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ellievsbear

oozey mess
hello vonnie
One Nice Bug Per Day

Origami Around

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$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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Product Placement
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Mike Driver
styofa doing anything
art blog(derogatory)
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
trying on a metaphor
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
cherry valley forever

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@juvenilearson
this was missing the incredibly important next picture where she got mad at the camera like its their fault she bit the soap
No joke this vine has a better understanding of transmisogyny than 40% of this website
didnât know if youâd care if i came back
pairing: bucky barnes x curvy!reader
warnings: sweetness. tiny bit of angst but mostly fluff fluff fluff. grumpy x grumpy sweethearts who havenât defined the relationship lol. cuddling. blink and youâll miss it mention of body insecurities. uhhh if iâm missing something that should be tagged pls let me know!
words: 1.7k
notes: idk where this came from but if youâre noticing repeating themes in my writings - no youâre not.
anyway! thank you in advance for reading, i hope you enjoy. as always, reblogs and comments are welcome and so appreciated! let me know your thoughts đŠľ
âGet out,â you speak, your ever present annoyance clear in your voice while your stone face is completely unaffected as you type on your phone, not bothering to so much as glance at the door. Youâre comfy in your bed while your space heater hums and you keep typing away as you hear the door click shut once again.
Your blanket is pulled and your bed shifts beneath you as you type faster, working to finish your thought before it slips away completely. Still not looking at anything but your screen,
âGet off my bed,â you demand to no avail.
âShut up,â he grumbles, his own constant annoyance audible as he easily wraps you up in his strong arms. Your soft body presses against his as you maintain focus on your phone, rolling into his hold while maneuvering your device from hitting him. One last sentence and youâre done. You hit save and then let your phone drop after locking it.
âWhat happened to hello?â he asks harshly as he holds you close.
âYou were busy,â you shrug matter of factly, face in his chest as you get comfortable.
âLook at me,â he demands, forcing you to angle your face to meet his eye as you sigh with a roll of your eyes.
âWhat?â you humph. âIâve been gone three days, you havenât even had time to miss me.â
âI donât care if youâve only been gone three minutes,â he squeezes your jaw a bit, eliciting a sharp breath from you as your gaze softens up at him. âIf youâre not right next to me, doll, Iâm missing you.â
The sincerity and warmth in his normally icy blue eyes has your heart melting just a little more. He missed you⌠he really missed you?
Itâs atypical for you, but you donât have anything to say in refute as you stare back at him - a part of you waiting to see something that will give him away and confirm your suspicions that heâs lying. The other just wanting to commit that look in his eyes and the gorgeous color to memory.
He missed you.
No oneâs ever missed you beforeâŚnot really.
He came to your room of his own free will, just to see you? Heâs holding you so close and you donât think youâve ever felt so warm or welcome.
Or wanted.
And heâs not even trying to get you out of your clothes. Heâs just here. To be here. To see you. Because he missed you.
He missed you.
âAnd for the record,â he continues speaking, interrupting your thoughts, âI wonât ever be too busy for you.â His eyes soften even more as he notices the growing emotion welling in them as you work to maintain your facade of careless, feel nothing, grump. He knows the feeling. He knows you.
He brushes his lips softly on your forehead and he feels your fingers tighten ever so slightly in his shirt as you let yourself relax a bit more into him, âNot for you,â he mumbles his promise.
You fight a shudder as you blink your eyes, batting your lashes in an attempt to fight the sting of welling tears before they have a chance to fall. Damn this man and his uncanny ability to have your walls crumbling around him within mere minutes.
Youâre still not even sure how this all started. It was one night together on a mission.
And then another night together back home.
And then another.
And another.
And then an afternoon together. And then a morning.
And then a full day.
Into the next.
And then it was sharing beds every now and again.
And dinners.
And then more and more frequent sleepovers. And now itâs? You arenât sure.
It went from just desperate late night sex toâŚto whatever this is.
But, whatever it is, you think it might be for the better. Bucky helps you feelâŚbetter.
Safe.
Cared for.
Loved.
You push that thought away. Thatâs justâŚtoo much.
Isnât it?
You cuddle into him despite yourself, nuzzling into his chest for comfort.
âSorry.â
Itâs nearly a whisper, but he hears you. His big hand rubbing soothingly up and down your back as he keeps you to him.
âI wan-,â you bite your tongue, swallowing the lump growing in your throat.
I wanted to, you were going to say, to see you first. Just didnât want to bug you.
You hear his response in your mind as you thoughtlessly press your lips. âYouâre not a bug. Youâre not a burden.â You know what heâll say, and you want to believe him. But you donât think you can hear him say it right now without the damn breaking.
You try to clear your throat as you let your hands wander him and speak a little louder now,
âI missed you.â
Heâs smiling softly, not that you can see it, as he grabs your hand gently caressing his side and brings it to his lips. Your gaze follows the movement curiously before you watch him kiss your hand. Your stomach flutters at the small act of affection.
Bucky tugs you closer and you lift your leg to hook over his, just wanting to be closer, to feel him more.
âAnd how dare you try to kick me out of my own room,â he scolds.
You laugh, real and true as you shove him a bit. âThis is not your room,â you deny.
His toothy grin is infectious as he eyes you. âOh yeah?â he says, reaching behind you to grab something, âthen whatâs my pillow doing in here?â
You freeze for half a second, he notices but doesnât mention it, as your eyes widen ever so slightly. No, you think, you definitely put that back before you left.
You quirk a brow as you turn to see his pillow in his hand before he drops it back on the bed. You know you put his pillow back, and waitâŚthat wasnât even the pillow you had.
Why would his pillow be in here, unlessâŚ
âYou slept in here?â you ask, your voice much softer than you intended as you look in his eyes.
His smirk has lightened drastically, but still gently tugs on the corner of his lips as he tries to read your thoughts. He nods a little, breaking eye contact for a quick moment as he wets his lips out of habit,
âI missed you.â
Your own lips quirk at the corner as you feel your heart swell.
âAnd you were due back here at four this morning,â he adds.
He was waiting for you.
You knew someone at the tower was monitoring the flight itinerary but youâd assumed it was Stark or Fury. Now you know it was him. And your heart somehow feels like itâs gonna burst out of your chest as your tummy tingles with something you donât think you can actually name.
But itâs good.
Better than good.
Oh god.
Maybe it is loveâŚ
He turns to lay on his back and takes you with him as he does.
You groan a bit and try to shuffle off him, not wanting to crush him despite his super soldier status. He doesnât let you, not that youâre surprised. He keeps his hands on you, one on your bent thigh and the other around your back, resting protectively on the curve of your waist meeting your hip.
He loves the feeling of your body on his, revels in your weight resting on top of him - in every circumstance. Your curves, your softness, your warmth.
You.
âDonât even think about it,â he grumbles, letting his eyes close as he relaxes into the mattress. You sigh, staring at his contented face while his hands gently squeeze you comfortingly.
You watch him for a while, enraptured by his peaceful rest until you really feel his breaths even out. Heâs sleeping like a baby as you lay on top of him and you canât help your disbelieving titter. How this is comfortable for him, youâll never know.
You let a hand touch his cheek gently, your fingers brushing his five oâclock shadow. You angle yourself to put a delicate kiss on his stubbly jaw. You donât notice his nose twitch a bit or the tiniest furrow of his brow as you pull away.
Your fingers card through his hair as you admire him. You take a deep breath. If you can feel it, you can say itâŚ
Another stuttered breath. âI,â you start, âI love you,â you murmur softly, sure he canât hear you. You lean just a touch closer, lips just brushing his cheek. âI really love you.â
You feel a little proud of yourself as you pull away. You said it. You donât know the last time you told someone you loved them. Canât remember the last time you really felt it, or felt safe enough to say it. Sure, heâs sleeping, but still. You said it. And if you said it now, you know you can say it again. One day. When heâs awake. When youâre ready. You smile to yourself before you let your head rest on his chest, content now to sleep for a bit too in the comfort of his presence.
Buckyâs heart is beating so damn loudly heâs a little terrified youâll hear it as you make yourself more comfortable atop him. He wants to squeeze you and tell you how much he loves you too, to kiss you til youâre dizzy and make sure you really understand just how deeply in love with you he is.
But he knows he wasnât really meant to hear that just now. And despite that, heâs really glad that he did.
Because you love him.
You really love him.
He knows this is new to you, and youâre still trying to get used to it, to figure it all out, despite the fact that thereâs no mystery here for you to solve. But he doesnât mind moving at whatever pace you want or need. After so long, he never thought heâd find this. Never thought heâd feel this again.
And then came you.
Youâre his perfect match. And his best friend.
And you love him.
Buckyâs never really felt lucky in his life. But here and now, with you starting to mumble softly as you lay on his chest, trusting him, loving him, well heâd consider himself the luckiest man in the world.
this is SO perfect! i love the details you put into their facial/physical expressions during dialogue. it adds to it so much more in such a precise way if iâm making any sense?
LOVE how cute they are. thank you for this đĽşđŤśđť
me.
To give more context: The reviewer was Jean Lorrain, who also was gay. Both showed up to the duel and both missed on purpose.
gay people can never just ask each other out
I love going viral on tumblr.com. Itâs like if you stood in a field and said some of the stupidest shit a human being is capable of and then like fifty thousand crows attacked you
Donât do this to me
my brother in christ you made the post
âyouâre my best friend, now iâve got no one to tell iâve lost my best friend.â
âŚ.
thereâs something so special i think abt this being my most popular post.
one thing no one ever teaches you is that you can just make things nicer and more intentional- you can take your energy drink, pour it in a rocks glass over ice with a slice of lime on the rim, and sip it slow. and you'll think, "wow i am the biggest faggot to have ever lived". and you know what? you're right.
We all have that one guy we hate doing night watch with on our ship
"I swear to god i just saw something" Ohhh my goddd
you can't just not talk to babies after they're born to see what little fucked-up language they develop. you can't do that anymore. if you try to not hold a baby after it's born to see what happens they'll say "hey! hold your baby!". and if you wanna just put a bunch of babies alone on an island together, to see what happens, they'll stop you. you can't do any of that anymore. because of woke
Reposting this because I need to materialize it somewhere.
where?
Come Find Me | Bucky Barnes x Reader
I am back back back again! I have missed writing so much, I just don't have nearly the amount of time that I used to. But I'm in my last semester of school! So hopefully I'll be back on a consistent fanfic grind once I'm done :) PS: If you know what the title is referencing, you get a big hug from me.
Word Count: 13,439
Warnings: blood, talk of violence, reader injury
Bucky checked his texts every few minutes. Initially, he lied to himself about the reason behind it. He told himself he mustâve opened his conversation with you accidentally, or that he mistook an email notification for a text from you. Simple, innocent mistakes.Â
Either way, he always ended up staring at your side of the conversation, hoping for a gray ellipsis to appear.Â
But after a while, he could no longer deny the truth- and why would he want to? You were coming home.Â
You hadnât been gone long, and your mission was projected to be a cake walk. But he couldnât help it; he missed you. He missed you when you went on missions, when you visited your parents out of state, when you slept in your room down the hall. Missing you was part of him now, woven into the fabric of his being. It matched the material of his soul perfectly, like he was always meant to feel this way.
He fired off a quick âlet me know when you landâ message and waited, hoping youâd write back soon.Â
Usually, you texted him when you were headed back to the compound. It gave him a countdown to your return and something to look forward to. It also signaled to him that you were, in fact, coming home alive. Even if a bit banged up, you were well enough to shoot him a message. And that always eased his worries.
Today, however, was different. No text, no call.
It struck him as bizarre and sounded Buckyâs internal alarms. But he silenced them as best he could. He wasnât going to let himself get worked up, not when you had a perfectly good reason for not messaging him. Â
This was your first time leading a mission with a new recruit under your wing. Bucky knew you devoted your full attention to your trainee, giving him absolutely everything you had. You took this position- as well as your pupilâs safety and success- very seriously. He knew you were probably busy helping your recruit learn a swath of new things, and who was he to interrupt?
Bucky opened the log and saw your jet had been marked as âincomingâ only minutes ago. A sigh of relief left his chest and eased his muscles. Sure, he wouldâve rather heard that information from you, but it didnât matter. Your jet would be here soon; he had no reason to worry.Â
The moment he saw that your jet was homeward bound, he lost the ability to think about anything else. He counted the minutes, the seconds. You had to be close, right? The log wouldnât have said âIncomingâ if you were still hours away.Â
To pass the time, he folded laundry, answered emails, reread a few chapters of The Hobbit- but he couldnât focus. He thought of you, only you. And no matter how hard he tried to distract himself, he couldnât hang around his room any longer. He couldnât stand it. He needed to be there when the jet landed. He needed to meet you on the steps of the aircraft and wrap you in a bear hug.Â
And there was no real harm in waiting near the hangar, was there? âIf anything,â he told himself, âItâs actually more convenient for her if I meet her there. That way, I can carry her bag- sheâs probably tired.âÂ
Anything to rationalize his desperate need to be near you.
He knew in his heart of hearts that you didnât need him to carry your bag or help you off the jet. But this lie was all the convincing he needed. Without hesitation, he ditched his room and set off down the hall, your impending homecoming pulling him forward.Â
It was in that moment he noticed just how far the elevator was from his room. The walk seemed to stretch on and on, the hallway growing longer with each step. And how had he never noticed how slowly the elevator moved? It slid downward at a glacial pace, toying with his patience. For such an expensive, state of the art building, the elevator moved like an ancient piece of turn of the century machinery. Bucky cursed Tonyâs engineering.Â
Everything seemed to add time, multiplying his moments without you. The universe liked toying with him, teasing him. And this was just another cruel joke.Â
The moment the doors opened, Bucky sprang free out into the hallway. He knocked into Clint and his group of trainees and called an apology over his shoulder without stopping. He couldnât stop, couldnât waste time- not when you could arrive at any moment.Â
His field of view narrowed into tunnel vision, only allowing for visualization of the path toward the hangar. He didnât greet his fellow team members or allow for distraction. You were his one-track mind. That is, until something stopped him.Â
âShit, sorry, man,â your trainee, Jake, laughed as he bumped into Bucky. He took a step to the side and attempted to continue down the hall, but Bucky blocked his path.Â
âJake?â Bucky eyed a bloody gash on Jakeâs eyebrow, âwhen did you guys get back?â
Jake gave a casual shrug and checked his phone, âI donât know, five minutes ago?â
âOh, okayâŚâ Bucky reached for his phone, but found his screen void of notifications. If you landed five minutes ago with your trainee safe and sound, why didnât you send him a message? It was out of character for you.Â
âWell, whereâs your partner in crime? Or crime fighting, I guess,â Bucky tried to joke, but his tone was strained. He eyed each person who came around the corner, hoping to find your face. âDid you see which way she went?â
âNah, sheâs not here,â Jake was scrolling through Instagram, only half paying attention.
Buckyâs disappointed sigh left his chest deflated, empty. âOh, did she say where she was going? Or when sheâd be back?â
Jake pulled his focus from his phone and stared at Bucky with confusion on his face. His brows pulled together, his mouth hung slightly ajar. But finally, he made sense of Buckyâs words. âOHHH, okay, my bad- I think there was a miscommunication just now.â
Bucky sighed again- this time, with relief.Â
âYeah, no, sheâs not here,â Jake continued, âbecause she didnât make it back.â
Buckyâs ears started ringing.Â
The sharp, piercing sound blocked out voices. Footsteps on the tile. Maybe Jake was trying to speak to him, but Bucky heard only the shrill sound of shock. Seconds later, his nerves fell numb. The utter absence of sensation disconnected him from his body. He was lost in a liminal atmosphere with no stability, no purchase. His entire being was shutting down, one sense at a time.
Bucky told himself to focus, to compute what heâd heard. He did his best to make sense of Jakeâs words, but to no avail. His mind simply couldnât understand the phrase âshe didnât make it backâ. The words had shed their meaning entirely and sounded foreign to Bucky as they rattled around his skull. Goosebumps rose over the surface of his skin, and a cold sweat created a sheen across his face. He feared he might get sick.Â
âI- Iâm sorry,â he forced himself back into his body, back to the present. âI donât think I understand.âÂ
âThings got pretty hairy- this was not the easy mission they said it would be,â Jake scoffed and rolled his eyes. âItâs not fair, I definitely got a way harder assignment for my first mission than all the other new agents, and I think itâs-âÂ
Buckyâs glare couldâve sliced Jake in half, âget to the point.â Â
âRight, um,â Jake continued, âI told her over comms that I was leaving. I gave her plenty of time to meet me at the jet, but she didnât answer. And she never came outside.â He shrugged, âI had to leave for my own safety.â
âSo, you just-â Bucky felt himself losing his grip. âYou left her there? Alone?â He didnât realize he was shouting, didnât realize heâd drawn attention to himself- until Agent Hill showed up.
She placed a light hand on Buckyâs tense shoulder, but instantly withdrew. He was shaking, practically vibrating under her palm. âIs there a problem here, guys? I donât want-â
âHe left her behind,â was all Bucky could manage.
Maria stared at Jake in disbelief, âyou did what?â
A strange mixture of rage and heartbreak seethed behind Buckyâs eyes, âYou donât just abandon your partner-â
Jakeâs attitude disgusted Bucky. He was detached, irritated. He rolled his eyes like an insolent child. âRelax, man. Jesus Christ, this isnât the army. I didnât promise to âleave no man behindâ or whatever-â
Bucky had heard enough. He lifted jake by the collar of his shirt, twisting the material in his metal fist. Jakeâs head sent a sickening thud resounding through the space as Bucky forced him against the nearest wall.
