hi, how do i do this thing called living...? she/they 22
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Note
hii! this is my first ever request, but i was wondering if you could write something with spencer where him and reader are hanging out or whatever and he keeps catching reader looking at him weird, and she eventually admits that the more she falls for him the more scared she gets about him leaving/them breaking up?
afraid — spencer reid
pairing: spencer reid x fem!reader ( no use of y/n ) content warnings: established relationship, tiny bit of angst because of reader's worries a/n: haiii !! lovely idea !!! i hope i did your first request justice <3
“Where’s the hairdryer?” you called from the bathroom as you stepped into the bedroom, tugging the oversized shirt down over your shorts.
Spencer looked up from the bed, where he’d been sitting cross-legged, a crossword puzzle half-completed in his lap. He immediately set the pen down on the nightstand and swung his legs over the side of the bed. “I think I put it in the drawer over here,” he murmured, already moving toward the closet.
You smiled to yourself. He could’ve easily pointed, told you where it was but instead, he’d gotten up without hesitation. It was such a small thing, really. But it made you happy.
“Found it,” he announced, pulling out the hairdryer with a small, proud smile. Then, he looked over at you, holding it up. “Do you want help?” he asked, gesturing to your damp hair.
You tilted your head, smile soft. “If you don’t mind.”
“Not at all,” he said immediately, crossing the room again to plug it in.
You took a seat on the small chair in front of the vanity. Spencer stood behind you, fingers careful as he adjusted the settings and turned the dryer on. He began drying your hair, fingers combing through each section. You watched him in the mirror with a soft smile. You’d once told him how much you hated going to bed with even slightly wet hair. How it clung to your neck, made your pillow cold, left you restless. And now here he was, making sure that wouldn’t happen tonight.
At some point, he leaned down and pressed a kiss to the crown of your head. You smiled at the unexpected touch, and in the mirror, you saw him smile back, like he was proud of making you smile. He continued, taking his time, fingers gentle as he brushed through the ends and dried every last bit. You stayed quiet, eyes on him the whole time. Every few minutes, your eyes would meet in the mirror and every single time, Spencer smiled at you.
He didn’t mention how he could tell something was off in your stare. How your eyes seemed distant, like they were looking at him but not really seeing him. Still, he said nothing.
Once he finished drying your hair, he clicked the dryer off and ran his fingers gently through the strands, smoothing them down, only to ruffle them playfully a moment later. “All done,” he murmured with a small smile. You were still watching him. Quiet, unreadable.
“You smell nice,” he added softly, hoping to pull a smile from you.
You blinked like you were coming out of a fog. “Oh. Yeah,” you said, trying to catch up to the conversation. “I used that vanilla shampoo I got a couple days ago.”
He nodded, but couldn’t shake the unease rising in his chest. He couldn’t decipher the expression on your face. For someone who read people for a living, the fact that you suddenly felt like a mystery made his stomach twist a little.
You watched in silence as he unplugged the hairdryer and carefully returned it to the closet. When he turned back around, you were staring blankly at the edge of his nightstand. Zoned out completely. He closed the drawer slowly. “Hey,” he said gently as he stepped closer. “You okay?”
The sound of his voice pulled your attention back. You blinked, shook your head lightly. “Yeah. I’m okay. Sorry,” you said quickly, pasting on a small smile.
He wasn’t convinced.
“Thank you,” you added, your voice softer now. You walked over to him with hesitance. Spencer got even more worried at that. You paused, then you leaned up on your toes and pressed a delicate kiss to his cheek.
“Thank you,” you whispered again, barely meeting his eyes before pulling back.
He didn’t say anything. Just watched. You moved away before he could stop you, retreating to the bed and climbing under the covers like nothing had happened. You grabbed the book from your nightstand, flipping it open without looking at him.
Spencer stayed where he was, eyes narrowing slightly as he studied you. He wasn’t sure what had just happened, but something was definitely wrong. Spencer stepped closer, but instead of heading to his usual side of the bed, he moved around and sat at yours. You looked up surprised. He didn’t say anything at first , just gave you a searching look before speaking.
“What’s wrong?” he asked gently.
You hesitated, then slowly shifted your legs to make space. He sat close right beside your thighs, like he wanted to be able to see every flicker of expression on your face.
