SYNOPSIS: on your way home from work, you spot a stray dog and decide to help it from the pouring rain. little do you know you caught the attention of the scary, unapproachable mob boss and now that heโs got his sights set on you, he never plans to let you go. based on this request.
WARNINGS: 18+ MINORS DNI โ alternate universe. fem!reader, oblivious!reader, sensitive!reader, age gap (reader is early20s & bucky is late30s) reader works a normal office job, pet names such as โbabyโ , โbabydollโ & โsunshineโ , reader hates cursing, reader adopts a puppy (teddy) stalker!bucky, mention of steve being buckyโs head of security, fluff, angst, hurt/comfort, bucky hides his identity for a while, eventual smut, kidnapping, blood, guns, murder, reader gets injured, happy ending, no use of y/n
AN: this is a mini series that should have 1-3 parts. if thereโs any more, you guys will be updated.
word count | 13.5k words
summary | you had the house. the husband. the hollow life. but every tuesday and thursday at 10:45 AM, you opened the door to something sweeterโa young mailman with a mouth full of yes maโam and hands made for sin.
tags | 18+ (MDNI), EXPLICIT SEXUAL CONTENT, unprotected sex, suburbia au, pwp, cheating sex, infidelity, age gap, power imbalance (but consensual), marital infidelity, dom/sub dynamics, begging, doggy style, overstimulation, light dirty talk, reader fantasises about bucky during sex with husband, tw: br*ck r*mlow, mention of emotional neglect in marriage, praise kink, creampie, bucky is obsessed, lowkey inexperienced!bucky, subby!bucky, bucky calls you maโam and then fucks you stupid, he leaves your pussy full of mail, cuckold core, possessive!bucky, pussy drunk!bucky, heavy praise
a/n | tbh this couldโve taken place in the 50s or 2000s, nobody knows. this was inspired by desperate housewives but i made it sluttier (if gabby and bree were one person)
likes comments and reblogs are much appreciated โจ
MASTERLIST
divider by @enchanthings
Thereโs something peculiar about the way a woman can be broken without ever making a sound.
No cracks. No gasps. No shattering porcelain on the floor.
Just a quiet kind of nothing that settles behind her eyes like dust on a windowsill, inevitable and slowly turning everything gray.
You were folding laundry when you found it.
One of Brockโs white shirts. The expensive kind. Egyptian cotton, triple-stitched, with his initials monogrammed just inside the collarโBRRโlike a cattle brand stamped into the fabric. Youโd pressed it yourself that morning, running the iron over the sleeves in slow, methodical passes, breathing in the steam and starch and the faint ghost of his cologne.
And then you saw it.
Lipstick.
Not yours.
Too red. Too loud. The kind of colour worn by women who laugh too hard at dinner parties and drink too much gin straight from the glass. Women who donโt bother to wipe the smudge off the rim before they hand it back to the waiter.
Right there, faint but certain, a smear near the collarbone. Just a whisper of crimson against the white. Like a signature. Like a taunt.
You didnโt scream or crumble. You just held the shirt between your fingers and stared at that mark like it was a wine stain on the wallpaper. Inconvenient and not even worth fussing about.
Because this is what it meant to be Mrs. Rumlow. And you had no one to blame but yourself.
After all, you werenโt swept off your feet. You were justย worn down.
Brock pursued you the way a dog gnaws a boneโpersistent and aggressive. He asked you out eight times before you said yes. Called your job every afternoon until the receptionist started putting him through just to shut him up. Sent flowers to your apartment; carnations, always carnations, because he never bothered to learn what you actually liked. Showed up at your motherโs dinner parties with that performative charm, shaking hands, kissing cheeks, grinning like heโd already won.
And everyone else loved him.
Your friends said he was handsome. Your mother said he had prospects. Your father just nodded and shook his hand and called him aย good man.
You didnโt feel anything at all really.
But the word โyesโ started falling out of your mouth like clockwork. Yes to dinner. Yes to letting him in. Yes to the ringโheavy and perfect and exactly what a girlย shouldย want. Yes to the house with the white picket fence and the immaculate lawn. Yes to the titleโMrs. Rumlow.
Yes. Yes. Yes.
Until suddenly you were thirty, standing in your laundry room at two in the afternoon, holding a manโs shirt that didnโt even smell like you anymore.
And what now? You could confront him. Cry, maybe. Throw a tantrum. Smash a vase against the wall and watch the pieces scatter across the hardwood.
But for what? To make him feel bad for fifteen minutes before he went right back to doing whatever he pleased? To force an apology you knew wouldnโt mean a thing?
No, thank you.
You hung the shirt neatly over the back of the chair, the way youโd been taught, and went back to folding towels. Matching corners. Smooth stacks. The rhythm of it steadied something in your chest.
That afternoon, you made a lemon cake.
You creamed the butter and sugar until it was pale and fluffy. You zested the lemons until your fingers smelled sharp and bright. You poured the batter into the pan and watched it rise through the oven door, golden and perfect. You whipped the frosting by hand until your arm ached, then spread it in smooth, even layers across the top.
And when you sat down in your immaculate kitchenโsurrounded by the hum of the refrigerator and the ticking of the clock, with a slice of cake on a china plate in front of youโyou took a bite.
The frosting was just a little too sweet.
You felt absolutely nothing at all.
Dinner was silent.
You set the pot roast on the table, the porcelain platter warm against your palms, steam curling upward like cigarette smoke in a half-empty bar. The scent of rosemary and roasted carrots hung in the air, filling the dining room with something that smelled likeย homeโฆ even if it didnโt feel like one.
Brock thanked you without looking up from the newspaper.
The words came out flat, automatic, as if spoken by a machine. He ate quickly, efficiently, like everything in his life. Fork, knife, chew, swallow. A rhythm of consumption without pleasure. He checked his watch between bites, that little gold-faced wristband catching the chandelier light, and you wondered if he ever really tasted anything at all.
You nodded at the right moments. Smiled when he made a dry comment about workโฆ something about a man named Alexander Pierce, a deal gone sour, a shipment delayed. You didnโt really listen. You just let your mouth move in practiced curves while your eyes drifted to the lipstick stain youโd pressed out of that shirt hours ago.
You poured him another drink when he tapped the glass. The two clinks of his wedding band against the crystal, a wordless request you had long since learned to obey without thought.
You didnโt bring up the lipstick.
Why would you? He would deny it. Or worseโhe would tell the truth like it was trivial, like it was nothing more than a spilled drink at a work function, a kiss on the cheek from a clientโs wife. He would wave his hand and sayย you know how these things go, sweetheart, and then heโd go back to carving the roast.
So you kept your mouth shut and your hands steady and your face smooth as porcelain.
After dinner, you washed the dishes while he stood behind you. His hands found your hips in that familiar way, yet less like a husband touching his wife and more like a man checking the fence posts on his property. You didnโt flinch or lean back into him. You just let the warm water run over your fingers and watched the soap bubbles pop one by one against the stainless steel.
He guided you upstairs without a word.
In the bedroom, he didnโt turn on the lights. He never did when he was in this mood. It was easier for him to pretend you were anyone he wanted. Easier for you to pretend you didnโt know who he was imagining. Easier for both of you to exist in that shadowed space without having to look each other in the eye.
He unbuttoned your dress halfway, just enough to get what he needed, and pushed inside you with a sigh. The same tired exhale he gave when he loosened his tie after work. A release. Not affection. Not even desire. Just pressure leaving the body, a valve opened after a long day.
He moved like a man finishing a task before bed. His breath warm and stale against your neck, tinged with whiskey and gravy. Your cheek pressed into the pillow, eyes open in the dark, staring at the faint crack in the ceiling where the moonlight bled through the curtains.
You didnโt make a sound. You didnโt tremble or cling or gasp. You just lay there, letting him take what he thought was his, feeling nothing but the soft thud of your heartbeat in your ear and the slight friction of the sheets against your thighs.
When he came, he groaned your name like an afterthought and rolled off you immediately. A completed chore. The mattress shifted as he settled onto his back, and within minutes his breathing evened out into the low, rough snore youโd grown accustomed to.
You pulled the sheets back up to your chin and lay on your back, staring at the ceiling.
The moonlight cut pale lines across the room, sharp and silver, like broken glass scattered on the floor. You traced them with your eyes, following the angles where they crossed the crown molding, the light fixture, the corner where the wallpaper had begun to peel ever so slightly.
They didnโt point anywhere. They didnโt mean anything. They were just lines of light falling across a dark room where a woman lay next to a man who didnโt see her.
The ache between your legs was faint now, fading into something distant and numb. You folded your hands over your stomach, fingers interlaced, like a woman lying in a casket.
The ceiling fan hummed above you, a low mechanical drone that filled the silence with something almost like comfort.
Then you let sleep pull you under, still hollow, still quiet, still waiting for something to crack.
Tuesday
You sat in the kitchen with a cigarette burning between your fingers and your second cup of coffee growing cold on the counter, wearing a satin robe the colour of pale champagne; too soft, too pretty, too delicate for a life this dull. The fabric whispered against your skin with every small movement, a reminder that you still had a body, still had nerve endings, still had wants that went unacknowledged.
The floor was spotless. Linoleum gleaming under the morning light, every crumb swept, every scuff wiped away. The breakfast dishes were stacked neatly in the drying rack, porcelain and ceramic arranged like soldiers at attention. Everything in its place. Everything perfect.
And for a moment, just one dizzy, suffocating moment, you considered what it would be like if you justโฆ walked out.
Not packed. Not explained. Not left a note. Just stood up, pushed back the chair, and let the front door click shut behind you without a backward glance. No destination. No plan. Just the simple, radical act of leaving.
You thought about the other wives on the block. Margaret with her twin boys and her perpetual exhaustion. Doris with her tennis club and her too-bright laugh. Eleanor with her country luncheons and her gossip that cut like a finely sharpened knife. All of them busy, all of them pretending they werenโt slowly going mad in their identical houses with their identical husbands and their identical lives.
You didnโt have a baby. You didnโt have a career. You didnโt even have friends you really likedโjust women you drank tea with because it was expected, because the calendar said Monday and Wednesday meant bridge club whether you wanted it or not.
You had a house that stayed clean and a husband that didnโt. And every day felt the same.
Breakfast. Clean. Grocery store. Smile politely. Dinner. Dishes. Sex if he remembered. Sleep. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.
You stubbed the cigarette out in the ceramic ashtray, the ember hissing against porcelain, and let out a long, slow breath. Maybe youโd bake something today. A cheesecake, perhapsโthe one your mother had taught you, the one that took two hours and left your hands smelling of cream and sugar. Or maybe youโd just sit here, watching the clock tick toward noon, counting the minutes until the day blurred into the next one.
Knock. Knock.
Your head turned, like a reflex you hadnโt trained but couldnโt control.
The clock on the wall said 10:45. Which meant it was Tuesday. Which meantโ
You already knew before you opened the door.
The morning light spilled across the porch, catching in his hair, turning it something between caramel and chocolate. He stood there in his postal uniform; navy trousers pressed sharp, shirt buttoned to regulation, the leather strap of his mailbag cutting across his chest.
But beneath the uniform, he wore a white t-shirt, the collar just visible at his throat, and heโd cuffed his sleeves once, twice, to show his forearms. Tan skin dusted with fine golden hair, muscles that moved beneath the surface with a boyish, easy strength.
There was a curl stuck to his forehead, dark and damp from the morning humidity. Your fingers itched to push it back.
He smiled when he saw you, that wide, eager grin that made him look like heโd just found something heโd been searching for. โGโmorninโ, Mrs. Rumlow.โ His voice had a rumble to it, low and warm. โYouโre lookinโ mighty pretty this morninโ.โ
The words landed somewhere in your chest, like a stone dropped into still water. You didnโt smile back, not the full thing, anyway. Just a curve at the corner of your mouth, a softening of your eyes. You held the doorframe with two fingers, the satin of your robe draping against the painted wood.
โThank you, James.โ His name felt intentional on your tongue, drawn out just a little longer than necessary. โRight on time, I see.โ
Bucky scratched the back of his neck, a gesture so young, so unpolished, it made something tighten in your stomach. โYou know me, maโam. Gotta keep to a schedule.โ He laughed once, a short breath of sound. โWouldnโt wanna disappoint.โ
Disappoint.ย The word hung in the air between you, weighted with something neither of you acknowledged aloud.
He pulled the letters from his bag with careful hands; one bill, one catalog, one cream-coloured envelope with your motherโs looping handwriting on the front. He offered them to you, and you reached out to take them, your fingers brushing his in the exchange.
A whisper of contact. Barely anything at all. But your skin remembered it. Tingled with it. Held onto it like a secret.
You looked down at the envelopes, then back up at him. His cheeks were flushed, that telltale pink climbing up from his collar, and he was looking at you like you were something more than a housewife in a bathrobe holding a stack of bills.
โYou have a good day now, maโam,โ he said, quieter this time, as if the words were meant only for the space between you.
Theย maโamย made something in your chest loosen. It wasnโt condescending, not the way Brock said it when he was irritated, a dismissive verbal pat on the head. This was different. Like being called something sacred.
โThank you, James.โ Your voice came out steadier than you felt. โIโll see you Thursday.โ
His grin widened, a flash of white teeth, and he touched the brim of his cap like a soldier saluting. โYes, maโam. Thursday.โ
Bucky turned and walked back down the path, his stride easy and confident, the mailbag swinging against his hip. You watched him go, fingers still pressed to the doorframe, the letters clutched against your chest. He glanced back once, just before the hedge swallowed him from view, and caught your eye.
He didnโt wave. Neither did you.
But the look he gave you lingered long after he disappeared.
You closed the door slowly and leaned against it, the wood cool against your back through the thin satin. And suddenly, all you could think about was Thursday.
All you could think about was him.
Thursday
You put on lipstick before breakfast.
Not the usual pale pink you wore to bridge club or church, the kind that barely registered on your lips, a ghost of colour meant to be respectable and forgettable. No. Today, you reached for the tube tucked behind the vanity mirror, the one youโd bought weeks ago on a whim and never worn. A glossier red. Crimson. The kind of shade that demanded attention.
It wasnโt quite as brazen as the stain on Brockโs collarโ that shade had been brighter, cheaper, applied with less care, but it was close. Close enough to feel like a statement. Close enough to feel like your own small rebellion.
You curled your hair, too. The iron hissed against the strands, shaping them into soft curls that brushed your shoulders. You ironed your best blouse, cream silk with mother-of-pearl buttons, and paired it with a navy skirt that cinched at your waist and fell just below your knees. You dabbed perfume behind your ears, at your wrists, between your breasts, letting the scent settle into your skin like a secret.
All for what? A two-minute doorstep exchange.
Maybe.
But it had been a long time since you got ready for someone. A long time since youโd felt the flutter of anticipation in your chest, the nervous checking of your reflection, the quiet thrill of wondering ifย heย would notice.
And Bucky? He always noticed.
The morning moved slowly. You tried to busy yourselfโmade the bed with hospital corners, scrubbed the kitchen counters until they gleamed, cleaned out the icebox with methodical precision. But your hands went through the motions while your mind wandered elsewhere.
You kept glancing at the clock.
10:32.
10:39.
The coffee grew cold in your cup, untouched.
10:44.
Your pulse quickened, an involuntary flutter against your ribs. You wiped your palms on your skirt, smoothed a hand over your hair, touched your lips to check the lipstick was still perfect.
Thenโ
Footsteps on gravel.
Your breath caught. You straightened your posture, squared your shoulders, and walked to the front door with a calm you didnโt feel. You opened it before he could knock, the morning light spilling across the porch and catching him mid-step.
โWell, good morninโ, Mrs. Rumlow.โ
He stood there with a toothpick tucked in the corner of his mouth, rolling it lazily between his lips. Same cuffed sleeves, same easy stance, same sunshine grin, but something shifted when his eyes landed on you. The grin faltered, just a fraction. His gaze traveled down, then back up, taking his time. Top to bottom. Appreciative.ย Hungry.
Your skin warmed under the weight of it.
โWhy, James,โ you said, your voice light and teasing, carrying the faintest lilt of surprise. โYouโre lucky Iโm dressed. Another ten seconds and you mightโve caught me in a robe.โ
He laughed, a low, full sound that rumbled from his chest. โGuess I showed up just in time, then.โ He pulled the toothpick from his mouth, tucking it into his shirt pocket, and let his eyes linger on your lips. โYou look real nice today, Mrs. Rumlow. That colour suits you.โ
You felt the compliment settle low in your belly. You leaned against the doorframe, letting your hip jut out just slightly, letting him see the curve of your waist beneath the silk. โThursdays feel longer than Tuesdays,โ you mused, taking the mail from his outstretched hand. Your fingers brushed his on purpose this time. โI think I like Tuesdays better.โ
He cocked his head, watching your fingers trace the edge of the envelope. A slow smile spread across his face, not shy now, not boyish. Something else. โThen I guess Iโll have to make Thursdays worth your while, wonโt I?โ
There it was. The cocky edge under all that charm. The faintest bite, the shift from sweet to knowing. He wasnโt just flirting anymore, he wasย answeringย you.
You felt it in your chest. In your thighs. That quiet, familiar clench that hadnโt visited in years, the one youโd thought had died somewhere between Brockโs indifference and your own resignation.
โYou always this flattering to the women on your route?โ you asked, tilting your head, keeping your tone airy. But your eyes held his, unflinching.
