Tiny itty bitty welcome post that i should've made ages ago- or an updated one at least :3
Hi im Siren or Anaya! ive had a bit of a change in formatting, persona and a bunch of other things. I write fics in my spare time or whenever i want to. I cant promise frequent updates for fics or new fics as i run out of motivation and often burnout- BUT that doesnt mean im not writing at all!!!!!! im cooking up some things in my brain and writing fics in progress, just havent finished them yet (;
My submissions and asks are always open and feel free to message me! but before requesting i would appreciate if you read the list of fandoms and rules i have :3
I also have a masterlist that is slowly but surely growing. Ive also made a taglist that is open right now!
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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me when im on "x reader tag" looking for fics at 3 am BUT all i find is memes and all the funny posts under the world EXCEPT the fics abt the character :
you're popular among horror fans. he's well-respected among film critics. though you work in the same industry, you couldn't be more different - but your managers think a pr romance is just what your careers need.
series warning: actor!bucky x f!actress!reader, mature themes, fake dating, enemies to lovers, bucky is an asshole, angst, smut, slow burn (or at least my attempt at a slow burn).
Series Masterlist
The bright lights are dimmed through your Dolce & Gabanna sunglasses, but they do little to mute the sound of a hundred cameras flashing. Numerous voices yell out questions to you, some innocent, some daring, and some downright nasty. Six years ago, you would've been seconds away from an anxiety attack in this situation, but the years of stardom have chipped away at your nerves, and what once overwhelmed you is now just another Tuesday.
You're pushed through the crowd by your less-than-gentle bodyguard into the restaurant. As the doors shut behind you, the raucous sound of the paparazzi thankfully dies down, and the host knows better than to ask your name before he leads you into the dining area and to a small table towards the back of the room.
Pepper has that look you hate on her face as you sit down opposite her; the look that means she's angry at you. She waits until the host has finished his welcome shtick before she leans forwards and speaks to you. "Did you even try to be good last night?" She asks with pure disappointment in her tone. "I mean, seriously? Do you do this to me on purpose?"
As much as you know it'll only piss her off even further, you roll your eyes and let out a nonchalant sigh. "I don't do anything to you, Pepper. I'm just living my life," You claim casually. "It's not my fault there's people filming my every move."
"It might not be your fault, but you can control what they see," She reminds you sternly. "You were gonna present an Oscar before your antics last night!"
"All I did was get a little drunk, is that a crime?" You ask her before pushing your sunglasses up onto your head when you realize what she said. "What do you mean, were?"
A soft scoff leaves her mouth. She's not happy about it, but she does get some satisfaction from being right. "Yeah. They don't want you to present Best Supporting Actor anymore. In fact, they don't want you at the Oscars at all," She tells you curtly. "Same probably goes for the Globes."
"They can't do that!" You exclaim, getting the attention of some of the diners but not caring. "I'm an actress; they can't uninvite me from the Oscars!"
"Well, they did," She hisses lowly, leaning in closer. "You're on thin ice, Y/N. This industry is all about reputation. No-one cares how talented you are when you're taking body shots off Thor Odinson - I mean, seriously? Out of all the athletes you could be associated with, you go for the barely-divorced basketballer known for cheating on every wife he's had?"
You sit back, not taking her seriously. Too many times Pepper has scolded you only to swiftly move on the next day with news of an audition she booked for you, so her cold anger has begun to lose its impact. She can tell you aren't intimidated by her, and that pisses her off even further.
"I've had enough of you throwing your career away," She says with a glare. "I'm not letting you cause your own downfall. You gained momentum from Bryn Sinclair, you've got fans, you're mostly likeable when you're not fucking married men. I've seen it a hundred times before; girl from a small town gets some attention, books a few good gigs, makes some money, hits her peak, and then blows it all on a coke-fueled bender and a stint in jail."
Offended, you frown at her. "I haven't even begun to peak, Potts," You claim firmly. "Losing isn't an option. And going out for a drink with a disgraced basketballer isn't going to ruin my career - all publicity is good publicity, right?"
Pepper lets out a long sigh. Neither of you say anything until the waiter brings over a bottle of wine and some bruschetta, compliments of the chef. You keep your eyes on her, waiting for her to say something. She doesn't say a word until she's halfway through her bruschetta.
"Speaking of publicity, Bruce had an idea," She begins, her eyes on the tomato she just stabbed with her fork. "Not sure you'll like it."
"Idea for what?" You ask her, half-expecting her to tell you her boss has finally finished the script for his sci-fi musical.
Her lips curl upwards and she shakes her head. "Tale as old as time," She says cryptically. "It's nothing original. Everyone does it."
You narrow your eyes, still confused. "Plastic surgery?" You guess. "I'll get lip filler, but I refuse to do that buccal fat thing."
"No. We're keeping your face natural in case you're cast in a period piece; you know that. I'm talking about a PR romance," She finally spills as her eyes light up. "We match you up with someone at your level or slightly above it, you pretend to date them, the public eats it up, both of you gain popularity. And then, six months later, there's a break-up. We keep the reason vague so there's no blame either way. Neither of you are the bad guy, and we all benefit."
After working with her for five years, you know her too well for her to be able to fool you. You can tell by the way she's speaking that she's already made her mind up - you're doing this PR romance, and you wouldn't be surprised if she's already found you a match who's being told the exact same thing as you by their own manager right now.
You've learned that saying no is usually a bad idea when it comes to these things. Not only are you contractually obliged to agree with your management's decisions, Pepper usually knows what's best. And though the thought of fake dating someone for six months sounds like the most awkward, uncomfortable experience of your life, you're an actress. What good would you be if you couldn't put it in for the cameras?
"Alright," You say with a shrug. "But whoever it is, they better be hot."
"No. No, absolutely not. Are you fucking kidding me? This is a joke, right?"
Carol sighs, sitting back in her chair. "I know this isn't what you expected-"
"What I expected? Carol, this is insanity!" Bucky exclaims with pink cheeks. "Of all the women you could've paired me with, her? Some C-List scream queen who wouldn't know what good acting is if it hit her in the face?" His cheeks are slightly pink as his nostrils flare.
"That's mean," Carol says sternly, standing up and resting her arms on her desk. "Y/N is extremely talented in her avenue."
"Oh, please. Anyone can gasp and scream bloody-murder; what she does is not acting," He counters with an eye roll. "I can't be associated with her, Carol. She's on the front page of E! News with her tongue down a different athlete's throat every other week, and I'm about to be nominated for an Oscar. Did you even try to find someone on my level? What about Natasha?"
Carol shakes her head. "Natasha's got enough going on this year. Besides, it'd be better to save her for a rainy day - milk the will they, won't they? storyline for as long as possible," She explains, before walking around her desk and closing the distance between them. "I know it's hard to agree with me, but this is for the best. Y/N has a very strong fanbase and anyone would kill for her social media interactions. As great an actor as you are, in this day and age, you need the Internet on your side, and Y/N is your ticket to getting that."
Bucky lets out a scoff before pulling out a carton of cigarettes from his back pocket. "I don't need 12-year-olds making fucking TikToks about me in order to succeed," He states bitterly, making his way to the door.
"I beg to differ, Buck," Carol says with a shrug. "Trust me. When have I ever steered you wrong? This will do wonders for your career." When he says nothing in return, she lets out a sigh. "Six months. Half a year. That's all I'm asking for."
He places a cigarette between his lips and lets out a defeated grunt before swinging open the door and leaving. Carol smiles to herself, knowing she's won him over.
The first planned interaction between you and Bucky is at Steve Rogers' Fourth of July party. It's one of the biggest celebrity events of the year, always resulting in plenty of rumor and scandal. There's a few paparazzi in smaller boats floating around, aiming their cameras like weapons.
You're wearing a red two-piece bathing suit with a white sarong loosely tied around your hips. You look in a compact mirror and touch up your makeup while sitting by one of the coolers, waiting patiently for your faux beau to join you.
Bucky's in a chiffon blue shirt, the open buttons revealing his bare chest as he speaks to Steve at the other end of the yacht. Admittedly, you've had a crush on him since you were thirteen and watching him in Sunset Lake; a six-season teen drama on which he made his acting debut and was labeled America's heartthrob. He quickly moved onto more mature projects in his early 20s, with multiple Emmys and Golden Globes lining his shelves to show for it.
You wonder what he thinks of you. You're popular with young people and horror fans, but other people in the industry don't seem to respect your craft. That, and they see you as a typical party animal, which might not be so far from the truth. It's likely he sees you in that same way. You've never met him, and you only hope he's a decent person.
Spotting you, Bucky inwardly sighs. He knows he should make his way over to you so the press that Carol hired can take their pictures, but he's dreading it. This marks the official beginning of his relationship with you, fake or not, and though Carol's sure it'll boost his popularity, he's afraid he'll lose the respect of his fans and peers if he's linked to you in any way, let alone seen to be dating you. But, what Carol says goes, and it's only a six month stint. In that time, he'll likely only have to see you a couple of times a month in order to keep the facade up. Twelve public interactions. That's all. He's been through worse for a role before.
Determined to get this over with, Bucky makes his way over to you. You've told your posse to leave you alone for a little bit so they don't interfere with this meeting. When you see Bucky walking over, you sit up, unable to deny how incredibly attractive he is in person. Your heart flutters a little and you know that the teenaged version of you is screaming at the idea of dating Bucky Barnes, fake or not.
He stands a foot away from you and pushes his sunglasses up onto his head. "Hey," Is his short greeting.
"Hi, there," You reply, looking up at him.
A second passes and you notice him glancing down at your legs before looking back at your face. "Get up," He orders lowly, keeping his face blank.
You raise a brow. Is this how he thinks this is gonna go? Instead, you take your sunglasses off and narrow your eyes at him. "Excuse me?"
It's clear he's irritated but he's doing his best to hide it. They don't give out Golden Globes for nothing. "Stand up and come closer," He says lowly. "Let the rats take their pictures, and we go our separate ways again."
