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Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
Letâs just say Titanic is one of my favourite movies ever if not my best pick like every time I have to choose, this fic is literally perfect⌠I loved every tiny phrase of this and Iâm gonna read it like forever đĽšđĽšđđ
I'm so delighted to hear that gin. You're very sweet đ
Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
Iâm so glad they got their happy ending đŤś
I was tempted to make it a no comfort angst but they had suffered enough I guess. A happy ending was well deserved đ
Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
Help these tags are killing me đ
Wrong Place, Wrong time
 Pairing : Bucky x Reader
Summary : Empty meeting rooms are not supposed to be used for fucking your boyfriend before a mission. But since when do you follow any rules?
Warnings : 18+ MDNI, smut, oral (m rec.), semi public sex, dick pronouns, kinda sub Bucky.
Word Count : 260 (yayy)
âBaby, I gotta leaveâ Bucky grunts âLena wouldâfuckâshe'd kick my ass if I'm lateâ
âBut I'm having such a good time, buckâ you tease, pulling your mouth away from his cock and making him whine at the loss of your warmth.
You kiss the tip of him, swollen and blushed and so happy to see you. âFuck, honey, I can't, not right nowâ
âYou say that but your cock tells me otherwise. He tells me he wants my mouth. My cunt. He wants to be inside me all dayâ You graze a nail against the sensitive underside and he curses at the feeling.
âYou're such aââ
âSlut for you? I am!â You complete his sentence before the words make their way out of him mouth.
âI was gonna say menace. But that works tooâ He teases and you punish him by wrapping your mouth around his cock.
He moans, fingers tangling in your hair as you bob your head faster. âBaby, I'mâfuckâIâm gonnaââ He comes with a choked groan and your name in his mouth.
He pulls you up swiftly, metal palm still resting in your hair as he kissed you fervently before tugging his jeans up and rewearing his misson gear.
You wait until he's done and about to leave before grasping his hand and pulling him back towards you. âYou're not leaving until I'm full of youâ
 Dividers by @diviniyae
Tag list : @redstarleftarm, @sweetserendipity65, @sambuckystony, @nymphhbabiee, @darlingdenise, @venigrantrogers, @i-gotta-go-so-much-bigger, @bstan01, @phoenix-in-writing, @singulartoast, @danerb67, @onyx8514, @globetrotter28, @buckysdecaflove, @alyssinwunderland-blog-blog, @herejustforbuckybarnes, @v33mustdie, @star-yawnznn
Comment or send an ask to be added or removed from the tag list
neither Bucky nor meeting rooms would EVER know any peace if i was around đââď¸
You bet I'd be just as bad aly đ
Wrong Place, Wrong time
 Pairing : Bucky x Reader
Summary : Empty meeting rooms are not supposed to be used for fucking your boyfriend before a mission. But since when do you follow any rules?
Warnings : 18+ MDNI, smut, oral (m rec.), semi public sex, dick pronouns, kinda sub Bucky.
Word Count : 260 (yayy)
âBaby, I gotta leaveâ Bucky grunts âLena wouldâfuckâshe'd kick my ass if I'm lateâ
âBut I'm having such a good time, buckâ you tease, pulling your mouth away from his cock and making him whine at the loss of your warmth.
You kiss the tip of him, swollen and blushed and so happy to see you. âFuck, honey, I can't, not right nowâ
âYou say that but your cock tells me otherwise. He tells me he wants my mouth. My cunt. He wants to be inside me all dayâ You graze a nail against the sensitive underside and he curses at the feeling.
âYou're such aââ
âSlut for you? I am!â You complete his sentence before the words make their way out of him mouth.
âI was gonna say menace. But that works tooâ He teases and you punish him by wrapping your mouth around his cock.
He moans, fingers tangling in your hair as you bob your head faster. âBaby, I'mâfuckâIâm gonnaââ He comes with a choked groan and your name in his mouth.
He pulls you up swiftly, metal palm still resting in your hair as he kissed you fervently before tugging his jeans up and rewearing his misson gear.
You wait until he's done and about to leave before grasping his hand and pulling him back towards you. âYou're not leaving until I'm full of youâ
 Dividers by @diviniyae
Tag list : @redstarleftarm, @sweetserendipity65, @sambuckystony, @nymphhbabiee, @darlingdenise, @venigrantrogers, @i-gotta-go-so-much-bigger, @bstan01, @phoenix-in-writing, @singulartoast, @danerb67, @onyx8514, @globetrotter28, @buckysdecaflove, @alyssinwunderland-blog-blog, @herejustforbuckybarnes, @v33mustdie, @star-yawnznn
Comment or send an ask to be added or removed from the tag list
Wrong Place, Wrong time
 Pairing : Bucky x Reader
Summary : Empty meeting rooms are not supposed to be used for fucking your boyfriend before a mission. But since when do you follow any rules?
Warnings : 18+ MDNI, smut, oral (m rec.), semi public sex, dick pronouns, kinda sub Bucky.
Word Count : 260 (yayy)
âBaby, I gotta leaveâ Bucky grunts âLena wouldâfuckâshe'd kick my ass if I'm lateâ
âBut I'm having such a good time, buckâ you tease, pulling your mouth away from his cock and making him whine at the loss of your warmth.
You kiss the tip of him, swollen and blushed and so happy to see you. âFuck, honey, I can't, not right nowâ
âYou say that but your cock tells me otherwise. He tells me he wants my mouth. My cunt. He wants to be inside me all dayâ You graze a nail against the sensitive underside and he curses at the feeling.
âYou're such aââ
âSlut for you? I am!â You complete his sentence before the words make their way out of him mouth.
âI was gonna say menace. But that works tooâ He teases and you punish him by wrapping your mouth around his cock.
He moans, fingers tangling in your hair as you bob your head faster. âBaby, I'mâfuckâIâm gonnaââ He comes with a choked groan and your name in his mouth.
He pulls you up swiftly, metal palm still resting in your hair as he kissed you fervently before tugging his jeans up and rewearing his misson gear.
You wait until he's done and about to leave before grasping his hand and pulling him back towards you. âYou're not leaving until I'm full of youâ
 Dividers by @diviniyae
Tag list : @redstarleftarm, @sweetserendipity65, @sambuckystony, @nymphhbabiee, @darlingdenise, @venigrantrogers, @i-gotta-go-so-much-bigger, @bstan01, @phoenix-in-writing, @singulartoast, @danerb67, @onyx8514, @globetrotter28, @buckysdecaflove, @alyssinwunderland-blog-blog, @herejustforbuckybarnes, @v33mustdie, @star-yawnznn
Comment or send an ask to be added or removed from the tag list
Totally getting her đĽľ
đŻ Bucky would never know peace around us lol
Wrong Place, Wrong time
 Pairing : Bucky x Reader
Summary : Empty meeting rooms are not supposed to be used for fucking your boyfriend before a mission. But since when do you follow any rules?
Warnings : 18+ MDNI, smut, oral (m rec.), semi public sex, dick pronouns, kinda sub Bucky.
Word Count : 260 (yayy)
âBaby, I gotta leaveâ Bucky grunts âLena wouldâfuckâshe'd kick my ass if I'm lateâ
âBut I'm having such a good time, buckâ you tease, pulling your mouth away from his cock and making him whine at the loss of your warmth.
You kiss the tip of him, swollen and blushed and so happy to see you. âFuck, honey, I can't, not right nowâ
âYou say that but your cock tells me otherwise. He tells me he wants my mouth. My cunt. He wants to be inside me all dayâ You graze a nail against the sensitive underside and he curses at the feeling.
âYou're such aââ
âSlut for you? I am!â You complete his sentence before the words make their way out of him mouth.
âI was gonna say menace. But that works tooâ He teases and you punish him by wrapping your mouth around his cock.
He moans, fingers tangling in your hair as you bob your head faster. âBaby, I'mâfuckâIâm gonnaââ He comes with a choked groan and your name in his mouth.
He pulls you up swiftly, metal palm still resting in your hair as he kissed you fervently before tugging his jeans up and rewearing his misson gear.
You wait until he's done and about to leave before grasping his hand and pulling him back towards you. âYou're not leaving until I'm full of youâ
 Dividers by @diviniyae
Tag list : @redstarleftarm, @sweetserendipity65, @sambuckystony, @nymphhbabiee, @darlingdenise, @venigrantrogers, @i-gotta-go-so-much-bigger, @bstan01, @phoenix-in-writing, @singulartoast, @danerb67, @onyx8514, @globetrotter28, @buckysdecaflove, @alyssinwunderland-blog-blog, @herejustforbuckybarnes, @v33mustdie, @star-yawnznn
Comment or send an ask to be added or removed from the tag list
oh em gee
Wrong Place, Wrong time
 Pairing : Bucky x Reader
Summary : Empty meeting rooms are not supposed to be used for fucking your boyfriend before a mission. But since when do you follow any rules?
Warnings : 18+ MDNI, smut, oral (m rec.), semi public sex, dick pronouns, kinda sub Bucky.
Word Count : 260 (yayy)
âBaby, I gotta leaveâ Bucky grunts âLena wouldâfuckâshe'd kick my ass if I'm lateâ
âBut I'm having such a good time, buckâ you tease, pulling your mouth away from his cock and making him whine at the loss of your warmth.
You kiss the tip of him, swollen and blushed and so happy to see you. âFuck, honey, I can't, not right nowâ
âYou say that but your cock tells me otherwise. He tells me he wants my mouth. My cunt. He wants to be inside me all dayâ You graze a nail against the sensitive underside and he curses at the feeling.
âYou're such aââ
âSlut for you? I am!â You complete his sentence before the words make their way out of him mouth.
âI was gonna say menace. But that works tooâ He teases and you punish him by wrapping your mouth around his cock.
He moans, fingers tangling in your hair as you bob your head faster. âBaby, I'mâfuckâIâm gonnaââ He comes with a choked groan and your name in his mouth.
He pulls you up swiftly, metal palm still resting in your hair as he kissed you fervently before tugging his jeans up and rewearing his misson gear.
You wait until he's done and about to leave before grasping his hand and pulling him back towards you. âYou're not leaving until I'm full of youâ
 Dividers by @diviniyae
Tag list : @redstarleftarm, @sweetserendipity65, @sambuckystony, @nymphhbabiee, @darlingdenise, @venigrantrogers, @i-gotta-go-so-much-bigger, @bstan01, @phoenix-in-writing, @singulartoast, @danerb67, @onyx8514, @globetrotter28, @buckysdecaflove, @alyssinwunderland-blog-blog, @herejustforbuckybarnes, @v33mustdie, @star-yawnznn
Comment or send an ask to be added or removed from the tag list
fawwkkkk omg daisy this was so hot đĽľđŤŚđŤŚ
Thanks blue đ
Daisington
đ
What is this about now?
Are we watching Bridgerton? đ
Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
DAISY i'm so proud of you for getting this done. i will be back for this so soon đЎđЎđЎ
Blue my love, you best believe this wouldn't be here without you supporting me the whole way â¤ď¸âĽď¸
Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
Bucky babes are eating gooddddd today
Stop this is such a high praise đĽšđĽš I love you â¤ď¸
youâre one of the sweetest people on here, i just donât want you targeted. please donât use ânot, not, just.â in your writing. that is one of the most common ai tells, people will accuse you of using ai then. thank you. have a nice day đ
Oh god why does this ai shit not end đ
Thank you for telling me honey. I really appreciate this message and I understand where its coming from.
But in all honesty the part that you're referring to, is actually something i learned from a fellow writer's fics coz I'm always trying to keep improving my grammar since English isn't my first language.
So I guess I'll keep using it sometimes?
Have a lovely day yourself babe đ
STEVE DIES???? WDYM STEVE DIES??? Why donât you love me đđđđđđđđđ
Oops đŹ
I totally did not kill Steve intentionally to suggest that Steve dying is better than Steve leaving bucky đŤŁđŤŁ
But I still love you though đ
@cartier: Sebastian Stan embraces the pioneering spirit of the new Santos de Cartier Chronograph watch, tailored for the everyday performance. #SantosdeCartier
Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all.
Pairing : Bucky barnes x Reader (Titanic au) Summary : Trapped in a cruel betrothal aboard the Titanic, you find unexpected freedom in the company of Sergeant Bucky Barnesâa charming stranger who sees the woman you truly are. In the span of a few stolen days, the stranger becomes your safe haven, your best friend, and the love of your life. But when tragedy strikes in the middle of the Atlantic, you must fight to hold onto each otherâand the future you dared to imagine Word Count : 24k (This might as well be a book lol) Warnings : 18+ MDNI, angst with happy ending, hurt, comfort, more hurt, domestic violence, bruises, mentions of wounds, use of foul language, cheating (not on bucky), Smut, PinV, PWP, Tit play, Oral (f rec.), mentions of death, actual deaths, terrible fiancĂŠ, terrible mother, mentions of hypothermia, water, drowning, darkness, idk what else to put in the TW. But you get the point right? It's titanic au⌠A/N : Guys if this doesn't get notes, I'm gonna cry because this took four fucking months and a lot of tears and emotional devastation to write. This is not proofread coz I couldn't physically go through it again. So forgive me for any mistakes you find in there. Also huge shout out to my girls @singulartoast @phoenix-in-writing @venigrantrogers @buckybsdoll and @buckysdecaflove for hearing me yap endlessly about this fic for months. Without you all I would've gone insane writing this.
The cold air of the Atlantic bit at your skin as you stepped onto the deck.
It slipped beneath the thin fabric of your dress and wrapped around your bruised skin like icy fingers. The night air of the ocean was sharp enough to sting but you welcomed it. It was the first honest feeling youâd had all evening.
Inside, the music still floated faintly through the shipâlaughter, clinking glasses, polished shoes gliding across marble floors. The grand world of the first class cabins glittered like something unreal.
Out here, the cold was real.
Your hand curled around the railing as you walked, the metal biting against your palm.
You didnât even notice the ache in your ribs when you breathed too deeply. You were used to that kind of pain now. The dull throbbing beneath the silk sleeves. The fingerprints blooming purple and blue along your arms.
Your fingers traced your lips gently, You could feel the bruise forming. The makeup must have chipped away by now, the blue of it showing clearly in the glow of the ballroom lights.
The thought passes through your mind like a wave hitting the bow of the ship. You let it splatter away like water. Willing yourself not to care.
The man who adorned you with such grisly marks, didnât care if it hurt. The mother who asked you to compromise, didnât care if it stung. The friends who saw the evidence but remained silent, didnât care if this was your life.
So why must you care?
Thereâs a burn behind your eyes. But the tears donât fall. They refuse to, now. After all the times the tears fell, and went unnoticed, they have made their dejection known.
Thereâs an ache in your skull, that denies to make itself known. Thereâs a lump in your throat, that abstains the words from flowing out.
So you just stared wordlessly, into the darkness.
The ocean stretched endlessly ahead, black and restless beneath the moonlight. It looked peaceful from far away.
You climbed the railing slowly.
The metal was slick with frost as you lifted one foot up, gripping tightly with your numb fingers. The wind tugged at your hair, whipping strands across your face as the ship carved through the water beneath you.
For the first time in what felt like years, your chest filled with something close to relief. No expectations. No suffocating rooms. No dominating hands. No one watching you. Just the wind, the sea⌠and the quiet promise of freedom waiting below.
You balanced carefully on the railing, your toes gripping the narrow bar, dress fluttering wildly in the wind. The cold air burned in your lungs, but you leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark water rushing past.
One step. A little courage. That was all it would take.
You could surrender yourself to the cold, to the waves below, to the loving embrace of mother nature, and put an end to your misery.
