the art of unraveling - sambucky college au
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summary: Sam signs up for an art class just to fill his credit hours. Hasnât seen Bucky since that party months ago - walks in first day and guess whoâs there, sitting like he owns the place, sleeves rolled up, tattoos out, smirk ready to ruin samâs week? Yeah.
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The art building smelled faintly of clay and turpentine, a sharp contrast to the crisp winter air Sam had just walked through. He tugged his beanie lower over his ears, clutching the schedule printout like it might change if he blinked too hard.
Intro to Painting. Tuesday/Thursday. 9 a.m.
It wasnât exactly on his academic bingo card, but he needed the credits, and the class had been one of the few open slots left. He figured heâd sit in the back, keep quiet, and let the semester slip by unnoticed.
He needed this credit hour, or else he could kiss the radio show goodbye. And that? That wasnât an option.
The booth was the only place where he felt untouchable. Behind that mic, he wasnât the kid scrambling for scholarships or the guy barely making his parents proud. He was just Sam. Or rather, the voice people tuned into when the world felt too loud.
Lose that, and he wasnât sure who heâd be.
So yeah, an intro-level art course felt like a small price to pay. Draw a bowl of fruit, get a passing grade, keep the show. Easy.
The studio was already half full when he stepped inâstudents setting out brushes, stretching canvas, chatting like theyâd all known each other for years. Sam kept his eyes on the nearest empty easel, weaving through the room until he found one at the far end.
Sarah would have puked her guts from all the laughing she would do if she saw him now. She knew her little brother was no good with his hands. Knew that the only good thing about him was his brain (or maybe that's what he thought of himself).
Sam made himslef smaller in the desk, shriveling up behind the easel as more students began to pile into empty chairs and couches that sat around the room.
He tugged his hoodie sleeves down over his wrists, pretending to busy himself with the battered sketchpad the supply list had demanded. The room had that mix of sharp paint fumes and something warmâmaybe the constant hum of conversation, maybe the way sunlight stretched across the wood floors in long golden stripes.
He kept his head low, flipping blank pages, letting the sound of new voices wash over him. If he didnât make eye contact, maybe no one would try to talk to him. That was the plan.
Until a shadow slid across his easel.
Sam glanced up.
And froze.
Bucky Barnes, leaning against the stool two seats over like he owned the place. Hair tied back today, loose strands falling into his face. A faint paint smudge already on his wrist like heâd been doing this all his life.
"Hello, stranger." Bucky said, the words curling into a smirk. The faintest trace of cigarette smoke clung to himâsharp, bitter, and somehow warmer than it should be. It curled around Samâs thoughts, pulling him backward to that balcony, to the smirk that had kept him up on more than one late night since.
Sam didn't say anything, eyes staring up at Bucky like he shouldn't exist. Well, any in case, he shouldn't. Not here. This was supposed to be Sam's easy class.
Sam didnât say anything. Couldnât. His eyes stayed locked on Bucky like he was an optical illusionâif he blinked, maybe heâd vanish. Because Bucky shouldnât be here. Not in this classroom. Not in the quiet little corner of Samâs life that was supposed to be untouched.
This was supposed to be his easy class. A credit-filler. A chance to coast.
Bucky slid into the stool two seats away, his movements unhurried, like he belonged here more than anyone else in the room. He tossed a folded denim jacket onto the back of the seat, rolled up his sleeves, and reached for a charcoal stick. The smudge on his wrist was darker now, more deliberate, and it made something low in Samâs chest tighten.
âYou gonna say hi back, or just keep staring?â Bucky asked, voice low enough that the words felt like they were meant only for Samâs ears.
Sam forced his gaze down to the blank sheet in front of him, muttering, âHi.â
âBetter,â Bucky said, leaning forward onto his elbows. âKinda missed that voice.â
Samâs pencil rolled off the desk and clattered to the floor.
Sam bent to grab the pencil, silently praying his ears werenât as red as they felt. By the time he straightened, the instructor had walked inâa tall woman with streaks of paint on her jeans and the energy of someone whoâd downed three espressos before noon.
âAlright, everyone, letâs get started,â she said, clapping her hands. âToday, weâre diving straight in. No warmups, no overthinking. I want you to draw the person sitting across from you.â
A collective groan rippled through the room.
