HI MY BEAUTIFUL đANON!! I adore this so much, I adore YOU so much, as always, your requests are everything!!Â
Warnings: So so much fluffy fluff, angst if you really squint till your eyes go cross-eyed and blurry
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âItâs been decades. Not even a couple years. Almost a century. You probably shoot dust. Or whatever your bionic ass reproduces withâ
Bucky contemplated throwing his half finished milkshake at Samâs head while they both scarfed down burgers from a late night diner after a taxing mission. Sam was pestering Bucky yet again about his nonexistent social and lack of a love life, a topic he seemed to get high off of.Â
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universe please take all of lando norris', yuki tsunoda's and ollie bearman's sufferings, quadruple it and give it to christian horner, zak brown and flavio briatoređ
Whenever anything is not going his way, he lashes out with unnecessary anger and borderline violence.
THIS IS SO GOOD I CAN'T AHAHAHHAHAHAH
Pairing: Firefighter!Bucky x Reader
Summary: You burned the past to be free of it. And now it tries to burn you back. That is the moment you finally find the courage to reach out to the one person you know will pull you from the fire.
Word Count: 10.7k
Warnings: emotional abuse; harassment by an ex partner; gaslighting (implied, not Bucky); house fire (graphic); fire; smoke inhalation; near-death experience; panic; anxiety; medical trauma; hospital scene; toxic relationship themes; protective!Bucky; Bucky being a hero, what is new
Authorâs Note: Here is the second part to All up in Flames. Please proceed with caution guys, and read the warnings because this does get angsty. There are heavy themes around fire and if you are sensitive to such content, then either stay away or read with care. I did try my best to research fire protocols and safety measures, but please remember that this is a work of fiction. I cannot guarantee the accuracy of all procedures, and it shouldnât be taken as advice on how to act in a real fire situation! I hope you enjoy âĄ
Part one
Masterlist
You are trying very hard not to cry over a dog in a bee costume.
Which is, you think, an admirable effort considering the week youâve had.
The dog park is noisy in that specific, unfiltered way that only wide-open space filled with too many small, yappy creatures can be. It smells of dirt and treats and city wind, and the sun is too bright for your eyes, but not your skin, and your shoes are already flecked with grass strains you donât remember collecting.
Natasha is somewhere to your left, throwing a tennis ball for her auntâs golden retriever named General as though sheâs got something to prove. Said it would be good for you to get out. âFresh air,â she said. âCanât spiral with a golden retriever licking your knee.â
You hadnât really put up much of a fight.
Itâs hard to argue when your phone keeps lighting up like a faulty traffic signal - missed calls, text messages, voicemails. All those numbers are burning a slow hole into your palm. He probably calls you with the number of his fiancĂ©. It makes you sick.
You havenât responded.
You keep not responding.
But youâve listened to his voicemails. And you hated yourself for it. Hated that he talked to you as though you were an old coat he forgot at someoneâs house and now suddenly he wants it back.
Heâs not yelling but itâs the persistence that wears you down. The little messages that slip through every block, every new setting. The way a new number appearing on your phone feels like a match being struck against your spine.
Because no matter how many times you say it, there is still a part of you that canât shake what you did. Of how it felt to stand in front of Nolanâs pile of leftover possessions and set a match to it, watch it burn to ash.
You did it to reclaim something.
To breathe again.
But sometimes - at night, when the messages come through in batches - you wonder what would happen if he found out. What he would do if he knew. If he suspected.
You didnât exactly want to come to the dog park. You didnât want to smile at strangers or pretend to be charmed by dogs in hats or feel the edge of sunlight on your collarbone and think that you should be okay by now.
You sit on the nearest bench and press your knuckles to your brow, trying not to let your eyes dart to every man-shaped figure near the gate. Trying not to scan for shadows youâve already erased from your life. The world smells of bark and breath and baking cement.
The sky looks as though it forgot how to commit. Itâs the color of chewed-up erasers and the backs of old receipts - washed out, waiting. The kind of weather that sticks to your skin, heavy and indecisive, as though maybe it wants to rain but forgot the script.
Natasha is squatting by General, adjusting the harness. She glances up at you and squints.
âYou good?â
You nod. Then shake your head. Then try to smile like thatâs not a contradiction.
âDo you want to throw it for him?â she asks, tossing the half-slobbering tennis ball in the air and catching it with the same hand.
You grimace. âYeah, no, thanks.â
Then she holds out the leash to you. You shake your head. General has already been dragging you around the perimeter like a four-legged drill sergeant with a sudden vendetta against squirrels. It worked for ten minutes, but you donât feel like doing that again. And he seems rather busy trying very hard to dig a hole to China.
You wince at the mud he is digging up that very effectively lands in his fur. âYour auntâs gonna kill you.â
Natasha snorts beside you, tipping her sunglasses down to peer at the scene. General has abandoned the hole and now starts making a very aggressive effort to roll in a mud puddle with all the glee of a war criminal.
You smile, the corner of your mouth hitching up. âTell her he got in a fight with a skunk. Sheâll probably be proud,â you hum.
âShe will,â Natasha agrees. âSheâll say it builds character.â Leaning back, she tosses a stick lazily in Generalâs direction. He ignores it with majestic disdain.
âHe hates fetch,â she says amused. âPrefers war crimes.â
You laugh, small but genuine. Let the sound carry.
The air around you moves gently. Laughter and dog tags and barks swirling in the breeze like falling leaves. You take a long breath and let it out slowly.
âEasy, buddy- hey, hey, gentle. Thatâs not a chew toy, come on.â
Your head snaps up before you can think twice.
Because that voice has become quite familiar. Too familiar. Warm. A little raspy here and there.
Of course, itâs him.
Bucky Barnes, in jeans and a dark blue shirt that already has dog hair colonizing every inch of fabric. Shoulders broad, biceps hugged, and a red and white bandana tied loosely around his neck as though he is one picnic away from being someoneâs Americana-themed daydream. He is holding a leash - attached to what looks like a pit mix with an underbite, large paws, and a tail that helicopter-spins every time it sees movement. Though heâs got eyes that say Iâve seen some stuff.
The dog lunges forward. Bucky doesnât flinch.
Natasha sees him exactly two seconds after you do. âWell, now look who we got here,â she drawls under her breath, eyebrow lifting with slow, luxurious smugness. âThatâs some coincidence. This is getting interesting.â
âDonât,â you warn her in a whisper, but you canât help the staring or the weird thing your stomach is doing.
âDonât what?â Her tone is all innocent sugar and no subtlety whatsoever.
âYou breathed suggestively.â
âIâm just admiring the view.â
You are too.
Because he hasnât seen you yet. He crouches down now, trying to coax the dog - who apparently answers to Tank - into something that resembles good behavior. But itâs hard to ignore the way he moves. So you donât. Your gaze is fixed on that careful control. That firm patience. His hands, steady. His voice, low and kind and laced with humor.
Your chest does a thing you donât have the energy to think about.
You canât hear what he says to the dog, but you can somehow feel it. It thrums through you like a vibration. He seems to try not to scare the animal, as though he knows what itâs like to be too much and too afraid at the same time.
He still doesnât see you, too focused on the dog.
But the dog is not focused on him.
Itâs like he feels you staring.
And then he stares back. With a gaze so intense, itâs as though he sees you made of bacon and belly rubs and destiny.
Something uneasy churns in your chest
The pit mix wiggles in one fluid motion and the leash slips through Buckyâs fingers.
The dog barrels forward.
Your stomach drops.
Time slows. A low rumble of a bark and then a series of joyful, guttural grunts as this four-legged cannonball launches itself toward you as though he was born for this moment.
âOh sh-â Buckyâs voice is sharp behind him. âTank! No!â
But the dog is already bolting across the park as though he is auditioning for the canine Olympics with the manic, cheerful energy of a toddler on espresso.
