Summary: Steve takes you to an abandoned house during Halloween night for a ‘date’. What happens there is hard for you to believe…
Warnings: none
Words: 1037
Author:Rouge
A/N: this little oneshot was written for @loki-the-fox writing challenge. Thank you for the opportunity ☺
Against the dark night sky all Steve could see was the crumbling walls that were nothing more than a ghostly silhouette of some previous existence. The wind whistled through the trees.
”Did you hear that? Let’s go see what that was,” he offered, glaring at you above his shoulder.
You shuddered as you pulled your coat tighter around your waist.
The fading of the sunlight had also meant the fading of the heat. Wintry air swirled around both of you, taking every lick of warmth it could.
“I am not sure, Steve, I don’t feel good here,” you claimed quietly, tucking your chin downward into your pullover.
“Shush,” he put his finger to his lips, humming softly. “I’m here with ya. You’re gonna be alright, come on,” Steve reached his hand out to you, a little smile appeared on his bearded face.
You sighed loudly but took a hold of his palm and let him to lead you in. You didn’t like the idea at all but you loved Steve and it was cute from his side that he was trying so hard to impress you. The idea of a trip to an abandoned house during Halloween night was, however, not your thing. You’ve agreed on his idea mostly because you didn’t want to make him sad. You knew that he put a lot of effort to prepare something. Besides, it was something new. You trusted him fully, in the end he was your boyfriend. Part of you still was afraid of what was about to come but you took a deep breath and followed him inside.
Both of you were exploring the house for almost an hour.
Dust was over every surface like dirty snow.
Thankfully, Steve has taken the flashlight with him so you didn’t have to blunder through the complete darkness.
The floors had been a highly polished parquet, individual blocks lovingly placed and sanded to a smooth finish before the varnish was brushed on with fine bristles. The walls stood firm, the window frames strong, glass triple glazed and whole. All in all, it looked like a movie-set, a place waiting for life to come. The only give-away was the odour, well, that and the dust. It was musty and dry, but nothing opening the doors and windows couldn’t solve.
You both passed by cracked windows and mouldy, browned wooden walls with water stains painting as scars upon skin. You and Steve stopped when you came to a collapsed doorway. Wooden planks barred you from entering, still there from when the northern side of the house had fallen on itself.
You approached, peering through the slats, the light streaming in. It looked just like the rest: quaint in size, aging, and creepy. But what was ‘abnormal’, there was a little table in the middle of the room with a tiny ornate music box on its counter.
You glared back at Steve and he nodded softly, moving beam a bit to wider the slat for you to slither in. “Don’t hesitate, Y/N. It’s safe to get in, I guarantee,” man assured you softly.
With a quiet whimper you got into the room and waited politely at Steve to join you.
As he did, you both heard some not nice cracking a floor above and you held your breath back.
“What was that, Steve?” You whispered, instinctively grabbing a hem of his flannel shirt, tugging on it and pulling closer to him.
“Shush, Y/N. The house is old, it’s going rotten everywhere. It was just a wood, shush,” he explained calmly, stroking over your shoulder.
You mumbled something under your breath and you simply nuzzled to his wide chest, you shivered as you did.
“Hmmm? What’s that, Y/N? Don’t be afraid, it’s okay, I’m here. I won’t let anything bad happen to you.”
You could feel Steve smiling and you relaxed in his string arms a bit. Indeed, you felt securely when he was right next to you.
You glanced back at the music box.
“How is it not devastated like rest of the house? Only the music box is in a good condition. Interesting…” You muttered rubbing your chin with a thumb.
Steve let you out of his arms and gently pushed you ahead. “Instead of talking, go and check why is that,” Steve suggested lightly and you frowned a bit.
Was it some kind of a trap?
You looked around the room in an attempt to look for any hidden camera but there was nothing.
As slowly as it was possible, you approached the old table and took the music box in your hands. You turned around to Steve, and within a second he was standing in front of you. Rogers took the box out of your hands and looked down at you as he was towering over your figure.
“Steve…?” You asked, cocking brow up and tilting your head a bit. “What’s that, Steve?”
He only smiled at you, showing his beautiful teeth as he went down on his knee slowly, and it was when you simply knew what was about to happen.
“Steve…?” You asked again but he kept smiling only.
Steve opened the box and you saw a beautiful ring with a sapphire. You slowly put your palm to your mouth, you felt like you would collapse.
“Will you marry me, Y/N?” He asked softly.
The air was so brittle it could snap. But you took a step closer to him, nodding. “I do, Steve.” This time you spoke firmly, so sure of your own words. “I do.”
You let him put the ring on your ring finger, and when he stand up again, you simply jumped into his arms. “I love you so fucking much, Rogers,” you whispered between kisses you were placing everywhere you could reach.
He giggled happily, wrapping his muscular arms around your waist and nuzzling his bearded face into your shoulder. “I do love you too, honey-boo,” he claimed. “But, language!” He laughed harder, ruffling your bangs.
“Oh, c’mon, Steve! I’ve used THIS word to emphasise how much I love you, Cap,” you explained yourself and grabbed his palm. “Can we go back home now? I would rather not be killed in some abandoned house.”
You’re being saved from
death by Captain America himself. Is this a beginning of a serious
relationship?
Author: Ailo
Cold. Everything is cold, and glow in a weird light.
You feel hands on your back, warmth seeping out from them and right into your shirt.
“Hang on.”
You can’t make out the last words, everything is a blur and your head, your head hurts like that one morning after you drank yourself under the table. Your whole body is shaken by shivers, you can’t seem to be able to stop shivering, even when you try to take deep breaths to settle your shoulders.
So cold…
You’re being lifted up. You know because your vision suddenly swarms, and you feel nauseous. “Stop that…” you say weekly to the one responsible for your sudden unwelcome state.
You’re resting against something hard, bulky, warm, that beats in rhythm… You realize you’re being carried bride-style, the person’s arms you were in on your back and under your knees. You snuggle into the warmth, burrowing your face and the cold tip of your nose in the person’s neck. The one carrying you takes a sudden breath, heart-beat accelerating slightly against your side for a moment before returning back to its normal, steady beating. You don’t speak. Neither does the other, who just walks. Walks where exactly ? You can’t recall a destination being set, just being picked up and carried away.. and not in Disney princess style, as you can’t seem to be able to muster enough strength to open your tired eyes.
Somewhere along the way, the other’s body heat having warmed you up during the walk, you fall asleep, gripping the person’s shirt tightly into your hands, like a man at sea would a life line. And you fall, fall slowly into slumber, the steady beating of the heart acting like a lullaby, the steady and regular pace of the other rocking you to sleep.
And then everything turns to hell. You’re being put down to rest against a tree, the sound of gunshots ringing in your head. “Don’t worry” says a voice. You open your eyes, trying to get a glance of the person who you know has been taking care of you. “Everything is going to be all right… I’ll come find you after I get them off of our backs…” You can’t even nod, can’t even voice your acknowledgment to the person. You try harder to get your sight to focus and put a face on the voice. A man. That you can make out of the blur. The voice is that of a man. Yellow… a blond, then. His hair are disheveled… And then, out of nowhere, two blue orbs pop out. A blond with blue eyes then. A pretty shade of blue, at that, the color not cold but warm and making you want to trust those eyes… A smile, trying to hide the worry and the marks of fatigue on the man’s face.
“I promise I’ll be back soon.”
And then, nothing. He disappears from your vision. You can see the grey sky, heavy clouds announcing rain… It’s pretty, standing against the luscious green of the trees around you… Gunshots again. Yells. The sound of hand to hand combat. Bullets resonating against something metallic…
You hope your blue eyed savior is alright.
The gunshots stop.
You start counting… 1 Mississippi, 2 Mississippi, 3 Mississippi… You lose count after 13, when the first drops of rain fall down onto your face.
Suddenly he is here again. Takes you back into his arms. “Miss me ?” he asks jokingly. “We’ll be safe soon.”
You don’t care. Now you know you’ll be alright. You close your eyes, let out a content sigh and bury your nose in the man’s neck once more, drifting back to sleep, only this time completely letting go…
You hear a door opening and closing seconds later. You feel good… you’re on something soft… a mattress… You’re warm again, your head doesn’t hurt as much as before…
There is a weight on your right hand.
You open your eyes slowly, letting them adjust to the sunlight peaking through the curtains… You are faced by a wall. A white one.
A hospital then.
You turn your gaze to the right. The blond man is here, hands over your smaller one, head resting upon his arms.
Has he been here since you were brought in?
He looks cute, with his hair still a mess. You move your left hand you put it in his hair. He wakes up, startled by the contact. Now that you can see his face, all disoriented from waking up, you decide he is even cuter. No… handsome is more the appropriate word. He his handsome.
“Hi.”
“Hello.”
You smile. He takes both your hands in his larger ones, gripping them tightly.
“How are you?” he asks, looking you straight into the eyes. “Better than before. Thank you for saving me..”
God, how cheesy you must sound.
Even to you it sounds like a line from the romantic comedies you used to watch with your friends in high-school. You’re cut in your train of thought, when you notice him blushing.
“What about you? How are you?” “Fine.” he says, shrugging. “Did you eat?” “Yes, I had the nurse bring me a tray earlier…” “Why didn’t you leave?” you frown a bit. “Sorry?” he looks taken-aback. “Why are you still here?” you ask again.
You mentally hit yourself for your choice of words as soon as you see his expression change, he now looks lost, like a puppy who had just been kicked by its owner.
“I can leave if…” he tries to rise from his seat, hesitating. “I didn’t mean it like that, I just… I don’t understand why you’d choose to stay here while we don’t know each other.”
Fuck, you cursed in your thoughts. You are kinda pitiless to him now. And that man has saved your life..
He stiffens. “I… I don’t know… you just… I wanted to make sure…” “It’s alright.” You say softly, getting one your hands out from his grasp. You slowly put it on his cheek. “Thank you.”
It’s his turn to smile now. And that smile is the cutest thing you’ve ever seen.
From the moment, I first saw you, knew my heart could not be free, man’s heart skips a beat, when those thoughts forms deep in his mind as he observes you carefully with his blue eyes. I couldn’t left you there to die.
He remains silent however for a second.
“I’ve never asked you for your name..” blonde man esquires.
“Y/N” you say simply. “And does my savior has a name though?” you ask quietly, breaking the silence.
“Of course” he scoffs, blue eyes lighting up his face. “Steve. Steve Rogers.”
Bucky and Steve and their first time with smartphone
Request by: Anonymous
Author: Cass and Beast.
It was a day like many else before. Bucky,
sitting on the couch at the Avengers’ Tower, was playing with a little object
in his hands.
Steve walked to him and looked at lil
object. “Is it Stark’s phone, Bucky? I think he told you to not touch his
stuff.” Steve muttered and sat next to his friend.
“Yeaaah, I’ve heard all this before,
pal” Bucky shrugged slightly, moving one of his metal fingers over the
screen. “I like to make him mad. Besides. It’s only a piece of metal and
glass.”
“A piece of metal and glass that is
really important for him, just like for everyone in these days.” Steve
only shrugged. “I have no idea what interesting is in those smartphone or
whatever… In our times we didn’t have stuff like this.” He muttered.
“Heh” Bucky rolled his eyes.
“That dude can’t spend even 5 minutes without this device. I’m curious
what he would do if I would hide it somewhere…” Bucky giggled under his
breath. “Our century was much different, Steve. Maybe harder, but
better.”
“One day he will kick you out of here.
You are cruel for him. Father’s day and Stark gets a cup from you.. With words
"I love my dad” and you HAD to add “Sorry Tony” using
permanent marker.“ Steve rolled his eyes and looked at his friend.
"What are you doing there?” He said and slowly looked at phone.
“Oh, c’mon Stevie!” Bucky poked
Steve’s leg. “I just wanna see his reaction” brunette got up and
looked around. “Maybe here…” he approached the bookshelf and when
he tried to put phone behind books, he accidentally unlocked the screen.
“Fuck!”
“Hey, hey!” with flash hand he
carefully moved his finger along the screen. “The fuck is that, Steve?
I’ve never seen something like that before..”
“It’s just a phone Bucky. I saw how
Tony uses it, he just moves his fingers and touches it and the phone do
whatever he wants.”
“Lemma try this” Bucky, without a
blink, started to click each of the icons on the screen. “Oh.. How many
numbers… Mom.. Mostly to women. Precious informations” Bucky chuckled
darkly.
Steve gently smacked Bucky in the back of
his head. “Remember that those numbers can be also important for
him.” He said. “Maybe try to touch the other… lil picture on this
phone.” Steve said, he couldn’t help said he became a bit curious.
Bucky looked at his pal. “Really,
man?” he rolled his eyes annoyed. But he followed Steve’s advice and he
touched another icon. “Shit, man, I’ve just started recording…
Wait!” Bucky raised his hand with the phone in it. “Hi, Tony! Don’t
worry, your phone is a good hands!” Bucky waved to the camera.
“Just don’t kick him out Tony, please.
Turn it off back. Now” Steve muttered. “Gimme that.” Steve took
the phone and returned to the couch. “What else can be here..?” Man
said and looked at his friend.
Bucky eagerly followed his friend and
jumped on the couch. “Hey, I wanna see too!”
“Stark is gonna kill us pal.”
Steve smiled softly and opened phone’s gallery. “Oh… look at that,
photos… and there is our video… shell we look at all photos?”
“Are ya kidding me, Steve?!”
Bucky blinked. “Sure! We have to!” Bucky wrapped his metal arm around
Steve’s shoulders to see phone better.
Steve laughed shortly. “Sooo…”
He started look trough photos. “So… there is Pepper… Rhodey in
hospital… This new kid, Parker, and of course… photos with many different
women… Now you Buck.” Steve said and gave phone back to his friend.
“Pepper would be soooo mad” Bucky
pretended to be sad. “Well.. Wait.. I recognize that funny thing looking
like a bird.” Bucky clicked the icon and entered Stark’s twitter.
“You aren’t good in pretending.”
Steve shook his head and moved closer to Bucky. “What is it, pal?”
“Once I saw how Stark was.. How he
said.. Was updating his status on.. Twitter thing… Or something like
that..”
Steve only shook his head. “I think
I’m too old for this, Buck.”
“Me too… But..” Bucky managed
to use the keyboard.
STEVE & BUCKY WERE THERE. XOXO
After writing he presses on the “post
it” button. “Done.”
Steve laughed. “Soo! What now? Maybe
he has some music here? I’m wonder what is he listening to.”
Bucky tried to click another icon, but
somehow he clasped the device in his metal hand and he crushed it. “Fuck
me.”
Steve blinked. “Yea! I told you.”
He frowned. “What now?”
“PAAAARKEEEEERRR!” Bucky yelled
loudly.
“Really, Buck. What he’s gonna do? He
is just a kid.” Steve muttered looking at his friend.
“PARKER, move your lazy ass
here!!!” Bucky yelled again.
“What WHAT! What?! Aliens? Thanos? or
something else what is very evil?!” Peter jumped into room really
surprised and confused.
“Catch it, kid!!” Bucky threw
crushed phone at Parker’s direction.
“Woohoo! Wait! This is Mr. Stark’s phone…
What have you done?“ He asked. Steve shrugged. "His fault.” He
pointed at Bucky.
“Traitor” Bucky poked Steve’s
shoulder. “I accidentally broked this. But.. Now you are holding this..
So.. None of my fault” he giggled.
“Um…” Peter looked at Bucky
even more confused.
Steve sighed deeply. “Bucky, he is
just a kid. You can’t treat him like this.”
Man slowly got up and walked to Peter, he took the phone from him. “Go to
your room. I will take care of this.”
Peter slowly nodded and quickly left the
room.
~Few hours later~
"My phone… Where did I left it?” Tony muttered to himself, looking into
every place where he could possibly left his phone.
Kitchen -no.
Bathroom – no.
living room – no.
Bedroom – no.
"F.R.I.D.A.Y, do you know where my phone is?! If not, can you locate it
for me?” He muttered deeply annoyed.
“I can’t do that Mr. Stark, but I want to inform you that Steve Rogers
left something in your office.”
Tony rolled his eyes and quickly went to his office.