He chuckled, shaking his head. โOnly the pretty ones.โ
You raised an eyebrow. โOh? So just Mrs. McCall across the street, then?โ
He laughed again, and God, that laugh. It was warm and genuine, a sound that seemed to come from somewhere deep in his chest. He placed a hand over his heart, feigning offense. โYou wound me, Mrs. Rumlow. You know youโre my favourite.โ
The way he said it. That confident little smirk. The way his eyes dropped to your lips again, just for a second, before returning to yours, like he was memorising you.
It shouldnโt have made your thighs press together. But it did.
He made no move to step back. You made no move to end the conversation. The morning stretched around you, the only sounds the distant hum of a lawnmower and the thrumming of your own pulse.
โYou got plans this weekend?โ he asked suddenly.
The question caught you off guard. You blinked, your composure slipping for just a moment. โNo,โ you admitted. โJust the usual. Laundry. Groceries. Maybe lunch with some women I donโt particularly like.โ
He smiled again, wide and wolfish this time. โI could think of better ways to spend a Sunday.โ
Your lips parted. You could feel the weight of his words, the implication wrapped in that easy grin. But you didnโt speak.
He stepped back then, finally, breaking the spell slowly. He tipped two fingers to his forehead in a mock salute, his eyes never leaving yours. โSee you Tuesday, Mrs. Rumlow.โ
โTuesday,โ you repeated, your voice softer than you intended.
He turned and walked down the path, his stride easy, his shoulders broad beneath the blue uniform. You watched him go, watched the way his hips moved, the way his hair curled at the nape of his neck. And this time, when he glanced back, just before the hedge swallowed him, he didnโt just look.
Heย winked.
You closed the door slowly, and exhaled through your nose, a long, shaky breath you hadnโt realised you were holding. Your heart rattled against your ribs. Your lips still tingled from the weight of his gaze.
You were old enough to know better. Old enough to recognize the danger in a boy who looked at you like you were the sun. But today? You didnโt feel old. You didnโt feel married. You didnโt feel like a housewife in a quiet suburb with a cheating husband and a hollow life.
You feltย looked at. You feltย chosen. And maybe Bucky had other girls. Maybe he had dozens, scattered across his route like wildflowers. But when he looked at you like that, like you were the only woman on the planet, you let yourself bask in it.
Saturday Night
Brock wanted sex, again.
You could always tell by the way he stood in the doorway after his shower, towel slung low around his hips, rubbing the bridge of his nose like the very thought of wanting you exhausted him. It never felt like desire. It felt like appetite, hunger without taste, a reflex he performed out of schedule rather than longing. He never looked at you the way Bucky did. He lookedย throughย you, like you were a task to check off before sleep.
You were propped against the headboard, a copy ofย Ladiesโ Home Journalย open in your lap, your eyes scanning the same paragraph three times without reading a word. The magazine had been a shield. A pretense of being occupied. But when Brock padded over and plucked it from your hands, his fingers brushing yours without lingering, you didnโt protest.
He placed it on the nightstand and you watched his shadow fall across the bed.
โYou ready for me?โ he asked, already knowing the answer. His voice was flat, perfunctory.
โMhm,โ you murmured, the sound soft, neutral. Invitation enough.
He climbed on top of you, the mattress dipping under his weight. His lips found yours in a single, dry kiss , just a press of mouth against mouth before he pulled back. His lips were damp from the shower. Impatient. He pushed your nightgown up over your hips, the cotton gathering in wrinkled bunches around your ribs. The air hit your thighs, cool and indifferent.
โI missed you,โ he whispered, but the words were hollow, a script he recited by rote. He didnโt mean it. He never meant it. But the sound still filled the room, settling between you like dust.
You opened your legs because that was the routine. That was marriage. That was being Mrs. Rumlow, a woman who spread her thighs for a man who forgot she had a name beyond the ring on her finger.
He entered you with a grunt. As you felt the familiar weight of a man claiming what he believed belonged to him. His hips settled against yours, and he began to move, steady, mechanical, like the piston of a machine. In. Out. In. Out. His breath hot against your neck.
It didnโt hurt. It didnโt feel good. It felt likeย nothing.
You stared over his shoulder at the wall. The pattern in the wallpaper blurred as your focus drifted. The lamp on the nightstand flickered once, a tired bulb. The headboard creaked with each thrust, a rhythmic complaint that had long since become white noise. You counted the creaks. Six. Seven. Eight. You wandered through the numbers like hallways, searching for somewhere else to be.
Your mind wandered. It always did. But tonight it wandered somewhere new.
James Buchanan Barnes.
You pictured him without even meaning to. The curve of his smile, that boyish confidence that didnโt know its own power. His hands, rough and calloused from sorting mail and lifting parcels, curling around envelopes with a casual grace. Forearms tight and sun-browned, taut with youth and strength, so much younger than they should be for how much they made you ache.
You imagined those hands on your waist instead. Sliding over the curve of your hip. Fingers digging in like he was afraid you might slip through them, like he wanted to hold on so tight heโd leave bruises you could press in the morning and remember.
Brock groaned into your shoulder. A sound of effort, not passion. You barely heard it.
Your mind was in your foyer. Sunlight streaming through the side window, catching the gold in Jamesโs hair, turning it to chocolate brown. His eyes dropping to your lips and the quiet hitch of his breath when he realised you were wearing red today. The way his tongue touched his bottom lip before he spoke.
You imagined him standing too close. Close enough that you could smell the soap on his skin, the faint salt of a morningโs work. You imagined him saying your name with that low rasp, Mrs. Rumlow, not as a title, but as a confession. Almost shy. Almost cocky. Almost daring you to stop him.
You imagined him whispering something filthy in your ear. Something a young man should never say to a married woman. Something you would let him say anyway, wouldย craveย him to say, would press your thighs together under the kitchen table and pretend not to hear.
โI think about you when Iโm alone, Mrs. Rumlow. Late at night. Do you think about me?โ
Brock picked up his pace. His breathing turned heavy, tight, a rhythm he knew by heart. His hips slapped against yours, harder now, more insistent. Your body moved out of habitโa practiced arch of your back, a soft sound youโd learned to make at the right intervals. But you werenโt there.
You were in the kitchen with Bucky, morning light streaming through the lace curtains. Your robe hanging open. His mouth hot on your throat, trailing down, down, tasting the perfume youโd dabbed there just for him. His voice unsteady and hungry, cracking with want. His hand sliding up your thigh, like he had been dreaming about the feel of your skin for months.
โTell me you want this,โย heโd whisper.ย โTell me you want me.โ
You imagined him losing control. The careful restraint crumbling. The boyish charm replaced by something ravenous, something that needed you so badly it frightened him. You imagined him taking you right there against the counter, your back arching, your fingers tangled in his hair, every sound you made pulling him deeper.
Your breath caught. Heat crawled up your spine like fingers tracing vertebrae. Your nails dug into the sheets, white-knuckled, pulling the fabric taut.
Brock didnโt notice.
You came quietly. An involuntary gasp against his shoulder, a tremour that ran through your thighs and settled deep in your belly. You bit down on the sound, swallowed it whole. You didnโt want him to know why. You didnโt want him to know it wasnโt for him.
He finished thirty seconds later with a strained grunt, his body tensing, his release hot and forgettable. He collapsed on top of you, a dead weight, sweating and satisfied, completely ignorant. His breath evened out against your neck, slowing into the rhythm of a man who had taken what he wanted and was already forgetting heโd had it.
โI missed you,โ he said again. A kiss pressed to your shoulder, empty of meaning.
You closed your eyes. Your pulse settled slowly, like dust after a storm.
Your husband had made you orgasm for the first time in years. And he would never know that he had nothing to do with it.
You lay there under Brockโs weight, the lamp flickering, the headboard silent now. Your fingers still curled in the sheets. Your skin still tingled where youโd imagined Buckyโs hands.
You thought about Tuesday. You thought about the red lipstick in your vanity drawer. You thought about the way Jamesโs eyes had dropped to your lips this morning, hungry and hopeful, like a boy ready to sin.
And you smiled in the dark.
Tuesday came again.
And so did you.
Not physically. Not yet. But God, did you want to.
You spent the morning choosing your clothes with the kind of care you usually reserved for holidays or funerals. A blush pink blouse with three buttons undone, sleeves rolled just past your elbows. An indecent skirt that hugged your hips when you walked. You applied your lipstick slowly, blotting against tissue paper until the colour was perfect, a deep, shameful red that screamedย look at me.
You heard the mail truck before you saw him. The low rumble of the engine, the crunch of gravel, the squeak of brakes. Your pulse quickened. You stepped onto the porch just as he rounded the corner of the driveway, satchel slung over one shoulder, a stack of envelopes in his hand.
He looked up. Saw you. Stopped.
The sun caught the sweat on his brow, glistening on his temple. He was soย young. It made your stomach tighten.
โMorninโ, Mrs. Rumlow.โ His voice came out a little rough. He cleared his throat. โGot your usual. Couple of bills. A catalog.โ
You smiled and stepped forward. Close enough that the breeze carried your perfume straight to him. You saw his nostrils flare, just slightlyโ, efore he caught himself.
โThatโs very kind of you to bring them right to the door,โ you said, letting your voice dip low. โYโknow most mailmen would just toss them in the box.โ
โI like makinโ sure you get yours proper.โ He held out the envelopes. His fingers brushed yours when you took them. Lingered. You didnโt pull away.
You looked up at him through your lashes. โYouโre good at your job, James.โ
He smiled, crooked and shy. โOnly โcause the sceneryโs nice.โ
You laughed softly. โCareful. Youโll spoil me.โ
โWell, maybe you deserve to be spoiled.โ
The words hung in the air between you, heavy and warm. He didnโt look away. Neither did you.
Thursday came with a different kind of heat.
Thick and humid, the kind that clung to your skin and made everything feel slow. You wore a sundress, thin straps, low neckline, the fabric loose enough to hint at what lay beneath without giving everything away. No stockings. No slip. Just your body and cotton and the knowledge that the afternoon sun would make the dress cling to every curve.
You heard the truck at the usual time. You opened the door before he could knock.
This time you leaned out a little too far as you reached for the envelopes. Let the neckline gape. Let him see the swell of your breasts, the shadow between them, the way your skin glistened from the humidity.
His eyes dropped.
It was only for a second. Less. But you saw it. The way his jaw twitched. The way his hand tightened around the mail he was holding, crinkling the edge of an envelope.
โThanks, James.โ You straightened slowly, letting him see the smile playing on your lips.
โY-yes maโam.โ He swallowed. โYou have a good day now.โ
โI plan to.โ
You closed the door and leaned against it, heart pounding. That night, you ran a bath so hot the mirror fogged over. You lay in the water with your knees bent, steam curling around your face, and you let your hand drift between your thighs.
You imagined him on his knees in front of the tub. His hands gripping the porcelain. His eyes on you, dark and hungry. The way heโd look up at you before lowering his head.
โPlease, Mrs. Rumlow. Let me taste you.โ
You pressed your fingers deeper, biting down on your own wrist to muffle the sound. You came with his name on your tongue, barely whispered, lost in the steam.
Tuesday
The heat came early that morning, crawling through the window screens like something alive. Thick and unforgiving. By the time the clock struck ten, the air in the house had gone still and heavy, pressing against your skin like a warm palm.
You didnโt bother dressing.
There was no point. Brock had left before sunrise, a muttered goodbye and the slam of the front door, off to wherever it was he went when he wasnโt here. The house was yours.
You slipped into your favourit pink champagne robe. You tied it just once at the waist, loose enough that the fabric fell open when you moved, baring the slope of your collarbone, the shadow between your breasts, the long line of your thigh as you walked from the bedroom to the kitchen.
No bra. No slip. Just your skin beneath the silk, damp from the humidity.
The clock ticked to 10:45.
Right on schedule.
Youโd been standing at the kitchen window, watching the street through the sheer curtain, a glass of ice water sweating in your hand. You saw the mail truck pull up. Saw him step out, satchel slung over his shoulder, wiping the back of his hand across his brow.
He looked up at your house. Paused. Adjusted his collar.
You smiled to yourself, set down the glass, and walked to the door.
Knock, knock.
You waited two beatsโlong enough to seem unhurried, not long enough to seem reluctant. Then you turned the knob and pulled the door open.
The heat hit you first, a wall of it, thick and wet. It smelled like cut grass and pavement and the faint, clean sweat of a young man whoโd been working under the sun.
And there he was.
Bucky Barnes, all six feet of him, backlit by the morning glare. The light caught his cheekbones, the sharp line of his jaw, the brown strands of his hair darkened with sweat and plastered to his forehead. His uniform shirt was unbuttoned halfway, the fabric gaping open to reveal the smooth plane of his chest, the sun-warmed skin, the fine sheen of sweat that made it gleam.
He had a stack of mail in one hand. The other hung loose at his side, fingers twitching like he didnโt know what to do with them.
His eyes met yours.
And then they dropped.
Down your body. Over the open V of your robe. Down to your bare legs, the curve of your calf, the way the silk shifted when you breathed. It wasnโt a glance. It was a slow and helplessย look and he didnโt even try to hide it.
You saw the exact moment his brain caught up with his body. His throat moved. His jaw tightened. His gaze snapped back to your face, but it was too late. Youโd already seen everything.
โM-Morninโ, Mrs. Rumlow.โ
The stutter was tiny. Barely there. But you heard it, felt it like a small victory.
โGood morning, James.โ
Your voice came out low, syrupy, the kind of voice you used when you wanted a man to lean in closer. You let your hand drift up to the doorframe, the movement casual, but it pulled the robe just a fraction tighter across your chest.
โHot one today,โ you murmured, tilting your head. โI thought Iโd stay in something a little lighter. The heatโs been unbearable.โ
He opened his mouth. Closed it. His eyes flickered down again, just for a second, just a brief, helpless slip, before he forced them back up.
โYeah,โ he said, and his voice cracked on the word. He cleared his throat. โYeah, itโsโreal hot. Humid, too.โ
โYou must be dying out there in that uniform.โ
โIt ainโt so bad.โ He shifted his weight, licked his lips. โGot a good schedule. Nice houses. Nice people.โ
He held out the mail. You took it, slowly letting your fingertips brush against his. His skin was warm. His pulse jumped under your touch.
โThank you,โ you said, soft. โI notice you always bring it to me personally. You donโt do that for anyone else, do you?โ
He blinked. โIโno, maโam. I usually just leave it in the box.โ
โSo why do you bring mine to the door?โ
The question hung in the air between you, sweet as poison. He stared at you, and you watched him search for an answer that wouldnโt give too much away.
He failed.
โGuess I like seeinโ your face.โ His voice dropped, quieter now, almost rough. โYouโre always real nice to me. Not everyone is.โ
You stepped closer, just enough to bring you into the wedge of sunlight spilling through the doorway. The robe shifted, gaping open at your thigh. You saw his eyes track the movement.
โYou like talking to me, James?โ
โYeah.โ The word came out breathless. โI really do.โ
You let a small smile play at the corner of your mouth. โI like talking to you too.โ
A silence settled between you. The air itself seemed to thicken, you could hear the hum of a lawnmower two streets away, the distant bark of a dog, the ragged rhythm of his breathing.
The sun spilled across his shoulders, catching the sweat on his collarbone. Your robe was loose, barely tied, the silk shifting with every shallow rise and fall of your chest. Just standing there, two feet apart, was a kind of intimacy.
You could have kissed him then. You knew he would have let you. You knew heย wantedย you to. You could see it in the way his pupils had swallowed the blue of his irises, the way his throat worked as he swallowed, the way his gaze kept dropping to your mouth and then darting away, like he was afraid of what he might do if he looked too long.
Instead, you smiled.
โWould you like some lemonade?โ
The question hung in the air like a dare. His eyes snapped to your mouth, then back up, and you watched him process what youโd just offered. The invitation. The implication. The fact that you werenโt asking him to leave.
He nodded. Too quickly. His voice cracked when he spoke.
โYeah. Sure. IโdโIโd like that.โ
Come in.
You didnโt say it. You just stepped back, letting the door swing open wider, and turned without another word. Bare feet on cool tile. The soft whisper of silk against your thighs. You walked ahead of him, letting him follow, letting him watch.
The robe shifted when you moved, slipping off one shoulder, brushing the backs of your knees, the hem fluttering just above the curve of your calf. You didnโt look back. You didnโt need to. You could feel his gaze on you like a hand at your waist, trailing down your spine, settling low.
The house was quiet. Too quiet. No radio humming. No laundry churning. Just the low buzz of the ceiling fan from the living room and the soft, steady tick of the wall clock over the sink.
The kitchen blazed with sunlight pouring through the open windows, catching the dust motes drifting in the still air. The counters gleamed. A half-used lemon sat on the cutting board from this morning. The whole room smelled faintly of citrus and sugar and the clean scent of dish soap.
โSit,โ you said gently, motioning toward the stools at the counter. โIโll get the lemonade.โ
He obeyed. Quietly. He set his satchel down on the counter, then pulled out one of the stools, the legs scraping against the tile. He sat, watched you, said nothing. His hands rested on his thighs, fingers flexing.
You moved unhurriedly. Opened the refrigerator door. Let the cold air wash over you. Bent slowly, reaching all the way to the back for the glass pitcher, knowing exactly how the robe tightened across the backs of your thighs, knowing exactly how the hem rose just a little higher when you stretched.
When you straightened and turned, his eyes snapped up too fast. A flush crept up his neck. Heโd been staring. Caught.
You didnโt acknowledge it. Just smiled to yourself and poured two tall glasses, condensation already beading on the glass.
You set one in front of him. Then took the stool across the counter, crossing your legs as you settled. The robe fell open at the knee, baring the length of your thigh. You saw him glance down, then force himself to look at the lemonade.