Ah. So he hates this situation and, likely, hates you just as much. Usually, you'd be the first to want to get a job like this over with, but something about the way his jaw clenches when he looks at you gives you a little rush. It must be because he's a pretentious prick. He thinks he's better than you because he's in dramas while you're in the screams, and that pisses you off. If he thinks you're going to make this easy for him when he looks down on you, he's got another thing coming.
When you still don't move an inch, Bucky realizes what he's in for. Not only are you an unpredictable liability, you're also an idiot. He lets out a huff through his nose before reaching out, taking your hand, and pulling you to your feet. Surprised, you almost fall into him, but you don't want it look like he's being rough with you, which he is, so you remain calm and keep a smile on your face. Cameras are too good nowadays for you to let the mask slip for even a second.
"Nice to meet you, I'm Bucky Barnes," He says flatly.
"And you know who I am," You reply snarkily. "So, six months of this, huh?"
His hand is still on yours and he can feel the heat from your body radiating onto his. "If you have any sense at all, you'll wanna get this over and done with," Bucky utters. "I don't have time to fuck around."
"Ooh, golden boy's got an edge," You say teasingly, moving closer to him. "What if I don't have any sense? What if I'm just a stupid girl with no talent, who's gonna ruin your perfect image?"
He rolls his eyes.
"Cameras would've caught that," You tell him with a smirk. "You better do something to make up for it."
Bucky smiles, and you almost think it's genuine until you remember that he's an actor. He lets go of your hand and places his hands on your hips, pulling you closer. "Another two minutes and we're done here," He says coldly, though from afar it would look like he's whispering sweet nothings into your ear.
"Aw, this was nice," You coo coyly, resting a hand on his chest. "You know we've gotta seal the deal before you leave me, though. And make it look real, yeah?"
He clenches his jaw again and his hands tighten on your hips. Looking down at you, Bucky pushes your sunglasses up onto your head before leaning down and giving you a movie star kiss. To your surprise, he's heavy handed with the tongue, but you're not complaining. Your childhood celebrity crush is making out with you, whether it's a genuine kiss or not, which is one thing you can tick off your bucket list.
When he pulls away, he keeps his lips close to yours. "That real enough for you?" He asks bitterly.
You smile up at him and shrug. "Decent. Don't worry; by the end of these six months, I'll have trained you to be much better," You say, knowing it's hurting his ego.
He closes his eyes, probably to hide him rolling them, before pulling away. "Nice meeting you," Bucky says flatly.
Putting your sunglasses back on, you nod. "You, too."
Chapter One >
happy valentine's day.
been soooo long since i started a series. is anyone still here?? let's try for weekly updates :)
bucky masterlist
buy me a kofi <3
i no longer have a taglist, follow @kinanabinksupdates and turn on notifications for updates.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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summary âș every other weekend, sam hosts a cookout at the docks. every other weekend, bucky pretends he isnât looking for the same girl standing by the water at sunset.
pairing âș bucky x female reader
content warnings âș set during tfatws, soft/nervous bucky, (attempted) flirting, sam being a meddling cutie
word count âș 1.4k
authors note âș a little fluff for summer! if you guys couldnt tell tfatws bucky is my obsession. i love him and need him forever and ever.
Every other weekend in Delacroix, somebody lights a grill, drags coolers out onto the dock, and pretends life has always been this simple.
Sam calls them âcasual little cookouts,â which is a lie considering thereâs always enough food to feed a football team, music echoing through the boatyard, at least one argument over who burned the burgers and about twenty people yelling over each other while the Louisiana sunset turns everything gold.
Bucky usually keeps to the edges of it all.
Not hiding exactly, just observing. Helping when someone asks. Nodding along to conversations. Holding a beer long enough that people stop offering him another one. And every single cookout for the last two months, somewhere around sunset, he notices you. Always near the water. Sometimes sitting on the edge of the dock with your sandals abandoned beside you, sometimes leaning against one of the old wooden posts near the boatyard. Always looking out toward the horizon like youâre listening to something no one else can hear.
The first time he saw you, he thought to himself how pretty you were, the way the reflected sun off the water glowed across your face. The second time he wondered if you were waiting for someone else to join you. By the fourth cookout, he started looking for you before he even got out of the truck.
Tonight is no different. Bucky stands near the cooler pretending to listen to Sam and Torres argue over seasoning while his eyes drift automatically toward the water, and there you are. Leaning against the fence near the boats, drink hanging loosely from your fingers while the sunset paints orange light across your skin.
Bucky stares too long. Again.
âJesus Christ,â Sam mutters beside him without even looking up from the grill. âGo talk to her before you wear a hole through the poor girl.â
Bucky nearly chokes on his beer.
âIâm notââ
âYou are.â
âIâm just standing here.â
âAnd lookinâ at her like she hung the moon.â
Bucky scowls while Sam grins into the smoke curling from the grill.
âYou got exactly five minutes before somebody else gets the nerve first.â
âThatâs notââ
âFive.â
Bucky hates that his stomach actually drops a little at the thought, because he hasnât done this in a long time, not like this not when it matters. Across the yard, you laugh softly at something one of the Wilson kids says before drifting back toward the quieter end of the dock again. Alone.
Bucky exhales slowly.
Say something to her. Anything.
Before he can talk himself out of it, he starts walking. The wooden boards creak beneath his boots as he approaches. Closer now, he notices details he couldnât from afar, the condensation sliding down your cup, your hair moving gently in the breeze off the water, the way your shoulders relax out here away from the noise. You glance over at the sound of his footsteps. And suddenly Bucky Barnes the former assassin, war veteran, and literal super soldierâcompletely forgets how conversations work.
âYou uhââ
Brilliant start.
âYouâve been standing there a while.â
The second the words leave his mouth, Bucky wants to launch himself directly into the bay.
Nice going, Barnes.
But then you laugh, soft and surprised and warm enough to knock the air from his lungs.
âOh, yeah,â you admit, looking back toward the sunset. âGuess I have been.â
Then your eyes flick back to his.
âI didnât think youâd notice me.â
And Bucky, the poor bastard, his brain short-circuits entirely. Because how is he supposed to answer that honestly?
I notice you every single time you walk into a room.
I started showing up early hoping youâd be here.
I know exactly what your laugh sounds like from across the yard.
Instead what comes out is something much clumsier.
âIâd have to be blind not to notice you.â
Your cheeks flush immediately and Buckyâs soul leaves his body.
âI meanââ he starts quickly, panic rising fast, ânot like Iâm staring at you or anythingâI just meant likeââ
You save him then, with that warm gentle smile of yours.
âItâs okay,â you say softly. âI know what you mean.â
The relief nearly takes his knees out. Then after a tiny pause, your voice gets quieter.
âI notice you too.â
Bucky stares at you, stares like heâs trying to process whether he imagined that.
âYou do?â
Smooth. Very cool.
You laugh again, ducking your head slightly.
âKind of hard not to.â
Something warm unfolds slowly in Buckyâs chest. Shock first, then confusion, then happiness so sudden it almost feels dangerous. And when you smile at him again, all shy and sunlight-soft in the fading evening glow, he thinks distantly to himself.
This is good, right? Yeah. Okay. Time to send it home.
Bucky clears his throat.
âI uhââ
God. Why is he suddenly sixteen years old again?
âI notice,â he says carefully, glancing toward your cup, âyour drink is empty.â
You look down at it like you forgot you were holding it.
âWould you maybe wanna get another,â Bucky asks, trying very hard not to sound like this is the most nerve-wracking moment of his life, âwith me?â
Thereâs half a second where heâs convinced he ruined it somehow. Then you smile bright enough to rival the sunset behind you.
âYeah,â you answer softly. âYeah, Iâd like that.â
Bucky tries to play it cool, he really does, but as the two of you start walking back toward the lights and laughter of the cookout together, he canât stop the small smile pulling at his mouth. And behind the grill, Sam Wilson watches the whole thing happen before immediately shouting aloud for everyone to hear.
âITâS ABOUT DAMN TIME.â
Bucky flips him off without hesitation which makes you laugh so hard you nearly spill your drink again as he shakes his head and mutters something about this being a setup.
"A setup?"
"You and Sam."
"We've never discussed you."
"That's exactly what somebody discussing me would say."
The two of you reach the cooler then, and Bucky bends down to grab fresh drinks before you can.
"What are you having?"
"Lemonade."
He already knows, you've had lemonade at every cookout. Still, hearing you say it feels oddly satisfying. Bucky twists the cap loose before handing the bottle over, and your fingers brush his. It's brief, barely there, the kind of touch most people wouldn't even notice. But Bucky does.
The warmth of it lingers embarrassingly long.
"Thank you."
"You're welcome."
Neither of you pull away quite as quickly as you probably should and it makes Bucky's heart do something deeply inconvenient.
You seem completely unaware or maybe you're pretending to be, he honestly can't tell. The realization gives him a strange burst of courage. Because you've been smiling at him for the last half hour, because you noticed him too. Because if he leaves tonight without asking, Sam will probably never let him live it down. Mostly because he doesn't want to wait another two weeks to talk to you again.
Bucky clears his throat and immediately, you glance toward him and suddenly the nerves return full force.
"Hey."
"Hey."
Very smooth, professional even, he thinks.
You bite back a smile and Bucky points at you.
"Don't."
"I'm not doing anything."
"You are."
"I haven't said a word."
"You're thinking things."
That finally earns a laugh and the sound settles some of his nerves, just a little, just enough. Bucky rubs the back of his neck. Then, before he can overthink it.
"Would you maybe wanna come to the next cookout with me?"
Your eyebrows lift slightly.
His stomach drops, so he rushes onward.
"I meanânot that you aren't already coming. Obviously you're already coming."
Fantastic.
"God."
You laugh again.
Bucky closes his eyes briefly.
"Let me start over."
"Okay."
He's smiling now despite himself.
"So. Next cookout."
"Next cookout."
"Would you wanna come with me?"
The teasing fades from your expression and something softer takes its place. Your smile becomes smaller, warmer, the kind that twinkles across your eyes.
"I'd like that."
Relief crashes through him so quickly he almost laughs.
"Yeah?"
"Yeah."