You squeak as the dog leaps onto the bench, all 50-something pounds of him squirming onto your lap, tongue out and very interested in licking every inch of your face.
His tail is wagging enthusiastically and he is lapping at you with the aggressive determination of someone trying to polish a window with their tongue.
âTank!â Buckyâs voice is harsh and loud, a thunderstorm. âNo! Get down! Off, come on- off!â
But youâre laughing, choking on fur, getting pressed into the back of the bench as paws dig into your thighs and the dog noses at your cheek as though he is looking for peanut butter behind your ear.
âTank! Off!â
Buckyâs voice again, slightly panting now as he finally catches up, grabbing the harness and yanking the dog back with all the frustrated dignity of someone who just lost a game they didnât agree to play.
âIâm so sorry,â he apologizes breathlessly, tugging Tank back gently but firmly. âHeâs usually- heâs not- God, Iâm so sorry. Heâs still in training.â
You wipe your face with your sleeve and squint up at him.
And thatâs when he sees you.
His eyes go wide. His mouth parts slightly as though he meant to say something but forgot what it was. There is surprise. Then there is softness. Something melting into the lines of his face. Something that settles behind his eyes like sunshine finding a window.
âOh- itâs- youâre- hey,â he stammers out.
You laugh breathlessly. âYeah, hey.â
Bucky looks a little stunned. A little horrified. A little amazed. âIâm so sorry. Again. Heâs-â He takes a look at the dog, then back to you. âHeâs never done that to anyone before.â
Tank lets out a single, satisfied woof.
You glance at him, then back at Bucky. âItâs alright, really.â
Bucky rubs the back of his neck. âStill, I- shit. Iâm sorry. I swear heâs not dangerous, he just- he wants to play.â Bucky shoots a sheepish look at you, then at an amused Natasha who stands there with her arms crossed, then back at you. âYou okay? He didnât- he didnât hurt you, did he?â
You try to catch a breath but fail. âNo, he didnât, donât worry. Iâm okay.â
Bucky huffs out a relieved breath, tightening his grip on Tank. He looks at you, and the light in his eyes warms. They are blue and just the tiniest bit wide. The corner of his mouth tips up, crooked and cautious.
âItâs good to see you again,â he says, a little quieter.
You still canât quite breathe right. âYeah. You too.â
Tank flops down in the grass before you, bopping his nose at your shoe as though he doesnât trust you not to vanish.
You shake your head fondly. âSo⊠whatâs his story?â
Buckyâs grin softens further. âHeâs a rescue. Firehouse took him in after a hoarding case a couple towns over. He was half-feral when we got him. Wouldnât let anyone near him. First week, he lived under a desk and growled at shadows.â
You look down at the dog with sympathy.
Bucky crouches beside the bench now, fingers remaining curled around the harness, his eyebrows raised halfway to the sky. âHeâs seriously never done this before. I mean- not unless youâre holding a bacon. Are you holding bacon?â
âNot that I know of,â you respond amused.
Natasha stands there smirking, watching you with twinkling eyes. âWell well well. Look whoâs the animal whisperer.â
Rolling your eyes, you swat at your red-headed friend, keeping your movements slow enough not to startle the dog. âDonât be ridiculous.â
Bucky nods toward Natasha. âIâm not saying sheâs right, but he definitely seems to like you.â
âHeâs got taste,â Natasha adds slyly.
âThat, he does.â Buckyâs gaze is fixed on Tank.
Natasha is smirking.
You grow warm.
General is trotting up now. He pauses beside Tank, regal as a lion, then lets out one polite bark and proceeds to sniff him, nose twitching with delicate judgment.
Tank wiggles and sneezes in his face.
Bucky reaches out to pet General softly. âAnd who are you, buddy, huh?â
âThatâs General,â Natasha answers.
Bucky looks up, eyebrows raised. âGeneral?â
âShort for General Mayhem,â she states. âNamed by my six-year-old cousin. He thought it sounded cool and dangerous.â
Bucky huffs out an amused laugh.
âYou see this?â Natasha murmurs, gesturing with her chin toward General, whose tail is twitching low and tight like a predator preparing to pounce. âThatâs him flirting.â
You narrow your eyes. âHe looks like he wants to murder him.â
âThatâs how he shows affection,â your best friend says proudly. âItâs a family trait.â
General takes off then, running in a loose, chaotic arc, tongue lolling sideways, ears flapping like banners.
Tank tries to tear after him, but Buckyâs grip is strong and he doesnât break loose.
âUh-uh, buddy. Youâre staying here,â he warns, not at all looking like this show of strength is making him sweat. Tank keeps trying to wiggle out of Buckyâs hold, but he keeps him close. His eyes drift up to yours through the curtain of wind-tousled hair. âWeâve been working on manners, but⊠well, you see how thatâs going.â
âOh, I think youâre managing just fine,â you answer with a grin.
Bucky chuckles softly, looking at you again. Not quickly. Not nervously. Just softly. Intently.
Natasha returnes, dragging General back to your corner of the park with all the resistance of someone trying to reel in a dump truck.
The golden retriever immediately starts sniffing out Tank again.
Bucky clears his throat as he stands back up, brushing nonexistent dirt from his jeans, keeping a strong hold on Tankâs leash.
âSo,â Bucky says, to Natasha now. âGeneral, huh? He yours?â
âGod, no. Heâs my auntâs. Russian aunt. Scary lady. She thinks dogs should have jobs. Heâs trained in four languages and only listens when itâs convenient for him.â
âAlmost sounds like this one,â Bucky deadpans. Then nods at the pit mix whoâs now lying upside down and chewing on a clump of dandelions like a misunderstood poet. âThe guys at the station called him Tank because he crashes through every room like heâs made of steel.â
You smile, looking at the lopsided dog.
âDo you think this is a permanent situation for you guys?â
âNo one claimed him,â Bucky says, voice dipping quietly into something gentler. âAnd now heâs kind of latched on. Just needs to socialize a little more. Get some good training. But might be a permanent situation, yeah.â
âLike a firehouse mascot?â you grin.
He shrugs, but there is a gleam in his eyes as he looks down at you. âYeah. Something like that.â
Tank bumps his nose into your knee again, and you scratch behind his ears.
âHe really does like you,â Bucky says softly, eyes on the way you touch the dog.
You hum. âHe seems to have been through some shit. But Iâm sure heâs in good care now. And Iâm sure heâll behave at some point.â You keep your eyes on the dog. But you feel Buckyâs gaze on you. And it makes your stomach twist in a not-unpleasant way.
General has now adopted a low, slow stalk, tail wagging in dangerous arcs as he inches toward Tank.
âThis is going to end in blood,â Natasha sighs, as she tightens the leash again.
But Bucky is still glancing at you. At the softness in your face, the way your knees are pulled up onto the bench now as though youâre bracing for something that wonât come.
âHey. Whereâs your other friend?â he asks, casually.
âWanda?â you blink. âOh, sheâs- sheâs working today. Double shift.â
Bucky hums.
And you stare at him for more than a second.
Heâs asking about your people. Not out of obligation or politeness. Out of interest. Because he wants to know. Because heâs listening.
Natasha coughs. Loudly. On purpose.
You both turn.
General has one paw on Tankâs head now, and Tank is lying down in full surrender, tongue out, tail thumping the grass.
âBest friends,â Natasha declares.
You laugh. Bucky laughs.
The sun shines a little warmer.
****
It starts with the ceiling.
Your apartmentâs ceiling, specifically - the one you stared at for forty-eight minutes this morning with your phone buzzing once. Then twice. Then three times, like a persistent tap against an already bruised part of your brain. A new number lighting up your screen again, and again, and again, and you know itâs just a synonym for his name.
You still didnât answer. But he continues calling. Texting. He even sent you screenshots of your favorite songs as though that somehow meant something. And each time you donât answer, itâs like dragging your tired soul uphill barefoot, hands full of the weight you swore you already let go.
