuses you briefly, âWhatâŠâ Your voice cracks badly. âWhere am I?â
Sam visibly relaxes at the use of English, âSafe.â
You blink at him, âbut why?â
âMission,â he responds simply. âSteve left to go get medication.âÂ
You stare at him blankly. Then back at Barnes again, âFor who?â You ask, eyebrows pulling together.Â
And the look James gives youâsympathetic, worryâcare. Suddenly memory crashes back into place all at once.
Ah. The bunker. The set up. The vents. The smell. The ringingâYour stomach twists violently, âOh my God.â
Your hand presses hard against one ear. Pain immediately shoots through your skull hard enough to make you hiss through your teeth.
âEasy,â Barnes says quickly.
Your breathing starts accelerating again. âIt hurts,â you groan out, doubling over. âFuck, why does it hurt like this?â
Neither man answers immediately. And that silence is enough. Your eyes widen. You inhale sharply through your nose again. But this time, you are met with a sharp pain. Like a knife in the sinuses. Not able to smell anything but iron from the blood that still lingers there.Â
You move away from them, taking a few big steps back. Gripping the bridge of your nose between your pointer finger and thumb.Â
âNo no noââ You start hyperventilating. âNo, pleaseâno, not this again, Iââ
âHey,â Sam says quickly. âHey. Itâs temporary.â
And then you, big strong, all talk, no emotion YOUâyour eyes start welling up with tears. Your closed fists fly up to them, pressing downwards to keep them both from seeing it.Â
âAnd I canât,â you gaspâbroken as it cuts through tearsâa sob. âI canât fucking see right.â
The panic is real now. Not confusion anymoreâyou know you're not in Siberia, youâre no longer in the bunkerâ-but the remnants remain.Â
You touch beneath your nose again, the scrape of the dried blood catching on the soft skin of your hand.Â
Barnes watches you spiral with something close to panic building in his own chest now. Because he recognizes the look on your face. You think something inside you is permanently broken. And maybe the worst part? He understands exactly why that possibility terrifies you so much.
âYouâre alright,â he says carefully, walking forward with raised hands. âThey overloaded your senses.â
Your eyes flick toward him immediatelyâwatching him as he moves toward you. You stare at him for a long second. And slowlyâslowlyâYour breathing begins evening out just enough for logic to start clawing its way back in.
Because even though you canât smell him, your brain still knows heâs there. Grounding you, Calming you. Your shoulders suddenly sag, and the adrenaline collapse hits almost immediately afterward. Your entire body starts trembling. Small at first. Then worse. Exhaustion. Fear. Overstimulation.
âYouâre alright,â Barnes says quietly, finally standing before you again.Â
His hands cup your cheeks, and you lean into one instinctively, eyes big and watery, peering up into his own. Without thinking about it, you take a step towards him. Tiny movement. Barely noticeable.
But Barnes immediately shifts closer to steady you before dizziness can pull you sideways again. His hands reaching downwards, cupping the backs of your thighs, and pulling you into his chest, headed towards the bathroom down the hallway to clean you up.
âYA ves' gryaznyy,â (Iâm all dirty,) you sniffle into his neck.Â
âI know,â he nodsâeyes catching onto Samâs for a moment, âlet's get you all cleaned up, okay?â
There is a mutual glare of recognition between the two of them. Sam giving a nod and a look of, âoh, so this is whatâs been going on,â and Barnes shaking his own head with some frustration, âand now is not the time to bring it up.â
The door closes behind Barnes as he carries you into the bathroom.Â
âI knew it.â Sam says to himself.Â
âŠ
When he finally gets you into the bathroom, he sets you carefully down onto the counter beside the sink before stepping back against the opposite wall.
Arms crossed over his chest. Watching you. Not in the way he usually doesânot hungry, not teasing. Tentative. Like heâs studying shifting weather patterns and trying to figure out whether the storm has actually passed yet.
Steam still clings faintly to the mirror from where he started running the bathwater earlier. Warm golden light reflects softly across the tile, the sound of wind rattling faintly against the safehouse windows somewhere deeper in the house.
And now, fifteen quiet minutes later, you finally look up at him.
The two of you hold each otherâs gaze for a moment too long. His eyes look heavy. Tired. A little narrowed still from worry. Thereâs something deeply uncertain in the way he watches you nowâas if he wants desperately to help but still isnât entirely sure what heâs allowed to be to you yet.
Because the truth is: The two of you arenât together. Not technically. Youâve only slept together once. Twice now, if the bathroom tension unfolding between you counts as the beginning of another inevitable mistake.
But despite thatâSomething has shifted. Something undeniable. Barnes canât stop feeling pulled toward you in ways he doesnât fully understand yet. Protective in ways that border on instinct. Like every crack running through your nervous system echoes painfully through his own body too.
You blink at him another second longer before finally looking away. Then take a shaky breath.
âI feel bad.â
His eyes immediately flick over you again from head to toe, almost unconsciously running through some internal checklist to reassure himself youâre still tangible. Still here. Still breathing.
âWhy would you feel bad?â he asks quietly, clearing his throat afterward.
âFor you,â you admit.
His brows pull together instantly, âWhy would you feel bad for me?â
You rub absently at your wrist, âBecause you always console me.â
A small breath of laughter escapes him.
âNot always,â he mutters. âLotta times there isnât much consoling involved.â
âOkay,â you sniffle softly. âThen you always ground me, I guess.â
Something in his expression shifts at that. Softer. More dangerous.
âIt seems like Iâm the only one who really can, doll.â
âNo.â You shake your head immediately. âNo, youâve been through this too. Worse, probably.â Your eyes lower briefly. âI should be helping you.â
He doesnât answer. Canât, really. Because the second you say it, all he can think about are the things he forces himself to forget. Part of the reason heâs been so stuck on you.Â
âI know you have nightmares,â you whisper.
Barnes visibly stiffens. Then immediately looks down at your clothes instead. Deflecting. Retreating.
âDo you want me to stay or go?â he asks instead, voice rougher now. âNeed help gettinâ your clothes off?â
âYou were gonna leave?â you ask quietly.
âNo, noââ He pushes himself off the wall immediately, a tiny smile finally tugging at the corner of his mouth as both hands come up to cradle your cheeks. âJust wanted to see if you wanted me to.â
The warmth of his palms makes your eyes flutter briefly.
âI donât ever really like it when you leave,â you admit softly.
And GodâThe look that crosses his face after that nearly undoes him. Something painfully affectionate settles deep into his chest before he can stop it.
âWant me to help get your clothes off?â he asks again, gentler this time.
âPervert,â you mumble automatically.
But it finally coaxes the smallest smile out of you.
âHey,â he teases quietly, stepping closer and gripping your hips to pull your body flush against his. âIâm doinâ you a favor.â
âYeah,â you mutter, âbut donât act like you arenât excited to see my ass.â
That earns a real laugh out of him. As you turn around to pull your top off, he absolutely looks. Canât help it. The fever flush still paints your skin pink beneath the dried blood streaked across your face and neck. Your body looks warm. Soft. Real. Too real.
âIâm gonna be honest here, doll,â he murmurs, eyes shamelessly dragging lower for half a second. âI think most people would be excited to see your ass.â
You roll your eyes, âCan you help me with the zipper?â
âYeah.â
His fingers catch the zipper carefully before slowly dragging it downward along your spine. Goosebumps follow immediately in its wake. The lower he goes, the more he has to bend until eventually heâs crouched behind you completely, face nearly level with your hips.
Control yourself, he thinks miserably. Which becomes significantly harder when you start peeling the sleeves down your arms, exposing your entire back to him. And then worseâYou bend forward slightly to shove the fabric lower, pressing your ass almost directly into his face in the process.
Barnes closes his eyes briefly, âYouâre trouble,â he mutters.
âYou like it,â you sigh, then turn back around to face him.
His chin comes to rest lightly against your stomach while he looks up at you through dark lashes. The position alone makes your chest tighten painfully. You reach down automatically, fingers sliding into his hair and tugging gently.
âWant you,â you admit quietly.
Barely audible. Barnes exhales hard through his nose.
âDoll,â he sighs. âYouâve got a fever. Youâre hurt. Youâre covered in blood.â
You shake your head weakly before guiding him back to his feet. Now itâs your turn to look up at him. Eyes glassy. Lashes damp.
âI canât really see,â you whisper. âEverything sounds underwater. Everything smells like iron.â Your lip trembles once. âSo I feel so much right nowâŠand all of it hurts.â
The confession hits him directly in the chest.
You hook your fingers into your underwear and push them down your thighs before stepping out of them carefully, âI wanna feel something other than the hurt.â
Barnes looks wrecked. Actually wrecked. Because now heâs hard enough to ache, but underneath all of that is something stronger: The need to take care of you. To cool your fever down. To clean the blood off your face. To keep you safe.
âLet me clean you first,â he manages finally, though his mouth has gone dry. âThen if youâre still feelinâ up for itâŠyou can have me.â
You nod.
And Christ, he really tries not to stare as you step into the bath. He fails. Miserably. Because even nowâeven exhausted, feverish, blood streaked across your skinâhe still thinks you might genuinely be the most beautiful thing heâs ever seen.
He soaks the washcloth carefully in the warm water before bringing it up to your face. Slowly dabbing beneath your nose. Across your cheeks. Rewetting it before gently pressing it over your injured eye to loosen the dried blood there too.
The bathroom stays quiet for several long moments. Only water softly shifting. Wind outside. Your breathing. His breathing.
You watch him the entire time. Heavy-eyed. Admiring him openly now.Â
And Barnes can feel it. The tension sitting thick between you again. Especially when the washcloth starts drifting lower. Your throat. Your collarbone. The slope of your chest.
âI can be quiet,â you say suddenly, biting your lip. âSam wonât hear.â
Barnesâ eyes immediately flick back up to yours. That pulls a reluctant smile out of him. He leans closer, one hand gripping your calf gently while his face hovers near yours.
âYouâre pushinâ it, kid,â he murmurs, eyes dragging slowly between your mouth and your eyes. âYou know that?â
âDonât act like you donât want it,â you smile weakly back. âI canât smell you right nowâŠbut I always know.â
Your hand slides up his jaw, pulling him closer, âFeel you in my bones.â
Barnesâ eyes shut briefly, âFuck,â he sighs under his breath. âNow is not the time for this, doll. You know that.â
But he still leans closer anyway. Still lets his forehead brush yours, âAnd you know youâre makinâ it real hard for me.â
You guide his hand slowly against your chest. And the second he feels the warmth of your skin beneath his palm, the softness of your breastâhis composure visibly cracks.
âHad me worried sick earlier,â he mutters, mouth brushing your neck now. âScared me half to death.â
Your head tips backward instinctively, exposing more of your throat to him while his beard scrapes softly against overheated skin.
And suddenly, with most of your other senses muted or damagedâTouch becomes everything. The drag of his mouth. The warmth of his breath. The roughness of his hands. It hits you all at once with almost frightening intensity.
âThis wonât help your fever,â he murmurs against your ear, hand moving up your leg now, where your body is so desperately calling out to him. âMight make it worse.â
âOnly one way to find outââ You try to say it, but as one finger slips inside you, the words collapse into a lewd moan instead.
Barnesâ hand clamps over your mouth instantly. You can feel the smirk against your neck as he shushes you, retracting his fingers just as quickly. You whine softly at the loss of contact.
âSam is in the living room,â he whispers, kissing back up your neck toward your lips.
âPlease,â you say before he can close the distance completely, both of your eyes locking onto one another. The tension between you is fucking palpable all the way down to the pupils. Full blown. Your irises are practically swallowed by black. âLet me take what I want,â you nearly beg.
His eyes roll briefly into the back of his head, âyouâreââ He regains his bearings with a deep breath. âDoll, youâre hurtââ
âDo you not want it?â you ask, leaning into his neck now, leaving your own weak trail of kisses there.
ââCourse I want it,â he sighs as you bite lightly at his neck. âBeen needinâ you all week.â
With shaky legs, you begin pushing yourself over the side of the tub. He grabs your hand immediately, looking up at you from his spot on the floor.
âWhat are youââ he starts, both hands moving to your waist to steady you.
âDo I need to remind you again?â You plop yourself down onto his lap, body dripping with water. âI canât smell,â you begin, fingers reaching for the belt of his jeans. âCanât taste,â you continue, fumbling with the buckle. âI can hardly hearââ You tug his zipper down. âAnd I can barely fucking see,â you finish, palming him through his underwear.
He sucks in a deep breath, head falling back against the wall.
âAll I have right now is feeling,â you mumble, resting your forehead against his. âI donât care if I have a fever. Itâs not like itâs going away right now either way.â
You tilt your chin toward him, lips brushing lightly over his own.
âIf youâll let me,â you test quietly, biting at his bottom lip, âIâd love to feel something else.â
He hums low in his throat, visibly fighting himself. Not because he doesnât want youâChrist, he does. In fact, heâs doing everything in his power not to haul you off the bathroom floor, throw you onto the bed, and fuck you hard enough to collapse the rickety frame straight through the goddamn floorboards.
But he knows he needs to be gentle. Wants to be. Wants to cradle your head and take care of you. Wants to savor every last second of this. Heal you in the only way he knows how.
And right now, letting you take what you want seems like the best option. He shakes his head at you, fighting back a smile.
You scrunch your nose immediately at the unspoken yes and let your forehead drop against his.
âIf youââ he starts, but the sentence cuts off as he sucks a sharp breath through his teeth the second you free his heavy cock from the confines of his underwear.Â
âWhat were you gonna say?â you ask, your smile replacing his now.
He reaches up immediately, fingers catching your jaw as he tilts your face toward him so he can look directly into your eyes.
âI was gonna sayâŠâ His gaze drags downward as you bite your lip and wrap your hand around himâteasing, but firm.Â
Composure. Composure. He repeats it internally like a mantra.
ââŠthat, fuckââ he grumbles as you finally drag your hand up once, slowly from he base, all the way back up to the tip. âThat you need to tell me if it stops helping.â
âI will,â you giggle softly, leaning forward to bite at his earlobe.
His head falls back against the wall as you raise your hips up and slowly line him up beneath you.
âPromise,â he says, eyes closed now, mouth parted slightly as he braces himself.
âPromise.â You pull away from his neck and finallyâachingly slowlyâbegin to sink down.
The lazy way heâd been slouched against the wall disappears instantly. His entire body jerks upward at the feeling of you wrapping around him like a vice. Warm. Wet. Welcoming. His eyes drag helplessly up toward your face as it twists with pleasure, your mouth falling open while you fight to stay quiet.
His hands return to your hips immediately, kneading at the skin there while he glances down between your bodies, watching as you slowly take more and more of him. Both of you struggle to suppress your sounds.
Then finally, the two of you meet fully together, sheathing him completely inside you. Your foreheads find each other again instantly.
âYou okay?â he asks hoarsely, throat dry as his flesh hand drags slowly up your back before settling at the base of your neck.
âMmhmm,â you hum softly.
Then you reach down, grab his left handâthe metal oneâand drag it up toward your breast.
âCan I have it?â you finally ask, adjusting yourself slightly in his lap.
Barnes shakes his head faintly, completely wrecked by the sight of your face contorting with pleasure. His metal hand kneads gently at your breast, thumb brushing over your nipple.
âTake it,â he whispers finally.
And with a sheepish smile, you slowly lift yourself back up again.
The two of you inhale sharply at the same time before you begin sinking back down. Your eyes snap open, locking onto his. Both your mouths part. Both your brows pull upward in the center. The sounds escaping the two of you are strained, breathless little pants of air.
And after a moment, you begin to move. Grinding against him slowly. Back and forth. Taking your time. Testing. Savoring the feel of him inside you as much as you possibly can. And fuckâcan you feel him. Heâs everywhere.
Goosebumps ripple across your skin. His breath drifts through your damp hair. The rough callouses on his flesh hand catch against your skin as it slides down from your neck to your ass, his metal hand meeting it there as he spreads you open wider to take him.
Gradually, the rhythm changes. What starts slow and sensual becomes rougher. Needier. The smooth drag of your hips slowly loses its coordinated rhythm, turning into desperate little bounces as his hands grip harder at your ass, guiding you up and down onto him again and again and again. Meeting you in the middle, rutting upwards to match your bounces, heavy balls slapping against you. His strength making it easier for you to take all of him.
Your face twists into something almost painful in its beauty. The kind of expression that belongs painted onto ancient canvas and hung in a gallery for people to stare at for centuries.
Eyes squeezed shut. Lip caught between your teeth.
âSuch a good girl for me,â he whispers suddenly, the sound of his voice almost startling you. âSo good and quiet.â
And Barnes notices immediately what the praise does to you. The way you tighten around him. The way your pace falters before speeding up again. The sound of his voice winds you tighter and tighter, like something getting ready to snap.
âLike that?â He breathes. âLike when I tell you how good you are?â
You nod weakly before reaching down and grabbing his metal hand again, dragging it up toward your face to cradle at your cheek.
Reluctantly, he drags his gaze away from your face just long enough to look down between your bodies. The sight nearly destroys him.
Your pussyâswollen, perfect, soakedâtakes him over and over again, coating him with every bit of your arousal. And he can tell, just by looking at you, how little else youâre processing right now.
âFuck,â he groans quietly, âfuck, look at youââ
You were right. Thereâs no other sensation left for your body to focus on besides him. The fullness. The pressure. The way he fills you completely. And although he may be rusty, he knows one thing he can try to help further.
His flesh hand slips carefully between your bodies, pressing down against your clit just hard enough to create pressure without overwhelming you completely.
The strangled moan you try to suppress catches hard in your throat, sounding almost punched out of you.
And as if he wasnât already close, you lift his metal fingers toward your mouth, wrapping your lips around them slowly and dragging your tongue along the cool metal.
Even though he canât physically feel itâIt still wrecks him. Because just as your body starts tightening around him, your face contorting, eyes glassing over slightly, he realizes heâs seconds away from losing control completely.
Fuck. He probably wouldâve finished already if he wasnât so distracted by the sight of you.
The quiet wet sounds of you taking him echo softly through the bathroom despite how carefully heâs controlling his strength. The drag. The pull. The slick sheath of his cock disappearing into you over and over again.
âLook at me,â he says suddenly, voice rough and wrecked. âFuckinâ look at me.â
And of course you do. The second your eyes finally open and lock onto hisâYou break. Your orgasm hits you visibly all at once. Your brows pull together sharply while your muffled moan escapes around the fingers still pressed against your mouth.
âThere you go,â he coos. âThere you fuckin go, take all you need. Gonna feel so much better, huh?â
The pleasure crashes through you so intensely your whole body trembles with it. Losing yourself in it. Your nerves in complete control. So, unsurprisingly, you canât help the sensation that follows. An undeniable gushing. Something warm and wet rushing out between the two of you.Â
And watching youâFeeling you clench around him over and overâhis brows pulling together at the feeling of your wild release soaking his cock, his pants, the groundâBarnes completely loses it too.
âFuckââ His mouth buries against your shoulder immediately, biting down hard enough to silence himself while his orgasm tears through him in thick, helpless waves.
You milk everything out of him. Again. And again. Until finally the violent trembling slows. Your hips grow sluggish. Your breathing turns ragged. And eventually, youâre left slowly rocking against him again, just like when you first took him.
Curious, Barnes glances downward between your bodies.
He thinks he may need to pinch himself to check if heâs dreaming. Cause the gush? That was real. Signified by a puddle of water that coats the bathroom floorâand definitely more than what had dripped off your skin from the bath.Â
âSorry,â you gasp immediately, burying your face against his neck. âFuckâsorryââ
Your cheeks burn bright with embarrassment. Because that wasâŠnot something you anticipated happening from this. You just fuckingâŠsquirted.Â
âThat doesnâtââ you mumble awkwardly. âFuck, Iâm sorry, that never happensââ
âWhy the fuck are you apologizing?â Barnes asks instantly, eyes wide and trancelike as one of his hands slides beneath you, warm fingers brushing the slick mess between your thighs. âFuck, did youââ
You immediately dissolve into embarrassed laughter against his neckâbecause, yes, Jamesâyou fucking did.Â
Slowly, he settles you more comfortably back down onto his lap, still wrapped around him while his cock twitches as it softens inside you. Both of his hands come up to cradle your face, thumbs dragging slowly across your flushed cheeks.
He just stares at you. Utterly speechless.
âIt probably wonât be a regular occurrence,â you mumble awkwardly. âI think itâs just cause the feelings are justâŠheightened right now.â
Barnes blinks at you slowly, âHas this happened before?â he finally manages.
âOnly with a vibrator,â you admit. âBut only because it can be so overstimulating.â
You crack one eye open to look at him. He still looks absolutely wrecked. Like the two of you are still going.
âI can show you sometime, if you want, itâs kinda funny cause it doesnât take much effort,â you mumble shyly. âIf we ever get back home, that is. I dunno how long weâll be stuck here.â
âIf I had a fuckinâ heart attack right now,â he says slowly, fingertips tracing everywhere they can across your face, lips, cheeks, jaw, âand that was the last thing I ever saw, Iâd die happy.â
That immediately sends you into another fit of laughter. Barnes laughs too, chest vibrating beneath yours.
âFuck,â he huffs affectionately before leaning forward to kiss you softly. âYou feelinâ any better?â
Your expression softens instantly, âWell,â you sigh, âI still have a fever.â
âYeah,â he murmurs. âProbably just made it worse too.â
âButâŠâ A sleepy smile pulls at your lips. âNothing really hurts anymore.â
Your hands finally come up to his face, thumbs brushing slowly across the scruff along his jaw, âOnly feel you,â you whisper. âEverywhere.â
The look he gives you after that is almost unbearably soft.
âGood, princess,â he murmurs, kissing your sweaty forehead. âHow are the others? Can you see?â
You glance slowly around the bathroom. Your lip catches. Trembles once.
And Barnes notices the exact second reality settles back in. Immediately, he grabs your cheeks again, grounding you before panic can fully return.
âJust a bit muted,â you sniffle softly. âThe colors, I mean.â
The look on his face turns genuinely pained. His big, tough girl reduced to tears over muted colors.
His big, tough girl. Jesus Christ. Heâs so fucking gone for you.
âIâm sure itâll be a little better after you sleep,â he murmurs gently. âWhat about hearing, sweet girl?â
You purse your lips together thoughtfully before shaking your head weakly, âStill ringing.â
His hand comes up and pinches your nose lightly, âWhat about this?â he asks, smiling when it finally manages to pull the tiniest smile from you too. âCan you smell anything yet?â
âJust you,â you sigh tiredly. âFuckinâ always you somehow.â
Your brows pinch together thoughtfully.
âAlthoughâŠâ you hesitate. âIâm not sure if thatâs actually real or if itâs just in my head now. Sometimes I swear I smell you even when youâre not around.â
You nod slightly, âBut Iâll take it,â you murmur. âAt least itâs not fuckinâ ammonium nitrateâŠor indole.âÂ
âŠ
Like a child, your second wind comes and goes just as quickly.
Barnes places you back into the bath after you ride him, and now he sits beside the tub while you soak quietly. The washcloth rests warm across your chest while Bucky continuously fusses with the water temperature, turning on the faucet and unplugging the stopper every few minutes to keep it from getting too cold.
âWhat about what I said earlier?â you mumble sleepily, eyes heavy as you take him in with as much vision as you still have left.
âWhat did you say?â he asks, leaning forward and using his thumb to wipe away a bead of sweat before it falls into your eye.
âThe nightmares,â you say plainly.
He blinks at you for a moment, his own cheeks heating with embarrassment, turning nearly the same shade as yours from the fever.
âUm,â he starts, throat suddenly dry. âWhat about them?â
Slowly, sluggishly, you lift your hand and wrap your fingers around his forearm.
He watches you through an increase in heartbeats, silently hoping youâll drift off to sleep before he actually has to admit anything about them.
And itâs not that he doesnât want to talk.
Itâs that the idea of you knowing about his nightmares makes something emasculating sink heavily into his stomach.
âWhat are they about?â you whisper, eyelids fluttering as you fight to keep them open. âYouâd better talk to me about it while you can, soldier.â A lazy smile creeps across your lips. âI think Iâm being rather agreeable at the moment.â
That pulls a quiet laugh out of him. Just a small puff of air through his nose as he gazes down at you, his own hand coming up to cover yours where it rests against his arm.
Because youâre right. You are being agreeable.
And whether itâs because youâre feverish, exhausted, fucked out, or simply calmed by his presenceâa mixture of all of those not entirely out of the questionâhe knows almost nobody who has ever met you would recognize you right now.
Vulnerable. Soft. Practically melting into the palm of his hand. Sweet. Gentle. Not a trace of your usual short fuse anywhere in sight.
He wonders briefly if this side of you will become more common, or if moments like this are painfully rare. Not that he really minds your temper. Truthfully, he kind of likes you angry. But he knows not everyone feels the same way.
âHydra,â he finally says, clearing his throat as his shoulders slump slightly. âBut I donât wanna get you all wound up, doll.â
âMâwanna know,â you drawl sleepily.
Then quieterâ âWanna know you.â
Something in his face tightens immediately. His brows pull together as he fights back some sudden emotion clawing up his throat, something sharp enough to make his eyes burn dry before threatening to make them watery instead.
âYou said it best a while ago,â he mutters. âScrambled my brain up.â
âHowâd they do it?â you murmur.
âMachine,â he says plainly. âLooked kinda like those electric shock things they got at mental hospitals.â
âDid it really work?â
âMost of the time,â he swallows thickly, something unfamiliar twisting painfully inside his chest. âBut it never really stays gone forever. Comes back in pieces.â
âDid it hurt?â
âNot like what you went through, dollââ
âDonât do that,â you interrupt immediately, eyes dragging back open so you can look at him properly. âDonât act like what you went through doesnât matter.â
You lift your hand again rather pathetically and place your palm against the center of his chest. His heart pounds hard beneath it. Faster than normal.
âYouâre very strong,â you murmur with a sleepy little smile. âStronger than me.â
And before he can interrupt youâbefore he can try and redirect the conversation to make you feel better insteadâyou answer for him.
âAnd stronger than most people because you let yourself feel it.â
He just stares down at you for a moment, lips parting slightly, completely unsure what to say to that.
âIâm so afraid of my past I comatose myself with Ambien and hydros,â you breathe out, eyes falling shut again. âI do everything I can not to remember.â
âI donât like remembering either,â he admits quietly, his voice cracking slightly as pressure builds behind his eyes.
âBut you do,â you yawn. âAnd sometimes Iâm jealous of that.â
âWhy would you ever be jealous of that?â he asks, genuinely baffled, brows creasing tightly together.
âBecause Iâm a coward,â you slur softly, your head slowly tipping onto your shoulder. âAll I ever wanna do is forget.â
And before he can even answerâ
âIâll never get past it if âm too afraid to face itâŠâ you whisper.
husband!congressman!bucky x wife!diplomat!reader
‷ matt murdock x reader
summary: one week. that's what you agree to. one week for bucky barnes to prove that your marriage can still work. it should be simple. it never is.
because bucky starts taking up space in your life like he never left, and matt murdock never quite takes up enough. you already know how this should end. the divorce papers have been sitting in your drawer for two months, waiting. but you kept his side of the closet clear. you never put anything on his nightstand. and that, more than anything, is what gives you away.
warnings/tags: SMUT, p in v, semi-public sex, fingering, praise kink, oral sex (f receiving), manhandling, multiple orgasms, overstimulation, spit kink, pussy pronouns, dacryphilia, soft dom!bucky, bucky and reader are privately separated but publicly still married, love triangle (no cheating), second chance romance, idiots in love, avoidant!matt, possessive!bucky, bucky being an emotionally repressed idiot, he's also kind of manipulative at one point but reader chews him out for it trust me, divorce babes, bucky grovelling til his knees are shredded, mutual pining, lots of yummy angst, hurt/comfort, alpine mention, bucky actually works on himself, a man who yearns is a man who earns, eventual happy ending, 18+ MDNI
word count: 28.8k (i think i went crazy writing this)
from maddie: hello and welcome back to yappers anonymous (i mean it, there's so much dialogue in here). anyway, i'm really sorry for taking so long on this. but it's finally here, and i hope the word count makes up for the delay. i have really struggled with writers block while writing this, and i lowkey kind of hate it. but i really really hope you guys don't <3
p.s. i realise the first part was set in december but i couldn't physically write about christmas in april/may so imagine that part one was set in early december and that's why there's no mention of christmas lol
masterlist | series masterpost
The last guest leaves at half past midnight, and then there are no more excuses.
For the past two hours since leaving your office and slipping back into the ballroom like you hadn't just comprehensively undermined eight months of careful separation, you'd had the party. The party, with its noise and its obligations and its endless, mercifully absorbing requirement that you be on. All of it demanding just enough of your attention to make thinking about anything else logistically impossible. It had been, if nothing else, somewhere to put your face.Â
But now the guests are gone, the house has exhaled down to its bones, and the silence left behind is the kind that doesn't stay empty for long. You can already feel the thoughts beginning to squirm back in at the edges, insistently, like they've been waiting all evening with a numbered ticket and now it's finally their turn.
The whole room is still dressed and gleaming for an evening that was, by every external measure, a resounding success. But you are currently conducting a very focused internal audit of every decision you have made since approximately nine o'clock this evening.
The audit is not going well.
Returning to the party with your husbandâex-husbandâBucky, on your arm like you hadn't just left a significant proportion of your dignity scattered on your desk had been one thing. The way the evening had gone after was quite another.Â
Bucky had been insufferable, obviously. Warm in the particular way that reads as devoted husband from twelve feet away but as I have won something and we both know it in closer proximity. His arm became a fixed and immovable constant around your waist, metal hand pressing at the small of your back with the patient, territorial certainty of a man who has decided something and seen no reason to discuss it.
Matt had gone. You'd felt his absence around ten minutes in. The particular negative space of someone who has quietly removed themselves without making it anyone's problem. The only remnant of his presence was his champagne flute left half-finished on a windowsill you'd passed on the way to the speeches. You'd stared at it for a moment longer than you should have.
Bucky had noticed your mind drifting, of course. His thumb smoothed over your back - just a small, deliberate pressure that meant I see exactly where you're looking, and I'm still here. Stay. And you had, because the alternative was making a scene at your own event. And also becauseâwell.
Because somewhere between the dinner and the second round of speeches, something had started happening that you hadn't authorised and couldn't entirely stop. You'd caught Bucky's eye over a comment from the Belgian ambassador and he gave you that faint, private smile in return - the shared language you developed years ago.Â
At one point heâd dipped his head to your ear to murmur something dry about one of the ministers, and youâd had to bite your cheek to keep from laughing. Bucky had looked down at you with those soft eyes he does when he's not thinking carefully enough about his own expression, and you'd looked away first. You were even finishing each other's sentences again without realising.
And by the time the last round of handshakes came, you'd stopped noticing the weight of his hand on your back and started noticing the absence of it when it left. If you clutched at straws, maybe you could convince yourself that this was just eight months of having nobody to lean into. That, and the fact your body had always been significantly stupider than your brain where Bucky Barnes was concerned. But truth of it was quieter and more inconvenient than any rationalisation you could construct: it had felt, humiliatingly, like home.
The audit is really not going well.Â
âMadam Ambassador.â
Thomas, your chief of staff, materialises at the foot of the stairs. Silent, eternal, and entirely too perceptive. A man who has worked in diplomatic residences long enough to have seen everything and professionally forgotten most of it.
âThe last of the staff will be finished within the hour,â he offers. âWill there be anything else tonight?â
You open your mouth.
âThat'll be all, Thomas, thank you.â
Bucky's voice comes from somewhere behind your left shoulder, easy and warm in the way of a man who has slipped right back into the domestic machinery of your shared life.
Thomas nods, unperturbed. âVery good, Congressman Barnes. Wonderful to have you back, sir. I've had your things brought up.â
Of course he has.
Because why wouldn't he? Congressman Barnes is visiting his wife, and that is a thing that happens, and the residence's household operates on the reasonable assumptions, none of which were consulted past you.
âGreat, thanks Thomas.â You reply, and your voice comes out perfectly steady, which feels like a small miracle. âGoodnight.â
Thomas retreats. And then it is just the two of you, on the landing, in this enormous, beautiful house, at the end of the most profoundly strange evening of what has already been a profoundly strange year. Neither of you speaks for just a beat too long.
âRight,â Bucky says finally.
âRight,â you agree.
You head upstairs, and he follows, and the house closes around you both like it was always going to.
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The master bedroom is on the first floor, east wing, overlooking the gardens.
It's your favourite room in the house;Â twelve foot ceilings, original cornicing, sash windows that rattle faintly when the wind comes off the park. It even has an original, working fireplace and enough space that the four poster doesn't overwhelm it, which is saying something.
You have not, in the past eight months, shared it with anyone
The door closes behind you both with a soft, decisive click.
You set your clutch down on the dressing table. He's already shrugging off his jacket, moving through the room with the ease of a man whose muscle memory never got the memo that he left.
Like a man who has lived here. Like the months of absence were a minor administrative detail rather than anything worth adjusting for. Like a man who has decided - and this is the thing about Bucky, this has always been the thing - that simply resuming works better than discussing. That if he just continues, the awkward conversation about feelings never has to be raised.
He reaches up to loosen his tie, that automatic gesture you have watched a thousand times, and then just⊠stops.
The pause is small. Almost nothing. His hands still at his collar and there's the briefest flicker of something in his expression that looks almost like recalibration. Like a man who has been operating on instinct for the last several hours and has only just now checked in with his frontal lobe to ask if instinct is advisable right now.
You watch him start to process the situation in real time. The room. The two sides of the turned down bed. His coat already laid on his chair. His suitcase placed next to his left side of the bed, because your chief of staff doesn't forget anything, ever, including what side of the bed the Congressman sleeps on.
Buckyâs tongue drags briefly over his teeth. Then he looks up and meets your eyes in the mirror, and the silence that follows has the particular quality of two people clearly thinking about the same three or four things and not willing to be the first to name any of them.
âI can take the couch,â he offers carefully. Gesturing vaguely at the small sofa by the fireplace that is, objectively, six inches shorter than he is.
âDon't be ridiculous, you'll be folded in half,â you object. âI'll take it.â
âYou won't fit either,â he points out.
âAt least I'm smaller than you.â
âWell,â Bucky sighs flatly, âI'm not letting my wife sleep on a fucking loveseat.â
There it is again. Wife. The word he keeps wielding like a claim, like it still means what it used to. And it still lands the same. You hate that it does.
You hate the warm, stupid, entirely unwelcome thing it does somewhere behind your sternum. Because he's being impossible - he's been impossible all evening - and yet here he is, immovable on the subject of your comfort even while being the singular architect of your discomfort.Â
âSeparated wife,â you correct, sharper than you intend, but one of you has to keep score here and it's clearly not going to be him.
He tilts his head, slow and deliberate, his eyes doing that thing where they get very still and very blue and very focused on your face.
âDidn't seem very separated a few hours ago when you were coming on myââ
âDon't.â You hold up a hand. âDo not finish that sentence in my bedroom.â
âOur bedroom,â he replies, and the audacity of it nearly makes you laugh.
âYou haven't lived here in eight months,â you scoff.
âYeah, well.â He looks around the room with something that might be fondness or might be smugness or might be both. âDoesn't seem to have changed much.â
And that's the problem, isn't it? Because he's right. You haven't changed anything. His nightstand is bare but still his; you've never put anything on it, never colonized that space. Even the closet still has the section you'd never quite gotten around to re-purposing, like some part of you had been keeping it warm. Keeping it ready.
The thought makes you feel pathetic and furious in equal measure.
âWell it's my bedroom now, and I'm telling you not toââ You stop yourself, jaw tight, because getting into this right now, at nearly one in the morning with him half-undressed, is absolutely not happening. âYou know what? Fine. We're both adults. We can share a bed again without making it a thing.â
âI wasn't making it a thing.â
âYou were absolutely making it a thing.â
âI was making an observationââ
âYou were being an ass.â
His mouth twitches. Almost a smile. âYeah, well. You married an ass.â
âSeparated from an ass,â you correct sharply, moving toward your dresser with more force than necessary.
The muscle in his jaw strains. Pops, like he's physically holding something back, biting down on whatever else he was about to say.
âFine.â He reaches up, resuming the work on his tie, fingers pulling the silk loose with deliberate, practised movements. âWe'll be adults about it.â
âFine,â you echo.
You yank open your pyjama drawer with more violence than it deserves, pulling out the silk set you'd bought months ago in a fit of reclamation. Expensive, modest, and nothing like the worn t-shirts you used to steal from him.
âGreat.â The tie slides free. He starts on the top button of his shirt, then the next, movements slow and methodical. You catch yourself watching his fingers work the buttons with that same deft precision they had a few hours ago when they were working you open instead. Christ.
âFine.â And the second it leaves your mouth you know you've made a tactical error, becauseâ
âYou already said fine.â
There it is.
âWell I'm saying it again.â You turn toward the bathroom. âBecause we're being adults about this. Mature, reasonable adults who can share a sleeping space without any complications,â you finish firmly.
âRight. No complications.â His voice is dry, but not quite enough to hide the edge underneath. Something that sounds dangerously close to hurt. âWe're real good at uncomplicated, you and me.â
You don't bother with a response. Just gather your things and head for the bathroom with all the dignity of a woman who is, essentially, fleeing. There's no other word for it. You're running away from your own husband in your own bedroom, and you both know it.
âI'm taking the bathroom first before I smother you with a pillow,â you announce.
âSee, that doesn't sound very aduââ
You slam the bathroom door before he can finish that sentence, and the lock clicks with a satisfaction that's entirely petty and entirely warranted. Behind the door, you hear him huff a laugh. Something that might be fondness disguised as frustration and that particular stubborn amusement he gets when you're both being impossible.Â
He always claims not to get off on your verbal sparring. You know he's always lying.
Leaning back against the door, you finally let yourself breathe. Your reflection stares back from the mirror, still perfect from three hours of performance.
Except it's not really, is it? Because underneath the dress, you're still wearing the evidence of what you let him do. What you begged him to do.
You reach behind yourself for the zipper, fingers searching low on your back for the tab. The dress is one of those gorgeous, backless nightmares designed by someone who clearly never considered that women might need to undress themselves. Your fingers catch the zip and you pull, but it only moves an inch before jamming.
âCome on,â you mutter, twisting your arm lower. Your shoulder protests. The zip grudges down another half-inch before catching completely on some invisible fold of silk.
You try the other arm. Same failure, different angle.
âFuck.â
You stare at your reflection. At the reality of your options, which is that you have exactly one and it's terrible.Â
âBucky?â You call, quieter than intended, opening the door just enough to suggest he's being granted entry, however reluctantly.
A pause, and for a moment you're not sure he heard you. âYeah?â
âI need help with my zip. It's stuck.â
You hear him cross the bedroom before the door opens the rest of the way, but he doesnât step in immediately. Thereâs a pause, like heâs giving you the chance to change your mind, and then he crosses the threshold.
âTurn around.â Itâs not quite an order, but your body responds to it anyway before your brain has the chance to argue. You pivot, presenting your back to him, fingers braced lightly against the edge of the counter.
You feel him step in behind you, close enough that the heat of him registers before anything else does. Your breath stutters, traitorous, and you fix your eyes on your reflection. His hands come into view in the mirror a second later. One settles lightly at your waist, just enough to still the fabric, the other finding the zipper with careful fingers.
His breath grazes the back of your neck as the zip finally gives and slides down, and every nerve ending along your spine lights up. His hands still for just a moment, a beat that lasts slightly longer than it should, and the bathroom is very quiet. For a second, it feels dangerously like the easiest thing in the world to lean back that last inch. To close the distance without naming it. To let instinct run the show again, just for a moment.
But then his fingers flex, and he lets go. He steps back, and the air between you is breathable again.
âGot it.â He clears his throat.
âThank you.â
âYeah, of course.â he replies, slightly unsteady, and then he's gone.
You stare at the closed bathroom door for a moment longer before finally forcing yourself to move.
The shower is too cold once you turn it on and step beneath it. But you linger under the spray anyway, letting it work down your shoulders, washing the evidence of the evening - of him - away until the water runs clear. At least your IUD means this is the extent of the cleanup. But sooner than you'd like what little heat there is fades, the old pipes protesting. Damn old house.
You towel off. Perform your entire nighttime routine with robotic habit, because anything else means thinking, and thinking is dangerous right now. Toner. Serum. Moisturiser. You find a loose thread on your sleeve and fiddle with it. You reorganise nothing on the counter and call it tidying.
Eventually, you run out of tasks.
The bedroom is waiting on the other side of the door.
Bucky's sitting on his side of the bed - when did you start thinking of it as his side again? - in nothing but his boxer briefs, scrolling through his phone with the blank expression of a man who is absolutely not reading anything.
He's kept himself in shape. Of course he has. Super soldier serum aside, Bucky's always been disciplined about training.But thereâs more weight on him than last time you saw him - broader through the shoulders, softer in some areas. It suits him unfairly well. Fills him out in a way that makes him look less like a weapon and more like a man whoâs taking care of himself.Â
The thought makes something warm bloom in your chest, and your gaze lingers long enough to catch on the scars at his left shoulder, where metal meets flesh. The scars there are unchanged, a familiar map youâd once known by touch rather than sight.
He looks up when you emerge, and his gaze tracks over you with an intensity that makes your skin prickle.
âBathroom's yours,â you manage.
He slips into the bathroom without another word. You climb into bed, trying to stay as far to your side as physically possible. You shift. Adjust the pillow. Shift again. Can't find the position you normally sleep in, and youâre still awake when Bucky reemerges.
The mattress dips under his weight. You do your best impression of a woman who is already asleep, which would be more convincing if he hadnât spent the better part of three years sleeping next to you. If he didn't know exactly how your breathing changes when sleep actually takes you. He doesn't call you on it. Just settles back against the pillows with a soft exhale that says he knows exactly what you're doing.
The residence settles around you both. The old Georgian silence, where the radiators tick, the pipes groan, and the old timber relaxes.Â
You can hear him breathing. Feel the heat radiating off his body across the sheets, your whole right side hyper-aware of it. The bed that felt cavernously large when you slept alone suddenly feels impossibly small. Every nerve insisting on registering his presence with an enthusiasm you find deeply unhelpful.
âWe should probably talk,â he states, though thereâs not real conviction behind it.
âI'm tired, Bucky.â
A pause. You can practically hear him deciding whether to push.
âYeah,â he concedes, something resigned in his voice. âMe too.â
He reaches over and turns off his bedside lamp, plunging the room into darkness. The bed shifts as he settles onto his side, facing away from you. And then it's just the sound of his breathing, evening out into an easy slumber.
Which is something. Because for a long time, sleep was a thing Bucky Barnes did badly. Youâd learnt that slowly, through observation, the way you did most things about him in the early months. Through the careful cataloguing of details he wouldn't offer freely. The nightmares. The insomnia. The tense stillness that only came from someone forcing themselves to lie motionless, hoping you wouldnât notice. Which you always did, and pretended you hadnât.Â
Because pressing would've sent him retreating behind walls you were only just beginning to see past. So you'd just held him tighter and let him figure out you weren't going anywhere.
Over time his body learnt yours. Your warmth. Your weight beside him. The rhythm of your heartbeat. Something in him that had been braced for decades finally started to let go. He'd started reaching for you in his sleep without waking. Started sleeping past five a.m., then six. Once, memorably, past nine, and he'd surfaced so bewildered by his own rested state that heâd just stared at you like youâd performed some kind of miracle.Â
It's particularly memorable, your heart unhelpfully supplies, because itâs the exact moment you knew you were in love with him.
He used to say you were the only place he didn't have to be on guard.
Used to.
You'd worried about that, those first few months after you separated. Whether he was sleeping at all in that sterile DC apartment. Whether the nightmares had crept back in without you there. Whether he lay awake at three a.m, every muscle held just a little too tight, waiting for something that never quite came. You'd tried not to feel guilty about it. Failed, mostly.
Beside you, Bucky makes a small sound and shifts.
It's drowsy, unconscious, seeking you out in a way his waking self wouldnât authorize. His body curves toward yours, closing the distance between you with the same inevitability as a plant tipping toward sunlight. Itâs like his nervous system runs through a quick inventory - familiar warmth, familiar scent, familiar body - and just defaults back to you like coming home.Â
Which is deeply inconvenient knowledge to possess while you're actively trying to remember all the very good reasons you separated in the first place.
His face has even softened in that devastating way where it sheds the mask and just looks like Bucky. The real one. The version that doesnât belong to the Congressman, or the ex-assassin. The one that youâve probably spent more time with than anyone else alive.
You are absolutely not thinking about how much you've missed that face. You are not.
Instead, you think about Matt.
The thing is, you don't know exactly what you owe Matt, which is in itself a fairly damning summary of where you'd arrived. Two months. Easy, fun, uncomplicated in the way that things are when neither person is asking too much or offering too much and the arrangement suits them both. You'd liked him. You do like him. He's brilliant and funny and present, in the straightforward way that had felt so startling after months of press releases and assistant-mediated contact.
But he hadn't committed. Neither had you. That had been the point, or at least the operating premise.
So, the question of guilt.
Do you owe Matt anything that would make tonight a transgression? You'd not made promises. The terms, such as they were, had been deliberately unspecified, which had felt like freedom at the time and feels significantly more complicated now.
And, of course, thereâs no way he hadnât heard everything.
That is the part you keep arriving at and then shying away from like a horse refusing a jump, because there is no version of that in which you come off well. Matt Murdock, who can hear a heartbeat from across a room, absolutely heard every single thing that happened in your office tonight. Every word. Every sound. Every moment of two people who were supposed to be separated doing a fairly comprehensive impression of the opposite.
He'd left without saying anything. You don't know whether that makes it better or worse. You suspect worse.
You're going to have to talk to him. You're going to have to talk to him, and you're going to have to figure out what tonight was, and what the past eight months of separation actually mean in practice versus on paper.Â
You're going to have to stand in front of Matt and have some version of a conversation you cannot currently outline because every time you try to construct the opening sentence your brain just goes quiet and offers you nothing except a replay of Bucky's mouth hot against your throat, and the rough edge of his voice when he called you his pretty wife.
Next to you, Buckyâs forehead comes to rest against your shoulder - tucked against you like something that simply found its way back to where it was always going to end up. Your chest does something you'd really rather it didn't.
You look at the ceiling for a long time, listening to your husband breathe, and try not to think about how natural this feels.
How terrifying that is. How much you've missed it. How angry you are that you've missed it.Â
Eventually, because the ceiling has offered no solutions and your body has been quietly conspiring with Bucky's for the past twenty minutes, you drift off next to him.
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You reach for him before you're properly awake.
Your hand finds cold sheets, and the humiliation of that is enough to finish the job of waking you up completely.
For a moment you just lie there, staring at the indent in his pillow, at the covers thrown back on his side. Processing the faint sense of abandonment that has absolutely no right to exist given that you spent half the night wishing he'd spontaneously relocate to a different continent.
The shower in the en-suite isn't running. The dressing room is quiet. He's not here. You lie there for a moment, taking stock of the specific variety of idiot you are. Then you get up.
Twenty minutes later you're dressed and heading downstairs with the grim determination of a woman about to reclaim her life and her sanity. The sound of voices reach you before you make it to the breakfast room. Two of them - your aide's quick, efficient register, and underneath it, lower, Bucky's.Â
You stop in the doorway.
Bucky's sitting at the table looking unfairly well-rested, already dressed in one of his perfectly tailored suits. Your aide - Caroline - sits across from him, laptop open, notepad beside it, wearing the expression of someone who has been efficiently charmed into full co-operation and hasn't quite noticed yet. Papers are open between them. His handwriting is on some of them.
When you walk into the room, they both look up. Caroline smiles, bright and professional. Bucky's smile is slower, warmer, with an edge of something that makes your spine stiffen on instinct.
âGood morning, sweetheart,â he greets, and you immediately donât trust his tone. âSleep well?â
You manage a smile that doesn't reach your eyes. âFine, thank you.â
âMorning,â your aide adds brightly, already turning the laptop toward you. âPerfect timing actuallââ
âWhat is all this?â you interject, a little sharper than you intend, crossing to the coffee pot because you need something to do with your hands.
âJust some press co-ordination,â Bucky shrugs, like itâs obvious. Like obviously your time belongs to him whenever he's in town. âWe thought it made sense, while I'm here. The Times have been wanting a piece for a while, and with the summit coverage still running there's a window to get some good visibility.â
Your aide nods with the enthusiasm of someone utterly oblivious to the tension crystallizing in the air. âIt's perfect actually, I've already reached out to a few contacts. We've got the charity reception Friday, a lunch Thursday that Lord Johnsonâs been requesting for months, then the Atlantic Council meeting on Wednesday - that'll be good for photos if you both attend together - then tomorrowâ.â
âWait.â You set your cup down carefully. âWednesdays I meet with our legal counsel.â
There's a small pause. Your aide's fingers hover over the keyboard.Â
âMr. Murdock?â Caroline glances at her notes. âThatâs been pushed back,â she says, slightly carefully.Â
You look at her. âTo when?â
âThese press things have tight windows,â Bucky interjects smoothly, with an expression of such reasonable, considered sympathy that you could scream. âVisibility with the right people, good for both our offices. You know how it is.â The faintest tilt of his head. âI'm sure Murdock will understand that these things take priority.â
There is a very specific register that Bucky uses when he has already made a decision and is presenting it as a collaborative discussion, and this is unmistakably it.
âEspecially,â he continues, and you have to bite your cheek so you donât say something youâll regret, âgiven the transatlantic tensions recently. It's important we present a unified front. As husband and wife.â
The words land exactly how he means them to. A reminder. A claim. You know exactly what heâs doing because heâs not even trying to be subtle.Â
He's monopolised your entire week, filled every available slot with joint appearances. Between your existing obligations and everything he's just loaded into your schedule, there isn't a single free hour left for the meeting with Matt that you both know isn't really about legal counsel.
âAnd tomorrow,â Caroline ploughs on, bless her completely oblivious soul, âyou'd originally blocked out for paperwork, but the round-table is invitation-only and they specifically requested both of you, soââ
âSo you've just... rewritten my entire week.â You hear yourself say. Your smile is so tight it might shatter.
âOptimized.â Bucky corrects gently.Â
His eyes meet yours across the table, and the look in them is pure, undiluted victory. And the worst part? He's not even wrong. These are important events. You should attend them together. From any objective standpoint, his logic is flawless. Any attempt at protesting would make you look like you're prioritizing the wrong things.
Which is exactly what makes it so infuriating.
âWill there be anything else?â you ask, voice perfectly professional. âI have a meeting Iâm already running late for.â
âI think that covers it,â Caroline says brightly. âOh, the German Ambassador's office called about scheduling aââ
âSend me the details,â you interrupt. âI'll review them later.â
You pick up a croissant from the breakfast spread. Turn to leave.
âSweetheart?â
You stop. Take deep breath. Don't turn around. âYes?â
âI was thinking we could have lunch later. Just the two of us. Prep ourselves for the busy week ahead.â
The audacity. The sheer, breathtaking audacity.
You turn back, smile still in place. âSounds perfect, why donât you come by my office later?â
âAbsolutely.â His smile widens. âIt's a date.â
You leave the residence before you turn your private separation into a very public spectacle involving thrown pastries, taking your fury with you to the embassy where it promptly gets buried under the weight of your actual job.
The morning is a blur of meetings that run long and emails that multiply faster than you can answer them. Trade briefings that should take thirty minutes stretch to fifty. Security updates that require your signature on six different documents. A conference call with State that goes in circles for forty minutes before anyone agrees on anything. Your assistant has brought you coffee twice, and both cups have gone cold on your desk untouched.
You're mid-sentence in a response to the German Ambassador's office when there's a knock at your door.
âCome in,â you call, not looking up, assuming it's another briefing packet or someone from the communications team.
The door opens. You register the footsteps, the soft tap of a cane, before the voice.
âBusy morning?â
Your head snaps up so fast you nearly give yourself whiplash.
Matt's standing in the doorway, one hand on his cane, the other tucked into his pocket. His expression is pleasant and unreadable in that way he does when he's being very deliberate about not showing what he's actually thinking.
Fuck.
This would've been significantly easier with some advance notice. A text, or an email, or a calendar invite titled âDiscuss Why You Disappeared Into Your Office With Your Supposed Ex-Husbandâ. Anything that would've given you more than zero seconds to figure out what the hell you're supposed to say right now.Â
You've walked into treaty negotiations with less anxiety. Those at least came with agendas. Preparation time. The basic courtesy of knowing they were happening before you were actively in them.
âMatt.â Your brain scrambles for words, or literally anything useful. âHi. I didn'tâI wasn't expectingââ
âNoticed your calendar got significantly fuller since yesterday,â he observes mildly, tilting his head. There's no accusation in his tone, but you hear the question underneath it anyway. âLot of joint appearances suddenly.â
Heat crawls up your neck. You're aware, abruptly, of how you must look - harried, distracted, still half-focused on the email you were writing. âYes,â you manage. âI'm sorry. I wanted toâI meant to call, I just haven't had a second toââ
âIt's fine.â He steps into the office properly, and your heart kicks harder in your chest, whether itâs dread or want, youâre not entirely sure. âIt's your lunch break now though, isn't it? We could grab something. Talk about last night.â
Oh god. Suddenly the conference call that went in circles for forty minutes seems appealing by comparison.
âMatt,â you start, but you don't even know where that sentence is going. Because what can you even say? My husband is systematically cutting you out of my life and I'm clearly too much of a coward to stop him?
âI'm notââ He stops, and there's a light sigh before his lips press together in that particular way he does when he's choosing his words carefully. âI'm not trying to make this difficult. I just think we should probably talk about where things stand. Clear the air.â
You scramble find words that don't make this exponentially worse. âIt's complicated.â
âIs it?â There's an edge to his voice now, however faint. âOr is it actually pretty straightforward and we're both just avoiding saying it out loud?â
You're trying to formulate something that resembles an answer when you hear the distinct cadence of footsteps youâd recognise anywhere, coming down the hall towards your office.
âThere you are, sweetheart.â
Your stomach drops straight through the floor and keeps going.
Bucky appears in the doorway, looking between you and Matt with an expression of polite surprise that would be convincing if you didn't know him well enough to see the calculation behind it.
âOh, Murdock,â he greets, as though he's only just noticed Matt standing there. âDidn't realise you were stopping by.â
âCongressman Barnes,â Matt turns slightly, angling toward Bucky's voice. âJust thought I'd see if the Ambassador was free for lunch, because it seems like her schedule's quite full.â
âYeah, it's a busy week,â Bucky agrees easily, stepping into the office properly now. Not quite crowding, but definitely occupying space between you both. âWe've got lunch plans actually. Lots to catch up on - isn't that right, doll?â
You're still sitting at your desk, frozen, watching this happen like you're observing it from outside your own body. The air in the office has gone thick and uncomfortable, the silence stretching just a beat too long.
Matt's expression hasn't changed, but you can see the slight tension in his jaw. The way his hand tightens fractionally on his cane;Â he knows exactly what's happening here
âRight,â you manage finally. âYes. We'reâitâs a working lunch. Coordinating the rest of the week.â
âA working lunch,â Matt repeats, and you can't tell if there's an edge to it or if your guilt is adding subtext that isnât there.
âYou know how it is,â Bucky adds. âJust making sure we're aligned before all the joint appearances. Tedious stuff, really.â
Buckyâs still smiling. Matt's still standing there. You're still trying to remember how to breathe normally.
âOf course,â Matt says after a moment. âI should let you both get to it then.â
âWe could reschedule,â you start, but the words feel hollow even as you're saying them. âLater this week, maybeââ
âYour calendar looked pretty full,â Matt interrupts. âBut sure. Have your people call my people.â
The formality of it stings more than it should. Like he's already pulling back, already creating space between you that wasn't there before.
âMattââ
âIt's fine.â he assures, though it doesnât sound fine. It sounds like a door closing. Or maybe you're imagining that too - there's nothing in his voice you can parse clearly. âReally, enjoy your lunch.â
You want to say something else. Want to explain, or apologise, or do literally anything to make this less excruciating. But the words stick in your throat, and Matt's already shifting toward the door into the hallway, and Bucky's just standing there, absolutely not trying to hide his satisfaction.
âReady to go?â Bucky asks.
âI just need to freshen up,â you reply. âGive me two minutes. I'll meet you downstairs.â
It's a transparent excuse and you both know it. But you need air. You need thirty seconds where you're not feeling like youâre being pulled apart at the seams. You grab your bag and slip out after Matt, turning the opposite direction toward the bathrooms, leaving Bucky alone in your office. Which is possibly the worst decision you could have made, you realise, but you can't exactly turn around now.
Behind you, Bucky watches you disappear around the corner. Waits patiently until your heels clicking fades down the corridor. Then he moves.Â
Matt's halfway down the corridor when Bucky catches up.
âMurdock.â
Matt stops mid-stride. There's a fractional hesitation where his shoulders stiffen before he turns. His expression has shed whatever careful pleasantness he'd been wearing in your office. What's left is cooler. Bucky stops a respectful distance away, hands loose at his sides. Everything about his posture says this is just two professionals having a friendly discussion.
âI think we should talk,â he begins. âBriefly.â
Matt's expression doesn't change. âAbout?â
âAbout boundaries.â Bucky asserts, though his tone is reasonable - almost apologetic, even. Like this is an awkward position heâs been forced into rather than something heâs orchestrating. âLook, I'm going to be direct here. My wife and I are working through things. Trying to figure out what we want going forward. And I thinkâWell, I think it would be easier if we had some space to do that without other complications.â
Matt tilts his head slightly, and there's something almost amused in the gesture. âAnd by complications you mean me.â
âIâm not trying to be a dick about this, I'm just asking you to back off for a while. Let us have the space we need as we get back to where we were.â It comes out steady, but Buckyâs heart rate betrays him. That telltale spike that means heâs not being entirely truthful. Matt catalogues the lie for what it is. âIt's been a difficult few months, but we're in a good place now.â
âAnd she's aware of this? The working things out?â
Bucky's jaw tightens. âWe're on the same page about what matters.â
âWow,â Matt scoffs softly, a disbelieving smile pulling at the corner of his mouth. âThatâs what youâre telling yourself?â
Bucky goes still, but Matt hears the minute hitch in his breathing anyway. The slight shift in his heartbeat as he re-calibrates, trying to decide whether Matt actually knows something or if heâs bluffing.
When Bucky speaks again, thereâs bite to his tone, the pleasantness veneer starting to crack around the edges.
âMy relationship with my wife isn't really your concern.âÂ
âIt is when Iâve been sleeping with her the past two months.â
Buckyâs mouth pulls into something mean immediately, his expression hardening as the last scraps of diplomacy finally burn off. Any pretence of this being a civil conversation is entirely gone.
âAnd yet those two months didnât seem to mean much last night, did they? I hadnât even been back three hours, that must sting a little.â
The barb lands. Matt's jaw tightens, but he doesn't take the bait.
âYou know, if push her into something she doesn't actually wantââ
âI know my wife.â
âDo you?â Matt asks, and there's just enough lift in it to make it a real question but not quite enough warmth to make it a polite one. âBecause despite what you think, two months ago she didn't seem like someone who was waiting around for you to come back.â
Bucky's hands flex. âMeaning?â
âMeaning she built a life here without you in it,â Matt states, matter of fact. âAnd sleeping with her and monopolising her calendar doesnât undo that, no matter how much you want it to.â
That lands differently. Bucky's mouth presses into a thin line as he tries to find his footing again. Tries to figure out how to wrestle the conversation back under his control. But Matt's already turning away, done with whatever this was.
âNext time you want to have a conversation about boundaries, Congressman,â he tosses back over his shoulder, âmaybe try having it with her first.â
Then he's gone, footsteps receding down the hallway, leaving Bucky standing alone with the distinct feeling that he didn't win that exchange nearly as cleanly as he'd intended.Â
He stands there for a moment, trying to sort through what just happened. Matt's parting shot sits uncomfortably in his chest, because thatâs what heâs trying to fix, isnât it? Except maybe Murdock has a point about the method.
He straightens his jacket. Rolls his shoulders back. Whatever. He has lunch with his wife, and Matt Murdock can go back to whatever law firm he crawled out of.Â
Bucky makes it down to the entrance hall,checking his phone more out of habit than any real interest in the messages accumulating there. When he hears your footsteps on the stairs, he looks up, and something in his chest loosens slightly. At least he has this. This week. That has to count for something.
He straightens as you approach, and there's something careful in the way his eyes track over your face, like he's bracing for whatever mood you're bringing down those stairs with you.
âReady?â He asks, aiming for casual but it doesn't quite land.
âDo I have a choice?â The question comes with a raised brow. You donât slow down as you reach him, just brush past toward the door.
âYou always have a choice.â He falls into step beside you, hands sliding into his pockets.
âFunny,â you return, pushing through the door without waiting for him to open it. âDoesn't feel like it this week.â
Wisely, he chooses not to argue. Instead, he follows you out into the grey London afternoon, the kind of day where the sky can't decide if it wants to commit to rain or just make everyone miserable with the threat of it.Â
The walk is silent - not the comfortable kind. Bucky keeps his hands in his pockets because if he doesn't, they'll instinctively search for your waist or the small of your back or some other familiar place they've been gravitating toward for years. And that Velcro instinct to maintain contact feels entirely unhelpful given the current temperature between you.
The restaurant Bucky chose is one of those discreet places where ministers go to have conversations they'd rather not have overheard. The kind with enough distance from other diners that you could have an argument without making it everyone's business. Not that you're planning to argue. You're planning to get through this lunch, get through this week, and then figure out what the hell your life is supposed to look like when your ex-husband stops playing whatever game this is.
You both settle into your seats. Pick up menus you don't really look at. You order a salad you won't finish, and he gets something with chicken. The waiter retreats, and you're left with the silence again, which is starting to feel like a third presence in your relationship. Bucky's doing that thing where he looks like he's about to say something, then doesn't, his jaw working slightly like he's testing out sentences in his head before committing to them out loud.
âJust say it,â you offer eventually, unfolding your napkin with more attention than the action requires.
His eyes snap up, sheepish. âSay what?â
âWhatever it is you've been composing since we sat down.â
He huffs a breath that might be amusement. Looks down at his water glass, turning it slightly on the table, before looking back up at you through his lashes with that rare, almost boyish uncertainty. When he speaks, his voice is quieter than you're expecting.
âI know you're pissed about the calendar.â
âObservant.â The word comes out flat, edged with sarcasm. âWhat gave it away? The part where I barely spoke to you on the walk over, or the part where I'm sitting here looking like I'd rather be anywhere else?â
His mouth twitches, but he doesn't smile. âI should've asked first.â
âYes. You shouldâve.â
âI didn't think you'd say yes if I asked.â
The honesty of it catches you off guard. You look up, and he's watching you with an expression you can't quite parse. Like he's trying to gauge how much damage control he needs to do, but it's coming off more hesitant than calculated.
âWould you have?â he presses.
âWe'll never know now, will we?â
The waiter arrives with water. You both fall silent until he leaves. Bucky exhales through his nose. His fingers drum once against the table before going still, like he's physically stopping himself from fidgeting.
âLook, I know I've beenââ He stops. Starts again. âThe past year has been shit. And I know that's on me.â
You weren't expecting that. You were expecting deflection, or charm, or strategic redirection. Not this.Â
âI let the distance grow,â he continues, not quite meeting your eyes. âGot buried in DC and the constant fucking politics of it all. And somewhere in there I stopped picking up the phone. Stopped making time. Started letting my assistant filter everything because it was easier than dealing with how far apart we'd gotten.â
âYou suggested the separation,â you point out, voice flat. âYou're the one who said no strings, no hard feelings.â
âI know.â
âYou made it impossible for me to reach you and then acted like the distance was mutual.â
âI know,â he repeats, and there's something tighter in his voice now. âAnd I'm not saying that was fair. It wasn't. It was cowardly. But I'm here now.â
âFor a week.â You lean back in your chair, arms crossing. âAnd you got here by hijacking my calendar instead of just asking me to talk.â
âWe're talking now.â
You sigh, or maybe it's closer to an exhale of pure exasperation. Your gaze lifts to the ceiling for a brief moment like you're asking for divine patience.
âBuckyââ
âOkay,â he concedes, hands lifting briefly in surrender before he shifts forward, elbows coming to rest on the table. âI know monopolizing your schedule was a shit way to go about it, but I miss you.â He looks down at his hands, then back up at you. âI miss us. I miss you being the first person I want to tell things to. And I want to prove that we can still do this. That I can be here, when it matters.â
The words settle in the space between you, complicated and messy and not nearly enough to fix everything that's broken. It's nowhere near enough.
You want to stay angry. Want to hold onto the fury that's been building since this morning, or since last night, or over the past year, really. But there's something in his voice that sounds like actual regret, and you're so tired of being angry all the time. It's more than he's said in months, and that matters more than it should.
âSo this is what, exactly?â you ask, trying to stay firm. âAn audition? A demonstration?â
âIt's me trying.â Itâs a simple confession, like heâs run out of polished answers, and this is all he has left.
The food arrives. You both go quiet while the waiter sets down plates and refills water and does all the small choreographed movements of service. Once he's gone, you pick up your fork without any real intention of eating.
âYou hijacked my week, Bucky. You coordinated with my staff behind my back and filled my schedule so I couldn'tââ You stop yourself before you finish that sentence, but he finishes it anyway.
âSo you couldn't see Murdock.â
âSo I couldn't make my own choices,â you correct sharply.
He has the grace to look slightly abashed. Slightly. âFair enough.â
âIs it? Because from where I'm sitting, it looks like the same pattern. You can't just show up and expectââ
âItâs notââ He stops, looking for the right words. âOkay. Maybe. But just let me show you I can be present. That we still work as a team.â His voice is steady now, certain. âThe rest of it, we can figure that out. Just give me this week, please.â
You should say no. You should tell him that orchestrating your life without your consent isn't how you rebuild trust. That half-apologies that donât actually contain an apology don't undo eight months of distance. That you can't just paper over everything with joint appearances and pretty words.
But he's looking at you so earnestly that it makes you hesitate. And the treacherous truth is that you're tired. Tired of being angry, tired of navigating this alone, tired of lying in that too-big bed and pretending you don't notice the empty space beside you.
And it would be so much easier to just... let this be easy.
âOne week,â you hear yourself say.
Something in his face softens. His posture shifts, only slightly, but you catch it. Relief, maybe. Or victory. Hard to tell which. âYeah?â
âOne week of actually showing up. And then we talk. Really talk. About all of it.â You hold his gaze. âAnd I mean everything, Bucky. The separation, the distance, why we're even doing this. No more avoiding the hard conversations.â
âDeal.â
The silence that follows is different. Still weighted, but less hostile. More like you're both feeling your way toward something that used to be natural and isn't anymore.
âSo,â Bucky says, moving food around his plate. âHow bad is Lord Johnson actually going to be on Thursday?â
Despite yourself, you almost laugh. âUnbearable. He's going to lecture you about trade policy superiority while asking for concessions.â
âSo exactly like last time.â
âMhm,â you agree, finally taking a bite of your salad. âExcept now he's also upset about the tariffs, so add that to his list of grievances. Plus he's developed this tendency to touch people when he talks. Very hands-on.â
Bucky's eyebrow raises, fork pausing halfway to his mouth. âShould I be worried?â
âAbout Lord Johnson making a move?â You can't quite keep the smirk off your face. âI think your virtue's safe.â
âI meant about him pawing at you for two hours.â
There's an edge of possession in his tone that should irritate you. Instead it does something warm and stupid in your chest. You take another bite, buying yourself a moment. âI can handle Lord Johnson.â
âI know you can.â He pauses. âDoesn't mean you should have to.â
You shrug. âIf he tries it with me, I'm elbowing him in the ribs.â
âI'll back you up. You sneezed, he was unfortunately in the blast radius, these things happen.â
You take a sip of water to cover the fact that you're almost smiling. This is the problem. This is exactly the problem. Two minutes of actual honesty and you're already slipping back into familiar patterns, already falling back into the easy rhythm of banter and knowing looks.
âMorrison might be at the Atlantic Council thing tomorrow,â you mention, trying to redirect to safer ground.
Bucky groans. âHe's going to corner me about the infrastructure bill again.â
âProbably. He's been insufferable about it since the committee hearing.â
âWell, I've gotten very good at the diplomatic non-answer.â His mouth curves slightly. âTake it under advisement, appreciate the input, look forward to continued dialogueââ
âYou learnt that from me.â You point your fork at him accusingly, though there's no real heat in it.
âI learnt most of the useful stuff from you.â He says it like it's simple fact, but something in his expression has gone softer.
The admission sits there between you, heavier than it should be. You look down at your plate, suddenly very focused on rearranging lettuce.
âYou really think this will work?â you ask quietly, not looking up. âThis week?â
âI think when we're together, we're still good at this. The partnership part. That has to count for something.â
It's not an answer to the bigger question. But maybe it's the only answer either of you has right now.
You eat in silence for a moment, but it's different now. Less hostile. Almost comfortable. Your phone buzzes. You glance down, itâs another email from Caroline about tomorrow's schedule. When you look back up, Bucky's watching you with an expression you can't quite read.
You eye him suspiciously. âWhat?âÂ
âNothing. Just...â He shakes his head slightly, but he's almost smiling. âI missed this.â
âYeah,â you admit, quieter than you mean to. âMe too.â
And you have, you realise. Not just him - though that's there too, complicated and inconvenient as it is - but this. The ease of being with someone who knows you well enough that you don't have to explain every reference or thought. Who can read your expressions without words. Who makes you laugh even when you're furious with them.
It doesn't fix anything. Doesn't undo the eight months or the separation or the fact that you still haven't actually addressed any of the reasons you split in the first place. But for right now, sitting across from your husband in a quiet corner of a restaurant where nobody's watching, it feels like maybe, just maybe, you can remember why you married him in the first place.
Even if that's exactly the problem.
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The week unfolds with a momentum you can't quite control, each day bleeding into the next in a blur of meetings that run too smoothly, dinners where the conversations flow too easily, and nights where he sleeps in your bed like itâs the most natural thing in the world.
By Wednesday you're laughing at his jokes again without the bitter edge. By Thursday his hand at your waist feels less like a claim and more like an anchor. The Times runs their profile on your relationship - âA Political Partnership That Worksâ - pulling photos from the week's events. You're flipping through them absently when the pattern registers. Different events, different rooms, different contexts. But in every frame, Buckyâs eyes are always fixed on you.
Oh.
You save the photos to your phone, which is its own kind of problem.
Matt's name sits in your contacts with no new messages. Of course, you're not keeping score of his silence against Bucky's constant presence. That would imply thereâs a competition between them. Which there definitely isnât.
To be fair, Caroline did mention his office called about rescheduling. You said you'd handle it. You didnât.
Matt hadnât chased the issue after that. Which is, objectively, the respectful thing to do. Matt never demands more than you freely offer him, which had once felt refreshingly uncomplicated. Lately, though, youâre starting to wonder if thereâs a difference between being understanding and simply never fighting for a place in someoneâs life.
Maybe Matt only knows how to want you in situations where wanting you remains easy.
By Friday morning you're walking back from the Canadian delegation breakfast, Bucky's telling some story that has you laughing hard enough that your sides hurt, and for a dangerous moment you forget about the separation. About the ocean's width of distance - literal and otherwise - that usually sits between you. That Sunday he leaves and you have to figure out what any of this actually meant.
But that's fine. You're exceptional at compartmentalizing. You've had years of practice at keeping different parts of your life in separate boxes that never touch. The fact that the boxes are getting harder to keep closed is something you'll worry about later.
Or at least, it should be, because right now you have a meeting that got squeezed into your calendar this morning that you need to prep for. But you can't seem to focus on the sparse notes that Caroline left you because your brain keeps drifting back to the way Buckyâs hand found yours under the table this morning and you let it stay there.
A knock at the door pulls you from the spiral.
âCome in,â you call, straightening slightly in your chair, trying to look like you've been doing something productive instead of staring at the same paragraph for ten minutes.
The door opens, and the distinctive tap of a cane against tile makes your stomach twist before you even look up.
Matt's standing in your doorway. Again. Appearing when youâre utterly unprepared to see him. Again. And youâre going to have to push him away. Again.
If the universe is trying to teach you something by replaying this week until you stop making catastrophically bad decisions, the lesson is lost on you.
âMatt.â You're already half-standing, the words tumbling out before you can stop them. âI'm so sorry, I have a meeting inââ you glance at your screen, at the calendar slot that's starting right now, ââI can't, I have toââ
âI know,â he interrupts, and there's something almost amused in his expression as he steps into the office properly. âI'm your meeting.â
Your eyebrow raises slowly. âYou faked a meeting to see me?â
âWell, since your husband's been so thorough about cutting me out of your calendar all week,â he returns smoothly, closing the door behind him with a quiet click, âit seemed like the only way in.â
There's a joke there, light and easy, but underneath it there's definitely an edge. A deserved one, maybe. The guilt that's been sitting low in your stomach all week flares hot and immediate. âMatt, I should have called. I meant to, I justâthe week got away from me, and I didnât mean to disappearââ
âYou didn't disappear,â Matt corrects mildly. âYou've been very visible, actually. Hard to miss when you're in three different political newsletters looking very much like the devoted political wife.â
The observation lands with enough weight that you have to look away. Matt moves closer, leaning against the edge of your desk with his arms crossed loosely, head tilted in that particular way that means he's cataloguing everything youâre not saying. Your elevated heart rate. The shallow breathing you can't quite control. The tension wound so tight in your shoulders you might snap.
âI know I should'veââ
âShould've what?â He interrupts again, but his voices stays gentle. âCalled the man you've been sleeping with while your husband's in town making sure everyone knows you're still married?â His mouth quirks slightly. âCan't imagine why that would feel awkward.â
The last part comes with just enough wry humour to take some of the sting out of it. An acknowledgement that yes, this situation is absurd, and yes, you're both aware of it.
âYou didn't call either,â you point out, and it comes out more wounded than you intend.
âNo, I didn't,â he admits easily. âDidn't want to crowd you when Bucky's been taking up so much real estate in your schedule. Thought maybe you needed space to figure things out.â His mouth curves, voice going warmer. âBesides, seemed only fair to give him a shot, sweetheart. I had you to myself for two months.â
It should feel mature, the way he keeps placing the choice back in your hands. But standing here now, watching him deliberately leave the distance between you intact, you canât quite ignore the small, ugly part of yourself that wants someone to fight a little harder for you than that.
So you close the distance yourself, drawn by the same gravitational pull that's been there since the first time he walked into your office three months ago. Once again doing the reaching. The pattern recognition occurring here is frankly humiliating.
Your hands find his chest, feel the steady thrum of his heartbeat under his shirt.
âI haven't figured anything out,â you admit quietly, because you suppose he deserves the honesty. âAbout what this week means, or what I want, or any of it.â
âNo?â There's something almost teasing in the question. âThe Times seemed pretty convinced you and Barnes are a political power couple for the ages.â
âThe Times doesn't know we're separated.â
âClearly.â His hand comes up, fingers finding your jaw with unerring accuracy, thumb brushing along your cheekbone in a touch that's devastatingly familiar. âThough after this week, I'm starting to wonder if you remember that either.â
The words should sting. Maybe they do. But mostly what you're aware of is his proximity, the heat of his palm against your face, the way your body has started leaning into him without conscious permission.
âMattââ
âSorry, Iâm not trying to make you feel guilty.â His thumb traces lower, following the line of your jaw. âThatâs not what this is.â
âThen what is this?â
âThis,â he murmurs, leaning in until his forehead nearly touches yours, âis me reminding you that you have options.â
âI've missed you,â you whisper against his lips.
His free hand comes up to your waist, thumb brushing the curve of your hip through your dress. âYeah?â
âYeah.â
You should stop this. Should step back and have the actual conversation about this week and where you stand and all the things you've been avoiding. Should deal with the compartments that are failing to stay separate instead of making everything more complicated.
But his mouth is right there.
You kiss him before you can think better of it, before the guilt can claw its way up your throat and ruin the moment. He makes a soft sound against your mouth, surprise giving way to hunger as he kisses you back.
It's different than kissing Bucky. Where Bucky takes, Matt asks - the tilt of his head a question, the press of his tongue a request. You grant it. Grant all of it. Pour five days of frustration and confusion into the kiss until you're both breathing hard.
âMissed this too,â you gasp between kisses, and he laughs against your mouth.
âJust this?â
âMissed you being a smartass,â you correct, tugging him closer by his tie. âMissed your hands on meâgod, I just missedââ
He lifts you then, strong hands gripping your thighs as he spins you both and sets you on the edge of your desk. Papers scatter. You don't care. Your legs open, allowing him to step into the space between your thighs.
âMissed having a conversation that didn't involve diplomatic immunity,â you continue, breathless, as his mouth trails down your neck. âMissed not being scheduled within an inch of my life.â
His teeth graze your pulse point. âSounds exhausting.â
âIt is.â Your head tips back, fingers threading through his hair. âIt'sâfuck, Mattââ
His hands slide up your thighs, pushing the hem of your skirt higher. The drag of his palms against your stockings makes you shiver.
Your hands find his lapels, pulling him desperately closer. The kiss deepens, his tongue sliding against yours, and for a moment you forget about Bucky and the separation and every complicated thing you've been avoiding.
âYou should've booked a longer meeting,â you manage, and it comes out almost playful despite the heat pooling low in your belly.
Matt's smile is absolutely wicked. âPlease,â he murmurs against your mouth. âI don't need long to make you come, sweetheart. Just need your legs open and the door locked.â
Heat floods through you at the promise in his voice, your thighs clenching involuntarily. Before you can even respond, his hands are sliding under your ass, lifting you in one smooth motion. Your legs wrap around his waist automatically, gasping into his mouth as he turns and walks you backward.
You don't break the kiss. Can't. Your fingers are in his hair, tugging probably too hard, and he makes this gorgeous rough sound against your mouth that vibrates straight through you. His mouth is hot and demanding against yours, tongue sliding past your lips to taste you properly, and you make a sound into his mouth that's embarrassingly needy.
Your back hits the door hard enough to knock the breath from your lungs, the solid wood catching you with enough force that you gasp into his mouth. Matt pins you there immediately, hips rolling forward, and you can feel how hard he is already, the thick length of him pressing right where you're aching. Your hand scrabbles blindly behind you for the lock, fingers clumsy with want, and when it finally clicks he groans like the sound itself did something to him.
âFuck yes,â he breathes against your mouth, and his hand slides up your thigh, pushing your skirt higher. When his fingers brush the inside of your thigh you shudder, hips canting forward, seeking more contact. âBeen thinking about this all week. Thinking about getting you alone, getting my hands on youââ
His fingers find the edge of your underwear, slipping just beneath the lace to trace along the seam where it meets your thigh. The touch is light, almost lazy, like he has all the time in the world and knows it's driving you insane. You gasp, hips grinding forward, trying to direct his hand where you actually need it, and your head drops back against the door. He laughs softly against your throat.
âGod, you're impatient,â he teases, teeth grazing your pulse point. âAlready trying to fuck yourself on my hand.â
âShut up,â you whine, but there's no heat in it, just desperate need.
âWhy?â His mouth trails to your jaw, leave wet kisses behind. âI like knowing you want me. Like hearing your pulse race when I touch you hereââ His finger traces up the centre of your underwear, dragging slowly through the damp fabric from your entrance all the way up to your clit. The pressure is perfect and not nearly enough, and you can feel how wet you are, how the lace clings to you. ââand feeling you stop breathing when Iââ
His fingers finally slip beneath the lace, and the second he actually touches you, feels how wet and slick you are, he makes this broken sound against your mouth that's half-groan, half-curse. Then he's kissing you again, mouth crashing back to yours. Tongue pushing past your lips deeper, harder, needier. Losing that earlier control. His fingers slide through the mess you've made and your hips jerk forward into his hand.
âFuck,â he breathes against your lips, fingers parting your folds and sliding through the wetness, spreading it deliberately before finding your clit. He circles it with your own slick, and you can feel how soaked you are, how easily his fingers move, and the wet sound of it makes your face flush hot. âYou're fucking soaked for me.â
He's not wrong. You are soaked, aching, need clawing under your skin with an urgency that borders on painful. Whether it's because of him or because you've spent five days with Bucky's hand at your waist and his body in your bed, that constant simmering tension winding you tighter and tighter with nowhere for it to go, you genuinely don't know.
Don't want to know.
Your hips roll forward, trying to get more pressure, more friction, more anything. âThen stop teasing and do something about it.â
He laughs, the sound rough and a little desperate. âYes ma'am.â
His fingers slide lower, one pressing inside you with a slow, deliberate stretch that makes your head thunk back against the door. You bite down on your lip hard, trying to keep quiet, hyper-aware that you're in your office in the middle of the day with your staff just outside.