Your eyes closed themselves, body leaning forward before your mind caught up and alarmed you with the consequences. Just a little more. JustâŚ..
âCareful there. The water must be cold at this hour.â The voice startled you. Body jolting in surprise as you gripped the railing harder for balance. You didnât turn around to see who it was âGo awayâ your voice came out shaking.
The ocean roared beneath you.
âMa'amâ he tried again, softer this time, breath fogging in the cold âIf you jump, Iâm gonna have to jump in after youâ
You turned around just enough to glare at the man. But the sight of him knocked the breath out of your lungs.
The man standing a few steps behind you looked entirely out of place against the dark ocean and freezing wind.
A soldier.
The sharp lines of a sergeantâs uniform caught the moonlight, the dark wool coat buttoned neatly despite the cold. The brass buttons glinted faintly, the insignia on his sleeve unmistakable even from where you stood. The wind tugged at his hair, a little longer than regulation perhaps, dark strands falling across his forehead.
He looked⌠warm. Kind. Real in a way the polished men in the dining hall never were. Your eyes drifted up before you could stop yourself and then they stopped.
His face. Strong jaw dusted with stubble, lips curved slightly like he already knew something you didnât. But it was his eyes that held youâlight in the moonlight, sharp and focused entirely on you. Watching you with a strange mixture of caution and curiosity.
You realized, dimly, that you had been staring at him for far too long. His mouth curved slowly to one side.
âWell now,â he said, voice warm and rough with a Brooklyn drawl softened by the wind. âThatâs a first.â
You blinked. âWhat is?â
âUsually when a ladyâs standing on the railing of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic,â he replied easily, taking one slow step closer, âsheâs not lookinâ at me like sheâs deciding whether Iâm worth interruptinâ the evening for.â
Your fingers tightened around the cold metal bar. âI wasnâtââ
âBecause I gotta tell you,â he continued, strolling another step closer like the situation was nothing more serious than a late-night conversation, âIâve had women look at me plenty of ways before. Annoyed. Amused. Once or twice impressed.â
His eyes flicked deliberately up and down your figure before settling back on your face again. âBut that?â he said with a soft chuckle. âThatâs a new one.â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows furrowed
âThe thoughtful lookâ He cleared âWhat's that about?â He leaned closer, like asking for a secret âWhat are you thinking?â
âNone of your businessâ you attempted, but the bite in your voice was swallowed in the cold wind around you.
âCertainly not.â He agreed âBut if I'm about to watch a young lady, and a very beautiful one at that, hurl herself into the cold waters of the Atlantic, Only to get mauled by the sharks and die of hypothermia, I guess it becomes some of my businessâ
âWho tells you I'm not getting mauled by sharks here.â You confessed, voice shaking, as your chest constricted at the agony you tried to swallow down.
His eyes softened, understanding rising beneath the concern. Its only then that he took in the the blue of your lips, the green on your arm, the slight limp in your foot.
He winced, the woman in front of him was the epitome of beauty to him by all means. Her skin glowing in the faint glimmers of moonlight.
Face bright but shadowed by something he recognised as torment. His heart gave a lurch. The only marks on the skin of a woman like this, should be of love. Of passion.
The only expression on her face should be of joy. Of glee. Not the raging dilemma of whether to suffer through or to end it.
âWell,â he tried slowly, âIâd appreciate it if you didnât jump.â
You blinked at him, confused. âAnd if I do?â
He didnât need time to consider that. He just shrugged, the answer clear as day in his head. âWell,â he said, âthen I gotta jump in after you.â
Your brows drew together. âWhy would you do that?â
He gestured vaguely toward the ocean. âBecause if I stand here and watch a lady go over the side, someoneâs gonna say Sergeant Barnes shouldâve done something about it.â
You stared at him. âAnd thatâs the only reason?â
He grinned slightly. âWell,â he admitted, âthat and the fact I donât much like the idea of you freezing to death down there.â
âI wasn't gonna jumpâ you lied. Still standing on the shipâ stern, gripping the railing for dear life, you lied. You didn't know why. Just something about him made you want to say that.
âThatâs a relief,â he replied, sounding entirely unconvinced. âHere I was thinking Iâd interrupted something important.â
His gaze drifted casually over the dark ocean below your feet. Black water surged alongside the ship, endless and merciless beneath the moonlight.
He let out a low whistle. âHell of a view you've picked.â The waves roared past the hull, distant and cold and final.
Your stomach twisted. âItâs quiet,â you murmured.
âQuiet?â he repeated.
âYes.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âLady, that water down there is about thirty degrees and meaner than a pack of alley cats,â he said. âQuiet ainât the word Iâd use.â
You glanced back at him. âThen what word would you use?â
He tilted his head, studying you more carefully now. âCold,â he said. Another step closer. âLonely.â The wind blew harder across the deck. âAnd permanent.â
Your breath caught in your throat. The wind whipped your dress around your legs as you tried very hard not to notice how close he was getting.
He was only a few feet away. You could see the faint scar along his jaw. The steady rise and fall of his chest as the cold air fogged his breath.
âYou seem awfully calm about this,â you said.
âOh Iâm not calm,â he replied lightly.
âYouâre not?â
âNo maâam,â he said. âIâm just buying time.â
You frowned. âFor what?â
âFor you to keep lookinâ at me like that,â he said, voice turning teasing again, âinstead of lookinâ down.â
You rolled your eyes and turned your head away from him feigning annoyanceâAnd that was the moment he moved.
One strong arm shot forward, wrapping firmly around your waist. And before you could even gasp, he pulled you backward off the railing.
Your feet left the metal bar and suddenly you were stumbling against solid deck again, the world tilting as you crashed straight into him.
His other hand steadied your arm, holding you firmly against his chest until you regained your balance.
For a moment, neither of you moved.
The wind rushed across the deck, louder now that your feet were firmly planted on it again. The ocean roared past the hull below, but it sounded farther away somehowâlike it belonged to another world entirely.
Your hands were still clutching the front of his coat. You hadnât even realized youâd grabbed him. The thick wool felt grounding beneath your fingers.
His arm was still around your waist, steadying you as though he didnât quite trust that you wouldnât tip backward again the moment he let go.
Your breathing slowly began to calm. So did his.
When you finally looked up, you found him already looking down at you. The teasing expression heâd worn earlier had softened into something quieter now. Concern lingered in his eyes, but he didnât say anything right away.
He just studied your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or trying to understand it.
The wind pushed a strand of your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he lifted a hand and brushed it gently aside. The touch was so careful it startled you more than the sudden grab from before.
You weren't used to gentle touches after all. Of course you belonged from a rich family, a noble family. But money doesn't guarantee gentleness. Nor does it guarantee happiness.
âYou alright?â he asked quietly, breaking the fragile silence.
You nodded after a moment. âYes.â You confirmed.
But he didnât let go just yet. Instead, his gaze drifted past you briefly to the railing you had been standing on moments earlier. The dark water rushed below it endlessly.
When his eyes returned to you, they were firmer. âListen,â he said, voice low but serious now. âYou donât gotta tell me what put the idea in your head tonight.â The wind tugged at his coat as he spoke.
There was no teasing in his voice this time. No clever remarks. Just quiet certainty. âJust please don't do that againâ he requested, as if you were something precious to him, that he was afraid of losing. âDonât climb railings,â he added softly. âDonât stand up there alone thinking nobody would notice if you disappeared.â
The words hung between you.
For a moment you didnât know what to say. Not because it was true, it wasn't. People would notice your disappearance, just they wouldn't care. Your eyes dropped briefly to the brass buttons of his coat, still gleaming faintly in the moonlight. âThank you,â you said finally.
âFor what?â He blinked. Like he hadnât just saved your life
âFor pulling me down.â Your voice was soft but steady. âFor not⌠letting me make the mistake.â
He studied you carefully, like he was weighing those words. âYouâre welcome,â he said after a moment.
Silence settled again. Not the kind that was uncomfortable. But the kind that felt full.
He tilted his head slightly. Fingers coming up and brushing your lower lip. You winced at the sting that went through the blooming bruise. But even through the pain, you were surprised at the touch. It wasn't sexual in the slightest. Not demanding, not asking, not taking. Just feeling.
âTell me what happenedâ he inquired, fingers still skimming against your lips.
You realized a second later that he isn't just talking about the bruise. Or about the railing. You feared he might have already connected the dots.
âWhat is it?â he insisted. His eyes shone with something similar to care.
You swallowed through the lump in your throat, eyes going glassy. âItâs nothingâ
âPleaseââ he tried again but you shook your head. He didnât need to know. He must not.
You had realized very quickly that the people around you were vultures. They would tear away at any one who tried to attack their reputation. And somewhere in the dark night and the cold waters, you had realized that this man, this stranger youâve never met before would fight for your safety.
You had no idea how you knew. Just that you did. Just like you also knew that you'd protect him from those vultures at all costs. His eyes found yours again. waiting. Hoping. But the words that come out of your mouth are anything but.
âThank you again.â you curtsied âIf thereâs anything I can do to return the favour, pleaseââ
âYour nameâ he cut you off
âIâm sorry?â
His cheeks turned rosy as he answered. If it was due to the winter air, or something else, you didnât let yourself think. âYou can give me your name in returnâ
You hesitated. Part of you didnât want to answer. Didnât want to tie this momentâthis strange, unexpected kindnessâto the world waiting for you inside. But something about the way he stood there⌠patient, but curious⌠made it difficult to walk away without saying anything at all.
You finally gave in. You told him your name. He repeated it quietly, almost testing the sound of it. A small smile appeared on his face, brightening it up even more than the moonlight in the dark night. âNice to meet you,â he said.
You took a step back. Then another. The wind caught your dress again as you turned toward the doors leading inside. âGoodnight, Sergeant,â you said softly.
He straightened slightly. âYou know my rank but not my name?â
You glanced back over your shoulder.A faint smile touched your lips. You almost didn't want to put a name on that face. Allowing yourself the only freedom you could by letting your imagination run wild. If you never see him again, you can call him whatever you wanted. In your dreams, he could be whoever you wanted. âI didnât ask.â You whispered, smiling faintly.
Before he could answer, you stepped through the doors and disappeared into the warm glow of the shipâs interior.
Out on the deck, Sergeant Barnes stood there a moment longer, the cold wind tugging at his coat. Staring at the place where you had been. And wondering why he already hoped heâd see you again.
Warm air and music rushed over you the moment the doors closed behind you.
The ballroom glittered just as it had before you slipped outsideâcrystal chandeliers dripping light over polished floors, the orchestra swelling into another lively tune, couples gliding past in perfect circles. Laughter carried across the room, glasses clinked, silk and satin shimmered under the lamps.
It looked untouched by the cold night outside. Untouched by the ocean. Untouched by the moment that had almost happened.
You paused just inside the doorway, the warmth rushing painfully back into your skin. Your fingers still trembled faintly from the coldâand from the memory of steady hands pulling you back from the railing.
For a brief second, you considered turning around. Going back out. But before you could take another stepâ A hand seized your arm. Hard.
Your breath caught sharply as you were yanked sideways into the shadow of a tall pillar near the edge of the ballroom.
âWhere have you been?â John Walkerâs voice was low and sharp enough to cut through the music.
You froze.
He stood far too close, towering over you in his immaculate dinner jacket and overpowering cologne. Everything about him looked polishedâthe pressed lines of his suit jacket, the perfect knot of his tie, the slicked-back hair.
Except for the anger burning in his eyes. His fingers tightened around your arm. Pain shot up your shoulder. âIââ you began quietly. âI was justââ
âDonât,â he snapped. The word came out through clenched teeth. His grip tightened again, nails digging through the thin fabric of your sleeve until you had to bite down on a small gasp.
âI turned around for one minute,â he said, leaning closer so no one else in the room could hear him, âand my fiancĂŠe had vanished. Do you have any idea how that looks?â
âI only stepped out for some air,â you said quickly, your voice small despite your effort to sound calm. âIt was warm inside and Iââ
âFor air?â he repeated sharply. His eyes swept over your face with sudden irritation. Then they narrowed. âWhat the hell is that?â
Your stomach dropped.
His hand released your arm only to grab your chin, turning your face toward the nearest light. The bruise. The one blooming faintly along your lower lip, barely concealed beneath powder that had smudged in the cold wind outside. Your heart began to pound.
âYou couldnât even manage to cover it properly?â he hissed.
âI tried,â you whispered. âThe cold outside must haveââ
âYou tried?â he scoffed.
His grip on your chin tightened painfully. âYou walked into a ballroom full of people looking like this.â
Your gaze dropped immediately to the floor. Not by choice. By habit. âIâm sorry.â
âSorry doesnât fix my reputation,â he snapped.
A couple drifted past nearby, laughing together as they crossed the dance floor. No one looked your way. No one noticed the way his fingers dug into your arm again when he released your face.
âDo you have any idea what people will say if they see that?â he went on coldly. âWhat theyâll assume about me?â
âI didnât meanââ
âThatâs the problem,â he interrupted. âYou never mean anything. You just do whatever foolish thing comes into your head without thinking how it reflects on your fiancĂŠ.â
His hand clamped firmly around your jaw again. Harder this time. âJohn,â you said quietly, trying not to wince. âYouâre hurting me.â
âGood,â he muttered. âYou need to be punished for your foolishnessâ
And then he started pulling you through the crowd. You stumbled slightly as he dragged you along, trying to keep pace with his long strides. âJohn, pleaseââ you murmured urgently. âPeople are watching.â
âThat would be a shame, wouldnât it?â he said bitterly.
The ballroom blurred past in glittering lights and music as he hauled you toward the grand staircase leading to the private cabins. âI was only outside for a moment,â you said again quickly, your voice shaking now. âI just needed some air.â
âOh Iâm sure you did,â he replied coldly. You almost tripped when he jerked your arm again.
âWalking around a ship alone in the middle of the night with your face looking like that,â he continued, his voice low with contempt. âDo you have any idea what conclusions people might draw?â
âI wasnât speaking to anyone,â you said quickly.
He stopped abruptly at the base of the staircase. Turning to face you. His eyes were sharp and searching. âNo?â he asked.
Your heart pounded. âNo,â you whispered.
He studied your face for another long moment. Then his hand tightened again around your arm.
âGood,â he said flatly. And without another word, he dragged you up the staircase toward your cabin.
All the while you kept your head lowered. Trying not to cry. Trying not to think about the quiet man standing on the freezing deck outsideâThe one who had held you carefully. The one who had asked gently. The one who had said please like you mattered. So very different from the man now pulling you painfully down the corridor.
The music from the ballroom barely reached this far down the hall, softened into a distant murmur behind thick walls and polished doors. The carpet swallowed the sound of footsteps, leaving only the faint rustle of clothing and the tightening grip of John Walkerâs hand around your arm.
You tried to keep pace with him. You really did. But his strides were longer, faster, fueled by anger that made his grip harsher with every step.âJohnâplease,â you whispered once more. âYouâre hurtingââ
He stopped abruptly. The sudden halt made you stumble straight into him. Before you could regain your balance, he shoved the cabin door open and dragged you inside.
The door slammed shut behind you with a sharp crack that echoed in the small room.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The cabin was dimly lit by a single lamp on the bedside table, its warm glow illuminating polished wood furniture and neatly arranged luggage.
The bedspread remained untouched, perfectly smooth, like the room itself had been waiting patiently for your return.
John finally released your arm. But only so he could pace away a few steps.
You stood where he had left you, hands clasped tightly together in front of you to stop them from shaking.
Your arm throbbed where he had gripped it. âDo you have any idea,â he began slowly, his voice tight with restrained fury, âhow humiliating it is to stand in a room full of men who are watching my fiancĂŠe wander around looking like that?â
You swallowed. âI didnât wanderââ
âYou disappeared.â The word cracked through the room.