He saw something on his desk, he also saw small note.
Tony walked closer and saw that this ‘something’ was his phone. Crushed.
He looked at the note.
"Hey, Tony… Your phone had small accident… Bucky is sorry. –
Steve”
Tony could felt how anger was growing inside him.
“BARNES! I TOLD YOU SOMETHING ABOUT
TOUCHING MY STUFF!”
Habit and impulse were so easy to fall
back on, thinking being a costly and dangerous liability. The Asset had learned
that early on, it having been forced into his program, carved into his skin
among the patchwork of scars so it became a part of him. This time, however,
this time it was different. This time when he
woke up on that familiar cold table, seeing white-coated techs hovering over
him and his wounds like vultures, he didn’t feel the programming trying to lull
him into docility. Oh no, this time a latent instinct, old and raw and
powerful, bubbled through the cracks in HYDRA’s conditioning and screamed in
his subconscious, spurring him to act.
Fight.
Find.
Protect.
A snarl worthy of a predator tore its way
out of his throat as he shoved the nearest tech away, the force of it throwing
him clear into the opposite wall. The rest of them scattered like insects,
shouting in varied languages as he pulled himself into a sitting position,
glaring at them from behind the mess of his hair. A half-dozen IVs were laced
into his veins, a likely but ultimately unsuccessful attempt to keep him
asleep. The stiffness along his shoulder told him they had likely closed the
sniper’s wound, and he quickly realized his dislocated joint had been pushed
back into place and immobilized with thick medical tape. They’d replaced his
blood-soaked shirt with a dark grey one, and as if to mock him, it bore the
SHIELD logo embossed in shiny blue thread over his heart.
“где.”
The soldier demanded, forcing himself to his feet, the drip-lines tugged free
of his arms. The HYDRA agents and techs skittered in panic, yowling like
panicked animals in a hunter’s trap. When he didn’t get a response did he bark
the word out again, this time in English. “Where.” If he wasn’t told,
he wouldn’t hesitate to tear the place to shreds to find out. Before any of the
cowardly technicians could answer, however, several HYDRA agents in full combat
gear poured into the room, armed to the teeth.
One moved too close, holding a syringe,
and the assassin lunged without hesitation. His metal arm felt sluggish and
heavy, having been in the middle of being repaired when he woke, but that
didn’t hinder his deadliness any as he swung with all the force he could muster
at the man’s jaw. A grim sort of smirk appeared on his features, feeling bone
crack and give under his fist, the soldier dropping into a crumpled heap at his
feet. He crushed the dropped syringe under his boot, the sound of the glass
shattering morbidly satisfying.
Something was shouted in a language he
couldn’t catch, but he didn’t give the soldiers the luxury of time to
coordinate themselves. A scalpel, lifted from the near table that held the
medical supplies, in his capable hands slit the throat of one of the agents
before he even realized what had happened, the bleeding man roughly kicked away
into another soldier. Another’s throat was caught in his metal fingers when he
went to prod him with a stunstick, the vertebra crunching loudly with a single
squeeze. The body was casually tossed aside, a mere afterthought. Chaos
erupted, which was exactly what the Asset had wanted, as he was able to easily
dispatch agent after agent, until in the confusion he was able to slip out into
the hall. He slammed the door shut behind him, bending the metal frame enough
that the soldiers inside weren’t getting out anytime soon.
Alarms began to blare, and he knew he
didn’t have much time. He needed to find where they were keeping Steve, needed
to find out if he was alive, needed to get him out. The
layout of the building was familiar, and he soon found himself tracing mental
maps that he couldn’t consciously remember. Identical doors in identical halls,
yet somehow he knew the way, ending up in a neglected corner of whatever
backwater HYDRA base this was. Detention level. He knew these
rooms all too well. Broken memories of conditioning, of training and discipline
flashed through his mind. It was enough to sour his stomach.
Only one of the rooms had light filtering
through the dingy door window, and he just knew that had to be where they were
keeping Steve. The door was thick steel, reinforced and heavy and bolted with
more locks than he cared to count. It could have been made of vibranium and it
wouldn’t have been enough to keep him out. The Asset tore through the locks he could,
picking the others he couldn’t, using every skill in his considerable arsenal
but his patience only lasted so long. Normally he could wait for days, one of a
sniper’s greatest attributes, but this was Steve and he needed inside now.
The sound of metal rending and groaning
filled the level, the soldier slamming his metallic fist into the door over and
over, bending and deforming the surface bit by bit. The servos and artificial
tendons in his arm screamed in protest but he scarcely cared, eventually making
a dent deep enough he could get his fingers inside the stop. He braced himself
and pulled with all his weight, the fatigued and aged metal shredding in his
hand. That just fed his ambition, and soon enough he was tearing through the
door with both hands, unfeeling to the shards that sliced through his flesh and
bone hand, and to the hot slickness of blood as it poured from his palm.
Desperation was beginning to claw at his
mind. He knew agents would find out where he was soon enough, and he couldn’t let
them take him away. Not before he knew if Steve was still alive. Standing back,
the assassin kicked the door with every ounce of strength he had. The metal
gave way with a great resounding shudder, the hinges failing and door swinging
open violently. He was inside before the door even had the chance to hit the
wall when it swung wide.
Relief isn’t anywhere near strong enough a
word to convey the emotion the soldier felt when he saw Steve, battered and
broken and still as he was, breathing and alive. At his side in an instant, the
assassin assessed the Captain’s condition and wounds within moments. The man
was unconscious, the worst of his wounds hidden under layers and layers of
pink-tinged gauze. Smaller injuries had been ignored, his skin was pallor and
in some distant part of his mind the soldier recognized this. Recognized a tiny
kid with a rattling cough and pale skin who always scared him half to death
with the fact that he might not make it through winter.
Medical supplies still covered the table
to the side of the cot he was placed on, and without a second thought or any
concern for being captured, the former Soviet started to pick through the
contents. He wrapped a quick bandage around the cuts to his hand to stem the
bleeding, not wanting to risk getting it on Steve when who knew what had been
pumped into his system. Clean gauze was soaked in disinfectant, the excess
wrung out before it was pressed to a shallow cut that burned an angry red
across the Captain’s cheek. The serum had already begun healing his body, the
wound already mostly closed, but for some reason he found himself fussing over
it regardless.
The soldier hadn’t patched anyone up save
himself for decades. He remembered, very dimly, bandaging someone with crimson
hair that glowed like a dying fire, but the memory was so hazy and distorted
that it might as well have been a dream. He was used to sewing himself up, to
prying bullets out of his body and mending jagged pieces of flesh back
together. As a result, delicateness was not something he was intimately
familiar with, yet it seemed his body remembered better than his brain, as he
cleaned the man’s wounds with an unfamiliar tender gentleness.
A crackle of memory fizzled in his mind,
of him sitting in a muddy, snow-filled trench, tearing a scarf free of his neck
and brandishing it as if to threaten some other person. He dimly recalled
blood, from a wound of some kind to the arm of someone dressed in blue, and
angrily muttering something about not signing up to be a mother as he wrapped his
scarf around the limb. He remembered laughter from people he didn’t know, or
couldn’t remember, and being called a jerk. The memory faded as quickly as it
appeared, and within a second of its passing it was all but forgotten in favor
of focusing on the task at hand.
“Well, seems like the dosage of
sedative we gave you was a bit off.” A calm voice suddenly broke the
silence, the assassin’s muscles seizing up in remembered fear as familiarity
crashed over him like a wave. He didn’t move for a long moment, bloody fingers
hovering over another cut to the Avenger’s chin, as if his stillness could be
taken as a sign of submission.
There was an amused hum from behind him,
one that faded into a dark, twisted sort of laugh. “At attention,
воин.” The order was issued sternly, and the soldier found himself turning
around to face the man, posture stiff with unease and the beginnings of fear.
The man, he knew him, the name Aiden provided by the bits of memory that
survived each successive wipe. A crooked grin spread across the General’s face
and it caused the Asset’s stomach to churn.
“They warned me that you were far
more… damaged than we would have liked.” Black spoke
with all the casualness as if they were merely speaking about the weather,
“It would have been easier just to put you down, but since we have Captain
America in addition to our Winter Soldier…” he trailed off, malevolent
smile spreading further across his face as he approached with a proud air to
his movements. Once he was close enough, the suited man regarded him with all
the affection one might have for a fine weapon, eyes appraising but cold and
calculating, seeking only value.
“Why, I think what’s left of SHIELD
would do just about anything to get their hands on him, and you as well. Oh,
the secrets they think you have… they’d do anything to wring them out of you,
воин, but I’m never going to let that happen, don’t you worry.” The acidic
sweetness to his voice made the soldier’s blood run as cold as the river that
haunted his nightmares. It was a tone all too familiar, yet for what felt like
lifetimes that tone had been the closest semblance to kindness he’d ever
experienced, and he’d latched onto it desperately. Now it made him sick.
Aiden brushed past him, leaning over the
cot to look at the Captain’s wounds. One of his hands reached out, and the
soldier let out a growl that faded into a whine at the glare he received. The
man’s hand remained raised with a hint of threatening intent, and the assassin
felt his muscles tense in the expectation of a blow. His programming might have
degraded greatly due to being so long out of cryostasis, but enough of the
framework was intact for him to not attack the man or outwardly resist his
commands. He could only watch as he withdrew his hand, walking back towards the
shattered door, his back to him.
“I see you have some… attachment
to the Captain.” The General’s tone held the slightest hint of bitterness,
something he knew was very dangerous, “That will not be tolerated.
However…” his voice went quiet, that knowing smirk once again firmly
planted on his features as he spun on his heel to face the soldier, “If
you cooperate and let us fix all that damage Captain Rogers and his SHIELD
allies have done to your mind, we might let him live. If you don’t have any
more of those outbursts, we might even let you see him.” It was a ruse, he
knew it for sure, but he had no choice but to nod in silent agreement. Arguing
would signal that HYDRA’s control had faltered dangerously, and he couldn’t
risk Steve’s safety. For the first time in his memory, he found himself putting
the well-being of another before his own.
“Good, good. In that case I expect
you to return to medical immediately and let the doctors finish up their work.
We need you in working order as soon as possible. I expect an update on your
condition in three hours.” With that, Aiden Black left the room. The
soldier’s hearing could pick up on the sound of footsteps running down the hall
to retrieve him, likely signaled by the General, and he only had a few seconds.
He couldn’t run, couldn’t try to fight or escape, as that would get Steve
killed and he couldn’t bring himself to even consider that possibility.
He’d have to play this game, even fall
back under HYDRA’s command if it meant keeping the other man alive. It was a sacrifice
he was willing to make. The soldiers crowded the room a half-second later,
surrounding him and shepherding him out and away from the room, away from
Steve. One of them fit the muzzle-mask over his face, and with its acquainted
confines the soldier felt a foreign sense of revulsion budding in his chest.
The familiarity of it all, and the horror that he found himself so easily
slipping back into the mannerisms and routine, made the new fear that he might
lose what little fragments of himself he’d managed to gain back seem very, very
real.
Drip.
Drip.
Drip.
The soft, rhythmic pattern of water drops
pulled Steve out of the fog of unconsciousness, cutting through the static that
seemed to fill his mind. He didn’t feel any pain, not yet, but he felt heavy
and weak and so very tired. Stagnant, stale air coated his throat, thick with a
sharp, sanitized scent that settled on his tongue with a faintly bitter,
familiar taste. The air itself felt dense, as if he was breathing through
cotton shoved down his throat; if he hadn’t known better, he would have thought
he was having an asthma attack. There was a rattling, ghastly wheeze every
handful of seconds in addition to the dripping that had woken him, and it took
a long, sobering moment before he realized that he was hearing his own
breathing.
Drip.
Drip.
His torso felt constricted, tight and
immobile under what felt like a cocoon of gauze and medical tape. As
uncomfortable as it was it assured him that his wounds had been tended to, but
by whom the Captain had no idea. An experimental twitch of his fingers assured
him that he wasn’t paralyzed and could move, however difficult it may have
been. Everything felt fuzzy, it was the only way to describe it, unable to feel
or hear anything clearly. Everything was blurred into a mess of muffled noises
and sweeping sensations, nothing distinct.
Drip.
A slight shift of his head told him just
how stiff and sore his neck was. How long was I out? The
thought struck him suddenly, followed immediately by the cold electricity of
fear. Where am I? His eyes were forced open, but shut
immediately due to the blinding light of the room. Steve groaned and squeezed
his eyes shut tighter, tilting his head trying to block out every bit of that
painful brightness. The movement made him aware that his head was propped up
slightly, a pillow tucked behind it. It reminded him of when he’d have
respiratory infections in winter and Bucky would give him all the pillows to
keep his head and shoulders lifted so he could breathe easier—
Bucky. Emily.
The panic that gripped him was
all-consuming, shredding through the muddled fog in his mind like iron claws.
“B-Buck… Em…” the words barely left his throat, voice hoarse and
rasping and lungs suddenly alight with crackling fire at the effort. The words
brought the taste of copper to his lips, blood he was sure, but he scarcely
cared. “B… Bucky! Emily!” His eyes shot open again, ignoring the pain
of the light and he looked frantically for any sign of the soldier. Everything
came crashing back in a tangle of bloody memories—the fight, the sniper, Bucky
collapsing in front of him, felled by the commander—and in horror he realized
they had been captured. His own pain was ignored as he tried to push himself
up, the room spinning as he did so, his own weakness now undeniably apparent.
A strong, cold hand gripped his shoulder,
pushing him back down onto the cot before he could even think of trying to
search. Moments later a figure moved into his vision, leaning over him with a
face obscured by a curtain of dark, unruly hair. He heard a hushed word of
Russian, tone soft, reassuring in its sound although he didn’t understand it.
The Captain’s vision was too blurry to see many details, but then again, he didn’t
need any details to recognize him.
A dozen words tried to spill out of him at
once—you’re alright, you’re here, I was so scared for you, Buck,
where’s Em — but nothing left him save a wheezy exhale as he smiled
in relief. He wanted to stand, to make sure Bucky was alright, to tend to any
wounds he had, but he was all too aware that he couldn’t do a damned thing in
this state. Bucky was here and in the end that was the most important thing.
Everything else could be confronted and dealt with later.
Without another thought Steve had raised
his left arm, hesitantly brushing a few stray strands of hair out of the way
before cupping his cheek. He wanted to make sure he was really there, that this
wasn’t some horrible HYDRA trick, that it wasn’t the blood loss and whatever
medicines he was full of making him see things. Bucky’s skin was cold, rough
against his fingers, but very much alive and very much real. He didn’t even try
to stop his smile from spreading a bit when he saw how the soldier leaned into
the touch a bit instead of shying away or swatting at his hand.
“… about time you woke up.”
Bucky’s voice was quiet and scratchy, just the barest hint of a Brooklyn accent
shining through as he moved away, turning to look at what Steve guessed was the
door. He let his hand fall back to his side, cringing a bit when he felt a tug
at the crook of his arm. IV line; must have been what the dripping
was. He tried to ask how long he’d been out but only managed to
cough, tacky blood rattling in his aching lungs. The soldier glanced down to
him at the sound, but quickly went back to his vigil.
“Three days” of course he’d have
been able to know what he was trying to say, they’d been able to finish each
other sentences in the past, “you were hurt bad, Steve, real bad. Still hurt
bad, but I won’t let them touch you.” His voice trailed off, words
carrying an edge as sharp as any blade, but also the barest hint of sadness. It
was the most Bucky had spoken to him since he found him sleeping seemingly
lifetimes ago, and in some distant part of the Captain his soul practically
sung. He sounded more like Bucky, more like the cocky jerk he’d grown up with
in Brooklyn than he ever had since he’d become the Winter Soldier. A second
later just what he had said sunk in, and his optimism wavered.
“… w-who?” the Avenger just
barely croaked it out, a sense of dread sitting heavy in his heart. He knew who
had captured them, knew where they were, but maybe he could deny it all away.
