Bucky Barnes (
advanced) wrote in
fossilised2017-03-14 08:58 pm
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It's AU time
Building 64 down in the East end of Brooklyn was not a fashionable place to live. The apartments were small, barely more than studio size, and the rent was pretty cheap. Not many people lived there permanently, most people only came and stayed a year or two to get enough money together to move onto somewhere better. But there were two residents who had been there a while.
Steven Grant Rogers, early twenties, who earned his rent doing tattoo designs part time to fund his college course, and occasionally dipped his toe into online art commissions. He'd moved in there when his mother had died four years previously, leaving him enough money to get by, but not enough that he could stop working. And right across the hall was Natalia Romanova, an aspiring ballerina from Russia. She was tough as hell, she had worked herself right through high school, paid her own way to America when she didn't even speak the language, and kept going through tenacity alone.
Somehow a friendship had struck up between them when Steve had been the first person not to look at her like she was an idiot or disgusting for not speaking the language. He'd helped her learn, and they'd been firm friends for the last three years. Everyone else was transient, coming and going, not really making an impact. Natalia had friends and a boyfriend outside of the apartment, but she sometimes worried that Steve never seemed to do anything but work and study.
Which was probably why he would be in his apartment when a loud crash sounded on the stairs outside. Said crash had come from a box of (now very broken) plates and bowls being dropped by the man just moving in to the apartment directly above Steve's, judging by the amount of cardboard boxes that were littering the hallway. He was tall, muscled, dressed in faded jeans and a hoodie with long slightly scruffy hair, leather gloves, and deep blue eyes.
Steven Grant Rogers, early twenties, who earned his rent doing tattoo designs part time to fund his college course, and occasionally dipped his toe into online art commissions. He'd moved in there when his mother had died four years previously, leaving him enough money to get by, but not enough that he could stop working. And right across the hall was Natalia Romanova, an aspiring ballerina from Russia. She was tough as hell, she had worked herself right through high school, paid her own way to America when she didn't even speak the language, and kept going through tenacity alone.
Somehow a friendship had struck up between them when Steve had been the first person not to look at her like she was an idiot or disgusting for not speaking the language. He'd helped her learn, and they'd been firm friends for the last three years. Everyone else was transient, coming and going, not really making an impact. Natalia had friends and a boyfriend outside of the apartment, but she sometimes worried that Steve never seemed to do anything but work and study.
Which was probably why he would be in his apartment when a loud crash sounded on the stairs outside. Said crash had come from a box of (now very broken) plates and bowls being dropped by the man just moving in to the apartment directly above Steve's, judging by the amount of cardboard boxes that were littering the hallway. He was tall, muscled, dressed in faded jeans and a hoodie with long slightly scruffy hair, leather gloves, and deep blue eyes.
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A man a little shorter than Bucky with a butterfly bandage on his forehead over his left eyebrow and a smarmy sort of smile headed right for the counter, arm in a sling over his coat and facial hair shaped a little strangely. On the back of his black bomber jacket was the logo of a mechanic shop Steve had seen in passing a few times near the ferry
He cleared his throat as Steve sat down and watched Loren, eyes significantly lower on him then about where his face would be when he turned around.
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Loren raised a perfectly shaped eyebrow as though unimpressed himself, though a tiny smile played the corner of his lips, and he very deliberately took his book out and sat down to start reading as if he hadn't noticed the audacious entry of the mechanic.
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The older man in the bomber jacket scoffed loudly. "Don't do me like that, Ren. I actually took the subway all the way over. The doc won't let me on the bike yet," he complained, and Steve nudged Bucky and openly gaped at him.
"Wait, I recognize him... Wasn't he in the hospital...?" The guy with the towels around his head and his hand. Small world.
"Is that book really more interesting than I am?"
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Nobody would have thought the two would match well together, not with Loren's issues and Tony's audacious lifestyle, but they ended up forming a bond in the most unlikely of ways and had been together for quite some time now. Nearing a year, though Loren had determined not to tell his boyfriend to see if he would recall himself the date when it came around. Somehow he doubted it.
However, Tony was in his bad books at the moment after getting himself hurt in such a stupid way, and Loren had refused to take his calls for a few days. He shouldn't have come to the shop, there was a risk he could run into Thor and Loren did not want his brother and boyfriend to mix - partly because Thor did not know he was gay and partly because he feared Tony would like Thor more, everyone did.
So he continued to turn the pages of his book as if completely deaf to the man in front of him, though the smile at his lips did grow.
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He was very insistent and Steve was rooting for him, not because he suspected that this was a romantic relationship so much as he thought Loren was just playing around. He could see the side of his face anyway. And that face really was smiling.
"Listen. I'm sorry. I'm sorry I thought I could change the winch and that I did it without anyone around. And I'm sorry that you had to find me. But I'm glad you did. I owe you my life. That's got to be worth a direct smile right?"
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"I thought you were dead when I found you."