You bit your lip. There was no point in pretending with Spencer. You could lie to anyone else in the world, but not him. Without a word, he reached for the book in your hands, fingers brushing yours as he gently pulled it away. He slipped a bookmark between the pages and set it aside on the bed. With that, he gave you time to gather your words and thoughts. Then, his hand settled lightly on your thigh, his thumb moving slowly back and forth.
Finally, you mumbled. “I really like you.”
Spencer’s expression softened instantly. A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth, and a warmth bloomed across his face, even coloring the tips of his ears.
“I really like you too,” he said, matching your tone. You’d both said I love you before, but he adjusted his words to meet yours now, sensing you needed it.
You gave him a small, grateful smile, but it didn’t quite reach your eyes. You looked down at his hand on your thigh instead, watching the movement of his thumb.
Then, you sighed. “I feel like I’m falling in love with you more and more every day,” you said, voice barely above a breath. “Every minute, even.”
Spencer studied your face, trying to follow your thoughts, to understand what part of that confession was weighing on you so heavily.
Then you added. “And it’s scary.”
He froze, just enough that his thumb paused mid-stroke. “Why is it scary?” he whispered. He was slightly worried. Worried that somehow you meant that you were insuating something bad.
You bit your lip, heart pounding in your chest. “Because I’m scared you’ll leave,” you whispered. “Or… break up with me.”
Spencer froze again, but this time, not out of uncertainty. This time, it was shock and heartbreak. “What?” he breathed, barely able to believe what he was hearing.
You didn’t answer. You couldn’t. You just stared at his motionless hand, still resting on your thigh.
It took him a second to come back to himself. Then, slowly, Spencer moved. His fingers twitched, then gently curled around yours. “You think I would leave you?” he asked softly, eyes fixed on yours.
You hesitated, then gave the tiniest nod.
Spencer just stared, his heart breaking. He hadn’t expected this. But suddenly, it all made sense. The distant look in your eyes earlier and the pause before you kissed his cheek. He understood now. Every moment between you had only deepened your fear. Because the more of yourself you gave, the more terrified you became that he might walk away with all of it.
“I… I can’t even fathom the idea of ever leaving you,” he whispered. He reached for your hand, cradling it between both of his. Then he tilted his head, trying to catch your eyes again. “I don’t even like going to work without you,” he added with a crooked smile.
You let out a small laugh. You remembered how clingy he got every time he packed a go-bag. The extra kisses. The lingering hugs. The texts he sent between briefings just to check in.
“I need you to trust me when I tell you,” he continued, “I don’t ever — ever — plan on ending this.” His eyes held yours. You could see how much he meant it. “You’re stuck with me,” he added, voice lighter now. “Forever.”
That pulled a real smile from you. You felt strength return to your fingers, and you squeezed his hand gently. Spencer smiled back at you.
“I love you so much,” he whispered. You stared at him, still holding his hand. Spencer leaned in just a little closer, his voice firmer now. “Hey. I’m serious.” His hand reached up, brushing your hair behind your ear with all the tenderness in the world. His fingertips lingered at your cheek.
“I love you,” he said again. “I would never—” He stopped, jaw tightening slightly. He hated even saying the words leave you, as if voicing them gave them power.
But you understood. And your hand tightened around his. “Okay,” you said softly.
Spencer didn’t hesitate. He opened his arms and pulled you in, wrapping you tightly against his chest. He nuzzled his face into your shoulder. But his mind wasn't still. He couldn’t stop thinking about how you must have felt carrying that fear inside you. The idea that you’d been so afraid of him leaving, it hurt him. It didn’t make sense to him, not when he’d never been more certain of anything in his life than you.
You were holding him tightly around the waist. And after a long moment, Spencer slowly pulled back. He cupped your face in his hand, thumb brushing gently along your cheek. His eyes searched yours. “You believe me, don’t you?” he whispered.
You nodded, giving him a small, soft smile. “Yeah.”
But Spencer saw the tiny flicker of hesitation still lingering in your eyes. He bit his lip, hesitating for only a moment before the words began tumbling out of him.
“Whenever I go to work,” he said, “the only thing that keeps me going is knowing I get to come home to you.”