After all, Bucky was here with him, right? They would have separated them
for sure…
“HYDRA.” The name was spat out,
deadly venom saturating his voice. Steve’s blood ran cold in his veins, the
room falling silent with only the constant drip drip of the isotonic IV
bag keeping time between them with its ceaseless rhythm. That little bit of
hope that he had been clinging to wavered, knowing just how bad a situation
they were in, but it didn’t go out. Emily and Sam were still out there, and he
knew they wouldn’t give up on him. They’d find them, somehow; Emily was clever and
resourceful, she’d pick up the trail and find them, and Sam was loyal and
wouldn’t stop until he was found.
His lungs hurt too much to try and
continue the conversation, and as his eyes adjusted he tried to make sense of
his surroundings. The measly cot he was lying on was pushed against a stone
wall that just seemed to exude a wet chill, meaning they were likely somewhere
underground. Light buzzed blearily from a thin fluorescent fixture in the
ceiling, a pitchy and irritating hum occasionally creeping over the drip
drop of the IV. The walls were dingy and ill-kempt, but a glance to
the door surprised him. Door was a loose term as it looked like it had been
holding back a tiger, shattered glass and broken old steel littering the floor,
but the door itself was made of new shiny metal. Judging from the debris, the
damaged door he was currently looking at was a replacement and the first one
made up the scraps on the floor. It took a few seconds before Steve realized it
wasn’t from Bucky attempting to break out, but from him breaking
in.
That realization made his chest tighten,
breath hitching slightly as he tried to breathe around the lump that built in
his throat. His last hazy moments of consciousness in that alleyway, of Bucky
crouched in front of him teary-eyed with gentling hands pressed to his wounds,
he’d thought he had dreamed them. Thought that in his pained delirium he’d
imagined hearing the soldier’s meek voice saying “I’m not
leaving you behind”. Thought that maybe he’d mistaken seeing
Bucky breaking through for those precious few minutes, and it looks like he
just might have. He’d clearly torn his way out of wherever HYDRA had tried to
lock him up, but instead of making an escape, he found him and broke in
and stayed right by his side.
“Y-you… stayed with m-me…”
Steve’s voice was hardly above a raspy whisper, vision distorting as tears
welled up. He wasn’t sure if it was the pain or medicine or just a moment of
vulnerability that brought them out, but he didn’t make any attempts to hide
them. Bucky protected me. He’d fought to keep HYDRA away
from him instead of saving himself. Even if Buck didn’t
remember much of his past he had still fought to keep him safe like all those
years ago. The Avenger breathed heavily, choking on his own words as he tried
to say too many things at once. He knew this man wasn’t the Bucky he knew so
well from his past, but he was bits and pieces of him and he wasn’t going to
stop helping him even if the suave jerk he had spent his life with never really
came back.
“Quit that” Bucky’s voice was
gruff, but the fingers that hesitantly ruffled his hair a moment later were
gentle and familiar. “You’re gonna tear that lung again if you keep
talking. Get some more sleep, I’ll be here when you wake up.” It wasn’t a command
from the Winter Soldier, it was spoken too softly for that, instead it sounded
more like back in their apartment in the old days, when Bucky would try to
wrangle him to bed when he was sick and not cooperating. He couldn’t count how
many times Buck had just picked up all coughing hundred and ten pounds of him
and put him to bed under every moth-eaten blanket they owned, no matter how
much Steve protested. He never admitted it to him, but after his mom had died,
Bucky’s sometimes over-protective mollycoddling had meant the world to him.
“Buck… Where’s Emily?” suddenly Steve blinked, narrowing his eyebrows.
“Where’s she?”
Winter Soldier let out a quiet sigh,
turning his eyesight away.
“Buck…” Steve felt like his heart
stopped within second. “I have to know.”
“She’s probably dead” Bucky shrughed slightly, without a shadow of emotions on
his face. “I haven’t heard from her since many days.”
Bucky continued to run his fingers through
Steve’s hair, something he’d done countless times when the artist had been sick
and confined to Buck’s bed. The radiator in Steve’s old room had always had
piss-poor timing when it came to breaking, so whenever he had shown the
slightest sign of illness Buck had surrendered his much-warmer room and they
both slept curled up on that ratty old bed to try and keep warm. He wasn’t sure
if Bucky remembered any of that or if he was just acting on instinct or
something else, but just like it had back then in their apartment, it put the
Captain to sleep in only a few minutes.
With him lulled back into sleep so
quickly, he hadn’t had the time to notice that Bucky was dressed back into his
combat gear, or see the troubled, guilty expression that he wore. Bucky hadn’t
wanted him to see either.
The passing of days no longer
registered, the only timestamps he recalled being changes in the Captain’s
condition. Some days he was awake when he was bidden time to spend in the cell,
most times he was unconscious or in a restorative sleep as the serum tried to
patch his body back together. The tainted, imperfect serum that flowed in his
own veins was doing much the same, skin and bones mending beneath his clothing.
It burned with a throbbing sort of heat and sometimes hours passed as he
passively observed the healing, watching his own flesh knitting back together
until only scars remained.
His body was healthier, the
Asset noticed dimly, his new handlers eager to get him back to working
conditions as soon as possible. The constant IV drips, the strange injections,
the foodstuffs he was prodded to eat, they’d all filled him out so he didn’t
look quite so emaciated. He halfheartedly guessed that the serum had busied
itself rebuilding his muscles with the amble nutrients he was getting as much
as it was healing his wounds.
With his shoulder healing up,
the white-coated techs had taken to repairing the extensive damage to his
prosthetic. It now moved fluidly, easily, the burn that gnashed its teeth into
his artificial nerves now abated and calmed. The plates had been smoothed and
repaired, the blood and grime cleaned away, although the red star he had tried
to scratch off with his own fingernails and anything within reach those first
few weeks remained marred and damaged. The techs didn’t try to reapply it; now
that he was no longer tied to the Red Room and the Soviets, they had no need to
flaunt their emblem.
He knew it was only a matter
of time before they’d try to deploy him, to test his programing, but he knew it
was mostly due to their eagerness to try and patch the damage that had been
caused by the exposing of SHIELD as HYDRA. Pierce was dead, but the saying
still held true; cut off one head, two more will take its place. Aiden Black
was not the new leader, but he had fallen in as his new handler, and that bit
of his programming was still sound enough to prevent him from refusing orders
from the man.
Today, however, he’d been
granted time with the Captain after preforming well in training. He knew that
Black wanted to wipe him, to rebuild the programming and perhaps even try the
same with the healing Captain, but he knew that the man couldn’t. This facility
lacked the proper equipment to carry out that procedure safely, or to rewrite
and build the programming back into his mind. It was likely why they were even
letting him see the other man. It was a way to keep him under control, giving
him time with him like a dog being trained and rewarded with scraps. He ought
to have been offended but honestly he didn’t care; any time with Steve was
worth whatever hell they put him through.
His earlier thoughts were all
pushed aside as soon as he entered the room they were keeping Steve in. The
soldiers always left them alone, Black convinced in his control over the Asset,
and he preferred it this way. He knew he was always under surveillance, but the
illusion of peace he had with the Captain was enough. Despite his few hours of
reprieve here he never allowed his guard to lower, never spoke out of turn or
gave any indication that the programming had slipped. He couldn’t allow that
knowledge to fall into Black’s hands. He could find some way to wipe him clean
and order him to kill the man he’d fought so hard to defend. The thought alone
made his breathing falter.
“… Bucky?” blinking,
his focus was pulled back to the present, to the Captain laid out on the cot.
The Asset straightened himself, shoved down all his disjointed thoughts, padded
over to the bedside to look down at him. He might have the perfected serum but
he had been wounded horrifically; he was still all but bedridden with the
injuries he’d sustained. He was half convinced the only reason he survived at
all was because the Captain was just too damn stubborn to die. Dim memories of
back alley fights, bright blond hair matted with blood and halfhearted smiles
mired by bruising and dirt flitted across his mind for a brief moment.
The Asset didn’t reply with
words, merely humming in response as he sat down in the empty chair next to the
cot. Some distant part of him was glad to see that Steve was awake and aware,
as the last few visits he’d been groggy and barely able to speak, mumbling in a
drug and pain-induced haze about things the Soldier didn’t remember. It was
stressful, but he would rather spend his time here, questioned over things he
didn’t understand or know, than be primed and molded to fall back into HYDRA’s
command.
“… you’re in gear.”
Steve’s voice was quiet, but he could still hear the apprehension and
resignation in his tone. It bothered the Asset greatly. Black had hinted at
possibly sending him out on some sort of simple assignment so he’d dressed himself
in his heavy Kevlar vest and armor, hiding his healing wounds and returning
build. The less Steve knew about how long he’d been trapped here the better.
The last thing he needed was him hatching some idiotic scheme to escape that
would get him killed.
“… d’you get your
orders?” the words came out of his mouth slurred and soft, his mind
obviously still a bit hazed from whatever drugs they had to have pumped him
full of to keep him manageable. It set the Soldier’s teeth on edge, the thought
of them doing something like that to Steve, but he couldn’t protest or else run
the risk of being separated fully. The statement did, however, fire some
distant, disjointed memory. He could almost smell the musty air of some damp
alleyway, blood in the mouth of his friend as he spoke and looked at him in a
strange mix of admiration and sadness. It made his heart ache in a way he
wasn’t familiar with, even without any further context to bolster it.
“… yeah, Steve.” His
voice was still rough with disuse, awkward and stiff and lacking in the emotion
Steve held when he talked. The last time he’d been here the other man had
panicked, remembering their capture, tried to fight his way free of the web of
IV line that held him. At least this way, with him lost in his own sleepy
awareness, he was easy to convince all was well although every lie he told
tasted bitter on his tongue.
“Be careful, Buck.”
Steve mumbled a bit when the Asset stood and began to pick at his wound
wrappings, drawing his eyes from his work to meet his. They were hazy from pain
and sleep, greyed and sick looking in a way that made the Soldier’s stomach
knot up. He swallowed thickly and focused on checking all of Steve’s wounds,
not trusting any of the HYDRA medics or their work. Most of his wounds had
closed, the deepest pink with new-grown scar tissue and the lesser wounds
already silvered and faded into his skin.
“I will.” The
response was automatic, not looking away from his task now. He was replacing
the packing in Steve’s side, where the sniper round had ripped his chest cavity
open. Even the serum was having trouble with the wound, and if it hadn’t been
for that (and his damn fool stubbornness) he surely would have bled out right
there in the street.
Steve made a noise halfway
between a whimper and groan when he started to pull the bloodied, coagulated
mess of packing out of the wound, obviously feeling it even through the fog of
painkillers. He squirmed enough to make his task difficult, but at the same
time it lifted his spirits somewhat. His strength was coming back, slowly, but
it was a good sign. His body was starting to heal enough for his system to
begin filtering the medicines in his body more efficiently; a hazy memory
bubbled up of Steve complaining about Morita’s morphine shot not taking the
edge off a bullet wound he’d gotten in the calf. This had to be a good sign. It
just had to be.
The wound still looked
horrific, and he knew he couldn’t chance an escape with Steve in this state.
The ragged tear was having trouble healing over due to just how much tissue loss
and damage he’d sustained, despite the serum flowing in his veins. Even with
Steve still moving around he was able to place more sterile packing into the
wound and wrap it tight with gauze and medical tape, after treating it with a
potent antibacterial wash that he made sure to carry on his person at all
times. That hadn’t been fun. Steve had gasped hoarsely and it’d hurt him to
hear, but it needed to be done. He still didn’t trust these HYDRA doctors to
treat the wounds correctly, even though he had little formal medical training
himself. It didn’t matter in his mind; his body and muscle memory knew Steve
and how to treat him better than anyone else and like hell he was going to just
sit passively by and let someone who didn’t know the first thing about Steve
Rogers try to patch his wounds.
With his work finished and
Black no doubt waiting on him, the Soldier knew he had to cut his visit short.
The man had mentioned something about a cleanup mission, to take care of some
SHIELD holdouts that had grouped up near where he and Steve had been picked up.
It would be a quick and clean mission. They’d likely pair him with the
surviving members of the Strike unit to keep him under observation, but he
could easily use their fear of him to make them keep their distance. He had a
feeling these ‘SHIELD holdouts’ might be whoever Steve had alerted the night
they were captured. If that was the case this mission was going to go very
poorly.
“I’m leaving, don’t get
into any trouble while I’m gone.” The Soldier mumbled a bit, not wanting
to leave but knowing he couldn’t stay. He gently smoothed down Steve’s unruly
hair with his right hand, always the right, something he
felt like he’d done countless times a hundred lifetimes ago. When he was around
the other man it felt like he went on autopilot, doing things he had no clear
conscious memory of ever knowing how to do, yet with the ease and familiarity
as if he’d been doing them all his life. He knew how to calm him down, how he
liked his pillows just so, how he had an awful habit of kicking the blankets
off in his sleep, things he had no business knowing yet he did.
“No promises, Buck.”
Steve breathed out heavily, eyes already half-lidded with drowsy exhaustion but
with a crooked grin on his face. The Soldier felt a near overwhelming urge to
roll his eyes and swat his shoulder but he held back, knowing he was still
badly wounded and not wanting any sign of playfulness to be seen by the
cameras. He merely brushed a few dirty blond strands of hair out of Steve’s
face instead, hiding the action by pretending to hold his palm there to check
his temperature. It was a poor ruse, with his fingers lingering a moment too
long, body too loose with the feeling of safety, but he didn’t think it would
be caught.
This mission had him nervous.
It sat low in his stomach like a weight of molten lead, burning and heavy and
disorienting. It felt familiar in some distant way; he remembered feeling it
before, while sitting in the snow at the edge of some high cliff, the snow kept
off him with a shield held above his head by the man he was leaning heavily
against for warmth. The memory was pushed down as he closed the door behind
him, lock clicking softly at his back before he allowed himself to be pushed by
the decayed programming to report to the command center. The sooner he
completed his assignment the sooner he could return to Steve’s side, and that
was the only thought that kept his body in motion.
“Have you heard anything
back from Jarvis, Stark? We’ve got to narrow down our search parameters.”
The past few weeks had been
complete and utter hell. Without SHIELD, running a rescue mission for one
Steven Grant Rogers and one possibly-hostile Winter Soldier had been, to put it
mildly, completely fucking exhausting. But, this was hardly enough to make
Emily Vandom crack. She’d done more with less resources and less time, and this
time she had friends to help her. She poured herself another mug of coffee,
glancing over to Stark tapping away at one of his fancy tablets and to Wilson
and his makeshift workstation on the floor with his wingpack.
After last time when they got
separated, Emily didn’t know what to do and how to help Bucky and Steve, so she
did the last thing that remained – she had to contact with Sam Wilson, who was
(as she knew) a closest friend of Steve.
Sam, although she had known
him not too long, had slotted himself into the ragtag group as easily as
clockwork, as if he’d been crafted to be a part of their unit. For the first
week he’d housed both herself and Barton, who’d come as soon as Emily had
filled him in on the situation. It was reassuring having her partner in crime
back at her side. Stark, for all his crassness and bluster, had dropped
everything when she informed him of Steve’s capture. As difficult as he was to
work with some days, he really could be an invaluable ally as long as he kept
himself occupied.
“Jarvis is going as fast
as he can but there’s a lot of data to go through,” Tony’s voice was heavy
with lost sleep, as if the dark patches under his eyes and the hot coffee mug
held tight in his hand weren’t enough of a giveaway, “HYDRA’s hiding
themselves pretty well, or what’s left of it anyway. They’re probably
disguising their shipments and covering their tracks more than usual. I doubt
they’d take them out of the city yet, it’d draw too much attention, but, it is
HYDRA so who knows.”
Tony must have repeated that a
hundred times in a hundred different ways, and she knew that the tension was
getting to them all, but it didn’t make her any less anxious. They’d moved into
Steve’s apartment and the empty next door apartment after contacting Sharon,
who provided her keys to the locks which had yet to be changed. She was doing
what she could to aid in the search, but with her new job in the FBI and Emily
still in hot political water, she didn’t want to add any fuel to that fire with
her presence. If word got lose in the government that Captain America had been
captured while housing the Winter Soldier, well, the repercussions were
something none of them wanted to deal with.