So you leave.
You donât brush your hair. You donât put on makeup. You shove your feet into the first shoes you can find, a worn canvas tote over your shoulder, keys in hand before youâve even fully convinced yourself where youâre going.
Just out.
Just away.
Just somewhere with people and produce and sunshine and the kind of air that doesnât taste like memories gone sour.
Youâve left your phone on the kitchen table - face down, volume off.
You told Wanda and Natasha you were going out for fruit. They told you to get oranges, or honey, or a distraction. They didnât ask questions. They didnât have to.
They knew you needed to be alone sometimes, even if they tried their best to distract you.
So now youâre here, walking through the open sprawl of the farmers market with your arms crossed and your face tilted toward the sun, trying to remember what it felt like to want anything at all. The breeze is soft. Smells of ripe tomatoes, lemon soap, kettle corn.
Wooden booths spill over with plums and figs and jars of pickled things. The scent of sourdough and espresso. A toddler is losing his absolute mind over a balloon shaped like a strawberry.
It feels manageable. Which is something. It feels like air, and you take it in.
Youâre not looking for anything.
Youâre not looking for anyone.
The sky is a soft blue silk someone forgot to iron. A child is screaming somewhere nearby. The wind is polite. It tucks your hair behind your ear as though itâs trying to be helpful. Some other kid is singing off-key to their dog.
Youâre just wandering, shoes soft on gravel, following the color and chatter through the stalls.
You let yourself pretend to be a person who likes to browse.
Grapes that are glistening. Bundles of basil so fragrant they make your head spin. Jars of jam in flavors you never heard of - things like honey plum and lavender peach.
âWell, if it isnât my favorite fire hazard.â
You freeze.
An actual freeze, standing there with your hand mid-reach toward a bunch of thyme, and your pulse doing something inadvisable.
You turn slowly.
And there he is.
Bucky Barnes.
In jeans and a navy hoodie, hood down, sleeves pushed up. His hair is a little longer than you remember, tied back in a short knot, and heâs smiling that slow, surprised way that makes you feel like the morning has turned inside out.
He looks like summer if summer had a soft spot for you.
You tuck a strand of hair behind your ear.
âDidnât expect to see you here,â he says, the corners of his mouth twitching as though heâs trying not to smile too big.
Your heart decides to practice gymnastics. Your voice, mercifully, cooperates.
âI could say the same,â you reply, trying for breezy and landing somewhere near breathless.
He nods, eyes sweeping briefly over you - not as though heâs checking you out, but heâs checking. Taking you in. Your oversized sweater. The circles under your eyes. The way your smile doesnât quite reach the corners today.
âYou doing okay?â he asks gently, without preamble. His voice doesnât push. Just opens a space.
You hesitate.
Then shrug, something brittle in your chest. âI needed some air.â
He nods, as though he perfectly understands. As though he really does. âBad week?â His voice is low.
You want to lie. Say no, say youâre just craving figs or something ridiculous and poetic.
But instead, you nod. âYeah,â you get out, and it sounds a little heavy even in your own ears. âSomething like that.â
You donât tell him about the missed calls or the way your stomach knots every time you walk past your front door. You donât say the name of the guy who made your life feel like walking on thin ice barefoot, always waiting for the crack.
But you donât have to.
Bucky doesnât press. Just watches you as though he is memorizing the lines of your face for any small shift in weather.
âGlad youâre out,â he remarks after a second, voice deep and sincere. âItâs a nice morning.â
âCould use more sunshine,â you answer, because thereâs nothing else in your mind that could fit.
He grins. âHey, Iâm trying.â
You snort, just a little, and the tension in your chest cracks open enough to let in the scent of rosemary and warm bread.
âIs this your usual Saturday routine?â you inquire, fiddling with a frayed thread on your sleeve. âOr do you just stalk open-air markets for fire safety offenders?â
âI only stalk interesting ones,â he responds easily, still granting you that soft smile.
There is a moment of quiet between you, and youâre both standing a little too close for strangers but not close enough for anything else.
The crowd swirls around you both. People bargaining over radishes, someone dropping a jar of honey with a crack - simple weekend chatter in the background.
âHowâs Tank?â you ask, genuinely interested.
Buckyâs mouth softens. âHeâs good. Still a little weird around other dogs. Still doesnât understand the concept of stairs. But heâs getting there.â
You grin before you mean to.
âThatâs a relief.â
Bucky smiles. âYeah. He even got clingy. Always has to follow someone around.â He exhales a huffed breath, itâs a little bashful. There is a glint in his eyes now - teasing, maybe. Admiring, definitely. âHeâs a good judge of character.â
Your stomach somersaults. Something loose and ridiculous and hopeful starts threading your insides together.
âHe was sweet,â you tell him, remembering the weight of the pit mix in your lap, the wet, slobbery affection, the surprise of Buckyâs voice when he recognized you. âEven if he nearly took me out.â
âYou held your own,â Bucky states confidently, the glint in his eyes brighter now.
You giggle quietly, glancing down, fingers fumbling with the strap of your bag.
A breeze blows past and flirts with your hair. Somewhere, a vendor calls out that strawberries are two for five.
Bucky shifts his weight. His fingers brush the handle of his bag but donât fidget. There is a gentleness to him. A patience that could break your heart.
He is careful.
âI was actually hoping Iâd see you again,â he begins with a clear of his throat, voice quiet.
Your eyes snap up.
He rubs the back of his neck. âNot here, I mean. Just⊠eventually. Didnât think itâd be here, but- hey, Iâm not complaining.â
You laugh softly, heart stammering.
âI didnât think Iâd see you either,â you admit. âI, uh. I wasnât sureâŠâ
Buckyâs smile fades just a touch - not in disappointment, but in that careful way people get when theyâre making room for your story.
âI get it,â he says, genuine. âTruly. No pressure. At all.â
There is a small pause in him. A recalibration. You can feel it, the way you can feel a shift in the wind before it touches your skin.
âHey, listen,â he says again, still quiet. âYou donât⊠I mean, I donât want to assume anything. Or be too much. Or too forward. I just-â He stops himself. Clears his throat. âIf you ever need anything. Like if you ever want to talk. Or not talk. Or simply vent about something. Iâd be around.â
His hand dips into his back pocket, pulls out a work wallet. He retrieves a card - simple, clean, name and number, folded corners as tough itâs lived a little - and holds it out.
But he doesnât push it toward you. He just offers. Gentle.
There is something in your chest that twists painfully.
âI donât wanna make anything weird. Or come off like Iâm⊠pushing,â he goes on, tentative. Talking a little faster. âOnly if you want. No pressure. Just- figured Iâd offer. I hoped Iâd meet you again, and I just didnât wanna, uh- yeah, you know.â
He shrugs, not quite meeting your eyes. Suddenly bashful.
Your heart is near your throat. You reach for the card slowly. As though he might pull it away again if youâre too fast.
âThanks,â you tell him. It comes out smaller than you meant it to.
He shifts again. Nervous, maybe. Or just respectful. As though he knows this isnât easy for you. As though he doesnât want to pile anything else on top of whatâs already there.
Then he tilts his head, opening his mouth, seemingly believing he has to explain himself some more. âMaybe youâll need some smoke detector advice someday. Or fire extinguisher refills. Emotional support waffles.â
âWaffles?â You want to smile. So wide.
âYeah. I make good ones. Ask Steve.â
âSteve?â
âOh, right.â He winces apologetically, and itâs the most endearing thing. âHeâs that tall blond guy. Rogers. Known each other since childhood.â
You smile. Nearly fondly. âWell then I will have to take your word for it.â
He chuckles, and his eyes crinkle at the corners.
Your chest aches. Not in a painful way. But in a maybe-thereâs-still-good-guys-on-this-planet kind of way.