You nudge your shoulder lightly against his, this time definitely on purpose.
"I've kind of been hoping you'd ask."
And for the rest of the night, Bucky can't stop smiling. Not even when Sam catches his eye from across the grill and points both thumbs triumphantly toward the sky. Not even when you laugh at that too. Not even when your head finds his shoulder, or stays there.
i saw someone saying on twitter about a woman who said that her boyfriend was so nervous when propose her that he forgot everything and ended up just getting on his knees saying âpleaseâ.
i hope every writer who reads this makes the best of it
X-Men 97 is back! And you know what that means! Time for an X-Men round up! I'm always trying to make sure I can get as many of y'all's faves as possible, so keep an eye outâI'm hoping to have more options later this summer!
And I'm currently having my big summer sale, so come on by and grab your faves at up to 25% off! Shop is here.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
letâs be real the pressure to use AI as an adult is exactly what they said the pressure the do drugs as a teenager would be like but the people that told us that caved immediately for the AI and definitely did not just say no
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
warnings: 18+ MDNI, eventual smut, fluffy!Bucky, power imbalance, sugar daddy / sugar baby dynamic, age gap (reader in mid-to-late twenties while Buckyâs in his early forties), mentioned illness/death of parents (minor characters), money troubles, i.e., debt, bills, etc., alcohol consumption, one instance of smoking cigarettes, no mentions of y/n
word count: 12.5k
part two - part three - masterlist
summary: The arrangement is simple enough: you give him friendship, he gives you a better life. But between the private dinners cozied up in a booth and the charity galas pressed to his side, itâs getting harder for you to hold up your end of the bargain when youâre starting to feel things for your sugar daddy that were not included in the contractâŠ
sammy speaks: so the rumors are true, I am in fact buckyâs sugar baby and this is my autobiography, thank you for reading it!! could easily say this is my magnum opus, I donât think Iâve put more time and effort into a piece of writing than I have this one. I hope everyone out there on the bucky x reader tag gets the chance to read it <3
Your shift is off to a very bad start.
The subway broke down â again â which means you had to sprint the last six blocks in your tiny skirt and sheer tights just to make it to work forty minutes late. Sweat pours down your back by the time you burst through the service door; the girls still lingering after the day shift give you wary looks while you lean against the wall, panting and brushing wet strands of hair from your face. You donât care.
All you want is some water and to clean yourself up before heading out onto the floor, but your manager decides now is as good a time as any to give you a lecture on tardiness.
Your lungs are still struggling for air as you endure his power trip, your teeth grinding together over the fact that he hadnât let you clock in before launching into his tirade. His ruddy face and the drool collecting at the corners of his mouth wouldâve made for a comical sight if you werenât already fuming over your situation. By the time he tires himself out, heâs eaten away at seven additional minutes you couldâve been paid for.
Safe to say, thereâs a black cloud over your head when you finally emerge onto the floor. Cleaning yourself up had been futile â there was nothing you could do about your hair, and youâre putting a lot of faith in the ambiance to keep the sweat stains on your uniform indiscernible. And not only are you sticky with dried sweat, smelling of the cheap drug store body spray and year-old deodorant you borrowed, but blisters are beginning to form after your uncoordinated run in heels earlier. You have a feeling youâll be cleaning dried blood from them at the end of the shift, and until then, every step will be torture.
That is until you see the floor map at the host stand, then you donât even register the pain anymore. The hostess fidgets nervously beside you as you double and triple-check what youâre seeing.
At first glance, it looks like it always does. You have the same tables every night with the same people filling them like clockwork, because this place thrives on consistency and itâs common knowledge that regulars have the deepest pockets. Everything looks normalâŠexcept for one table. And once your eyes catch on it, it makes your heart seize.
Your Friday night 8:30 p.m. regulars is missing â the group of eighty-something year-old men that like to compare you to their granddaughters and fuss over your wellbeing and always tip like itâs their last day on earth are no longer in their usual back booth. No, the long-standing reservation under âS. Leeâ is off in another corner of the screen. In Melissaâs section. In her booth.
âThis has to be a mistake,â you say out loud. The young girl playing hostess for the evening squeaks, curling in on herself.
âIâm sorry, he made me,â she whispers urgently, and you know she means your manager. âYou were running late and he didnât want them to wait, so he had me put them at Melâs table next to the pianoââ
You tune her out, a hand covering your eyes to block out every sensory input you could. The missing table of your best regulars feels like the death blow to your optimism, your hope, your last chance. With debt collectors clogging up your voicemail, you havenât thought about anything but this shift for the last week. A lot was riding on it, and not just the tips or the wages â tonight was going to be the night you swallowed your pride and pitched your sob story to the table of Warren Buffet clones. Itâs a gamble â one that risks your job if you donât play your cards right â but after months of buttering them up with winks and pats and an endless amount of patience for repeatedly-told stories, you figured at least two out of the six might crack open their wallets for a charitable cause of a motherless young woman with crippling medical debt.
But now you would never know. The thought hurts a lot worse than the blisters.
It takes great effort to slap a smile on your face and act like you didnât just miss the last lifeboat on the sinking ship, but every time you pass the empty booth, a cold chill runs down your spine. Deadlines, due dates, and late notices swirl in your brain while you take orders or fake laughter. Your mind has catalogued everything you think the repo men will take first when they come knocking next week. Itâs a dark and winding internal spiral.
But just when you think it canât get any worse, your black cloud becomes a roaring thunderstorm.
You know the hostess thought she was helping â youâve been catching her apologetic looks from the corner of your eye throughout the shift. But when she creeps over to you cautiously, a small smile on her face, and says she found the perfect replacement reservation for you, youâre about ready to dump a pitcher of water over her head.
âReplacementâ rings alarm bells in your head. âReplacementâ means reservations outside of the regularsâ time slots. âReplacementâ means snotty out-of-towners with connections or ignorant first-time club members. âReplacementâ means trouble.
And trouble they are.
You assess your new group of gentleman from across the bar. There are seven of them in the secluded booth, all of them spread out and lounging comfortably like theyâve been patrons of your table for years. You donât recognize any of them, and neither does the bartender, which confirms your biggest fears. Youâre at risk of cracking a tooth.
But your manager appears out of nowhere, giving you the evil eye, so you have no choice but to relax your jaw and make your way over to the newcomers.
Your forced smile could power a small generator when you sidle up to the table.
âWelcome to The Alpine, gentlemen. How are we?â
Seven pairs of eyes snap to you, and you know what comes next: the head-to-toe look over and appreciative smiles that follow shortly after. The tall blonde in the middle has a particularly disarming curl to his lips that raises the hair on the back of your neck.
âBetter, now that youâre here,â he quips, line of vision resting somewhere between your chin and your naval. The man beside him chuckles.
âWell, glad I could be of service,â you say brightly, eyelashes fluttering on command. Even if it kills you, youâll flirt like hell with them if it means better tips. âWhat brings you in tonight?â
The blonde one speaks up again. âOur friend here just bought another nightclub,â he says, gesturing to a man to his right. âSo we thought weâd celebrate him adding to his empire.â
Your smile never falters, but you feel your eye twitch.
âHow exciting,â you manage to say.
It takes you much longer than necessary to get their drink orders. The blonde man â whose name you learned is Walker â doesnât seem to know how to stop talking. Even if you shoved a dirty bar towel down his throat, you think heâd still be shooting off jokes. Probably about ball gags, after hearing the mouth on him.
As you walk away to put in their orders, you can just hear Walkerâs nasty little comparison of a bouncy ball and your ass. Your eyes roll so hard they hurt.
When you return with their drinks, he once again zeroes in on your neckline.
âHow long have you been working here, sweetie?â he asks your breasts, voice cutting through the othersâ conversations. Your smile is blank and placid as you hand him his drink, ignoring the purposeful drag of his fingers over yours.
âComing up on a year,â you reply. âLong enough to know when someone interesting walks in.â
You add a wink for good measure and he devours it. Sitting up straighter, Walker puffs out his chest.
âInteresting, huh?â he asks with a smirk thatâs probably meant to seduce but instead summons vomit. âSounds like I might be a new favorite of yours.â
Do not gag do not gag do not gagâ
âOh, I donât do favorites. I just like my clientele to feel special.â
God, you might make yourself vomitâ
âGood to know,â he drawls, âbecause Iâll be around a lot more soon. Barnes is getting me on the short-list next month, right, Barnes?â
Before whichever man named Barnes can reply, Walker continues. âSo donât go running off anywhere. Wouldnât want you breaking my heart before I even get settled in.â
The cliche of it all has you actively fighting the urge to burst out laughing.
âAnd give up the chance to have you as a regular? Wouldnât dream of it,â you soothe, smile cracking with your hidden mirth. The man at the end of the booth makes a noise somewhere between a snort and cough, but Walker beams like he won the lottery.
As the drinks flow, his audacity grows, which you find as shocking as it is endearing â which is to say, not at all. But you play along, because what other choice do you have? None when Walkerâs giving all the signs that heâll be footing the bill.
So you keep it up, the back and forth, the balance of flirty and dismissive responses; you can see the interest growing in Walkerâs eyes as his sobriety shrinks. His friends are right there with him, and soon enough the energy of the table starts to shift in Walkerâs direction.
âThat vest really does wonders for you.â
âI like it when a girl shows a little skin.â
âThat skirt looks like it was made for you.â
Your patience is wearing thin.
To their credit, a couple others at the table try to rein him in when they can, including the man of the hour, the club buyer, an attractive guy in his early forties called Sam. He makes pointed subject changes and laughs off the awkwardness when Walker makes a comment that lands just this side of perverted. Truthfully, you wouldnât mind Walker running his mouth until you had grounds to have him removed, essentially destroying whatever chance he has at the âshort-list,â or whatever the fuck that made up thing was. But you appreciate Samâs efforts all the same.
And then thereâs the other guy, the one on the end, who takes a more direct approach to shutting Walker up.
Walkerâs in the middle of a slurred proposition for you to accompany him home after your shift when the man at the end of the booth lifts his head.