âMattââ His name escapes your lips anyway, louder than you intend.
âShh,â he breathes against your lips, but he's smiling, adding another finger and curling them just right. âSweetheart, you're gonna get us caught.â
âYour fault,â you gasp, barely above a whisper, hips rocking to meet the thrust of his fingers.
âFair point.â His forehead presses to yours, breathing ragged. âBut you still need to be quiet for me. Can you do that?â
Nodding, you try to stop the moan building in your throat as his fingers work deeper, finding that spot that makes your thighs shake. Your nails dig into his shoulders through his shirt, breath coming in shallow, restrained gasps. But then he curls them again, harder, and the sound that escapes you is too loud, too obvious. His mouth is on yours immediately, swallowing the moan before it can carry.
He kisses you deep and filthy, tongue sliding against yours as his fingers work faster, his thumb finding your clit. The dual sensation is overwhelming, pleasure building fast and sharp. You're making these small, desperate noises into his mouth that you can't control, and he seems determined to catch every single one, kissing you harder each time his fingers make you gasp.
âMattâpleaseâI needââ you whisper between kisses, the words breaking apart.
âI know,â he murmurs back, and there's something soft in it even as his fingers work you closer to the edge. âNeed to come. Need to stop thinking for five minutes.â His thumb circles your clit with perfect pressure and you gasp into his mouth. âNeed it to be easy for once, yeah? Just this. Just us. Nothing complicated.â
Yes. God, yes. That's exactly what you need. To not think. To just feel something that isn't guilt or confusion or the weight of every choice you've made this week.
âMore,â you gasp.
âSo greedy sweetheart.â His thumb finds your clit, circling in rhythm with the thrust of his fingers. âWhat am I gonna do with you?â
âFuck me would be a good start.â
He groans, forehead dropping to your shoulder. âLove when you get bossy.â
His fingers slide out of you and the whimper that escapes you is pathetic, your hips moving forward involuntarily, trying to chase what you just lost.But your hands are already moving, shaking as they reach for his belt. You yank at it, fingers fumbling with the buckle in your desperation to get him undone.
You need him inside you, need it with an urgency that's making your hands clumsy and your breathing erratic.
âCondom?â you gasp out, finally getting his belt undone and working on the button of his slacks.
âWallet, back pocket.âÂ
A breath of relief punches out of you. âFuckâgood boy,â you tease, pulling him into a kiss.
Matt makes this wrecked sound into your mouth, somewhere between a moan and a growl, and his hand cracks down on your ass hard enough to make you gasp against his lips.
âCareful,â he warns, but there's no heat in it, just desperate want. âKeep talking like that and this is gonna be over way too fast.â
You reach around, palm sliding over his ass as you fish out his wallet. The leather is warm from his body heat, and your fingers are still trembling as you flip it open and grab the condom. You tear the foil packet open with your teeth, spitting the scrap of wrapper aside, and then your hand is wrapping around his cock. He's thick and hard in your palm, already leaking, and the groan that tears out of him is absolutely obscene.
âCan't have that,â you murmur, rolling the latex down his length slowly despite how badly you're shaking. You stroke him once, twice, feeling every thick inch, and your thumb swipes over the head. He shudders, fingers digging into your thighs hard enough to bruise.
âSweetheart,â he grits out, and it sounds like a plea. His hips buck forward into your grip. âPlease.â
âPlease what?â You're being mean now, hand still working him while he's trying to hold himself together.
âPlease let me fuck you before I lose my fucking mind.â
You guide the swollen head of his cock to your entrance and you both go still for half a second, just breathing against each other's mouths. Then he's pushing inside you in one long, smooth slide and the stretch steals every thought from your head. It's almost too much, the thick press of him, and you're making these small desperate sounds you can't control.
âFuck,â Matt breathes, the words vibrating against your throat where his mouth has landed. You can feel him shaking with the effort of holding still as he lets you adjust to the stretch of him. âYou feelâgod, you're so wet I can feel it dripping down myââ
You cut him off with a kiss, messy and graceless, and start rolling your hips experimentally. His cock drags against that spot inside you that makes your vision blur. The angle is perfect like this, him pinning you to the door, and each roll of your hips takes him deeper. He meets your rhythm, hands gripping your ass to hold you steady as he thrusts up into you, and you have to bite down on his shoulder to muffle the moan that tears out of you.
Your legs tighten around his waist, heels digging into his ass, trying to pull him impossibly closer.
âThat's it,â he groans, setting a rhythm that's slow but deep, each thrust deliberate and devastating. âTake what you need, sweetheart.â
You can barely form words, too focused on the stretch of him filling you, the way your needy cunt is already clenching around him, desperate to pull him deeper. The wet, obscene sounds of him fucking you fill your quiet office as you both pant into each other's mouths, drowning in the sensation of each other. The thick drag of his cock inside you, the press of his body against yours, the heat of your skin under his hands.Â
Your hand slides between your bodies, seeking more. When your fingers find your clit, it's swollen and sensitive, and just that first brush of contact makes you mewl into his mouth. You're so worked up, so desperate, that even your own touch feels like too much and not enough at the same time. You circle it carefully at first, testing, but the spike of pleasure that shoots through you makes your hips jerk and your walls clench around his cock.
âYou sound so pretty like this,â Matt pants against your neck, hips snapping forward. âSo fucking pretty when you stop overthinking and just let go.â
Your response is incoherent, something between a moan and his name. The pleasure is building fast, coiling tighter with each thrust, each drag of his cock inside you. Your cunt clenches around him, greedy, desperate, chasing the release that's right there.
âThat's it, sweetheart,â he encourages, rhythm getting rougher. âCan feel you getting close. Feel you squeezing my cock. You gonna come for me? Gonna let me feel it?â
You're circling your clit in time with his thrusts and it's almost too much sensation, pleasure coiling tighter in your belly. He shifts slightly and the new angle makes you see stars, a whimper escaping before you can bite it back.
âYesâfuckâMattââ
âThere?â he asks breathlessly, doing it again, and when you nod frantically he keeps hitting that exact spot. Every thrust drives him deeper and pushes your hand harder against yourself, and you're whimpering with each roll of your hips.
âI can hear it,â Matt groans into your mouth. âCan hear how close you areâyour heart's racing, your breathing, you're right thereâplease, sweetheart, need to feel youââ
It crashes over you sudden and overwhelming, pleasure ripping through you in waves. You come with a broken cry that Matt catches with his mouth, your cunt clamping down on his cock so hard you're practically strangling it. Your whole body locks up, thighs shaking as the pleasure tears through you in brutal waves. Your fingers are still on your clit, working yourself through it, and you're making these high desperate sounds into his mouth that you can't control.
âFuckâoh fuckââ Matt groans, fucking you through it, prolonging it until you're gasping and oversensitive. âSo fucking perfectââ
He buries himself deep with a final hard thrust and comes with a groan of your name, cock pulsing as he spills into the condom. You can feel every throb, every twitch as he empties himself, and it sends another aftershock through you that makes you clench around him all over again.
For a moment you just breathe together, foreheads pressed close, hearts racing in tandem. Your legs are trembling so badly around his waist that you're not sure they'll hold you when he pulls out. When he does, you both make these raw sounds at the loss of contact.
Slowly, carefully, he lowers you to the floor. Your knees wobble slightly as your feet hit the ground, and Matt immediately steadies you.
âOkay?â he asks softly, thumb stroking your hip.
âYeah,â you manage, because that's about all your brain can produce right now.
He kisses you again, but when he pulls back there's something careful in it. Almost like heâs making sure it stays just the right side of casual. His hand cups your face briefly - thumb brushing rogue strands of hair from your face.
âTold you I didn't need long,â he murmurs, and you can hear the smile in his voice.
âSmug bastard.â
But even as you say it your brain is already pulling away, cataloguing everything that needs to happen in the next ten minutes. Fix your hair. Cover that mark on your neck. Make yourself look like a composed diplomat instead of a woman who just fucked her boyfriendâsituationship? god, you refuse to be a grown woman with a situationshipâagainst her office door while her husband is probably working back home.
What the fuck are you doing?
Your heart kicks up, anxiety spiking sharp and sudden. Matt's thumb stills against your cheek, and you realise he can probably hear it. The way your body betrays every thought before you can even process it yourself.
âHey,â he says, and there's a question in it. âWhere'd you go?â
You open your mouth. Then immediately close it. You don't actually have an answer that won't make this worse.Â
His head tilts slightly, that listening posture you know so well, and his mouth curves into something small and resigned. Like he's already heard the answer in your pulse, in the shift of your breathing, in all the things your body is telling him that you won't say out loud.
So he steps back, creating space between you, and starts dealing with the condom without another word. He ties it off, wraps it in tissue from your desk, buries it under the papers in your trash bin so it's not the first thing anyone sees. The movements are quick and practised, and somehow that makes it worse.
âI should probably let you get back to it,â he offers, straightening out his clothes. âI'm sure you've got seventeen meetings stacked up this afternoon.â
You stare dumbly, watching him button his shirt, tuck it back in, re-buckle his belt. Everything going back into place like this was just a pleasant interlude in the workday and now it's back to business. He runs a hand through his hair to fix what your fingers messed up, and within two minutes he looks perfectly put together, as though nothing happened.
You catch sight of your reflection in the dark window and you definitely don't look like nothing happened. Your hair is a mess, your lips are swollen, and there's a faint mark on your neck that you're going to have to cover with makeup before your next meeting.
Matt turns away, adjusts his jacket, and something about the ease of it all makes your stomach twist. He's leaving. Of course he's leaving.
He picks up his cane, testing his weight on it, and the gesture is so familiar it hurts. How many times have you watched him do exactly that? Watched him prepare to leave after a late night working at your dining table, after drinks that turned into dinner that turned into more. Always the same smooth transition from intimacy back to separate lives.
He leans in, presses a kiss to your temple that lands somewhere between affectionate and perfunctory. âDon't let Bucky monopolize your entire weekend.â
It's said warmly. Casually, even. Like he's not bothered. Like this is all very uncomplicated and he's very okay with however this plays out.
âMattââ
âI'll see you later,â he says easily, hand already on the door.
The casualness of it catches you wrong. Hooks into something raw thatâs been building this whole week. And thatâs what snaps you out of your own head and back into the moment.
âThat's it?â The words come out sharper than you intend. âYou'll see me later?â
He pauses, hand on the doorknob, shoulders stiffing as he tries to read the edge in your voice. âAre youâis something wrong?â
Itâs remarkable, really. The man can hear your pulse spike from three rooms away, can detect the slightest shift in your body chemistry, can read more from your heartbeat than most people get from a full conversation. And yet here he is, still remarkably incapable of reading the room. Superhuman senses, same oblivious male brain.
âYou know what, no, nothing's wrong.â You scoff, yanking your skirt down with more force than necessary, already moving towards your desk, trying to put yourself back together. âYou're right, I do have a busy afternoon. Thanks for stopping by.â
âOkay, what's actually going on right now?â He asks slowly, like he's genuinely trying to figure this out. âYouâre clearly upset.â
âI'm not upset.â
âYour heart rate says differently.â
God, you hate that he can do that. Hate that your body betrays you before your mouth can even form the lie. And if he's going to use those stupidly accurate senses to call you out, fine. You might as well just say it.
âWhen am I going to see you again?â
The question hangs in the air. Matt's quiet for a moment, and you can see him processing, trying to read the subtext.
âI don't know.â The answer comes after a beat, careful. âWhen do you want to see me again?â
It's a reasonable question. A fair question. So why does it make you want to scream?
âThat's really how you're going to leave this?â You turn to face him, and you know you're being unfair but you can't seem to stop yourself. âI don't know, you tell me, we'll figure it out later?â
His expression shifts, the muscles tightening around his lips even as his posture stays relaxed. âI was trying to make it easy for you.â
âEasy for me or easy for yourself?â
âBoth, probably,â he admits, and the ease of his honesty genuinely makes you pause. âYou've got a lot going on. Your husband's here, clearly trying toâŠâ The sentence trails off, unfinished, like he doesnât want to say something he shouldnât. âI'm trying not to put more pressure on you when Bucky's already doing that.â
âSo you're just backing off? Not even going toââ You stop, because fight for me sounds insane and desperate and you're not sure you even want him to fight for you, but the fact that he won't makes you furious anyway.
âWhat do you want from me here?â Matt asks, and there's the first edge of frustration creeping into his voice. âYou want me to demand your time? Tell you to pick me over him? Make this harder for you?â
You open your mouth but nothing comes out, because you don't know. You don't know what you want from him. You don't know what you want from Bucky. You don't know what you want from any of this mess you've created.
âMaybe I just want you to care! âThe words burst out louder than you meant them, and you have to forcibly lower your voice, aware again of where you are, who might hear. âI want you to act like this actually matters instead of just being whatever's convenient when I have a free hour.â
The silence that follows is sharp enough to cut.
âThat's not fair,â he says quietly.
âIsn't it? You won't make plans more than a day out. You've never even asked me to stay over.â
âBecause I don't know what we are!â His voice spikes, exasperated, and you both freeze for a second, listening for footsteps in the hall. When none come, he continues, quieter but no less intense. âYou're still married. He's clearly trying to get you back. You're asking me to push when you've made it pretty clear you don't know what you want, and I'm not going to compete with your husband.â
âThere's a difference between not being pushy and not fighting for anything at all!âYour voice cracks slightly on the last word and you hate yourself for it, the vulnerability bleeding through when you're trying to stay angry. You swallow hard, trying to pull it back together. âThere's a difference between giving someone space and just letting go without even trying.â
âI'm trying,â he begins, and there's something rawer in his voice now, âto give you space to figure your shit out without making you feel like you owe me something.â
âMaybe I want to owe you something!â You're pacing now, heels clicking sharp against the floor. âMaybe I want you to act like you actually give a damn whether I pick him or not!â
âOf course I give a damn!â It's the closest he's come to raising his voice. âBut I'm not going to manipulate you or monopolize your calendar or show up andââ He stops himself. âI'm not him. I'm not going to do what he does.â
âAt least he's doing something!â
The words land like a slap. You see it in the way his expression shutters, in the way his hand tightens on his cane.
âRight.â His voice is flat. âWell. At least we know where we stand, then.â He's already turning toward the door. âClearly Iâm not what you need.â
âMatt, I didnât meanââ You press your palms against your eyes because you can feel the sting of tears starting and you really donât want to cry right now. âYouâre right, I don't know what I need.â Your voice cracks again and you hate it, hate the tears that are threatening, hate how small you sound. âBut why does it have to be all or nothing with both of you? He smothers me and you won't evenââ
You stop, pressing your hand to your mouth, trying to hold it together. But the tears are coming anyway, hot and frustrated and exhausted, because you've been holding everything in all week and it's too much. It's all too much.
The tap of his cane stops.
For a moment there's just silence, broken only by the humiliating wet sound of you trying not to sob.
âI'm fine.â But your voice does that horrible shaky thing that makes it very clear you are the opposite of fine.
âYou're not fine.â He's already moving toward you, and then his hands are on your arms. Warm and solid and gentle in a way that makes your chest hurt worse. âYou're crying in your office.â
âDon'tââ You try to turn away, humiliation burning hot in your chest because this is mortifying. âI just need a minute. I'm fine, really,â you try again, but it comes out as barely more than a whisper.
âStop saying that.â His voice has gone impossibly soft, thumb stroking along your forearm. âCome here, please.
You let him pull you in, let yourself press your face against his chest while the tears come properly now. His arms come around you, solid and sure, one hand coming up to cup the back of your head. He doesn't say anything. Just holds you while you shake apart against him, while you soak the front of his shirt with tears that won't stop coming.
âI'm sorry,â you gasp out between sobs. âI'm sorry, I don'tâI don't know what I'm doing. I don't know what I want. This whole week has been so fucked up and I can't think straight and I don'tââ Another sob cuts you off.
âShh. I know.â His hand moves in slow circles on your back, the pressure steady and grounding. âIt's okay, just breatheâ
âIt's not okay.â The words come out muffled against his chest. âThis whole week has beenââ Your breath hitches. âHe's everywhere and you'reâand I can't think straight and I keep making everything worseââ
His hand stills on your back for just a moment. âWhat do you need?â
You pull back slightly, just enough to breathe, and his hands shift to your arms. Steadying but not restraining. His face is tilted toward you with that particular focus he gets when he's listening to everything - your heartbeat, your breathing, the catch in your voice.
âI don't know.â You pull back slightly, wiping at your face with shaking hands. âMaybe I just need a break. From this. From both of you.â
You try to read his reaction, but he doesnât give anything away. Just keeps stroking your back in those same soothing motions.
âBucky's going back to DC on Sunday anyway,â you continue, and your voice sounds raw even to your own ears. âMaybe I just need some time. To figure myself out. Figure out what I actually want instead of justââ You gesture helplessly at the general disaster that is currently your life. âThis.â
You expect him to argue. To push back. To do something other than what he does, which is nod slowly.
âOkay,â he says quietly, and his thumb comes up to brush away a tear from your cheek. âYeah. We can do that. You need time, I'll give you time.â
The agreement should feel like relief but instead it just makes you want to cry harder. Because of course he's not fighting this either. Of course he's just agreeing, just stepping back, just giving you exactly what you asked for in a way that somehow feels like losing anyway.
âButââ He hesitates, and something in his tone shifts. Gets more careful. âYou might need to explain this all to Bucky too. Since, you know. He thinks you're working things out.â
Your head snaps up, tears still wet on your cheeks. âWhat?â
Matt's lips purse slightly, like heâs trying to figure out how to phrase it. âHe asked me to back off. Said you two were working through things. That you needed space to figure out your marriage without complications.â His mouth twists slightly on the last word. âMeaning me.â
The humiliation of thirty seconds ago transmutes instantly into something else. The tears stop. Everything stops. For a moment you just stare at Matt, trying to process what he's telling you, and then the rage hits like a freight train. âHe told you we were getting back together?â
âNot in those exact words, but yes,â he confirms quietly. âHe tried to make it seem like he knew where things stood between you. Made it pretty clear he considered me a temporary blip in your relationship.â
âThat fuckingââ You can't even finish the sentence, fury choking the words in your throat. Your hands are shaking again, but this time with anger.
âWe had one lunch,â you say, and your voice has gone cold. âOne. Where he apologised for being absent and I agreed to give him one week to prove he could actually show up. That's it. We neverâI never said we were working things out.â
Matt's very quiet.
âHe told you we were reconciling.â You're not asking. You're clarifying. Making sure you understand the full scope of what Bucky's done. âHe told you to back off because we were fixing our marriage.â
âYeah.â
âAnd then he filled my entire calendar. And slept in my bed. And touched me like I belonged to him in front of half of diplomatic London.â The pieces are clicking together with horrible clarity. âHe decided. Again. He just fucking decided without me that we're working things out and told myâtold you to back off like he gets to make those calls for me.â
You're already moving, grabbing your bag, your phone, not even sure what you're doing but you need to move, need to do something with this rage before it burns you alive from the inside.
âWhere are you going?â Matt asks carefully.
âHome.â The word comes out sharp and final. âI'm going home and I'm ending this shit right now.â
ââ âąÂ â âïž Ëă»đïž âč
The click of your heels echoes through the residence, each step a punctuation mark to the fury coiling tighter in your chest. You stride through the hallway, past Thomas who takes one look at your face and wisely says nothing, and straight to the study where you know Bucky's working.
He's at the desk - your desk, because apparently he's just moved back into every corner of your life without asking - looking at some papers with a confused scrunch of his nose that would be endearing if you weren't currently fantasizing about throwing something heavy at his head.
The papers hit the mahogany with a slap that makes him jolt upright. For half a second there's just confusion - eyebrows raised, mouth slightly parted on a question that hasnât formed yet - and then his eyes drop to what youâve thrown down. âPetition for Dissolution of Marriageâ printed across the top in black and white. You watch his face change as he reads the header. Watch the colour drain slightly. Watch his throat work as he swallows.
âWhatââ He starts to speak, stops to compose himself, and when the words finally come theyâre careful, like he already knows the answer and is hoping he's wrong âWhatâs this?â
âTake a wild fucking guess, Congressman.â
His hand moves slowly toward the papers like they might burn him, fingers hovering before he finally touches them. He flips through, and you know the exact moment he finds the signature page because his whole body goes rigid.
Your finger jabs down at the signature line. âSign them.â
âWhat?â He's standing now, the chair scraping back, and there's something raw starting to crack through the careful composure on his face. Something that looks like panic and grief all at once. âBabyââ
âDon't.â You hold up a hand and he actually freezes mid-step. âDon't 'baby' me. Don't use that voice. Don't act like you can smooth this over if you just find the right words.â
âThat's notâI'm notââ His hands spread wide in a helpless gesture. âPlease, just talk to me. What happened? This morning we were fine, we wereââ
âWe were what, exactly?â You cut him off, arms crossing over your chest. âWorking things out? Getting back together? Reconciling our marriage?â
Bucky's quiet for a moment, and you can practically see him running through possibilities, trying to figure out which particular mine he's stepped on. And then the guilt stats to flicker across his face.
âOh good,â you say flatly. âYou know exactly what I'm talking about.â
His whole posture changes, that familiar stubborn set coming into his jaw that tells you he's not going to back down easy. âIf this is about Mattââ
âIf this is about Matt?â You actually laugh, and it sounds wrong even to your own ears. âThis is about you, Bucky! The fact that you lied and said we were working things out. That you said to back off because apparently we needed space to fix our marriage.â
He's quiet. Won't meet your eyes.
âWhen exactly were you planning to mention that to me?â Fury makes your voice shake despite your best efforts to keep it steady. âBefore or after you finished orchestrating my entire fucking life?â
âI was trying toââ
âI don't care what you were trying to do!â It comes out too loud, echoing off the study walls. âYou know, I've had these papers for two months. Two months of looking at them in my drawer, too much of a coward to sign them, because some pathetic part of me still hoped we could fix this.âÂ
Your voice cracks and you have to stop, have to breathe through the anger and hurt tangling in your throat.
âBut we can't. Because you don't know how to be in a partnership. You only know how to run operations and make strategic decisions and manipulate variables, and I'm so fucking tired of being a variable in your life instead of your fucking wife.â
âThat's not what you are to me! I swear, pleaseââ He runs a hand through his hair, and heâs scrambling, trying to find the words that will fix this. His gaze drifts back to the papers like they might rearrange themselves into something different if he looks hard enough. âWait, you drew these up two months ago?â
You watch him do the maths. Watch the realization settle across his features, his jaw going tight.
âWhen you started seeing him.â It's not a question.Â
âStop making this about Matt! Stop deflecting. Stop trying to make this about jealousy when this is about you making decisions about my life without me!âÂ
You're pacing before you realise it, unable to stand still. Three steps to the window and back.
âIt seems very much to be about him though, doesn't it?â Bucky's voice has gone rough at the edges. He pushes off the desk, takes a step toward you. âYou draw up divorce papers the second you start sleeping with him, this whole week goes perfectly fine until you see him again, and now you're in here ready to end our marriageââ
âThis week was a lie!â You shout, beyond caring who might hear. âThis week was you orchestrating my entire life, filling my calendar, telling people we were reconciling without ever actually asking me if that's what I wanted! Don't you dare act like things were fine when the whole thing was built on you manipulatingââ
ââI wasnât manipulatingââ
ââour marriage, making a decision about my relationships without saying word to me!â Your voice rises to stay above his. âI actually had those papers drawn up two months ago because Iâd spent the previous six months unable to have a single fucking conversation with my own husband!â
The words are coming faster now, angrier, everything you've been holding in for 8 months spilling out. âEvery time I called I got 'he's in a meeting' or 'he'll call you back' and he never, ever did. Because somewhere along the line I stopped being your wife and became an item on your assistant's to-do list that never made it to the top of the pile!â
His head comes up. His eyes are wet with unshed tears when they find yours, jaw locked so tight you can see the muscle jumping. He's trying desperately to hold it together but you watch him start to lose the fight in the way his face crumples, in the painful swallow working down his throat. His hand lifts toward you before he seems to remember himself and lets it drop uselessly back to his side.Â
âIâm sorry, sweetheart, I know I fucked up, I know I wasn't there, and I'm trying to fix it nowââ
âBy doing the same thing! By making decisions without me!â Your nails dig into your palms hard enough to hurt, arms rigid at your sides. âDo you not see that? Youâre still doing it, Bucky, you're still shutting me out and deciding what's best for us without ever asking me what I want!â
âSo what do you want from me?â His desperation bleeds through every word, but itâs far too little, and far too late. âTell me what you want and I'll do it.â
For a moment you just stand there, looking at him across the desk that's covered in his work, in this life he built without consulting you. You should feel something. Guilt, maybe. Regret. Some echo of the love that used to live in your chest when you looked at him like this. But you just feel exhausted.Â
When you finally speak, the answer comes out quieter than anything else you've said tonight.
âI want you to sign the papers.â
Your words seem to suck the air out of the room, leaving nothing but the thundering of your own heartbeat in your ears.
âNo.â He's shaking his head slowly at first, then faster, like he can physically deny what's happening if he just refuses hard enough. âNo, I'm notâI can'tââ
âYou don't get to say no.â
âJust talk to me!â He begs. âJust talk to me instead of throwing divorce papers on my desk and expecting me toââ
âTalk to you?â You can hear the bitter edge bleeding through your voice, feel it scraping against your throat. âWow, okay. Like you talked to me before telling Matt to back off? Like you talked to me before orchestrating my entire week? Like you talked to me every time I called and got your pretty little assistant instead?â
âI told you I didnât sleep with her.â
âOh my fucking god, congratulations!â Your arms fly up in exasperation. âYou want a medal for not fucking your assistant? You want me to applaud your restraint? Letâs not act like you were alone, pining away for me this whole time.â
âAt least I didn't parade it in front of you!â The accusation explodes out of him like it's been festering, his face flushing with pain and frustration mixing together.
âWe were separated! That was the whole fucking point of the agreement!â Even though your throat is becoming raw from shouting, you canât seem to stop, months of resentment pouring out of you. âMarried in public, free to see other people privately - thatâs what we agreed to. Except clearly, neither of us can act normally about it!â
Your voice cracks.
âWe're just destroying each other. And I can't do it anymore.â
Your words hang in the air between you. You're both breathing hard, and the study feels simultaneously too small and too vast, like the space can't quite contain what's happening. Then something shifts in his expression as he seems to finally hear what heâs been saying, how he sounds. His shoulders sag inward. The voice that comes out next is barely recognisable.
âI'm sorry.â He drags a hand over his face. âYou're right. I'm making this worse. I'm making everything worse. But please, donât do this, just give me a chance tooââ
âI've been giving you chances for eight months. I gave you a chance when you became Congressman without talking to me about it. I gave you a chance this week when you showed up and I let you back in even though you were already making decisions for me. And every time you fucked it up!â
Bucky just stands there, breathing hard, staring at you like youâve gutted him. His eyes are still wet, tears clinging to his lashes but refusing to fall.
âI love you,â he whispers. âAnd I know you might not have felt it, and i know itâs not enough, but I have loved you through every stupid mistake I've made, including running for Congress.â
He lets out a breath that sounds like it's been trapped in his chest for months.
âI thought⊠I thought if I could be someone important, someone legitimate, maybe I'd finally be worthy of you. You've spent your whole career saving lives, negotiating peace, actually helping people. And I'm justââ His voice cracks. âI'm still just the Winter Soldier trying to prove I'm more than that. So I ran for Congress because I thought it might fix me, might fill the hole where my humanity used to be. But instead I just broke us and Iâm still as damaged as before. And now I can'tââ
His voice fractures completely.
âI can't lose you.â
The confession lands entirely wrong, because this is what you've wanted to hear for months - years, maybe. This vulnerability, this honesty, this real version of Bucky youâve only ever glimpsed in stolen moments. And itâs too late. Your throat tightens. You have to look away from him because seeing him like this, broken open and bleeding out in front of you, makes something in you want to take it all back. Want to cross the room and hold him and tell him he's not damaged, that he's never been unworthy, that you've loved him through every version of himself he hasnât.
But loving him has never been the problem.
âYou already did, Bucky.â The words hurt coming out. âYou can't put that on me - your sense of self-worth, your identity, fixing yourself. That was never my job. I loved you. I loved you exactly as you were, and you never believed me. And now you're telling me you destroyed our marriage trying to become someone you thought I wanted, when all I ever wanted was you.â
Somehow his face crumples further. You have to look away again. When you speak next, your voice is barely above a whisper. Tired and sad and so heavy you can barely get the words out.
âSo yes, you're right. You did break us. But not because you weren't good enough, Bucky. Because you never let me love the person you actually are.â
For a moment he just stands there, and you watch all the fight drain out of him like someone pulled a plug. His eyes go distant, almost glassy, and his breathing deepens, like he's shutting something down inside himself. The desperation from moments ago has been replaced by something far more terrifying: quiet resignation. He's finally stopped trying to hold on.
He picks up the pen. His hand trembles badly enough that you wonder if he'll even be able to write, but he manages to grip it, staring down at the signature line for what feels like an eternity. When the pen finally touches paper, the scratch of it against the silence is deafening.
He signs his name. Dates it. Slides the papers across the desk toward you without meeting your eyes.
âThere.â His voice is completely destroyed. âIf that's what you need.â
You pick up the papers with numb fingers. Stare at his signature like you can't quite believe it's real.
âI'm sorry.â He hasn't moved. Just stands there with wet cheeks and empty hands. âI'm so sorry. For every way I failed you. For not being what you needed.â
âThank you.â It comes out barely audible. âFor the apology. For signing.â
You fold the papers slowly, creasing each edge with deliberate precision because if you think about the mechanics of folding paper you don't have to think about what you're holding.
âI want you to catch the next flight back to DC. Tonight, if you can. I'll have Thomas help you pack.â
âOkay.â He looks lost standing there, like he doesn't know what to do with his hands, with his body, with any of this. âOkay, yeah.â
âAnd Buckyââ Your voice is steadier now, or at least you're doing a better job of faking it. âDon't call. Don't text. Don't send flowers or letters or try to fix anything. We're done. Let it be done.â
He nods, even though it looks like it's killing him. âOkay.â
There should be something else to say. Some final words that would make this less awful, less final. But you can't think of anything that won't make it worse. So you just turn and walk toward the door, papers pressed against your chest like you need the reminder of why youâre doing this.
âFor what it's worth,â His voice stops you at the threshold, and it comes out quiet and defeated. âYou're the best thing that ever happened to me. The best thing I've ever had and the worst thing I've ever lost, and I know that's my fault. I know I did that.â The silence hangs for a moment. âI'm sorry. For all of it.â
You don't turn around, can't let him see your face right now.
âGoodbye, Bucky.â
Then you walk out, leaving your husband standing alone in the study, and you don't look back.
ââ âąÂ â âïž Ëă»đïž âč
The wind off the Potomac is sharp enough to sting, cutting through your coat. March in Washington hasn't gotten any more pleasant since you left - still grey, still biting, still full of men in expensive suits having conversations that matter to nobody outside this ten-block radius.
You've been back for two days. Meetings, briefings, a reception last night where you smiled until your face hurt and deflected questions about London with the practised ease of someone who's done this too many times to count. It's fine. Exhausting, but fine. You can do this job in your sleep at this point.
What you can't do, apparently, is stop yourself from scanning every room you enter for a familiar face. Your heart has been doing this annoying thing ever since you landed at Dulles where it kicks up at unexpected moments - half anticipation, half dread. Walking past a coffee shop that he used to go to. Hearing someone laugh in a way that's almost but not quite his register. Seeing a tall, dark-haired man in a suit who makes your stupid heart stutter before you realise it's not him.
You're not looking for him. You're absolutely not looking for him. You're just aware. Hyper-aware, maybe. Of the absence. Of the space where he should be and isn't.Â
Because Bucky's on Foreign Relations. He should have been at yesterday's hearing. Definitely should have been at the NATO briefing this morning where you spent two hours making small talk with people who absolutely knew you were divorced and were definitely trying not to bring it up.
But he's not here. And the unease that started yesterday has metastasized into something closer to worry, which is absurd because you're divorced and it's none of your business anymore where he is or what he's doing or why he's apparently missing every major political event this week.
Except now it's your last day in DC and you're walking out of your final meeting, and you still haven't seen him. Which is good. That's good. That's what you wanted - to get through this trip without the inevitable awkward encounter, without having to figure out what you're supposed to say to your ex-husband in a professional setting.
He's probably just busy. He's always busy. That's the whole problem, isn't it? Was. Was the whole problem.
You tell yourself it's none of your business. You tell yourself heâs probably had scheduling conflicts, or dozen other reasonable explanations that have nothing to do with you. You tell yourself to get in the car waiting to take you to the hotel and get a good nights sleep before your flight tomorrow morning.
Instead, you hear yourself giving the driver a different address.
You watch DC slide past the window. Familiar streets, familiar monuments, a city you used to know as well as London but feels foreign now. It's been three months since you signed those papers. Six weeks since the divorce was finalised. And he gave you the silence that you asked for, that you needed, that was supposed to make this easier.Â
It did make some things easier, in a way. You can think about him now without that sharp twist of anger in your chest. Can acknowledge the good parts of your marriage without immediately cataloguing all the ways it fell apart. You've stopped checking your phone obsessively, stopped writing texts you never sent, stopped having imaginary arguments with him at two in the morning.
You've started sleeping through the night again. Started saying âmy ex-husbandâ without your voice catching. Started believing that maybe you could actually do this - be divorced, be separate, be okay.
But you still can't be in this city without needing to know he's alright. Because Bucky Barnes gets under your skin and doesnât leave. Not really. Not even after divorce papers and three months of silence and all the ways you've tried to extract him from your chest. He's just there, permanent as a scar, and you've apparently made peace with the fact that he always will be.
His apartment is close enough to the Capitol that he could walk if he wanted to, far enough that it didn't feel like living at the office. You'd picked it out together four years ago, back when you thought his Congressional run was temporary and you'd be back in New York within a term. The doorman doesn't recognise you, but he calls up anyway when you give him your name.
The elevator ride to the eighth floor feels longer than the entire flight from London. Your heart is doing that kicking thing again but worse now, harder, because this is stupid and inappropriate and you have no right to be here. But what if something's wrong? Or maybe nothing's wrong and you're being ridiculous. Both options feel equally terrible.
You walk down the hallway on muscle memory, and before you can overthink it anymore, youâre standing in from of 8F. The door opens before your knuckles even make contact with the wood.
Bucky's standing there in jeans and a Henley that's seen better days, hair slightly too long and falling into his eyes. The permanent tension he used to carry in his shoulders has eased, and there's no tie strangling him, no suit jacket making him look like a politician action figure. He looks comfortable in a way you've never seen him look in DC.
He also looks completely shocked to see you.
His eyes go wide, lips parting on what might be your name but doesn't quite make it out.Â
âHi,â you manage.
For a second he just stares at you like you might be a hallucination, hand still on the doorframe, body frozen mid-breath. âHi.â
And then silence. Awful, stretching silence where you're both just looking at each other and you're realizing with creeping horror that you came all the way here without any plan for what you were actually going to say. Now you're just standing here like an idiot while he stares at you and oh god you need to say something, anythingâ
âI'm sorry. I know I shouldn't just show up, I was in town for meetings and I wasn't going to bother youââ And suddenly you're talking too fast, words tumbling over each other in a way that would be mortifying if you could stop long enough to be mortified. âBut you weren't at the Foreign Relations hearing yesterdayâwhich isn't my business, obviously, you don't owe me your scheduleâŠâÂ
Your hand comes up to your neck, fingers pressing against the tension there like that might somehow stop the word vomit. âBut then you also weren't at the NATO briefing this morning and I know you're always at those because it's your thing, and I know I have no right to just show up here, and this is probably completely inappropriateââ
Shit, you're babbling. You're fully babbling at your ex-husband who you haven't spoken to in three months while he stands there looking increasingly bewildered. Stop talking. Stop talking right now.
ââbut I was getting in the car to go to my hotel and I just kept thinking about how you weren't there and what if something was wrong, and I know I asked for space and this is definitely not space, this is the opposite of space, this is me showing up at your apartment like a completeââ
âI left Congress.â
The words cut through your spiral, stopping you mid-sentence with your mouth still open. Your brain completely flat-lines for a moment and then reboots, and for a second you just stare at him while the information tries to process.
âWhat?â
âCongress. I left.â He says it simply, like he's commenting on the weather. âAbout three weeks ago.â
âOh.â
The word comes out flat and stupid. You blink at him. Process his words. Try to figure out what expression your face is making and whether it's appropriate.
âOh,â you repeat dumbly, because apparently that's all your brain can produce. âI didn'tâI didn't know.â
The silence that follows is excruciating. And you're suddenly extremely aware that you're standing in his hallway, that he's looking at you with an expression you can't parse, and how you've just made a complete fool of yourself by showing up here based on incorrect assumptions about his schedule.
This was a mistake. This was such a mistake.
âRight. Of course.â You take a step back toward the elevator, face hot with embarrassment. âI'm sorry, I shouldn't haveâthis was inappropriate, I'll justââ
âDo you want to come in?â The question comes out slightly strangled, like it surprised him as much as it surprises you.
It stops you mid-retreat. You look at him and he's watching you with something that might be hope or might be caution or might be both.
âI don't want to intrudeâŠâ
âYou're not.â He steps back from the doorway, making space. âI mean, you're already here. And I'd like to talk to you, if that's okay.â
You should say no. Should absolutely say no. Should get back in that car and go to your hotel and let this remain a awkward three-minute interaction you can both pretend never happened.
âOkay,â you hear yourself say instead.
You step inside and it hits you how familiar everything still is. Same layout you could navigate blind, same view of the street you used to watch on sleepless nights, same couch you both used to fall asleep on after long nights reading political documents.Â
But the congressional briefings that used to bleed across every flat surface are gone. In their place are books on the side table - actual books that look read, spines creased, pages dog-eared. The kitchen looks like someone's actually been using it instead of just microwaving leftovers at midnight. It's still the same apartment, but it feels different. Like someone actually exists here instead of just sleeping between eighteen-hour days.
You're standing there trying to process it when you realise Bucky's closed the door and now you're both just awkwardly existing in the same space, six feet apart, neither of you sure what to do with your hands.
But damn, he looks good. That's the thing you keep getting stuck on. The permanent furrow between his brows has smoothed out. His shoulders sit easier. Even the way he's standing is looser, less like a man braced for impact. And he's looking at you like he's trying very hard to be normal about this and failing completely. Like you're something he's not allowed to want anymore but can't quite help it.
You clear your throat, grasping for something to say that isn't we got divorced and you look good and I don't know what to do with that.
âSo⊠Not Congressman Barnes anymore.â
He actually cringes, then huffs out a surprised laugh. âYeah. Thank god.â
âWhat happened?â You're trying to keep your voice neutral, conversational, but it definitely comes out more loaded than you intended. âI mean, you don't have to tell me if you don't want to, I don't have a right toââ
âYou have a right,â he interrupts quietly, then seems to reconsider. âOr, I don't know if you have a right, but I want to tell you anyway.â
You nod, not trusting your voice.
He runs a hand through his hair, and you watch him gather his thoughts. That little exhale he does when he's trying to figure out how to be honest about something difficult.
âAfter the divorceââ He stops on the word, like it physically hurts to say. He swallows, tries again. âI did a lot of thinking. About why I ran for Congress in the first place, what I was trying to prove. And I realised I hated it. Hated the politics, the performance, the constant posturing. I was terrible at it, you know I was terrible at it. The only reason I didn't completely implode was because you were there coaching me through it, and once you weren't...â He trails off, shaking his head. âI kept going anyway because I thought that's what I was supposed to do. That quitting would mean I'd failed, or that I was giving up.â
He's looking at his hands now, the flesh one fidgeting against the metal one.
âBut you were right. I was doing it for all the wrong reasons. Trying to be someone I thought deserved you instead of figuring out who I actually am.â He lets out a breath. âNot for you, not to prove anything to anyone. Just for me. I'd never done that before.â
He shifts his weight, suddenly looking uncomfortable with how honest that came out, and you have to swallow past the tightness in your throat because that might be the most vulnerable thing he's ever admitted to you.
âSo I quit.â He shrugs like it's no big deal, trying to play it off. âAnd then I started thinking about what I actually wanted to do if I wasn't trying to prove I was more than what Hydra made me.â
He glances up at you then, and there's something almost hesitant in it, like he's trying to gauge your reaction. Like he canât help that some part of him still wants you to be proud of him even though he's doing this for himself. âSam's been building something with the Avengers. A new teamââ
And he must catch the concern that flickers across your face because he quickly adds, âI'm not fighting; I'm done with that. But Iâm going to help with training programs, support systems, trying to make sure the next generation doesn't get chewed up the way we did. Sam suggested it. And for the first time in years something just... clicked.â
You're staring at him, trying to process all of it. The growth. The self-awareness. The fact that he actually heard you, actually sat with it, actually made changes not to win you back but because he needed to be better for himself.
âThat'sââ Your voice comes out rough and you have to clear your throat. âThat's really good, Bucky. I'm happy for you.â
And you are. You are genuinely happy for him. But there's something bittersweet lodged behind your ribs too, something that tastes like why now and why couldn't you have done this when we were still trying and this is exactly what I wanted from you.
âI'm sorry I didn't tell you,â he adds quietly. âI wasn't sure if it was my place anymore, or if you'd want to know. You asked for silence and I was trying to respect that, trying to give you the peace you deserved after everything I put you through.â
God. He's doing exactly what you asked him to do. Respecting your boundaries, not inserting himself into your life, letting you move on. And apparently getting what you want feels a lot like getting punched in the chest, which seems cosmically unfair.
âYou're allowed to tell me things,â you manage. âJust because we're divorced doesn't mean I don't care about what happens to you.â
He nods slowly, but doesn't say anything, and the quiet that settles between you is thick with all the things neither of you knows how to say.
You're both still just standing there and you have no idea what you're supposed to do now. No idea what the protocol is for this situation. No idea how to be around him when he looks this good and this different and this much like what you'd needed him to be.
That's when you hear it. A small, inquiring âmrrpâ from somewhere behind the couch. A white cat emerges, one blue eye and one green, tail high and confident as she saunters into the middle of the room and sits down to observe you both with feline judgment.
âYou got a cat,â you remark, grateful for a distraction.
âYeah.â Bucky says, and there's something almost embarrassed in his voice. âHer name's Alpine. I got her about a month after the divorce. The apartment was too quiet and Iââ He trails off, one hand coming up to rub the back of his neck. âShe was at a shelter and she looked at me like she knew I needed someone around and I guess I did.â
The apartment was too quiet because you weren't in it anymore, is the thing he doesn't say. But it hangs there anyway.
Alpine pads over to you with the confidence of a cat who knows she's in charge, and you crouch down automatically, extending your hand for her to sniff.
âHi there, sweet girl,â you murmur, and she immediately butts her head against your palm, purring like a small motor. Within seconds she's winding between your legs, tail curling around your calf with clear ownership.
âWell, that's it then,â Bucky teases, small smile tugging at his lips. âShe's decided you're hers. Good luck leaving, she's very persistent when she wants something.â
The words hang in the air for a second, and you watch his expression shift as he seems to hear what he just said. Like he's just remembered that you leaving is exactly what's supposed to happen. That you have a life that doesn't include him or his cat.
âSo, how are things with....â He clears his throat, and you can practically feel him trying to make his voice sound casual and normal. It doesn't work. âHow's the boyfriend?â
Your hand stills on Alpine's fur. You look up to find him studiously examining a spot on the wall like it's the most fascinating piece of architecture he's ever seen.
âMatt moved back to New York a few months ago.â You straighten up slowly, Alpine protesting the loss of attention with a small trill. âWe ended things. Wanted different things from the relationship.â
âOh.â Bucky's eyes finally land on you, and there's something complicated happening in his expression. âI'm sorry.â
âNo you're not.â
It comes out before you can stop it, and for a second you think you've made it weird again, but then Bucky laughs. It's surprised out of him, genuine and a little helpless, and god you've missed that sound.
âNo,â he admits, smile going crooked. âI'm really not.â
The honesty of it sits between you for a moment. Then something changes in his face, the amusement fading into something more vulnerable.
âBut I should be sorry,â he continues quietly. âIt shouldn't matter what I think. You deserve to move on, to be happy with someone whoââ He cuts himself off, looking down at his hands. âSomeone who can actually be what you need. And I'll deal with that eventually. I will. I'm justââ Another pause. âI'm sorry that I played a part in screwing that up for you, with Matt. And Iâm sorry if the divorce or the complications or just... me... if any of that made it harder for you to have something good.â
The sincerity in his voice makes your throat tight. Here he is, your ex-husband, apologising for potentially ruining your other relationship while also admitting he's not sorry it ended, and somehow it's the most honest you've been with each other in months.
âIt wasn't you,â you hear yourself say. âNot directly, anyway. Matt and I⊠we wanted different things. He wanted easy and uncomplicated, and I'm apparently incapable of either of those things.â
âThat's not trueââ
âBucky.â You raise a brow. âI showed up at my ex-husband's apartment unannounced because I got worried when he didn't show up to committee meetings. I think we can agree that 'easy and uncomplicated' is not really my strong suit.â
His mouth twitches. âFair point.â
âBut,â he adds, âyou deserve someone who doesn't want easy. Someone who wants all of it - the complicated, the messy, the hard parts. Someone who wants you exactly as you are. Because you show up. Even when you shouldn't, even when it's inconvenient, even when you have every reason not to. You came here today because you were worried about me, because that's just who you are. You care so completely, so deeply, even when it costs you. And you deserve someone who loves you enough to show up for you the way you've always shown up for everyone else.â
The words land like a physical blow, stealing the air from your lungs. Your eyes start to sting and you have to look away, blinking hard against the sudden heat behind them because you're not going to cry in his apartment, you're not.
Except apparently you are, because your vision's already blurring and there's a tightness in your chest that won't ease and when you try to speak nothing comes out but a slightly choked sound that you immediately wish you could take back.
âHey,â Bucky moves toward you immediately, concern flooding his face. âShit, no, I didn't mean to upset you.â
You try and recover the situation, aiming for light, but it cracks halfway through. âNo, Iâm fine, thatâs a veryâthat's nice, that's a really nice thing to say, thank you for theââ
You stop because you're not making sense, because the whole thing is so mortifying you want to sink through the floor.
âSweetheart, whatâs happening?â His hand comes up immediately, thumb brushing across your cheek with a gentleness that makes it worse. Heâs so close now that you can see the flecks of grey starting to thread through his hair at his temples. Close enough that you catch the scent of his cologne - the same one you bought him three years ago for his birthday. Close enough that your body remembers what it feels like to fit against his before your brain can stop it.
And god, he still feels like home. Still looks at you like you're something precious. And it's too much, all of it is too much, and the tears that have been threatening finally spill over.
âDon't call me that,â you choke out, but there's no heat in it. âAnd don'tâyou can't justââ
The words are getting tangled up with the crying, which is humiliating, but now that you've started you can't seem to stop.
âYou don't get to do this,â you manage, and it comes out accusatory and broken at the same time. âYou don't get to make all these changes and become this better version of yourself after we're divorced. You don't get to quit the job you hated and figure out what you actually want and get a cat and look at me like that when we're notââ
You stop, pressing your palms against your eyes because maybe if you can't see him this will be easier.
âYou're doing everything right and it's too late. And god, I'm here being pathetic, showing up at your apartment because I couldn't handle not seeing you at a meeting. You've moved on, you're this whole new person, and I'm stillââ
âYou think I could ever move on from you?â
The question stops you mid-sentence. You lower your hands and look up at him, and his face has gone soft and raw and heartbroken in a way that makes your chest cave in.
âI haven't moved on.â His voice drops to barely more than a whisper. âI couldn't move on from you if I tried. You think I got a cat because I moved on? I got a cat because I was so fucking lonely and every time I tried to date, I couldnât. I couldnât let anyone else in here. Couldn't stand the thought of someone in this space who wasnât you.â
He takes a breath that shudders slightly on the exhale, and you can see him fighting to hold himself together.
âI'm not a better person because I moved on. I'm a better person because losing you destroyed me and I had to either figure out who I actually was without you or let it kill me. So I figured it out, because I owed it to myself to be more than just the wreckage of our marriage.â
His thumb continues to trace slow paths across your cheekbone, catching each tear as it falls. The space between you has shrunk to almost nothing. You don't remember either of you moving but suddenly you can count his eyelashes, can see his eyes are wet too.Â
Your eyes drop to his mouth. His lips are slightly parted, close enough that you can feel the warmth of his breath ghosting across your skin, and you watch him notice where you're looking. Watch the way his pupils blow wider, the way his grip on your face tightens just slightly.
âBut god, Iâm sorry,â he continues, and his forehead drops to rest against yours. âI'm so fucking sorry for all of it. For running for Congress without talking to you first. For shutting you out instead of letting you help me. For making you feel like you weren't enough when you were always everything.â
âBuckyââ
âI'm sorry for manipulating your calendar and lying to Matt and thinking I could orchestrate our marriage back together instead of just talking to you like a fucking adult.â His other hand comes up to cup your face, both palms cradling you as his thumb brushes your bottom lip âI'm sorry for taking you for granted and not fighting for us until it was too late. I'm sorryââ
You kiss him.Â
You can't help it. Can't wait another second, can't stand anymore distance between you when he's been standing there saying everything you'd needed to hear for months and he's finally, finally letting you all the way in and you need him closer. Need his mouth on yours more than you need air right now.
He makes this startled sound against your lips, like he didn't dare let himself believe this was actually happening. But then his hands tighten on your face and he's kissing you back, desperate and messy, your face still wet with tears.
âKeep going,â you gasp against his lips between kisses. âDon't stop.â
âI'm sorry for every time I chose my pride over our marriage.â The words tumble out between kisses as he walks you backward, one hand now gripping your waist, the other sliding up to cup the back of your head. âFor every time I made you feel small or unimportant or like you were the problem when it was always me.â
You hit the wall with a soft thud, his palm deliberately taking the impact for your head, and his mouth finds your throat immediately, hot and desperate, teeth grazing your pulse point before his lips soothe over it.
âI'm sorry for wasting so much time,â he breathes against your neck, hands finding the hem of your shirt and pulling back just enough to drag it over your head. âFor not appreciating every second I had with you. For not telling you every single day that you were the best thing that ever happened to me.â
âBuckyââ You plead, fingers tugging his hair hard enough to make him groan against your skin.
He pulls back just enough to look up at you, chest heaving, lips swollen, eyes blown completely dark, and the desperation on his face mirrors everything coiling tight in your stomach.
âLet me make it up to you,â he pants, mouth already trailing lower, kissing down your throat, your collarbone, your sternum. âPlease. Let me get on my knees and show you exactly how sorry I am, sweetheart.â
âFuckâplease, Bucky. Yes!â
His mouth keeps moving lower as he sinks down, lips pressing hot and wet over your stomach. When he reaches the waistband of your skirt his hands slide around to find the zip, tugging it down over your hips.Â
He peels it down slowly, mouth following the same path, pressing open kisses down your hip, the outside of your thigh, your knee, helping you step out of it carefully but making absolutely no move to take your heels off. For a moment he just stays there, looking up at you from the floor with blown dark eyes.
The sight of him down there looking at you like that makes your breath come out shaky.
âMissed you so fucking much,â he breathes against your inner thigh, lips dragging higher again. âMissed this.â His fingers find the waistband of your panties, peeling them down slowly, and when they're gone his right hand lingers on your calf, squeezing.
âMissed the way you sound when I do thisââ He presses his mouth to your clit, barely anything, just enough to make you whine and your hips jerk forward chasing more. âMissed the way you taste. Been so fucking long, sweetheart, I'm gonna make sure you feel every single apology.â
Then he hooks your leg over his shoulder, spreading you wider, the stiletto of your heel digging into his back. He groans against you like he's been waiting months for exactly this, tongue dragging through your folds, tasting every inch of you, before his mouth closes around your clit and sucks.
You're already soaked, embarrassingly so, slick and swollen and desperate, and the obscene sounds he's making against you make your face flush hot. Like he's enjoying this more than you are, which makes the heat pooling in your stomach coil tighter and more urgent.Â
Your fingers bury themselves in his hair, gripping hard, and the moan that rumbles out of him against your folds is immediate, hips shifting like he can't help it. You tug again, twisting tighter, and he groans louder, like he'd let you pull as hard as you wanted as long as you kept him right there.
His tongue curls and your back arches off the wall with a broken, high little sound, thighs trembling against his shoulders. The heel of your stiletto presses harder into his back as your leg tightens around him.
He teases you mercilessly, knows exactly how to make you chase it. Tongue circling your clit until your hips roll forward without shame, grinding against his face, chasing friction with a desperation that would be humiliating if you had any capacity left to feel embarrassed. Every time you get close he pulls back, mouthing at your inner thigh or the crease of your hip, until you whine with frustration.
âPleaseââ It comes out wrecked, barely recognisable as your own voice. âBucky, pleaseââ
He makes this low, pleased chuckle against your folds that you feel everywhere, clearly delighted with himself, and the vibration of it makes you desperately clench around nothing and moan so shamelessly that he does it again on purpose.Â
His tongue fucks into you and the world goes soft at the edges, thoughts dissolving one by one until there's nothing left but the wet heat of his mouth and the needy little moans you canât seem to stop making. His nose bumps your clit with every movement, pressure building so deep and overwhelming that you've stopped being capable of anything as complex as forming words.Â
Just fingers buried in his hair, back arched, existing entirely at the mercy of his mouth.
Then his left hand closes around your standing thigh, metal fingers wrapping around soft flesh. He pulls his mouth away just far enough to speak, his breath hot and damp against your soaked, swollen folds.
âUp,â he rumbles directly into your cunt, and you hear it somewhere distant and unimportant.Â
Your legs aren't really receiving instructions anymore - you're not capable of much of anything right now, every nerve ending in your body shorting out under his mouth. Too far gone already to manage something as complicated as lifting a leg.
The crack of his metal hand against your ass brings the world back in one sharp snap.
âUp, pretty girl. C'mon.â His voice is rough, amused, unbearably fond. âCan't have gone dumb on my tongue already, sweetheart. Iâve barely even started.â
âFuck,â you manage.
âThere we go,â he murmurs, the deep warmth in his voice is devastatingly attractive. âGood girl. Up.â
His hand guides you this time, helping you move your other leg up and over his shoulder so both thighs bracket his head. Before you can process whatâs happening, he rises, straightening to his full height with an ease that makes it obvious how little you weigh to him. How effortless this is. How completely in control he is of the situation. And it makes your stomach swoop.Â
Your fingers yank his hair on instinct, panic and want tangled together, and the moan that drags out of him reverberates directly against your pussy in a way that makes your whole body shudder.
The wall catches your back. His hands lock around the backs of your thighs, one warm, one cool metal, fingers pressing into your flesh as he pins you exactly where he wants you. His face is buried between your legs and there's nothing below you but six feet of immovable super soldier who has absolutely no intention of letting you go anywhere. The realization of how thoroughly he has you, how completely helpless you are right now, sends a fresh rush of arousal flooding against his mouth that makes him moan his encouragement.
âFuckâ pleaseâBucky.â
The answering groan he makes against you says he heard it just fine. And then he gets greedy.
His tongue finds your clit and doesn't leave, licking and sucking with a focused relentlessness that has you sobbing. You're soaked, dripping down his chin. Every careful, deliberate stroke of his tongue pulls another helpless mewl from your throat while his hands keep you pinned exactly where he wants you, going nowhere, taking everything he decides to give you.
He learns you all over again like he has all the time in the world. Finds every spot that makes your thighs clench around his head and returns to them, again and again, cataloguing your reactions with the focused intensity of someone who has missed this more than they can articulate and intends to make up for every lost month tonight.Â
âTaste so fucking good,â he groans into you, the words vibrating against your clit, hips grinding forward against nothing. âMissed this pussy so much. Missed how wet she gets for me. Could eat her all night and never get enough.â
The knowledge that he's this worked up just from going down on you makes another rush of arousal flood against his tongue. Heat spreads through you in waves, the orgasm building each time he seals his lips around your clit and sucks, each time he groans against your folds like he's the one being taken apart. Your thighs are shaking around his head, his name spilling out of you in a broken, continuous stream that you can't stop.
âThat's my girl,â he rasps into you, fingers digging into your thighs. âFeel her getting close. Gonna give me what I want.â
You come with a wail, clenching so hard around his tongue that he groans like it's the best thing he's ever felt. His hands remain steady around your thighs as he licks you through every shuddering wave, greedy for every last pulse of it, not pulling back until you're twitching and whimpering and completely wrecked above him.
He pulls back with one last filthy, open mouthed kiss to your cunt that makes you mewl, and then his hands shift, sliding you down his body until your legs wrap around his waist. You can feel how hard he is through his jeans, thick and insistent against where you're still throbbing, and your hips roll forward instinctively.
âLook at you,â he murmurs against your throat, hands gripping your ass, holding you up effortlessly. âSo pretty when you cum for me. Did so good.â
You make some soft, wrecked sound against his neck that might be his name.
Then one hand comes up to grip your jaw, tilting your face up to his. His chin is slick with you, lips swollen and pink and kissable. His thumb presses against your bottom lip, dragging it down. âOpen that pretty mouth.â
Dazed and pliant, you open your mouth without thinking, too gone to do anything but comply. He leans in and lets a slow string of spit drop onto your tongue, mixed with the slick mess of you.
âAtta girl,â he rumbles, watching your face with a primal satisfaction. âYou taste so fucking good, sweetheart - had to let you have some.â
You swallow and he groans his approval, crashing his mouth back to yours before you can breathe. The taste of yourself on his tongue makes you dizzy, fingers twisting in his Henley. Your brain several steps behind your body as he starts moving, carrying you through the dark hallway without breaking the kiss, navigating entirely on muscle memory.
The bedroom is dark. He lays you out across his bed, stepping back to look at you. Spread across his sheets still in nothing but your heels and bra, chest heaving, thighs slick, eyes blown completely dumb. The look on his face makes your stomach flip all over again.
âBeen dreaming about seeing you in this bed again,â he says, crawling over you, caging you in with those unfairly big biceps. âNot done with you yet, pretty girl. Not even close.â
Your hands find the hem of his top immediately, fisting the fabric, and he helps you drag it over his head. His dog tags fall forward as the shirt comes off, swinging between you both as he dips back down to your mouth.
Already your fingers are at his belt, clumsy and impatient, fumbling with the buckle while he kisses down your jaw and unhooks your bra before tossing it aside. His mouth finds your nipple immediately, greedy,tongue curling around it, and your hands stutter.
âBuckyââ You're swearing under your breath, hands shaking as you try and fail to get the buckle undone. âCome on, fuck, come on!â
He grazes his teeth against your nipple and your fingers slip entirely.Â
âShit, please,â you whine, utterly shameless.
Bucky just laughs against your tits, warm and low, not even slightly helpful. Finally, though, the belt gives, button pops, zip drags down, and you're shoving everything down his hips in one desperate motion as his cock springs free. Thick and hard and heavy between his legs, and your mouth goes dry.Â
Itâs been almost a year since youâve seen him like this and your eyes drag down his body with a hunger you can't even pretend to hide. You reach for him immediately, needing to touch, needing to feel the weight of him in your hand, but he catches both wrists before you get there, pinning them above your head against the pillow.Â
âPatience, pretty girl,â he murmurs, hips settling between your thighs, cock heavy against your folds but not where you need him. âWe've got time. Not rushing this.â
You whimper, hips lifting, trying to find friction, finding nothing.
He slides his cock through your folds, dragging through how obscenely wet you are, and the feeling of it pulls a broken noise from both of you simultaneously. Slow and deliberate, he teases the swollen head through your slick, catching your clit on the way, and your whole body jerks underneath him.
âBucky,â you mewl. Your wrists flex against his grip, not really trying to get free, just needing somewhere to put the desperation flooding through you. He drags his cock back through your heat while you clench desperately around nothing, watching your face fall apart with an expression of filthy satisfaction.
âThere it is. Look at that pretty little cunt begging for it.â Another slow roll of his hips, cock dragging through the mess of you. âGonna give it to you. Just want you to ask nice price.â
âPlease,â you manage, and it comes out so small and wrecked and needy that his hips stutter. âPlease, Bucky, I needâI can'tâpleaseââ
He releases your wrists and your hands fly to his shoulders instantly, nails digging in hard, needing to touch him, needing to anchor yourself to something solid while his cock nudges your entrance, barely breaching, just enough to make you clench desperately around nothing.
âShh,â he coos, hands gripping your hips hard enough to bruise, holding you exactly where he wants you even as your hips try to roll forward chasing more. âI've got you, baby.â The head of his cock presses a little deeper, teasing, and your nails drag down his shoulders as your back arches off the bed. âAlways gonna take care of you. You know that.âÂ
He pushes in slowly, and the stretch of him makes your whole body go rigid, nails carving lines down his shoulders that make him hiss as you take him inch by inch. Your walls flutter around him, clenching, trying to pull him deeper even as your body relearns the thickness of him, the weight, the specific fullness that you'd spent three months trying to forget and never quite managed.
âFuck,â he grits out, hips stilling when he's buried completely, forehead dropping to yours, breathing ragged. âAlways so fucking tight. Feel that? Feel how well this pretty cunt fits me?â His hips roll, just slightly, and you cry out. âFeel so perfect around my cock, pretty girl.â
You can't form words. Can only moan and dig your nails deeper into his back and breathe through it, through the overwhelming stretch and heat and the fact that it's him, it's Bucky, it's finally Bucky again after everything.
Then he starts to move.
Long, deep strokes that drag against every sensitive place inside you, his cock splitting you open over and over until you can't remember what it felt like to be empty. The cold metal of his dog tags brushes your chest with every thrust. His hand slides between your bodies, thumb finding your clit, and the dual sensation pulls a needy little wail from you, toes curling in your heels
âThat's it,â he breathes against your lips. âThat's my girl. Take all of it.â
You drag him back down into the kiss, desperate, one hand tangling in his hair and the other still clawing down his back, needing more of him, needing every part of him pressed against every part of you. He gives it to you, kissing you filthy and deep, hips rolling into a rhythm that's making coherent thought impossible.
âMissed you,â you gasp between kisses, and once it starts coming out you can't stop it. âMissed you so much, I missed you every single day, I tried not to but I couldn't stop, I missed you, I missed youââ
âI know.â His voice breaks on it. âMissed you too, baby. I'm here. I've got you.â
âDon't stop,â you sob against his mouth. âPlease don't stop.â
âNot stopping.â His thumb keeps circling your clit and his hips snap forward harder, the wet obscene sounds of him fucking into you filling the dark bedroom. âNot going anywhere ever again.â
The pleasure and the grief and the overwhelming relief of having him back crash into each other all at once and the tears come again without warning, spilling hot down your cheeks. You're coming and crying at the same time, clenching so hard around him that he groans like it's the best thing he's ever felt.
Instinctively you hide your face against his neck with a mewling, broken little sound, as the waves keep crashing through you. His hand finds your jaw immediately, fingers gentle but certain, tilting your face back to his.
When he sees you - eyes wet and glassy, tears tracking freely down your cheeks, kiss-bitten bottom lip caught between your teeth - his expression cracks wide open. His thumb drags slowly through the wetness on your cheek, just looking at you, chest heaving, cock still buried deep inside you.Â
âFuck,â he rasps, hips driving deeper, mouth dragging across your wet cheeks, licking away the tears. âDonât hide from me. Not this. So beautiful when you cry for me like this.âÂ
Another deep thrust punctuates his words and your sob breaks against his throat. The orgasm is almost too much, pleasure cresting so sharp and overwhelming that you're squirming beneath him, trying to get away from it and chase it at the same time. Your hips buck uselessly as his thumb keeps bullying your swollen clit , wringing every last shuddering wave out of you whether your oversensitive body can handle it or not.
âMade you cry too many times for the wrong reasons.â His mouth moves to your other cheek, kissing the wetness away gently even as his hips keep pounding into you. âNever fucking again. Only time you cry because of me now is when I've got you so full of cock you can't fucking think straight.â
Then he pulls back to look at you, pupils blown, taking in your wet lashes, your ruined expression. âThat's the only reason I ever put tears on this pretty face again. On my fucking life.â
You're trying to say his name but it keeps breaking apart every time his hips drive forward, dissolving into breathless, helpless sounds against his mouth. But you canât stop them, canât control it, canât do anything other than moan because he just keeps fucking you through every shuddering wave of your orgasm until youâre trembling under him.Â
You whimper, oversensitive and shaking, hips trying to shy away from his thumb even as your walls keep fluttering around him.
âCan feel her gripping me,â Bucky murmurs, almost to himself, hips still rolling slow and deep. âFeel that? Still so greedy even when you're all fucked out.â His thumb lifts and you exhale in relief, but his cock is still thick and heavy inside you, every slight movement magnified by how sensitive you are. âGot one more in there for me, baby. I know you do.â
Turning your face into his neck, you make a sound that's half-protest, half-desperate agreement.Â
âCâmon pretty girl,â His voice drops to something low and coaxing, lips brushing your ear. âYou gonna give it to me?â
You nod weakly, barely managing it, pliant and soft and entirely his to do whatever he wants with. You'd agree to anything right now. Give him anything. You just want whatever he'll give you, want to stay exactly like this forever, warm and full and completely undone.
The rumble that comes out of him is deep and satisfied. âGood fucking girl.â
The words land low in your stomach even before his hands are moving, even before he pulls out with a groan that you both feel everywhere, even before the cool air hits the slick mess between your thighs. The empty whine that escapes you is involuntary and embarrassing and he hears every second of it.
His hands find your hips, turning you with that easy, devastating strength, flipping you over like you weigh nothing. Your face finds the mattress, and before you can process the change in position his palm is pressing warm between your shoulder blades, urging you down while his other hand slides under your hips, pulling them up to meet him.
You go pliant without resistance, body soft and utterly compliant beneath his hands, brain several steps behind everything. Your cheek presses into his sheets and you can smell him on the fabric, sending a fresh pulse of want through you.
He leans over you, his chest warm against your back for just a moment, and then his hand slides into your hair. Gathers it gently, sweeping it away from your face with a tenderness that's completely at odds with how thoroughly he just fucked you apart. His fingers are careful, unhurried, and you turn your face slightly into his palm like a cat.
âThere you are,â he murmurs, low and warm, and you can feel the smile in it. His lips press to the nape of your neck, the top of your spine, each vertebra down between your shoulder blades.
He stays there for a moment, just looking at you. Taking in the slack, cock-drunk softness of your expression. The way your eyes have gone heavy and distant, lashes still wet, lips parted and swollen.
Then the blunt head of his cock presses against your entrance again and you keen into the sheets.
He pushes in slowly, achingly slowly, and the stretch of him at this angle is deeper, fuller, hitting every nerve ending at once. You're so wet and so oversensitive that every inch of him dragging inside you pulls sounds from your throat that you couldn't muffle if you tried.
âFuck,â he gasps, hands locked around your hips, pulling you back onto him as his last inch disappears inside you. âLook at that. Taking every fucking inch. Good girl.â
He starts to move and your eyes roll back.
It's different like this. Harder, deeper, each thrust rocking you forward into the mattress, his hips snapping against your ass with a sound that fills the dark room, punctuated by his own rough exhales. One hand is splayed across your lower back to keep your hips tilted exactly where he wants them, the other gripping the curve of your hip hard enough you'll have fingerprints tomorrow.
You fist the sheets. It's all you can do. Knuckles white, face pressed into his pillow, breathing in desperate gasps because he keeps knocking the air out of your lungs with every thrust.
âFuck, baby. Listen to how pretty you are like this.â His voice has gone rough, stripped of everything except want. His cock drags out slow and thrusts back hard, knocking another moan from you. âHear that?â
You hear it. The wet, filthy sounds of him fucking into you, the slap of skin, the helpless little mewls you can't stop making. His dog tags swing forward with every thrust, cold metal grazing your back. Your face burns hot in the dark.
âCâmon, use your words,â he murmurs, hand smoothing up your spine. âYou hear how good this pussy sounds taking me?â
âYes,â You moan agreement, barely recognizing as your own voice. âYes, fuck, yesâ
His hand snakes around your throat, pulling you back against his chest in one smooth motion like you weigh nothing at all. And god, to him you don't. Youâre so light in his hands that he barely has to think about it, and the ease of it sends a sharp pulse through you. You gasp as your back hits his chest, Buckyâs free arm secure around you, while his cock keeps driving up into you, the new angle hitting deeper.
He groans softly against your ear when you clenches hard around him. âFuck. Knew youâd like that.â
You canât respond. All that comes out is another needy little sound while your hands scramble desperately for purchase, one gripping his forearm where it rests against your throat, the other reaching back blindly for him. Bucky catches your hand immediately and presses it flat against his lower stomach, holding it there so you can feel every thrust, every flex of muscle as he fucks into you.
âThatâs it, good girl. Hold on,â he murmurs approvingly, feeling you squeeze around him again. âFeel what you do to me?â
His free hand slides down your stomach, over the curve of your hip, fingers finding your clit once more. You jolt at his touch, a high broken sound tearing out of you, hips lurching forward despite yourself.
âShh.â His lips brush your ear. âI've got you. Stay still for me.â
You try. You genuinely try. But he's fucking up into you and rubbing your swollen clit simultaneously and the combination is devastating, pleasure crashing through you in waves that make it impossible to do anything except squirm against him and make sounds you'll be embarrassed about later. Your fingers dig into his forearm, nails pressing crescents into his skin, and his breath hitches against your neck.
âFuck, good girl,â he hisses. âScratch me up, sweetheart. Let me feel it.â
His fingers work faster and your head drops back against his shoulder, completely gone. Everything is his hands, his cock, his voice in your ear saying things that dissolve into heat before you can parse the words. You're making these desperate mewling sounds with every thrust, fingers scrabbling at his arm, his hip, any part of him you can reach, just needing to touch him, needing to feel him everywhere at once.
âFeel how wet she is,â he murmurs, fingers slipping through the absolute mess between your thighs. âDripping down my hand. Making a mess of me.â His cock drives deeper and you sob. âSo fucking perfect.â
His hand shifts from your throat to your jaw, turning your face toward his, and then he's kissing you.
Itâs messy and overwhelming, his tongue sliding against yours while he keeps fucking you hard enough to make you moan helplessly into his mouth. Bucky swallows every needy little sound you make, kissing you deeper every time you squirm against him.
You can barely keep up with it. Head fuzzy, heavy with pleasure, especially with the way heâs still rubbing your clit in relentless slow circles that make your whole body shake harder every second.
âCome for me,â he breathes against your lips. âWant to feel that pretty pussy squeeze my cock again, baby. Can you do that for me?â
âYes, Bucky, please.â
âSo fucking good for me.â The hand at your jaw slides back to your throat, tilting your head back against his shoulder, baring your neck. His mouth finds your pulse point immediately. âBest thing I've ever had. Best thing I've ever touched.â His teeth graze your throat and you whimper, thighs shaking. âThe only thing I ever want.â
His fingers press harder against your clit, hips rolling forward in a way that make you tremble in his grip, knees threatening to buckle, the only thing keeping you upright the arm locked around you.Â
âFuckâI love you,â he grits out against the back of your neck, and it sounds like it's been tearing at him from the inside for months. âI love you. I love you.â Each repetition punctuated by a thrust that makes you cry out. âLoved you every single day I was without you. Never stopped for a second.â
The words hit somewhere deeper than anything else. Deeper than his hands or his mouth or any of it. Something cracks open in your chest, warm and enormous, and youâre coming again. Harder than before, your whole body seizing as you clench around him so completely that your knees do give out entirely. Just ragdoll weight caught entirely in his arms.
âBucky,â you cry name in a needy a sob. âI love you tooâfuckâI love you so much.â
The confession tears out of you and follows you over with a groan that shakes through his whole body. He buries himself to the hilt, cock pulsing in deep, spilling inside you with your name on his lips.
Youâre both breathing in ragged pulls, and if it werenât for his arms still locked around you, youâd have collapsed onto the bed. His chest heaves against your back, lips pressed somewhere near your temple, and neither of you speaks for a moment.
Eventually, carefully, he lowers you both down to the mattress, turning you over and pulling you against his chest. You lay boneless against him as his hand strokes slowly up your side, over and over, like he can't stop touching you now that he's allowed to again.
âI've got you,â he murmurs into your hair. âI've got you. You're okay. I've got you.â
And for the first time in almost a year, you actually believe it.
You stay like that for a while, neither of you moving, his hand still stroking slowly up your side. The room has gone quiet and warm around you, just his heartbeat under your ear and the city humming distantly outside.
But eventually he shifts, pressing a kiss to your temple. âStay there.â
A weak sound of protest escapes you when he moves but he's already up, disappearing into the en-suite. You hear water running. When he comes back he sits beside you on the bed, warm cloth in hand.
âI canââ you start.
âI know you can,â he agrees simply, but he does it anyway, cleaning you up with gentle, unhurried hands. Then his free hand strokes down your leg, gently tugging one heel off, then the other, puts them both on the floor.
When he's done he disappears briefly, and then the mattress dips and he's pulling you into him, tucking you against his chest. The duvet settles warm around you both, and his hand starts moving slowly through your hair in soothing strokes.
âSleep,â he murmurs against your temple, lips barely moving. âI've got you.â
You don't have much choice. Your body is already pulling you under, warm and safe and held in a way you'd spent months trying to convince yourself you didn't miss. His heartbeat is slow and steady under your ear, his chest rising and falling with a deep, even calm that pulls you further under with every breath.
His hand keeps moving through your hair, and the city outside feels very far away, and sleep takes you before you even feel it coming.
ââ âąÂ â âïž Ëă»đïž âč
The blaring of you alarm pulls you up from the deepest sleep you've had in months, and for one blissful, unthinking moment you're just warm. Buckyâs chest rises and falls slowly beneath your cheek. Reality hovers at the edges of your consciousness, waiting to be let in, and you squeeze your eyes shut against it, burrowing deeper into the duvet like that might keep it at bay.
Alpine is curled heavy and purring against the backs of your knees, warm and certain, like she's been there all night. Like you belong here. The thought sits in your chest, complicated and tender.
But your phone doesnât stop shrilling from the nightstand.Â
You reach over and fumble for it, managing to silence before Bucky stirs. His arm tightens around you, pulling you back into him with a sleepy, wordless sound of protest, lips pressing somewhere near your hair. But then he goes still.Â
ââŠWas that your alarm for your flight?â His voice is rough with sleep, and underneath the grogginess you can here the carefulness.
âYes,â you reply quietly, but make no effort to move.
The city hums distantly outside the window. Somewhere below, DC is already going about its morning. Up here, in the warm dark of his bedroom, time feels suspended, neither of you quite willing to be the one to break it.
You turn over. His eyes scan your face with an intensity that's so nakedly desperate it makes your chest ache. Like he's trying to memorize your face in case this is the last time he's allowed to be this close. Like he hasn't yet let himself believe last night was real.
âStay.â The word comes out before he can stop it, blurted and slightly wrecked. His jaw tightens immediately afterwards, like he's bracing for it to land wrong. âCould you stay? I want you to stay. Justâa little longer, orâI know we haven't talked about anything properly yet, I justââ He exhales, slightly pained. âPlease stay.â
You look at him for a moment. Let him sit with it a moment longer than necessary, watching the soft, desperate hope on his face exist exist without rushing to meet it, because you find you want to keep looking at him like this for just another few seconds. This new version of him that doesn't hide behind composure when something matters.Â
It's devastating and wonderful in equal measure, and you want to hold onto the sight of it for a second before you say anything.
âI suppose,â you begin slowly, watching his expression flicker, âI could probably stay a little longer. Get to know this version of you that coaches Avengers and has a cat and apparently owns cookbooks he's actually used.â
The exhale that comes out of him is enormous. Pure relief, pure joy, and the smile that follows it - wide and unguarded and slightly incredulous - is the most beautiful thing you've seen in a very long time. He pulls you in and presses his lips to your forehead, warm and certain.
You let him. Then you pull back gently, hand finding his jaw, tilting his face down to yours.
âBut slowly,â you add, and mean it. âWe do this slowly. No grand gestures, no orchestrating, no deciding things on my behalf. We actually talk. We work through all of it - the things we broke and the reasons we broke them. We make real effort this time, not just falling back into old patterns because it's easy and it feels good short term.â
He nods. Immediately, earnestly, like every word is being carefully filed away. âSlowly,â he repeats. âYeah. I can do slowly.â
You raise a brow.
He has the grace to look slightly sheepish. âI can learn slowly.â
You're both quiet for a moment, considering this. You are not, historically, two people who do anything slowly. Your entire relationship has been characterized by intensity and momentum and grand gestures and catastrophic miscommunications. The idea of slow is almost comically foreign to you both.
âI'll come to London more,â he offers after a moment. âMy schedule is flexible. I can make it workâI want to make it work. And I know the distance is real, and I know it won't always be easy, but I'd rather figure it out than spend another year without you.â
âAnd I'll come here too,â you add quietly. âI should've done that more. Made the effort in both directions instead of letting the Atlantic become an excuse.â
âOkay,â he says. âWe start there.â
âWe start there,â you agree.
And maybe itâs foolish. Maybe you'll look back on this morning and recognise it as just another impulsive decision in a marriage that's always run on chemistry and stubbornness and the particular madness of two people who can't seem to leave each other alone. Maybe the distance will be hard and the conversations will be harder and somewhere down the line you'll hit another wall neither of you knows how to climb.
But when he looks at you like that - open and unhidden in a way he spent years not knowing how to be - it doesn't feel like a mistake. It feels like something you've been working toward through every wrong turn and bad decision and midnight argument. Like the mess of the last year was just the long way round to something you were always going to find your way back to.
âCome here,â he murmurs, and you let him turn you back over, let him pull you into his chest where you fit so perfectly.
The relief of not having a flight to catch settles over you like the duvet itself.
His lips find the curve of your neck, lazy and warm, just the occasional soft press of his mouth against your skin. Just enjoying the fact that he can. That you're here and not leaving and there's nowhere either of you need to be.
Your eyes drift closed, hovering in that soft place between sleep and waking again. Alpine purrs against your feet. You feel more at peace than you have in longer than you can remember. And then, through your sleepy haze, you gradually become aware of his hand.
It's moved without him seeming to notice, fingers drifting down your arm, over your wrist, settling at your left hand. His thumb brushes absently over your ring finger, back and forth, over the bare skin where your ring used to sit. Slow and absent, like he doesn't even know he's doing it.
Your right hand moves to cover his, and he still immediately. A slight tension moving through his chest, like he's been caught at something, like he's about to pull back.
âAsk me again someday,â you murmur into the pillow, half-conscious. âWhen we're ready.â
The tension bleeds out of him all at once, his whole body exhaling like he's been holding that breath for months. His arms tighten around you and his mouth presses to the back of your neck again.
âI will,â he affirms quietly, against your skin. âI promise you, one day, I will.â
His thumb resumes its slow path over your ring finger, gentle and deliberate now. A quiet promise being made in the dark.
âI love you,â he murmurs into your hair, lips barely moving. âMissed saying that. Missed you hearing it. I love you so much.â
You sink deeper into his arms, into the warmth of him, into the love in his voice, into the particular peace of being somewhere you belong after a very long time of being without it.
You fall back asleep before you can answer. But that's okay, you have time now.
more mads: that's all folks! I really, really hope you enjoyed, like seriously. this fic has both been the bane of my existence and a precious little baby because i do really love these idiots. i hope i gave them a satisfactory ending and that it was worth the wait, and i would absolutely love to know your thoughts via any comments or reblogs! thank you so much for reading :)
taglist: @juniebjonesin @heldbybarnes @love-stucky @badbitchsincebirth05 @phoenix-in-writing @tw1sters @blowingbarnes @sassandscribbles @alpinebarnesworld @sheriff-bodecker @buckybsdoll @gilwm @venigrantrogers @mrsevans90 @rainyapricotcreatorparty @midnightramyeoncravings @catchmeupimgettingoutofhere @krisstyu @itsalltaken - if you would like to join my taglist, please send me an inbox or leave a comment here!
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Jolting awake to the distant wail of an ambulance rushing past the hotel, youâre left blinking up at a world that doesnât quite make sense yet. Where are you? How did you get here? And why are you so much colder now than when you fell asleep?
Sunlight pours through the open blindsâharsh, invasive, impossible to ignore. You have no idea how it didnât wake you sooner. You push yourself upright too fast, eyes darting across every surface in a frantic attempt to ground yourself in something real.