You look up at him.
His smile is something quiet and relieved.
He looks away first.
âI should-uh,â he gestures toward the other end of the market. âI promised the firehouse Iâd bring back peaches. They get weirdly emotional about it.â
You laugh, and it feels real. Not just muscle memory.
âIâll let you go then,â you say sweetly.
He starts to walk away with a wave. Then stops.
Turns back just slightly. âDonât feel like you have to call, okay?â
You nod. Your throat closes. âOkay.â
âBut if you do,â he adds. âIâll be around.â
And then he waves goodbye with a last glance over his shoulder, walking off with his hands in his pockets, steps unhurried.
You watch him disappear behind a stall selling fresh bread.
Your fingers curl around the card in your hand.
And you donât feel like crying.
Not today.
Not right now.
Because the air smells sweet. The sky is clear. And somewhere, maybe, something good is beginning.
Something that makes you feel warm without a fire burning.
****
Bad decisions oftentimes start with a maybe.
Maybe you should just hear what he wants.
Maybe if you talk to him one more time, heâll stop.
Maybe closure is a real thing and not just a word people throw around like confetti.
You hadnât meant to actually talk to him again.
Hadnât meant to let his relentless calls get to you.
But it rang at the same time your thumb was hovering above a different name, a different number - the one Bucky gave you. Simple black type on a white card still tucked into your phone case. You didnât even mean to look at it. But you had. For the third time today. For maybe the hundredth time since he gave it to you last week.
You thought about texting. Something harmless. Something funny. Something soft. But your thumb froze. And that was when his number lit up your screen again.
You saw it and thought of mold. Of wet towels left in gym bags. Or old perfume evaporating off a scarf you forgot to burn.
But your thumb twitched.
Your thumb tapped accept.
It shouldnât have. But it did.
You hated how familiar his voice still sounded. Like a song you used to love before you listened closely to the lyrics and found out they were garbage. The same casual tone, the same too-easy drawl like nothing had ever really gone wrong. Like the last six months didnât happen.
He wanted to talk. Thatâs what he said. Just a talk. Said he still had some of your things. Things you never asked back for, because what could they possibly be? And what could you possibly want them for now?
But you said yes.
You donât know why.
You tell yourself you can relish in telling him that you burned his stuff.
You tell yourself it is bravery, even if it is shaped like something else.
You wear jeans and an old hoodie and steady your pulse. You leave your phone in your back pocket and your self-worth tucked under your collarbone.
He opens the door the way he always has. A little too wide. A little too confident. A smile with too many teeth.
Itâs an ugly apartment. You forgot how ugly it was. Not physically, though the couch still sags like a dying animal and the curtains are the color of depression.
Itâs ugly in the way it smells of memories.
He talks too much. Laughs too loud. Does that thing with his tongue against his teeth as though he is chewing on a punchline.
âStill got that painting your mom made,â he says, smirking as he rifles through a box that looks suspiciously like it hasnât been touched since you left. âNot exactly my style, yâknow, but whatever. Thought youâd come crawling for it.â
You blink slowly. âI didnât.â
âYeah, I noticed.â His voice twists sharp. A rusted hinge creaking closed.
You shift your weight from one foot to the other. You shouldnât have come. You knew you shouldnât have come. But you did. As though your body still thought it owed him something.
âI didnât ask for anything back because I didnât want anything back,â you express, finally. Your voice is low, but firm. âI didnât want to be here again. I didnât want to see you again.â
He turns. There is something brittle in his posture. Something ready to snap.
âSo why are you here then? Huh? Thought Iâd say sorry?â His eyes shine in disbelief. âRight. Thatâs rich.â
âNo,â you shoot back. Blood rises in your ears. Your fists tighten, small knots of nerves and shame. You remember the exact sound his voice makes when it drops low and mean, and you hate it. âI thought you wanted to return my stuff.â
âOh, that?â He tosses a shirt into a cardboard box. Shrugs. âYou want this one? Think it still smells like you.â
You donât answer. You should leave. You should leave right now. But your feet donât move, as though they are listening for the next note in a song that never ends right.
âAnd where is my stuff then, huh?â His gaze is penetrating. Demanding. âDoesnât fucking look like you brought it with you. So why would I give back your shit?â
You flinch. Not visibly. You hope not visibly.
Regret, like a scent, lives in the drywall. In the leather couch thatâs seen too much. In the one dead plant that still lays in its pot as though it could relearn to grow.
Youâre standing with your arms crossed tight across your chest, as though if you hold yourself hard enough, you wonât fall through the floor.
Youâre already angry at yourself. Already chewing on the bitter little pill of what the hell did you think would happen.
âHuh?â he goes on, voice harsher. But he doesnât come closer. âWhere's my shit?â
âI burned it,â you blurt out all at once, taking a step back.
His face cracks.
âWhat?â
âI burned your things,â you repeat, voice a little more hesitant. But still somehow firm. âI didnât want them anymore.â
There is silence that feels like the inhale before a slap.
Then he laughs. Not a laugh, really. Something worse. A sound without humor. A shape without softness. Itâs sharp and mean and wrong.
âYouâre insane.â His voice is crackling ice underfoot.
âMaybe.â
He starts pacing. Cursing. Muttering things under his breath that make old bruises bleed again.
And then he goes over to your pile.
Your sweater. A half-read book. A toothbrush. Pencils.
You think maybe he is going to shove it at you. Demand you take it and get out. You would be fine with that.
But thatâs not what he does.
He pulls out a lighter.
One of those fancy electric ones with a plasma arc.
He clicks it on. A hiss. A flame.
You take a sharp breath.
âNolan!â you warn.
âWhy not?â he says, voice dangerously calm now. âWeâre doing fire now, right? Iâll play.â
He stops and grabs something - your old notebook. The one with the red leather cover and pages full of dreams you hadnât wanted to remember. He lights the corner.
âOmg, Nolan, stop!â you shout. âWhat the hell are you doing?â
The paper shrivels into black lace, turning inward, hissing as though it lives. He drops it on top of the clothes.
A single thread of smoke trails toward the ceiling in a lazy, indecisive curl. You watch it the way someone might watch an ink stain bloom on a shirt - unsettled.
Nolan is still talking.
Still pacing in that way he does when heâs on edge - half fury, half performance, all nerves masquerading as ego. His words have gone jagged, slurring with heat. Every sentence heavier than the last. Weighted with resentment.
âYou think you can just burn my shit down?â he snaps, and you wonder if he even hears himself. If he understands how strange it sounds, how cracked. Heâs got that look in his eye again - the one that once made you flinch and now just makes you tired.
âPut it out,â you order harshly, gesturing to the fire.
But itâs already licking up the fabric. It eats with the mouth of a beast. The knit sweater you left behind many months ago has been reduced to cinders on one side.
You lunge forward, grabbing a throw blanket, trying to smother the small flames, but they are growing. You forgot how fast fire moves.
âHelp me!â you yell, panicking.
But Nolan just stands there, stunned.
The flame consumes the carton and now starts crawling across the cheap rug. It touches a plastic bin and the bin sags, sighs, melts.
Nolan hesitates.
His face splits between pride and dread, one eye twitching with the effort of pretending he is still in control. His thumb hovers over the lighter still. As if he might be able to rewind the fire back into silence.
You start swatting the air with an old pillow off the couch. It does nothing. Just pushes the smoke around.
The fire is bigger now.
Hungrier.
The smoke thickens. Begins to bloom from the rug, unfurling across the floor like a snake looking for ankles.
âWhy arenât you doing anything?â you snap.
But heâs frozen. Staring at it. Staring at you.
âWhy arenât you?â he yells back.
You try to remember what Bucky said.
You try to hold onto it - his voice in that fire safety class. You try to remember the sequence of things, the order of calm: Assess. Alert. Act. Breathe.