You blinked, startled by this confession.
“When I go to the grocery store, I always have to do two rounds because I forget what I even needed. I get too distracted thinking about what you might like. What would make you smile.”
You opened your mouth to respond, but he kept going.
“I’ve gotten in trouble more times than I can count because I text you during briefings. Even when Hotch specifically said no phones. I know his rule is that you’re only allowed to be late once…” Spencer gave a small, guilty smile. “But I’ve broken it five times in the last two months. Because I can’t leave in the morning. Because I don’t want to leave you.”
Your eyes widened a little.
“I hate waking up before you, because it means I have to wait to hear your voice. Though,” he added, brushing his knuckles along your jaw with a fond smile, “I do love getting to look at you. You look so peaceful in your sleep.”
You felt your cheeks warm. But he wasn’t done.
“I hate falling asleep after you, too,” he said, quieter now. “Because it means I miss out on more time with your smile.” He paused, just for a second. “All my doctors know you. Even my dentist. I talk about you constantly. All my letters to my mom — they’re about you. All of them.”
You stared at him, lips slightly parted, stunned into silence by the flood of confessions.
“I even dream about you,” he whispered. “Whether you’re next to me in bed or not.” Then, he looked straight into your eyes and said: “All I think about is you.”
You were silent, staring at him with the widest eyes he’d ever seen. Your heart felt too big for your chest, every beat pressing against your ribs.
And Spencer wasn’t even embarrassed. He was flushed, yes, pink at the tips of his ears, but he wasn’t embarassed of how much he loved you. Your mouth was still hanging open, completely speechless, as Spencer sat in front of you, pink from head to toe. He was waiting, bracing himself for your reaction.
“Spence,” you whispered. “Oh my god…” You blinked quickly, brushing at your eyes as emotion welled up without warning. You hadn’t even realized you’d teared up until now.
Spencer’s brows furrowed softly, and his voice dropped. “Please don’t worry anymore,” he murmured. His thumb reached out to gently catch a tear before it could fall.
You let out a watery laugh, still overwhelmed. “Well, no, I won’t worry anymore,” you said, smiling through your sniffles. “You got in trouble with Hotch for me.” You giggled at the thought, imagining Spencer getting scolded for texting you during briefings or being late just to steal a few extra moments with you in the morning.
Spencer grinned, smile widening at the sound of your laughter. He would have confessed a thousand more embarrassing things just to hear it again. He brushed his thumb across your cheek once more.
“You do love me,” you said through your smile, almost breathless with disbelief, like it had just hit you all over again.
“More than anything,” he whispered. The way he spoke, the conviction in his eyes, made it impossible not to believe him, made it impossible not to feel the depth of what he was saying.
“Thank you.” You breathed, your arms wrapping around his neck, your fingers tangling in the soft hair at the nape. Your body pressed close to his, and the simple act of being near him sent shivers up your spine.
He held you just as tightly. “There’s nothing to thank me for,” he whispered into your hair, his lips brushing the top of your head. You smiled as he pulled back, just enough to nuzzle your nose with his, before finally pulling away enough to look you in the eyes again.
“Believe me now?” he asked, his voice a whisper.
And this time, there wasn’t even a flicker of doubt. No hesitation. “Yes,” you said softly.
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promise without ceremony | bucky barnes x reader
Summary: Bucky Barnes gave up on marriage a long time ago. But then, somewhere deep in a storm-soaked safe house, he pulls a bullet from your leg and accidentally proposes in the process.
MCU Timeline Placement: Post TFATWS
Master List: Find my other stuff here!
Warnings: blood loss, injury, bullet wound, field medicine, pain, mild medical trauma, emotional vulnerability, war references, ptsd mentions, marriage talk, soft angst, accidental proposal
Word Count: 3.9k
Author’s Note: i am once again asking bucky barnes to know peace (he will not). anyway i cleaned my kitchen at 1am and now i’m emotionally compromised about fictional men again. if you need me i’ll be lying facedown on the floor, thinking about laundry and commitment.

The idea of marriage had died sometime in the ice.