âWhat the fuck?â Jake squirmed in Buckyâs grasp, âThere are casualties in the field all the time, why am I being punished for-â
Bucky released Jake at once, sending him crashing to the floor.Â
His voice was quiet, hollow. âCasualties?â He swallowed hard, âIs she-â
Jake shrugged at he rubbed at the bruise forming on his neck. âI donât know, I assume so. I didnât stick around to find out.âÂ
And just like that, Bucky was gone.Â
He took off down the hall, forcing himself forward as a soul-crushing panic swallowed him whole. No matter how many times he blinked, no matter how fervently he shook his head, he couldnât rid his mind of the picture Jake painted for him. Each time he shut his eyes he saw you- alone. Your bloodied, broken body laying collapsed against a wall of a Hydra base. Your skin slick with blood. Your skin cold. Void of life.Â
He moved quickly, but not quick enough. He simply couldnât outrun the familiar feeling closing in on him. His heavy, well-worn cloak of grief wound its way across his shoulders and twisted itself around his neck. He knew the suffocating sensation all too well. It weighed him down but couldnât dampen his pace, nothing could; not when your life hung in the balance.Â
He was too well acquainted with loss by now, too familiar with mourning. Thereâd been a time when he wondered if heâd ever grieve again. Heâd lost his family, his friends, himself- what else was there? What more could he possibly lose? But the moment he met you, he knew heâd one day mourn again. He just didnât realize that time would come so soon.Â
A startling cold prickled at his skin, his lungs refused to inflate. How much time did you have left? How long would it take him to get to you? Were you even-
Hillâs voice yanked him out of his spiral, âBarnes, hey-â She made a grab at his shoulder, but her feeble attempt was no match for Buckyâs pace. âWhere are you going?â
âTo get her back.â Buckyâs tone was firm, resolute. He was going to bring you home or die trying.
âI donât think thatâs a good idea,â Hill nearly tripped over her own feet as she tried to keep up with Buckyâs long strides. âYou heard what Jake said, itâs a dangerous location- more dangerous than we thought. I think it might be best to wait it out for a few days, let things calm down and then-â
Bucky turned suddenly, stopping Maria in her tracks. âIâm not just going to leave her there.â
Maria shrunk away from the fierceness in his eyes, âI know youâre upset, but she might not be-â
âI donât care.â His gruff tone dissolved, making way for the fear heâd so desperately tried to hide. âWhether sheâs alive or-â he couldnât bring himself to voice the alternative.Â
Bucky knew what it was like to be assumed dead. He knew what it was like to be left in the field.Â
âShe deserves to come home,â he said.
Maria couldnât argue with him.Â
âRound up as many members of the med team as you can and have them meet me in the hangar. Weâre leaving in ten minutes- sooner if we can.â Bucky turned and resumed his previous path, âIâll be in the armory.â
Bucky grabbed as much weaponry as his duffel would carry without splitting at the seams and made his way to the hangar. He hoped to find ten, maybe fifteen members of the medical team waiting for him on the jet. He wasnât sure of your condition, didnât know how many breaths you had left. He wanted to give you the best possible chance at surviving the onslaught you endured.Â
But when he turned the corner into the hangar, he found only three scrub-clad bodies.Â
âIs this it?â Bucky boarded the jet and dropped his bag to the floor. He eyed the scant amount of medical support, their uncertain expressions. His hopes of bringing you home alive dwindled.
A nurse whoâd stitched Bucky up more times than he could count gave him a nervous smile. âThe med bay is swamped, the team could barely afford to let us come with you.âÂ
Bucky didnât want to hear it. He didnât want excuses or rationalizations. All he wanted was to bring you home with your heart still beating. And three medical professionals, he decided, was better than none.Â
The flight to your location only gave Bucky more time to worry. He obsessively checked his weaponry, hovered over the med teamâs supplies. But no amount of double and triple checking could save him from the spiral. He traveled down the path of every possible âwhat if?â, leading him only to heartache. No matter where he searched, he couldnât find a positive outcome. And though he didnât want to acknowledge the odds, he knew yours were slim- impossible, even.Â
And as the jet grew closer to your location, Bucky steeled himself for what he knew heâd find: you, his best friend, his reason for living, his everything- dead. Cold. Lifeless. None of the horrors he faced in the past could compare; no pain could ever be greater. Bucky knew heâd hurt for the rest of his life.
The clouds parted as the jet began its descent. Slowly, a large stone building appeared out of the fog like a monster in the horror movies you loved so much. It stood in an otherwise empty clearing, its shadow looming over the dying grass. Smoke billowed from holes in the roof, the walls. Whatever happened here was catastrophic. Disastrous.Â
Buckyâs heart sat lodged in his throat as he imagined you trapped in there. Goosebumps rose over the surface of his skin as he stared at the looming structure. He had to get you out, even if he died trying.
Just before the jet touched down, an idea popped into Buckyâs head. It scaled the high walls heâd tried to erect to protect himself from thoughts of your demise and grabbed him by the throat. It was smart- brilliant, actually. He was shocked he could even think straight given the circumstances.
âFRIDAY,â Bucky called out, âis comm 1209 working?â He shoved his own comm in his ear and waited for a response.Â
âComm 1209 is on and in range,â Friday said. âWould you like me to connect you?â
He couldnât say yes fast enough.
A few staticky clicks and pops vibrated against Buckyâs eardrum as his comm connected to yours. But he was too scared to speak. What if you didnât answer? What if he heard you take your dying breaths? Just the thought was enough to make him sick.
He owed it to you, though, to at least try. Heâd always said heâd do anything for you, that heâd risk it all for you- and he meant it every time. If reaching out to you over comms exposed him to something horrible, something traumatic and unforgettable, at least he tried. At least he attempted to keep his promise. And after everything heâd been through, what was one more life-shattering, soul-crushing nightmare?
âH- umâŚâ Bucky swallowed the large lump obstructing his throat. âHello?â He waited a moment, holding his breath the entire time, and tried again. âHello?â
He waited.Â
No response.
âDoll? Itâs me. Itâs BuckyâŚâÂ
The dead silence on the other end of the line dragged on. It seemed like his words disappeared into the air, unacknowledged. Unheard. Maybe the sound of his voice was reverberating inside your ear as you lay dying. Or maybe he was talking to your corpse.
 The thought made him nauseous.
âPlease, sweetheart. If youâre there- if youâre able- just say one word. Say anything,â he pled. A long bout of silence followed.
He clenched and released his metal fist again and again, desperate to rid himself of the panic settling into his bones. He was stupid to think you survived, stupid to let himself be optimistic. He made it here as quickly as he could, but he couldnât save you. He was too late.Â
He wanted to take one of his many weapons and turn it on himself.Â
But a small sound stopped him.
âBuckâŚâ
He almost fell to his knees. At the sound of your voice, an overwhelming warmth banished the cold that infiltrated his bones. Against all odds, you were alive.
A deep sigh of relief seeped from Buckyâs lungs, âSweetheartâŚâÂ
A hurricane of emotion rattled against the storm doors inside Buckyâs mind. He couldnât stop thinking about the âalmostsâ. How he almost lost you, how you almost died alone in a Hydra base. But he couldnât allow it to swallow him- not yet. There was no time for a breakdown. He needed to move, he needed to get to you.Â
He shrugged off the grief that rested heavy on his shoulders and swallowed the impending sob that vibrated inside his throat. âIâm here- Iâm gonna come get you. Just tell me where-â
A staunch refusal came from your end of the comm, âNo- noâŚâ You took a sharp, rattling breath, âno way.â
Bucky didnât like the way you had to fight to get your words out. You were clearly struggling, doing everything in your power to stay on this side of consciousness. He wondered how much time you had left.
But still, there was a familiar strength to your voice. Maybe it was the adrenaline, maybe it was the renewed hope of rescue; something was keeping you alive.Â
âItâs okay, sweetheart, just tell me where you are. The jet just landed. Iâm gonna get you out and-â
âI said- I said no,â you breathed. âYou canât c-come in here, itâs too dangerous⌠we were a-ambushed.â
Even in your condition, even when Bucky was your only hope of rescue, his safety was your first thought. Youâd rather die alone than put Buckyâs life at risk; the thought made his cheeks pink and filled his chest with a fuzzy warmth. But he didnât have time to enjoy the feeling.
âIf you donât tell me where you are, Iâll just sweep the whole building,â Bucky said, using your worry against you. âThat means more opportunities for me to run into Hydra operatives. More time inside the base- itâll be way more dangerous.â He could practically see you rolling your eyes, âso itâs probably better if you just give me a direct route, donât you think?â
Bucky smiled to himself as he envisioned you on the other end. He was certain you were arguing with yourself, cursing his rationale.Â
He waited for you to come at him with a sharp retort or a sarcastic quip but heard nothing. The silence on your end of the line dragged on. And on. It lasted far too long for Buckyâs comfort. Surely, you couldnât still be thinking about his proposition? Heâd given you more than enough time to make up your mind, more than enough time to come up with a response. It was time you didnât have.Â
What if youâd fallen unconscious? What if, in those quiet moments, your soul vacated this earth?
Bucky couldnât take it anymore. He disembarked the jet, resolving to search every inch of the base. But just as he reached the dark, unsettling building, you spoke.
âF-fifteenth floor. Northeast⌠northeast quadrant,â you sighed, defeated. âThereâs a- a room at the end of this hall, I think itâs maybe an office?â Again, you took a long pause. The energy required to think, to speak, was energy you didnât have. âJust f-follow the trail of blood.â
Buckyâs breath caught in his throat. He shuddered at the thought of your blood leaving a path down the stark white, sterile hallways of the base. But he didnât have time to focus on anything other than getting you out; this was a rescue. He owed it to you to keep his head level. To focus on getting you out as quickly as he could.Â
âThe power is⌠itâs outâ, you said. âYouâre gonna h-have to take-âÂ
Bucky wanted to save you from wasting any extra energy, âThe stairs. Got it.âÂ
And while he normally didnât mind getting a few extra steps in, he knew the time required to climb fifteen flights of stairs would push the limits of your survival.Â
But he pushed the ever-encroaching sense of doom to the side and put on a brave face for you. For himself. âOkay, Iâm coming to get you,â he promised. âStay awake, and donât move.â
âAs if I h-have a choice,â you laughed a breathy, hollow laugh. A long groan followed.Â
Your pain radiated through Buckyâs chest. He didnât want to climb stairs or scour hallways- he just wanted to be there. To instantly materialize at your side. To bring you instantaneous comfort. He lamented the super soldier serumâs lack of teleportation abilities.Â
âYou know what I mean, doll. Just stay awake, okay?â Bucky drew his gun and stepped inside the building. âDonât fall asleep. Do anything you have to do- just stay awake. Can you keep talking until I get there?â
âW-what am IâŚâ You let out a raspy exhale, âsupposed to talk about?â
Bucky cleared a long hallway and found the stairwell, âAnything, just keep talking.â
Another extended silence filled the air; it nearly drove Bucky crazy. Your silences held limitless possibilities, horrifying âwhat ifsâ.
âIt w-wasnât supposed to be⌠to be like this,â you finally said. âIt wasnât supposed to be this dangerous. This was Jakeâs first mission- it wasnât f-fair to him.â Heartache coated your every word. Even after your partner abandoned you, even after Jake forced you to suffer and bleed all alone- you still sympathized with him. Still felt sorry for him.Â
Bucky felt no such thing.
âI know, doll. Keep talking, okay?â
You sighed. âWe s-split up for recon⌠thatâs when they- when they came at me.â Your next few breaths were so shallow, your lungs barely inflated; the lack of oxygen left you dizzy. A thin veil of glittering spots sparkled and danced on the edges of your periphery. âIt all h-happened so fast⌠there were so many of them. I just- I remember pain. And I hoped Jake was okay, w-wherever he was.â
Your heart was too good for this job. For people like Jake. Bucky admired your kindness, your empathy, your selfless nature. Even in the face of pain, of death- you thought about others. You often told Bucky how unfair life had been to him, lamenting his treatment at the hands of fate. Bucky found himself doing the same for you and your kind heart.
âI called out for h-him, I needed backup⌠I kept asking him to come help me-â A sharp cough rattled out of your throat.Â
Bucky cringed at the sound. It was the only sound in the building. He hadnât heard anyone else. Hadnât seen one Hydra operative- at least, not a live one. He came across their bodies every now and again but didnât see a single living soul. He was sure they deserted after the explosion. Just like Jake.Â
The destruction, however, was everywhere. Bullet casings littered the floor. Blood stained the tile floors. Fluorescent lights flickered overhead. He had to get you out of here.
âBut he n-never answered. And then he told me he was leaving. He said he was- he was outside already. He gave me n-ninety seconds to meet him at the jetâŚâ Your words were tinged with devastation, with hopelessness, with betrayal. âI tried- I did my best to make it down the stairs. But I was- I was dizzy⌠I was b-bleeding.â The memory stung like your fresh wounds. âI kept slipping on- on my own blood. I just c-couldnât move fast enough. It hurt too much.â
Wrath burned inside Bucky like a raging forest fire. But his utter heartbreak doused it completely, extinguishing the rageful flames. He found himself unable to think, to breathe. It took everything in him to keep moving forward. Who could ever leave you behind like that? Who could ignore your suffering and sentence you to death without a second thought? The image of you stumbling, struggling to run for your life gutted him.
âAnd then- and then I heard the jet t-take off,â you sighed. âAnd I listened as it got farther and farther away⌠until it was g-gone. And I was- I was alone.â
He thought of you sitting alone in cold silence as the noise from the jet quieted. As your hope dwindled. The entire base mustâve felt like a tomb, like a massive, lonely grave meant just for you.Â
Bucky almost fell to his knees. Sobs throttled the inside of his chest, begging for release. Tears burned inside his lash line. Jake didnât just leave you behind, he marooned you without care. And in his departure, he sealed your fate.Â
âI d-didnât have a way to call for⌠for help. My phone was on the j-jet with jake.â
The sorrow that stained your words was all too familiar to Bucky. It was the same hopelessness that accompanied him every day that he was at Hydra. When he laid in the snow for hours upon hours after falling from the train. He never wished that kind of despondency, that kind of  misery on anyone. And knowing that you, the person who deserved it the least, experienced it for even a moment shattered him.
âI realized I⌠I didnât h-have any options,â you breathed.Â
A collapsed column blocked Buckyâs path as he tried to make his way from the sixth floor to the seventh. The concrete was too high, too precarious to scale. If he tried to climb it and got hurt, it would only serve to diminish your chances of survival. And he wasnât willing to risk that. With a huff, Bucky exited the northwest stairwell in search of another route. This was a waste of time- time you didnât have.Â
He painstakingly checked every hall until he finally found another stairwell. His breathing came a little easier as he rocketed his way up the stairs, growing ever closer to you.
âSo, I found this- this room. Itâs quiet. Itâs out of the w-way. I needed somewhere to hide. S-somewhere toâŚâ A small crack of emotion cut through your voice, âsomewhere to die.â
It wasnât fair. It wasnât fair that Jake got to return home safe and sound while you struggled to stay alive. It wasnât fair that you had to seek out your own deathbed. Bucky wanted to scream, to break things, to spill every last drop of Jakeâs blood. But he was a soldier, and this was a rescue mission.
âThis seemed like as g-good a place as any,â you choked on a weak laugh. âBeats dying in the middle of a h-hallway, I guess.â
Buckyâs automatic response was to swear that youâd make it out. To promise that you werenât going to die. But he bit his tongue. He couldnât make those kinds of assurances. Heâd do anything to bring you comfort but swearing that youâd return home alive seemed almost cruel.Â
He pushed himself to move faster. He couldnât let you die alone, especially not in this godforsaken place. As he sprinted up the last flight of stairs and ripped open the door to the fifteenth floor, he struggled to orient himself. You were in the northeast quadrant, but where was he? He searched for anything to indicate his location- but found no signage. No directory.Â
Everything inside of him rattled with dread, with anxiety. Any moment now, you were going to die. You were going to take your last breath. All alone. A thick, suffocating wave of panic crashed over Bucky as he realized- you were going to die disappointed. You were going to leave this world knowing that he hadnât gotten to you in time.
It was then that he noticed a faded arrow painted on the wall, with âNEQâ painted below it in block letters. Northeast quadrant. He was closer than he thought.
âIâm gonna be there in just a second, doll,â he said as he followed the arrows.  âI think Iâm right around the corner.âÂ
This was just his way of making you feel better, you were sure of it. The hallways were long and winding. Each floor was a maze of its own. Even with your vague instructions, it could take him a while to find you. Still, Buckyâs words brought you comfort in the way that only he could.
âI know, I t-trustâŚâ A metallic taste filled your mouth. A warm ooze trickled down your chin and dripped onto your chest. The warm, fuzzy feeling brought on by Buckyâs assurances faded. Of course, you knew you were in bad shape. But as blood leaked from your mouth, you wondered if these were your last moments.
Instantly, you searched for the words to say goodbye to Bucky. Time was slipping through your fingers, life draining from your body with each passing second. But before you drifted off into a never-ending sleep, you had to tell Bucky what he meant to you. Youâd use all your strength, your last few breaths- whatever it took. He just had to know.Â
But how does one say goodbye to a soulmate? You didnât have the energy or capacity to make a grandiose speech. And the blood filling your mouth impeded your ability to speak. You wanted to tell bucky everything- how he comforted you, cared for you, made your life worth living. How your life revolved around him as though he were your personal sun. But nothing quite encapsulated the things you felt for him. Every word in the English language, every sonnet fell short. And the lack of oxygen getting to your brain sabotaged your phrasing.
âBuck, I think itâs⌠I think itâs almost t-time,â you rasped.
But just as you opened your blood-stained mouth to proclaim every feeling you ever had for him, the door flew open. Alarm coursed through your veins at the threat. Surely, a Hydra agent had stumbled upon your hiding place and was here to finish you off. The severe blood loss was no match for your training, thought. And, on instinct, you pulled your gun on the tall, dark silhouette standing in the doorway.
âWoah, hey!â Bucky raised his hands in surrender. âItâs me, itâs just me.â
At the sound of his voice, your arm fell limp. Your gun clattered to the floor. Your head lolled back against the wall. It had taken everything in you to try and protect yourself one last time. And now that your energy reserves were nearly depleted, you allowed your eyes to close.