You brought the glass to your lips. Sipped. Let the cold sweetness coat your tongue. When you set it down, you licked a stray drop from your lower lip, slow enough to make him shift in his seat.
โStill hot out,โ you said, your voice light, conversational. โNot used to this kind of heat. Makes a woman crave something cold.โ
He swallowed. โYeah. Itโsโitโs bad this week.โ His voice was rough, like heโd been shouting, though heโd barely spoken a word.
You tilted your head, studying him. โYou alright, sweetheart? You look a little flushed.โ
His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. โJust warm,โ he managed.
โMmm.โ You rested your chin on your palm, elbow on the counter, watching him. โYou know, youโre always so nice. I really like that about you.โ
He blinked, caught off guard. โMaโam?โ
โA lot of boys your age wouldnโt be so kind to someone like me.โ
His brow furrowed. โSomeone like you?โ
You smiled, bittersweet, letting your gaze drop. โA housewife,โ you murmured. โMarried. Boring. A little past my prime, I suppose.โ
The words hung in the air. You felt the weight of them, the small lie you were telling, the way you were baiting him.
He sat up straighter. His jaw tightened. โYouโre not past anything.โ
You looked at him, surprised by the sudden heat in his voice.
โYouโreโโ He broke off, dragging a hand through his damp hair. His ears were red. โYouโre beautiful, Mrs. Rumlow.โ
The silence stretched between you. The ceiling fan turned overhead, stirring the warm air. Somewhere outside, a bird called. The ice in your glass settled with a soft clink.
You held his gaze a second longer than was appropriate. Then you took another sip of your lemonade, letting the moment breathe.
โThatโs very sweet of you to say, James.โ Your voice was quieter now. Softer. โVery sweet.โ
He swallowed hard. His fingers tightened around his glass, knuckles white, like he was bracing himself against something.
For a while, neither of you said anything.
Just sat in the sun-warmed silence, pretending to be casual while the air thickened between you like honey left too long on the stove. The whole world had narrowed to this kitchen, this counter, this boy with his hands wrapped around a glass like it was the only thing keeping him tethered.
You shifted in your seat, uncrossing your legs and recrossing them the other way. The silk whispered against your skin.
His eyes dropped. You felt them like a touch, the way they traced the line of your thigh where the robe had fallen open, the way they lingered on the curve of your knee, the shadow above it. He watched the slow slide of your fingers over your glass, watched the way you wet your lips without thinking, and you watched him right back, cataloging every small tell.
The way his breath stalled when you moved. The way his knuckles went white. The way he bit his lower lipโjust the tiniest flicker of restraint cracking, the pressure of his teeth against the soft flesh making you feel something warm and dangerous coil low in your belly.
You caught him. You didnโt say a word. Just smiled, the kind that said,ย I saw you. Itโs alright. I wanted you to.
He bit his lip harder, then let it go. His mouth stayed parted, pink and slightly swollen.
You leaned forward, elbows on the counter, voice dropping to just above a whisper. โDo you like coming here, James?โ
The question was simple. Innocent in its phrasing.
He looked up. Met your eyes. Nodded, like he was admitting something heโd been holding back for weeks.
โYeah,โ he said, like gravel scraped smooth by water. โI really do.โ
You let the silence fall again, full and heavy and humming. And then, with the softest, most dangerous smile you owned. โGood,โ you whispered. โMe too.โ
You stood from your stool, the wood scraping softly against the tile. Took your empty glass to the sink, and rinsed it slowly, letting the water run over your fingers, watching the last traces of lemon and sugar swirl down the drain. The tap hummed. The water was cool against your heated skin.
You lifted your eyes to the window above the sink, watching his distorted reflection in the glass. He was staring at your back. The curve of your spine through the thin silk. The dip of your waist. The way your hips swayed just slightly as you shifted your weight from one foot to the other.
Finally, you turned off the tap. Shook the excess water from your hands. Dried them slowly on a dish towel hanging from the oven handle.
Then you spoke.
โTell me something, James.โ
Your voice was soft. Curious.
โYes, maโam?โ
You turned around slowly, hips resting against the counterโs edge, the thin silk of your robe parting just a little as it settled around your waist. The morning light caught the curve of your hip, the shadow of your navel, the soft swell of your breasts beneath the fabric.
You watched his eyes follow it.
โDo you flirt with every woman on your route,โ you asked gently, tilting your head, โor only me?โ
His mouth opened, then closed. He actually blinked, like he needed to reset his brain, like the question had short-circuited something vital. His ears reddened. His hands tightened on the glass again, then relaxed as he set it down carefully, as if afraid he might break it.
โOnly you,โ he said quietly. The words came out steady, but his voice trembled at the edges. โOnly ever you.โ
You nodded once. As if that confirmed something you already knew, something youโd suspected since the first time he lingered a little too long at your door, since the first time his fingers brushed yours when he handed you the mail.
Then you walked toward him.
Slow steps. Bare feet on cool tile. The sun fell across your path, warm on your shoulders, and you felt beautiful in a way you hadnโt in years. Not for Brock. Not for anyone else. For yourself. For the way this boyโs eyes followed every inch of you like you were something sacred.
When you reached him, you placed your hand lightly on the counter beside his shoulder. Not touching him. Close enough that he could feel the warmth radiating from your skin. You leaned in just slightly, letting him smell your perfume.
His breath hitched so sharply it almost broke your composure. You felt a thrill run through you, sharp and electric.
โLook at me,โ you whispered.
He did.
You let your gaze drag over his face, the strong line of his jaw, the delicate curve of his lips. The way his blue eyes had gone dark, pupils blown wide, the colour swallowed by want. The way his throat worked as he swallowed again, the Adamโs apple bobbing.
You let your fingers trail down his forearm. Barely a touch. The lightest brush of your fingertips over the fine hair on his skin, over the warmth of him, over the tremour that ran through his muscles when you made contact.
โYou know,โ you said softly, your voice a murmur, โyou have been very good to me these last few months.โ
His chest rose. Fell. His lips parted.
โI like our chats, James.โ
Your fingers continued their lazy path, tracing the line of a vein, the curve of his wrist. You felt his pulse jump beneath your touch, rapid and wild.
โAnd I like how you look at me,โ you added. โEven when you try not to.โ
He swallowed hard. His jaw worked. When he spoke, his voice was barely above a whisper, rough and honest and cracked at the edges.
โI am trying real hard right now.โ
You smiled. A slow, sinful curl of your lips. โYou donโt have to.โ
Then, in the softest voice you had used with him yet, โStand up for me, James.โ
He obeyed before he realized he had moved. The stool scraped back against the tile, and suddenly he was towering over youโtall, flushed to the tips of his ears, trying not to tremble.
You stepped closer. Close enough that the fabric of your robe brushed his barely opened shirt. Close enough that your breath touched his mouth. You could feel the heat radiating off him, the slight shake in his hands as they hung at his sides, not quite daring to reach for you.
โYou want me,โ you said. Not a question. A truth spoken plainly, laid out on the counter between you like a confession.
He nodded. Hard. His jaw worked, and when he spoke, his voice cracked on the first word.
โI been tryinโ not to,โ he whispered. โSwear I been tryinโ, maโam. Every time I see you at that door, I tell myselfโโ He broke off, swallowing. โI tell myself to just hand you the mail and go. Just walk away.โ
โBut you donโt.โ
โNo, maโam.โ His eyes dropped to your lips. โI canโt.โ
You touched his jaw. The barest brush of your fingertips against the stubble along his cheekbone. He shivered under your touch.
โI donโt want you to try anymore.โ
His eyes darkened. Something shifted behind them, the last thread of restraint snapping. What was left was something hungry. Something young and desperate and finally set free. His breathing turned shallow. His hands curled into fists at his sides, then released.
โM-Mrs. Rumlow,โ he breathed, voice shaking, โif I touch you Iโm not gonna be able to stop.โ
You tilted your chin up, lips inches from his. Close enough to taste the warmth of his breath, to see the fine tremor in his lower lip.
โGood.โ
That was it. That was the spark.
He grabbed your waist with both hands, strong fingers digging into silk and skin, pulling you into him with a force that stole your breath. His mouth crashed into yours. Hungry and messy and eager. A young man who had been imagining this for months and finally snapped.
You gasped against his lips, and he swallowed the sound, took the chance to push his tongue into your mouth. He tasted like lemonade and something masculine. His hands moved without permission, shoving your robe open at your hips, dragging you against his body like he needed to feel every inch of you through the thin silk.
He kissed you like he was starving. Like you were the first taste of anything real in his short, hungry life. His fingers dug into the soft flesh of your hips, and you felt the tremble in his arms, the barely leashed violence of his need.
You let him. You let him take. You let him lose control.
Because you had been waiting for this. For this exact moment.
You pulled back just enough to whisper against his lips, โTake me, James.โ
The hallway was a blur.
You didn't remember crossing it. You didn't remember the robe slipping from your shoulders and pooling on the floor. You didn't remember the bedroom door swinging open, or the way the afternoon light fell across the bed in golden stripes.
What you remembered was the moment Bucky lost control.
The moment his hands gripped your thighs like he needed to hold you in place or heโd fall apart. The moment he lowered you onto the mattress, his body covering yours, the weight of him pressing you into the sheets.
The moment he said your name.
Notย maโam. Notย Mrs. Rumlow. Not anything polite or proper.
Butย your name, whispered like a sin he was dying to commit, like heโd been saving it for this exact moment, tasting it on his tongue for the first time.
โPlease,โ he breathed, hot against your neck, lips brushing the thrumming pulse at your throat. โPlease let me.โ
And then he pushed inside you.
Your gasp broke in half. Your fingers clutched the sheets. Your breasts arched into his chest on instinct, a reflexive surrender.
You cunt was soaked, open and ready, aching for him in a way you hadnโt ached for anything in years. But he still felt too big. Too deep. The stretch of him made your eyes roll back, made your breath catch in your throat.
You hadnโt been touched like this in years. Not with intention. Not with fire. Not with the kind of desperate, worshipful need that made you feel like you were the only woman in the world.
โYou feel so good,โ he groaned, burying his face in the crook of your shoulder. His voice was muffled against your skin, rough and broken. โGod, you feelโfuckโโ
Each thrust was harder. Needier and more frantic. The headboard knocked against the wall in a steady rhythm, the sound mixing with the ragged fall of his breathing, the wet, slick sound of him moving inside you.
He fucked you like he was making up for every time he watched you from the sidewalk and imagined what youโd sound like under him. Like heโd been storing up this hunger for weeks, months, and finally had permission to let it out.
You dragged your nails down his back and he trembled, a full-body shudder that made him bury himself deeper.
โEasy,โ you whispered, breath hot in his ear. โSlow down, sweetheart.โ
He shook his head, fucking into you harder, faster, his rhythm falling apart at the edges.
โI canโt,โ he said, voice cracking. โI canโt, Iโm sorry, Iโbeen wanting you so longโโ
You grabbed his jaw. Forced him to look at you.
His pupils were blown, dark as ink. His cheeks were flushed, his lips red and swollen from kissing you too hard. A strand of hair had fallen across his forehead, and he looked wrecked in the most beautiful way.
โThen take what you want,โ you said softly, stroking his cheek with your thumb. โCome on, baby. Donโt hold back.โ
He broke.
His mouth crashed onto yours again, sloppy and desperate. His hips snapped forward in a brutal rhythm, the headboard slamming the wall in a steady, percussive beat. Each thrust drove the air from your lungs, your tits bouncing with every impact.
He stared at you like heโd never seen a naked woman in his life, like you were something sacred and filthy all at once. His gaze traced the curve of your breasts, the flush spreading across your chest, the way your body moved beneath him.
โYouโre so beautiful,โ he gasped, the words tumbling out broken. โBeen dreaminโ about you in this bedโfuckโthought about it every damn night. Every time I walked past your door, Iโd picture you right here, spread out for me.โ
You moaned, loud and shameless, your fingers threading through his damp hair and tugging him down. Your mouth met his in a kiss that bruised, tongues sliding, the taste of salt and lemon mingling between you.
He kissed like he fucked. All tongue and breath and raw, unfettered hunger. He sucked your bottom lip into his mouth and moaned into the kiss, his cock still pounding into you with that relentless, youthful urgency.
โYou like this?โ he panted, pulling back just enough to meet your eyes. His were glassy, pupils blown wide. โYou like how I fuck you? Tell me. PleaseโI need to hear it. I need to know Iโm doinโ it right.โ
Your voice came out broken, barely recognizable. โYes. God,ย yes. Harderโdonโt stopโโ
His grip shifted. One hand stayed firm on your hip, fingers digging into the soft flesh. The other slid under your thigh, lifting it higher, angling you deeper, opening you to him in a way that made stars burst behind your eyelids.
โShitโJamesโโ
โI know, I knowโfeels good, right?โ His voice was ragged, breath sawing in and out of his lungs. โI can feel youโfuckโyouโre squeezinโ me, maโam. Like you donโt wanna let me go.โ
He was falling apart. You were too. Your nails dragged down his shoulders, leaving red crescents in their wake. Your breath hitched, stuttered, dissolved into a whimper. Your thighs quivered around his waist, the muscles trembling with the effort of holding on.
โDonโt stop,โ you whined, the plea ripping out of your throat. โDonโt youย dareย stopโโ
His voice broke completely, cracking under the weight of his own need. โIโm not. Iโm not. Iโm gonna stay right hereโgonna give you everything, Mrs. Rumlowโeverythinโ I gotโโ
Your orgasm hit you so hard you didnโt even register your own moan. It tore through you like a wave, white-hot and blinding, clamping down around him in rhythmic pulses that stole your breath and turned your limbs to jelly. Your back arched off the bed, your fingers twisting in the sheets, your vision going white at the edges.
Buckyโs breath caught in his throat as he felt you clench around him, a sudden grip that dragged him over the edge with you.
โOhโoh my Godโโ he gasped, his rhythm faltering, his hips stuttering. โYouโreโfuckโyouโre cumminโโโ
And then he fell apart inside you.
A guttural, broken groan tore out of his chest as he thrust deep burying himself to the hilt while he spilled into you with an urgency that bordered on desperate. His body shook, every muscle taut, his hands clutching your hips like you were the only solid thing in a world that had just tilted sideways.
His forehead fell to your shoulder, his breath hot and uneven against your sweat-slicked skin. He breathed you in; the scent of your perfume, the salt of your skin, the lingering musk of sex, and let out a shuddering exhale.
โMrs. Rumlowโฆโ he whispered, like a confession. His voice was raw and hoarse. Then, as he slowly pulled out, the loss of him making you feel suddenly empty, he added, โIโฆ I donโt wanna stop.โ
You stroked the back of his head gently, your nails grazing the nape of his neck, tracing the fine hairs there. His skin was damp, warm, trembling slightly under your touch.
โYou donโt have to, sweetheart,โ you murmured, the words low and honeyed.
He lifted his head. His eyes were blown wide, dark and glassy. His hair was a wild mess, plastered to his forehead with sweat. His cheeks were flushed, his lips red and swollen, and under all that, still hard, still pressing against your thigh with stubborn, unapologetic desire.
โI can go again,โ he whispered, almost frightened of his own need. โPlease let me. I know I justโbut Iย needโplease, I ainโt done with you yet.โ
Your fingers raked through his damp hair, smoothing it back from his brow. He was so young. So pink. So earnest in his hunger. Youโd just let him cum inside you, and he still looked like he wanted to sayย thank you.
You kissed the corner of his mouth, tasting the salt of his skin.
โBreathe, honey,โ you whispered, your lips brushing against his. โYouโre not done yet.โ
And before he could even answer, you shifted from underneath him, a slow, fluid motion that left him blinking, confused, his body still humming with unspent need. You climbed onto all fours, and looked back over your shoulder at him. The afternoon light caught the curve of your spine, the dip of your waist, the soft swell of your hips.
You looked over your shoulder at him, a lazy, knowing smile curving your lips.
โCome here, James. Show me what else youโve been dreaming about.โ
His eyes went wide. The pupils had already swallowed most of the blue, leaving just a thin ring of colour around the black. His chest heaved, still slick with sweat, a fine sheen glistening across his collarbones and the hollow of his throat.
You didnโt have to tell him twice.
He was already fully hard again, flushed tip, veins twitching along the shaft, the head glistening with a mixture of your combined slick. When he slid behind you, it wasnโt with the frantic rush you expected. He took his time. Let his hands trace the curve of your ass first, palming the roundness like he couldnโt believe it was real.
โFuck,โ he breathed, voice hushed and awed. โYouโre perfect. I swear to godโโ
โShow me, then,โ you said. โShow me how perfect I am.โ
His hands tightened. Fingers digging into the soft flesh of your hips, anchoring himself. And then, he pushed in again. Thick and warm, the slick heat of you parting around him like youโd been waiting for this very moment. You moaned like you meant it, your forehead dropping to the sheets as he filled you inch by inch.
โJesusโstill so fuckinโ wetโโ he hissed, hips stuttering as he bottomed out, pressing flush against you.
You were. Dripping with the evidence of his first release and still greedy for more. The feeling of him sliding into that already-fucked heat sent a shiver through you, your inner walls clenching instinctively around him.
โHarder,โ you rasped, cheek pressed to the mattress, the words muffled but clear. โI can take it. Come on, honey.ย Fuck me.โ
His grip on your hips turned bruising, fingers pressing deep enough to leave marks youโd find tomorrow. His thrusts came harder, deeper, desperate and sloppy with sound. The wet, obscene noise of his cock driving into you filled the room, mingling with his ragged breaths and your broken moans. He was panting behind you, fingers digging in as he drove into you like he wanted to climb inside, to bury himself so deep youโd never forget the shape of him.