Not all at once. Not dramatically, like a final gasp of a man slipping into the Atlantic with a ring still in his coat pocket. No, it had been slower than that. Eaten away in inches. First by frostbite. Then by fire. Then by the sound of screaming that wasn’t his own but came from his own mouth anyway.
It used to mean something to him. Marriage. A porch swing. Warm soup. A house with windows that didn’t rattle in the wind. The kind of thing you promised a girl in church shoes, hands clasped over the Sunday paper.
James Buchanan Barnes had once thought he’d get that life. That he’d earn it. If he fought hard enough, if he came home in one piece, if he smiled the right way when he walked her back to her door.
Then war had cracked the world open like a rotten egg, and everything inside had spilled black.
There were no porches where Hydra took him. No rings. Just cold steel and code phrases. Needles and electrodes. Years swallowed by fog. And when he remembered again, when he started to remember, he couldn’t even picture a wedding band without wondering how deep it would slice if it caught against bone.
So no, marriage hadn’t crossed his mind in years.
Not until you.
Not even with you, not in the usual sense. You hadn’t crawled into his life and started naming curtains or pointing out flower arrangements like a threat. You’d just…stayed. Through the Accords. Through the fallout. Through Wakanda and the long, sterile quiet of the recovery halls. You never flinched when he woke up screaming. You never tiptoed around the word past like it might set off a bomb.
You were there during the repairs. The recalibrations. You’d worked with Shuri on something far above his understanding, fingers stained with grease and ink, hair always pinned messily away from your eyes. You’d curse under your breath in three different languages. You argued with Ayo. You laughed loudly.
By the time he was sent back into the field—once he had left the mountains, left the quiet—he expected the connection to die out. Most things did. The world had taught him that. You could try to keep something alive outside the place it was born, but roots snapped when you pulled too hard.
And it had. He had left you. Not by choice, not really. One blink and he was gone. Another blink, and you’d aged five years without him.
But then he saw you again. In D.C. In New York. Even in Louisiana. Out of nowhere, standing in a pair of sunglasses too big for your face, grinning like it hadn’t been years for you.
“Miss me, Barnes?”
And damn him, he had.
You’d joined the mission against the Flag Smashers. Temporarily, at first. That’s what you both said. Just this op. Just this briefing. Just this one joint task force run with Sam.
And then it wasn’t temporary anymore. And then there was a room in the same safe house that you’d claimed. A bunk on the same floor. Your stuff beside his. And his toothbrush in your travel kit, and he had no idea how or when that had happened.
There were no conversations. No declarations. Just a slow merging.
He liked your laugh. The dry, cut-glass one you used when Joaquin said something stupid. The low, real one that came out when you let your guard down, when the weight on your shoulders slipped just enough to let joy through.
You liked to touch him. Not in the way that made him flinch. In the way that made the back of his neck burn. A casual hand on his spine when passing behind him. Fingers brushing his sleeve. A nudge with your elbow when he got too serious. You were constant.
You grounded him.
And he didn’t know how to name that. He wasn’t good at words anymore. Hadn’t been in decades. But he knew how it felt when you were hurt. When you bled. When someone touched you too rough during an extraction and he saw red before he even registered why.
He had never said “I love you.” Not outright. Neither had you.
But there were nights you fell asleep on his chest, breathing slow against the metal plates, and he’d whisper it in your hair like a secret. Like a curse.
Because he did love you.
And it terrified him.
Not because he thought you’d leave, though that was always a part of it.
But because he didn’t believe in the future. Not really. Hydra had broken that part of him, rewired him to think in terms of seconds, triggers, threats. Even now, after all this time, after all this healing, the idea of forever felt…dangerous. Unrealistic. Like planning for spring in the middle of a war zone.
But the truth was: he wanted to grow old with you.
He didn’t say it. But he wanted it.
The thought came loudest during quiet missions. When your hand found his under the table. When you scolded Sam like a sitcom wife. When you kissed him before leaving in a rush and forgot your ID badge, and he chased after you just to hear you laugh when he caught up.
That was what marriage looked like to him now.
Not churches or tuxedos. Not parties or speeches. Just this. Just you.

It was raining now. Somewhere deep in the woods outside of Vienna, a safe house blinked on like a dying star. One generator. One flickering lamp. One bullet in your leg, and his hands slick with blood that wasn’t his.
