Bucky Barnes (
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fossilised2017-02-24 01:53 am
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For Steve
[It's been fourteen months, six weeks, and four days since the Soldier pulled Steve from the Potomac and ran from everything he had ever known. Since he had begun to realise which parts of the world he'd been fed were lies, but hadn't quite managed to pin down which were truths. He knows that Steve has been looking for him. Not just him, but his friends too, most of the Avengers have been roped into Steve's unceasing search.
They never find anything.
He's too good, he knows how to hide. He's seen them - Iron Man once, Falcon four times, Steve twice - but they've never seen him. He's a ghost, just rumours that dry up on the wind. He's not too sure if he wants to remain this way for the rest of his life, he knows he's not ready for anything else, and this feels almost comforting. Anonymous. But something in him has pulled him back to America. He hears on the news what's been happening with the Avengers, he sees that there's a new 'compound' that they're using as a base, though none of the news channels know where it is.
It doesn't matter, he finds it.
There's security systems, of course, but he bypasses them all. He slips close enough past Falcon that he can smell the aftershave he used, but he isn't noticed. He finds Steve's room, easy to tell it's his because of the shield inside the door and the way that the whole place is military precision. Not a habit easy to break even once the army is done with you. He isn't even sure why he's here, just that he's following the instincts of his mind at the moment.
He takes a seat on Steve's bed, cross legged, and he waits.]
They never find anything.
He's too good, he knows how to hide. He's seen them - Iron Man once, Falcon four times, Steve twice - but they've never seen him. He's a ghost, just rumours that dry up on the wind. He's not too sure if he wants to remain this way for the rest of his life, he knows he's not ready for anything else, and this feels almost comforting. Anonymous. But something in him has pulled him back to America. He hears on the news what's been happening with the Avengers, he sees that there's a new 'compound' that they're using as a base, though none of the news channels know where it is.
It doesn't matter, he finds it.
There's security systems, of course, but he bypasses them all. He slips close enough past Falcon that he can smell the aftershave he used, but he isn't noticed. He finds Steve's room, easy to tell it's his because of the shield inside the door and the way that the whole place is military precision. Not a habit easy to break even once the army is done with you. He isn't even sure why he's here, just that he's following the instincts of his mind at the moment.
He takes a seat on Steve's bed, cross legged, and he waits.]
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And look at me now, I bet my own Ma wouldn't recognise me. Which is fair, I guess, since I wouldn't recognise her.
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[Steve looks over at Bucky, looks him up and down.]
Yeah, she'd probably nag you to cut your hair and shave, but she'd recognize you. I did.
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[It seems crazy to him that Steve had staked his life on someone who he thought had died in the war.]
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[Steve scratches the back of his neck as he thinks about that. Yeah, maybe he should have considered that.]
It was more than just looks. I just... knew.
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Was there something more to their friendship in the past? He doesn't know, he keeps remembering odd feelings, but nothing that would support them.]
What you did was stupid.
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[He actually laughs at that. People have been telling him that... Bucky has been telling him that his whole life.]
But it worked.
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Bucky fastens his safety bar in place and waits, feeling oddly nervous. He's not done something like this in a long time, just for fun.]
You ready?
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But hey. It'll be fun. Right?
He looks over at Bucky and smiles, trying to focus on the excitement of the ride and the people around him, not the idea that there's a distinct possibility that this is the last time he'll ever see Bucky.]
Yeah, I think so. You?
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[The car jerks into motion.
It's such a strange sensation, being boxed into a little rollercoaster car with the man he tried to kill, surrounded by strangers who have no idea how dangerous the man in their mix is.
The ride itself isn't as exhilarating as he remembers it being, maybe because he's done things far more deserving of adrenaline since the last time he rode it, but it's still oddly enjoyable. It's over too fast, they're rolling back to the platform in what seems like moments.
He glances over at Steve, for just a moment the hint of a regretful smile on his face.]
This is my stop, Steve, it's time to go.
