Bucky Barnes (
advanced) wrote in
fossilised2019-03-13 10:13 am
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HYDRA world AU
The world changed the day that Steve Rogers went into the ice.
Troops that had been following his exploits across the Allied Nations lost hope and lost morale, thinking that if even a super soldier could be defeated then what was the good of them fighting? Conversely, the Axis Powers grew more confident, hailing the defeat of Captain America, and that became a symbol for them to rally around. Technically, the Nazi Party won that war, but they were only in power for a year before HYDRA grew tired of being merely a part of a whole and decided to subsume their former masters.
They, after all, had no real interest in eugenics or genocide, that was the way to rule a single country. They wanted world domination, and they got there through careful promises, through underhand dealings, and by convincing the public that the freedoms they were giving over were for the greater good. After all, how could HYDRA protect them without knowledge, without obedience?
Years turned into decades and what had begun as a tentative regime had become all-powerful and tyrannical as technology boomed and citizens were born into this new world order. Children were taught from a young age, scared with stories of the Soldier. A boogieman to most, a whispered secret of its actual existence to others, the Weapon sent in when all else had failed. At least fifteen organised rebellions had been quelled by its deadly presence alone, and now most feared to even try.
The Soldier was an obedient tool.
Until the day it disappeared.
It had been a fairly routine mission, just reconnaissance on a boarding school down in Texas to make sure that nothing subversive was being taught on the curriculum after rumours to the contrary had reached powerful ears. It had sat and stared down a scope for 72 hours and seen nothing, heard nothing, and so it left as ordered, neither disappointed or elated at not having to kill that day. Its next mission was to take out a tanker of supplies on the Arctic ocean, kill all souls aboard, and make it look as though one of their enemies to the East had done it.
Simple.
The Soldier didn't like the cold. It wasn't supposed to like or dislike anything, and so it carefully guarded that secret, but it didn't like the cold. It was reminiscent of storage, and of a place coated in snow that was synonymous with pain. But that dislike didn't cause any hesitation, and the Soldier dived into the frigid waters from its dinghy to swim toward the ship. But something stopped that progress. Something sighted under the water, something inside frozen ice. A face that caused more pain than even the freezing water, that made the Soldier believe its heart was about to stop dead. Something in its head broke, a reset button to the orders given, and suddenly nothing seemed more important than to collect that someone frozen in ice and protect him. Keep him.
It took nearly 40 hours to drag the ice floe to the surface and chip away enough to retrieve the body inside, and another 24 to get to shore. Even the Soldier's enhanced body was pushed to its limits from the prolonged exposure to the cold, and the extreme physical effort it took. But eventually the Soldier and its captive (Ste--?) were ensconced in a small abandoned building.
Steve would wake up naked, on the floor, and being stared at by a man all in black leather with a mask hiding his face.
Troops that had been following his exploits across the Allied Nations lost hope and lost morale, thinking that if even a super soldier could be defeated then what was the good of them fighting? Conversely, the Axis Powers grew more confident, hailing the defeat of Captain America, and that became a symbol for them to rally around. Technically, the Nazi Party won that war, but they were only in power for a year before HYDRA grew tired of being merely a part of a whole and decided to subsume their former masters.
They, after all, had no real interest in eugenics or genocide, that was the way to rule a single country. They wanted world domination, and they got there through careful promises, through underhand dealings, and by convincing the public that the freedoms they were giving over were for the greater good. After all, how could HYDRA protect them without knowledge, without obedience?
Years turned into decades and what had begun as a tentative regime had become all-powerful and tyrannical as technology boomed and citizens were born into this new world order. Children were taught from a young age, scared with stories of the Soldier. A boogieman to most, a whispered secret of its actual existence to others, the Weapon sent in when all else had failed. At least fifteen organised rebellions had been quelled by its deadly presence alone, and now most feared to even try.
The Soldier was an obedient tool.
Until the day it disappeared.
It had been a fairly routine mission, just reconnaissance on a boarding school down in Texas to make sure that nothing subversive was being taught on the curriculum after rumours to the contrary had reached powerful ears. It had sat and stared down a scope for 72 hours and seen nothing, heard nothing, and so it left as ordered, neither disappointed or elated at not having to kill that day. Its next mission was to take out a tanker of supplies on the Arctic ocean, kill all souls aboard, and make it look as though one of their enemies to the East had done it.
Simple.