âS-sorryâŚâ A barely-there smile pulled at your lips. âMy⌠my bad, Buck.â
âNo, donât be sorry, doll.âÂ
Bucky knelt in front of you, taking in your broken, bloodied body. Heâd seen carnage before, witnessed more death than anyone should. But this, you- it was different. It hurt in places he didnât know he had. But he didnât let it show. Knowing you, youâd spend your last few moments comforting him, trying to make him feel better. And so, he forced a warm smile and tabled his breakdown for the moment.
âIâm actually impressed. I mean, you might be hurt, but you were ready to take me out just now,â he forced a chuckle. âThatâs my girl.â His cool metallic hand brushed against your blood-stained cheek.Â
And in that moment, something within you changed. Your eyes shot open. You blinked a few times before forcing your eyes shut once again. You gave your head a few good shakes. Surely, this wasnât real- it couldnât be.Â
You opened your eyes wide once again, taking him in. âBucky?â
With one shaking hand, you reached for him in the most pathetic attempt heâd ever seen. You were weak, dangerously so; it scared him to his core. But you were alive.Â
He leaned in, meeting you in the middle, and let you stroke at his stubble for a moment.
âYeah, Iâm here,â he kissed your palm. âIâm so happy to see you.â
âYouâreâŚâ you other hand reached for him, but made it only a centimeter or two before falling into your lap. Bucky opted to take it in his. âYouâre here?â
He nodded, âI could never leave you behind, sweetheart.â
He may have continued speaking after that, but you didnât quite hear him. The emotion youâd tried so hard to swallow came bursting forward, crushing your every attempt at remaining levelheaded. Your fingers smoothed over Buckyâs cheek again and again. His name fell from your lips in what resembled a prayer. Tears rolled down your cheeks and mixed with the blood crusting over your skin.Â
A soft, warm wave of peace rolled in, covering you like a well-loved quilt. The pain disappeared; the sorrow evaporated. All that remained was Bucky. This was the warm spring that followed a dark, bitter winter. The first rays of sun after a vicious storm. The first taste of home after a long time away. You let the familiar warmth of Buckyâs presence drown out the rest of the world until only you two remained.
âSweetheart, did you hear me?â With a gentle squeeze of your hand, Bucky called you back to the present. âI need to look at your wound, okay?â
A sharp rush of pain nearly blinded you as you lifted your shirt, exposing the bloody mess. But even as Bucky appraised the gunshot wound that turned your abdomen into horror scene, you couldnât find it in you to worry. Your hands lazily found his shoulder, his chest, his face; you just wanted to touch him. To know, without a doubt, that he was there. That he was real.
âHey, we⌠we need to t-talk,â you whispered as Bucky did his best to quickly bandage your wound for transport. âI n-need to talk- to talk to youâŚâ
Bucky nodded, âsure thing, doll. Absolutely. We can talk about whatever you want. But right nowâŚâ he returned your shirt to its rightful position and met your gaze. âRight now, I need to get you out to the jet, okay? We can talk later.â
He guided your arms around his neck, lifted you into his arms, and moved as fast as he could through the winding hallways. His quick gait set your nerves alight with pain. Every bump, every jostle had you gasping for breath. And though it was a necessary evil, the guilt still sat in Buckyâs stomach like a rock. His repeated âIâm sorrysâ were nearly constant, doubling with your every grimace and groan. But he couldnât slow down, couldnât let the time slip away; you didnât have much left.
Between pained sounds and twisted expressions of discomfort, you said the same thing on a loop. Again and again and again, you pled with him, using energy you didnât have.Â
âWe need to⌠to t-talk.â
âI h-have to tell you.â
âCan I talk to y-you about- about something?â
And though Bucky wouldâve loved nothing more than to have a long heart to heart with you as you two often did, you werenât strong enough. He couldnât let you waste your finite energy on a conversation with him. And so, he responded to each of your requests with an ask of his own, begging you to save your strength. He promised that the two of you could talk tomorrow, that there was plenty of time for a conversation later.Â
But âplenty of timeâ almost seemed like an empty promise. And âtomorrowâ felt like a lie. Would you have a âlaterâ? He didnât know. But he didnât want you wasting your oxygen, not when he feared it might be your last breath.
Boarding the jet with you alive in his arms almost felt like a win to Bucky. Almost. Sure, heâd gotten you out with your heart still beating, but your condition worsened by the second. And the grave looks the med team wore as Bucky gently rested you on the treatment table dug a deep pit in his stomach.Â
They sprang into action, placing IVs and delivering medications. Scissors glided through your shirt and exposed your broken body to the med team. Bucky knew theyâd seen their share of gnarly injuries over the years, but he swore that they recoiled at the sight of your wounds.Â
With a shake of his head, Bucky refocused. He had to get you out of there- to get you home. He headed for the controls and planned to set the jet in motion. But he made it only a step toward the cockpit before a hand caught his.
âS-stayâŚâ you whispered. âPlease.â
His heart shattered. âIâm not leaving you, doll, IÂ promise. I just have to get us in the air, okay?â With great care, he placed a kiss to your hand and set it at your side. âIâll be back in just a minute.â
Buckyâs body operated on muscle memory alone as he initiated take off. His mind was occupied, completely and totally, by the sound of your weak voice begging him not to leave. The sound played on a loop inside his brain, cutting him deeper each time. Youâd already been abandoned once today; he was certain you feared it would happen again.Â
With a deep breath and a quick reset, Bucky did what he had to do. He needed to be on his A-game for you, needed to be his very best. Only a few hours ago, youâd trusted someone with your life, and they failed you. Bucky wasnât about to do the same. He worked carefully to chart the fastest route back to the compound, opting to forego FRIDAYâs proposed path. It kept him from your side longer than he wouldâve liked, but less time in the air seemed like the best option. The sooner he could get you to the med bay, with its massive, brilliant medical staff and unlimited resources, the better.Â
Just as he finalized the flight plan and asked FRIDAY to notify the med bay of your impending arrival, an unsettling sound pulled his focus. It was an ominous beeping, alarming your care team of a sudden, life-threatening change.Â
Gloved hands moved at lightning speed; voices yelled medical jargon back and forth. And you laid there on the table. No heartbeat. No respirations. Deathly still.Â
Bucky stood on the periphery, too horrified to get any closer.Â
He thought it best, of course, to stay out the med teamâs way. But knew deep down it was an excuse. He was simply too terrified to lose you. If he got closer, if he saw you struggling to stay alive, all of this would suddenly become real. And he couldnât handle that.Â
âBarnes!â A nurse screamed at him, âdid you hear me?â
Bucky forced himself back to the present. âNo⌠I, um-â
âShe has no pulse- get over here, we need you to do compressions!â
Buckyâs desperate need to help you, to save you, overpowered his fear. And in an instant, he was at your side. He loomed over you, his hands locked together, preparing to help resuscitate you. But once again, his fear reared its ugly head. You were already so badly injured, so weak. And he was far too strong. What if he made your condition worse? What if he-
âCome on!â The nurse yelled at him, âstart compressions-Â now!â
He did as he was told. He pressed into your body with a measured pressure, careful not to crush your chest. But his cautious compressions didnât cut it. The nurses instructed him to push harder. To âactually compressâ your chest- and Bucky followed instructions.Â
But as he did so, a sickly snapping sound exploded from your body. Bucky recoiled instantly; his face contorted in horror.
âWhat are you doing? Keep going!â
âIÂ canât- I think I broke her ribs,â Bucky shouted at the doctor. âWhat do I do?â
âKeep going!â The nurse yelled, âIt happens- just keep going.â
Bucky broke out into a cold sweat. His stomach turned at the thought of hurting you, of causing you even more pain; youâd been through enough as it was. But he did as he was told. With each round of compressions, he swore he created new fractures. He felt every splinter, every crack as he put pressure on your chest.Â
He wanted to sever every last nerve-ending in his hand; anything to rid him of the sickening sensation creeping through his palm. But if doing this saved you, it was worth the nightmares.
He watched as the two nurses provided your supplemental breaths and tended to your endlessly bleeding wound. The doctor called âclearâ every so often, shocking you with a defibrillator in an attempt to restore your heartbeat.
Round after round of compressions, breathing, and shocks passed by without signs of improvement. You remained lifeless, unresponsive. A syringe of epinephrine delivered straight to your chest did nothing. And Bucky felt what little hope he had slipping through the cracks in your ribs. He couldnât believe he was about to lose you; couldnât believe heâd have to watch you die. Hot tears blurred his vision and streaked down his cheeks. His legs went numb. At any second, he knew his knees would give out, knew heâd crumble to the floor under the crushing weight of grief.
The doctor deemed the next shock your last, and Bucky almost doubled over.Â
âCome on, doll, just-â He swallowed a sob, âjust stay. Stay. Do it for me, Iâm begging you. Please?â
The doctor called one last âclearâ and delivered your final shock, only to be met with the rhythmic beeping of your heart monitor.
âSinus rhythm restored,â announced the nurse to Buckyâs left. She appraised the waves on your EKG and gave a nod. âSheâs stable.â
After what felt like an eternity, Bucky took a breath. He stretched his tense fingers and did his best to  relax the rock-hard knots forming in his shoulders. A new crop of hope bloomed cautiously inside his chest, but he couldnât allow it to blossom and flourish just yet. You werenât out of the woods; there was a very real possibility that your heart might stop again. And he wasnât sure how many times the doctor could revive you before throwing in the towel.
Less than a minute after Buckyâs cautious optimism sprouted anew, a soul crushing sight dashed it completely. A sharp gasp filled his lungs, a shudder rocked his frame. Shades of deep, dark blue bloomed under the skin of your chest. Black and purple splotches stained your sternum. Some spots were already starting to swell. He extended a hand in your direction but recoiled in an instant, fearing heâd hurt you yet again.Â
âHappens all the time,â one of the nurses said with a shrug. âBelieve me, broken ribs are the least of her worries.â
Somehow, her words didnât make him feel any better. He ached to hold your hand, to sweep a gentle caress across your cheek. But he didnât dare touch you after what he did. Every glimpse of your bruised, swollen chest sent bile rushing into his throat.Â
The three dedicated members of the med team worked tirelessly for the rest of the flight. They did everything in their power to keep your condition steady, to maintain the life they worked so hard to save. It brought Bucky comfort to see them staying so close, ready to jump into action if need be. Â
Bucky, like the med team, hovered. He couldnât bring himself to leave your side. You seemed too fragile, your condition too tenuous. He counted your every breath, took stock of every beat of your heart on the monitor. Stepping away for even a second felt wrong. He needed to be there if you crashed again, if the doctor needed extra hands. He needed to be there to help.
And if you woke up, he wanted to be the first face you saw.Â
But you didnât wake. A groan here, a muscle twitch there- that was all you could spare. And though Bucky wanted nothing more than to see you open your eyes, he thanked the universe for keeping you unconscious. He knew tsunamis of pain rippled in the wings, waiting to overtake you the second you woke.
Bucky held his breath as the jet landed. Every jarring bump, every vibration, forced his heart into his throat. He feared that even the slightest impact would send you into cardiac arrest. He flicked his eyes from the rising and falling of your chest to the rhythmic flashing of your heart monitor and back again. Nothing changed, no alarms sounded. And when the jet finally stilled, Bucky breathed a deep sigh of relief. He just needed to get you to the med bay for treatment, and this whole nightmare would be over.Â
He didnât like being optimistic. It felt like a set-up, like false hope. If he told himself youâd survive and you didnât, the fall would be that much harder, that much more devastating.Â
But being realistic wasnât any better. Telling himself that you were too far gone, that you werenât going to make it, felt wrong. To him, it seemed like he was cursing you. Like willing your death into existence. Like begging the universe to end your life.Â
And so, he opted for a neutral mantra. âSheâs home,â he told himself. âSheâs home. Sheâs home. Sheâs home.â
The distance to the medbay felt longer than usual. The hallways seemed to stretch on forever, the double doors to the triage center seemed to grow farther and farther away. Bucky followed your gurney closely, only allowing a few inches of space between the two of you. He couldnât be separated from you again. He wouldnât. He needed to be with you every second, watching over you.Â
A dark cloud of impending doom loomed over his psyche. It whispered to him, telling him that if he left your side, if he let you out of his sight, youâd die. Youâd be gone forever. And it would be his fault. He knew it was nonsense, that this was just his anxiety operating on overdrive. But he couldnât shake the fear. And risking it wasnât an option.
âNo visitors past this point,â a security guard placed an arm in front of Bucky as he tried to enter the triage unit.
Bucky tried to go around the man, watching as the medical staff carried you farther out of reach. âIâm not a visitor, Iâm an agent-âÂ
âNo agents past this point, then,â the guard rolled his eyes. âOnly patients and medical staff. You can have a seat over there.â
A small table sat against the wall, flanked by two chairs. It was a sad, makeshift excuse for a waiting room that operated as a device to keep people from hanging around. But bucky couldnât be discouraged. He took a seat in one of the chairs, determined to wait there as long as he had to. He knew heâd missed a number of important phone calls by now, and probably several meetings. But he didnât care; all that mattered was you.Â
Dread circled Bucky like a buzzard as he waited. It was taking too long- why was it taking so long? How much time did the medical staff need? You were stable when the jet landed, the nurse said so. Why were there no updates? All Bucky needed was a nod, a bit of information. But he remained in the dark, wondering if you died on the operating table.
Maria found Bucky slumped in a chair with a zombie-like air about him. He was expressionless, his gaze hollow. His palms traced the same track up and down his thighs in a never-ending cycle. One look and she knew: something was very wrong.
âHey,â she called softly, hoping not to startle him.
But Bucky didnât respond- he didnât even react. He just sat there, his unblinking stare burning a hole in the tile. An uneasiness enveloped Maria. Sheâd never seen Bucky so empty, so despondent. As she stared at him, she found herself fearing the worst. âMaybe he just received terrible newsâ she thought. âMaybe heâs grievingâ.
âHey,â she tried again, nudging her foot against his.Â
He came back to life with a start. A sharp inhale filled his chest, his eyes blinked wildly. But his palms never stopped moving in their endless cycle against his tactical pants. And he never actually looked at her.
âHiâŚâ he breathed.Â
Hill took the seat opposite him. She conjured the gentlest, warmest tone she could find, âis everything okay?â
Bucky balled his hands into tight fists and stretched them out again. Maria noticed blood- your blood- crusting under his fingernails and staining his skin. But before she could get a good look, he grabbed the arms of the chair. His palms rubbed fervently against the plastic handles for a moment until they moved to his face. He ran his hands along his jaw, his spiky stubble poking into his skin.
âBarnes, what happened? Are you-â
Finally, his head snapped in her direction, âI can still feel itâŚâ
âFeel what?â
Buckyâs head fell into his hands. He pressed his palms against his eyes and dragged them down his face. Maria watched him fall apart in slow motion. He seemed to be unraveling, one cell at a time. And when he finally spoke, shame made his words almost unintelligible.Â
âShe crashed on the jetâŚâ
âOh...â Maria did her best to keep a calm, even tone. Her concern for you vibrated in her chest, but she didnât dare let it free- not when Bucky was moments away from a meltdown. âIs she-â
âThe med team needed help. There werenât enough of them- they needed me to do chest compressions,â Bucky said, his voice low. âAnd I broke- I crushed her ribs.âÂ
A sharp shudder rocked his entire body. Just thinking of that moment, when his too-strong hands destroyed your chest, was enough to make him sick. To scar him for life. To haunt him. Of all the horrible things heâd done in over the years, this was the worst. He gave his hands a quick shake, hoping to rid his nerve endings of the sensation.
âI felt her bones snapping under my hands,â Buckyâs words dripped with shame. âAnd I can still⌠I still feel it.â
âOkay,â Maria said gently. âWell, if she-â
âShe was already in such bad shape,â Bucky swiped a tear from his cheek. âAnd IâŚÂ I hurt her. I made it so much worse.âÂ
His head fell into his hands once again and did not reemerge.Â
âHey, look at me,â Maria gave his arm a gentle touch.Â
Bucky only shook his head.Â
âCome on, Barnes, just look at me for a second.â
Again, he refused.Â
Maria abandoned her chair and sat instead on the small table. She never got this close to Bucky. Usually, she preferred to give him his space. He wasnât the touchy-feely type- unless you were around. But he was lost in a shame spiral, adrift with no hope of return. And he needed rescuing. She placed her hands on his and gently removed them from his face.Â
âYou saved her life,â Maria said. âTwice. You rescued her from the base, and when the med team needed help, you came through.â
âBut I-â
âDid it work?â Maria asked, her tine almost stern. âDid the chest compressions work?â
Bucky nodded.Â
Maria gave him a shrug, âThatâs all that matters. She can recover from a few broken ribs, but if you hadnât been there-âÂ
Bucky averted his gaze as his eyes filled with tears.Â
âHey,â Maria grabbed his face, bringing his focus back to her. âIf you hadnât been there, sheâd be dead.â
Mariaâs words fought hard against the demeaning voice that lived inside Buckyâs head. It screamed at him, telling him that he shouldnât believe her, that he was a monster, that he almost killed you. Usually, Bucky allowed his inner demons to run free. He listened to them without pause, believing anything and everything they told him, no matter how vile. But Maria was steadfast and unshakable in her sentiments; she truly believed what she was saying. And by some miracle, Bucky did, too.
âThanksâŚâ He granted her a hollow smile and a small nod.Â
Hill sat in silence with him for a few hours. She didnât try to make small talk or ask what was going on inside his head. She simply existed near him, sharing the space so that he didnât have to be alone. She ignored important texts and sent every call to voicemail. She knew it was exactly what youâd do for him, if you were able. And she did her best to fill your shoes.