You arched your back, pressed into him, gave him more. Your breasts swung beneath you, nipples dragging against the sheets with each impact. The sensation sent sparks through your chest.
โThatโs it, baby. Thatโs it. Use me.โ
โYouโre gonna ruin me,โ he gasped, his voice cracking. โYouโre gonnaย fuckinโย ruin me, maโam. Iโm never gonna be able to look at another woman without thinkinโ of you.โ
And you smiled, even as your mouth fell open with another moan as his cock hit that spot deep inside you, the one that made your vision blur and your toes curl.
The room was hot. The sheets wrinkled and twisted beneath you. Skin stuck together wherever you touched, his thighs against yours, his chest against your back when he leaned forward, his breath hot on your shoulder blade. The scent of sex clung to every inch of air; sharp and sweet, salt and musk, the metallic tang of arousal and the warmth of two bodies pushed past their limits.
Slapโslapโslapย of skin meeting skin. The desperate whine building in his throat. The soft chant of your name breaking from his lips like a prayer, maโam, Mrs. Rumlow, please, please, each syllable punctuated by a thrust.
โYou like this?โ you managed to gasp, your voice frayed at the edges. โFucking a married woman? In her bed? Filling her up like a good boy?โ
He whimpered. The sound was raw, stripped of all pretense.
โYesโyes, maโamโfuckโโ His rhythm faltered, his hips stuttering as he fought for control. โPlease let me cum again. Please. Iโll do anythinโโIโll be so goodโโ
You reached between your legs and rubbed your clit with two fingers, the pressure just enough to send sparks up your spine, to tighten the coil building low in your belly. Your hips pushed back to meet his thrusts, driving him deeper.
โThen do it,โ you moaned, the words thick with approaching release. โCum in me, James.ย Again.ย Show me how much you want me.โ
He buried himself so deep you swore you could feel it in your throat, a fullness that stole your breath, that made your eyes roll back. And with a strangled grunt, he came again.
Pulsing inside you like he never wanted to leave. You felt each spasm, each flood of warmth, each desperate clench of his hands on your hips as he emptied himself into you.
The sensation pushed you over the edge. You followed hard, clenching around him, crying out into the sheets as your body finally gave out. The tremors ran through you in waves, stealing your strength, turning your limbs to jelly. Your arms collapsed beneath you, and you sank into the mattress, cheek pressed to the damp fabric.
But he stayed inside. Held your hips. Rested his forehead on your back and just breathed, hot, uneven puffs of air against your spine.
You didnโt move at first. Didnโt speak. Didnโt reach for the sheets to cover yourself. Just lay there, chest pressed to the mattress, skin hot and slick with sweat and the evidence of what youโd done, your breath slowing in the heavy stillness of the room.
The clock on the nightstand ticked. Somewhere outside, a bird sang. Life continued in the world beyond these walls, oblivious to the sin unfolding in this bed.
You felt the soft drag of Buckyโs fingers down your spine. Tracing each vertebrae like he was memorising you.
โJesus Christ,โ he whispered, voice still shaking, still raw. โI canโt believe that just happened.โ
You smiled into the pillow, eyes closed, lips curving against the cotton.
โBelieve it,โ you murmured, voice rasped and ruined. โYou earned it.โ
He laughed, a breathless sound that didnโt quite mask the wonder in it, and pressed a kiss between your shoulder blades. His lips lingered, warm and soft.
And then another. And another. Trailing up the ridge of your spine to the nape of your neck, where he nuzzled into the fine hairs there and let out a contented sigh.
โI donโt wanna leave,โ he mumbled against your skin. โEver.โ
You hummed, a low, pleased sound. Your hand reached back blindly, finding his head, patting it once.
โThen stay a little longer, sweetheart. Clockโs not even at twelve yet.โ
He shifted, pulling out slowly, the loss of him making you feel suddenly empty, a faint ache in its wake.
โAre you okay?โ he asked quietly, nosing into your hair, his breath warm against your scalp. The question came out hushed, almost fragile. โDid Iโwas I too rough?โ
You shook your head, eyes half-lidded, a lazy smile tugging at your lips. The pillowcase was cool beneath your cheek, a soft counterpoint to the heat still radiating from your skin.
โNo, honey. You were perfect.โ
That made him groan, the sound vibrating against your back where his chest pressed flush against you. You could feel his cock twitch, still half-hard against your thigh, a stubborn pulse of warmth that refused to fully subside.
He shifted beside you, curling around your back, fitting himself to the curve of your spine like heโd been made to fill that space. His mouth kept moving, over your shoulder, across the delicate skin where your neck met your collarbone, pressing featherlight kisses that made your breath catch.
โIโve neverโฆโ He paused, his lips still against your skin. โIโve never felt anything like that.โ
His hand slid up your stomach, palm flat, fingers tracing lazy circles into the soft plane of your belly. It came to rest just beneath your breasts, close enough that you could feel the heat radiating from his palm.
โYouโre soย fuckinโย soft,โ he whispered, wonder threading through the words. โI canโt stop touching you.โ
โThen donโt.โ
You meant it. Let him have you. Let him touch and kiss and worship every inch of you until your skin felt new again, until the ghost of Brockโs careless hands was erased entirely, replaced by the devotion of this boy who acted like you were something special.
His lips found your jaw. Your cheek. The slope of your neck where your pulse still fluttered. He kissed the hollow of your throat, and you felt the tip of his tongue.
โCan I stay a little longer?โ His voice was quieter now. Stripped of the confident swagger heโd worn on your doorstep. This was the boy beneath the uniform, the one who still got nervous around pretty girls and asked permission like he expected to be denied.
You turned your head, looked him in the eye for the first time since youโd let him fuck you senseless. The blue of his irises was hazy, pupils still blown wide, but there was something raw there too. Something that needed to hear the answer.
โYou can stay as long as you want, honey.โ
His exhale was shaky. His forehead dropped to yours, nose brushing against your cheek, and he let out a sound that was half-sigh of relief.
โYeah?โ
โYes, James.โ
He smiled. A real one, boyish and crooked.
You lay there for a while, tangled together in the wreckage of the sheets, letting your heartbeat settle, letting the room breathe around you. The afternoon light had shifted, softer now, casting long shadows across the floor.
Bucky eventually had to pull away to dress again. He stumbled a little getting off the bed, his legs still unsteady, and you watched him gather his uniform from where it lay scattered across the floor. He flushed every time he caught your eye, a pink bloom creeping up his neck and across his cheeks.
He kept looking back at you. At your thighs still parted, at the imprint of your body on the mattress heโd just ruined.
You watched him pull his uniform pants back up, hands shaking as he fumbled with the zipper. His tucked-in shirt stuck to the sweat drying on his chest, and he smoothed it down like he was trying to make himself look respectable again.
Like he hadnโt just spent the last hour moaning into your pillow.
When he reached the doorway of your bedroom, his steps slowed. His hand came up to grip the doorframe, knuckles whitening. He hesitated. Then lingered.
โUmโฆ I shouldโฆ I gotta get back,โ he muttered, voice small, almost apologetic. โMy route. Theyโll notice if Iโm gone too long.โ
You nodded gently, propping yourself up on one elbow.
He looked down at the floor. At the worn wooden boards. Then at you again, as if drawn by some invisible force.
โWas thatโฆ was this justโฆ?โ
He swallowed, his jaw flexing as if the words hurt to push past his teeth. โWas it just a one-time thing?โ
You didnโt move. Not at first. You let him stand there, already addicted, already terrified of losing something he never thought he could have. The silence stretched, just long enough to make him fidget.
โIโฆ I didnโt mean to cross a line,โ he said quickly, the words tumbling out in a rush. โI know youโre married. I justโ I couldnโt help it. Every time I saw you at that door, I couldnโt think straight. And if you donโt want to see me again, Iโโ
You didnโt let him finish.
You slid out of bed, the sheets pooling at your feet, not bothering to cover yourself. The air hit your skin, but you didnโt shiver. You walked toward him slowly, each step intentional, the floorboards creaking beneath your bare feet.
When you reached him, you put your hands on his face, palms against his stubbled jaw, fingers threading into the hair at his temples. His skin was warm, and he leaned into your touch like a man starved for it.
His breath stopped altogether.
And you kissed him.
A slow, sultryย kiss, tongue sliding into his mouth, your body pressed against his until you felt the hard line of him through his uniform pants. He groaned softly against your lips, the sound swallowed by the kiss, his free hand coming up to grip your waist like he might fall without you.
His fingers curled into the doorframe with his other hand, white-knuckled, like he needed the support to stay upright. His chest heaved against yours.
When you finally pulled back, his eyes were dazed. Puppy-soft.
You brushed your thumb over his cheek, feeling the faint stubble, the heat still lingering in his skin.
โBaby,โ you whispered, lips grazing his, close enough that you felt his breath ghost across your mouth. โIโll see you again on Thursday.โ
He exhaled like youโd just saved his life. Like youโd reached into his chest and wrapped your hand around his heart and told him it was safe to keep beating.
โThursday,โ he repeated, dazed, the word rolling off his tongue like a prayer. โYeah. Okay. Iโllโฆ Iโll be here.โ
You smiled. Soft and sure. A promise sealed in the space between your bodies.
โI know you will.โ
He stared at you one last time, like he didnโt want to look away, like leaving meant losing something heโd only just found. His eyes traced your face, your lips, the line of your throat where his mouth had been. Then he forced himself to turn, to walk out of the bedroom, down the hallway, toward the front door.
You followed at a distance, leaning against the wall just inside the living room, watching through the sheer curtain as he stepped outside. He paused on the porch, shoulders tense, one hand pressed over his mouth like he was still trying to understand what youโd done to him.
He walked down the path, past the rose bushes, past the mailbox, towards his truck, his steps heavy and light all at once. At the gate, he stopped. Turned back. Looked at the house.
At the window where you stood, half-hidden behind the curtain.
He didnโt wave, he just looked. A long, searching look that said everything his stammering words couldnโt.
Then he turned and disappeared down the street, his mailbag slapping against his hip, his life forever changed by the woman in the window.
After that Tuesdays and Thursdays became your favourite days of the week.
The clock became your accomplice. Youโd watch the hands crawl toward 10:45, feel the familiar flutter build in your chest, absoluteย anticipation. That electric hum that made everything sharper, brighter, more alive.
By the time his footsteps sounded on the porch, you were already at the door.
He never had to knock again.
The first Thursday after that Tuesday, you opened it before his knuckles could meet wood, and he stood there, mailbag slung across his body, cap in hand, that boyish grin already spreading across his face. But his eyes were different now. Hungrier. Like heโd spent the the last two days reliving every second.
โGood morninโ,โ he said, voice low, glancing down the street before stepping inside.
You didnโt bother with pleasantries.ย You grabbed his collar, pulled him into the kitchen, and pushed him against the counter.
He laughed against your mouth, surprised and delighted. โDamn, womanโโ
You bit his lower lip.ย โShut up and kiss me.โ
He did.
The kitchen became a playground. Flour dusted the counter where heโd lifted you onto it, your legs wrapped around his waist, his hands gripping your hips as he fucked you slow and deep. The sun streamed through the window, catching the sweat on his chest, and you remembered thinking,ย this is what mornings should feel like.
โI couldnโt stop thinkinโ about you,โ he murmured against your throat, thrusting up into you. โAll day. Every night.โ
โYeah?โ
โYeah.โ He buried his face in your neck, breath hot and ragged. โKept seeinโ you in my head. The way you looked at me when Iโโ
You pulled his head back, made him look at you.ย โWhen you what, honey?โ
His cheeks flushed. โWhen I came inside you.โ
You smiled, slow and wicked, and clenched around him.ย He groaned, head falling forward.
โGood,โย you whispered.ย โYou keep thinking about it.โ
The stairs came next.
It was Tuesday, and youโd been waiting at the top of the staircase when he walked in.ย Youโd worn nothing but his cap, the mailmanโs cap youโd stolen from his head the week before, and peered down at him from the landing.
His eyes went wide. His mouth dropped open.
โMrs. Rumlowโฆโ
โYou coming up or not?โ
He took the stairs two at a time, but you didnโt let him reach the top.ย You met him halfway, pushed him onto his knees, and let him bury his face between your thighs right there on the steps.ย His hands gripped your hips, his mouth worked you until your knees buckled, and you came with your fingers tangled in his hair, your back against the banister, the wood creaking beneath you.
He looked up at you afterward, lips slick, eyes dazed. โIโm gonna get fired if I keep this up.โ
You helped him stand, kissed the taste of yourself off his mouth.ย โThen get fired. Iโll keep you.โ
He laughed, breathless, and pulled you into the bedroom.
The dining table became an altar.
It was a Thursday, and youโd set it for two; plates, silverware, a vase of fresh roses, but lunch sat untouched.ย Instead, he bent you over the mahogany surface, your palms flat against the wood, his body pressed against your back.ย The china rattled with every thrust. A glass clattered to the floor, shattering.
โSorry,โย he gasped, stilling for a moment.
โDonโt stop.โย You pushed back against him.ย โDonโt you dare stop.โ
He didnโt.
Afterward, you lay tangled on the rug, your head on his chest, his fingers tracing lazy patterns on your arm. The afternoon light filtered through the lace curtains, casting patterns across the floor.
โI ever tell you what I think about?โย he asked quietly.
โWhat?โ
He turned his head, kissed your hair. โWhen Iโm out on my route. Walkinโ up all those driveways. I pretend every door is yours. Every house. Justโฆ imagine your face, waitinโ for me on the other side.โ
You lifted your head, looked at him.ย โThatโs sweet, James.โ
His ears went red. โYeah, well. Donโt tell nobody.โ
The Cadillac was your piรจce de rรฉsistance.
Brock had taken it out just once that month, to some dinner with his boss, and heโd left it in the garage, waxed and gleaming, untouched.ย You knew exactly where he kept the spare key.
You led Bucky out there with your fingers laced through his, past the gardening tools and the oil-stained floor. When he saw the car, he stopped.
โShit. Youโre not serious.โ
โOpen the door.โ
โMrs. Rumlow, your husband will kill me if he finds outโโ
โBucky.โย You turned, pressed yourself against him, looked up through your lashes.ย โDonโt you want to know what it feels like to fuck another manโs wife in his own car?โ
His breath caught. His hands trembled. And then he was fumbling with the door handle, pushing you into the backseat, following you in.
The leather was cool against your skin. The windows fogged up fast. He moved above you, inside you, his mouth against your ear, whispering things that wouldโve made a priest blush.
โYouโre gonna be the death of me,โย he breathed.
โThen die happy, sweetheart.โ
He came with a shudder, his face pressed into your shoulder, his body shaking.ย You held him through it, ran your fingers through his damp hair, felt the last tremors ripple through him.
He pulled back, looked at you like youโd rewritten the stars.
โI donโt have much,โย he said softly.ย โBut everything I got? Itโs yours.โ
You cupped his face, kissed him slow.ย โI know, baby.โ
And every time, he looked at you like you were the only thing in the world that mattered.
The way heโd trace the lines of your face afterward, like he was memorising you. The way heโd whisper your name.ย The way heโd hold you after, his arms wrapped around you like he was afraid youโd disappear.
Maybe you werenโt in love. Not the kind you read about in books, anyway. Not the kind that lasted.
But you wereย wanted.
Every Tuesday. Every Thursday. Every time he stepped through that door, you saw it in his eyes; that hungry, desperate,ย devotedย look that said you were the best part of his week, the secret heโd carry to his grave, the woman whoโd ruined him for anyone else.
And for now, that was enough.
a/n | yeah reading back on this, itโs very repetitive in some parts, maybe thatโs why i didnโt post it, srry for keeping this fic hostage for eight months chat
Summary:ย What was supposed to be your bachelorette trip becomes a girls getaway after your fiancรฉโs betrayal leaves you single, heartbroken, and unsure how to move forward. But when the trip is non-refundable and your friends refuse to let him ruin one more thing, you find yourself along the coast, trying to laugh through the ache. Then you meet Bucky Barnes: quiet, careful, unfairly handsome, and somehow exactly where you need him to be.
Warnings/Tags:ย Cheating Ex-Fiancรฉ, Cancelled Wedding, Heartbreak, Post-Breakup Grief, Self-Doubt After Betrayal, Alcohol/Hangover References, Anxiety Around New Romance, Protective Friends (Original Characters), Flirting, Romantic Tension, Bucky Barnes Being Dangerously Respectfulย
Word count:ย 10.9k
Music:ย
I Can Do It With A Broken Heart - Taylor Swift
Feather - Sabrina Carpenter
Ocean Eyes - Billie Eilishย
Begin Again - Taylor Swift
Kiss Me - Sixpence None The Richer
Delicate - Taylor Swift
Notes:ย hi hello!! This is going to be part one of a three part series!! Find part two here! I will link each part together once theyโre all posted, Iโve been working on this for a while after being inspired by a TikTok a few months ago and wellโฆ Iโve really flushed it out for sure ๐ I hope you all love this as much as I do!ย
The hotel suite was beautiful in the kind of way that felt almost offensive.
All white linen and gauzy curtains that shifted with the ocean breeze, polished tile cool under bare feet, a wide balcony overlooking water so blue it barely looked real. There was a bottle of champagne chilling in a silver bucket on the counter that none of them had opened. Matching gift bags still sat in a neat row by the door where theyโd dropped them on the first day, each one stuffed with things that had been chosen months ago, back when this trip had meant something else. Back when the cheap satin sashes and heart-shaped sunglasses and ridiculous little ring-shaped drink stirrers had been funny instead of cruel.