Instead, youâre met with a dull, splitting ache behind your eyes. Nausea curls in your stomach from the sudden movement. The faint, lingering taste of fruited wine clings to your breathâand beneath it, woven into the fabric of the couchâBarnes.
Ah. Right. Last night. The wine. The balcony. Him.
âMorning.â Samâs voice cuts clean through the spiral.
Your head whips toward the sound, immediately regretting it as the room tilts slightly. You wince, forcing your eyes to adjust as you take in the scene across the suite.
Sam sits at the table, laptop open, already halfway into his day. Steveâs beside him, calm as ever, flipping through a newspaper like this is just another quiet morning. Between themâan entire spread of room service breakfast. Normal. Easy. Grounded.
âHey,â you mumble, dragging a hand over your face, rubbing sleep from your eyes.
âWe got food for you,â Sam says, barely looking up as he takes a bite of bacon. âYou want some?â
You push yourself to your feet, your body heavy and stiff from sleeping wrong. Your arms stretch overhead, joints protesting, fabric shifting against your skinâstill in last nightâs clothes. Makeup still on. God.
âThat depends,â you mutter, starting toward the table. âIâmâŠpretty picky, unfortunately.â
Steveâs eyes lift just as he finishes a line in the paperâand there it is. That subtle shift. Not quite judgment, not quite concern. JustâŠsurprise. Ever composed. Ever polished.
And nowâWell. You can only imagine.
âBarnes told us what he usually sees you eat since youâre both up so early,â Sam answers easily, filling the silence Steve leaves behind.
Steve, however, isnât looking at your face anymore. His gaze is fixed lower. On your neck. Shit. The snuff bottle.
âDoes that look right?â Sam asks, finally glancing up.
âWhat?â Your voice comes out a touch too quick as your hand finds the back of the chair, gripping it before you sit.
Too late to hide it.
âI said,â Sam repeats, slower now, âBarnes told us what you usually eat for breakfast.â He nods toward the covered plate in front of you. âDoes that look right?â
Your fingers curl around the silver dome, lifting it carefully. Andâyour brows knit. Because itâs not just close. Itâs exact.
ââŠyes,â you admit, voice softer now, dragged slightly by something you canât quite name.
Surprise. Confusion. Something warmer. Something you immediately try to ignore.
âEnjoy it, kid,â Steve says, already returning to his paper. âYouâll need it for tonight.â
Tonight. Right. And just like that, your attention shiftsâeyes flicking around the suite, searching without meaning to. Looking forââWhere is he?â you ask, aiming for casual.
âHeâs getting a nicer outfit for the party,â Sam says.
Of course he is.
âOhâright,â you brighten slightly, reaching for the croissant. âI get to go grab a dress.â
âWell, eat first, then go,â Sam says, squinting at something on his screen.
âOkay, dad,â you mutter, taking a bite.
âHey,â he shoots back, finally looking at you. âIâm looking out for you.â
âSeems like itâs working,â Steve adds, glancing up againâthis time watching you eat. âIâm surprised to even see you eating.â
âI eat,â you push back.
âBarely,â Sam counters. âAnd when you do, itâs this. Carbs. You need protein.â
Your gaze driftsâinevitablyâto their plates. Meat. Eggs. Fruit. Structure. Normal food. The familiar wave creeps in, quiet but heavy. Embarrassment. Frustration. That old, ingrained awareness of how wrong it all looks from the outside. You didnât ask to be like this.
âIs it the taste?â Steve asks, unexpectedly.
You hesitate, âI meanâŠâ You exhale softly. âWith my in-nose, I can block most of it. But that doesnât fix everything.â You shake your head slightly. âItâs moreâŠmemory, I guess. If I know I hated something before, then I still hate it now.â
âWhat do you usually eat?â Sam asks, leaning back now, watching you more closely. âBesides the croissant.â
You shrug, âItâs justâŠcomplicated. Bread has to be homemade or I can taste the factory in it. Or feel it on my teeth. Pastaâs the sameâeven if itâs just flour and water, I can still tell how it was made.â You pause, searching for the right words. âFruits and vegetables are fine, but only if theyâre clean. No pesticides. No treated soil. Otherwise it justâŠlingers.â
You glance down at your hands, âItâs exhausting.â
âNo meat?â Sam asks.
You donât even hesitate, âThe idea of chewing through ligaments and tissue makes me sick,â you say flatly. âAnd most animals smell awful. If I ate that bacon right nowâwithout the implantâI could probably tell you exactly what that pig ate before it died.â
Silence lingers for a beat. You finish the last of your croissant, brushing your fingers together as you stand.
âIâm gonna get ready,â you say lightly, already stepping away before anything else can be said.
Before they can look at you too closely. Before you think too much about him again.
You move through the motions quicklyâwashing your face, stripping away last night, resetting yourself piece by pieceâuntil thereâs nothing left but the plan for the day. A dress. A party. And whatever tonight is going to bring.
âŠ
You step back into the suite with a soft click of the door behind you, arms weighed down with shopping bags that dig into your fingers. The quiet hits you first. No TV. No voices. No movement. Just stillness.
Your eyes sweep the space automatically, searching out of habit more than anything elseâuntil they land on him. Barnes. Sitting on the couch. Waiting.
âWhere is everyone else?â you ask, shifting the bags slightly in your grip.
âOut,â he answers simply, not looking away from you. âGot bored being cooped up in here.â
You nod once, already turning, already movingâheading toward your room with the dress bag slung carefully over your arm. Almost made it.
âHeyââ His voice stops you just short of the hallway.
You pause, but donât turn around right away, âYeah?â you call back, already feeling something off in the way he said it.
Thereâs a beat.
ââŠby the way, tonightâyou know, umââ
You turn now, slower this time, one brow lifting as you face him fully, âWhat?â
He shifts slightly on the couch, like he regrets opening his mouth but doesnât know how to close it now, âJust⊠um. Go easy tonight.â
The words land wrong immediately. Your eyebrows pull together, the weight of the bags suddenly feeling heavier, âIâm sorryâwhat does that mean?â
He exhales through his nose, already trying to course-correct, âJustâyou knowâitâll be crowded. Probably loudââ
âI know that,â you cut in, sharper now, taking a step toward him. âBut what are you implying?â
And there it is. That flicker.
His eyes dropâquick, almost involuntaryâto the chain around your neck. Then back up. You feel it like a burn. Something tight coils in your chest.
âYou need to be on your best behavior,â he says, a little more grounded now, like heâs decided to just commit to it. âAnd you need to be⊠cognizant.â
The word sits heavy between you. Measured. Deliberate.
He pushes himself up from the couch, already moving, already disengaging as he starts toward his room, âThis could go south fast,â he adds over his shoulder. âSo justâbe prepared.â
Prepared. Right. Your grip tightens around the handles of the bags. Thereâs a flicker of something underneath it allâquick, unwanted. He knows. Heâs seen enough. Enough to clock the necklace. Enough to piece things together. Enough toâ
âHey, asshole.â Your voice cuts through the space, sharper than you intendedâbut you donât take it back.
He stops. Doesnât turn around. But you step forward, pointing at him now, the bags swinging slightly with the motion, âIf you have something you want to say to meâbe direct.â
Silence. His shoulders shift, just barely. Still not facing you. That only makes it worse.
âWhat,â you push, heat rising fast now, âyou think I have a fucking problem?â
The words come out harsher than you meantâbut the embarrassment is already there, sitting thick in your throat.
He finally responds, voice lower, âNo.â
A beat.
His head turns just slightlyâjust enough that you can see the edge of his expression, âI think you make poor decisions when youâre vulnerable.â
That lands. Hard. A hollow laugh breaks out of you before you can stop it, sharp and disbelieving as you shake your head.
âOh, Jesusââ you scoff. âWhy donât you go easy tonight, huh? How does that sound?â
He doesnât take the bait. Doesnât move. Doesnât rise to it. And thatâsomehowâmakes it worse.
You step closer, tilting your head, voice dipping into something mocking, âOh, Barnes, be careful tonight,â you mimic. âThereâs gonna be a lot of peopleâa lot of noiseâa lot of action.â
Your lips curl slightly, âWouldnât want you to go all Winter Soldier on everyone and mow down the entire party.â
His jaw tightens. You see it. The way his hand flexes once at his side. But he swallows it down. Turns away. Starts walking again. Coward.
âWhat, you donât have anything to say?â you press, following him a step. âYou just gonna tell me I have a fuckinâ problem and not add anything else?â
His hand lands on the door handle. Grip tightening, âI didnât say you had a problem,â he mutters, not turning back.
âRight,â you snap. âJust that I make poor decisions. Totally different.â
The door starts to open.
âFuck you,â you spit, the words coming fast now, unfiltered. âI donât have a problemâyouâre the fucking problem.â
That does it. For a split second, you think he might turn around. Might say something. Might finally meet you where youâre standing. But he doesnât. The door closes behind him with a quiet, controlled finality. And that almost pisses you off more than if heâd slammed it.
âYou may know me better than you did before!â you shout after him, the words echoing through the wood. âBut donât you ever sit there and try to dissect my life like you have any idea about itâbesides a couple of goddamn war stories!â
Nothing. No response. Just silence.
Your chest rises and falls a little too fast as you stand there, heat still buzzing under your skin.
âAsshole,â you mutter under your breath.
You turn sharply, crossing the suite toward your own room, bags swinging with the force of it. The door shuts behind you with a heavier click. And as you start getting readyâthe words replay. Poor decisions.
Your fingers brush the necklace unconsciously. A pause. Thenâyou leave it exactly where it is. And double down.
âŠ
You donât waste time once the door shuts behind you. Water runs, steam slowly filling the bathroom as you strip away the remnants of last night. Makeup comes off, then goes back onâcleaner this time, sharper. Controlled. Intentional. Every movement is precise, practiced, like youâre rebuilding yourself piece by piece into something more composed. More untouchable.
Lotion smoothed over your skin, a subtle layer of perfume applied with careâjust enough to exist, just enough to linger in case the in-nose ever has to come out later. Your hair is styled to complement the gown youâve already decided on, every detail curated with quiet purpose.
And then there it is. The dress hangs where you left it, draped carefully over the closet door. Red. Backless. Silk. Dangerous.
Your fingers brush the fabric before you even realize youâve stepped closer. Itâs smooth, cool beneath your touchâalmost liquid, like it could slip right through your hands if youâre not careful.
For a momentâjust a momentâyou hesitate. Poor decisions.
Your jaw tightens, the words hitting harder now in the quiet.
âFuck that,â you mutter under your breath.
You step into the dress. The silk glides over your skin like it was made for you, clinging in all the right places and falling effortlessly everywhere else. The back dips low, exposing the length of your spine, the fabric pooling just enough at the base to feel intentionalâcalculated.
You adjust it once in the mirror. Then again, smoothing your hands down your sides, turning slightly to catch every angle. Perfect.
Your hand moves automatically toward your necklace, searching for the familiar weight of it. It isnât there. Your eyes shift to the dresser.
The snuff bottle sits under the artificial lights, gleaming faintly, almost calling to you. You pick it up, letting it settle into your palm. Cool. Familiar. Grounding in a way nothing else quite is.
For a second, thereâs a flicker of something else. A thought you donât like. Maybe heâs right. Maybe you should go easy tonight.
Your fingers trace the edges of it slowly, absentmindedly, feeling the grooves, the shape, reminding yourself what it doesâwhat itâs for. Not indulgence. Not weaknessâFunction. Control. A means to an end. Like an inhaler. Like an oxygen tank. Like an EpiPen. Your iron lung.
You hold it there just a second too long before your gaze drops to your clutch sitting nearby. Then back to your hand. And despite that brief hesitationâyou tuck it inside. The clasp snaps shut with a quiet finality. Out of sight, sure. But not gone. Never gone.
You slip on your heels, straighten the dress one last time, and head for the door.
Voices drift in from the living room as you step out, low and focused, pulling you back into the mission whether you want it or not.
ââŠremember, make sure you leave in the comm,â Steve is saying, the faint rustle of paper accompanying his words. âIf anything goes wrong, just contact usâwe wonât be farââ
And then you step fully into view. The room shifts.
Itâs subtle at first, almost imperceptible, but you feel itâthe way attention moves, the way energy redirects. From your heels, to your legs, to the line of your waist, the curve of your back, the fall of silk over your frameâevery inch of you wrapped in something most people would only ever dream of touching.
Sam looks up first. Mid-sentence. Mid-thought. And stops. His brows lift slowly, a grin spreading across his face as he leans back slightly in his chair, clearly impressed.
âWell, damn,â he says, letting out a low whistle. âKidâyou clean up nice.â
Steve follows his gaze, eyes liftingâand for a fraction of a second, even he falters. Itâs subtle, controlled, but itâs there. A brief pause, a small shift in posture, an acknowledgment he doesnât quite bother to hide.
âLooks good,â he says, nodding once, though his voice comes just a beat slower than usual.
You barely register either of them. Because you already feel it. Before you even look. Him.
Barnes stands off to the side, near the edge of the room, half-turned toward the table like he had been part of the conversationâlike he still should be.
But he isnât. Not anymore. His eyes are on you. Locked. And he doesnât bother hiding it.
This isnât like Samâs reactionâeasy, amused. Not like Steveâsâmeasured, respectful.
No. This is something else entirely. Something heavier. You feel it the second it hits you, and instead of shrinking from it, you lean into itâjust slightly. Deliberately.
You turn, slow and unhurried, giving them a full view. Letting the silk catch the light, letting the low cut of your back linger just long enough to make a point. The dress dips just above the swell of your ass, revealing more than it should without ever crossing the line into obvious.
Controlled. Calculated. Cruel, if youâre being honest.
When you turn back around, your eyes find his. And for a secondâjust a secondâyou hold it there. Because his gazeâŠThereâs something under it. Not just attraction. Something sharper. Hotter. Angrier. Like heâs looking at youâand resenting the fact that he canât stop.
Your throat tightens almost imperceptibly. Your chin lifts in response. Instinct. Defense.
âTry not to stare,â you mutter, your tone dry as you move further into the room, setting your clutch down briefly on the table.
Itâs meant to be light. Flippant. But it lands heavier than that. His jaw shiftsâjust slightlyâand when his eyes finally flick up to meet yours, itâs worse than before. Because now itâs direct. Now thereâs no buffer. No pretending. Just the two of you standing there with everything from earlier still hanging thick between you.
âYou ready?â Steve asks, breaking the moment cleanly.
You nod once, quick. âYeah.â
Sam pushes himself up from his seat, clapping his hands together lightly as he resets the room, âAlright, letâs go over this one more time before you two head out.â
He dives back into the plan, gesturing toward the papers spread out in front of him, his voice steady and focused. You try to listen. You really do. But your attention keeps slipping. Because every time you shift, every time the fabric moves against your skin, every time you take a stepâyou can feel it.
Barnes. Still watching. Even when he pretends not to be.
And when you finally risk a glanceâHeâs already looking away. Like he got caught. Like heâs trying to rein himself in.
You pick up your clutch again, your fingers brushing against the shape of the snuff bottle inside. The familiar weight grounds you instantly, settling something uneasy in your chest. A choice. A deliberate one. Poor decisions.
Your gaze flicks back to him, just for a secondâjust long enough to meet his eyes again. Long enough to make sure he understands.
You heard him. You know exactly what he meant. And whether it came from concern, control, or something in betweenâYou didnât listen. Not even a little. And tonightâYouâre going to make sure he knows it.
âŠ
Itâs quiet between the two of you by the time you reach Pierreâs apartment. Not the comfortable kind of quiet, either. Not the kind that settles. This one lingersâtight, unresolved, still carrying the weight of everything said back in the suite.
Barnes keeps two paces behind you the entire walk. Not enough to look intentional, but enough to give himself space. Enough to try and keep his head straight. It doesnât really work.
His eyes betray him more than once, draggingâunwillinglyâover the sway of your hips, the way the silk moves with you, clinging and releasing in a rhythm that feels almost deliberate. Your waist, impossibly small, pulling his attention in like a hook in his chest.
He looks away. Forces himself to. Then looks back again anyway. Each time followed by a sharp breath, a flicker of irritation settling in his chest that has nothing to do with youâand everything to do with the fact that he canât seem to stop.
Because why did you have to look like that? Especially after everything you said.
By the time you reach the door, that irritation has settled into something heavierâsomething harder to name. You lift your hand to knock. The door swings open before your knuckles even make contact.
A couple stumbles out past you, laughing, already drunk. One of the men slows just enough to give you a second lookâeyes lingering in a way Barnes recognizes instantly. The same way his own had. That is, until Barnes meets his gaze.
Sharp. Unforgiving. The guy looks away quickly, muttering something under his breath as he disappears down the hall.
By the time Barnes looks back, youâre already moving. Of course you are. You glide into the apartment like you belong there, like the entire space exists just to hold you. Heads turn as you passâmen pausing mid-conversation, drinks hovering halfway to their mouths as they take you in.
And BarnesâHe canât even blame them. Thereâs a part of him that thinks youâre doing this on purpose. That every step, every shift of your body, every glance over your shoulder is calculated. That this is some kind of retaliation. A point youâre trying to prove after the argument.
But that doesnât make sense. You bought the dress before that. Right?
Then againâAs your arms lift slightly, as you step toward the host, that easy confidence settling over you like a second skinâIt feels intentional anyway.
âPierre!â you call, your voice warm, inviting, just loud enough to cut through the music.
He pulls you into a tight embrace, his hands lingering a second too long as he spins you out in front of him, taking you in openlyâunapologetically. His eyes drag over every inch of you like youâre something laid out for display.
Barnesâ ears start ringing. The room dulls slightly at the edges, sound stretching thin as his focus narrows. His legs keep moving toward you, but everything feels slower now. Heavier. Because nowâNow heâs sure of it. You wore the dress for this. For them. Or worseâFor him.
To make him look. To make him feel it. To push him. Like youâre the thing heâs not supposed to touch, and you know it. Like youâre daring him.
âPierre, this is Keaton,â you say smoothly, nudging Barnes forward with a light press of your hand.
He barely registers the contact before Pierreâs attention snaps to him.
âWow,â Pierre breathes, taking in his size with open fascination. âYou are quite big for a jazz musician, no?â
Barnes forces something that resembles a smile, though it looks more strained than amused.
âWhat the hell does a guy like you even play?â Pierre continues, already entertained by his own curiosity.
Before you can answer, Barnes leans in slightly, tilting his head just enough, âTuba.â
You have to turn away immediately, shoulders tightening as you fight to keep from laughing.
âJazz tuba!â Pierre exclaims, delighted, gripping Barnesâ hand and yanking him closer, slapping him hard on the back. âThat is what I like to hear!â
Barnesâ nostrils flare, his composure hanging on by a thread, but he holds the same tight, polite expression. Barely.
You nudge Pierre lightly, leaning in conspiratorially, âCan you believe it?â you murmur, gesturing back toward Barnes. âHe almost switched to piccolo a few years ago.â
Pierre erupts into laughter, grabbing your face with both hands and smushing your cheeks together before planting a loud, sloppy kiss on your forehead. His breath is thick with vodka, âWonderful!â he shouts.
You and Barnes are left blinking at him as he stumbles off, already distracted by something else. Your fingers come up instinctively, brushing your forehead like he left something behind.
âJesus,â Barnes mutters. âYou donât think heâs gonna find a tuba for me to play, do you?â
You shrug, already turning toward the bar, not bothering to look at him, âLetâs hope not. With your lung capacity, youâd probably cause a small earthquake.â
You donât wait for a response. Of course you donât.
He watches you go. Watches the way people notice. The way they look. The way they move closer.
You reach the bar, order a drink, and down it in one smooth motion. Another is placed in front of you before you even ask. That one goes down even faster.
Barnes presses his lips together, shaking his head slightly. Unbelievable.
And when he looks up againâYouâre gone. Just⊠gone. Swallowed by the crowd.
âŠ
Two hours later, the party is in full swing. The city stretches out beyond the windows, the crescent moon hanging high over the Paris skyline, casting a pale glow that contrasts sharply with the low, pulsing lights inside. The bass from downstairs vibrates faintly through the floorboards as the two of you move carefully through Pierreâs office.
Youâve been searching for fifteen minutes. And youâve foundâNothing useful.
A few questionable novels. Some recent visits on his computer that you absolutely did not need to see. You let out a frustrated breath, leaning back against the large mahogany desk, fingers pressing between your brows as the alcohol dulls your focus just enough to make everything feel heavier.
âThis is no use,â you mutter, your words dragging slightly. Youâve had more than you should. You know that.
Every drink handed to you. Every one accepted.
âWell,â Barnes exhales, still rifling through the file cabinet, âmaybe if you hadnât had so much to drink, itâd be a little easier for you toââ
âOh, fuck offââ You donât get to finish.
Because he goes still. Completely. His posture snaps straight, something in his hands catching his full attention.
âWhat?â you ask immediately, pushing off the desk, your voice dropping instinctively. âDid you find something?â
He doesnât answer right away. Just stares. ThenââDo these look familiar to you?â
You step closer. Too close. Your arms brush. Your shoulder presses lightly into his. You can feel the heat of him, the steady rise and fall of his breath just beneath your ear.
âYes,â you breathe, leaning in. âYes, these areââ
You turn to himâBut heâs already looking at you. And for a second, neither of you moves. Then reality snaps back in. You both look down again. The same tracking files as Timâs. The same format as Timâs.
Only this timeâSiberia. An exact address. And a line item: $650,000 for AOTVG
Barnes squints at it, âWhat the hell is AOTVGS?â
Your body goes rigid. You step back before you even realize youâre doing it. Space. You need space.
âAuditory. Olfactory. Tactile. Visual. Gustatory,â you say quietly. âSerum.â
His head snaps toward you. You nod. Because yeah. Itâs exactly what he thinks.
âThatâs the name of my serum,â you continue, your voice lowering further. âWhich means they either found an old oneâŠâ
Another step back, ââŠor they used my DNA to make a new one.â
Silence stretches between you.
âThat chunk of money?â you add. âThatâs only the first quarter.â
âSo what does that mean?â he asks. âDid he buy it for himself, orââ
âI think itâs both,â you cut in, thinking through it despite the haze. âTheyâd test it first. On other people. Make sure it works.â
âIf they survive it,â Barnes mutters.
The bass thumps beneath your feet. The room feels smaller.
âWait,â he says suddenly, stepping closer again, pointing at another section. âI donât think him wanting the serum was the point of capturing you.â
He moves in beside you again, shoulders brushing, his height looming just above yours as he angles the page. You try to focus. You really do. But all you can think about is how close he is again. How easy it would be to lean in. Toâ
âYouâre distracting me,â you murmur.
His breath catchesâjust slightly. His lips partâAnd you snatch the paper from his hands, stepping away again before anything else can happen. The loss of him hits harder than it should.
You force yourself to focus. Reading once. Twice. Three times. Thenâ
âThe money was sent back,â you say, frowning. âThereâs a note.â
You scan lower, heart starting to pick up again. Two words. Not yet.
âWhat does that mean?â you ask.
âProbably not stable. Subjects are dying.â He exhales, running a hand through his hair. âPierre probably got word of what it does and requested some for himself.â
You nod slowly, âThat makes sense. If this is Hydra⊠they probably donât have much to work with. Limited samples. Limited attempts.â
He glances at the clock. Then the door. Decision made.
âAlright. Take it,â he says, gesturing to the papers. âWeâve got the address. We figure it out later.â
You hesitateâbut the look he gives you shuts it down immediately. Not now. Donât push. You got what you were looking for. You tuck the papers away.
âLetâs go,â he says. âBefore someone realizes youâre gone.â
And just like thatâYouâre moving again. Back into the noise. Back into the night.
âŠ
Barnes hadnât expected the two of you to stay another three hours after finding exactly what you came for. But here he is. Still standing in the middle of a packed, suffocating room, a glass of bourbon clenched tightly in his handâtight enough that the muscle in his forearm has started to burn. Tight enough that if it were anything less durable than crystal, it wouldâve shattered by now.
Across the roomâYou. And the guy youâve been talking to for the last twenty minutes. Barnes is just about at his limit.
What makes it worseâwhat really gets under his skinâis that you donât look bored. You donât look like youâre playing a part. You look like youâre enjoying yourself. Laughing. Leaning in. Letting the guy think he has even a fraction of your attention.
And thenâThat moment. The one Barnes wishes he could unsee. The small baggie. The white powder. The way the guy offers it like itâs nothing. And youâYou donât hesitate. Not even a second.
Barnesâ jaw tightens as he watches you dip your finger into it, slow and deliberate, your gaze locked on the man in front of you.
ThenâYou lift it. Offer it. Slide it past his lips.
Barnes exhales sharply through his nose, something dark and hot twisting low in his chest. Unbelievable.
By the time the music swells again, youâre already being pulled toward the dance floor, the two of you folding into the mass of bodies moving under dim lights and pulsing bass.
And itâs not subtle. Not even close. The guy turns you, pulls you back against him, your body fitting against his like it belongs there. Your arm loops around his neck, fingers threading into his hair as he dips his head toward your throat.
Thatâs it. Barnes doesnât even realize heâs moving until heâs already halfway across the room. Everything else fades. The music dulls. The voices blur. The crowd becomes nothing but shifting shapes in his periphery.
All he can seeâIs you. And him. Too close. Too comfortable. Too fucking familiar. His steps donât slow. Donât hesitate. By the time he reaches you, his hand is already on the guyâs shoulderâfirm, unyieldingâripping him away from you and spinning him around.
âAlright,â Barnes says, his voice low and deadly calm. âI think Iâve seen enough.â
Thereâs no humor in it. No warning. Just intent. The guy blinks at him, slow, unfocused, too drunk to register whatâs happening.
âHeyââ he slurs, shoving a hand into Barnesâ chest like that might do something. âWhatâs your problem, asshole?â
Barnes doesnât move. Not even an inch. If anything, the guy recoils slightly from the impact, like he hit something immovable.
Behind him, you turn. And the second you see Barnesâ faceâ You know.
âBarnes,â you warn, your voice sharp now, cutting through the noise.
Because youâve seen that look before. And it never ends well.
But itâs too late. His arm pulls backâAnd then snaps forward. Fast. Violent. The crack of impact cuts through the music, sharp enough to turn heads nearby. The guy drops instantly, crumpling backward, hands flying to his face as blood spills between his fingers. Your stomach drops.
âJames!â you snap, stepping forward, your voice laced with disbelief and frustration.
Because that wasnât normal. Not even close. And if anyone here is paying enough attentionâThatâs a problem.
But Barnes is already gone. Already turning, already pushing through the crowd, heading straight for the balcony doors like he needs air before he does something worse.
The cool night air hits him the second he steps outside, but it doesnât help. Not really. His chest is still tight, breath uneven, something restless and violent still pacing under his skin. He grips the railing for half a secondâThen lets go. Pacing once. Twice. Trying to shake it off. Trying toâ
The balcony door slams open behind him. Hard.
The sound echoes through the space, sharp enough to make him turn. You.
Storming toward him, eyes blazing, every inch of you radiating anger.
âI donât want to hear itââ he starts.
You donât let him finish. Your hand comes up fast, connecting with his face in a sharp, echoing crack that snaps his head slightly to the side.
For a split secondâEverything stills. His eyes widen, more from shock than pain, as he looks back at you.
And thenâBefore he can say a wordâYour hand is on him again.
Not striking this time. Gripping. Fingers pressing into his jaw, pulling him down toward youâAnd your mouth crashes into his.
Itâs not soft. Not hesitant. Itâs sharp. Angry. Consuming.
For a moment, he doesnât move. Doesnât react. Like his brain hasnât caught up to whatâs happening yet. Like heâs still trying to decide if this is real.
You pull back just as quickly, breath uneven, eyes narrowedâlike it meant nothing. Like it was just another hit. Another way to get under his skin.
And thatâThatâs what breaks whatever restraint he had left. Because heâs not letting you walk away from that. Not this time. Not after everything.
His hand comes up fast, closing around the side of your neckânot tight enough to hurt, but firm, grounding, undeniableâas he pulls you back into him. Hard.
Your back hits the brick wall behind you, the rough surface scraping lightly against your skin through the open cut of your dress, the sting sharpâbut fleeting. Because his mouth is on yours again, and this time thereâs nothing held back. Itâs rough. Messy. All heat and tension finally snapping loose at once.
Your hands tangle into his shirt, then his hair, pulling him closer like youâre trying to erase every inch of space between you.
His grip shifts, sliding from your waist to your hips, then lowerâhands firm, grounding, like he needs to feel that youâre real. That this is actually happening.
Your breath catches as his mouth drags from yours, down along your jaw, your neckâevery movement impatient, unfiltered, like heâs been holding back for too long and doesnât know how to stop now that heâs started.
The world narrows. Just this. Just him. Just the heat, the pressure, the way everything else falls away completely. For a momentâYou let it. Let yourself sink into it. Into him. You donât fight it. And he feels that.
Feels the exact second your resistance dropsânot gone, not surrendered, but⊠allowed. Enough to undo him completely. His hands shift without hesitation, sliding down from your waist, fingers hooking beneath your thighs as he gathers you up in one decisive movement.
The world tilts for a split secondâAnd then your back is against the brick again, higher this time, your body lifted, his strength effortless as he presses you flush against the wall.
Your breath catches sharply, a sound pulled from somewhere low in your chest as your legs instinctively wrap around his waist, locking him in place, pulling him closer instead of pushing him away.
Closer. Exactly where you want him. Exactly where he wants to be.
The contact is immediate, unavoidableâyour bodies aligned in a way that leaves no space for denial, no room to pretend this is anything less than what it is. The heat of him, the tension, the pressureâit all hits at once, sharp and consuming, drawing another breath from you that isnât quite steady.
His head dips forward again, his mouth finding yours with renewed urgency, like the shift in position only made everything worseâin the best possible way. The kiss deepens, messy and unrestrained, the kind that doesnât care about rhythm or neatness, only about proximity, about closeness, about taking and being taken in equal measure.
Your fingers tighten in his hair, anchoring yourself, pulling him back into you when he shifts, when he tries to move lower, your bodies pressing together again, grinding into each other in a desperate attempt to feel as much as you can, in a way that pulls a low, involuntary sound from somewhere between youâhalf breath, half something else entirely.
His grip on you adjusts, one hand firm at the back of your thigh, the other braced at your side, holding you steady, holding you there, like letting go isnât even an option anymore.
The rough brick at your back, the heat of his body in front of you, the contrast of it allâitâs too much and not enough at the same time, your head tipping back for a fraction of a second as your breath breaks, your chest rising against his, the moment stretching just long enough to feel it fully.
To know it. To know him. To know what this is. And what it could become if you let it go any further.
Your hands come up between you then, pressing lightly against his chestânot forceful, not rejecting, just enough to create space. Enough to interrupt. Enough to breathe. Enough to think. He stills instantly. Like the shift alone is enough to snap something back into place.
Your eyes meet his. Still close. Still charged. Still very, very aware of what just happened.
âIâm going back to the hotel,â you say, your voice quieter nowâbut steady.
It takes him a second to process it, ââŠwhat?â
âWait fifteen minutes,â you add, already easing yourself down from him, your hands briefly brushing his shoulders for balance before you step away. âWe canât be seen leaving together.â
Practical. Like that didnât just happen. Like you didnât justâ
You turn before he can respond, heading back toward the door. And just before you disappear insideâYou glance back. Just enough to make sure heâs still watching.
Of course he is.
You donât say anything else. Just turnâAnd leave him standing there. Alone. Breathing hard. Still trying to catch up. Still trying to figure outâWhat the hell just happened. And why itâs not even close to enough.
âŠ
By the time you reach the hotel, the adrenaline has nowhere left to go. It lingers under your skin insteadârestless, electric, refusing to settle. Every step through the lobby feels too slow, too exposed, like everyone can see somethingâs changed, like itâs written all over you.
You keep your head down anyway. Keep moving.
The elevator ride is quiet. Too quiet. The faint hum of it climbing floor by floor does nothing to drown out the echo of the night still ringing in your earsâthe music, the voices, the him.
Your jaw tightens slightly. Fifteen minutes. You gave him fifteen minutes. You donât let yourself think about whether heâll actually take them.
The doors slide open with a soft chime. You step out, heels clicking against the hallway floor, your pace just a touch faster than usual as you make your way to the suite. Your fingers tighten slightly around your clutch.
Focus. Just get inside. The keycard slides through. The door opens. And the second you step inâYou know. Steve and Sam are both there. Waiting.
The shift in the room is immediate, their attention snapping toward you in unison, relief flickering across their faces so fast it almost goes unnoticedâalmost.
âJesus,â Sam exhales, pushing himself up from the couch. âWe were about two minutes away from coming down there.â
Steveâs posture straightens where heâs been standing near the table, arms crossed, eyes already scanning you in that quiet, assessing way of his.
âYou didnât check in,â he adds, not accusingâjust stating.
You nod once, already moving further into the room, slipping your clutch onto the table like it weighs more than it should.
âYeahâsorry,â you say, your voice a little thinner than usual, like it hasnât quite caught up with you yet. âThings justâŠtook longer than expected.â
Samâs eyes narrow slightlyânot suspicious, just noticing. Because something is off. Not obvious. Not dramatic. But enough.
âEverything good?â he asks, tilting his head just a fraction.
You donât answer right away. Instead, you reach into your clutch, fingers brushing past the snuff bottle for half a second before finding what youâre actually looking forâthe folded papers. You pull them out and hold them up between two fingers.
âWe got what we needed.â
That does it. Their focus sharpens instantly. Steve steps forward first, taking the papers from you, already scanning the top page as Sam moves in closer beside him.
âWhat is it?â Sam asks, leaning over slightly.
âSiberia,â you say, folding your arms loosely across your chest, more for grounding than anything else. âSame kind of tracking files Tim hadâbut this time thereâs a direct address. And a payment line.â
Steveâs brows pull together as he reads, his expression tightening just slightly.
âAOTVGâŠâ he murmurs under his breath.
Sam glances at you. âThat mean anything?â
Thereâs a beat. You hesitate. Just long enough for it to register.
âItâs the serum,â you say finally, quieter now. âMine.â
That lands. Steveâs head lifts immediately, eyes flicking to yours, âAre you sure?â
You nod once, âYeah.â
Sam exhales low, running a hand over the back of his neck. âThatâs⊠not great.â
âNo,â you agree, your voice flattening slightly. âItâs not.â
Steve flips to the next page, scanning faster now, more focused, âAnd this addressââ
âExact location,â you cut in, a little quicker than necessary. âMoneyâs already moving. Or trying to.â
Sam glances back down. âTrying?â
âIt was sent back,â you explain, shifting your weight slightly. âThereâs a note. âNot yet.ââ
Steve and Sam exchange a look. The kind that doesnât need words.
âMeaning itâs not ready,â Steve says.
âOr itâs killing people,â Sam adds.
âProbably both,â you mutter.
Silence settles for a second. Not heavy. JustâŠprocessing. And in that pause, Samâs gaze drifts back to you again. Really looks this time.
The slightly uneven rhythm of your breathing. The way your fingers keep flexing at your sides like you donât know what to do with them. The faint flush still lingering across your skin.
âHey,â he says, softer now. âYou good?â
You blink. Like you werenât expecting the question. Like you forgot you were still in the room with them.
âYeah,â you answer quickly. Too quickly. âIâm fine.â
Steveâs eyes flick up again. He doesnât say anything. But he definitely doesnât look convinced.
You clear your throat lightly, already stepping back, putting space between you and them.
âSorry,â you add, the word coming out a little quieter this time. âIâm just⊠tired.â
That part, at least, isnât a lie.
âIâm gonna go to sleep,â you continue, already turning toward the hallway before either of them can press further. âWe can go over everything in the morning.â
Sam opens his mouth like heâs about to say somethingâprobably stop you, probably ask another questionâBut Steve gives the smallest shake of his head. Not now.
They let you go. Your hand finds your door, pushing it open just enough to slip inside. And the second it closes behind youâThe room feels different. Quieter. Smaller. Like everything youâve been holding together all night finally has somewhere to land.
Outside, in the main room, Sam exhales slowly, glancing toward the hallway.
ââŠsheâs not fine,â he mutters.
Steve doesnât look away from the papers in his hands.
âNo,â he agrees quietly.
A beat.
ââŠand Barnes isnât back yet.â
Samâs eyes flick toward the door. Then back to Steve, ââŠyeah.â
Neither of them says anything else. Because they both already knowâSomething happened. And whatever it wasâItâs not over.
âŠ
The door to the suite opens again not long after. Not tentative. Not quiet. Fast. It swings inward with more force than necessary, and Barnes steps through like he forgot how to slow down somewhere between the balcony and the street.
His eyes move immediately. Sharp. Searching. Scanning the room like heâs expecting to see you standing right where he left youâlike maybe you didnât actually go back, like maybe youâre still here, waiting, like that moment didnât end the way it did.
But youâre not. The space where you were just minutes ago is empty. And thatâThat hits him.
Not visibly, not in a way most people would catchâbut itâs there. In the way his shoulders tense, in the way his jaw tightens just slightly as his gaze flicks once more across the room, checking again like that might change something.
It doesnât.
âNice of you to finally show up,â Sam says, pushing himself up from the couch, arms crossing over his chest. Thereâs no real bite to itâbut thereâs definitely an edge.
Because yeah. They noticed.
Steve doesnât say anything at first. He just watches Barnes, steady, assessing, like heâs trying to read something that isnât being said out loud.
Barnes barely registers either of them. His attention is still elsewhere.
âWhere is she?â he asks, the question coming out quickâtoo quick to be casual.
Sam and Steve exchange a look. There it is.
Sam tilts his head slightly. âShe just went to bed.â
That lands harder than it should. Barnesâ eyes flick toward the hallway instantly, like he might actually move toward itâlike the thought crosses his mind before he can stop it.
Sam catches it.
âWhat the hell happened down there?â he presses, brows pulling together. âShe came in here acting⊠off. Didnât say much, just handed over the papers and disappeared.â
Steve steps in a little more evenly, voice calm but firm, âYou didnât check in.â
Another beat. Barnes finally looks at them. Really looks this time. And for a second, itâs clearâwhateverâs going on under the surface, itâs not settled. Not even close. His expression isnât shut down like hers was. Itâs tighter. More controlled. But barely. Thereâs something restless still pacing behind his eyes, something sharp that hasnât had time to cool off yet.
âNothing happened,â he says, a little too quickly, a little too flat.
Samâs brows lift immediately, âBullââ
âWe got what we needed,â Barnes cuts in, not raising his voice, but thereâs enough weight behind it to stop the rest of the sentence cold.
Steve studies him for another second. Doesnât push. Not yet.
Barnes shifts his weight slightly, already turning away, already disengaging.
âIâm going to sleep,â he adds, like that closes it. Like thatâs the end of the conversation.
Sam lets out a quiet breath through his nose, exchanging another look with Steve.
ââŠright,â he mutters under his breath.
Because thatâs not an answer. Not even close.
But Barnes is already moving, heading toward the hallway without another word, his pace just a fraction too fast to be relaxed. And as he disappears down the same hallway you vanished into just minutes beforeâThe tension doesnât leave with him. It just⊠settles deeper into the room.
Sam watches the hallway for a second longer before shaking his head slightly.
âYeah, no,â he says quietly. âSomething definitely happened.â
Steve doesnât disagree. His gaze drops briefly to the papers still in his handâthen back toward the hallway, ââŠweâll deal with it in the morning.â
But even he doesnât sound entirely convinced. Because whatever just walked through that doorâWasnât resolved. Not even a little.
âŠ
Morning comes too quickly.
Paris filters in through the curtains in soft, pale light, the city already awake long before you ever managed to fall asleep. What little rest you did get was fractured at bestâshallow, restless, your mind looping through the same moments over and over again until they blurred together into something indistinguishable.
You stare at the ceiling for a while before you move. Longer than you should. Your body feels heavy, like it never actually shut off, like itâs still carrying the night with itâevery glance, every word, every second on that balcony sitting just beneath your skin, unresolved.
You swallow once. Then push yourself up. Routine. Thatâs all this is. Just another morning.
By the time you step out into the suite, youâve already rebuilt the version of yourself you want them to seeâcomposed, neutral, just sharp enough to feel normal.
The smell of coffee hits you first. Then voices. Samâs. Steveâs. AndâHim.
You donât hesitate. Donât give yourself the chance to. You walk in like nothing happened.
The three of them are already at the table, plates half-finished, coffee cups in various states of empty. Samâs mid-sentence about something you donât fully catch, Steve listening, noddingâ
And BarnesâBarnes isnât really part of the conversation. Heâs there. Sitting. But not in it. His posture is tighter than usual, shoulders set just a little too rigid, his focus drifting in and out like he canât quite lock onto anything for long.
And the second you walk inâIt snaps. All of it.
Three sets of eyes lift. Sam is the first to react, easy as always.
âWell, look who decided to join the living,â he says, leaning back slightly in his chair. âWe were starting to think you ghosted us.â
You donât miss a beat.
âTempting,â you reply dryly, pulling out a chair and dropping into it with just enough casual indifference to sell it.
Normal.
Steve gives you a small look over the rim of his coffee cupânot suspicious, not pressing, just⊠noting, âYou sleep alright?â he asks.
You shrug, reaching for whateverâs closest on the table, âEnough.â
Which is not an answer.
Samâs eyes flick between you and Barnes quicklyâonce, twice. Clocking. Because something is off. Not loud. Not obvious. But there.
And BarnesâBarnes hasnât said a word. Not since you walked in. You can feel it without looking. That tension. That awareness. Like he knows exactly where you are in the room at all times, even when heâs not facing you.
You reach for your coffee, bringing it to your lips, buying yourself a second.
âPlan for today?â you ask, setting it down again, voice steady, casual.
Steve answers first.
âWe fly out tonight,â he says. âFigured weâd use the day while weâre still here.â
Sam perks up slightly at that.
âYeah, Iâm gonna head out, find something for my sister,â he adds. âSomething that doesnât scream âairport gift shop regret.ââ
Steve allows himself the smallest hint of a smile before continuing, âIâm going to the art Museum,â he says. âUhhâŠthereâs been more than a few things I've missed.â
Your gaze drops briefly to the table, then back up again, casual.
âAnd us?â you ask, though you already know the answer.
Sam leans back, stretching slightly.
âWell,â he says, dragging the word out just a little too long, âthat would leave you and Sergeant Broody over there to hold down the fort.â
Thereâs a beat. A small one. But it lands. Because Barnes finally reacts. Just barely. His jaw shifts, his eyes flicking upânot to SamâTo you. Itâs quick. But itâs enough.
You feel it. You donât look back, âThrilling,â you mutter, reaching for your coffee again like that didnât just happen.
Sam watches the two of you for another second, brows knitting together slightly. Because thisâThis is weird. Youâre acting like yourself. Sharp. Dismissive. A little rude. Normal.
But Barnes? Barnes is not acting like himself. Heâs quieter than usual. Tighter. Like heâs holding onto something he doesnât know what to do with. And thatâs what makes it stand out.
âWhatâs up with you?â Sam asks finally, directing it at him now.
Barnes doesnât answer right away. His fingers tighten slightly around his fork before he sets it down, exhaling through his nose, âNothing.â
Flat. Immediate. Not convincing.
Sam leans back, not buying it for a second, âRight,â he says, dragging it out.
Steve doesnât step in. Doesnât need to. Heâs already seen enough. His gaze moves between the two of you once moreâslower this time. More deliberate.
He doesnât ask. But itâs clearâHe knows something happened. Just not what. And neither of you is offering it up.
You push your chair back slightly, standing before the silence can stretch too long.
âIâm gonna take a shower,â you say, brushing your hands together lightly.
Another exit. Another deflection, âTry not to burn the place down while Iâm gone.â
Sam snorts softly, âNo promises.â
You donât look at Barnes as you turn. Donât give yourself the chance. But you feel it anywayâThat pull. That tension. That unfinished something sitting heavy between the two of you. And behind you, as you disappear down the hallâSam leans slightly toward Steve, lowering his voice just enough.
ââŠokay, Iâm not crazy, right?â
Steve doesnât look away from the table, âNo.â
A beat.
ââŠsomething definitely happened.â
Across from them, Barnes stares down at his plateâNot seeing any of it.
âŠ
By the time Steve and Sam leave, Barnes is like youâsimilarly hiding out in his room until further notice. But the moment you heard his door close earlier, your hair falling behind you, you went to sit out in the open air of the balcony, just to try and clear your sinuses of the remnants of him.
You hadnât smelled him last night because you had the implant inserted. You did, however, take it out a few times to snort powdersâand the moment you got home to snort more, you just⊠never put it back in.
But the smell of him lingered. Laying heavily on the suite like a low fog. Dense. Thick. And warmâunnervingly warm. Like something alive. Like something charged. Like a live wire humming just beneath the surface of everything.
For how overstimulating it had been last nightâall the parts of your body screaming for some sort of reliefâyou find yourself mildly, dangerously curious. Curious about the fact that it almost felt like whatever he was feeling⊠your body would feel too. As if his emotions were so loud they bled off him and into you.
Either wayânow, as you sit on the balcony, the mid-day sun warming your faceâyou breathe in the sights and smells of the city. Which honestly arenât that great. Stillâ
Even from this distance, your body tenses slightly as the sound of his bedroom door clicks open. Your breathing picks up as the weight of his steps thumps into the wood of the hallway, the vibrations travelingâfloor, chair legs, spine.
And then the smell. Stronger. Closer. Until heâs there. Just in your peripheral. Standing behind you. Arms crossed. Thinking. Weighing.Â
Does he address it? Does he let you address it? Does he pretend it never happened? Because he doesnât want that. He wants to remember. Needs to. Hellâheâll probably be chasing that feeling for the rest of his life.
But as you sit thereâknees pulled into your chestâhe decides to let it be. Moves past you. Drops onto the couch. Reaches for the remote. Turns the TV on like nothing happened.
And thereâs a part of youâsharp, irritatedâthatâs almost offended. Offended that he didnât rip you out of that chair and put you in your goddamn place for leaving him like that. Offended that he didnât grab you by the neck, bend you over the railing in broad daylight, and fuck you into submission for ever thinking your behavior last night was okay.
You squeeze your thighs tight, glancing over your shoulderâjust briefly. You see him shift. Once. Twice. Three times. And then it clicks.
Whatever pheromones youâre giving offâheâs catching them too. Just like youâre catching his from fifteen feet away.
Your eyes strain, still angled back toward himâyou notice his head start to turn. Tilt. Like heâs trying to make sense of it. Like heâs realizing this isnât in his head. Like he can feel youâjust as worked up as he is.
But youâre already moving. On your feet. Stalking toward him like youâre a lion and heâs a goddamn antelopeâfitting, because the way he watches you come at him is pure prey. Eyes wide. Body tense. BracingâYou stop in front of him. Arms crossed. Face hard. Unyielding.
He mirrors youâmostly. The shock melts off him quickly, replaced with something darker. His eyes trailâface, throat, bodyâlanding at the hem of your silk nightgown. Earlier, it had been covered by your robe. Now it isnât.
The stare-off stretches. Neither of you speaks. Just breathing. Heavier. Sharper. His nostrils flare. He shakes his head slightlyâlike heâs about to moveâbut you beat him to it. You canât wait anymore.
Your right leg comes upâstraddling his thigh. Then your left.
His hands pull back slightly, hoveringâwatching your face. His lower lip trembles, just barely, like heâs beggingâbeggingâfor you to drop down on him.
His eyes flick down. The lace hem barely covers anything. His gaze snaps back up. He looks like heâs panting. Looks like heâs angry. And then something snaps.
His brows pull in. His nose wrinklesâand he yanks you down onto his lap.
The second your lips meetâand your hips rollâthe sounds that leave both of you are obscene.
Like youâve been dying of thirst and finally found water. Like youâve been suffocating and someone just tore the bag off your head. Like starvation meeting a feast.
The kiss is roughâlike last nightâbut this time the hands move. Hisâone flesh, one metalâdrop to your ass, grabbing, dragging you back and forth against him.
You moanâhead thrown backâonly for his hand to fist into your hair and yank you down again.
Itâs too much. Too fast.
Neither of you knows where to startâwhat to touch firstâhow to get what you want fast enough. So he stops trying to sit.
And your eyes almost roll into the back of your head at how effortless it is when he stands, lifting you like you weigh nothingâboth hands locked under your thighs as you cling to him. He stumbles forward, unsteady, desperateâyour legs tightening around his waist as he moves toward the hallway.
He doesnât even know where heâs going. Doesnât care. He just needsâYou. Now.
Your back hits the hallway table hardâA glass lamp crashes to the floor, shattering. Cold wood bites into your skin as your body arches. He spreads your legs, drags you closerâgrinding into you again.
Clothes still on. Modesty still intact. Barely.
You grab at his neck, trying to pull him closerârubbing frantically against him. His metal hand catches your wrist, pinning it above your headâA vase crashes down next. Water spilling. Glass breaking. Neither of you even notices.
His other hand slides up your bodyârough, draggingâuntil it reaches your chest, squeezing your breast hard through the thin fabric before moving upâwrapping around your throat.
He pulls back just enough to look at you. Sweat-damp hair falling into his face. Eyes blown. Focused. Flicking between your throat in his hand and the friction between your bodies.
Godâheâs so hot.
Your head falls backâtoo hard this timeâit smacks against the surface of the tableâquick pain flashingâand he notices. His grip shifts, loosensâhand sliding from your throat to your jaw, checking youâstill moving against you, still looking at you like youâre something sacred.
You glance down. His fingersâright there. Close enough.
You look back up at himâlock eyesâAnd grab his hand. Shove his fingers into your mouth. And the sound he makesâItâs not human. A growl. Something feral. Something almost embarrassing in how raw it isâconsidering all youâre doing is this. Grinding.
And yetâAs you keep eye contact, his lip caught between his teeth, his hips still movingâyou suck his fingers slowly. Deliberately. Wishingâachingâthat it was something else.
Your body tightens. Arches. Just the thought of him in your mouthâYou need it. Your head tilts, working his fingers deeper, slowerâyour body writhing beneath him like itâs the only thing that matters in the world.
His mouth drops open. And thatâs it. Thatâs what breaks him. The heat. The pressure. You.
His body locks. Heâs so hard it hurts. Grinding into you through fabric, through friction, through restraintâand itâs not enough. Not even close.
His brows knit tight. His breath stuttersâAnd then heâs gone. Head dropping into your neck, body tensing, finishing in his pants with a broken, muffled groan against your skin.
Your hand stays on him. Guiding. Keeping him there as he comes down from it. But thenâThe sound. The elevator.
Your eyes snap open.
âJames,â you whisper, hands on his face, trying to lift his head. âJamesâget upââ
He groans, mumbling into youâbecause that is the last thing he wants to do. And nowânow it really hits him. What just happened. His face flushes deeperâthis time not from exertionâno, because he just came in his fucking pants.Â
âTheyâre coming,â you whisper urgently.
He pulls back fast. Eyes wide. Wild. His gaze dropsâtakes in the shattered glass, the mess, you sprawled on the tableâthen back to your face.
You hear Steveâs hand hit the door.
You unhook your legs, slipping off the tableâgrabbing the nearest thing as you drop, scrambling into position.
The door creaks open. You hit the floorâfumbling, selling it. Barnes reaches down immediatelyâplaying alongâhelping you up like nothing happened.Â
âWell,â Sam says after a long pause. âThis looks⊠interesting.â
You glance up quickly, forcing confusion onto your face while Barnes hauls you upright beside him.
âWhat?â you ask. âI tripped.â
Steveâs eyes drift slowly across the hallway. The shattered lamp. The flowers and water all over the floor. The vase in pieces. Barnes looking like heâd just been dragged through a war zone.
Then his gaze lands on you. Disheveled hair. Flushed cheeks. The strap of your slip halfway down your shoulder.
One of his eyebrows lifts.
âYou tripped,â he repeats flatly.
âYes.â
âWith enough force to destroy half the hallway?â Sam asks.
You look around briefly, as if just now noticing the damage.
ââŠIâm clumsy.â
Barnes coughs suddenly into his fist. Hard. Like heâs trying not to choke. Your eyes narrow at him for half a second. Steve notices immediately. And thenâsomething clicks across both their faces at the exact same time.
Sam slowly points between the two of you, âOh my God.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about,â you say immediately. Too quickly.
âRight,â Sam nods. âAnd Iâm sure Barnes here just accidentally slammed you into a hallway table hard enough to commit property damage.â
âWe were arguing,â you shoot back.
Barnes turns toward you slightly at that. Arguing?
âYou two got into another fight, didnât you?â Steve says, sounding far too pleased with himself now that he thinks heâs solved it.Â
âYes,â you say instantly.
âNo,â Barnes says at the exact same time.
You turn your head slowly toward him.
Barnes stares back at you, equally annoyed, before correcting himself with absolutely zero grace. âI meanâyes. Obviously.â
Sam squints at the two of youâbecause unlike SteveâSam understands all the telltale markings, ones practically written on the walls. And you catch itâthe difference between him and Steve. One sure, the other one skeptical. One wrong, and one right in their assumptions. You pray he doesnât say anything about it.Â
You cross your arms defensively. âHe hasâŠemotional regulation issues.â
Barnes actually looks offended, âOh, Iâm the problem?â
âYou threw me into a table!â You shout.Â
âYou launched yourself at me!â Heâs not wrong.Â
Steveâs expression immediately shifts into one of deep, exhausted understanding, âLook, kid,â
âOh Jesus,â you groanâinterrupting himâbecause you know where this is going.Â
âYouâve gotten a lot better, but if you donât stop picking fights soon, youâre gonna get hurt.â
You blink at himâunbelieveableâand shake your head as you peel away from Barnes, walking down the hallway some more and towards the door to your suite.Â
âWow,â is all you say.
Because even if this really was a fightâif Barnes had actually slammed you into a table as retaliationâtheyâd still blame you? The war criminal with the metal arm wouldnât have an eye blinked in his directionâpurely due to the implication that if you were involved, you mustâve caused it?
You donât miss the expression on Barnesâ face before you pull the door closed. His eyes wildâwatching youâa part of him silently begging you not to leave him alone with the two of them.
He felt the shift earlierâinto something calmerâmedicatedâŠrelaxed. Your general irritability melted away along with the tension in your back the moment his hands landed on you. As if he was a prescription fixâa powder you keep sealed inside that little necklace of yours. Like all you needed to take the edge off was him.Â
But now, the same old look returns. The hurt in your eyes from Steveâs wordsâright as the door cracks into nothing but a sliverâexposing the crease in your brow, the subtle rage returningâsimmering away inside you like heâs used to seeing.
One step forward, two steps back.
âŠ
The flight home is miserable for him. Not loud. Not dramatic. But thatâs somehow worseâbecause now thereâs something sitting between the two of you in the quinjet. Something heavy. Alive. Impossible to ignore. And yetâŠyou ignore it anyway.
Barnes sits across from you for nearly two and a half hours, and you barely look at him once. Not really. Not fully. Every time his eyes drift toward you, yours are already somewhere elseâout the window, on your phone, on the floor, on the little paperback balanced in your lap that you havenât turned a page of in twenty minutes.
At first, he thinks maybe youâre angry. Whichâfair enough. Steveâs comment had clearly struck a nerve. But then an hour passes. Then another. And he realizes itâs something worse. Youâre avoiding him. Not obviously. Not enough for Sam or Steve to notice. But Barnes noticesâbecause Barnes notices everything about you now, whether he wants to or not.Â
And something heâs put the pieces together to recently, one thing he hasnât been able to ignore once he figured it out, is that he knows that itâs more than one thing that you use to take the edge offâand most importantly, he can always tell what it is that youâve taken when you do.Â
If youâre more irritable than usualâarrogant, stubbornâyouâve taken something to wake you up. To make you focus. To clear your mind of racing thoughts.
If youâre softerâsmiley, approachable, likableâyouâve taken something that mellows you. Words slurring, even more so if itâs been mixed with a drink.
Which is interesting to him, because heâs also realized you can be at your worst when youâre drunk. Bitter. Abrasive. You pull at peopleâs insecuritiesâyou become mean. Probably because, in one way or another, youâre drowning in your own.
And when youâre Youâwhen nothingâs blurring the edges, when you exist without anything interferingâyouâre typically nervous. On edge. Blunt. A little too honest. In ways he finds charming, even if others might not. You become less approachable, more intimidating. And thereâs a look in your eyes he canât stop getting lost inâbecause he knows it. Feels it. Carries it, too.
When youâre You, you pick at the skin around your nails. Your hair is usually pulled backâbecause heâs learned that when youâre the most present the sensory issues bother you the most.
In general you donât eat unless you have toâno matter what youâve takenâUnless there are cookies.
A specific kind. They show up once a weekâlike clockwork. Not too sweet, not too soft, not too hard. Those youâll make an exception for.
Heâs also figured out you donât order them. Maybe because you donât think you deserve toâor maybe you just expect them to show up every Monday now. Either way there is always a note, always a tag left with the delivery.Â
Last week: âIâd usually tell someone not to eat them all in one sitting, but if Iâm being honest with you, youâre one skipped meal away from having a build like a greyhound.â âT.
Tony.
And heâs realized when youâre clear-headedâwhen youâre Youâyou always read the note. You start with a smile, and by the end thereâs a scoff. Stark always means it lovingly, but lovingly to him also means picking on you as much as possible.Â
And worst of allâcoming off of this entire spiralâhe notices the way you keep acting like none of the past few days ever happened.
Like the hallway. Like your mouth on his. Like the sound you made when he grabbed your waist. Like none of it happened at all.
And Itâs driving him fucking insane. Because he can still feel you. Christ, he can still smell you.
Even dulled by the recycled air of the jet and the layers of clothing between you and him, there are still tracesâyour shampoo, your skin, the adrenaline still looming beneath your sweat. It wraps around his nervous system like barbed wire.
And every now and then, you glance at himâaccidentally. Only accidentally.
And every time, he catches the same thing flashing across your face: Want. Then guilt. Then avoidance.
The second the jet lands back in New York, it gets worse. The compound becomes a maze of near misses.
Barnes starts hearing you before he sees youâbathwater sloshing as you shift in the tub, your voice echoing from the kitchen as you bicker with Sam on the rare occasions you leave your room, the never off-key but always too loud, inconsiderate singing you do in the shower at three in the morning while heâs halfway through making coffee.
Every time he rounds a corner, there you areâAnd every time, you leave almost immediately. Like you canât stand being around him for too long.
One night, he walks into the kitchen around one in the morning, expecting it to be empty. Itâs not. Because there you are, standing barefoot at the counter in your standard silkâskimpy, barely-thereâpajamas, with a mouth full of cookies.
You freeze the second you see him. He freezes too. And for a moment, neither of you moves.
The overhead stove light casts a soft amber glow across your face. Your hair is messy from tryingâand failingâto sleep. Your cheeks are still warm from the bottle of wine you drank before dropping into the trash bin, and covering it with paper towels so no one sees the remnants.Â
But either way, you look soft. Too soft. It does something dangerous to him.
âCouldnât sleep?â he asks quietly.
You brush the crumbs off of your hands into the sink, âsomething like that.â
Silence. Thick. Heavy. Painful.
His eyes drop to your mouth before he can stop himself. You notice. Of course you notice.
Your pulse jumpsâhe hears it. And you hear the subtle shift in his breathing. And suddenly the kitchen feels too small. Too warm.
You clear your throat first, âGoodnight, James,â you mutter, already backing toward the doorway.
And then youâre gone. Leaving him standing there, staring at the space youâd just occupied like a fucking idiot.
Another time, itâs the gym. Orâmore accuratelyâhe catches himself staring at you in the gym.
One, because youâre wearing that tight pink workout set that drives him up the wall. And two, because you are never in there willinglyâand from the look of the empty gym, no one forced you this time.
Youâre across the room using some insane contraption that looks like medieval tortureâhe heard Nat call it porcinis or something. Headphones on. Sports bra clinging damply to your skin from a runâwhich, surprisingly, you actually do often.
And Barnes cannot stop looking at the strip of skin above your waistband. Canât stop remembering what it felt like under his hands in Paris. The memory hits so hard he nearly crushes the dumbbell in his metal hand.
The sound makes you look up. Your eyes meet his. And for one horrible secondâneither of you looks away.
And there it is again. That pull. Like magnets. Like gravity. Like something biological and unavoidable.
Your pupils widen. Then you rip your headphones off, mutter something about a call, and leave before he can say a word.
He sleeps worse after that. Not that he was sleeping beforeâbut now that he knows thereâs something that could helpâYouâItâs unbearable.
Brooding. Pacing. Existing in a constant state of agitation that Steve notices almost immediately.
âYou good?â Steve asks one morning while Barnes stands at the counter aggressively murdering a coffee mug.
âFine.â
Steve glances at the cracked ceramic. ââŠRight.â
Barnes spends entire nights staring at the ceiling, replaying Paris like a bedtime story. Something to soothe him. Something to chase sleep.
Your hands on him. His mouth at your neck. The way your body softened when he touched you. And thenâthe way youâve been running ever since.
By the end of the week, heâs losing his goddamn mind. Because the tension hasnât faded. Itâs grown teeth.
Every accidental touch feels loaded. Every glance lasts too long. Every room overheats the second you walk into it. And you keep avoiding him. Avoiding. Avoiding. Avoidingâuntil it starts feeling more than just personal. Until it starts feeling cruel.
Which is exactly why, three days later, when he finds you peacefully reading on the couch like none of this has been actively destroying him from the inside outâsomething in him finally snaps.
Logicâgone. Careâgone. His feet are already moving, thundering toward youâeyes locked. Burning.
âWhatâs crawled up your ass?â you grumble in his direction.
âEvery time I look at you, I want to die,â he says begrudgingly, gaze glaring into you, arms crossed over his chest.Â
âThank you, James. Thatâs so kind of you to say.â You donât even glance up from your book when you answer, which somehow seems to make him angrier.
âIâm serious, IâChrist.â He drags both hands down his face hard enough to pull at the skin. âI fucking hate this shit.â
And that finally gets your attention. Your book falls flat against your chest with a soft thump as you look up at him, eyes narrowing, âand here I thought we were enjoying each otherâs company.â
You sit up slowly, your legs sliding off the ottoman and onto the floor. The fabric of your little slip dress catches briefly against your skin as you shift, and his eyes flick downward automatically before snapping right back up again.
You notice. Of course you notice, and yet you still ask, âWhatâs got you so riled up?â
He starts pacing immediately. Back and forth. Back and forth. Like he physically cannot stand still around you anymore.
âYou,â he says finally, pointing at you as he stalks closer. âYou drive me fucking insane, do you know that?â
âMe?â you scoff, offended. âIâve just been sitting here reading.â
âExactly!â he snaps.
Your brows pull together at the sound of him raising his voice, âAnd whatâs so wrong with that?â
Because thatâs the problem, isnât it? You arenât doing anything. Youâre just existing.
Curled up on the couch in a sinful excuse of a daytime dress, legs tucked beneath you, lazily flipping pages while the afternoon light spills gold across your skin through the compound windows. Your hair flowing and cascading, your face bare, lips slightly parted in concentration every few minutes while you read.
And it is driving him fucking feral.
âAre we just not going to address what happened?â he asks finally, dropping his hands to his sides. The impact against his thighs echoes in your ears.
âOh.â You huff lightly. âWell, I donât want to talk about it.â
âOkay.â The answer comes too fastâtoo flatâand he turns immediately, heading toward the hallway.
You stare after him for half a second before groaning loudly, shoving your hands into your hair.
âDonât walk away, Iââ You scramble up from the couch, nearly tripping over the blanket tangled around your legs. âBucky, come back.â
He ignores you. Broad shoulders tense beneath his shirt. Long strides carrying him down the hallway fast enough that you practically have to jog to catch up. His footsteps pound against the floorboards in a rhythm that rattles straight through your chest.
You catch his bedroom door just before it shuts, and your foot wedges into the crack with a grunt.
âCareful now, Barnes,â you warn. âDonât wanna break my foot.â
âMove it,â he glares. âGo away. Iâm not in the fucking mood.â
âLast time I checked, we were in the middle of a conversation.â
âYeah?â His jaw tightens. âWell, not anymore.â
âIâm not finished!â you shoot back.
âWell, I fucking am!â The door presses harder into your leg and you make a point to grimace dramatically.
âThen close it,â you hiss through gritted teeth.
His nostrils flare, âI canâtââ
âClose. It.â
He lets out a sound somewhere between a growl and a yell before finally throwing himself backward away from the door entirely, landing hard on the center of the mattress. The bedframe groans beneath his weight.
You blink at him. Then slowly push the door open the rest of the way. And lock it behind you. The click makes something shift in the room. Something heavier.
âHow old are you again?â you ask finally, unable to help yourself.
âFuck you,â he mutters, staring up at the ceiling.
âWhat is your problem?!â
âYou!â He finally sits up enough to look at you properly, frustration practically vibrating off him. âI try to talk to you and you donât talk to me.â
âIâm talking to you now!â you argue, throwing your arms out. âIâm here now. Spit it out.â
âNo.â He rubs at his face again. âIâm over it. Just leave, please.â
âBuckââ
âPlease.â That one is quieter.
And it catches you off guard enough that your anger falters. You move toward his bed slowly this time, debating whether or not you should sit beside him.
He notices immediately.
You can tell by the way his body tightens. By the way his pulse spikes. And against your better judgment, you sit anyway. Arms crossed tightly over yourself. The mattress dips beneath your weight. Your shoulder brushes his for barely half a second and both of you inhale at the exact same time.
Electric. Actually electric. The silence stretches.
Then your eyes drift toward him. His cheeks are faintly pink. His pulse is elevated to a genuinely concerning degree. He wonât look directly at you for more than a second. And suddenly you understand, the realization making your chest ache.Â
Oh.
âYouâre embarrassed,â you realize softly.
âPlease,â he says again, almost pained. âDonât.â
You feel guilty immediately.
âIâm sorry,â you murmur, staring upward instead of at him. âThis isâFUCK!â
God, why was this so hard for you?
âI like you,â you blurt finally. âI like you a lot, okay? There. Are you happy now?â
Silence. Complete silence.
And thenâeverything changes. Not physically. The room doesnât move. Neither of you does. But the tension snaps. Like a wire pulled too tight finally giving way. Because thatâThat was what he wanted. No. Needed.
You finally risk looking at him again. And the expression on his face nearly steals the breath from your lungs. Relief. Disbelief. Want. Pure, painful want.
âGod,â he exhales, almost laughing at himself as he finally sits upright beside you. âYou drive me fucking crazy.â
Your shoulders brush again. And this time neither of you pulls away. But it only makes it worse.
Your stomach twists violently every time his skin grazes yours. Every accidental touch feels loaded now. Intentional. Dangerous.
âIâm sorry I left you with that,â you mumble. âAnd that you were confused⊠or something.â
âOr something?â He laughs under his breath, rubbing at his temples. âI couldnât sleep that night, or any night since.â
You stand abruptly, needing movement before you combust entirely.
He watches you pace in front of him from where he leans back against the bed, elbows braced behind him. Watching you like youâre something heâs trying very hard not to devour.
âIâlook, the last time IâŠâ You stop short, your gaze catching his. âThe last time I liked someone like this, theyâfuck.â Your voice breaks apart under the weight of it. âBucky, stop looking at me like that.â
âLike what?â Thereâs the faintest hint of a smirk now.
And somehow that makes it worse too.
âLike that. Godââ You collapse onto your knees suddenly, folding into your hands. âIâm afraid.â
The confession comes out small. Childlike. And it changes him instantly. Every trace of irritation disappears from his face.
Heâs off the bed immediately, crouching beside you carefullyâso carefullyâlike approaching a wounded animal. He knows better than to touch you right away. But Christ, he wants to.
âOf me?â he asks softly. âDoll, you know I would never hurt you.â
The gentleness in his voice makes your stomach twist harder.
âNo,â you whisper quickly, looking up at him. âGod, no. Look at you.â
Your eyes flick helplessly between his.
âI fucking salivate over you.â
His breath catches audibly.
âAnd I smell you and it drives me out of my goddamn mind.â
A strained groan escapes him at that. Low. Rough.
Youâre still on your knees facing him now. Inches apart. Neither of you can stop staring. And suddenly the air feels too thick to breathe.
âYeah, well, you arenât the only one,â he barely manages, though the words come out strained, dragged up from somewhere deep in his chest.
âThe last time I liked someoneâlike that, like thisâitâŠâ You swallow hard. âIt didnât end the way I wouldâve wanted it to and I justâŠâ
Your voice faltersâa flash of Thomas sitting beaten in and bloody next to you.Â
âIâm afraid.â The confession hangs between you.
Heavy. Warm. Vulnerable in a way that makes your skin feel too thin.
Bucky laughs softly at thatânot because itâs funny, but because he genuinely doesnât know what else to do with the feeling currently shredding through him. He shakes his head once, gaze dragging down to the floor before lifting back to you again.
âI havenât been with someoneâanyoneâin over eighty goddamn years,â he says quietly. âAnd youâre afraid?â
Before you can respond, he grabs your hand. Not rough. Almost desperate.
He pulls you closer until your knees nearly touch his, until your noses hover so close your breathing starts mixing together. Then he takes your palm and presses it flat against his chest. Hard muscle. Warm skin beneath the thin fabric of his shirt. And beneath thatâThe pounding. Violent. Relentless.
His heartbeat slams against your hand so hard you almost think heâs exaggerating it on purpose. But noâyou can hear the strain in it. The uneven rhythm. The way it speeds every single time your thumb accidentally shifts against him.
âI know you donât need to touch me to know how hard my heart pounds around you,â he mutters, eyes flicking between yours. âI know you can hear it. Fuck, you can probably feel it through the goddamn floor.â
His lips twitch bitterly, âIâm fucking afraid.â
That surprises you enough that your brows knit together slightly.
âAnd yeah,â he continues, voice rougher now, âyou know what? I am embarrassed.â
His eyes drag over your face slowly. Painfully slowly.
âYouâreâChristâyouâre what, twenty-one?â He exhales sharply through his nose. âAnd youâre the most beautiful thing Iâve ever seen.â
The sincerity in it nearly knocks the breath from your lungs.
âAnd here I am,â he says with a humorless laugh, âan old man losing his fucking mind over some smart-ass kid who canât even get herself off benzos.â
âIâm off them,â you lie automatically, gaze dropping toward the carpet.
âYouâre not.â The response is immediate. Firm.
Your eyes flick back up to him.
Heâs already watching you carefully, like heâs memorized every twitch of your face.
âAnd I know that,â he says quietly, âbecause Iâve stared at you enough to tell the difference.â
God. That shouldnât make heat rush through your stomach the way it does.
âI canât help it,â you whisper finally. âIâm sorry.â
The apology sounds pathetic the second it leaves your mouth. Weak. Small. Buckyâs expression changes instantly.
âWhat are you apologizing to me for?â he asks softly.
His voice is velvet now. Deep and smooth and devastatingly gentle. You hate how much it affects you.
âBecause they make me weak,â you admit, your vocal cords catching painfully halfway through the sentence.
He stares at you for a long moment after that. Then laughs under his breath again, except this time it sounds almost angry. Mostly at himself.
âChrist,â he mutters. âYou make me weak.â
The words hit you square in the chest.
âI canât be weak,â he continues, shaking his head. âI donât want to feel like this. I want to brood and be lonely and just⊠fucking exist.â
His jaw flexes hard.
âI need to be tough. I need control.â
His eyes lock onto yours.
âNot getting territorial over a girl Iâm not even with.â
The tension spikes violently at that word. Territorial. You feel it immediately. The possessiveness threaded beneath it. The frustration. The restraint.
âI wish I didnât feel like this,â he says honestly. âBut I do. And itâs getting to the point where I canât fucking take it anymore.â
His breathing deepens slightly.
âI want you,â he admits. âFuck, I want you so bad.â
Your eyes flutter closed instinctively.
âI know,â you whisper. âI smell it on you.â
That nearly kills him outright.
âFuck,â he groans, tipping his head back briefly. âSee? And I know better than to even try hiding anything from you.â
You stare at him for another long moment, trying to find the words clawing around inside your chest.
âThis isâŠâ You shake your head slowly. âThis is different, James.â
He watches you carefully as you struggle through it. Doesnât interrupt. Doesnât rush you. Even though some part of him already understands exactly what youâre trying to say. Because he feels it too.
âThereâs thisâŠâ Your brows pull together. âPull.â
The word sounds inadequate immediately.
âLike I canât help but like you.â
The air between you feels charged now.
Your breaths fan across each otherâs mouths. Every exhale makes the tiny hairs along his skin rise. His lashes flutter every time your breath brushes his lips.
âI know what you mean,â he swallows hard.
Because he does. He knew something was wrong the second he smelled you on Halloween. Hellâbefore that. Back in Russia. Something in him had recognized you immediately, even before his mind caught up.
You reach for his hand then. Slowly. Torturously slowly. And guide it toward your chest.
The edge of his palm brushes the side of your breast accidentally and his entire body goes rigid. His breath catches so sharply you hear it. Feel it. Then his hand settles higher. Over your heart. Fluttering wildly beneath your ribs. Fast. Delicate. Like a trapped hummingbird.
âYou feel this?â you ask softly.
Your lips hover dangerously close to his now. Barely a breath apart.
âYes,â he nearly moans.
âYeah?â
âYeah.â His eyes drop briefly to your mouth. He wants to bite your fucking neck.
âItâs pounding, isnât it?â you whisper.
âMmhmm.â
Your lips brush lightly. Once. Not quite a kiss. Enough to make your stomach flip violently anyway. Your eyes close for half a second. Warm. Dizzy. Sleepy in the way overstimulation sometimes makes you.
âWhy do you think that is?â you ask, opening your eyes again just to watch him answer.
âI donât know,â he lies immediately.
You can tell heâs lying. He wants to hear you say it.
âBecause I want you,â you admit.
And Bucky inhales sharply between his teeth like the words physically wounded him. This is becoming unbearable now.
âI wanted you the moment you looked at me back in Russia,â you continue quietly. âI didnât even know who you wereâcouldnât even see you.â
Your fingers tighten slightly around his wrist.
âIt was just⊠a scent. A feeling.â You shake your head slowly. âI almost thought you were a hallucination. Like my brain made you up just to pass the time.â
He canât stop staring at you. Completely transfixed.
âI thought that was it,â you continue. âBecause why the fuck would I ever see that guy again outside of Siberia?â
A weak laugh escapes you.
âBut apparently itâs a very small fucking world.â
Your voice stays steady, but your body doesnât. You tremble beneath him. He notices every tiny movement. Every uneven breath. Every little hitch in your pulse.
âAnd Buck?â you whisper.
âMmhmm?â His mouth is watering now.
âI haveâwhether I wanted to or notâached for you ever since.â
That breaks something in him. Completely. He stares at you like he genuinely cannot process that another human being just said those words to him. Like heâs waiting to wake up.
âYouâve got a lot of composure for someone I wouldnât consider very composed,â you tease weakly.
âIâm sorry,â he says hoarsely. âIâm busy trying not to violate you right now.â
Your hand rises slowly to his jaw. Warm skin. Rough stubble beneath your fingertips.
âWhatever this is,â you murmur, forcing him to look directly at you again, âit canât move too quickly.â
His eyes nearly close at the feeling of your hand on him.
âI can go slow,â he practically moans.
Your eyes roll back briefly at the sound of it. God. Where had your composure gone?
âYeah?â you whisper.
âYeah.â
âBucky?â
âFuck,â he groans quietly, shaking his head once. âYes?â
You stare at him for one long, unbearable second.
Then sigh shakily, âFuck it.â
Your fingers tighten gently against his jaw, holding him there. Keeping him close.
âI need you,â you whisper. âIâm sorry it took me so long to say it.â
For a second, Bucky genuinely stops breathing. The look on his face turns almost painful. Like relief so intense it hurts.
âSay it again,â he says hoarsely.
You blink. âWhat?â
âSay it,â he commands softly. âAgain.â
And because itâs himâbecause he asked it like thatâyou obey immediately.
âI need you, Bucky.â
His eyes shut. A broken sound leaves him. And then suddenly heâs moving. Fast. Certain. Like the last thread of restraint in him finally snapped.
Because even if this was temporaryâeven if this ends badlyâeven if it ruins himâHe knows one thing with absolute certainty. He needs you. Like air. Like water. Like something his body had been deprived of for decades and finally found again.
And so, with both pairs of knees still planted on the ground, the two of you surge forwardâmeeting in the middle like atoms colliding hard enough to split apart.
The first kiss is painful. Not bad painful. Desperate painful.
Teeth crash together with reckless force, all frantic mouths and ruined breathing. Itâs fucking messy. Your hands fist in his shirt, trying to drag him impossibly closer, and he immediately shoves them aside just to get a better grip on you himself.
One hand slides behind your head, swallowing the entire back of your skull, fingers spreading wide as he forces you deeper into him.
Everything about him is huge compared to you. Both of you have noticed it before. Thought about it too many times. Lost sleep over it.
Your hands move between your bodies, grasping at his neck, his collar, the front of his shirtâanything to ground yourself. To pull him closer. To be consumed by him.
Tongues in each otherâs mouths, past the point of tenderness now. Past making an impression. Now itâs just pure depravity.
You pull back for half a secondâas much as heâll allowâand even then he follows after you immediately, chasing your mouth like he physically canât tolerate the separation.
You tilt your head back, gasping for air, and he takes full advantage of it. His mouth drops to your throat. Your eyes roll back instantly.
But youâre trying to speak, trying to gather enough coherent thought to form words, but heâs biting and licking and sucking at your skin like a starving man. Like heâs been dreaming about this exact moment for weeks.
Tasting you. Claiming you. Marking youânot even for other people to see. Just for himself. So he can look at you later and remember how badly the two of you needed each other.
âJames,â you breathe finally.
He hums against your neckâlow, rough, practically barbaric. Not listening. Too busy pushing you backward toward the floor.
âJames,â you try again, hands pawing at him harder now. âNeed to take it out. Please.â
That finally makes him pause. Barely.
âTake what out?â he asks, kissing his way back up toward your mouth again.
His body looms over yours. Your knees bent beneath him, spine pressed into the floor, the front of his pants grinding hard against your cunt as you writhe underneath him.
Your eyes squeeze shut, lip trembling. His hand wraps around your jaw.
âLook at me,â he rasps. âOpen your eyes. Whatâd you say?â
And you do. Shakily, your hand reaches up between the two of you and toward the device hooked beneath your septum.
âNeed more of you,â you whisper. âNeed to take it out.â
His pupils blow wide as he watches your fingers tremble against the device. Thenâ
âFuck.â The word leaves him in a wrecked moan.
He immediately helps you, his larger fingers taking over when yours shake too hard to grip properly.
âWanna smell me?â he asks quietly, one hand still cupping the base of your nose.
âNeed to,â you whine.
The sound nearly kills him. His throat works hard as he nods.
âTake it out,â you beg again.
And suddenly heâs moving fast. His body covers yours completely, chest pressed to yours as he carefully removes the device and tosses it blindly somewhere else in the room.
Then he watches you. Waiting.
âCâmon,â he coaxes softly, though his voice still sounds wrecked with want. âTake a deep breath for me. Iâm right here.â
And when you doâthe reaction is immediate. A sharp moan tears out of you, catching halfway into something breathless and broken. Deep. Instinctive.
Barnes bites down hard on his own lip watching it happen. His hand slides to your throatânot choking, just grounding you there while your back arches violently off the floor.
âOh fuck,â you whimper. âFuckâokay.â
âYeah?â he asks, voice shaking.Â
âMhm.â Lightheaded already.
He watches goosebumps flood your skin in waves, your nipples hardening visibly beneath the thin fabric of your dress.
âJesus Christ,â he breathes.
Then heâs over you again. One hand cages your throat gently, holding you steady while his eyes drag downwardâtoward the hem of your dress bunched above your thighs. Toward the soaked cotton between your legs.
âFuck,â he groans, staring openly now. âListen to me, I need youââ
Your back arches hard enough to interrupt him.
âFuckâI need you to tell me if itâs too much,â he continues anyway, voice strained. âI know you feel everything harder. I donât wanna hurt you.â
âMake it hurt,â you whine immediately. âPlease. I need it.â
His entire expression twists at that.
âItâs okay if it hurts,â you gasp. âAs long as itâs you.â
Something in him snaps. He flips you onto your stomach so fast it punches a breath from your lungs. His eyes lock onto the sight of your ass presented for him now, your underwear stretched tight over the curves of you.
And thereâRight thereâThe wet patch soaking through the fabric. Barnes stares at it like a man possessed.
His thumbs drag over it experimentally, rubbing directly against your swollen cunt through the material, and your whole body jolts beneath him with a helpless groan.