Abruptly, Buckyâs head snapped in her direction. His pulse thrummed against his skin as a new wave of anxiety crashed over him. âShe kept sayingâŚâ he sighed. âShe kept saying we needed to talk. She wanted to talk to me about something.â
Maria cocked her head to the side, âAbout what?â
He shrugged. âI told her we could talk later because there would be plenty of time,â Buckyâs words grew shaky. He found himself near tears for what felt like the millionth time that day. Guilt sucker punched him. âWhat if⌠what if there isnât more time for us? What if that was all we were ever going to get? What if-â
âYouâll get more time,â Maria said with certainty. âThe universe has a way of evening things out. You were robbed of time once; it wonât happen again. Plus, youâre deserved some fucking karmic retribution- youâre owed this.â
Bucky wondered how she could be that sure of something so ethereal. But she was steady, solid as a rock. She didnât waver in her words or add caveats at the end. She, somehow, knew it to be true. And Bucky couldnât help but believe her.
But when Fury called her for the eighth time, she knew quiet time was over.
âI have to go, okay? Fury canât do anything without me, heâs hopeless.â She stood from her seat and rested a hand on Buckyâs shoulder. âCall if you need anything.â
Bucky thanked her a million times over and, for the first time, gave Maria a hug. She would never know how much her reassurances helped him. Sheâd pulled him from the ledge and gave him what he desperately needed: perspective.
In the hours that followed, he let her words play on a constant loop inside his mind. âIf you hadnât been there, sheâd be dead,â he heard her say. âYouâll get more time.â The sickening feeling of your bones snapping under his strength never faded, and the fear of losing you still had him in a chokehold, but Mariaâs words quieted his mind.Â
In the sad, empty waiting room, time seemed to mutate. Some of the hours dragged, others whizzed by. Bucky wasnât sure how long heâd been there. Was it ten hours? Or twenty? He didnât really care. Heâd wait lifetimes for you.Â
He saw the security guards change shifts once, twice. It was the only thing alerting him to the passage of time, as part of him believed it was standing still. On the third shift change, they told him to go home.Â
âTheyâll call you if thereâs an updateâ, said one of the guards. âItâd probably be a good idea for you to go get some sleep, or something.â
Bucky knew he looked like hell. Your blood left crimson streaks across his face and neck. And the dark circles he usually wore under his eyes were a deep shade of plum. But he couldnât leave, he couldnât sleep. Not when your life hung in the balance. Not when you needed him.Â
A few more hours passed with no news, and Bucky found himself teetering on the edge of insanity. An angry, desperate voice bellowed inside his head. It told him to bust through the doors and find you, no matter what it took- even if it meant hurting people in the process. The gun secured to his hip and the knife strapped to his ankle became eerily attractive. His hands itched to reach for the weapons, to hold someone at gun point until they allowed him to see you. But he couldnât to give in to the fear, to the violence. It took him years of therapy and long talks with you to stop seeing himself as a monster- and he refused to destroy the progress you helped him make.Â
A doctor stepped out of the double doors and looked in Buckyâs direction, âSergeant Barnes?â Â
Bucky was on his feet before he knew what hit him. This was it. After what felt like an eternity of not knowing whether you lived or died, he was about to have an answer. Sweat dampened his palm, his brow as he stood in front of your doctor.Â
He didnât know he was even capable of this kind of fear, this kind of agony. And though he was an impossibly strong physical specimen, Bucky knew heâd never be able to lift the weight of the grief that followed your loss. He knew that, if you died, heâd spend the rest of his life dragging himself from place to place, unable to stand, unable to push back against the overwhelming, oppressive force of losing you.Â
Your doctor spoke quickly and professionally about your condition, but the words turned to mush the second they reached Buckyâs brain. The combination of medical jargon and pure panic made their meanings imperceptible. But one phrase managed to cut through the fog of Buckyâs anxiety and exhaustion: âyou can see her now.â
And just like that, Bucky took off. His fatigued body did its best to carry him through the halls, stumbling every now and then on the smooth tile of the hospital floors. But he didnât dare slow down. He had to get to you.Â
By the time he reached the door to your room, he found himself shaking- almost shivering- with anxiety. He knew you were alive, of course. Knew that the doctors had been successful in saving your life. But something in him doubted their handiwork. Something in him swore that if he didnât get to you in the next half second, youâd flatline. Again.Â
He could practically feel his brain rattling around inside his skull, his teeth chattered against one another. And the sharp tremors in his hands made it nearly impossible to get a grip on the door handle. Panic and frustration coursed through him as the he tried again and again to gain entry to your room with no luck. A strangled sob forced its way out of his chest and caught the attention of a nurse- one of the nurses who helped keep you alive on the jet.Â
âHeyâŚâ Her eyes drifted to Buckyâs shaking hands. âNeed some help?â Before Bucky could answer, sheâd abandoned the medication she was prepping, discarded her gloves, and made her way to his side.
âHere, let me.â Her soft, sympathetic tone was almost too kind; Buckyâs eyes blurred with tears. She turned the door handle and gestured for Bucky to go inside.
His âthank youâ was for more than just the door.Â
Bucky took a few steps inside and drew in a sharp breath; heâd never seen you in such severe condition. Over the many hours that Bucky waited for you outside, all of your bruises grew darker, more menacing. They stained your throat, your face, your arms. He didnât even want to think about the ones on your chest- the ones he caused. Dried blood crusted in your hair and formed a path down the side of your face. It sat caked under your fingernails and rested in the creases of your palms. Thankfully, your gunshot wound was covered by gauze and concealed by your gown. But knowing it was there was enough to make Bucky sick. He, of course, witnessed and inflicted, his fair share of carnage over the years. But he knew your wound would haunt him for years to come- simply because it was yours.Â
All he wanted was to be near you. To sit at your bedside and hold your hand. But he didnât dare to get any closer. Electrodes attached a dozen wires to your chest. IVs sat lodged in the crooks of your elbows, in the backs of your hands. Machines and monitors kept track of your vitals. And who was he to disturb this fragile, vital ecosystem? What if he accidentally pulled out one of your IVs? What if he detached a wire by mistake? Heâd already hurt you once today, he wasnât about to do it again.Â
He, instead, opted to stand at attention. A few feet away. For your safety. He didnât touch you, didnât even say your name. He simply stared at you, counting your every breath.Â
An hour- or maybe two- passed by with him like this. Nurses checked on you, doctors poked their heads in. And every time, they told him he was permitted to sit by your bedside. But he just shook his head. Sure, slipping his hand into yours, being close to you- it would provide him with incomprehensible comfort. But he couldnât, not when you were so severely injured.Â
After the third hour, Bucky feared his sanity was slipping. A wicked voice lodged deep in his psyche suddenly awakened. It whispered to him, taunted him. Maybe this was all a dream. Maybe he was asleep in the waiting room. Maybe you didnât survive. MaybeâŚ
And he wouldâve believed it, had you not snapped him out of the vicious spiral.Â
âBuck?â He feared heâd never hear you voice again, but there it was. Hoarse and weak- but yours.
Bucky flew to your side. He cradled your face gingerly in his hands, completely consumed by the need to touch you, to feel you, to know that you were real. His palms laid flush against your cheeks, his thumbs sweeping over your skin. And in an instant, the sickly sensation of your snapping bones vanished.
A hurricane of tangled thoughts and emotions crashed over him. He had so much to he wanted to say, so much he wanted to confess to you. But the words refused to arrange themselves properly. Suddenly, Bucky wished heâd used his ample time in the waiting room to better organize his thoughts. He wished heâd sought out a pen and a scrap of paper and used them to plan and articulate his sentiment. But even if heâd found the supplies he needed, he wouldnât have been able to jot a single thing down. Not with his shaking, unsteady hands.
Anxious words and broken sobs got stuck in his throat and formed a garbled, unintelligible mess as they left his mouth. But it was the best he could do. He stared at you, waiting for your response.
âI, umâŚâ you looked at him for a long moment. The haze of head trauma, blood loss, and pain killers made you foggy. You did your best to trace your steps back through Buckyâs words, certain that your condition was the cause of your confusion. But after a significant pause, you came up empty. âSorry, I- what?â
Bucky slid one of his hands into yours and gave a soft laugh. âSorry. I tried to say-â He sat quiet for a moment. What had he tried to say, exactly? He wasnât sure. With a small shake of his head, he re-rerouted. âUm, it doesnât matter. Here, howâs this:â He cleared his throat and spoke with the sharpest pronunciation possible. âHow are you feeling?â
Your laugh- Buckyâs favorite laugh- bubbled up to the surface. But regret swallowed you whole as pain shot through your head, your chest, your side. The hurt radiated through your entire being. It rendered you breathless, and left your face twisted in an agonized grimace.
Bucky didnât like how long it took you to recover from the small chuckle you shot his way. A pang of worry shot through him.  âDonât exert yourself, okay?â He swept a thumb across your cheek, âyou donât wanna tear your stitches or...â He cleared his throat, âaggravate any, um, broken bones.â Bones that he broke.
âNo, IâmâŚâ you squeezed your eyes shut for a long moment before opening them again. The pain slowly receded. âIâm good, Iâm okay. I just- breathing is hard. I forgot how shitty it feels to have broken ribs.â
Bucky nodded. His teeth sunk into the smooth flesh of his cheek. A metallic taste coated his mouth. He didnât want to tell you the truth. Didnât want you to know that he was the cause of your severe pain. But you deserved to know, didnât you? With a deep sigh, he opened his mouth, intent on telling you what really happened. But you cut him off.Â
âThank you, Buck. For coming to get me. I really thought I wasâŚâ Hot tears stung your eyes and blurred your vision. âI thought that was it for me, you know? And I just want you to know how-â you sniffed, âhow grateful I am.â
Bucky left your side for only a second, retrieving a box of tissues from the counter across the room. He was back in no time and swept a tissue across your cheek to catch your tears.
âI know we always say that we have each otherâs backs but you⌠you meant it,â you said. A small smile pulled at your lips, âthank you for meaning it.â
Bucky nodded. He did his best to keep his breathing steady, to stop himself from falling apart at the seams. He knew exactly what it felt like to be left behind, to wait for your last moments- alone.Â
âI wasnât gonna leave you there, doll. I couldnât.âÂ
You gave a small nod. âYeah, I- I wish my partner had felt the same wayâŚâ The hurt in your voice was unmistakable. It sliced though Buckyâs chest. âI didnât think he would ever do something like that. I mean, I thought we were friends.â
The mere thought of Jake brought a familiar rage to the forefront of Buckyâs mind. He didnât understand how anyone could be so callous, so uncaring- so indifferent to the well-being of others. The part of him that swore off unnecessary violence remained quiet as the rest of him imagined Jakeâs demise. He wanted your disloyal partner to suffer. To squirm and squeal and regret that he ever left you behind. But that could wait- you were the priority.
âYeah, I didnât expect him to be that kind of person,â Bucky sighed, âhe seemed like a stand-up guy.â
Silence filled the room as you thought over Jakeâs desertion. His abandonment hurt. It stung in places you didnât expect. Youâd taken Jake under your wing and did everything in your power to be the best leader possible. All you wanted was to help him. To set him up for success.Â
And after working alongside Bucky for so long, youâd forgotten that disloyalty to oneâs partner was even an option.Â
âHe probably panicked,â you tried to rationalize. âAnd then once he realized what heâd done, maybe heâŚâ
There was no rationalizing this.Â
An ugly realization slithered into your mind. âAfter he left, I think he probably hoped Iâd just die⌠that way I wouldnât be able to give my side of the story.â The weight of Jakeâs actions hit you like a train. Rivulets of warm tears rolled down your cheeks, only to be swept away by Buckyâs gentle hand. With a small shake of your head, you did your best to banish the feelings of abandonment and betrayal. Wallowing would only make you more miserable. And you didnât need emotional pain on top of the physical agony that already plagued you.
âWell, jokeâs on him,â you shrugged, âcause Iâm still alive.â Pain radiated through your chest, bringing a grimace to your face. âKind of.âÂ
Bucky didnât understand how you could just dismiss the bad feelings. Couldnât understand your propensity for levity. Your partner left you for dead without a second thought- and yet, you found a way to joke about it. It was something heâd always admired about you, something he wished he was capable of.Â
You gave a strained laugh, âI canât wait to see the look on Jakeâs face when he finds out that I didnât die.â
Bucky wasnât sure what prompted him to say it. It left his mouth without his brainâs authorization.
âBut you did.â
He wished to take the words back, but it was too late. They hung in the air, just out of his reach.Â
âIâŚâ you struggled to grasp Buckyâs words. âI what?â
This was not the time- or the place, or the way- to tell you the truth. But he didnât have a choice. His clumsy words made his bed, and now he had to lie in it.Â
âYou, umâŚâ Bucky didnât want to think about what happened, let alone say it out loud. But he owed it to you to be honest. Especially after Jake had lied to you about being a trustworthy partner. Bucky scratched at the stubble on his face, ran a hand through his hair. Anything to delay the inevitable. But he couldnât put it off for long. âYour heart stopped- you died. On the jet.â
Only one word fell from your lips, âOhâŚâÂ
âAnd while Iâm at it, I might as well tell you thatâŚâ Bucky took a deep inhale. He was in too deep now. And keeping this from you any longer felt like lying. âThat your ribs are broken because of me.â
A quizzical look crossed your face, âwhat do you mean?â
âI mean⌠the med team was short staffed on the jet. There were only three of them. And when you crashed, it was- it was an all hands on deck situation.â He flashed back to the moment when the alarms sounded. When your EKG flatlined. A shudder ran through him. âThey needed me to do chest compressions. And I- I didnât want to hurt you, but the nurse said I wasnât pushing hard enough to actually help you. And when I pushed harder- I broke your ribs.â
Bucky searched your face for something-Â anything. Anger. Fear. Betrayal. But he found nothing. Your expression was as neutral as they come. He feared that something lingered just below the surface. That once you fully processed his words, youâd erupt into a perfect storm of disgust and disappointment.
He told himself to wait silently until you made up your mind. But the outburst exploded from his lips before he could stop it. âIâm sorry- Iâm so sorry, sweetheart. You know Iâd never want to hurt you, I would never do anything to hurt you. But I⌠they told me I had to push harder. Or it wasnât going to work. And I just wanted it to work, I wanted you to be okay, and-â
It took almost all of your strength to raise your hand and place a finger to Buckyâs lips. He fell silent.
âBuck, itâs okay.â
He tried to form a rebuttal, but you cut him off.Â
âYou didnât have to rescue me, but you did. No questions asked, no hesitation. You saved my life by getting me out of there. And you saved me again by helping the med team.â Your hand drifted from Buckyâs face and landed in his palm. âYou didnât do anything wrong.â
Bucky didnât say anything else. His fingers traced gentle patterns on your palm. His eyes fell downward. You could almost see the shame eating him alive from the inside.
 âHey,â you intertwined your fingers with his. âI can handle a few broken ribs.â
âNo, I- I know you can. I justâŚâ A sad smiled flickered across his lips. âI feel terrible. You went through a lot. And I just donât like knowing I made it worse.â
A long silence filled the room. Youâd seen this side of Bucky more times than you could count. And you knew him well enough to know what followed. He was going to feel bad-Â terrible, actually- about this for a while. There was no accelerating the process or absolving him of his guilt. No amount of reassurances could save him from it. He just had to sit with it. One day, the weight would diminish. But it was going to take time. And that was okay.Â
You gave his hand a squeeze. âI thought your voice was a hallucination, you know.â
Bucky lifted his head.
âAnd when you came into the room, I actually thought that was a hallucination, too.â A smile stretched across your face, âI mean, I thought I was losing my mind.â Â
Bucky gave a half-hearted chuckle. He didnât want to think about you in that room by yourself. About you struggling to tell what was real.
âBut then you touched meâŚâ You raised your hand and brushed it across your cheek, mimicking him. âAnd thatâs when I realized that you were real- that you were there.â You fell quiet for a moment, lost in the memory of Buckyâs rescue. âIt was like, in that moment, I wasnât scared anymore. I wasnât scared of the pain. I wasnât scared of dying. I was just scared thatâŚâ
âWhat?â
âYou have to promise not to laugh,â you told him with an authoritative tone. âCause I know itâs corny, or cheesy, or whatever.â
âSweetheart,â Bucky drew an X over his heart. âIâm not gonna laugh at you.â
You stared at him with narrowed eyes, sizing up his promise. But, of course, you knew Bucky would never tease or ridicule you about something like this.Â
âOkay, fine, I um⌠I was scared that Iâd never see you again. If I died, I mean.â
Buckyâs lungs emptied. He couldnât remember how to breathe, how to speak. A sudden ache ripped through his heart as it splintered and shattered into a million pieces. To know that you thought of him in what you believed were your last moments somehow ripped him apart and put him back together all at once.