“I’m going up to check
the perimeter with Clint. Let me know if you find anything, and while Jarvis
works maybe you could give Sam a hand.” Sitting idle and waiting just
wasn’t in her nature. Sam was working on his damaged wingpack, which Tony had
started to repair but had to drop to prep Jarvis for the scan of the city’s
information apparatus. They’d need Sam’s help once the AI located whatever
HYDRA hellhole Steve and the Winter Soldier had been taken to. Even though
Steve seemed to trust him, there was still a wary part of her that couldn’t
dismiss the possibility that maybe the Winter Soldier had lead Steve into a
trap, that he’d been a Trojan horse or some form of bait to lure him into
HYDRA’s clutches. It was a grim and farfetched possibility, but one that was
all too real.
The cool air outside once she
reached the roof was a welcome source of sobriety, washing away her muddled
thoughts and letting her release her own tensions with a soft exhale. The last
week had damn near run her ragged. To have something like this happen so soon
after the fall of SHIELD, before she’d had a chance to really recover, was just
not something she had ever expected to happen. She’d thought she would have had
a bit more time before she’d have to pay her debt back to Steve for saving her
life.
“Lower levels secure,
how’re things up here?” she sat down heavily near the archer, just in case
he had his hearing aids turned down. He was perched on the corner of the
building, goggled eyes on the building entrance and the surrounding streets.
His bow was held in loose fingers, eyes never stopping their scan of the
streets when he replied.
“Well, there’s been an
awful lot of owls around but no, haven’t seen any HYDRA agents or anything
unusual.” Clint replied, voice a bit hoarse from not having spoken in
several hours. Emily roughly shoved her half-empty coffee mug into his side,
nudging him until he sighed loudly and took it with his free hand.
“You’ve been on watch for
hours, take a few minutes.” She knew he was as tense and eager to find the
Captain, but with nothing to do but stand watch it had to be bothering him a
good deal. “Stark has Jarvis checking shipping records and anything else
we can think of to try and narrow down a few spots. We don’t think they’re out
of the city. Sam’s getting his wings ready and if we have some locales by the
end of the night we can move out as early as the morning.”
“Good.” Clint
mumbled through a mouthful of coffee, having nearly chugged the whole cup while
Emily had been talking. “I’ve got Soviet cooties now but thanks for the
coffee, ‘Tasha.” With an exasperated sigh Emily punched his side, which
made him jump and the coffee mug to slip out of his hand and down to the street
below with a muffled shattering of ceramic. “Aw, mug no.”
Emily laughed, a true laugh,
the kind that ended with her snorting into her sleeve. Maybe it was the tension
of the night but it felt good to just laugh, and she heard Clint huff out a
laugh as well. The last few days have weighed on her so much that it was nice
to let off a little of the steam. She turned to make a witty comment but Clint
frantically signed “quiet” at her, eyes
locked down where the mug had fallen. She was up and looking over the ledge of
the building in an instant, keeping low so she wouldn’t be seen.
She heard him notch an arrow
and draw, his breathing evening out the way it did when he aimed. She spotted
in the street below within a few seconds; a shadow out of place, a brief flash
of reflected light off of metal. Emily didn’t hesitate to stop the archer, hand
over his as he prepared to let the arrow fly, hissing out a breath between her
teeth as she struggled to choose what to do. Downing him was likely the wisest
option, but, if he was here, there was a chance Steve was too.
“Don’t,” she knew
that Clint wouldn’t, but speaking her thoughts couldn’t hurt any, “This
isn’t right. If he was going to try and pick us off he would have while we were
distracted. Something’s going on.” Clint kept his bow at half-pull, and
she didn’t blame him; she was cautious and untrusting herself, but as she
watched the Winter Soldier looked right at them yet didn’t duck behind cover.
He just looked right at them.
“He could have agents all
around the building we can’t just sit here,” he whispered harshly, pulling
the bow to full-draw when the Soldier advanced until he was standing just a
couple yards from the building. He was masked but lacked the goggles, dressed
full in HYDRA gear with a rifle slung at his back, but hands empty.
“This isn’t right, Clint.”
As if on cue, the Winter Soldier raised his hands, empty palms towards them.
A show of submission. Emily bit her lip, not knowing what was going
on in the man’s head but knowing that this wasn’t one of HYDRA’s normal
tactics. Either this was the man that had grown up with Steve or a twisted
HYDRA trap, or something in-between. “… I’m going down there. Cover
me.”
“Emily you can’t
be…” she didn’t give him the chance to try and talk her out of it,
jumping onto the fire escape two floors down. It rattled so loud in the
otherwise silent alleyway that she was sure HYDRA agents would be all over her,
but seconds ticked by and there wasn’t any movement, not even from the assassin
in the street below. She was far from unarmed, with a pistol in her pockets, but
she would never underestimate the Winter Soldier.
Being on the ground, mere feet
away from the man that had shot her just a few months ago, is… tense, to say
the least. Her shoulder aches. He looks different now in a way she can’t really
place; he’s thinner than he was in her memories, eyes dark with lost sleep and
weary in a way she never thought was possible from so menacing a man. He looked
ragged and downtrodden and every bit as awful as Steve had described. Beneath
the layers of caution and defensiveness, she admitted she felt a twinge of,
pity was too strong a word but something like it, for her former mentor.
“What do you want,
James.” The words came out more bitter than she had intended, but then
again maybe it was better to put up that façade. The man standing before her
wasn’t the same anymore, but hell, she changed also…
“Vitani.” His voice
was muffled under the muzzle-mask but that didn’t diminish their effect. Vitani.
Emily hadn’t heard her old nickname in what felt like lifetimes. It told her
that he remembered at least fragments of their past, much like her. “… I
need your help.” That definitely wasn’t what she expected to hear him say
next.
“My help?” Emily
repeated the statement softly, “… Steve. How can I help?” she watched
his eyes light up the dimmest bit. James slowly lowered his right hand, pulling
something small and flat from his pocket. An arrow cut the tense air between
them, embedding itself into the pavement a few inches from the man’s foot; a
clear, grim warning not to test his luck. It gave the Soldier pause before he
completed his action, a small, scuffed moleskin sketchbook clutched in his
hand.
“They have him.”
James’s voice was rough and so tired, the book gently placed in her hands with
his fingers lingering on her own for the briefest moment, “They think I’m
on their leash still, Emily. Steve is hurt, I can’t get him out on my
own.” His tone was almost pleading and it painfully twisted something up
inside of her, “They sent me here to kill you all with the Strike team,
you’re not safe here any longer.” Even without it being said, she knew
that he had killed his own team to prevent them from hurting them.
“Where did they take him?
Where are you based?” she got no clear answer, the Soldier merely tilting
his head towards the thin sketchpad in her hands. When she opened the cover she
realized there was a roughly drawn map, made of taken streets and turns that he
must have taken to reach the building. It could lead them right to them.
“Emily, listen to
me” his voice was suddenly soft, shot through with remorse, “they’re
trying to get me under control again. If they manage to, I need you to put me
down. Steve won’t be able to, and you’re the only person I can trust to do it
right. They might not even need to do it, I might try and hurt him if I’m not
in my right mind. Please, I need you to promise.” Without even seeing his
reaction she knew her façade fell for the briefest of moments, blindsided by
the request. She’d expected him to be hostile, to be defiant at the least, but not
this.
She couldn’t form the words
but nodded, setting her jaw and straightening her back. The look of relief that
filled his eyes was almost as heartbreaking as the whole damn situation. He
started to turn but she stopped him, slipping a small object into his palm,
curling his calloused fingers around it with her own hands. It was her necklace
she used to wear everyday, in a shape of swan with outstretched wings. Seconds
ticked by before he broke eye contact with her, looking down to his hand that
she still held and then to the arrow by his boot.
“… thank you, моя любовь.”
She almost missed it, that softly mumbled bit of Russian that solidified in her
mind that this was really James talking, and not the Winter Soldier. She never thought she would ever hear that
from him again. Emily gave his hand a gentle squeeze before she backed away,
the Soldier doing the same, storing the thin metal object she had given him
into one of his pockets.
“Be careful, James.”
Emily spoke softly, “… дорогой..” She watched him stiffen at the
word, scanning her eyes for a long moment before he turned his head, breath
exhaled loudly through the mask. She allowed her gaze to return to the roof,
where Clint was still perched watchfully, another arrow at the ready. When she
turned back to the Winter Soldier he was gone, just like the ghost he was. Her
grip on the sketchbook tightened as resolve settled in.
As it stood, HYDRA was holding two men from her, and they would soon come to
regret that action.
His mind had always been too
loud. Too loud, too busy, too full of things he had no context for. He could
see them in bright flashes of vivid experience; the smell of a Brooklyn alley
after a midnight rain, the feel of a stray cat’s fur under his palm as it
arched into his touch, the sound of a train’s wheels far too close, he could
remember small bits in crisp clarity but the whole picture was broken. He held
the shattered pieces of a great mosaic with no blueprint, no frame of
reference; the grand work it once was lost, leaving him with only a hundred
million broken fragments and no way to tell how they fit together.
At least, it had been that way
for the decades under HYDRA’s command. He’d been out of cryo so long, his mind
let go to mend without the wipes and supplied with small threads to stitch the
patchwork of memories together, that now he was slowly piecing that mosaic of
his former life back together. His memories were less flashes of disjointed
fragments and now short contingencies; instead of just an isolated sound of
pencils scratching at paper he now had a tentative picture of a skinny boy
hunched dutifully over a thin sketchpad as he drew, or how a Russian lullaby
now reminded him of a dozen young faces in a dim military compound.
With the tentative return of
his memories came the emotions attached to them. He remembered the fluttery
lightness in his stomach when he laughed loud and long around a campfire with
Steve and soldiers just on this edge of familiarity, or how the fear had felt
like tendrils of ice snaking up his spine when he heard a door slam shut over
the rattling of train wheels. He remembered what fondness felt like, how it had
bloomed with a fragile warmth behind his ribs for the first time in decades
when he heard the first few unsure English words leave Emily’s mouth, how she’d
smiled like the sun after she held her first conversation in it with him. He
remembered how it felt to have the emotions, but what he lacked entirely was
how it felt to receive them, to give them
freely and openly.
The strings that HYDRA had cut
and mangled were slowly reconnecting, threading through the holes in the
decaying programming and forming stronger bonds with each day. He hid it, he
hid it deep and he hid it well. If Black knew he would be isolated, probably
even forcibly wiped with what little equipment the base had even if it had a
high chance of killing him. He knew how Black operated, his worth was only
measured by his effectiveness in the field, and he knew as soon as that was
permanently diminished he was obsolete. Just another loose end to be cleaned
up, a broken machine to be discarded, a toothless wolf to be tied down and
shot.
A week had passed since his
meeting with Emily, since he’d given her every bit of information he could to
help them find Steve. He could feel the programming responding to his HYDRA
handlers, feel himself falling easier and easier into old ways and habits,
found it harder to recall the broken shards of his memories. It scared him, it
honestly scared him. What if tomorrow he woke up and all of the progress he had
made was undone? What if tomorrow he looked at Steve and didn’t see him, and
saw only a target or mission or body to be disposed of? If he lost Steve, if he
lost him and Emily, then he knew there’d be no saving him from HYDRA; they were
the only ones who stood even the slightest chance of picking up his shattered
pieces. This act of putting faith and trust in others was so foreign to him it
was almost terrifying but he knew he couldn’t do this on his own.
The soft sound of exhaled
breath brought him back to reality, eyes cutting down to where Steve was
resting his head on his thigh. The wound to his right side had healed enough
for him to move around somewhat, although his definition of moving was rather
singular. Steve had rolled onto his left side, using the Soldier’s lap as a
pillow, the thin white blanket he was wrapped in streaked with rust red from
the most recent change of bandages. The Asset had deemed him well enough to
chance providing him with a shirt, bright SHIELD logo across the chest of it,
the sight of which made him feel sick. Steve was curled up somewhat, back
mostly to the Asset, trying to shrink into himself but twisting himself up in
the blanket and his own limbs in the process. Wide open to
attack. The thought stung in his mind, eyes narrowing a fraction
behind the thick protective goggles, and was dispelled quickly. Steve Rogers
was not a target, threat or mark to him, but his programming deemed otherwise.
Even with the serum Steve’s
wounds were taking too long to heal for the Asset to be comfortable. The
horrific gunshot to his side had only just closed up, a stark red swath of raw
muscle stretched taunt over mending bones. The wound to his collarbone had
healed much quicker, now a silvery patch of scarred skin that was fading with
every passing day. His breathing had evened out to a wheezy constant, no longer
sputtering and fluid-filled. It was a small comfort to the Asset.
The HYDRA doctors kept him
sedated heavily most days now, preventing him from attempting to fight back or
flee. The Asset knew the drugs well enough, as they had been used on him in the
past when he woke up from cryo. It had kept him docile and pliant and it made
him sick to see Steve reduced to the same state. He was burning through the
dosage much quicker than he ever had, sometimes snapping to awareness with a
feral sort of desperation to escape. Black made an awful point to make him be
the one to administer the syrette, make him stand and watch as Steve collapsed
and wheezed and tried to fight the drug, always to fail. Black couldn’t wipe
him, but he was trying his damnedest to break him through other means.
He’d been given less and less
time with the Captain, forced into training exercise after training exercise,
with little rest in between. The goggles hid how cloudy from exhaustion his
eyes had gotten, how dark the patches under them had become, rendering him less
and less able to fight back against orders. He wanted to gnash his teeth and
lash out at every turn but he didn’t have near the strength to keep doing so.
He was so tired. He was never going to stop fighting but the programming was
much stronger in his depleted state, the feeling of it guiding his movements
almost second nature after decades under its control.
Stress sat heavy on the
Soldier’s shoulders, weighing him down and filling him with dread. His right
hand was gently carding through Steve’s hair, curling through golden strands
that had grown during their captivity. He had orders from Black himself, an
ultimate test for his programming, and he could feel it straining in his mind,
the cogs and gears of HYDRA’s control creaking and screeching in protest
against his unwillingness to comply. He’d known this order was coming since his
capture, known since they let Steve recover, known since they let him visit him
as a reward.
The possibility of it had
eaten at his mind since his first agreement to comply with Black’s wishes, but
now that the command had been given the reality of it all had crashed down on
him. It was punishment, he knew it, punishment for not killing Emily and the
small group she had gathered, for killing his own team to protect them. Black
wanted him to know that he wasn’t to make decisions and couldn’t think for
himself, and Black’s sick sense of humor had been summed up in his simple
order. He wanted balance; since he couldn’t kill Emily and her group, he had to
take another’s life.
He held a knife in his metal
hand.
“Kill the Captain,
Soldier.”
Even hours later the words
still rang in his ears, a roar that threatened to drown out his own thoughts.
He couldn’t reject a direct command from a handler such as Black, yet he’d
managed to hold out this long, kept his blade from marring the unblemished skin
of the blond’s neck. He could feel the press of it bearing down on his mind, burning
behind his temples and tugging at his limbs, but he fought it. He gritted his
teeth under the muzzle-mask and hissed out his breath, trying to will himself
to throw the knife away from them but his arm wouldn’t respond. He couldn’t
disarm himself but he found he could keep himself from moving to attack; he was
at a grim stalemate with the programming.
“Slit his throat,
Soldier. I want you to watch him die.”
A strangled sort of noise
choked in the Asset’s throat, swallowed down thickly as he struggled to keep
from showing his distress outwardly. He didn’t even realize his hands were
shaking until Steve made a confused sound, tilting his head to look up at him
with one medicine-fogged eye in silent question. It just made the Soldier’s
hands tremble more. He’d done everything he could to try and protect the few
people he knew with certainty and it was being warped into Steve’s own death;
everything he’d done was going to kill the man he’d tried so hard to protect.
“… Bucky?”
The Asset’s whole body
shuddered at the other’s voice, shaking so much he could hardly sit. He pulled
his hand away and watched the other’s face, thankful for the first time in
decades for the mask that covered his expression. Steve couldn’t see the pained
look on his face, see how panicked and wild his eyes were through the goggles.
Black’s agents had locked him in here and he could see the shadows of them
through the small square window on the door; he knew that they would keep him
in here until he completed his mission. He’d lasted this long, he just had to
keep telling himself he just had to hang on a little longer.