âChrist,â he mutters.
Then his fingers hook into the sides of your underwear and rip them clean off your body.
The sound alone nearly makes you shake apart.
He spreads you open with both hands after that, openly staring at you. Admiring you. At the slickness waiting for him. At the way she twitches under his gaze. His thumb drags through you once. Slow.
You practically collapse into the floor.
âNeed it,â he says hoarsely, more plea than statement now. âPlease let me taste you.â
You shove your hips back toward him immediately in answer, face pressing deeper into the carpet as one fist curls tight in the fur beneath you.
Thatâs all the permission he needs. He drops down behind you, takes one deep breath against your cuntâAnd groans. Actually groans at the scent of you.
Then he dives in. No hesitation. Tongue flattening against you immediately, licking hard through your folds while he holds your hips still beneath his hands. Every sound he makes is muffled against your skinâpanting, moaning, completely ruined already.
The pleasure hits too hard, too fast. You start doubling back over, dragging out of his grasp without meaning to. Thighs pressing back together while he devours you, lapping and lapping and lapping, only to pry them back apart. Lifting you up, flipping you over, and throwing you onto his bed.Â
His hands grip your hips, pulling you so you rest on the very edge until heâs eye level with it. Then he spits directly onto your clit. The sight of your body clenching around nothing makes him curse under his breath before he dives back in harder.
âOh my Godââ Your voice breaks completely.
Youâre bucking helplessly against his mouth now, fingers tangled in his hair while he kisses your clit like heâs making out with it. Slow one second, filthy the next. Sucking on it. Massaging it with his tongue. Wrapping his mouth around it like heâs personally offended this is the first time heâs ever gotten to touch you this way.
He glances up eventually. And the second he sees your faceâCompletely wrecked, lips parted, eyes glossyâBarnes moans against you so deeply the vibration alone nearly sends you over the edge.
Your body convulses. And he already knows.
His thumb slides down, gathering the slick pouring out of you before pushing it slowly inside while you come apart around his mouth. Again. And again. And again your body shakes, thighs clamping, back arching, like a cat in fucking heat.Â
Your noises turn muffled and breathless as your body shakes beneath him. And Barnes looks fucking addicted to it.
He pulls away from between your thighs with one final kiss against your clit, smooth thumb dragging over the sensitive nub as he climbs back over you again. Predatory. Towering.
His shirt gets ripped off somewhere in the process, tossed carelessly aside while he fumbles with his belt buckle one-handed. Meanwhile, you scramble backward across the mattress until your head collides with the headboard with a dull thunk.
He barely notices. His attention is entirely on you. On the way your dress is bunched around your waist now, your chest heaving hard enough to make your breasts spill against the fabric. Your thighs spread instinctively for him before heâs even fully over you again. Like your body already knows.
Barnes finally shoves his pants and boxers down just enough to free himself, and your breath catches instantly at the sight of him.
âOh f-fuck,â you stammer.
Your hand reaches for him automatically, wrapping around his cock halfway through the motion of him climbing over you again.
The sound he makes is wrecked. Deep. Completely involuntary. His forehead nearly drops to your shoulder from it. Because your handâChrist. Your hand feels tiny around him. Warm. Soft. Trembling. You stroke him once and his entire body jerks.
âJesus fucking Christ,â he groans.
Your eyes stay fixed downward, openly staring now. Heâs thick enough to make your mouth water, veins running along the underside, flushed and leaking at the tip already. Perfect. Intimidating.
âWanna taste you,â you whine softly.
âLater,â he says immediately, though it sounds strained. Painful. Like the word physically hurts him to say.
Because he knows if he lets you do that right now, heâs done for.
Instead, he drags the head of his cock slowly through your folds, collecting every bit of slickness waiting there for him.
The two of you moan at the feeling simultaneously. His eyes drop between your bodies, transfixed by the sight of you coating him. Like heâs admiring something sacred. Something won.
Your head falls back hard against the headboard again as anticipation twists through your stomach.
And then he pushes in. Slowly. The stretch makes both of you freeze.
Your mouth falls open immediately, fingers digging hard into his shoulders while his entire body tenses over yours. You grip him so tightly he nearly loses composure on the spot.
His head drops into the crook of your neck with a broken sound, âFuckââ
The word comes out punched from his lungs.
He forces himself deeper inch by inch, jaw clenched hard enough to ache. Youâre tight. Not resistant to himânever that. Just unused to this for a while. Your body seems almost confused at first. Pulling him in while simultaneously struggling to adjust around the size of him.
The sounds both of you make when he finally bottoms out blend together into one wrecked groan. Your teeth sink into his shoulder instantly.
âOne second,â you breathe shakily.
Barnes stills immediately. Every muscle in his body visibly strains with the effort not to move. His breathing comes rough against your throat as he lifts his head enough to look down at you properly.
Your eyes are squeezed shut. Lips swollen. Chest rising too quickly.
His hand wraps carefully around your throatânot squeezing, just grounding you there while he holds himself buried inside you. Steady. Unyielding. Desperate to move.
âLook at me,â he rasps.
His thumb brushes along your chin, pulling your lower lip free from between your teeth.
âNeed to check on you.â
You finally open your eyes. Watery. Overwhelmed.
And the second he sees that youâre okayâreally okayâhe nearly breaks apart from relief alone. Then he pulls out slowly. And pushes back in. Both of you shudder. Your eyes stay locked this time, neither of you wanting to look away.
âWhat if someone hears us?â you whisper.
His thumb slips between your lips before you can say anything else, and you suck him in instinctively.
Barnes watches your mouth with blown pupils.
âNo oneâs here,â he says hoarsely. âGot you all to myself today.â
The words send heat straight through you. And with one weak little nod from you, he finally starts moving. Slow at first. Measured. Dragging himself in and out like heâs trying to memorize the feeling. Heavy thrusts that make the entire bed creak beneath you.
Your breathing syncs together almost immediately. In. Out. In. Out. Every drag of his hips pulls another helpless sound from your throat. You release his thumb with a shaky breath.
âTake it,â you whisperâneeding him primallyâwanting him to fuck you like the animal you feel like.Â
His brows pull together instantly.
âYeah?â he asks, already sounding strained again.
âTake all of me.â You confirm.
The words nearly destroy him. Especially when they leave your mouth so softly. So trusting.
His next thrust fills you completely, punching a gasp from your lungs. Stuffed full of him. Your nails rake hard down his back.
And Barnes finally loses the last of his restraint. One agonizing second passes where he checks your face againâwatching carefully, making sure youâre still with himâThen he starts fucking you for real. Hard.
Your back arches sharply into the mattress as his face buries into your neck again, thrusts turning rough and relentless. The sound of skin slapping skin fills the room almost immediately.
âFuckâfuckâfuckââ The curses fall from his mouth in broken repetition every time he bottoms out.
His hands canât stay still. Grabbing at your waist. Your thighs. Your breasts. Anywhere he can touch, he does. Like he canât get enough. Like after weeks of starving beside you, heâs finally allowed to eat.
And itâs overwhelming. For both of you.
Youâre already sensitive from his mouth, already shaking apart around him, and now heâs splitting you open over and over again like heâs searching for something buried inside you. Something only he gets to find.
âFuckâyesâpleaseââ Your words dissolve into whining halfway through.
Barnes lifts his head immediately at the sound, eyes locking onto your face as your entire body jolts beneath every thrust. Your breasts bounce with the force of it. Your mouth hangs open in silent screams. Tears gather at the corners of your eyes from sheer overstimulation.
And he realizes with horrifying clarity that heâs not going to last.
âOh fuck,â he groans.
His hand slides up your face, gripping your jaw gently but firmly, âLook at me.â
You try. Barely.
âCâmon,â he pants. âLook me in my fuckinâ eyes.â
And when you finally doâThatâs it. Completely fucking it.
His expression crumples into something desperate and ruined as he thrusts into you oneâtwoâthree more times before he finally comes apart.
The sound he makes is almost painful. Deep and wrecked and completely overwhelmed. Hot spurts fill you while he keeps thrusting through it, fucking every pulse deeper inside like he physically cannot stop himself.
Years of restraint. Years of loneliness. Years of wanting something real enough to ground him. All of it pours out of him at once. And somewhere in the haze of it, one strange thought hits himâQuiet, but undeniable.
That maybe he survived all of it for this. For You.
Maybe whatever cruel force kept him alive through decades of torture and freezing and violence did it because somewhere down the line, you would exist.
Someone capable of taking him exactly as he is. Someone capable of holding all the fractured pieces steady in their hands without dropping them.
And as the two of you slowly come down from it togetherâthe bed frame still trembling beneath you, him still buried deep inside your bodyâ
You share one long, silent look. Knowing. Certain.
The kind of certainty that settles into bone. That thisâWhatever this isâHas just ruined the both of you for anybody else.Â
A/N: Okay so I did everyone a lot of favors by even making him last as long as he did in this. There will be longer smut, we just have to get his stamina back up <3 Either way, hope you enjoyed. More to come. Smut in every chapter for the rest of this book.
The moment the quinjet wheels hit the tarmac, youâre already on your feetâgrabbing your bag and heading straight for the ramp. Barnes is right behind you, just as eager to get the hell off the plane, while Sam and Steve linger.
The front doors of the compound feel almost sacredâlike the entrance to a temple, glowing gold under the lightsâbecause you only had one thought on your mind.
Drugs.
Well, and showering, and lotion, and skincare, and maybe some more drugs
And since youâd taken your stimulant before the flightâthe three men behind you are probably ready to blow their brains outâbecause those were the only thing you wanted to talk about.Â
And you had not stopped talking.
But, in your defenseâRogers started it.
âSo, the five sensesââ heâd said, mid-bite of an apple. âYouâd think the cold wouldâve bothered you. Donât you remember what happened in the sauna?â
Your eyes had snapped upâbut not to him. To Barnes. Who had been sitting right beside him. And who was very clearly trying not to smile.
âIt does bother me,â youâd said, careful. âBut I have a special⊠down coat material from Stark. Made just for me.â
That was a complete lieâbut honestly not a bad ideaâŠone even worthy of potentially being brought up.Â
âSo how does that work?â Steve had asked, taking another bite. âIs it just hot and cold, or can you feel other things? I know you have dampeners for your nose and ears, but what about something like that? Feeling things?â
Well, Steve, since youâre so curiousâyouâve found a steady regimen of prescription drugs usually does the trickâbut of course, you donât say that.
âI can feel everything,â youâd sighed, already cringing at how it sounded. âDid you ever hear about the tsunami in Indonesia back in 2004?â
âRead about it,â he nodded. âYou felt it?â
âWellâyes, butâŠâ youâd emphasized, âI also knew it was going to happen a day before. I justâŠwell, I was eight, and didnât understand what I was feeling, so I umâŠcouldnât warn anyone.â
That got their attention. All of them. Even Barnes. Which was honestly a little confusing.Â
âOkayâfirst of all,â youâd said quickly, noticing the shift, âwerenât you frozen too?â
âYeah,â Barnes shrugged. âBut so was he. What, you expect him to know and not me?â
You rolled your eyes.
âWell, to be fair, I donât even know when you wouldâve found out about it. Werenât you⊠brought back toâŠnormalâŠlike, a few months ago?â
Steve sighed your name.
Barnes just blinked at you.
âKid, you canât justââ Steve started.
âWhat?â you shot back.
âNo, sheâs right,â Barnes said simply. âItâs a valid question.â
âItâs rude,â Sam called from the cockpit. âYou donât hear me going around saying to people, âoh donât mind her, back before the war she was normal.ââ
âOkay,â you pointed. âThat is not what I was implying.â
âItâs fine,â Barnes said. âShe doesnât have a filterâwhich that can beâŠocasionally admirable, butâher questions areâŠwarranted.â
âInvasive,â Sam corrected.
âEither way,â you cut in, redirecting, âyou know when your leg falls asleep? That tingling? The day before the earthquake, my feet felt like that. Constantly. It got so bad they couldnât even runââ
You stopped yourself. They couldnât even run their daily tests. No. Not going down that hole again.Â
âI had to stay home sick,â you corrected. âThat night I couldnât sleep. Kept telling Yona my mattress felt off. Like I was on a waterbed or something.â
You huffed a small laugh. âThe doctors had initially thought it was vertigo from allergies, but turns out it wasnât sinus pressure. I was, uhâŠfeeling foreshocks.â
You let that sit. Watched them process it.Â
âThe craziest part?â you added. âMy feet started tingling three hours before seismometers even picked anything up.â
âOkay, forgive me,â Steve blinked, âbut how do you even exist? How are you not overstimulated all of the time?â
Fair question.
âWellâitâs not every earthquake,â you explained. âThat one just happened to be massive. But my doctors think I picked it up through my hair folliclesâleg hair, dry skin, anything light enough to react to micro-movements. Itâs different than my head hair,â
You gestured vaguely at it, since there was so much it was kind ofâŠhard to miss.Â
âThis is heavy, so it does better at tracking wind direction, stuff like that. The smaller things, like the leg hair, are so light that they tend to be a bit moreâŠsensitive.â
There's a beat.Â
âAfter that my scienââ not scientists, not to this group, at least. âMy doctors decided that the best course of action would be shaving, excess moisturizingâstuff like that. And they had the right idea, because once I did that everything stopped being so intense. The environment doesnât⊠pull on me the same way anymore.â
There was a beat.
Then Sam: âSo what youâre saying⊠is you have really smooth legs.â
You laughed. Actually laughed.
âSee for yourself,â you shrugged, rolling your pant leg up.
You extended your leg toward Steve. He leaned downâamusedâand reached an arm out.
What you didnât notice at the time, was that Barnes was watching. But closely. Too closely.
He noticed the way Steve hesitatedâjust a finger at firstâbut then his eyes had widened, and he grabbed hold of your ankle with both hands, enough grip to pull you slightly forward.
And something in Barnesâsnapped.
It was immediate. Sharp. And unfamiliar.
His jaw tightened. His chest constricted. His hand flexed like he was about toâsomething. Anything.
âOh my GOD, Samâ Steve laughed, head tipping back. âItâs like satin.â
And just like thatâBarnes was somewhere else. The memory hit him like a wave. The first time he ever experienced you.
Her skin had a finish like satin, even beneath all of the damage. Powdery almostânot in color, but texture. Like she had once been taken care of.
He turned away from the sight before him. Sick with it. And it didnât go away. Not when Steve let go. Not when the moment passed. Not when the quinjet landed. And not now.
Because the second you walk into the compoundâNat is on you.
âHey, so, weird question,â she says, grabbing your arm.
âNat, I just walked through the fucking door,â you groan, dropping your bag.
She pauses. Thinks. Then smiles.
âBetter question,â she says. âDid you find what you were looking for?â
You roll your eyes, trying to sidestep her, âWe found who we need to find what weâre looking for.â
âPerfect,â she nods. âNowâthe weird question. Do you have a landline?â
You stop, âwhat?â
âA landline. In your room? Itâs been ringing nonstop.â
Your stomach drops. You do. But onlyââWhat?!â you snap.
âItâs on silent,â she shrugs. âWe didnât hear it. But Vision says itâs interfering with his⊠forehead.â
She gestures vaguely to her own, referencing the stone that sits in the center of his.Â
âOh Godââ your hand flies to your mouth. âYona uses that for secure contact.â
âOhâitâs definitely not Yona,â she grins.
You begin to move toward your roomâbut youâre met with a flash. The all familiar wall of red, but still startling, nonetheless.
Vision.Â
âStaff Sergeantââ He starts.Â
âJesus, Vision!â you snap. âWhat?!â
He holds out the phone. You glance at the screen. Unknown number.
âThirty calls over the past day,â he says calmly. âThey just called again, and I knew you had finally arrived back soâŠI answered.â
âWhy would you answer it?!â you demand, running a hand through your hair. âYou donât even know who it is!â
âI know who it is,â he replies simply. âBut I can disconnect it if youâd preferââ
âNoâjust give it to me.â You grab it, pressing it to your ear. âHello? Who the hell is this?â
A chuckle.Â
âOh, Iâm offended,â the voice says. âI thought I was a little more memorable to you than that, but alright.â
Scottish. Fuck. Your mouth parts.
âLukeâŠâ you breathe. ââŠshit. Are you okay? Iâm sorry I missed your calls, IâveâŠbeen gone.â
There is the sound of a small breath on the other line. Always concerned over the potential that youâll continue being used as a tool for outside forces.
âYou working with them now?â he asks.
You turn away from the groupâthe ones heâs referring toâand cover the receiver slightly.
âNo, and confidentialâyou know that.â
Barnes watches. Noticing everything. The shift in your voice. Softer. Different.
âWho is it?â Nat mouths, leaning in.
You shove her away. But suddenly, the phone rings again. You frown and look down at it.
âWhat?â Nat asks.
âItâs ringing again.â You note.Â
âMaybe he got disconnected?â
Barnes almost hopes so.
You bring the phone back up, âLuke?â
âYeah, still here.â
You glance at Visionâwho shrugs in response.
âHe wasnât the only person whoâd been calling.â
You hesitate, then into the phone, âIâm going to put you on hold for a second.â
Your fingers press the buttons, shifting to the incoming line. Sticking your arm a bit away from you, you put it on speakerâworried it could be someone who got word of yourâŠsudden curiosity into official hydra business.Â
ââŠhello?â you say quietly.Â
âOh, thank God,â a new voice says. âThatâs you, right?â
Nat gestures wildly, âAnother one?â
As in, another guy. Christ.Â
âWho is this?â you askâirritated.
A pause.
âDudeâseriously? Itâs Keaton. From Columbia? We go to school togetherâŠâ
Barnesâ stomach drops. Hard. âAnother oneâ was right. He wonders how many guys you know, and worse, exactly how well you know them.Â
âKeaton,â you sigh. âHow did you get this number?â
âIâve been trying to get into contact with you for days. You told me to call it if you disappeared. Which you do. Constantly.â
You glance at Nat. Fair. You both shrug in agreement to that.Â
âSorry, Iâve beenâŠâ your eyes flick to Barnesâsomething unspokenââbusy.â
He feels it. The weight of the gaze.Â
You pull the phone back to your ear, âCan I call you back in an hour, I just got home fromâŠvacation.â
âVacation?â he laughs. âWhere?â
âKazakhstan.â Itâs true, but you know he wonât believe it anyway.Â
âYeahâright.â
âJust call me later,â you say, grabbing your bag again. âIâll answer.â
Barnes canât hear the rest as you move to pick up your stuff, phone latched to your ear as you head down the hallway. No, itâs just ringing in his ears now. With one thought looping. That he wantsâfuck.Â
That he wants to be wrapped up in you.
âŠ
Plopping down onto your bed, the landline pressed to your ear, you stare up at the ceiling.
âHey, Iâm sorryâI had a call on another line,â you sigh.
âItâs alright,â Luke says, and you can hear the smile in his voice. âJust happy you called back.â
âIs everything alright?â you ask, testing. âI havenât heard from you in a while.â
âI just got back home last week.â
âWow,â you scoff lightly. âSo Iâm not your top priority call?â
âYouâreâŠsomewhere on the listâŠâ His voice trails, and a quiet settles between you. âI miss you.â
You let the silence stretch, your eyes fluttering closed, teeth catching your bottom lip.
âLukeâŠâ you breathe.
âI knowâIâm sorryâbut I canât lie about it,â he says, faltering slightly. âI think about you all the time. Canât get you out of my head.â
You let out a quiet laughâthough, not at him. âI wish I had you in my head,â you admit. âWould be better than whatâs in it now.â
The silence returns. Not awkward. JustâŠheavy. Like mourning. And it stirs something familiar in your chestâthat same guilt, churning low in your gut, threatening to swallow you whole.
âYouâre not planning on becomingâŠpublic knowledge, are you?â he asks finally.
âNo,â you mumble. Itâs honest. âYou know how I feel about it.â
You shake your head slightly, even though he canât see it.
âI have⊠kind of a friend at Columbia,â you add. âHe doesnât even know aboutâŠthis.â
âWhat about Starkâs friends?â Luke presses. âHe throws parties, doesnât he? Surely heâs paraded you around like a trophy since you got back.â
You huff a breath.
âThere are two types of people at those parties,â you say, reaching into your bedside table, pulling out your snuff bottle. âLowlifes who have nothing better to do than anonymously report on other peopleâs drama⊠and old money intellectuals. Debutantes, whatever. They can be⊠selectively evilâbut they like secrets. Knowing things other people donât. Thatâs the appeal.â
A pause, âTony has more of the latter.â
âSounds vile,â he mutters.
âIt is,â you laugh quietly. âBut⊠itâs nice, sometimes. Dressing up. Wearing something that isnât military-issued.â
âWell,â he says softly, âlucky you look good in everything.â
You sniff a small amount of powder, rubbing beneath your nose, âYeah,â you exhale. âLucky me.â
âBut seriously,â he continues, tone shifting, âstay out of it.â
âLuke, Iâve told youâI donât want that,â you say, a bit sharper now. âAnd itâs not like I have a choice anyway. It was literally written in my birth contract. Iâm tooâŠvaluable to be seen. Other entitiesâŠtheyâd consider me an unfair asset. Try to âtake care of meâ⊠or worse.â
Another quick inhale, powder melding into the hairs of your nose, âTheyâd try to replicate me.â
You pause.
âPlus, you know,â you laugh. âI hate camera flashes.â
âYeah,â he says, quieter now. âBut youâve got opinions. Youâre smart. Youâve got a story. Youâre unfairly attractive. Someoneâs going to try to turn you into something.â
âSHIELD would never let that happen.â
âSHIELD is dissolved,â he reminds you. âJustâŠbe careful.â
âIâm not worried,â you shrug, setting the bottle back in the drawer as you stand, heading toward the bathroom.
âYou should be,â he sighs. Thenâmore pointedââAnd if you keep doing what youâre doing, youâre going to get sloppy.â
You stop. Mid-step.
âAre you still doing blow?â he asks.
You grimace, âNo, I donâtââ you start, then falter. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âRight,â he mutters. You can practically hear the eye roll. âJustâŠkeep in touch, alright? Schwarzyâs impossible to reachâheâs been in and out of the hospital.â
âWhat?â you cut in immediately, brows pulling together. âSince when? Whatâs wrong with him?â
âSurvivorâs guilt, Iâd guess,â Luke says, voice heavier now. âAnd from what Iâve heard⊠heâs doing the same thing you are.â
âI told you, Iâm not doing anything,â you insist.
âThis isnât my first day on Earth,â he replies. âAnd itâs not my first deployment. What do you have crushed up? Benzos? Opiates?â
A pause, reluctant but, you need to get it out to someone sooner or later, âughâŠboth.â
âFrom your leg?â
âIt still bothers me,â you say quietly, turning the shower handle. âIt hurts. All the time.â Liar.
Silence settles again. But this timeâitâs not soft. Itâs not shared. Itâs pointed. Accusatory. Not from himâfrom the truth of it.
âItâs still kickinâ you, isnât it?â he asksâand heâs not talking about your leg.
Your ears ring. Your fingers go still against the fabric of your shirt. And suddenlyâyouâre not here.
Flashes. Bombs. Gunfire. Light. Hands on youâtoo manyâholding, poking, prodding. The smell. Thomas. His rotting corpse. Your throat tightens. Your voice empties. Your body goes numb. Tears threatenâbut donât fall. Too afraid to make themselves known, just like everything else simmering away inside of you.Â
And finallyâfinallyâyou say it. To someone.
âLukeâŠâ you breathe. âFuck.â
Your head falls into your hand, âI canât beat it.âÂ
âŠ
Itâs not every day that snow turns to rain in upstate New Yorkâbut the times that it does, it rains hard.
Feet slapping against concrete, water burning your eyes, clothes clinging to your skinâthis is how you ended up outside.
A dream. Not just any dream. This one was hot. Filthy. Enough to have you waking up gasping, chest heavingâyour body reacting before your mind could even catch up. You couldnât remember the details, not really.
Just the feeling. Just the fact that he had been everywhere. And that your panties had been damp.
Your heartbeat pounds in your ears as the rain pelts against your skin, the wind cutting through you in a way that borders on torture. You donât understand why you do thisâwhy you willingly throw yourself into situations like this.
But thisâthis isnât normal. This isnât just being turned on. You had worked yourself into a sweat. A tight, coiling pressure low in your abdomen at the mere thought of who it had been.
You had thrown yourself out of bed, letting the freezing rain hit you in some desperate attempt to ground yourself.
It didnât work.
Your head still spins. Dizzy. Overstimulatedâmore than usual. Your skin feels wrong. Like itâs craving something itâs never had before. Not dryânot like it needs lotion. Something deeper. Like your muscles are wound too tight. Like your back aches for hands that havenât touched it yet.
Like your body isâbegging. Screaming. Something primal and unbearable clawing its way up through your nerves.
This had happened once before. Afghanistan. The first week after youâd slept with Thomas.
You remember being doubled over, in pain, begging the onsite nurse for helpâconvinced it was a UTI, a stomach flu, a fever building inside of you, something wrong.
They ran tests. Checked everything. Asked if youâd gotten your period. You hadnâtânot since the implant. So they blamed nerves. Pre-mission anxiety. Your body trying to find a way out.
You knew that wasnât it then. And you definitely know itâs not now.
Because as you slow to a stop, crouching low, your forearm braced against the trunk of a massive oak tree, breath coming in sharp, uneven pullsâyou feel it.
The realization. Swallowing it down as it churns in your gut. Fear. Real, unfamiliar fear.
Youâre ovulating.
Your entire body screaming into the voidâhoping to be heard by one person in particular. Hoping he hears it. Feels it. Answers it.
Since the moment you caught his scent in Siberia.
You double over, wincing, fighting it, âFuckâŠâ
This shouldnât be happening. Your implant isnât due for another year and a half. So maybeâmaybe your body is just overriding it. So consumed by him that itâs breaking through anyway.
The worst part? This isnât the first dream youâve had this week. Not even close. And you canât remember a single one. Just the aftermath. Just the knowing that something obscene happened. And the unbearable need to know what it was.
Youâd landed back from the mission a week ago. The next one already looming. Paris. Jazz party. You. Steve. Sam. Barnes.
And schoolâfucking schoolâstarting again in a week and a half, a pressure you keep trying to ignore, mostly because part of you dreads leaving thisâthis proximity. This constant exposure to him.
Finally, soaked through, stomach emptied in the tall grass behind the compound, you drag yourself back inside.
Cold, wet fabric clings to youâyour workout clothes doing absolutely nothing to help. The worst part? Pink. Of course.
Your nipples are hard, visible through the soaked fabric, and if anyone looks even a little too closelyâyou donât even want to think about it. Prayingâbeggingâyou donât run into anyoneâespecially not the hundred-year-old man your body is apparently trying to serenade like a goddamn sirenâyou rush through the lower level of the compound, heading straight for the elevator.
No one uses it. Right? Everyone here is obsessed with stairs, with trainingâplus, itâs early. Six-thirty. No one should be up. Your shaking finger reaches for the buttonâand you hear it.
The elevator. Coming up. From the bottom floor. Your stomach drops. Because there is one reason anyone would be down there this early. The gym.
And Fuckâyour in-nose is out. You had taken it out on purpose. Trying to burn your senses clean with cold air. But now, now youâll be exposed to the scent of someoneâs entire inner workings.
âPlease be Nat,â you whisper under your breath. âPleaseâpleaseâpleaseââ
Too late.
The doors open. Thunder cracks overhead at the exact same moment, loud enough to make you flinchâand there he is. Barnes. Of course. Because heâs one of the only people ever awake this early on a weekend.
Your eyes go wide as you take him inâface down to shoes. Drenched in sweat. Shirt clinging to him like a second skin. Cheeks flushed. Hair damp. He looksâfuck.
And thenâthe smell hits you. Hard. So strong it almost makes you sick.
âAre you going up?â he asks, snapping you out of it.
And thenâhe looks at you. Really looks.
Your soaked clothes. The way they cling. Your shirt practically translucent in this light.
His lips part slightly. Your expressions mirror each other for just a secondâbefore both of you snap out of it, eyes dropping to the floor as you step inside.
The doors close. And everything comes rushing back. Not creeping. Not subtle. A fucking collision. Your knees almost buckle. Your gaze driftsâjust slightlyâto the outline beneath his sweatpants.
And thenâbecause apparently this is your personal hellâthere is another clap of thunderâloud enough to wear the compound shakes.
And then the elevator shudders. Stops. And the hum dies. Red emergency lights flicker on, bathing everything in a dim, pulsing glowânow looking more like a fucking brothelâwhich does not help. Plus, there is now no air movementâand no escape.
âFuckâŠâ you whisper.
You lunge forward, slamming the emergency button over and over. âCome onâcome onâcome onââ
âWhy are you wet?â
You freeze, âWhat?â
Oh. Your clothes. HahâŠâŠRight.
âWere you outside?â he asks, voice low, controlledâtoo controlled. âItâs⊠freezing.â
You back away from the panel, pressing yourself into the far corner.
âHad a⊠umâŠâ you blink, looking anywhere but him. âBad dream.â
A pause.
âYeah,â he huffs a quiet laugh. âYeahâme too.â
You highly doubt it was the same kind. Youâd gladly take your nightmares over this. Easily. Because thisâthis feels like your body is misbehaving. Like something inside you has gone completely rogue.
Like you need to get eye level with your fucking vagina and say, âwhat is it girl? what do you see?â And, âno, bad girl!â
âSeriously though,â he continues, and you feel his eyes on you, âbetween this and last weekâŠyouâre asking for hypothermia.â
You laughâtoo high, too forced. âHahaha⊠yeah.â
What is wrong with you? âDown, girl! Down! Heel!!!!â
Thunder cracks againâand this time you jump. Your body shifting closerâhis arm brushing yours.
You donât notice the way his breath catches. Donât notice the tension in his body. The fact that heâs dealing with his own problemâvery physical. Very obvious.
Because your body is calling to him. Loudly. And he can smell it. Although heâs not entirely sure what exactly it is. Something new. Sweet. Different. Not like before. Something that makes him want to sink his teeth into your skin and breathe you in until thereâs nothing left.
And to make matters worse, his dreamsâŠthey havenât been nightmares either.
No. Theyâve been you. Over and over. And mixed in with itâjealousy. Sharp. Ugly.
Who the hell were those guys on the phone? Why does he even care?
And nowâtrapped in a metal box with youâno airâno distanceâno controlâitâs unbearable.Â
And thenâmercifullyâthe lights flicker. The hum returns. The elevator jerks back to life with a sharp beep. And before the doors even open fully, youâre already moving, headed straight towards your room with only one thing on your mind.Â
Burkina Faso, Western Africa, 2014
The heat in Burkina Faso didnât settleâit pressed.
Even in the shade outside the hotel, it clung to your skin, thick and unmoving, the air laced with dust and something metallic beneath it. The street wasnât busy, but it wasnât empty eitherâtoo many people pretending not to look, too many eyes that lingered just a second too long.
You sat at a small metal table just outside the entrance, chair tilted back slightly on two legs, scanning the street through half-lidded eyes like you were bored instead of alert.
âWho are we looking for again?â you grumbled, gaze sweeping the immediate area.
âSomeone French,â Thomas whispered beside youâvoice tight, controlled.
âOh, really? I had no idea,â you smirked, leaning just slightly into the space on your other side. âFUBAR, you wouldnât have happened to see anyone wearing a beret around here?â
âYou are pathetic,â FUBAR muttered back, forcing a smile, venom slipping through clenched teeth.
âThis is boringâand dangerous,â you sighed, letting your chair settle flat again. âIâd much rather be back on base.â
âIâm sure you would be,â he replied. âBut youâre the only one fluent enough in French to understand what anyoneâs saying.â
âHe knows a little,â you nudged Thomas with your elbow. âParles-tu français?â
âJuste un peuâŠâ Thomas mumbled, taking a sip of his water.
You hummed, thenâwithout changing your volumeâleaned in slightly and said,
âJe suis chaude. Tu veux me baiser?â
Thomas choked immediately. You just sat back, smug.
âWhat did she say?â FUBAR asked.
Glancing at you quicklyâthen back to FUBARâcheeky smile on his lips,âShe said, âIâm horny, do you want to fuck me?ââ
Your hand came up instantly, smacking Thomas square in the chest.
âI did not say that,â you shot back, a faint blush creeping up your cheeks.
âI wouldnât put it past you,â FUBAR muttered, rolling his eyesâthen his attention shiftedâeyes landing on something coming in from behind you. âHeâsââ
âI know,â you cut in, posture straightening before he even finished.
From your peripheral, you caught itâthe hand gripping the back of the chair beside you before the man pulled it out and sat.
âOuah, vous trois, vous n'avez vraiment pas l'air suspects du tout.â (Wow, the three of you really donât look suspicious at all.) Sarcasm, heavy and effortless.
So this was Sergeant Durand.
âQu'est-ce qui nous a trahis?â (What gave us away?) you replied smoothly.
âBon, pour commencer, tu es assis ici en plein jour, comme si le JNIM et l'ISGS ne rĂŽdaient pas partout dans les environs.â (Well, for starters, youâre sitting here in broad daylight like JNIM and ISGS arenât crawling all over the place.) He looked across the three of you.
Then, switching cleanly into EnglishââPlus, you look like touristsâand there are hardly ever any tourists that come here.â
His eyes landed on you. And stayed there. Taking you inâthe slouch, the smirk, the way your eyes narrowed back at him like you were already unimpressed.
He was handsome, sure. But more interestingâhe looked irritated. You liked that. Loved pressing buttons.Â
âBut I suppose youâre better than the last ones,â he sighed. âDo you three know a man named John Walker?â
All three of you groaned.
âIâll take that as a yes,â he smirked, leaning back now. âBecause of him, I no longer look at you people with any sort of⊠fondness. Just disappointment. And he is special forces too, no?â
âAlright,â Thomas cut in, raising a hand. âFor the record, I have nothing to do with the Americans.â
âI donât care much for Brits either,â Durand shrugged, pulling a pack of cigarettes from his shirt pocket. âHe brought his own with himâthey were alsoâŠirritating.â
âWho, Walker?â FUBAR asked, leaning forward. âKnowing his cocky ass Iâm surprised he didnât come alone.â
âYesââ Durand placed one between his lips, extending the pack toward you all. âThough in the Brits defense, he didnât seem to like Walker much either.â
FUBAR grabbed one, leaning in so Durand could light it, the man cupping his hand against the wind before lighting his own.
âThis was supposed to be finished months ago,â Durand continued, exhaling smoke slowly. âHe had the perfect opportunity. Didnât take it. Didnât trust any of us. Thought it was a setup.â
âWhat?â Thomas frowned. âWhy? Weâre on the same side.â
âIf only youâd been here to tell him that,â Durand laughed, then pointed at you. âEither wayâIâm glad heâs gone. Iâve heard the rumors about you.â
A smile crept across his face.
âWalker has nothing on your reputation,â he added, then glancing at the others. âDid you see this one in Colombia?â
FUBARâs hand landed on your backâfirm, proud. âNah,â he said. âThat was before her time with us. Iâm surprised you even put two and two together.â
âBefore deployment, ouah,â Durand nodded slowly, âWhat, she canât be more than⊠eighteen now?â
âIâm nineteen,â you corrected, voice sharp. âAnd more capable than Walker will ever be in his entire life. So donât compare me to him again.â
You pouted slightlyâmocking. FUBARâs hand shifted into a light smack against your back, finger lifting in warning. Behave.
âEither way,â Durand continued, unbothered, âthis can be done before midnight. Then youâre out.â
Thomas frowned slightly, âForgive meâbut why havenât you handled it yourselves? Surely one of you is capable enough with a rifle.â
Durand nodded, pulling the cigarette from his lips and crushing it into the ashtray.
âOne,â he said, voice tightening slightly, âwe have capable snipers. But distance is preferableâand she has better distance than anyone else currently on active duty.â
You tilted your head slightly. âTu parles trĂšs bien anglais. Pourquoi demander quelquâun qui parle français?â (You speak English very well. Why ask for someone who speaks French?)
You smirked, âSi je ne te connaissais pas mieux, je dirais que tu me fais des avances.â (If I didnât know any better, Iâd say you were flirting with me.)
Then, quieterââCe qui en dit bien plus long sur toi que sur lui.â (Which says much more about you than it does about him.)
His gaze didnât leave you.
âDâautant plus que je sais que lâun de vous deux a davantage lâhabitude dâen recevoir.â
(Especially since I know one of you is far more used to receiving them.)
The alleyway in Paris is narrower than you expected.
It looks like it smells like wet pavement, metal, and something faintly sourâold city air that never quite leaves.
Your carry-on sits at your feet, the handle still extended, fingers loosely hooked around it as you press the buzzer again. And again. And again.
âWhatâs this guyâs name again?â Sam asks, looking over at you.
âDurand,â You reply flatly. âNot like I havenât told you twenty goddamn times already.â
âWhere is Steve?â Barnes mutters, scanning the alley, eyes sharp despite the late hour. âI donât want to be stuck with you two. All you do is argue.â
âHe couldnât fly commercial,â Sam sighs, shifting his bag on his shoulder. âHeâll be here in the morning.â
You press the buzzer again. Still nothing. Youâve been out here for five minutes already.
âOkay,â Sam adds, glancing up toward the dark windows above, âif heâs even in there, you pressing that over and over isnât going to make him move faster. He might not even want to answer now.â
You slowly turn your head. Finger hovering over the button. Eyes locking with his. And thenâyou press it. Once. Twice. Three times.
âWould you cut it out?â Barnes snaps, his head whipping toward you. âYouâre starting to work my last nerve.â
âOh, am I?â you shoot back immediately. âThatâs rich coming from you. I had to sit next to you on that goddamn plane for seven hours while you just keptâmovingâand movingâand movingââ
You whirl toward Sam.
âAnd youâyou fucking bastardâyou had the middle seat and you still made me take it! And I had to listen to you snoring the entire time!â
âHey,â Barnes cuts in, irritation bleeding through his tone. âThat annoyed me tooâbut you have something that literally lets you not hear things, so quit complaining.â
You tilt your head at him. Take a step closer. You donât even realize youâre doing it. Because God, there's a part of you that wants him to keep going.
The flight had been hell. Even with him right next to you.
In-nose turned all the way upâand still, it hadnât mattered. Heâs too big. Your bodies pressed together the entire time, no matter how much either of you tried to shift away. Your eyes betraying youâglancing at him again, and again, and again.
The movie youâd picked had done nothing to help distract you.
Samâs head kept dropping onto your shoulder as he dozed off, his snoring vibrating through your seatâlow, and rhythmicâand making everything worse. Stimulating a part of your body in a way you didnât even want to acknowledge.
And through all of itâyou hadnât noticed Barnes wasnât doing much better.
All that shifting? That wasnât restlessness. That was him trying to deal with the weight in his jeansâthe pressure that only got worse the longer you sat pressed against him. Every breath you exhaled. The smell of your hair. The way you kept whiningâannoying, yesâbut it did something to him.
Something that made him want to shut you up. Permanently. Put you in your place. Make you feel it.
And that pissed him off. Because it made everything worse. Because youâre you. Young. Too young. And the way his body reacts to youâthe way he needs youâfeels wrong. Because the way that he finds himself wanting you is biblically inappropriate.Â
But there is one part of him that whispers. Slipping into something quieter. Something he only hears when heâs alone. When the nightmares stop for a few minutes.
That maybeâmaybe youâre not wrong for each other. That maybe heâs never seen himself so clearly in another person.Â
That he looks for you nowâwithout meaning to. In hallways. In rooms. Waiting for some sharp, bitchy remark to fall out of your mouth like it always doesâjust so he has something to grab onto. Something to push back against. Something to drown in.
And nowâstanding here in this alleyâwatching you wind yourself up, Sam feeding into it just enough to keep you goingâhe feels it again.
That shift. That heat. His eyes darken. His jaw tightens. And your scentâGod. Itâs worse like this. Sharper. Sweeter. Wrong.
âHey.â It comes out rough. Louder than he meant.
It cuts straight through you. Your head snaps toward him, eyes wideâwild in a way that makes his stomach twist.
âIf you press that button one more timeââ he starts.
And of courseâbecause you are who you areâyou donât back down. Not yet.
âYouâll what?â you scoff, chin tilting slightly, waiting.
He steps closer. Not aggressive. Not unsafe. But deliberate. Heavy. Commanding.
Something in the air shifts with him. And when he speaksâitâs low. Controlled. Deadly calm.
âIâm not going to ask you again.âÂ
Not loud. Not flashy. But it lands. Hard.
And something in youâgives. Not outwardly, no. You donât step back. You donât look away. But it hits. Straight through you.
Your body reacts before your brain can catch upâheat pooling low, your breath catching, something in you wanting to dropâto submitâto give in to whatever that tone just promised.
âJesus Christââ The accented voice cuts through it like a knife.
The door swings open. Warm air spilling out into the cold alley.
âDo you think you couldâve pressed the button a bit more?â Durand drawls. âIâm not sure I heard you the first time.â
And there he is. Durand. A ghost from something that already feels like another lifetime.
âMerdeâŠâ his eyes drag over you slowly. âYou have grown into yourself.â
You donât notice Barnes rolling his eyes behind you. Or Sam doing the same. And you surely donât notice the difference in contexts. One annoyedâthe other territorial.
âHi, Durand,â you smile, small and easy. âThanks for answering my call.â
His arms open immediately. Inviting. You step into them without hesitation.
âThank you for reaching out,â he murmurs, his nose dipping into your hair.
His eyes lift. Just brieflyâand meet Barnes. And everything stops. His grip on you falters. Because the look Barnes gives himâcold. Lethal. Possessive in a way that doesnât need wordsâIf looks could killâDurand wouldnât even exist long enough to hit the ground.
His gaze snaps back to you instantly. Hands shiftingâless intimate now, settling on your biceps instead. He clears his throat slightly.
âWell,â he exhales, forcing a smile as he looks between the three of you, âare you going to come inside?â
âŠ
Durandâs apartment feels like it was never meant to hold this many people.
Itâs long and narrow, much like the alley outsideâceilings high, old Parisian molding cracked slightly at the edges, warm yellow lighting casting soft shadows across everything. The air smells faintly of tobacco, old books, and something richer underneathâwine, maybe, or whatever had soaked into the furniture over years of use.
A large window stretches across one wall, the balcony just beyond it, sheer curtains shifting slightly with the night air slipping in through the small gap in the door. The sounds of the city are distant hereâmuted traffic, laughter echoing somewhere far below, a siren that fades as quickly as it comes.
âAlright, and here is the couch that pulls out.â Durand smiles, finishing his tour around the apartment.
The couch is worn but clean, tucked against the wall across from a low table littered with ashtrays and old magazines. A single armchair sits off to the sideâfirm, structured, definitely not meant for sleeping. The bedroom door is cracked open just enough to reveal a neatly made bed insideâtoo neat, almost untouched.
âDurand,â you start, shifting to face him, pulling a hand up to your mouth as your eyes flick briefly toward the bedroom. âIâm grateful that youâre going out of your way to let us stay hereâbut you said that your place slept four.â
âIt does,â he says easily. âTwo in this bedââ his gaze drifts toward the open doorway, then back to you as he leans in slightly, voice dropping just enough to carry weight, ââand two in mine.â
âAbsolutely not.â Barnes and Sam say in unison.
Sam not wanting to be left with Barnes. Barnes not wanting you to be left with Durand.
Giving the two of them a look, you turn back toward Durand, brushing it off.
âHowâs this,â you smile, light, easy. âIâm smaller, so I can sleep on the chair.â
âNo,â Bucky grumbles immediately. âI donât need to sleep. You take the bed. Sam will take the chair.â
âI donât want the chair.â Sam shrugs.
Barnes glares at him.
âHow about you take the chair,â Sam continues, unfazed, âIâll take the couch, and she can sleep withââ
âNo.â Barnes warns.
The word lands heavier than it should.
Thenâlike heâs enjoying this just a bit too muchâDurand cuts in, âDo you not wish to sleep with me?â he asks, tilting his head.
You shrug, âI meanâif I have toââ
âI promise I donât bite,â he continues, a grin pulling at his mouth. âUnless you want me to.â
He laughs out loud at himselfâand Barnes takes a step forward. Small. Subtle. But real. The flare in his nostrils unmistakable.
âKidding,â Durand says quickly, hands coming up. âThat was a joke.â
âHow about this,â you start, stepping in before anything escalates, even if you donât fully understand why it feels like it might. âSam and I will take the pull-out couchâJames, youâll take the chair.â
âMaybe I want my own bed,â Sam mumbles.
âOh, you lost the privilege to your own bed when you used me as a pillow for the entire flight over here.â
âOr,â Barnes cuts in, sharper now, âwe could just get a hotel room.â
âWe canât,â Sam shakes his head. âWe have to wait for Cap.â
âWhatever,â Barnes mutters, already turning away, moving toward the balcony. âItâs not like she or I sleep anyway.â
The sliding door opens, then closes againâleft just slightly ajar. Fresh air slipping in. And you let out a quiet breath. Not because you wanted him goneâbut because his presenceâŠit presses. Too much. Too constant.
âSo,â Durand says, dropping onto the couch, stretching out like he belongs here, like this is easy. His eyes flick up to you. âHow was the rest of your deployment?â
You tilt your head. Studying him. Does he not know? Is this small talk? Orâ
âAnd where is Thomas?â he asks suddenly.
Everything stops. The blood drains from your face.
âAnd the other oneâCrowbar, whatever it was. You got to leave and they didnât? Or are they just not with you now?â
âWho the hell is Crowbar?â Sam asks, dropping into the chair, leaning forward slightly.
âIââ you start.
And nothing comes.
That feelingâthe one thatâs been dulled by movement, distraction, noiseâit comes back. Climbing. Clawing. It never left.
As if he sensed itâthe balcony door creaks open again behind you. You donât turn. You donât have to. The weight of him settles into the room againâwarm, heavy, grounding.
You shake your head, âCe nâest pas grave. Ce nâest pas ta faute.â (Itâs alright. Itâs not your fault.) Then, in English: âYou didnât know.â
And before the silence can swallow you wholeâyou move. Toward the balcony. The door slides open. Cold air hits your face. You step out. And close it behind you.
Durand watches you go. Then slowly looks back at Barnesâstanding in the center of the roomâand Sam, still in the chair.
Sam clears his throat, âExplosion,â he says. âLand mine, I think.â
Durand nods slowly.
Then Samâbecause he doesnât know when to stopââShe was taken,â he adds. âPOW. Pretty sure that Thomas guy was with her actually.â
Durand goes still.
âThatâs actually why weâre here.â Sam finishesÂ
âShe must feel guilty,â Durand says quietly. âWord about her spread quickly. Iâm surprised no one tried to take her sooner.â
Barnes moves before either of them can respond. Already heading toward the balcony, âGoing to check on her.â He grumbles.Â
The door opens. Closes. Sam and Durand exchange a look.
Then Durand stands, heading toward the fridge, âHow long have those two been together?â he asks casually.
Sam leans back, âWhat? They arenât.â
âRight,â Durand says, grabbing a bottle of wine, returning with a glass. He pours slowlyâthen glances up, catching Samâs expression.
âOh,â he says, pausing. âYou werenât joking.â
âNo,â Sam laughs. âThey can barely stand each other.â
Durand lets out a sharp laugh, leaning back into the couch, grabbing the remote.
âTrust me,â he says, turning on the TV, light flickering across his face, âI know what âcanât stand each otherâ looks like.â
A beat.
âThatâs not it.â
âŠ
The wind hits harder up here. Sharper. Cutting. But it grounds you. More than anything else right now.
The door slides open behind you. You tense instantly. But you donât turn. You donât need to. You know itâs him.
He lingers at first. Doesnât step forward. And usuallyâthat would make you uneasy. But with himâit doesnât. Because even at your weakestâand him at his worstâhe was never anything but gentle.
âItâs alright,â you say, breaking the silence. âI just needed a second. I get⊠overstimulated after traveling.â
His voice comes from behind you. Low. Soft, âDo you want me to go back inside?â
No. But you donât say that.
âYou can do whatever you want,â you shrug.
A pause.
Thenâa step. Then another. Until the warmth of him reaches you. The cold softens.
âHow do you know him?â he asks.
Not curious. Not really. Something else.
You glance downâeyes catching his arm near yours on the railing. Close. Too close not to notice. Too far to touch. You wish the wind would pick up again.
âI was based in Afghanistan,â you say. âBut sometimes⊠if someone had a shot they couldnât afford to missâtheyâd call me in.â
He nods slowly. Breath pulling in deep. Your scent filling him. Settling. Everywhere, âWho did you kill for him?â
âA leader,â you nod. âTerror group in Burkina Faso.â
A pause.
âHow far was the shot?â
âAbout two miles.â
He huffs a quiet laugh.
You turn, âWhat?â
He shakes his head, a faint smile forming, âYouâre just⊠surprising.â
âWhy?â you ask, irritation flickering.
âNot bad,â he says quickly. âJustâlook at you. You dress like this. Your room is pink. And youâreââ
âHigh maintenance,â you finish.
âYes.â
âAnd spoiled.â
âYes.â
You nod, âRotten.â
The smile fades from his face. He looks back out, âIf you werenât born like this⊠what would you be doing?â
You exhale. Long. Heavy, âI donât know,â you admit. âThis is all I know.â
âDo you like it?â
You hesitate.
âYes,â you say finally. âBecause Iâm good at it. And because I didnât really have a choice.â
He nods slowly, âI think I feel the same way,â he says. âI mustâve had other things I liked before all thisâI justââ
âDoesnât feel like you anymore.â You finish.Â
His head turns toward you. Something raw there, âYeah.â
A beat.
âAnd not because Iâm a hundred years old.â
You smile faintly, âI wanted to be a ballerina once, or something girly,â you say. âBut after a while⊠I donât know. People kept telling me how good I was at this. All the time. So I justâŠâ
You gesture vaguely, âBecame it.â
A pause.
âBut now, I always find myself wondering, you knowâwhen does greatness stop being a gift,â you murmur, âand start feeling like a burden?â
The wind pulls you closer. Too close.
âBut then I think,â your breath catching. âWell, maybe it wasnât even a gift to begin with.â
His presence overwhelming again. His eyesâŠso blue. And your eyelashesâthe weight of themâso long.Â
Thenâlaughter from inside. Sharp. Pulling you out of it. And you glance back. Sam and Durandâwatching Chapelle Show, of all things.
You look back at Barnesâwho is still staring at youâand so you grab his shirt, and pull him inside with you. Your heart flutteringâstupidâlightâlike a little kidâjust at the feel of him alone.
âŠ
Last night you hadnât slept, of courseâjust like Barnes had called it.
For starters, Sam was snoringâas usual. Plus he took all of your blanket. And honestlyâyou had spent most of the night trying not to think about how easy it would be to just⊠move. Curl up in Barnesâ lap like a cat, let the scent of him knock you out the way it had before.
He hadnât slept either. You knew that.
And now, this morningâas if Durandâs apartment couldnât feel any smallerâthe addition of a second super soldier somehow makes it worse.
You sit wedged into the center of the couch, Sam to your left. Durand is in the shower, water running faintly through the thin walls. Steve and Barnes stand in the middle of the room, taking up space without even trying.
âOkay, so the party is tomorrow night,â Steve says, nodding slightly, more to himself than anyone else. âAnd after talking to Nat, she says itâll be easiest to get in using her.â
He points at you. You blink. Look left. Look right.
âMe?â you ask, head snapping back toward him.
âWe donât have an invitation,â he shrugs.
âI kind of assumed we would sneak in or something.â
âEasier said than done,â Sam sighs. âHe canât be there at all, and if the guy running itâwho is it, Pierre?âif heâs HYDRA, heâll recognize me because Iâve been seen with Cap.â
âSo then itâs just me?â you gape.
âNo,â Steve starts. âBuckyââ
âHe literally worked for them less than a year ago,â you cut in, gesturing toward Barnes.
âThatâs different,â Steve shakes his head. âBucky wasnât public-facing. He was an assetâhidden. Nat says this guy operates on the business side. He wouldnât have crossed paths with him.â
You frown.
âIâm still trying to figure out why someone like that is living in Paris throwing jazz parties.â
âPeople have hobbies,â Sam shrugs. âAnd like Cap saidâheâs business. His father was high-ranking HYDRA, now dead. The son stayed loyalâbut works through investments now.â
You sit with that. Thenâsomething clicks. Hard.
âOh,â you mutter, your head dropping into your hands. âOh, I know why he wants it.â
âWhat?â Sam nudges you.
You drag your face up slowly, fingers pressing into your cheeks, exasperation creeping in.
âHe wants it for himself,â you say. âSo he can hear the music differently.â
Thereâs a pause. Steve frowns slightly, âWhy would heââ
You cut him off.
âBecause music to normal people and music to me are completely different,â you say, sitting up a bit straighter now. âEven the two of you can probably understand parts of itâbut for me itâs not just sound.â
You gesture vaguely, searching for the right words.
âItâs vibration. Itâs structure. Itâs⊠feeling it physically. Pitch becomes something you can see in a way. Itâs not just auditory anymore.â
They stay quiet. So you keep going.
âThere was a study done on me when I was youngerâseven or eight, I think. Some speaker company funded it. They were trying to design something better for musiciansâbecause a lot of them arenât deaf, but they were fascinated by how Beethoven experienced music.â
Sam tilts his head, âWaitâlike the whole âfeel it through the floorâ thing? With vibrations, right?â
âYeah,â you nod. âBass turned all the way up, speakers on the ground, using vibration instead of sound.â
You shake your head slightly.
âBut they wanted to push it further. Thereâs this weird niche group of classical music people who are obsessed with experiencing music in a more âpureâ way. Like they want to intellectualize it past just listening.â
You huff a quiet laugh.
âThey built the speaker based off me. I tested it. And it worked. Vibrations are already intenseâimagine it increased. It was like myâŠit was like my insides were boiling.â
A pause.
âBut they loved it. People bought it, praised it, and part of the funding looped back into my program.â
You lean back slightly.
âI was supposed to stay anonymous, though. They didnât really know meâjust that someone SHIELD made existed. Some kind of experiment.â
Your eyes flick between them.
âBut now SHIELDâs gone. Information leaks. People talk.â
And now you land it.
âSo if this guy is obsessed with musicâand doesnât need strength, or combat abilityâthen he doesnât want your serum.â
You glance at Steve. Then Barnes.
âHe wants mine.â
Silence settles over the room. Heavier now. Realization setting in.
âHmmmâŠâ Sam hums next to you. âThatâs a good point, I guess.â
âBut the question still stands,â Steve adds, glancing between you all, âhow do we get you in there?â
âWe can locate him today, maybe eavesdrop,â you shrug. âI can flirt my way into itâor technically play the music. Though I might be a bit rusty.â
Barnesâ jaw tightens immediately, the muscle in his cheek ticking as he clenches down. His arms fold tighter across his chestâshoulders squaring, posture going rigid.
The only thing that interrupts itâis Durand.
He walks out of the bedroom, hair still dripping from the shower, a towel slung loosely around his neck as he runs a hand through damp strands.
âSheâs a good flirt,â Durand drawls, heading toward the kitchen. âHad a lot of soldiers wrapped around that finger of hers.â
You roll your eyes, but your gaze flicksâjust brieflyâtoward Barnes.
And there it is again. That look. Tension. Something sharper underneath it. Possibly jealousyâthough without your nose, you canât fully confirm it.
âIf I were to flirt my way in,â you continue, gesturing toward Barnes, âthen how the hell does he get in?â
âAs your plus one? I donât know,â Sam shrugs.
âYou donât think it would be strange being invited there romantically and then bringing a guy with me?â
âHe could be gay,â Sam offers casually.
âHA,â Durand barks, grabbing a carton of milk as he makes his way back over, dropping onto the couch on your other side. âNo one will believe that. Iâve seen Navy SEALs less manly than him.â
âHey,â Steve cuts in, pointing toward Barnes. âI heard that gay comes in a lot of different forms these days.â
âWhatever,â Durand yawns, throwing his arm behind you along the back of the couch, leaning in like he owns the space. âThe man is rich, no? He doesnât care if you show up single or with fifteen boyfriends. He just wants his other rich friends to see that a beautiful woman is interested in coming.â
Then his eyes driftâslowlyâto Barnes. Taking him in properly this time. The size. The presence. The threat.
âPlus,â Durand adds, almost lazily, âI heard sheâs a terrible fighter. If anything goes wrong and youâre thereâŠâ his gaze lingers, a smirk tugging at his mouth, âIâm sure youâll be more than willing to protect this one.â
âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?â Barnes gruffsâbut thereâs no real bite behind it.
Not enough to convince anyone. Durand smiles at him. Slow. Amused. Then turns his head toward you.
The laugh escapes you before you can stop itâsharp, surprisedâyour eyes widening as your hand flies up to cover your mouth, the other coming down to smack his chest.
âWhat?â Barnes asks, looking between the two of you. âWhat did he say?â
âMieux vaut ne pas se frotter Ă lui,â (Better not mess with him,) you murmur to Durand.
âI heard him say penis, I think,â Sam grins, leaning toward Steve.
âNah,â Steve shakes his head, smiling. âWhy would he say penis?â
âYou cannot say that word anymore,â you shake your head.
âOh, but youâsensory issues,â he waves a hand loosely in your direction. âVous avez droit Ă une exception, nâest-ce pas ?â (Youâre entitled to an exception, arenât you?)
âVa te faire foutre,â (go fuck yourself,) you laugh, pushing yourself up off the couch, ready to actually get things moving.
âŠ
The boulevard is aliveâbut not loud.
That kind of Parisian day where everything hums instead of shouts. Afternoon sun casting a warm amber glow across pavement. Conversations drift in and outâFrench, English, laughter, the clink of glasswareâblending into something almost musical.
Sam sits among them. Tryingâfailingâto look casual.
One leg crossed over the other, coffee untouched in front of him, eyes hidden behind the rim of his cup every few seconds as he checks your target. His head turns just a little too deliberately, just a little too oftenâlike someone who thinks theyâre blending in.
And in between all of itâPierre. Your target. Moving slow. Confident. Unaware.
You clock the distance. The rhythm of the crowd. Samâs position. Barnes beside youâtoo close. Always too close. And thenâSam turns his head just a bit too obviously away from the man youâre trackingâand you donât hesitate.Â
Your hand shoots out, grabbing Barnes by the collar of his shirt, fingers curling into the fabric, and you yank him sidewaysâhardâinto the nearest photobooth.
The flimsy curtain snaps shut behind you with a soft plastic hiss.
Itâs tiny. Not just smallâtight. The kind of space that wasnât built for two people, let alone someone like him.
His legs hit the seat first, folding awkwardly, knees spreading just to fit, boots braced against the metal frame like heâs trying not to break the whole thing. The ceiling dips too low for you to stand fully upright, forcing you downâand the only place leftâis him.
So you drop. Not fully. You aim for the edgeâhis thigh, right above the knee. Safe. Manageable. Not that bad. Exceptâit is.
Because the second you land, the entire booth shifts slightly under your combined weight, the seat creaking, his body going completely rigid beneath you.
His hands hover. Not touching you. Not knowing where to go. His back presses hard against the wall behind him, shoulders squared, chest barely movingâlike if he breathes too deeply, heâll somehow make it worse.
âDo you have a dollar?â you ask, one ear turned outward, tracking.
âWhat?â he chokes, the word delayedâlike it has to fight its way out of his throat.
You donât look at him. You canât. Not right now.
âOr a euro, a francâwhatever they use,â you mutter, focused.
Because if you did look at himâif you actually registered how close you areâthe fact that your hip is pressed into him, your back almost brushing his chest every time you shiftâyouâd lose it.
And you already feel it. Even with the in-nose. Even turned down. That pull. That low, dangerous instinct clawing at your ribsâtelling you to swing a leg over him. Press down. Stay there.
âOr a euroâŠâ you repeat, more impatient now.
Outside, you track the sound of Pierre amongst the rest of the crowd. Thereâs a difference. Subtleâbut distinct. The rhythm of footsteps against pavementâhundreds of them blending togetherâbut hisâcleaner. Sharper. Imported Italian leather. The soles hit differently. More precise. More expensive. Closer.
Barnes fumbles slightlyâhis hand brushing your hip for half a second as he digs into his pocket, the contact quick, accidentalâbut itâs enough.
His fingers close around a coin, pressing it into your palm. Your skin brushes his. Warm. Too warm. You donât acknowledge it. You just smile to yourself and feed the coin into the slot.
âOkay,â you say, shifting.
And this timeâyou donât stay on his knee. You move back. Your spine nearly flush with his chest now, your weight settling more fully into him, the two of you facing forward.
Your hair brushes his jaw. Soft. And it smellsâChrist.
âSmile!â
The flash goes off. Blinding for a split second. Youâre grinningâbright, effortlessâcompletely unaware that behind you, he looks like heâs about to be executed.
Eyes wide. Jaw locked. Hands gripping the edge of the seat like itâs the only thing anchoring him. Because thisâthis is worse than the plane. Worse than anything.
Your dressâthat fucking dressâlight, soft, riding up just slightly where your thigh presses against his, the fabric doing nothing to hide the shape of youâthe warmth of youâHe can feel everything. Every shift. Every breath. And his body is reacting in a way he cannot control.
âSmile!â you chirp again.
This time you twist just enough to grab his face, your thumb and forefinger pressing into his cheeks, squishing them together, forcing his expression into something usable.
âWhat theââ he startsâ
But you lean back further. Your head almost brushing his. Your lips closer now. Too close.
âOne more,â you murmur.
Your voice drops. Quieter. Different. It slides under his skin. And right before the flashâyou turn your head, and press your lips to his cheek.
Soft. Quick. But real. Warm.
And thenâyouâre gone.
Out of his lap. Out of the booth. Curtain snapping open as you rush forwardâstraight into Pierre.
âOh!â you gasp, the impact knocking you backward as you land on your ass, palms scraping lightly against the pavement.
You blink up at himâwide-eyed, disoriented just enough to sell itâhis hand already extending down toward you.
âSorry,â you giggle breathlessly, âumm⊠no hablas french.â
He laughs softly at that, but doesnât hesitateâhis hand closing around yours, pulling you up in one smooth motion. His other hand settles briefly at your waist to steady you, drawing you just within the space of himâhis HermĂšs jacket brushing your arms as he leans in just enough to take you in.
And he does. Slowly. Thoroughly.
âOh,â he smiles, gaze flicking over your lips. âYou are American?â
âHahâyes,â you laugh again, brushing your hair back over your shoulder. âSorryâI know we get a pretty bad reputation over here.â
He steps backâbut not farâhis fingers still loosely holding yours as he lifts his other hand, gently turning you in a slow circle. Appraising. Your dress moves with you, light fabric catching the glow of the sun, clinging just slightly where it needs toâyour waist, your hips, the soft dip of your back.
âAre you just here for visit?â he asks, eyes dragging just a bit too long at the neckline of your dress.
âOhâum, no,â you laugh, playing it shy now. âI actually go to school in Viennaâjust stopping in for a concert before heading back.â
âVienna?â His interest sharpens immediately. âAnd what concert? I may have beenâor will be in attendance.â
âOhâŠâ you hesitate, glancing down, letting your voice soften. âYou probably donât know who it isâŠâ
âYouâd be surprised,â he smiles.
âOkayâwellâheâs just a niche jazz artist,â you say, glancing back up at him through your lashes. âI only know him because I studyââ
âYou like jazz?â he interrupts, mouth parting slightly.
âI love jazz,â you grin, the energy shifting instantlyâmore genuine now. âItâs what I study at MDW.â
Then you pause. Eyes widening slightly, âWaitâyou like jazz too?â
The smile that spreads across his face is immediate. Pleased. Flattered. Hooked.
âDo I like jazz?â he laughs. âJazz is my entire life. What do you play?â
âA few things,â you shrug lightly, shifting your weight. âBut I got accepted for jazz pianoâshocker, I know.â
âWow,â he exhales, clearly impressed. Then, like the thought hits him mid-sentenceâ âWaitâwhat are you doing tomorrow?â
You blink. Feign hesitation.
âIâve run into you,â he continues, a little too eager now, âand youâve clearly been sent by angels or somethingâI am having a gathering at my flat. Jazz music. You would love it.â
âWhat kind of gathering?â you ask, cautious.
âItâs more of a party,â he waves it off. âBut refined. It starts around tenâends whenever I decide. You must come.â
You hesitate just long enough.
âWellâit sounds lovely,â you admit. âBut I donât know how smart it would be⊠going to some manâs house I donât knowâno offense.â
âOh, please,â he laughs, brushing it off. âBring a friend.â
Thatâs your in. You nod slowly.
âOkay⊠yeah,â you smile. âI think I can make that work.â
âWonderful!â he beams, already pulling out his phone. âWhat is the best way to reach you? Iâll send everythingâaddress, dress codeââ
Behind youâjust out of Pierreâs line of sightâBarnes leans against the side of the photobooth.
Still. Silent. But absolutely not okay.
The photo strips sit in his hands. He looks like an idiot in them. He knows that. But thatâs not whatâs bothering him. Whatâs bothering himâis why.
Because every single one of those photos was taken while he was trying not to lose control. Trying not to shift. Trying not to let you feel what was happening in his lap the second you sat down on him.
His thumb drags slowly over one of the images. You. Smiling. Bright. Careless. And him behind youâcompletely wrecked.
âFuckâŠâ
His jaw tightens. Because nowâwatching you like thisâthe way you laugh, the way you tilt your head, the way you let that guy look at you like thatâitâs worse. So much worse.
His fingers flex around the strip. He glances around quicklyâthen slides one of them into his jacket pocket. Quick. Subtle. Gone. Like it was never there. Because thereâs no way in hell heâs letting that leave his possession.
And as his hand pulls back outâyou appear. Turning the corner. That same smile. That same energy. And he swallows. Hard. His throat suddenly dry as his eyes tryâand failânot to take you in. Every inch.
âSo,â you smirk, stepping closer, reaching down and plucking the remaining photo strip from his fingers.
Your fingers brush his. Electric. Immediate.
âSo?â he asks, voice rough.
âI may have gotten us an invitation,â you smile.
And Godâhe hates how easily that pulls a grin out of him.
âYeah?â he mutters. âAnd no⊠strange exchanges?â
You narrow your eyes at him. Then grab his arm. Pull him forward. Back toward Sam.
âOh yes,â you sigh dramatically. âI have to suck him off afterwards.â
âWHATââ Barnes nearly yelps, stopping dead in the middle of the boulevard.
His whole body locks. Eyes wide. Chest tight. Fists curlingâ
âJames,â you tilt your head. âThat was a joke.â
He exhales. But not fully. Not even close.
âAnd why would that be so awful?â you press, teasing.
âBecauseâŠâ he struggles, grasping for something that isnât what he actually wants to say. âBecauseâthatâs⊠exploitative.â
âOh, is it, Mr. 1917?â you drawl. âMaybe I wanted to suck him off.â
He stops again. Completely. Like youâve unplugged him.
âThe mouth on you,â he mutters, shaking his head. âYouâre unbelievable.â
âMmm,â you hum, dragging your gaze slowly up and down himâdeliberate now.
Letting him feel it.
âI think you might like it.â
And then youâre gone. Back toward Sam. Light. Easy. Like none of this is affecting you.
And Barnes just stands thereâin the space you left behind. Like youâve taken the air with you. His head spinning with one very clear thought: Oh, you are so fucked.
âŠ
The hotel balcony stretches wider than the one at Durandâs apartmentâopen, deliberate, meant to be lingered in.
Wrought iron railings curve outward slightly, framing the city like a painting. The night air is cooler here, cleanerâParis settled into that late-hour hush where everything feels suspended. The lights below glow softer now, reflections scattered across the Seine in long, trembling streaks of gold.
Thereâs a small refrigerated bar cart tucked near the wallâglass bottles lined up neatly, condensation catching the light. Wine. Champagne. Something sparkling you didnât bother reading the label of.
You sit near the edge in one of the lounge chairs, legs curled slightly beneath you, a bottle loose in your grip, gaze lost somewhere in the distance.
God, you want a cigarette.
Behind you, the door slides open. You donât turn. Itâs lateâpushing two in the morning. You donât need to guess whoâs standing there.
âCanât sleep?â you ask, lifting the bottle for another slow sip.
He stops a few feet away, then moves to the railing, forearms bracing against it as he looks out over the city, mirroring you without meaning to.
âNever really can,â he mutters.
âMe either.â
A quiet beat passes.
âAre you drinking?â he asks, not looking at youâbut the nearly empty bottle makes the question pointless.
âYeah,â you exhale, rolling the glass between your fingers. âItâs been⊠I donât know. A stressful couple of weeks. Not even physically, justââ
âMentally,â he finishes for you.
You glance over, âYeahâŠâ you nod faintly.
âI get it,â he says, voice rough around the edges.
He shifts, turning slightly toward you, but his gaze stays liftedâfixed somewhere above the skyline, like looking at you directly would make something harder.
âCan Iââ he starts, hesitating. âWell⊠can I ask you something?â
A small smile pulls at your mouth. A quick call back to the night in the tent.
âYeah,â you breathe. âYou can ask me. Iâm feeling gentle tonight.â
âProbably the bottle youâre halfway through,â he replies, nodding toward it.
And moreâbecause at this point, a few different things are going in your system. Enough to really try and make you tired, though it's not really working.
âDo you remember⊠much from inside?â he asks carefully. âDuring your capture.â
The smile lingers for a second longer than it shouldâmore at yourself than him. Because at this point, youâve somehow managed to make every trained soldier around you terrified of saying the wrong thing.
âEnough to keep me from sleeping,â you admit, the humor fading. âBut not everything. It comes back in flashes. I only remembered you because I smelled you.â
That gets his attention, and his gaze finally drops to you.
âYeah,â he says. âYour eyes were pretty bad then. Iâm surprised youâre not blind now.â
âMe too,â you huff lightly. âI think my corneas heal faster or something. Maybe theyâre thickerâmore exposure to lightâI donât knowâŠâ
Your voice trails, trying to shake off the phantom sensation that lingers there.Â
âWhat about you?â you ask. âI heard there wasâŠmanipulation.â
He exhales through his nose.
âYeah,â he says after a beat. âThatâs one way to put it. ButâŠthatâs for another time.â
A flicker of something crosses his faceâbut gone almost immediately.
You nod, âI think I get the idea.â
âYeah?â
âThey wipe you,â you say quietly. âSo they can rebuild you into what they need. Weapons donât have emotions. So that way youâre easier to control.â
His mouth tightens slightly, âYeah.â He shifts, almost uncomfortable, âDid they everââ
âNo,â you cut in, shaking your head. You lean forward, setting the empty bottle on the ground beside you. âI wasnât wiped.â
A small, humorless breath leaves you.
âSo everything I didâbefore, afterâthat was all me.â
âBut they gave you orders,â he counters, softer now. Not arguingâjust trying to understand.
âMost of the time,â you concede. âSometimes not.â
He stares out over the city again, âThatâs the part I canât figure out,â he admits. âWhere it...â
His words trail off, and study him for a moment before, âWhere you end and the weapon begins?â
He glances at you, âYeah.â
You nod slowly, âI get that,â you say. âButâif it helpsâwhen I look at youâŠâ
You hesitate. Your gaze drifts back out across the horizon, ââŠI donât see that.â
A pause.
âSometimes I donât see violence at all,â you continue. âWhich is kind of ironic, given your history.â
Your voice softens, âI mostly just associate you with⊠salvation.â
The word hangs there. Fragile.
âYou were gentle,â you add, quieter now. âGentle with me.â
He exhales sharply, âYeah, but I didnât stop it,â he says, frustration threading through his voice.
âYou werenât you,â you answerâbut itâs not forceful. Not convincing.
âI know,â he mutters. âEveryone says that. But it still feels like me. Same eyes. Same hands.â
He flexes his fingers slightly against the railing, âThatâs what keeps me up.â
Across the way, someone steps out onto another balcony, lighting a cigarette. The glow flares briefly in the dark. Their hotel room still dim, as if this person was in the same position as you. Unable to sleep. Accommodating for the ones who can.
âYet here you are, still salvation to someone,â you murmur.
He goes quiet for a moment, âHow many people were taken with you into captivity?â he asks.
âTwo,â you say. âOnly one made it out.â
âDo you ever talk to him?â
You shake your head immediately, âNo. He blames me.â
âThatâs not fair.â
You hum faintly, âWell, that depends who you ask.â
A beat.
âI thought three people survived your unit,â he adds carefully. âBut you saidââ
âBarnes,â you cut in, sharper now. âYouâre pushing it.â
His hands lift slightly, âYou donât have toââ
âThomas died inside,â you say anywayâa deep sigh along with itâbecause he probably needs this.Â
But the words still come out flat. Controlled.
âI think he was already gone before that. The blast⊠it was bad. But he was still breathing when I woke upâŠsomehow. HisâŠâ You swallow. âHis whole head was bashed inâŠbut, um, we had ten people in my unit. Only nine went out that night.â
You glance down.
âA few days before, I got into it with someone during training. Lost control of my rifle. Shot Nick in the leg.â
A breathless, hollow laugh escapes you, âSo he stayed back.â
âWhere is he now?â Barnes asks quietly.
âSomewhere worse than me, from what Iâve heard,â you say. âSurvivorâs guilt, I think.â
You shake your head.
âThat oneâs on me too, apparently.â
Silence settles again. Heavy.
âGod,â you mutter under your breath. âI sound so selfish.â
âYouâre allowed to be,â he says.
âIn moderation,â you counter automatically, then a faint smile ghosts across your face as you try to change the subject. âAnyway⊠the guy who called me the other dayâheâs from the other unit. Heâs the only one I really talk to. The only one Iâm not⊠afraid of.â
That catches him, âWhy would you be afraid to talk to anyone?â
You push yourself up from the chair.
âThat,â you say lightly, brushing it off, âis also a story for another night. Preferably with more alcohol.â
âYouâre gonna feel like shit tomorrow,â he warns.
âIâve got ways around that,â you shrug, then glance back toward the door. âYou should try to sleep.â
âI told you,â he mutters, âthatâs not really my thing these days.â
âBut in the tent, you did,â you point out.
âNo, I didnât,â he says quickly. âI wasâŠkeeping watch.â
You raise a brow, âOh, were you?â
âYes.â
You smile slowly, âSo it was you who pulled me on top of your chest?â
He doesnât answer.
âRight,â you nod. âThatâs what I thought.â
You stretch slightly, rolling your shoulders.
âWell, my bottleâs empty, and I should probably try to sleep. Otherwise Iâll look awful tomorrow.â
âOkay,â he says, a little unsure.
âIâm gonna go put something on the TV,â you add, heading for the door. âYou can come if you want.â
Inside, the suite is dimâonly a lamp left on in the corner, casting soft light across the living area. The city noise dulls the moment the door shuts behind you. You drop onto the couch with a quiet exhale, sinking into the cushions like youâve done it a hundred times before.
Behind you, the door opens again. He steps in. Slower. More hesitant this time. Like heâs not sure what heâs walking into.
You glance over at him briefly. He stands there for a momentâjust inside the roomâwatching you lay back on the couch like your body finally gave out on you. Like all the noise justâŠstopped.
The TV hums low. Some late-night program in Frenchâvoices blending together, meaningless. You donât even look at him for more than a second. Like it doesnât matter whether he stays or goes. Like you already know heâs not leaving.
His jaw tightens slightly. He moves anyway. Slow. Measured. Like every step has to be thought through before he takes it.
And then he sits. Too far at first. Back straight. Hands planted on his thighs. Like heâs bracing for something.
He doesnât look at you. He doesnât need to. He can feel you. Every shift of the couch. Every breath. The quiet way your body sinks into the cushions like youâve finally found something soft enough to give in to.
And thenâmovement.
He barely has time to register it before your legs are in his lap. Justâthere. Like they belong there. Like itâs the most natural thing in the world.
His entire body goes rigid. Hands coming up immediatelyâhovering, unsure, fingers flexing like heâs been given something he doesnât know how to hold.
Donât move. Donât touch. Donâtâ
But you donât react. Donât even open your eyes. You just settle. Shift once. Get comfortable. Like heâs furniture. Like heâs safe.
And thatâthat does something to him. Worse than anything else. Because you trust him. Without hesitation. Without thinking. And he doesnâtâhe doesnât know what to do with that.
His hands hover for another second. Two. Then slowlyâcarefullyâhe lets them fall. Resting against your legs. Light at first. Like if he presses too hard, youâll disappear. But you donât. You donât even stir.
Instead, your breathing slows. Even. Steady. And he feels it. Not just the rhythm of itâbut the way it pulls at him. Like something in his body starts syncing without permission. His shoulders drop just slightly. His back loosens against the couch. His grip softens.
And he hates it. Because thisâthis isnât normal. He doesnât relax. He doesnât sleep. Not like this. Not withoutâ
His jaw clenches. The thoughts try to come. They always do. Images. Fragments. Things he canât control.
But they donât land. Not fully. Like they hit somethingâand slide off. Blocked. Muted. Because youâre here. Because your legs are in his lap. Because the warmth of you is bleeding through his jeans, settling into his skin, grounding him in a way that doesnât make sense.
His thumb shifts slightly. Barely noticeable. Pressing just a fraction more into you. Testing.
You donât move. Donât wake. Just breathe. And something in his chestâtight for so longâfinally starts to loosen.
âJesusâŠâ he mutters under his breath.
Itâs quiet. More breath than voice. His head tips back against the couch. Eyes drifting shut for a secondâjust a secondâ
And he catches it. That edge. That place right before sleep.
He jerks himself back. Eyes opening again. No. He doesnât do this. Not here. Not likeâ
His gaze drops to you. Your eyelids flutter under the weight of your debilitatingly long eyelashes. Completely asleep. Like it took nothing. Like all you needed wasâthis.
Him.
The thought hits harder than it should. He exhales slowly. Long. Controlled. But it doesnât fix it.
Because the longer he sits thereâthe heavier his limbs feel. The quieter his head gets. The more that pull settles in his chest. That same one from the tent. From the jet. From every moment heâs been too close to you and not able to explain why it feels likeâlike something clicking into place.
His hand shifts again. More certain this time. Resting fully. Fingers securely wrapping around your sweet ankle.
Not careful anymore. Just⊠there. Like it belongs. Like you do. Like he does.Â
His breathing slows. Matches yours without him realizing. The TV noise fades into nothing. The room softens. Edges blurring. And this timeâwhen his eyes closeâhe doesnât fight it.
Because for onceâthereâs no noise waiting for him. No ghosts. No fragments.Â
Justâquiet.
Warmth.
You.
His head dips slightly forward. Chin lowering. Body finally giving in. And for the second time in a long timeâJames Barnes falls asleep without meaning toâall thanks to you.Â
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A/N:Â Okay, so because of the two part greed, there will also be a two part lust to compensate.
Chapter Specific Warnings: Emetephobia as usual (sorry)âŠ.PINING, Angst, Violence, TENSION, allllllmoooossttttt kisses, touching?Hypothermia? As always check the full list below âŹïž
The house feels different when you come back in. Quieterâbut not in a peaceful way. Like something has settled into the walls. Something heavy. Something that doesnât belong.
âYou gave her the guns?â Sam asks.
âOf course.â Yona doesnât even hesitate.
âWhyâwhy would you do that?â
âWhy wouldnât I?â Yona counters coolly. âShe is more capable of carrying them than you are.â
The argument unfolding in the living room bleeds through the bathroom door, slightly muffledâbut not enough. Not with your hearing. Not with the lorazepam you had just snorted into both nostrils from the small snuff bottle tucked into your bra. The bitterness still clings faintly to the back of your throat.
You stare at yourself in the mirror. Your face looks⊠wrong. Warped. Sad, almost. Betrayal doesnât suit youâat least not when it comes from someone else.
âObviously not! Two people are dead!â Samâs voice cuts through again, sharper now.
It grates.
You had already reinserted your in-ears the moment you got back into the car, dialing everything down, but even now, the excess stimulationâthe aftermath, the noise, the pressure of everything sitting just beneath your skinâfeels like too much.
Thereâs a part of you that wants to take out your in-nose. That maybeâjust maybeâBuckyâs smell would pull you back into that familiar, numbed-out limbo.
Not quite living. Not quite dead. Still breathing. Just⊠not feeling it as much.
âIf she hadnât had the guns, she may have been in their position instead,â Yona continues, unmoved. âIf anything, you should be kissing the ground I walk on. If she ended up dead, that would be on you. Youâd have to deal with Stark. They deserved to die.â
âI donâtâŠâ Sam exhales, running a hand over his face. âI donât understand.â
âThis is a situation far beyond you,â Yona says. âIt goes beyond just those two men. There are hundreds of people wrapped up in this who deserve nothing but the absolute worst that could happen to them. It was a miracle SHIELD fell apartâsimply because of the program that created her. Those barbarians will never stand trial. They get to walk away. Even after everything they did.â
Reluctantly, you splash a handful of cold water onto your face, letting it drip down your skin before pushing yourself upright and stepping back out into the living room.