But there is no calm now.
Just fire.
Youâre shaking, and your palms are slick and useless, and your heart is pounding like a wild creature.
âDo you have an extinguisher?â you shout, coughing, turning to Nolan, whose face is lit with flickering orange. He stares at the curtain swallowing itself in flames as though he doesnât understand it. As though the fire is the problem - not his temper, not the lighter still warm in his hand.
âNo!â he yells. âWhy would I have a-?â
âThen why the fuck did you set something on fire in your living room?â You canât believe this is happening. You want to scream. You want to cry. You want to hit him and disappear.
But all you do is spin in a frantic circle, looking for something, anything to smother the fire. The old blanket you tried already is a scorched mess on the floor. A sweatshirt is melting in the corner. His apartment is a graveyard of clutter and bad choices.
You fall to your knees, eyes stinging, stomach trembling with too many fears and not enough oxygen. You drag your sweater sleeve over your nose and crawl toward the base of the door. You remember you should cover the gap beneath the door. The towel trick. You remember the warning signs. You remember him.
But this isnât a stovetop mishap. This isnât a pan left on too long or an overzealous toaster. This is rage. This is Nolan. This is intentional.
You spot a pillow, hurl it under the doorframe, press it into the crack with your knees.
âIf itâs too big to handle,â Bucky had said, âyou get out. You call us. You donât be a hero.â
You feel your chest begin to shrink. Your lungs pull taut. The room smells of plastic and anger and something chemical that doesnât belong in air. You cough, hard, and stumble back. Your eyes sting.
The fire reaches the curtains.
They go up as though theyâve been waiting. Flames shoot vertical, dancing fast, bright and hot. Orange tongues curl in laughter. Smoke darkens and the room is a storm cloud. Your breath hiccups.
Nolan finally moves. He grabs a towel. Swings it at the fire but it doesnât do anything.
He spins, eyes wild now, and shouts at you. âYou started this!â
You donât answer. You canât.
The doorknob is already red. Glowing. It starts hissing when your fingers get close.
Nolan rushes over and tries to touch it. His palm jerks back. He swears. Drops a ragged, âshit- okay, okay,â and starts moving toward the windows.
But itâs too late.
The windows wonât open. The smoke eats the oxygen and you swear the walls are closing in.
You are coughing terribly. Thick gray smoke creeps up your nose, your throat, your eyes. You canât see.
Stumbling backward, you hit the coffee table with your knees.
You donât remember unlocking your phone.
Your lungs are fighting for a breath they canât find, and your eyes are stinging so bad theyâre practically sewn shut, and everything is wrong. You cough. Canât breathe. Canât breathe. Cough.
The smoke is everywhere. In your eyes. In your mouth. In your throat.
A sour, chemical fog that coats your insides, turning every breath into something punishing. Your fingers are slick with sweat. Your vision a wash of heat and blur. You can barely see the glowing screen.
You donât even remember pressing his name. Maybe your thumb moved on its own. Maybe your body made the decision for you, the way it sometimes does in the worst moments - when logic is buried beneath fear and your lungs are screaming and your heartbeat is running through your ears like a siren. You donât remember.
But you must have pressed it.
Because the line connects.
âBarnes.â
His voice.
God. Itâs his voice.
Of course, it is. You fucking called him.
You try to speak. Try to say his name. Try to form a word, any word, but all that comes out is a broken cough - violent and dry and helpless. The sound of your panic gurgling out of your chest.
Then silence on the line.
âY/n?â
You gasp. Wheeze. Cough - wracked, your body bending with the force of it. Your phone drops to the floor, chest convulsing, the sound of flames rising behind you, and it feels as though they already are inside you.
Then his voice again. Sharp. Cataloguing.
He snaps into action. âWhere are you? Whatâs happening?â
There is already movement in the background. His boots against concrete. Radio static flaring, fast instructions in the background.
âFire,â is all you can croak out.
âFuck. Okay. Okay. Itâs okay- Can you talk? Just try, alright? Need you to say something, Y/n. Need you to tell me where you are!â
Youâve never heard his voice like that. It isnât low and easy, isnât the gentle sort of teasing he used in all your meetings before. It isnât calm. It isnât composed. It isnât clipped and professional.
Itâs shaking.
You sink to the floor and press your phone to your ear. As though it might pull you out of this nightmare and into him.
You cough again. A ragged, awful sound. âBucky,âyou croak, finally, and it tears out of you like a scream you didnât have the air for.
The sound he makes isnât a word. It explodes out of him like something breaking. You hear gear shifting, footsteps quick, boots slamming against the floor, the loud slam of an emergency cabinet opening.
âWhere are you?â he snaps. âTell me where you are. Talk to me. You just gotta tell me where-â
âCanât- breathe,â you rasp, coughing again, and trembling so hard the phone almost slips.
âOkay.â His voice is trembling too. Rough. âThatâs okay. Youâre doing great. Just- fuck- just hang on. I need to know where, sweetheart, please. Tell me where.â
You squeeze your eyes shut.
Force your brain to focus. Nolan is somewhere behind you but the smoke has made him a ghost. The fireâs hiss is louder than Buckyâs voice now. Louder than your thoughts.
Nolan shouts his address out, coughing, pacing.
Buckyâs voice cuts back. Loud. Sharp. âI need confirmation. Hey- sweetheart- are you there? Is that where you are?â
You swallow. âY-yeah. Thatâs it. Third floor. I- he- he lit something and it caught- Bucky it spread. We canât get out.â
Behind you, Nolan coughs violently. âYou donât have to tell him everything-â
âIâm trying to get help!â
âDonât fucking yell at me, youâre the one who-â
Tears sting in your smoke-smeared eyes. âGet down, Nolan! Crawl!â
âAnd what are you now, huh? You think-â
âHey- hey!â Buckyâs voice is harsh. Urgent. âOkay. Listen to me. Cover your mouth with something - whatever youâve got. Youâre gonna stay low. Both of you. Crawl to the farthest wall from the door if you havenât already. Do you see smoke coming through it?â
âYeah,â you whisper, coughing into your elbow. The fabric of your sweater is damp from sweat, and it stinks of fear.
âCan you block the bottom with something - towels, jacket, anything.â
âI tried. Itâs still coming through. I- Bucky, I tried to put it out, like you said, I-â
âI know,â he interrupts, voice cracking slightly, dry and gentle. âI know, sweetheart. I know you tried. Iâm proud of you. You did so fucking good calling me, okay? You hear me?â
âI canât see anything,â you whisper. âItâs all smoke.â
Your hands tremble as you crawl. Nolanâs coughing has grown louder and more uneven, as though his lungs are learning how to fall apart.
âWeâre coming. Iâm on the truck. Just stay with me. Stay low. Try to find a corner or something near the window if you can. Donât touch the doorknob again.âHeâs obviously trying to hide the raw edge in his voice, but you hear it nonetheless.
âItâs hot.â Your voice is an ash-covered whisper.
âOkay. Okay. You donât try to touch it again, alright? Donât touch anything. Donât open anything. Youâre staying right where you are. You did the right thing, sweetheart. You did everything right.â He talks as though itâs a prayer. A lullaby spoken with desperation.
Thereâs a flurry of noise behind him. Muffled radio calls, the wailing of sirens into the wind, yelling voices.
You can picture him - knuckles white, leg bouncing, one hand pressed to his ear as if willing the sound of you to stay close.
âYouâre not alone,â he emphasizes, voice thick. A rough, frantic rasp like a match scraped too many times. âWeâre coming for you, sweetheart. I swear to God. I wonât let anything happen to you.â
âI was stupid,â you choke. âI shouldnât have come here. I shouldâve told him to go to hell.â
âHey,â Bucky interrupts you fast, voice sharp with emotion. âYouâre not stupid. Donât ever say that. Youâre not responsible for someone else losing control, you hear me?â
You nod, eyes burning now with something more than smoke.