âEnough,â he says bluntly, suddenly; his voice is low and rough, direct. The tongue-in-cheek comment about sharing a bed immediately dies on Walkerâs lips, his eyes flashing to his interruptor.
He doesnât even bother looking at Walker, staring at his drink as he slowly spins it on the table, still his first one when the others are on their fourth or fifth. Thereâs a brief flash of something black and gold peeking from underneath the cuff of his suit jacket â a brilliant watch, clearly high-end and probably worth more than youâll ever make in your life. A ring sits on his pinky, polished titanium. His charcoal suit fits his shoulders like every stitch and seam were custom made for his measurements â and maybe they were.
You see money in various forms all the time at this job, but occasionally youâll stumble across real money. Big money. Stupid money. The kind that expresses itself quietly instead of boisterously like Mr. Short-List. Itâs not always easy to spot, but youâve learned how to over the last year, and when you do, it doesnât fail to knock you on your ass every time.
One quick look and you know this man has real money. Your heart stutters in your chest, thoughts of your stack of unpaid bills wiping the smile clean off your face.
On the other side of the table, Sam disrupts the new silence by making a brave pivot to the stock market, something the rest of the group jumps on, even Walker. Youâre attempting to swallow the lump in your throat, scrambling to grab empty glasses and old napkins, when you feel eyes on you.
Itâs him, the man at the end of the booth.
His eyes are a startlingly bright blue that sends an electric shock down your spine. His face, looking like it was carved straight from Michelangeloâs private diary, stays neutral as you meet his gaze; you can see the years on him through scars and scruff and wrinkles around the eyes, but you wouldnât guess him to be older than forty-five. His thick dark hair is swept back, threaded with silver near the temples that matches the silver around his chin.
Heâs watching you like heâs waiting for something. Some sort of reaction maybe. His pink lips are parted like heâs about to ask a question. You have no idea what it could be.
Not giving yourself the chance to hesitate, the smile is back on your face with practiced ease. âCan I get you anything, sir?â you murmur quietly, trying to draw as little attention from the others as possible.
He blinks, breaking the undisclosed stare down between the two of you. âJust the check, please.â
âOf course. Can I get the name under the membership?â
âBarnes,â he says, holding out a black credit card for you to take. âJames Barnes. Thank you.â
âThank you, Mr. Barnes.â
His eyes find yours again and stare. You offer him one last smile before leaving.
Your fingers tap restlessly against the counter as you wait for the receipt to print. From across the room, you watch as the group at the booth begins to get up. Walkerâs foot catches on the lip and he stumbles into his friend; Samâs there immediately to usher them toward the door. You place the receipt in the black book and make your way back to the table, where James Barnes still sits, still staring at his drink.
Unfortunately, you have to pass Walker on your way over. With a sad excuse for a smile, you thank him for coming in tonight. He leans forward, into your personal space, reeking of liquor and leering at you.
âLeft my number on the napkin if you miss me too much. We can pick up where we left off when youâre done with work.â
Clearly he thought he was bestowing a tremendous gift on you, from the way he winks and struts away. Your smile drops as soon as you turn back to the table, where you see James Barnes staring at you yet again.
Feeling caught, you offer him a sheepish look, a small upturn of your lips, and hand him the receipt.
âThank you for coming in tonight, Mr. Barnes. We hope you come back soon.â
He hums, taking it from your hands; your fingers brush, and your brain has no choice but to acknowledge how different it feels from when Walker did it. He signs the receipt and offers it back to you before you have the chance to give him privacy, but when you grab it, he holds on to the other end, stopping you in your place.
âIâm sorry,â he says quietly, eyes boring into yours again, âfor what you had to put up with tonight.â
You blink. âOh, thatâs â itâs not a problem at all, your friends seem like a, uh â fun time.â
A smile flits across his face, crooked and devastating. âFun? So, you enjoy getting asked to go home with your customers?â
âIââ your blush lights up your face. âHe didnât mean it, Iâm sureââ
âHe did.â
âItâs fine,â you rush to say. âI get it a lot, comes with the territory. Call it a work perk.â
His eyebrow lifts.
âA work perk,â he repeats. âSure. Some places offer health insurance, but you get to be flirted with by married men.â
Fucking dick bag, you seethe internally, your mind conjuring up a scenario where you curb stomp Walker until his teeth fall out.
You try to smile but it feels like a grimace. âWhat can I say? Iâm living the dream.â
He chuckles, finally releasing the bill. His eyes sweep across your face.
âAre you?â
You pause. âAm I what?â
âLiving the dream.â
âIs anyone, really?â you say with a quirk of your lips.
âI donât know,â he allows, tilting his head. âMaybe not. But we keep pretending we are.â His gaze drifts around the room before settling back on you. âWere late nights and putting up with guys like Walker what you always pictured your life to look like?â
You chuckle, but thereâs hesitation in it. Images of your verbally abusive manager and meager paystubs flash through your mind. But thatâs the darker side of the club that customers arenât supposed to know about. As a server, your job is to slap a pair of rose-colored glasses over their eyes and keep them there. Yet heâs asking to take them off. It feels taboo.
Heâs looking at you like he can read your thoughts, but he waits for your answer like he has all the time in the world.
âUh, no,â you say slowly. âDefinitely not.â
You glance over your shoulder like youâre expecting your manager to be standing there, red-faced and spitting again.
âGood,â James murmurs, âI was starting to worry about your long-term goals.â
âIâmâŠIâm actually in school,â you admit before you can stop yourself. âGrad school. Masters in Business Analytics.â
His lips do something similar to a smile, but his eyes are serious as he leans your way. âImpressive. What are you hoping to do with this degree?â
You shrug, feeling the full weight of his undivided attention. It isnât uncomfortable, but itâs heavy.
âSomething with data. It kind of â I donât know â speaks to me, I guess? Iâm good with numbers. I can read an Excel sheet, which is half the battle. Interpreting data really isnât that difficult when you dictate the right models andââ You stop short and shake your head quickly. âIâm sorry. Iâm boring you.â
His smile returns. âYouâre not boring me.â
âI was rambling. You probably have better things to do than listen to me run my mouth about dictating data models,â you joke.
âOn the contrary,â he murmurs, âIâd like to hear what you have to say about data models.â
You look to the floor as the blush blooms across your face. âIt doesnât make for very thrilling conversation.â
âWeâre at The Alpine Club â Iâm pretty sure data models make up ninety percent of the conversations around here. Whatâs one more?â
You laugh, bright and unexpected. âYou got me there.â
He watches you for a moment, thoughtful.
âSo,â he says, twirling his empty glass, âwhat kind of data are you hoping to manipulate around when you graduate?â
You blink as his question lands. It isnât lost on you that heâs prolonging the conversation. Your weight shifts, you debate answering him; you have tables that havenât been touched in minutes, you have side work thatâs waiting for you in the back. Plus, your gut is screaming at you that this has gone a lot further than the average conversation between customer and server, especially when heâs already settled up. You should thank him for coming in and walk away.
âManipulating data sounds corrupt,â you say with a small smile. The side work can wait. âItâs more likeâŠmaking sense of it. Organizations collect all this information and half the time they donât even know what to do with it. I like the idea of being the person who can look at a mess of numbers and data points and say okay, hereâs the story.â
âSounds like an art,â he says.
âArtists donât use spreadsheets.â
âI think it still counts.â
Your hands tighten around the receipt book. âNot sure if Iâve ever heard someone call data analytics an art. Most people start disassociating when I mention Excel.â
âMost people are missing out.â
Your smile grows. âThat sounds like a line.â
âItâs not,â he says easily, placing both hands on the table. âIâm genuinely interested.â
âIn data?â
âIn you.â
The words are a shock to your system. You feel heat climb into your cheeks again. Okay, thatâs definitely a line.
That smile flickers on his face again, and he points toward his empty glass. âActually, do you mind if I get one more from you? Please?â
You hesitate for a moment before nodding, turning for the bar again. When you return with his drink, he takes it from you with gentle fingers that brush yours.
âDo you think youâd be able to sit with me? Just for the drink?â he asks.
You freeze.
âIf youâre busy, I understand,â he says quietly. âI donât want to keep you from your work.â
Chewing your lip, you chance a look at your section. Itâs died down considerably â closing time is near, but your last few tables have yet to pay. He watches you in that patient way of his.
âNo, itâs â Iâm not busy,â you mumble. Youâre about to move to the other side of the booth when he slides over deftly, leaving room for you to sit next to him with a healthy amount of distance left between. Your hesitation is quick, but obvious, although he says nothing when you eventually take the spot beside him.
âWhere do you go to school?â he asks, like there wasnât a break in the conversation.
âOâMalley.â
His eyebrows lift a fraction. âThatâs a great school.â
âHa. Thank you. Yeah, my mom nearly had a heart attack when I got my acceptance letter. Big school, bigger price tag.â Your nose wrinkles. âI guess you could say thatâs part of the reason Iâm here.â
Youâre not sure what made you bring up your mom â you havenât weaved her into conversation in weeks. While your brows furrow in thought, James shifts in his seat, suddenly, like a twitch but more intentional. He lifts the drink to his lips.
âPart of the reason?â he repeats.
âItâs a long story.â
He looks at you, eyes bright but calm.
âI have time.â
You exhale softly, unable to hold the eye contact. âIt â well, itâs not a very good story either.â
He doesnât say anything, letting you consider in silence whether or not to share. You donât tell your story very often â in fact, youâve tried running from it multiple times. Hence the reason the debt collectors were after you. Tonight was going to be a rare occurrence if you had actually ended up telling your table of regulars your tearful tale.
Sitting beside him, you canât deny the pull to James, nor the urge to tell him; you want to chalk it up to being prepared for another audience, but deep down, you know itâs something completely different.
With a sigh, you start.