âI stepped outside for a moment,â you said softly, trying to keep your voice steady. âI told you it was warm in there and I just neededââ
âYou needed, what!â he snapped. He let out a short, bitter laugh. You needed to parade that bruise around where people could see it?â
âIf it bothers you so much, you shouldn't have put it on me in the first placeâ words tumbled out of you before you could stop them, your brain to mouth filter malfunctioning.
John whipped around. Eyes dark with fury, and regret washed over you like an ice cold bucket of water. His hand came around the back of your neck. Gripping tight enough that you could hear his knuckles crack.
âWhat did you just say to me?â He hissed through gritted teeth. He reeked of alcohol, making you grimace.
You tried to draw your face back, fighting against the grip. âJohn, pleaseââ you tried again and his hand loosened slightly, before tightening again.
âI told you,â he snapped sharply, âto stop talking back.â The room seemed to shrink around you. Your hands trembled violently at your sides.
âIâm not talking back,â you said, your voice thinner now but still there. âIâm just saying it isnât fair that you blame me when youâre the one whoââ
âYou donât get to tell me whatâs fair.â His voice rose suddenly, sharp and dangerous.
Before he drew his hand back, only to swing it down harder as it met your cheek with a sharp crack. The force caught you completely off guard.
You stumbled backward, your heel catching on the rug as the world tilted violently. Your shoulder slammed into the edge of the small wooden table beside the door before the back of your head struck it.
Pain exploded behind your eyes. You cried out softly as your body collapsed to the floor. The table lurched with the impact. The porcelain vase sitting on top of it crashed down beside you. It shattered against the floor with a sharp crack. Fragments scattered across the carpet and polished wood.
You barely had time to lift your hands before one of the larger shards sliced across your palm. A sharp sting followed by warmth. Your breath hitched. For a moment the room spun around you, the dull ache in your head pulsing with every heartbeat.
You stared down at your hand. A thin line of red welled across your skin where the broken porcelain had caught you. Across the room, John stood frozen. His chest rose and fell heavily as he stared at the scene in front of himâthe broken vase, the overturned table, you sitting on the floor clutching your hand.
âYou see?â he said finally, his voice tight with irritation rather than concern. âYou canât even have a simple conversation without turning it into a disaster.â
You looked up at him, stunned. Your head throbbed where it had struck the table. Blood slowly slid down your fingers.âFor Fuckâs sake,â he muttered. âNow look at this mess.â
His eyes flicked briefly to your injured hand, but his expression remained cold. âYou should remember your place.â
Your throat tightened painfully. Slowly, you pulled your hand closer to your chest, trying to stop the bleeding with the fabric of your sleeve. Your vision blurred slightlyânot just from the pain in your head. But from the agony in your heart.
You whimpered, trying to hold the sobs in. Trying not to break down in tears in front of the man who would rather worry about his expensive carpet getting stained from your blood than the anguish he had caused you.
He scoffed at the noise, turning around and storming out of the room like you weren't worth wasting another moment on. The door shut behind him with a firm, irritated click.
His footsteps faded down the corridor a moment later. And then the cabin fell completely silent.
You stayed where you had fallen.
For a long moment you didnât move, didnât speak, didnât even try to stand. The soft lamp beside the bed cast a warm glow across the room, catching on the shards of porcelain scattered across the floor like tiny pieces of moonlight.
Your head still throbbed where it had struck the table. When you touched the back of your hair carefully, your fingers came away trembling. Your other hand hurt worse. Blood had begun to drip slowly along your wrist, thin red lines slipping between your fingers where the broken vase had cut your palm.
You pressed your sleeve tighter around it. The sting pulsed steadily. But the pain barely reached you. Instead, your mind drifted somewhere else entirely.
Cold wind. Dark ocean. A steady voice saying Donât move. You could still feel the warmth of strong arms pulling you safely off the railing. Still hear the quiet firmness when he had said, Donât do that again.
You stared at the floor. For the first time that night, tears blurred your vision, before a soft knock sounded at the door. You quickly wiped your eyes with the back of your wrist before you could think about it.
The door opened slowly. Your mother stepped inside. She paused immediately when she saw you on the floor. âOh my goodness,â she breathed. Her heels crossed the carpet quickly as she hurried toward you. âWhat happened?â
She crouched beside you, carefully lifting your injured hand. âOh dear,â she murmured when she saw the cut. âYouâre bleeding.â
âItâs nothing,â you said quietly.
But she was already rising, moving quickly to the washstand. âI told you to be careful,â she called gently over her shoulder as she fetched a clean cloth and the small tin of antiseptic she always carried while traveling.
You said nothing.
She returned and helped you sit up properly, brushing broken porcelain aside before guiding you to rest against the edge of the bed. âThere now,â she said softly, dabbing the cloth against your palm.
The sting made you flinch slightly. âYou must be more careful around these things.â Her voice remained calm, practical. As if this were simply another small accident.
You watched her hands as she worked. Precise. Efficient. The way she had done countless times before. âWhat happened?â she asked again, though her tone suggested she already knew.
âThe vase fell,â you murmured. She glanced briefly toward the shattered pieces across the floor. Then back to your face. You saw disappointment flash across the eyes of the woman that had birthed you.
Her gaze lingered for a moment on the bruise along your lips. A small sigh escaped her. âI told you to cover that better before going downstairs.â
Your fingers curled slightly. âThe powder came off outside,â you said quietly.
âOutside?â she repeated.
âI stepped out for air.â
She clicked her tongue softly in disapproval. âYou shouldnât wander around alone like that,â she said. âEspecially when your fiancĂŠ is entertaining important guests.â
You stayed silent. She wrapped a bandage carefully around your palm. âYou must try harder to avoid upsetting him,â she continued gently. âMen like John carry a great deal of pressure.â
Her voice remained patient, almost soothing. But you knew better. âThey have expectations placed upon them. Responsibilities.â The cloth tightened around your hand. âAnd when his fiancĂŠe contradicts them or embarrasses them publiclyâŚâ she added, tying the knot neatly. Her gaze lifted to yours again. âYou must understand how that reflects on him.â
You already knew what she was going to say next. You had heard it before. So many times. âMarriage requires compromise,â she repeated softly. âAdjustment.â Your eyes drifted toward the floor again.
âYouâre very fortunate,â she continued. âJohn is well respected. Successful. A man with a promising future.â Her hand rested lightly on your arm. âYou must try not to provoke him.â
The words slid over you like a familiar script. You didnât argue. Didnât correct her. Didnât mention the slap. Or the bruise. Or the way your head still ached from striking the table. You knew she didn't care.
Instead, your thoughts drifted again to the freezing deck outside. To a man in a sergeantâs uniform who had spoken to you like you mattered. Who had looked at you with concern instead of irritation. Who had said please.
You could still see the faint scar along his jaw. Still hear the warmth in his voice. Still remember the way he had repeated your name quietly, like it was something worth remembering.
Your mother finished tying the bandage. âThere,â she said gently. âAll fixed.â
You nodded faintly. But your mind was far away. Back in the cold night air. Back at the railing. Back with the soldier who had pulled you back from the edge. And somewhere deep inside, a quiet thought formed before you could stop it.
What might life have been⌠âŚif Sergeant Barnes had been the one waiting for you behind this door instead?
The night was dark out side the cabin. The ship had grown quieter.
Most of the laughter and music had faded into distant murmurs somewhere deep inside the great floating palace. The corridors outside the cabins were dim now, the lamps turned low as passengers retired for the night.
But sleep would not come to you. Not with your head still aching faintly. Not with your hand wrapped in fresh bandages. Not with your motherâs soft, practiced words still echoing in your ears. Marriage requires compromise. You must try not to provoke him. Not with John sleeping peacefully beside you like nothing ever happened.
You laid in bed for nearly an hour staring at the ceiling before finally giving up. Carefully, quietly, you slipped from the room. The corridor was empty. No one stopped you as you made your way up the staircase again, your steps light against the carpet.
Your heart pounded faster the closer you got to the deck. You werenât entirely sure why. You told yourself it was the air. The cold that had felt good earlier. Honest.
But somewhere deep down, another hope stirred quietly beneath the surface. A ridiculous one. One that had no business igniting you like this. You pushed the door open. The wind greeted you again immediately, colder now that the night had deepened. The vast ocean stretched endlessly under the moon, silver waves rolling against the shipâs hull.
You stepped out slowly. And then you saw him. He sat on a floor near the railing, leaning back with one arm stretched along the hardwood floor, the other resting loosely against his knee.
His coat collar was turned up against the cold, his dark hair ruffled by the wind as he looked out across the water. Or ratherâ Up at the sky. The stars stretched a vast curtain of shimmering crystals above the ship.
For a moment you simply stood there watching him. Then the deck creaked softly under your step. His head turned. Those same sharp eyes found you almost immediately.
For a second he just stared. Before a slow grin spread across his face. âWell now,â he said, pushing himself upright. âLook who it is.â
You felt warmth rise unexpectedly to your cheeks despite the cold air. He tilted his head slightly, studying you with amused curiosity. If he saw the handprint on your cheek, he didn't mention it.
âDonât tell me,â he continued, standing and brushing invisible dust from his coat. âYou changed your mind again.â
You blinked. âAbout what?â
He nodded casually toward the railing. âThe dramatic exit.â
Your lips parted and before you could stop yourself a laugh escaped you. The sound surprising to you in all it's honesty. âNo,â you said, shaking your head. âNot tonight.â
He placed a hand over his heart with exaggerated relief. âWell thatâs good news,â he said. âI didnât feel like swimming again.â
You walked a little closer. âAgain?â you asked.
âWell if youâd jumped earlier, I wouldâve had to,â he said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre very sure of that.â
âOh absolutely.â He gestured to himself with mock seriousness. âHeroic instincts.â
Your smile grew before you could stop it. âI see.â
He looked pleased with himself. But his gaze softened slightly. âYou alright?â he asked quietly.
You hesitated before nodding. âYes.â
His eyes lingered on your face for a moment longer, like he was deciding whether to believe that. But he didnât push. Instead he leaned back against the railing, crossing his arms. âSo,â he said casually. âWhat brings you back out here if itâs not the ocean calling your name?â
You tilted your head thoughtfully. âI suppose I was hoping to see the stars.â You said, gazing into his eyes like they held all the constellations you wished to see.
He glanced up at the sky. Then back at you. âFunny,â he said. âThatâs exactly what I told myself I was doing.â
You raised a brow. âAnd what were you actually doing?â
He grinned. âWaiting to see if the mysterious lady from earlier came back.â
Your breath caught slightly. âYou were not.â You huffed out a disbelieving laugh.
âWas too.â
You tried to look unimpressed but the hopeful look on his face made you fail miserably. âAnd what if I hadnât?â
He shrugged. âThen Iâd have sat here looking at the ocean pretending I wasnât disappointed.â
That made you laugh again. Softly this time. He noticed, grin widening. âWell Iâll be damned,â he said. âShe smiles.â
âOf course I smile.â You countered.
âDidnât see it earlier.â
âThatâs because you were too busy insulting my life choices.â
âTry, saving your life,â he corrected.
âDebatable.â You teased
He leaned closer slightly. âOh I donât think so.â
The wind shifted again, brushing your hair across your cheek. Without thinking, he reached out and tucked the strand gently behind your ear again. The same quiet motion as before. Your breath caught.
For a moment neither of you spoke. You were standing closer now. Close enough that you could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. Close enough that the warmth from his coat reached you in the cold air.
âSo,â he said softly.
âSo?â
âYou got a name,â he reminded you. âFeels a little unfair that Iâm still just âSergeant.ââ
You smiled faintly, teasing slightly. âYou never told me.â You said even though yku were the one who never asked in the first place.
âWell that seems like an oversight.â He straightened slightly. âJames Barnes,â he said.
Then he added with a crooked grinâ âBut most people call me Bucky.â
You repeated it quietly. âBucky.â The way you said it made something flicker across his face.
âAnd you,â he said, leaning a little closer again, âare still the most mysterious passenger on this ship.â
You tilted your head. âIs that so?â
âOh absolutely.â
âWhy?â
âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âyou appear on a railing in the middle of the night, nearly give me a heart attack, disappear without explanation⌠then come back smiling like none of it happened.â He leaned slightly closer still. âIâd say that qualifies.â
Your heart fluttered strangely. âYouâre very dramatic.â
âOnly when necessary.â
The two of you stood there quietly for a moment. The ocean rolled endlessly beside the ship. The stars burned above.
You crossed the deck to lean against the railing. Settling beside him, wordlessly. Letting the moment settle softly around you. For the first time in what felt like forever, you felt light. Almost giddy. Excited.
And somewhere inside, a quiet voice whispered that this momentâthis strange, unexpected night under the starsâmight be the beginning of something you had never dared imagine before.
For a while neither of you said anything.
You stood beside him at the railing, the cold wind brushing past you both while the great ship pushed steadily through the dark water. The stars stretched endlessly overhead, brighter than you had ever seen them from land.
Bucky leaned his elbows against the rail, looking out across the ocean. You followed his gaze. For once, the quiet didnât feel heavy. It felt⌠easy. Like something that belonged there.
He turned around to face you, eyes drifting down, pausing on your hand. The bandage was wrapped clumsily around your palm. It was impossible to miss in the pale moonlight. His brow knit slightly. âHey,â he said gently, making you look up. âWhat happened there?â
You glanced down at your hand as if noticing it for the first time. âOh,â you murmured.
He waited. The wind tugged softly at your hair again. âItâs nothing,â you said after a moment. âJust a vase that decided it didnât like gravity very much.â His eyes flicked back to yours.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth. âUh huh.â
He didnât say anything else right away. But something in his expression changedâsomething quieter, more thoughtful. Like he understood that the sentence youâd given him wasnât really the whole story.
You felt his gaze linger on your hand a moment longer. âVases can be real dangerous like that,â he said lightly, but there was no humour in it.
âI can't really do anything about themâ the words tumbles put of you before you could stop them.
âThen maybe you should let someone do it for youâ his eyes never left yours as he spoke. Earnest. Willing. The honesty, too much for you. You turned away, willing your eyes to look at the stars and not at him.
The irony wasn't lost on you. âYou can't really do much about the vasesâ you retorted
âWell, you can always throw them awayâ he shook his head slightly, hair moving with the wind.
âIt's not so easy when you're attached to such vasesâ you looked away, the kindness in his eyes making your voice shake.
The wind shifted again, colder this time. You rubbed your arms slightly without realizing it. Bucky noticed immediately. âCâmere,â he said softly. Before you could protest, he guided you toward the bench heâd been sitting on earlier.
You hesitated only a second before sitting beside him. The wood was cool beneath you. For a moment you both stared out at the ocean again. Then, slowly, carefullyâ His arm slipped around your shoulders. Not forceful. Not claiming. Just⌠there. Warm.
You leaned into him before your mind had time to argue. The movement felt strangely natural. Your head rested lightly against his shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing grounding in a way you hadnât expected. For several quiet minutes neither of you spoke.
The ship hummed beneath you. The waves rolled endlessly beside it. His hand rested loosely against your arm. Then it shifted slightly. His fingers brushed the back of your head. The exact spot where it had struck the table earlier.
Pain flared sharply. You winced before you could stop yourself. He froze. âWhoa,â he said quietly, pulling back just enough to look down at you. âWhat was that?â
You tried to wave it off. âItâs nothing.â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âThat didnât look like nothing.â
You gave a small shrug. âJust a table that didnât like gravity very much.â
For a second he just stared at you. Then realization flickered across his face. The wind ruffled his hair again. His voice softened slightly. âYou hit your head pretty hard?â
You shrugged again. âTables can be unpredictable.â
âYour furniture doesn't seem to like you very muchâ His face was grim when he said it. The expression telling you that he wasn't just talking about the furniture.