Someone (Mia, probably) had turned the sash around so the glitteringย BRIDE TO BEย faced the wall.
You stood in front of the bathroom mirror with one earring in, one hand braced against the counter, staring at your reflection like she belonged to somebody else.
There was nothing objectively wrong with the girl in the mirror. Your makeup was soft and glowy, your hair falling in careful waves over one shoulder, your dress the color of sea glass and cut just enough to make all your friends whistle when youโd stepped out earlier. You looked exactly like the kind of woman who shouldโve been on a bachelorette trip in a beach town with four of her closest friends, buzzing with excitement, cheeks warm from laughing too much, texting her fiancรฉ blurry selfies with the captionย miss you already.
Instead, you looked like a woman who had learned, six weeks ago, that the man sheโd nearly married had been sleeping with someone from his office for almost five months.
You still remembered the way the apartment had smelled that day. Coffee gone cold. Laundry detergent. The sharp citrus of the dish soap because youโd been standing at the sink when the messages lit up his iPad one after another, stupidly ordinary in their cruelty. You still remembered how your body had gone cold first and then violently hot, like your skin didnโt know how to hold what had just happened. You remembered him trying to explain. Trying to cry. Trying to touch your arm.
You remembered saying, very quietly, โDonโt.โ
That had been the end of it.
No dramatic reconciliation. No begging worth hearing. No grand speech that fixed the unforgivable fact of it. Just the sick collapse of a life youโd already started arranging furniture in.
The venue had been canceled. The dress returned. Some deposits lost, some salvaged, some too humiliating to deal with until later. The bachelorette trip, however, had been stubbornly, stupidly non-refundable.
So your friends had done what best friends do when your life explodes in your hands. They had shown up with snacks and wine and righteous fury. They had boxed up his things while cursing creatively. They had taken your phone when you were at your weakest and blocked his number for you. And when youโd tried to tell them you didnโt want to go on the trip anymore, that it would be embarrassing, pathetic, that the whole thing would feel like one big neon sign flashingย she got cheated on, theyโd looked at you like youโd lost your mind.
โHe ruined a relationship,โ Mia had said flatly, stuffing sandals into a suitcase for you because youโd been too numb to pack. โHe does not also get to ruin a beachfront villa.โ
So here you were.
A former bride on what had become, through sheer force of friendship and denial, a girlsโ trip in denial.
There was a knock on the bathroom door before it pushed open an inch. โYou decent?โ
โDepends on whoโs asking.โ
Lena slipped through the gap, already dressed in a red wrap dress that made her look like trouble in the best possible way. She took one look at your face in the mirror and softened. โHey.โ
โIโm fine,โ you said automatically.
โLiar.โ
You laughed, but it came out thin. Lena stepped behind you and rested her chin lightly on your shoulder, both of you looking at your reflections.
โYou donโt have to go out tonight,โ she said. โWe can stay in. Order room service. Watch terrible reality TV. Iโll even let Jess pick the movie and you know what a sacrifice that is.โ
From the other room, right on cue, Jess yelled, โI heard that, and for the record, my taste is immaculate.โ
You smiled despite yourself.
Lena squeezed your shoulder. โIโm serious.โ
โI know.โ You swallowed. โI justโฆ I donโt want this trip to become some sad little memorial service to my canceled wedding.โ
โIt wonโt.โ
โIt already kind of is.โ
โIt was,โ she corrected gently. โThe first night was. Yesterday was weird because we all kept almost saying things and then not saying them. But tonight?โ She lifted one brow in the mirror. โTonight, we get drunk, dance badly, and remind you that your life didnโt end because one mediocre man had the self-control of wet cardboard.โ
You barked out a real laugh at that.
โThere she is,โ Lena said softly.
You looked down, blinking hard. โI hate that Iโm still this upset.โ
โOf course youโre still upset.โ
โItโs been weeks.โ
โAnd?โ
โAnd I should beโฆโ You gestured helplessly at yourself, mascara wand still clutched in your fingers. โBetter.โ
Lenaโs voice went very quiet. โYou were going to marry him.โ
That landed in the room with all the weight youโd been trying not to feel.
Not just date him. Not just love him. Marry him. Build a life with him. Wake up next to him for years and years and years, and trust that the future you were stepping into was solid beneath your feet. He hadnโt just cheated on you. Heโd made you question your own memory, your own judgment, your own ability to know when you were loved honestly and when you were being made a fool.
Lena turned you gently on the stool until you were facing her. โYou do not have to be over it on anyoneโs schedule,โ she said. โEspecially not yours.โ
Your throat tightened. โI really, really hate crying with mascara on.โ
โSo donโt cry.โ Her mouth curved. โCome let me put obnoxious lip gloss on you and tell you how hot you are.โ
From the bedroom, Mia called, โWe are going to miss the dinner reservation if you two keep having a feelings summit in there.โ
โAnd Iโm starving,โ Tori added.
โTragic,โ Jess deadpanned. โThoughts and prayers.โ
Lena held out a hand. โCโmon.โ
You stared at it for a second, then took it.
The restaurant was loud in the pleasantly expensive way only vacation places seemed to perfect.
Warm lights strung across the open-air terrace cast everyone in gold. Music drifted from somewhere near the bar, something upbeat and rhythmic that mixed with the crash of distant waves and the low murmur of a hundred overlapping conversations. The air smelled like salt, grilled meats and citrus, sunscreen, and the faintest hint of tequila.
Your table overlooked the marina, all bobbing lights on black water. Your friends had done what they did best: formed a protective wall of normal around you without making it obvious. Nobody mentioned him. Nobody made pitying faces. They just ordered too many appetizers, argued over cocktails, stole bites off one anotherโs plates, and dragged you into conversation until the tension in your shoulders slowly, almost reluctantly, began to loosen.
By the second drink, you were laughing more easily.
By the third, Mia had somehow gotten the whole table ranking celebrity breakups by messiness.
โAbsolutely not,โ Jess said, pointing with a french fry. โPublic cheating scandals are bad, yes, but nothing tops a man leaving his wife for a woman he met while making a movie where they play soulmates. That is psychotic.โ
โThat is unfortunately a classic,โ Tori agreed.
Lena tilted her head at you. โYour thoughts, wounded party?โ
You swirled your drink, pretending to consider it deeply. โI think men should have to apply for licenses before speaking to women.โ
โRenewed annually,โ Mia said.
โWith references,โ Jess added.
โAnd an essay portion,โ Tori said.
You grinned. โMinimum one thousand words.โ
The table erupted, and for one soft, golden moment, it almost felt easy. Not fixed. Not fully healed. But easy enough to breathe inside.
Then a group at the bar started cheering over some birthday shot ritual, and the sound hit you wrongโtoo close to celebration, too adjacent to the thing this trip was originally supposed to beโand the air seemed to thin.
It was sudden, stupid, and so incredibly unfair.
You set your glass down too carefully.
Lena noticed first because of course she did. โYou okay?โ
โYeah,โ you said, already halfway out of your chair. โI just need a second.โ
Nobody tried to stop you. Another kindness. Mia only squeezed your wrist as you passed, and Jess said, โText if you need me to come glare at strangers.โ
You slipped away before they could see your face fully give you away.
The terrace opened into a quieter walkway that curved along the side of the restaurant toward the beach access path. The noise softened there, blunted by wind and distance. A line of palms swayed overhead, their fronds whispering against the night. Somewhere below, the tide moved in and out with steady, indifferent patience.
You wrapped your arms around yourself and kept walking until the music and voices behind you were little more than a blur.
This was the part no one told you about heartbreak, how it could ambush you in the middle of a good moment. That you could be laughing one second and then wrecked the next because someone popped champagne two tables over or because a song came on or because your brain remembered, without your permission, what was supposed to be happening instead.
You pressed the heel of your hand briefly to your sternum like it might steady the ache there.
โNot your night either, huh?โ
The voice was low and rough-edged, threaded with something almost like humor. Not invasive. Just there.
You turned.
He was leaning against the white stucco wall a few yards away, one boot braced behind him, a beer bottle loose in one hand.
Your first ridiculous and entirely involuntary thought was that he looked unfair.
Not just handsome. Plenty of men were handsome. This was something more disruptive than that. Tall in a way that made the space around him seem smaller, broad-shouldered, dressed simply in dark jeans and a black henley with the sleeves shoved to his forearms. There was silver at one wrist from a watch, dark hair pushed back carelessly, a beard that softened the hard lines of his jaw only enough to make you wonder what he looked like clean-shaven and then immediately resent yourself for wondering that at all.
But it was his face that kept you there a second too long.
Something in his expression was watchful, steady. Not the eager opportunism of a man whoโd spotted a woman alone and decided to try his luck. He looked like someone who knew what it was to need air.
His gaze flicked once to your face, then away again with deliberate politeness. โSorry,โ he said. โDidnโt mean to startle you.โ
โItโs fine.โ Your voice came out softer than intended. โI was justโฆโ
โEscaping?โ
A faint laugh caught in your throat. โThat obvious?โ
He took a small sip from the bottle. โYouโve got the same look I do.โ
โAnd what look is that?โ
โLike if one more person asks if youโre having fun, you might throw yourself into the ocean.โ
You stared at him.
Then, to your own surprise, you laughed. Really laughed. Sudden and bright and helpless enough that you had to press your lips together after. The manโs mouth tipped at one corner, not smug, just pleased to have earned it.
โOkay,โ you said. โThat was kind of funny.โ
โKind of?โ
โDonโt get cocky.โ
His eyes, startlingly blue even in the low light, settled on you again. โToo late.โ
There it was. Chemistry. Not a spark. Not a flicker. A live wire.
You felt it in the curious little pause after your laughter faded. In the way the air between you changed shape. In the way he seemed perfectly still and yet somehow entirely attentive.
He straightened off the wall and held out his free hand, not too close, not presumptuous. โBucky.โ
You blinked at the name, then smiled despite yourself. โBucky?โ
โYeah, I know.โ
โNo, I like it.โ You slid your hand into his. โIt just surprised me.โ
His hand was warm and much larger than yours, his grip gentle in a way that made your pulse misbehave. He repeated your name quietly after you gave it to him, like he was testing the shape of it.
It should not have affected you as much as it did.
โSo,โ Bucky said, easing back half a step but not too far, โwhat are you escaping from?โ
You should have lied.
You almost did. Almost saidย a loud tableย orย too many margaritasย orย my friends are insane. Something light. Easy. The kind of answer that kept things shallow and safe.
Instead, maybe because he was a stranger and therefore safer than anyone else in the world for the span of a few minutes, you said, โThis was supposed to be my bachelorette trip.โ
His expression changed instantly.
Not dramatically. Not with that terrible exaggerated pity people wore when they thought they were being compassionate. It was subtler than that. A stilling. A sharpened attention.
โSupposed to be?โ he asked carefully.
โI caught my fiancรฉ cheating.โ You looked out toward the dark line of the water. โThe trip was non-refundable.โ
For one beat, he said nothing.
Then: โHeโs an idiot.โ
The answer was so immediate, so certain, that your head turned back to him.
โYou donโt even know him.โ
โDonโt need to.โ
That should not have made heat rise behind your ribs. It absolutely did.
You huffed a quiet laugh and looked down at the tile. โMy friends agree with you.โ
โSmart women.โ
โThey are.โ
He tipped the beer bottle lightly toward the restaurant. โThey the ones keeping an eye on you from inside?โ
You glanced back through the open terrace and immediately spotted them. Four women pretending very badly not to watch from across the restaurant. The second Lena realized sheโd been caught, she gave a tiny, unapologetic wave.
A smile tugged at your mouth. โYes.โ
โGood.โ
Something about the way he said it made you look at him again. โGood?โ
โYeah.โ His shoulders lifted in one small shrug. โYou got your heart broken. Means anybody with sense oughta be cautious with you for a while.โ
There was no flirtatious edge to it. Noย but Iโm differentย tucked inside. Just simple, grounded truth.
That, more than anything, disarmed you.
โYou always this honest?โ you asked.
โOnly when Iโm trying to make a good impression.โ
โThat your plan?โ
โWasnโt, originally.โ
โAnd now?โ
His gaze met yours full on, and there was something devastatingly direct in it. โNow Iโm thinkinโ Iโd like to keep you talking.โ
Your breath caught. Just a little. Enough to annoy you.
You folded your arms loosely. โThat a line?โ
โNot a very polished one.โ
โNo.โ
โI can do worse, if it helps.โ
You laughed again, and this time he smiled properly.
Lord. It changed him completely.
The seriousness in his face didnโt disappear, exactly, but it warmed, the corners of his eyes creasing, the whole effect unexpectedly boyish for someone built like he could carry furniture by himself. It made him look less like a man leaning in the shadows and more like someone you could picture grinning across a kitchen table at midnight.
Dangerous thought.
You cleared your throat. โSo what areย youย doing out here, Bucky?โ
He looked down at the bottle in his hand. โFriendโs birthday dinner. Too many people, not enough exits.โ
โAh. Fellow escape artist.โ
โSeems that way.โ
โYour friends keeping tabs on you too?โ
He angled his head toward a table farther inside, and you followed the motion.
Three people were watching him with absolutely no shame.
The first was a broad-shouldered blond man who looked like heโd been carved out of old-fashioned decency and stubbornness, one arm hooked over the back of his chair, his expression calm except for the faint, knowing curve at the corner of his mouth. Beside him sat a man with an easy grin and warm, assessing eyes, leaning back like he was enjoying a show he fully intended to heckle later. He caught your eye and lifted his glass in a quick, charming salute that made Bucky mutter something under his breath.
And next to them was a woman with red hair and a smile sharp enough to cut glass, watching the entire exchange with the quiet satisfaction of someone who had already figured out the ending and was waiting for everyone else to catch up.
โYep,โ Bucky said dryly. โLike a zoo exhibit.โ
โYou say that like youโre not talking to a woman currently being monitored by a four-person committee.โ
โFair point.โ
The night wind lifted a strand of hair across your cheek. Without thinking, you tucked it back, suddenly aware of your bare shoulders, the dip of your dress, the fact that youโd come out here to have a small private breakdown and instead found yourself flirting with a stranger who looked like heโd stepped out of some absurdly specific fantasy.
You should probably go back inside.
That was the sensible thing. The smart thing. The emotionally mature thing, even.
Instead you heard yourself say, โSo what happens now?โ
Buckyโs brows drew together faintly. โNow?โ
โYouโve made me laugh during my dramatic escape moment. Thatโs a high-risk move. Whatโs your follow-up strategy?โ
His mouth twitched. โWell. Could offer to buy you a drink, but it looks like youโve already got one.โ
โVery observant.โ
โCould ask you to dance.โ
You blinked.
Somewhere deeper in the restaurant, the live music had shifted. Slower now. Not fully slow, but smoother. The kind of song people swayed to more than danced.
Bucky watched your face carefully, like he was making sure not to crowd you.
โOr,โ he added, โI could just stand out here with you a while. Whichever youโd rather.โ
There it was again. That carefulness. That unexpected, almost old-fashioned gentleness. Not pushy. Not performative. As though your comfort mattered to him on instinct.
It had been a long time since anyoneโs instinct had felt like care.
You looked at him for a long second.
Then you said, โYou know what? Ask me properly.โ
A flicker of surprise crossed his face, followed by something warmer. He set the beer bottle down on the ledge beside him, took one step closer, and held out his hand.
โWould you let me have this dance?โ
Oh.
That was unfair too.
You stared at his hand, then at his face, then at the hand again. Somewhere behind you, your friends were absolutely losing their minds in silent, collective suspicion. You could feel it from here.
And maybe it was reckless. Maybe it was ridiculous. Maybe it was too soon and too strange and too much for a woman still nursing a cracked-open heart.
But maybe, too, life did not wait for perfect timing to offer you something tender.
You put your hand in his.
His fingers closed around yours with quiet certainty.
He led you back toward the edge of the terrace where there was just enough room between tables for dancing if people were willing to be a little shameless about it. You were very aware, suddenly, of everything. The warmth of his palm, the nearness of his body as he turned to face you, the curious glances from strangers, the way your friends had all gone rigid at your table as though witnessing a wildlife event they didnโt dare interrupt.
Buckyโs hand settled at your waist with measured care, like he was asking permission even after youโd already given it. Your free hand came to rest against his shoulder, and the solid heat of him beneath the thin fabric of his shirt nearly short-circuited your brain.
โStill okay?โ he asked quietly.
You looked up.
He was serious again, gaze fixed on yours, all the humor gentled into something steadier.
The question wasnโt about dancing. Or not only about dancing.
Your chest tightened unexpectedly.
โYeah,โ you whispered. โStill okay.โ
He nodded once, satisfied, and drew you a fraction closer.
The music wrapped around you soft and low. Beyond him, lights blurred against the marina, gold melting into black water. A breeze moved through the terrace, carrying salt and jasmine and the faint clink of glasses. His hand at your waist was warm, anchoring without pressing. He moved like someone who knew exactly where his body was in space and was making damn sure it never overwhelmed yours.
You hadnโt expected that either.
โYouโre good at this,โ you murmured.
โDancing?โ
โMaking a woman feel like sheโs the only person in the room.โ
Something in his expression shifted. Deepened.
โMaybe,โ he said, โthatโs because right now you are.โ
Your pulse stumbled so hard it was almost embarrassing.
โBucky.โ
โToo much?โ
You shouldโve said yes.
Instead you smiled helplessly and shook your head.