His first words, and they were hissed out venomously in that lilting accent.
"You did not deserve to be saved, attempting something so foolish alone. I had thought you possessed even a small amount of intelligence, but it seems I have been proven wrong and your head is completely empty." He picked up his book again, hands shaking slightly as he repeated himself. "I thought you were dead."
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But when Loren started talking in that incredibly sexy Scandanavian accent of his, oh Tony's heart (and loins) happened to be set on fire. Tony pulled up the edge of the bar and scooter passed the hinged board.
"It won't happen again. Why don't you tell your customers to finish up and come home with me?"
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He had thought he had lost one of them, and the healing wounds proved that he very nearly had. Still, perhaps he had punished Tony enough, and so he did bestow a small and wicked smile to him.
"I do not think that would be wise. Were I to take you home, your injuries would get no rest."
Bucky snorted from his table, unable to pretend he wasn't listening any longer. But at least the mini soap opera (seriously, who were these clowns?) had helped anchor him back in reality.
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Three pairs of eyes, each one a distinctly different shade, turned towards that snort. "Buck," Steve warned under his breath but Tony, who was touching Loren's cheek with his uninjured hand, had the funniest expression.
"Oh I'm sorry. Are we disturbing you and your boyfriend? Hurry up and go. We have some making up to do." Tony was not impressed. He wanted to spend the time Loren had denied him for the last week and a half with his boyfriend. He didn't come all the way out here for nothing.
The coffee shop and bookstore were usually empty by now so this wasn't fair.
"Oh, we aren't," Steve said, but Tony snorted.
"Don't care. Goodbye."
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Loren was unimpressed.
He did not care for a stranger laughing at him as though his relationship were something to be mocked, and he did not like that Steven had seen him with Tony, for he might then tell Thor and that would not be ideal. Spitefully, for he had seen the way that Bucky had jumped when the door slammed, he slapped his hand on the counter to create a loud crack, seemingly without realising the effect that it would have.
"Do not laugh so rudely, Steven take your guest and go."
Not that he would be able to, as Bucky reacted only a split second or two after the crack had come, literally tackling Steve from his seat and onto the floor, covering him with his body and shaking like a leaf.
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"It's me," Steve said. "It's Steve. You're with me and we're in Brooklyn, Bucky. We're at the coffee place. The place you said had the best coffee you've ever tasted. and it's all right."
"Jesus Christ," he heard Loren's boyfriend say, coming closer. "Look man, look. Sorry. My bad." He felt terrible. It hadn't been his intention to get some Vet all messed up and he knew Loren wouldn't had tried it either. A lot of the guys he hired at the shop were ex-military. He saw the signs.
"See, you're here in a coffee shop. We're in New York."
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But then more people were talking, a voice he didn't recognise in a garbled sort of way that didn't make any sense, and he resorted to his default answer, the only one that he knew was safe no matter what.
"James Barnes, Sergeant, 1070413. James Barnes, Sergeant, 1070413. James Barnes, Sergeant, 1070413."
He kept murmuring it, showing no signs of getting off Steve even though he didn't even seem to see him. Loren remained where he was behind the counter, watching with interest though he had arranged his expression to concern as though he had not intended this as revenge.
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The wheezing was back but he wouldn't let Bucky feel guilty about it. How could he when he was the one that forced him to come out? This was his fault, like the hospital. Steve managed to get an arm around Bucky's neck and he pulled him further down on top of him.
"You're just Bucky," Steve stressed. "To me. Name, rank and serial number aren't needed with me, Buck. This isn't war. No one's holding you right now, but me. We're going to get some new coffee and we're going to go home, pal. Just you and me. I promise. No one else. No one else is going to touch you."
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"...Steve?"
No. No, that couldn't be right. Who was Steve? There was no Steve out here, so why did he keep seeing intensely blue eyes and a smile that could outshine the sun? It just made him shake all the harder, his prosthetic bent at an odd angle on the floor where he had tried to shield Steve.
"It's not-- you have to stay down, I'll protect you."
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That could be ten minutes from now, an hour from now, Steve wouldn't give up.
"You know me. And you know where we are and nothing here will hurt you." He repeated the promises for coffee and for Maury on TV and his eyes never once strayed to Tony, who was looking uncomfortable and pulling Loren away, or to Loren and that intense, not quite right look on his face.
It didn't matter to him.
None of it did. Nothing but the shaking man trying to save him from his own mind.
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"Sorry. I'm really sorry."
He was such a goddamn idiot. He could really have hurt Steve, maybe he had really hurt him, the poor guy was just recovering and now he had spent who knew how long on his back on a cold floor with a heavy idiot on top of him.
"Fuck."
Fuck.
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Tony wasn't sure what to make of the two. Not dating, the little one said that, but man, that was some loyalty. If the brunet had taken care of the blond for a week and the blond just so easily brushed off the last half an hour here... Wow. That was love. That was love visible right before his very eyes. So excuse him, all right, if he found the whole thing just ridiculous. Tony didn't do love. He didn't think he could. Loren was something else all together. Something that they did not bother naming.