You tore your gaze away.
Because it really was as simple as that. You don't hurt the person you love. And if John thought hurting you was his right, that it's not love.
âCan't really do anything about itâ you said, still looking at the stars.
He sighed letting it go. He must've seen the ache behind your eyes. Must've realised this was the very thing you were trying to escape.
So he dropped it, letting the conversation drift somewhere else. Slowly. Naturally. You talked about the ocean first. About how endless it felt. Then about the stars. Bucky pointed out a few constellations he remembered from nights spent camping as a boy.
You admitted youâd never really looked at them before. âYouâve never just⌠sat somewhere and watched the sky?â he asked.
You shook your head faintly. âThere was always somewhere I was supposed to be.â
He looked at you thoughtfully. âThat sounds exhausting.â
You smiled slightly. âIt is.â
He told you about Brooklyn. Small streets and crowded apartments and summer nights sitting on rooftops with friends. You listened quietly. It sounded like another world entirely.
âWhat about you?â he asked eventually.
âWhat about me?â
âWhat did you want to do?â he said. âBefore all this.â
You hesitated. No one had asked you that question in a very long time. âI used to want to travel,â you admitted softly.His brow lifted.
âYeah?â
âI wanted to see cities,â you continued slowly, the words feeling strange on your tongue. âDifferent countries. Learn languages.â
His smile was warm. âSounds like a pretty good plan.â
You looked down at your bandaged hand. âThat was a long time ago.â
He didnât respond right away. Instead, his arm tightened slightly around your shoulders.âPlans donât always stay buried forever,â he said quietly. The words lingered in the cold night air. You leaned into him again, your head resting against his shoulder.
For the first time in a long whileâ You let yourself imagine things. Dreams. Places. A life that felt different from the one waiting behind your cabin door. And beside you, Bucky Barnes kept talking softly under the starsâAbout everything. About nothing.
As if the two of you had known each other far longer than a single night on the deck of a ship crossing the Atlantic. Bucky leaned back against the bench, one arm still loosely around your shoulders. His coat was warm where you rested against him, the steady rhythm of his breathing quiet and calm beside you.
Then he glanced down at you. âSo,â he said.
You looked up slightly. âSo?â
âYou told me about wanting to travel.â
You nodded. He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight.He tilted his head, studying you in the soft moonlight. âWhat else?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell,â he said simply, âwhat else do you want?â
You stared at him for a moment. No one had ever asked it that way before. Not like it mattered. Not like the answer might actually interest them. âYou mean⌠in life?â you asked.
âYeah,â he said easily, smiling a little. âIn life.â
You let out a small breath, unsure whether he was teasing you again. But when you looked up at him, his expression wasnât playful. He was genuinely waiting. Curious.
âYou really want to know?â you asked.
âSure I do.â
Your fingers fidgeted lightly with the edge of the bandage on your hand. âWell⌠I suppose I always thought Iâd live somewhere near the water,â you said slowly. âNot on a ship exactly but⌠somewhere you could hear the waves if you opened the window.â
Bucky nodded thoughtfully. âGood choice.â
âAnd Iâd like a small house,â you continued, the words beginning to come easier. âNot very grand. Just comfortable.â
You paused. âMaybe with a garden.â His mouth curved slightly.
Your voice grew softer as the images formed more clearly in your mind. âThereâd be a porch,â you added. âWith a swing.â
âOh yeah?â
You nodded. âSo you could sit out there in the evenings.â
âAnd watch the sunset?â he guessed.
âExactly.â You turned to look at him, eyes earnest as you talked animatedly about your dreams for the first time ever.
He looked pleased with himself. âSee? Iâm good at this.â You laughed quietly. The sound felt lighter this time. More natural.
âAnd children,â you added after a moment, surprising yourself. His brows lifted slightly. âOh yeah?â
âIâve always wanted children.â
âHow many?â
You thought about it. âFour.â
He chuckled softly.âFour?â
âYes.â
âThatâs ambitious.â
You nudged his arm slightly. âI think itâs the perfect number.â
He held up a hand in surrender. âAlright, alright. I wonât argue.â
You smiled again. âIâve even thought of names.â
âOf course you have.â
You tilted your head, resting it on ypur palm as you spoke. âI always thought I'd name one of them Jamesâ
âYeah? you like that name?â There was a slight smirk playing on his lips when your eyes found him again.
âI really doâ
âWell what if your husband has the same nameâ he pretended to think, as if he was trying to find a solution for a problem that didn't even exist yet.
âWell I guess I'd have to find one who goes by his middle name thenâ you teased back.
âI guess you doâ he winked making you laugh.
It was so easy with him. No practised smiles that were meant to appease important people. No âDon't laugh to loudâ and âDon't smile too wideâ comments from your mother or john every once in a while, when a real smile threatened to outgrow the fake ones.
Here the moment belonged to you and only you. No shouting voices telling you to stay in your limits. No whispered advices asking you to compromise. Just you under the stars with a man who listened like every word mattered
You kept talking. About books you loved. About the places youâd dreamed of seeing. Paris. Italy. Little towns along the coast where you imagined walking narrow streets and buying fresh bread in the mornings.
You told him how you loved music, though youâd never been allowed to learn an instrument properly. How you liked drawing when you were younger. How you always thought autumn was the prettiest season.
The words poured out of you before you even realized it was happening. Like something that had been locked away for years suddenly found an open door.
And strangely, none of the stories involved the life waiting behind your cabin door. You didnât mention your fiancĂŠe. Or your mother. Or the expectations that had always surrounded you like invisible walls.
For once, the life you described felt entirely your own. Just yours. Just for this night. Eventually you paused, suddenly aware of how much you had said. You glanced up at him nervously. âIâm talking too much, arenât I?â
Bucky was quiet for a second. Then he shook his head slowly. âNo,â he said softly.
His arm tightened just slightly around your shoulders again. âI think itâs the most beautiful conversation Iâve had in a long time.â
You looked at him. The moonlight catching the faint scar along his jaw. The quiet warmth in his eyes. And for the first time in your life, the dreams you had just spoken aloud didnât feel foolish anymore. They felt possible. At least here. On this quiet stretch of deck. In the arms of a man who had asked simply because he wanted to know.
You stood on the front of your mirror dabbing compact powder on your skin with careless concern. Your mind was too preoccupied to care if the application was even.
The applicator kept hitting the same dip of your cheekbones again and again as you let yourself be lost in the thoughts of the night before.
Thoughts of the man who held you like you were precious. Of how much you talked and still had words left inside you. Of the animated look in his eyes when he told you about brooklyn and Steve. You felt yourself wanting to meet his friends. To see his life and to be a part of it.
âYou ready?â John's rough voice cut through your thoughts like knife through silk.
You turned around, adjusting your gown and checking the makeup before nodding. He took your hand without a care to compliment you on your looks or even checking his grip to not hurt your ring clad fingers.
When you reached the main ballroom, it glittered more brightly than the evening before.
Every chandelier blazed with light, scattering gold across polished floors and crystal glasses. Music poured out in practised symphony from the orchestra, elegant and precise, while laughter drifted between carefully measured conversations.
You stood beside John, dressed exactly as expected. Silk draped perfectly. Hair pinned without a strand out of place. Makeup carefully appliedâthis time thick enough to hide every trace of yesterday.
From the outside, you were flawless. From the inside, Your chest ached.
ââŚa remarkable opportunity,â one of the men was saying, his voice rich with importance. âThe expansion alone could double returns within the year.â
John nodded, fully engaged, his posture straight and confident. âExactly my thinking,â he replied smoothly. âItâs simply a matter of timing.â
You stood at his side, quiet, poised, offering the occasional polite smile when expected. But your mind wasnât in the room. It was somewhere else entirely. Cold air. Endless stars. A quiet voice asking, What else do you want? Your fingers tightened slightly around the stem of your glass.
The morning had arrived way too quickly for your liking and you hadnât been able to stop thinking about him ever since you left. There was a charm about him that you never could find in the men that belonged to nobility. There was an ease about being with him. About the way he listened. The way he made space for you in a world that had never done that before.
ââŚdonât you agree?â one of the men suddenly asked, turning toward you.
You blinked. âIâyes,â you said softly, though you hadnât heard a word.
Johnâs hand brushed lightly against your back. A silent warning to pay attention. You straightened slightly. âI think it sounds⌠promising,â you added carefully.
The men nodded, satisfied enough. The conversation moved on. You exhaled quietly.
And that was when you saw him. At first, it didnât make sense. A server moving through the room with a tray of drinks. Perfectly ordinary. Exceptâyour breath caughtâIt was him.
Bucky.
Dressed in a waiterâs uniform that didnât quite fit him rightâtoo tight across the shoulders, the sleeves rolled just enough to reveal strong forearms. His hair was slightly neater than the night before, but no less unruly under the ballroom lights.
And his eyes, they found you immediately. A slow, familiar grin tugging at his lips. Your heart nearly stopped. What is he doing here? Panic flickered through you. If anyone noticedâ If John noticedâ
You forced yourself to look away quickly. But it was too late. You could feel it. That pull. That awareness of him moving through the room, closer, weaving between guests like he belonged there.
You swallowed hard.
âIâll justâexcuse me,â you murmured suddenly, stepping back from the group before anyone could question it.
John barely glanced at you, too absorbed in conversation. Relief rushed through you. You moved quickly. Carefully. Trying desperately to not draw attention.
Until you caught sight of him slipping through a side archway near the edge of the ballroom. Without thinking, you followed. The corridor beyond was dimmer, quieter, the music softening behind heavy curtains. You turned the cornerâAnd nearly ran straight into him.
âCareful, doll,â Bucky murmured, catching your arm to steady you. Your eyes widened, both at the nickname and at the way he looked in front of you.
Skin slightly flushed and lips curved upwards into a grin. You told yourself that none of the views you've seen so far travelling around the world could top this one. It will always be the favourite to your eyes.
âWhat are you doing here?â you whispered urgently.
He looked entirely unbothered. âWell,â he said casually, shifting the tray onto one hand, âI was in the neighborhood.â
âThis is not funny,â you hissed, glancing nervously back toward the ballroom. âYou canât be here.â
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice. âFunny,â he said, âI seem to be here just fine.â
âBuckyââ
âJames, when Iâm working,â he corrected with a crooked grin.
You stared at him. âThis is serious.â
âI know,â he said lightly. âThatâs why I dressed for the occasion.â
You glanced down at the uniform. âThis is not dressing for the occasion, this isâthis is sneaking into a first-class ballroom!â
âTechnically,â he said, âI walked right through the front.â
You pressed a hand to your forehead. âYouâre going to get caught.â
âNot if Iâm charming enough.â
âThis isnât one of your games!â Your voice came out sharper than you intended.
For a moment, he just looked at you. Then his expression softened slightly. âI just wanted to see you,â he said quietly.
The words hit harder than they should have. Your breath faltered. âYou shouldnât haveââ you whispered.
âI know.â
âThen why did you?â
He shrugged lightly, though his eyes stayed on yours. âDidnât feel right not to.â
Your heart twisted painfully.
You stepped closer, lowering your voice further. âIf someone sees youâif they recognize you donât belongââ
âThey wonât.â
âYou donât know that.â
âI got a pretty good track record so far.â
You grabbed his sleeve suddenly, pulling him slightly deeper into the shadowed corner. âYou need to leave,â you said, your voice urgent now. âRight now.â
He looked down at your hand gripping him. Then back at your face. âOr what?â he asked softly.
âOr youâll get in trouble.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âBucky,â you insisted, your voice trembling now, âIâm serious.â
He tilted his head slightly, studying you. âYouâre worried about me.â
âOf course I am!â The words slipped out before you could stop them.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then his grin returnedâsofter this time, but unmistakably there. âWell,â he said quietly, leaning just a little closer, âthat makes sneaking in here worth it.â
You stared at him, half exasperated, half⌠something else entirely. âYou are impossible.â
âIâve been told.â
You shook your head, trying not to smile.
âThis isnât funny,â you repeated, though your voice had lost some of its edge. âYou need to go before someoneââ Footsteps echoed faintly from the ballroom. Your grip on his sleeve tightened. âPlease,â you whispered.
This time, he heard it. Really heard it. The worry behind your trembling voice. The concern behind your eyes.
His expression shifted. The teasing faded just enough. âAlright,â he said quietly. But he didnât move immediately. Instead, his gaze lingered on you for one more second.
âYou lookâŚâ he started, then stopped himself, a faint smirk returning. âDifferent,â he finished.
You exhaled shakily. âThatâs because Iâm supposed to.â
He shook his head slightly. âNo,â he said. âNot that.â His voice softened. âYou look like you donât belong in there.â
Your heart stuttered but before you could respond, voices grew closer. He straightened quickly. âGuess thatâs my cue,â he murmured.
You nodded, stepping back. But your eyes stayed on him. âGo,â you whispered.
He took a few steps back before thinking better of it, surging forward and pulling you into his chest. And despite being startled at the suddenness of the hug, your body melted into him all the same.
When he pulled away, you felt him pushing something into the palm of your handâa noteâbefore he turned, making his way towards the door.
He gave you one last look over his shoulder then turned, disappearing smoothly down the corridor with the ease of someone who had always known how to slip through places he wasnât meant to be.
You stood there for a moment longer. Hands shaking. Heart racing. Before forcing yourself to return to the ballroom. Back to the lights. The music.
The music swallowed you again. Bright and loud. You slipped back into your place beside John as if nothing had happened, your posture perfect, your expression composed.
But your hand remained closed. Tight. Careful.
It took several long minutes before you found a moment to yourselfâjust enough to turn slightly away from the crowd, just enough to unfold the small piece of paper hidden in your palm.
Your eyes flicked down quickly. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. Iâll make sure youâre entertained proper.
His handwriting was slightly messy. Like his fingers were shaking when he wrote it. It almost seemed like a weak attempt at fine cursive but charming nonetheless.
Your breath caught. You folded the note quickly, hiding it again. Your heart was racing now. You glanced across the room instinctively.
He was nowhere to be seen. Of course he wasnât. He had already gone. You'd asked him to. Even though you wished anything but that.
The room suddenly felt even more suffocating than it had before. Because now, you knew what it felt like to breathe. The note stayed hidden in your glove.
You didnât dare read it again. You didnât need to. The words had already carved themselves into your mind. Third class dance room. In case this gets too dull. You stood where you were meant to stand. Beside John. Perfectly composed. Perfectly still.
The ballroom shimmered around youâlight catching on glass and silk, music rising and falling in careful rhythm. Everything was exactly as it should be.
And yetâYour fingers kept brushing against the folded paper tucked inside your glove. A quiet reminder. A possibility. You forced yourself to focus. To stay. To be sensible. This was your life. This was what was expected of you. You could not simply⌠walk away from it.
ââŚand of course, discretion is everything,â one of the men was saying.
John nodded, engaged, confident. âNaturally.â
You shifted your weight slightly, your shoes beginning to ache. No one noticed. No one ever did. You told yourself againâ Youâre not going. This is foolish. You will stay right here.
Johnâs hand came to rest lightly on your arm. At first, it looked like nothing..A casual gesture. Possessive, but acceptable. Then his fingers tightened. Not enough for anyone else to notice but enough for you to feel it.
You stiffened slightly. âSmile,â he snarled under his breath, his voice low enough that only you could hear. âYou look miserable.â You forced your lips to curve into the fakes smile imaginable. âThere,â he said. âBetter.â
The conversation around you continued. Numbers. Names. Opportunities. You barely heard any of it. His grip didnât loosen.