His thumb moved once against your side. Barely there. Enough to send a tiny shiver through you anyway.
At your table, Lena looked one second away from marching over with a clipboard and a background check.
You caught sight of her over Buckyโs shoulder and snorted.
โWhat?โ
โMy friends are conducting a silent tribunal.โ
He glanced discreetly, then huffed out a laugh. โYeah, I see that.โ
โThey mean well.โ
โI know.โ
โTheyโll probably interrogate me later.โ
โThat so?โ
โOh, absolutely. Theyโll want to know your full name, your social security number, whether youโve ever hurt a womanโs feelings, your stance on emotional availabilityโโ
โGot good answers for most of that.โ
โMost?โ
He looked down at you, mouth curving. โMight fail the social security one.โ
You rolled your eyes, smiling in spite of yourself.
The song shifted again, your bodies swaying almost lazily now, and there was suddenly very little space between your laughter and silence. Not awkward silence. The charged kind. The kind that gathers. That asks.
You became aware, with startling clarity, of the roughness of his hand at your waist. The clean smell of soap and cedar and maybe something darker underneath. The exact shade of blue in his eyes. The fact that if either of you leaned in even an inch, everything about this moment would change.
Your breath slowed.
His did too.
He looked at your mouth once. Quick enough that you could have pretended not to notice.
Instead, because apparently heartbreak had destroyed your self-preservation along with everything else, you said softly, โYouโre very intense.โ
Bucky exhaled a quiet laugh. โSorry.โ
โI didnโt say I hated it.โ
That landed.
He went very still, his eyes on yours.
From somewhere far away, you could hear your friends collectively combusting.
But Bucky didnโt move closer. Didnโt presume. He just watched you with that impossible, careful attention, as though he understood exactly how fragile first steps could be when somebody else had already broken the ground beneath you once.
It made your chest ache in a whole new way.
โYou know,โ he said, voice low enough that only you could hear, โI was gonna be a gentleman.โ
โWere you?โ
โTryinโ to be.โ
โAnd now?โ
His gaze dropped briefly to your mouth and back. โNow Iโm thinkinโ Iโm in trouble.โ
For the first time in weeks, maybe longer, the ache in your chest loosened around something other than grief.
Something bright. Warm. A little terrifying.
Hope, maybe.
Or at least the beginning of wanting something again.
You tilted your head. โThat sounds like a you problem.โ
His smile was slow and devastating. โCould be.โ
The song ended. Neither of you stepped back right away.
Applause rose around the terrace. Glasses clinked. The spell should have broken.
It didnโt.
โYou should probably get back to your friends,โ Bucky said at last, though it sounded like the suggestion cost him something.
โI probably should.โ
He nodded, but his hand stayed where it was for one beat longer, two, before he let go.
The loss of warmth was immediate and ridiculous.
You took half a step back, tucking hair behind your ear mostly so you had something to do with your hands. โThis wasโฆโ
โYeah,โ he said softly. โIt was.โ
You searched his face. โAre you going to ask for my number?โ
One dark brow lifted. โWould that be okay?โ
The fact that he still asked nearly undid you.
You smiled. โYes.โ
By the time you made it back to your table, your friends looked like a panel of judges moments away from delivering a verdict.
Jess leaned back in her chair, arms folded. โWell?โ
Mia shoved a glass of water into your hand. โBefore anything else, hydrate.โ
Tori was openly staring over your shoulder toward the bar. โHeโs hot.โ
โThank you, Tori,โ Lena said, not taking her eyes off you. โCan we focus?โ
You sat down slowly, aware that your face felt warm. Warm enough that all four women immediately noticed.
Mia gasped. โOh my God.โ
โWhat?โ you demanded, already defensive.
โYou like him.โ
โShut up.โ
โYou do,โ Jess said, sounding delighted and skeptical all at once.
โIt was one dance.โ
โOne very charged dance,โ Tori said.
Lena leaned forward, expression gentler than the others. โAre you okay?โ
The question quieted everything.
You looked down at the condensation sliding down your water glass. At the tacky ring-shaped stirrer someone had stuck in your untouched second cocktail. At your own hand, where his warmth felt like it had somehow lingered.
And then you looked back up at your friends.
For the first time since the world had tilted sideways, the answer didnโt feel complicated.
โActually,โ you said softly, a little stunned by it yourself, โI think I am.โ
The first thing you became aware of was the light.
Not soft morning light. Not gentle, poetic,ย new day, new beginningsย light.
Aggressive light.
Bright, merciless, tropical sunlight poured through the thin gap in the curtains like it had personally been sent to punish you for every tequila-based decision youโd made the night before. It sliced across the hotel room in one golden blade and landed directly over your closed eyelids, dragging you reluctantly back into consciousness one miserable degree at a time.
You made a sound that was not quite human and rolled onto your stomach.
Something crinkled beneath your cheek.
You opened one eye.
A silver sash lay half-under your face, the sequins catching the light in tiny, hateful flashes.
Not theย BRIDE TO BEย sash. Thank God. That one had been shoved into the back of Lenaโs suitcase after the first night with a solemnity usually reserved for disposing of cursed objects.
This one saidย HOT GIRL DETOURย in glittery pink letters.
You stared at it for a long second, trying to piece together when exactly it had entered your life.
Then the memories began filtering in.
Dinner. The terrace. The music. The boy at the wall with the blue eyes and the unfair smile.
Bucky.
Your heart did a small, humiliating thing.
Then came the rest of it. The dance. His hand at your waist. Your friends staring like government officials observing an unidentified flying object. The way heโd asked for your number like he genuinely cared whether you wanted to give it. The brief, warm press of his fingers around yours before heโd let go.
Your hand moved before your brain fully caught up, patting blindly over the bedspread until you found your phone wedged dangerously close to the edge of the mattress.
You squinted at the screen.
9:47 a.m.
Three notifications from your group chat.
One missed photo drop from Mia.
One reminder from the airline app you had no emotional capacity to deal with.
No text from Bucky.
Your stomach sank in a way you immediately hated.
It was stupid. Completely, embarrassingly stupid. You had met the man less than twelve hours ago. He did not owe you a good morning text. He did not owe you anything. A dance, a conversation, a charming little moment on vacationโฆ it could remain exactly that. A moment. Not every nice thing had to become something. Not every man who looked at you like he wanted to keep you talking was secretly the first chapter of a love story.
Still.
Your thumb unlocked the phone anyway, as if perhaps the text might be hiding somewhere beneath the wallpaper.
Nothing.
You dropped the phone onto the mattress and turned your face into the pillow with a groan.
From the other bed, Jess rasped, โIf youโre dying, do it quietly.โ
You lifted your head just enough to look at her.
Jess lay on her back in the exact position she must have fallen asleep in, one arm flung over her face, mascara faintly smudged beneath one eye, still wearing one earring and none of her dignity. Her hair had become something of a structural event overnight. Beside her on the nightstand sat three empty water bottles, a half-eaten bag of salt and vinegar chips, and a pair of heart-shaped sunglasses with one lens missing.
โYou look incredible,โ you croaked.
โDonโt flirt with me,โ she muttered. โIโm vulnerable.โ
Across the room, a mound of blankets shifted on the small pullout sofa. Tori emerged from it slowly, blinking like a newly unearthed creature seeing daylight for the first time.
โWhy is the sun yelling?โ she whispered.
โBecause you ordered a round of shots called โThe Bad Decisionโ at midnight,โ Jess said without moving.
Tori frowned, then seemed to consider this. โThat does sound like me.โ
The bathroom door opened, and Lena stepped out already wearing sunglasses indoors, an oversized T-shirt, and the expression of a woman held together by sheer moral superiority and electrolyte packets.
โAlive?โ she asked.
โNo,โ Jess said.
โEmotionally?โ Lena asked, looking specifically at you.
You groaned and flopped onto your back. โWhy are you all like this?โ
โBecause last night you danced with six feet of emotionally available jawline,โ Tori said, pointing weakly from the pullout. โAnd now we require updates.โ
โThere are no updates.โ
That got Jess to remove her arm from her face.
Lena stopped halfway to the mini-fridge.
Tori sat upright too quickly, winced, and clutched her head. โOw. Alsoโwhat?โ
You held up your phone with a miserable little shake. โNo text.โ
There was a beat of silence.
Then Jess said, โI knew it. Men are disappointing in every climate.โ
Lena shot her a look. โJess.โ
โWhat? Iโm not saying we send him hate mail yet. Iโm just saying I had one eyebrow raised from the beginning and she knows it.โ
You pulled a pillow over your face. โCan everyone please stop acting like he promised me a dowry and then disappeared at sea?โ
โNo,โ Tori said immediately. โBecause he hadย vibes.โ
โHe did have vibes,โ Lena admitted, though reluctantly.
โVery intense, careful, โI chop firewood but also ask about your feelingsโ vibes,โ Tori continued.
โThatโs a suspicious combination,โ Jess said.
You peeked out from beneath the pillow. โHow is that suspicious?โ
โBecause men should not be allowed to be both hot and emotionally attentive. Itโs how they get past security.โ
Lena pointed at Jess. โThat is, unfortunately, not entirely wrong.โ
You sat up slowly, wincing when your head objected to the movement. โHe could just be busy. Or asleep. Or also hungover.โ
โOr gathering references for the essay portion of his license to speak to women,โ Tori said.
Despite yourself, you smiled.
Then your smile faded as your eyes drifted back to your phone.
You hated that you cared.
That was the worst part. Not the lack of text. Not the uncertainty. Not even the tiny, uninvited sting of disappointment.
It was caring at all.
After everything with your ex, youโd promised yourself that you were done handing pieces of yourself over too quickly. Done making excuses. Done mistaking sparks for safety. Done letting a manโs attention feel like proof of your worth.
And then Bucky had smiled at you once under terrace lights, and here you were the next morning, hungover and freshly pathetic, staring at your phone like a teenager.
Lenaโs expression softened when she saw your face.
โHey,โ she said, quieter now.
You shook your head before she could continue. โI know. I know itโs dumb.โ
โItโs not dumb.โ
โIt is,โ you insisted, throat tightening with irritation at yourself more than sadness. โI met him last night. I had one dance with him. Iโm notโโ You stopped, pressing your lips together. โIโm not spiraling over some guy not texting me by breakfast.โ
Jess was quiet for once.
Tori looked down at the blanket in her lap.
Lena crossed the room and sat on the edge of your bed, careful not to jostle you too much. โYouโre not spiraling over him,โ she said gently. โYouโre bracing.โ
That hit too close.
You looked away.
Lena lowered her voice. โThereโs a difference.โ
The room softened around that. The obnoxious sunlight, the scattered shoes, the sequins, the water bottles, the stale scent of perfume and salt air and last nightโs cocktailsโฆ it all seemed to go still for a second.
โI just donโt want to feel stupid again,โ you said.
It came out small enough that you wished you could grab the words and shove them back into your mouth.
Jess sat up slowly, suddenly much less sarcastic. โYou were never stupid.โ
You gave her a look.
โNo,โ she said firmly. โAbsolutely not. He was a cheating little sewer rat who made choices behind your back. You trusting the person you were going to marry does not make you stupid.โ
โI missed so much.โ
โYou didnโt miss anything,โ Lena said. โHe hid things.โ
Tori nodded, eyes earnest despite the disaster of her hair. โAnd now your nervous system is doing that cute little thing where it thinks every silence means danger.โ
โThat is unfortunately very accurate,โ you muttered.
โWhich is why,โ Jess said, reaching for a water bottle and pointing it at you like a gavel, โwe are maintaining cautious optimism at best.โ
โSupportively suspicious,โ Tori added.
โExactly.โ
You laughed weakly. โSupportively suspicious.โ
โThatโs our official stance,โ Lena said. โWe liked him. We are willing to admit he seemed sweet. We are also prepared to ruin his life if necessary.โ
โBalance,โ Jess said.
โHealthy,โ Tori agreed.
A knock sounded at the connecting door from the room Mia had taken with Tori originally, though clearly room assignments had become more of a suggestion than a rule after midnight.
โIs everyone decent?โ Mia called.
โNo,โ Jess yelled.
The door opened anyway.
Mia entered wearing linen pants, a bikini top, and sunglasses pushed into her hair, looking far too fresh for someone who had absolutely been the reason the group had ended up singing along to early 2000s breakup songs in a bar called The Tipsy Pelican at one in the morning.
She carried an iced coffee tray like an offering from the gods.
โI come bearing caffeine and judgment,โ she announced.
Tori made a reverent sound and crawled toward her.
Mia handed out drinks, then took one look at your face and narrowed her eyes. โHe hasnโt texted.โ
โHow did you know?โ
โBecause you look like youโre trying to be chill about not being chill.โ
Jess snapped her fingers. โExactly.โ
You accepted your iced coffee with a glare. โI hate all of you.โ
โNo, you donโt,โ Mia said, sitting cross-legged at the foot of your bed. โYou hate uncertainty. Which is reasonable, because uncertainty recently kicked in your front door and stole your wedding registry.โ
You took a long sip. โThat metaphor got away from you.โ
โIt did, but I stand by the emotional truth.โ
Lena reached over and squeezed your ankle through the blanket. โWeโre doing brunch at eleven-thirty. You have time to shower, hydrate, and stop checking your phone every eighteen seconds.โ
โI am not checking it every eighteen seconds.โ
Your phone lit up.
All five heads turned toward it.
You froze.
The screen showed only a weather alert.
Jess inhaled through her nose. โThe universe is tacky for that.โ
You grabbed the phone and turned it face down. โNobody is allowed to perceive me until brunch.โ
Unfortunately, being perceived was the primary hobby of your friend group.
The next hour unfolded in a haze of showers, shared concealer, dry shampoo, and the particular kind of fragile laughter that came after a night out with people who knew exactly how much fun to push on you before it became too much. The suite slowly transformed from disaster zone to controlled chaos. Jess found her missing earring inside one of Toriโs shoes. Mia discovered a video of herself dramatically toasting โto women with standards and men who fear God,โ which none of you remembered but all of you agreed was thematically strong. Lena made everyone drink water before she would allow a single person to leave.
You tried not to check your phone.
You failed six times.
No text.
By the time you reached the brunch place, some breezy little cafรฉ with white umbrellas, blue tile, and a view of the beach, you had almost successfully convinced yourself that it was fine.
Almost.
The hostess led you to a corner table outside. The morning had softened into something kinder by then, the sun higher but less cruel, the sea flashing silver beyond the low dunes. Around you, other vacationers nursed bloody marys and iced coffees, sunglasses hiding the universal evidence of poor evening choices.
You slid into your chair, grateful for the shade.
Mia immediately opened the menu and said, โI need potatoes in a spiritual way.โ
โI need eggs,โ Tori said.
โI need silence,โ Jess muttered.
โYou need toast,โ Lena told her.
โI need justice.โ
You were smiling down at your menu when your phone buzzed against the table.
Once.
A real buzz this time.
Not a weather alert.
Not the group chat.
A single notification slid across the screen.
Unknown Number:ย Morning. This is Bucky. I was trying to wait until a respectable hour, but Iโm starting to think I may have overcorrected.
Your entire body went still.
Unfortunately, your friends saw everything.
Mia gasped so loudly that the woman at the next table glanced over.
โOh my God,โ Tori whispered. โIs it him?โ
You snatched the phone up, but it was too late.
Lena leaned in. โRead it.โ
โNo.โ
Jess put her sunglasses down her nose. โRead it, or I will climb across this table and take your phone.โ
โYou are in no physical condition to climb anything.โ
โTry me.โ
You held the phone to your chest for one last second, cheeks already warm, then read the message aloud.
There was a collective pause.
Then Tori pressed both hands to her heart. โThatโs cute.โ
Mia looked deeply conflicted. โThat isโฆ unfortunately a good text.โ
Jess narrowed her eyes. โRespectable hour, huh? Clever. Takes accountability without groveling.โ
Lena pointed at Jess. โDo not sound impressed. It weakens our position.โ
โIโm analyzing the enemy.โ
You stared at the message, biting the inside of your cheek to contain the ridiculous smile fighting its way onto your face.
Bucky had texted.
Not at some lazy afternoon hour that said heโd remembered you as an afterthought. Not with a boringย heyย or a performative line. Heโd apparently been overthinking the proper time to reach out, which was either wildly charming or dangerous to your fragile little heart.
Possibly both.
You typed, deleted, typed again.
You:ย Good morning, Bucky. Respectable hour is subjective, but I appreciate the restraint.
You stared at it.
โToo much?โ you asked.
Mia leaned over. โPerfect.โ
Jess nodded. โDry, mildly flirty, not desperate.โ
โThank you for grading my trauma texts.โ
โAnytime.โ
You hit send before you could lose your nerve.
The reply came faster than expected.
Bucky:ย For the record, the restraint was difficult.
Tori made a sound like sheโd been wounded.
You pressed your lips together, but your smile won.
You:ย Thatโs a bold confession before noon.
Bucky:ย Iโve been awake since seven trying not to make a bad impression.
You read that one silently first, and something warm unfurled in your chest before you could stop it.
Lenaโs face softened when you showed them.
โOkay,โ she said. โThatโsโฆ kind of sweet.โ
โKind of?โ Tori demanded.
โSupportively suspicious,โ Lena reminded her.
โRight. Sorry.โ Tori straightened. โSuspiciously sweet.โ
You huffed a laugh and typed back.
You:ย Seven? Thatโs either disciplined or alarming.
Bucky:ย Little of both, probably.
You:ย Honest answer. Dangerous strategy.
Bucky:ย Worked last night.