He had to look away. He
couldn’t look at Steve without the programming screaming to lunge, to hold him
down and slash the blade across his open throat. The inner mechanisms of his
metal arm whirled and purred, plates calibrating and lying flat and repeating,
unfeeling fingers tight around the handle of the knife that he could hear
cracks forming on the resin grip. He felt like some sort of predator, a
monster; Steve had done nothing but try to protect and aid him and when he
needed him to return the favor here he was, holding the knife that would kill
him.
Muffled voices from the HYDRA
agents outside, combined with their restlessly shifting shadows through the
window, set off alarms in the Asset’s mind. Something was going on. It was
likely Black coming to inspect his progress and the thought of it was enough to
worsen his shaking. He was being pulled in a dozen different directions;
Black’s words tugged at him to attack, his own mind screamed at him to get
Steve out of this hellhole and protect him, while the programming whispered
encouragements to complete his mission and be rewarded with the quiet sleep of
cryo.
The weight in his lap vanished
and he didn’t dare look to see; he could hear Steve straining to sit up, breath
wheezing out of his still-healing lungs from the effort. The programming
lurched at the opportunity like a starving animal presented with a meal, teeth
bared and desperate for blood. It’d be so easy to just turn and plunge the
knife into his back; the blade was long enough to reach his heart through his
ribs if he aimed right, he’d bleed out if it didn’t outright kill him..
“Buck.”
His grip on the knife
tightened, servos in his arm whirring into readiness. If he completed his
mission Black would put him in cryo, would stop all the noise of the broken
memories in his head and let him rest; he was so tired, he’d
run and fought for so long that even the horrors of his captivity seemed like a
sweet relief from the pain of remembering. The fragments of his memories had
always just been background noise before, but now with time and healing they
were loud, intrusive, overwhelming and smothering. He couldn’t handle it on his
own.
“Buck, something’s going
on, we need to get out of here…”
He was so far lost in his own
mind, moving without knowing, drowning inside his own thoughts and broken
memories. There was only so long one could fight before it all collapsed, until
one gives in under the pressure. With his memories a jumbled heap, struggling
to stitch together, the pain of it all was overpowering. He felt trapped inside
a cage like a wild animal, desperate to get out and escape from all the noise.
The soft touch of warm fingers
on his right arm triggered an immediate response, twisting and clamping his
hand onto a still-healing shoulder, knife edge pressed to soft skin. He was
instantly still, muscles wound tight like a spring, blade biting into his
throat just enough to draw a single trickle of blood. Steve,
this is Steve, stop. He was horrified,
wanting nothing more than to bolt out the door before he could do something to
hurt him more, but he couldn’t move. He could only
watch as Steve swallowed, eyes staring into his featureless goggles, confused
and frightened but, God, still so bright.
“Bucky, put it down… please…”
A sound that could have been a
whimper escaped him, stomach turning in disgusted horror at himself. Yet
he still couldn’t move the weapon away. He couldn’t just ignore his
mission but he could try and fight it, try to delay it, give Steve enough time
to try and get away but unless he got a new command he had to complete it. It
was the worst part of the programming.
“You don’t have to listen
to them anymore, Bucky..”
Steve sounded more lucid than
he had in weeks, even with his eyes still fogged from medication and pain. He
knew Steve, he’d made the connection between him and the boy with the
sparrow-thin bones and bloodied knuckles from his memories, but seventy years
of forced obedience and programming and control were impossible to just shrug
off. Steve must have sensed it, but then again even the broken fragments of his
memories told him that he had always been able to read him like a book.
He didn’t show an ounce of
fear as he slowly raised his hand, hovering it over his metal wrist, never
breaking eye contact. He reasoned he wanted him to make sure he saw what he was
doing. He remained tense and stiff, ready to slash the blade the inch it’d take
to kill the man, but he waited. Steve seemed to take it as permission, lightly
laying his hand over his own metal one, trying to gently push it away from his
throat. He resisted at first, artificial muscles clicking and flexing before he
slowly relaxed, letting his arm be guided away and down.
“You’re okay, Bucky,”
he started, keeping his voice low and even, not even blinking at the impossibly
loud sound of the knife clattering to the floor as it slipped from the Asset’s
grip, “you’re my friend, you don’t have to make it on your own.”
Thank you Buck, but I can make
it on my own.
The thing is, you don’t have
to.
Something about those string
of words sparked something, a bright image flashing in his mind. He remembered
Steve, so much smaller with red-ringed eyes. He remembered his hand gripping
his shoulder tightly; he realized dimly that he was doing much the same now, a
twisted sort of parody of a gesture that no doubt had once been based in
comfort. Steve lifted his free hand, the other still cradling the metal wrist
that a moment ago had been poised to slit his throat, reaching slowly towards
his face. The memory was so vivid he didn’t even react until he felt his
goggles being gently tugged away, dropping discarded into his lap.
The Asset tried to suck in a
breath through the muzzle mask but his lungs hitched as his whole body began to
shake, arms dropping into his lap, limp. He had no idea what was happening. The
programming had faltered, leaving him unable to complete the mission; the
conflict between his programming and the memories was just too much. Panic filled
every bit of him, heart hammering against his ribs and stomach threatening to
retch. He’d never felt like this in any of the memories he had and it terrified
him. He couldn’t get enough air and he felt entirely out of control of his own
body, his breathing loud and ragged and desperate under the mask.
He felt Steve’s hand on his
left shoulder, thumb just barely tracing the ragged seam where metal met flesh,
his eyes focused on his own as he spoke although he didn’t hear a word he said.
Normally he flinched or reacted violently to contact but he didn’t this time,
merely shrinking into himself in an attempt to hide from the storm that was his
mind. It was oddly assuring, the feeling of his firm grip on his shoulder,
although it didn’t immediately register that he was touching his left arm. He
couldn’t touch him with his left arm, he couldn’t, he couldn’t.
He was dimly aware of a loud noise outside the room, an electric sort of noise
that sent the panic coiling in his belly shooting straight up his spine. He
needed to get away. Electricity meant pain, meant the wipe that would steal
Emily and Steve and his fragile memories away again.
His legs felt boneless when he
tried to jump up but he didn’t make it any farther than that, Steve’s grip on
his shoulder turning strong as steel, pulling him back down. The Asset dimly
heard him yelling at him; he heard Bucky and he heard its
okay but everything in between was lost in the blur that was the
panic swirling in his mind. The electric noise was right outside, it was too
close. Too close.
“S-Steve, I…”
The door was blown off its
hinges with a bolt of blue, slamming into the wall, and all thoughts screeched
to a halt and screamed attack.
Steve flinched violently when
the door exploded to his right, shards of hot metal bouncing off his side. The
air was full of the acrid stench of charred metal and sharp electricity, a
scent he knew like the back of his hand. Stark. Thank God, Emily had gotten
help and somehow found them. They just might get out of this mess after all. He
had his visor flipped open and grinned when he saw him, motioning to the two of
them broadly. He didn’t have enough time to warn him about Bucky, to warn him
about the sound the repulsors made, to warn him about anything.
“Tony, turn off your
Repulsors!” he shouted but by the time the words left his lips Bucky had
already sprung, producing a knife from somewhere on his person and lunging at
Tony like a bird of prey, blade like a talon aiming straight for the suit’s Arc
Reactor. Tony didn’t even have enough time to flip down his visor before Bucky
barreled into him, sending them both to the floor. Steve tried to jump up to
pry Bucky off but the drugs were still in his system, making his limbs feel a
hundred pounds heavier and the room spin with any sudden movement. It felt like
when his blood sugar used to dip before the serum.
The screech of metal against
metal was nearly ear-splitting, the knife glancing off an armored gauntlet when
Tony threw his arms up to deflect the strike. Bucky jammed the blade into one
of the seams, Tony actually letting out a yelp before he jerked his arm back,
the knife catching and snapping from the torque. The useless hilt was
discarded, fingers curling into a fist and slamming into the Arc Reactor, cracking
the protective covering. Steve’s heart skipped and he screamed at Bucky to stop
but he watched as he raised his fist again, aiming to break the Reactor which
would trap Tony in the powerless suit.
A brilliant flash of blue
filled the room and Bucky was thrown off, the sleeve of his uniform
disintegrating and exposing the metal underneath. The Repulsor blast had been
drastically dialed back, only enough power behind it to knock him away, but it
still nearly blew him into the far wall. He landed on his feet like some sort
of cat and skidded back, tattered sleeve smoking and the plating of his arm
mired with superficial electricity burns. His breathing was far too fast and he
was still shaking, hardly able to stand on his own two feet.
“Bucky, calm down!”
Steve pulled himself free of the IV drips, using the wall to steady himself as
he moved closer to Tony; he was hedging his bets on the fact that Bucky
hopefully wouldn’t attack with him so close to his target. “Tony is a
friend, he’s not going to hurt you!” he could only watch helplessly as
Bucky tensed himself up again, coiling in on himself like a snake about to
strike. “Bucky, don’t! I promise he’s not going to hurt you!” he
placed himself between the two, holding his hands up submissively. Tony quickly
did the same, powering down his Repulsors completely.
Bucky remained crouched and
ready to lunge, another much larger blade in his right hand. His eyes darted
between Steve and behind him to Tony as if he was trying to judge his distance;
it made Steve’s stomach drop. He edged forward slowly, closing the distance
hesitantly even though he heard Tony’s concerned hiss of Steve
be careful behind him.
“Buck, its okay, I
promise. Its fine, Tony’s not going to hurt you or me.” he assured,
reaching out and slowly taking hold of his hand with the knife. Bucky didn’t
let go, keeping his eyes locked on Tony over Steve’s shoulder as if daring him
to try and take another step closer even though he was now shaking so badly he
could barely keep his stance. His eyes were still unfocused and wild, nothing
like they were the last few times he’d visited him in his cell.
“Cap, I think he’s having
a panic attack” Tony said suddenly, visor flipping up, “try and get
him calmed down so we can get you both out of here. Emily is coming down the
hallway, I’m going to make sure our path out is clear but we need to leave
before more HYDRA agents show up.” Steve nodded back at him before turning
his attention back to Bucky, hand still on the hilt of the knife to try and
keep him from lunging around him at Tony.
“Buck, Bucky, I need you
to look at me” Steve spoke sternly, Bucky’s gaze snapping back to him in
an instant, “please try and calm down. You’re breathing too hard, just,
try and focus on slowing it down.” He’d talked Tony through his panic
attacks in the last few months when something triggered them but Tony had never
had a penchant to try and kill him during them.
The knife came loose from his
grip a moment later, Steve quickly tossing it out of reach onto the abandoned
cot. Bucky was shuddering so much he looked like he was about to shake apart,
breath heaving in and out. He wanted to get the mask off of him but he didn’t
think it was a good idea with him still so flighty. He could easily end up
hurting him or himself.
“James, теперь ты в
безопасности.”
He felt Bucky jolt to look
over at the remains of the door where Emily was now standing silently, the
shield strapped to one arm. Steve would have spun around himself but he didn’t
dare make any sudden moves with Bucky in his state, knowing he was teetering on
the edge of attacking him or attacking anyone who so much as came within three
feet of him with a weapon.
“E-Emily.” Bucky’s
voice was painfully weak, hardly audible over his breathing. Steve heard her
walk over, she deliberately making enough noise so not to startle him, reaching
out to lay her hand on his arm gently. It seemed to ease his shaking a bit,
having two grounding points, but they didn’t have the time to get him
completely calmed down. They still had to get out of this nightmarish place and
get to safety.
“You’re going to be
fine.” She reassured him soothingly, her voice softer than he’d ever heard
it before, “we’re going to take you and Steve somewhere safe.” Bucky
seemed to calm a bit at her words, tentatively nodding in agreement as his
tremors subsided. He still looked pale and nervous but he didn’t seem to be on
the verge of passing out anymore. “Steve, Stark has the hallway clear but
we need to go now. More agents are inbound and we don’t have the head of the
base pinned down. Do you think he’s good for extraction?” Steve turned to
look at the Soldier at her words, and he mirrored the action.
“Do you think you can
make it out of the building, Buck? We need to go.” Steve asked and was
relieved when he saw the slight nod he got in response.
“Good. Clint and Bruce
are outside in a Quinjet. Let’s get you both home.” Emily whispered with a
little smile in the corner of her lips.
FOUR YEARS LATER
“Mommy!? Mommy, mommy,
mommy!!!” a squeaky voice has spreaded its echo around a cottage.
Little girl ran through upper floor, heading towards stairs leading at the
ground floor. She ran into the living room, looking around, but there was no
one, so she ran further.
Girl spotted the black chow-chow, who was laying at the dog bedding near the
main door.
“Hey! Xena! Have you seen Ma?”
girl, laughing loudly, went to the dog and pet dog’s head playfully.
The animal only barked lazly, so girl shook her head and decided to ran to the
garden.
But at the door a pair of
strong hands had caught her and she had been picked up. She was laughing and
squeaking.
“Uncle! Put me down, put me down!!!” she giggled, looking up into pair of
familiar, huge blue eyes.
Steve smirked and made an offended face.
“Nah, I don’t think so, I like to have you close, besides, now I hope I’ll have
better deal with your mother if it comes to a dessert!” Captain tickled little
belly of the girl, causing a bunch of giggles and squeaks.
“Uncle! Unfair!” little girl nuzzled to his neck. “Well, I’ll help ya with a dessert
if you’ll help me to look for my Ma! I can’t find her.”
Steve laughed briefly and gave a slight nod, then stepped outside t the garden,
holding girl in his arms.
Emily was sitting at the wide
swing with Bucky, they were catching sunrays of the late summer, cuddling and
talking.
When little girl noticed her parents, she squeaked once again, tugging Steve’s
sleve.
“Mommy! Daddy!” she yelled loudly and as soon as her little feet touched the
ground, she ran towards them, jumping at Bucky’s lap.
“Mommy! I was looking for you everywhere!!! I draw something for you!!” little
girl held a dawing in her hand and she passed it over to Emily.
Redhead woman took a piece of the paper in her hand and whistled shortly.
“James, look, I bet our girl’s gonna be an artist in the future!” she giggled.
Bucky took the drawing in his metal palm and took a look on that, letting Steve
to watch it also.
“I bet she’ll” Bucky took girl into his arms and hugged her tight, smiling
proudly. “My beautiful Marika.”
“I’m sorry to interrupt, but what’s with that dessert you had promissed me?”
Steve poked Emily’s shoulder and woman rolled her eyes.
“Captain is hungry as always. I told James before, they should’ve been calling
you Captain Hunger instead of America” Emily summed up, smiling sweetly.
All four talked for a while,
then headed back to the house.
They were living in peace, filling their lives with love and hope.
Hope for better world.
Whatever they had missed, they possessed together the
precious, the incommunicable past.
The words reached him gradually, spoken
softly and warmly as his tentative grip on reality tightened. He felt awful,
head swimming and senses dulled. He wanted nothing more than to give in to the
lull of sleep, to let go of consciousness and fall back into the waiting
darkness, but he knew that would leave him vulnerable. The awareness of his own
body was painfully slow to return. He was lying on something soft, his shoulder
ached with a pain like broken glass in his head, his mouth was far too dry and
something was touching him.
For some odd reason, he wasn’t as panicked
as he thought he’d be. Concerned was a more accurate word; concerned about what
was near him and who was speaking, but the voice was comforting and gentle, and
his guard wasn’t so quick to build up. It was familiar in some odd way that he
couldn’t quite put his finger on; it was nothing like the barking orders and
fearful murmurs of the white-coated men who pulled him from the icy depths of
cryostasis. He couldn’t have been in cryo for that matter, he felt too warm for
that, and waking from that death-sleep never happened on something soft; he
always awoke strapped down on a metal table, alone.
Movement in front of him; someone was
standing, walking away. He heard wooden floorboards creak softly underfoot. Not
in the facility. That was assuring, but also alarming. Where the
hell was he, if he wasn’t back there? Memories came back in a fuzzy tangle of
pain and confusion, not at all clear and providing no answers. All he could
definitively pick out was running, running, running, and
suffocating pain. It was too much of a jumbled mess to make sense of.