You hissed as he dug the tweezers in.
“I told you,” he said, voice low, steady even as his gut churned, “you were too exposed on the ridge. You shouldn’t have gone up alone.”
You shot him a look. “Wasn’t alone. You were covering me.”
“I was supposed to be covering you,” he muttered, breath tight. “Didn’t exactly do a great job, did I?”
You didn’t answer.
He hated this part. The way the pain made your voice tighten, the way you bit your lip hard enough to bleed rather than make a sound. It reminded him too much of everything he couldn’t fix. Of every mission where he hadn’t been fast enough. Every loss that had turned to ash in his mouth.
You were trembling now, sweat slicking your brow. The bullet was lodged deep. He could feel it with the tip of the tweezers, but it wouldn’t come clean.
His jaw clenched.
“Bucky.”
“Almost got it.”
“Bucky.”
He angled the tweezers just slightly, catching the edge of the casing with a surgeon’s precision, eyes fixed on the wound like it was the only thing keeping him tethered. You were trying to steady him. He knew that. Heard it in your voice. But he couldn’t afford to believe you were okay. Not yet. Not until the metal was out and you were still breathing.
“James.”
He looked up at that. Your eyes were glassy, lips pale. And yet, somehow, you smiled.
“You smile too much when you’re in pain,” he muttered, tweezers angled again.
“Maybe you just give me a lot to smile about.”
“Yeah?” His voice came quieter, almost bitter. “Like what?”
“Like this charming bedside manner,” you rasped. “And your tendency to monologue when
you’re worried.”
“I’m not—”
“You are.”
The bullet shifted. Your body jerked, a hoarse cry caught in your throat.
“Shit—sorry,” he said instantly, his free hand anchoring you at the hip. His palm was warm. Steady. “You okay?”
“Peachy,” you breathed.
And then, silence.
Heavy. Close. Pressed between bodies that had seen too many battlefields, too many exits. The only sound was the storm outside, ticking against the roof like bones, and your ragged, uneven breath.
He bent closer, eyes narrowed on the wound.
“You need to hold still,” he said softly. “If I nick your femoral, it’s over.”
“I know.”
“I mean it. It’s deep. If I miss this—”
“You won’t.”
“I might.”
“You won’t.”
Another silence.
He couldn’t look at you. Not now. Not with the bullet half-extracted and your skin flushed with shock and fever and trust. Trust he hadn’t earned. Trust that felt too close to faith.
And he was always bad at faith.
He adjusted the angle of the tweezers again, fingers tight with precision, breath shallow. If he moved just a millimeter too far to the left, he'd sever an artery. Too far right, and he'd leave metal behind. His mind kept listing the options like a file folder: all the ways he could fail you. All the ways he could lose you.
“Keep talkin’ to me,” he said roughly, not looking at you. “You pass out, I’m gonna be pissed.”
“What, no pressure or anything,” you slurred, but he caught the strain in it. The thin layer of humor barely stretched over real pain.
The tweezers hit resistance. He felt it in his bones.
“You’re doing good,” he muttered. “You’re—fuck. Just hang on. Almost there.”
“Bucky.”
“I said keep talking.”
You let out a ragged breath. “You want a story or a monologue?”
“Dealer’s choice.”
Your voice wavered. “One time I saw Sam fall off a boat trying to impress a group of kids with his balance—”
“Not funny enough.”
“He hit his head.”
“That’s better.”
Silence ticked between your words. His grip steadied. He’d have to go in again. Just a little deeper.
You winced as the metal tip shifted.
“Fuck,” you whispered. “You know, I thought this would be the day we got pizza. Not playing Operation.”
“We’ll still get pizza,” he muttered.
“Oh yeah? You cooking?”
“I’m not cooking. I’m buying.”
You didn’t reply. And when he glanced up, your eyes were fluttering, breath shallower.
“Hey,” he barked. “C’mon. Eyes open.”
“M’tired.”
“I don’t give a shit.”
You laughed faintly again, breathe hitching, and it cracked something in him.
“Do me a favor?” You asked.
He hummed.
“If I lose consciousness…don’t let someone else try to patch me up.”
“Not a chance.”
“And if I die…”
“You’re not gonna die.”