Instead, his thumb pressed deliberately into the inside of your arm, right where the bruise from earlier still ached beneath your sleeve. A sharp sting shot through you making your breath hitched.
Johnâs smile never faltered as he continued speaking. But his voice dropped again, quiet and cutting. âTry not to look like youâd rather be anywhere else,â he said. âItâs unbecoming.â
Your chest tightened. âIâm doing my best,â you whispered.
âYour best isnât very convincing.â His fingers pressed harder for a second before they released as one of the men turned toward you again.
âYou must find all this terribly dull,â the man said politely.
You blinked. âNo,â you replied quickly. âNot at all.â
Johnâs hand slid back to your waist. Firm. Holding you in place. âYou see?â he said smoothly. âSheâs perfectly content.â
You felt it then. Clear. Sharp. Not just the discomfort. Not just the pressure. But the certainty. This was your life. This. Standing still. Speaking when spoken to. Smiling on command. Hurting quietly where no one could see. Your fingers curled inside your glove. The paper crinkled softly.
The orchestra chnaged tunes. Someone laughed too loudly nearby. Johnâs voice cut through it as he continued speaking with the men, confident and smooth, completely unaware of the storm building quietly beside him.
You tried to focus again. You really did. You nodded when expected. Smiled when required. But the words around you blurred. The room felt smaller. Heavier. The note in your hand seemed to burn against your skin. Third class.
You shouldnât go. It was ridiculous and so very dangerous. Completely improper. You knew that. You knew exactly what your mother would say. What John would say. What anyone would say.
So you stayed where you were. Trying to ignore it. Trying to stay calm. Trying to be who you were supposed to be.
But your heart had already resigned itself to the man in sergeantâs uniform at the edge of the ship calling your name in the dark of the night.
His voice had already replaced the voice of John in your dreams, in your late night fantasies where you wondered how it would've been if John were a gentle man.
Now they were about how your life would've been if it was bucky holding your hand through it all.
You let yourself imagine it. The small house, the garden, the kids. And bucky through it all, building swings on the porch. Harvesting tomatoes from the garden. Teaching math to the kids.
You let yourself build the life of your dreams with the man you could never have. How could you? Women like you were born to be married for business.
And what you wanted for your life didn't matter to anyone but him. To him, it did matter. At least that was what you felt. It mattered to him that you smiled and that you were hurt. Or perhaps it was another fantasy of yours.
But you let yourself commit this sin. You let yourself dream and hope and wish and imagine. Because your mind was the only part of you that was still yours, that didn't have to obey someone else. The only part of you that you could still trust with a secret like this.
ââŚexcuse me,â you said quietly.
The urge to see him again suddenly overpowering enough to mask your fears. You should have thought about consequences, about your reputation. But you couldn't bring yourself past the thoughts of how fun it would be to do something reckless for once.
No one paid much attention as you slowly tried to slip out. John barely glanced at you. âDonât be long,â he muttered. Voice gruff and insolent.
You nodded faintly. But something in you had already shifted. You stepped away, swiftly at first. Then faster once you were out of their immediate sight.
The music grew faint behind you as you moved toward the doors. Your heart began to race. And for once you didn't think about stopping. Turning back. Rturning and apologising. You didn't care about being good. Being proper. Beingâ
Your hand tightened around the note. His messy handwriting swimming in your mind waiting to sink in.
You pushed through the doors. The corridor air hit your face, cooler, and quieter than the ugly screech of tables and chairs of the ballroom.
You didnât stop walking. Didnât hesitate this time. Your steps quickened, pulse followed. And the further you went, the lighter something inside you felt.
Like a weight was slowly lifting with every step away from that room. From john. From all of it.
You gathered your gown and started moving faster. Almost running now, ignoring the echo of your footsteps. Ignoring the voice that told you this was wild.
Because another voiceâstronger nowâanswered back. He is not worth it. None of this is worth it.
You reached the lower decks breathless. The sound of music met you before you even saw the door. Loud. Unrestrained. Alive in the way rehearsed orchestra could never be.
You slowed just long enough to catch your breath, hand hovering at the door. Your heart pounded wildly in your chest as you pushed the door open.
The moment you stepped into the third-class dance room, warmth crashed into you like a wave. Not just heat. Life. The room pulsed with it.
Music rang through the crowded space, fiddles playing fast enough to make your heartbeat stumble into rhythm with them. Boots pounded against the wooden floorboards, laughter burst from every corner, people sang loudly and terribly without shame, and somewhere near the back a group of men were arguing over cards while someone else balanced precariously atop a table.
It was chaos. Beautiful in all its liveliness. Nothing matched. Nothing was restrained. Nothing was orchestered in the way the noble people loved to have. And somehow it felt more real than every polished ballroom upstairs combined.
For a brief moment you lingered near the doorway, suddenly aware of how out of place you looked in your expensive gown and carefully pinned hair.
Several people noticed immediately. Conversations faltered. A few heads turned. A woman carrying drinks nearly stopped mid-step.
You could practically feel the room thinking the same thing, âA first-class woman? Here?â Your eyes scanned the crowd impatiently until you spotted him.
Bucky sat at one of the long wooden tables near the corner of the room, sleeves rolled to his forearms, suspenders slightly crooked now like heâd long since given up trying to look respectable.
He was laughing at something the blonde man beside him had just said. Probably Steve. You remembered him telling you about his best friend.
Then his eyes lifted and immediately found you. You watched his entire face change in real time. Like the room vanished for him. Like you were the only thing he saw.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â the blonde man beside him said, following Buckyâs stare toward the doorway.
Another friend leaned over, a black man. Probably sam. Bucky told you he was the funniest of them all. âNo way.â
âBarnes,â someone muttered in disbelief, âyou actually got her to come?â
Bucky was already standing before theyâd finished talking. He crossed the room quickly, weaving through dancers and chairs with that same easy confidence he seemed to carry everywhere. You barely had time to smile before he reached you.
âThere she is,â he said warmly. And before you could even think about itâHis arms came around you, pulling you into a hug.
It startled you at first. Not because it was unbecoming. But because it was so natural. So genuine. His arms wrapped around you tightly, stroking your back in gentle sweeps of his massive palm, like he was honestly happy you were there.
No hesitation. No calculation. Just happiness. You laughed softly in surprise as he held you for a second longer than necessary before pulling back slightly.
âI hoped youâd come,â he murmured with unmistakable satisfaction.
âYou did?â
âYeah. Would've been a shame if all my charm was wasted.â You rolled your eyes despite the warmth blooming in your chest.
Behind him, you noticed his friends openly staring now. Not rudely. Just⌠shocked. And rightfully so. It wasn't everyday they saw a person like you in a place like this. The blonde man blinked at you several times like he still wasnât convinced you were real.
Bucky glanced back at them with a grin. âAlright, stop gawking,â he called. âYouâre embarrassing me.â
âThatâs her?â one of them asked.
âYou make it sound like he caught a rare animal,â you replied before thinking.
The table erupted into laughter immediately. Bucky looked positively delighted. âOh sheâs funny too,â someone, probably sam, announced proudly.
The blonde man finally stood, recovering enough to offer you a kind smile. âSteve Rogers,â he introduced himself warmly. âNice to meet you.â
You told him your name.
Steveâs expression softened immediately. âWell,â he said, âany friend of Buck is welcome here.â
He was every bit of the person bucky told you he was. Kind blue eyes. Sweet serene smile. Thin and frail body but voice of iron. Unwavering in a way you rarely ever saw nowadays.
He greeted you like you were one of them. Making you feel wanted in a place where you only knew almost nobody. While the polished men and rich women upstairs, despite them being your fiancĂŠe or mother, wouldn't care if you're alive or dead if you went missing for days.
The others quickly followed, introducing themselves one by one, suddenly eager and warm now that the initial shock had passed.
But what struck you most wasnât just their friendliness. It was how easily they included you. No one cared whether your manners were perfect. No one watched your every movement waiting for you to embarrass yourself. No one seemed interested in your family name or social standing.
They simply⌠welcomed you. Like it was the easiest thing in the world. One of the women at the table, natasha from what you knew, scooted over immediately to make room for you.
Another handed you a drink with a grin. Someone else asked if you danced. The warmth of it hit you so suddenly it almost hurt. Because it felt so different from the people upstairs.
Johnâs friends spoke at you. Buckyâs friends spoke to you. Johnâs world felt polished and cold and careful. Bucky's world felt alive and real. And before you even fully settled into the feeling, Bucky leaned closer.
âSo,â he said, lowering his voice slightly. âYou gonna sit here lookinâ pretty all night or you gonna dance with me?â
Your stomach fluttered. âYou dance?â
He looked offended. âLady, I dance beautifully.â
Steve snorted loudly from behind him. âYou dance like a drunk sailor.â
Bucky pointed at him immediately. âDonât listen to him.â
You laughed before you could stop yourself. Buckyâs expression softened instantly at the sound. He watched you for a momentâthis woman who was totally out place in his world looking up at him like he was the best thing that happened to her that day.
He held out his hand toward you. âCâmon,â he said. âOne dance.â
You looked at his hand. Strong and warm and waiting patiently for yours. You realised that this was the first time in your life where no one was forcing you. No expectations. No obligations. Just a choice. Your choice.
Slowly, you placed your hand in his. The grin that spread across his face nearly made your knees weak. âThank you my ladyâ he murmured again softly making you giggle.
He pulled you toward the dance floor in a swift motion. The music was fast. Far faster than the elegant waltzes upstairs. You barely had time to react before Bucky spun you into the crowd. âOh my Godââ you gasped between laughs as he caught your waist.
âRelax,â he teased. âI got you.â
âThatâs exactly what you said before dragging me into this.â
âAnd was I wrong?â
You opened your mouth to argue but your words came out as startled laughter as the room blurred around you when he spun you again. He danced like everything else about himâmessy, confident, entirely unconcerned with dignity. And somehow it was perfect.
His hands stayed firm on your waist as he guided you through the crowd, grinning every time you stumbled slightly. âYouâre doing that on purpose,â you accused breathlessly.
âWhat?â
âSpinning me too fast.â
âWell,â he said solemnly, âA guyâs gotta impress a woman somehowâ
You laughed again. It wasn't the small polite sound you used upstairs. But an actual laugh. A real one. Bright enough that even Steve noticed from the table and shook his head with a smile.
Bucky chuckled softly when he heard it. Your heart skipped. He looked so handsome with that amused smile. That joyous laugh. You realised almost immediately that this moment would haunt your dreams for a long long time.
The dance slowed slightly as the music changed. Buckyâs hands settled more carefully at your waist now. You moved closer naturally.
Neither of you seemed to notice it happening. Or maybe you both did. But nobody said anything. The room around you faded softly into warmth and music and laughter.
And when you looked up at him, he was already watching you. Not your dress. Not your manners. You. Like he couldnât quite believe you were real either. âYou know,â he murmured as you swayed together, âI was worried you wouldnât come.â
You smiled faintly. âI almost didnât.â
His brows lifted slightly. âWhat changed your mind?â
You thought about the ballroom upstairs. Johnâs hand digging into your arm. The suffocating conversations. The feeling of disappearing piece by piece every time you stepped back into that world.
Then you looked at Bucky. At the warmth in his eyes. At the way he held you like something precious instead of something owned.
And your answer had nothing but honesty in it when you said âI remembered there was somewhere else Iâd rather be.â
You saw a flicker of something pass between his eyes. Maybe shock or surprise. Or maybe something else entirely.
You wished to know what that look meant. You wished to ask him. You wanted to talk. Tell him everything you felt. And somehow, you also wanted to saty quiet. Not utter a word and let this moment ingrained itself into your very bones.
Before you could think better of it, you leaned in, nose brushing his as his eyes flicked toward your lips before finding your eyes again.
When your lips met, the kiss wasn't explosive. It was warm. Tenuous in a way new things always are. Both mouths desperate to feel each other. Both tongues itching to explore each other.
He let you savour it. Let you melt into him as his hands found your jaw, tipping it up just enough that his tongue delved deeper into your mouth.
Your eyes shut themselves closed as you forgot all sense of time. Not caring if people saw or if rumors spread.
This was your moment. And for the first time in your life, you were sure, you'd rather die than let it go.
âTake me to your room, buckyâ you whispered against his mouth, pulling away, your breath fanning his face.
âWhat?â his eyes widened, and you repeated, a smile making its way to your face.
âYour room, buckâ
He didnât waste another moment. Didn't give another thought to what people around you would think. What they'd say. He just took your hand in his and guided you out of the dance room.
The hallway to his room was narrow. Very much I like the wide pathways to luxurious first class suites. When he pushed the door open, his room was small. Very small compared to lavish first class cabins.
It was simpleâtwo narrow bunks, a tiny washbasin, a crooked little mirror hanging against the wall. A jacket was tossed carelessly over one chair and a pair of boots sat near the bed like theyâd been kicked off without thought.
It was nothing like rooms you grew up living in but somehow, it felt warmer. More lived in and honest. And you found yourself willing to spend an eternity in this tiny room instead of palaces that John talked about gifting you.
Mostly because a palace with John would still be a cage while a small brooklyn apartment with bucky would be heaven to you. âItâs not much compared to your nice rooms. But if you compare it to brooklyn, it's basically luxuryâ he attempted to joke but you could hear the nervousness behind it.
âI like it better,â you admitted quietly.
Bucky looked at you for a second like he thought you might be teasing him before smiling softly. âYeah?â
You nodded. âIt feels real.â you answered honestly making something in his expression soften at that.
The sounds of the ship hummed faintly around youâthe distant rumble of engines, muffled laughter somewhere down the hall, the quiet creak of the ocean beneath everything.
You took his hand in yours walking in and tugging him with you until the back of your knees hit on one of the bunks.
He shut the door with a flick of his arm and your hands found the lapels of his coat the moment the door shut behind him with a conclusive click.
You pulled him closer like he was oxygen you needed to breathe, and before you could overthink it, you pressed your lips on his in a searing, desperate kiss.
It might just have been the most outrageous thing you have ever done in your entire life. If anyone came to know about it, you'd be banished, and tortured, and what not.
But you couldn't bring yourself to care. Your lip trembled against his, making its insecurity known when bucky didn't kiss you back immediately, more out of surprise than anything.
He felt your hands shaking around the lapels of his coat and he gently slid them around his torso, before cupping your face in both hands and kissing you back.
It was slow. Nothing like the impatient kiss you had started with. You realized he was savoring the feeling of your lips on his, of your face in his hands, of your hands around his body.
He didnât ask for more, didn't delve deeper into your mouth. Not because he didn't want to. God, he wanted to. But he wanted you to feel comfortable even more. He wanted you to feel cared for. In command of.
Your courage ignited just a little more and you let your tongue dart out to brush at his lower lip in the slightest of a lick.
He let you in immediately. Mouth opening, chasing you, as your tongue explored his mouth with curious adoration of someone having their first real kiss.
His own tongue had found home in your mouth. Sliding against your tongue and licking at your lips before promptly pulling away for air.
His mouth was shiny from the kiss, lips swollen where you had sunk your teeth in them. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, but fond all the same.
His hands didn't leave your cheeks, fingers caressing the soft skin as he finally spoke, âYou okay?â You nodded pulling him furhter into you until the back of your knees hit the bed again and you stumbled down onto the mattress with him on top of you.
He adjusted his weight on his forearms with a low groan, unwilling to move too much and lose the feel of your body under his. His mouth chased yours with the kind of urgency that only someone who's been waiting too long can have.