Testing his body was difficult. The pain
was sharp enough to register through the programming, indicating that something
was damaged severely. His thoughts were too sluggish for him to adequately
catalog his own wounds in his mental checklist to relay to his handlers. Wait—the
handlers are dead. That realization forced his eyes open, mind in
desperate need of affirmation for that line of thought. The light, however dim
it might have been, was oppressive and overpowering. He blinked several times
before he could make out any semblance of detail. The walls were painted a
warm, light color, with pictures and furniture scattered around the room. It
was nothing like the sterile space he typically woke in. Everything about it
was different, but not in an uncomfortable sort of way. He could see a pile of
bloody clothes—mine?—off
near the door, and was suddenly quite aware of how defenseless he felt.
“… Bucky?” the voice was so
sudden it caused him to twitch, body suddenly tense and ready to spring when he
caught sight of someone peeking in from a doorway across the room. His vision
was still blurry but he thought he recognized him. When the person stepped
closer he was sitting up in an instant—and instantly regretted it. The sharp
movement caused a burst of warmth on his shoulder, choking down a yelp at the
intense pain. He chanced looking away from the man, metal hand cautiously
touching the back of his shoulder. The limb lacked tactile sensation, but he
did determine there was something spongy and yielding there, and when he
removed the hand, the fingers were covered in fresh blood. My
shirt was removed and wounds tended to. Did the man do this?
The couch, he’d realized he was lying on
one a few seconds prior, dipped slightly as the man sat down next to him,
keeping enough space between them so he wasn’t crowded. The fact that he had
approached without him noticing was enough to alarm the asset into immediate
guard. He pressed himself against the arm of the couch, back against it and
wound as far away from the other as he could get it. He studied him intently,
looking for any weapon or any item that was a danger. He was ready to defend
himself at the slightest provocation.
“I brought you some juice, if you
want something to drink.” The man with the bright eyes spoke softly,
offering him a clear plastic cup filled about halfway with the liquid, smiling
at him with familiarity. It was brightly colored and somewhat unusual looking,
but it smelled rather pleasant and his dry throat was suddenly at the forefront
of his awareness. The confusion surrounding how he got here was still taking
precedence in his mind, but the man, he remembered something about him. His
voice was the one that had said he was safe. His hands were faintly stained
with blood and his shirt was marred with it as well. He
must be the one who treated me. He wasn’t entirely sure why that
thought was comforting, but it was.
Moments passed with no movement between
the two, the assassin distrustful and rightfully wary. Kindness and compassion
were both incredibly foreign concepts, locked out of him by layers and layers
of ridged programming and conditioning. There had to be some reason this man
was doing this. Was he being prepped for something?
He swallowed thickly, the dryness of his
throat too much to ignore, and cautiously extended his metal hand out to take
the offered cup. Eye contact was never broken, not giving the other the chance
to do anything that could threaten him. The cup was fragile, thin plastic, and
it took a little testing to make sure he wouldn’t break it before he took it
from him.
“Its orange juice,” the man
started, “I have milk or water if you’d rather have that?” was he
asking for his preference? That was… he didn’t really remember any time when
anyone had asked what he’d wanted. He didn’t respond and regarded the juice
warily, but he eventually deemed it safe. It wasn’t logical to go through all
the effort of tending to his wounds just to poison him. Even with that thought
in mind, his first sip was hesitant. It tasted overwhelmingly sweet, enough so
that it almost made him gag, but he was so thirsty he probably would have taken
just about anything.
Emily was standing on the corridor,
listening to the conversation of two men. She sighed sadly, knowing that
something was about to happen..
“Will you let me look at your
shoulder?” the question was entirely unexpected, causing icy eyes to cut
over to the other man, “It’s bleeding again, and I’d like to get an actual
bandage on it, if that’s alright with you.” He was asking his permission.
The concept was almost intangible to his methodical mind. He had rarely been
told what was happening to him, let alone given anything resembling a choice;
when things needed to be done, things were done, and he had no say in them. He
was interested in his wellbeing, so perhaps he was a new handler, to replace
the ones that were dead.
“One round, sniper rifle, distance of
several blocks.” He repeated all the information he knew about the injury,
“Bullet didn’t exit, needs extraction.” His voice was monotonous, not
looking away from the man at his right. Several moments of silence passed
before he watched the other man retrieve several items from the floor before
sitting back down next to him, much closer this time. In response the soldier
moved, sitting so that his back was to him so he could reach the wound easily.
He was operating on programming and instinct, otherwise he never would have
turned away from him.
“I’m going to take off the bandage
now, let me know if it hurts and I’ll stop.” His voice was still that
gentle tone that held a familiarity that he couldn’t place. He didn’t respond,
just sipping the juice he had been given as he felt the other peel the
blood-soaked fabric from the wound. To distract himself he tried to focus on
the events that ended with him waking up in this place. He remembered something
about the Strike team, about HYDRA,
about desperately seeking out someone, about Robrax.
The asset tensed absentmindedly when he
felt the other man dab at the wound with a cloth, wiping away the blood. He
heard a hastily mumbled “sorry” from behind him before the work was
continued, gentler than before. Minutes passed in silence, with the weapon
sitting stilly and obediently as the taller man cleaned and dressed the wound.
The disinfectant stung but he didn’t show any discomfort, allowing him to clean
the wound thoroughly as he let himself be lost in his own thoughts.
A hazy memory trickled into his mind of a
cold and dimly-lit apartment, with himself and someone else sitting on a ratty
old couch covered in moth-eaten blankets. The other person was scratching the
stub of a charcoal pencil into a small sketchbook, bundled up in as many of
those pathetic-looking blankets as he could and sitting as close to—me?—as was physically
possible. He remembered feeling Steve, his name was Steve, shivering horribly
even through all those blankets. It was winter, he’d just gotten over
pneumonia, and he remembered how scared he’d been thinking he was going to lose
him. But… why did he remember this? Were those memories actually his?
“… you still draw, don’t you,
Steve?” the soldier suddenly questioned, the degrading programming
loosening its grip on his awareness now that he was fully awake. The other man,
he remembered his name now. He was Steve Rogers. Captain Steve Rogers. He was
the only face he could recall with any clarity, therefore he had to have held
some significant importance to him at some time.
“I—” Steve faltered, finishing
up wrapping gauze tape around his shoulder to hold the sterile packing in
place, “Y-yeah I do, Buck. You… always liked watching me draw.” His
voice was tentative and hopeful, something the asset made immediate mental note
of. He heard Steve putting away things behind him, and he took it as a sign
that he was finished.
“… do you still keep a
sketchbook?” the assassin wasn’t sure why he was so interested, but the
memory had been rather clear and he took it as an opportunity to possibly learn
if it was real. He tilted his head to glance back over his shoulder, and saw
Steve nod slightly. “Can I see it?” he wasn’t used to asking
questions, to voicing his own thoughts, and he felt a need to try it. Seeing
the smile that broke across the other’s face was oddly rewarding.
“Of course you can.” Steve
nearly fumbled over his own words, eyes alight with some emotion he couldn’t
place, “Here, Bucky.” A shirt was held out to him when he turned to
face him fully, “Your shirt was ruined, so you can use one of mine.”
Blue eyes regarded it somewhat warily, but he took it from him regardless. It
was little more than a plain grey shirt, but it was appreciated. “I’ll go
and get you some more juice and my sketchbook. I’ll be back in a moment.”
The empty cup was retrieved from his hand, the assassin not startling at the
sudden movement, before the man left the room. Bucky.
There was that name again. His name. He dimly recalled it—yes, it was his name.
The shirt was a little difficult to put on
with his arm and shoulder injured, but it was managed. The horrific grinding
and popping of his joint when he pulled it over his head confirmed that the
injury had to be set. He added it into his mental list of injuries. The garment
was a little big on his thinned frame, but it was clean and comfortable. It had
a somewhat familiar scent to it as well that he couldn’t quite recall. Even in
as much pain as he was, he felt better than he had in a very long time. Not
physically better; he felt absolutely awful physically, but maybe a little
better mentally.
He had confirmation that his name was the
same as the Sergeant memorialized in the museum, and that this other man was
the same Steve that he could dimly remember. There was still an odd disconnect
between himself and his past, between himself and the man known as Bucky, but
this was a fragile thread that tied him back to it. There were a lot of blank,
empty spaces where memories should be in his mind, and he doubted he’d ever get
everything back, but this felt… right? Being here with Steve felt right. Yes,
he was fairly certain this was the right thing to do.
Tired eyes caught sight of a few folded
blankets on the floor near his feet. He might have just regained consciousness
but he still felt absolutely exhausted and drained. One of the blankets was
picked up, wrapped around him tightly to try and block the cold. It was one of
those odd constants that never left; cold seemed to follow him like his own
shadow, sinking teeth of ice into his flesh every waking moment. No matter what
he tried he never could seem to warm himself up. He curled up tightly under the
fabric, feeling a tentative safety for the first time in a long while. All the
running and fear and paranoia was starting to melt, bit by bit, as he allowed
his eyes to close willingly. By the time Steve returned, he had already dozed
off, huddled against the arm of the couch with his back to the door; a small,
fragile sign of trust. It was the first deep, peaceful sleep he could remember
since he woke from stasis.
When he opened his eyes this time there
was no light, the space dark and silent, the reason for just why he was awake
unclear. Several moments passed before he realized he was staring into fabric;
the back of a couch, he determined. Unease breathed at the back of his neck,
but nothing seemed outwardly wrong around him. However, something still felt off.
His memories were slow to catch up with his awareness, but he pieced together
where he was soon enough. This time his return to consciousness didn’t come
with any overwhelming paranoia, just a faint acknowledgment of his surroundings;
it was a first for the soldier.
He hadn’t moved at all since falling
asleep, the skill of remaining completely motionless honed into a fine art. It
was an ability he’d possessed even before HYDRA’s conditioning; he half
recalled something about sniping. The downside was that he was now rather sore,
and he was sure the injuries he’d sustained earlier in the night had only been
compounded by his lack of movement. He’d slept on his right arm, which hadn’t
done his dislocated joint any favors. He would be sure to alert his new handler
to the injury come morning.
There was a momentary lapse before he
corrected his thought. Not handler, Steve.
The man was an odd sort of mystery in his head. He wasn’t a handler, wasn’t a
white-coated tech, wasn’t anything he was familiar with. Steve was Steve.
He was a strange exception in a world of ridged rules and protocols. Normally
such an obvious outlier would make him nervous, but Steve’s presence was
comforting and nonthreatening and achingly familiar.
Movement was difficult; now that the
adrenaline and shock had worn off he felt the full force of the pain. Every
muscle seemed to ache, a deep-seeded burn that spread from his skin to the
deepest parts of him. His prosthetic creaked and the servos whined pitifully,
the weeks of abuse and ill-care wearing at it. Getting into a sitting position
took much more effort than he expected, but now that he had a clear view of the
entire room he felt a little safer. The tentative feeling of security let him
will himself to take stock of his situation.
The room hadn’t changed except for the
light having been flipped off, but the darkness was of no hindrance. He could
see rather well at night, but whether or not that was inherent or due to HYDRA
tampering he wasn’t sure. Despite the fact that this place exuded a sense of
safety that he’d never experienced before, checking the perimeter and his
surroundings was so ingrained in him that he felt a compulsion to do it.
As he moved to get up, he noticed there
was a second blanket covering him. Or had been, before he sat up and caused it
to tumble off of him in a heap. Absentmindedly he reached out to pick it up,
wincing a bit at the metallic whine of his artificial joints and tendons.
Several of the plates were jarred out of place, clanking together unnaturally
and restricting his range of motion. Dried blood mired the reflective surface,
coming not from himself but from nameless HYDRA agents. As soon as he had
recovered enough to be effective, he had gone and destroyed every safe house he
knew of, killing every HYDRA agent he came across. He was going to destroy
HYDRA all on his own if it came to that; they were going to regret ever having
created him. He’d see to it.
“Mm, Buck?” the sleepy hum of
the Captain broke the silence, the soldier’s eyes cutting over in that
direction. He hadn’t even noticed the other man had placed himself in a nearby
chair, now-open eyes regarding him tiredly. Keeping an eye on me? Making
sure I don’t escape?The second thought made his brow furrow a
bit. No, that’s not right. He somehow
just knew that wasn’t why he had opted to rest out here instead of returning to
the bedroom.
The asset didn’t respond verbally, but
gave him a brief nod before he carried through with picking up the blanket. The
nervousness was once again settling into the pit of his stomach, the sort of
feeling he expected prey felt before a predator sprung from the shadows. It was
such an unfamiliar feeling, as he was usually the lurking predator in question.
He could hear Steve stretching and moving to get up, so he decided to remain
seated; he had a feeling the Captain would fuss if he tried to get up and walk
with his wounds.
“Feeling any better?” the
other’s voice was far too bright for it being so early in the morning. The
assassin just watched as he tapped at a phone, glancing to him after the screen
lit up. He took a moment to check himself mentally before he responded. His
metal fingers hesitantly relinquished their grip on the blanket, instead
wrapping gingerly around his shoulder joint, where the Captain had dislocated
it in their struggle.
“… arm hurts.” He mumbled
quietly, lacking the robotic, monotonous quality that had previously dominated
his voice. He knew that the Captain had seen the deep bruising and
discoloration around the joint, as the bullet wound was plastered in the middle
of it, but he was well aware that there was likely little he could do for it.
Even he wasn’t sure if it was just a dislocation, or if there was a fracture as
well. The frown that appeared on the other man’s face at his words was enough
to make the nervousness he was experiencing leap to the front of his mind.
“We’ll get it looked at, don’t
worry.” His voice was always so soothing, “But…” discomfort,
possibly even fear crept into the other’s tone suddenly, serving to heighten
the soldier’s apprehension. His gaze was at his phone again, tapping his finger
against it nervously. “… we can’t stay here, we need to get somewhere
safe.” The sense of urgency was contagious, it seemed. The hairs on the
back of his neck were on-end again, and the assassin was on his feet in a few
seconds.
“Buck, are you sure you’re alright to
be up and..” the glare he directed at the Captain was much more
threatening than he meant it to be, but he got his point across as the rest of
the man’s sentence withered in his throat. He wasn’t fragile, he wasn’t to be
coddled; he was a weapon that was damaged and malfunctioning, not broken and
useless. Weakness wasn’t tolerated, his handlers had made sure to drive that
into his programming.
“Give me a minute to get ready and
get you a jacket, then we’ve gotta move out.” Those were words the soldier
remembered and associated with. Location compromised, moving to
safety. It must be why he woke up; HYDRA must be closing in. It was
enough to make his muscles stiffen with readiness, not wanting to be taken by
surprise like last time. They wouldn’t have that luxury. Not again.
Emily also had packed some necessary stuff
earlier. She was standing in the middle of the room, with a backpack hanging
over her shoulder.
“Guys…” she whispered. “We don’t have much
time.”
Waiting was not in the Winter Soldier’s
repertoire, and instead of remaining still he was up and moving. The pistol he
had dropped earlier was retrieved, inspected and placed into his pocket. There
wasn’t a lot of ammunition left in it, but enough to be useful. He’d done more
damage with much, much less. Now that he was up he decided to do that perimeter
check he’d been planning on. Steve was doing something in his room, so he
avoided that room and checked every other one. His pass through the kitchen
produced the knife he’d left that first night, still sullied with the Captain’s
blood, and a worn sketchbook. There was a twinge of guilt in his stomach that
passed quickly as he placed the blade back into the sheath at his ankle. The
small book, likely the one Steve had been bringing to show him, was tucked into
his pocket.
The dull, aching burn in his muscles was
pushed out of his awareness; now that there was a clear threat to him all pain
was ignored. It was how he had been conditioned, trained and taught; pain was a
weakness and only useful for determining damage after a successful mission. He
hated to admit that he was nervous, but he was. He had the beginnings of
fragile trust in Steve, but this had the makings of a trap. Suddenly relocating
after arriving? Departing hours before the sun rose, when no one would ever
notice their passing? It was enough to set off warning bells in the soldier’s
mind.