Sam glanced at the empty stool across from him, relief flooding in. Maybe heâd get to sketch a pile of supplies or a coat someone left behindâanything but a real person.
And then Bucky moved.
He slid out from his seat, crossing the small space with that same unhurried swagger, and dropped into the stool across from Sam. He leaned back slightly, arms draped over his knees, smirk returning like it had never left.
âGuess weâre partners,â Bucky said.
Samâs mouth went dry. âYou couldâve picked anyone else.â
âYeah,â Bucky agreed, tilting his head like he was sizing Sam up. âBut whereâs the fun in that?â
The instructor passed by, nodding approvingly at their setup. âGoodâeye contact is key. Really see the person in front of you.â
Buckyâs gaze locked on his, steady and unreadable. âYou heard her,â he murmured. âReally see me, Sam.â
And just like that, the noise of the room faded. It was the balcony all over againâjust the two of them, and nowhere to hide.
Bucky, in the light of the morning, had the softest blue eyes Sam had ever seen.
Noâ they werenât even really blue. They were green and gray, flecks of something that almost looked blue, shifting with every subtle movement. Sam couldnât help the way his gaze lingered, how the angles of Buckyâs jaw and the curve of his neck drew attention like gravity. Every stray lock of hair falling into his face made him look effortless, dangerous, magnetic.
And Sam hated himself for noticing. For feeling the pull he knew he shouldnât. His stomach twistedânot with hunger or nerves, but with the sharp, unfamiliar ache of wanting.
What would his parents think if they knew? Or Sarah? Theyâd mock him, tease him, call him soft, call him ridiculous. And yet, even imagining their teasing didnât undo the way Buckyâs presence rooted him to the chair, made his chest tighten and palms sweat.
And then the guilt hit. His parents. They had spent years drilling into him what was âproper,â what was âacceptable.â Straight-A student, responsible, dependableânever reckless, never distracted by⌠this.
What would they think if they knew he was sitting here, staring at someone like Bucky and feeling something that wasnât logical, something he couldnât name without judgment shadowing it? His chest tightened even more at the thought. Theyâd call it foolish, a distraction from the path heâd carefully laid out.
"Where did you go?" Bucky asked.
He was already working on his drawing, shading what he wanted. No guidelines to follow.
Samâs pencil hovered over the paper, hesitant, like touching it too soon would shatter something fragile. He glanced at Bucky, who was calm, unbothered, as if the chaos of the classroom and Samâs internal storm didnât exist.
âI⌠got distracted,â Sam muttered, finally letting the words slip. "I hate drawing. I don't know what I'm doing here." He confessed. And it was the truth about a lot of things. With this class. With college. With himself.
Buckyâs eyes met his, calm and steady. âYeah. Who does?â he said with a soft shrug, like it was no big deal to admit confusion.
Sam let out a quiet laugh, nervous and self-conscious. âGuess Iâm just not good at this⌠drawing.â
Bucky leaned back, smirk tugging at his lips. âReally? Thatâs your excuse?â His tone was teasing, light, but not cruel. âYou hate art, you hate drawing, yet here you are. Care to explain your existence, Sam Wilson?â
Sam groaned, pressing the pencil harder into the page. âCredits. Thatâs it. Purely practical.â
âPractical,â Bucky repeated, arching an eyebrow. âRight. Because everyone knows the only reason to pick up a pencil is for bureaucracy.â
Samâs cheeks warmed, but he tried to hide it behind a shrug. âYouâd be surprised how boring college can be when you stick to what youâre good at.â
Bucky tilted his head, smirk softening, but still mischievous. âYeah, well⌠maybe getting out of your comfort zone isnât so bad. You might even enjoy it.â
Sam rolled his eyes, but a small, reluctant smile slipped through.
"So," Bucky posed in his chair - head titled back and eyes closed. A smirk laid bare across his face. "Are you going to draw me, or are we going to keep talking?"
Sam didn't know which was better.
Bucky lingered, deliberately slow, dragging his hand along the edge of the table as the other students filed out around him. He didnât know why he wanted to stick around, not really. Maybe it was Samâhis steady, awkward, goldenâboy energy that made him feel⌠something. Something he couldnât quite name. He shook his head. Didnât matter. Just be near him. That was enough.