The Soldier didn't like the cold. It wasn't supposed to like or dislike anything, and so it carefully guarded that secret, but it didn't like the cold. It was reminiscent of storage, and of a place coated in snow that was synonymous with pain. But that dislike didn't cause any hesitation, and the Soldier dived into the frigid waters from its dinghy to swim toward the ship. But something stopped that progress. Something sighted under the water, something inside frozen ice. A face that caused more pain than even the freezing water, that made the Soldier believe its heart was about to stop dead. Something in its head broke, a reset button to the orders given, and suddenly nothing seemed more important than to collect that someone frozen in ice and protect him. Keep him.
It took nearly 40 hours to drag the ice floe to the surface and chip away enough to retrieve the body inside, and another 24 to get to shore. Even the Soldier's enhanced body was pushed to its limits from the prolonged exposure to the cold, and the extreme physical effort it took. But eventually the Soldier and its captive (Ste--?) were ensconced in a small abandoned building.
Steve would wake up naked, on the floor, and being stared at by a man all in black leather with a mask hiding his face.
no subject
He didn’t hear Steve beside him, he was much too in his own head, much too worried about making a sudden noise. He’d been caught. What would the point be of the prey crying out now?
When the Soldier let up on his foot, however, Tony did the stupidest thing one could do when faced with a killer—. He got up and he ran, nearly pulling the tent down over him as he skidded out into the sand and down towards the water. Where could he possibly go?K
no subject
But the water's edge would be as far as Tony would make it.
The Asset would suddenly be there, like the ghost he was purported to be, flesh fingers curling in the back of Stark's collar to jerk him to a stop and keep him still.
no subject
“Make it fast. I did what you asked so you owe me to at least make it fast!” Tony wasn’t afraid of a lot of things but torture? He remembered what it tasted like, how thick the air was, how much blood filled his mouth from self inflicted wounds with his is. teeth on delicate flesh.
Tony wasn’t sure what would happen now. He’d been prepared to die right up until that moment, but he didn’t want to. No one really wanted to. Fighting back wasn’t exactly an option but his body, free from bondage save for his collar, twisted to grab hold of something.
He needed agency in his fate.
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"Be silent."
The order was near silent itself, a sibilant hiss in the night.
"You did not do what I ordered. He is not with them."
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"They're not as dumb as you think," Tony said, dangling like a kitten from his mother's teeth. His toes drug in the sand as he sought purchase and to face his attacker. He wanted to see it coming, perversely. "Your bestie told them all about you and now they're pretty sure he's a plant. I'm pretty sure he's a plant too, but he just doesn't know it. You're not helping to prove anyone wrong either."
That felt like he was throwing Steve under the bus, but he was sure that Steve could lift and throw that bus off of him anyway, so whatever.
"How did you even get here? Did you bring your little friends? I really don't want to deal with a public hanging right now, okay? I'm too good looking."
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There was nobody else there but him, no "friends" as Tony put it, nobody setting up a gallows further down the beach. He released his grip on the other man to let him turn around, for there was no threat to him even if he wasn't held. The thin light of the moon showed that the Soldier was coated head to toe in blood and gore, bits of bone and brain matter between the plates of his metal arm, and his hair slicked down by blood. It was impossible to tell if any was his.
"I can find anyone," he said, which was all the explanation he would give as to how he got there.
His brow furrowed in mild confusion before he continued, still speaking in the same very soft and mild voice, incongruous to the statements provided. "I killed my handlers when they tried to condition me. I don't know why."
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What he did, however, was back up in the sand, the wet grit sticking to the soles of bare feet as the cold waves licked at his toes.
Tony wasn't cut out of the same cloth as Steve and there was no pleasant, gentle coddling to come. "You killed your handlers because you're brainwashed. And you don't want to be brainwashed anymore." Shit, he hoped he was right about that. He hoped that this broken weapon wasn't going to self destruct. "I get it. Rogers is going to get it too. But you can't look like a massacre when you tell him. You have uh...." He wriggled his fingers. "You have bits of handler in your hair."
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Why would his appearance matter to Rogers?
That tiny frown intensified, giving the Soldier a simultaneously dangerous and innocently bewildered expression.
"I brought something to assist in the mission."
Remember? The mission that was protect Steve Rogers, somehow given to himself and then buried too deeply to refuse. The Soldier drew a small set of wires and circuit boards and other electricals from his pocket, something Tony might intimately recognise as the heart of JARVIS. It was coated in rubble dust where the Asset had dug it out of the ruins of the tower, and had specks of blood down one side.
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His work wasn't dead. JARVIS was alive and not in the hands of HYDRA. It meant more to him than he could actually express, if the way his face kept contorting proved it.
"This... This might just save us," Tony told the Soldier, holding the device to his chest like a child. "But you still need to wash that crud off of you."
