Girlll I have an idea and itâs so tea u donât understand-
Okay so you should write a dad!bucky fic where him and readers kid has like powers (idk what powers like super strength most likely? U decide!!) but they stem from the super serum which obviously the two of them werenât aware was possible and so theyâve got a toddler running around that can pick up cars and I just think it would be cute and hilariousđ
i can so see in this scenario both bucky and reader being mystified but then reader goes "well he's you're kid"
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Buckyâs first clue that something was off came when the couch moved.
Not shifted, not creaked under the weight of a wiggly toddler. Noâthis was the full-bodied scoot of a piece of furniture being relocated across the living room floor by sheer willpower and baby determination.
âUh⊠doll?â Bucky blinked, frozen in the doorway with a coffee mug halfway to his lips. âDid you move the couch?â
You looked up from your laptop on the kitchen counter, squinting. âWhat? Noâwhy would I move theâoh my god.â
Because there, in the middle of the rug, stood your two-year-old daughter, wearing mismatched socks and the most serious little expression Bucky had ever seen. She had her chubby hands planted firmly on the armrest of the couchâand she was pushing it.
It wasnât sliding because of the hardwood. No. It was because she was lifting it.
âJamie Barnes, put that down!â you squeaked.
The couch hit the floor with a loud thud, and Jamie clapped her hands, delighted. âSee! I strong!â
Buckyâs jaw dropped. His mug tilted. Coffee sloshed dangerously close to the rim.
You turned toward him slowly, eyes wide. âDid youâdid you just see that?â
âYeah,â Bucky said faintly. âI think our kid just⊠benched the sofa.â
Five minutes later, the couch incident was confirmed not to be a fluke.
Bucky had crouched down, doing that calm, low-voice thing he always used when Jamie got a little too hyped. âSweetheart,â he said carefully, âcan you show Daddy again what you did?â
Jamie beamed. âShow Daddy!â
Before you could stop her, she toddled over to the end table andâoh godâlifted it like it weighed nothing.
The lamp teetered. You dove. Bucky lunged. Jamie giggled, clapping her hands as if she hadnât just displayed terrifying, world-breaking strength in her pastel pajamas.
âBuck,â you said weakly, lamp still cradled to your chest. âI think sheâs got the serum.â
The rest of the morning was a blur of half-shocked, half-hysterical parenting.
Jamieâs âgame timeâ included bending spoons (âBendy!â), pulling the fridge door off its hinges (âOopsieâ), and tossing her favorite stuffed bear onto the roof.
Every new discovery sent Bucky pacing the kitchen muttering about âhow is this even possible?â and âthereâs no damn way the serumâs hereditary, right?â before stopping to watch Jamie in awe as she ripped a juice box open with one hand.
You, meanwhile, alternated between frantically Googling âcan super soldier DNA be inherited?â and trying to keep your mutant toddler from turning your living room into a CrossFit gym.
Finally, Bucky called Sam.
âDonât laugh,â was the first thing he said, voice tight. âIâm serious, Wilson.â
There was a pause on the other end. Then: âWhy would I laugh? What happened now? She find your metal arm stash again?â
âNo,â Bucky hissed. âShe lifted the car.â
âCome again?â
âShe lifted my goddamn car, Sam!â
You heard Sam start cackling through the phone even from across the room. âOh, this is rich. Lilâ Barnes is out here outlifting her old man, huh? You better start training, grandpa.â
Bucky scowled. âI am not that old.â
âCoulda fooled me.â
âBye, Sam.â Click.
You were still half-hiding your smile when he turned around. âDonât you dare.â
âI didnât say anything.â
âYouâre thinking it.â
You bit your lip. â...That your toddler can bench-press a car?â
He groaned, raking a hand through his hair. âI just wanted a normal morning, doll. Maybe make pancakes. Not call Stark and tell him my babyâs the worldâs smallest Avenger.â
But it didnât take long for Buckyâs panic to melt into wonder.
Later, when Jamie ran to himâbarefoot and bright-eyed, her curls a chaotic haloâand begged, âAgain, Daddy! Pick up high!â he found himself kneeling beside her in the backyard, hands guiding her gently toward a safer target: the plastic sandbox lid.
âOkay, tiny powerhouse,â he said, smiling despite himself. âShow me what you got.â
Jamie grunted with effort, cheeks puffing out, little hands squeezing the edge of the lidâand then, to both of your disbelief, up it went. Her giggle rang out like sunlight through leaves.
âLook, Mommy!â she squealed. âStrong like Daddy!â
Buckyâs chest softened so fast it almost hurt. He scooped her up before she could test her powers on anything else and spun her around, laughing.
âYou sure are,â he murmured, kissing her temple. âStrongest girl in the world.â
She patted his cheek like it was the most obvious thing ever. âYou strong too, Daddy.â
He froze for a second, throat catching. The words were simpleâjust toddler chatterâbut something about hearing them from this tiny miracle, half him, half you, hit him right in the sternum.
You found him that night sitting on the edge of her bed long after sheâd fallen asleep, the dim nightlight painting soft shadows across the metal of his arm. Jamieâs tiny fingers were curled around his pinky, her stuffed bear tucked safely at her side (retrieved from the roof via one slightly exasperated Falcon).
He didnât look up when you came in, just whispered, âSheâs gonna have a hell of a time in kindergarten.â
You smiled, leaning against the doorframe. âI think sheâll be fine. Strong, remember?â
âToo strong,â he said softly. âYou think she knows how dangerous she could be?â
âSheâs two, Buck.â
âI know.â He sighed, rubbing at his eyes. âGuess I just⊠never thought Iâd see any part of that serum again. Not like this. Notââ His voice cracked a little. âNot in something so good.â
You crossed the room, brushing a hand over his shoulder. âSheâs good because you are. You made sure she got the best parts of you, Buck. Not the soldier part. The heart part.â
He glanced up at you, a crooked smile breaking through. âYeah?â
âYeah.â You kissed his hair. âBesides, if she ever starts throwing buses, youâll know where she got it from.â
That earned a quiet laugh. âIâm serious, doll. We gotta get her a mini punching bag or something. Maybe a toddler-sized shield.â
âOr we could start with baby-proofing the furniture again.â
âGood idea,â he said, chuckling softly. âAnd maybe a new couch.â
The next morning, you woke to the sound of giggles and the faint metallic clank of⊠something.
You groaned, sitting up. âBuck?â
He appeared in the doorway, bleary-eyed but grinning, Jamie perched proudly on his shoulders holding his vibranium armâdetached.
âShe wanted to âhelp Daddy fix it,ââ he explained sheepishly. âApparently, my kidâs strong enough to pop the socket on her own.â
You blinked. âSheâwhat?â
Jamie waved the arm triumphantly. âLook, Mommy! I fix Daddy!â
You stared for a long moment before dropping your face into your hands. âWeâre doomed.â
Bucky just laughed, crossing the room to press a kiss to your hair. âNah,â he said softly, as Jamie hugged his neck. âWeâre lucky.â
And maybe he was right. Because even with the chaos, the coffee spills, and the occasional superpowered toddler lifting furniture for fun, you wouldnât trade this little, impossible family for anything.
Not when your small but mighty girl was smiling like the world itself bowed to her strengthâand her daddy was right there beside her, smiling too.