Sam was packing up too, pencil tucked behind his ear, still fumbling with his sketchbook. Bucky caught the faintest blush creeping across his cheeks and smirked to himself. Yeah, he liked itâliked seeing Sam flustered, liked the quiet hesitation that lingered in his movements. Even if he didnât fully understand why.
âSoâŚâ Bucky started, sliding his sketchpad under his arm. âWGHR, huh? Your little late-night empire?â His tone was teasing, but curious. âBeen listening for a while, but⌠I gotta say, no one plays any good music.â
Sam froze mid-zip of his backpack. âUh⌠well, itâs⌠itâs not exactly forââ
âDonât tell me,â Bucky interrupted, grinning. âItâs for the lonely engineers and philosophy majors, right?â He fell into step beside Sam as they left the studio, the hallway buzzing faintly behind them.
Samâs hands fidgeted with the straps of his bag. Bucky noticed, of course. Every little twitch, every careful avoidance of eye contactâit all fascinated him. And he knew exactly why Sam did it, even if Sam didnât. That little edge of nerves, that awareness⌠Bucky thrived on it, just a little.
âSo,â Bucky said casually, voice low as they headed toward the cafeteria, âhow long have you been doing this thing? WGHR?â He let the silence hang just long enough to draw Sam out. âI mean, you donât strike me as the type to do⌠well, anything anonymously.â
Sam hesitated, then mumbled a few words about starting it freshman year, about Joaquin, about keeping it low-key. Bucky listened, nodding, not because he cared about the detailsâbut because Sam was talking, and that was enough.
And the truth was⌠Bucky already knew him. He knew him better than Sam suspected. Every late-night dedication, every soft voice on the airâit had been him, all along. Icarus. And Sam had no idea.
Bucky glanced at him, catching the faint curve of a nervous smile, and thought: yeah. That was exactly why he was here. Not the cafeteria. Not the class. Sam. Just Sam.
"Is Joaquin your boyfriend?" Bucky asked, just to see how Sam would react to such a question.
Samâs head jerked up, eyes wide. âNo! Joaquinâs like⌠like a brother to me. Iâd neverânever think about dating him.â
Bucky raised an eyebrow, lips curling into a teasing smirk. âHmm. Not even a little?â
Sam shook his head quickly, cheeks heating. âNot even a little. I mean⌠itâs just not that way.â
Bucky chuckled, falling into step beside him as they walked toward the cafeteria. âAlright then,â he said smoothly, tone curious, deliberate. âSo who do you see yourself dating, huh? If itâs not your so-called brother.â
Sam swallowed, fumbling with his bag strap, blinking at Bucky like heâd just been caught in a spotlight. âI⌠I donât know,â he admitted softly, voice tight with hesitation. âI havenât really thought about it. Or⌠maybe I have, butâŚâ He trailed off, unsure how much to give away.
Bucky smirked, sensing the nervous tension radiating off him. "What about Natasha?" Bucky pointed to one of his friends that was making her way into study hall.
Samâs eyes flicked to Natasha, who was walking past with her sister and friends, her laughter carrying across the room. He glanced back at Bucky, cheeks flushed, eyes darting away like he was trying to shrink into himself. His hands fidgeted with the strap of his bag, betraying the calm he usually tried to project.
Bucky noticed everythingâthe subtle bite of Samâs lip, the nervous shift in his weightâand couldnât help but smirk. âShe your type orâŚ?â he asked, casual but teasing. He knew Natasha; sheâd been in his art workshops last semester, a hookup whenever they both grew too bored to do anything else.
Sam shook his head quickly, avoiding Buckyâs gaze. âShe's pretty." he muttered, voice tight. âBut, no. Not my typeâ
Bucky chuckled softly, enjoying the way Samâs nervous energy radiated in waves. âAh, so sheâs out. Good to know,â he said, walking a step closer. âThen⌠what is your type?â
Samâs throat tightened. He fumbled with the strap of his bag, eyes flicking anywhere but Buckyâs. âI⌠I donât know,â he admitted, voice low and hesitant. âI havenât really thought about it⌠seriously.â
Bucky tilted his head, the smirk still tugging at the corner of his mouth. âHuh. So youâre saying youâve got no one in mind⌠or youâre just scared to say?â
Samâs cheeks burned hotter. âMaybe a little of both,â he muttered, tryingâand failingâto sound casual.