“Buck,” the Captain’s hesitant
voice broke his thoughts, eyes cutting over to where the other man was peeking
in from the door, “Are you ready?” again with questions, again with
asking him things. It was still a strange and unusual concept to the asset,
used only to demands and orders. He responded only with a curt nod, taking a
jacket that the other offered to him. It was somewhat big on him, but worn and
soft and comfortable nonetheless. Nothing like the rigid combat gear HYDRA had
outfitted him with. In a way he felt vulnerable, missing the reassuring weight and
constriction of his body armor.
Steve had a small pack slung over his
shoulder, the contents of which the soldier didn’t know, and shield strapped to
his arm. It was clear, however, that they were likely not coming back, not for
a long time at least. There was no sentimental attachment to this place for
him, he didn’t have any sentimental attachments honestly, but he did know this
place and knew it was safe in his mind, so leaving it didn’t sit right in his
mind. He did know, however, that staying would end in certain HYDRA custody or
death.
Ushered out into the hall, the soldier
only moved when prompted by his new handler. No, Steve. His
senses were on alert, although still dulled and sluggish from the blood loss
earlier. The sleep and bandaging had improved his awareness a bit, although
even with his serum it would take a few more hours before he would be in a
condition he was comfortable with. He just watched as Steve tapped at his
phone, door pulled shut behind him. It was only after he read some text message
for the fifth time that he suddenly froze.
“Shit.” Now that got a reaction
out of the soldier. He tensed up and stood perfectly still, the tone of Steve’s
voice setting off warnings and alarm bells that something was catastrophically
wrong. His tone had been nothing but softness and warmth up until now; the
swear sparked just the ghost of a sensation in his head, of cold wind and the
smell of gunsmoke as he peered over a trench in some long forgotten
battlefield.
“We need to move. Now.”
the words spilled out of the blond man suddenly, a hand grabbing his right arm
without warning and tugging him down towards the stairs. Normally such an
unexpected action would have warranted a swift punch to the jaw, but the
startled tone in the other’s voice alerted him that something was very, very wrong. He didn’t resist, letting Steve
lead him swiftly down the stairs and towards a back door, the other man
mumbling the entire way about something about the text having been wrong.
Muffled voices—HYDRA,
Strike team—filtered through the walls from outside, formless
shadows visible through the frosted glass of the front doors.
Subtly was thrown out the window as Steve
kicked the back door open and bolted outside, the asset stumbling and fighting
to keep up with the jolting motion. The man had yet to let go of his arm,
guiding him through narrow alleyways and side streets in a path that seemed
predetermined. He didn’t know the plan, which was a source of anxiety in and of
itself, but Steve clearly had something in mind, so for the first time he—trust
was too strong a word—relied on the other’s decisions to get them
out of harm’s way.
HYDRA agents were all over, dressed in
varying uniforms of Strike and police and others he did not recognize. They
shouted as they tried to corner them, seemingly appearing from nowhere from
alleyways and cars and from behind objects. Steve did not engage them, instead
pulling him along as he ducked and weaved dizzyingly between buildings and
sleepy streets. He had a set destination in mind, the asset could tell, and
even though the sight of HYDRA angered him into considering pulling away to
fight, he knew it was too risky to separate himself from the Captain.
Unfortunately, HYDRA did that for him.
There was a sudden, jarring shout from one of the alleys they were about to
blow past, and before either could react the darkened space filled with
blinding light and a concussive sound. Flashbang. Steve
yelled something but the asset didn’t hear, the grip on his arm lost as the
other covered his ears. Even before the white left his vision, formless shapes
surrounded them as agents appeared to spring from the very walls to box them
in. Wordlessly, the assassin and the Avenger stood back to back, fitting into
formation as easily as if it was something they did every day. The pistol was
pulled from his pocket, knowing that even with little ammo it would be more
effective at the moment than a knife. There was a brief flash of familiarity in
his mind, but the situation around him drowned it out almost instantly.
“Drop your weapon and surrender the
asset, Captain Rogers!” a husky voice barked out, a dozen barrels of a
dozen guns aimed at them. He could feel Steve tense against his back, but so
vastly outnumbered and outgunned any outburst now would likely end in one or
both of them dead.
“… Steve.” He wasn’t sure just
why he spoke, or why his voice was softened and hinted with an accent he only
vaguely recalled, but he did. It was a sort of rash, sudden need to ground
himself in the present, to remind himself that the man behind him was indeed
the Steve he could so faintly remember. His statement, however, had an
unintended consequence.
“The asset’s compromised,” that
growling voice spoke again, “he’ll need to be wiped and reconditioned if
we’re going to salvage this.” That statement triggered an intense,
shattering terror in the assassin the likes of which he could not recall.
Broken memories of deafening electricity crackling madly, of being tied down
and unresisting and passive, suddenly swam in his mind and broke through his
calculating combat mindset. Without thought he pressed himself further against
Steve’s back, as if somehow he could hide from his own horrifying memories in
the other’s presence.
“Buck, it’s alright,” voice
hushed and gentle, the Captain spoke only loud enough for him to hear,
“You’ve got to work with me, we’re going to work together to get out of
this, just follow my lead.” It wasn’t worded as an order or command, and
as such disoriented the soldier for a moment, but that fragile ideal of trust
settled in to fill in the gaps and his only response was a slight nod that went
unseen. They could do this. “Emily. I’m gonna take their attention, you need to
run. If they will take us three, nothing will left.”
She nodded slightly and before the fight,
she ran toward the nearest window. She stopped in front of it, taking a look
back at her men. Steve was looking at her above his shoulder, he gave her a
nod, so she followed his order and jumped out of the window, disappearing in
the darkness of the night.
There was no warning for the HYDRA agents,
shield thrown and colliding with several and incapacitating them while three
expertly placed and near-simultaneous bullets downed three permanently. They
moved in sync, still keeping each at their back even after separating and
lunging at the ring of agents that surrounded them. The now-useless pistol had
been abandoned in favor for a blade, which was used to swiftly and efficiently
disable and kill two more agents before they could even fire off a round.
The resonant clang of the shield behind him let him
subconsciously track the Captain’s movements, even as he threw himself into the
tangle of agents in front of him. He used the knowledge that he was wanted
alive to his advantage, as he knew they wouldn’t dare try to shoot him at such
close range as it would likely irreparably damage him and they would lose their
prized asset. It couldn’t have worked better for him, as he was just as
comfortable and deadly dispatching a target at close range as he was sniping.
An agent was slammed against the nearby
wall, razored blade deftly sliding between neck vertebras to kill his target
instantly. Without a moment’s hesitation he was upon another, moving with all
the predatory grace of a hunting cat, throat slit and body casually dropped as
if it were little more than a discarded jacket. The remaining two agents in his
field of view turned and bolted, and had he been on his prior missions of
annihilating HYDRA installations around the city he would have pursued them
relentlessly, but now he barely acknowledged their escape. Instead, he spun on
his heel to where Steve was fighting, wasting no time engaging the remaining
agents that swarmed him.
His blood-sullied blade dipped into the
throat of a Strike member readying to shoot Steve’s back, a gurgled wheeze of
horrified shock the only noise that escaped before he was roughly shoved aside.
Sticky crimson soaked deep into his jacket and clothes beneath but little
regard was given to it; the horrors of his actions seemed as commonplace as any
daily act to him after decades of repetition. Another HYDRA infantrymen lunged
at Rogers with
a stun baton, but the soldier intercepted him, slashing with a precise stroke
that opened the man’s torso as easily as a zipper. He fell noiselessly into a
jumbled heap of blood and viscera at the Captain’s feet, a non-threat.
Soon only a few hostiles remained, mostly
stepping far back and firing as many rounds as they could at Captain Rogers.
The asset refused to leave the man’s side again, tucked up close near him in an
effort to deter any more firing, and to his dim surprise it seemed to work. The
agents backed away even farther, guns raised but triggers untouched, eyes
locked on them. He took the brief lull in fire to glance at Steve for a moment,
to assess his condition. He was on his feet, but blood had soaked his right leg
from a bullet wound to the calf. A slash from a knife tore through his jacket
and into his side, while red dribbled from his saturated sleeve from another
entry wound. He was standing, for the moment, but the soldier knew that even
with the serum the blood loss would catch him quickly.
Steve asked something, something about how
he was holding up or the like, but the assassin didn’t catch it. Instead his
attention was elsewhere when his eyes caught a brief flash of light from the
roof of a building two streets over. His heart fell into his stomach and his
shout of warning was lost to the rifle crack when the realization hit. Of
course, the bullet hit first, just not in the place HYDRA had wanted it.
The soldier had reacted instinctively,
kicking the back of Steve’s injured leg hard enough that he buckled. His sudden
movement meant the bullet, aimed for a kill shot on the Avenger’s heart,
instead struck and slid off the slant of his shield and hit his collarbone. A
second bullet, fired milliseconds after the first from a likely second sniper,
caught him across his already-slashed ribs, blossoming open as if it were a
grotesque flower. The strangled cry of shock and pain that left the man as he
crumpled to the ground snapped something buried deep beneath HYDRA programming,
and within a half-second he had grabbed Steve by his arm and pulled him into a
small alcove between two buildings. He heard two more bullets strike the
asphalt where they had been moments before, and knew that HYDRA was likely not
going to take Steve alive.
All thoughts of the remaining HYDRA agents
were abandoned at the sound of Steve’s raspy breathing, the assassin leaning
him against the building wall as to hopefully ease it some as he leaned down to
his level. Even though the shield had absorbed most of the energy of the round,
the wound was devastating. The bullet had shattered his collarbone, flesh torn
and ripped and blood dripping freely. A dribble of the crimson stained the
Captain’s chin, breath labored and choking and heaved in and out. His
lung’s been punctured, probably collapsing. The second bullet had
no doubt shattered his ribs, and the awful torn wound was jagged and blown
apart by the unimpeded bullet’s passing. It was a grim prognosis.
The sounds of the agents trying to regroup
from the attack were hardly registered, hands pressed to the man’s injury in a
desperate attempt to stem the flow of blood. A pained cough escaped him,
reddened mouth slackened open as he tried again and again to fill his lungs
full to no avail. “B… B-Buck…” he slurred wetly through the blood,
half-lidded eyes beginning to glaze over as unconsciousness loomed, “… got
t-to… get… a-away…” shock was setting in, body trembling under the
assassin’s hands, but he mustered the energy to nudge him with the shield in a
halfhearted attempt to push him into running. He wanted him to leave him
behind, to save himself from falling back into HYDRA’s control. The very
thought of it twisted the soldier’s stomach in a knot and caused his breath to
catch in his throat.
“S-Steve,” his
normally-controlled voice was shaky and small, fear filling every inch of him
as trembling, blood-stained metallic fingers brushed golden hair away and
cupped the Captain’s cheek to hold his gaze on him, “You’ve gotta hold
on,” his eyes began to sting as an unfamiliar heat and blurriness began to
build, “I-I’m not leaving you behind.” Something had woken up deep in
his mind, faint ghosts of memories of battles long past. Of fights in alleys
where both refused to run away, never leaving the other’s side. It was such a
strong emotion that consumed him that he couldn’t ever hope to fight it, and
strangely enough, he possessed no will to resist it.
Footsteps and barked orders behind him
drew him from his withdrawn, focused state. It was like a switch flicking in
his head, the sharp focus of combat and programming setting in, and within the
space of a breath he had taken the shield from Steve’s faltering grasp and spun
around, keeping himself between the agents and his injured partner. His vision
was blurred and his eyes stung fiercely, an unfamiliar wetness trailing down a
cheek, but he didn’t move from his defensive stance, rooted to the spot with
shield held solid in his metal prosthetic. The plates whirled and slid together
with a groan of protest, ready to lash out with the vibranium disk at the
slightest movement.
“Get away!” he snarled in a
voice so loud it startled the men, “Get away from him!” he swung the
shield at an agent that dared to approach, knocking him clean off his feet and
sending him tumbling. The sharp, ripping pain as his own shoulder wound tore
caused him to wince, but it was immediately stuffed down as he had much more
important things to focus on. Seeing their own knocked away so easily, even
while he was in such a state, caused the others to take heed and back away a
few feet. Even though his joint protested, he retrieved and hid a blade in the
palm of his injured arm, keeping it disguised behind the shield. If they got
close again they would be in for a nasty surprise.
“This is… unexpected.” The same
agent who spoke earlier piped up, rifle trained on the pair with deadly intent,
“Looks like the programming has decayed more than anticipated. General
Lukin isn’t going to be pleased.” That name was familiar, and struck a
fear like a dagger of ice into the soldier’s heart. He pressed himself back,
shield held higher in a desperate attempt to keep the agents at bay. Steve
moved behind him, whimpering in pain, and a moment later the former Soviet felt
his hand press reassuringly to his back in a wordless gesture of trust. It was
enough to steel his nerves, to dispel his own fear just enough to focus on the
agents who had chanced to venture further.
With an almost animalistic roar, he leapt
at the nearest agent, jamming the sharp edge of the shield into his ribcage,
crushing it like a flimsy can. He dropped into a tangle of limbs, and he used
the moment of confusion to swing at another, feeling the agent’s skull cave
under the impact. The shield was brought down on the neck of another agent,
while the knife in his right hand pierced the torso of one rushing at him. As
he swiveled to lunge at the seeming-commander he froze mid-strike, eyes wide
with terror, when he saw that another agent had a gun trained to the downed
Captain’s head.
“No!” the word clawed its way
out of him, shield and blade falling from his hand in a show of submission,
eyes wide with feral panic. “D-don’t do it.” He’d never demanded
anything from anyone, not in all his active years, but he was now. He was
scared, desperate and out of options, pleading like one of his victims to spare
the other man’s life. The commander’s gravelly voice broke into a laugh behind
him, but before he could round on him he felt a pinprick on the back of his
neck, followed immediately by a burst of warmth that spider-webbed through his
body. His knees buckled and vision swam, awareness growing fuzzy as he
collapsed to the ground. He gasped out Steve’s name, tried to push himself back
up, but he couldn’t even prevent his eyes from sliding shut a heartbeat later.
His hearing muffled, but the last thing he was aware of was that growl of a
voice ordering the surviving agents to take the both of them before everything
drained away into nothingness.
Words: 1314 Warnings: a little bit of cursing Summary: Bucky wants to take a flight to Bucharest, unfortunately
at the airport there are problems because of his metal limb. Sam and Steve need
to calm their friend down, but it all goes wrong.. Requested by: anonymous Gif:x
Author: Beast
The terminal gate had a
large sitting area with the generic airport rows of chairs that were stuck
together, some of which were already filled with a mix of waiting passengers, a
few of them cheerfully optimistic while some looked irritated. The wide, glass
windows afforded a great view of the planes outside.
Bucky was sitting at
the chair, his legs crossed nicely as he was checking his phone and email.
He cursed and checked his watch.
„I’m gonna kill ‘em” he
grunted under his breath.
Standing up to stretch,
he looked around the terminal gate and noticed that the number of people had
dwindled. Bucky resisted the temptation to lick his lips, a nervous
habit that he’d never lost.
He spotted Sam and
Steve several minutes later.
“You both are late.
AGAIN” Bucky crossed his arms over his chest. “I’ve been waiting for fucking two
hours!
Steve approached Bucky
and put his large hand at man’s shoulder.
“I’m so sorry, Buck.
There was a huge traffic jam” blonde said in a soft voice, trying to calm his
buddy down.
Bucky only rolled his
eyes.
“Fine. Can we go now? I
don’t wanna miss a flight”.
Steve nodded and
pulling out his documents, with Sam and Bucky by his side, he went to the airport
check-in.
When their documents had
been inspected, guys went in the direction of security’s machine to check upon
metal stuff in their luggage.
The closer they were,
the more stressed Bucky was.
“Steve, shit, I won’t
pass it, ya know..” Bucky gently pointed at his left arm, carefully covered by
a grey hoodie.
“Easy, Buck, we’re
gonna make it” Steve patted his friend’s back, trying to give Bucky his
support.
As soon as the trio
stopped in front of the machine, they gave their bags to one of the guards to
let them check it.
After a while, the tall
man asked Steve to go through a metal detector.
Steve went through it
without any problems and as soon as he did, he turned to gave Bucky a look.