Yona sits on the couch, cigarette between his fingers, smoke curling lazily upward. Sam paces back and forth, restless, agitated, like he needs something to direct all of it at.
âWho? The agents?â Sam presses.
As the argument continues, your eyes driftâsubtle, searchingâuntil they land on Barnes in the kitchen.
His head is tilted down, gaze fixed somewhere on the floor.
But as if he feels itâyour stareâhis eyes flick up to meet yours. And for once, neither of you looks away.
Thereâs something shared there. Something quiet. Something unspoken. A mutual understanding that maybeâjust maybeâneither of you should have ever agreed to this mission in the first place.
âThere were hardly any agents,â Yona says, pulling your attention back. âIâm talking about the scientists. And the worst part isâthey knew exactly what they were doing. And they didnât care. Most of them have gone into hiding, or theyâre working under new governments now. Iâd know. Iâve been keeping tabs on all of them.â
He exhales smoke slowly, âOne day, they will get what they deserve for what they did to my child.â
He takes a beat, then;
âKisegya,â Yona calls.
His voice snaps you out of it.
Your legs feel slightly unsteady as you move toward him.
He stands from the couch, shoots Sam one last look, then pulls you inâone arm wrapping around your shoulders, the other settling on your bicep, thumb rubbing slow, grounding circles.
âTell them.â
Your stomach drops, âIââ
âYou have nothing to be ashamed of,â he interrupts, turning you to face him fully. His hands come up, holding your cheeks, steadying you. âIt wasnât your fault. You tell them. Now. They need to understand why it had to be done.â
Your jaw tightens almost immediately. No. Absolutely not.
Thereâs a flicker of something behind your eyesâresistance, sharp and immediate. Not fear of the memories themselves, noâyouâve lived with those long enough.
Itâs something else. The exposure. The idea of saying it out loud. Of letting them see it. Of letting them understand. Because understanding leads to something worse.
Pity.
And you canât stand that. Youâd rather be feared. Misunderstood. Hated, even. Anything but pitied.
You swallow. Your instinct is to shut it down. Deflect. Walk away. Say nothing. But Yonaâs hands are still holding your face. Grounding. Insistent. And the weight of what you found in that office presses back in, heavy and unavoidable.
You hesitateâthen exhale.
âEarlier⊠when he said it wasnât about Tim or Harleyâheâs right,â you begin, your voice quieter than expected, controlled but tight at the edges. âThey may be dead for it now, but he shouldâve known better.â
You swallow.
âAnd the explosionâitâs more than that. I donât even⊠in the grand scheme of all this, the explosion is the least of my worries.â
A beat.
âWhat Tim did⊠itâs worse.â
Your eyes flickâbrief, reluctantâtoward Barnes.
âHe gave them information on where to find me. Whether he thought Iâd be able to smell it or notâhe knew their intention. They wanted my blood. They wanted to figure out how to recreate the serum I was made with.â
You inhale slowly, âAnd Iâm going to take a guessâsince this is incredibly classifiedâthat neither of you understands how big of a deal that is.â
Your gaze lands on Barnes again, more directly this time, âBarnes⊠you and Steveâyour serums were the template for this.â
A pause.
âBut the one I was made with is⊠an abomination. A derivative evolution. A theory SHIELD was desperate to prove for a long time.â
Your jaw tightens slightly, âDo you know what they put on my birth certificate? The same one that had my specimen number?â
You donât wait for an answer, âIn big red lettersââNon-replicable. Serum-derived. Enhanced asset.ââ
Silence.
âAnd why?â you continue. âBecause making more of me was legally classified as a crime against humanity. A war crime. A violation of the Nuremberg Code.â
Your voice sharpens slightly, âAnd those decisions were made by SHIELD. The same people who created me.â
You let that sit.
âBut HYDRA doesnât know all of that. And even if they didâthey wouldnât care.â
A breath, âThey have my blood now. And theyâve probably already started making enhanced embryos from it.â
The words land heavy, âThe point of all of thisâof everythingâis that if those embryos are carried to term⊠if theyâre bornâŠâ
Your voice tightens, just slightly, âThey will suffer. And they will die.â
You swallow, âGive it to an adult instead? Theyâll suffer too. The only difference isâtheyâll understand it. Theyâll be aware of every second of it.â
A beat.
âAnd then theyâll die.â
You gestureâhesitant, almost unable to lookâtoward Barnes, âThe pain isnât like what you went through it doesnât stabilize. It doesnât burn out. It doesnât fade. Itâs constant. Itâs invasive. It doesnât stop until youâre dead.â
Your fingers twitch slightly at your sides, âItâs not always physical anymoreâfor meâbut it can be. And it was. Before I was⊠trained to manage it.â
Your voice drops lower, âThe infants⊠theyâd go blind first. The light alone would erode their corneas.â
A pause.
âSound? Even something softâtheir eardrums rupture. They bleed. They go deafâif they survive that long.â
You shake your head slightly, âThey choke on their own vomit because they can smell and taste everything at once. Their bodies seize from sensations no nervous system is meant to processâtemperature, pressure, vibrations beneath the earthâeverything.â
Your breathing is steady. Too steady, âTheir hearts fail under the strain.â
A beat.
âNone of them die fast enough.â
Silence.
âItâs painful. Itâs barbaric. And most importantlyâŠâ You lift your gaze. âThey arenât born into love. Theyâre born into a lab. Into immediate suffering.â
Another pause.
âNow youâre probably wondering how I survived.â A faint, humorless exhale. âI got lucky.â
Your shoulders shift slightly, âMy senses distributed almost evenly. That never happened before. For the others, one always overpowered the rest. It made survival impossible.â
Your eyes drift, distant for a moment, âAnd by the time I was born⊠they had gone through enough bodies to figure out how to make it possible.â
The room feels heavier now, âThey acclimated me to sedatives in the womb. I had to be in and out of consciousness just to survive my first year. Certain sensations had to be suppressed constantly, or I wouldnât have made it.â
You blink slowly, âAnd once they finally created one successful living specimenâŠâ
A breath.
âThey never did it again.â
Your voice softens, but only slightly, âThey couldnâtâŠjustify the cost.â
A beat.
âThese things⊠canât be replicated.â Your jaw tightens. âItâs not right.â
Silence.
âAnd if youâre concerned about outside reaction,â you add, quieter now, âIâll tell Tony myself.â
A pause.
âHeâd be glad to know I killed the man who led to my torture.â
The room goes still.
Yona and Sam both look down, their eyes tracing the hardwood floorâunwilling, or unable, to meet your gaze.
But Barnesâhe hasnât looked away from you. Not once. The staring contest you broke earlier never ended for him.
And nowâsomething has changed.
Thereâs something in his expression you donât recognize. From the outside, something you donât seeâItâs vulnerability.
For the first time in a long time, he feels seen. Stripped raw. Exposed. Laid bare in front of you. Not as a weapon. Not as a soldier. But as something understood. Something mirrored.
Because as he looks at you nowâyour eyes heavy, your lashes fluttering the same way they did back in SiberiaâHe doesnât just see you.
He sees himself.
[July 24th, 2015, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland: Fourteen Days After Rescue]
The hospital smelled sterile. Bleach, other antiseptics hanging in the air. Sharp. Clean. Artificial. The kind of smell that clings to the back of your throat and never quite leaves, no matter how long you stay.
Itâd been a week and a half since you had woken up. And everything already felt like it was moving too fast.
Tony stood near the window, arms crossed, jaw tight. The city hummed faintly beyond the glass, distant and irrelevant. Rhodey leaned back against the wall, posture more relaxedâbut his eyes stayed alert, tracking every word, every shift, every sound he was able to manage around him.Â
The door opened.Â
âMr. Stark, Colonel Rhodes, good to see you again.â
Dr. Goold was the head of psychiatrics at Walter Reed Medical Center. Stiffâand a bit unnervingâbut overall great at his job. He was older than his peers, usually serving as more of a consultant rather than a full on doctor at that point, but for situations like yours the hospital usually made an exception.Â
He had been paged the moment the jet landed on the tarmac in D.C.
Although Tony had heard him enter the room, he didnât turn right away. Eyes a bit out of focus, his hand pulled up to his mouthâhe took a heavy, shaking breath.Â
âDoc,â he said finally, glancing over his shoulder. âHow was the evaluation?â
Dr. Goold exhaled through his nose, something restrained sitting just beneath his expression.Â
âWell,â he started, letting out a bit of a sigh. âShe definitely qualifies as a POW.â
It was quiet. Too quiet for what that meant.Â
âOh.â Tonyâs voice was weak.Â
âCommand will make the final decision,â Dr. Goold continued, âhowever, I would be surprised if they donât agree.â
Tony watched him thenâreally watched him, âYou sound irritated.â
âNot at her,â Dr. Goold said quickly. Then, after a beatââI⊠dislike government entities. I think they are going to sign off on the determination shortly.â
âAlready?â Rhodey pushed off the wall slightly, jumping into the conversation. âDoesnât it have to go through a court or a board or something?â
âItâs not every day they bring in a federal officer, an attorney, and a security detail into an evaluation,â Dr. Goold replied. âBut she is⊠well. I suppose sheâs in a⊠unique situation.â
Tony shifted his weight, something sharper creeping into his tone, âCan I askââ
âThey pushed questions that I thought were inappropriate,â Dr. Goold cut in. âMore questions than needed for a standard evaluation.â
Tonyâs eyes narrowed, âAm IâŠallowed to know specifics at all?â
âOn my end,â Dr. Goold said carefully, âI concluded there wasâŠextensive evidence of torture.â
Tony didnât react immediately, hand coming back up to his mouth.Â
âOn your end?â he repeated. âWhat was their end?â
âOh, they agree with that,â Dr. Goold nodded. âAt least, the military physician theyâre using does.â
âBut they didnât?â Tony pressed.
âNo,â Dr. Goold said. âThe others in the room seemed to be concerned about⊠other things.â
Rhodey straightened, âWhat other things?â
âThey were heavily interested in SHIELD,â Dr. Goold replied. âI canât go into too much detail. The attorney had me sign an NDA.â
âBut SHIELD has been dissolved,â Rhodey said.
âBut it was a government agency,â Dr. Goold countered. âAnd to me, it seemed like they were trying to protect the personnel.â
Tonyâs gaze sharpened, âProtect them from what?â
Dr. Goold hesitated, thenââFrom her.â
The room stilled.
âWhat?â Rhodey said immediately. âWhy would they need to protect them from her? Sheâs bedridden.â
âThe nurses have been keeping track of her mental state,â Dr. Goold explained. âThey document certain conversationsâanything notableâinto her records. It seems like someone higher up got a hold of it.â
Tonyâs voice lowered, âWhat was she saying?â
Dr. Goold exhaled slowly, âSomething that made her seem like a liability.â
âA liability?â Rhodey repeated.
âI donât know the specifics behind what was said prior to this,â Dr. Goold admitted.
âAnd the specifics during this?â Rhodey pressed.
A pause.
ThenââWhen I was done, they asked her how she felt about everything that was done to her during captivity.â
Tonyâs jaw tightened.
âAt first, I thought they might have been trying to protect HYDRA for some reason,â Dr. Goold continued. âBut then she said it had beenâŠeasier than anticipated.â
Tonyâs head tilted slightly.
âThen they asked her why.â Another pause. âAnd she said it was because sheâd already been through it before.â
The words hung. Heavy. Unsettling.
âShe told them to ask Dr. Nettles.â
âDr. Nettles?â Tony repeated.
âI donât know,â Dr. Goold shook his head. âProbably a SHIELD scientist. But whoever it is⊠the name made them uneasy.â
Tony didnât like that. Not at all.
âThey signed off on an order,â Dr. Goold finished.
Tonyâs gaze snapped back to him.
âShe no longer has clearance for weapon access. Indefinitely. Effective immediately.â
Silence.
Tony went completely still. Not confused. Not surprised. Justâstill.
âYou think it was disciplinary?â Rhodey asked, a bit more cautious.
âNo.â
âHarm to herself?â
âNo.â
Rhodey glanced between the two of them, âThen what?â
Dr. Goold didnât hesitate this time.
âContainment.â
Another silence settled in the roomâbut this one was different. Heavier. Because Tony understood something he didnât before.
They werenât afraid of what happened to you. Noâthey were afraid of what you are. What you could be capable of. And for the first time since you woke upâhe realized he might not fully understand that either.
The flight back from East Tennessee had been silentâSam and Barnes sitting next to each otherâhowever reluctantlyâin the front seats. Sam flying, Barnes doing what he did best: staring out the window like something hollowed out.
And you had been in the backânot even in the second row, but on the fold-down seat near the ramp. The one that faces away from everything.
You hadnât even realized youâd landed. The Ambien had knocked you outâshockerâbut honestly, you really hadnât used it much for sleeping in the first place. Either way, this time you had let it do its job. Or maybe it had just been the exhaustion of the excursion finally catching up to you, dragging you under whether you liked it or not.
You were the first one off the quinjet. It took a moment for the others to follow, but in that brief window, you caught itâBarnesâ elongated shadow stretching across the tarmac under the overhead lights. Lingering behind you. Like smoke after a house fire.
By the time you reached your door, hand wrapping around the knob, you finally noticed he had followed you all the way there.
His voice cuts through whatever fog youâve been stuck in, âCan I talk to you?â
Your body joltsâsubtle, but sharp, eyes not leaving your fingers clutching the handle.Â
Heâs been in your room before. You know that. You just donât remember it. Not really.
The night you were unconscious. The night he carried you from the archives. The night his scent soaked into everythingâinto your sheets, your floor, your airâand stayed there long enough that you had to fight the instinct to get on your knees andâyou shut the thought down. Hard.
You push the door open. He steps in behind you. And as if the first time he hadnât let himself lingerâthis time, he looks. Really looks.
His gaze drifts across the roomâlike heâs allowing himself to actually take it in. The medals above your desk. The badges. The proof of everything youâve done.
Then the contrastâbaby pink sheets. Softness. Something that doesnât match.
You move to your suitcase, kneeling slightly as you begin pulling things outâanything to give your hands something to do.
âUmâŠâ you swallow. âWhat did youâŠwant to talk about?â
He stiffens at your voice. His attention drops to the deskâto the pile of developed photos you still havenât touched. The ones from deployment. The ones you keep pretending donât exist.
âJustâumâŠâ he starts, hesitation thick in his throat. âI just wanted to tell you that IâŠunderstand.â
You scoff. The shirts slip from your hands, dropping back into the suitcase with a dull thump.
âDonât,â you sigh. âDonât feel like you need to sympathize with me. I donât need it.â
Now he looks at you. And you canât even return it. Your posture mirrors hisârigid, closed off, eyes snapping toward the window instead.
âNo, Iâm notââ
âNo, you are,â you cut him off. âItâs fine.â
His brows pull together. His gaze drops again, âI justâI know youââ
A laugh leaves you. Sharp. Mean. Immediate. You feel it the second it happensâhow ugly it soundsâbut you donât stop it.
Sometimes you hate how easy it is for you to be cruel, âYou donât know me.â
Your eyes snap back to him, âI hardly talk to you, you hardly talk to meââ
âBut in Siberiaââ
âPlease.â It comes out wrong.
Tight. Uneven. Like the word itself is choking you, âPleaseâjust⊠I donât want to talk about that.â
Thatâs usually where people stop. Where he stops. But not this time.
âLook,â he says, voice firmer now. âI donât remember much from when I was there, okay?â
You donât respondâjust stare at him. Jaw clenching. Releasing. Clenching again.
âIt comes back in piecesâbut what I do rememberââ
âI know you remember meââ
And something shiftsâhis patience snapping.
âIâm not talking about you,â he says, sharper nowâsomething heavier underneath it. âIâm talking about the things you said at the cabin.â
He steps closer. Barely. But enough. Enough that it feels like a line has been crossed.
âYou didnât mention what they did to you while you were in Siberia. Iâve had to piece that together myself. But what you said about your childhoodâwhat they did to youâhow they treated youââ
His voice falters for just a second.
âIt made me feelââ
You shake your head.
âFeel what?â you cut in, stepping toward him. âSeen?â
Your head tilts slightly, something cold settling behind your eyes.
âLet me make one thing very clear,â you sayâand you wish you could stop yourself, but you donât. âI donât know you. I donât know what you went through.â
A breath.
âWhat I do know is that you had the luxury of being brainwashed. Of forgetting. Of getting to come back and piece things together like itâs some kind of puzzle.â
His face shifts. Subtle. But itâs there.
âBut me?â you laugh againâand itâs worse this time. âI spend every single second of every single day trying to figure out how to forget.â
That one lands. You see it. Actually see it. Something in him recoils.
âWe are not friends,â you continue. âI donât care if I knew you before. I donât care that you were there. And I donât care if you think you can relate to me.â
His jaw tightens.
âYou might be stronger than me physically,â you add, stepping even closer now, âbut donât everâeverâthink that we are even remotely the same.â
Your voice drops. Quieter. Sharper. âI donât want to remember.â
You donât realize how close you are until itâs too late. Until your breath is hitting him. Until thereâs nowhere else to go.
âSo if you want to dig all that shit up, go find a shrink,â you finish. âI have one I can recommend. I donât see him anymore, so there should be an opening.â
Silence. Thick. Suffocating. It stretches too long. You can taste itâacid creeping up your throat, bile burning behind your teeth. Your eyes flick past him for half a secondâthe purple heart mounted on your wall. Watching you. Judging.
And he turns. Just like that. No fight. No pushback. Just leaves. But not quietly.
âMaybe you should consider going back to one,â he throws over his shoulder.
The door already half open.
âSeems like youâve got your own shit to work through.â
And then heâs gone. The door clicks shut. And the silence that follows is worse than anything he said. Because once againâitâs silence that you created.Â
The same night you pulled two triggersâthe blood of Tim and Harley, as well as seven others, dripping from your handsâyou had called Tony on the phone, said âI did what I had to do,â and hung up. You heard Samâs phone ringing from the inside of the cabin only a few minutes later.
Tony had asked you to meet him in the city at the tower a few days after you arrived back at the compound, giving the time you spent away the chance to lingerâyour brain to process what you needed it to.
And although it had taken a heroic amount of prescription drugs, blissful moments of isolation, and hours spent scanning textbooks for the upcoming semesterâmaybe it had been necessary.
Now, as you stand in front of him, eating your own wordsâthe ones you had told Sam, Iâll tell Tony myselfâyou feel less like the person who said them and more like a dog with its tail tucked between its legs.
The penthouse is as quiet as Manhattan allows, and even with your in-nose and in-ears in since the moment you left Timâs cabin, the world still echoes. Likeâshockerâit doesnât bend just to meet your sensory standards.
âYou want to continue it?â Tony asks, eyes fixed on a projection hovering over his desk.
âContinue what?â you ask, shifting your weight between your feet.
His gaze lingers on the graphic for a moment longer before slowly dropping to you.
âThe mission.â
âThe mission is over,â you say, your brows pulling together.
âItâs not overâyou said that yourself.â
âYou want me toââ You shake your head. âDo you want me to continue it?â
Perhaps taking a hydrocodone before coming down here was a poor choiceâyou feel half-out of itâthe words leaving his lips almost sounding positive, rather than the full on character assault you had been anticipating during your drive.Â
âWhy wouldnât I?â Tony counters. âYou explained the situation. This is something that needs to be taken care of as soon as possible.â
âIâŠâ Your voice falters. âI donât know what to say.â
Maybe heâs not sounding positiveânoâmaybe heâs just being positive.Â
He studies you for a moment, letting the silence stretchâletting you sit in it.
âI thought youâŠâ You huff out a quiet, disbelieving laugh. âI thought you were going to be mad at me.â
Tony shakes his head as he pushes off his desk and walks toward you. He leans back against it instead, arms crossing over his chest, gaze dropping to the floor as your words settle.
âI donât blame you for what you did. If I had been there, he wouldâve been dead on the ground the moment I found out he had something to do with what happened to you.â
âBut I was careless.â You squint slightly, like you donât even agree with yourself. âWellâmaybe. Sam sure thinks so.â
âSam still sees you as what I saw you as a week ago.â
You meet his eyes, tension threading between youâuntil he breaks it first with a small smile.
âA kid,â Tony says with a soft laugh. âWhich is ridiculous. And itâs not fair.â
Your eyes widen slightly.
âYouâre young, sure,â he continues. âBut youâre just as qualified as anyone else hereâbecause youâve already been through it. At your age, youâve already been through it.â
You let the words knock around in your head, heavy and unfamiliar.
âI trust you,â he says. âI trust your capabilities to do what needs to be done. Even if I donât want you to get hurt. But itâd be selfish of me to hold you back, because at the end of the day, Iâd just be keeping you from the only thing youâve ever really known.â
He exhales, quieter now.
âI could sit here and try to reshape you into something Iâd be more comfortable withâbut youâre already more than enough. Youâre already operating on a level I couldnât have imagined at your age.â
A pause.
âThe only thing thatâsâŠquestionable is the baggage. But we all have that. Yours might be heavierâbut thatâs okay. Youâre tough. And honestly? Youâre probably more capable than most when it comes to carrying it. Even if you drive me nuts. Even if you make bad calls.â
A faint smirk tugs at his mouth, âBecause every bad call teaches you something. And eventually, you stop making the same ones.â
He straightens slightly, âSo yeah. I want you to continue.â
âTonyâŠâ you breathe.
âBut,â he adds, pointing at you, âdepending on what youâre doing and where youâre going, you loop me in. Or Cap. Or Rhodey. You donât go in blind with just your team.â
âMy team?â you echo.
âWilson and Barnes.â
âTheyâre my team?â
They had been there, sure. But it hadnât exactly feltâŠintentional. Or mutual.
âI mean, unless you donât want them to be,â he shrugs. âBut I talked to themâwell, I talked to Wilson. Barnes is⊠Barnes. But they both asked if this was going to continue.â
Your stomach twists.
âThey did?â
âYeah.â
And suddenly, you have a memory of Barnesâthe tension, the sharpness, the almost-argument you had the evening you had gotten back.Â
Well, almost-argument was putting it lightly. You had been cruelâmean. And yet after all of that, here heâs beenâadvocating for youâand if not exactly you, at least something you care so much about.Â
Guilt settles in, quiet but persistent.
âAnd even though Samâs a little frustrated with your choices,â Tony continues, âhe gets it. And IâwellâI may have shown him your ribbon rack.â
You blink.
âLetâs just say he didnât even know it was possible to rack up that many expert marksmanship badges. Especially not in three years.â
You donât respond. You just let it sit. Let it settle. Let it sink into the coldest parts of you.
The blizzard thatâs been tearing through your head for months doesnât stopâbut it shifts. Just slightly. A crack in the storm. A thin beam of sunlight slipping through heavy clouds.
Somewhere deep inside, ice begins to meltâslow, quiet, almost unnoticeable.
The storm is still there. But the levee isnât about to break anymore.
Circling Sam on the mat, the two of you somehow managing to break a sweat with minimal effort, your bare feet glide against the canvasâlight, measured, controlled.
âYou hit like a girl,â he huffs, already a little winded.
âI never said I was good at fighting,â you shoot back, breath steady despite the heat gathering under your skin.
âWell, you need to be.â
âHasnât been an issue yet.â You shrug.
A week and a half has passed since your conversation with Tony. In that time, youâand, surprisingly, Sam and Natâhave been piecing together scraps of intel, chasing leads that barely qualify as leads. Languages help. Patterns help. People are careless in ways they donât realize.
HYDRA isnât stupid enough to hand over an address, but they are arrogant enough to communicate sloppily. There was evidence of a paper trail in the documents Tim had contained inside that folder on his desk. A location mentioned. Again, probably nothing butâitâs somethingâNat seemed pretty certain that there was some importance about it.Â
âHow the hell were you in Delta Force?â Sam mocks.
âYouâre quick to judge for someone just standing there holding mitts,â you bite back.
âI canât fight youâthatâd be unfair,â he argues.
You tilt your head slightly, irritation flickering.
âDo you want to see why I was able to be in Delta Force?â
He blinks.
âPut them down,â you nod toward the pads. âTry coming at me.â
âDo you see this, Rogers?â Sam glances over his shoulder.
Steve, arms crossed, leans against the ropes, a faint grin tugging at his mouth. âHonestly, I was getting a little bored.â
Sam shakes his head, tossing the pads aside. They hit the mat with a dull slap.
The mission sits in the back of your mindâKazakhstan, Mongolia, Siberiaâspecifically in mid January. Your skin crawls at the thought of that kind of cold. You think you should say somethingâabout howâŠsensitive you can be in regard to brutal temperatures. But unless you were wanting to be left behind, perhaps itâs best you donât bring that issue up. Because if you do, you know exactly how that conversation endsâwith a âno.â
âAlso, while weâre at it,â Sam adds, rolling his shoulders, âYona was right. Youâre too thin.â
âJust hit me already,â you mutter, rolling your eyes.
He doesnât hesitate.
The first punch comes fastâclean, directed to your jaw.
But youâre already gone. Not reactingâanticipating.
Your body shifts a fraction of a second before he even fully commits, your head tilting just enough for his fist to cut through empty air. You pivot on your heel, sliding out of range like water slipping through fingers.
He adjusts, eyebrows furrowing.Â
Throws a combinationâleft, right, hook. You weave through it. Each movement precise. Economical. No wasted energy. Itâs not speed for the sake of speedâitâs inevitability. You already know where heâs going before he does. You can feel it in the shift of his weight, the tension in his shoulders, the microsecond hesitation in his breath.
As if itâs already decided.
His foot pivotsâand youâre gone. His hip turnsâand suddenly, youâre not there.
âJesusââ he mutters, frustration creeping in.
He speeds up. A sharp side kick aimed at your ribsâyou step inside it before it even fully extends, his leg slicing past your back as you pivot around him. He spins, throws anotherâhigher this time.
You duck. Okay, that was close. Too close.
Your shoulder brushes his chest as you pass him, already repositioning.
He exhales sharply, recalibrating. Then he commitsâfully. A final, heavy kickâstrong, deliberate, meant to land. You let it come. Wait.
Then right at the last secondâyour hand shoots out, catching his ankle mid-air. The impact travels up your arm, but you hold it steady, grip tightening.
Thereâs a split second where everything pauses. Thenâyou step in and drive your knee up. Direct. Precise. Merciless. Aimed for the crotch.Â
Sam folds instantly, the air leaving his lungs in a strangled groan as he crumples to the mat, clutching himself.
Works every time.Â
Silenceâthen clapping. Steve.
You release Samâs leg, letting it drop as you brush your hands off against the front of your shorts like youâve just finished something minor.
âYeah,â you say, not even out of breath, âyou can absolutely beat my assâbut youâll never land a single punch because Iââ
âCan sense it before I even throw itâyeah, got itââ Sam groans from the floor, voice strained.
You step over the ropes, Steve offering you a hand as you hop down. You take it.
And thenâpauseâbecause heâs already looking at you. Eyes steady. Focused.
You narrow yours slightly, caught off guard for half a secondâJesus. Thereâs something unfair about the way he just exists. Like someone sculpted him with a little too much intention.
His hand liftsâgentle, carefulâand he brushes a stray strand of hair from your forehead.
You let him. Itâs brief. Quiet. Not heavyâbut not nothing. His pupils widen just slightly. You notice. Of course you do.
You swallow down the hint of a grin, stepping back, slipping out from under the moment before it can become anything more. A flicker of annoyance followsâif you could smell right now, youâd know. Youâd have confirmation.
Not that youâd act on itâŠbut itâs still nice to feel wanted.Â
âWhen do we leave?â you ask quickly, turning away, already moving toward the exit. Your skin itchesârestless, unsettledâmind already drifting toward something numbing.
âUhâI think tomorrow morning?â Steve says, glancing back. âSam?â
Sam drags himself up with a groan, still wincing. âYeahâwe leave in the morning,â he pants. âWonât get there till three the next day.â
You donât slow. Just nod once. And keep walking.
âŠ
The night before had been sleeplessâor the entire week youâve been home really.Â
Your eyelids drag now, heavy, soreâbut itâs not just the lack of sleep. Itâs the why of it. The reason your brain refuses to shut off, even now, even with the low hum of the quinjet vibrating beneath your feet.
Tim. What he said. What you already knewâbut couldnât fully admit. Or didnât let yourself.
That you shouldâve smelled it. The same thing that you had always thought. And Tim made that thought real. Simple. Blunt. Like it was obvious.
The compound. The bomb. The thing that ended everything. You shouldâve caught it. That nightâright before the explosionâthere had been that âsomethingâ. A flicker. A moment where your brain had almostâalmostâpicked up on it.
You had felt itâŠand yet, you had justâŠignored it. Brushed past it like it didnât matter. At least, like it didnât matter as much as the man sitting next to you at the time.Â
For months, you sat with that. The maybe. The possibility that you missed something. That you failed. But it had been uncertain. Blurry. Something you could reshape in your mind.
And Tim took that away. Because he confirmed it. You did smell itâyou just werenât paying attention.Â
Your jaw tightens.Â
Thomas. The smell of himâwarm, familiar, grounding in a way that cut through everything else. Something you leaned into without thinking. Something that pulled your focus so completely that everything elseâevery warning signâeverything that could have saved themâfaded into the background.
You swallow. Because now it isnât just guilt. Itâs not just you couldâve done something. Itâsâyou would have. If you hadnât been soâyou inhale sharply through your nose, eyes flicking down to your handsâenamored. Distracted. Weak.
And now theyâre dead because of you.
Your fingers curl slightly against your knees. But your brain doesnât stop there. It never does. It moves. Slides somewhere worse. Across from you. Barnes.
You donât look at him. Not directly. But youâre aware of him in the way youâre aware of everything nowâtoo aware. The space he takes up. The way he sits. The quiet tension that never seems to leave him.
Your stomach twists. Because the memory comes back sharp. The other night. Your room. The way you snapped at him. Cruel. Immediate. No hesitation.Â
And you had told yourself the outburst was because he didnât understand. Because he was pushing. Because he was trying to relate when he had no right to.
Butâyour brows knit slightlyâbecause thatâs not the whole truth. Not really. Because now, sitting hereâwith Timâs words still echoing, with everything finally lining up the way you didnât want it toâyou can see it clearer. You werenât just reacting to him. You were reacting to what he reminded you of.
The same feeling. The same pull. The sameâyour jaw tightens again. Because itâs worse now.
Thomas had been intense. You remember that. You remember how easy it had been to get lost in itâto let it take over, to let everything else fade out around it. And that had been enough to get people killed.
But Barnesâyou shift slightly in your seat, adjusting your posture like thatâll settle anythingâBarnes is stronger. Not physically. No, not just that. But the pull.
Whatever this even isâit hits harder with him. Faster. Sharper. Like your body doesnât even give you the option to ignore it. And that realization sits heavy in your chest.Â
The anger. The way you lashed out. The way you shut him down before he could get too close to anything real. It wasnât just about him understandingâit was about controlâŠor your lack of it.
Because if what happened with Thomas was enough to make you miss something that got your entire squad killedâthen what the hell does that make this?
Something youâve been tryingâand failingâto ignore. It had been there before. You know that now. You just hadnât named it.Â
Lust.
You feel it againâsharp and immediateâas you sit across from him. Neither of you looking at each other, yet something shifts anyway.
This isnât just attraction. It doesnât fit into anything normal, anything controlled. Itâs something else entirelyâsomething that feels less like emotion and more like reaction. Like instinct. Like something wired into you. Primal. Animalistic. And worst of allânatural.
In the week since youâve been back, you havenât just been preparing for the semester. Youâve been reading. Researching. Trying to find an answer to the question thatâs been building since Siberiaâsince the first moment you smelled him and something in your body recognized it.
Pheromones.
Not just theory. Not just animalsâhumans. Suppressed, maybe. Diminished, sure. But not gone.
And youâyou arenât normal. And neither is he. Enhanced senses. Altered biology. Systems pushed further than they were ever meant to go.
Maybe this has always existed. Maybe people just couldnât feel it. But you can.
And whatever this isâthis pull, this overwhelming, consuming awareness of himâit doesnât feel optional. It feels inevitable.
You shift in your seat, your gaze flickering toward him before you can stop it. Immediately, you look away.
Because even thinking about it is enough to make your body reactâand the realization that he might noticeâthat he might actually be able to sense itâheat creeps up your neck.
And the worst part? You donât think itâs one-sided. You donât think youâre imagining it. If this is realâif this is chemical, biological, unavoidableâthen he feels it too. He has to.
The thought settles in, quiet and dangerous. And suddenly, humanity makes a lot more sense.
The violence. The impulsivity. The way people lose control, act without logic, destroy everything in front of them. It doesnât feel confusing anymore. Because if this is whatâs underneath it allâif this is what people would feel without the limits of dulled sensesâthen maybe none of it is as shocking as you once thought.
Maybe weâve always been this way. Animals, pretending otherwise. And the only thing separating everyone else from realizing itâis that they simply canât feel it as deeply as you do.
The silence of the quinjet breaks like a shattering vase as Steveâs voice cuts through from the cockpit.
âAlright, steady altitude now. We should be there within the next few hours.â
He nods at you, then to Barnesâhis gaze lingering for just a moment, flicking between the two of you like he can feel somethingâs off. Lips pursed, he moves past, dropping onto one of the cots near the back. He kicks his feet up and pulls out a book.
You roll your eyes at the title. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Christ. Wellâhey. At least he made it that far.
A throat clears from the front.
âDo we know what the plan is?â Sam calls back.
Silence. Yours and Barnesâs eyes both driftâthen land on Steve. Because obviously neither one of you were entrusted with actually making the plan.
Sam raises an eyebrow, twisting in his seat to look back at Steve sprawled on the cot.
You sigh, leaning over and poking Steveâs leg with your finger.
âYouâve been summonedâŠâ you mumble, a slight crinkle in your eyes as his attention snaps back up.
âSorryâwhat was the question?â he asks, sitting upright.
âI was just going over the plan.â Sam reiterates.Â
âRight,â Steve nodsâthen pauses, like he doesnât remember a single word of it.
You sigh again. They may not have trusted you to make the planâbut youâve had the whole thing mapped out in your head since the day this excursion was even decided.Â
âWe land in the woods,â you start, already picturing it, âwalk three miles to the cabin, set up, and wait. Two of us head out early afternoon, hike to the low spot about a mile from the locationâpre-map it, clear it if needed. Early the next morning, the other twoâincluding Sam, aerialâcome in from the opposite side. We regroup, and go from there.â
âI shouldâve asked Barnes,â Sam huffs, âItâs basically cheating with you.â
Well, heâs not wrong. But youâre generally too irritated to watch people try and play guessing games. They either know it, or they donât. And judging by the looks on their faces, you were definitely the only person really caring to pay attention during the debriefing.Â
âWait,â Steve cuts in, brows lifting. âWho leaves the night before and who stays behind? Have we decided on that?â
âWell, obviously sheâll need an accompaniment,â Sam says. âSo either you or Barnes goes with her.â
âWho says I need an accompaniment?â You grill.Â
âYou,â Sam shoots back immediately, âliterally yesterday. When you said that I could easily beat your ass.â
âOkay,â you snap, âI showed you how capable I was at evading all your attacks.â
Sam stares at you, completely unimpressed. Then tilts his head slightly toward Steve, âWhat do you think?â
Steve considers it for a moment, âI donât know⊠if itâs only one person going in from the other side, it should probably be me.â
âWhy?â Barnes cuts in.
Steve blinks. âWhat?â
âYou say that like you think Iâm incapable.â
âIn his defense,â Sam adds, âyou were a HYDRA assassin three months agoââ
Glancing around at the three men as they begin exchanging arguments, you decide to cut in.
âI can do itââ
They all cut you off before you can even finish getting the words out, âNo.â
All three of them. At once. Your head snaps toward Barnes.
He isnât looking at you. Not at anyone. Just staring down at his hands like the conversationâs already over.
Your mouth parts slightly. Did he justâDid he just say no to you? Like he has any say in this whatsoever?
You canâtâyou cannot go with him. It would beâcounterproductive doesnât even begin to cover it. Going would be the exact opposite of everything you had just been trying to convince yourself of not even ten minutes ago.
âFine.â He interrupts your train of thought.Â
Your ears perk.
Barnes exhales, like the word cost him something, âYeah. Fine. Thatâs fine.â Still not looking at you. âIâll take the kid.â
Hah. Him too now? The kid.
The phrase echoes immediatelyâtoo familiar, too easy. It bounces around your skull like itâs found a permanent home there. A chorus. Background noise to every waking thought, every half-conscious drift, every chemically-induced lull youâve been slipping into just to get some rest.
Iâll take the kid. It drowns everything else out. You donât hear what they say next. Not really. Just that word. That name. The kid.
You almost laugh. Have to fight the urge to stand up, rip the devices out of your nose, and plant yourself directly in his lap just to prove a point.
This kid?
This kid thatâscientifically speaking, whether he wants to acknowledge it or notâcould very easily have him adjusting the front of his pants?
The initial wave of dreadâof possibly being paired with himâfades almost as quickly as it came. Replaced. Twisted into something else entirely.
Because wasnât that what you were just thinking? How heâs worse than Thomas? How whatever pull he has is stronger? More dangerous? Something you shouldnât test?
Pride is a funny thingâor maybe it isnât pride. Maybe itâs just spite, dressed up well enough to pass.
He wants to call you a kid? The hundred-year-old man who somehow manages to act no more mature than you?
Yeah. Right. Two can play that game.
You havenât stopped looking at him. Your gaze burnsâunsubtle, intentionalâuntil it finally pulls him out of whatever hole heâs been staring into.
His eyes lift. Find yours. Thereâs a split second where something shiftsâand you donât even try to hide the smirk that spreads across your lips.
Youâll torment him. Like something persistent. Something irritating. Something he canât shake no matter how hard he tries. Youâll push. Prod. Get under his skin until thereâs nothing left but dust.
And in the endâyouâll enjoy every second of watching how much he wants you. Just to prove itâto prove youâre rightâyou push yourself up, excusing yourself without a word, heading toward the back of the quinjet.
The bathroom door shuts behind you with a soft click. The mirror stares back. You stare back harder.
Your hands move automaticallyâreaching up, slipping the in-ears out first. The quiet shifts instantly, the world dulling, flattening in a way that almost makes your head spin. Although this had actually been allowed. They were letting you use this talent of yoursâhowever reluctantly.Â
But you push it further. The in-nose. The second it comes free, thereâs a subtle, disorienting dropâlike your body doesnât quite know how to recalibrate without it. You steady yourself against the counter, breath shallow for a second as you tuck both devices into your pocket.
You meet your own gaze again. Not a kid. Not to him. Not to anyone. Not anymore.
The rest of the flight had gone exactly as anticipatedâyour fingers gripping the edge of the seat until your knuckles turned white. Eventually, you caved and put the in-nose back in, the confinement becoming too much without it. After that, you relocated to one of the cots and pretended to sleep.
By the time you landed, you were wound tight, exhausted, and completely unprepared for the mission ahead.
And then there was the cold.
That creeping, unavoidable dread had already started to settle inâespecially during the mid-morning walk from the quinjet to the cabin. Temperatures were at their highest, and you were still shivering. That didnât bode well.
Steve and Sam had taken over the mapsâSam handling most of the technical side, obviously. The other two dinosaurs contributing where they could. They let you fill in gaps when needed, though.
Even then, you found yourself half-dozing on the couch in the middle of the living room. The thing was ancientâsprings digging straight into your spineâbut it didnât stop your body from trying to shut down anyway.
At one point, you caught Barnes cleaning a gun. Later, sharpening a knife.
And thenânothing.
MIA for most of the morning. Most of the afternoon.
Until now. Because the plan you had recited from memory was already in motion, the two of you hiking side by side as the sun dipped low on the horizon, bleeding into dusk.
The tension between you isâŠpresent. Palpable.
Youâve been walking for a little over two hours. Your feet are numb. Your fingers worse. Even through gloves and boots, the cold has found its way inâsettling beneath your nails, a sharp, persistent sting that borders on unbearable.
But without the in-ears, your other senses have overcompensated, dulling the pain just enough to keep you moving.
The in-nose is in, only this time itâs turned down.
Up until earlier you hadnât remembered that you never actually needed to remove it in the first place. Just like the in-ears, it too could be adjusted. Lowered. Controlled.
Yet, even at a reduced levelâheâs still there.
Not overwhelming like before. Not suffocating. But something else. Something quieter. Like a prescription depressant settling into your bloodstreamâsteady, calmingâjust enough that you havenât needed to snort anything since landing.
âWould you stop that?â His voice cuts through the quiet like ice cracking beneath your feet.
You glance over, brow lifting.
First words either of you have spoken to each other since the argument after arriving home from Appalachia.
âStop what?â you bite back.
âYour teeth are chattering,â he says, like itâs an inconvenience. âWhatâare you cold or something?â
Yes. You are. But the chattering isnât from the cold. Not entirely. Itâs the stimulant. The one currently threading through your system, making up for the complete lack of sleep youâve had all week. No thanks to him, by the way.Â
Heyâyou said no depressants. This isnât that. And plus, you donât even have to snort it, so it doesnât really count.Â
âNo,â you scoffâand right on cue, a sharp gust of wind slices through, biting at the exposed skin of your cheeks and nose.
You donât finish your sentence. Your feet stop. Mid-step. Every muscle in your body goes still. The hairs on the back of your neck rise instantly.
He turns, irritation flashing, âWhat are youââ
âShh.â Your voice drops, a finger lifting toward him. âDo you hear that?â
He freezes, eyes scanning. Back and forth. Like a clock.
âHear what?â he presses, something uneasy slipping beneath the annoyance.
And thenâthere.
You move before the thought even finishes forming. Turning. Body aligning with the sound. Your hand finds your pistol like muscle memoryâsmooth, practiced, effortless. It slides free, already raised, already aimed. No hesitation. Fifty yards. You donât even think.
The shot lands with a muted thudâthe silencer swallowing most of it, the snow catching the body as it drops.
Stillness.
âShitâŠâ he breathes, eyes snapping between you and the dark shape crumpled in the distance. âHow did youââ
You donât answer. Not yet. Your head moves, scanningâleft, right, behindâmapping everything, recalculating, making sure there isnât anything else.
The sound had been smallâbut enough. Enough for everything to click back into place. The geometry of the space. The distance. The direction. Like it never left.
âThat was it,â you say finally, breath steady, eyes lingering before drifting back to him.
Heâs staring at you. Like youâre something unfamiliar. Lips parted. Eyes wide.
âWhat?â you snap, sharper than necessary.
âIââ he shakes his head slightly. âYou didnât evenâyou just turned and shot. How did youââ
You tap your ear. Then gesture vaguely outward, âI donât need to aim,â you shrug. âNot when itâs this quiet.â
You start walking. Back toward the body. A small, humorless huff leaves you, âHa⊠wellâif a body falls in the forest and thereâs no one there to hear it, does it make a sound?â
âShitâŠâ he mutters again, still trying to process. âMaybe to you.â
You nod, âdamn straight.â
The man is Slavic. Standard patrol, most likelyâlike this place is even worth guarding. Your gaze drops to his ear. Comms.
You hold a hand out, stopping Barnes before he gets too close, and crouch slightlyâlistening. Itâs on.
But there's no audible panic. No alarm. Just static. Routine rotation chatter. Waiting for a check-in.
âYou still speak Russian, donât you?â you ask, glancing up. âOr did you forget that too?â
He glares at youâmind going back to the last conversation youâd had, âWhy?â
âBecause if they check in,â you say, pulling the comm from the manâs ear, âyour voice is going to sound a lot more convincing than mine.â
You glance at the body again, studying the angle. He hadnât been facing you. Didnât even see it coming, âThankfully,â you add, âI donât think he knew we were here. Not yet, at least.â
Barnes exhales slowly, âThat was insane,â he says. âYou shot that far with a pistolâIâve never evenââ
âHonestly?â you shrug, nudging the body lightly with your boot, watching the blood spread into the snow. âThat was sloppy.â
A pause, âI prefer a rifle. Butâheyâbeggars canât be choosers.â
Too bulky, Sam had said. Donât push your luck.
Yeah. Right.
âShould we tell them?â he asks.
You shake your head, âNot yet. They might getâŠapprehensive.â
âWell, Iâm sure theyâd like to know there are guys justâŠhanging out in trees.â
You sigh, lips pressing together, âWell,â you mutter, âthatâs what Sam is for.â
âŠ
The dip in the earth where youâd planned on setting up your makeshift camp is nice for one reasonâthe wind isnât hitting you directly. Which, considering the howling you can hear tearing past the outside of the tent, is shockingâthank god for the nylon walls currently surrounding you.
What isnât nice, however, is the fact that as you lay here, you can see the tips of your fingers turning white. Because cold is an understatement. If you donât thaw out soon, you may wind up like Cap or Barnes.Â
The only issue is, youâre not allowed to build a fire. Especially not now, not after the man in the tree.
So instead, you lay thereâBarnes on the opposite side of the tentâawake. Very awake. His heart rate isnât steady enough otherwise.
And you find yourself beggingâsilently, desperatelyâto whatever god might be listeningâŠthat he doesnât say anything. Because the idea of anyone thinking youâre weaker than you already areâitâs too much.
And as if he can hear your thoughtsâhe speaks.
âYour teethâŠâ he groans. âAre so loud.â
You stare up at the fabric stretched above you.
âYou didnât answer my question earlier,â he adds. âAre you cold?â
You blink slowly. Maybe if you stay still enough, heâll think youâre asleep.
He doesnât. Instead, he shoots upright, crossing the tent in seconds, dropping down beside you.
âJesus,â he mutters, his flesh hand pressing to your forehead. âKid, youâreâheyâare you alright? Youâre freezing.â
That word again. Kid. If you had the energy, youâd argue. Youâd fight it. But heâs right. And your body knows it.
âHeyââ he taps your cheek, then grips it lightly, trying to pull your focus. âHey, look at meââ
And you do. Your eyes drag toward his face. You try to scowlâtry to make it look like youâve just been woken upâbut your face wonât cooperate.
Instead, a slow, stupid grin spreads across your lips. Because of courseâof course in this half-frozen, half-delirious stateâjust like the archivesâbeing this close to him pulls that version of you right back to the surface.
âZurrprisseeeâŠâ you slur.
âJesus Christ,â he mutters, grabbing your shoulders and hauling you up into a sitting position. âHow are you this cold? I thought youââ
âNo,â you huffâbarely more than air. âI donâ⊠I donâ have enhannnced consâuhâtutionâŠâ
âWhat?â His brows pull together. âWhat do youââ
âMânot like you ân St-t-t-eve,â your teeth chatter through it. âI got tha tricks⊠jusâ⊠mmm⊠thaâs it rillyâŠâ
His expression darkens.
âLet me get this straight,â his voice drops low, controlled. âYou agreed to come out here knowing your body canât handle the cold?â
You try to laughâbut it comes out as a weak wheeze.âMmm⊠noâŠâ you mumble. âSâworse.â
You swallowâyour mouth dry. âNâactually⊠worse than normal people cusâŠâ your hand lifts, uselessly rubbing at your nose, not feeling your fingersâyour faceââcus mâso sensitive tâ touch⊠ân stuffâŠâ
He stares at you. But youâre barely focused on his face anymore. Too distracted by the heat coming off him. That warmth. That pull.
Your grin widens again, stupid and loose, as you reach outâslow, uncoordinatedâand poke the tip of his nose. You manage it once. Before his hand gently catches your wrist. He doesnât comment. Just moves. Pulling you out of your bag and dragging you toward his.
âWeeeeâŠâ you murmur, amused.
He doesnât laugh.
âYou think this is funny?â he scoffs, already unzipping his bag. âYouâre twenty minutes away from dying.â
He settles firstâthen pulls you in with him. Your body presses against his. Warm. So warm.
His breath catchesâjust barelyâbut you feel it. Not hear it. Feel it. Like something in him reacts before he can stop it.
âOhhh⊠mmmâŠâ the sound leaves you without permission. âFuck⊠youâre so fucking warm.â
He goes rigid. You feel it instantly. Even like thisâyou catch it. The reaction. The tension. The want.
But you donât get to enjoy it. Because suddenlyâyour body lights up. Pain. Sharp, electric, violent. Like static under your skinâlike your nerves are being dragged back to life all at once.
Your body jerks again, and for a second your back presses fully into his chestâclose enough that you can feel the way he goes completely still behind you.
Your sound shifts instantlyâa broken groan replacing the earlier warmth, âShitâŠâ you gasp, twisting. âShit, Iââ
You try to push awayâaway from him, away from the feelingâ
âHeyââ he follows, hands steady but firm. âHey, you just gotta breathe through itâitâs gonna hurt for a few minutes.â
You fold forward, knees tucked under you, hands braced against the sleeping bag. Your body tenses. Twitches.
Godâyouâre going to be sickâ
Then his hand lands on your back. Heavy. Warm. Moving slowly in circlesâand you canât tell if itâs to calm you downâŠor himself.
And something in you loosens. Just slightly.
âOkay⊠umâŠâ he mutters, thinking. âIf the sensationâs too muchâcanât you⊠shift it? Make another sense stronger?â
Heâs rightâŠeven if itâs a terrible idea.
âMy noseâŠâ you groan, fingers gripping the fabric of the sleeping bag. âFuckâcould you take out my nose?â
Shit. Shit.
âI need to see your face,â he says quietly. âCan you sit up for me?â
His hand presses lightly against your lower back, guiding you. The other comes up, steadying you at your collarbones.
Your eyes squeeze shut. Your lip pulls between your teeth. You breathe out sharply as his fingers find the silicone under your septumâpinching, slidingâand removing the device.
You donât breathe. Not at first. You just sit there. Because you know what happens next.
âGotta breathe,â he urges softly. âYouâre not getting color back.â
You shake your head weaklyâfighting itâbut itâs no use. Finally, you tilt it upâand inhale. Fully. Deep.
âAlrightââ he startsâ
His grip tightens slightlyâsubtle, but thereâas if he feels the shift in you the second it happens. But the sound you make cuts him off. Euphoric. Relieved.Â
And not just from the pain easing. Because heâs everywhere now. Flooding you. Like an IV drip straight into your veins. Like morphine. Replacing pain with something heavier. Something consuming.
You pitch forward again, your fist slamming into the ground.
âThere you go,â he says, voice softer now. âIs that better?â
You bite back a whineâbut it slips anyway, ââŠyes,â you breathe.
After a few moments, your body begins to settle. The pain dulls. Your muscles loosen. And you collapse forwardâboneless, exhausted.
The sensation of Him lingersâglittering, invasive, addictive. Dangerous. Because nowâwith the steady rhythm of his heart behind youâthe baseline hum of his bodyâthe smell of him wrapping around every inch of your awarenessâyou start to drift.
Like a child. Like something small and safe. Like you donât have to feel anything else.
âIâm sorryâŠâ you whisper.
He shifts slightly behind you, âItâs alrightâitâs an important missionââ
âNo,â you cut in, shaking your head. âNoâIâm sorry for the other night. I was⊠rude.â
You donât look at himâbut youâre aware of how close he still is. Close enough that if you straightened up your spine, youâd be pressed fully against him again.
He doesnât respond immediately. Just lets it sit.
âIt wasnâtâI wasnât mad at you,â you continue quietly. âI was upset about other things. I took it out on you.â
Silence.
âIf you ever want to talk about it,â you mumble, voice strained, âjustâfuckâdo me a favor and wait until Iâm not feeling traumatized.â
âArenât you always?â he says dryly.
His hand pulls back slightly as he says itâlike heâs only just now realizing where itâs been. But thereâs something softer underneath it.
It pulls a weak laugh out of you. You shift, slowly sitting back up, turning toward himâminding the proximityâbut you canât meet his eyes. All that confidence. All that certainty. Gone.
You were so sure you could play with him. Control it. And nowâyou canât even look at him.
âI should probably go lay back down,â you mutter.
He makes a face, âas much as I may prefer thatâŠâ
Ouch. And alsoâliar.
âI think itâd be smarter if we shared,â he adds, more serious now. âYour lips are still blue. Your nose is still pink.â
âWhat?â you tease, a flicker of energy returning. âDonât want me laying next to you?â
He rolls his eyesâbut the seriousness doesnât leave.
âIâm notâŠâ he starts, shaking his head slightly. âEver since⊠Iâm not great atâtouch. Or people touching me.â
And you see him. Really see him. And it hitsâbecause he had been right. Youâre really not that different.
âIâm the same,â you say quietly. âIf that⊠helps.â
A small, awkward laugh escapes you.
âUsually Iâd fight you on this,â you admit. âBut⊠I know you wouldnât let that happen.â
He shakes his head immediately, âNoâIâd never force you to do anything.â
A faint smile pulls at your lips.
You settle back down on the ground where the warmth still lingers, eyes blinking up at him as he kneels over you.Â
Thereâs a secondâjust a secondâwhere he hesitates before laying down next to youâbut he does. Then another as he tries pulling you inâlike heâs giving himself the chance to stop.
âYou want to know my secret?â you whisperâthe two of you almost enveloped in each otherâlaying front to front, noses only inches apart.Â
For a second, neither of you moves. Not really. But something shifts. Itâs subtleâso subtle itâs almost nothing.
The tilt of your head, barely there. The way his breath slowsâlike heâs waiting for something he canât quite name. The space between you closes by fractionsâyour noses almost brushing, your lips close enough that if either of you movedâ
just a littleâIt wouldnât take anything.
It doesnât feel like a decision. Doesnât even feel like a thought. More like gravityâor nature. Like something pullingâquiet, inevitableâŠ
âSometimes I donât mind being forced,â you murmur, breaking through. âEspecially if itâs something I need.â
That doesnât work for most people around you. But him? Something about him makes you want to pushâjust to be pushed back. To fightâjust so you can lose. So he can put you exactly where you belong.
The two of you look at each other. Just for a moment.
But then he moves up, grabbing at the top of the sleeping bag, and closing it around you both, your body getting tucked into his side, his arm settling beneath your head, his back now flat on the ground.
âIs this okay?â he asks.
His voice is steadyâbut too steady. Like heâs holding it there on purpose.
And thereâin his breathâyou catch it. That thread. That crack in his composure. The want. Real. Undeniable.Â
If this were any other momentâyouâd turn. Push into him. See how far it goes. But youâre too tired. Too close to freezing. Too overwhelmed. The thought alone loosens something in you.
Your breathing slowsâmatching his without you meaning to. Your eyes drift closed. Your body finally gives in.
Because he works. Better than anything else. Stronger than the meds. Stronger than the Ambien.
And just before sleep takes youâyou smell itâhear it, too.Â
His brain making melatonin, the soft puffs of it wafting out of his nostrils, feeding into your own. His breathing slowingâlike yours. His heart steadyingâlike yours. Like youâre pulling him under with you.
âŠ
The light begins to spill through the cracks in the nylon of the tent, birds chirping faintly in the distance as you start to stir. The initial jolt of waking makes it feel like something loud had pulled you out of sleepâbut a quick scan of your surroundings tells you otherwise.
You shift slightly, trying to sink back into itâbut somethingâs off. Your pillow. ItâsâŠnot comfortable.
Your eyes blink rapidly, your brain still lagging, not fully registering where the hell you areâuntil a low grumble sounds beneath you. You freeze.
Then pull back quickly, your head snapping downwardâand both you and Barnes wake at the exact same time.
Youâre laying flat on top of him. Stomach to chest. His eyes are already on you. Wide. Matching yours.
For a moment, neither of you moves. Not speaking. Not even breathing properly. JustâŠthere. Thenâthe commlink crackles to life beside you.
Both your heads whip toward it as Samâs voice cuts through, irritated.
âHello? Wilson to Barnes!â Thereâs a muffled shift, like heâs turned away from the mic. âHello? Are you guys good?â
You glance down at your watch, âShitâŠâ
You peel yourself off Barnes quickly, your movements rushed, slightly clumsy as he reaches for the comm.
âHeyâyeah, everythingâs goodââ he says, slipping it into his ear.
Samâs voice filters through, âWhere the hell have you two been? Whatâs going on? We needed to reconvene an hour ago!â
A flicker of guilt hits you as you shove things into your bagâfast, messy. Because this was literally your mission.
âIâm sorry, weâŠâ Barnes starts, his eyes catching yours brieflyâsearchingâbefore he commits. âWe, uh⊠found someone in a tree.â
Your head snaps toward him. Both hands come up. âWhat the fuck?â You mouth it, exaggerated.
He shrugsâsmall, defensive.
âAw shit,â Sam continues. âIs the kid alright?â
Your eyes meet Barnesâs againâand this time, you donât miss it. The way his gaze moves over you. Quick. Checking. But it lingersâjust for a secondâat your waist. Then itâs gone.
âSheâs fine,â he says quietly.
âHow was the cold? For a second we thought maybe you two had gotten hypothermia.â
You reach for the zipper, packing the last of your things, your brow lifting slightly. Waiting. Half expecting him to expose you for being more fragile than you had initially let on. Or worseâsay something stupid like you kept each other warm. But he doesnât.
âShe did fine,â he says, watching you as you stand and move toward the tent flap. âWho do you think noticed the guy in the tree?â
Heat creeps up your cheeks at that. Seriously? Are you blushing?Â
âOne of her only perks,â Sam replies.
You roll your eyes.
âGood morning, sunshine,â he adds. âI know youâre listening.â
You donât reactâjust step out into the cold. But thereâs a small smirk that pulls at your lips at Barnesâs response.
âSheâd probably hear you if you were just talking out loud in your current location without the comm.â
Sam laughs.
Outside, everything looks untouched. Frozen. Still. You canât imagine choosing to live out here. But when you turn and take in the mountains stretching endlessly behind youâyou almost understand it.
Almost.
Stillâout here, away from the tentâyou feel it immediately.
The absence. That scent. His scentâdiminished. The one that dragged you into the deepest sleep youâve had in months. You didnât wake once. And judging by himâneither did he.
You pull out your compact mirror, glancing at your reflection. Your finger taps lightly beneath your eyes. The dark circles are still thereâbut softer. LessâŠsevereâjust like his.Â
âWell, unless she wants to double-check,â Sam continues, voice crackling slightly, âCap and I already cleared the place. We found something.â
Your hand pauses mid-motion. You turn. Barnes is already looking at you.
âThere were guys in trees over here too,â Sam says. âStandard protocol for undisclosed HYDRA labs. This oneâs olderâbut everythingâs still connected.â
The two of you start walking toward each other.
Yours is logical, initiated by Samâs reconnaissanceâbut Barnes, his is less so. But the pull is there. Undeniable. Like something in him callsâand something in you answers before you can stop it. You stop in front of him. Close. Too close. Standing face to face, your gazes bleeding into one another.Â
A sharp gust of wind cuts through the space between youâa dull chill, like an unsharpened bladeâcurling around your bodies like itâs trying to push you together. And without thinking, you step forward.
Your hand presses flat against his chest.
He shifts. For a secondâjust a secondâit looks like heâs going to touch you back. Pull you in. But he doesnât.
âWhateverâs left of HYDRA,â Sam continues, his voice beginning to blur at the edges, âtheir head scientistâthe one giving ordersâheâs in Paris.â
Barnesâs lips part. Your eyes drop to them. His follow.Â
A beat passes. Then another.
âHe throws parties once a month,â Sam says. âBig jazz guy. Two weeks from nowânext one. Weâll go over it more on the jet, but Cap and I think itâs the best shot at intel.â
Barnes nods. But his attention isnât on Sam. Not really. Not anymore.
Your faces are inches apart now. The wind keeps movingâlike itâs working against you. Or for you. No clouds. No interruption. A part of you almostâalmostâthinks this is intentional. As if this is purely God's will.Â
âYou still there?â Sam calls, distant now.
And right before anything can happenâyou hear it. The shift. The pre-snap of wood under pressure. The crackling of frozen bark.Â
Your body moves before the sound fully forms. You turnâgun already in your handâand fire as if it was as easy as breathing.Â
The shot cuts clean through the silence. Another body drops. Silencers help, but again, in the quiet morning of this glacial woodland, the sound of the shot still casts a melodic, deep hum against the trees.Â
âY-yeah,â Barnes stutters, stepping forward, eyes locked on the fallen figure. âShe just shot another one.â
His arm comes across your chest instinctivelyâsubtle, protective.
âShitâis there anyone else?â Sam asks.
Youâre already scanning. Already calculating. You shake your head.
âNo,â Barnes repeats into the comm, voice lower now. âNo.â
âAlright,â Sam says. âHead back the way you cameâweâll meet you in the clearing.â
âUnless sheââ
âNo,â you cut in, your voice rough from sleep. âItâs fine. I trust them.âAnd without another wordâthe two of you start walking. Back the way you came. Together. Only this time, the tension is for a different reason.
Previous | Masterlist | Content Warnings | Next Chapter |
Below is a list of Soldier Boy fics I've read, some I haven't, and some that people have recommended on the behalf of others! Please check these out when you're in the mood for some grumpy danger grandpa and give some love to these writers!
Light - @anniewinchesterr
You Call It Maddness, I Call it Love - @lamentationsofalonelypotato
Take A Chance On Me - @lamentationsofalonelypotato
A Well Made Mistake - @thoughtslikeaminefieldÂ
She's Out To Please, She Pouts Her Best - @venus-haze
Old Habits - @wayward-and-wornÂ
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @lila-lou
-> Not sure where to start? I'd recommend His Only Exception or Loud
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @godmadeaterribleerror
-> Not sure where to start? I'd recommend No Love Lost or If Only You Knew
Soldier Boy x reader Masterlist - @syrma-sensei
Frequency - @previousloversandmuses
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @wayward-dreamer
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @deanbrainrotwritings
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @waynes-multiverse
-> Not sure where to start? I'd recommend Time After Time
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @zepskies
-> Not sure where to start? I'd recommend Break Me Down
Soldier Boy Masterlist - @luci-in-trenchcoats
-> Not sure where to start? I'd recommend Thunder In Our Hearts
If anyone has any other fics they'd like to see added, just let me know!
Pairing: Soldat!Bucky/Bucky x Reader
Word count: 6.4k
Warnings: PTSD, memory loss/memory retrieval, Bucky coming to terms with what the Soldat did, forced proximity, takes place after the events of CATWS, SMUT (dry humping, f oral, p in v, m masturbation), yearning, creampie, scent kink.
Summary: After the events of the causeway in D.C., you find the Assetâ sorry, Bucky on his way out of the Smithsonian. Will he come with you to the safe house?
+fran: I'm cutting myself off after this! No more prolonging this story (watch me bite my tongue and have something to write after this lmao. dividers by @/enchanthings
can be read alone, part 1 here and 2 here
Bucky.
His name was Bucky.Â
The museum lighting was too bright, too clean, reflecting off the glass in front of him like it was trying to show him a stranger. The man in the picture looked young. Confident. Grinning with the kind of careless charm that came from believing the world would keep turning the way it always had.
Well, it was James, but he went by Bucky. At least that's what the Smithsonian exhibit said. And the fragmented, barely-there memories that came back after beating Steve into a pulp.Â
Steve.
Captain America.Â
He remembered his metal fist coming down again and again, splitting Steve's skin against the shiny knuckles until his lip was bloody and he had purple blooming around his eye. Before he realized who he was in a fractured memory, he remembered wanting to make it hurt.Â
Wanting to make it hurt becauseâ
âI was in the middle of getting myself off.âÂ
After hearing Steve knock, he watched you shuffle to the door trying to put clothes on, trying to pretend you weren't leaking with him still.Â
As he hid in the doorway of your closet, in the dark trying to tuck himself back together, he heard your voice trail off, and bit back a growl in distaste. He didn't like Steve knowing you that intimately. âLike. Fully committed. Lights low. Door locked. Very enthusiastic.â
He heard the silence and then Steve's voice. âOh.â A few other murmured words, and he heard you again.Â
Cleary, this time. âYou donât want to supervise?â The thought of Steve touching you like that in any way, shape, or form, made him want to snap his neck like a twig.Â
You.
Steve's shadow and neighbor. Steve's friend.
He remembered your scent first. The strongest sense tied to memory. Peonies and musk and vanilla bypassed his thalamus and landed straight into his hippocampus and amygdala, burrowing deep there.Â
As he walked the halls of the exhibit, more and more pieces came back, slow and disjointed, like shards of painted glass scattered across the floor of his mind.
He passed the stand of pictures of him and Steve, the Howling Commandos, and what seemed to be his own fucking funeral. Bits and pieces battled for space in his brain he didn't have yet, giving way to a pounding sensation on the inside of his skull, sudden enough it made his vision blur for a few seconds.
Like some version of him was trying to break out.Â
His hand came up instinctively, fingers pressing against his temple as the museum hallway tilted slightly beneath his feet.
The exhibit around him blurred into color and glass and distant voices as another memory tried to surface, clawing its way up through the conditioning Hydra had hammered into his skull.
He staggered sideways, gripping the edge of a display case to steady himself. The metal fingers of his prosthetic curled against the glass with a faint screech that made a nearby tourist glance over.
Bucky pushed away immediately.
The air inside the museum suddenly felt wrong â too clean, too loud, too full of ghosts trying to claw their way back into his head.
He turned sharply and walked toward the side corridor heâd noticed earlier when he came in. A service hallway.
His footsteps echoed off concrete instead of polished marble now, each step sending another dull pulse through his skull. The headache hadnât eased â if anything, it throbbed harder the farther he moved from the exhibit.
Like his mind was angry at him for walking away before the picture was finished.
He pushed the door under the glowing red "EXIT" sign, and as soon as the sun hit him, the overhead of the exhibit faded away and the busy noise of D.C. filled his ears, he could feel oxygen in his lungs again.Â
In.
Out.
In.
Out.
As he breathed deep, he noticed an unmarked black car parked there. All tinted windows.Â
Bucky's heart raced again and his body tensed automatically. Predator instincts snapping into place before conscious thought could catch up.
Did they find me? Already?Â
His brain was going a million miles a minute and overheating.Â
He looked around, planning a getaway, looking for traps, snipers, and before he could get much further than that, the door opened, and out of the car you stepped.Â
He didn't recognize you, per se. But his body somehow⊠knew.Â
There was a manila envelope tucked under one arm, thick with papers and creased from being held too tightly. Your clothes were practical â thick, dark leggings, what looked like running shoes, a jacket zipped halfway up over a hoodie, and sunglasses.
Sunglasses that did nothing to hide the purple blooming on the apple of your cheek.Â
His fingers flexed as his stomach twisted at the sight, a little part of him knowing that was probably his doing. A small, ugly thought flickered through his mind.
You stopped a few feet from the car, studying him like youâd been doing it for a long time already.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. You could see the tension in his body, the uncertainty and distrust flashing in his eyes.Â
When he spoke, his voice came out rough, shaking at the beginning of the sentence, from not being used. "Who did that to you?"
The question seemed to surprise him almost as much as it did you.
He studied you for another second, like he was trying to fit you into the fractured spaces in his mind.
âThat,â you said quietly, âis a long story.â You walked to the other side of the car, opened the passenger door and threw the envelope on the seat, tuning back to him. "You coming?"
Washington faded in the rearview mirror in slow increments â traffic thinning, buildings lowering, glass and steel turning into brick and then eventually trees. The late afternoon sun filtered through the windshield in long, warm streaks that flickered across the dashboard as the road curved deeper into Virginia.
Bucky.
It felt so weird he had a name now.Â
You wondered exactly how much he remembered. You read the files as you gathered them before it all went to shit, you knew whatever twisted version you had of him, it wasn't the same one Steve tried to save.Â
Bucky didnât speak much.
He sat angled slightly toward the window, one arm resting loosely on the door, metal fingers flexing every so often like they had their own restless thoughts. His eyes moved constantly â mirrors, tree lines, passing cars.
You kept the drive steady, hands loose on the wheel, like this was just another quiet afternoon road trip instead of the first time youâd seen him since the causeway.
Eventually the paved highway gave way to a narrow two-lane road, then a gravel path that wound through thick woods. Tall trees leaned overhead, their branches forming a natural tunnel that swallowed the last hints of civilization behind you.
The cabin sat tucked beside a wide, slow river that caught the sunlight like glass. It wasnât large, but it was well kept â simple wood siding, a small wraparound porch, wide windows facing the water.
You parked the car near the edge of the clearing and turned the engine off.
For a moment neither of you moved.
The sudden silence of the woods settled around the car â water moving gently over rocks, leaves rustling in a breeze that smelled like pine and river mist.
Buckyâs eyes swept the property. He narrowed his gaze at the lack of findings. His jaw tightened, âToo clean,â he muttered under his breath.
You snorted. âYeah, well,â you said as you opened your door and stepped out onto the gravel, âI vacuum.â
His boots crunched lightly against the gravel when he got out of the car, as he stood beside the door, scanning the cabin again with the same sharp caution heâd had since the alley behind the museum.
As you walked to the trunk to get your duffel bags, one of your belongings and the other of food, you decided you'd be the chatty one. As it's always been.Â
You lifted a hand, gesturing vaguely toward the surrounding forest.
âOff grid. No utilities tied to my name. No property record in any government database worth a damn. Bought it under three shell companies and a retired fisherman in Montana who thinks he owns a lake house heâs never seen.â
âHydra doesnât know it exists.â You tilted your head slightly. âAnd neither does SHIELD. That part made his eyes narrow a fraction. You pushed the trunk closed and started toward the cabin steps. âJust me.â
As he followed you in, his eyes took inventory of the inside of the cabin. Warm air spilled out â wood smoke, clean linen, something faintly herbal from the kitchen.
Simple furniture. Neat. A couch near the fireplace. A small table at the center, over a rug. A bookshelf. A kitchen tucked into the back corner with the smallest kitchen island known to man.Â
"Bathroom's that way," you nodded your head to your left, dropping the duffel bags in the kitchen by the cabinets. "Bedroom's the door before."
No surveillance. No technology. Just quiet.
You put refrigerated things in the small fridge by the kitchen corner, and grabbed the duffel bag, handing it to him. "I figured you and Steve were the same size." He looked at you puzzled. "Got a few changed of clothes for you, washed away all his star splangled piousness."
Bucky didn't say anything, just stared at you like he was trying to grasp at a thread in his brain that kept slipping away.Â
You looked back at him, and nervously chuckled. "Okay, tough crowd."
Buckyâs gaze drifted back toward the table. Toward the envelope. It sat there like it had weight far heavier than paper should.
You followed his line of sight. âYeah,â you said after a beat, pushing away from the counter. âThat.â You fidgeted with the corners of the envelope. âItâs everything I could find.â
He tilted his head, as if spurring you on to keep talking. You stepped back again, folding your arms loosely.
âOn Bucky,â you continued. A small pause. âOn the Winter Soldier.â Another pause. âOn whoever the hell you decide you are when youâre done reading it.â
âHYDRA records. SHIELD files. Soviet archives. Mission logs.â Your mouth tilted faintly. âSome things even Natasha doesnât know exist.â
The cabin creaked softly as the wind moved through the trees outside.
It took Bucky two full days to feel some semblance that his body belonged to him again. He didn't feel underwater â at least not fully â anymore.Â
The envelope stayed unopened.
It sat on the small table near the couch like a quiet third presence in the room, its corners curling slightly from the humidity drifting in through the cracked windows. Every so often Buckyâs eyes would land on it, linger for a moment, and then move away again.
Instead, he watched you.
Not in the way he used to â not from rooftops with the cold focus of a rifle scope â but with a quiet, almost instinctive attention. Like his body had decided something before his mind could catch up.
He followed you without realizing he was doing it.
When you moved around the small kitchen in the morning, he drifted closer under the pretense of getting water. When you stepped outside to the porch with a mug of coffee, he appeared a minute later, leaning against the railing like the river had been calling him there all along.
Sometimes he didnât even seem aware of it.
Youâd turn around and find him standing in the doorway watching you chop vegetables, or sitting on the edge of the couch while you flipped through one of the battered paperbacks on the shelf.
Whatever pieces of Bucky Barnes were trying to claw their way back had nothing stable to attach to yet.
Except you.
Which was⊠complicated.
You were standing by the kitchen counter when you finally said it.
âIâve gotta head out tomorrow.â
âYouâre leaving.â Not a question.
You grabbed a bottle of water from the fridge, twisting the cap off with one hand. âCouple days,â you said casually. âMaybe three.â
His shoulders squared slightly, tension threading through the relaxed posture heâd had moments earlier. âFor what?â
You took a sip before answering. âGotta check on a couple people.â His eyes narrowed a fraction.
âSteve.â You gave a small nod.
âAnd Nat.â The reaction was tiny. So small most people probably wouldnât have noticed it.
âWhy?â
You shrugged one shoulder. âBecause theyâre probably looking for both of us.â Another pause. âAnd because theyâre my friends.â
That word hung in the air longer than the rest.
Bucky stood in the doorway for a long time after the sound of the car disappeared, staring out at the quiet river like he was waiting for something to change.
Eventually, he turned back inside, sitting at the table, staring at the envelope like it might catch fire if he didn't.Â
He decided that was as good time as any.Â
Minutes passed, then hours. Probably more.Â
The files inside were organized by date, the only sort of thread he could actually follow. The beginning painted a picture he could barely remember. You even managed to find things that only someone who went digging for his little sister's diary could find, anecdotes of the type of childhood he could imagine he had, pictures of his childhood, his sisters, his parents.Â
Then it got⊠darker.Â
The experiment in Azzano, the rescue, his missions with Steve, all the way to his fall of the train. How he survived hypothermia, the operative report when they attached his arm. The first real wiping session.Â
HYDRA mission reports.
Redacted SHIELD intel that you somehow got unredacted.
Bucky read the words on the paper, old and new, until his eyes ached. The pounding headache came back, too many versions of himself stacked on top of each other, and he decided it was enough for the night.Â
He looked through the bookcase, finding stacks of crossword puzzles, sudoku, a deck of cards, all on the second drawer below the books and board games.Â
The New York Times wednesday crossword was the lucky one he picked. He laid on the couch with the newspaper in front of him, and by the end, there was only one clue that had him, well, puzzled.Â
Ooh, la, la!
What the fuck kind of clue was that?
Four letters.Â
He tilted his head one side, then the other, trying to crack his neck, and when he stretched, he buried his face in the cushion.Â
It was peonies, and soft musk, and vanilla. It was your sweatshirt that you left over the arm of the couch.Â
Before realization hit, a flash went by behind his eyelids, sending his heart straight to the pit of his stomach.Â
"Please, you don't have to do this, please, don't!â ah!" It was your voice, distant, far away, but there. Yours. "No! Stop! I- mmmnnghhh!"
He heard himself then. "You can tell me, it'll be our little secret." A rush of heat trickling down his stomach like lava. "Feels good, doesn't it?"
Bucky opened his eyes and sucked in a breath like he had just come out from underwater, scared of his own mind.
He had a blurred visual of what accompaied the words, was that a memory? Was it a dream? Were those his intentions with you? Were you safe with him in this remote cabin?
His thoughts raced with speed one would get a felony charge for, and he looked around to see if he was still alone. He shuffled away from the sweatshirt like it was covered in cactus spines.
His hands dragged over his face, and he decided the coldest shower the safehouse could provide would fix whatever was wrong with his mind. âYouâre fine,â he muttered to himself.
He walked to the bathroom and looked at himself in the mirror for longer than he'd like to admit, trying to find pieces of the James Barnes he read about.Â
The shower didn't do much, but it did enough to soothe the tense muscles in his back and ease the throbbing ache in his skull. The instant ramen he made settled okay in his stomach. He settled on the old creaky bed and stared at the ceiling like it held all the answers to his questions until his eyes drifted closed.Â
The chair was cold. Metal against his spine. His wrists locked down tight enough that he can feel his pulse fighting against the restraints. The room smells like antiseptic and something burnedâwires, maybe, or skin. Itâs dark and smells musty. Too old.
He can't move his head.Â
He heard the whirring of the wiping machine, heard his own teeth grind together, and then dull footsteps walking in circles around him like a shark circling wounded prey.Â
He felt flashes of memory crumbling down like weak concrete.
And the voice spoke again.Â
"Soldat?"
He heard his voice with so little emotion it didn't even feel like him. "Ya gotov otvechat'."
And before he could remember what orders he was given, the nightmare changed.Â
"I'll be good! I'll comply!"Â Suddenly he wasn't in a HYDRA base that smelled of rust and old water, no. He was somewhere much softer, much better taken care of, much more pleasant to be in.Â
You.Â
He saw himself blurred, almost like he was watching it happen but feeling it all the same, heard himself coax agreement out of you, and heard your voice, broken and wet and needy, say the words. "Ya gotov otvechat'."
Bucky woke up in a cold sweat, breathing like he just choked while running a marathon.
The room was dark, a bedside table clock telling him it was barely past 2am, and when he looked down he groaned in shame at the sight of the tent he was pitching in his pants, aching and leaking enough to wet a spot on the front of his pants.
He decided to toss. And turn. And toss again, trying to go back to sleep.Â
He threw the covers off of him, walking to the kitchen and side eyeing the sweatshirt tossed on the couch like it might lunge at him. Tried to mush down the heat in the back of his throat with a glass of water, which proved unsuccessful.
He laid back in bed, covers over his legs and waist, and closed his eyes, wishing, hoping, praying he'd drift away into anywhere his shitty ability to maladaptive daydream would take him.Â
Which was right back to you.Â
The synapses in his brain just wouldn't stop.Â
"You didn't show up for days."Â Your voice was distant, like a weird doppler effect was happening. You sounded sad, like you felt forgotten about.Â
It kept coming to him in flashes, âYou disappear,â you said, ticking it off on your fingers. âYou come back. You act like nothing happened. Rinse. Repeat.â This time he could almost feel the supple skin of your cheeks under the pads of his fingers.Â
His hand twitched on the pillow above his head, and he sighed deeply. Each inch his hand moved lower, the clearer the picture got.Â
When it tickled the skin on his stomach, he got a flash of you looking up at him.Â
You sucked the digit into your mouth, metallic tang on your tastebuds, as you tugged fabric down just enough so his cock would spring free. Thick, hard, mouth-wateringly big. "Missed my cock that much, mmm, pretty girl?"
Bucky whined, hand going lower over the sweats and palming himself through it.Â
He slotted himself between your open thighs and rubbed his length up and down the wetness dripping from you, making you moan at the feeling, "PleaseâŠ"
He felt dirty, and like he was doing something he shouldn't. But no one would know. He was alone for miles and miles, and you were gone checking on your precious Steve.
He palmed himself harder and sucked in a harsh breath through his nose, his hand coming up slightly to go under the sweats and grip himself, his body jolting at the feeling of skin against skin.Â
"Let your pretty girl see youâŠ" Another strangled whine left his lips, like it hurt. Like it hurt to feel what he was feeling and be confused as to why, have no outlet for such emotion, not know what to do with the memories.
You lifted you hips and sank back down slowly, little gasps and moans you tried not to let out, coming out anyway.
âI donât like it when youâre gone.â The words came out muffled against his hand, his thumb tracing your lip again.Â
The moan that escaped his lips when he stroked himself at first was broken, like it knocked the wind out of him. He didn't mean to let it out but the imagery got clearer with each movement.Â
"Mne ne khochetsya tebya pokidat'."Â I don't like leaving you.
He stroked again, each slick sound from him fucking his fist reminding him of how you sounded fucking yourself open onto him.Â
"Ya ne khochu, chtoby ty ischezla."Â I don't want you to disappear.
It hurt. It felt good. Tears rimmed his eyes in confusion and overstimulation of all his emotions hitting him at once. The more the knot in his core tightened at the thought of you, the less oxygen he felt existed.Â
He stroked, up and down, swiping his thumb across the leaking tip of him, eyes shut tightly trying to remember the feel of your spongy walls wrapping around him, then clenching.Â
He moaned your name and stroked faster, a flash of memory showing him how you begged him to let you be on top, metal hand glinting around your throat.Â
He squeezed his hand around himself, and as soon as the image of you biting your lower lip and begging him to cum through teary eyes popped in his head, he was done for.
Like releasing a spring that was coiled too tight, the relief was immediate, making a shudder run through his body as hot spurts of cum painted his stomach and some of the sheets around him.Â
The next time it happened, it was the wine.