“If I did. Hypothetically.”
His jaw ticked.
“If you did,” he said slowly, “then I’d kill whoever touched you. Then myself, probably.”
You let out a hoarse huff. “Jesus. That’s grim.”
“It’s honest.”
And it was.
Because he would. That was the part that terrified him. He would level cities for you. Not because it was right. Not because he’d made a vow. But because he couldn’t breathe without you anymore and he didn’t know when that had happened.
He leaned in. Flashlight shifting under his elbow. Blood soaked the makeshift cloth beneath you. The bullet was lodged against something slick and resistant. He knew the second he twisted, you’d scream.
He swallowed. Adjusted his grip.
“If this fucks up, it’s gonna hurt like hell,” he muttered. “So you need to stay with me, alright?”
You made a noise. Not quite a word. Not quite a yes.
He couldn’t stop now.
“Just keep talkin’, sweetheart. Anything. Tell me what kind of pizza we’re getting. Tell me a lie. Tell me where you see yourself in five years—”
“I’m bleeding out on a rotting cot in the woods, Buck,” you rasped. “Not interviewing for my dream job.”
“Doesn’t mean I don’t wanna hear it.”
You blinked slow. “You first, then.”
He didn’t think. Couldn’t. The panic had tunneled too deep. He started speaking before he meant to.
“Five years from now,” voice low, working the metal free inch by inch, “we’re retired. You hate the house I picked but only complain about the goddamn mugs. You make fun of me for how I fold laundry. You still steal all the blankets. And some poor bastard down the road asks what it’s like being married to the grumpiest man alive and you tell them I’ve always been soft on you.”
His fingers adjusted instinctively, and there it was, the clean edge of the casing caught between the tips. A perfect hold. He didn’t breathe. Didn’t blink. Just braced himself, every nerve wound tight as wire.
He cleared his throat. “Got it. On three.”
You didn’t speak.
“Three.”
He yanked.
A scream ripped from your throat, half-swallowed into his shoulder as you surged forward, clutching at his arm. Blood poured hot and fast, but the bullet clinked into the basin beside the cot.
He dropped the tweezers. Hands went to pressure. To cloth. To you.
“You’re okay,” he murmured. “You’re okay. Just keep breathing.”
You nodded faintly, head lolling back against the pillow.
He didn’t realize how close his face was to yours until the storm flash lit up the room—and he saw the way your eyes were fixed on him.
“Did you mean that?”
He blinked.
“What?”
Your lashes were heavy, lips pale, but there was no mistaking the way your gaze held him now. Steady. Anchored. Like you’d come back to yourself just enough to feel it. The weight of what he’d said, the shape it had taken, the shape it could still take if either of you were stupid enough to say it again.
“You said we’d be married,” you whispered.
His jaw ticked. “You were going into shock.”
“I wasn’t hearing things.”
“You were half-conscious.”
“And you still said it.”
He exhaled through his nose, sharp and shallow, dragging the blood-soaked cloth tighter around your thigh with more care than force. His hands didn’t match the way his mouth tensed.
“It was nothing. Just words.”
You didn’t believe that. He could see you didn’t. And that was worse. You weren’t teasing. You weren’t cornering him. You were just looking at him. Like maybe you’d known this was in him before he did. Like maybe you’d been waiting for it to slip out.
And god, he wanted to run.
Not because he didn’t mean it. But because he did. Too much. Too fast. In ways he couldn’t survive.
He pressed the cloth harder against your leg, then grabbed another strip of cloth from the field kit, wrapping it tight, methodical, just above the wound. Tourniquet style. Not too high and not too tight, just enough to slow the bleed.
His hands moved on instinct, the muscle memory of field medicine kicking in even as his mind spun. He checked your pulse. Inner thigh. Faint, but steady. He exhaled. Forced himself not to shake.
“I wouldn’t mind,” you said softly, “being a Mrs. Barnes one day.”
He stilled.
For a second, you thought maybe he didn’t hear you right. Or maybe he’d frozen, like his mind shorted out and hadn’t rebooted yet.
His heart flipped. Fucked off entirely, probably.
You shifted slightly, voice smaller. “But only if you keep folding laundry the wrong way. And keep picking ugly mugs.”