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Again, he didn't address exactly what Stark had said. Why did blood matter? Why was it so important he be clean?
"Don't tell him where you got it."
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Trying to give orders to a stoic man-child covered in gore was insanity. Tony was half expecting puppies to come running out of the bushes or a giant Statue of Liberty to come wading over for a tea party, it was just that crazy right now.
"This is part of the damned mission, got it?"
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"I'll be watching."
Which is definitely not at all worrying and nightmare inducing.
"He's not to know."
It was part of the confusion, but something about seeing Rogers' stupid giant face on top of his stupid giant body just made everything that much more fractured.
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Tony was absolutely not going to be calling him either.
Hell. No. He hissed against the wind and then stalked his way back towards the tent. He was surprised Rogers slept through all of that, but there that damned blond was, still passed out, breathing evenly, blankets bunched over one leg and dragging in the sand. Tony bent to cover him better and then dropped on his own cot, slipping JARVIS under his lumpy pillow.
He wouldn't be sleeping any more tonight, that was for sure.
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When he woke with the dawn, yawning and stretching, he looked over at Tony in concern. The man looked godawful, pale with dark smudges under his eyes as if he hadn't slept a wink.
"...hey, you okay?"
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‘I’m watching you.’ No more frightening phrase had ever been said to him and now he couldn’t get it out of his head. Everyone was watching. The Soldier. The Resistance. There was no where for him to go, still under constant watch even if his whole world was gone. Just his luck.
“We are stuck on an island?” Thankfully there really was something wrong here for Tony to draw on so that he didn’t come right out and tell Steve that he had been visited by the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come. “And we don’t have any prosecco for mimosas with brunch.”
Speaking up about the device he had been given would alert both watching parties so Tony could not even hint to Steve about it.
“Other than that, and the gnats in the sand biting me all night, I’m fine.”
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He sat up properly and scrubbed his hands through his hair, brow furrowing as super soldier senses kicked in.
"Uh, are you hurt?"
He can smell blood and the faintest tinge of gunpowder in the air.
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He left the tent to head towards the fire Steve made the night before and knelt down next to it to add more provided kindling and set up a pot of coffee. For a rich kid, he thankfully knew how to improvise. It helped that he was a genius and that was pretty much his life’s work of course.
Trying to avoid answering questions was a fool’s errand. Twice in as many days, the Soldier had come along to fuck him without lube or a reach around and he was getting tired of it.
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Steve looked utterly unimpressed. He did feel for the other man, he could recognise that the fear in his voice and the hysteria in his eyes were real. But Tony wasn't a dumb man, he knew that wasn't what Steve was asking.
"I can smell the blood."
He was aware how creepy that could sound, but he couldn't help his super soldier senses and it was better that all the cards were on the table.
"It wasn't there last night."
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"I had a bad night so that's to be expected," Tony said, teeth clenched together so tightly that he could feel his jaw ache. "How about this...you don't ask me questions that aren't relevant to our situation and I don't have to be cute with you?"
And he was pretty cute. Of that he was certain.
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In fact, he was fairly sure that literally everything was relevant right now, when all they had was each other on this tiny spit of beach, not knowing if they were going to be rescued or left to die.
"A bad night doesn't usually equal that, in my experience. Not unless there was someone else involved."
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He was a big man baby. He'd be able to do that. Steve p[robably realized that by now too and wouldn't be too surprised.
"How about I let you know if I see anything that ends up being your business and I'll fill you in then?" Drop it Steve. Please.
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"Someone came in the night."
It wasn't a question.
"So either the resistance told you not to tell me, or you've been passing information along to someone else. There can't have been a fight, I wouldn't have slept through that. So-- someone wounded? Damn it, Stark, talk to me."
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“It’s more fun to watch you try to puzzle it out,” Tony replied. “There’s nothing to be concerned about. We are being monitored. If they thought I was passing information—. Hey. If you’re so enhanced and last night didn’t wake you up, that’s not on me.”
His grimace was telling, dark and tired.
“Drop it. It doesn’t have anything to do with you. “
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Besides, surely not even glowering and petulant Tony Stark would be enough of a jerk to hide the fact his best friend had come calling.
"Gee, thanks," he grumbled sarcastically. "I'll just sit over here and hope that happens before danger drops on my head."
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He needed Steve to talk, not about Tony but about himself. Steve was just being a piece of shit about it.
Standing up carefully, JARVIS hidden under his pillow, Tony sighed and tapped the faint glow in the center of his chest.
“Arc reactor. Not getting into it. Sorry it sometimes smells. Gives me a faint coconut taste in my mouth to be honest. Can you stop now?”
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