You had gotten back already, and he was looking for something to drink in the fridge, though maybe a bottle of water and a flavor packet that you called Liquid I.V. would be nice, when he saw the bottle out of the corner of his eye.Â
The label seemed familiar, familiar enough for a flash of a syringe and a needle to pass by his mind, no other context or explanation.Â
When he took the half-sticking-out cork out, the smell of it flooded his nostrils, and another flash appeared.Â
Your kiss.Â
It was messy, urgent, nothing like the soft kiss he remembered before. This one he could almost taste, wine, lip balm, and, well, what he imagined you tasted like.Â
Your eyes squeezed shut at the eerily familiar feel of his lips on you, kissing you open as he held your thighs apart. âOh, GodââÂ
He licked, and sucked, and bit like the solace for his miserable existence could only be found in the oasis between your legs. Squelching was loud in the room already and it only got worse when he put two fingers inside of you.Â
"S'tight, baby."Â
He groaned in annoyance, his body responding to the memory faster than he could tell his own brain to repress it.Â
He took a deep breath, then two, and when it became clear his dick was winning this one, he turned on the balls of his feet and bee lined for the bedroom, hoping to be done before you got out of the shower.Â
He paused, however, by the couch. Looking at your sweatshirt, then the door, then the sweatshirt again, until he decided to stop fucking thinking and just grabbed it.Â
This time, he did it with the fabric close to his face, where he could turn around and bury his face in it, feel how soft it was and imagine it was the skin between your breasts, imagine your sweet little whimpers in his ear, your hands tangled in his hair tugging it as he grazed the skin with his teeth.Â
"If you keep being good maybe I'll give you my cum. Mm? You'd like that wouldn't you?"
"No, I'm not onâ pleaseâ"
He built rhythm easier this time, the images weren't fractured glass as much as they were reflections off of a river stream now, flowing and fleeting.Â
"Feels... so- oh! Good! Good.. So full."
There wasn't a headache anymore, just a throbbing need behind his ribs and low in his spine, shame and want blended so well together he didn't know which was which.Â
"Please, don't stop."
His hand stroked faster, up and down his shaft, until it was weeping with need, precum coating his entire fist. Your voice in his head kept echoing, closer, and closer, bringing him to the edge of a precipice he had all intentions of falling from.Â
"Too much." You tried to squirm away, but his grip was too strong.
"Never too much, baby."
He bit his own fist as he spilled onto his hand, trying to muffle any sounds coming out of his mouth, but it wasn't much avail. Blood rushing in his ears, he didn't hear you turn off the shower, or open the bathroom door.
You'd recognize his moans in any environment though.
The timbre of his voice when he was close, almost choking on his own groans trying to keep quiet, not knowing you were outside the door listening to it, unaware he was thinking of you.Â
The cards were worn.
Soft at the edges, corners bent from too many hands, too many games that were meant to pass time instead of⊠whatever this was.
"Ha! That's four," You said, scooping the pair of cards from the coffee table and onto your pile. "Are you even trying? Your memory cannot be that bad."
The rain sounded heavy outside, thick drops of water crashing down on the roof, the wind making them thud against the window in harsh pitter-patter patterns that comforted the loneliest souls.Â
He sat across from you, elbows resting on his knees, one hand resting on his chin and the other hanging from his lap, the deep crease between his brows making an appearance. His gaze wasnât on the cards.Â
You raised a brow, taking your glass of wine in your hand to take a sip. "Do I have something on my face?"
"You smelled like vanilla."
It was out of context, almost like he was just thinking out loud and not exactly planning on filling you in on what the conversation was in the first place.Â
You raised your forearm to your nose, smelling the skin on your wrist, and furrowed your own brows, a chuckle escaping you. "It's the moisturizer, Bucky, I canâ"
"And after it was peonies."
Oh?
Oh.
He⊠remembers.Â
"I remembered those nights." Your blood ran cold, you could see his throat bob like he was swallowing words too thick for his tongue. "I rememberâ" He shut his eyes, both trying to recall and erase the memory of the very first night you were together.Â
"Buckyâ" You sat up on your knees, making the motion to get a couple inches closer to him, and he moved away the same distance.Â
"You criedâ fuckâ you begged me to stop and I justâ" His hands were up in the air, as if keeping space between you would make whatever he did to you less worse.Â
"Bucky, pleaseâ"
"Why are you kind to me?" His question was almost demanding. Scolding. "After everything I did to you?" His eyes looked into yours, searching your face for answers to a question he didn't have the words to ask. "After I râ"
"Because I liked it." You blurted out. "A deep, twisted, dark part of me wouldn't let the rest of me hate you for it." You sighed, Bucky tilting his head as if nudging you to elaborate.Â
You looked everywhere but him, fidgeting with your hands on your lap. "I didn't even last that first night before I⊠felt things I couldn't name." You picked at the fabric of your pants. "I woke up the next morning feeling hollow that you left. Every night after that I waited for you to come back."
"Why would yâ"
"I don't know." You interrupted him, looking into his eyes. "I can't explain why, but every night you didn't come I felt like jumping off of the tallest building I could find." You looked away again, chuckling at how idiotic you thought you sounded.Â
"I sound stupid."
You pulled away to get up and walk away, getting as far as having to step over him to find somewhere to bury your shame.Â
Bucky wouldn't let you, though. His hand reached up as you were walking over him, pulling you down.
Your knees hit the rug on each side of him with a soft thud, his hands cradling your face and looking for any sign of protest.Â
He didn't find any. Would never find any. Not from you.Â
You looked into his eyes, watching him watch you, and leaned in, kissing his lips softly.
So softly he'd have thought it was a dream.Â
Your lips moved together as if it was the first kidd you'd shared. And technically, it was, no matter how much muscle memory he had of the Asset and you.Â
He deepened the kiss and your hips twiched as his hands fell to rest at your side, grinding yourself onto his pelvis, making him groan into your mouth.Â
Your hands tangled in his hair, pulling it lightly and sighing into him. "I missed you." You breathed against his mouth before he pulled away to kiss down your neck. "Missed you so much I wanted toâ"
"M'here." Muffled against your collarbone, hands going under the hem of your ribbed tank top, gripping your waist with a little more want. He reached up to tug the collar of the shirt to the side, giving him more space to lap and kiss at your clevage.
Your hands found the hem of his shirt and tugged it up, his arms extending upwards to help you take it off for him.Â
You touched the scars on his shoulder, and he watched you carefully. The sliver of humanity you saw in the Asset the first night he left you undress him coming out now, in full unadultered awe.Â
Your lips kissed each old divot of skin, eyes closing at the memory as your hips ground deeper into him, until you felt his hard length straining against his jeans, the seam of it catching just right into your that you felt a zing straight to your clit.Â
His hands travelled up your shirt, bringing the fabric up with them, until it was your turn to let him undress you, hair falling behind your back and over one shoulder.Â
He looked at you like a man seeing the sun for the first time.Â
His pupils were blown with desire and adrenaline flowing through his veins, mouth coming to claim yours in a kiss again.Â
A big hand splayed against your back, his hips tilting so he could lay you down on the rug, your hair fanning out around you as he kissed down your jaw, your neck, your sternum.
His hand came to rest around your ribs, thumb dangerously close to the underside if your breast, and then daring to flick the hardened nipple there.Â
"Buckâ"
He sighed against your skin as he kissed the skin of your torso lower and lower, kissing down the skin of your stomach, "You don't know what it does to me hearing you say my name like this."
He kissed lower and butterflies bloomed in your stomach when his lips brushed the hem of your shorts, eyes flicking up to yours as if asking for permission, or wanting you to beg, he wasn't sure.
He just wanted to hear the sound of your voice for the rest of his life.Â
His fingers hooked into the shorts and pulled them down your legs along with your panties, tossing them over the couch.Â
Calloused palms rubbed up your legs, squeezing when he got to the top of your thighs, and you sighed as you let them fall open so he could settle his broad chest between your legs.Â
He inhaled deeply when he got to be eye level with your core, memories floosing every groove of his brain.Â
His tongue licked a long, flat strip up your core and your breath caught in a moan. "Missed your scent." He kissed your clit. "Missed your taste." He groaned. "Without even knowing I was missing it."
He devoured you like a man starved.Â
Like he'd forget you all over again if he stopped lapping at your cunt for even a second.Â
And the thought of forgetting your face, your sounds, your smell, your taste, the thought of forgetting you was more painful than anything he had endured.Â
Bucky alternated between long, deep licks up your core, and quick flicks of his tongue around your clit before sucking the bundle of nerves into his mouth, while his fingers played with your nipples.Â
The feel of your thighs squeezing around his head every time you did that was more comforting than any soothing mechanism he'd ever tried.Â
His hands pushed your legs open once again, wider, so he could lean down and thrust his tongue in and out of your drooling pussy, making you whine and buck your hips into his face.Â
The temperature of the cabin suddenly was a hundred degrees hotter, a sheen coat of sweat over your bare body making you glisten against the firelight.Â
Your hands in his hair tugged, until his glistening face was flush with yours in a hungry kiss that had you tasting yourself.
Deft, manicured fingers worked on the buttons and zipper of his jeans, shoving them down awkwardly as your legs were wrapped around his waist, his cock springing free between the two of you.Â
You gasped against his lips when it landed against your folds in a wet slap, leaking precum over your stomach, the patch glistening.
God, you missed him.Â
His right hand reached for the length of him, lazily rubbing the tip between your folds, collecting slick, and then pumping it slowly to spread it.
He did that torturously slow, almost as if he was giving you time to back out. Decide you were right in the head and wanted nothing to do with him, actually.Â
But instead you waited until his tip was notched by your entrance, and pulled him forward with your legs. his forarms bracing against the floow beside your head as his length impaled you on him, stretching you impossibly wide around his cock to the hilt.
The familiar sting made a loud, lewd moan escape your lips and stumble straight into his mouth, his lips open hovering over yours.
His metal hand cradled the top of your head, eyes locking with yours and noticing tears rim your waterline.Â
Panic set in his gut mixing with the heat licking up his ribs, and you noticed the way his body stiffened. "I'm okay." You nodded. "Justâ" The words getting caught in your throat as his flesh thumb traced your bottom lip. "Missed you. Need you."
You hand gave his ass cheek a firm squeeze, his eyes narrowing at you as his flesh hand reached to hike your ankle up around his waist higher, and he gave the first tentative thrust, eyes locked with yours.Â
He pulled out more, and pushed his hips forward again, hitting the sweet spot inside of you that only he could reach. He leaned down, continuing his movements, and kissed down your chest, pulling a nipple into his mouth, swiling his tongue around it.Â
The wet noises coming from where your bodies joined were louder than the rain outside now. Your moans getting gradually more high pitched and his groans getting deeper and deeper, as if it hurt to have you like this again.Â
"You feelâ" a particularly harsh thrust interrupted you. "oh my God! You feel so good, Bucky, pleaseâ"
"Dreamt of youâ" Another groan. "Dreamt of you every day."
All of his sentences were punctuated by thrusts, the thick drag of his cock inside of you making your skin feel like it was on fire, sweat from you both dripping down onto the rug.Â
"Fuck, Buckyâ"
"Thought you were in my head." He confessed. "Until I smelled you againâ fuckâ on the Causewayâ" Harsher thrusts, like he was losing himself in the feel of your cunt strangling him. "Knew you had to be real then." And then a needy, higher pitched moan from him. "Knew it had to be you."
You cupped your hands one each side of his face, making him let go of whatever patch of skin he was sucking on, a purple mark being left behind, and made him look at you.
Blue eyes lost is a black pool of lust and need and want.Â
"Don't leave me." You pleaded, as he started thrusting hard enough to slap his pelvis against your clit with each thrust. "Please, don't ever leave me again."
He kissed your palm. "Not gonna." Muffled against your hand. "Never gonna let you go."
He strained his neck to capture your lips in a kiss again, feeling your gummy walls spasm around his length, pulsing like you wanted him to fill you up as your orgasm crashed over you and drowned you in him.Â
"G'nna, cu-umâŠ" His hips stuttered. "Need tâ fuckâ" You nodded against him, locking your legs behind his back, making him groan at the thought that you couldn't bear him gone as much as he couldn't bear to be away.
A symphony of passionate moans from you at the overstimulation of not even being over one orgasm and already feeling the coil in your stomach tighten again threw Bucky over the edge.
Hot, thick ropes of cum filled you, your eyes rolled back at the feeling of it, so much that it dripped out of you.Â
He slowly stopped his movements, brushing your hair away from your face, kissing everywhere in your flushed chest and cheeks as he came down from his high.Â
You tilted his head towards you again. "No more running."
"No more running." He agreed, kissing your palm in earnest.
me writing that smut scene with wet eyes and a wet pussy
as always TELL ME WHAT YOU THINK PLEAK!!!!!
A/N: I think I may make a 'Greed: Part Two' after this hmmm. Lust is next btw ( Ë¶Ë ÂłË)⥠OH! and also, pay attention to the gifs, that's the era Bucky is supposed to be in visually/physically.
Tony paces. Not casuallyânever casually. Itâs sharp, restless, all tight turns and aborted thoughts, like his body is trying to outrun whateverâs sitting in his head.
Vision floats a few feet off the ground, still as ever, hands folded behind his back, watching.
Rhodey sits at Tonyâs desk like he owns itâboots propped up, chair tilted slightly back, the only one in the room not feeding into the tension.
âCan I get your advice?â Tony finally says, not looking at either of them. âYou knowââ he gestures vaguely toward Vision, ââas theâŠbeing that you are?â
Vision tilts his head, considering.
âWould you prefer my answer to be as human as possible, Mr. Stark?â
Tony exhales sharply through his nose. âHowâs thisâI ask the question, and you give me both answers.â
A beat. Vision nods.
Tony stops pacing for half a secondâjust long enough to hesitate. âOkay, umâwellââ
He starts moving again. âShit⊠soââ
âDude,â Rhodey cuts in, not even opening his eyes.
âRhodes,â Tony snaps, pointing at him as he passes, âthis doesnât involve you.â
âWell hurry up and get it out of your system,â Rhodey mutters. âYouâre making me nervous.â
Tony ignores that, âAlrightâthe kidââ
âStaff Sergeant,â Vision corrects calmly.
Tony winces, âYes. Thatâsâthe one. Uhââ
âYouâre wanting my opinion on whether she should go on the mission involving her old caregiver.â
Tony stops, âExactâyes. Exactly.â
Visionâs expression doesnât change, âWhy wouldnât she go?â
Tony opens his mouthâcloses it, âSheâsââ
âScarred.â
Tony nods once, âYes.â
âRight,â Vision says softly.
Tony rubs a hand over his face, âAnd sheââ
âYou were given the order to keep her from obtaining any sort of firearm until further clearance.â
Tony lets out a humorless breath, âExactly.â
âIâm going to assume she does not know that.â
âNo,â Tony says. âShe does not.â
Visionâs gaze drifts slightly, thoughtful, âPerhaps she wonât want to hold one anyway.â
Tony huffs, âShe would if she knew there was a specific order for her not to.â
Vision looks back at him, âMr. Stark, forgive meâbut it is less about the firearm limitations itself, and more of⊠everyoneâs bias.â
Tony doesnât answer this time. Just exhales. A quiet, conceding sound.
âMr. Stark, if I mayââ Vision begins.
Tony gestures vaguely. Go on.
âThis past September, she and I had a⊠conversation.â
The memory settles in slowly.
Quieter.
Softer.
You sit at the dining table, your leg wrapped in a cast, propped up awkwardly on the chair across from you. Someone had made tea earlier, though itâs long gone cold now.
Vision sits near you. Not floating. Not hovering. Simply sittingâyet staring, nonetheless. Not quite still. Never quite human.
âMay I⊠ask you somethingâŠâ he says, his gaze fixed on the table, as if the question itself requires careful placement.
You let out a small, amused huff.
As if he doesnât already know the answer.
You donât start right awayâjust look at him, giving him the space to continue.
âThisââ he gestures lightly toward his forehead, toward the yellow stone set between his temples, glowing faintly, ââin my head⊠it speaks to you.â
Your fingers tap lightly against the table.
âI donât know if it speaks to me specifically,â you admit, âbut if I didnât have theseââ you reach up, brushing your ear slightly, ââin-ears, I would definitely hear it right now.â
He pauses. Then leans forwardâjust slightly.
His voice lowers, âYou feared it once.â
Itâs not really a question. It never is.Â
You swallow.
âYeah,â you say, breath catching just a little. Your eyes flick over him, searching, grounding. âThat wasnât so long ago.â
âWhat⊠changedâŠâ
You let out a small laughâdry, almost surprised at yourself.
âWell,â you shrug faintly, âfor startersâI went to war.â
Vision straightens, drifting back a few inches, hands clasping behind him again as he begins to hover, slow and thoughtfulâalmost pacing.
âForgive me,â he says, âbut war is natural, is it not? Something a part of the human condition.â
He glances at you again.
âAnd thisâthis seems almost⊠otherworldly. Supernatural, in comparison.â
You nod.
âYeah,â you murmur. âItâs definitely⊠strange.â
A pause.
âYet,â Vision says, âyou do not care. Not as you did.â
Your gaze drops, your voice is quieter this time.
âI have other things that scare me now.â
The memory dissolves just as gently as it came.
Back to the office. Back to Tony, âVision, Iâm sorryâbut the stone in your head and this missionâthose are two very different things.â
âYouâre right,â Vision says. âBut that is not the point.â
Tony crosses his arms, already knowing heâs about to lose this argument.
âI asked her what it was that scared her,â Vision continues, âalthough I already knew the answer.â
Tony tries anyway.
âWhat did she say? Carbon monoxide?â he mutters.
Vision doesnât react.
âHerself.â
Tonyâs expression shifts immediately, âOh.â
âMr. Stark,â Vision says, steppingâfloatingâcloser, âthe one person who believes she is the least capable of allâŠâ
A beat.
ââŠis herself.â
Tony looks away, âI know where youâre going with this.â
âPerhaps,â Vision continues, âsince this mission does seem rather simpleâit would be the perfect moment. The perfect time to change her view on that.â
Tony exhales, slow.
âAnd perhaps,â Vision adds, âif it goes well⊠this immaturity and tactlessness that follows herâeverywhereâmay lessen.â
Tony huffs a quiet laugh, âThatâs a lot of perhaps.â
A pause. Thenâ
âBut I thinkâŠâ he nods once, more to himself than anyone else, âI think you may be right.â
Silence settles over the room.
Even Rhodey lowers his feet slightly, the weight of it catching up.
âOhâMr. Stark,â Vision says, almost as an afterthought, âone more word of advice.â
Tony sighs, âYeah. Sure. Go for it.â
Vision looks directly at him, âSteve Rogers must not go.â
Tony frowns immediately.
âIt needs to be three people,â he says. âHe has to go. No one else is available.â
Vision tilts his head, âThere isâŠâ
A pause.
ââŠone.â
[Present Day]
The first thing you notice is him. Not because he says anythingâhe doesnâtâbut because of how still he is.
Barnes sits directly behind you, one arm slung along the back of the seat of the car, his gaze fixed somewhere out the window like heâs not really looking at anything at all. The mountains pass in blurs of green and shadow, reflected faintly in the glass, but he doesnât track them. Doesnât move. Doesnât react.
You can feel him there anyway. A presence. Heavy. Quiet. Observing. And somehow, thatâs worse.
If someone were to tell you a week ago that youâd be where you are right now, you wouldnât believe them. Never in your life would you have imagined these three men interactingâlet alone being driven to stay at one of their houses.
Most importantlyâa house you know quite well.
Yona has a black F-150.
Heâs always driven one, for as long as you can remember. This one, however, is new. Sleek. Clean. Leather interiorâwhich is out of character. Itâs lifted, too. You almost had to ask for help getting in.
You like to think heâs made a business drug running, maybe exposing SHIELD secrets for a hefty priceâbut you know he wouldnât risk it.
No. Especially not when it comes to you.
The radio hums quietly in the background. Not yet at a commercial breakâfour country classics have already cycled through. The car is quiet. Too quiet. Yona had never been one for conversation, but you expected more than this. He hasnât seen you in months.
From your spot in the passenger seat, you watch him. His eyes are locked straight ahead, tracking the winding mountain roads. His hands grip the steering wheel tightâwhite-knuckled. His jaw is set, like heâs grinding his teeth down to nothing.
Maybe heâs angry with you. Maybe you shouldâve been calling him more.
His eyes flick over to you for just a momentâquick, assessingâbefore snapping back to the road. He takes a breath. Oh boy.
âYou are too thin.â He clears his throat. âWhere did your muscles go?â
You let that sit for a second. Then glance up at the rearview mirror. Did he really need to be doing this right now? Especially when Barnes is sitting directly behind youâand Sam right next to him. And, judging by the shift in the airâyeahâtheyâre listening.
Samâs eyebrow lifts slightly, interest sparked. And BuckyâGodâhe almost looks like heâs trying to suppress a smile. Fucking bastards. All of them.
âIn the hospital you were denser. Is Stark not feeding you?â Yona continues, reaching over and pinching at the flesh of your stomach.
âOuch,â you grumble, swatting his hand away and shoving it back toward him. âIâm a picky eater.â
Yonaâs expression doesnât change. Unreadable. You canât tell if heâs angry, irritated, or concerned.
âThat doesnât mean you donât eat.â
âYou know what,â you scoff, turning slightly toward him, âitâs nice to see you too.â
Thereâs no pause. No space for that to land. He just keeps goingâlike heâs been silently preparing this entire drive.
âYou look strung out,â he adds. âAre you still taking the pain medication?â
Your hands smack down onto your thighs, âJesus Christ, Yona!â
âWell, are you?â he asks, brows lifting slightly.
âNo!â you snap.
âHold on,â Sam cuts in.
And oh no. Oh boyâoh fuck. No no no no noâ
âWhat pain medication?â
You stare straight ahead. Pretend you didnât hear him. Thankfully, Yona ignores him tooâthough not the topic.
âYou are lying,â Yona says.
Not an accusation. Not an argument. Just a fact. He knows you.
âIâm not lying!â you insistâlying.
âThen why is your lip pulling up?â he asks calmly, eyes still on the road.
Your stomach drops.
âThe twitch of your upper lipââ
âItâs not pulling up!â Oh, yes it is.
âYou just did it again.â
âIâm sorry,â Sam cuts in again, louder this timeâenough to pull everyoneâs attention. âAre you just casually mentioning youâre on prescription pain meds before we head into a mission?â
A beat.
âYour first mission, mind you.â
âIâm not taking anything!â you fire back. Also a lie.
Sam stares at you for a second. Unimpressed. Thenâslowlyâa grin spreads across his face.
âWow,â he laughs, tilting his head at you.
âYes, did you see that?â Yona adds, finally glancing over.
âIt really does come up,â Sam shakes his head, then nudges his shoulder slightly toward the man beside him. âYou see that, Barnes?â
Bucky shrugs, barely shifting, âHard to miss.â
âReally?â You glance back at him, and for a split second his eyes are already on you.
Not amused. Not judgmental. Just watching. Studying. Then, just as quickly, he looks away again. Back out the window. Like he wasnât.
âEver since she could lie, itâs been this way,â Yona adds, already looking back at the road.
âDoes she lie often?â Sam asks, turning fully toward you now, like heâs sizing you up.
âOnly if she thinks she can get away with it,â Yona mutters.
âObviously she canât,â Sam snorts.
âSheâs cocky. Always has been.â
Your gaze flicks between themâthen stops. On him. Barnes.
Heâs looking out the window again. Expression flat. Detached. Unamused. Like none of this concerns him. Like you donât concern him. God. You hope he doesnât think youâre a fucking addict.
âCan we talk about something else, please?â you sigh, dragging your eyes away and facing forward again.
âŠ
The air is cooler here. Crisp. Clean. The kind that settles into your lungs and stays there. The reservation stretches out around you in quiet familiarityâtrees swaying softly, distant insects humming, the low glow of porch lights scattered across the land like something grounding.
Home. Or something close to it.
Tomorrow morning you plan on walking around outside with your OSAM outâas the smell here is far too familiar to ignore. For now, however, with Barnes in your vicinity, you promise yourself youâll leave them in.Â
The four of you step out of the truck. Gravel crunches under your shoes.
Yona is already moving before youâve fully closed the door, reaching into the back and grabbing your bag like itâs second nature. You fall into step beside him as the group starts toward the cabin.Â
âItâs late,â you say, rubbing at your arms slightly. âI think Iâll go to sleep.â
âNo,â Yona answers immediately. âYou need dinner.â
You glance at him, incredulous, âItâs one in the morning.â
âLeotie has already made it. Sheâs waiting inside for you.â
You stop walking for half a step, âLeotie is awake?!â
âŠ
The door opens before you can even reach for it. Warmth spills out firstâlight, the smell of something sweet, something cooked down and simmering.Â
Leotie stands in the middle of the room like sheâs been waiting there the entire night. Small. Wrapped in layers. Eyes bright in a way that doesnât match her age.
âHI LEOTIE, YOU SHOULD BE ASLEEP.â You shout.Â
Maternal. Grandmother. Familiar. Everything here is familiar.Â
She approaches you with outstretched arms. Ready to dote on you just like she did when you were small. You feel as if she may still see you that way.Â
âI had to see you,â she says, smiling. âHavenât in so long.â
Her small, weathered hands reach for your cheeks, slapping them lightly. You canât help the grin that pulls at your face.
âYOU LOOK BEAUTIFUL.âÂ
âI made you grape dumplings.âÂ
Your expression softens instantly, âTHANK YOU, YOU DIDNâT HAVE TO DO THAT.â
She waves it off like it was inevitable. Then her eyes shiftâpast you. To them.
âWho are they?â She nods, taking Barnes and Wilson in with a slightly cautious expression.Â
You turn slightly, gesturing behind you, âLEOTIE, THIS IS SAM. THIS IS BUCKY.â
âI made her grape dumplings,â Leotie tells them, as if that explains everything.
Sam steps forward slightly, already smiling, âAnd my, do they look wonderful.â
âWhat?â She asks you, not having heard what he said.Â
âHE SAYS THE DUMPLINGS LOOK GREAT.â You confirm.Â
Looking over at Sam, you pull at your ear quickly â he nods. Understood. The woman is practically deaf.Â
âWhat about him?â she asks, looking directly at Bucky.
Thereâs a pause â and honestly, you find yourself a bit curious to see if heâll even respond.Â
âThey look great,â Bucky says.
Thereâs not much behind it. Careful.
Leotie studies him. Not just lookingâlingering. Long enough that it almost feels like sheâs placing him somewhere.
âThis one is yours?â she asks you.
âNO.â
âWhat? Heâs your husband?â
âIâLeotieâŠâ You glance back, then forward again. âLEOTIE, NOââ you turn quickly toward Yona. âHelp me, please.â
âI am enjoying this,â Yona says, already walking past you and towards the grape dumplings.Â
âThis one is very handsome,â Leotie continues, pointing toward Sam. âLike peregrine falcon.â
Sam blinks, âShe know about the Falcon?â
You shake your head, a small, uncertain smile forming, âno⊠she justâsheâŠsays things. Sometimes they sound like guessesâŠand then later, they donât.â
âWhat?â Leotie asks.Â
âHE SAID YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL. LIKE INDIGO BUNTING.â
Leotie laughs, delighted, âHahahaha⊠he is naughty, this one. Uyo anitsutsa.â
Sam leans in slightly, âWhat did she say?â
âShe said youâre a bad boy.â
âI like her.â He grinsâbut his expression changes quickly. âWait, do you speak Cherokee too?â he asks.
âWell,â you shrug slightly, ânot fluently.â
âShe is being modest,â Yona says from behind you. âMy daughter knows many languages.â
You wince slightly, âHeâsâheâs bragging.â
âWhat?â Leotie asks.
âI SAID SHE KNOWS MANY LANGUAGES,â Yona repeats louder.
âOh yes,â Leotie nods. âAnd learned a new one this summer too.â
The shift is immediate. Your body goes still. Color drains just slightly from your face.
âNew one?â Yona asks, turning toward you now. âYou didnât tell me that.â
âSoviet,â Leotie continues easily. âYes. Written all over the face.â
Behind youâBucky goes still. Not in the same way as before. This is different. Sharper.
âYou werenât practicing before you left,â Yona says, his tone tightening.
âNo, IâI learned it there,â you answer quietly.
Your eyes flick to Leotieâsomething caught between awe and frustration. Why would she say that?
âIn captivity?â Sam asks. âWhat, they give you a book?â
âAh,â Leotie hums. âShe had memorized it. Read it through in her head, she did.â
Buckyâs gaze drops. Not to the floor. To your hands. Like heâs trying to picture it.
âYou memorized what?â Sam asks.
âShe memorizes Russian language book,â Leotie answers.
Sam stares, âYou memorized an entire Russian language book?â
âWhat?â Leotie asks.Â
âTHEY ARENâT TALKING ABOUT YOU,â Yona cuts in.
âAhhh,â Leotie points suddenly, her face suddenly full of recognition. âThis is the Captain America.â
You sigh, âNO, LEOTIE. THIS IS SAM.â
âOne day,â she says, smiling at him knowingly.
Sam pauses, ââŠI meanâokay.â
âAlright,â you cut in quickly, stepping toward the table. âCan weâletâs just sit and eat for a moment, please.â
âWhat?â Leotie asks.
âI SAID LETâS EAT.â You repeat.Â
âThe next time I see you,â Leotie saysâand this time, she turns fullyâpointing at Bucky. âyou will be married.â
The room stills for half a second.
You groan immediately, dragging a hand down your face, âSorryâsometimes the intuition is onâŠâ
But Buckyâdoesnât move. At all. Not even a shift this time. His eyes stay on Leotie. Locked. Like heâs waiting for her to say more. Like he expects her to. Like something in himârecognizes it.
Thenâhis jaw tightens. Just slightly. His tongue presses once against the inside of his cheek. A small, controlled movement. Contained. Dismissed. Filed away.
âOther times she sounds like a schizophrenic,â Yona adds flatly.
âExactly.â You turn to him, agreeing.Â
Bucky finally looks away. But not beforeâjust for a secondâhis gaze flicks to you.
Quick. Involuntary. Like he didnât mean to. Like he definitely didnât mean to. And then itâs gone.
âWhat?â Leotie asks.Â
âTHEY SAID THE FOOD IS LOVELY,â Yona says.
She blinks at him, smiles, then begins another tangent, âRussian, Arabic, French, Spanishâwhat else?âÂ
âEAT YOUR FOOD,â Yona cuts in.
âAh. Chinese.â She adds, beaming.Â
âYou speak Mandarin?â Sam asks you.Â
âAnd Cantonese,â Yona adds.
Sam turns to you, wide-eyed, âWhat? Why didnât I know this? I thought you loved bragging.â
âShe does,â Yona says.
âExplosion has changed her,â Leotie adds softly.
You turn sharply, scoffing, âYona, really?â
âI never told her about that,â he shrugsâbut his eyes are wideâbecause once again, she knows something that she shouldnât.Â
Buckyâs handâresting near the edge of the tableâtightens slightly against the wood. Then stills again.
âTHESE ARE WONDERFUL. THANK YOU FOR MAKING THEM,â Sam says, grabbing a dumpling.
âŠ
Sam paces back and forth on the porch, phone pressed to his earâon his, what feels like, thousandth phone call of the day.
âDoes he usually take this many phone calls?â Yona grumbles, glancing down at the face of his watch.
Heâs leaning back against the kitchen counter, nursing a scowl that could freeze lava.
Youâre by the window, hand lifted slightly toward your mouth.
âYes.â You and Barnes answer in unison.
Thereâs a beat. The two of you turn to each other for just a momentârecognition. A flicker of something almost amused, buried under mutual annoyance. He shakes his head lightly and sinks further into the worn leather recliner.
âIâm sure heâs going over my rules,â you sigh, eyes dropping to your nails. Cuticle oil would be nice.
âYour rules?â Yona presses.
âYes,â you answer, voice flat. âI donât really care. Iâm surprised they even let me go on thisâŠexcursion anyway.â
It doesnât feel like a missionânot with how tightly controlled everything is. Tony had been very clear. Almost military in the way he laid it out.
âWhat are the rules?â Yona asks.
You glance up from your fingers, meeting his eyesâthen shifting to Barnes. That gets his attention. The recliner had been facing forward, toward the dusty windows. Now itâs turnedâfully. His legs angled toward you. Watching.
âNo, umâŠâ you startâbut the way Yonaâs lip curls makes you hesitate.
This would piss him off. He already dislikes Tony enough. The idea of him placing limits on youâon something that had been drilled into you your entire lifeâThereâs something almost poetic about it. Train your whole life to be a weapon. Perfect it. Master it. Then come back from war destroyedâand suddenly youâre not allowed to use it.Â
Punishment? Doubtful. Necessary? Maybe. Cautionary? Of course.
âI canât shoot a gun,â you admit.
Yona stiffens immediately, âYou what?â
You donât miss Barnesâ reaction either. Hard to miss the quiet whir of the metal arm as the plates shift, tightening just slightly. Not surprise. Recognition.
âWellâtechnically I canât even hold one, butââ
Yona scoffs, pushing off the counter in one sharp movement. He gestures out toward the porch, toward Sam, âThen why the hell would they even bring you here if you canât use your best talent?â
âI donâtââ
He cuts you off, âIf Tim is up to something, the only thing heâs gonna be afraid of is your finger on that trigger.â
âWell,â you counter, jaw tightening, âmaybe the fact that I can hear if heâs lying might help.â
âHe wouldnât be worried about that,â Yona mutters, already reaching into his pocket for his worn pack of cigarettes. âHe called after he heard about the accident. I told him you had hearing and sight damage.â
You whip around.
âWhy the hell would you say that?â Your hands plant firmly on your hips.
Youâre not facing himâbut your peripheral catches Barnes like a reflection in glass.
Heâs smilingâor something like it. Not quite natural. Not quite intentional. But there. And somehowâyouâre the only one who ever seems to get that reaction out of him.
âBecause I donât trust him,â Yona says simply, taking a drag, leaning back again. âDidnât trust him then. Definitely donât now.â
You open your mouthâready to argueâbut a voice cuts clean through it.
âWho even is this guy?â Barnes.
His tone is even, but it lands like a blade through the tension. He looks between the two of youâstudying.
Your expressions mirror each other more than youâd like. Irritated. Closed off. Unimpressed. You might as well be related. Those were the only expressions you learned in the first thirteen years of your life.Â
âTim was kind of like Yona,â you say.
âDonât compare him to me.â
âNot in personality,â you shoot him a look, then turn back to Barnes. âOr morals. He was justâŠone of my caretakers. Kind of.â
âHe was around less,â Yona adds. âBut he was there.â
âAnd this is the guy you heard,â Barnes continues, voice quieter now, more deliberate, âon the radio back in November?â
You falter. Heat creeps up your neckâjust slightly, âyes,â you say. âSame guy.â
The screen door slams open. Sam storms back insideâmid-thought, mid-frustrationâno buildup, no introduction.
âBefore we start anything, letâs go over this one more time,â he says. âYona, feel free to add. You know him best.â
âIâll add what I can,â Yona shrugs. âNot much to say.â
âHe has plenty,â you mutter. âJust none of itâs positive.â
âAlright,â Sam exhales, rubbing his jaw. âLetâs try to approach this as unbiased as possible.â
âIâll try,â Yona nods.
âHe wonât,â you say flatly.
Sam steps over, leaning beside him at the counter, âthe transmission you heard back in Novemberâyou say it was in Dari?â
âYes.â
âAnd just to clarifyâbecause I heard Arabic.â
âIâm fluent in Arabic. They were speaking Dari.â
âAnd nothing was misheard?â Sam presses. âHow fluent are you in Dari?â
âFluent is fluent.â
âJust answer the question.â
âThat is the answer.â
Sam exhales sharply, dragging a hand down his face as he starts pacing again, âI cannot believe they took a brain like yours and put it into combat,â he mutters.
Thereâs a beat. Yona exhales smoke slowly, âYou and me both.â
âI mean thatâs a full-on liability,â Sam continues, turning toward him. âThey shouldâve been utilizing that instead.â
You let out a short laugh, âHa.â Every head turns. âMaybe if Iâd been trained in brain my whole life instead of semiautomatic rifles I couldâve gotten a Nobel Prize. Maybe a Guinness World Record.â You mutterâthen a beat. âProbably wouldâve been easier on the psyche.â
Another beat, thenâ âinstead of, you knowâthe absolute abomination of war.â
âTell me about it,â Barnes says.
You look at him. That shouldnât be funny. Itâs dark. Dryâbut something about it lands just right.
A real laugh slips out before you can stop it. And you donât miss the one tugging at the corner of his mouth.
Sam and Yona stare. Flat. Annoyed.
âIâm sorry,â you snort, glancing back at Barnes.
His face hasnât changedâstill deadpan, still unreadableâand somehow that makes it worse.
A laugh bursts out of you again. You have to turn away. It feelsâlight. Wrong, almost. Like something cracking open.
Behind youâhis shoulders shift. Subtle. Thenâhe laughs. Quiet at first. Then real.
âOh my god,â Sam stares. âBarnesâare you laughing?â
You clamp a hand over your mouth. It doesnât help.
âI donât understand the joke,â Yona says, arms crossed.
âWounded warriors, man,â Sam mutters. âThese people got problems.â
You turn back, still fighting it, âokayâokayâIâm sorry. That wasââ you shake your head, breathless, âI was enjoying that.â
âPlan will be formed later,â Yona cuts in, crushing his cigarette into the ashtray. âShe needs to go see what heâs up to.â
âSpying is espionage,â Sam counters, âwhich is part of a missionâwhich she is not involved in.â
âShe can hold her own.â
âShe canât even hold a gun!â
âShe can hear from a mile away!â
âSo can Redwing.â
âDude,â you groan.
He looks at you. Doubles down, âNo.â
âI can go with her.â
Every head turns. Barnes shifts forward slightly, finally stepping in, âI can keep watch. Iâll hold the gun.â
âAbsolutely not,â Sam says immediately.
âWhat? Why?â
âYou two are the worst possible duo,â Sam points between you.
You and Barnes look at each otherâthen back.
âDo I need to explain?â
âThen why am I here?â Barnes presses.
âAssistance.â
âRight,â he lets out a short laughâdry, sharp. âSo Iâm not allowed to hold a gun either?â
âYou might not be if you keep up the lip.â
âIâm a grown man.â
âLet him go,â Yona cuts in, already done with the conversation. âHe is large.â
A beat.
âAnd they get along better than you would with either of them.â He moves toward the door, kicking it open slightly. âAnd if they donâtâI will. Only difference is I wonât wait or watch.â
His voice drops, âIâll walk into his house and take the information myself.â A pause. âWould you prefer that, birdman?â
âIââ Sam starts.
âNo,â Yona cuts him off. âNothing.â Cold. Final.
âIâm sure you have more calls to take anyway.â Yona gestures vaguely. âWhy waste time on a machine that canât even read molecular changesâyou already have one that can right here.â
And with thatâheâs goneâmumbling something about Redwing. The screen door slams behind him.
âŠ
The winter air has a bite to it, nipping at the exposed skin of your neck as you lie flat against the forest floor at the edge of the treelineâjust before the cliff that overlooks the narrow valley between the reservation and Timâs cabin.
You keep readjusting. The binoculars Sam gave you press hard against your orbital bone, a dull ache blooming beneath the glassâtoo familiar. Too reminiscent of that chair in Siberia.
Usually your eyesight would make these things completely useless, but that had been the catch. You werenât allowed to remove either sensory device. And at this distanceânearly a mileâyouâd need your hearing to compensate if you wanted any real clarity from this perch.
Barnes stands somewhere behind you, his back resting against a large oak. You canât see him, but you can feel him thereâsubtly. The faint push of his exhales drifting forward, catching lightly in the strands of your hair. Most people donât have lungs like that. But he isnât most people.
You let out a groan, shifting again, irritation building as the floaters in your vision worsen under the magnification. The glass only makes it worseâwarping, distortingâturning everything into something just slightly off.
âThis is so stupid,â you mutter under your breath.
With a sharp exhale, you yank the binoculars away from your face and push yourself upright, shaking your head as if thatâll clear the distortion.
You turn over your shoulder, eyes meet his immediately.
Whether heâd been watching the whole timeâor just caught the movementâit doesnât seem to matter to him. Thereâs no attempt to look away. No embarrassment.
Your nose wrinkles, and without another word, you toss the binoculars at his feet like they personally offended you.
His eyes flick down brieflyâtracking the motionâbefore lifting back up to you.
âWhat did they ever do to you?â he mutters.
âI despise them,â you shoot back, glaring at where they landed.
A beatâthen your eyes lift to his again, âCan you keep a secret?â
He shrugs, scanning the area out of habit before answering, âDepends on what it is.â
Your stare doesnât break. Slowly, deliberately, you reach up and remove both in-ears.
He watchesâquiet, observant. Thereâs something there, faint curiosity maybeâbut itâs buried under that same controlled stillness he always carries.
You inhale. And the world rushes in.
The forest hits you all at onceâloud, alive. Birds you could name without thinking. Patterns of movement in branches. The subtle internal creaks of trees older than anything youâve ever known. The wind, shifting direction, catching in layers.
Itâs overwhelming. Familiarâbut overwhelming.
Thereâs a ringing underneath it all, and you wince slightly, jaw tightening as your system struggles to recalibrate.
For a split secondâyou think he shifts. Like he might step forward. But it doesnât come.
âWhy did you do that?â he asks.
âI asked if you can keep a secret,â you murmur, voice quieter now, more focused. âMy talents are best utilized this way.â
You steady your breathing. Let the vertigo comeâlet it pass.
Then you move back toward your original position, lowering into a squat this time instead of lying flat. Your weight settles through your feetâgrounded. Familiar. Controlled. Muscle memory.
Only this timeâthereâs no rifle in your hands. No target waiting at the end of a scope.
You clear your throat.
âWhen I tell you to,â you say, âI need you to snap your fingers.â
âWhat?â His voice carries differently nowâdeeper, fullerâvibrating through the space in a way that brushes against your senses.
You ignore it.
âJustââ you exhale sharply, irritation flickering back in, âjust do it. Please.â
He doesnât respond verbally. But you hear itâthe subtle shift of his posture, the quiet strain of ligaments in his neck as he nods once.
You raise your hands, forming rough circles with your fingers, bringing them up to your eyes.
Forget the binoculars. You are the binoculars.
You take one slow breath. Close your eyes.
âSnap.â
He does. And just like thatâthe world changes. It folds outward into something measurable. Structured. Clean. Waves. Distances. Angles. Elevation. Depth. Everything reduced to something precise. Understandable. Controlled.
It settles over you like something old. Something known. Like slipping back into a version of yourself you havenât touched sinceâNo. You push that train of thought away.
But this? This was always a gift. Complicated. Dangerous. But a gift.
You exhale slowly, letting the system stabilize. Your focus sharpensâlocking onto the outline of Timâs cabin. The front porch. Movement patterns. Structural layout.
âAlright,â you murmur. âWhatâs the time?â
You hear the faint shift of his wrist. The quiet movement of fabric.
âQuarter till,â he answers.
You nod once, eyes still fixed forward.
âRight,â you say softly.
A beat.
âWonât be long now.â
Thereâs a pause behind you.
ThenââWhat are you, umâŠwhat do you see?â
You donât turn, âthe same things that have always been there.â
Behind you, thereâs the faint rustle of movement. You hear him pick up the binoculars. Adjust them.
A beat.
âWaitâwait,â you snap. âAhâthere.âÂ
Barnes has moved closer now, drawn in despite himselfâentranced by what youâre doing, even if he doesnât fully understand it.
You stick your finger out, pointing into the distance.
Behind you, he adjusts the binoculars, squinting. Then lets out a quiet huff, âI donât even see anything.â
âGet down here, you idiot,â you mutter, reaching back to tug at his pant leg.
He hesitates. His eyes flick down to youâyour position, low to the ground, closeâbefore something in his posture shifts. Heâs never been one for proximity. Not like this. Butâfor some reasonâyou donât seem to register the same way.
That night on New Yearâs Eveâpressed into the couch beside youâhad been the first time in years heâd been that close to someone. Not counting Steve or Sam, obviously. They didnât count. They never did. Too loud. Too present. Too known.
Thisâthis is different.
You donât even notice when he finally lowers himself beside you. Not untilâyou hear it.
That deep, rhythmic thud in his chest. Fast. Heavy. Poundingâpoundingâpounding. Like a bass drum barely contained beneath skin.
Your breath catches. Sharp. Quick. Heâd miss it. But you donât.
Your focus slips for half a secondâperipheral wideningâtaking him in at your side. The sheer size of him. The heat. The presence.
Godâyou wish you could fucking smell him right now.
Stop that.
You force your eyes forward again. Brain agreeing. Heartâless so.
âThere,â you say, pointing again. âRight there in the kitchen. Look through the side window.â
He adjusts, more carefully this time. Thereâs a pause. Thenâa low hum of acknowledgment.
âLooks like a kid,â he says. âThought Tim was older.â
You roll your eyes, âThatâs his son, dumbass.â
âHow the hell was I supposed to know that?â
You both watch. Harley. You hadnât seen him in years. He hadnât come around the last time you were hereâjust Tim. Awkward. Stiff.
Yona had hated him then. Still does. Especially after the way Tim had looked at youâexcited, almostâwhen he found out you were being shipped off. Like it was something to celebrate.
You clear your throat, âWeâre creatures of habit,â you say suddenly.
âWhat?â
âTheyâve had the same routine for years. I can predict it. Watch.â
You shift slightly, settling deeper into your stance,âHarleyâthe kid, who is older than me, by the wayââ
âYouâre a kid too.â
âCompared to you maybeâand fuck you, tell that to my goddamn dog tags.â
âChrist,â he mutters, shaking his head. âBack in my day, women didnât have mouths like you.â
âYeah?â you shoot back immediately, a grin tugging at your lips. âWell, James, itâs been a long time since the Civil War.â
You drop your hands from your eyes and turn toward him, smile widening, âYou knowâwe actually have the right to vote now, too.â
He snortsâreal. Then straightens almost immediately, like the sound slipped out without permission. Like he caught it too late.
âIâm not that old,â he grumbles.
You linger on him for a second longer than necessaryâthen turn back, lifting your hands again.
âAnyway,â you continue, âHarleyâs going to finish the dishes. Then heâll peek down the hall, yell for Timâwho is already, more or less, a pack of Miller Lite in.â
âItâs ten in the morning.â
âYouâre right,â you nod. âLate start for him.â
âJesus.â
âAhâthere,â you murmur. âLookâshaking his hands dryâŠwiping them on his pantsâand there.â
âHuh.â
âOkay, now heâs going to grab the keys. Theyâre on the coat rack by the front door. Then heâll step outsideâpauseârealize itâs cold, and go back in for a jacket.â
âThereâs no wayââ
But Harley does exactly that. And you canât help it. A hint of pride slips in, âNow heâll go back out, head to the truck. Itâs oldâheâll unlock it, but the door sticks, so heâll slam his side into it until it gives.â
Harley does. Again. This timeâBarnes isnât looking through the binoculars anymore. Heâs looking at you.
You donât notice, âThere we goâŠstarting the engineâŠâ you murmur. âAnd now heâs heading to Mamawâs. Heâll be there about twenty minutes, give or take. Then ten minutes to the grocery store.â
You tilt your head slightly, âSo weâve gotâŠfortyâforty-five minutes to intercept.â
âIntercept?â
âYes,â you scoff. âIf we walk up to the front door, theyâll know somethingâs off. Thatâs not routine. Thatâs not how things work around here.â
âSo whatâwe confront him in the grocery store parking lot?â
âNo,â you say, finally turning to him againâsmiling now. âWe run into him.â
You shift slightly, more animated now.
âHeâll ask what the hell Iâm doing here. Iâll tell him Iâm showing my two fellow servicemen where I grew up.â
A beat.
âAnd then heâll invite us over for a beer tonight.â
Thereâs a pause.
âWow,â he says slowly. âYouâve really got this all figured out, donât you?â
You shrug, âPredictability is probability.â A beat. âWhich is mathematics.â Another. âAnd I happen to be very good at spotting patterns.â
âŠ
âDo you see breadcrumbs?â you ask, staring down at the list in your left hand, the other pushing the buggy in front of you.Â
âUhmmm⊠yeah, what kind do youââ Sam stops himself mid-sentence, shaking his head in disbelief. âWow. I cannot believe you convinced me to do this.â
Peeling your eyes up from the list, you tilt your head toward him. âYou were just getting into character so wellâŠâ
He rolls his eyes, turning his body back toward the aisle, scanning shelves like heâs been doing this his whole life, âItalian? Panko?â
âUhhhhmmmmâŠâ you hum, thinking, the pen in your hand coming up to tap against your lips. âActually, maybe we should just crush crackers insteadââ
You pause, glancing around the store, your brows pulling together slightly. âWait⊠where is Barnes?â
âYou sent him to get ground beef.â
âRight, riââ
âDee?â
The voice slices through the momentâsharp, distant, once-known. âDeeâ
The name hits like a jolt of electricity down your spine, like something buried too deep just got dragged to the surface without warning. Not your name. Not really. At least, not anymore.
A designation. A label. Something clinical. Something you werenât supposed to hear outside of sterile rooms and cold metal restraints. Something tied to D3 1.1âsomething you had buried, compartmentalized, locked away so tightly that hearing it now feels like your brain stutters trying to process it.
For half a second, you forget where you are. You and Sam both turn, looking past the buggy. At him. Exactly as you planned it.Â
The twenty-something standing there, eyes wide, like heâs just seen a ghost.
âHarley?!â you gaspâwhere is your Academy Award?
The basket in his hand slips, crashing to the floor, potatoes rolling lazily across the tile.
He steps forward cautiously, like heâs approaching something fragileâunsure if he should hug you, unsure if youâd even want him to.
You donât. Not really. But you make the exception. Not for himâno. For the image. For the narrative. For the mission.Â
You slide away from the cart and start walking toward him slowly, mirroring his hesitation.
âDeeâŠâ he says again, softer this time, like heâs testing the name, like heâs afraid youâll disappear if he says it too loud.
His eyes drag over youâtaking inventory. But then he pauses. Squints. Something clicks.
âWait a minuteâŠâ His hand comes up to his mouth. âI thought you got your leg amputated?â
And just like thatâWhatever expression you hadâmanufactured or notâwipes clean off your face like someone sprayed you with Windex.
âWhat?â you ask. Thereâs no softness in it. No patience. Just disbelief, bordering irritation. âNo, noâHarley⊠I broke my femur.â
âBut I thoughtââ
âNo,â you cut in, a breath escaping you despite yourself. âNo. That was the other guy I was with.â
You donât elaborate. You donât need to. Heâs not really listening anyway.
He just shakes his head, like reality needs a second to catch up to him, before finally stepping forward and pulling you into a hug.
âWhat the hell are you doing here, Dee?â he asks, his right hand cradling the back of your head, his face turning into your shoulder as he breathes you in. âYou shouldâve calledâwouldâve loved to see you. Especially Daddy.â
âDonât worry,â you smile. âWeâre here for a few more days. Just, uhmâŠâ
You gesture behind you, âJust been showing a few of my old squadron members around where I grew up. We just got here last night.â
Harleyâs gaze shifts past you, landing on Sam.
Sam nods politely, a small, controlled smile on his face.
Harley studies him for a secondâthen that confusion creeps back in, âI thought they were all dead but two?â
You pinch the bridge of your nose. God.
âNo, no, Harley,â you correct, forcing patience. âThey were members of my unitâthe entire squadron is likeâŠmultiple units combined. So they werenât there with me that night.â
âHey, I found the ground beef.â Barnesâ voice cuts in, smooth, grounding, pulling the moment sideways.
âAnd also, whatâwhat the hell isâŠâ He squints down at the package in his hand. âStrongly flavored game meatâŠ?â
His eyes drag up from the label. Land on the scene. You. Sam. Harley. He goes still.
All three of you look at himâeach with something different. Irritation. Confusion. Disbelief.
Thereâs a beat. Like heâs waiting for context. When none comes, he clears his throat, âUhm⊠hello,â he says to Harley.
You blink once. Then turn, âHarley, this is my other⊠guest.â
Harleyâs eyes bounce between you and Barnes, and slowlyâa knowing smile spreads across his face, âOhhh, I get it now, Dee,â he chuckles. âYouâre bringinâ the old boyfriend âround where you grew up.â
Your mouth opens slightly. You glance at Bucky.
âIââ
No. This could work. This could be useful, âYes,â you recover, a quick laugh. âYeah. My boyfriend and ourââ
âThird wheel,â Harley cuts you off, smirking at Sam. âYeah, I get it. Iâm usually in your position.â
Sam looks like he wants to say something elseâsomething sharperâbut swallows it down.Â
âWow,â Harley laughs, shaking his head. âI canât believe youâre here, DeeâDaddy would love to see you.âÂ
He nudges you with his elbow, âWhatâve you got goinâ on tonight? Yâshould come swing by. Have some beers.â
Another nudge, âMaybe tell us some war stories,â he grins. âYou know Iâve been dyinâ to hear âem.â
You glance back at Sam and Barnes, âYeah⊠I think we have time for that, actually.â Then back to Harley, âWhat time works best? I think Yona will have us freed up around seven-ish.â
Harley grins, then slaps a hand against your backâHard.
The impact jolts through you, sharp and immediate. You stumble forward slightly, breath catchingânot enough to fully knock the wind out of you, but enough that it burns.
Your face tightens.
Sam and Bucky both move at the same time. A step forward. Instinct. Because they know.
Sensitive. Too sensitive. Every nerve ending like exposed wiring. Embarrassing. Obvious. Everyone knows it. Everyone exceptâ
âWell,â Harley continues, completely unaware, like nothing just happened. âThis is awesome, Dee. Iâll let Daddy know when I get back home.â
You inhale slowly through your nose, steadying yourself, âAwesome,â you echo, forcing the smile back into place. âOhâuhm, will Mamaw be joining us? I havenât seen her in forever.â
Harleyâs expression shifts, softens, âAw, no⊠yeah, no,â he shakes his head. âYâall are more than welcome to go visit her, butâshe canât move. Not after she had that stroke.â
Your eyes widen, âShe had a stroke?â
âOh yeah,â he says, letting out a small, almost disbelieving laugh. âThree of âem, actually.â
âŠ
âYou just had to go with the boyfriend thing, didnât you?â Sam shakes his head, hands tight on the steering wheel as the tires hum against the road. âHeâs already bad enough at acting normal.âÂ
You and Barnes both roll your eyes at that, almost in sync.
âHe fed it to me! I couldnât say noâand if you really think about it, it makes more sense anyway. What, I just came here to show my military friends around? I donât think so.â You gesture vaguely, like the idea itself is ridiculous, like it offends you on principle.
âThey werenât even supposed to know you were here in the first place!â Sam shoots back, glancing at you briefly before returning his eyes to the road.
âYou would never have made it into that house without meâdo you not understand?â you counter, voice sharpening, something defensive creeping in whether you mean for it to or not.
He shakes his head, unimpressed.
âSo, since you seem to have it all figured out, whatâs the plan?â he asks, mockery laced through every word.
You donât answer immediately. Just stare out at the road ahead, watching the trees blur past in streaks of dark green and shadow.
âHuh. Nothing? Really?â Sam presses. âI thought you were the one in charge here.â
âOh, fuck off,â you mutter, finally. âAnd itâs easyâwe go in, I look around. He either has it, or itâs a bust.â
âRight, okay,â Sam scoffs. âAs if thereâs nothing suspicious about you just wandering around his house.â
âIt wouldnât be wandering,â you snap. âIâd listen firstâsee if heâs nervous. Thereâd be a distraction. Then Iâd excuse myself, go to the bathroom, take a look.â
âTony said you werenât permitted to take out the sensory devices.â
âIâm surprised Iâm even allowed to breathe at this point,â you mutter, then add, almost offhandââAnd my in-ears are already out.â
âWhat?â Sam snaps, head whipping toward you.
âBarnesâ ideaâblame him, not me.â
âWhat??â Barnesâ voice cuts in immediately from the backseat, incredulous.
âRemind me how the hell I got stuck with you two?â Sam groans, dragging a hand down his face. Thenâ âOh, and another thing, Deeââ he emphasizes it now. âWhy did he keep calling you Dee?â
The question lands heavier than it should.
Catching you off guard, your gaze drops to your feet. You swallow, throat suddenly dry, words sticking for a second before you force them out.
âThat was⊠my nickname growing up.â
âYour nickname?â Sam frowns. âIâve never heard anyone else call you that.â
âThatâs because everyone knows better,â you bite, a little too fast, a little too sharp.
Sam hums, glancing at you again, something more curious settling into his expression.
âAh,â he says slowly. âSo it must be something embarrassing, then.â
You hesitate.
The road stretches on endlessly in front of you.
Thenâ
âD3 1.1.â
The words drop into the space between you like something physical.
The car goes quiet.
âThatâs, uh⊠the name I was born with.â
Samâs brows pull together. âThatâs hardly a name.â
âWell⊠it wasnât really a name name.â You shift slightly in your seat, fingers curling into your jeans. âIt was the designation for my embryo. They, uhââ you exhale softly through your nose. âUsually the infants from my program didnât⊠survive very long. So⊠they never got around to changing it.â
âOh.â
âYeah,â you laugh, but itâs hollowâtoo light, too brittle. âIt wasâhahaâit was actually on my dog tags.â
Sam presses his lips together, trying not to react, but the corners of his mouth betray him.
âOne of myâhahahaâone of my other units called me C3P0.â
That does it. Sam bursts out laughing, âHA!â
And despite everythingâdespite the heaviness still sitting in your chestâyou join him. The laughter comes easier than it should, shoulders shaking, the sound filling the car and pushing the tension out just enough to breathe again.
âWas that your callsign?â Sam asks, grinning now.
âWhat? No,â you giggle, shaking your head. âNo, my callsign was Longshot.â
Another beat passes, softer now.
âAh,â Sam nods, âI get it. âCause you were sniper trained.â
âWell⊠that, andâŠâ your voice trails off.
The humor dims. That partâThat part wasnât supposed to be said. Not then. Not now. Not ever.
âThat and what?â Sam presses, glancing at you again.
You hesitate. Your eyes flick up to the rearview mirror. Barnes sits in the backseat, posture loose, gaze fixed out the window like he hasnât been listening at all. Like heâs not paying attention.
Sam waits.
âReally?â he nudges, a grin tugging back at his mouth. âWhatâyou think either of us are taking this to the press?â
You roll your eyes, but thereâs less bite to it now. Maybe this helps. Maybe if they knowâif they seeâtheyâll stop looking at you like something fragile. Or worseâlike something they donât understand.
âI, uhâŠâ you swallow. âI hold the record for the longest-distance confirmed sniper kill.â
The words feel heavier once theyâre out.
Samâs expression drops instantly, âWhat?â he says, brows knitting together. âNo, that was done in Colombia. I remember hearing about it when I was serving. You hadnât even been deployed yet.â
âYeah,â you nod once. âNo, I wasnât deployed yet.â
A beat.
âI was fourteen.â
Silence. Immediate. Suffocating. The kind that presses against your ears until it almost rings.
Samâs grip tightens on the wheel again, knuckles paling as he stares straight ahead.
And just like thatâthe pride you used to feel? Gone. Replaced with something sour. Something that crawls up the back of your throat and sits there, heavy and bitter.
Because now you hear it. The way it sounds. Youâfourteen. Not a soldier. Not even a person. Just a tool. An experiment. Something pointed at a target and told to pull the trigger. Blood on your hands long before you ever had a choice in it.
The quiet stretches. Too long. ThenâFrom the backseatâ
Barnesâ voice cuts through it, low, casual, almost distracted, âwhat the hell is a C3P0?â
âŠ
The gravel drive up to Timâs front door crackles beneath the soles of your feet, each step loud in the quiet stretch of yard.Â
Sam stands next to you, steady, purposeful. Barnes trails a few paces behind, slowerânot hesitant, exactly, justâŠwatching.
âCan you pick up the pace, please,â Sam whisper-scolds over his shoulder. âShe said sheâs your girlfriend, not your caretakerâyou look like a freak. â
You shoot Sam a glare before glancing back at Barnes.
âItâs okay,â you say, softer now. âRemember, they think you two were at war together. I donât think theyâll hold it against him for being a little⊠awkward.â
The front porch looms ahead. Not intimidating. Not unfamiliar. JustâWrong. Because it hasnât changed. Not even a little.
The same warped planks. The same chipped red railing. The same sag in the middle step that used to catch your foot when you ran too fast as a kid.
You clear your throat, brushing your palms against your jeans, suddenly aware of your body in a way you donât like, âHow do I look?â
Sam doesnât even hesitate.
âWhat do you mean, âhow do I look?ââ he mutters. âItâs an interrogation, not a homecoming dance.â
âI havenât seen these two in years,â you push back. Then, almost as an afterthoughtâ âPlus, theyâve only ever seen me in boy clothes and ghillie suits.â
âYou look fine,â Sam grumbles, already half-focused on the door.
The steps creak beneath your feet as you climb them, each shift of weight pulling something loose in your memory. Flashes. Quick. Disjointed.
Running barefoot across the boards. Splinters. Mud. Laughterâyours? Someone elseâs?Â
You blink hard. If you were able to smell right nowâGod. Youâre sure it would be worse. The wood. The dirt. The old fabric. Sweat. Oil. Smoke.
It would come crashing back all at onceâtoo much, too fastâlayered over the present until you wouldnât be able to tell the difference.
And BarnesâClose behind you. Too close. Even without your full senses, youâre aware of him. The heat of him. The space he takes upâitâs enough. More than enough.
Sam lifts his hand to ring the doorbellâ
âIt doesnât work,â you say quickly.
He pauses, glancing at you with a raised brow.
âIt, umâŠâ you gesture vaguely. âI canât hear any wiring there. So.â
âRight,â he mutters.
âOhâand before we go in, remember,â you lean in slightly toward both of them, lowering your voice, âI have hearing and sight damage.â
A beat.
âCopy that,â Sam nods.
And just as you lift your hand to knockâThe door whips open.
The sudden movement makes you flinchâjust slightlyâleaving only the thin, rattling screen between you and him.
Tim.
He doesnât say anything at first. Just looks at you. Up and down. Slow. Measured.
His expression is mostly neutralâaside from the slack of his jaw, like something hasnât quite caught up yet.
His eyes drag over your face, down your fitted shirt, across the belt loops of your jeans, all the way to your shoesâTaking inventory. Comparing. Reconciling.
âWell Iâll be damned,â he mutters finally. âFinally grew into your nose.â
You roll your eyes automaticallyâmuscle memory more than reactionâas he kicks open the screen and pulls you into a hug.
Itâs immediate. Overwhelming. Big. Hot. Too tight. The kind of hug that doesnât ask.
His shirt sticks slightly to your skin. His arm locks around your shoulders, hand pressing into your upper back.
You stiffen for half a second before forcing yourself to lean into it. Play along.
âThem eyelashes, howeverââ he pulls back just enough to look at you again, still holding onto your arms, his face far too close as you try not to recoil.
He squints, scanning your features like heâs searching for the kid you used to be, âStill looks like switchgrass to meâŠâ
âŠ
âAlright, which one of these two is the boyfriend?â Tim asks, gesturing lazily with the beer bottle in his hand between Sam and Barnes, the two of them effectively boxing you in on the couch. âI heard itâs one of âem.â
âOhâum,â you glance to your right, barely hesitating. âBucky. Here.â
Tim studies him for a moment, lips wrapped loosely around the rim of the bottle. He takes a slow pull, swallows, then lowers it with a gruntâ
âand lets out a loud, unapologetic burp.
âWasnât he Australianâor⊠Irish or something?â
Your brows pull together. âWhat?â
âYeah,â he nods to himself, like heâs piecing something together. âYeah, Yona told me you had a boyfriend while you were servingââ
Oh. Fuck. NoâheâsâChrist. Heâs talking about Thomas.
âTim, Iââ you exhale, the sound heavy, real this time. Not curated. Not controlled. âNo. That wasâhis name was Thomas. He⊠died in captivity.â
Something shifts. Not visually. Not outwardly. But you feel it. Like pressure dropping before a storm. Like the moment right before a tornado warning hitsâwhen the air turns thick, damp, charged with something you canât see but know is there.
For a second, you think itâs the room. The house. The memory.
But thenâYou focus. Just slightly. And you realizeâItâs not the air. Itâs Tim.
ThumpThumpThumpThumpThumpThumpThump
His heart. Loud. Too loud. Pounding against his ribs like itâs trying to break out.
His breathing shiftsâsharp inhales, catching halfway down his throat, the airway tightening just enough for you to hearthe restriction as it forces its way back out.
Strange. Not grief. Not just discomfort. Nervous.
His blood pressure spikesâyou can hear it in the way the rhythm strains, pushes harder, faster.
Does he feel guilty? For you? For Thomas? For serving? For not serving? For not being there?
For not coming to see you when you were lying in that hospital bedâunconscious, unreachable, half-alive?
OrâIs it something else?
âWell,â you continue, quieter nowâbut deliberate. Testing. âHe was dead once the mine went off, basically.â
You shake your head, a weak, hollow chuckle pulling itself from somewhere deep in your chest.
âJust, uh⊠you know. Brain dead.â
Th-thump. Thump. Thuthump. Thâ
The rhythm stutters. Uneven. Unsteady. Building. Like something is climbing its way up his throat. Like panic. Like heâs trying to hold something down.
Ah. There it is.
You tilt your head slightly, watching him. Heâs hiding something.
âOnce they put him out of his misery,â you add, voice quieter stillâalmost conversational, like youâre not dissecting him in real time, âI smelled him as he rotted a few cells away from me.â
And thatâThatâs when the room actually changes. Because now itâs not just Tim.
Sam goes still beside youâtoo still. The kind of stillness that means heâs trying to process something he didnât know existed. Youâve never told him that. Not like that. Not ever.
And BarnesâBehind youâHe doesnât move. But you can feel it. The shift. Because he knows. He was there, not long, but he saw enough to understand exactly what youâre talking about. Close enough to carry it. Close enough to feel the weight of it every single day since.
âSorry,â you shake your head lightly, forcing a small, strained smile back into place. âSorry, Timâthat was⊠probably really not what anyone wanted to hear, Iââ
Your voice fades. Because for a secondâYou almost donât recognize it as your own.
âI guess being home has made me feel more⊠comfortable. Opening up.â
The lie sits awkwardly in your mouth.
Before Tim can respondâThe front door kicks open. The sound cuts through the tension like a blade.
Harley.
He stomps in, arms loaded with two twelve-packs of Coors Banquet, the cardboard crinkling in his grip.
âBanquet?â you say, pushing yourself up from the couch, letting the shift in energy carry you toward the kitchen. âYouâre spoiling us.â
Harley laughs, setting them down on the counter with a heavy thud.
âYouâre home,â he says, smiling at youâsimple, genuine. âFelt right to get the good stuff.â
âŠ
The two packs of beer have been nearly drained at this point, empty bottles scattered across the coffee table and lining the arm of Timâs chair. Faint music hums from a radio tucked beneath the televisionâsomething old, something static-laced.
Sam stands by the wall with Tim and Harley, their attention fixed on the various hunting rifles mounted there. Tim sits heavy in his worn leather chair, lazily mouthing a Camel Crush, the ember glowing dim between his lips. Harley is undeniably enjoying the situationâlaughing, leaning, relaxed.
Tim, howeverâstill on edge. You can hear it. Even now.
Swaying slightly to the beat of the music, you feel Barnes behind you, leaning back against the kitchen counter. You take a step back.
Then another. Until the heat of him is almost unbearable.
âIâm behind you,â he mumbles.
And before you can respond, you back into him anyway. You ignore the firm press of him against you. Ignore it like youâve trained yourself to ignore everything else.
âWhat are youââ he starts, but you cut him off, tilting your head back, leaning toward his earâyour neck resting against his shoulder.
âPut your hands on my hips,â you murmur. Demanding. Blunt. Completely at odds with the soft smile on your lips.
âWhat?â he asks, body going rigid.
âPut your handsâŠâ you warn, reaching back to grab his wrists. ââŠon my hips.â
Reluctantlyâhesitantlyâhe does.
âPlay into it,â you hiss.
And immediatelyâIt almost undoes you. The contact. The weight of his hands. Inappropriate. Distracting. Wanting. Pathetic.
You swallow it down hard, forcing your expression to stay light, playfulânormal.Â
But his fingertipsâthey leave a trail. Calloused. Rough. Warm. You feel one catch slightly against the sensitive skin at your waist, and if you had even an ounce less control, youâre certain something would slipâa gasp, a sound, something humiliating.
The worst partâyou swear you can smell him.
But you canât. At least not physically. The in-nose is turned all the way up. There should be nothing. But heâs there. Pressing at the front of your sinuses like a phantom. Like something knocking, trying to be let in. Like a vampire waiting for permission.
Itâs debaucherous. Overwhelming. Debilitating. And stillâYou manage to keep the act. Even as your knees threaten to give out beneath you.
âHeâs hiding something,â you whisper into Barnesâ ear, smile still fixed in place. âAct like youâre enjoying this. Youâre stiff.â
And he is stiff. JustâŠnot in the way you might prefer.
But what you donât missâIs the change. His pulse. Faster. His breathingâshorter. Controlled, but strained.
Not like Timâsâno, this is different.
Thisâyou recognize. Afghanistan. Adrenaline. Something closer to want. To restraint. Something dangerous. Something youâre almost grateful you canât fully smellâBut part of you thinksâŠthat maybe you can. That maybe your body still registers it even when your mind canât. That something deeperâyour organs, your nervous systemâstill reacts. Still craves. Still remembers.
And judging by the way his heart poundsâthe way his abdomen tightens beneath your backâhe feels it too.
âIâm trying,â he mutters, forcing a smile.
âHeâs lying about something,â you continue quietly. âHeart rateâs way above baseline.â
Across the room, Tim turns. You hear it before you see itâthe subtle pop of vertebrae in his neck as he shifts, eyes landing on the two of you. Watching. Assessing.
His expression softensâjust slightly. Maybe reassured. Maybe convinced. But his heartâStill racing.
âHow long those two been together?â Harley asks.
Sam doesnât look up, too busy inspecting an antique sawed-off shotgun, fingers tracing along the worn barrel.
âUhâŠâ he mutters. âCouple months nowâafter she got back.â
Then Sam looks up. Really looks at the two of you. At Barnesâ hands on your hips. At your fingers now loosely intertwined with his. You can practically hear the thought he doesnât say outloudâJesus. The two people who hate being touched the mostâŠ
âIâm going to go look around,â you murmur, letting your breath ghost deliberately against Barnesâ neck. âYouâre going to create a distraction so they donât follow me. Okay?â
He nods. And you definitely donât miss the way he swallows. You turn, smile at himâthen narrow your eyes brieflyâand step away.
âCan I still use the bathroom down here?â you call, already moving towards the hall.
âOf course,â Tim huffs, crushing his cigarette into the ashtray. âJust holler if you get lost.â
The moment your feet leave the linoleum and meet the hardwoodâyou lock in.
You pass the bathroom, flipping on the light and closing the door without entering, just enough to sell it.
Then keep walking. Straight. Sharp right. His office.
You donât dare close the door. Not worth the risk. For once youâre more hidden by leaving it wide open.Â
The roomâis disgusting. Papers everywhere. Old receipts. Half-crushed cans. Dust coating nearly every surface. The air feels thick, staleâlike it hasnât moved properly in years.
A corkboard on the wall, cluttered with random notes, hunting permits, old photographsânothing immediately useful. Filing cabinets half-open, drawers uneven. A printer shoved into the corner, blinking some useless error code.
Messy. Chaotic. But not random.
Your eyes move quickly, scanning, sorting. Looking for something that doesnât belong.
Thenâa sound. Samâs phone ringing loud enough to make you jump. You freeze, listening.
âHold on,â Sam says faintly from the other room. âLet me step out and take thisâitâs my sister.â
A pause.
âMind if we join?â Harleyâs voice follows. âItâs muggy as hell in here.â
Tim mutters something in agreement. Thenâfootsteps. Multiple. Moving.
The front door creaks open. Shifts. Closes. Silence.
You wait a second longer, listening hard. Nothing.
And with a sigh of relief, for just a momentâyou let your guard down.
The desk by the window catches your attention. A tan manila folder sits beneath a stack of unused printer paper. Too clean. Too deliberate to not be something that wasnât supposed to be haphazardly hidden.Â
Thereâs an ashtray beside it. A checkbook. A pen placed parallel to the edge.
You glance over your shoulder. Nothing. StillâYou move carefully. Slide the folder free. Your fingers tremble slightly. Why? It could be nothing. And even if itâs somethingâit could just be proof of the money. Something explainable. Something harmless.
Butâhis heart. The way it raced. The way it panicked.
Jaw clenching, the sound of it grating as your masseters rub against the boneâyou finally open it.Â
And it is bank statements. Page after page. Proof of deposit. Proof of transfer. Proof of sending. A return. Then another send. And finally, an arrival at U.S. customs.
You flip the page. The senderâs copies make themselves known. All in Dari. Not surprising considering the afghan contacts.
You skim. Thenâsomething catches. â۱ÙŰłÛÙ.â [Rosiyeh.] Russia.
Your stomach drops. A pit opening, deep and sudden. A push out of the door of an airplane.Â
You flip again.
And nowâRussian. Clean. Official. More pages. Transmissions. Tim to the Afghans. The Afghans to the Russians.
And thenâIn perfect, untranslated Englishâ âD3 1.1.â
Your breath stops. Below itââTsentr vremennogo soderzhaniya. Temporary detention center.â [Coordinates. Exact. Western Siberia.]
A smile spreads across your faceâbut itâs wrong. Sharp. Betrayed.
âYou motherfuckerâŠâ you whisper.
And thenâa creak.
Behind you. Floorboard. Weight.
Your hand moves instantly, reaching into your boot, pulling your pistol and aiming it toward the door without even turning. The natural instinct that had been burned into your muscle memory revealing itself as useful even after months of lying dormant.Â
âYou slimy fuck,â you laugh, hollow and violent, eyes still narrowed at the folder in front of you. âYou sold me out.â
Tim steps into view, his own gun raised, moving cautiously.
âYou were supposed to be able to sense it,â he says, his breathing uneven. âI only did it because of that.â
Your ears ring as he moves slightly to your left, taking careful, mechanical steps towards you. Eyes unmoving, your right arm still extended and sturdy, finger gripping the trigger with trained reluctance.Â
âYou got seven people killed,â you say, voice low.
âThat wasnât supposed to happen,â he replies, calmâtoo calm. âYou shouldâve smelled it coming.â
Your expression flickers as the next words roll off of his tongue.Â
âIt was stuffed with nitroglycerin.â
And thatâthat pulls you somewhere else. Dark. Buried.
âWhat?â you ask, but your voice is weaker now.
Before Tim can get an answer outâyou clock another noiseâand youâre already moving. Body choosing to shift before your brain can even catch up. You reach into the back of your jeans with your free hand, gripping the second gun you had hidden, and aim it behind you without ever turning your head.
âGet that gun out of my fatherâs face.â
Harley.Â
Gripping the same rifle that was mounted to the wall earlier. Tracking you like prey. Like the same deer you used to hear in the meadows early Sunday morningsâtheir hearts flutteringâonly to be silenced with a popâa pop that came from this rifle heâs aiming on you now.Â
âYouâre lying,â you say to Tim, ignoring Harley.
Nostrils flaring as you read more lines from the page in the folder that youâre still stuck on.Â
âGET THE GUN OUT OF HIS FACE!â Harley shouts.
You donât flinch, the same unsettling smile returning, shaking your head in disbelief.Â
âThey knew what you were.â Tim fires back. âLab grownâdifferent. They wanted in. I needed the money. I told them youâd probably be able to tell something was off. Hell, I went out of my way to say nitroglycerin on PURPOSE. You never, ever missed that! You hated the fuckinâ smell of it growinâ up. Always complaininâ about it beinâ too fuckin sweetâ. You shouldâve smelled it.â
Your stomach twists. Becauseâheâs rightâyou should have smelled it.Â
And worst of all isâyou did.
But ThomasâŠand your greedâyou ignored all of it.Â
âPUTââ Harley starts.
âMove another inch and Iâll blow your fucking head off.â
Barnes.
Calm. Deadly. Metal arm locked around Harleyâs throat, dragging him back into his sturdy chest. His own gunâwhich he also wasnât supposed to haveâpressing into your childhood friends temple.Â
Four heartbeats now. All loud. All colliding.
âI didnât smell it,â you try.
But it sounds wrong. Even to you.
âThen you were distracted,â Tim says, finger trembling on the trigger.
âYouâre lying!â you shout.
âI wanted my money, not for you to be fuckinâ dead!â he yells. âHell, I raised you!â
âThere wasnâtââ your face pinches together, your own lies trying to keep themselves from coming out. âThere was no nitroglycerin.â
Tim lets out a laugh. Taunting and brutal, âYou trying to make me believe thatâŠor yourself?â
âI wouldâve smelled it.â
âNo, you shouldâve!â he snaps. âI made it myself. Same compound we always trained you with!â
Your breath stutters, âyouâre lyingâŠâ you repeat, the phrase turning into a mantra.Â
âYou made a mistake, kid.â
No. Your finger tightens on the trigger, âI donât make mistakes.â
The words cut through your teeth like something unbreakable. Painful. Sharp. Ugly. If it were diamond the cut would be jagged.Â
And somewhereâyou wonder if Barnes understands what you two are talking about. If he sees you for what you really are.Â
âYou shouldâve smelled it from miles away,â Tim continues. âYou were distracted.â
âI was not.â your voice breaks, tears blurring your vision.
âYou were faulty. YOU made the mistakeââ
And before the end of the sentence manages to leave his lipsâyou fire simultaneously.Â
Two shots. Perfect. Right through the eyes. They drop instantly. Like sandbags. Heavy. Resonating. And thenâsilence.Â
Your lip twitches, pride seeping in for just a momentâbecause mistakes donât look like this.
Mistakes donât land clean.
Mistakes donât hit exactly where you aim. Youâd laugh if you couldâstanding there, trembling, staring down at Timâs body with his finger still curled around the trigger.Â
Footsteps echo through the houseâthen the sound of Samâs phone clattering to the floor.Â
âWhatâŠthe hellâŠjust happened?â Sam.
That breaks you out of it. You finally turn towards the door to the other side of the office, face pale, eyes wideânot guiltânot even shock. Something else.
âWhat did you do?â Sam shouts, looking between the bodies. âAnd where the hell did you get that gun?â
Your gaze flicks to Harleyâs body, the shot cleanâstraight into the center of his pupil. Then your eyes drag upwards, towards Barnes, only to flick right over his shoulder where Harleyâs head had been resting.Â
The bullet had gone all the way through, and lodged perfectly into the wall behind him.Â
And BarnesâŠhe isnât looking at Sam. He isnât even looking at you. No, heâs staring at the precision.Â
âYou shot both of themâŠright through the pupilsâŠâ he murmurs.Â
âBarnesâŠâ Sam warns.Â
You swallow the lump you didnât know was in your throat.Â
âThey had to die,â you say calmly. âThey were a liability.â
âThey werenât supposed to die!â Sam gestures between the bodies.
But youâyouâre already moving. Ignoring him. All emotion gone. Compartmentalized.
âHe sold me out.â You grab the folder.
âWhat?â Sam asks.Â
âThe explosion, the one that sent me home,â you say. âThey found out about me because of him. That money theyâd been talking about over the radio? It was from them.â
âFrom who?â
âHYDRA.â
Sam rubs a hand down the side of his face, âthat doesnât justify killing them! You shouldâve come to me first!â
âThere is more to this story than either of you know.â
âOh really? You care to enlighten us?â
âItâs personal.â
âThen itâs not a valid reason.â
You spin, gun upâpointed directly at Samâs face.
His eyes catch on it. So do yours. What the hell are you doing?
You let go, and it hits the floor with a heavy, final thud.
âIâm not talking about this here,â you warn. âThere could be a wire.â
Sam exhales, jaw tight, then nods toward the door.
âGo outside. Barnes and I will try to clean this shit up.â
You huff, turning.
âNot much to clean,â you shrug. âMy shots arenât messy.â
Staring down at your work one more time, you walk out the door. Down the hallway. The front door creaks open. Then slams shut behind you.Â
And theyâre left standing thereâin the silence you created.
[August 20th, 2015, Arlington, Virginia: A month after medical discharge]
The sound your cane made as it repeatedly hit the marble flooring of the hotel was humbling to say the least.Â
âWe are here today to mark the loss of a joint operational United States and United Kingdom special forces squadron. This memorial is not an explanation of events. Those details remain classified, and they will stay that way. What matters today is not how this team was lost, but who they wereâŠâ
Can you believe they had initially insisted on you using a wheelchair? You wouldâve rather died in captivity than faced that level of mortification. It was already bad enough that you had two people on either side of you, clutching their pearls like you were just going to suddenly fall to the ground and die, as well as two more people behind you, monitoring your movements from the back.