Whatever. It didn't matter.
"Coffee's on me, folks," Tony said, shelling out a twenty to slide over to Loren. He dared his boyfriend to argue with him.
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Bucky mumbled a thanks to both of them, but his attention remained almost solely on Steve right up until they got back to the apartment building and Steve's front door had closed behind them. Only then did he sag forward and grab Steve in a bone-crushing hug, muttering thanks into his neck.
What had he ever done to deserve a friend like this? Steve was pretty much a goddamn angel in human form and he wished so hard that he could have met him back when he had been functional. He would already have kissed him, he was sure of it.
"--did I hurt you? Are you cold? Does your chest hurt?"
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And Steve would have just admitted the handsome soldier from afar. He probably never would have gotten to know Bucky like he had.
The hug was not unwelcome, but it had taken Steve by surprise enough to leave him barely balanced on his toes against Bucky's chest. He half hugged back and half clung.
"You didn't, I'm not and it doesn't," he said in response to the rapid fire questions, glad he'd gotten the coffee down before they were locked in another brown deluge. "But what about you? Are you all right, Bucky?"
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"Shut up, don't even try and worry about me."
He finally pulled back, eyes intent on Steve's face as if to find any clues that he might not be doing as well as he said he was. If Steve relapsed because of him, he'd hate himself for a long time.
"I'm fine, it was nothing. That-- it was a mistake, forget it happened."
Dumb to try and pretend he was still fine, but he didn't want Steve to join the brigade of people who tried to convince him that he had PTSD and that counselling was the best option. He didn't, he was fine, he just needed to stop being so weak and pull himself together.
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Bucky wasn’t getting off so easily, not while he was hugging Steve so tightly, not even after he pulled back, leaving Steve unsteady on his feet and missing the warmth of Bucky’s chest and single, all encompassing arm. “I’m not going to forget what happened. I want to help you,” Steve said firmly. “I’m not going to toe the line about you needing to talk to anyone-- They told me to do that when my mom died but I couldn’t. I’m not even going to tell you that you should talk to me-- You can, obviously, you can talk to me about anything, but I want to help you with it just the same.”
And maybe he’d spent a little time looking up how soldiers were taught to deal with their PTSD. It wasn’t like that could ever be cured. Of course, most of the things they mentioned required two hands…knitting for instance. Something to keep active.
“And… I want to help me too, so don’t pin all of this on me being a good Samaritan. I mean, I’m in the Eagle shirt but that doesn’t mean I’m completely altruistic right npw!” Steve’s smile was never crooked and his perfect teeth almost outshone his eyes. That was one health issue he didn’t have at least. “Do you think-- Can you train me? The doctor did say that if I can build up the muscles in my chest, it will help with the asthma. But… Cardio doesn’t really go with asthma so… I really need someone that can monitor me and there’s no way I can afford a personal trainer at a gym around here.”
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He used to be good at fighting, even before the army, a boxer. Having one arm might hinder him a bit, but he could sure as hell help Steve get the basics down and teach him breathing techniques so that he might be able to jog, all that sort of thing.
"--yeah." He couldn't help but smile, gratitude and fondness in his eyes. "I think I could help you do that. But are you sure that's what you want? I mean, I'm pretty ruthless, I'm used to training up shitty cadets. I'm not a nice guy when I train people."
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Steve kicked off his boots, or rather, he kicked off one and tried to toe out of the other before giving up to plop on the coffee table and unzip the other. It was tossed towards the door and he leaned back on one hand, knees splayed and socked feet crossed at the ankles. There was no attempt to look sexy so much as a little tired.
"I guess it's too bad that Loren has a boyfriend. I had no idea he liked men. I would have tried to pretend to be a at and set you two up. Even if that would make me a fifth wheel since Nat is dating his brother."
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How could Steve so effortlessly do this? Usually when Bucky had a bad day, let alone lost himself so completely like that, it could ruin the rest of the damn week. It should have sent him huddling into his apartment for days, but here he was flopping on the couch next to Steve after an hour. Shaky, yes, but not losing himself.
"I don't think it's a good idea for me to be dating anyone, Steve. I'm a project case, not a boyfriend."
There was a trace of bitterness in his words, but he kept a smile at his lips the same time. He knew the score, being angry about it wouldn't change it. Casual dating was pretty much off the table.
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Heck, Steve couldn't juggle that either. He wasn't good with dark and mysterious.
He also wasn't good with big and muscley or cute and dumb or vapid and tall-- so just about everyone that Nat set him up with was never a good fit. Sure, it was his dream to have someone. To love someone and be loved back--
"And you're young. You have years to find someone. Or someones if you date the ballet troupe."
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off to work, catch you later
I'll be here when you get back!
<33
Re: <33
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pretend Bucky is Nat
Re: pretend Bucky is Nat
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