âI had a lot saved up. A good chunk of it from my dadâs life insurance policy. Car accident when I was sixteen,â you add, when Jamesâ tilts his head questioningly. âIt wasâŠsad, but we got through it. My mom and me. I got the money when I turned twenty-two, just in time to graduate college. I worked at a bar part-time and made some money there, so I decided to take a year off before grad school. Travel. See the worldâŠâ
James clears his throat. âWhere did you go?â
âEurope. Mostly Italy. I love the food, the history, how the countryâs broken up by states and each one has its own cultureâŠâ You trail off, biting down on a smile. âI think itâs my favorite place in the world.â
Next to you, James shifts again, but heâs got a soft smile on his face as he watches the liquid swirl in his glass.
âBut then my mom got sick,â you continue, your voice lowering automatically. âStage 4 colon cancer. I came home right away, brought her to every doctor in the city, but they all said the same thing: that there was nothing they could do.â
Thereâs a sound like a hushed rumble coming from Jamesâ chest. He sets his drink down and meets your eyes.
âIâm sorry,â he says.
A stab of grief shoots through your heart at those two words. Youâve heard them a million times over in your life, eventually growing numb to them â especially when they came from strangers. But the way heâs looking at you, the simplicity in the way he said it, causes a reaction you havenât had in months. You quickly blink away the burn behind your eyes.
âItâsâŠthank you.â
He nods once, a gesture of acknowledgment and to continue. You take a breath.
âShe refused to give up. She was a badass, but I also think that was just her being a mom. She didnât want to leave me on my own in the world. So we used up every cent we had flying across the country, meeting with the best doctors out there and trying treatment after treatment. We spent a stint at the Mayo in Rochester, and for a moment, things were starting to look up. But she took a sudden turn for the worse, so we came back here. We came home.â
You rest your chin in your palm, eyes following his finger as it taps against his glass. You can feel him watching you closely.
âI tried to make her as comfortable as I could. Took the rest of my savings and poured it into her care. She hated that I did that, but there was no point arguing. Not when we only had weeks left. She passed last spring.â
Jamesâ free hand twitches in your direction. You pretend not to notice.
âAfter the funeral, I looked around and realized I had mountains of medical bills to pay, a mortgage suddenly in my name, and a future full of student loans.â You make a soft noise in the back of your throat, untitled in emotion. âDespite everything, my mom made me enroll in classes as soon as we got home â she wanted me to have something waiting for me on the other side of it all. I thought she was crazy at first because I couldnât think about anything but her, but now that sheâs gone, Iâm glad she made me do it.â
The silence after you finish is surprisingly light. It doesnât feel tense or heavy like it usually does, when your audience isnât sure how to reconcile all of that grief in one personâs lifetime. James sits beside you easily, absorbing your story with careful consideration and space.
âFor what itâs worth, I think your mom would be really proud of where you are todayâ he murmurs.
The corner of your mouth lifts.
âDonât speak too soon. I sold the house, but it barely made a dent in the medical bills. Whoever invented interest can suck my dick.â
James coughs and takes a large sip of his drink.
âTruthfully, Iâm â Iâm drowning,â you laugh breathlessly. âI canât study because Iâm constantly worried about having enough money to keep the lights on, and then that makes me worry that Iâll get kicked out of the program and lose my chance at a job that pays enough to make these bills go away. So I got a job here in the meantime because â well, everythingâs outrageously priced and that means you get outrageous tips, which is literally the only way to keep my head above water.â
Your voice has raised in volume, pitch and speed, but you plow on, too late to bottle it up now.
âI ran the numbers a hundred times, set them against average incomes of thousands of jobs in the city, calculated inflation and costs, and it came down to either this or stripping. Which I donât have anything against! But I canât move like that, I can barely do a push up â so tips would be beyond sad for me, if I get any, and then Iâd be back to where I started. So between that and The Alpine, I thought why not save myself the embarrassment andââ
You cut yourself off with a wince. You did it again.
You shoot a furtive glance his way. Heâs turned completely in his seat to face you, jaw tight and eyes unreadable. Like this, you get the full force of him, the piercing blue of his eyes, the sharp features of his face; itâs unnerving, but in a way that makes your skin tingle, like electricityâs dancing down your limbs. A brief look reveals a brush of chest hair peeking out from under his white button down, and your subconscious decides it would like to see the rest of it someday.
He appears to be considering something, mulling it over carefully in his head. He hasnât looked away from you since you stopped talking, but you donât find it creepy. Yet.
âSounds like you have a lot on your plate,â James mutters.
âYeah,â you say faintly, âsorry to unload all of that on you.â
He shakes his head quickly, throwing back the last of his drink in one large gulp. His lips press into a thin line. Youâre kicking yourself mentally, thinking youâve finally traumatized the poor guy with your unfiltered stream of consciousness, when he sets the glass down with a sharp klink.
âI could help,â he says quietly.
You blink. âOh, you donât â you donât need to do that. I promise I wasnât using my sob story to get you to kick me a bigger tip or anythingââ
âJust listen, please.â
Your mouth shuts with a snap. The air hums with a level of anticipation that wasnât there before. His eyes hold steadily onto yours.
âIâll only say this once, and if itâs not for you, I wonât say another word about it ever again.â He tilts his head. âI believe two people can come together in an uncomplicated and beneficial way, like friends do, to help each other out. Iâd like to make your life easier so you can focus on what actually matters to you. Iâd be someone you can rely on, who values your time and wants to see you succeedâŠwhile also helping you with any roadblocks in your way. I could take some of the pressure off â financially â so that you can focus on your future instead of struggling to make things work today. And in return, I get your company. Iâve had a better time talking to you for the last twenty minutes than Iâve had with that group of guys for years. Youâre sharp, youâre funny, youâre groundedâŠyour time and your attention is all I would want.â
He lets that sit between you with a short pause. Meanwhile, the air has left your lungs.
âThis requires trust. Discretion. Maturity. Itâs not about rescuing anyone or buying affection. Itâs moreâŠintentional than that. Mutual.â
He pauses again, longer, as if heâs waiting for his words to sink in with you. They certainly have.
âBeing my friend will never require you to be out of your comfort zone,â he continues softly. âItâs about making you comfortable. Youâll get support without strings, without owing anything, and without judgment. Itâs not complicated, and itâs not about control. Itâs about being a friend. Iâd like to be your friend.â
Your mouth opens but nothing comes out. Not a whisper of a sound. The corners of his mouth twitch up as he searches your face â you suspect youâre not doing a very good job at concealing your emotions.
âYou donât need to give me an answer now,â James murmurs, leaning back against the booth; his voice has dipped into a lower octave, and the sound of it sends vibrations up your spine. âAll Iâm asking is that you consider it.â
Youâre silent as you turn his words over in your mind, your heart thrumming beneath your chest.
âWe donât even know each other,â you whisper.
âI know,â he replies, âbut Iâd like to know you. This is a way for me to do that.â
You bite your lip. âIf youâre saying all of this because of my mom, or â or âcause you feel badââ
âNo,â he says calmly, hand resting on the table near yours. âThis isnât because I feel bad.â
âThen why?â you ask.
âBecause youâre beautiful, and I enjoy the sides of you that youâve shown me tonight. And selfishly, Iâd like to be your friend that makes things easier for you.â
Your gut swoops low. He called you beautiful. But there was an innocence behind it, like he was stating a fact rather than making a move. This settles over you like a warm blanket after a long day.
James watches you for another moment before reaching into his suit jacket and pulling out a card. He offers it to you.
âTake some time. Think it over. If you have questions, call me. If you never want to hear from me again, say the word and Iâll leave you alone. But if youâre interested in what this could be, let me know.â
You take the card without a word, absentmindedly pocketing it while you get to your feet. Your body has overridden your brain, moving you through the motions. James rises after you, and his frame towers over yours as you finally stand next to him. His bright eyes scan your face, assessing every detail. You swallow hard, his eyes track that as well.
âI hope to hear from you soon,â he murmurs, dipping his head down to your eye level. You nod breathlessly.
With a pointed look, he nudges the receipt book closer to you, where it had been abandoned on the table after he asked for another drink.
âItâsâitâs on me,â you say weakly. He raises his eyebrows, hands shoved into his pockets; you wave vaguely in front of you. âDonât worry about it.â
âThank you,â James says politely, and with a small dip of his chin, he turns away for the door. You watch as he crosses the room at a relaxed pace, dark hair bouncing gracefully, suit swishing perfectly. He doesnât look back as the door is opened for him like a king and he exits the room.
You let out a breath you didnât know you were holding. Holy shit.
Later that evening, when you stumble home with ruptured blisters, smelling of stale sweat and cleaning products, you collapse onto your couch and pull out the card.
James B. Barnes, Chairman of the Board
Barnes Group, Inc.
The last name should have given it away, but to be fair, you were blindsided by the smooth talking and how good he looked. Barnes Group, Inc. is a quiet but major asset management firm that dominates the Financial District. They hold their weight against the big ones despite being around for less than twenty years. Theyâre well-respected and popular, from what youâve heard around The Alpine. Your instincts proved correct once again â he really does have real money.
Your mind whirls. How cliche is it for one of the wealthiest men in the city to offer an arrangement like this to a younger woman? Very â thereâs no beating around that bush.
But the way he framed it had broken through your initial judgment, hitting you in a place that was dark and dusty and unused for ages. Friendship.
You couldnât remember the last time you spoke to someone you could call a friend. All of them had slowly disappeared after you buried your mother, and for valid reasons; you made it impossible to keep in touch, dodging phone calls and ignoring texts like it was your job. But youâre still human â even if you push everyone away, that doesnât mean youâre immune to loneliness. And with hardly any family left, that doesnât leave you with many options for human companionship.
His words had shined a spotlight on that gaping hole in your life, intentional or not. Maybe he could see that on top of flirting with poverty, youâre lonely.
Maybe heâs lonely, too.
You rub your eyes viscously with your knuckles, willing the day to seep from your bones. Your cat, Lucky, hops onto the couch and curls up beside you.
You canât believe it, but you think you need to consider this. While several true crime documentaries could show you the downfall of trusting the wrong person, you canât help but take Jamesâ words as they are. Perhaps that ity, bity, tiny sliver of hope you allow to live on inside you has taken charge of your decision making. It would explain your sudden deviation from enormous dislike for the rich.