âI just wanted to be done.â
âYou will be,â he promises, his voice a storm swallowing itself. âYouâre gonna walk out of there, and that chapterâs gonna stay behind. Youâll never have to see him again. Iâll make sure of it.â
âBucky,â you sob, barely holding on.
And his voice breaks when he says your name back. Not just once.
âI got you. Youâre doing so well. Youâre doing perfect, Y/n. Iâm so proud of you. Just a little longer. Weâre almost here. You just gotta hang on for me, yeah? Just try to breathe. Let me hear you breathe.â
You nod, forgetting he canât see you.
Another panicked call of your name.
âIâm here.â Your voice turned into smoke itself.
You can hear the fire truck now. A distant roar. Like a cavalry arriving on a battlefield thatâs already gone to ruin.
You can hear his frantic breathing.
âBucky, Iâm scared,â you whimper.
âI know, doll. I know.â His voice is soft now, too soft, as though maybe he is crouched in the back of the truck, hunched over the phone with his head in his hand. He talks as if he could speak you safe again. âBut youâre not alone, okay? And youâre doing so well. Weâll get you two out. I just need your voice, alright? Donât hang up. Iâm almost there.â
You donât register the exact moment you drop your phone, only that you keep hearing Buckyâs voice before it slips from your hand.
âDonât close your eyes, sweetheart- stay with me-â
The door is glowing. Glowing as though it wants to become the sun. Glowing like warning and goodbye all at once.
You taste the fire. Breathe it. Feel it coat your throat like ash-painted molasses.
Buckyâs urgent and desperate voice is only registering as a blurred cloud engulfing you.
There is a thunderous sound. A crack. A groan. Wood screaming as it splits. Metal breaking open.
Then comes light.
Blinding and orange and rolling with smoke.
A change in the air - slight and sharp and sudden.
The hot room breathes.
A gust of wind stabs inward, dragging smoke toward the shattered pane as though itâs trying to pull the panic out by its throat.
And then shouts.
Boots.
The room collapses around your vision. You are sagged against the floor. Head lulling.
People crash through the smoke. No, not just people. Itâs him. Bucky. In full gear. Mask sealed to his face. Shoulders wide, body big, so big, bulked in turnout gear and panic.
You almost donât believe it.
For a second, you think he might be something your brain cooked up to calm you down. A mirage with a radio. A hallucination in navy.
But then he says your name. Yells it. Muffled through the voice amplifier in his mask, but desperate.
You open your mouth. Try to say his name back.
But he is already lunging, crashing toward you like a storm. Suddenly he kneels. And suddenly-er you are airborne. Up. Scooped into his arms, pressed into his chest.
You feel the sound of his heartbeat before you hear it - thudding against your side, frantic, furious.
You want to tell him youâre okay, that youâre sorry, that you meant to call him under different circumstances, that you didnât mean to worry him.
But all you can do is let your body go limp in his hold.
His jacket smells of sweat and smoke and something cleaner underneath - some sterile tang of extinguisher foam and ash and whatever this moment is turning into.
You press your forehead into the curve of his neck, where the helmet meets the collar of his gear.
âIâve got you. Iâve got you, sweetheart-â he keeps saying it, over and over, like a chant.
His voice is strained now. Hoarse. Desperate. Shaky. Strangled through a throat thatâs trying not to break open in front of everyone. He lifts you higher against his chest and sprints, shouting orders as he crashes through the hallway.
âClear a path!â
âMake room! Get oxygen ready!â
âSheâs fading! Move!â
He holds you as though you already caught the fire. He holds you like absolution.
You drift in and out, eyes fluttering as Bucky runs through smoke-filled corridors and splintered doorways and the skeleton of someone elseâs anger turned to flame.
But you still feel the shift in his arms. The way he squeezes you when you cough. How his gloved hands cup the back of your head, shielding you from debris. How he leans his body to block falling soot as he barrels toward the stairwell two at a time, breathing hard, mumbling things you canât hear.
Or maybe theyâre not for you. Maybe theyâre for himself.
âDonât you dare. Donât you fucking dare go quiet on me. Hang on. Stay with me. Come on.â
Your hands curl weakly into the strap across his chest.
He bursts through the front of the building, and the world opens up - wild and wide and full of oxygen.
The roar of the crowd. The red-and-white flash of emergency lights bouncing off soot-covered brick.
Someone tries to take you from him - another firefighter, older, calm - but Bucky growls under his breath and shifts you closer, ducking his head like a shield.
âIâve got her,â he grunts, thick and hoarse. Shaking. âIâve got her.â
They donât argue.
His boots only then screech to a halt when he arrives at the ambulance door and two EMTs step forward with a stretcher and an oxygen mask in hand.
He lays you down gently, so gently, as though you are made of porcelain and poems. He pulls the mask off his face and immediately goes back to touching you. One hand cupping your jaw, thumb streaking soot from your cheek. The other wrapped around your wrist, searching for your pulse.
âSheâs got smoke inhalation,â Bucky barks. His voice is too loud. Too full. His hair sticks to his forehead. His cheeks are streaked with sweat and worry. âSheâs conscious, but barely. I need- can I-â
One of the medics puts a hand on his shoulder, while the other cares for you. âWeâve got her. You did good, Cap.â
But when youâre wheeled into the ambulance, he steps in with you. Without a word. The medics donât say anything. Perhaps because of his expression.
You feel his eyes on you.
âYouâre okay now, sweetheart,â he says, low. Gutted. âI got you out.â
Your eyes find his. Somehow. You can barely keep them open. Can barely feel the oxygen mask over your face. Can barely feel his hands on you.
His breath shudders. And for a second you think he might cry.
But he just swallows, jaw clenched so hard the muscles twitch.
âHey,â he whispers. âHey, stay with me. You gotta stay with me.â
You try.
You really do.
But this moment does not seem to want to hold you in its arms the same way Bucky just did.
It wants to let you go.
It does.
****
Hospitals always smell like endings.
Even in the quiet, even with the windows open and the soft beep of a heart monitor keeping tempo with your breath. Thereâs something sterile and final about the place. A hush that doesnât belong to any one person.
You wake slowly. Float up from the bottom of a deep, smoky ocean, lungs burning even in memory.
The world is all soft edges and clean white. The blanket draped over your legs is tucked in too neatly.
Sunlight filters through fog. Like a dream dragging its feet on the way out.
Everything aches in soft, unfamiliar places. Behind your eyes. In your throat. In your chest, where the air settles heavy, too new.
You blink against the brightness, throat sore and mouth dry, vision hazy.
He falls into your line of vision in an instant.
Sitting beside you in the roomâs single chair, pulled as close to your bedside as it could go, knees wide, elbows on them. Head bowed as though he is praying or thinking or maybe both. His fingers are steepled against his mouth as though heâs been holding his breath for hours.
The gear is gone, but the exhaustion is not. Heâs in a dark hoodie and sweatpants now, his hair damp, pushed back as if he ran both hands through it and forgot to fix it after.
He looks big here. Too big for the tiny chair. Too solid of all this silence. His foot is bouncing. His hands are clasped. His face is half-hidden behind a knuckle.
But he is here.
He is truly here.
You manage to whisper his name.
Your voice is hoarse and frail and hardly audible. But his head still snaps up.
And oh. The relief on his face could bring down buildings.
He is up in an instant, the chair scraping back, but he stops at the edge of your bed as though he is not sure if he can touch you. His hand hovers gently on the bed rail.
His eyes are red-rimmed. You donât know if it comes from crying or from staying awake. There are soft bruises under them. You wonder how long heâs been here.
âHey,â he breathes.