You felt like you were being escorted into a court room, about to face trial for capital murder or something. Well, in a way, you kind of were. Dressed in black, equipped with a serious pair of medically prescribed sunglasses, headed to a memorial for seven people, all of their deaths preventable if you had just been paying attention. It was worse than capital murder â it was mass murder. And the only other person who had known that at the time was facing towards you in the hotel lobby, missing a leg, and sitting down in a wheelchair.Â
Humbled again.
What the hell was the matter with you?
â...United States Army Special Forces, Major Robert âFUBARâ Ritchie commanded this squadron with consistency and discipline. He set standards and enforced them. His authority was never in question because it did not rely on volume or force. It relied on preparation and accountabilityâŠâ
Once you and your entourage had made your way past the front desk, you heard a voice call your name. Someone desperate â yelling out to you from the side of the big room. You glanced over, your vision being swallowed up by the gigantic male specimen who was barreling towards you, arms outstretched wide.Â
Eyes bulged, your cane dropped to the floor, the sound reverberated around the echoey walls of the hotel. You hadnât seen him since â well, since you left on the mission.Â
âSchwarzy?!â You howled as he scooped you into his chest.Â
He spun you around, his hand cradling the back of your head.Â
âFuck, Iâm so happy youâre alright.â He sniffled.Â
You looked down at his face, legs wrapped around his waist, he was crying.Â
âOh, Nick, donât cry.â You whispered, using his real name, eyebrows furrowed together as you swiped your thumbs across his cheeks.
âItâs my fault.â He shook his head, not being able to look at you.Â
âYou werenât even there.â You said gently, laughing a bit.Â
âExactly.â He sputtered, completely breaking down into tears.Â
Tony leaned into Pepper's ear as the two of them, plus Nat and Rhodey, watched the scene unfold.Â
âI thought the boyfriend was British?â Tony mumbled to her.
Pepper slapped his chest, âthe boyfriend was British, heâs dead now. Youâre here honoring him today, Tony. Jesus Christ.âÂ
â...United States Army Special Forces, Captain Brian âRFBâ Harrison served as the squadronâs intelligence officer. His work informed every movement this team made. He understood that good intelligence does not seek attentionâit prevents mistakes. He did his job well...â
Schwarzy placed you back down on the ground, but of course, you werenât prepared, legs buckled out from under you, landing on your ass with a smack.Â
âFuck,â Schwarzy cursed, watching as your congregation rushed towards you. âFuck, Iâm so sorry. I didnât even think ââ
âNick,â you pressed, âItâs fine.â
Two sets of hands reached underneath your armpits to help you back up, your eyes not leaving his face for a moment.Â
He was â GodâŠ
He had been taking this really hard.
It was written all over him, carved into his skin like cave drawings.Â
Survivors' guilt.Â
You tried shaking the thought out of your head.Â
All thanks to you, by the way.Â
Sighing, you reached for the discarded cane as Rhodey handed it to you. Not letting go of your arm until he knew you were stable. His lips in a tight line, he gave you a once over, then turned to Nick with an outstretched hand.Â
âYou must be Schwarzy,â Rhodes nodded to him. âWeâve heard a lot about you.â
Nick stood still for a moment, his face frozen in time, eyes wandering over each member of your pieced-together family.Â
âIâŠâ Nick breathed out, refocusing on Rhodey. âColonel Rhodes ââ
âOh Jesus.â Tony had muttered under his breath.
Nat corrected him with an elbow to the rib.Â
âWow itâsâŠwow. I almost joined the Air Force because of you.â Nick admitted with veneration.Â
Rhodey glanced down between the two of them, attempting not to pull a face at the prolonged, awkward, tight gripped handshake. You tried to suppress a malaproposed laugh, forgetting that these people who you knew so well could garner such a stunned reaction.Â
âWhat stopped you?â Rhodes asked, pulling his hand back and stretching out his fingers.
âSaid I was too big.â Nick hadnât blinked once during the entire exchange.Â
âThatâsâŠâ Rhodey started, raising an eyebrow in Nickâs direction. âOkay, you know what, Iâm not going to take that as an insult.â
â...United States Army Special Forces, Staff Sergeant John âStevie Nicksâ Brando was responsible for engineering and demolition. When the plan required adaptation, he provided it. His technical judgment allowed others to move forward with confidence...â
As Tony walked over to Nick for his own greeting, you turned around, and nodded towards Rhino. He pulled his lips together, acknowledging your presence, and wheeled himself over to you.
âYou must be Nicolas,â You heard Tony say to Scharzy over your shoulder. âItâs nice to finally meet you.â
âWow, Mr. Stark,â Nick responded, but his words became muffled as Rhino rolled closer. âIâŠwow, Agent RomanoffâŠyouâreâŠwow.â
Despite the new and improved AGSIâs you woke up with, your ears still rung with trepidation. Anticipation from the incoming proximity bubbled up underneath your skin like soapy water. The times you and Rhino had interacted during your captivity were few and far between, but all of them malicious on his end. He had been upset, and rightfully so. You had only hoped he wouldnât mention it to anyone, well, that was if he hadnât already.Â
Once the two of you were face to face he let your name pass the threshold of his lips. You couldnât tell if it had made him feel sick, or if it was bordering on cathartic.Â
âHow have you been?â Rhino asked.
Utterly commiserated, you didnât want to look down on him, so you crouched with your left leg, and extended the broken right one off to the side, being careful of the pressure.Â
âHow have I been?â You scoffed, but it wasn't rude. âLook at you. How have you been?â
The two of you surveyed each other for a moment. There was undeniable tension. Your mind wandered off to what you had walked into only days before the explosion, while his mind slipped and fell into that same puddle of resentment.Â
âIâve been betterâŠâ he said finally, but trailed off, his eyes widening at something behind you.
Not being able to hear as usual, plus getting to experience your life for the first time without the threat of smell, and the fact that your corneas were still damaged, you couldnât tell who, or what exactly was approaching your six. Looking back on it, the assumption shouldâve been very clear. Although, at the time, you hadnât anticipated this.Â
âLook what the cat dragged in.â A voice called, one that you recognized, but couldnât quite place.
â...United States Army Special Forces, Sergeant First Class Jonathan âCURJâ Jackson led the direct action element. He understood that assault work is not about aggression, but control. He maintained that control under pressureâŠâ
Turning around slowly, your eyes adjusted to the three men who were standing in front of you.
The voice that had spokenâŠyou recognized him as Matthew Staggs. No wonder Rhino looked like heâd seen a ghost. This was who you had walked in on him with only weeks ago.Â
Smiling at Matthew, then looking to the left of him, your expression faltered. You blinked rapidly from underneath your sunglasses.Â
Tall, dark and handsome.Â
âLuke?â You whispered, but he had heard it.
âHi gorgeous.â He grinned at you â it didnât match his eyes.Â
Tears had begun to accumulate, taking even more of your vision with them. You tilted your head back, not wanting the people around you to see them fall.Â
Sighing, pulling yourself back together, you looked back down â but you werenât able to find the words to say. Just stuttering over all the memories that came flooding back, you were jumping over them like hurdles.Â
âAre you alright?â He asked gently, stepping towards you with an outstretched hand.
Still not able to speak, though your mouth was moving like it was trying to. Looking all around your face, he brought his hand up to your cheek, and slammed you into his chest. His hands wrapped around your waist, burying his nose into your neck.
âIâm surprised you didnât smell me.â He mumbled, chuckling a bit, his breath tickling at your skin.
âDid you finish your tour?â You had finally managed, voice breaking off into your throat.
âNo,â He sighed, breathing you in. âNo, Iâm here for this, head to London tomorrow for the other, and then I'm back on base.â
You nodded, not sure what else to say, or how to even make any words. Another hand on your back grounded you further, you peeked over your shoulder to identify the owner. The third man that had been with them, Commander McNamara. He smiled at you as he patted your back, then moved over to speak with Rhino.
âFuck,â Luke exhaled, pulling back, his hand still cradling your cheek. âI could kiss you right now.â
You think he was going to move in, but he was interrupted by the huge, warm force that suddenly enveloped around the two of you.
â...British Army SAS, Colour Sergeant George âMickâ Taylor was the senior technical specialist from the United Kingdom contingent. He brought experience, reliability, and consistency into environments where those traits were not optionalâŠâ
âHey, Schwarzâ.â Luke laughed, his head resting atop yours, and Nickâs head atop his.
âLuke,â Nickâs voice was deep, it vibrated up and down the vertebrae of your spine. âMan, thanks so much for coming.â
Schwarzy pulled back,Â
looking back and forth between the two of you, about to speakâŠ
âŠbut his eyes caught on Rhino.Â
Brows furrowing, his head shook back and forth.
âIâŠâ Nick tried â but the sound melted away into the surrounding air.
âItâs alright, Nick.â Rhino nodded at him, noticing his line of sight, it was directed towards his amputated leg.
âFuck, IâŠâ Schwarzy took a step back. âYour leg, IâŠâ
Luke grabbed a hold of his shoulder, trying to steady him. All the color had washed out of Nickâs face.
âSchwarzâ,â Luke said, trying to ground him. âHey Nick, I think you should sit down.â
Luke started pushing him over towards the nearest chair.
âI donâtâŠâ Schwarzy was panicking, brain going a hundred miles a minute, his eyes flashing around the entire room. âI can't ââ
He cut himself off, yanking Lukeâs hand off of him. Hands coming up into his hair, gaze landing down on the floor, his white cast had turned to green.Â
âIâm going to be sick.â Nick mumbled to himself.
â...British Army SAS, Sergeant Bako âChristine McVieâ Umaru was a direct action operator. He operated in close quarters, under immediate risk, and remained focused on his responsibilities until the endâŠâ
You, Luke, Rhino, Matthew, and Commander McNamara all looked at each other frantically.
âOh boy.â Tony said, noticing the scene unfolding in the middle of the hotel lobby.
Luke stepped towards Nick, palm facing towards him, as if he was approaching a wild, territorial hippopotamus.Â
âNick, âya big cunt,â he meant it with the utmost love and adoration. âSchwarzâ why donât we get âya water?â
Fuck.
And then Nick, this gigantic, burly hunk of a man â the textbook definition of masculinity and strength â fell down onto his knees. It sounded like a gunshot as his bones collided with the floor.
Turning away, you couldnât watch this. You couldnât bear to see the complete and utter breakdown he was having. Two of the reasons for his nauseating guilt you had caused.Â
He wretched behind you, you didnât turn to watch, just walked straight past everyone, headed towards the hotel bathroom. Spots popped up in your vision, ears ringing, stomach sinking â it was like you were in Russia all over again.
â...British Army SAS, Sergeant Thomas âBuckinghamâ Ridge served as the reconnaissance operator. His role placed him ahead of the team, frequently alone. Reconnaissance demands patience, accuracy, and restraint. He met those requirementsâŠâ
The rest of the hour had been a blur.Â
You knew that Nat had followed you into the bathroom, felt the sensation of her rubbing a damp paper towel on your forehead.Â
You knew you were inside of a bus at one point. It bounced over speedbumps as the big group of you headed towards Arlington Cemetery.Â
You knew Command Sergeant Major Johnson was present at the gravesite upon your arrival. He had been there to give the memoriam speech. Heâd come from North Carolina to pay his respects.Â
You knew that Nick and Rhino were on either side as he delivered his eulogy.Â
You knew that it was raining.
â...Two members of this squadron survived the incident and have returned to the United States for medical treatment, and one member was unable to deploy on the final mission, and now carries that weight forward. We are fortunate enough to have the three of them in attendance with us today. To these servicemembers I say, remember that survival does not diminish sacrifice â It extends itâŠâ
You knew that a sensation you didnât entirely recognize began to catch fire beneath your skin. It was full of resentment, anger, hatred, and insecurity. Youâd felt inklings of it in captivity, the first whispers coming in during Rhinoâs beration.Â
âYou caused this.âÂ
âThis is all your fault.â
âYouâre greedy, youâre gluttonous,â
âNever satisfied, youâre selfish.â
âNever worthy of this title, look at what your inexperience has caused.â
â...This squadron was assembled because each individual met a specific requirement. They were not interchangeable. They were selected. They carried out their duties with competence and professionalism. That is the standard by which they should be remembered. Their absence will be felt operationally and personally. Both matter. This memorial concludes our formal recognition of their service. Thank you.â
That overwhelming feelingâŠthat pure, unadulterated self-loathing.
It was awful â turned your skin devoid of color â creating a hollowness under your eyes.
Despite the torture during your month-long imprisonment, you didnât start showing age until this moment.
White hairs sprouted, lines appeared on your skin, you became weathered, old â turning a hundred shades of blue.Â
Your organs began to ache, rotting from the inside out under the weight of your momentous inhibition.Â
Sure, youâd experienced guilt before â but it was never like this.Â
This was raw, and real, and it left you naked, exposed, like you were running around, constantly trying to find somewhere to hide.Â
You wanted to die.
But your death wouldâve just been more self-serving.Â
You didnât deserve to be at peace â you had earned every molecule of this eternal suffering.Â
Prologue âDAMNATIONâ | Masterlist | Content Warnings | Chapter Two
ALL WARNINGS | Chapter Specific: emetephobia, extreme graphic descriptions of injuries, drug & alcohol usage
A/N: Please read the necessary prologue and content warnings before continuing this story.
Pride is the single, greatest threat to the human race.Â
Pride is bleeding out in the middle of the Indian Ocean. Pride is the sharks that circle a few meters below, salivating over your panic as you struggle to stay afloat. Pride is the first shark that had the courage to take the bait, unhinging its jaw like a bear trap, only to be netted by a fishing boat.
Pride is the men aboard itâbarbaricâas they chop off its fin, its life force, its only way of movement, of existence.Â
Pride is getting thrown back out into the ocean, and having no choice but to sink down to the floor below.Â
Pride is your posthumous fin being thawed after flash freezing, and then getting sold the next morning at a fish market in China. Pride is the man who buys it, believing that if you consume it, you will then have a great and powerful libido.Â
Pride is your wife laughing at you as you once again finish off inside her without even giving her a moment to start.Â
Humility is being able to look at yourself in the mirror the next morning, brushing the shame off your shoulders, and telling yourself, âtry, try again.âÂ
Humility was your eyes adjusting to the light, turning on your side, and staring right at someone's entire blown-off leg laying next to youâas if you had put it there yourself.
Humility is knowing you couldâve kept that from happeningâpride is never, ever admitting that. Â
Halloween 2015, Present Day
Big crowds, loud music, bright lights, body smells, vibrationsâall things you have never once found yourself enjoying.
Until now.
And whether itâs the second-generation auditory implants Tony has finally perfected, or the first-generation olfactory implant he recently completedâor maybe the copious amounts of hydrocodone and lorazepamâcould even be the seventh shot of vodka you downed at the barâ
âor maybe, just maybe, itâs all of it combined.
Maybe, just maybe, itâs that you canât risk remembering, so all you have left is trying to forget.
Nat invited you out for Halloween. Take your mind off things. Get you out of the compoundâsomewhere other than your weekly drive to school. Somewhere other than your own head.
...
âYouâre rather subdued these days.âÂ
You jumped at the sudden start in conversation. Looking to your right, Nat sat next to you on the couch, giving you a side eye from behind the screen of her laptop.Â
âAm I?â You asked, looking down at your nails.Â
You both had been sitting there together for a couple of hours. She was getting some work done, you were supposed to be studying. You started your masters program right after you got out of the hospital in August. It would give you something to do. Tony would have preferred MIT. You had gotten my bachelors there prior to my deployment. Chemistry major with a minor in environmental science.Â
Now, however, youâre enrolled at Columbia University for graduate school. Itâs closer to the compound. Majoring in Homeland Security with concentrations in counterterrorism and forensic analytics.Â
âYes. Synthetically so. Did they put you on anything when you left the hospital?â She asked.
Was she interrogating you?
âNo,â you lied. âWell, hydrocodone, but only a few days worth.â
She didnât look up from her computer.Â
âInteresting.â She said, but it lacked any conviction.Â
âWhy?â You asked, raising your eyebrow.
âWell, youâve been looking at the same spot, on the same page of your book for,â She glanced over to the clock on the wall. âat least, twenty minutes.â
âI'm working through it.â You sighed, leaning your head back and resting it on the couch.
âAre you still seeing your therapist?â She closed her laptop, searching my face.
âI hate my therapist, he's an asshole.â You stated simply â it was avoidant.
You didnât want to talk about it.
âHe probably just tells you things you donât want to hear.â She smirked a bit.
âExactly.â You groaned.
Who the hell did he think he was? Telling you what to do with your life?
âWell, thatâs the whole point.â She laughed, moving her hand, resting it on your shoulder.Â
You pulled a face, tilting your head side to side as if you were considering it.
âI thought the point was making me better.â
âYou say that as if youâre in need of fixing.â
âI donât know what I need.â
It was honest. Real. She understood.Â
If you were in the mood for an argument you wouldâve told her how you overheard her and Steve talking about the dinner outburst youâd had a few weeks ago.Â
She had mentioned a âserious personality switch,â which Steve had replied, âsheâs got shellshock.âÂ
You remember hiding around the corner, chewing at the skin around your fingers, letting their words grate you down like sandpaper.Â
âHey, by the way,â She started, turning back to you.
Her voice, like velvet, lifted you out of the trance you were under like morning fog.Â
 âI know you never liked going out in the past, which is understandableâbut Iâm going to a Halloween partyâmore for workâbut I know how much you used to like dressing up, and I would love a date.âÂ
Your eyes narrowed at her, hands reaching back down to the textbook in your lap.Â
âMust be hard for you to find one of those these days.â You said, voice very serious.
âYeah? Whyâs that?â She asked, tilting her head, a small grin pulled at the sides of her lips.Â
âWell y'knowâŠconsidering youâre likeâŠmiddle aged and everythingâŠâ
The gasp that followed couldâve awoken the dead.Â
âUgh! I am not middle aged!â She batted your arm, her jaw dropping.
âWhatever gets you to sleep at night.â The audacityâŠ
âIâm only thirty!â She argued.
âOnly?âŠyikes.â You said, pursing your lips into a line.
She shook her head, moving to stand up, grabbing onto her laptop with one hand.Â
âWhatever. Youâre coming on Halloween because of that. Whether you like it or not.â She pointed at you, then backtracked out of the room.Â
âMiddle aged,â She turned around, disappearing under the archway. âPlease.â
âŠ
And now, here you areâHalloween night, costume tight, body movingâlimbs, nerves, atoms vibrating with the bass that pulses through the floor, up your legs, into your chest.
You think she may regret extending the invitation.Â
âIs thisââ Wanda starts, mouth slightly agape as she watches you from the bar.
âNo,â Nat cuts her off immediately.
âHas sheââ Wanda continues, finger lifting, vaguely gesturing toward you as your body moves in a way that kind of resembles dancingâŠor perhaps something primal?
Whatever it is isnât great.Â
âOh, absolutely not,â Nat shakes her head.
âAre youââ Wanda turns to her.
âIâm⊠not sure,â Nat admits, brows pulling tight.
With a sigh, Natasha pushes off the bar and disappears into the edge of the crowd. She came for work. Work is what sheâs going to do. Youâre a grown woman. You can make your own choices.
It was never like this before your deployment. No implants. No drugs. No interest in any of this.
And you donât really have an interest now, either.
Youâre just⊠forgetting. Or trying to. Becoming someone you donât recognize. Perhaps it was warâit dissected you, then tried putting you back together by memoryâa few pieces missing, a few out of place. Maybe if you let yourself believe that, then the memories will be harder to make their way back to you.Â
School is fine. Easy. You got your bachelorâs at sixteen, finished in two years. Couldâve been fasterâbut you were still being shaped. Still malleable. Still turning into exactly what SHIELD wanted you to be.
An asset. A weapon. A whatever the fuck.
Then at seventeen, you served for three years. You acted as the asset. As the weapon. As whatever the fuck.
And now you have to live with it. Whether youâre ready to admit that or not.
Some guy moves up behind you, but even with your senses dulled down like this, your hands catch his before they settle on your waist. You felt him approach from ten feet away. Without the implants, you wouldâve smelled him the moment he even thought about coming towards you.Â
âGo away,â you shout at him over the music.
âBut you look so lonely!â he yells back, smiling as you turn toward him.
You donât stop dancing.
âI prefer it that way, thanks.â No smile.
âI like your costume,â he presses. âWhat are youâlike a devil or something?â
Your body stills. You look at himâreally look.
âReally?â you ask, voice teetering on disgust.
âOhâare you supposed to be something else?â
You glance down at your outfit. So does he.
âIâm Iron Man.â
He raises an eyebrow.
It was a funny idea in theoryâyou, Nat, and Wanda all dressing as Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor.Â
âUh, yeah, last time I checked Iron Man doesnât have a hot pink cast.â
You donât have to glance down at your wrist to know what's wrapped around it. The screws that hold the inside of your forearm together like bolts on a track are enough to remember.Â
âOh, and the devil does?â You retort.Â
âNoâbut the devil definitely leaves the house in shorts that short.â
You roll your eyes, shove past him, and head for the bar.
âAnd what are you supposed to be?â you call over your shoulder. âA fucking stupid, ugly pervert?â
You squeeze in next to Wanda, eyes squinting at the varying types of liquors lining the wall behind the man working the bar.
âYeahâuhm, double Titoâs,â you say to the bartender, then glance back at her.
âJesus,â she mutters, eyes dragging over you, then to the guy you had just spoken to, his face crumpling in on itself. âThat wasâŠquite the roast.â
âDid that sound like a roast? I was trying to be more insulting than that.â
The bartender hands you the drink. Wanda watches as you down it.
âHe was harmless,â she says, attempting to sound criticalâbut sheâs smiling.
âSure, and subhuman.â you shrug, already motioning for another. âYou want a drink?â
The first part is flat. Casual. Like heâs not even a person. The secondâgenuineâbecause you know she doesnât want to be here. Why isnât she numbing that the same way you are?
She laughs, brighter now.
âNo,â she says. âIâm fine.â
You nod as the second drink lands in your hand.
âSuit yourself.â
You down it. She ogles you like a painting in a museum.Â
âI didnât take you for a partier,â she says.
âOh, Iâm not.â
Your eyes scan the room instead of meeting hersâflashes of bodies, colored lights streaking across skin, sweat catching neon.
âFor someone who isnât, you seem to be having a good time.â
Your head bobs slightly to the beat vibrating in your bones. You look back at her.
âI thoughtââ she continues.
âYou thought what?â you cut in.
Sharp. A little rude. But not malicious. Not to her. She hasnât known you long, but this version of youâthis seems consistent, at least. Honest. Raw. Careless. Callous. Itâs real. Or it looks like it is.
Sheâs heard you werenât always like this. Blunt, sureâbut not this. This apathy. This tactlessness. This isâapparentlyâvery new.
You came back from the hospital like this.
She knows what happened. Not everythingâbut enough. Captured. HYDRA. A month in captivityâgoing through god knows what. Your unitâbasically all dead. And yet youâre here. Standing. Functioning. But something isâŠoff.
Wanda doesnât need details. She feels it. She doesnât know your routine. She feels it. The chemicals in your system. The noise in your head. The things you refuse to look at. Your thoughts are loud enough to bleed into her sleep. And the painâthe pain is louder.
Sheâs not surprised youâre here because of Tonyâs sensory implants helping with the noise of the world, noâ
Sheâs surprised youâre here because of you.
Because simply standing near you feels like sheâs drowning.
âNothing,â she says finally.
You feel itâthe way she watches you. Like something under glass. Like something to be figured out. You can see it in her faceâthe way sheâs turning you over in her mind.
âDonât think too hard,â you say, a faint smile pulling at your lips. âIf you go in my head, you might see things you donât want to see.â
âA bit difficult not to,â she says carefully. âYour thoughts are loud.â
Your movement slows, grip tightening around the glass, eyes shifting to her.
Her gaze doesnât move. It has intent. It holds secrets. Itâs as if she knows. As if she feels obligated to reassure you on itâwhatever it is that bothers you so much.Â
Because to her, it is a feeling. One that, if she were to focus hard enough, would impact her own.Â
âEveryone makes mistakes,â she says suddenly.Â
Eyes locking on one another. Hers branding you like cattle. A searing burn on your hip. One that tells her who you are, who you belong toâor reallyâthat she knows that something keeps you up at night.Â
Because thatâs how easy it is. She now rests under your skin. White blood cells fighting her off like an illness. The kind that threatens your mindâyour psyche.Â
You watch her disappear down the hallway, your own once-spoken words echoing back at youâI donât make mistakes.
Naive. You were so naive then. Because you finally realizedâof course you do.
June 10th, 2015, 0225 Hours
FUBAR and the rest of FM1 watched FM2 as they, at last, whipped over to the reconvene point. Dust and sand kicked up in a swarm out from behind the back tires of their land cruiser. FM1âs MRAP dingo was heavy and slow in comparison to their vehicle. Interesting how they managed to get there a few minutes before the others, especially considering they were three miles farther than they were.
The cruiser slid to a halt, tapping against the dingo, before CURJ shifted the gears into park. Him and Rhino hopped out of the front seats, walking up to the rest of their squadron with open hands, ready to shake.
Thomas and you were on full display as you made out in the exposed backseat. A couple of groans echoing out from the unamused chorus.
âLongshot, you gonna help clean up your mess?â FUBAR shouted towards you.
You had flashed him a middle finger, then turned to go right back to making out â but you thought youâŠ
No. It was nothing.
But wait âIt wasâŠsweet â something was sweetâŠagain. The same sugary, electrical smell you caught earlier from your perch on the cliff.
âYou alright?â Thomas had asked you, searching your eyes.
You snapped out of trance easily. His scent knocked you back into place.
âYes, sorry. Just thought I smelled something ââ
He smirked at you, reaching for your hand and pulling it down to the front of his pants.
âMaybe this?â He whispered in your ear.
Your skin erupted â thousands of goosebumps popping up everywhere. He had some stubble. It tickled the lobe of your ear.
âNow that you mention it â yes.â You gasped as he bit down onto your pulse point.
He chased your open mouth with his.
That sweet, oily smell â metallic, almost â definitely could've been the blood rushing into his cock.
âI donât even think Buckingham heard me.â The commander sighed from his spot by the dingo.
CURJ squeezed his shoulder as he passed by.
âLet them celebrate. Weâre only out here so much longer.â
Stevie Nicks and McVie had rummaged through the dingo for a couple body bags. They were these huge, black duffles made out of a canvas material.
âToss me one of those.â RFB said, reaching his left hand up as his right attached the tag on one of the corpses' toes.
He stood up and wiped his hands off on his pants, nodding to Mick to help him load the body up.
Rhino had been walking with a limp for the past few days. He had busted his knee up on a rock during his last scout.
âHere, brother,â CURJ said, patting the passenger seat of the dingo. âHop up here, let me take a look.â
Despite being a threat on the battlefield, CURJ had also been the only certified medic on the team. His first few years after high school had been spent on an ambulance where he worked as an EMT.
Rhino hissed as he pulled the pant leg over his knee. CURJ turned on his flashlight to get a better look. He had made a face, his lips pursing together.
âItâs bad, isnât it?â Rhino asked, not daring to look down.
âYouâre good man, nothinâ a little antibiotics canât fix.â He lied.
The knee had become incredibly swollen. It was hot to the touch, bright red, and oozing with pus. He didnât understand what could've even gotten in there considering the unlivable, arid climate they were in. He knew better than to mention it. For as good of a spotter as Rhino was, he had been an even better neurotic.
âAlright, all tagged. Bodies in bags.â RFB confirmed as he zipped up the last one.
âLetâs go brother.â Mick understood, reaching down to the first one to load it up into the dingo.
Halloween 2015, Present Day
Steve and Sam arenât anticipating Tony being at the compound when they arrive. Theyâve been gone for almost a month. All they want to do is throw their stowaway into his new bedroom and call it a night.
But, no.
Tony always has something to say. Always has to be a generous host. And most importantly, he has to stake his dominance in any way necessary.
And taking one look at the stowawayâyou wouldnât really blame him. Tall. Intimidating. Thick. Masculine. Brooding.
All words that barely scratch the surface of the almost catatonically quiet, sprawling, borderline-beast of a man leaning his lower half against the back of the couch.
James Buchanan Barnes.
His hair falls around shoulder length. His eyes are tiredâgloomyâas they move back and forth between the three men in front of him. Theyâre talking. About something. He doesnât care. He just wants to go to sleep.
Tony Stark stands in front of him, back to the entrance. Steve Rogers to his left, arms crossed, nodding along. Sam Wilson to his right, blinking slowâexhaustion written all over him.
Barnes feels the same. Unamused. Silent. And somehow, even that isnât enough to signal that Tony isnât needed. But who is he to judge? Given his own, extensive, violence-fueled track record, heâs almost surprised he isnât being greeted with armed guards and guns drawn.
He thinks whatever threat or dominance Stark is even trying to establish is through the weird, floating red guy whoâs currently hovering near the wall behind the bar.Â
âAnyway, let any of us know if you need a tour of the place,â Tony finally says, turning back to Barnes, their introduction having happened well over thirty minutes ago. âHowever, Iâm going to be honest with youâyouâre going to be confined to your room for justâjust a little bit.â
âTonyââ Steve sighs.
âDo you blame me?â Tony cuts in, gesturing toward Barnes. âI mean, look at this guy.â
And there he leansâpure man.
âIâm not even sure heâs said anything the whole time heâs been here,â Tony laughs.
Steve and Sam both send Barnes apologetic looks.
âWhichâthatâs fine,â Tony backtracks, raising his hands. âI donât blame you.â
âNot one for socializing much anyway,â Sam mumbles.
âIâm going to be in and out of hereâwhich Iâm sure is absolutely heartbreaking for you to hearâbut our very kindâand incredibly strongâfriend Vision is going to be looking out for everyoneâsâŠbest interests.â
âSergeant Barnes,â Vision nods from across the room.
Barnes doesnât respond. He kind of wishes the red guy would just bite the bullet, fly over, and take care of him already. This is torture.
âItâs notâ,â Tony stumbles, searching for words. âWell, youâre not a prisoner. We just want to make sure we keep youââ
ââAs comfortable as possible,â Vision finishes.
âThank you. Exactly.â
âVision isââ Steve startsâ
And then stops. Because the front door opens. Nat walks in first, dressed as Captain Americaâor her version of it.
âOh my god,â Sam says, smirking.
She spins once, laughing. All attention shifts to her.
Barnes is incredibly thankful for the distraction.
âNew SHIELD-issued design?â Steve jokes.
Wanda follows behind, her best interpretation of Thor. The entertainment continuesâmuch to their enjoyment, far less to Barnesâ dismay.
âThor, I havenât seen you since Sokovia,â Tony teases. âYouâve gottenâŠsmaller.â
She huffs out something that almost passes for a laugh, then looks back over her shoulder, tracking your slow approach to the door.
âSheâs coming,â Wanda groans.
âWhoâs coming?â Steve and Sam ask in unison.
Theyâre ignored.
âBegrudgingly,â Nat adds, turning to Tony.. âSheâs been complaining about her feet for the past two hours.â
âAnd the coldââ Wanda adds.
âAnd the walking.â Nat finishes.
Tony leans forward, trying to see past them, âyeah, sheâs a brat, whatâs new?â
And then you walk in. Or, more accurately, you stumble through the door. Youâre impossible to miss.
Sam spits out his drink.
âWhat the hell, Nat?â Tony shouts, gesturing toward you. âYou let her go out in that?â
Skin-tight red hot-pants, a surprisingly full length red T-shirtâbut even that shapes to you like cling wrap. A pair of Wandaâs red boots. And shitty gold spray-painted accents that are supposed to mimic his signature hand repulsors.Â
The compound was now in serious need of new flashlights.Â
âSheâs a grown woman!â Nat shoots back.
âTonyâhelp,â you yelp, voice light, playful, completely unbothered. âThey made me wear this.â
You wink at Nat as you pass, heading for warmth. Energy fills the room with you. Loose. Bright. A little too loud. A little too easy.
âLook, youâve exploited her,â he says dramatically.
Tony moves toward you, hand landing on your back.
âWow, Tony,â Steve starts, his eyes dragging up and down the expanse of your exposed skin. âWith legs like that, I thought you wouldâve considered accommodating in terms of the suit. Itâs not like you to not show off.â
âWatch it, Rogers,â He warns.
ThenâSteve remembers. Eyes widening, he turns to the side, gesturing towards his old friend, and clears his throat.
âOhâladiesâthis is Bucky. Heâs going to be staying here with us for a bit.â
Everyone turns. Smiles ready. Warm. Welcoming. And thenâ
They fade.
Because Barnes isnât looking at them.
Heâs looking at you.
Not casually. Not politely. Staring. Still. Unmoving. Like something in him justâŠlocked. Thereâs a beat. Then another. No one says anything.
Sam glances at Steve. Steve looks at Tony. Tony looks at Barnesâthen at you. Then back at Barnes.
The silence is loudâand awkward.Â
âUhââ Sam clears his throat, trying to slice through the sudden tension. âRehabilitation.â
Because the behavior was in desperate need of an explanation.Â
âExactly,â Steve adds quickly.
Still nothing. Barnes doesnât blink. Doesnât move. Justâstaring at you. Hard enough that it starts to feelâŠwrong. Noticeable. Unavoidable.
Oblivious at first, but you feel it before you see it. Someone's gaze on you. Unwavering. The kind that makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.Â
Your eyes start their ascent from their place on the floor, taking in the shoes, the jeans, the shirt, the size, the frame, theâŠfaceâ
The face.Â
Your expression shifts. Subtleâbut immediate. Your head tilts slightly. Eyes narrowing. Somethingâsomething isnât right.
Lips moving before you have the chance to think, âI know you.â
Whatever silence was loud before has become deafening.Â
Nat grabs your arm. âSheâs drunkâjust ignore herââ
But you pull away, âIâve seen you before.â
You step closer. Too close. Your eyes scan his face like youâre trying to pull something out of it. Like itâs simmering right below the surface.Â
His stare doesnât change. If anythingâit deepens.
You take a deep inhale through your noseâthe one trick that always helps you recognizeâto rememberâbut, because of the implants, you havenât been able to smell since you woke back up in the hospital.Â
Wherever you think you remember him from is lost on you for the time being.Â
But the fact that youâre standing there sniffing like a dogâand staring into the eyes of the repeatedly pre-warned, borderline contextually traumatized war criminalâno one steps in.Â
No one is quite sure how.
But Tony finally moves.
âSheâs drunk and getting in peopleâsâŠpersonal space, which is actually rather abnormal,â he says, reaching for your arm.
He knows Barnes isnât listening. Heâs still staring at you. Like youâre the only thing in the room.
âNo, I swear Iâveââ you start.
Tony grabs you. Firm.
âOkayâcome on, Mr. Stark,â he mutters, already pulling you away. âLetâs get you to your room. Maybe put you by a space heater, try thawing you out.
Tony turns once, mouthing a quick sorry to the room.
They nod. They understand. Youâve been through a lot. And, frankly, so has Barnes. Hurt recognizes hurt, they assume.
âChrist, you really are freezing, kid,â Tony mutters as you disappear down the hall.
Behind you, the room exhales.
Steve grimaces, âthat wasâŠâ
âAlso rehabilitation,â Sam nods towards Barnes, now trying to rationalize your behavior.Â
âYes!â Steve points.
âDeploymentââ
âA veteran, actually,â Steve adds.
âShockingly enough,â Sam finishes.
Nat is already walking off, âsheâsâŠugh, God, sheâs drunk,â she groans. âNice to meet you, Sergeant Barnes.â
He doesnât respond. Eyes glazed over, too entranced by the hallway you disappeared into.Â
November 4th 2015, Present Day
Youâve been medicating like a motherfucker since Halloween night.
Your new roommateâthe one you swear you know from somewhereâhasnât come out of his room once since your initial introduction. If you can even call it that.
At first, you assume it isnât intentional on his part. Maybe Tony forced it. Maybe Visionâs watching him. You donât even know who he is or why heâs hereâjust that Tony mentioned something about harboring a fugitive. But knowing Steve, you canât imagine heâd allow someone to be kept locked up for long.
And Tonyâs hardly ever around anyway.
Soâafter a whileâyou start to think that maybe it is intentional. That maybe Barnes is simply wanting to hide away.Â
And itâs not that youâve been trying to watch. Youâre not spyingâif anything, youâve practically deafened yourself with how far youâve turned up the noise suppression on your AGSI.
Youâre justâŠthere. On the couch. Day after day. Half-aware, half-sedated, pretending to exist while Sam and Steve stand outside that door like theyâre trying to coax a stray animal out from under a porch. Knocking. Talking. Pausing. Trying again. Getting nothing.
It mightâve been entertaining if you actually wanted to be sitting out there. Which you donât. But Tony made it very clear: 'If you donât start coming out of your room like a normal human being, Iâm taking away your isolation privileges.'
When you asked what the hell that even meant, he said something along the lines of, 'You were already a recluse before. Iâm not about to lose visual contact with you for a few weeks and then walk in to find you acting like Marlon Brando in Apocalypse Now.'
And surprisingly, that had been the first time anyone had made a wounded war-movie joke at your expense.
So now you sit. On the couch. In plain sight. A model citizen. Supervised free-range. Watching Sam attempt conversation with a closed door while you slowly dissolve into the cushions.
Usually, you wouldnât care. Itâs not your business. Youâd ignore it completelyâand it helps having substances running through your system, keeping you comfortably uninterested. But lately, thatâs kind of the problem. Because of them, you havenât been doing much of anything at all.
Home. Class. Repeat. Nothing in between.
This was the only source of entertainment that you even haveâif you can even call it that. And when you actually stop to think about itâwhat would you even do if there was something in between?
You donât really have friends. Well, maybe that one kid from class, but he may be more of a nuisance than anything. So yeah, not really friends. At least, not in the way that counts.
Nat, Tony, Steveâwhoever the fuck elseâthey donât exactly fall into that category. Not cleanly. Not normally. And youâre not even entirely sure they like talking to you.
The only people who do are paid to. And even then, itâsâŠquestionable.
Which is how you end up here. Sitting across from your psychiatrist. Who looks just as inconvenienced as you feel.
Dr. Bulut is an asshole. Heâs also incredibly intelligent.
âI just lost you there for a moment.â The voice of your psychiatrist bubbles up from the abyss you tend to find yourself drifting into more often than youâd like to admit.Â
âWhere did you just go?â He asks.Â
His voice is quiet and gentle â which is out of the ordinaryâyou donât buy it.Â
âJust thinking.â You mumbleâalthough itâs a bit vacant.Â
That seems to be the new normal for you.
âAbout what?â Dr. Bulut presses.Â
You shake your head, stifling a bit of a scoff.
âWhy do you ask me questions you already know the answer to?âÂ
Silence envelops the room for just a moment.
From his seat in his big leather chair, his eyes trail from your face, and land on the obnoxious neon pink cast that still has a vice grip on your wrist.
Itâll come off soon, sometime this month the doctor had predicted.Â
Thereâs a part of you that is terrified of that. Your femur had long since healed. Your vision had gone back to how it had been before. This had been the only visual memory left.Â
âI saw you in the library last week,â he begins, a small smile cracking from his lips. âwhen you said you were sick.â
âYeah,â You nod, your head gesturing over to the right side. âIâumâused to be better at noticing if someone was there.âÂ
Surprisingly, that one-off joke had made him smile. The edges of his lips pulling up. He shakes his head.
âYou were there with a friend.â
âHeâs hardly a friend.â You groan.Â
Annoyance palpable.Â
âSomething else then?â There's a suggestiveness in his tone.
âHah, yeah,â You donât take the bait. A nuisance.âÂ
âŠ
The library was packed like a can of sardines. The overhead fluorescents pounded down into your eyes, pulsing with every beat of your heart.Â
It was distracting, and honestly, the last thing you really needed for the specific method of studying you were going for. Usually you wouldnât be out like this willingly, but ever since Halloween youâd been avoiding the compound as much as possible. Too many accusations. Too many wandering eyes.Â
To make matters worse, the kidâthe nuisance from your Psychology of Terrorism class was sitting right across from youâand staring. Heâs a big, huge nerd, but one of the only people on campus youâd actually consider attractive. And smart. Could maybe, maybe consider being a friend. Keaton.
But as his gaze cooked you like you had been placed on a broiling rack, you thoughtâDoubtful.
âWhat the fuck are you doing?â he asked.
You held up your pointer finger in protest, ignoring him.
âI havenât seen you blink once since you opened that book.â
âIâm in the middle of something,â you mumbled, lips pursed.
âIn the middle of what?â
âScanning,â you snapped.
âScanning? RightâŠwhat, like a printer?â
You peeled your eyes away from the page just long enough to glare at him.
âYes,â you huffed. âLike a printer.â
You hated that he was on the right track with that assumption. The reason why school had always been easy, the reason why a lot of academic things were easy, was just another part of your genetics.Â
Sure, your vision was great in generalâperiphreal far beyond standard human limitsâso if you focused correctly, your eyes could become like a long-lens, zooming in and out as needed.
But the ability to remember everything you see? That was the best part.Â
A photographic memory. Looking down at a page. Being able to remember everything on it. Your mind becomes like a library, able to sort through it all like your own personal archive.Â
So yesâexactly like a printer.Â
âThat doesnât seem very effective.â
You slammed the book shut and shoveled it into your bag.Â
âDo you need help studying?â he asked, raising an eyebrow at your frustration.Â
âFrom you? Hah.â You laughed, and pulled a compact mirror out of your bag. âNo.â
You hadnât slept since Halloween. Actually, you hadnât slept since you got back from the hospital. Not really. Unless you count the occasional depressant-assisted twelve-hour comas. Dark circles sat heavy under your eyes. Purple splotches crept back through your concealer.
âOh no,â he teasedâsmug fuck. âI wasnât offering that kind of help.â
He dug into his bag, arm disappearing nearly to the elbow.
âHere,â he said, setting something on the table. âI donât use them.â
A half-full orange prescription bottle.
You recognized it immediately. The same one you got from Duane Reade.
âAmbien,â you read off the label. âAre you trying to tell me something?â
âYes. You need to go to sleep. You look like shit.â
You canât argue that.
âHow much?â you asked.
âTwo hundred for the bottle.â
âYou got anything to wake me back up after?â you grilled. âHow do you expect me to get anything done between the sleep and then the sleepiness?â
âI have Vyvanse too,â he shrugged, âbut thatâs more expensive. Everyoneâs trying to get a prescription these days. I need the money.â
âYou donât use them?â
âI donât need them.â
âThen why do you have them?â
âI was a shithead kid,â he said, sighing. âThen I decided I didnât want to pay attention in high school.â
You glanced around the Columbia library.
âSo howâd you make it in here?â you asked, gesturing vaguely to the room.
âWell, I started using them in high school.â
âSo why stop?â
âIâm actually interested in what Iâm learning now,â he added. âWho the fuck is paying attention in personal finance?â
Youâd never taken personal finance, but you felt the same way about philosophy.
Answers based on interpretation?
Yeahâno. Not your thing.
âI donât need them either,â you mumbled, setting the bottle back down.
âWhatever you sayââ he started, reaching for it.
You snatched it back.
âI said I donât need them. Not that I donât want them.â You pause. âIâll give you five hundred for the whole bottle.â
âChristâwhere are you getting that kind of money?â
âIâm on pension.â
TrueâŠshockingly enough.Â
âYouâre twenty-one.â
âTwenty.â you corrected.Â
He seemed unamused.Â
âSix hundred?â you pushed.
âNo. Take it for five,â he made a face, âbutââ
âOh boy,â you sighed, rolling your eyes.
âWhere are you getting that money, seriously?â he pressed. âYou one of those hedge fund kids?â
âI was adopted by Tony Stark,â you said simply, crossing your arms.
There was a beat of silence. Then he started laughing. Like it was the funniest thing heâd ever heard.
âYeah, okayâand my dad is Thor.â He shook his head, grinning. âYou know what? Youâre pretty funny.â
âThank you. I wasnât trying to be.â
Your general identity had still remained unknown by the masses. The image of you that had popped up during various news reports after the incident had been redacted. Blurred.Â
âDo you want to hang out?â he asked.
It caught you off guard.
âI thought you said I look like shit?â you countered.
âI donât want to date you.â
âOh. Okay.â
He tilted his head. âWhy? Did you want me to want to date you?â
âNo.â You shrugged. âI donât do that anymore.â
True.
âYou donât what?â
âDate.â
You said it as if it was the most obvious thing in the world.Â
âYou donât date anymore?â He clarified.Â
âLong story.â
Short story, reallyâThomas.Â
âWellâŠwhen do you want to hang out?â
âI donât care. I donât live here.â
âWhat? Where do you live?â
âUpstate. About an hour drive.â
âThat sounds like a hassle.â
âMaybe for you.â You shrugged. âI drive a Porsche.â
âYou drive a what?â
âŠ
âI spoke to Tony yesterday.â Dr. Bulut's voice is levelâtoo levelâas if heâs testing the water before stepping in.
Heâs changing the subject.Â
âOh well, Iâm sure you two mustâve had a wonderful conversation.â You say, voice dripping with acerbity.Â
âConcerning maybe.â He ignores it.Â
He doesnât look up right away, flipping a page in that worn notebook like this is routine.
âI heard things have been a bit stressful at the compound since Halloween. Something about a new roommate?â He continues.Â
Craning your neck, you feel the vertebrae pop, small releases of air puffing out against the surrounding synovial fluid. The roommate has beenâwellâalso a nuisance.Â
âYes,â you confirm.
Inclined to continue further, but there isnât much you have to add. Youâre sure Tony has kept him in the know.Â
âWho is this one?â He pushes, the question hanging in between the two of you like a corpse from a ceiling fan.Â
Decaying. Rotting. Swaying. More guilt.Â
âSomeâŠfugitive.â You respond.
The way you say it almost gives you a double take. As if the idea of him alone disgusts you.Â
âTony said you thought you knew him.â
âYeah,â you swallow, throat dry. âUm, it was just a hunch.â
âDid you know him?âÂ
âIâŠâ you start, mouth able to form the words, yet your voice unable to produce them. âI donât know.â
âYou don't know?â
âNo. I donât know.â
âBut you have a hunch?â
âI said âI donât know.ââ You spit.
The room welcomes the following silence with apprehension. As if even the walls are preparing for something they know is bound to happen. By the look on his faceâyou can tell he can feel it too.Â
âYouâe on edge all the time nowâangryâStark says itâs out of place butâŠâ
He studies you for a moment, hard enough, in fact, that you almost feel like heâs scanning you. Nodding, as if heâs taken what heâs needed into consideration, he begins scribbling on his notepadâyou hate his stupid fucking pen. One of those ridiculous turkey feathers that you dip in ink.
âThis new wave of irritability, surely itâs not just from the new houseguest.â
âWell, getting captured doesnât help.â
âI thought you told me people like you donât get PTSD?â
âItâs not PTSD.â
âOh yeah? What is it then?â
âResidual anxiety.â
You jump a bit as he slams the feather pen down into the crevice of the suede notebook.
âIf youâre not going to be honest with me, we will never, ever have a constructive session.â
He doesnât even realize heâs crushing the barbs.
âIâm being honest.â
âYouâre working around the truth.â He counters.
Well, maybe a little bit.
âWhat are you currently taking?â he asks--stripping you bare.
You were always a well-behaved child. A well-behaved teenager. Praised by everyone, for everything, from the moment you were born. It had been second nature to be goodâto know you were goodâand to be told exactly how good you wereâŠconstantly.
It all makes sense now.
When you were three, they started bringing you into the lab. Running tests.
It wasnât easy. There were sounds, sights, feelings, tastes, smellsâand none of them were pleasant. They pushed you. Measured you. Mapped the limits of what you could and couldnât endure.
It had been normal. Or at least, it had been normal to you. You were embryo D2 1.1. Group D. Subset two. Round one. Embryo one. The only specimen to survive both the womb and infancy. The closest any of the others got was maybe a year. A year and a few months, give or take.
If someone unaware of your circumstances had taken you to a pediatrician, they would have said it was colic. That you would grow out of it. That eventually, you would stop crying. But you werenât crying just to cry. You were crying because everything had been too much.
Touch: Everything anyone experienced normally was amplified to you beyond comprehension. Acid reflux in a baby? It had felt like your esophagus was being dipped in sulfuric acid. Pain receptorsâthe ones meant to warn youâwere turned all the way up.
Hearing: Your own screams? A nuclear blast. Over, and over, and over again. You were a babyâyou didnât know the sound was coming from you. You didnât know the only way to stop it was to close your mouth.
There was no comfort in a heartbeat. Only torment.
Most of the others died early. Newborns needed over twenty hours of sleep. You werenât getting any. So they sedated you. They had to. And it took a lot of sedatives to keep the subjects aliveâenough that the infant mortality rate in the lab grew exponentially.
Leading cause: overdoses.
The only reason you made it was because they had prepared you before you were even born. Acclimated you to sedation in utero. Built the tolerance early.
Your surrogateâyour mother, technicallyâhad been an addict. Chosen on purpose. Flyers posted in places like Skid Row, offering money in exchange for carrying a child. She had been paid well over six figures. She shot heroin, as instructed, while you were growing inside her.
You werenât genetically related to herâbut addiction had already been built into you. You were born dependent. You were born needing something.
In Afghanistan, you picked up smoking. Tried cocaine. Took an array of pain meds to treat injuries while on duty. But it never became anything more than treatment. Always controlled. Always contained.
You remember waking up in the hospital two months ago with a morphine drip to your right. It felt like a gift.
When the psychiatrists came inâevaluating your mental state, determining whether you qualified as a POWâthey mentioned Xanax. Klonopin. Other controlled substances. You thought you were too tough for that.
People like youâpeople bred to be better than everyone elseâdidnât get anxiety. It was just another day at the office.
Your therapist told you about post-traumatic stress a few weeks ago. That it was real. That you would more than likely suffer from it.
You told him, âyeah right. Okay. Whatever.â
He told you it might not be today. Not tomorrow. Not even this year. But it would come. And it did. He was right.
That triggerâthat âresidual anxietyââhas been your justification. Last night before going to sleepâwhich was already a choreâyou decided to take two lorazepam at once.
As you laid awake, waiting for it to kick in, you thought, maybeâjust maybeâwhat if I still had a nightmare? That your eyes would fall closed and suddenly youâd be faced with it all again. That youâd be forced to remember. You didnât want that.
So you added a hydrocodone in the mix, and washed it all down with a glass of red wine. You slept for twelve hours.
His voice, sharp, mean, gratingâsnaps you back. He repeats himself.
âWhat are you currently taking?â He presses it like a warning.Â
A bead of sweat starts forming above your brow.
âIâwhat do you mean?â You falter, voice cracking on the last word.Â
He tilts his head forward, his reading glasses sliding down to the tip of his nose.
âWhat medications are you currently taking?â he reiterates.
âWell, you prescribed me the lorazepamââ
âAs needed.â
âWhich has been as needed.â
âWhat else?â
âWell, I was told to take hydrocodone as needed.â You explainâor try to.
You feel like you look guilty. Youâre an awful liar.
âHydrocodone? For what, your arm?â he tests.
âYeah, I mean it was snapped in half.â You scoff.
âBut you get the cast off in the next few weeks, donât you? It shouldnât still hurt.â
âMy doctor said it would be normal given myâŠcircumstances. I canâI can feel the titanium plates and screws rubbing against my bone.â
âAnd how often are you taking it?â
âAs needed.â You lie.
âAre you drinking at all?â
âSometimes.â Also a lie.
âNot with the medications, I hope.â
âNo, no, not with the medications.â All lies.
He leans back into his chair, his legs spreading open. Unfortunately, your eyes land at the swell of his crotch for a moment. Itâs quick â they move back up to meet his own again.
Dr. Bulut quirks an eyebrow up â oh, he noticed.
Sex hadnât been a thing for you until you joined the military. The men were big, strong, handsomeâand since you were special forces, they also happened to be smartâand you also happened to be one of the only women there.Â
You hadnât had your OSAM implanted yet, so smellsânot just standard body smellsâthings like fear, anger, stress, wantâthey were all consuming.Â
And although you havenât done anything since youâve been homeâyou do find your brain lingering. Craving that hypersensitive touch. And Dr. Bulut is in his late fifties, sureâbut you like the challenge he gives you. You like that he makes you want to behave.Â
Or maybe you just want the validation to help take the edge off.Â
âWhat are you hiding?â He asks, his head tilting, eyes narrowing.Â
âI donât have anything to hide.â You bite.
Thereâs too much in your headâtoo much that wonât move, wonât sort, wonât settle into anything that feels like the past.
He doesnât buy it. And you know heâs going to keep pushing.
âYou sure about that?â Heâs showing teeth now.
Any want you were just feeling is goneâreplaced with something rawâsomething vulnerable.Â
âWhat are you trying to get at here?â You feel like youâre standing naked on a stage.Â
âI just donât know how many times I have to tell you to be honest with me.â He sighs now too, his hands moving up in the air with a shrug.
âIâm honest.â
Liar.
âThatâs another lie.â
Fucking bastard.
âOkay, what do you want me to say? That Iâm kept up by nightmares? That Iâm haunted by the ghosts of my past?â You try toying with him â it doesnât work.
âSee?â He tuts. âThatâs deflection.â
âNothing is bothering me.â Your chest is tightening up.
âKid, youâre high as a kite right now.â
Is it that obvious?
âIâm not.â You shake your head â you have to get out of this room.
âYour pupils are three sizes larger than they need to be.â
âItâs for the pain.â You drop your arms back down to your sides, moving in the chair, about to stand up.
âYeah? Physical or emotional?â Heâs teasing you at this point â taunting you like a school yard bully.
âI would like to leave.â You demand, however there is a hint of apprehension.
âOf course you do.â
âFuck you.â You hiss, finally pushing up out of your seat, headed towards the door of the office.
Apprehension gone.
âYouâre using this as a coping mechanism. Youâre overcompensating for the hurt.â He calls, following your escape route with the turn of his head.
âI donât need to overcompensate. This is just who I am. My whole life has been an overcompensation. I canât help it.â You reach down and grab your purse.
You could scream.
âYouâre relying on other things to make yourself feel better.â He sings.
Heâs a sadist, youâre sure of it.
âEveryone does that.â You try to justify, your hand extending towards the door knob.
âAnd itâs unhealthy. Thatâs when bad habits form, thatâs when addiction comes in.â
Addiction?
You stop in your tracks, fingers hovering over the handle.
âIâm not an addict.â You donât look at him â you canât.
âMaybe not yet, but you sure as hell have a lot of bad habits.â Heâs turned around fully now, his torso facing towards you.
âYeah?â Now you look at him, challenging the hurt in your voice.
The staring contest resumes.
âYou grotesquely hypersexualize yourself.â He starts.
Fucking asshole.
âOh, do I?â You scoff â itâs bitter â icy.
âYes. Got a little male attention a few times overseas, now it feeds you like itâs something that matters.â
âThatâs not true.â Youâre fighting back.
This has become a battle â youâre teetering on the edge of giving up â raising your white flag.
âBeen told you were great all your life, and then when youâre proven not to be you have to overplay it even to the people that could care less?â
Sinuses burning, tears bubbling up from the inside, they want to drop.
âNow youâre just being an asshole.â You move to leave again â he stops you.
âDo you really think that someone like Tony Stark cares? Heâs known you half of your life. Your talents don't impress him anymore. He expects it at this point.â
You look down at the floor, your first shed tear thumping as it collides with the hardwood.
âStop it.â
âNow look at you â youâre becoming a caricature. Itâs over the top, youâre worth more than thisââ Heâs just attacking you at this point.
âFuck you,â You interrupt him â voice cracking. âThis is all I am now.â
â âLacking all depth,â he continues his tirade. âturning yourself into a villain just because you donât want to face it.â
Unmoving, your hand still hovering, you could collapse on the floor right now, legs ready to give out.
âWhy didnât you sense that bomb?â He demands an answer.
Everything in you goes quiet. Too quiet. Like something deep in your chest slams a door shut before anything can reach it. You donât feel your hands. You donât feel your legs. You donât feel anything.
âIt had a damper.â You protest.
Not even you believe that.
âIncorrect. Youâve told me before. You can sniff through dampers. Bragged about it to me many times now.â
Whipping around to face him, you cant take it anymore, raising your voice, itâs full of fucking resentment.
âIâve had enough of this. Iâm leaving. You should have your fuckin license revoked!â You point at him.
He acknowledges your tears now. Youâre a fucking mess.
âYouâre my only patient. I teach lectures these days.â He shakes his head at you.
âGo teach a class on this you fuckinâ dick,â you stick up your middle finger to him, then finally start making your way out.Â
âIâm sorry, did I strike a nerve?â He calls after you.
âScrew you. Go read my fuckinâ case notes, you shrink.â The door slams behind you.
The sound reverberates through the room. He sighs, picking up his pen and moving to write a few notes.
âSheâll be backâŠâ
June 10th, 2015, 0230 Hours
âAlright, all tagged. Bodies in bags.â RFB confirmed as he zipped up the last one.
âLetâs go brother.â Mick understood, reaching down to the first one to load it up into the dingo.
You and Buckingham had still been violating each other in the back seat of the cruiser. He grabbed onto your face with both hands, pushing your cheeks in together.
âOnly a few more weeks here.â He said, looking back and forth between your eyes.
âI know.â You smiled, although it didnât match the rest of your face.
âDo you want to go back to London with me again?â He asked, raising an eyebrow.
âOh shit, fuckââ Mick had yelped, cutting off your ability to answer.
The two of you turned your heads towards him, he was standing about ten feet away, looking down at his ankle.
âYou good?â RFB asked, going to set down his side of the body bag to take a peek.
âI just rolled my ankle or something.â Mick clarified, letting go of the other bag strap.
âHere let me helpââ
And as the other side of the bag had hit the ground, the earth ignited. A blast so big, and so bright that the dingo flung backwardsâ
RFB and Mick were pulverized upon detonation. The powerful landmine had practically shredded them back down to atoms.
Stevie, who had been the third closest to the explosion, was ripped in half. Everything from his waist down got blown to smithereens. His intestines hung out of his mangled torso and onto the ground.
FUBAR and McVie were also killed on impact, their mutilated bodies getting stuck on the side of the dingo like pieces of gum.
CURJ, who was crouched near the ground at the time, had also been torn apart. Both of his legs and one of his arms had been blown off, resting far away from the rest of his body.Â
Unfortunately, he was still alive, just gasping for air on the floor of the desert.
Rhino had come to. He was no longer in the passenger seat of the dingo. No, he had been forced backwards to the driver's seat, his head laying back against shattered bullet-proof glass. His ears were ringing, he couldn't feel much of anything besides the vibration that sound caused. He didnât even really understand what was going on.
What he did notice however, was the fact that his knee was no longer hurting. It had been euphoric, such a relief. He glanced down to take a peek at it butâ
âF-fuckââ Rhino tried to manage, he mustâve gotten the wind knocked out of him.
His eyes had been blurry, but he couldnât mistake the sight before him. His leg had been ripped off, his femur sticking out of the mangled skin like a tomahawk steak.
He was in shock, suddenly not sure if anything was real.
He thought he may have heard the muffled sounds of voices, but he wasn't certain. Too distracted by the graininess of his own purple, bloody, newly-externalized tissue.
â...'iinah la yazalâŠâ Someone was speaking Dari. ââŠealaa qayd alhayaatiâŠâ
He tried making it out, although his brain remained distracted. Was he going to die? Was he bleeding out?
All the sudden he was blinded, a centralized light coming down through the opposite window.
â'iinah la yazal ealaa qayd alhayaati.â (he is still alive.) He understood it that time.
A miracleâsomeone saw what happened and decided to help.
He tried speaking, saying something â anything â- but it all just came out as air.
Hands reached down next to the beam of light, grabbed hold of his good leg and lifted him back out of the dingo.
His head had begun to spin once he was finally right side up. There were four menâmaybe fiveâthat were rushing around the area.
It looked like a scene out of one of those thrasher movies. There were body parts everywhere. The smell of bloodâironâwas unmistakable. He wondered if you were among the dead, knowing how awful this would've been for you.
He had manifested itâcatching sight of you. He was distracted, not even looking down as one of the men began wrapping a belt around his upper thigh, creating somewhat of a makeshift tourniquet.
You were being carried off, your body limp. Rhino noticed your arm was mangled, forearm snapped in half, jiggling unnaturally with each step. You must've been passed out, or at least he had figured as much. It seemed as if they were leaving the dead ones. One of them already came over to put CURJ out of his misery. The moans he let out as he laid there dyingâŠ
That was the worst partâthoseâŠsounds he made. That distinct rattle of deathâthe agonal breathing.
Someone had slid in next to him, placing some sort of oxygen mask over his face. Rhino took a deep breath, enjoying the feeling of fresh air as it expanded his lungs.
He was asleep before he even had a chance to breathe it back out.
November 2015, Present Day
âYou did what?!â
Your eyes flick around the compoundâs common areaâthe kitchen, dining room, bar, living room. Itâs far too busy for this kind of conversation.
Itâs already shocking enough that Barnes is out of his room by the time you get backâand even more shocking that Tony is here, and let it happen.
Theyâre further offâBarnes, Steve, and Samâspread across the couch, watching Star Wars on the massive television. Apparently, neither Steve nor the fugitive has seen it before. You overheard Sam earlier, talking about some listâmodern movies, music, whatever the hell else two ninety-something-year-old men missed while frozen.
But youâno. You and Tonyâand fucking Visionâand fucking Rhodeyâare all in the kitchen.
Youâre backed into the refrigerator, cold metal pressing into your spine. Tony stands in front of you, arms crossed. Rhodey leans against the counter, eating an apple like heâs not listening. Vision hovers near the doorwayâyour only way out.
âCan we not have this conversation somewhere else?â you groan, trying to sidestep Tony. He mirrors you. Every step.
âDo you know how much convincing it took for me to even get him to talk to you once? Let alone multiple sessions?â He ignores you, and if anything, just doubles down on his nagging.Â
You sigh, letting the back of your head tap against the fridgeâonce, twice, three times.Â
âHeâs an old friend of mine. Itâs embarrassing. He has a goddamn Nobel Prize, for Christâs sake.â
You donât look at Tony. Your gaze drifts leftâtoward the couch. They arenât looking. But theyâre listening. And SamâSam isnât even trying to hide it. His shoulders shake. Heâs laughing at you.
âNobel Prize or not,â you snap, eyes locking onto Tonyâs, âheâs a dickhead.â
Rhodey chokes on his apple in an attempt to stifle a laugh. Tony glares at him.Â
There is a space to leave. A small sliver where you can slip by Vision. You consider itâalthough there is a bit of apprehension. The last thing you want is to make this interaction worse than it already is.Â
Tony exhales sharply, hands dropping to his thighs. âThis isnât a joke,â he mutters. âYou donât get to opt out because youâre uncomfortable.â
Eyes continuing to flick towards itâthe space between Vision and the jambsâyou canât help it. This is suffocating. You take the opening anyway. Fly past Tony. Slips past Visionâwho hesitates just for a secondâbut lets you through.
âYoung lady, you get back here this instant!â
Youâre already movingâfast. Not quite running, but quick enough to look ridiculous. You weave around the dining table, eyes locked on the sliding glass door. You need out. The roomâthe peopleâthe noiseâthe stimulant buzzing under your skin like a live wire.
Barnesâ attention shifts when you move. Not because youâre leavingâbut because of how you do it. Too clean. Too aware of the space around you. You donât bump into anything. Donât hesitate. You already know where everything is.
âVision, really? I asked you to do oneâone thing for me.â You hear Tony reprimand from the kitchen.Â
Ten more feet. Almost free.
You pass behind the couch. You donât look at the men there.Â
And for a secondâBarnesâ focus flicks up. Not to your face. To your positioning. The distance you keep. The angle you take around the table. Calculated.
Now you feel itâtheir attention pressing into your back. Steveâs concern. Samâs amusement.
And just as your hand reaches for the handleâsweet freedomâa flash of red.
Visionâbastard. Youâre locked once again.Â
Your eyes roll hard enough to make your head ache. âReally?â you say, arms crossing over your chest.
Vision stands there, lips pressed thin, gaze avoiding yoursâbut his posture mirrors you. A wall.
Your eyes shift right. You donât need to turn. Sam. Steve. The Hermit. All watching.
Your focus slipsâjust for a second. Subtle. Barely there. But itâs there.
Vision notices, and clears his throat. âCaptain Rogers,â he says. âThe young lady can feel your gaze.â
'Captain' Rogers. 'Young lady'.
None of them ever acknowledge your title. Maybe theyâre afraid of what it means. But to youânot saying it feels worse. Insulting. You earned that rankâjust as much as they did.Â
âItâs fine,â you call over your shoulder, swallowing down the burn in your throat. âYou can stay. Iâm going back to my room.â
But Steve starts to standâ
âStop.â You press.Â
You donât look to know heâs moving. You donât need to. Samâs eyebrow lifts. You catch that too. And for a secondâjust a secondâyouâre satisfied. Like at least someone here sees it. You.Â
Youâre not here because of Stark. Not because you were taken in. Youâre here because you earned it. Because you were born and bred for this.Â
And when you really think about itâyouâre better than him.
Steve Rogersâonce a scrawny kid from Brooklynâwas made into Captain America. Not you, no. You were born into it.
âI said you donât need to move.â Final.
You turn on your heel, heading for the hallway. Tony steps slightly into your path as you pass.
âIf you want to speak to me like Iâm an adult,â you snap at him, eyes fixed ahead, âyou can do it somewhere else.â
âThen start acting like one,â Tony shoots backâquieter now, but sharper.
It almost lands. Almost.
And just before they disappear behind youâat the very edge of your visionâSam mouths it.
âYikes.â
You inhale, sharp. Then, without turningâ
âAt this point, Wilson, you might as well say it out loud.â
Unknown Date, Time, Location [A few ???? gone]
You had felt your blood pumping through the pressure behind your eyes when you finally woke up, greeted by nothing but a distinct darkness and ringing ears.
You were confusedânot remembering where you were, what had happened, why you couldn't see anythingâŠ
You tried focusing your hearingâtried breathing in through your nostrils. They had been cloggedâkind of felt like when you get a coldâhow the mucus slips down the back of your throat. You swallowed to checkâohâthat had worked.
You gasped, realizing you were able to get oxygen in through your mouth. Your throat was soreâyou must've been sick.
The sensation of something covering your face was maddening. Maybe you were back at home with a cold washcloth nursing your hot foreheadârestricting your ability to see.
You had tried to reach up to take it off, but you couldn't move your arm, at least, not the dominant one. You pulled against itâin return only feeling the sense that you may have been tied downârestricted. Your other hand twitched as you tried stretching your fingers out butâno, something was wrong.
That stretch met your wrist with a rush of tinglesâsomething only akin to tv staticâmoving straight up your arm and into your shoulderâa numbness almostâbut it wasâfuck, it was so much pain.
You were groaning, your throat vibrating. You could hardly hear itâonly feeling the tremor of your vocal cords as they strained themselves bareâraw.
You went through your bodily check listâhowever unbearableâstarting at the tips of your fingers.
Fineâyesâthose were fine, just numbness.
Your wristâChrist, it ached. It was like someone had drilled a hole in the little round bone that stuck out to the side, then filled it up with freezing water.
Something was wrongâno, something was definitely, very wrong.
You continued moving up, going to assess the condition of your radius and ulna bones of your forearmâbut had been interrupted by your own blood-curdling scream.
Youââf uckââeach one, each bone had been snapped in the center. The blood vessels which enveloped around it had ripped apartâ
You started retching at the sensation of your bone marrow being exposed to the surrounding internalized flesh. The medullary cavity had turned into nothing but shrapnelâtearing into your ulnar nerve like shards of glass.
The pain was unbearable. You wished to go back to the time before you had tried to check. What the fuck was going on?
A flash of lightâblindingâbut it stayed consistent. That sensation of something covering your faceâgone. Your skin was coldâthe sweat in your pores now exposed to the wet air.
Your vision had faded in and out in little black flashes, only being able to catch a few things at a time. It was almost like scrolling through photos on a cameraâ
âŠ
Wet sandâgunpowder in the airâa legâdetached and bloody...You tried standing upâno, your legs didnât work, you had passed out againâwhite splotches...Your forearmâwhy has itâwhy was it dangling like thatâ...Groaningâand writhingârolling overâ
...Bloodâyour blood. It pooled behind your head, mixing with the grainsâthe fuckingâthe grains of sandâthey had turned into dark coffee grounds...You grabbed at your headâyour other armâyour shoulder had been dislocated. But why couldn't you feel it?
Fingers came to your scalpâtouchingânoâgraspingâŠdamp hairâsoaked hairâyou felt the beat of your heart through itâit shot out pulsing blood bullets like a pistol.
Your skull wasâit was uneven and sharp andâcracked...A concussion. That made sense. You could hardly seeâand you couldn't hear.
Toesâohâthere were toes right behind youâ
You managed to move onto your stomach, you felt the blood puddle out from your head wound as if a bucket of water had been pouredâ
T-Thomasâyes, it was Thomasâ...His faceâohâit had been smashed inâthe whites of his eye dripping out like an undercooked egg whiteâ
You felt his pulse through the groundâdraggingâweakâbut thereâhe took in little gaspsâhis chest kind of looked like it was twitchingâagonal breathingâoh godâoh noâhe was dyingâ
You tried pushing up, but your medullary cavity just kept splintering off into your exposed tissueâit was bleeding youâyouâre sure you were internally bleedingâ...Your heart rate had picked up, you could tell by the feeling behind your eyesâthat pressureâyour blood was just pumpingâso strained behind your eyesâŠ
âŠ
âFuckâŠâ You breathed, although it came out more like a puff of air.
You had hung your neck forward.
â...f-fuck!â You heard from your right.
You rolled your head to the side.
It wasâshit, Rhino was with youâhisâoh fuck. His fucking leg had been blown off.
He was thrashing back and forth against his restraints, looking down at the remainder of his limb, splattering blood all over the room like a bad paint job.
You would've stopped him, but you couldn't speak. You didnât even need to try to know that.
The room around you was blurry, but you could still make it outâmetallic, but not at all sterile. There was rust, and these little pools of stagnant brown waterâreferring to them as puddles would've been an insult to puddlesâyou were thankful you couldnât smell.
There had been a flickering, dusty old fluorescent hanging overhead, the hard shell around it stained a caramel color from years of presumable cleaning neglect.
Where the fuck were you? And where wasâ
Shit, there was Thomas to your left, totally limp in the chair he was tied to. You had gasped a bit, leaning over to see if you could hear him. He was breathingâbut barely. He was aliveâbut barely.
Why didnât they just put him out of his misery? Taking a look at the state of his head, anyone without a medical license would've been able to tell. But he was somehow still breathingâokay, potentially no anoxic brain injury. You werenât sure. They had bandaged the side of his face with the pulverized eye, enough to mask the true state of the injury.
You could still hardly hear. Rhinoâs screams had only been made out because they were so loudâso strained. You felt his heartbeat through the ground too. It was pounding. If he wanted to survive that amputation, heâd need to calm himself down.
Steadying your vision onto his flailing leg, you could see that it was at least wrappedâa shitty makeshift belt tourniquet fighting against his movements in an attempt to stop the blood flow. But he had been moving too much. It was unravelingâexposing his purple tissueâhis exposed boneâ
You were going to be sick.
âStop,â You tried, although it was all air and mouth movement.
You took a bigger one inâssssniiiiiffFFFââSTop!â
He was really starting to freak out. He must've just started coming back into consciousness. He was having a panic attackâhowever, this one was definitely justified.
SnnNNiiiIIIIffFFFFââSTOPPp!â You finally managed.
And although strainedâhe had heard it.
His head whipped over to you. His eyes went wide. He breathed your nameâyour legal oneânot the code name. It passed through his lips like a prayer, like a mantra.
Youâre alive.
November 12th, 2015, 2350 hours, Present Day
Water laps quietly against the sides of the tub every time you shift. And for once, nothing hurts.
The bath youâre soaking in is perfect. Warmânot too hotâjust right. Youâve added a few drops of imported oils and lavender Epsom salts for your aching femur.
On the rim of the tub sits a lit patchouli incense. Youâve never been able to enjoy them before the in-nose. Most smells like that wouldâve set you back a few days with an awful migraine.
Youâre sure the scent is also muted by your nightly lorazepam and hydrocodone combo. Which, of course, you down with a glass of wine about twenty minutes ago.
You think you may be drifting off when the sound of a soft knock taps against the bathroom door. Your eyes stay closed. But, judging by the way the feet pad through the floorboards, you can tell itâs Natasha.
âHey,â she says, poking her head through the crack.
âHello,â you reply, one eye opening.
âYou look relaxed,â she smiles.
Her gaze drops. An almost empty bottle of chardonnay rests on the bath mat.
âWhat do you want?â you shift slightly, her line of sight not going unnoticed.
A beat.
âDid you drink all of that tonight?â
âWhat do you want, Natasha?â
She hesitates. Thenââyou speak Arabic, right?â
Your brows furrow for just a moment. Thinking. Considering. But it makes you sit up.
âThereâs something weâve been⊠tracking,â she says.
Your eyes open fully.
âA transmission. F.R.I.D.A.Y. flagged it as suspicious, but none of us can understand what theyâre saying.â
âWhoâs tried?â you ask.
Is sheâŠconsulting you?
âMe, Sam, Steve. I think they went to grab Barnes too.â
âSamâs a vet. What, he doesnât speak any?â Baffling.
âHe does. But itâs⊠muffled.â
âMuffled,â you repeat.
âYes.â You can tell she hates asking.
âSo you want me toââ
But God, you hate how much you like that she even is. You leave war only to be greeted by people whoâmore or lessâlike to pretend you were never in it in the first place. As if the only thing it did to you was cause cracks. As if the cracks werenât caused by your qualifications to become cracked in the first place.
âOnly if youâre comfortable,â she interrupts.
You stand, reaching for the heated bathrobe.
âYouâve caught me in a good mood,â you say, wrapping it around yourself. âBut Iâll warn youâadjusting back to normal noise might not go well.â
And it might not. You havenât heard the standard volume of the world around you since you woke up in the hospital.
She nods, âtake your time," and starts toward the door.
âIâll be out in ten minutes,â you call after her. âGoing to dry off and start tapering off the audio buffers.â
âŠ
When you enter the main room, you notice theyâve moved the big dining table. It usually sits off to the side, closer to the kitchen, but now it rests in the center, underneath the skylight. Itâs late, the lights are dim, and the current full moon casts a lunar wash that keeps the atmosphere a bitâŠspooky.
On the dining table sits a giant radio. Bulkyâsimilar to the ones you used back in Afghanistan. Strange, considering the Stark-issued technology you all have at your disposalâbut these ones are usually long-range.
âHere, come sit,â Nat says, pulling a chair out for you. âHow are your ears?â
You sigh, walking toward her, beginning to reach up to take them out.
âSit first. Please.â She stops you.
Sheâs concerned. Her eyebrows furrow, searching your face for some sort of signâa triggerâas if youâre just going to suddenly go off like a trip wire. Sheâs probably right.
The group surrounding the radio parts, making way for your entrance.
âWe think itâs Arabic,â Sam says as you land in the seat.
âWhy donât you know for sure?â you ask.
âYouâll be able to tell in a second,â he murmurs, rubbing his hands down his face.
You nod, then move to take out your AGSI. As you slide the right one out, your breath catches in your throat, choking you like a fish out of water.
Youâre met with the once-familiar sound of tinnitus. That constant ringing. You almost forgot about that. The sound is so overwhelming, youâre not even sure how you managed it for seventeen years. The past four have beenâwellâquiet.
You grimaceâthey notice.
Nat moves in closer, like sheâs about to step in, like youâre some small child playing with glass. You have some composure. Some control over your own mind and body. You take a deep breath and hold your hand up to her.
âDonât go too fast,â Nat saysâdesperate, pleading. âDonâtâŠpush yourself.â
âItâs okayâfuckââ Youâre cut off by the groan ripping out of your throat.
Theâfuckâall these goddamn super soldiers around youâtheir heartbeats are deafening.
âJustâplease,â you manage. âI need all of you to move back.â
And they do.
Even through your physical struggle, you still feel Barnes' eyes on you. Eyeballing you like youâre nothing more than prey.
You shake it off, taking a deep breath, and finally lift the headphones to your ears. The headband rests over your eyes, accommodating for the towel your hair is currently wrapped in.
Your eyelids flutter shutâyour hands gripping the side of the table. If you were stronger, youâre sure there would be nail marks left behind.
Itâs all static at firstâonly able to make out the sound of your ears still ringing. ItâsâGod, itâs loud. Obnoxious. Irritating.
You grit your teeth. Your right hand curls into a fist, then slams down onto the table.
âYouââ Nat calls.
âShhhââ you cut her off. âItâs alright.â
And thereâthrough the static, through the ringingâit moves toward you like headlights in dense fog. The voices begin to make themselves known.
Theyâre rightâyou can immediately tell. Itâs confusing. But you hear it.
âOkay,â you start, your hand unfurling as you reach over to fiddle with the knobs of the radio. âFor starters, they arenât speaking Arabic. This is Farsi.â
âButââ Sam protests.
âActually, no,â you interrupt. âItâs Dari.â
âWhatâsââ someone begins to askâyouâre not sure who.
âItâs an Afghan dialect. Dari is to Farsi as American English is to British English. Itâs aâŠregional difference.â
âWell, that would track. The transmission is coming from the border of Iran and Afghanistan,â Steve addsâ
âWaitââ You jolt, making everyone else jump as you reposition yourself.
What the fuck? You reach down, fiddling with the knob again...No. It canât be. And thereâthen you hear itâŠagain.
Your eyes snap open. You rip the damp towel off your head and grab the headphone wire, yanking it from the radio so everyone can hear.
âThis oneââ you gesture to the man currently talking, âthis one isnât a native speaker. The other one is. Thatâs why heâs so hard to understand andââ
The group leans in, trying to decipher the difference.
âHoly shit.â You almost soundâŠexcited.
You hook a thumb toward the radio, glancing around at themâlike an inaudible: Get a load of this.
âWhat?â Sam asks, hands dropping to his sides.
Ugh, of course they canât tell the difference. They all seem to be eyeing you with the same apprehension they would a civilian. Youâre the only one in the room who understands whatâs happening.
You sigh. âDo you know where the other transmission is coming from?â
âNot exactly. We can kind of pinpoint it somewhere in the eastern U.S.,â Steve says, stepping forwardâthen stopping, thinking better of it.
âI actuallyââ they watch you expectantly. âOkay, I know this is going to soundâŠinsane, but IâI think I know who this is.â
âWhat?â Sam asks again, clearly exasperated.
That voice. That drawl. That borderline indiscernible Appalachian accent, âyesâYES! Oh my god.â
No wonder they couldnât understand him. No one can understand him half the time in English.
âWhat?! Who is it?!â Nat shouts.
âItâsââ you shake your head.
Holy shit. âItâs fucking Tim.â
âTim?â Nat raises a brow.
âWho the hell is Tim?â Sam adds, arms crossing.
âI mean, it has to be,â you ignore them. âHe used toâwell, he served in Desert Storm back in the 90s.â
There's a beat. You notice after a moment.
âSorry,â you start, dragging a hand over your forehead. âHe was one of my caregivers back at the cabin.â
âHow do you know that?â Cap asks.
Itâs not doubt. Itâs confusion.
âWaitââ you shoot a hand up. âGrab me a piece of paper and a pen.â
Nat scrambles, finding a sharpie on the coffee table and a piece of mail from the counter. She flips it over and places it in front of you.
You start scribblingâdeciphering their shitty little puzzle.
âJanuary 2ndâŠparcel incomingâat home. What? Why would heâat home? Really?â
âOkay, wait, Tim? I thought your caregiver was Cherokee?â Nat asks.
You wave her off, still writing.
âTwo hundred thousand in cashâŠfirst. Then anotherâtwo hundred and fifty thousandâŠtwo weeks later?â
Your lips press into a line. Yeah. Someoneâs definitely up to no good.
âHey!â Nat snaps. âWho the hell is Tim?â
âUgh, Tim isâwell, he was my caregiver. Up untilâŠI donât know. Eight? Nine maybe? He gotâwellâinto some trouble. Wasted too many chances. By the time Tony showed up, it was justâŠme and Yona.â
âWhat are they saying now?â Cap asks.