Bucky chuckled, catching the twitch of a smile that betrayed Samâs nerves. âAlright, Iâll take that as a challenge,â he said, stepping just a little closer, letting the teasing weight of his presence settle around Sam. âGuess weâll see who makes the cut, huh?â
Right now, Bucky was deliberately skipping his next class, letting the empty hallway echo with his footsteps just to keep Sam in his orbit a little longerâcurious, teasing, enjoying the way Sam fidgeted under his gaze.
Sam topped short of the entrance to the cafeteria, eyeing the stairs that lead down to the basement where WGHR was recorded.
âYou heading down there?â Bucky asked casually, nodding toward the stairs. âRadio time?â
Samâs cheeks warmed, and he shifted his weight awkwardly. âYeah⌠just for a bit.â His voice was quiet, almost defensive, like he wasnât used to someone noticing so much.
"Can I put a request in now?" Bucky asked.
Sam blinked, caught off guard. âUh⌠sure, I guess.â His fingers twitched at his bag strap, and he quickly added, âJust⌠donât expect anything fancy. Itâs just a request board.â
Buckyâs smirk deepened, leaning a little closer as if the small space between them made the world shrink. âThatâs fine. I like simple.â
Sam felt his chest tighten, a mix of nerves and something else he didnât want to name. âOkay⌠go ahead.â
Bucky pulled out his phone, typing casually, but Sam couldnât stop noticing the way his fingers moved, the faint crease between his brows, the way he didnât look at Sam while doing itâand yet somehow, Sam felt every ounce of attention on him.
Then, the quietness filled the gap between them. Finally, Bucky looked up, a slow, deliberate smirk tugging at his lips. âDone,â he said, voice low, teasing. âDonât make me wait to hear if you actually play it.â
Sam smiled and headed downstairs.
Sam padded down the stairs to the basement, the muffled hum of the campus building fading behind him. The familiar scent of old vinyl, electronics, and a hint of coffee filled the small WGHR booth, instantly grounding him.
He flicked on the equipment, a few songs from his morning playlist still looping softly in the background. Fingers dancing over the controls, he queued up the next track, letting the low bass settle into the room like a heartbeat.
Once the music hummed steadily, he pulled up the request board, expecting the usual flood of student notes and late-night jokes. Two new messages blinked at him.
First, the usual:
morning sunshine, anything exciting happen in class today? (song request : im on fire) - icarus
Then, the newst one that made Sam smile:
back to the old house - the smiths. see you in class wednesday, golden boy - smokingart
Samâs stomach knotted at the coincidenceâor maybe it wasnât a coincidence at all. He hesitated, fingers hovering over the keyboard, aware of the familiar tug of excitement and nerves. The past two months had been quiet, controlled⌠until now.
His fingers hesitated over the play button, thumb hovering, then finally pressing it with a reluctant click. The opening chords filled the booth, warm and familiar, but Samâs smile faltered almost immediately.
In that moment, he made a decision. Swear off Bucky Barnes. Not out of anger or dislikeâheâd never truly hated himâbut because Bucky was a complication he didnât need. A distraction in the form of smirks and easy confidence, a presence that made his chest tighten without reason.
He hated how, even in the empty basement of the station, he found himself smiling to himself at thoughts of Bucky. Hated how he knew he would scan the hallway for Buckyâs familiar figure, anticipating those long walks from class like a fool.
He didnât want Bucky. Not the free, careless Bucky who drifted through life without a care, smiling at everyone and breaking hearts with ease. He wanted this Buckyâthe one who made his chest tighten, whose smirk haunted his thoughts, who had somehow wormed his way into the quiet corners of his mind.
The realization made his stomach twist with frustration. How could he crave someone so infuriating? Someone heâd sworn heâd avoid? His hands tightened around the edge of the console, nails pressing into the plastic. Anger flared, sharp and unexpected.
Without thinking, he paused the music and switched the track mid-song, replacing it with the glowing message from Icarus:
morning sunshine, anything exciting happen in class today? (song request : im on fire) - icarus
The new music cut through the tension, but Samâs chest still burned. He scowled at the screen, telling himself it wasnât about Buckyâit was about keeping control. Keeping himself sane. But deep down, he knew the lie wouldnât last long.