His lips trailed down slowly, mouthing at your neck until you whined, tugging at his shirt. He took the bait, pulling it off of him in a swift motion and revealing the planes of his toned chest to you.
It was clear he worked out. He was a sergeant and it showed. Your mouth went dry, hands itching to feel the skin and muscle of him under your palms, your lips.
His hands shook at their resting place on your waist, pawing at the skirt of your gown, pulling at the strings of your corset.
You helped him with a giggle, swiftly peeling each layer off and baring yourself to him. You were flustered in a way someone having a new experience always would be. But the way he looked at you, so adoring, so fond, made you feel respected even though you have never been in a more vulnerable position before.
He kissed every inch of you revealed to him, muttering praises into your skin and making you giggle. By the time youre both naked and breathless you don't think there's any part of you left unkissed.
Maybe because bucky didn't rush it, he touched you like he was worshipping you. Asking every step of the way if you're okay. Murmuring soft praises as he explored parts of you that no one else ever had.
Which was exactly what he was doing right now. Knelt between your thighs, as his mouth worked slow and teasing on your dripping core.
You shuddered beneath him as he licked a long stripe from your sopping hole to your clit, circling his tongue on the aroused bundle of nerves making your thighs tighten around his head.
He made a pleased sound of approval at that. Working to fast and slow, alternatively, the pleasure building tighter and hotter inside of your until his name was the only thing on your mouth. âBuck, pleaseââ you whimpered
âYou don't gotta beg sweetheart.â He kissed your thigh âC'mon. Come for meâ
You broke with a loud cry, white waves of pleasure washing over you completely. Bucky didn't let up, his tongue worked you through your orgasm until you pushed weakly at his shoulders.
He crawled back up your body and you immediately pressed your lips onto his, tasting yourself on his tongue and moaning at the feel of it.
His fingers found you then, stroking slowly, sliding through the slick wetness of you and nudging at your entrance.
He leaned down slightly. Mouth finding your breast and closing over a nipple. Your back arched itself, offering more of you to him, as your mouth opened in a silent gasp.
His fingers slowly slid in, one at first then another. Two thick digits driving in and out of you as his mouth fondled over your breast.
âNeed you buckyâ you whined, wanting more of him.
âNot yet baby,â His hand replaced his mouth on your chest as he spoke âgotta stretch you out for me.â His fingers scissor inside you and you cry out.
âCan't have you hurting, can we?â he kissed the tip of your nose, fingers ploughing into faster now. âCome for me baby.â He cooed âYou want my cock, donât you?â
âWant it bucky. Need your cockâ you whimpered.
âThen come on my fingers first.â His thumb came up to rub tight circles on your clit, making your thighs shake âCome for me sweetheart. Then I'll give you my cockâ
The orgasm surged violently through you. And by the time bucky's fingers left you, your chest was heaving. He waited patiently for you to come down. Ridding himself of the tight constraints of his pants and stroking himself at the sight of you.
There was a faint blush to your cheeks. Face dewy with sweat and mouth open in ecstacy and bucky decided that there was never anything more beautiful than this. Than you.
He stopped the movements of his hand as yours came to wrap around him instead. Your hand felt soft and warm on his cock. So tiny but so much better than his own calloused hand. You grip wasn't as tight as he'd like but having you like this was already so fortunate of him.
Your thumb swiped across the tip, spreading the wetness there and making him groan. And before he knew it, you nestled slightly closer still, letting his cock slide through the slick of your core, the tip of him nudging your clit and making you both moan into each other's mouths.
He pushed in slowly. Inch by torturous inch as you fluttered and clenched around him, adjusting to his size. âFuckâ he cursed âStill so tight, Sweetheart. I can't even moveâ
You drew your hips up slightly, helping him slide all the way in to the hilt. His body lowered itself onto you with a low grunt. Face finding the crook of your neck and biting down on your shoulder as he began to rock forward slightly.
His thrusts were shallow at first. Barely pulling out before rutting back in. The pace built slowly, mostly because bucky wanted to take his time with you. His hips stilled every time he felt his restraint snap. He fucked you until your whole body was taut and ready to snap.
âWhy are you so tense honey?â He asked driving back in faster now âYou can let go. Its just me. Its your bucky.â His hand found your cheek, thumb stroking softly at your cheekbones. âYou know I'd never hurt you.â He reassured.
Your eyes found his then, holding his gaze. This man who was so earnest, so painfully reverent even in a moment like this. And in a passing second, you decided that this was the man you wanted to spend the rest of your life with.
Not John. Not anyone else. Bucky. Only bucky.
He saw the burn behind your eyes, kissing your tears away as they swiftly leave your eyes. âI love youâ he said, voice shaky but firm all the same. You surge forward in an instant. Hiding your face in his neck, the sudden change in the angle making his cock hit deeper and your sniffle comes out breathy.
âI love you too, bucky.â You sobbed âI love you so muchâ
He ground down, before pulling back out. Rutting into you with more urgency now. The room was filled with muffled sounds of gasps and moans. It reeked of sweat and sex.
But neither of you could bring yourself to care. All you could think about was bucky on top of you. All you could feel was him inside you, twitching ever so slightly as he held himself back.
His fingers found your clit again, circling faster, tighter, pulling you toward the edge with him. You surrendered yourself to the pleasure as it developed you whole, your mouth parting in a choked gasp and you felt bucky's hips still, burying himself to the hilt and spilling into you with a grunt.
He let the weight of his body fall onto you ever so slightly as he rode out the aftershocks of his orgasm. When he finally caught his breath, he rolled over, taking his weight off of you and your body immediately protested at the loss of him.
He would've understood it because he tugged you closer to him almost instantl. Pulling you onto him until you were laying on his chest.
His lips found your forehead in a chaste kiss. Hands settling on your back, stroking it slowly and gentle. Occasionally taking q detour anf playing with your hair, twirling it around his fingers.
It should've been soothing, but as you came down from the high the reality of the situation began to dawn on you. You might be here right now, sated and so in love. But when tomorrow you're forced to go back to your old life, your real life, the nightmare that you're trying so desperately to escape, what would you do then?
And as if it was a cruel joke, your brain suddenly reminded you that bucky didn't know about any of it. About John, about you practically cheating on your fiancĂŠe. âWhat's got you thinking so loud, sweetheart?â He turned your face to meet his eyes.
And yoh realised, he desevred the truth. After what he said to you, after what you did, you owed him honesty. âBucky, Iâum, maybe you donât know thatâI mean, you definitely don't knowâYou had no idea and I know its my fault. I should've said something before weââ
âHey, if this is about me not knowing that you have a man in your life, then you don't need to worry. I knowâ
âYou know?â You were shocked to hear that.
âI saw that man with you when I sneaked into that ballroom to meet youâ he confessed âAnd I realised what your relationship was.â
When you didn't show any signs of horror that bucky was worrying about, he went on. âFor a moment i thought about pulling away but then i remembered the vaseâ his fingers found your forearm where the scar from the vase was still fresh.
âAnd the tableâ His hand went to the back of your head as if to emphasise what he was talking about.
âAnd the way your eyes shine when youâre with me.â he whispered. âI saw it in that room, baby. How dead you looked. How miserable. And all I could think about was that you deserved better than that. So much better, sweetheart. You deserve the world.â
His eyes shone with something you didnât know if you truly understood, he cupped your cheek as he said the next part. âAnd even though I know I can't give it to you. But Iâd sure as he'll die trying.â
âYou might have known, bucky. But that doesn't make me less guiltyâ you confessed
âMaybe not. But I'm no less guilty either. I courted you despite knowing you have a fiancĂŠe. Iâm at fault too, honeyâ he said looking into your eyes. âBut what we did, what I saidâI want you to know that I mean it, every word, every gesture, everything. If you're willing to give me a chance, I want to do this right. Just say yes.â
And for the firsttime that night, you hoped that maybe you could have it all with him. All you had to do was say yes and the future would be right there. He would be right there. He'd hold your hand and everything would be fine.
You could disappear. John would never find you and you would find everything. The freedom. The joy. The dreams. The future. Him.
âYesâ
The room had grown quieter as the night passed. Not silentânever truly silent on a ship this largeâbut softer somehow.
The distant hum of the engines vibrated faintly beneath the walls while muffled footsteps echoed occasionally through the corridor outside. Somewhere farther down the hall, someone laughed loudly before being immediately shushed.
But inside the little cabin, everything felt warm. Safe. You lay curled against Buckyâs side on the narrow bunk, your head resting against his shoulder while he absentmindedly played with your fingers.
At some point you had both decided sleep wasn't the priority for your tired bodies and now you both laid awake in each other's arms.
The careful curls that your hair had been arranged in a few hours ago had come apart almost completely. Bucky seemed very pleased about that.
âYou know,â he murmured thoughtfully, twisting one escaped strand around his finger, âI think this is my favorite version of you.â
You glanced up at him suspiciously. âYour favorite version?â
âMmhm.â
âWhat happened to the mysterious elegant first-class lady version of me?â
âOh sheâs alright,â he said. âBut this one laughs at my jokes.â
âTheyâre still bad jokes.â
âYou keep laughinâ though.â
You rolled your eyes. âThatâs pity.â
âSure it is.â His grin widened when you smiled again.
The warmth in your chest felt almost frightening now. Like you were becoming too attached to this. To him. But every time you tried to pull back mentally, heâd say something ridiculous and drag you right back in.
At some point the conversation had dragged your consiousness to future again. He talked about wanting a cat. You joked that the cat would hate him.
He pinched your side and you tried to turn away feigning annoyance, only to be pulled back into him. You shook your head, smiling helplessly.
âYou think about this often?â You said after some time, when he started talking about building a garden for you in your house.
âNot usually with such a pretty audience.â Your cheeks warmed immediately.
Bucky looked unbearably pleased with himself. Smug in a way that made you feel like you've made the right choice in a man. âYou blush real easy, you know that?â
âYou flirt constantly, you know that?â
âYeah,â he said easily. âMostly because watching you react is my new favorite hobby.â
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â he said softly, âyouâre still here.â
Your fingers traced lightly over the fabric of his shirt while the conversation drifted again. You told him about books you loved as a child. He admitted he once tried to impress a girl by pretending to understand poetry and accidentally quoted a laundry advertisement instead. You laughed so hard you nearly fell off the bunk.
He looked deeply offended about it. âYouâre never lettinâ that go, are you?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âCruel woman.â
âYou deserve it.â
He spoke quietly about wanting a little mechanic shop someday. Nothing grand. You listened carefully while he described it. âYouâd hate it,â he warned.
âWhy?â
âGrease everywhere.â
âThatâs manageable.â
âIâd come home filthy every day.â
âI think Iâd survive.â
He smiled softly at that. You were lost to the dreams of future and into each other when a sudden pounding hit the door. Hard enough to rattle the walls. Both of you jolted upright immediately.
âBuck!â Steveâs voice shouted from the other side. Urgent and panicked. âBuck, open the damn door!â
Bucky frowned instantly, already climbing off the bed. âWhat the hellââ
Another fist slam against the door. âBUCKY!â Something in Steveâs voice made your stomach drop ominously. Bucky yanked the door open. Making steve practically stumble inside, breathless and pale. Paler than bucky had ever seen him.
âSteve?â Bucky said sharply. âWhat happened?â Steve grabbed his arm. âThe ship hit something.â
For one second, nobody moved. The information taking itâs time to sink in. âWhat?â you whispered, breaking out of the trance as you felt the floorboards rattle beneath your feet by the surge of water.
Steve looked between both of you. âItâs bad,â he said quickly. âReal bad. Waterâs coming in downstairs already.â
A strange sound groaned through the ship beneath your feet and one of the tile creaked open, giving way to an insistent trickle of water flowing into the room.
Your blood went ice cold. Buckyâs expression changed instantly. No teasing now. Only sharp focus. âHow bad?â he demanded. Steve swallowed. âTheyâre saying itâs sinking.â
The room went utterly still. You could hear the faint voice of people shouting, children crying, feet rushing as groups of guests ran toward the deck, doors slamming open and luggage thudding behind as they dragged whatever they could save, with them.
The ship tilted, just slightly. But enough. Enough to feel it. Your breath caught. âOh my God.â
Bucky moved immediately. âCoat,â he said sharply, already grabbing his own. âPut your coat on.â Your hands shook as you obeyed.
Outside the corridor, panic was building fast now. Voices overlapped chaotically. âWhatâs happening?!â âMove!â âGet upstairs!â
The ship groaned again beneath your feet. Louder this time, more insistent. You looked toward the floor instinctively and saw water slipping beneath the corridor door farther down the hall. Cold seawater rushing inward from the farther side of the hall
Your heart stopped. âBuckyââ
âI see it.â He grabbed your hand immediately. âStay with me.â
Steve was already moving into the corridor. âCâmon!â
The hallway outside had transformed into chaos. Passengers poured from cabins in various stages of dress, frightened voices echoing against narrow walls while crewmen shouted conflicting instructions.
The ship tilted again. Harder this time. A woman screamed as luggage slid suddenly across the floor. The lights started to flicker like you were in a horror movie. Which, given the situation was an accurate description.
Water rushed visibly now at the far end of the corridor. Fast. Far too fast. Your pulse thundered painfully in your ears.
Bucky tightened his grip around your hand. âStay with me,â he said firmly. âWhatever happens, you donât let go of my hand, understood?â You nodded shakily.
People shoved past desperately. Someone cried openly nearby. A child screamed for their mother. The sound of metal groaning deep within the ship echoed like thunder through the walls.
âMove!â Steve shouted ahead. You ran.
Your shoes slipped against wet flooring as the ship tilted again beneath you. Bucky kept one arm firmly around your wrist whenever the angle shifted too sharply, practically dragging you upright through the crowd.
Water surged suddenly around your ankles. Ice cold and unforgiving. You gasped sharply. âJesus Christ,â Steve muttered ahead.
The hallway behind you erupted into screams as the water rushed faster. People started running in earnest now. Pure panic. The ship groaned violently again.
Lights flickered themselves off, turning the lower deck dark and unsettling. Someone fell. Bucky immediately pulled you around them before the crowd crushed forward again. âKeep moving,â he said tightly.
Your breathing came in panicked bursts now. The staircases were packed. People shouting and pushing. Trying to get to the lifeboats before the others.
Crewmen tried desperately to direct passengers upward calmly. But calm had gone out of the window the moment ice cold water of the Atlantic touched peopleâs feet.
âWomen and children first!â âWhatâs happening?!â âIs it true?!â
The ship tilted harder.
A chandelier somewhere crashed violently. Glass shattered. You nearly lost your footing entirely before Bucky caught you against him. âI got you,â he said immediately and his voice cut through the panic somehow. Grounding.
You clung tightly to his hand as you climbed higher and higher toward the deck. Toward the freezing night air. Toward whatever waited above the chaos below.
When you reached the deck, it was chaos. The moment you emerged into the freezing night air, the full horror of it crashed into you all at once. People everywhere. Shouting. Crying.
Crewmen yelling orders over one another while passengers pushed desperately across the tilted deck. Steam billowed into the night sky from the great funnels overhead, and the once-beautiful ship now groaned like something wounded beneath your feet.
The cold hit brutally. Wind tore through your hair and clothes while the Atlantic stretched black and endless around you.
But more merciless than the cold right now was fear. Real and endless and bone deep fear as the reality and graveity of the situation suddenly started to dawn on everybody.
You could see men making calculations as to how to get their wives and kids to the lifeboats, in case they themselves couldnât make it. You could see women trying to mask their own fear to console their crying children and worried husbands. You could see children trying to make sense of the situation and trying to believe as their mothers said âeverything will be fineâ even though they could visibly see the otherwise.