Your voice cracked. Tears filled your eyes. âI was afraid that weâd already run out of time. I was afraid that we werenât going to get any more.â A few soft sobs escaped from your throat, followed by a pained groan. But you pushed passed the throbbing in your chest. âBut I was so relieved. Because I got to see you one last time. It was the most intense sense of peace Iâve ever experienced.â
Bucky struggled to hold on to his composure. He felt himself crumbling, weakening under the weight of your words.Â
âBut then I realized- I realized Iâd never get to tell you. And you kept saying we could talk later, but I didnât know if there would be a âlaterâ. And when I blacked out, I was so full ofâŚâ You shook your head ever so slightly, sending a few tears dripping onto your cheeks. âI had so much regret. Because I needed you to know.â
âTo know what?â Bucky leaned in close, searching your face for any inkling, any clue. âDoll, itâs âlaterâ. Tell me- whatever it is. You can tell me now, itâs-â
Your lips met his in a soft kiss. In it, everything youâd ever felt for him came rushing forward. Admiration. Longing. Lust. Obsession. Adoration. Love.Â
A sting of pain jolted through you as your split lip brushed his, but you didnât care. His hands found your face, your fingers curled into the collar of his shirt. It was always supposed to be this way.Â
When the two of you finally separated, Bucky simply stared at you. He didnât move, he didnât speak. He wasnât sure he knew how.Â
âI love you, Buck. Iâve loved you- for so long.â A huff left your chest, âSo. Long.âÂ
Still, Bucky remained silent. Nerves began crawling through you like vines, twisting their way through every fiber of your being. But you owed it to yourself, and to Bucky, to tell him the truth.Â
âAnd I just⌠I know how you see yourself. And I know you donât think youâre even worthy of my friendship, let alone love. But I was so anxious, cause I thought youâd never know the truth. I thought Iâd die without getting to tell you. And youâd live the rest of your life thinking that youâre not worthy, that no one could ever love you. But I- I love you. I just needed you to know.â
The silence made your ears ring. Buckyâs face still wore a mask of bewilderment. And you feared youâd ruined everything.Â
âYou donât have to say it back, though,â you said. âIâm not gonna stop being your friend if this is an unrequited thing.â
Finally, Bucky came back to life. He rolled his eyes and let a scoff escape his lips. He leaned in close, the tip of his nose almost brushing yours. âUnrequited? I broke every SWORD rule and policy. Abducted medical staff. Stole a jet. And went on an unauthorized mission. All to get you back. I didnât even know if you were alive, I just- I had to bring you home.âÂ
He closed the small gap that remained between your face and his and granted you warm, gentle kiss that tasted like home. âI did all that- and you thought there was even a chance that I didnât love you back?â Bucky gave a playful roll of his eyes, âyou donât know me at all, sweetheart.â
You returned his eye roll. "Well, you're a really great friend to me. And you always have been. So, I didnât take a rescue as a proclamation of love,â you gave a strained chuckle. âI just thought-â
âIâve loved you forâŚâ Bucky thought back over the course of your friendship. The day you first met, the first time you helped him through a panic attack, the time he made you the ugliest cake in the world for your birthday. He saw his life in two parts: before he met you and after he met you. And he so preferred the after.Â
âI donât even know how long,â he shrugged. It was almost automatic. His feelings for you didnât need a slow, gradual build up. They descended upon him all at once, like the worldâs most beautiful avalanche.  âItâs been a long time- an embarrassing amount of time, probably,â he laughed.
âOh, so weâre both cowards then,â you shot him a wink. âToo afraid to tell the other how we feel.â
Bucky nodded, âIt seems that wayâŚâ
âBut you werenât too scared to steal a jet and run into possible gun fire?â you quipped.
âNope. Didnât even think about it,â he said matter-of-factly. âI just wanted to find you.â
Youâd never experienced a love- a commitment- like that. It sent a rush of warmth into your cheeks and somehow eased the pain plaguing your body. You knew in your heart you wouldâve done the same for Bucky without a second thought. But knowing that he was so fiercely determined to bring you home felt almost unbelievable. You had the proof, though, right there in front of you. This man, who you loved, loved you too. And loved you enough to risk his life for you. It wasnât something youâd ever ask him to do, and you knew youâd never have to. Heâd do it without hesitation. Without reservation. Heâd walk through fire for you if it meant bringing you home.Â
--------------------------------------------------------
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i have SO many thoughts.
1. i donât know if this was intentional or not, but i didnât realize that they werenât actually together until the very end of the story. i think that makes it so much more beautiful because all of the wonderfully written emotions they feel for each other (longing, adoration, despair, LONGING etc) exist without confirmation that theyâre reciprocated in a romantic way? and the foundation that lays for the revelation is so much more solid and touching this way. the way you SHOW the emotions that are being felt by characters is incredible, like tf you mean âAnything to rationalize his desperate need to be near you.â????? are you trying to kill me? thank you btw.
2. i havenât cried at a fic in a LONG time and this made me do it. the dialogue in the hospital paired with each personâs REACTION to it, both internally and externally, it tugged on my heartstrings in a way i thought fics couldnât do for me anymore.
3. the way you wrote about her fears of dying alone, her desperation to find solace in a final moment of comfort, her heartbreak at the betrayal she experienced, it elevates this fic beyond a portrayal of a fantasy relationship and to something thatâs just a great piece of writing and storytelling. with or without knowledge of the MCU, this is a straight up well crafted and well written story.
ANYWAYS. canât believe this is available for free on tumblr dot com. this is a masterpiece. iâd slap this bad boy right up in the Louvre
ARE YOU TRYING TO MAKE ME CRY??????? You actually have no idea how much it means to me that you took the TIME and the EFFORT to engage with my writing in this way đđđ if you were trying to make me feel so so so special, you succeeded! I literally had to hide my face from the screen cause I was so flattered! Thank you so so so much for this. You have my heart forever. đđĽ°đŤś
i am SO happy you feel special because you SHOULD. if my reblog made you feel a FRACTION of what i felt reading this fic iâm satisfied!! youâre incredible fr
Come Find Me | Bucky Barnes x Reader
I am back back back again! I have missed writing so much, I just don't have nearly the amount of time that I used to. But I'm in my last semester of school! So hopefully I'll be back on a consistent fanfic grind once I'm done :) PS: If you know what the title is referencing, you get a big hug from me.
Word Count: 13,439
Warnings: blood, talk of violence, reader injury
Bucky checked his texts every few minutes. Initially, he lied to himself about the reason behind it. He told himself he mustâve opened his conversation with you accidentally, or that he mistook an email notification for a text from you. Simple, innocent mistakes.Â
Either way, he always ended up staring at your side of the conversation, hoping for a gray ellipsis to appear.Â
But after a while, he could no longer deny the truth- and why would he want to? You were coming home.Â
You hadnât been gone long, and your mission was projected to be a cake walk. But he couldnât help it; he missed you. He missed you when you went on missions, when you visited your parents out of state, when you slept in your room down the hall. Missing you was part of him now, woven into the fabric of his being. It matched the material of his soul perfectly, like he was always meant to feel this way.
He fired off a quick âlet me know when you landâ message and waited, hoping youâd write back soon.Â
Usually, you texted him when you were headed back to the compound. It gave him a countdown to your return and something to look forward to. It also signaled to him that you were, in fact, coming home alive. Even if a bit banged up, you were well enough to shoot him a message. And that always eased his worries.
Today, however, was different. No text, no call.
It struck him as bizarre and sounded Buckyâs internal alarms. But he silenced them as best he could. He wasnât going to let himself get worked up, not when you had a perfectly good reason for not messaging him. Â
This was your first time leading a mission with a new recruit under your wing. Bucky knew you devoted your full attention to your trainee, giving him absolutely everything you had. You took this position- as well as your pupilâs safety and success- very seriously. He knew you were probably busy helping your recruit learn a swath of new things, and who was he to interrupt?
Bucky opened the log and saw your jet had been marked as âincomingâ only minutes ago. A sigh of relief left his chest and eased his muscles. Sure, he wouldâve rather heard that information from you, but it didnât matter. Your jet would be here soon; he had no reason to worry.Â
The moment he saw that your jet was homeward bound, he lost the ability to think about anything else. He counted the minutes, the seconds. You had to be close, right? The log wouldnât have said âIncomingâ if you were still hours away.Â
To pass the time, he folded laundry, answered emails, reread a few chapters of The Hobbit- but he couldnât focus. He thought of you, only you. And no matter how hard he tried to distract himself, he couldnât hang around his room any longer. He couldnât stand it. He needed to be there when the jet landed. He needed to meet you on the steps of the aircraft and wrap you in a bear hug.Â
And there was no real harm in waiting near the hangar, was there? âIf anything,â he told himself, âItâs actually more convenient for her if I meet her there. That way, I can carry her bag- sheâs probably tired.âÂ
Anything to rationalize his desperate need to be near you.
He knew in his heart of hearts that you didnât need him to carry your bag or help you off the jet. But this lie was all the convincing he needed. Without hesitation, he ditched his room and set off down the hall, your impending homecoming pulling him forward.Â
It was in that moment he noticed just how far the elevator was from his room. The walk seemed to stretch on and on, the hallway growing longer with each step. And how had he never noticed how slowly the elevator moved? It slid downward at a glacial pace, toying with his patience. For such an expensive, state of the art building, the elevator moved like an ancient piece of turn of the century machinery. Bucky cursed Tonyâs engineering.Â
Everything seemed to add time, multiplying his moments without you. The universe liked toying with him, teasing him. And this was just another cruel joke.Â
The moment the doors opened, Bucky sprang free out into the hallway. He knocked into Clint and his group of trainees and called an apology over his shoulder without stopping. He couldnât stop, couldnât waste time- not when you could arrive at any moment.Â
His field of view narrowed into tunnel vision, only allowing for visualization of the path toward the hangar. He didnât greet his fellow team members or allow for distraction. You were his one-track mind. That is, until something stopped him.Â
âShit, sorry, man,â your trainee, Jake, laughed as he bumped into Bucky. He took a step to the side and attempted to continue down the hall, but Bucky blocked his path.Â
âJake?â Bucky eyed a bloody gash on Jakeâs eyebrow, âwhen did you guys get back?â
Jake gave a casual shrug and checked his phone, âI donât know, five minutes ago?â
âOh, okayâŚâ Bucky reached for his phone, but found his screen void of notifications. If you landed five minutes ago with your trainee safe and sound, why didnât you send him a message? It was out of character for you.Â
âWell, whereâs your partner in crime? Or crime fighting, I guess,â Bucky tried to joke, but his tone was strained. He eyed each person who came around the corner, hoping to find your face. âDid you see which way she went?â
âNah, sheâs not here,â Jake was scrolling through Instagram, only half paying attention.
Buckyâs disappointed sigh left his chest deflated, empty. âOh, did she say where she was going? Or when sheâd be back?â
Jake pulled his focus from his phone and stared at Bucky with confusion on his face. His brows pulled together, his mouth hung slightly ajar. But finally, he made sense of Buckyâs words. âOHHH, okay, my bad- I think there was a miscommunication just now.â
Bucky sighed again- this time, with relief.Â
âYeah, no, sheâs not here,â Jake continued, âbecause she didnât make it back.â
Buckyâs ears started ringing.Â
The sharp, piercing sound blocked out voices. Footsteps on the tile. Maybe Jake was trying to speak to him, but Bucky heard only the shrill sound of shock. Seconds later, his nerves fell numb. The utter absence of sensation disconnected him from his body. He was lost in a liminal atmosphere with no stability, no purchase. His entire being was shutting down, one sense at a time.
Bucky told himself to focus, to compute what heâd heard. He did his best to make sense of Jakeâs words, but to no avail. His mind simply couldnât understand the phrase âshe didnât make it backâ. The words had shed their meaning entirely and sounded foreign to Bucky as they rattled around his skull. Goosebumps rose over the surface of his skin, and a cold sweat created a sheen across his face. He feared he might get sick.Â
âI- Iâm sorry,â he forced himself back into his body, back to the present. âI donât think I understand.âÂ
âThings got pretty hairy- this was not the easy mission they said it would be,â Jake scoffed and rolled his eyes. âItâs not fair, I definitely got a way harder assignment for my first mission than all the other new agents, and I think itâs-âÂ
Buckyâs glare couldâve sliced Jake in half, âget to the point.â Â
âRight, um,â Jake continued, âI told her over comms that I was leaving. I gave her plenty of time to meet me at the jet, but she didnât answer. And she never came outside.â He shrugged, âI had to leave for my own safety.â
âSo, you just-â Bucky felt himself losing his grip. âYou left her there? Alone?â He didnât realize he was shouting, didnât realize heâd drawn attention to himself- until Agent Hill showed up.
She placed a light hand on Buckyâs tense shoulder, but instantly withdrew. He was shaking, practically vibrating under her palm. âIs there a problem here, guys? I donât want-â
âHe left her behind,â was all Bucky could manage.
Maria stared at Jake in disbelief, âyou did what?â
A strange mixture of rage and heartbreak seethed behind Buckyâs eyes, âYou donât just abandon your partner-â
Jakeâs attitude disgusted Bucky. He was detached, irritated. He rolled his eyes like an insolent child. âRelax, man. Jesus Christ, this isnât the army. I didnât promise to âleave no man behindâ or whatever-â
Bucky had heard enough. He lifted jake by the collar of his shirt, twisting the material in his metal fist. Jakeâs head sent a sickening thud resounding through the space as Bucky forced him against the nearest wall.
âWhat the fuck?â Jake squirmed in Buckyâs grasp, âThere are casualties in the field all the time, why am I being punished for-â
Bucky released Jake at once, sending him crashing to the floor.Â
His voice was quiet, hollow. âCasualties?â He swallowed hard, âIs she-â
Jake shrugged at he rubbed at the bruise forming on his neck. âI donât know, I assume so. I didnât stick around to find out.âÂ
And just like that, Bucky was gone.Â
He took off down the hall, forcing himself forward as a soul-crushing panic swallowed him whole. No matter how many times he blinked, no matter how fervently he shook his head, he couldnât rid his mind of the picture Jake painted for him. Each time he shut his eyes he saw you- alone. Your bloodied, broken body laying collapsed against a wall of a Hydra base. Your skin slick with blood. Your skin cold. Void of life.Â
He moved quickly, but not quick enough. He simply couldnât outrun the familiar feeling closing in on him. His heavy, well-worn cloak of grief wound its way across his shoulders and twisted itself around his neck. He knew the suffocating sensation all too well. It weighed him down but couldnât dampen his pace, nothing could; not when your life hung in the balance.Â
He was too well acquainted with loss by now, too familiar with mourning. Thereâd been a time when he wondered if heâd ever grieve again. Heâd lost his family, his friends, himself- what else was there? What more could he possibly lose? But the moment he met you, he knew heâd one day mourn again. He just didnât realize that time would come so soon.Â
A startling cold prickled at his skin, his lungs refused to inflate. How much time did you have left? How long would it take him to get to you? Were you even-
Hillâs voice yanked him out of his spiral, âBarnes, hey-â She made a grab at his shoulder, but her feeble attempt was no match for Buckyâs pace. âWhere are you going?â
âTo get her back.â Buckyâs tone was firm, resolute. He was going to bring you home or die trying.
âI donât think thatâs a good idea,â Hill nearly tripped over her own feet as she tried to keep up with Buckyâs long strides. âYou heard what Jake said, itâs a dangerous location- more dangerous than we thought. I think it might be best to wait it out for a few days, let things calm down and then-â
Bucky turned suddenly, stopping Maria in her tracks. âIâm not just going to leave her there.â
Maria shrunk away from the fierceness in his eyes, âI know youâre upset, but she might not be-â
âI donât care.â His gruff tone dissolved, making way for the fear heâd so desperately tried to hide. âWhether sheâs alive or-â he couldnât bring himself to voice the alternative.Â
Bucky knew what it was like to be assumed dead. He knew what it was like to be left in the field.Â
âShe deserves to come home,â he said.
Maria couldnât argue with him.Â
âRound up as many members of the med team as you can and have them meet me in the hangar. Weâre leaving in ten minutes- sooner if we can.â Bucky turned and resumed his previous path, âIâll be in the armory.â
Bucky grabbed as much weaponry as his duffel would carry without splitting at the seams and made his way to the hangar. He hoped to find ten, maybe fifteen members of the medical team waiting for him on the jet. He wasnât sure of your condition, didnât know how many breaths you had left. He wanted to give you the best possible chance at surviving the onslaught you endured.Â
But when he turned the corner into the hangar, he found only three scrub-clad bodies.Â
âIs this it?â Bucky boarded the jet and dropped his bag to the floor. He eyed the scant amount of medical support, their uncertain expressions. His hopes of bringing you home alive dwindled.
A nurse whoâd stitched Bucky up more times than he could count gave him a nervous smile. âThe med bay is swamped, the team could barely afford to let us come with you.âÂ
Bucky didnât want to hear it. He didnât want excuses or rationalizations. All he wanted was to bring you home with your heart still beating. And three medical professionals, he decided, was better than none.Â
The flight to your location only gave Bucky more time to worry. He obsessively checked his weaponry, hovered over the med teamâs supplies. But no amount of double and triple checking could save him from the spiral. He traveled down the path of every possible âwhat if?â, leading him only to heartache. No matter where he searched, he couldnât find a positive outcome. And though he didnât want to acknowledge the odds, he knew yours were slim- impossible, even.Â
And as the jet grew closer to your location, Bucky steeled himself for what he knew heâd find: you, his best friend, his reason for living, his everything- dead. Cold. Lifeless. None of the horrors he faced in the past could compare; no pain could ever be greater. Bucky knew heâd hurt for the rest of his life.
The clouds parted as the jet began its descent. Slowly, a large stone building appeared out of the fog like a monster in the horror movies you loved so much. It stood in an otherwise empty clearing, its shadow looming over the dying grass. Smoke billowed from holes in the roof, the walls. Whatever happened here was catastrophic. Disastrous.Â
Buckyâs heart sat lodged in his throat as he imagined you trapped in there. Goosebumps rose over the surface of his skin as he stared at the looming structure. He had to get you out, even if he died trying.
Just before the jet touched down, an idea popped into Buckyâs head. It scaled the high walls heâd tried to erect to protect himself from thoughts of your demise and grabbed him by the throat. It was smart- brilliant, actually. He was shocked he could even think straight given the circumstances.
âFRIDAY,â Bucky called out, âis comm 1209 working?â He shoved his own comm in his ear and waited for a response.Â
âComm 1209 is on and in range,â Friday said. âWould you like me to connect you?â
He couldnât say yes fast enough.
A few staticky clicks and pops vibrated against Buckyâs eardrum as his comm connected to yours. But he was too scared to speak. What if you didnât answer? What if he heard you take your dying breaths? Just the thought was enough to make him sick.
He owed it to you, though, to at least try. Heâd always said heâd do anything for you, that heâd risk it all for you- and he meant it every time. If reaching out to you over comms exposed him to something horrible, something traumatic and unforgettable, at least he tried. At least he attempted to keep his promise. And after everything heâd been through, what was one more life-shattering, soul-crushing nightmare?
âH- umâŚâ Bucky swallowed the large lump obstructing his throat. âHello?â He waited a moment, holding his breath the entire time, and tried again. âHello?â
He waited.Â
No response.