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He feels tears pushing at his eyes, and he can't bring himself to fight them.
He turns to face Bucky and shakes his head.]
It doesn't have to be like this, Buck. It doesn't have to be goodbye.
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[His voice is slightly softer, but it's the only indication that this might be even a little hard for him too.]
It's the end of the line, Steve, it's time to accept that.
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That's the thing, Buck. There's never been an end of the line. Not for me. And there never will be.
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You're wrong.
[There's an edge of desperation to his voice.]
You have to let me go, it's over.
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[He lets go, steps back.]
But you get to make your own choices now. So if this is really what you want, I'm not going to stop you. All I can do is beg you to reconsider.
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I told you to shut up!
[He shouts it, suddenly throwing a punch at Steve's face viciously. Whether he's stopped or blocked, he'll keep throwing punches all the same, making the bystanders start to scream or shout for security now that a fight has broken out.]
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But this isn't the helicarrier. They're on Coney Island, if they do this in public, they're going to cause serious problems. So instead of just letting Bucky pummel him (as if that would help anything), Steve does his best to duck and dodge and try to catch Bucky's hands to get him to still.]
Bucky! Bucky, stop, please, not here! They're gonna see you!
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[He's so angry that it feels like his chest might explode with it, and he's not going to stop unless Steve actively restrains him properly or fights back. If even one of his hands gets caught, he's going to surge forwards to try and headbutt him viciously.]
I hate you.
[That's not true, but it comes out all the same.]
You selfish asshole.
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Steve starts to fight back, enough to try to really restrain Bucky this time.]
Yeah, Buck, I'm a selfish asshole. Always have been. But Buck, they're gonna call the cops if we keep this up. You want to kick the shit out of me that's fine but let's do it in private maybe?
[The words come out breathless and disjointed because trying to fight and converse at the same time is very difficult. Steve finds a tiny opening in Bucky's relentless onslaught and goes for a headlock.]
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He won't be trapped again, he won't.
People all around are screaming, some are even filming it in the morbid way that people always holding their cell phones do these days. Bucky doesn't care, just like he doesn't care about the cops right now.]
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So he takes a deep breath.]
God, Buck, I'm so sorry.
[He hates how things have turned out, and it's all his fault.
But there's no time for that. He turns and runs. If Bucky is angry enough, he'll chase Steve out of there, maybe to safety. If he has even a modicum of a clear head, he'll get himself out of there and disappear out of Steve's life again, probably forever.
But Steve can't be responsible for Bucky being taken back in, he can't.
So he runs.]
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He sees Steve run and, for a moment, he nearly follows.
But he doesn't.
He runs the other way and disappears, a ghost long before the police cars first show up. Some of them hunt down Steve later, he was recognised from the video footage, but he's an Avenger and a national hero, so they don't question him too much. Natasha and Sam give him knowing and sympathetic looks, but nobody says anything. Nobody says 'I told you so'.
And once more, silence becomes the norm.
It's nearly four months later that Steve gets a letter through the post, addressed in old-style neat handwriting of the sort that kids these days just don't seem to learn in school. The letter isn't long and the return address is some villa in Austria.]
I taught you to shave because your Dad was dead. You didn't need to, you never really grew any hair, but I taught you anyway. You near skinned your face, we stopped the blood with your Ma's best towels. She nearly killed us both.
This is for you.
[In with the letter is a small package containing a proper straight razor and some shaving cream.]
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He doesn't go looking for Bucky, doesn't even consider it. Steve knows better. He's done enough damage already.
When he's not working, Steve goes through the journal he wrote, and, after a month, starts writing in it again, though he doubts Bucky will ever see it.
The package arrives later, and he nearly has a breakdown in his room over it. Bucky's alive, he's still remembering, and he doesn't hate Steve. It's... not an ideal situation, but it's much better than Steve had even dared to hope.
He doesn't know if Bucky's still at the address listed, but he write to it anyway, trusting that Bucky left the address for a reason.]