He knew his friend was a bit terrified.
Sam also went through the
detector without any issues.
And then it was Bucky’s
turn.
“Sir?” the tall guard
looked at Bucky with a suspicious gaze. “Is everything alright? You can do it
now.”
Bucky nodded nervously
and after several deep breaths he slowly stepped through the machine.
As soon as he did, the
detector started to beep like a crazy, signaling presence of metal with flashing of a
little red light.
Another security guard approached
Bucky and started to search him down.
“Pockets are clear” he
said to other man dressed in an uniform.
It was until guard
touched Bucky’s metal arm through his hoodie. Man frowned and glared up at
Bucky.
“Sir. We need you to
pull up your sleeve, please” guy said slowly, looking carefully at Bucky.
Barnes sighed deeply
and gave a brief look to Steve, who only nodded.
Bucky slowly rolled up
his sleeve, revealing his metal limb.
Two other security
guards came to check upon Bucky’s metal arm.
“Uhm.. Sir.. Is that
real or fake?” one of men, an older dude with glasses asked politely, blinking
few times.
Bucky hesitated and as
annoyed as he was, he mumbled quietly.
“Real.”
Guards gathered
themselves in a little circle, whispering something among each other.
“I knew it’ll end up like
this, Steve” Sam leaned to blonde man and chuckled softly.
“Shhh, Sam, not now”
Steve raised his hand to give his friend a sign to be quiet.
Bucky was still
standing in a place. He felt like an animal caught in a snares. Feeling glances
of other people, who were looking at him out of curiosity, Bucky growled
loudly.
“Ekhem. Shall we?” he
gave an anxious look to the older guard.
Man nodded and took a
deep breath.
“I am sorry sir, I am afraid
we cannot let you through with that metal.”
Bucky blinked and
instinctively looked at Steve with an imploring glance.
“I have to go with my
friends” Barnes felt like an idiot saying this. “We have a flight to Bucharest.”
Was he trying to
explain himself?!
Steve approached them
and smiled gently.
“Yes. He’s with us. We
have very important meeting there and we can’t miss this flight” Steve has shown
his ticket to guards. “Please.”
The older man shook his
head.
“I am sorry sir, it’s
the main rule and we have to obey it.”
Steve was about saying something,
when other guard cleared his throat.
“Sir” man looked at
Bucky, “is there something you can do with this… metal limb?”
Bucky blinked and shook
his head.
“No. Don’t think so, for fuck’s sake..”
“Oh yes, he can!” it
was no one else but Sam who stand next to Steve. “Buck, you can reattach it.”
“Oh, for sure, little
fucker!” Bucky growled aloud, causing the guards gave him an odd glances. “Ya
know I can’t do it now!”
Sam giggled.
“Easy, man, trying to
give ya some idea” Falcon shrugged with a cheeky grin on his lips.
Oh, how much Bucky was
hating that grin!
It caused his rage
increased within seconds.
“Fuck you, Sam!” Bucky
blew a hit in Falcon’s shoulder, but Sam blocked his hit.
Guards immediately came
in between two men to separate them from each other.
“EASY!” the older man
shouted. He turned his face to Bucky. “Is there any chance for you to reattach
that metal limb now?” he asked.
“I’ve been telling you
that no! For fuck’s sake, are you deaf, man!?” Bucky jerked, trying to free his
hand from grasp of security guards.
Falcon only laughed,
looking how frustrated Bucky was.
“You can try to put
your hand up in the air and go through that machine again!” he laughed from his
own joke. “Maybe it’ll work, huh?”
Steve punched Sam’s
shoulder, making an angry face and narrowing his brows.
“Sam, stop, don’t make
it worse!”
But Falcon’s comment
made Bucky yelled loudly.
“Fuck you, Wilson! Why
are you such a cunt, huh!?”
Sam smirked again,
laughing hardly.
“Because I love to piss
ya off, Buck!” he chuckled.
The guards were
thinking for a while.
“Well.. Maybe we can
try to wrap your limb in some material..” one of man suggested.
Steve nodded eagerly.
“Let’s give it a try,
men.”
Few minutes and outbursts
of anger later, Bucky’s arm was wrapped in a large white piece of a material
guards have found in an janitor’s room.
Steve was standing in
front of Bucky.
“Relax, take it easy” Rogers instructed his
friend before the next attempt.
He made a place for
Bucky and gently pushed him ahead.
Sam was standing next
to the guards, awaiting for the event development.
Bucky walked through the detector once again, but he
didn’t succeed. Again, the machine started to beep.
Steve just knew it won’t end properly as soon as he
spotted like Sam took a step ahead in the direction of Bucky and like he was spreading
his arms.
“Go back to the shadow, Winter Soldier! YOU SHALL NOT
PASS!” Sam intoned with a deep voice, trying to sound like Gandalf from Lord of the Rings.
Before Steve barely could say something, Bucky simply
jumped to Falcon and after a while both men were tussling on the floor.
“How dare you, little fucker!” Bucky was yelling,
strangling Sam a bit.
Wilson was blocking each move of Barnes and after a moment
of fight, he managed to kick Winter Soldier off himself.
When Bucky was laying on the ground, gasping for air,
Sam crawled to him and punched him at the shoulder, choking himself with a
laughter.
“I am sorry, man!” Sam rolled at his back, Bucky did
same. “I just had to do it.”
Bucky growled, but after a second he was laughing too.
“Fucker” Bucky playfully punched Sam’s shoulder. “I
hate you.”
Imagine:
Iron Man
kills Captain in front of Bucky’s eyes.
Bucky froze motionless. His heart stopped for a short moment. His blood turned into an ice.
Only thing he has heard was a familiar voice. But was he able to recognize it under all those emotions?
Tony Stark was standing on shaking legs, looking ahead. He watched as Steve slowly sank on his knees. “..I’m sorry..” Tony rasped. “I’m sorry, Steve, I didn’t know I fired the repulsers…” his voice was trembling as he spoke.
Steve let out a soft groan, indicating that he is still alive. Before Tony could apologize again, he has been pushed away from Steve with a strong force. His suit hit the wall behind him, and it took him a moment to adjust his coordination. When he looked up, Bucky was glaring at him.
“I’m so…” Tony tried to say, but his breath was knocked out by a strong punch, directed at his arc reactor. Bucky has been driven with an anger. He punched Tony with his cybernetic arm again, causing the suit to bend inwards. Bucky let out a growl, then he drove his hand into the arc reactor with more force. Bucky kept his metal hand digging into Tony’s arc reactor, crushing it. Tony tried to push Bucky away, but he failed.
“Bucky…” it was nothing more than a whisper.
Barnes, shaking all over his bpdy turned around and walked to Steve who’s laying on the ground. He knelt next to his friend, taking a hold of his hand. “Steve” he managed to say. Bucky’s gaze slowly slipped at Steve’s torso. There was a hole caused by a hit of an energy stream.
Bucky turned his face, automatically closing his eyes. He knew exactly how it meant to end..
“Bucky…” Steve whispered again, hia voice became yet weaker then it was a moment before.
A huge stain of dark blood slowly spilled around Captain.
Bucky felt a touch of cold hand at his unshaven cheek. He dared to look down, straight into his friend’s eyes. He saw how Steve was waning slowly.
“Till the end….” Steve was cutted off by a cough. “… of the line, pal..” Bucky whispered, nuzzling to Steve’s hand.
And then that last moment came. Steve’s eyes have widened for a second, he also tried to take a breath, but he only gasped for the air. He squeezed Bucky’s hand and after a second his eyes have slowly shut down.
Bucky was looking at Steve for short second and then he bursted with cry. Not hesitating about blood, he took Steve’s body in his arms. “NOOO!!!” he squalled loudly, letting warm tears flew down over his cheeks.
It took him few minutes to calm down a bit. He places Steve’s body back on the ground as gently as he could and he slowly got up. Bucky was covered in a blood and dirt, but he didn’t mind.
He turned himself to face Tony. “You killed him.” His voice was so cold.
Stark, who was still motionless, has swallowed before he spoke. “James…”
But Bucky looked into Tony’s eyes without a single shadow mercy. “Now there’s no one who would stop me” Bucky said. He seemed to be in a different place with his thoughts. Bucky slowly lifted his chin, his eyes met Tony’s eyes. As raged and unstable as he was at the moment, he managed to say one sentence. “Your time finally has come.”
He was certain of only one thing: he needed to find him. He had to find Bucky…
His injuries had healed, leaving little else but faint silvery scars where the bullets and metal hand had bitten into him. The serum’s boost to his immune system had saved him from an infection from the contaminated water, and mended the injuries quickly enough.
They could take everything he had. They could break everything he was. But still he would be rising from the ground, because he had a reason. Bucky….
Steve stayed in his apartment in Washington only because firstly, he had to prepare everything. And secondly, he knew where does Steve live…
He knew that search for his friend won’t be easy.
Bucky was an assassin and for sure he had his own ways to disappear when he only wanted to.
Sometimes Steve had an impression that someone was visiting his apartment during his absence. He wasn’t sure if that really happened, or if his own desperate hope was playing tricks on him. Steve could swore that sometimes he would return home to find something off; a paper on his desk moved a half-inch to the left, some drops of water by the sink, the blanket on the couch folded a bit differently than he remembered, and, most alarmingly, a single, minuscule drop of blood he’d found on the windowsill. He told himself it had to be Bucky, that he knew where he lived and could easily sneak in.
It sounded absurd even to him, but there was a tiny bit of hope that maybe, just maybe, he’d wake up one day to find his friend at the door. A foolish hope, he knew it, but optimism was one thing that he never could quite shake. So he was leaving his window unlocked anyway, just in case he wasn’t as delusional as he feared.
For most of the time, he just needed to be alone, to try and find Bucky on his own. He knew he was out there, somewhere, and he was determined to find him.
Steve was, of course, esteeming the presence of Sam, who was trying to help him as much as he only could, but mostly Rogers preferred to work alone.
He won’t just conform, no matter how they shake his core.
He needed to fulfill his own vendetta. He had sworn to himself, that he will find everyone, who ever dared to put hands on Bucky.
They devastated his friend. His pal. His buddy. HIS BUCKY…
Imagine:Steve Rogers finally tells Tony about his feelings toward him
“…so, yea, Steve. I’m fucking serious” Tony was leaning his forearm against a large window, in his office, at one of the highest floors of S.H.I.E.L.D. base.
Steve was still walking around the room, looking for any clues or ideas to end a conflict between him and Mr Stark. Again, they were arguing about Sokovia Protocol. “You know my statement in the case” Steve finally shrugged, taking a seat on a leather couch and crossing his legs nicely. “I won’t change my mind. You know that Avengers are yet devided by this” his voice sounded more firmly than he was planning to.
Tony growled, turning around to face Steve. “Liar!” he snorted. “We’re not divided by THIS. We’re divided only by YOUR sick visions, Rogers” Tony briefly ran his fingers through his black hair. “If you wouldn’t start to give them arguments to not do it, all of them would sign it a long time ago!” Steve only rolled his eyes, looking at the ceiling. “Shame on you, Stark. Your fucking decision about even give it a chance! It changed everything. If you wouldn’t promise government that you’ll take a look at that, everything will be as it was” Steve slowly was getting frustrated. He was still trying to explain his point of view, but Tony seemed to screw it all.
Stark sighed, clinching hands in fists as he turned with his back to Steve once again that day. “You think you’re a Mr know-it-all, don’t you, Steve?” the simple question hung between two men like a sharp knife. Rogers stayed silent, however deep inside in his soul he was fighting with himself. He just wanted to get up, walk to Tony and just punch him straight in the face. But…
It was impossible to him to do it. Because he felt something to that guy. He didn’t want to admit it even in front of himself, but it was a true. He fell for Tony long time ago. When there was good. Notwithstanding, he never found a courage to tell his friend about that feeling…
Suddenly something, a little cheeky voice, which was coming from back of Steve’s head, said: “Do it now or you’ll lose him, you fucking coward!”
Steve cleared his throat and still trying to stay calm, he got up and walked to Tony. He placed his large palm at Stark’s shoulder before he spoke. “Okay. You won. Maybe it’s exactly like you said it. But, please..” Steve’s voice got weaker immediately when Tony turned his face to him. Only one look into those beautiful hazel eyes of Tony made Captain vulnerable.
The awkward silence prevailing between them has been interrupted by Stark’s strong voice. “Finally, Steve. What happend, that you finally understood it?”
But Steve wasn’t definelty listening to Tony’s words. He found a courage to take Tony’s face in his palms, to pull black-haired man closer and finally to kiss his friend.
Steve felt that Stark was more than surprised by that action, Tony’s muscles stiffened in a second. But he didn’t push Steve away. No. He did it not.
After a few seconds Stark broke the kiss to look deeply into Rogers’ blue eyes. “Fuck, Steve… what the fuck..” Captain let out a quiet whimper. “I had to. I just.. I can’t explain that. It just happend. I think I fell for you. Months ago. Just… I just couldn’t tell you earlier.”
Steve was the most scared of a rejection. But at the moment blonde man was happy that finally he managed to tell Tony the truth about hia feelings.
Stark cleared his throat and with pale face took a little step back. “Steve.. for fuck’s sake.. what I’m supposed to do now.. what are you expecting from me? It’s… I need time to think of it..” Captain’s eyes sparkled with kind of a hope. “Just promise me… that even if… if you won’t feel the same.. that we’ll stay friends. I just can’t think of a day when you’ll go away..” Steve’s voice shivered a bit as he was speaking. Tony rubbed his chin, nodding slowly. “Okay. That I can guarantee you for sure.”
Steve smiled gently, then he quickly left Stark’s office, leaving Tony with an vortex of a thoughts.
Steve Rogers and
Winter Soldier are babysitting your child
Request from: Anonymous
“I’m telling you, you’re doing this in a wrong way, Steve” Bucky exclaimed, rolling his eyes.
He and Steve were sitting in a house of their common friends, babysitting a little son of them.
Steve was trying to feed the baby using a little bottle with milk. The problem was the liquid was cold. Bucky sighed slightly, carefully talking the bottle out of Steve’s hand. “Give it to me. He’s going to be sick if you’ll feed him with a cold milk!” brunette growled softly, putting the bottle into the pot filled with a warm water. “It shall has a room temperature.”
Steve grinned, looking at his friend. “I didn’t know you know that much about children” he pointed out, smirking.
Bucky only gave him a gaze above his shoulder, checking the milk temperature with his finger. “Nah. It’s just an instinct..” he explained shortly, walking back to the living room. He sat down next to Steve and handles the bottle to the blonde.
Steve took it and started to feed baby again. This time baby boy chuckled, waving his little chubby hands, trying to catch Steve’s fingers. Bucky giggled softly, watching that scene.
When the baby was fed, Steve carefully patted boy’s back. Holding baby tight in his arms, Rogers walked to the kitchen to put the bottle into the sink. Bucky stretched his back, leaning himself against the back of the couch. Suddenly to his ear came a little sobbing. He looked at the side and noticed Steve, who was trying to calm baby down – little boy was crying now, greedily taking his breaths. “Oh, come on Steve, sing for him!” Bucky smirked happily, watching as his friend walked upstairs to put baby to the cradle.
***
Later, in the night, Bucky has beem awoken by a loud cry. Sleepy, he got out of the bed located in a guest room and he took his steps straight into a baby’s bedroom. Little boy was crying aloud, a huge tears were falling down his cheeks. Man, as carefully as he was able to, took child into his arms. “Hey, baby boy..” he whispered in a soft voice of his. “Why are you crying?” Bucky gently grabbed little chubby finger to shake it a bit. It only caused a wave of giggles coming out of a little mouth of the boy. Bucky couldn’t help but giggled too, starting to rock the baby and humming some Russian lullaby at the same time.
Finally, when boy fell asleep again and Bucky put him back into the cradle, he heard a soft voice behind his back. “That was incredibly sweet.”
It was Steve. He was standing in a door frame, smiling brightly. Even in the dark, Bucky was able to see that sparks in on his friend’s eyes. However he only nodded, smiling too. “I’ve been telling you. It’s nothing more but instinct” brunette shrugged playfully, boxing Steve’s side before he left the room.
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