âDoll? Itâs me. Itâs BuckyâŚâÂ
The dead silence on the other end of the line dragged on. It seemed like his words disappeared into the air, unacknowledged. Unheard. Maybe the sound of his voice was reverberating inside your ear as you lay dying. Or maybe he was talking to your corpse.
 The thought made him nauseous.
âPlease, sweetheart. If youâre there- if youâre able- just say one word. Say anything,â he pled. A long bout of silence followed.
He clenched and released his metal fist again and again, desperate to rid himself of the panic settling into his bones. He was stupid to think you survived, stupid to let himself be optimistic. He made it here as quickly as he could, but he couldnât save you. He was too late.Â
He wanted to take one of his many weapons and turn it on himself.Â
But a small sound stopped him.
âBuckâŚâ
He almost fell to his knees. At the sound of your voice, an overwhelming warmth banished the cold that infiltrated his bones. Against all odds, you were alive.
A deep sigh of relief seeped from Buckyâs lungs, âSweetheartâŚâÂ
A hurricane of emotion rattled against the storm doors inside Buckyâs mind. He couldnât stop thinking about the âalmostsâ. How he almost lost you, how you almost died alone in a Hydra base. But he couldnât allow it to swallow him- not yet. There was no time for a breakdown. He needed to move, he needed to get to you.Â
He shrugged off the grief that rested heavy on his shoulders and swallowed the impending sob that vibrated inside his throat. âIâm here- Iâm gonna come get you. Just tell me where-â
A staunch refusal came from your end of the comm, âNo- noâŚâ You took a sharp, rattling breath, âno way.â
Bucky didnât like the way you had to fight to get your words out. You were clearly struggling, doing everything in your power to stay on this side of consciousness. He wondered how much time you had left.
But still, there was a familiar strength to your voice. Maybe it was the adrenaline, maybe it was the renewed hope of rescue; something was keeping you alive.Â
âItâs okay, sweetheart, just tell me where you are. The jet just landed. Iâm gonna get you out and-â
âI said- I said no,â you breathed. âYou canât c-come in here, itâs too dangerous⌠we were a-ambushed.â
Even in your condition, even when Bucky was your only hope of rescue, his safety was your first thought. Youâd rather die alone than put Buckyâs life at risk; the thought made his cheeks pink and filled his chest with a fuzzy warmth. But he didnât have time to enjoy the feeling.
âIf you donât tell me where you are, Iâll just sweep the whole building,â Bucky said, using your worry against you. âThat means more opportunities for me to run into Hydra operatives. More time inside the base- itâll be way more dangerous.â He could practically see you rolling your eyes, âso itâs probably better if you just give me a direct route, donât you think?â
Bucky smiled to himself as he envisioned you on the other end. He was certain you were arguing with yourself, cursing his rationale.Â
He waited for you to come at him with a sharp retort or a sarcastic quip but heard nothing. The silence on your end of the line dragged on. And on. It lasted far too long for Buckyâs comfort. Surely, you couldnât still be thinking about his proposition? Heâd given you more than enough time to make up your mind, more than enough time to come up with a response. It was time you didnât have.Â
What if youâd fallen unconscious? What if, in those quiet moments, your soul vacated this earth?
Bucky couldnât take it anymore. He disembarked the jet, resolving to search every inch of the base. But just as he reached the dark, unsettling building, you spoke.
âF-fifteenth floor. Northeast⌠northeast quadrant,â you sighed, defeated. âThereâs a- a room at the end of this hall, I think itâs maybe an office?â Again, you took a long pause. The energy required to think, to speak, was energy you didnât have. âJust f-follow the trail of blood.â
Buckyâs breath caught in his throat. He shuddered at the thought of your blood leaving a path down the stark white, sterile hallways of the base. But he didnât have time to focus on anything other than getting you out; this was a rescue. He owed it to you to keep his head level. To focus on getting you out as quickly as he could.Â
âThe power is⌠itâs outâ, you said. âYouâre gonna h-have to take-âÂ
Bucky wanted to save you from wasting any extra energy, âThe stairs. Got it.âÂ
And while he normally didnât mind getting a few extra steps in, he knew the time required to climb fifteen flights of stairs would push the limits of your survival.Â
But he pushed the ever-encroaching sense of doom to the side and put on a brave face for you. For himself. âOkay, Iâm coming to get you,â he promised. âStay awake, and donât move.â
âAs if I h-have a choice,â you laughed a breathy, hollow laugh. A long groan followed.Â
Your pain radiated through Buckyâs chest. He didnât want to climb stairs or scour hallways- he just wanted to be there. To instantly materialize at your side. To bring you instantaneous comfort. He lamented the super soldier serumâs lack of teleportation abilities.Â
âYou know what I mean, doll. Just stay awake, okay?â Bucky drew his gun and stepped inside the building. âDonât fall asleep. Do anything you have to do- just stay awake. Can you keep talking until I get there?â
âW-what am IâŚâ You let out a raspy exhale, âsupposed to talk about?â
Bucky cleared a long hallway and found the stairwell, âAnything, just keep talking.â
Another extended silence filled the air; it nearly drove Bucky crazy. Your silences held limitless possibilities, horrifying âwhat ifsâ.
âIt w-wasnât supposed to be⌠to be like this,â you finally said. âIt wasnât supposed to be this dangerous. This was Jakeâs first mission- it wasnât f-fair to him.â Heartache coated your every word. Even after your partner abandoned you, even after Jake forced you to suffer and bleed all alone- you still sympathized with him. Still felt sorry for him.Â
Bucky felt no such thing.
âI know, doll. Keep talking, okay?â
You sighed. âWe s-split up for recon⌠thatâs when they- when they came at me.â Your next few breaths were so shallow, your lungs barely inflated; the lack of oxygen left you dizzy. A thin veil of glittering spots sparkled and danced on the edges of your periphery. âIt all h-happened so fast⌠there were so many of them. I just- I remember pain. And I hoped Jake was okay, w-wherever he was.â
Your heart was too good for this job. For people like Jake. Bucky admired your kindness, your empathy, your selfless nature. Even in the face of pain, of death- you thought about others. You often told Bucky how unfair life had been to him, lamenting his treatment at the hands of fate. Bucky found himself doing the same for you and your kind heart.
âI called out for h-him, I needed backup⌠I kept asking him to come help me-â A sharp cough rattled out of your throat.Â
Bucky cringed at the sound. It was the only sound in the building. He hadnât heard anyone else. Hadnât seen one Hydra operative- at least, not a live one. He came across their bodies every now and again but didnât see a single living soul. He was sure they deserted after the explosion. Just like Jake.Â
The destruction, however, was everywhere. Bullet casings littered the floor. Blood stained the tile floors. Fluorescent lights flickered overhead. He had to get you out of here.
âBut he n-never answered. And then he told me he was leaving. He said he was- he was outside already. He gave me n-ninety seconds to meet him at the jetâŚâ Your words were tinged with devastation, with hopelessness, with betrayal. âI tried- I did my best to make it down the stairs. But I was- I was dizzy⌠I was b-bleeding.â The memory stung like your fresh wounds. âI kept slipping on- on my own blood. I just c-couldnât move fast enough. It hurt too much.â
Wrath burned inside Bucky like a raging forest fire. But his utter heartbreak doused it completely, extinguishing the rageful flames. He found himself unable to think, to breathe. It took everything in him to keep moving forward. Who could ever leave you behind like that? Who could ignore your suffering and sentence you to death without a second thought? The image of you stumbling, struggling to run for your life gutted him.
âAnd then- and then I heard the jet t-take off,â you sighed. âAnd I listened as it got farther and farther away⌠until it was g-gone. And I was- I was alone.â
He thought of you sitting alone in cold silence as the noise from the jet quieted. As your hope dwindled. The entire base mustâve felt like a tomb, like a massive, lonely grave meant just for you.Â
Bucky almost fell to his knees. Sobs throttled the inside of his chest, begging for release. Tears burned inside his lash line. Jake didnât just leave you behind, he marooned you without care. And in his departure, he sealed your fate.Â
âI d-didnât have a way to call for⌠for help. My phone was on the j-jet with jake.â
The sorrow that stained your words was all too familiar to Bucky. It was the same hopelessness that accompanied him every day that he was at Hydra. When he laid in the snow for hours upon hours after falling from the train. He never wished that kind of despondency, that kind of  misery on anyone. And knowing that you, the person who deserved it the least, experienced it for even a moment shattered him.
âI realized I⌠I didnât h-have any options,â you breathed.Â
A collapsed column blocked Buckyâs path as he tried to make his way from the sixth floor to the seventh. The concrete was too high, too precarious to scale. If he tried to climb it and got hurt, it would only serve to diminish your chances of survival. And he wasnât willing to risk that. With a huff, Bucky exited the northwest stairwell in search of another route. This was a waste of time- time you didnât have.Â
He painstakingly checked every hall until he finally found another stairwell. His breathing came a little easier as he rocketed his way up the stairs, growing ever closer to you.
âSo, I found this- this room. Itâs quiet. Itâs out of the w-way. I needed somewhere to hide. S-somewhere toâŚâ A small crack of emotion cut through your voice, âsomewhere to die.â
It wasnât fair. It wasnât fair that Jake got to return home safe and sound while you struggled to stay alive. It wasnât fair that you had to seek out your own deathbed. Bucky wanted to scream, to break things, to spill every last drop of Jakeâs blood. But he was a soldier, and this was a rescue mission.
âThis seemed like as g-good a place as any,â you choked on a weak laugh. âBeats dying in the middle of a h-hallway, I guess.â
Buckyâs automatic response was to swear that youâd make it out. To promise that you werenât going to die. But he bit his tongue. He couldnât make those kinds of assurances. Heâd do anything to bring you comfort but swearing that youâd return home alive seemed almost cruel.Â
He pushed himself to move faster. He couldnât let you die alone, especially not in this godforsaken place. As he sprinted up the last flight of stairs and ripped open the door to the fifteenth floor, he struggled to orient himself. You were in the northeast quadrant, but where was he? He searched for anything to indicate his location- but found no signage. No directory.Â
Everything inside of him rattled with dread, with anxiety. Any moment now, you were going to die. You were going to take your last breath. All alone. A thick, suffocating wave of panic crashed over Bucky as he realized- you were going to die disappointed. You were going to leave this world knowing that he hadnât gotten to you in time.
It was then that he noticed a faded arrow painted on the wall, with âNEQâ painted below it in block letters. Northeast quadrant. He was closer than he thought.
âIâm gonna be there in just a second, doll,â he said as he followed the arrows.  âI think Iâm right around the corner.âÂ
This was just his way of making you feel better, you were sure of it. The hallways were long and winding. Each floor was a maze of its own. Even with your vague instructions, it could take him a while to find you. Still, Buckyâs words brought you comfort in the way that only he could.
âI know, I t-trustâŚâ A metallic taste filled your mouth. A warm ooze trickled down your chin and dripped onto your chest. The warm, fuzzy feeling brought on by Buckyâs assurances faded. Of course, you knew you were in bad shape. But as blood leaked from your mouth, you wondered if these were your last moments.
Instantly, you searched for the words to say goodbye to Bucky. Time was slipping through your fingers, life draining from your body with each passing second. But before you drifted off into a never-ending sleep, you had to tell Bucky what he meant to you. Youâd use all your strength, your last few breaths- whatever it took. He just had to know.Â
But how does one say goodbye to a soulmate? You didnât have the energy or capacity to make a grandiose speech. And the blood filling your mouth impeded your ability to speak. You wanted to tell bucky everything- how he comforted you, cared for you, made your life worth living. How your life revolved around him as though he were your personal sun. But nothing quite encapsulated the things you felt for him. Every word in the English language, every sonnet fell short. And the lack of oxygen getting to your brain sabotaged your phrasing.
âBuck, I think itâs⌠I think itâs almost t-time,â you rasped.
But just as you opened your blood-stained mouth to proclaim every feeling you ever had for him, the door flew open. Alarm coursed through your veins at the threat. Surely, a Hydra agent had stumbled upon your hiding place and was here to finish you off. The severe blood loss was no match for your training, thought. And, on instinct, you pulled your gun on the tall, dark silhouette standing in the doorway.
âWoah, hey!â Bucky raised his hands in surrender. âItâs me, itâs just me.â
At the sound of his voice, your arm fell limp. Your gun clattered to the floor. Your head lolled back against the wall. It had taken everything in you to try and protect yourself one last time. And now that your energy reserves were nearly depleted, you allowed your eyes to close.
âS-sorryâŚâ A barely-there smile pulled at your lips. âMy⌠my bad, Buck.â
âNo, donât be sorry, doll.âÂ
Bucky knelt in front of you, taking in your broken, bloodied body. Heâd seen carnage before, witnessed more death than anyone should. But this, you- it was different. It hurt in places he didnât know he had. But he didnât let it show. Knowing you, youâd spend your last few moments comforting him, trying to make him feel better. And so, he forced a warm smile and tabled his breakdown for the moment.
âIâm actually impressed. I mean, you might be hurt, but you were ready to take me out just now,â he forced a chuckle. âThatâs my girl.â His cool metallic hand brushed against your blood-stained cheek.Â
And in that moment, something within you changed. Your eyes shot open. You blinked a few times before forcing your eyes shut once again. You gave your head a few good shakes. Surely, this wasnât real- it couldnât be.Â
You opened your eyes wide once again, taking him in. âBucky?â
With one shaking hand, you reached for him in the most pathetic attempt heâd ever seen. You were weak, dangerously so; it scared him to his core. But you were alive.Â
He leaned in, meeting you in the middle, and let you stroke at his stubble for a moment.
âYeah, Iâm here,â he kissed your palm. âIâm so happy to see you.â
âYouâreâŚâ you other hand reached for him, but made it only a centimeter or two before falling into your lap. Bucky opted to take it in his. âYouâre here?â
He nodded, âI could never leave you behind, sweetheart.â
He may have continued speaking after that, but you didnât quite hear him. The emotion youâd tried so hard to swallow came bursting forward, crushing your every attempt at remaining levelheaded. Your fingers smoothed over Buckyâs cheek again and again. His name fell from your lips in what resembled a prayer. Tears rolled down your cheeks and mixed with the blood crusting over your skin.Â
A soft, warm wave of peace rolled in, covering you like a well-loved quilt. The pain disappeared; the sorrow evaporated. All that remained was Bucky. This was the warm spring that followed a dark, bitter winter. The first rays of sun after a vicious storm. The first taste of home after a long time away. You let the familiar warmth of Buckyâs presence drown out the rest of the world until only you two remained.
âSweetheart, did you hear me?â With a gentle squeeze of your hand, Bucky called you back to the present. âI need to look at your wound, okay?â
A sharp rush of pain nearly blinded you as you lifted your shirt, exposing the bloody mess. But even as Bucky appraised the gunshot wound that turned your abdomen into horror scene, you couldnât find it in you to worry. Your hands lazily found his shoulder, his chest, his face; you just wanted to touch him. To know, without a doubt, that he was there. That he was real.
âHey, we⌠we need to t-talk,â you whispered as Bucky did his best to quickly bandage your wound for transport. âI n-need to talk- to talk to youâŚâ
Bucky nodded, âsure thing, doll. Absolutely. We can talk about whatever you want. But right nowâŚâ he returned your shirt to its rightful position and met your gaze. âRight now, I need to get you out to the jet, okay? We can talk later.â
He guided your arms around his neck, lifted you into his arms, and moved as fast as he could through the winding hallways. His quick gait set your nerves alight with pain. Every bump, every jostle had you gasping for breath. And though it was a necessary evil, the guilt still sat in Buckyâs stomach like a rock. His repeated âIâm sorrysâ were nearly constant, doubling with your every grimace and groan. But he couldnât slow down, couldnât let the time slip away; you didnât have much left.
Between pained sounds and twisted expressions of discomfort, you said the same thing on a loop. Again and again and again, you pled with him, using energy you didnât have.Â
âWe need to⌠to t-talk.â
âI h-have to tell you.â
âCan I talk to y-you about- about something?â
And though Bucky wouldâve loved nothing more than to have a long heart to heart with you as you two often did, you werenât strong enough. He couldnât let you waste your finite energy on a conversation with him. And so, he responded to each of your requests with an ask of his own, begging you to save your strength. He promised that the two of you could talk tomorrow, that there was plenty of time for a conversation later.Â
But âplenty of timeâ almost seemed like an empty promise. And âtomorrowâ felt like a lie. Would you have a âlaterâ? He didnât know. But he didnât want you wasting your oxygen, not when he feared it might be your last breath.
Boarding the jet with you alive in his arms almost felt like a win to Bucky. Almost. Sure, heâd gotten you out with your heart still beating, but your condition worsened by the second. And the grave looks the med team wore as Bucky gently rested you on the treatment table dug a deep pit in his stomach.Â
They sprang into action, placing IVs and delivering medications. Scissors glided through your shirt and exposed your broken body to the med team. Bucky knew theyâd seen their share of gnarly injuries over the years, but he swore that they recoiled at the sight of your wounds.Â
With a shake of his head, Bucky refocused. He had to get you out of there- to get you home. He headed for the controls and planned to set the jet in motion. But he made it only a step toward the cockpit before a hand caught his.