Your throat scrapes when you try to answer. A dry, ragged rasp. âHey. Bucky, I-â
âEasy.â His voice softens even more. He is cooing. âDonât try to talk too much, alright? Take it slow.â
You try to clear your throat and immediately regret it. Heâs already got a cup of water in his hand, straw tucked between your lips before you can blink. You drink, slow and small sips, until the burn dulls a little.
He catches a drop of water with his thumb when it leaks over the side of your mouth.
You try to smile. It trembles at the corners. But you need to keep talking. Keep explaining. The words just fall out, messy and cracked and full of everything you feel.
âI didnât mean for this to be when I called you.â
He stiffens, only a little. Not because heâs upset - because heâs listening too hard. Because every syllable you manage seems like something he wants to tuck into his jacket and guard with his whole life.
Pushing out a breath, you keep going. âI wanted to call you. I almost did. Before. So many times.â Your voice breaks on the tail end of it, dry and uncertain. âBut I got scared. And then Nolan- he just kept calling, and I thought maybe if I just talked to him once-â
âHey,â Bucky eases tenderly. He leans in, hand ghosting close to yours. Not quite touching yet, as though heâs afraid to ask your skin for too much. âYou donât have to explain everything right now. I told you, thereâs no pressure. I wanted you to take your time.â
âNo, I-â you protest, emotional. âIâm sorry, I- God, Iâm so stupid, I-â
âHey, no. Donât.â His voice interjects you so gently you almost cry from it. âYou called. Thatâs what matters. You called me when it counted.â He glances at your hand and touches it lightly. You let him.
You swallow. âBut I-â
He shakes his head kindly. âSweetheart,â he says softly. âI donât care when it happened. I just care that you did. That youâre here. That I got to you in time.â He rubs his thumb over your knuckles. âAnd I swear-â he pauses, runs a hand down his jaw, seemingly trying to put himself back together. âI swear, Iâve never run so fast in my damn life.â
You lace your fingers with his. His palm is warm. His grip is careful. Asking you if this is okay. You squeeze once.
He is leaning over you, staring as though you just handed him something precious he doesnât know how to hold.
âAnd next time you need someone, please donât wait. Doesnât have to be fire-level urgent, okay? Doesnât have to be about him. If you need help picking fruit at the farmers market, or Wandaâs making you do one of those weird tea cleanses again, or youâre just lonely at 2 am - you call me.â
You smile. Or try to.
His smile is smaller. Sadder.
âIâm here, alright?â Bucky adds after a moment, voice rough but certain. âYouâre not alone.â He takes a deep breath. There is something new in his voice now. A gentle grit. âBut Iâm not here to rush you. Iâm not here to push. I like you. You probably already figured that out. But I want this to be whatever you need. At your pace. No pressure. No expectations. I just want you safe. I want you to breathe easy again. I want to be someone you know you can lean on. Nothing more than that, not unless you want it.â
Your breath hiccups. Your eyes sting.
He nods toward the IV in your arm. âRight now, the only thing that matters is getting you back to okay.â
You blink. Your throat is tight.
Silence, again. Soft and clean and full of feeling.
You look at him for a long time, studying the scruff on his jaw, the fine line between his brows, the way his eyes search your face as if he is still making sure you woke up.
âThank you, Bucky,â you whisper. âIâm glad youâre here.â
He exhales a long breath. Blinks hard. Rubs the heel of his palm over his mouth.
âI like you, too.â
You hear his breath catch.
You say it softer. Slower. More certain. âI want you to know that. I really like you.â
His eyes are whole. With something warm and breaking wide open. You wonder if he even realizes he is holding your hand tighter now.
And you look at him as though maybe your heartâs been trying to find his this whole time.
His thumb brushes over your skin so lightly, you almost donât feel it. But you do. Of course, you do. It sends tiny shivers running through your body. Lets your skin prickle.
âHeâs not gonna come near you again,â Bucky states quietly, a little bit firm. âYou donât have to worry about that. You donât have to do any of this alone.â
And you still. Your eyes go wide a tiny fraction. Because how could you have forgotten?
âNolan.â
Something tightens behind Buckyâs eyes. Something that does not flinch but does not smile either.
You say his name again, slower this time, unsure why your lungs feel colder now. âIs heâŠâ
âHeâs okay,â Bucky affirms, but there is a jagged note to the words. âGot some burns on his hand and inhaled a lot of smoke, but nothing that wonât heal.â
He doesnât say donât worry but you hear it.
He also doesnât say he deserved worse, but you hear that too.
You study Buckyâs face - how his jaw ticks, his nostrils flare ever so slightly. His posture has changed, too. Not tense exactly, but watchful. Guarded. As though he is sitting on something stretched too tight between staying soft for you and not punching a wall with his fist.
âHeâŠâ Bucky exhales and rubs a hand through his hair as though it might soothe the fire out of his voice. âHe asked about you.â
That surprises you. Your lips part, but you donât know what question youâre asking yet.
âHe wanted to know if you were okay.â Bucky pauses. Looks away, just for a second, as though he is chewing on something bitter. âSaid he didnât mean for it to go that far. That he was just mad. That it was a mistake.â
The words hang in the air like smoke without a source.
You stare at the blanket pulled up to your ribs. You donât know what youâre feeling. Grief, maybe. Not for Nolan. For the version of yourself that still picks up when he calls.
âIâm sorry,â you say again. Heavily. You donât know why. Maybe just for existing in this mess. For dragging Bucky into it. For not seeing it all coming sooner.
âYou donât owe anyone an apology,â Bucky grounds out, and this time his voice is sharper. A crackle of heat under the words. âHe doesnât get to hurt you and then feel bad about it after the fact. He couldâve killed you.â
You stare at him.
And he softens.
A little. A blink. A breath.
âSorry,â he mutters, shaking his head and looking down at his boots. âI didnât mean to snap. Just-â He rubs the back of his neck. His face twists into something pained. âI rushed into that apartment and saw you on the floor and-â His voice breaks a little and comes back shaky. âIt was like time stopped. Didnât even see anything else. Just you.â
Silence swells again, full of unsaid things and tight lungs and hearts pounding.
You squeeze his hand gently.
And then the door clicks open.
Wanda peeks in first, her hair a frizzed halo, cheeks blotchy, eyes wide and wet. Natasha follows behind, chin set, jaw tight. She looks composed, but you know she isnât.
âYouâre awake,â Wanda sighs, already by your side, reaching for your other hand. âGod, Iâm gonna cry again-â
âYou look like hell,â Natasha deadpans. But she is smiling. Just barely.
You smile back. It takes effort. But itâs true.
Bucky keeps watching you as though he is afraid to blink. As though he doesnât want to miss a second more of you breathing.
And even though your chest still hurts and your throat stings and you feel as though your world just burned down another time, there is something brightening in your heart.
âDonât ever do that again,â Wanda chastises weakly, adjusting your blanket, and giving you the gentlest kiss on your forehead. âYou scared the hell out of us.â
And you feel that crater inside you - the one the smoke didnât touch. The one carved out by fear. By how close it all had been.
âI didnât mean-â
âWe know, dummy,â Natasha cuts in gently, and itâs not an accusation. âWeâre just glad youâre okay.â
Thereâs a pause. You just breathe slowly. Staring at the ceiling.
âGod, I swear,â Wanda mutters, fingers tightening slightly where they rest against your wrist. âIf I ever see that bastard againâŠâ
Natasha snorts, her voice tilting toward something sly. âIâm sure your personal guardian here will take care of him. Shouldâve seen him when the paramedics mentioned Nolan.â
Bucky, beside you, goes very still.
You feel his hand twitch against yours. Heâs still holding it. Hadnât let go.
He hasnât said anything since the girls came in.
Now he looks like stone. His gaze flicks away.
You can feel the tension building in his chest - his breath shallower, his jaw clenched. His thumb presses slightly harder against your palm, as though the thought of your ex walking around freely is the worst thing heâs ever had to picture.