You clung tightly to Buckyâs hand as he guided you through the crowd, Steve trailing close behind. âStay close,â Bucky said sharply over the noise.
You nodded quickly, struggling to keep your footing as the ship started to crack right down the middle. Women were crying openly now. Children clung to parents. Some people still stood frozen in disbelief while others surged toward the lifeboats in growing panic.
A crewman shouted nearby âWomen and children first!â The words sent a chill through you colder than the wind. Buckyâs grip on your hand tightened. His eyes darted quickly toward the lifeboats. Then toward you.
Something in his face changed. âNo,â you said immediately.
He blinked. âWhat?â
You shook your head before he could even speak. âNo.â
âSweetheartââ
âNo.â
Bucky looked briefly stunned. âYou donât even know what I was gonna say.â
âYes I do. You were gonna tell me to go.â
Another violent groan echoed through the ship. Somewhere nearby, metal screamed loudly enough to make everyone flinch. The crowd surged suddenly, people falling through the cracks in the ship into the dark endless abyss beneath.
Bucky immediately steadied you against him. âListen to me,â he said firmly.
âNo.â
âYou need get on that boat. You have first class access, now's the time to use it.â Your stomach dropped painfully. âGo sweetheart.â
There it was. You shook your head harder. âIâm not leaving you.â
âYes, you are. You have to.â
âNo.â
âHey.â His voice softened slightly despite the chaos around you. âLook at me.â
You did. And immediately wished you hadnât. Because there was fear in his eyes now. Not for himself. For you.
âYou have a better chance than me,â he said carefully. âYou know that.â
âI donât care.â
âYou should.â
âI donât.â
He huffed out a breath that almost sounded frustrated. âDarlinâ, this ainât the time to be stubborn.â
âAnd this isnât the time for you to tell me what to do.â
Despite everything, his mouth almost twitched. âNowâs really when you decide to start talking back?â
You cupped his face in tour freezing hands âYou listen to me bucky barnes, you are the omly thing that matters to me now. Don't you see it? How precious you are to me? I can'tââ your voice broke âI can't lose you. I won'tâ
Another lifeboat began lowering nearby, half-full already while people screamed to be let aboard. Crewmen held them back. âStand back!â âI have a child!â âPlease!â
Your heart pounded painfully in your chest. Bucky cupped your face suddenly, forcing your attention fully back to him. Holding in all that he felt for you in the moment because now wasn't the time to say it aloud.
Maybe if he gets another chance at life, he would try. But not now. Now his only priority was to get you on the boat safe and sound. The world around you blurred for a second. âI need you to listen,â he said quietly. The seriousness in his voice terrified you more than the sinking ship. âYou can survive this.â
âSo can you.â
He didnât answer quickly enough. And you saw it. That flicker of doubt. Tears stung your eyes instantly.
âNo,â you whispered shakily. âNo, donât do that.â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â
His expression broke slightly. âSweetheartâŚâ
âYou donât get to decide I leave without you.â
His thumb brushed quickly against your cheek, cold from the night air. âIâm trying to keep you safe.â
âI donât want safe without you.â The words came out before you could stop them.
Bucky went still at that. Even with the panic raging around you. Even with the ship dying beneath your feet. His eyes searched yours like he was trying to understand whether you really meant it. You did. And he knew.
Steve appeared beside you both again, breathless. âBuck, more boats are loading on the port sideââ Then he stopped when he saw your faces. Understanding crossed his expression immediately. âAw, hell,â he muttered quietly.
Bucky ran a hand through his hair roughly. âShe needs to get on a boat.â
âShe does,â Steve agreed gently.
You looked between both of them in disbelief. âOh, absolutely not.â
Bucky almost laughed despite everything.
âSee?â Steve said. âSheâs scarier than you.â
âNot helping.â
The ship tilted sharply again. People screamed as several passengers lost their footing and slid directly into the ocean. Bucky stumbled but you caught his hand instantly in both of yours. âI got you,â you said automatically.
You realised your hands clutched tightly at his coat even when he found his footing. And there was a moment where suddenly you realized something with terrifying clarity. You trusted him more than anyone else in the world.
More than your fiancee. More than your mother. More than yourself, maybe. And the thought of stepping into a lifeboat while he stayed behind felt impossible. Like tearing something out of your chest.
âIâm not leaving you,â you repeated quietly. Bucky shut his eyes briefly. When he opened them again, they were glassy and it nearly undid you.
âYou barely know me,â he said softly.
A watery laugh escaped you. âAnd iâm not losing the only chance I have at knowing you more.â
âHoneyââ
âNo buck. Don't you know that if I leave we'll never see each other again? They'll take me away bucky. They'll lock me up somewhere andââ you sniffled âand memories of us will all I have for the rest of my life.â
He sighed. Undone by emotion but logic still weighing heavy on the back of his mind. âYou will die hereâ he blurted out the ugly truth.
âThen it'll be kinder than a life with himâ you pointed behind you where John would probably be somewhere trying to get into the lifeboats with all his precious jewels and artifacts.
Bucky looked away. He didn't know what to say. He couldn't ask that of you. Your life in return of his love was too high a price.
You pressed your palm on his chest. âI'm choosing this bucky. Iâm choosing you. It might be the last and the only thing I get to do with my own will. So, please let me make this choice.â
The lights on the topmost deck flickered and dimmed slightly. A fresh wave of panic ripped across the deck. People began running now.
The bow dipped lower. The reality finally impossible to deny. Bucky looked around once. At the lifeboats. At the freezing ocean. At the terrified crowds. Then finally back at you. And something in him gave way. A small, helpless smile crossed his face masking his concern for your sake.
âYou are unbelievably stubborn,â he murmured.
You nodded shakily. âThatâs a first.â
He stared at you one more second. Then pulled you tightly against him. His arms wrapped around you fiercely enough that you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. And quietly, against your hair, he whispered âAlright.â
Not agreement. Not surrender. Just Alright.
Like he understood now that neither of you was walking away from the other again. And even when he wasn't sure of it, he knew one thing for sure that if it meant keeping you, he'd die trying.
The night had become a nightmare. The deck was no longer a place of music and laughter. It was screaming and chaos.
The great ship that had seemed unsinkable only hours ago now groaned like a dying thing beneath everyone's feet. The bow was disappearing into the black Atlantic fast and irreversible.
The stern rose higher and higher. People stumbled across tilted decks desperately trying to find safety where none existed. Steve was ahead of you both, helping clear a path through panicked passengers. "Over here!" he yelled.
The deck lurched violently. Bucky never left your hand through it all. All around you, people were crying. Praying. Calling for loved ones. The sound was almost unbearable.
That was until you heard a terrible noise. A deep metallic roar that seemed to shake the entire world. Everyone froze for one horrible second. Then screaming erupted everywhere. The ship was breaking apart. "Oh God," you whispered.
Bucky's face had gone pale. "Run."
Nobody needed telling twice. The deck became a flood of terrified people. The angle grew steeper way too fast. Much steeper.
You found yourselves climbing rather than running now. Clinging to railings. Pulling yourselves upward while the ship rose beneath you. The ocean seemed impossibly far below. Black. Endless and deadly. "Buck!" Steve shouted.
A section of deck shifted suddenly beneath you. Metal shrieked. People fell through. Bucky grabbed your arm and yanked you toward him just as the flooring buckled. The movement saved you. But not him.
A heavy piece of twisted railing slammed into his left arm. The impact throwing him sideways. You heard him cry out. "Bucky!"
He hit the deck hard. You stumbled toward him, worried. Hands cupping his face and making him look at you before your mind had caught up with the incident.
For a terrifying second he didn't move. Then, much to your relief, he opened his eyes. They were glassy and terrified. You helped him as he pushed himself upright.
His face had gone completely white.Left arm hanging awkwardly against his side, bleeding profusely and flesh peeking out from where the skin had given way when the railing struck him.
"Buckyâ" "I'm fine."
He wasn't. He was anything but fine. You tore a piece of fabric from your skirt, wrapping it around the wound in a makeshift bandage. When you looked up again his jaw was clenched so tightly you thought he might crack a tooth. Steve saw it too. "Jesus, Buckâ"
"I'm fine. We gotta keep going." The lie was obvious. But there wasn't time. The ship groaned again, deck tilting further. People were already sliding. Bucky grabbed your hand again with his good arm. "Move."
The stern rose higher and higher. The freezing wind tore at your clothes. And in a moment, the railing slipped from your hand and the ship disappeared beneath you.
For one impossible second there was only weightlessness. The stars overhead. Bucky's hand in yours as you both tumbled down towards endless nothingness.
The terrified look in Steve's eyes as he watched his best friend fall into the dark abyss. Then the ocean hit. The cold stole everything. Your breath. Your thoughts. Your voice.
It felt like being struck by lightning. Sudden and all at once. Like every nerve in your body had shattered. You surfaced choking and gasping for air. The screams around you were worse now. Far worse. Hundreds of voices crying out in the darkness. You spun desperately, looking for him, praying, hopingâŚâŚ.
"Bucky!"
There he was. A few feet away. Still alive. Still fighting toward you through the freezing water. Relief crashed through you. "Bucky!"
He reached you moments later. Face pale, Lips blue, Teeth chattering but smiling nonetheless. "There you are." You almost laughed.
"Steve!" bucky suddenly shouted.
You turned around just enough to hear steve yell, "I'm here!" He mustâve jumped in after you and was now fighting the surgung waves to reach his best frined.
You and bucky tried to cross the short distance toward him the best you could. The three of you fought through floating debris. Broken furniture and pieces of the ship, to reach each other.
The cold was unbearable, every movement feeling harder than the last. At some point a wooden panelling floated toward you, you grabbed it with sheer will power, hands and legs feeling numb in the cold of water.
The three of you held onto it for dear life. Then another wave struck. The wreckage spun violently making bucky lose his grip. The injured arm failed him completely.
You caught him before he could disappear bemeath the water. Interlocking your fingers with his good arm to keep him afloat as you could visibly see his consiousness fade slowly due to the blood loss.
The cold continued to steal strength from all of you. Minutes felt like hours and hours felt like days. The lights of the unsinkable had died between all the commotion. Leaving you in nothing but endless darkness. The ocean down below and the sky up ahead.
And somewhere during the darkness and silence, you realised how quiet everyone had gone. Maybe everyone was tired, maybe dead. Bucky was barely holding on in front of you, eyes drowsy and ice kissed. And steve,âŚ.STEVE?
Where was he? âBuck,â you shook him awake, âWhereâWhereâs steve?â
You both looked around desperately, one moment he was there. Holding onto the wreckage. Talking. Trying to keep everyone awake. The next you knew, heâs nowhere to be found. "Steve!" Bucky yelled. No answer. You looked everywhere. Every direction but there was nothing but darkness. Bodies. Debris. And the endless black ocean.
"STEVE!" You shouted too. Silence. Only the wind and waves answered. The realization settled slowly and terribly, like a rock hitting the bottom of a pitt. The ocean had taken him.
You both kept looking anyway. For minutes. Maybe longer. Until your voices became too weak. Until the cold became too much. Until there was nothing left to do.
The stars blurred overhead. Your body felt impossibly heavy now. Sleep tugged at you. Dangerous sleep. The kind where you know thereâs no waking up from.
As the hours passed, the cold became its own world. After a while, it stopped feeling like water. It became something larger than that, something scarier, pulling at your consiousness asking to surrender yourself to it.
Something that wrapped itself around every thought, every movement, every breath. The wreckage beneath you creaked softly with each passing wave. The ocean stretched endlessly in every direction. Black water. Black sky. Only the stars remained bright.
You couldn't feel your feet anymore. Or your hands. You weren't even entirely sure how long it had been. Minutes. Hours. A lifetime.
Beside you, Bucky was still holding on with his good arm. Barely. His injured arm remained limp against his side, hanging uselessly in the freezing water. Every so often his jaw tightened sharply when a wave jostled it. But he never complained. Not once.
You hated him for that. Because it made it harder to ignore how badly he was hurt. And you realised with a terrifying certainty, that he was waiting. Waiting for rescue. WAiting for death. Whichever came sooner.
The ocean rose and fell beneath you, slow and endless. As if unaware of the lives it had taken tonight. "Hey." His voice sounded rough now.
You turned your head. Or at least you tried to. Even that felt difficult. "What?" His eyes were fixed on the stars.
"You still awake?"
"Unfortunately." A faint smile appeared.
The darkness stretched around you. Somewhere far away voices occasionally echoed across the water. Fainter now. Far fewer than before. The reality of that sat heavily between you. The ocean had become quiet. Too quiet. And you hated it.
"Bucky." "Hm?"
"I'm scared." The admission slipped out before you could stop it. He turned his head toward you immediately.
For a moment he looked younger somehow. Not Sergeant Barnes. Not the confident man from the dance floor. Just a frightened young man floating in an impossible ocean. "Yeah," he admitted quietly. "So am I."
You stared up at the stars again. They seemed cruel now. Beautiful. Unreachable. Uncaring. "I thought tonight would be different."
Bucky huffed softly. "I'd say it definitely qualifies as different."
You rolled your eyes weakly. How could this man still hold onto his humour. "That's not what I meant."
"I know." His good hand found yours beneath the freezing water. The grip was weak. But present. Grounding. "I know."
Silence settled again. You listened to the waves. To the wind. To the sound of Bucky breathing beside you. And gradually a terrible realization began creeping into your thoughts. No lights. No boats. No rescue. Nothing. Just darkness. And cold. And waiting.
Your throat tightened. "Bucky?"
"Yeah?"
"If..." The word got stuck in your throat. You tried again. âIf I don't make it."
Immediately he shook his head. "No."
"Bucky." "No."
His voice was firmer this time. You looked at him. He wasn't looking back. His eyes remained fixed stubbornly on the horizon. As though refusing to acknowledge the possibility made it less real. "Bucky."
His jaw tightened. Finally he sighed. "Fine." The word sounded reluctant. Painful.
You swallowed. "If I don't make it..." His grip tightened immediately. You almost stopped. But the words were already coming. "If I don't make it, I need you to promise me something."
His eyes closed briefly. "What?" You thought for a moment. About the little house. The porch. The wildflowers. The future you'd built together in conversations over a handful of hours. A future that suddenly felt very far away.
"Be happy."
Bucky immediately looked offended. "What kinda request is that?"
"I'm serious."
"So am I." Another wave rolled past. The cold dug deeper making you shiver violently. Bucky shifted closer immediately. Trying to block some of the wind. Trying to protect you from an ocean. The ridiculousness of it almost made you cry.
"You deserve happy," you whispered.
His eyes softened. "So do you."
You looked away. The stars blurred slightly. "You know what the worst part is?"
"What?"
"I only got one day."
His brow furrowed. "One day?"
"With you."
The words came out quietly. Truthfully. "I spent years doing what everyone else wanted." You swallowed hard. "And when I finally got something for myself. I only got one day."
Bucky stared at you. His expression breaking a little more with every word. âHeyâ His voice was firm. âLook at meâ "We're getting that house."
You smiled sadly. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
"The garden too?"
"Especially the garden."
A laugh escaped both of you. Small. Fragile. But real. The only sign of life in this pitt of darkness. Then silence returned. Longer this time. The cold kept pulling at you. Pulling you downward. Toward sleep. Toward rest. You could feel it.
And judging by the way Bucky's eyes kept drifting closed, he could too. Eventually he spoke again. "So if I don't make it."
Your chest tightened immediately. "Buckyâ"
"Let me say it." His worrds hung heavily between you. You nodded. His gaze returned to the stars. "Travel."
You blinked. "What?"
"Everything you told me." His voice had grown soft. Dreamy.