You sigh, stroking Luckyâs back. âIf this is real, Iâd be an idiot not to,â you say to him, like you have no other choice. Lucky yawns his affirmation.
So you think on it. A lot. A lot a lot. Pretty much every minute of the next three days, youâre thinking about James. His words replay over and over in your head until itâs an automatic loop of noise.
Iâd like to be your friend.
Itâs distracting, thinking about him and his offer. Which means youâre distracted at work, youâre distracted on the subway, youâre distracted folding laundry. You even answer a debt collector by accident because your mind is in two places. Youâll never do that again.
âŠHe could make sure you never do that again.
It comes to a head when youâre taking your break during your shift. The August night is hot and humid, the sky bragging of potential thunderstorms. The cigarette in your hand shakes as you inhale greedily.
The same two things circle your brain: how long would you let this go on for? And what would your mom think?
Both questions hold great weight, yet both are unanswerable to you â at least for now. Just when you start going down that road, your brain screeches to a halt in some sort of self-preservation tactic, distracting you by throwing mental memories of Jamesâ soft smile, his quiet empathy, or â even worse â his chest hair.
It makes it a lot easier to pull out your phone than you think. The card is slightly crumpled from taking it out and holding it so often, but the numbers read clearly as you punch them in.
Heâs offering you a way out of this mess you call your life. Just because he wants to. And all he asks is for you to smile and thank him for it over dinner every now and then. Either heâs dealing with a lot of guilt over having money, or he truly wants to see your life get easier because of him. Maybe itâs both. Either way, itâll change your life.
For the better. Right?
The line rings three times before he answers. âJames Barnes.â
âJames,â you croak, exhaling a cloud of smoke. âItâs me. From The Alpine. Hi.â
Something shifts in the background, like heâs sitting up straighter or moving something around. It sounds like sheets against skin. âHi,â he says back, neutral. You glance at the time on your phone.
âShit,â you mutter, âIâm sorry. I didnât even think about how late it is. I can call you backâ?â
âNo,â he cuts in. âNowâs fine. How are you?â
You chew on your lip. âIâm good. Busy, butâŠIâve beenâ uh, Iâve been thinking.â
âOh, yeah?â he murmurs, soft and loose like itâs a knee-jerk response. Your gut swoops low.
âAbout what you said,â you choke out. âAbout beingâŠfriends. IâŠI have some questions.â
âI have some answers.â
âI was wondering if we could meet. Soon. So I can ask you the questions. And learn a little more aboutâŠwhat this will be like.â
Thereâs a pause on the other end, not even a rustle of fabric or a brush of his breathing against the receiver to be heard. Then he clears his throat.
âHow about tomorrow night? 8 oâclock at Pepperâs.â
âYeahâ uh, yes. That works,â you breathe. Thereâs a moment of silence where all you can hear is the pounding of your own heart.
âWould it be presumptive of me to bring a few documents? Unless youâd like to have a lawyer look over themââ
Your mouth goes dry. âNo. Thatâs okay,â you say. âYou can bring them.â
He makes a soft noise, something pleased. âIâm glad you called,â he says, voice low and warm. âI was starting to think I wouldnât hear from you.â
The hand holding your cellphone spasms. âIâm sorry,â you whisper.
He shushes you quietly. âItâs okay. Iâm glad you took your time. You seem like the type of person who wants to know exactly what she gets herself into. I admire that.â
You hum, because words are elusive as ever right now.
âAre you working?â he asks.
âYes.â
âItâs almost midnight. Isnât The Alpine closed by now?â
âYeah, wellâŠside workâs a bitch. Iâll probably be here until one.â
He grunts. âLet me send a car to get you home.â
âJames, Iââ
âPlease. Itâll let me sleep tonight. Worrying about you walking around New York at one in the morning in the rain will do the opposite.â
Your foot taps restlessly. âOkay,â you breathe.
âOkay, doll.â
A flush runs through your body, from the crown of your head to the tip fo your toes. It leaves behind a wave of tingles that tickle your skin.
âYeah, uh. Iâll let youâ uh, Iâll let you get back to it then. Iâll see you tomorrow, James.â
âTomorrow,â he vows. And the line goes dead.
You adjust the straps of your dress again, pulling them further back on your shoulders so that they frame your chest just right. Itâs your favorite dress â or, more accurately, your only dress â and your one item of clothing thatâs acceptable enough for the five star restaurant youâre meeting James at.
Heâs sending another car â he texted you this time, brokering no argument over it, just a time and the driverâs name. Youâd be put off if the ride last night hadnât cut your usual hour-long hike home down to ten minutes and saved you from a torrential downpour. Private cars have their benefits, apparently.
The driver, Bob, picks you up at half past seven. He weaves in and out of traffic flawlessly, leaving you with very little time to fix your makeup and call on every shred of courage you have.
When he pulls up to the curb, he hops out of the car and opens the door for you, helping you to balance on your heels that donât entirely cover the bandaids on the back of your ankles. You thank him for the ride as he ushers you into the restaurant.
James waits at the table tucked into a secluded corner at the back of the room, hair parted perfectly, scruff a little longer than before, and dressed in a suit of midnight black. His shirt is a shade lighter, the top three buttons undone and exposing even more chest hair than the last time. You take a deep breath as you approach.
He stands immediately when he spots you, eyes appraising you gently, like his favorite person in the world just showed up.
âHello,â he says, coming around to hold out your chair for you.
âHi,â you mumble, blushing as you sit. He holds eye contact as he resettles into his own seat, a small smile on his face.
âYou look breathtaking,â he admits, a twinge in his voice that could pass for pained, like the way you look is so devastatingly beautiful, it hurts.
âThank you. You look very nice, too.â
His smile grows. âIâm glad you could meet me tonight. I have to say Iâve been a bit restless since our talk last night.â
âOh?â is your dumb response. Your pulse flutters as his smile grows crooked.
âI guess you could say Iâm eager to hear your questions.â
âOh, umâŠyes. I have a fewâŠâ
He gestures to the table. âDo your worst.â
You were prepared for this, but it still makes you feel light-headed as you pull out the small slip of paper from your purse. He watches you carefully as you unfold it, pieces of the ripped edges fluttering to the floor. Maybe you were expecting a bit of small talk, but whatâs there to talk about when you hardly know each other? You can appreciate cutting to the chase, even if it makes your mouth dry.
âFirst, IâŠI just want to say thank you,â you begin quietly, shyly meeting his gaze. âFor listening to me. And for not making it a big deal. It was the first time Iâve told that story that I didnât feel like a tragedy after, and you made me feel that way.â
His shoulders seem to relax a little, his expression gentle. âYouâre welcome.â
âThat being said,â you continue shakily, unable to meet his eyes any longer. âIâm wondering what kind of help you want to give, and if there are things I can say no to.â
He nods, his face becoming serious. âOf course. I want to help, not intrude. If there are things you donât want me to touch, then I wonât. You get the say in that.â
âSo, if I say I donât want any help with my student loansâŠâ
âThen thatâs that. I wonât push you about it either.â
You nod, fingering the edge of the paper nervously. The silence stretches.
âWould it be useful to give you a summary of what I will and wonât help with?â he asks, leaning back in his seat. You nod again, motioning for him to continue. He settles into his seat, clearing his throat. âTo start, I wonât help with the circumstances of friends or relatives, unless theyâre direct dependents of yours, which it doesnât sound like you have anyway. This arrangement is for us, so it stays between us. And I wonât help with any legal troubles either. If you end up in jail, I wonât pay for bail, I wonât pay fines, and I wonât pay for legal counsel. If youâre charged with anything, this arrangement is void.â
His voice is level, almost monotonous, like heâs said this a few times. You gulp.
âBut I will pay for everything else, if youâll let me,â he remarks, growing softer. âYouâll get my card for the day-to-day things. Groceries, coffee, transit, take out. Anything you do when youâre not at work. I also want to pay for the things you couldnât do before. Expect appointments booked for the spa, massages, hair, nails â whatever you decide. My assistant will help with that.â
âOkay,â you breathe, feeling just a little dizzy. God, when was the last time you got your nails done?
âIâll also pay for your rent. Or, if you want to move, Iâll buy you a new place. Apartment. Condo. Brownstone. Up to you. I want you feeling comfortable and safe when youâre not with me.â
Your mouth falls open to protest. Buy a brownstone? For you? The girl he just met? You crumples the paper in a reflex reaction, but he holds up a hand before you can speak.
âYou donât have to, Iâm just giving you the option. Remember, youâll never have to go out of your comfort zone with me.â
He scans your face â youâre sure youâre a shade paler than before.
âWhere do you live now?â he asks gently.
âQueens.â He smiles.
âThen Iâd at least argue for you to use my driver.â
âMakes sense,â you murmur distractedly.
The server comes over then, placing a whiskey in front of James and asking what youâd like to drink. You order a white wine, cringing when he asks if you have a preferred bottle, but James answers for you, naming a brand youâve never heard of, his eyes on you the entire time. The waiter returns a minute later with your glass, and you take a greedy sip as soon as it hits the table.
âI also like to give gifts,â James says, picking up where he left off. âThat could mean jewelry, bags, cars, vacationsââ you choke on your wine, he politely ignores it. âWhatever Iâm feeling that day.â
âOh, is that all?â you say weakly. He chuckles, genuine and soft.
âIt may change, depending on what I think youâd like. And what you tell me you like.â
âIâm picky,â you attempt to joke.
âI like a challenge.â
The air shifts subtly, youâd miss it if you werenât paying attention. He crosses his legs effortlessly at the knee, looking every bit composed while youâre pinching yourself to keep from hyperventilating.
âIdeally, youâd quit your job,â he begins slowly. âNot for me, but because you wonât need to work anymore. You donât have to if you donât want to, but youâre in school, and itâs clear you love it. I want you to be comfortable enough to focus on that. Put your time into studying. Not dealing with men like Walker.â
You huff a soft laugh because you arenât sure what else to say. Quitting your job hadnât even crossed your mind through all of this, but now that the seedâs been planted, it takes root quickly, despite the voice in your head telling you not to let it.