âS-stayâŚâ you whispered. âPlease.â
His heart shattered. âIâm not leaving you, doll, IÂ promise. I just have to get us in the air, okay?â With great care, he placed a kiss to your hand and set it at your side. âIâll be back in just a minute.â
Buckyâs body operated on muscle memory alone as he initiated take off. His mind was occupied, completely and totally, by the sound of your weak voice begging him not to leave. The sound played on a loop inside his brain, cutting him deeper each time. Youâd already been abandoned once today; he was certain you feared it would happen again.Â
With a deep breath and a quick reset, Bucky did what he had to do. He needed to be on his A-game for you, needed to be his very best. Only a few hours ago, youâd trusted someone with your life, and they failed you. Bucky wasnât about to do the same. He worked carefully to chart the fastest route back to the compound, opting to forego FRIDAYâs proposed path. It kept him from your side longer than he wouldâve liked, but less time in the air seemed like the best option. The sooner he could get you to the med bay, with its massive, brilliant medical staff and unlimited resources, the better.Â
Just as he finalized the flight plan and asked FRIDAY to notify the med bay of your impending arrival, an unsettling sound pulled his focus. It was an ominous beeping, alarming your care team of a sudden, life-threatening change.Â
Gloved hands moved at lightning speed; voices yelled medical jargon back and forth. And you laid there on the table. No heartbeat. No respirations. Deathly still.Â
Bucky stood on the periphery, too horrified to get any closer.Â
He thought it best, of course, to stay out the med teamâs way. But knew deep down it was an excuse. He was simply too terrified to lose you. If he got closer, if he saw you struggling to stay alive, all of this would suddenly become real. And he couldnât handle that.Â
âBarnes!â A nurse screamed at him, âdid you hear me?â
Bucky forced himself back to the present. âNo⌠I, um-â
âShe has no pulse- get over here, we need you to do compressions!â
Buckyâs desperate need to help you, to save you, overpowered his fear. And in an instant, he was at your side. He loomed over you, his hands locked together, preparing to help resuscitate you. But once again, his fear reared its ugly head. You were already so badly injured, so weak. And he was far too strong. What if he made your condition worse? What if he-
âCome on!â The nurse yelled at him, âstart compressions-Â now!â
He did as he was told. He pressed into your body with a measured pressure, careful not to crush your chest. But his cautious compressions didnât cut it. The nurses instructed him to push harder. To âactually compressâ your chest- and Bucky followed instructions.Â
But as he did so, a sickly snapping sound exploded from your body. Bucky recoiled instantly; his face contorted in horror.
âWhat are you doing? Keep going!â
âIÂ canât- I think I broke her ribs,â Bucky shouted at the doctor. âWhat do I do?â
âKeep going!â The nurse yelled, âIt happens- just keep going.â
Bucky broke out into a cold sweat. His stomach turned at the thought of hurting you, of causing you even more pain; youâd been through enough as it was. But he did as he was told. With each round of compressions, he swore he created new fractures. He felt every splinter, every crack as he put pressure on your chest.Â
He wanted to sever every last nerve-ending in his hand; anything to rid him of the sickening sensation creeping through his palm. But if doing this saved you, it was worth the nightmares.
He watched as the two nurses provided your supplemental breaths and tended to your endlessly bleeding wound. The doctor called âclearâ every so often, shocking you with a defibrillator in an attempt to restore your heartbeat.
Round after round of compressions, breathing, and shocks passed by without signs of improvement. You remained lifeless, unresponsive. A syringe of epinephrine delivered straight to your chest did nothing. And Bucky felt what little hope he had slipping through the cracks in your ribs. He couldnât believe he was about to lose you; couldnât believe heâd have to watch you die. Hot tears blurred his vision and streaked down his cheeks. His legs went numb. At any second, he knew his knees would give out, knew heâd crumble to the floor under the crushing weight of grief.
The doctor deemed the next shock your last, and Bucky almost doubled over.Â
âCome on, doll, just-â He swallowed a sob, âjust stay. Stay. Do it for me, Iâm begging you. Please?â
The doctor called one last âclearâ and delivered your final shock, only to be met with the rhythmic beeping of your heart monitor.
âSinus rhythm restored,â announced the nurse to Buckyâs left. She appraised the waves on your EKG and gave a nod. âSheâs stable.â
After what felt like an eternity, Bucky took a breath. He stretched his tense fingers and did his best to  relax the rock-hard knots forming in his shoulders. A new crop of hope bloomed cautiously inside his chest, but he couldnât allow it to blossom and flourish just yet. You werenât out of the woods; there was a very real possibility that your heart might stop again. And he wasnât sure how many times the doctor could revive you before throwing in the towel.
Less than a minute after Buckyâs cautious optimism sprouted anew, a soul crushing sight dashed it completely. A sharp gasp filled his lungs, a shudder rocked his frame. Shades of deep, dark blue bloomed under the skin of your chest. Black and purple splotches stained your sternum. Some spots were already starting to swell. He extended a hand in your direction but recoiled in an instant, fearing heâd hurt you yet again.Â
âHappens all the time,â one of the nurses said with a shrug. âBelieve me, broken ribs are the least of her worries.â
Somehow, her words didnât make him feel any better. He ached to hold your hand, to sweep a gentle caress across your cheek. But he didnât dare touch you after what he did. Every glimpse of your bruised, swollen chest sent bile rushing into his throat.Â
The three dedicated members of the med team worked tirelessly for the rest of the flight. They did everything in their power to keep your condition steady, to maintain the life they worked so hard to save. It brought Bucky comfort to see them staying so close, ready to jump into action if need be. Â
Bucky, like the med team, hovered. He couldnât bring himself to leave your side. You seemed too fragile, your condition too tenuous. He counted your every breath, took stock of every beat of your heart on the monitor. Stepping away for even a second felt wrong. He needed to be there if you crashed again, if the doctor needed extra hands. He needed to be there to help.
And if you woke up, he wanted to be the first face you saw.Â
But you didnât wake. A groan here, a muscle twitch there- that was all you could spare. And though Bucky wanted nothing more than to see you open your eyes, he thanked the universe for keeping you unconscious. He knew tsunamis of pain rippled in the wings, waiting to overtake you the second you woke.
Bucky held his breath as the jet landed. Every jarring bump, every vibration, forced his heart into his throat. He feared that even the slightest impact would send you into cardiac arrest. He flicked his eyes from the rising and falling of your chest to the rhythmic flashing of your heart monitor and back again. Nothing changed, no alarms sounded. And when the jet finally stilled, Bucky breathed a deep sigh of relief. He just needed to get you to the med bay for treatment, and this whole nightmare would be over.Â
He didnât like being optimistic. It felt like a set-up, like false hope. If he told himself youâd survive and you didnât, the fall would be that much harder, that much more devastating.Â
But being realistic wasnât any better. Telling himself that you were too far gone, that you werenât going to make it, felt wrong. To him, it seemed like he was cursing you. Like willing your death into existence. Like begging the universe to end your life.Â
And so, he opted for a neutral mantra. âSheâs home,â he told himself. âSheâs home. Sheâs home. Sheâs home.â
The distance to the medbay felt longer than usual. The hallways seemed to stretch on forever, the double doors to the triage center seemed to grow farther and farther away. Bucky followed your gurney closely, only allowing a few inches of space between the two of you. He couldnât be separated from you again. He wouldnât. He needed to be with you every second, watching over you.Â
A dark cloud of impending doom loomed over his psyche. It whispered to him, telling him that if he left your side, if he let you out of his sight, youâd die. Youâd be gone forever. And it would be his fault. He knew it was nonsense, that this was just his anxiety operating on overdrive. But he couldnât shake the fear. And risking it wasnât an option.
âNo visitors past this point,â a security guard placed an arm in front of Bucky as he tried to enter the triage unit.
Bucky tried to go around the man, watching as the medical staff carried you farther out of reach. âIâm not a visitor, Iâm an agent-âÂ
âNo agents past this point, then,â the guard rolled his eyes. âOnly patients and medical staff. You can have a seat over there.â
A small table sat against the wall, flanked by two chairs. It was a sad, makeshift excuse for a waiting room that operated as a device to keep people from hanging around. But bucky couldnât be discouraged. He took a seat in one of the chairs, determined to wait there as long as he had to. He knew heâd missed a number of important phone calls by now, and probably several meetings. But he didnât care; all that mattered was you.Â
Dread circled Bucky like a buzzard as he waited. It was taking too long- why was it taking so long? How much time did the medical staff need? You were stable when the jet landed, the nurse said so. Why were there no updates? All Bucky needed was a nod, a bit of information. But he remained in the dark, wondering if you died on the operating table.
Maria found Bucky slumped in a chair with a zombie-like air about him. He was expressionless, his gaze hollow. His palms traced the same track up and down his thighs in a never-ending cycle. One look and she knew: something was very wrong.
âHey,â she called softly, hoping not to startle him.
But Bucky didnât respond- he didnât even react. He just sat there, his unblinking stare burning a hole in the tile. An uneasiness enveloped Maria. Sheâd never seen Bucky so empty, so despondent. As she stared at him, she found herself fearing the worst. âMaybe he just received terrible newsâ she thought. âMaybe heâs grievingâ.
âHey,â she tried again, nudging her foot against his.Â
He came back to life with a start. A sharp inhale filled his chest, his eyes blinked wildly. But his palms never stopped moving in their endless cycle against his tactical pants. And he never actually looked at her.
âHiâŚâ he breathed.Â
Hill took the seat opposite him. She conjured the gentlest, warmest tone she could find, âis everything okay?â
Bucky balled his hands into tight fists and stretched them out again. Maria noticed blood- your blood- crusting under his fingernails and staining his skin. But before she could get a good look, he grabbed the arms of the chair. His palms rubbed fervently against the plastic handles for a moment until they moved to his face. He ran his hands along his jaw, his spiky stubble poking into his skin.
âBarnes, what happened? Are you-â
Finally, his head snapped in her direction, âI can still feel itâŚâ
âFeel what?â
Buckyâs head fell into his hands. He pressed his palms against his eyes and dragged them down his face. Maria watched him fall apart in slow motion. He seemed to be unraveling, one cell at a time. And when he finally spoke, shame made his words almost unintelligible.Â
âShe crashed on the jetâŚâ
âOh...â Maria did her best to keep a calm, even tone. Her concern for you vibrated in her chest, but she didnât dare let it free- not when Bucky was moments away from a meltdown. âIs she-â
âThe med team needed help. There werenât enough of them- they needed me to do chest compressions,â Bucky said, his voice low. âAnd I broke- I crushed her ribs.âÂ
A sharp shudder rocked his entire body. Just thinking of that moment, when his too-strong hands destroyed your chest, was enough to make him sick. To scar him for life. To haunt him. Of all the horrible things heâd done in over the years, this was the worst. He gave his hands a quick shake, hoping to rid his nerve endings of the sensation.
âI felt her bones snapping under my hands,â Buckyâs words dripped with shame. âAnd I can still⌠I still feel it.â
âOkay,â Maria said gently. âWell, if she-â
âShe was already in such bad shape,â Bucky swiped a tear from his cheek. âAnd IâŚÂ I hurt her. I made it so much worse.âÂ
His head fell into his hands once again and did not reemerge.Â
âHey, look at me,â Maria gave his arm a gentle touch.Â
Bucky only shook his head.Â
âCome on, Barnes, just look at me for a second.â
Again, he refused.Â
Maria abandoned her chair and sat instead on the small table. She never got this close to Bucky. Usually, she preferred to give him his space. He wasnât the touchy-feely type- unless you were around. But he was lost in a shame spiral, adrift with no hope of return. And he needed rescuing. She placed her hands on his and gently removed them from his face.Â
âYou saved her life,â Maria said. âTwice. You rescued her from the base, and when the med team needed help, you came through.â
âBut I-â
âDid it work?â Maria asked, her tine almost stern. âDid the chest compressions work?â
Bucky nodded.Â
Maria gave him a shrug, âThatâs all that matters. She can recover from a few broken ribs, but if you hadnât been there-âÂ
Bucky averted his gaze as his eyes filled with tears.Â
âHey,â Maria grabbed his face, bringing his focus back to her. âIf you hadnât been there, sheâd be dead.â
Mariaâs words fought hard against the demeaning voice that lived inside Buckyâs head. It screamed at him, telling him that he shouldnât believe her, that he was a monster, that he almost killed you. Usually, Bucky allowed his inner demons to run free. He listened to them without pause, believing anything and everything they told him, no matter how vile. But Maria was steadfast and unshakable in her sentiments; she truly believed what she was saying. And by some miracle, Bucky did, too.
âThanksâŚâ He granted her a hollow smile and a small nod.Â
Hill sat in silence with him for a few hours. She didnât try to make small talk or ask what was going on inside his head. She simply existed near him, sharing the space so that he didnât have to be alone. She ignored important texts and sent every call to voicemail. She knew it was exactly what youâd do for him, if you were able. And she did her best to fill your shoes.
Abruptly, Buckyâs head snapped in her direction. His pulse thrummed against his skin as a new wave of anxiety crashed over him. âShe kept sayingâŚâ he sighed. âShe kept saying we needed to talk. She wanted to talk to me about something.â
Maria cocked her head to the side, âAbout what?â
He shrugged. âI told her we could talk later because there would be plenty of time,â Buckyâs words grew shaky. He found himself near tears for what felt like the millionth time that day. Guilt sucker punched him. âWhat if⌠what if there isnât more time for us? What if that was all we were ever going to get? What if-â
âYouâll get more time,â Maria said with certainty. âThe universe has a way of evening things out. You were robbed of time once; it wonât happen again. Plus, youâre deserved some fucking karmic retribution- youâre owed this.â
Bucky wondered how she could be that sure of something so ethereal. But she was steady, solid as a rock. She didnât waver in her words or add caveats at the end. She, somehow, knew it to be true. And Bucky couldnât help but believe her.
But when Fury called her for the eighth time, she knew quiet time was over.
âI have to go, okay? Fury canât do anything without me, heâs hopeless.â She stood from her seat and rested a hand on Buckyâs shoulder. âCall if you need anything.â
Bucky thanked her a million times over and, for the first time, gave Maria a hug. She would never know how much her reassurances helped him. Sheâd pulled him from the ledge and gave him what he desperately needed: perspective.
In the hours that followed, he let her words play on a constant loop inside his mind. âIf you hadnât been there, sheâd be dead,â he heard her say. âYouâll get more time.â The sickening feeling of your bones snapping under his strength never faded, and the fear of losing you still had him in a chokehold, but Mariaâs words quieted his mind.Â
In the sad, empty waiting room, time seemed to mutate. Some of the hours dragged, others whizzed by. Bucky wasnât sure how long heâd been there. Was it ten hours? Or twenty? He didnât really care. Heâd wait lifetimes for you.Â
He saw the security guards change shifts once, twice. It was the only thing alerting him to the passage of time, as part of him believed it was standing still. On the third shift change, they told him to go home.Â
âTheyâll call you if thereâs an updateâ, said one of the guards. âItâd probably be a good idea for you to go get some sleep, or something.â
Bucky knew he looked like hell. Your blood left crimson streaks across his face and neck. And the dark circles he usually wore under his eyes were a deep shade of plum. But he couldnât leave, he couldnât sleep. Not when your life hung in the balance. Not when you needed him.Â
A few more hours passed with no news, and Bucky found himself teetering on the edge of insanity. An angry, desperate voice bellowed inside his head. It told him to bust through the doors and find you, no matter what it took- even if it meant hurting people in the process. The gun secured to his hip and the knife strapped to his ankle became eerily attractive. His hands itched to reach for the weapons, to hold someone at gun point until they allowed him to see you. But he couldnât to give in to the fear, to the violence. It took him years of therapy and long talks with you to stop seeing himself as a monster- and he refused to destroy the progress you helped him make.Â
A doctor stepped out of the double doors and looked in Buckyâs direction, âSergeant Barnes?â Â
Bucky was on his feet before he knew what hit him. This was it. After what felt like an eternity of not knowing whether you lived or died, he was about to have an answer. Sweat dampened his palm, his brow as he stood in front of your doctor.Â
He didnât know he was even capable of this kind of fear, this kind of agony. And though he was an impossibly strong physical specimen, Bucky knew heâd never be able to lift the weight of the grief that followed your loss. He knew that, if you died, heâd spend the rest of his life dragging himself from place to place, unable to stand, unable to push back against the overwhelming, oppressive force of losing you.Â
Your doctor spoke quickly and professionally about your condition, but the words turned to mush the second they reached Buckyâs brain. The combination of medical jargon and pure panic made their meanings imperceptible. But one phrase managed to cut through the fog of Buckyâs anxiety and exhaustion: âyou can see her now.â
And just like that, Bucky took off. His fatigued body did its best to carry him through the halls, stumbling every now and then on the smooth tile of the hospital floors. But he didnât dare slow down. He had to get to you.Â
By the time he reached the door to your room, he found himself shaking- almost shivering- with anxiety. He knew you were alive, of course. Knew that the doctors had been successful in saving your life. But something in him doubted their handiwork. Something in him swore that if he didnât get to you in the next half second, youâd flatline. Again.Â
He could practically feel his brain rattling around inside his skull, his teeth chattered against one another. And the sharp tremors in his hands made it nearly impossible to get a grip on the door handle. Panic and frustration coursed through him as the he tried again and again to gain entry to your room with no luck. A strangled sob forced its way out of his chest and caught the attention of a nurse- one of the nurses who helped keep you alive on the jet.Â
âHeyâŚâ Her eyes drifted to Buckyâs shaking hands. âNeed some help?â Before Bucky could answer, sheâd abandoned the medication she was prepping, discarded her gloves, and made her way to his side.
âHere, let me.â Her soft, sympathetic tone was almost too kind; Buckyâs eyes blurred with tears. She turned the door handle and gestured for Bucky to go inside.