âJust repeating details,â you say, then huff a laugh. âHaâheâs asking about customs now.â
âWhat are they saying back?â Sam asks.
âPffââ you laugh again. âThe other guy said, âMan nami dĂąnam. Be kiram.ââ
They all look at each other, eyebrows raised in confusion. Right-they have no idea what youâre saying.
âTim said, âwhat about customs? Will that delay shipping?â And the other guy saidâwell, roughly in Englishââto my penis.â But in Dari itâs more like âI donât fucking knowâ or âI donât give a fuck.ââ
âOkay, so what does that mean?â Sam asks, already over it.
Christ. Lighten up.
âI donât know. Probably that Tim gave him something worth that kind of payment.â
âThey didnât mention specifics?â
âTim might be stupid enough to send money to his house, but heâs not stupid enough to talk details over an insecure line.â
âWell, what now?â Steve asks, glancing between Nat and Sam.
You answer for them.
âWell, you wonât hear another transmission. Comms are severed. But if you want answers, Iâd recommend visiting him in January. I know where he lives. I can come with youââ
âAbsolutely not.â Sam cuts in.
âWhat?â you blink. âWhy not?â
You look around. Nothing. No backup.
âYouâre retired,â Sam says.
âYeahâfrom the military,â you fire back. âAnd what the fuckâso is everyone else in this room.!
âDid you look in my file?â you tilt your head.
âDidnât have to. You walk with a limp, youâve got a cast, youâve got PTSDââ
âSam.â Nat warns.
âWhat? Am I wrong? She was released from the hospital a few months ago under POW status.â
âYouâre a POW?â
Silence---Because itâs Barnes.
Still staring. Always staring. Doesnât he have anything better to do?
Those eyesâthey make you uneasy. Because you swearâswear on everythingâthat you know them.
His gaze doesnât move. And you realize heâs not going to look away. He never does. So you donât either.
âWhatâs it to you?â you snap.
He finally chooses to speakâjust to the wrong person, at the wrong time.
âDo you have a problem with me, Barnes?â you ask, pushing your chair back and stalking toward him.
âNo,â he says. Asshole.
âThen why are you always staring at me?â
Samâs arm comes out, pressing against your chest.
âYouâre always staring at me,â Bucky shoots back.
âYou started it,â you snap, shoving Samâs arm.
âAlright, both of you, cool it off,â Sam groans.
âHe wonât stop staring at me!â you turn to Nat.
âStop staring at her, Barnes,â she sighsâbut her eyes stay on you.
âI will when she stops staring at me.â Childish.
âHey, I hate to remind you,â Sam grabs your shoulders, âbut you two were injected with two very different serums.â
Was that a dig?
âHey, assholeâthereâs only one key difference in the epigenetic modifiers in the programmable nanoparticles we both have!â
âI donât even know what that means,â Sam shoots back.
âPlus, I was born with mine!â you shout at Barnes.
âHeâs got a metal arm!â Sam raises his voice.
You tilt your head. The stimulant in your systemâitâs itching. Begging for a fight.
Vision phases in through the wallâfast, suddenâfeet landing firmly as he asserts control over the room. The tension draws him in.
âSheâs being an instigator,â Sam calls to him over his shoulder, not looking away from you.
âHe started it!â you fire back.
âDid not,â Bucky says.
âDid too.â
âBoth of you, cut it out," Steve steps forward. Done. "Whereâs Tony?â
âIâm an adult,â you scoff. âI can handle myself.â
âYeah? Then start acting like one,â Sam shoots.
âHe started it!â
âHe barely knows whatâs going on!â
Barnesâstill leaning against the couchârolls his eyes.
âWalk with me,â Sam says, grabbing your arm and pulling you toward the hallway.
âLet go of me!â you snap, trying to shake him off.
âWalk. Now.â Firm. Military. Familiar.
And despite yourselfâyou listen.
As the room fades behind youâyou still feel Barnesâ stare burning into your back.Â
July 2004, Undisclosed Location, TN
Timâs garage was like a swamp during mid summer, even with the door left open, even when it was real late at night. It was loud too. Tree frogs, cicadas â they all screamed down from the old, weathered branches which hung high above you.
Tim served in Desert Storm as a sniper in the special forces, heâd come over a few times a week to help you practice your marksmanship. Heâd usually bring his son Harley with him. It was always nice being around someone your age.Â
So, when Yona would head out of town, heâd drop you off at Timâs, and hope that heâd pick you back up in one piece. See, Tim was a good guy, a solid man, a veteran â but he wasnât immune to flaw.Â
For starters, he drank too much, was one tub of crisco away from a heart attack, and ever since he served he had gotten himself into trouble with the law more times than you could count.Â
But he did love you, and although sometimes he could be greedy, he was a quintessential aspect of your early childhood.
âHarley!â Tim called out from his seat on the lawn chair, which faced the TV mounted on the wall of the garage.Â
He already had a couple of empty beer cans crushed up on the ground next to him. Dressed in his usual sleeveless UT Vols shirt and a pair of boxers â this was the standard during most of your stay-overs with them.
âYes Sir?â Harley called from the kitchen, heâd gone in there to refill his cup of sweet tea.
âGo get me another Miller from the fridge, would âya boy?â His voice was a bit hoarse, so he hawked up a wad from his throat, and spat it onto the ground.
âCan I have one too?â You asked from your own lawn chair opposite to his.
It was tiny in comparison, pink all over, and had streamers on the armrests like a kids bike with training wheels would. He had decorated it special for you for your seventh birthday.Â
He hummed while turning toward you, his head tilted to the side.
âWhen does Yona get back?â He asked, his voice had been just above a whisper.
âTomorrowâŠâ You sighed.
You loved Yona, but Tim was lenient, and had let you do whatever the hell you wanted.
He narrowed his eyes on you, sitting there a moment in silence â then cleared his throat again.
âMake that two miller lites, boy!â He added.Â
You liked Miller Lite. It tasted like bread-which was one of the only foods you were ever able to stomach-and made your face really warm. However, you also happened to be twelve years away from the legal drinking age. It didn't really matter, one can once in a while wouldnât kill you.Â
Laid out in the middle of the garage was a bright green ping pong table. It was old and sticky, and had stains all over it. Tim had insisted on watching you and Harley play that night. The Vols had lost earlier that day so he needed some serious cheering up.
That had been the only issue with staying at Timâs, there was never anything fun for you to do. You liked it a bit better when Timâs mom Memaw would come by and visit. Sheâd bring some of her old baby dolls she played with as a kid, and if you were lucky, she'd pack some of her Avon products to do your makeup with.Â
âI donât like ping pong.â You said, staring off into space.
âYou ainât even played it before.â He laughed.Â
âYeah, butâŠthis table smells like vomit.â You grimaced.
He tilted his head â yeahâŠyeah it really did.Â
âWell, thatâs âcause itâs usually used for beer pong.â He justified.Â
âCan we play beer pong?â You got excited--that had meant more cans of bread.Â
âDont push it.â He warned, pointing a finger at you.
Harley came back out from the kitchen. He was two years older than you, which meant he was capable of holding two beers in one hand, and a cup in the other.Â
âThank you, son.â Tim smiled as Harley handed him his beer.
âYouâre welcome.â Harley nodded, reaching over you and putting the other can in the chair's built-in cupholder.
Tim downed a few big gulps â burped â and then nodded towards the shop table attached to the wall.Â
âNow son, go grab them there paddles,â Tim instructed.
Harley went and reached for them, then handed them back over to his dad.Â
âNo, donât give âem to me,â his father ridiculed, âI ainât the one playin.â He gestured his beer towards you.
Harley rolled his eyes, then dropped one of them into your lap.Â
âAlright, now,â Tim started, watching you while you fondled with the paddle. âNo, lord help me,â
You were holding it from the wrong side.Â
âFix your grip there, kid.â He shook his head at you, still not holding it correctly. âChrist, you ainât got the good sense God gave a goose.â
He reached over, helping you reposition your hand. âYuuuup, okay â thar âya go.â
He thought it was crazy how a kid as educated as you could be so damn stupid.Â
âNow, Harleyâs played before, so Iâm less havinâ to explain to him ââ
You grabbed at the handle again in a way that made zero anatomical sense.Â
âWould you quit holdinâ the fuckinâ paddle like that? Youâre a few bricks shy of a load, my God.â He raised his voice, reprimanding you.Â
You crossed your arms over your chest, face souring towards him.Â
âYona doesnât talk to me like that.â You argued back.
âWell, ole Yonaâs a brown noser. Iâm just givinâ you what for.â He said, his beer tipped back towards your direction again. âNow, take that there ball â thaur âya go. Now Harley, go ahead and serve it to âer.â
Harley served it. It hit the table, did a couple of bounces past you, and then the three of you watched as it fell onto the floor by your feet.Â
âAlright, see how that ball fell on the ground? You were supposed to hit that.â Tim explained.
You blinked down at it as it finally came to a stop by the toe of your shoe.
âI donât get it.â You stated.Â
Tim sighs, moving to stand up from his seat.Â
âAlright, he serves it â like this,â Tim grabs the ball off of the ground, then takes Harleyâs paddle and pretends to hit the ball with it.
âThen itâs gonna hit down onto the table once,â he held the ball in his fingers, mimicking how it should look as it flies through the air, then bounces it once on your side of the table.
âThen youâre gonna hit it back to âem,â he grabbed at your paddle, still holding the ball, and showing how you should hit it back.Â
âMakinâ sure your serve hits back down on the table too, and then that whole thing is gonna repeat, over and over again.â
You raised an eyebrow at him, looking a bit unimpressed.
âWell,â you started, âhow do you win?â
âIf you serve it and it hits down on his side of the table, and then he goes to hit it back to you but he misses, then you get a point.â Tim smiled, handing back both of you and Harleyâs paddles, then set the ball down in front of him.
âOkay.â You nodded.
âThat make sense?â He asked.
âYessir.â You reassured â although, it really hadnât made much sense.Â
âAlright,â Tim inclined. âNow go âhead.â
He backed up from the table, then moved over to the big radio that rested on the shelf by the wall. He turned it on, fiddled with the knobs for a moment until Lynyrd Skynyrd was pumping out through the speakers.Â
And so it began, you and Harley played back and forth for about twenty minutes. And he was clobbering you.Â
âThis game is the worst!â You shouted after a while, throwing your paddle onto the ground.
âWell, youâre just not very good at it.â Harley teased, you hadnât won one game, only having scored about five points compared to his fifty-two.
âIâm good at everything, though.â You sighed, kicking your foot at the ground.
âGuess not.â Harley stuck his tongue out at you.Â
âShut your big fat mouth!â You yelled at him, then turned back over to the man leaning back in his lawn chair. âUncle Tim, canât we please play somethinâ else? Can we call Mamaw to bring the dollsââ
âWe ainât playinâ no dolls,â Tim interrupted, pointing at you again with that fucking beer can in his hand. âPick up that damn paddle and serve it again.â
âDaddy, it ainât even fair at this point! She canât play worth a shit.â Harley shouted back at him.
You picked up the ball from the ground and launched it at his stupid head.
âHey!â Harley yelped, his hand coming up to where it hit his forehead.
âThatâs what you get!â You countered.Â
âDo not!â He threw back.
âDo too!â You finished.Â
âHey!â Uncle Tim raised both hands in exasperation. âNow both of you quit all that hollerin,â he motioned for you. âYou, câmere.â
âMe?â You looked around.Â
âYes you, you fuckinâ jackleg.â He mumbled the last part.Â
You walked towards him, watching as he peeled off his shirt and stood up. He spun a finger around so youâd turn your back to him, then proceeded to start tying the sweaty top over your eyes.Â
âThis is gross,â you gagged. âYour shirtâs wet.â
âBuilds character,â he didnât give a rat's ass, just pushed you back over towards the table. âNow go walk back over to your side.â
He reached back over to the shelf and turned off the music. Looked down at his son, then back at you. You were moving your head back and forth as if you could see â you couldn't.Â
âAlright, boy,â He nodded to his son. âServe it.â
âWhat?â Harley asked â and honestly, âwhat,â was right.Â
âYou heard me.âÂ
And so Harley served. You knew it was going to hit you â heard it as it whistled through the air, felt the dust particles wash towards you like a wave â it landed right between your covered eyes. And he started laughing at you.Â
That boy. Thatâs all he had been. Just a normal boy.Â
The scientists had told you time and time again: you werenât normal. You were special. You were better. You were the chosen one. The only one strong enough to survive it â that you had been surviving before you were even born.
Pride smacked you hard in the face that night. It knocked your jaw out of place, made your nose bleed, and had your head spinning. It was like you had been concussed.Â
He couldnât win. At least, not against you. Not when you were scientifically proven to be perfect.Â
So, you grabbed the ball off the ground â still blinded â and served it back towards him. Not seeing, but hearing. Second only to your sense of smell. Hell, youâd shot clay pigeons dead center while blindfolded.
And so the ball flew back and forth. It had rhythm, making its own beat as it landed on the table in perfect synchronization.Â
âWell, Iâll be damned.â Tim said under his breath.
His eyes followed the ball, trailed it like a pendulum, and would've been hypnotized if he wasnât careful. You won every game for the rest of the night.
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Book One: 'IMPULSE' - Chapter Three: âGluttonyâ
Word Count: 13.3k
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A/N: Pleaaaseeee give me feedback, even if it's negative.
[July 6th, 2015, 0730 Hours, Three Weeks and Five Days Gone]
The Soldier felt sick by the state of this captives room, but also a bit relieved that this one was, at least, still alive. They had just left the other one there to rot â this one, however, seemed to be in the final stages of torture. Probably not much better. Perhaps this one wishes they were dead too.Â
There were bodily fluids all over the ground, The Soldier had been happy that his mask was on, otherwise he wouldâve been overwhelmed by the smell.
The dead one was male, this one was female. Strapped to a metal chair, and beaten beyond belief. It was cruel. The Soldier could tell she had been pretty once. Her body was on full display â they had stripped her down to her undergarments.Â
The Soldier stopped in front of her, tilting his head a bit as he took her in. Her ears were bleeding â her eyes swollen shut. Face stained with splotches of dried blood â purple discoloration from bruising. This was a different treatment then they typically would have done. It had almost seemed like they had beenâŠexperimenting on her.Â
She had green and yellow slime that dripped from her eyelashes. Her ears had remnants of clip marks, adhesives, and scratches. She was covered in goosebumps, pale as a ghost, and had track marks up and down the center of her arms â the left one undeniably broken.Â
It justâŠhung there. The Soldier thought if there had been a cross wind that it wouldâve been swaying back and forth.Â
âZlaya malen'kaya tvar'.â Â
âVicious little thing.â A voice called from behind him.
When he had arrived there for a refuel a bit earlier they had mentioned the captives. Told him he just had to come see them. That their suffering was funny. That they were highly trained American Army dogs that got what was coming to them.
âChto s ney ne tak?âÂ
âWhat is wrong with her?â The Soldier asked back to the voice.
This was barbaric.Â
âU neye tozhe yest' syvorotka, kak i u tebya. Khotya yeye syvorotka nemnogo otlichayetsya. My nikogda ran'she takoy ne videli.âÂ
âShe also has the serum, just like you. Although hers is different. Sheâs not strong â sheâs⊠something else. Weâve never seen anything like it before.â The voice answered.
It sounded proud.Â
âOna umirayet.âÂ
âSheâs dying.â The Soldier countered.Â
Perhaps that had been their intention. She must've really done something awful to have required this kind of torture. He didnât understand why they didnât put her out of her misery.
âDa, i kak zhal'.âÂ
âYes, and what a shame.â The voice sighed.
âS.H.I.E.L.D.?â The Soldier asked while examining her face, moving it back and forth between his fingers.
They had beaten her to a pulp.Â
âNe perestupay chertu, soldat. Eto ne vkhodit v tvoi obyazannosti.â
âDon't cross the line, soldier. This is not part of your duties.â The voice reprimanded.
And it wasnât. It wasnât any of The Soldierâs business, and he knew he had been wrong for feeling any care. Feeling something akin to disgust towards his fellow comrades. How they could wear a young girl down to that point. ThatâŠstate. She couldnât have been older than twenty-one, if that.Â
âPig.â She spat up at him.
The Soldier suppressed a smile underneath his mask. Perhaps sheâd been fighting back. He secretly had hoped so.
âLisichka. Ona khitraya.âÂ
âLittle fox. She is conniving.â The voice said to him with a bit of amusement.Â
Her skin had a finish like satin, even beneath all of the damage. Powdery almost â and not necessarily in color, but more like texture. As if prior to this she had been well cared for. Absolutely no hints to having ever served in the military, unlike her deceased captive counterpart.Â
âKukolka.âÂ
âLittle doll.â The Soldier responded â however, it was more to himself.
What got The Soldier the most were her eyelashes. And although weighed down by sludge, they were so long. Almost as if she had been wearing a pair of false ones. She was like a little doll. Just one that had been battered and cracked.Â
âKukolka? Khotya yeye litso stalo neprivlekatel'nym. U neyo velikolepnaya figura. Maxim nazyvayet yeyo seks-koshechkoy.âÂ
âLittle doll?â The voice asked, then laughed to himself as he continued,Â
âher face has become ugly, but she still has a magnificent figure. Maxim calls her âthe sex kitten.ââ
The Soldierâs brows furrowed at her while she continued to twitch her nostrils. She had been doing that the whole time. Maybe he had woken her up, and she caught that undeniable smell of decomposition in the air. Maybe she had been trying to place it, but struggled considering the obvious head trauma.Â
âPrikhodit'. YA dolzhen pokazat' tebe parnya s otorvannoy nogoy.âÂ
âCome now. I must show you the one with the blown off leg.â The voice says, beginning to move down the hall.Â
The Soldier gave her a last look over. Her dog tags still dangled around her neck. They were coated in blood. The only letters he could make out were a âDâ and an âS,â as well as the bottom line, which had read; âIF FOUND, RETURN TO AES&VPPâ
âBednoye miloye sozdaniye.âÂ
âPoor sweet thing.â The SoldierâBuckyâmumbled to her.
He knew she couldnât hear him.
[November 21st, 2015, Present Day]
You wake up in your bed, disorientedâyour mind slow, your body heavier than it should beâwith no clear memory of how you got there.
Your eyes drag toward your phone on the nightstand, squinting at the screen. Around noon.
What the fuck?
A full beat passes. Maybe two.
Confusion settles in firstâthick and sluggishâfollowed quickly by something sharper. Unease.
And thenâa flicker of panic. Had youâŠ? Had you gone on some sort of bender?
You scan your room for proof, anything to piece together what the hell happened. Your gaze lands on your desk. Everything had fallen off of it, now laying scattered across the floor.
Fromâoh. From last night. Fuck.
Your stomach drops. Youâd hopedâstupidlyâthat it had been a dream. That maybe you had just collapsed into bed after scrolling through those files. That you never actuallyâ
But then you see it.
Sitting there on your dresser. Placed there. Deliberate. Impossible to miss.
Your In-Nose. Your fucking OSAM.
Right. So it was real.
A slow exhale leaves your lungsâtight, controlled, like youâre trying not to spook yourself. You push yourself up from the bed, moving toward it carefully, like getting too close might somehow change the answer.
But you donât even make it all the way there when you catch itâthe scent hits you before your hand even reaches the device, and you justâstop.
Him. Barnes.Â
Because he put it there. He picked it up off the floorâyour snot-coated, intra-nasal deviceâand set it out for you to find.
A sharp rush of heat floods your face, your neck, dropping fastâstraight down into your chest. Burning. Spreading. Boiling under your skin like something alive.
A blush that reaches your fingertips. A fluster that prickles along the fine hairs of your legs. A slow, scalding heat curling lowerâFuck.
And thenâstill foggy, still half-asleepâit clicks.
His scent isnât just there on the dresser, no.Â
Itâs everywhere.
Your eyes drag across the room, and suddenly you can see itâvisualize it like prints under UV lightâfollow it like a trail. From the door. Across the hardwood. Faint impressions on the carpet. All the way to your bed.
Your stomach twists.Â
The blanketâthere are remnants there that arenât yours. The subtle pull of fabric where big hands had gripped it, the way the comforter sits just slightly offâ
Like he had tucked you in.
Panicking, you inhale again before you can stop yourself. Deep. Too deep. As if your brain is trying to burn it into your lungs. Like itâs going against youâbetraying youâdesperate to try and keep it as its own.Â
No, this is wrong.
This is fucking wrongâBut there is a part of you, the part that isnât working against you, that likes it too.Â
Something hard to controlâsomething hard to containâimpossible to change.Â
This shit was down to your DNA. This had become chemical.Â
You stagger back a step, dragging a hand down your face. What the fuck is wrong with you?Â
Looking back at the OSAM still sitting on your dresser, you donât even realize what youâve done until itâs already too late. Suddenly overcome with a newfound sense of doom, you collapse back down on your bed, your head falling into your hands.
You knew the scent would be too muchâwhether you even knew him before or not â and you still did it anyway.Â
Smell isnât like the others.
Sight, hearing, touchâthey have steps. Pathways. Processing. They go through filters before your brain decides what they mean.
Smell doesnât.
Smell goes straight to the limbic system. Straight to memory. Straight to emotion. No permission. No buffer. No warning. It bypasses everything that would normally protect you.
And youâyou have spent years knowing that. Years learning how to suppress it when needed, and accept it when necessary.
The OSAM was never optionalâno, especially not after deployment âIt was a necessity.
Because without itâeverything comes in at once. Every chemical compound. Every trace. Every person. Every memory attached to them.
You knew smell would be worse. You werenât thinking. You never think anymore.
Youâve become a sad excuse of the weapon they perfected you into. All those years of trainingâfor what? You couldnât even stop for a moment and recognize the one thing you knew would happen.Â
When you were a kid, coming home from the labâexhuasted, tortured, overstimulatedâwhat you looked forward to more than anything was being wrapped up in the one thing you knew would never hurt you âwould never push youâthat would always be there for comfortâYona.Â
And when you took the OSAM out last nightâwhen you stood there, right in front of Barnesâyou didnât just smell him.
You didnât just remember him.
You were physically brought back.
That bunker. That chair. That momentâHim.
And fuckâall the trauma from the weeks priorâeverything.
Of course you latched onto itâlatched onto him.
The only thing in that place that hadnât hurt you. The only thing that had been gentle.
And thatâs why it feels like this.
Like withdrawal. Like craving. Like something inside of you is starving and just got fed for the first time in months.
All that noise is your head? All the cravings for the drugs you had to set aside for this upcoming appointment?Â
They've become white noise compared to this.Â
You feel like youâre going to have a heart attack as you rip yourself off of the bed and stumble into the bathroom. Turning on the sink, cupping your hands beneath it and splashing your face with cold water.Â
Another deep breathâŠ
Fingers gripping the marble countertopâeyes trailing upwardsâyouâre met with your own reflection.Â
This was going to be dangerous.Â
The last time something affected you like this, seven people died.Â
Because even before the real drugs, the real pain, the real guiltâyou were already an addict.Â
Thomasâ
Thomas was like ibuprofen.
And this?
This is like fucking crack.
[June 6th, 2015, 0100 Hours, Undisclosed U.S. Black Site, 25 Miles East of Kabul, Afghan/Pakistan Border, four days before the incident]
Kabul in early summer could be chilly at night. So the average person would've raised an eyebrow at your choice of attire â clad in just a sports bra and baggy tactical pants â but you were running hot that evening.Â
Almost everyone was.
âI can go smaller.â You sniffed, and rubbed your nose with the back of your hand.Â
You looked off into the distance while adjusting the magazine of your rifle â the industrial haze of nearby Kabul emanated shades of green on the horizon.Â
Youâd run out of clay pigeons a while ago, having to resort to various breakable objects around the base instead. Shattered ceramic was scattered around across the sand of the make-shift range you all had set up earlier in the evening.Â
âThat was a frisbee!â Schwarzy shouted to you.
Schwarzy â codename based on The Terminator himself â was the final member of their ten-person squadron âFleetwood Macâ. Another American â and God, was he full blooded. Schwarzy was huge, an inch taller than CURJ. Total linebacker. Whenever he wasn't on a tour, he was at home doing bodybuilding competitions. But, despite his outwards appearance, he was the sweetest fuckin guy youâd ever meet.Â
FUBAR, RFB, Mick, Christine McVie, and Buckingham were all out in Kandahar prepping for the upcoming mission. They had more experience and the titles to go along with it. Of course, that meant you, Schwarzy, CURJ, Stevie Nicks, and Rhino were all stuck back on base waiting for your call to duty.Â
You all definitely made the most of it.
âNo, I can go smaller for sure.â You said, looking around for CURJ.
He was leaning against a nearby barrel smoking a pipe of hashish with another soldier â a British SAS officer â they were both watching you as they passed it back and forth to each other.Â
âWhat you want girl?â CURJ called as you marched her way towards them.
âI need something smaller.â You stated â your eyes caught on the officer standing next to him.
Luke â who had been conveniently given the name âSkywalkerâ upon deployment â shamelessly checked you out. His gaze moved up and down a bit, resting a moment on the swell of your breasts which were spilling out of your sports bra.Â
He locked back in on your face a moment later.
but you had caught that.Â
You always did.Â
Although you had been fooling around with Thomas at the time, whenever he was gone youâd always come crawling back to this one. You felt bad about it â so did CURJ â Thomas was a good guy. But CURJ would never peep to him about this. It wasnât his business, and honestly? He enjoyed watching the drama play out.Â
âI can go grab some ping pong balls.â CURJ said, standing up, blowing the hashish smoke out of the side of his mouth.
âThanks,â you replied, your eyes still locked on Skywalker. âIâm going to replenish.â
You started walking backwards towards the shabby barracks that were just a little bit behind you. His gaze lingered on you for a moment â as if he was thinking, but ultimately choosing to follow.Â
He set the hashish pipe back down on the barrel.Â
You swallowed down a grin â turning around â swaying your hips away.Â
You had made sure to give him a bit of a show as he jogged to catch up â the front of his boots eventually nipping at your heels.
Luke was tall, hovered over you a bit. He reached his arm out from behind you and pushed in the door so you could walk through first.Â
By the time he closed it you had already turned around to face him. He grabbed at your waist and pushed you up against a nearby wall.
âYouâre a naughty one, do you know that?â He teased â he had this sensually thick Scottish accent. Â
Youâd never admit it â but you preferred it in comparison to Thomasâ Queenâs English.
âAm I?â You countered â biting down on your lower lip â tilting your head back to face him.Â
He towered over you with his left arm above your head and resting on the wall, the other one grabbing at the skin around your hips.Â
âI donât like doing this to Thomas.â He mumbled, his head leaning in lower, his breath fanning against you neck.
âHeâs not here.â You added â as if he didnât know.Â
He had taken a deep breath in â
as if to ground himself â
but ultimately just became more enticed by the scent of you alone.Â
He couldnât help himself.Â
He groaned â really trying to fight it.Â
His left hand above your head clenched into a fist â his knuckles going white.Â
âYouâre a glutton,â he wasnât wrong. âBut unfortunately so am I.â
You grabbed him by the neckline of his shirt â pulling him with you into one of the latrines.
âJust a second.â You whispered, reaching down into her boot.
You pulled your hand back out, holding a little saranwrap baggie of cocaine in between your pointer and thumb.
âYou planninâ on sharinâ that?â He asked, watching as you bent back up.
âFinders keepers.â You taunted.
You fondled in between your breasts for a moment, grabbing at the chain of your necklace.Â
A little key addition was added in the mix of your dog tags. You dipped it into the bag, scooping up a bit of the powder, and inhaling it into your left nostril.Â
âF-uck,â You coughed. âGod, itâs always awful.âÂ
You ate your words as you dipped in one more time â gathering a bit more â and snorting it up again into your right.Â
He smiled at you.
You were grimacing â your face pinched up in pure disgust.Â
âCanât be that bad, can it?â He chaffed.
You turned around, spitting into the toilet behind you.
âHere,â You said, licking your finger and plunging it into the bag. âWant to try?â
You brought your hand up to his face, your pointer coated in a thick layer of powder.
âSmileâŠâ You cooed at him.
And he did.
Laughing a bit as you rubbed the powder into his gums.Â
You watched as he stretched his jaw out till it popped â
â then chased the gumming with a kiss.
It was hot âÂ
âŠpassionate â but more so just because you both knew it was wrong.
So wrong for you especially â sure, you loved Thomas â but you were flawed.Â
 Just kept wanting more, and more, and more.Â
The sex made you feel even better than the drugs ever did.
âŠ
You had lost your virginity to Thomas two months after landing overseas. Thinking back on it, it shouldâve been quicker â but you had been nervous. What if it had hurt? You heard what it was supposed to be like. And the rumors had been true â It did hurt â but only for a moment.Â
Until it turned into something better.
Thomas had left a week after your deflowering, on a similar mission to what he had currently been doing at the time. It was nothing you had experienced ever before. The greatest feeling in your life. You wanted to breathe it like oxygen.
You craved it â those feelings you got from it â like scratching a good itch. The way you felt â your skin⊠It was your touch sense. For everything so awful about it â it had also been so good.
You slept with Skywalker the day after Thomas had left base â and then a different American soldier a day after that. Sergeant Declan Nix, in fact. The same one who taunted you with buckets of early morning water back at boot camp. You rotated between the three of them like they were sharing a cigarette. One that belonged to Thomas but was unknowingly allocated to Luke and Declan.
âŠ
Skywalker tapped at the backs of your legs, getting you to jump up. He gripped underneath your thighs, and slammed your back into the cinderblock wall of the latrine. Bringing up one of his hands, he yanked the edge of your top down, exposing your nipple. He looked up into your eyes and leaned his chin down to suck on it.
You watched him, pulling air in between your teeth, and shoving your hands into his hair, tugging hard.Â
His eyes rolled back as he reached behind you for the door. He planned on taking you to one of the medical rooms with an isolated bed.
âI thought you wanted to shoot something smaller?â He asked while biting his way back up to your lips.
âEnded up wanting bigger.â
He laughed through the kiss that followed.Â
He was searching for the door with his back, rubbing against the barrack walls like a bear would a tree.Â
He got discombobulated, but eventually caught sight of it behind your head. He made a one-eighty, swapping back again so he took the force of the door opening and not you. The doors were iron and very heavy â old and rusty â and he was ever the gentleman.Â
Your eyes squinted as you were met with the bright lights of the medical room, cringing a bit. But through the one you left cracked open, you noticed something â a blur of motion.Â
âWait,â you stopped him. âSomeone is in here.â
âWhat? Who?â He asked, moving to turn around.
âNo,â you said. âNo, donât look â itâs Anna sheâs â sheâs naked.â
Anna was one of the other officers â one who wasnât even there that night.Â
Your eyes were wide as he carried you back out of the room.
It wasnât Anna.Â
No â it definitely wasnât Anna.Â
It was Rhino âÂ
â he was âÂ
Fuck.
he was on his hands and knees naked âÂ
naked and bent over in front of fucking Matthew Staggs âÂ
â one of Skywalker's squadron members.Â
The two of them had ripped apart, their faces â fuck â you could tell by the looks of it that they had assumed the door was locked.Â
Rhinoâs eyes were unblinking as he stared at you â both of you at the will of the men you were with.Â
âPlease.âÂ
His face said it all. He didnât have to speak.Â
âPlease, donât say anything.â
Youâre sure the look on your face didnât give him much solace.Â
But of course you wouldnât â that wasâŠ
â it wasnât your business.Â
Donât Ask Donât Tell had been repealed a few years prior âÂ
â but this was â
Well, this was more like, didnât ask, don't care.
But to Rhino it was everything âÂ
â no, you had â
you had leverage.Â
[November 21st, 2015]
After thatâafter the realization, after the smell, after himâyou knew you had to shut it down. Fast. There wasnât room to sit with it, to analyze it, to let it spiral into something worse. You had felt what it could doâhow quickly it could take overâand you werenât stupid enough to let that happen twice. Normally, you wouldâve reached for something stronger. Something immediate. Something reliable. But the appointment was too close. Too risky. So you settled for what you could get away with. You drank.
wouldâve reached for something stronger. Something immediate. Something reliable. But the appointment was too close. Too risky. So you settled for what you could get away with. You drank.
âŠ
You donât remember falling asleep after your scent-induced spiral. Actually, you donât remember much of anything after that pointâjust fragments. Pieces. The kind that donât quite fit together unless you force them to.
The nights had started blending together. Blood, neurons, nerves, cellsâall beggingâshouting for something to help ease the withdrawals.Â
Kept waking up drenched in sweat. Sheets soaked through, hair sticking to your skin, lungs working like youâd just run a mile in your sleep. Youâd lay there for a secondâjust a secondâstaring at the ceiling, trying to convince yourself to stay put.Â
Your eyes would always drift to the nightstand. The Ambien. The hydrocodone. The lorazepam. All calling your name.
And every time, youâd force yourself up instead. Out of bed. Out of the room. Down the hallwayâbarefoot and half-conscious, like some kind of ghost haunting your own lifeâand end up at the wine cellar.Â
Youâd grab whatever bottle your hand landed on, bring it back upstairs, and down it in less than twenty seconds like it was water. Like it was medicine. Like it was enough.
It knocked you out. Hard.
Youâd wake up hours laterâtwelve, sometimesâwith your throat burning from acid crawling back up your esophagus, your body heavy, sluggish, but your mindâŠmercifully quiet.
At least for a little while.
âŠ
And then there were the days.
Or what you assumed were days.
Youâd wake up againâsometimes in the afternoon, sometimes at night, sometimes not even sure whichâand your phone would be full of things you didnât remember ignoring.
Keaton, mostly.
where are you? we agreed on 4:30.great. i have to study alone now thanks to you.if i hanged myself right here, right now in this library, do you even think anyone would notice?okay. im hanging myself. mourn me.
Ugh.
You didnât answer. Didnât have the energy to pretend you were still participating inâŠanything.
Exams were coming upâyou knew that. You could feel the material sitting somewhere in the back of your brain, filed away neatly like everything else youâd ever memorized.
Sometimes youâd check. Thankfully, the information was still intact. Good. Great. Perfect. That was all that mattered for now, right?
So then youâd down more wine, and go back to sleep.
âŠ
The appointment finally came, and went in a blur.
You remember the sound more than anythingâthe saw against the cast. That awful, vibrating whir as they cut it open and peeled it off your arm like it had never belonged there in the first place.
They handed it back to you in a bag.
Like a souvenir.
The signatures wereâŠimpressive, you guessed. You stared at them for a while, turning it over in your hands, wondering if you could sell it. Auction it off. Make something out of it.
But you needed drugs first. Priorities.
They took your blood. Of course they did. The one thing you had been worried about. Youâd expected it. Prepared for it.
And when the results came backâexpedited, just for youâyou almost laughed.
Because for all the shit you put yourself throughâŠIt had worked.
You hadnât suffered for nothing.
âŠ
The drive back to the compound had been white-knuckled.
Your fingers flex against the steering wheel even now as you step out of your Porsche, shaking them out, trying to get the feeling back into them. Your body feels wrong. Off. Like itâs lagging behind your movements by half a second.
You donât care. You donât have time to care.
The compound is quiet. Thank God.
No one stops you. No one questions you. No one looks at you long enough to notice somethingâs off as you move through the halls a little too fast, a little too unsteady, nearly tripping over your own feet in your rush.
You needâYou need to get to your room.
And thenâThere it is.
Like the gates of heaven opening. Like something divine placed exactly where it needed to be.
Your bedside drawer.
You donât even think. You rip it open. Grab the lorazepam. Crush it instantly with your key fob, hands shaking, movements sloppy, desperate, and thenâ
You snort it. OrâYou try to.
âFuck!â
But it falls right back out.
You freeze for half a secondâconfusedâbefore it hits you. The OSAM. Still in. Right. Right. You had put it back in. Of course you did.
Hands trembling, you rip it out again, struggling for a moment before it finally gives, and then you lean back down and take everything that had spilled.
It hits fast. Too fast.
You feel it immediatelyâdizziness flooding your system, the chemical burn tearing through your sinuses, sharp and real in a way that makes your eyes water.
âOhhhhhhh, fucckkkkâŠâ
It hurts. God, it hurts.
Your fist slams down against the table.
âFuck, fuuuucccckkkkââ
But there it is.
And Godâitâs good.
âOh, fuck.â
Youâre sure if anyone walked by right now theyâd think you were getting railed.
You donât even care.
Itâs not enough. Not yet. You need more.
You reach for the hydrocodone, dumping them out without thinking, crushing oneâmaybe twoâdoesnât matter, and taking it the same way.
And thatâThat does it.
Everything softens. Everything dulls. Perfect.
You donât need to study. You donât need to think. You just need to show up.
âŠ
The exam halls are too bright.
Too loud. Too full.
Even through the hazeâthrough the chemical blanket wrapped around your brainâyou can feel it pressing in. Voices overlap. Chairs scrape. Papers shuffle. The scratch of pencils drags across your skull like something physical.
It should be unbearable, but it isnât. Because youâre not reallyâŠthere.Â
You move through it like a ghost.You sit when youâre told to sit. You take the test when itâs placed in front of you.
And thenâ
âJesus Christ, there you are.â
Keaton.
You blink.
Your head turns toward him, but it feels delayed. Like your body is buffering.
He looks irritated. Frazzled. Slightly sweaty.
âWhere the hell have you been? Iâve been texting you forâlikeâtwo days. You just disappeared.â
His mouth keeps moving. You hear him. You do. But it doesnât land.
âYou okay?â Keaton asks, waving a hand in front of your face. âYou look like youâre about to pass out.â
Oh, Barnes.
Barnes had said the sameâŠ
The way his hand felt on your forehead. Cold. Grounding. Real.
You swallow. Too slow. Too heavy.
âIâm fine,â you say.
Your voice sounds wrong. Distant. Like itâs coming from somewhere behind you.
Keaton narrows his eyes. âYou sure? You lookââ
You donât hear the rest. Your hand twitches slightly in your lap.Â
Christ, youâre somehow craving Barnes through the fucking sedation.
âOkayâŠright,â Keaton says slowly, clearly not convinced. âWellâgood luck, I guess.â
He hesitates for a second longer, like heâs waiting for you to say something else.
You donât. You canât.
âDo yourself a favor,â he continues. âLay off the downers.â
âŠ
âBegin.â
The exam hits your desk.
You stare at it for a second too long. And then your hand moves. Automatic. Like it always does.
Your brain still works. Everything is still there. Every formula. Every concept. Every answer exactly where you stored it.
Your pen moves without hesitation. You donât think. You donât need to. You justâknow.
Your pen keeps moving. Answer after answer. Line after line. Perfect. Efficient. Detached.
But underneath itâthereâs something breaking through.
Not the drugs. Not the suppressors. Not your control. Him. Itâs like heâs cutting through everything. Like your body is reaching for him whether you want it to or not. Like something inside you has already decidedâand youâre just catching up.
You finish early. Of course you do. You always do.
You stare at the paper for a moment. Not reading it. Not checking it. JustâŠlooking. Because your brain is somewhere else. Your body is somewhere else.
You hand it in. Stand up. Walk out.
âŠ
And the second you step into the hallwayâyou inhale. Sharp. Desperate. Testing. Checking. Nothing. Just air. Just normal. Justâfine. You let out a breath. Laugh under it.
âOkay,â you murmur to yourself.
âOkay, youâre fine.â
Youâre not. You know youâre not.
Because if he can get through the drugsâ
if he can get through the suppressorsâ
if he can get through everythingâ
then what the fuck is left to stop it?
And worseâ
a much quieter thought creeps inâ
one you donât even want to acknowledge.
What if you donât actually want it to stop?
[June 8th, 2015, 2330 Hours, Undisclosed U.S. Black Site, 25 Miles East of Kabul, Afghan/Pakistan Border, two days before the incident]
Another night had passed as the other half of your squadron got intel in Kandahar. Which again, left you and the rest on your own at the black site. It had gotten boring. Not much to do besides drinking and doing drugs. And, well, having sex and shooting. Truly an all-American evening. The tax dollars were treating you well, all things considered.Â
âLoad.â Schwarzy called from your left.
The desert sand was rough against your skin that evening. It felt like it had been grating you down into nothing. Leaving the contrasting softness of your face rubbed raw and irritated.Â
âReady.â You grimaced as another grain hit you in the eye.
If you had been anyone else, you wouldnât have been ready. It was anything but ideal conditions to even consider firing this casually. The wind was howling, it was colder than normal. Thankfully you had three very large men around you to keep you warm. Well, them plus the dozen empty bottles of beer that sat on the ground.Â
âCall.â Schwarzy said with a smirk, watching as you focused down the scope.
Schwarzy, CURJ, and Luke took note of your frustration at the current environment. All your tells were there; flared nostrils, a sheen of sweat on your forehead â which they knew had been bothering you the most â the sand would stick to it, perspiration making it become tacky. You hated the feeling. It was overstimulating and made you want to rip the skin off of your body.Â
You took a deep breath in through your nose, and pushed it out of your mouth in a little âoâ shape.
âShoot.â You breathed.Â
Schwarzy nodded over to CURJ, who stood next to Luke at the trap that launched the clay pigeons. CURJ leaned down to trigger it. The machine took in a big suction of air, it kind of sounded like a bottle rocket.Â
âFollow through.â Schwarzy instructed you, preparing for the appearance of the incoming target.Â
POP â the shot rang out. This one sounded less like a bottle rocket, more like a firework.Â
It was an easy hit, and it had been all night. You had finally gotten down to the smallest of the plates.Â
âReset.â You mumbled, attention switching back down to your rifle.Â
Not caring enough to look out at the distance to see the damage you caused.Â
âConfirmed,â Schwarzy addressed you, then called out to CURJ as he ran out onto the range, âcall it!â
CURJ crouched down, a little flashlight shining onto the ground.
âDead,â he confirmed to you and Schwarzy, âright through the center.â
Not that you needed the confirmation.Â
âWell,â Schwarzy sighed, turning back towards you, âthat's the smallest.â
He smiled as he watched you roll your eyes, your right foot stomping down onto the ground.
âCan we not keep going?â You groaned, the rifle falling limp in your left hand.Â
âOh boy, not this again.â He laughed, shaking his head.
CURJ appeared in front of the two of you, a bit out of breath from his quick little jog. Off in the distance you caught sight of Luke as he started making his way over too.Â
âItâs alright, I got the ping pong balls already.â CURJ breathed, a big smile on his face.
âNo.â You said.
He and Schwarzy looked at each other, and then turned to you with raised eyebrows.
âNo?â CURJ repeated, making sure he heard you correctly.
Looking down at your feet as they kicked at the little rocks on the ground, you started to grin. The two of them narrowed their eyes at you as you finally turned to look back up at them. You were entirely too mischievous.Â
âYou got a quarter?â You asked, biting your lip.
CURJ and Schwarzy laughed at you.Â
Ever the show-off.
Ever the annoyance.Â
âYouâre not gonna shoot a quarter.â Luke said to you as he finally made his appearance.
He wrapped his left arm over your shoulders, glaring down at you, a bit of warning seeped in his sultry brown eyes.Â
âWell, Iâll hit anything, so unless youâre telling me no, then sure, I guess I won't shoot it.â You shrug.
He rolled his eyes at that, looking over at CURJ and Schwarzy, as if he was asking for some help. The two of them raised their shoulders, the idea not seeming to bother them much.Â
âYouâre unbelievable." Luke wheezed at the three of you.
âThey get back in the morning, we wonât get to do this again for a while.â You whined, as if you were a little kid begging for five more minutes.Â
âWhat is the appeal of this to you?â Schwarzy gestured. âDoes it make you feel better about yourself, or are you just trying to impress us?â
âItâs gotta be for her, she impressed me the moment she told Commander McNamara he had a melanoma on his back.â CURJ moved to your other side, opposite of Luke, and reached his right arm over your shoulders, his finger pointed at Schwarzy.Â
Man sandwich.Â
Very warm. Enjoyable.Â
âWhat? I couldâve done that. Theyâre easy to spot.â Luke countered, his body shifting inwards to speak directly at CURJ, the two of them gating you in like you werenât even there.
âHe was fully clothed,â CURJ argued back. âsaid she smelled it through his jacket.â
âWow,â Luke breathed, although it was pandering. âConsidering your countryâs shitty access to healthcare, you could make a good living off of that talent.â
He nudged you, his fingers digging into the side of your waist. You hated when he did that, which just made him do it more.Â
âYeah, what the hell?â CURJ asked him. âYou guys get to go to the doctor for free?âÂ
âThey do,â You added, pulling yourself out of their grasp, âbut only a year after making the initial appointment.âÂ
âA year?â CURJ looked between the two of you, as if he was really trying to understand what he was hearing.Â
âSheâs beinâ melodramatic,â Luke glared at your back as you sauntered away. âUsually six months. Tops.âÂ
âThatâs a long wait for suffering a heart attack.â CURJ breathed, still not able to believe it.
âIf you have a heart attack you just go to hospital.â Luke deadpanned.
âAnd then die in the waiting room.â You called over your shoulder, too focused on the upcoming shot to give the conversation much attention.Â
âIf itâs life or death theyâll treat ya quick,â he called back to you. âYou know, youâre startinâ to sound like Ronald Reagan.â
âI vote blue.â You comforted as your eyes peered down the scope, checking to see if it was still clear.
âSurprising considering your caretaker. Heâs worth, what, like twenty billion at this point?â Schwarzy joins back in on the banter, moving to take his place on your left side again.
âI think maybe fifteen.â You mumbled, the sleeve of your shirt cleaning off the glass on the scope.Â
âWow, only fifteen? In that case Iâm surprised you arenât covered by Obamacare.â Luke teased, beginning to make his way back over to the trap, tossing the quarter up and down into his hand.
âIâll take it. Anything is better than these shitty benefits weâre supposed to live on after risking our lives for this stupid fuckinâ country.â You were joking â well, sort of.Â
âGot the quarter.â Luke winked your way, holding it up to in between two fingers.Â
âBeautiful.â You sighed, taking in a big gulp of the bitter desert air.
âLoad and make ready.â Schwarzy shook his head at you, but ultimately gave in.
He could never say no to one of your shows, never questioning your ability to entertain, whether you had really meant to or not.Â
âReady.â You confirmed after reloading the magazine.Â
âHey!â A voice shouted from a few yards away.Â
The four of you paid no mind.Â
âIn the middle of something here, Rhino.â You groaned.Â
He always did that shit.Â
âWhat are you doing? Thatâs not an authorized target.â He grilled as he jogged towards you.
âGeorge Washington used slave teeth for dentures. Thatâs enough of an authorization to me.â You countered, rolling your eyes, readjusting the rifle out towards the distance.Â
âI donât care whoâs on it,â he argued. âItâs just dangerous.â
âHey,â Luke challenged, pushing himself off of the trap, and made his way back over to your area. âwhat's your problem with her?âÂ
âLuke, itâs fine.â You pressed, sending him a glare over the barrel.
âI donât have a problem,â Rhino corrected his posture, standing up straight to face the incoming Scotsman. âIâm just following orders.â
âYeah? And who gave you the order?â Luke nodded at him, stopping just a few feet away.Â
âItâs a presumed order. No one gave it to me. Itâs just the rules.â Rhino proclaimed.
âSounds like a kiss ass to me.â CURJ joined in.
Your eyes broke off the horizon, dragging over to the three men that were standing in a circle.Â
âCURJ, Luke. Seriously.â You warned, dropping the rifle back down into your left hand.
You made your way towards the three of them, watching as Rhino stepped up a bit.Â
âWhy donât you say that to my face?â He challenged.Â
âJust did,â CURJ crossed his arms over his chest, moving towards him a bit more. âWhy? You want me to say it a little closer?â
âThatâs enough,â you tried to counsel him. âYou've had too much to drink. Go take a walk.â
It didnât work, CURJ didnât care, and it ultimately just fueled Rhino up more. He eyed him for a moment longer, then decided to turn towards you.
âLook at all these goons you have, Stark,â He taunted. âWhat, you let them do all the talking for you?â
Was he really trying you? Right then and there? You laughed at him, tilting your head to the side. Gaze unrelenting, shooting daggers towards him.Â
Donât say anything youâll regret.Â
âWhy do you ask?â You definitely started saying something youâd regret. âJealous? Rather they do the talking for you?â
Low blow.Â
Especially considering the discovery you had made only a few days ago.
âWhy do you say that?â Rhino stepped up again, but his expression faltered, a bit of panic swirling around in his eyes.
Cool it off.
âIâm just saying.â You shrugged again, but you didnât look away, standing up tall to him.
âOh yeah?â Rhino pressed, ready to even out the playing field. âIâm sure Thomas would love to get in on this conversation. Does he know how much Luke likes to protect you?âÂ
Oof, that was a big mistake.
âHey!â Luke shouted at him, pushing Rhino away from you with his two big hands.Â
âThatâs enough!â You reprimanded Luke, trying to get in between the two of them.
âUnload that rifle!â Schwarzy instructed, his voice ringing out from a distance.Â
No one was listening, although they probably should have. Rhino pushed Luke back, which in turn, caused CURJ to join in, wrapping an arm around Lukeâs neck, attempting to hold him back. Luke wouldâve beaten that kid down into smithereens without ever breaking a sweat.Â
âThis is a hot range!â Schwarzy reminded everyone, his voice becoming a bit more commanding.Â
As if that comment had grounded Rhino, he turned towards you again, lunging for the rifle that was still being held in your left hand.
âGive me that fuckinâ gun!â He demanded, his fingers wrapping around the barrel.
You fought back, pulling it inwards towards you, as if the two of you were playing an incredibly dangerous game of tug of war. Not with a rope, no, with a firearm.Â
Ever the fiercesome protector,Â
Luke did not like that.
So he ripped himself from CURJâs grasp, only for his elbow to slam into the back of Rhinoâs head. The blow caught him off guard enough to lose his grip of the rifle while he was mid pull. The force had you tumbling forward, which you tried overcorrecting, but just fell onto your back, the rifle flying backwards, your finger misplaced on the trigger. It fired off over your shoulder.
POP â like the Fourth of July.Â
You didnât have a proper hold, it had forced itself out of your hand, the hot barrel burning your arm, the rifle launching towards the direction it had just shot, landing on the ground behind you.Â
âOh, fuck!â Schwarzy yelped.
He had taken the bullet.
It had fired right next to your ear, shaking your head, you tried to get yourself back up. You hadnât been equipped with the proper volume setting on your in-ears, so your right eardrum rumbled in response, pushing out a sound like a boiling tea kettle.Â
Tensing up the ground, you pulled yourself into the fetal position, your hand moving to cradle your sore ear.Â
âJesus Christ, look what youâve done!â Rhino yelled down at you as he ran towards Schwarzy off in the distance.Â
âYou knocked it out of her god damn hands!â Luke screamed back at him, rushing down towards your place on the ground.Â
âSheâs supposed to have a better grip!â Rhino argued back, his voice dissipating as he got closer to Schwarzy.Â
âYeah, if sheâs not getting fuckinâ attacked!â Luke defended you, then turned back towards your crumpled body laying on the ground. âyou alright, kid?â
âIâm fine, would you ââ your eyes narrowed on Luke as he reached his hands out for your face, pushing him away from you. âWould you go check on him, please? He just got fucking shot!â You reprimanded him.Â
âYou alright, brother?â CURJ asked Schwarzy, he had gotten to him first.Â
He leaned down, and placed a gentle hand on his chest, giving him a good once-over.Â
âYes â just, fuck,â Schwarzy writhed. âTore right through the fuckinâ muscle.â
Slowly pulling up Schwarzyâs pant leg, CURJ forced himself to swallow down an audible grimace. Schwarzy hissed as the fabric brushed over the tender area.Â
CURJ inspected it, being careful not to touch. It was a perfect shot. No shrapnel, just clean right through the calf muscle. Although, unfortunately for him, it hadnât made its way back out the other side. Embedded deep within the tissue.Â
âHe alright?â Rhino asked, his figure hovering above the two of them.
âClean shot at least.â CURJ sighed, continuing to examine the wound on his friend's leg.
âDidnât pop out the other side,â Rhino took note, then turned his head to Luke who walked towards the three of them. âOne of you go get a medic!â
âI am a medic.â CURJ mumbled, although it was more to himself, he knew Rhino wasnât listening.
âSchwarzy â shit, Iâm so sorry, man.â Rhino sighed, bending over to try and see his face as he spoke to him.
âYou didnât even get to throw the quarter.â Luke joked, CURJ having to stifle a laugh.Â
âWould you shut up and help me?â Schwarzy asked, his voice pained, but he couldnât hide the entertainment, he had thought it was funny too.Â
CURJ and Luke placed their arms underneath Schwarzyâs armpits, easing him back up and onto his feet. They made sure to be cautious of his bad leg, keeping it from pressing too hard onto the ground.
âHowâs that pressure feeling?â CURJ asked Schwarzy, watching him grimace.Â
âWhat the fuck do you think?â He groaned through gritted teeth.Â
âDude, there's no way youâre going on that mission.â CURJ shook his head â he couldnât put any weight on that leg.Â
âShit, itâs more dangerous being here at this point.â Schwarzy joked, hopping off with the two of them towards the med room.Â
[December 10th, 2015, Present Day]
Tony and Natasha stand in the kitchen, the two of them watching as you face out towards the big windows of the living room. A book rests on your lap, eyes trained on the snow as it falls outside. Youâre getting swallowed up by the big chair you sit in, left hand resting on the arm, holding up the side of your face, sporting a vacant expression.
âShe seems rather chipper today.â Nat mumbles, taking a sip of coffee out of her mug.
âHa, very funny.â Tony scoffs, moving over to the espresso machine to make himself some.
âSomething you said, I take it?â She teases, turning around to face him, raising up an eyebrow.
Stuffing the portafilter with ground beans, he stops, his head glancing over his shoulder.Â
âSomething I said?â He asks her.Â
Nat huffs a laugh, moving a bit closer to him. She leans her head towards his ear, keeping the conversation as quiet as possible.Â
âYou still giving her shit for firing your friend?â She says under her breath.
âHe isnât just my friend,â he starts, massaging at his temples. âHeâs the head of psychology at Columbiaâhe didnât even have to take her as a patient!â
âRight, so out of the kindness of his heart then.â
âYes, exactly.â He huffs, then grumbles, âmaking a god damn fool out of me.â
âI donât know, I heard he was telling her things she didnât want to hear.â
He laughs at that, an audible, loud âHA!â
âSheâd fire everyone in her life if that was the case.â He jokes.
Tilting her head at him, she narrows her eyes a bit.
âTony, try and remember that she is an adult. As much as youâd rather her not be.â She mutters, her gaze landing on you.
You had picked your book back up again, seemingly reading whateverâs written in it. However, knowing you, she takes the visual with a grain of salt.Â
âI donât âratherâ anything,â He protests, securing the portafilter into its designated notch. âIf she acts like a child, sheâll be reprimanded as one.â
âSheâs had a unique experience. Perhaps she's just movingâŠslower than normal.â She tries sympathizing with you, considering her own difficult upbringing.
Tony presses the power button.Â
âShe served in the military for three years, Natasha.â He argues, then pushes his finger down to brew.Â
âHave you met those guys?â She reasons. âNot the greatest reference of maturity. Youâre acting like she came out of your ballsack.â
She takes another sip, still eyeballing you over the rim of her cup.
âHey, I raised that kid like she was my own, okay? And may I remind you I was also doing it through the most influential years of her life.â Compensating for the sounds of the machine, he talks a bit louder.Â
Looking down into her coffee, then back up to him, she bites her lip. Deciding if she really wants to make the next statement or not.Â
âHave you ever thought that she may just get it from you, then?â She decides, teasing him a bit.
âWhat, her intelligence?â Heâs not taking the bait. âPotentially. Although, Iâm sure S.H.I.E.L.D. would beg to differ.â
He sends a wink her way, then drags his line of sight over to you, resting there for a moment while the conversation continues.Â
âHerâŠtactless personality.â Nat counters.Â
âWell, I think thatâs mainly the war, however Yona didnât help much either,â He deflects, turning back to the machine as it beeps with completion. âI wouldnât consider him to be particularly warm.â
âPepper?â She smiles.
âOh, that goes without question.â He smirks too, unlatching the portafilter.Â
If they hadnât been talking quietly, you still wouldn't be able to hear them, your in-ears heavily adjusted. Trying to savor as much of the current as possible, you think Barnes may have been sitting in this chair recently, it smells like him everywhere.
Someone is speaking, itâs muffled. Focusing your eyes again, you take in Steveâs form as he stands next to you. Heâs holding three records under his arm.Â
âIâd guess youâd have pretty good taste in music, huh kid?â He asks you.
Looking up, you decide to humor him.
âMmm, that depends entirely on personal opinion.â You say with a grin.
He smiles back at you, nodding down to the records. He spreads them all out in his hands, giving you a bit of a display.Â
âWell, out of these three, which one would you pick?â He quirks, eyebrow raising up.Â
The choices are âIn Uteroâ by Nirvana, which you almost catch yourself laughing at. Not really taking him as much of a Kurt Cobain kinda-guy. The next is Michael Jacksonâs âThriller,â which is a good choice, however youâd definitely have him listen to âOff The Wallâ first if you were given the chance. And the last, âAbbey Roadâ by The Beatles. Arguably the greatest album ever made, but thatâs still subjective.Â
âYou havenât listened to any of these albums?â You ask him, your forehead furrowing.Â
He shakes his head, glancing out the window you were just looking through.
âDo I need to remind you that I was frozen solid for seventy-years?â He laughs, turning back at you again, flashing a big smile.
Christ â this is a serious male specimen.Â
âYouâve had five years to catch up,â You tease, attempting to stifle the blush that threatens to swarm across your cheeks. âbut, if youâre planning on putting one of those on, Iâd start with the Beatles.â
âThat the one with the crosswalk?â He asks, looking down at the albums.Â
âYes, God, you really missed everything good,â You sigh, feeling a bit of empathy for him. âWhat did you even listen to back then? Melodic tumble weeds?â
He laughs again â God, if you werenât so invested in savoring every drop of The Hermitâs scent right now it probably wouldâve done something to you.
âIâm not that old,â he argues. âI loved Glenn Miller, Bing Crosby, Vera Lynn, Billie HolidayâŠâ
âWow, ânot that oldâ and âGlen Millerâ being used in the same sentenceâŠbut, hey, Iâll give it to you.â you tut. âHave you listened to anything from them before?â
You nod your head at Abbey Road, he hands the album to you, placing the other two behind him on the coffee table.Â
âWell, this group is hard not to hear,â he defends, and heâs not wrong. âIâve just neverâŠyâknowâŠgone through the whole album.â
Humming to yourself, you glance over to the rest of the collection of albums in the media unit.Â
âTypically Iâd tell you to start with âRevolver,â but this will do.â You sigh, reaching over to the side table next to you and setting your book down.
âWho is Revolver?â He asks. âIâm not sure Iâve heard of them yet.â
You laugh at that â he doesnât.Â
Oh, heâs being serious?
âJesus Christ,â You mumble to yourself, then look back up at him. âOkay, um, are you wanting to play it in here?â
âOnly if you donât mind.â He says, hands coming up, not wanting to make you uncomfortable.
Smiling, you tap at your ear, referencing your AGSIâs. Heâs sweet â but he doesnât need to worry so much.
âNext time weâll listen in my room though, I have a much better turntable.â You add, then stand up and move to the big record player that sits underneath the television.Â
Unsheathing the record, you place it down onto the platter, and drop the needle into the first line of grooves. It takes a moment, but the signature bass-heavy opening of âAbbey Roadâ begins to rumble out of the speakers.Â
Sighing, feeling incredibly relaxed, sporting a goofy look on your face, you move back over to the chair you were just in, and lock your nose back into your book.Â
Steve sits down on the couch, leans back, rests his head onto the arm of the sofa, and kicks his feet out. He lets out a calming breath, also letting the music flow through him. Youâre sure his experience is at least a little similar to how youâre able to enjoy it. Itâs not everyday you meet someone else who can literally feel it in their veins. The ability to feel each pluck of a guitar string flowing down to your fingers, each key on the piano touching you like a tap on the shoulder.Â
âI donât know, something is definitely going on there.â Nat mumbles into Tonyâs ear, the two of them both sipping their coffees, leaning against the kitchen counter.Â
âWhat do you mean? You think sheâs on something?â Tony asks, his eyes not peeling away from the back of your head.
It sways back and forth to the beat of the music, your foot tappingÂ
âMaybe. Nowâs not a good time to tell thoughâperhaps when sheâs moodierâsheâs easy on him.â Nat nods in Steveâs general direction.Â
You are always nice to him, which makes it a bit more difficult to decipher. Itâs not that you have anything out for the rest of the house, he is just always soâŠgentle.
âHandsome bastard. Everyoneâs easy on him.â Tony rolls his eyes, then moves over to the sink to wash out his coffee mug.
âYou should get her up and moving. She started exercising, but I think sheâs stopped since the⊠sauna incident.â Nat raises an eyebrow, finishing her last sip of coffee, and following Tony over to the faucet.
âOh yeah, âhey kid, do you want to go on a lovely little jog with me?â Sheâll definitely respond well to that.â He scoffs at her, reaching for her mug, and rinsing it with the stream of water.
âItâs not like sheâs fast,â she nods to the outside, there must be at least three feet of snow on the ground. âYou could make a run for it.â
He glances over to the window, taking in the almost total-whiteout, then turns back to Nat, and raises up an eyebrow.Â
âOh, thatâs diabolical,â he gives the backyard another glance. âI like the way you think, Romanoff."
You had seen Barnes only a handful of times recently. All of them short, typically a simple passing in the hall, or an exchanged awkward glance from across the room. You thank whatever God above for that.Â
Perhaps heâd been avoiding you, as the situation was just as awkward for him. Or perhaps itâs the fact that you have beenâŠknowingly negligent with your OSAM. Funny how you could be strung out on every pharmaceutical inside your bedside drawer, but the one thing that gives you more grief than anything is the fact that you itch to catch his scent in the wind.Â
Actually, the last time you had caught Barnesâ fresh trail, you followed it like one of those cartoon bears would float towards a pie on a picnic table.
Either way, readjusting to smell comes with some newfound side effectsâwhich isnât the least bit surprisingâsensory overload was sensory overload for a reason. It has rendered you completely exhausted most of the time. So really, whether he was trying to avoid you or not, you werenât really the greatest judgeâyouâd been catching up on sleep like you were in the throes of hibernation.Â
Also, your prescription of Hydrocodone and lorazepam expired the day of your cast removal. Thankfully you still had some left, but you were running low. Sure, you could go to a different doctor and try to get another prescription, but the probability that they would take you for an addict â which, you arenât, by the way â was very high.Â
So obviously you had done the logical thing â
Which was, you know, logging into your now-deceased childhood physician's medical portal and starting to write your own script.
His credentials had always been easy to remember, the way he typed it into his computer reminded you of a song off of the album youâre currently listening to. The next track, actually.Â
You think it to yourself as the first sung lyrics come into fruition;
âSomething in the way she movesâ or âone-two ten three four five ten.â
Come onâŠIt was too easy.Â
You had almost convinced yourself it was some sort of act of God the other night during a bout of hyperfocus. Remembering how a pastor from one of the Sunday services that Memaw and Tim used to take you to said, âin Hebrew there is no word for âcoincidences.âÂ
Or maybe it was Jesus telling you to go to rehab?Â
Oh stop it.Â
Look, if that were the case? WellâŠthen itâs a good thing you arenât a Christian!Â
But, if it had been a divine intervention fromâŠHim? Graciously giving you the gift of remembrance? Well, you know, in terms of how melodic the keyboard can be. Then shit, consider yourself a convert!
Get the baptism ready! Whenâs communion? Someone please bring out the stale crackers and the disgusting communal germ-infested wine!
Looking like a lunatic as you sit in your chair, eyes closed, laughing to yourself at the flow of your inner monologue, you donât even notice the man sneaking up behind you carrying a handful of snow. Hell, youâre so focused on your internal standup routine.
Reaching over the back of your chair, eyes flashing towards Nat as she hides behind a structure column, Tony drops the handful down the opening in your shirt, the snow landing right on your exposed back.Â
Eyes snapping open, and letting out a blood curdling scream, you launch yourself out of the chair, and onto the floor in front of you.Â
Look, if it had been anyone else that sensation would already be awful, but this is you, and given yourâŠbiological circumstances, itâs like youâve just been tased. Your whole body tenses up, your head snapping up to fucking Tony as he watches you for a moment, and then proceeds to start sprinting out of the back door.Â
Oh no you donât.Â
Flinging yourself off of the floor and chasing Tony outside, you donât miss the congregation thatâs forming at the opening of the hallway as the result of your screams. A few shared looks of concern amongst them, well, except for the Barnesâwho youâre shocked even came out of his cave at all.Â
He watches you rush past him as if you were running in slow motion, your long hair flowing out behind you in an angelic-like trail, leaving imaginable gold tendrils in its wake, the scent of your shampoo wafting towards him, washing over him like a hot shower.
He takes a shaky breath in, his eyes lingering over to the rest of the onlookers, their faces morphing in real time from concern into amusement. Smiles pull at their lips as they watch you tackle Tony onto the snow-covered ground.
Stark yelps, but mischievously grips his fist down into the white powder, and shoves it into your face.Â
Letting out another shout, and welcoming the muscle memory from your military training, you flip him over, and smash his face down into the freezing cold earth, his nose collapsing in a bit from the force of it. You yank him back up with your hand knotted in his hair, tilting his neck back, giving him the ability to speak.
âNat!â He yells dramatically. âNat, you said she wasnât fast!â
Oh, this was Natashaâs idea?
As you whip your head around to face back towards the house to glare at her, Tony goes for your blind spot, unhooking himself from your hold above him. He wiggles out, then runs out into the spacious backyard.Â
Shaking your head, propelling yourself off of the ground like a bonafide pole-vaulter, you chase after him.Â
The audience inside moves towards the open backdoor, watching with pure enjoyment as the two of you have it out in the snow.
Barnes looks out the window, his forearm resting above his head, his eyes glued on you, a smile threatening to pull at his lips.Â
The music playing is very fitting, he thinks. It has just gotten to the little guitar solo in the second track of the album. And although the rest of the world is moving out of paceâfast and rushingâcompletley off tempo â you stay in tune. Your body dancing around like a gazelle, moving in contrasting adagio, like someone bowing a cello, sweeping you up and shimmering you around like youâre some kind of angel.Â
He isnât religious, at least, definitely not anymore, but he finds himself consecrating you. Like youâre some kind of temple â sacred â utterly divine. Thinking that a gift like you could only be some sort of act of god. A miracle. Heavenly and celestial.Â
Pained expression on his face, he has to pull himself away.Â
You have a crush.
I haven't had a crush in eighty years.
Youâre keen on her.
Am not.
Look at you, arguing like a child. Youâre clobbered, arenât you?
Okay, and what if he is? Thatâs fine. Youâre too young for him anyway, and honestly, considering the fact he doesnât even know that much about you, itâs probably allâŠphysical attraction. Which, hey, is an easy thing to get rid of with the grip and drag of his right hand.Â
But he knows it's not.
Kukolka.
Stop that.Â
Hell, he was smitten the moment he laid eyes on you. Having been caught under the weight of those god damn eyelashes.Â
Which is ridiculous.
I know.
She was all battered upâŠ
I know.Â
But her eyelashesâŠ
âEnough!â
Heads whip his way at his outburst. Eyebrows raising in concern, he acknowledges everyone all out of the corner of his eye, not daring to turn his face towards them. He swallows, lids widening out.Â
I just said that out loud.Â
Oh, yes.
Pulling his lips into a line, he barrels out of the living room, down the hallway, until heâs hidden away again under lock and key.
I'm eighty years older than her.Â
Sure, maybe if weâre speaking literally.
Of course, the thirty-something-year-old who was born nineteen seventeen. I could be her great grandfather.Â
Okay, youâre no spring chicken. So what?Â
Itâs embarrassing.
Maybe sheâs into older guys.
Sighing, he plops himself down onto his bed.Â
I need serious help. I donât have the time for this.
Call an exorcist.
I donât even think they have those anymore.
They should, that cookie out there has got you speaking in tongues.Â
Get out of my head.
Laying down, he rolls over onto his side, facing his body towards his bedroom window.Â
And there you are again â a bit of a ways out â but still discernible. Frolicking around without a care.Â
Groaning at the sight, he lies flat on his back again, rubbing his palms down his face, the metal one helping cool off the blush burning beneath his skin.Â
Pull it together.Â
âŠ
[New Years Eve, 2015, 2350 Hours, Present Day]
Christmas came and went. Tonyâs annual holiday party at the tower had been less than satisfactory.Â
You had been sandwiched between Pepper and Tony the entire time as they trumpeted you around the masses, parading you about like a prized ham, listening to the yapping group of university intellectuals, a glass of wine in your hands, your third one of the evening.
Sighing, your eyes look down to your phone resting on the coffee table in front of you. Itâs ten minutes till midnight. Looking back up to the television screen, the volume turned off, you watch Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper blabber on, and on about the upcoming year. The good things to come, the things to be grateful for.Â
Reaching for the couch cushion to your left, you pat around for your sensory headphones. Relief washing over you as your fingers wrap around the headband. And although you are miles away from the city, you know youâll still be able to hear the imminent popping of fireworks all the way from Times Square.Â
Sure, you always have your in-ears, but sometimes, especially considering how traumatic holidays like this have been in the pastâbecause literally FUCK the fourth of July and the ENTIRE COUNTRYâyour firework trauma is valid.Â
âWhy arenât you out?âÂ
You jump at the sudden voice coming from behind your seat on the couchâBarnes.Â
Blinking, you donât yet turn to face him, just staring a hole into the television â five minutes until midnight.
âWhat do you mean?â You ask, itâs monotone.
Selfishly you assumed you wouldâve had the whole house to yourself tonight. However, you hadnât taken Barnes into consideration. Of course he wouldnât be out. Well, at least not willingly.Â
âItâs New Yearâs Eve.â He clarifies.Â
His stare burns into the back of your head.
âWhy arenât you out?â You counter.
âBecause itâs New Yearâs Eve.â He answers, a bit of a scoff slipping through his words.Â
âWell, thatâs why Iâm not out,â You sighâŠdo you dare turn around? âIâŠdonât like fireworks.âÂ
âI donât either.â He admits.
There is a lingering warmth coming from him. The kind that radiates off of bare skin.Â
Well, do you dare turn around?
âMidnightâs in five minutes,â languidly, you drag your head towards him. âYou can sit here with me if you want.â
And, ChristâŠ
HeâsâŠshirtless.Â
You have to fight your eyes as they yearn to trek down his bare torso. And, fuck â heâs giving Rogers a run for his god damn money.
âWhat are you watching?â He asks, eyebrows raising up for a moment, surprised you even just physically acknowledged him.
And it really is surprising, you know, considering the last conversation the two of you had.Â
Though you donât remember much of it now.
See, he had walked in on you early Christmas morning, around three, just a few hours after the party had ended. There you were, leaning against the kitchen counter, downing a glass of vodka like it was a glass of water.Â
What you can recall is him asking if you were alright â which is sweet in nature â but you hate that fucking question.Â
What, did you not look alright?
And, well, of course you didnât â you havenât looked âalrightâ in months â but being reminded of that just pissed you off more.Â
âThe ball drop.â You swallow, eyes comically glued to his own.
Do. Not. Look. Anywhere. Below. His. Chin.Â
âOkayâŠâ
God, heâs â fuck.Â
Why is he drenched in sweat?Â
âWhat have you been up to?â Quizzing him, your head tilting to the side a bit.
âNothing.â He responds a bit too quickly.Â
âYouâre sweating.â You point out, lifting a hand up, motioning towards hisâŠglistening body.
Oh, God â STRIKE ME DOWN.
âItâs hot in here.â He shrugs.
Forgetting you had invited him to join you on the couch, you have to physically restrain your body from reacting as he stalks closer to you. Youâre sure your eyes are wide, pupils blown out.Â
âRight.â You feign belief.Â
As he plops down on the cushion next to yours, your body gets flung a bit upwards. As your breasts ricochet from under your shirt, you take notice of your own outfit. Again you find yourself clad in skimpy little pajamas. A silky set. And â god damn it â your nipples are totally hard now.Â
Heâs soâŠlarge.
It makes you feelâŠheh, wellâŠ
Let's just say you hope he doesnât notice.
âYou um, you think theyâre gonna let you go?â He asks, snapping you out of your trance.Â
âWhat? Go where?â Your eyebrows knit together.
âOn the mission next week.â
On what mission next week?
Oh, Tim, thatâs right.Â
âMaybe,â Liar, they wouldnât let any mission touch you with a ten foot pole. âWhy, have theyâŠmentioned anything to you?â
âNo,â He shrugs, his eyes attached to the screen in front of him. âBut they would be⊠I donât know, kind of stupid not to though.âÂ
Itâs almost comical, the two of you there, sitting right next to each other, not daring to look, gaze glued to the same spot. Both of you are stiff, your positions almost exactly the same. Sitting up, posture a bit too taut, your hands resting palm down on your thighs.
âThank you. I feel the same way.â You nod.
âWell, I figured.â He nods back.
âAre you,â you clear your throat, âare you going?â
âOh,â he starts, then takes a deep breath. âUm, I donât know â maybe.âÂ
âSteve shouldnât go.â You add.Â
âThatâs what I said.â He tilts his head to the side in agreement.Â
âTheyâd recognize him and then,â You start.
âYeah it would be,â He interrupts.Â
You try to finish for him, but he continues to yap.
âStupid.â âStupid.â
Heads whip back towards each other at last.
âExactly.â âExactly.â
Gesturing a hand at the same time, you both nod in agreement.Â
âRight.â âRight.â
Okay, well now this is just becoming irritating.Â
âStop doing that.â âStop doing that.â
The two of you almost shout â both of your stares turn into glares.Â
Scoffing, you mirror each other as you cross your arms over your chests.Â
There is a poignant silence, and through the expanse of your peripheral, you catch him looking over at you. Words bubbling up at the tip of your tongues, wondering who will speak first â If either of you even will speak â what the hell would you even say?
Surprisingly, you take the bait, clearing your throat again, it echoes throughout the room.
âOne minute left.â You nod.
âYup.â So does he.Â
â2016.â You respond, itâs almost melodic.Â
âHeh, yeah.â
âThat would make you, what, at least a hundred?âÂ
âWhat?â He asks, his head slowly turning towards you. âNo.â
âOh, yes, I think so.â You counter, eyebrows raising.
He still glares at the side of your head, watching as your lips fold over, pulling into a tight line.Â
Shaking his head at you, he makes sure to clarify, âNinety nine.â
âOh,â Showing a bit of teeth, corners of your mouth pulled to the sides, your arms raised in defense. âWow, sorry, so almost a hundred. My fault.â
Itâs exaggerated, a bit comical, and thankfully, he starts laughing. Like, really actually laughing.Â
âWhatâs so funny?â You ask, head tilting towards him.
God, you want to bottle up the sound.Â
âI just,â he starts, but cuts himself off with another laugh â itâs deep, it bubbles up from the depths of his chest. âI donât think youâre even a quarter of that number yet.â
A hand moves up to cover your mouth, trying to suppress the laughter that bursts out of your throat. His eyes soften at you, though you donât notice, too busy trying to keep yourself from laughing at him.
The chuckles begin to subside, and your eyes glance over to the television.Â
â10 seconds.â You point out â there isnât much excitement.Â
Too focused on the present. That had just felt soâŠgood. You hadnât, well, you havenât laughed like that in a long time.Â
âYup.â He nods, smile still lingering on his lips.Â
âHow old would you be, likeâŠâ You start asking, but it trails off.Â
âWhat like, biologically?â So he asks for you.
âYeah.â You sigh, looking back at him.
And, well, heâs already looking at you.Â
âI donât know, thirty something?â He sighs.
âWell when you put it like that weâre not so far apart.â You give him a weak little smile.
âI guess.â He shrugs.
It seems like something heâd rather not talk about.Â
âHappy New Year, by the way.â You chime in, trying to change the subject.
The screen in front of you starts showing the familiar montage of different camera angles, capturing the Times Square audience as they all begin making out. There are flashes off in the distance, sparkling lights exploding outside your window, dancing on the horizon, and although you can still hear them going off, the fireworks donât frighten you like they usually would.
âYes. Same to you.â He smiles again â or ties to.
âYou know what, I feel like weâre similar enough.â You blurt out suddenly.
Because moments like this make you feel like thereâs no way this guy is from the fucking forties.Â
âWhat, you think I act like you?â He quizzes.
Iâm sorry â why does he make that sound like a bad thing?
âWhat would be so wrong with that?â You scoff at him, eyes narrowing.Â
âWellâŠâ he starts.
âWeâre not that different,â You protest.Â
The two of you begin to talk over each other.
â...youâre just immature.â â...youâre just immature.â
âWhat?â âWhat?â
âNo, I'm not.â âNo, I'm not.â
Christ, not this again.
âYouâre immature.â âYouâre immature.â
âStop doing that!â âStop doing that!â
Equally frustrated, you both decide bickering probably isnât the best option. It seems like you just agree on everything anyway, whether you want to or not. The silence takes control once more, you and him looking back over to the television, eyes unblinking, unmoving.Â
âHey, you know IâŠwell, I hope ââ He begins again, but he stumbles over the sentence.Â
âYou got it, use your words.â You mean it condescendingly, but it comes off as a tease.
Flirting â toying. It was unintentional, but he takes note, his eyebrow lifting up, as if youâre testing him.Â
âHuh, okay, well I was going to say it would be smart of them to send you on the mission, but I think I may take that back now.â He feigns a scoff, his straight posture softening as he leans back into the cushions.Â
Finally, at least one of you is relaxed.Â
âThank you, James, that is so kind of you, truly.â
âJames?â He repeats, tilting his head towards you, a bit surprised at the use of his government name. âThe last person who called me âJamesâ was my mother.â
âWell, perhaps youâre in need of some reprimanding.â You counter.
âReprimanding? Wow,â He sighs, simulating disappointment. âI would've put in a good word with Steve about you for that mission, tooâŠwhat a shame.â
Flashing him a big, fraudulent grin, âWell, as nice as that would be,â you start chuckling again, but itâs icy, mocking. âI have a feeling it might steer them in the opposite direction.â
âOh yeah?â He asks, âand whyâs that?â
Leaning a bit closer, taunting you, he cups a hand over his ear â really waiting on the answer.
âBecause they would listen to a brick before taking advice from either of us.âÂ
Youâre irritated now. Because usually this whole âget people worked upâ thing works out in your favor. However, he seems to be feeding off it, like he's challenging you.Â
âI think Iâm probably a bit more reputable than you.â He nods, mouth pulling into a line.Â
Game on, Barnes.Â
 âOh really? Thatâs funny, I was thinking the same thing.â You sass back.Â
âOh, so you agree?â He gibes, eyebrows lifting in probe.
âOf course not,â you laugh, âI was referring to myself.âÂ
And of course, you donât leave it at that. Not now, especially since he seems to enjoy the banter so much. Leaching off you like a fucking parasite. Hurting his feelings isnât really the intention, but again, this needs to be something you win. Even if he did think it was just mindless flirting â it isnât to you.Â
And so you say it, âI am undoubtedly more reliable. I mean, you're like a walking booby trap. So easy to set off.â
Itâs quiet for just a moment, his eyelids restricting, narrowing down those baby blues into nothing more than an icy slit. âOh, am I?â
What the fuck?
UmâŠokay, wellâŠusually that would work for you. But, again, he may just assume you are in the midst of exchanging coquetries, and not in the middle of a one-up.Â
Something has to catch this fucking guy off guard.Â
âOh, yes.â You purr, your voice becoming a bit naughty.
Ah, good. He notices the glimmer in your eye.
âRight, okay, I am but youâre not?â he toys, nodding his head. âBut, whatever. Iâm all ears, what would be your plan to diffuse me?â
Lovely. This will catch this fucking guy off guard.
âSpring the trap.â You shrug, lips turning up at the corners.
Leaning in, so quick, in fact, there's no way he would expect it â no way he can avoid it â you plant a fat kiss on his cheek. Any relaxation he was just exuding freezes in his veins, stiffening him up like a god damn icicle.Â
âHappy New Year, and take that for good luck,â you beam at him â at his apparent shock. âYou may need it.â
Standing up from the couch, you start making your way back towards your room. Sleep tugging at your eyelids. Glancing over your shoulder at him one last time, he hasnât moved positions, just pulled his hand up, fingers hovering over the spot on his cheek you just left.Â
Smirking to yourself, able to stuff another victory in your pocket, whether it was deserved or not.Â
âGoodnight, James.â You call, and then disappear down the hallway.Â
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