James must be a mind reader, because he leans forward, making sure you meet his eyes.
âIâd like to spoil you, because I think you deserve it. Not because of whatâs happened to you, but because of what youâve done since it happened,â he says, voice pulling you in with the husky lilt to it. âI think youâve earned the right to feel taken care of. It can be on your terms, of course, but trust me when I say thereâs almost nothing I wouldnât help with. Including the medical bills and the debt. Including the loans. But I will respect whatever you wish to keep separate from this.â
For a moment, youâre not sure what to say, but you end up on, âThank you, James. IâŠIâll think about it.â
He nods, businesslike. âWhat other questions do you have?â
You blink, looking down at your list. âWell, you answered a couple of them, actuallyâŠum, I guess my next question isââ You feel the heat rise to your cheeks. âWhen you say friendship, what does thatâŠinclude, exactly?â
He leans back in his seat, taking a slow sip of his drink.
âI meant what I said about being friends,â he offers, âand I meant it in the traditional sense. This isnât a âfriends with benefitsâ situation. Holding hands, a light hug, or sitting close together are all reasonable to me. But touch isnât required by you â youâre welcome to do whatever youâre comfortable with, and I wonât withhold anything from you if you arenât comfortable with it. And I wonât touch you if you donât want me to, but I will say Iâm hoping to earn that right eventually.â
Something loosens in your chest, an unnamed tension releasing.
âI understand,â you say slowly. âI think those are reasonable, too.â His eyes flicker across your face for a moment. âI appreciate you clarifying that for me. It was on my mind a lot over the last few days.â
âThatâs why weâre here,â he answers calmly. âAny more questions?â
âYes, um. How does thisâŠstart?â
The smile returns to Jamesâ face, sweet and relaxed. He waves two fingers in the air, and a server comes hurrying over with an official-looking envelope, setting it before him. James pulls out a small stack of documents and finds a pen in his suit jacket.
âIt starts with a couple signatures. These are NDAs stating you wonât talk or publish anything about our time together, and the same goes for me. Iâm held to the same principles you are. If I say a word about us to anyone without your permission, you have every right to sue me for all Iâm worth. I hope it tells you how serious I am about this.â
It actually says a hell of a lot more than just how serious it is, but heâs already shuffling the papers aside, picking up the one on the bottom.
âThis is an agreement on what Iâm allowed to pay for. Like the rent â Iâll need to know where to pay to. Thereâs also a place for your bank account information, in the case of moving large sums of money. Iâd like it wired safely and securely.â
You must show signs of panic, because he quickly tucks it away and says, âYou donât have to decide on anything today. You can add whatever you want to this as time goes on.â
Your breathing evens. He taps the pen against the stack of NDAs.
âAnything else?â he asks quietly. Your pinching grows stronger.
âAre youâŠfriendsâŠwith anyone else right now? Or is it just me?â
His lips quirk like he was expecting this question. He leans forward, elbows on the table, and holds your gaze steadily.
âJust you. And I can promise that I wonât need any other friends as long as I have you.â
Oh.
âBut youâveâŠhad other friends before. In the past.â
His eyes go blank for a moment. âYes, Iâve had other friends before. A few.â
âTheyâre not still your friends, though?â you ask.
âNo,â he answers. âThere came a point when it was time for them to explore otherâŠfriendships. Start different lives. It always ended amicably.â
You hesitate. âSo, if one day I decide I want toâŠstop being friends, that would be okay with you?â
âOf course. Iâm here as long as youâll have me. Or until we both decide itâs time.â
âOkay,â you whisper, meeting his gaze. Thereâs a roaring sound in your ears, like the ocean on a stormy night, but your hands are surprisingly steady as you reach out your hand toward him. âOkay. Can I borrow your pen?â
James smiles, the biggest smile youâve seen from him yet. He offers you the pen and the first document, pointing out where to sign and initial. You do so quickly, conscious of your climbing blood pressure, but the adrenaline leaves a sweet aftertaste as you write your name with a flourish. Or maybe itâs him, beaming at you while you sign up for this new chapter of life with him.
Once the documents are signed, he proposes a toast. âTo friendships,â he says. You clink your glass to his. âAnd, by the way, call me Bucky.â
âBucky?â you ask, eyebrows raised.
âItâs what my friends call me.â
It starts immediately.
The next morning, youâre greeted with a jungle of flowers waiting outside your apartment door. Flowers of all shapes and colors, some tropical, some simple, and all of them make you smile. Youâre placing the last of them on the counter when thereâs a knock on your door â a dozen freshly-made croissants from the Parisian cafe in Midtown. Impossible to get into, impossible to order out from, yet hereâs a box full of their best-selling pastries, still warm from the oven. You indulge in one too many, but itâs worth it.
Throughout the day, Bucky texts you. Itâs something he mentioned off-handedly, probably meant to give you a choice, but he likes to talk during the day. A lot. He likes check ins, he likes updates; he wants to hear about anything and everything.
At first, itâs odd having someone to talk to so consistently again â the last person you spoke to like this was your mom.
But Bucky keeps it unforced, easing the conversation along with the right questions and dry comments that actually have you smiling at your phone. When you get to work that night, he wishes you a good shift. No mention of you quitting. You appreciate this so much that you have half a mind to quit anyway.
Not today, you tell yourself. You need to wait to see if Bucky actually puts his money where his mouth is first.
It isnât long before he does.
Less than a week after you signed the papers, he asks you to join him for dinner on your night off. He makes the reservation early because he knows you have an exam in two days that youâre stressed over, leaving you with the rest of the evening to study. Youâre grateful for his mindfulness, but equally grateful for the distraction heâs providing. Heâs waiting outside the restaurant when Bob pulls up, offering his hand to help you out of the car.
âYou look beautiful,â he states plainly, like only an idiot would argue with him. Your answering smile is wide and uninhibited.
Inside, the two of you are seated at a booth mostly concealed from the other diners. He sits beside you, much like he did that first night, close but with enough space for you to breathe easily. He asks you about your day, he encourages you to try something strange on the menu, he compliments you again and again and again.
Your whole body is flushed from the wine and his attention by the time the desert arrives. Youâre licking chocolate syrup off the spoon, regaling a work story involving your meathead manager and another server.
âHe just chooses to ignore anything that makes us seem human to him. No emotions allowed. No personal problems allowed. You show up for your shift, you do your job, and thatâs it. Leave your life at the door, God help you if you donât.â
You sigh, your spoon clattering loudly onto the plate. Bucky fidgets with his own spoon, eyes on the corner of your mouth. He shakes his head a little, like he thought better of something, then points to the corner of his own mouth, smiling. You blush, taking the hint, and wipe a dab of chocolate away from your skin. Buckyâs still smiling as he takes another sip of his drink.
âMight be because he lacks his own personal life,â he muses. âPeople are always going to project what hurts them.â
You consider this. âNow that you say it, I donât think Iâve ever seen him take a day off.â
âThat can do some fucked up things to a person.â
âTell me about it,â you whine. âI havenât taken a day off in months.â
His eyes slide lazily to you, glass held loosely in his hand. He smiles wryly, and you understand what he means before he says a word.
âI know, I know. I justâŠâ You take a breath. âI need to know this is real first. Before I start cutting ties.â
Heâs quiet for a moment. âTomorrowâs the first of the month,â he says. âHave you thought more about allowing me to help with your rent?â
Your breath hitches.
âYes,â you whisper. He hums, eyes sparkling with something bright and ambiguous.
âAnd what have you decided?â
âI thinkâŠit would be a show of good faithâŠif you helped me out.â
âGood faith,â he laughs. âSweetheart, Iâll buy you the moon if it means youâll believe me when I say Iâll take care of you.â
The next morning, you get the email at 9 a.m. â your rent has been paid, utilities as well. Your stomach had been in knots when you wrote down the information for him, but seeing the confirmation makes you feel like youâre floating.
It only takes you another week until youâre calling your manager and quitting. To celebrate, Bucky rents out the Met for the night, and you explore and observe and admire to your heartâs content as he stands quietly and steadily by your side. He knows an impressive amount about art, surprisingly, but then he starts making things up when a specific piece stumps him, and the rest of the unguided tour is spent inventing made-up artists and their tragic backstories. By the end of the night, you canât resist anymore. You quickly lean in and wrap your arms around his waist.
Itâs clear heâs shocked, that youâve caught him off guard. But he recovers quickly, mirroring your grip and resting his cheek on top of your head. Itâs strange, itâs new, but itâsâŠcomforting.
Quitting your job means a lot more free time, but Bucky is adamant about you dedicating much of that time for school. So to keep a balance between time spent studying and time spent with him, Bucky proposes you come by his office between classes. Sometimes for lunch, sometimes to take a break, sometimes to set up camp on his leather couch, nose to your laptop screen as you research data sets and monitor the market while he quietly works at his desk.
Itâs calming and oddly motivating â heâs the perfect person to work next to.
When youâre not studying, Buckyâs supplying you with appointments that fill up your calendar. You have a new contact saved in your phone â Inga, Buckyâs very Dutch, very cheerful assistant â because she calls you at least twice a day, arranging your schedule and finding time you didnât know existed to fill.
A certain Thursday brings a yoga class from 7:45 to 9, then a massage from 10 to 11:30. After that is lunch with Bucky at his office (take out sushi from a place youâve only ever dreamed of going to), followed up by a nail appointment from 2 to 3 and a virtual meeting from 3:30 to 4:30 with your old therapist that you had to abandon when money got tight.
Once you get past the catch up, your therapist says you seem a lot better than you were the last time you saw her. Crazy concept, to agree with a therapist, but you actually do.
Youâre about a month into the arrangement when Bucky clears his throat at dinner, making you pause while twirling your pasta on your fork. Youâve slowly graduated to sitting closer, and his arm rests on the back of the booth behind you, its presence warm and obvious around your shoulders. You look up at him, waiting.