Thank you for the gift. It feels good to be shaving the way I remember. You were a good teacher, even if the first time didn't end so well.
I'm sorry I pushed you. I have never ever wanted to hurt you, but I know I do it regardless. I hope you're well.
Sam insisted I start seeing a therapist, someone to talk to about my problems. Apparently they've been obvious to everyone, as much as I try to ignore them. It's been going better than I thought it would. I didn't think anyone could possibly understand my perspective, but the doctor says it's actually very similar to that of refugees--being forced out of their home by conflict to settle in a strange new place, never to go back.
It helps to talk. More than I thought it would.
I hope you're well.
[Included is a drawing of the two of them, as they are now, sitting on the beach and watching the sunset.]
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He's not sure that's a good thing.
The more he remembers, the more sure he is that he's never going to be that man again. Just because he remembers dancing and smiling, it doesn't mean he feels any more capable of it now. It doesn't erase the fear, it doesn't stop him from checking every safe house he stops in for traps, it doesn't make him less of a murderer.
It's another two months before the next letter arrives, this one addressed to a place out in Sydney, Australia.]
The first year I thought you were going to die, you were eleven. I remember watching you wheeze and I thought that I was about to lose my best friend, I promised God that he could have my life if he spared yours. Do you think that's what all of this was? I've been paying back a debt I accrued years ago?
The year your Mom died you got pneumonia again. I never told you, but that friend who was a doctor who treated you for free because he was my pal - I never met him before. I just told you that so you'd see him, because you'd never take my help if it was charity. I picked up three months of extra work at the docks to pay for him. It was worth it.
I was glad when you were rejected from the army. I didn't want you to die.
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He keeps working, keeps writing in his journal, keeps seeing his therapist.
When the next letter arrives, he opens it with shaking hands.]
It's been a long time since I've been to church but if that was God asking you to pay off a debt, then you have more than earned a quiet life.
Back when I kept trying to enlist, I knew it was hurting you. But I couldn't let you go and risk your life without me. I always used general terms talking about it, but when I said guys were risking their lives, I meant you.
You absolutely helped me survive, I know that. But I think you needed me just as much, in a more subtle way. Everyone always thought you were a golden boy, you could do whatever you wanted and hang out with whoever you chose, but that was just your public face. Yeah, you were funny and kind and charming, but when it was just us I could see how you'd get stuck in your own head, stuck in dark thoughts.
I knew because it happened to me, too. And we kept each other out of it, as much as we could.
You got drafted, and the first thing I thought wasn't that I was scared you'd die, but that I was scared whatever it was that ate at you would get you, and you'd have no one to get you out again.
After I pulled you off Zola's table, I should have paid more attention. I tried, but there was more to focus on than I thought possible, and I took it on faith that when you said you were okay, that you were telling the truth. That you'd twll me if something was wrong.
Well, I was wrong. And I'm so sorry. I wonder, sometimes, how things would have been different if I'd sat you down and had a good talk once in a while. If maybe we could have figured out what had happened and been more careful trying to get Zola.
I have a lot of regrets. When I told you I couldn't let you go, that was why. I'm selfish. I'm always making it about me, and forgetting to listen. I'm doing that right now.
I hope you're well.
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This time the return letter only takes two weeks, and it's marked from the Ukraine.]
Don't regret it. I wouldn't have talked to you even if you had asked.
I don't talk much now. It's better that way, there's too much that's better left unsaid. This is going to be my last letter, I have things I need to do. But I have to ask you something first.
Were we in love?
I remember wanting to kiss you, but I don't remember kissing you. Only dames. Am I remembering things wrong?
[It was a short letter, but it said all it needed to. Bucky would never have asked if he truly did remember, because men weren't supposed to like men that way back then, and he would never have wanted the inevitable rejection. But it wouldn't matter now, he'd probably never see Steve again anyway.]
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omg i totally forgot it was my turn for like. a month. sorry about that.
no worries!
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and then a month later, jeez
<3
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