"See Paris." You felt tears sting your eyes.
"See Italy."
"Bucky..."
"Learn those languages."
His smile was faint now. "But don't get one of those tiny dogs."
You laughed through the tears. "Why?"
"They're mean."
"They are not."
"They absolutely are." He stayed quiet for a moment Then; "And name one kid after me."
Your eyes widened. "One?"
"Minimum."
You laughed again. "Bucky Barnes, that is incredibly arrogant."
"I know." His grin appeared briefly before fading again.
The darkness seemed heavier now. Both of you were drifting. Fighting it. Losing. Winning. Losing again. Your head felt strange. Far away.
The stars blurred into streaks. And for the first time all night, neither of you had a joke. Neither of you had a plan. Just each other. The ocean rocked gently beneath the wreckage. Peaceful now that it's hunger was quenched.
You rested your forehead against his. Too exhausted to hold it up any longer. And for a moment it felt like maybe this was it. Maybe this was where the story ended.
Not with screaming. Not with panic. Just darkness and cold. And one last quiet moment together. And when you decided to finally surrender yourself to the current, you heard it. A sound. Faint and distant but an anchor nevertheless.
The sound came again. Louder now. A voice. Shouting and looking for survivors. Bucky's eyes widened. "Wait."
"What?" He lifted his head, slightly. And then a lantern appeared in the darkness. Tiny. Far away. But real. A boat. Someone shouting. Someone searching.
"Bucky..." His face transformed. Relief. Disbelief. Joy. All at once.
"Hey!" His voice cracked as he shouted. "HEY!" You joined him. Weakly. Desperately.
The light turned toward you. Toward the wreckage. Toward the two stubborn people who had refused to let go. And as the boat drew closer through the darkness, neither of you said a word. You simply held onto each other.
And watched hope come back across the water.
The first thing you remembered after the rescue was warmth. Not safety. Not relief. Just warmth. Blankets piled over your shaking body. Hands helping you sit up. Voices speaking somewhere nearby.
And Bucky. Even half-conscious, barely awake himself, he kept searching for you. Every time his eyes opened, they found you.
The weeks that followed blurred together. Hospitals. Questions. Officials. Lists of survivors. Lists of the missing. Lists of the dead.
You hated all of them. Especially the questions. "What is your name, ma'am?" The man sat behind a desk with a pen poised above a ledger.
You looked down at your hands. Then at Bucky.
He was sleeping in a bed across the room, pale from surgery and exhaustion. His left arm had been too badly damaged during the sinking. The doctors had done everything they could. In the end, they had been forced to remove what could not be saved.
The loss hung over him quietly. Neither of you spoke about it much. Not yet. The grief was still too fresh.
The official cleared his throat. "Your name?" For a moment you saw John Walker's face. Your mother's. The life waiting for you if anyone found you. The cage you escaped.
Then you looked at Bucky again. At the man who had pulled you from a railing. Pulled you through a sinking ship. Pulled you through an ocean. And somehow given you back yourself.
You lifted your head. The words were soft when they came out, yet firm all the same "Mrs. Barnes."
Bucky hated the first months after surgery. Not because of the pain, though there was plenty of it, but because now suddenly simple things became difficult. Buttons. Doors. Writing. Even holding a cup.
When the grief got too heavy, you sat beside him and took his hand. The real one. The one that still trembled slightly when he was upset. "Bucky." you would say.
His eyes remained fixed on the floor. "Buck." Finally he looked up.
"Youâre still youâ you said âand you still got me," He didnât say anything. He never did. Just leaned forward until his forehead rested against yours.
Eventually a metal replacement was fitted. Crude by later standards. Heavy. Silver. Complicated. The sort of thing people stared at. Bucky hated that too. At first.
Then one day he accidentally crushed a walnut with it. Then realised he could do stuff that was harder for him to do before the metal arm. Like pulling doors right off the hinges. Fixing stuff that required heavy lifting. After that he became considerably more enthusiastic.
You found him showing it off to children in grocery aisles at least twice. "Bucky Barnes."
"What?"
"You are using your metal arm to impress six-year-olds."
"They think it's cool."
"They absolutely do." You grinned.
"They got excellent judgment."
And even though the scars of past were slowly healing but through everything, the one subject neither of you could escape was Steve. For months you hoped. People kept being found. Survivors appeared unexpectedly. Rumors spread. Stories changed.
Every knock at the door made Bucky sit up. Every newspaper made him look twice. Every list made your stomach twist. Maybe Steve had survived. Maybe he was somewhere else. Maybe he was recovering. MaybeâŚâŚ.
Hope can survive a very long time when there is nothing else to hold onto. Until one morning the final list arrived. Government officials. Recovered remains. Confirmed identities. You watched bucky pull the paper open with shaky hands. He read it with glassy eyes and the moment you saw Bucky's face, you knew.
You crossed the room slowly. "Bucky?â
He didn't answer. Couldn't. Words had left him the moment he read the paper. The finality kicking in as the hope flickered out like a flame in a stormy night.
He handed the paper to you, wordlessly. Your eyes found the name almost immediately. Steven Rogers. Recovered. Identified. Deceased.
The world stopped around you as you stared and stared at the paper until your vision turned blurry from unshed tears. You read it again and again. As though repetition might somehow change reality. It didn't.
The paper slipped from your fingers. And suddenly you couldn't breathe. âOh God."
The words came out chocked and watery. Bucky bowed his head. One hand covering his eyes. His shoulders shaking slightly. And for the first time since the ocean, he cried. Years of friendship and memories gone in an instant.
The grief hit both of you like a wave. You cried until your throat hurt. Until your eyes burned. Until exhaustion finally forced silence where words could not. That night neither of you slept much.
You sat together on the porch steps watching the stars. Thinking about a blonde boy fromBrooklyn. Thinking about laughter in a third-class dance hall. Thinking about all the futures that the ocean swallowed whole that night.
Life continued anyway. Slowly and reluctantly. But it did. Because that's what life does. It goes on even when it's stained with grief and scars. And that was how you found yourself several months later, standing in front of a small cottage near the water.
The paint needed work. One shutter hung crooked. The garden was mostly weeds. The porch creaked alarmingly. It was perfect. You looked at Bucky and found him already looking at you, smiling. "The porch squeaks."
"I know."
"The roof's uneven."
"I know."
"The front gate doesn't close."
"I know." You laughed.
"So we're buying it?"
"We're buying it."
The first year at the cottage chaos. Wonderful chaos. You planted wildflowers only for half of them to die. Bucky insisted he could fix the roof himself. He nearly fell off twice. You learned quickly that neither of you had any idea what you were doing.
That did not stop either of you. The garden slowly grew. He built a porch swing one day to surprise you. And day by day, piece by piece, the house became home.
Then one rainy afternoon a scruffy little stray cat wandered into the garden. She was tiny and grumpy. Covered in mud and entirely unimpressed by humans. Naturally, Bucky fell in love immediately.
Bucky picked her uo from the graden like she already belinged to him and the moment she curled up in his lap, bucky knew he'd lost his heart. "We're keeping her." He looked up at you with puppy eyes.
"Obviously." You rolled your eyes but there was no heat in it.
"What are we naming her?"
The answer came almost immediately. "Alpine." The cat yawned. Completely indifferent.
And so Alpine stayed. The garden grew. The porch swing creaked. The house filled with laughter. And some evenings, when the sun dipped low over the water and painted everything gold, you'd find yourself sitting beside Bucky on the porch.
His metal fingers intertwined with yours. Alpine sleeping nearby on the way tree her dad had built for her. Wildflowers swaying in the breeze. And sometimes you'd look at him and remember a freezing night beneath impossible stars. A railing. A dance. A sinking ship. An ocean that had nearly taken everything.
And you felt immensely grateful that somehow, against all impossible odds, the two of you had made it home.
Epilogue coming in a different post because tumblr keeps fucking with me
Gonna read this as soon as Iâm home đ
I'll be waiting to know your thoughts gin. I know you love a good angst đâ¤ď¸
Epilogue :- Let me love you a moment more, Itâs the last of it after all
10 years later
The warm afternoon light spilled amber across the floor of your bedroom. You were curled along one of the armchairs beside the window, nestled in the softness of it like a cat in sunlight.
Your feet rested in buckys lap, who had settled in the chair across from you, massaging your swollen ankles. Every so often he looked up at you and got that faraway look in his eyes.
âWhy do you keep looking at me like that?â You asked.
âI justâsometimes I can't believe how i got this, y'know. You, the kids.â
âYou deserve every bit of it bucky. Youâve fought death to keep itâ you reminded.
He shook his head at the memory. Even after all these years the memory of titanic was fresh in your mind like a wound you got yesterday.
Somehow it was both the most tragic yet the most magical experience of your life. It had changed your lives in a way that if you were to remove it from the evnets your life you could say with surety that your life would have been miserable.
You would have had to live out your days as john walkerâs wife, which to him was synonymous to âhis puppetâ The last you knew he was getting divorced after being sued by his wifeâs father for domestic violence against her.
According to the newspapers, he had entered a marriage of convinience contract with the daughter of a wealthy businessman to fuel his dying business. And apparently his business was flourishing unlike his reputation.
You winced slightly as the baby moved inside your belly. Hand going on top of your bump instinctively.
âLittle one giving you trouble?â Bucky asked, leaning forward to rest against hand in top of your swollen belly.
âHe's been moving non-stop. Didn't let me get any sleep last nightâ He clicked his tongue in disapproval before resting his head on your belly. Your fingers immediately finding their place in his hair.
âYou being naughty, peanut?â He questioned âYou don't bother your mama or I'll give you a good lesson when you come outâ he warned but there was no heat in his words, if anything he was smiling.
âHey! Nobody threatens my kidâ you feigned anger and he put his hands up in surrender making you giggle.
He looked so good like this. All wide smiles and teasing comments and all yours. It was in moments like these that made you think boarding that ship was the best decision you ever made.
Because if it wasn't for that, you wouldn't have this. And it wasn't like you hadn't paid the price for it.
You had.
You couldn't go to pools or lakes now. Couldn't sleep in complete darkness. Couldn't shower in cold water even in summer.
Bucky had lost his arm. Undoubtedly the metal arm he had now was fully functional but it still wasn't real. Nightmares had plagued his days for years after the incident.
He still couldn't sleep through the nights most days without feeling like he's drowning.
It had taken a lot of courage and a lot of tears for you both to arrive at a place like this where you both were comfortable and content with the life you were building.
âWe're naming this one Jamesâ you said suddenly, as the memories of past refreshed the conversation you had on the deck of the unsinkable.
He raised an eyebrow âNo weâre notâ
âYes we are. Remember I told you I wanna name one of them James?â you reminded.
You saw recognition flash across his face before a teasing smile replaced it âIf we do that then we're naming the next one after youâ
âNo we're notâ you blurted out instantly, horrified for no apparent reason.
âOh now youâre saying noâ he smirked
You smiled despite yourself. âYou're evilâ
âAnd you're still married to me.â
You threw a pillow at him, he catched it swiftly resting it in his lap before leaning in slightly.
No sooner had his lips brushed yours when you heard a loud shriek from down the hall. âIâm awakeeeâ
âAnd the gremlin awakensâ he sighed against your mouth.
âDaddyyyâ seven year old juniper launched herself at her father, the moment he was in her line of sight.
Bucky caught her with a grunt âWhat's got you so excited junebug?â
âDaddy did you forget?â She looked scandalized âAuntie Nat is coming tonight.â
Auntie Nat was the kids favourite person to be around. She visited you every time she was in town. Which wasn't as often as the kids would like so they got very excited when she was around.
âIâm soooo excited. I'll show her all my new dolls and daddy we can also tell her about the tomatoesâ juniper was really proud of the tomatoes her and bucky had grown in the garden.
She barely let her younger brother wander around them, afraid he'd pluck one or two. Which was unlikely because Steve was the calmer one of the two.
âOh yeah?â Bucky raised a brow
âYes and mama we can make the apple pie like we did last timeâ
She contributed absolutely nothing the last time you made apple pie for Buckyâs birthday. Her only service to you was that she managed to keep it a secret until the evening.
âWe should definitely do thatâ you agreed, knowing now wasn't the time she'd take a no. If you denied, she would somehow coerce bucky into making it.
âA little easy there on mama, honey. She's a little tired today.â Bucky interjected calmly âYour brother has been a menace all night. He certainly takes after youâ he flicked her nose making her giggle.
She was definitely one of the naughtier children and a harder pregnancy. Where Steve was calm and let you sleep through the night. Juniper was hell bent on making you pee yourself every time you tried to lay down.
Bucky always teases her about it. That she has been naughty since the very beginning of her existence and for some reason juniper finds it very funny. She prides in being the naughty kid.
There was one time she tried to swallow a bottle cap at three years old and you remember telling bucky âGirls are supposed to be less naughtyâ
He had just laughed âWell, what do you expect, doll? She's my kid. Of course she's the most mischievous of them all.â
And that was the whole point, wasn't it? That you were able to give your kids the childhood you never had.
You would always take pride in the fact that the greatest gift you gave your kids wasn't bringing them into this world but that you gave them bucky barnes as their dad.
Where you didn't have the freedom to even choose what you could wear or how you could laugh, your daughter sprinted around in your backyard wearing the same comfortable clothes as her brother did.
Where the girls out there still weren't allowed to make their own decisions, your daughter had somehow convinced bucky into putting her in a karate class.
Where her friends came to school in tight braids and uncomfortable ponytails she had asked bucky for a pixie cut one summer and bucky had happily cut her hair himself.
âShe's so much like meâ he had said one day watching her from the porch as she carried a water hose across the yard to drench her brother in the spray.
And that was the thing. Maybe people talked behind your backs about how your girl is too loud for a woman. And maybe people commented on bucky saying he's a bad parent because how could he give so much freedom to his daughter?
But the truth was that the freedom wasn't his to give. And it was probably the best thing about him that he was so painfully reverent. So focused on being the father you never had that he never surrendered himself to the stereotypes. Never taught your kids that girls were supposed to act a certain way or wear certain clothes.
He let children be children. You knew for sure that if your daughter was going through a tomboy phase he'll buy her all the punk rock CDs she wanted. And if someday she wanted to try being feminine, he'll take her to shop for dresses himself.
But how she should act or be wasn't his to decide.
âMamaâ A tiny voice tore you out of your train of thoughts. You looked down to see Steve standing on front of you with his hands tucked behind his back, clearly hiding something as he shifted nervously on his two feet.
âWhat is it honey?â You crouched a little so he could reach you better.
He looked at his dad, nervous and flushed. Bucky nodded with a smile and he shyly pulled his hands from behind his back to reveal the cutest, tiniest bouquet of wildflowers you had ever seen.
You could see the effort immediately. The mud on his fingers, the carefully picked stems and the way he bundled them together with a string so they wouldn't fall apart.
âOh my goodness!â You exclaimed âThat is so beautiful. Thank you so much stevieâ you picked him up, resting his weight on your side and kissing his cheeks until he squirmed away.
âDo you like it?â He asked shyly
âI love it so much baby. You're my little gentleman, aren't you? Bringing the most adorable bouquets for mamaâ
He hid his face in your neck at that. Bashful. You ruffled his hair, chuckling.
Bucky's eyes met yours then, they talked something about how happy he's to have this life with you. Yours replied in earnest, telling him how grateful you were.
What else could you have asked from life? A loving partner, a home you built with so much love and care, kids to play in the very home, making it even more alive.
You had everything.
Perhaps you weren't rich like before. Far from it. But only if richness was calculated on the measure of money. If the meausre of wealth was love, you might as well be the richest of them all.
Dividers by @diviniyae
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