You stopped breathing for half a second.
Your friends, fully shameless now, leaned so close that the waiter arrived with water and visibly reconsidered whether he wanted to get involved in whatever ritual was occurring at your table.
โCan I start you ladies with drinks?โ he asked.
โFive mimosas,โ Mia said immediately.
Lena lifted one finger. โFour mimosas and one coffee.โ
Jess pointed at herself. โCoffee is for me. Iโm recovering from an incident.โ
The waiter smiled politely and fled.
You looked back at your phone.
You:ย Did it?
A few seconds passed. Then:
Bucky:ย I got your number, didnโt I?
Your cheeks went warm.
Mia slapped the table softly. โOh, heโs good.โ
Jess grimaced. โAnnoyingly.โ
Lena took a deep breath. โI am trying so hard not to approve.โ
โHeโs making it difficult,โ Tori whispered.
You typed under the table this time, not because they couldnโt still see you smiling, but because you needed at least the illusion of privacy.
You:ย You did. Though technically I may have prompted that.
Bucky:ย I was getting there.
You:ย Were you?
Bucky:ย Eventually.
You:ย Very smooth.
Bucky:ย Never claimed to be smooth. Just interested.
Oh. There went your pulse again.
You stared at the words for too long.ย Interested.
Notย youโre hot. Notย last night was funย in the kind of noncommittal way that could be said to anyone after anything. Justย interested. Like he was naming a fact instead of tossing bait into the water.
Lena studied your face. โGood text?โ
You handed her the phone without speaking.
She read it. Her expression betrayed her before she could stop it.
Mia snatched the phone next. โOh, damn.โ
Jess took it last, eyes moving across the screen with reluctant focus. โHmm.โ
โWhat?โ you asked.
โNothing.โ
โJess.โ
She handed it back. โI hate that I donโt hate him.โ
Tori beamed. โProgress!โ
You were about to reply when another message came through.
Bucky:ย Also, I should probably say this before I accidentally imply otherwise: I know last night was a lot. Iโm not trying to rush you into anything. I just liked talking to you.
The table went quiet.
For a moment, even Jess didnโt have anything sarcastic to say.
Your throat tightened, but not in the awful way it had the night before. This was different. Softer. More dangerous in its own right.
Because there was something excruciatingly disarming about being handled gently when youโd gotten used to flinching.
You swallowed and looked down at your lap.
Lena reached over beneath the table and squeezed your knee.
โYou okay?โ she murmured.
You nodded.
Then you typed carefully.
You:ย I liked talking to you too.
You hesitated, then added:
You:ย And dancing with you.
His reply came a moment later.
Bucky:ย Good. I was hoping youโd say that.
Then another:
Bucky:ย My friends are doing a beach bonfire tonight. Nothing fancy. Food, drinks, music, probably Sam pretending he knows how to make a fire better than everyone else. You and your friends would be welcome, if you want to come.
You blinked and the words seemed to rearrange themselves twice.
Bonfire. Tonight. You and your friends.
Notย come meet me alone. Notย ditch your group. Not a late-night, half-vague invitation that carried all the wrong implications. He had invited all of you, directly and comfortably, as if he understood exactly who the gatekeepers were and had decided not to sneak around them.
You slowly lowered the phone.
Four faces stared back at you.
โWhat?โ Mia asked.
โHe invited us to a beach bonfire tonight.โ
There was an immediate eruption.
โUs?โ Tori squealed.
โAll of us?โ Lena asked.
Jessโs eyes narrowed. โInteresting.โ
Mia grabbed your phone. โLet me see.โ
You handed it over, half-laughing, half-terrified. They passed it around like a sacred document.
Tori looked delighted. โThatโs so cute.โ
Lena looked thoughtful. โInviting the whole group is good.โ
โStrategic,โ Jess said.
โRespectful,โ Lena countered.
โCould be both.โ
Mia was already reading the message again. โSam pretending he knows how to make a fire better than everyone else. Thatโs funny.โ
You took your phone back. โWe donโt have to go.โ
All four of them looked at you like youโd suggested spending the evening watching tax law seminars.
โExcuse me?โ Tori said.
โI mean, we just met them.โ
โCorrect,โ Jess said. โWhich is why we go as a group, remain supportively suspicious, and gather data.โ
โThat sounds ominous.โ
โIt is.โ
Lena folded her arms, still considering. โWhere is it?โ
You typed.
You:ย That sounds fun. Where would it be?
Bucky:ย North end of the beach, past the public pier. Thereโs a permitted fire pit area. Starts around seven, but people drift in after.
You showed them.
Mia nodded slowly. โPublic place. Group setting. Reasonable time.โ
Jess pointed a finger. โWe are not getting murdered at a permitted fire pit.โ
โThatโs reassuring,โ Tori said.
โStatistically.โ
โLess reassuring.โ
You pressed the heel of your hand to your forehead, but you were smiling. โYou guys, itโs okay to say no.โ
Lena looked at you carefully. โDo you want to go?โ
The question quieted the table again.
You looked down at the phone. At Buckyโs name, well not even his name yet, technically just an unknown number you hadnโt saved because saving it felt somehow too intimate and too hopeful at the same time.
Did you want to go?
Yes.
That was the terrifying part. You wanted to go. You wanted to see him again. You wanted to find out whether last night had been a trick of good lighting and grief and tequila, or whether that strange, warm tug in your chest meant something real enough to follow for one more evening.
You wanted to hear his laugh again.
You wanted to watch him try to be smooth and fail with charm.
You wanted to stand near him in the firelight and find out whether his hand would brush yours, whether heโd ask before touching you again, whether heโd look at you like he had on that terrace.
And because you wanted it, fear immediately rose up behind it.
โI donโt know,โ you said softly.
Lenaโs expression didnโt change. โThatโs not what I asked.โ
You exhaled, staring at the table.
Then, barely above a whisper, you admitted, โYes.โ
Toriโs whole face melted.
Jess sighed like the universe had personally inconvenienced her. โThen I guess weโre going to a bonfire.โ
Mia lifted her mimosa as soon as the waiter set it down. โTo questionable but potentially excellent vacation decisions.โ
Lena clinked her glass against Miaโs. โTo staying together as a group.โ
Jess added, โTo background checks conducted in real time.โ
Tori raised hers last. โTo hot men with manners.โ
You laughed, cheeks aching with it, and lifted your water because you were still not confident your body would tolerate champagne yet.
โTo supportively suspicious friends,โ you said.
They all drank to that.
You typed back before you could overthink it.
You:ย Weโre in. But fair warning, my friends are protective and nosy.
His reply came almost immediately.
Bucky:ย Good. Protective friends are usually right to be protective.
Your chest squeezed again.
A second message followed.
Bucky:ย And my friends are nosy too, so itโll be fair.
You smiled down at your phone.
You:ย Should I be worried?
Bucky:ย About Steve? No. About Sam? Maybe.
You:ย That sounds like something someone says right before Sam becomes a problem.
Bucky:ย Heโs already a problem. But heโs mostly harmless.
You:ย Mostly?
Bucky:ย Emotionally exhausting, occasionally loud, very committed to making me look stupid in front of pretty women.
You read the last two words three times.
Pretty women.
Mia saw your expression. โWhat did he say?โ
โNo.โ
โRead it.โ
โNo.โ
Jess leaned across the table. โOh, itโs good.โ
You held the phone away from them, laughing. โIโm allowed to have some private dignity.โ
โNot on this trip,โ Tori said.
You typed:
You:ย Pretty women plural? Should I warn them?
There was a longer pause this time.
Then:
Bucky:ย Woman. Singular.
Your stomach flipped clean over. You put the phone facedown on the table and covered your face.
The girls exploded.
โWhat?โ Lena demanded.
โWhat did he say?โ
โYou canโt react like that and not tell us.โ
โThatโs illegal.โ
You dragged your hands down your face, laughing helplessly as they snagged your phone to read what was said.ย
Tori actually squeaked.
Mia slapped Lenaโs arm repeatedly. โIโm sorry, I know weโre suspicious, but that was hot.โ
Jess stared at the ocean like she was wrestling with herself. โI hate men.โ
โNo, you donโt,โ Tori said.
โI hate that one might be doing well.โ
Brunch became, from that point forward, less of a meal and more of a strategic council.
There were pancakes and omelets and potatoes that Mia described as spiritually restorative. There were iced coffees and mimosas and a second round of water under Lenaโs watchful eye. There was an extremely serious discussion about what one wore to a beach bonfire when one was trying to communicateย effortless vacation goddessย without looking like one had spent three hours spiraling in front of a mirror.
โYou need something breezy,โ Tori said, stabbing a piece of fruit with unnecessary intensity. โBut not too sweet.โ
โWhy not too sweet?โ Mia asked.
โBecause she already has the wounded-heart thing going on. We need hot, not tragic.โ
โI am sitting right here,โ you said.
โAnd we love you,โ Tori replied without missing a beat.
Jess took a sip of coffee. โNo white.โ
Everyone looked at her.
โWhat?โ
โWhite reads bridal adjacent. Weโre not doing that.โ
You grimaced. โAgreed.โ
โBlack?โ Mia suggested.
โFor a beach bonfire?โ Lena made a face. โSheโll look like sheโs attending a seaside funeral.โ
โI could be,โ you said. โFor my engagement.โ
โToo soon?โ Tori asked.
You considered it.
Then you shrugged. โNo, actually. That one was funny.โ
Your friends cheered with the kind of disproportionate enthusiasm only best friends could manage over one mildly dark joke.
It felt good.
That was the strange thing. The day began to unfold around you, and it felt good. Not untouched by pain. Not miraculously healed because a handsome stranger had texted you before brunch. But there were pockets of light again. Little ones. Enough to notice.
After brunch, the five of you wandered through the streets near the beach, drifting in and out of boutiques and tourist shops with woven bags, linen dresses, handmade jewelry, oversized hats no one needed, and candles that all claimed to smell like some variation of ocean, coconut, or emotional rebirth.
Bucky texted again while you were holding up two dresses in a shop mirror, one coral and one deep blue.
Bucky:ย Sam wants me to ask if your group has dietary restrictions. Steve wants me to clarify that Sam is asking because heโs in charge of food, not because this is a trap.
You laughed out loud in the dressing area.
Lena, who was sorting through a rack of cover-ups, looked over. โBucky?โ
You nodded, reading the text aloud.
Mia, from somewhere behind a display of straw hats, called, โTell Sam we appreciate the trap transparency.โ
You typed:
You:ย No restrictions. Mia says thank you for the trap transparency.
Bucky:ย Sam says Mia sounds like leadership material.
You:ย She is. Fear her.
Bucky:ย Noted.
Then, after a beat:
Bucky:ย What are you doing today? Besides letting your friends interrogate my text etiquette.
You snorted.
You:ย Shopping. Possibly being bullied into buying something for tonight.
Bucky:ย Bullied?
You:ย Affectionately.
Bucky:ย Good. Iโd hate to have to defend you from a sundress.
Your smile went soft before you could stop it.
You:ย You think you could?
Bucky:ย Against the dress? Probably.
You:ย Against my friends?
Bucky:ย Absolutely not.
That one you showed the group.
Jess nodded once. โSelf-aware. Good.โ
โHe knows his limits,โ Lena said.
โGreen flag?โ Tori asked.
โDonโt get greedy,โ Jess replied.
In the end, you did not buy the coral dress.
You tried it on and stared at yourself in the boutique mirror, trying to decide whether it was cute or whether you were simply drawn to anything bright because your life had been so gray lately. It fit well. It made your skin look warm. It would have been perfect in another mood.
But the deep blue one made you pause.
It was simple, soft, the kind of dress that moved with you instead of clinging too tightly. Thin straps. A low back. A skirt that floated around your thighs when you turned. It wasnโt trying too hard. It didnโt feel like armor or costume or some desperate attempt to prove you were fine.
It just felt like you.
When you stepped out of the dressing room, your friends went silent.
Your stomach dipped. โBad?โ
Lenaโs expression softened. โNo.โ
Mia pressed a hand to her chest. โAbsolutely not bad.โ
Tori clasped her hands together. โBeach bonfire Bucky is going to walk into the ocean.โ
Jess considered you with the seriousness of a museum curator. โThatโs the one.โ
You looked back at the mirror.
For a second, you tried to see yourself the way Bucky had seemed to see you the night before. Not discarded. Not humiliated. Not some tragic almost-bride carrying around the wreckage of a man who couldnโt love her correctly.
Just a woman in a blue dress on vacation.
Pretty.
Interested.
Maybe even beginning again.
You bought the dress.
The afternoon slipped by in that slow, sun-soaked way vacation days did, stretching and melting until time felt less like a schedule and more like a suggestion. You went back to the hotel with shopping bags swinging from your wrists, changed into swimsuits, and spent a few hours by the pool, where Jess fell asleep under a hat, Tori befriended a retired couple from Michigan, and Mia kept ordering things with pineapple in them while claiming the fruit made them medicinal.
You alternated between reading half a page of a book you were not absorbing and texting Bucky.
He did not overwhelm you. That was what you noticed. He didnโt send message after message demanding your attention. He let conversations breathe. He answered when you answered. He flirted, yes, but carefully, with enough sincerity beneath it that you never felt like he was performing for a reaction.
At 2:13 p.m.:
Bucky:ย Sam has now asked twice if matching shirts would make the bonfire more festive.
You:ย Please tell me you said no.
Bucky:ย I said hell no.
You:ย Strong leadership.
Bucky:ย Steve said I should compromise.
You:ย Did you?
Bucky:ย I compromised by leaving the room.
At 3:02 p.m.:
You:ย Important question: is this bonfire casual casual or โeveryone says casual but somehow looks beautifulโ casual?
Bucky:ย Iโm wearing jeans. Sam will probably dress like heโs hosting a lifestyle show. Steve owns three shirts and somehow looks respectable in all of them.
You:ย That answered nothing and yet told me so much.
Bucky:ย Wear whatever makes you comfortable.
Then, a moment later:
Bucky:ย But for what itโs worth, you looked beautiful last night.
You stared at that one so long your screen dimmed.
You tapped it awake, read it again, then let the phone rest against your chest.
The pool noise moved around you. Laughter, splashing, the hum of conversation, Mia arguing with Jess about whether SPF 30 was enough, Lena reminding Tori to reapply said sunscreen. Everything ordinary. Everything sunlit.
You closed your eyes behind your sunglasses.
A compliment should not feel like this. It should not make your ribs ache. It should not make you feel both shy and seen, both happy and terrified. Your ex had called you beautiful plenty of times. Automatically, sometimes. Lazily. As punctuation. Like saying it meant heโd done the work of loving you.
But Bucky had said it like he remembered.
Like he had thought about you after you left.
You typed back slowly.
You:ย Thank you.
That felt too small, so you added:
You:ย You didnโt look so bad yourself.
His response took thirty seconds.
Bucky:ย That was smooth.
You:ย Iโm capable of growth.
Bucky:ย Proud of you.
The laugh that left you was soft and stupid and impossible to hide.
Jess lifted her hat with two fingers. โYouโre giggling.โ
โI am not.โ
โYou are. Itโs disgusting.โ
โLet her giggle,โ Tori said, floating nearby with her arms draped over the edge of the pool. โShe deserves vacation giggles.โ
Mia pointed at you with her pineapple drink. โVacation giggles are legally protected.โ
Lena watched you from beneath the brim of her hat, her smile small but tender. She didnโt tease. She didnโt need to. Her expression said enough.
Careful, but happy for you.
By late afternoon, the sky had started to soften around the edges.
Everyone returned to the suite with that pleasantly tired, sun-warmed heaviness that made the idea of getting ready feel both exciting and impossible. For a moment, you all stood in the middle of the room surrounded by bags and damp towels and half-finished coffees, silently assessing the amount of effort required to transform yourselves into bonfire-ready women.
Then Mia clapped her hands once. โOkay. We have two and a half hours. Nobody panic.โ
Jess walked past her toward the bathroom. โI call first shower because I am emotionally the oldest.โ
โYou are emotionally a Victorian ghost,โ Lena said.
โExactly. Respect your elders.โ
The room became chaos again.
Music went on, not too loud at first, then louder after Tori found a playlist calledย Post-Breakup Beach Goddess Energyand declared it fate. Dresses were pulled from bags. Makeup bags exploded across the counters.ย
Someone opened the champagne that had been glaring at everyone from the ice bucket since arrival, and though nobody drank more than a glass, it felt symbolic. Less like celebrating a wedding that wasnโt happening. More like reclaiming the trip from everything it had been meant to mourn.
You sat on the edge of the bed in a robe while Lena curled a piece of your hair, your phone resting facedown beside you.
โYouโve been calmer this afternoon,โ she said.
You met her eyes in the mirror. โHave I?โ
โYeah.โ
โI donโt feel calm.โ
โNo,โ she said, smiling faintly. โBut you feel less like youโre waiting for the other shoe to drop.โ
You looked down at your hands.
That was true, maybe. Not fully. The fear was still there, tucked beneath your ribs like a blade you couldnโt quite put down. But it had dulled a little throughout the day. Buckyโs steady presence on the other end of your phone had not fixed you (God, you hated the idea of being fixed by anyone) but it had given your nervous system something new to consider.
Maybe interest didnโt always have to feel like a trap.
Maybe attention didnโt always come with a hook buried inside it.
Maybe a man could be eager without being careless.
Lena finished one curl and moved to the next. โYou know weโre going to be annoying tonight.โ
โIโm counting on it.โ
โGood. Because if he gives me even one weird vibe, Iโm pulling you into the ocean as an emergency evacuation tactic.โ
โThat seems dramatic.โ
โItโll look spontaneous.โ
You laughed, then your phone buzzed.