His âthank youâ was for more than just the door.Â
Bucky took a few steps inside and drew in a sharp breath; heâd never seen you in such severe condition. Over the many hours that Bucky waited for you outside, all of your bruises grew darker, more menacing. They stained your throat, your face, your arms. He didnât even want to think about the ones on your chest- the ones he caused. Dried blood crusted in your hair and formed a path down the side of your face. It sat caked under your fingernails and rested in the creases of your palms. Thankfully, your gunshot wound was covered by gauze and concealed by your gown. But knowing it was there was enough to make Bucky sick. He, of course, witnessed and inflicted, his fair share of carnage over the years. But he knew your wound would haunt him for years to come- simply because it was yours.Â
All he wanted was to be near you. To sit at your bedside and hold your hand. But he didnât dare to get any closer. Electrodes attached a dozen wires to your chest. IVs sat lodged in the crooks of your elbows, in the backs of your hands. Machines and monitors kept track of your vitals. And who was he to disturb this fragile, vital ecosystem? What if he accidentally pulled out one of your IVs? What if he detached a wire by mistake? Heâd already hurt you once today, he wasnât about to do it again.Â
He, instead, opted to stand at attention. A few feet away. For your safety. He didnât touch you, didnât even say your name. He simply stared at you, counting your every breath.Â
An hour- or maybe two- passed by with him like this. Nurses checked on you, doctors poked their heads in. And every time, they told him he was permitted to sit by your bedside. But he just shook his head. Sure, slipping his hand into yours, being close to you- it would provide him with incomprehensible comfort. But he couldnât, not when you were so severely injured.Â
After the third hour, Bucky feared his sanity was slipping. A wicked voice lodged deep in his psyche suddenly awakened. It whispered to him, taunted him. Maybe this was all a dream. Maybe he was asleep in the waiting room. Maybe you didnât survive. MaybeâŚ
And he wouldâve believed it, had you not snapped him out of the vicious spiral.Â
âBuck?â He feared heâd never hear you voice again, but there it was. Hoarse and weak- but yours.
Bucky flew to your side. He cradled your face gingerly in his hands, completely consumed by the need to touch you, to feel you, to know that you were real. His palms laid flush against your cheeks, his thumbs sweeping over your skin. And in an instant, the sickly sensation of your snapping bones vanished.
A hurricane of tangled thoughts and emotions crashed over him. He had so much to he wanted to say, so much he wanted to confess to you. But the words refused to arrange themselves properly. Suddenly, Bucky wished heâd used his ample time in the waiting room to better organize his thoughts. He wished heâd sought out a pen and a scrap of paper and used them to plan and articulate his sentiment. But even if heâd found the supplies he needed, he wouldnât have been able to jot a single thing down. Not with his shaking, unsteady hands.
Anxious words and broken sobs got stuck in his throat and formed a garbled, unintelligible mess as they left his mouth. But it was the best he could do. He stared at you, waiting for your response.
âI, umâŚâ you looked at him for a long moment. The haze of head trauma, blood loss, and pain killers made you foggy. You did your best to trace your steps back through Buckyâs words, certain that your condition was the cause of your confusion. But after a significant pause, you came up empty. âSorry, I- what?â
Bucky slid one of his hands into yours and gave a soft laugh. âSorry. I tried to say-â He sat quiet for a moment. What had he tried to say, exactly? He wasnât sure. With a small shake of his head, he re-rerouted. âUm, it doesnât matter. Here, howâs this:â He cleared his throat and spoke with the sharpest pronunciation possible. âHow are you feeling?â
Your laugh- Buckyâs favorite laugh- bubbled up to the surface. But regret swallowed you whole as pain shot through your head, your chest, your side. The hurt radiated through your entire being. It rendered you breathless, and left your face twisted in an agonized grimace.
Bucky didnât like how long it took you to recover from the small chuckle you shot his way. A pang of worry shot through him.  âDonât exert yourself, okay?â He swept a thumb across your cheek, âyou donât wanna tear your stitches or...â He cleared his throat, âaggravate any, um, broken bones.â Bones that he broke.
âNo, IâmâŚâ you squeezed your eyes shut for a long moment before opening them again. The pain slowly receded. âIâm good, Iâm okay. I just- breathing is hard. I forgot how shitty it feels to have broken ribs.â
Bucky nodded. His teeth sunk into the smooth flesh of his cheek. A metallic taste coated his mouth. He didnât want to tell you the truth. Didnât want you to know that he was the cause of your severe pain. But you deserved to know, didnât you? With a deep sigh, he opened his mouth, intent on telling you what really happened. But you cut him off.Â
âThank you, Buck. For coming to get me. I really thought I wasâŚâ Hot tears stung your eyes and blurred your vision. âI thought that was it for me, you know? And I just want you to know how-â you sniffed, âhow grateful I am.â
Bucky left your side for only a second, retrieving a box of tissues from the counter across the room. He was back in no time and swept a tissue across your cheek to catch your tears.
âI know we always say that we have each otherâs backs but you⌠you meant it,â you said. A small smile pulled at your lips, âthank you for meaning it.â
Bucky nodded. He did his best to keep his breathing steady, to stop himself from falling apart at the seams. He knew exactly what it felt like to be left behind, to wait for your last moments- alone.Â
âI wasnât gonna leave you there, doll. I couldnât.âÂ
You gave a small nod. âYeah, I- I wish my partner had felt the same wayâŚâ The hurt in your voice was unmistakable. It sliced though Buckyâs chest. âI didnât think he would ever do something like that. I mean, I thought we were friends.â
The mere thought of Jake brought a familiar rage to the forefront of Buckyâs mind. He didnât understand how anyone could be so callous, so uncaring- so indifferent to the well-being of others. The part of him that swore off unnecessary violence remained quiet as the rest of him imagined Jakeâs demise. He wanted your disloyal partner to suffer. To squirm and squeal and regret that he ever left you behind. But that could wait- you were the priority.
âYeah, I didnât expect him to be that kind of person,â Bucky sighed, âhe seemed like a stand-up guy.â
Silence filled the room as you thought over Jakeâs desertion. His abandonment hurt. It stung in places you didnât expect. Youâd taken Jake under your wing and did everything in your power to be the best leader possible. All you wanted was to help him. To set him up for success.Â
And after working alongside Bucky for so long, youâd forgotten that disloyalty to oneâs partner was even an option.Â
âHe probably panicked,â you tried to rationalize. âAnd then once he realized what heâd done, maybe heâŚâ
There was no rationalizing this.Â
An ugly realization slithered into your mind. âAfter he left, I think he probably hoped Iâd just die⌠that way I wouldnât be able to give my side of the story.â The weight of Jakeâs actions hit you like a train. Rivulets of warm tears rolled down your cheeks, only to be swept away by Buckyâs gentle hand. With a small shake of your head, you did your best to banish the feelings of abandonment and betrayal. Wallowing would only make you more miserable. And you didnât need emotional pain on top of the physical agony that already plagued you.
âWell, jokeâs on him,â you shrugged, âcause Iâm still alive.â Pain radiated through your chest, bringing a grimace to your face. âKind of.âÂ
Bucky didnât understand how you could just dismiss the bad feelings. Couldnât understand your propensity for levity. Your partner left you for dead without a second thought- and yet, you found a way to joke about it. It was something heâd always admired about you, something he wished he was capable of.Â
You gave a strained laugh, âI canât wait to see the look on Jakeâs face when he finds out that I didnât die.â
Bucky wasnât sure what prompted him to say it. It left his mouth without his brainâs authorization.
âBut you did.â
He wished to take the words back, but it was too late. They hung in the air, just out of his reach.Â
âIâŚâ you struggled to grasp Buckyâs words. âI what?â
This was not the time- or the place, or the way- to tell you the truth. But he didnât have a choice. His clumsy words made his bed, and now he had to lie in it.Â
âYou, umâŚâ Bucky didnât want to think about what happened, let alone say it out loud. But he owed it to you to be honest. Especially after Jake had lied to you about being a trustworthy partner. Bucky scratched at the stubble on his face, ran a hand through his hair. Anything to delay the inevitable. But he couldnât put it off for long. âYour heart stopped- you died. On the jet.â
Only one word fell from your lips, âOhâŚâÂ
âAnd while Iâm at it, I might as well tell you thatâŚâ Bucky took a deep inhale. He was in too deep now. And keeping this from you any longer felt like lying. âThat your ribs are broken because of me.â
A quizzical look crossed your face, âwhat do you mean?â
âI mean⌠the med team was short staffed on the jet. There were only three of them. And when you crashed, it was- it was an all hands on deck situation.â He flashed back to the moment when the alarms sounded. When your EKG flatlined. A shudder ran through him. âThey needed me to do chest compressions. And I- I didnât want to hurt you, but the nurse said I wasnât pushing hard enough to actually help you. And when I pushed harder- I broke your ribs.â
Bucky searched your face for something-Â anything. Anger. Fear. Betrayal. But he found nothing. Your expression was as neutral as they come. He feared that something lingered just below the surface. That once you fully processed his words, youâd erupt into a perfect storm of disgust and disappointment.
He told himself to wait silently until you made up your mind. But the outburst exploded from his lips before he could stop it. âIâm sorry- Iâm so sorry, sweetheart. You know Iâd never want to hurt you, I would never do anything to hurt you. But I⌠they told me I had to push harder. Or it wasnât going to work. And I just wanted it to work, I wanted you to be okay, and-â
It took almost all of your strength to raise your hand and place a finger to Buckyâs lips. He fell silent.
âBuck, itâs okay.â
He tried to form a rebuttal, but you cut him off.Â
âYou didnât have to rescue me, but you did. No questions asked, no hesitation. You saved my life by getting me out of there. And you saved me again by helping the med team.â Your hand drifted from Buckyâs face and landed in his palm. âYou didnât do anything wrong.â
Bucky didnât say anything else. His fingers traced gentle patterns on your palm. His eyes fell downward. You could almost see the shame eating him alive from the inside.
 âHey,â you intertwined your fingers with his. âI can handle a few broken ribs.â
âNo, I- I know you can. I justâŚâ A sad smiled flickered across his lips. âI feel terrible. You went through a lot. And I just donât like knowing I made it worse.â
A long silence filled the room. Youâd seen this side of Bucky more times than you could count. And you knew him well enough to know what followed. He was going to feel bad-Â terrible, actually- about this for a while. There was no accelerating the process or absolving him of his guilt. No amount of reassurances could save him from it. He just had to sit with it. One day, the weight would diminish. But it was going to take time. And that was okay.Â
You gave his hand a squeeze. âI thought your voice was a hallucination, you know.â
Bucky lifted his head.
âAnd when you came into the room, I actually thought that was a hallucination, too.â A smile stretched across your face, âI mean, I thought I was losing my mind.â Â
Bucky gave a half-hearted chuckle. He didnât want to think about you in that room by yourself. About you struggling to tell what was real.
âBut then you touched meâŚâ You raised your hand and brushed it across your cheek, mimicking him. âAnd thatâs when I realized that you were real- that you were there.â You fell quiet for a moment, lost in the memory of Buckyâs rescue. âIt was like, in that moment, I wasnât scared anymore. I wasnât scared of the pain. I wasnât scared of dying. I was just scared thatâŚâ
âWhat?â
âYou have to promise not to laugh,â you told him with an authoritative tone. âCause I know itâs corny, or cheesy, or whatever.â
âSweetheart,â Bucky drew an X over his heart. âIâm not gonna laugh at you.â
You stared at him with narrowed eyes, sizing up his promise. But, of course, you knew Bucky would never tease or ridicule you about something like this.Â
âOkay, fine, I um⌠I was scared that Iâd never see you again. If I died, I mean.â
Buckyâs lungs emptied. He couldnât remember how to breathe, how to speak. A sudden ache ripped through his heart as it splintered and shattered into a million pieces. To know that you thought of him in what you believed were your last moments somehow ripped him apart and put him back together all at once.
Your voice cracked. Tears filled your eyes. âI was afraid that weâd already run out of time. I was afraid that we werenât going to get any more.â A few soft sobs escaped from your throat, followed by a pained groan. But you pushed passed the throbbing in your chest. âBut I was so relieved. Because I got to see you one last time. It was the most intense sense of peace Iâve ever experienced.â
Bucky struggled to hold on to his composure. He felt himself crumbling, weakening under the weight of your words.Â
âBut then I realized- I realized Iâd never get to tell you. And you kept saying we could talk later, but I didnât know if there would be a âlaterâ. And when I blacked out, I was so full ofâŚâ You shook your head ever so slightly, sending a few tears dripping onto your cheeks. âI had so much regret. Because I needed you to know.â
âTo know what?â Bucky leaned in close, searching your face for any inkling, any clue. âDoll, itâs âlaterâ. Tell me- whatever it is. You can tell me now, itâs-â
Your lips met his in a soft kiss. In it, everything youâd ever felt for him came rushing forward. Admiration. Longing. Lust. Obsession. Adoration. Love.Â
A sting of pain jolted through you as your split lip brushed his, but you didnât care. His hands found your face, your fingers curled into the collar of his shirt. It was always supposed to be this way.Â
When the two of you finally separated, Bucky simply stared at you. He didnât move, he didnât speak. He wasnât sure he knew how.Â
âI love you, Buck. Iâve loved you- for so long.â A huff left your chest, âSo. Long.âÂ
Still, Bucky remained silent. Nerves began crawling through you like vines, twisting their way through every fiber of your being. But you owed it to yourself, and to Bucky, to tell him the truth.Â
âAnd I just⌠I know how you see yourself. And I know you donât think youâre even worthy of my friendship, let alone love. But I was so anxious, cause I thought youâd never know the truth. I thought Iâd die without getting to tell you. And youâd live the rest of your life thinking that youâre not worthy, that no one could ever love you. But I- I love you. I just needed you to know.â
The silence made your ears ring. Buckyâs face still wore a mask of bewilderment. And you feared youâd ruined everything.Â
âYou donât have to say it back, though,â you said. âIâm not gonna stop being your friend if this is an unrequited thing.â
Finally, Bucky came back to life. He rolled his eyes and let a scoff escape his lips. He leaned in close, the tip of his nose almost brushing yours. âUnrequited? I broke every SWORD rule and policy. Abducted medical staff. Stole a jet. And went on an unauthorized mission. All to get you back. I didnât even know if you were alive, I just- I had to bring you home.âÂ
He closed the small gap that remained between your face and his and granted you warm, gentle kiss that tasted like home. âI did all that- and you thought there was even a chance that I didnât love you back?â Bucky gave a playful roll of his eyes, âyou donât know me at all, sweetheart.â
You returned his eye roll. "Well, you're a really great friend to me. And you always have been. So, I didnât take a rescue as a proclamation of love,â you gave a strained chuckle. âI just thought-â
âIâve loved you forâŚâ Bucky thought back over the course of your friendship. The day you first met, the first time you helped him through a panic attack, the time he made you the ugliest cake in the world for your birthday. He saw his life in two parts: before he met you and after he met you. And he so preferred the after.Â
âI donât even know how long,â he shrugged. It was almost automatic. His feelings for you didnât need a slow, gradual build up. They descended upon him all at once, like the worldâs most beautiful avalanche.  âItâs been a long time- an embarrassing amount of time, probably,â he laughed.
âOh, so weâre both cowards then,â you shot him a wink. âToo afraid to tell the other how we feel.â
Bucky nodded, âIt seems that wayâŚâ
âBut you werenât too scared to steal a jet and run into possible gun fire?â you quipped.
âNope. Didnât even think about it,â he said matter-of-factly. âI just wanted to find you.â
Youâd never experienced a love- a commitment- like that. It sent a rush of warmth into your cheeks and somehow eased the pain plaguing your body. You knew in your heart you wouldâve done the same for Bucky without a second thought. But knowing that he was so fiercely determined to bring you home felt almost unbelievable. You had the proof, though, right there in front of you. This man, who you loved, loved you too. And loved you enough to risk his life for you. It wasnât something youâd ever ask him to do, and you knew youâd never have to. Heâd do it without hesitation. Without reservation. Heâd walk through fire for you if it meant bringing you home.Â
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i have SO many thoughts.
1. i donât know if this was intentional or not, but i didnât realize that they werenât actually together until the very end of the story. i think that makes it so much more beautiful because all of the wonderfully written emotions they feel for each other (longing, adoration, despair, LONGING etc) exist without confirmation that theyâre reciprocated in a romantic way? and the foundation that lays for the revelation is so much more solid and touching this way. the way you SHOW the emotions that are being felt by characters is incredible, like tf you mean âAnything to rationalize his desperate need to be near you.â????? are you trying to kill me? thank you btw.
2. i havenât cried at a fic in a LONG time and this made me do it. the dialogue in the hospital paired with each personâs REACTION to it, both internally and externally, it tugged on my heartstrings in a way i thought fics couldnât do for me anymore.
3. the way you wrote about her fears of dying alone, her desperation to find solace in a final moment of comfort, her heartbreak at the betrayal she experienced, it elevates this fic beyond a portrayal of a fantasy relationship and to something thatâs just a great piece of writing and storytelling. with or without knowledge of the MCU, this is a straight up well crafted and well written story.
ANYWAYS. canât believe this is available for free on tumblr dot com. this is a masterpiece. iâd slap this bad boy right up in the Louvre
youre an olympic level hater. i respect it.
they asked me to represent my country in the sport of hating i said no. i hate my country
My Devotion
Mob!Bucky Barnes x F!Reader
Summary: The one where Bucky doesnât take your breakup well.
Warnings: Angst, Violence, Mentioned Infidelity, Smut, Kidnapping, Language, Possessive Bucky. 10k words. Itâs a long one. Bucky tries to have his cake and eat it too. Itâs a lot of terrible mobster activity and behavior, but with a happy ending.
âItâs just business, doll.â James sneered, barely looking up from his scotch. âIt didnât mean anything.â
Christ, you hated him.
You hated his prowess and the dark, bored look in his eye. You hated how detached he had become.
âYou know what? Go. Have your fun.â You all but growled out, pointing a finger at him from across the table. âGo on and sleep with every broad this side of the Mississippi. But donât expect me to be here waiting up for you.â
He stilled, looking at you with an ire you had never seen. The hair on the back of your neck stood on end.
âI never asked you to.â He spoke flatly, clearly knocking you off your center. âGo home. Weâll talk about this tomorrow.â
The nerve. To deride you after everything.
âDonât bother.â
You turned, walking to the door with a huff. With one last glance you watched as his stormy eyes moved back down to his pictures, nursing his glass.
âI canât do this anymore, James.â
Your voice dropped, your energy deflated, but you knew he was listening by the quip in his lip. You never called him James. Not once.
âGoodbye, good luck, and good riddance.â
Keep reading
i absolutely LOVE how you write HIS perspective on how he regards reader, like the themes of worship and dependence were pouring off the âpagesâ. so so good!