âNo worries, guys,â you say and even the thought of his name is foul in your mind. âIâm done with him.â
You lift your eyes to Bucky. Itâs not even intentional. You just have to look at him. Maybe you need him to hear it clearly. Need to make sure he heard it.
His eyes find yours. Dark and blue and lit up with something rougher than hope. Something hotter than worry.
His mouth tilts into something relieved. And you think, maybe, even a little bashful. As though he didnât expect to be included in this part. As though it is hitting him slowly, that he is not a stranger in your orbit anymore.
And something in him seems to let go - not all at once. But in pieces. Like melting ice, cracking and softening and spilling into warmer water.
He nods. Small. Doesnât seem able to speak.
But his hand in yours says everything.
Wanda and Natasha both go quiet. Watching him. Watching you. Watching this. This thing happening between you.
Outside the window, the sun climbs a little higher into the sky.
And he keeps looking.
Keeps absorbing.
Keeps memorizing.
Just like you.
âHeroes are ordinary people who make themselves extraordinary.â
- Gerard Way
Look how many people hate him. Iâm pretty damn happy about that đđđđđđ
women in motorsport + text posts (3/?)
Croissant manatee đ„
hello world (tumblr),
this is my first proper post on here and i have decided to use this as a little blog for myself!!
now, i do have interests. so here are the lists of things you WILL find me yapping about:
matt rempe (donât get me startedddd bro!)
utah hockey club i suppose, NOT cause im in love with miachel kesselring (i am but thatâs beside the point) but because utah!
f1 (fav drivers are lando norris and i have new found love for gabriel bortoleto)
mick schumacher. i am in love with him. we are actually married, he just doesnât know it yet đ„°
f1 academy (fav drivers are chloe chambers (đșđžđșđžđșđžđŠ đŠ đŠ ) and lia block! and tina hausman (but in like a i admire her greatly type way))
unfortunately that is the extent of my hyper fixations as of late, however i may use this as a book log so i talk about what books im reading atm!
to my two mutuals who follow me just cause i stalk their accounts; i love both of you and your work so much!!!
- 47chickens (i had chickens when i made this and i love mick)
See You! Spring 2024. A new short comic. : ) Debuted at TCAF 2024. [edit: i've now added a PDF of this comic in my store! : ) ]
pairing: bucky barnes x reader
timeline: civil war (bucharest romania)
wc: 1.1k
warnings: use of 'malyshka.' not proofread
a/n: really wanted something with bucky's dog tags but didn't have any ideas so wrote this... not as fluffy as the ideas in my head...
romania is beautiful. you spent a year in constanta, gazing out to the black sea and discovering how to live life after fleeing america, tired of the old life you left behind. you migrated inland, settling in bucharest like millions of others in the city.Â
you spent many nights learning the city, the language, and the people in it. it was how you met bucky three months ago.Â
âte-ai pierdut?â
bluish steel eyes blink back at you, no response.Â
you stare back at him, thinking. you try again, switching tongues because your gut tells you that heâs not from around here. âare you lost?â
a small grunt precedes his first word to you. âmarket.â
you nod, motioning for him to follow you out of the side street.
he follows in step quietly and almost robotically for three blocks until you reach the farmers market. itâs midday and bustling, some trying for a bargain and other window shopping the open tents.Â
you let him pass you, watching as he makes his way to a fresh fruit stand. he pauses and stares at the produce and the person running the booth.Â
you step forward. âdo you need help? i can translate if-â
your words are cut short as the man speaks fluently to the vendor, inquiring about the various fruits. as he finishes picking and paying, you stand in slight shock a few steps behind him. he turns around, shocked to see you waited around for him. he doesnât smile at you, but the look in his eyes tells you that he wants to. but he doesnât.
âiâm sorry.â you say at last. âi wouldnât have bothered you if i had known you didnât need help.â
the man shakes his head, his long brown hair swaying as he does so. you glance to the metal laying against his chest, not quite reading the name engraved into it.Â
âiâm bucky.â he offers a gloved hand. you look at it before shaking it, smiling as you introduce yourself.
you spent the rest of the day looking at the vendors together, getting lunch and talking in the park until the cold came with nightfall.
three months later, youâre back at the same farmers market, grocery shopping with the same man. you practically live together, surviving off the pay you get from your part time job and the money bucky earns on random side quests.Â
itâs not like you donât know him â you just donât know what heâs done, how he got to romania, why he stayed. itâll come with time, is what you always told yourself, especially when you wanted to ask bucky to be yours officially. the term âboyfriendâ scares him, and youâre not sure if either of you are ready for that level of commitment.Â
âmeet back at the dairy shop?â you let of his hand, ready to part into the sea of shops.
his smile is soft as he nods, kissing your hand as he releases it. you smile as you walk the other direction, weaving through the crowd to shop.Â
you pass a nearby bar, scanning the area through the propped door. glancing up, the news outlet displayed on the television catches your attention and you stop in place, reading the headlines. images flash across the screen, and a magnified picture of bucky pops up. the color drains from your face as you finish reading the headlines. your feet move faster than your mind, footsteps picking up as you race to find bucky in the field of people.
you weave again, almost slamming your bag into a woman as you near the next corner of the market.Â
âbucky!â you call. his back is turned to you but heâs barely 20 feet from you. the sea of people doesnât part for you and youâre forced to wait for the people to slowly depart.Â
he turns around just as you reach him, his gloved hands holding a newspaper with his face on the front of it.Â
âwhatâs happening?â tears well in your eyes as you reach for his hands. âyou couldnât have done those things. you were with me.â
he doesnât respond but he faintly nods. his jaw clicks and he grabs your hands, dragging you away from the market and the sea of people in it. âi need to leave.â
âleave?â you stumble after him, barely able to keep up as he pulls you along. âleave where? what about me? bucky, iâm scared.â
he pulls you into an alley, bringing your hands to his chest and steadying you. âi know, malyshka. iâm-â his eyes droop in disappointment. âiâm sorry. i never shouldâve let you get this close. i- i shouldnât have risked getting you involved.â
âinvolved?â your brows furrow. âinvolved in what?â you drop your bag on the asphalt.Â
âme.â his eyes search yours as you try to understand what he means. âiâm dangerous, malyshka.â
ânot to me.â you reach for that familiar metal hanging around his neck, forehead resting against his. âiâve never felt more safe than with you.â
as you exhale shakily, your breath fans his face and he glances to your lips before pulling you in a deep kiss, hands cupping your head gently.Â
âyou need to leave.â
âwhat?!â the shock on your face almost breaks him. you step back in shock. bucky picks up your bag, pulling it to your arm.Â
he goes through his pockets, giving you what he doesnât need and closing your bag securely.Â
âwhat? bucky, go where? why canât i go with you? Whatâs-â
both his hands hold your face, now ungloved. the sight of the metal plates in public has you quiet. he never takes his gloves off in public, never anywhere other than the safety of your apartment.Â
ây/n, i need you to focus.â he carefully pulls off his dog tags, pulling them over your head until the metal tabs rest on your chest now. âkeep these safe for me, okay?â
youâre crying now. you can barely see him through wet eyes.Â
you shake your head. âi donât want you to go.â you sob. âi love you.â
the confession has bucky pausing, the pads of his thumb wipe away your fallen tears. his lips meet your forehead in a calming kiss.Â
âi know, malyshka. i⊠i love you too.â
more tears spill out.
âbut i canât risk losing you.â he pulls you into his chest, hugging you so tight because you both know you wonât see each other for a long while. âget out of the city. go back to constanta if you have to. just-â you feel the uncertainty in his exhale. âget as far away until itâs safe.â
you peer up at him, sniffling. âokay.âÂ
âiâm coming back, y/n.â
âokay.â
he kisses you again. âi wonât leave you behind.â
âËâ¶Ëâ§âïœĄË
bucky masterlist
i'm thinking of writing a second part