Lenaโs eyebrows rose.
You picked it up.
Bucky:ย Do I get to tell you Iโm looking forward to tonight or is that too much pressure?
Your smile came before you could stop it.
You:ย You can tell me.
Bucky:ย Iโm looking forward to tonight.
A second message came right after.
Bucky:ย Maybe more than I should admit.
Your pulse warmed.
You:ย That was almost smooth again.
Bucky:ย Damn. Iโm improving too fast.
You:ย Careful. Expectations are dangerous.
Bucky:ย Iโll try to disappoint you a little when you get here.
You laughed.
You:ย Please donโt.
Bucky:ย I wonโt.
The simplicity of it landed harder than any clever line could have.
You stared at the screen until Lena gently tapped your shoulder with the curling iron, safely closed, but still enough to make you look up.
โHey,โ she said softly. โBreathe.โ
You did.
In. Out.
The girl in the mirror looked different than she had that morning. Not because of the makeup, though Mia had done something glowy and unfairly effective with highlighter. Not because of the hair, though the loose waves softened around your face beautifully. Not even because of the blue dress waiting on the hanger behind you.
She looked different because she didnโt look quite so haunted.
Still bruised, yes. Still cautious. Still carrying the ache of betrayal in places no one else could see.
But not empty.
Not defeated.
By the time the sun began sinking toward the horizon, the suite was full of perfume, music, and the frantic final rituals of women getting ready together. Tori kept losing her lip gloss. Jess changed shoes three times before deciding comfort was sexier than blisters. Mia delivered a solemn speech about how everyone should eat something before drinking near open flames. Lena packed a small purse with the energy of someone preparing for both a party and a tactical extraction.
โWater bottle,โ she said, dropping one in.
โPhone charger.โ
โMini sunscreen.โ
โItโll be dark,โ Jess said.
โYou can still burn if youโre spiritually vulnerable.โ
โThat is not science.โ
โBand-Aids,โ Lena continued.
Mia looked over. โAre you packing snacks?โ
Lena paused.
Everyone stared at her.
She unzipped the purse again and added two granola bars.
โLeadership,โ Tori whispered.
You stood near the mirror, smoothing your hands over the blue dress.
It really was the right one. The fabric skimmed over you lightly, catching movement every time you shifted. Your shoulders were bare, your skin still warm from the afternoon sun, your hair loose down your back. You had chosen simple earrings, a thin bracelet, sandals that wouldnโt sink too badly into the sand.
You looked like someone going to a beach bonfire because she wanted to.
Not because she was proving a point.
Not because she was running from pain.
Because she wanted to see a man with blue eyes and a careful smile again.
That was all.
That could be enough for tonight.
Mia came up behind you in the mirror and rested her chin on your shoulder, echoing Lena from that morning. โHow are we feeling?โ
โNervous.โ
โGood nervous or bad nervous?โ
You thought about it.
โBoth.โ
โThatโs allowed.โ
Jess appeared on your other side, holding a tube of lip gloss. โFor the record, if he turns out to be awful, we leave immediately and I personally throw sand at him.โ
โNoted.โ
Tori joined the cluster, already beaming. โBut if heโs wonderful, we also support that.โ
Lena stepped into view last, meeting your eyes in the mirror. โWe support you. Thatโs the actual thing.โ
Your throat tightened.
You looked at all of them reflected around you, your ridiculous, loyal, fiercely loving little army, and for a second the ache of the canceled trip shifted into something else. Because this was still not the bachelorette weekend youโd planned. It wasnโt the beginning of married life. It wasnโt the pretty, predictable future you had thought you were walking toward.
But it was yours.
The laughter. The grief. The hangovers. The group texts. The blue dress. The man waiting somewhere on the beach, probably pretending not to be nervous while his friends gave him hell.
All of it.
Yours.
Your phone buzzed one more time as you were slipping it into your purse.
Bucky:ย No pressure, but Sam just asked if Iโm going to stare at the entrance all night until you arrive. I said no. I may have lied.
You bit your lip against a smile.
You:ย Weโre leaving now.
His reply came almost instantly.
Bucky:ย Good.
Then, after a few seconds:
Bucky:ย Iโll be the one trying not to stare.
You looked up from your phone, cheeks warm.
โWell?โ Jess asked.
You slipped the phone into your purse. โHe says heโll be the one trying not to stare.โ
Tori made an ungodly noise.
Mia pointed toward the door. โMove. We are not wasting that line standing in a hotel suite.โ
The five of you spilled into the hallway in a cloud of perfume and nervous laughter, the door clicking shut behind you. Downstairs, the lobby glowed gold with early evening light. Outside, the air had cooled just enough for the ocean breeze to raise goosebumps along your arms.
The walk toward the beach felt longer than it probably was.
The sky had turned peach and lavender at the edges, the last of the sun melting low behind rooftops and palms. Sandals slapped softly against pavement. Somewhere ahead, beyond the dunes, you could already hear faint music drifting on the wind. Laughter too. The distant crackle of something that might have been fire.
Your friends walked around you in loose formation, still joking, still teasing, still making it impossible for fear to swallow the whole moment.
But beneath their voices, beneath the rustle of your dress and the rush of waves beyond the dunes, your heart beat hard and bright.
You crested the wooden path toward the beach.
A warm orange glow flickered ahead, just out of full view.
And somewhere beyond it, waiting in the firelight, was Bucky.
Summary: Bucky tries desperately to hide his feelings from you but one mission fucks him over for good.
Word Count: 2,493
Content Warnings/tags: Explicit sexual content, 18+ mdni, fem!reader, piv, dom! bucky, mean! Bucky, rough sex, buckyโs a eater!, hurt with comfort, misunderstandings, angst, happy ending!
Notes: Can you tell I lost motivation halfway through..
Youโve never been on good terms with Bucky Barnes. You werenโt sure why. Always in the dark on why he disliked you so much. Aside from the few weird glares you get from him, he was constantly ignoring you. Never greeting you back, never going out of his way to say at least one word to you, not even sparing you a glance during team meetings. You understood he wasnโt a very talkative person in general but he didnโt treat the other members of the New Avengers nearly as cold as he did you.ย
So why? Why did he despise you so much to the point where heโs arguing against going on a mission with you.ย
โNot going withย her.โ Buckyโs cold voice cut through the air but Yelena didnโt even flinch.ย
โEveryone else is busy and Iโm about to go on a mission myself-โย
โSo let me go alone. Iโm more than capable to finish this mission solo.โ He cut her off before she could finish her sentence. Yelena frowned and stared at him for a moment and then glanced at you.ย
โWhatโs wrong with her?โย
Bucky scoffed as if her answer was the most stupid thing she has ever asked him. โSheโs reckless, slow, andย incompetent. All she would do is slow. me. down. Even being near her pisses me off.โ
Your body flushed with humiliation and anger as you clenched your fists. Bucky didnโt even bother to turn around to say it to your face properly. You looked down biting your lip to prevent yourself from cursing him off. But you knew nothing good would come out of it so you sucked it up and let Yelena finish arguing with Bucky.ย
โSheโs coming with you itโs final.โ
Yelena walked off leaving the two of you in silence. You slowly glanced up to see his tense back. Your mouth opened before you could stop it. โNext time you have shit to say, tell me in private you coward.โ
Bucky immediately turned around to meet your eyes. You glared back tenfold and kept going. โI donโt know what I did to you but after this mission Iโll make sure to never even be in your vicinity again. Donโt wanna piss you off.โย
You repeated his past words as his jaw clenched, blue eyes flashing with immediate regret. Before he could say anything you turned and walked away leaving him alone. Just one mission and you donโt have to deal with him again.ย
Other than the awkward silence for basically the whole mission, it went well. The task was simple, collect some missing data from an old Hydra base and leave. Finding and entering the snowy base didnโt prove itself to be difficult at all.ย
โFound something.โ You said while scanning the practically ancient computer. Bucky nodded and slowly made his way over.ย
โThatโs it. Use the flash drive and letโs get out of here.โ He muttered quietly.ย
You plugged the drive into the computer sucking out all the data. More awkward silence followed as you saw Bucky not so discreetly move an inch or two away from you. You bit back a scoff. After the drive was finished you both reached to take it out at the same time. Accidentally, your fingers brushed against his which made him jerk back like you shocked him. Your eyes widened slightly as you turned your body towards him. His whole body was tense and he looked mildly uncomfortable. His audacity truly shocked you. You angrily took out the drive and shoved a finger to his chest.ย
โDo I disgust you that much to the point where you canโt be within a foot of me? How about my touch? Iโm touching you right now, are you going to burn your shirt just because I was on it!?โย
His mouth opened to say something but then a very small click was heard thanks to his enhanced hearing from the serum. Without thinking, Bucky grabbed your body and ran out the door. You didnโt even have time to protest before heat engulfed your surroundings and a new ringing developed in your ears. Buckyโs body landed on top of yours with a groan. The snow softening both your falls as he immediately lifted up his head.ย
โAre you hurt?!โย
You opened your eyes trying to say something but your voice was stolen away when he cupped you face with such tenderness you didnโt know even existed from him. Your eyes glanced behind him to see the small base you were just in engulfed in flames. An explosion.ย
โAre you hurt!โ
His voice was raw with panic and concern. It was odd seeing him thisโฆworried.
โIโm fine..!โ
Buckyโs wide eyes softened immediately as he let out a relieved sigh and dropped his head against your shoulder. You froze not sure what the hell was even going on. A few more moments of silence between you two passed before you finally noticed the piece of metal stuck in his shoulder.ย
โYouโre hurt.โ You whispered before sitting up.ย
โIโm fine.โ
Whatever moment you guys had was gone as he looked away like he did something he should be ashamed of. You reached out towards him gently touching his shoulder. His body tensed as his eyes snapped back to you.ย
โWe need to fix that up now.โ You told him while standing up. He didnโt protest as you dragged him up. A gush of wind sent snow and painfully cold air into your face. Bucky took that into account instantly and guided you guys to start moving towards the direction of the car.ย
โItโs cold we need to start moving now-โ
โThe carโs way too far away, thereโs a nearby cave we can stop at and wait until this snowstorm stops.โย
Your arm gripped him and started moving to the opposite direction and to the cave. Slowly, he let himself get dragged around by you.ย
The cold lessened inside the small cave but it was still freezing. Your hands shook as you winced at the sight of the metal scrap inside him.ย
โI donโt have any bandages on me..โ You helplessly whispered and touched his shoulder.ย
โItโs fine. I heal fast thanks to the serum.โ he told you dryly and yanked it out immediately. Your face contorted in a look of concern as your fingers hovered over the open wound.ย
Unconsciously, you leaned in to observe it properly. Buckyโs breath hitched at the proximity. His eyes closed slowly as your gentle touch examined his wound. He leaned involuntarily closer to you letting himself enjoy your presence. After a few moments you realized your mistake and instantly pulled away from him thinking he was uncomfortable with you feeling him up. Instant disappointment filled him as you apologized.ย
โNothing to be sorry about.โ He said quietly looking back at you with soft eyes that you mistaken to be tiredness.
โYou should get some rest Iโll be on lookout.โ You stood up but his voice stopped you.ย
โStay.โ his voice sounded a bit desperate. โPlease.โ
Your eyes widened at his tone but you slowly retreated back in front of him. He didnโt bother saying anything after that. Just more awkward silence. You slowly zoned out while looking outside. The snow was still falling pretty fast to get to the car now. At any moment-
โYour cold.โ He finally spoke.ย
You turned towards him โIโll live.โ
He frowned shaking his head before standing up. Your eyes followed him as he slowly unzipped his jacket.ย
โBucky I donโt need your jacket.โ
โNot giving you my jacket. We will both freeze in the next few hours if we donโt warm up now.โ
He said plainly before sliding off his shirt next. Your eyes widened as you immediately turned the other way. He let out a small chuckle and through his shirt onto the ground next to you.ย
โStrip.โ He demanded quietly.ย
โWhat?โ You glanced back in surprise. He raised an eyebrow at the implication and unbuckled his belt.ย
โBody heat from both of us will keep each other warm. Come on.โย
Mindlessly you stared at his naked body before he leaned down and unzipped your jacket
โCan Iโฆ?โ
Your head nodded before you could actually think what you agreed to. His hand slid up your body while yanking off your shirt. You gasped and covered your chest as his lips quirked up slightly. His fingers moved to your pants and took them off next leaving you both naked. Bucky laid down next to you before carefully dragging you down with him. His strong arms wrapped around your body from behind as you froze. Warmth spread all over your body and you were almost positive it wasnโt from his body heat.ย
โBetter?โย
โ..Yeah..โย
More silence passed by as he just held you in his arms. To clear up some tension you slowly spoke up.ย
โThought you wouldโve just left me for dead inside the base since you hate me so much.โ
Your dry sarcastic comment made him frown against your head. Evidently from the more silence that passed that he didnโt find you funny in the slightest. Your heart shrunk a little at the realization that he didnโt even bother denying what you said. You didnโt say anything after that. But then he quietly told you,ย
โI donโt hate youโฆโ
That made your head turn slightly. โWhat?โ
โSaid I donโt hate you.โ
You let out a small breath before speaking again. โYou donโt have to lie for my benefit.โ
โIโm serious.โ He told you firmly. You stayed silent for a moment.ย
โThen why do you treat me like a burden..? Why do you treat me so differently from the others, those things you said..โ Your small voice faded off.ย
The truth? Bucky was hopelessly in love with you. Since the moment he saw you on the team. He was worried how easy it was to fall in love after everything that happened to him. But thinking about you was like a breath of fresh air, sun on a rainy day, he just couldnโt stop himself.ย
โI donโt want to get more attached to you than I already am..โ He whispered against your head, grip tightening slightly. โI care about you so much words canโt even describe it.โ
Your breath hitched as he kept going. โThought if I ignored you my feelings would go away and thatโll be the end of it. But oh god I canโt stop staring at you whenever youโre nearbyโฆ.even being near you shuts my whole goddamn body downโฆโ
Suddenly all those weird glares and refusals to be near you made sense. Your breath picked up as his fingers slid down your stomach.ย
โThought I couldโve lost you earlier. I was so scared..โ Bucky whispered quietly as you gasped. His fingers lazily pressed against your clit and rubbed it.ย
Your hand grabbed his wrist but made no attempt to stop him.
โI know I was meanโฆIโm sorry and I promise I didnโt mean any of the things I said.โ
He sighed while you squirmed against his body. โYou donโt know how many nights I stayed up jerking off alone in bed thinking about youโฆIโve imagined how you would taste, what positions you would like, how you would feel when you came around my cock..โ
Bucky was past the point of shame. Your face blushed at his dirty confession. he rubbed your clit harder as he whispered into your ear.ย
โCan I make it up to you? Please let me apologize..โ
Without hesitation you nodded eager to get your back blown out by him. He pulled away leaving you momentarily cold and disappointed from the lack of his body heat. But the feeling left quickly as he pulled your legs apart and dove in with no hesitation. You moaned as his tongue worked aggressively against your wet pussy and throbbing clit. His hand held your leg apart before his free one came up to finger you.ย
โOh god!โ
โGod canโt help you now baby..โ
His fingers curled in deeper as the sound of his shameless slurping filled the cave. You helplessly squirmed against his face as he groaned. His dick pressed painfully against the floor as he fought himself from finishing just from eating you out. Buckyโs lips wrapped around your clit and sucked hard. You let out a choked moan which encouraged him to keep moving.ย
โB-Bucky please!โย
Your hips grinded against his face before cumming on him. His fingers struggled to speed up due to your pussy violently clenching. Your eyes were blown wide from the pleasure. He pulled out his fingers and immediately positioned himself against you.ย
โPlease let me fuck you baby.โ He begged pathetically.ย
You nodded tugging him down to kiss you. He moaned forcing his tongue into your mouth. He kissed like he was waiting for this very moments for years. Like he was absolutely starved for you. His hand jerked off his dick a few times before rubbing it against your wet slit.ย
โStop teasing..โ You complained as he let out a small laugh.ย
He slammed into you immediately making your back arch off the floor. His hips moved with a concerning amount of stamina you didnโt even was possible. Bucky gave you no time to adjust around his huge cock as he fucked you to oblivion. Your loud cries and moans kept spurring him to dick you down harder and harder. He groaned in pleasure as your nails raked down his back hard enough to leave marks. He silently prayed they wouldnโt heal at all so he could stare at them in the mirror after all of this was over.ย
โYou feel soย fuckingย good. Canโt believe I deprived myself of your pussy for this long.โย
Your eyes squeezed shut so overwhelmed with pleasure and him. You blindly wrapped your arms his neck. He slightly winced at your touch pressing against his wound but he was too far gone to actually care. He was just focused on making you cum now.ย
โSay youโre mine baby..say you belong to me now.. I promise to treat you so goodโฆโ
โYes! Yes! Yes!โ You agreed to whatever he was saying.ย
Bucky felt his orgasm approaching as he fucked you faster and harder to make sure you came first. With a loud cry your pussy clenched around his dick milking every last drop from him. His eyes squeezed shut as he let out a shaky groan. The two of you panted hard staying like that for several more moments. Carefully, he pulled out and collapsed next to you. His arms pulled you into him body as he kissed your head gently.ย
โIโm sorry. Iโll spend every day making it up to you but please, please tell me youโll be mine.โย
His voice asked with pure desperation and honesty. You lazily cuddled into him and nodded.ย
โWouldโve been a lot easier to do this from the start.โ