âIâve got this thing tomorrow night,â he begins, voice a little on the gruff side. Youâre shocked to realize heâs being shy, and poorly hiding it. âItâs a gala. The black tie kind. Itâs for charity â Childrenâs, I think. If youâre up for it, I was wondering if youâd like to come with me.â
You smile slowly. âIâd love to. Just need something to wear.â
A stack of hundred dollar bills is on the table in seconds. Inga accompanies you the following morning to ten different stores, all designer, all with prices that make you feel faint, but she is quick to shoo you away from the price tags and push you to try on the dresses that make you sigh dreamily. Maybe thatâs the reason Bucky wanted her with you.
You pick something bold, something youâd never see yourself in unless you had it on your body. It fits like a glove and reminds you that youâre a woman, not just a cog in the wheel of the working class. You only panic a little when you hand over the entire wad of cash Bucky gave you.
After that, youâre dropped off at the salon, where a facial and a blowout get you glowing like the sun. Bob picks you up and brings you to your apartment where your dress is waiting for you, courtesy of Inga. At 9 oâclock, Buckyâs waiting for you outside. The late September breeze ruffles his hair and swishes your dress as you come face-to-face.
He takes in every inch of you, from your painted toe nails to your shiny hair, and he sighs.
âYou lookâŠunbelievable.â
Later, when youâre buried deep into a crowd of people you donât know, Buckyâs anchoring you to him with a hand on the small of your back, thumb brushing the skin there. He leans in, nose nudging your temple, and whispers, âIâm very lucky to have you here with me.â
Just like that, something inside of you breaks. Not in a sad way, but in a revolutionary way. Like a floodgateâs been cracked open, and whatâs been locked inside is beginning to trickle out.
When he pulls back, your eyes linger on him. He flashes a movie star smile for the people that approach, but when he meets your gaze again, he gives you his crooked grin. Meant only for you. His warm hand pulls you closer into his side.
And thatâs when it begins, right there at that gala. Your appreciation for Bucky has opened up into something larger, still undefinable, but growing in magnitude.
You find yourself sweating under the lights of the ballroom, not from the heat, but from the unknown shift. It shapes itself a little more when Bucky runs into a colleague and introduces you as his friend. Heâs been doing it all night, but this time, it doesnât feel right. It feelsâŠoff. Generalized. Misplaced.
Not that youâd ever tell him. Bucky was clear about your arrangement being a friendship â to question what he calls you would be to question where you stand, and you donât want to make it seem like you canât hold up your end of the bargain as his friend.
So you smile through it, focusing on the feel of his hand on your skin, and push it down. For now.
Youâre a couple months into the arrangement when Bucky opens his home to you. Itâs a penthouse suite hundreds of feet in the sky, offering breathtaking views of the city sprawled below. The apartment is big and modern, with plenty of low lighting and soft colors. You find out right away that heâs messy, which you think is more endearing than it is a nuisance, even if that means throwing sweatshirts and belts and books off the couch just to find a place to sit.
He apologizes constantly, but it never gets better each time you come over. You donât mind.
With classes gearing up for finals, your time is more limited than before, leaving you with just a few windows of opportunity a week to be with each other. Most of these fall late at night, past 10 p.m., or early in the morning before he leaves for work.
So you start staying over.
It happens accidentally the first time. He picks you up and takes you back to his place for Chinese take out and binge watching trashy reality TV (of which he is a secret super fan), but you end up passing out minutes after he turns the show on.
The next morning, you wake in a soft bed, surrounded by oversized pillows and silk sheets. Bleary eyed, you stumble into the kitchen to find him dressed for work, sipping a coffee at the kitchen island and scrolling on his phone. He sets both of them down when he sees you, standing as you shuffle over.
âMorning,â he says, stretching out a hand to catch your sweatshirt clad waist.
This is par for the course these days â soft, grounding touches that donât linger for too long, cuddles on the couch that donât get too pretzel-like, barely-there kisses against the forehead when you say something that makes him smile a little too hard. All friendly, all innocent.
âDid I â did I crash?â you ask, suppressing a yawn. He chuckles, offering you his coffee.
âDidnât even make it to the elimination. Steve R. went home.â
âFuck, I liked him.â
âMe too.â
You look up at him, suddenly shy. âIâm sorry. Thanks for carrying me to bed.â
âOnly threw out my back for it. No worries.â
You slap away his hand on your waist, but itâs teasing, playful. He withdraws, taking a seat again so youâre eye level with him. A look takes over his face, something caught between serious and hopeful.
âYou know, that room can be yours, if youâd like.â
You pause mid sip of coffee. âWhat?â
âThe room. Itâs yours. For when you want to crash. Or just donât want to go home.â
âReally.â Itâs not a question.
âReally,â he repeats. âDonât ever feel like you have to stay, Iâll take you home any time of night. But if you do want to stay, itâs there for you.â
âThatâsâŠreally sweet of you.â
He smiles a little. âNot too much?â You shake your head. âGood. âCause I like knowing youâre close. Think I slept better. And I like waking up with you here.â
The feeling from the gala returns with renewed force. It almost drowns you, leaving you reeling in its tidal wave of emotion. It defines itself a little more as you picture sharing mornings with him, pouring travel mugs of coffee and shoving pieces of toast in his mouth as he races out the door.
But heâs watching you closely, expecting an answer, so you beat the feelings down until youâre numb. Sending him a smile over the mug, you say, âOkay.â
And thatâs that.
The first time you sleep over intentionally, Buckyâs not in a great mood. Which is a rare occasion in and of itself. You know heâs only human, but youâve barely seen him annoyed, let alone upset.
He makes an effort to hide it from you, greeting you with a soft kiss to the top of your head when you step out of the private elevator that opens to his floor. He all but forces you to relax on the couch while he cooks dinner, so you do, cracking open your textbook and stretching out lazily while he cooks. But even from the living room, you can feel the negative energy radiating from him.
He throws pans into the sink with a little too much force. He answers a call with a sharp bark of âwhat now?â He mutters to himself like a cranky old man.
His face is drawn and stony when he hands you a plate and joins you on the couch â pasta with red sauce, simple, and a family recipe, he claims. But the way he eats it, youâd think he hates it.
âBucky,â you say after watching him stab his food with homicidal intent. He grunts. âBucky,â you try again.
âWhat?â he snaps, sneering. Immediately, his eyes go round with guilt before you even have the chance to react. âOh, God â Iâm sorry. Iâm so sorry. I didnât meanââ He pinches the bridge of his nose, breathing deeply; when he opens his eyes again, his expression is calmer, more open. âJesus. You didnât deserve that. Forgive me.â
âAlways,â you say like itâs second nature. âWhatâs going on?â
He sighs, setting down his plate. âWork,â he mutters, âis killing me. Someone fucked up a deal with a really, really important client. They arenât happy, so I had to step in to clean up the mess. But now theyâre playing hard to get, so all day I had to suck their dicks and call them pretty just to get a reply.â
You giggle. He tilts his head at you.
âYou think thatâs funny?â
âA little. But I canât imagine anyone not getting on their knees for you immediately.â
Something flashes in Buckyâs eyes, something darker that doesnât fit the conversation topic. Itâs quick, brief, but you see it. He smiles before you can think twice about it.
âNot these guys. They like to test me. And I donât like being tested.â
âI can tell,â you comment. âWant me to help?â
He side-eyes you. âHow?â
âYou can take all your anger out byâŠrubbing my feet?â Your smile is saccharine as you slide your legs into his lap. He laughs, one loud sound, but takes your left foot in his hands anyway.
âHow sweet of you,â he coos. âHowâd you know this is exactly what I needed?â
His mood improves for the most part, although his phone buzzes a few times and sets his jaw ticking. But whether itâs to keep him sane or to keep the easy vibe of the night going, he ignores it. Reality TV is watched, cookies are eaten (he has five), and youâre feeling satisfied for having turned his night around just as you start to yawn.
He notices it immediately.
âAlright, doll. Youâre tired. Iâm taking you home.â
âI might stay here tonight, if thatâs okay with you.â
He freezes as he reaches for his keys. Slowly, his arm lowers, and thereâs a slightly dazed look in his eye.
âSure, yeah. Whatever you want,â he breathes.
He sets you up with a tooth brush and towels, an old shirt of his and boxers. While youâre brushing your teeth, you wander over to his bathroom and find him doing the same. You stand beside him, laughing through the toothpaste as he gets his all over his mouth and chin. Unintentionally, though heâll deny it.
He walks you to your room like heâs dropping you off at the end of date. You try not to think too much about that.
âSleep tight,â he says softly, leaning against the doorway, smiling at the too-big shirt and boxers. You smile back, sleepy and content.
âGoodnight, Bucky.â
Heâs gone before you wake up the next morning, but the note on the counter thanks you for being there with him last night. It makes your heart flutter much too fast for having just started your day.
When you get back to your own apartment, your phone alerts you to a new email. The name on it makes your stomach sink: the debt collectors. Theyâve been quiet for a while since youâve been able to offer them bigger scraps of money, so what do they want now?
Thank you for your payment. Your bills have been reconciled and your current balance is at $0.00.
The room tilts. Your breathing stops. Hundreds of thousands of dollars of medical bills, gone overnight.
Bucky.
It was only a week ago that you had shyly asked to amend the document on what he could help pay for. You werenât even sure that he looked at it yet.
Well, now you know he has. And in one fell swoop, he banned the debt collectors from ever bothering you again. Your mind can hardly wrap around it, can hardly wrap around Bucky, and his generosity, and his promises, and his follow through. All of it is a murky, muddy emotional mess inside of you. For the first time in months, you break down and cry.
Later that night, when the tears have finally dried and youâre sitting next to him at your favorite little Italian spot, you place a hand over his and just squeeze. You meant to say words, but theyâve disappeared on you.
But Bucky doesnât need the words. He knows everything that youâre saying with the simple touch. He squeezes back, smile soft, posture relaxed as he nudges your shoulder with his.
The floodgate inside of you swings open wider.
sammy speaks again: wowowowowow ok thatâs a wrap on part one. part two coming almost immediately! I tried to fit it all into one but tumblr doesnât like 30k word posts I guess :/ donât forget to let me know what you think, I appreciate all of you for making it this far đ€