His laugh cracked at the edges. Like old bark. Like something split down the middle.
“You hate those mugs.”
“Yeah,” you murmured. “But you love them. And I love you.”
His breath caught. Chest tight. No armor. No dodge. No shield left between the two of you now.
“You’re not allowed to say that,” he said hoarsely. “Not when you’re this fucked up.”
“I’m lucid enough,” you whispered. “Don’t make me take it back.”
He didn’t.
He looked at your hand, still curled near his arm. Blood beneath your nails. Pulse stuttering in your wrist.
“I don’t even have a ring,” he said before he could stop himself.
You laughed. Soft. Breathless. Real.
“That’s okay. You’ve got gauze.”
He swallowed.
“I’d want to do it right,” he said, more to the floor than to you.
You reached up, brushed your knuckles against his cheek. Just barely there.
“Right now,” you whispered, “you just pulled a bullet out of my leg and said you’d kill the world for me. I think that counts.”
He leaned into your touch. Just for a second. Just long enough to let the part of him that still believed in things like vows and porches and soft lives feel it.
“Mrs. Barnes,” he murmured, testing it, letting the sound break in his mouth. “You sure about that?”
Your lips barely moved. “Why don’t you ask me?”
His head lifted just slightly, eyes catching yours through the stormlight. And it hit him like a second shot to the chest—cleaner than the first, but just as deep.
Why don’t you ask me?
So simple. So fucking impossible.
Because it was too big. Because it wasn’t a joke anymore. Because the second he said the words, really said them, he couldn’t take them back. Not like all the other things he’d lost to time. Not like the names they’d stripped from him or the missions they’d made him forget. This one, he’d remember.
He looked down at your leg, at the blood still leaking through cloth. His hands had steadied. His breathing hadn’t.
Why don’t you ask me?
Because what if you said yes just because you were scared. Because you thought you were dying. Because he looked like a man who needed saving and you were always the type to offer your hands even when yours were already shaking.
He looked at you, chest tight, and thought you don’t know what you’re saying. Not really. Not now. Not like this.
But then your thumb moved. Just once. Across the hinge of his jaw. And the quiet in your eyes told him yes, you did know. You always had.
He dropped his gaze, voice rough. “It’s just…”
He let it sit there. Let it ache.
“It’s not supposed to be this way,” he murmured, eyes flicking to the bloodied gauze still pressed to your leg. “I was supposed to have flowers. A ring. I was supposed to have something better for you than a leaking roof and a med kit that expired in 2015.”
His throat worked. His jaw locked.
He should’ve said it right then. Should’ve just spoken.
But instead—
“I didn’t think I was allowed to want this,” he said, voice low, uneven. “Not after everything I did. Not after everything that was done to me.”
You didn’t interrupt.
He swallowed. Continued.
“I used to think if I ever got out, I’d live quiet. Alone. Keep to myself. Go somewhere cold. Make peace with the fact that I’d never get to be anyone real again.”
His hand twitched where it held yours.
“And then you showed up. Like some pain-in-the-ass fever dream with too many opinions and terrible taste in music. You just—you didn’t leave. You stayed. You made fun of my shirts. You memorized my nightmares. You never once flinched at what I used to be.”
He looked up, then. Just barely. Just enough to meet your gaze.
“You made me want things again.”
You blinked. He could see the tears gathering now, not falling yet, just clinging to the edges like dew. Shaking. Waiting.
He shifted, exhaled through his nose, then slowly reached toward the chain tucked under his shirt. The tags clicked quietly against one another as he drew them out—worn, scraped, edges dulled. He hesitated. Thumb running along the groove of his name.
Barnes, James B.
Property of the U.S. Army.
And below that werenumbers. Codes. The echo of orders that used to own him.
They were the only thing he’d ever been given back when he’d stopped being a person. They were the last thing that made him his.
He huffed a breath. Shaky. Wet around the edges.
“And I don’t know how long I’ve been in love with you. I think maybe it was the first time you told Sam to shut up without looking up from your lunch when you knew it was a bad day. Or maybe it was the time you stayed up with me for four hours just so I could get ten minutes of sleep without a nightmare.”
His mouth quirked, not a smile, just a break in the grief.
“I’d want to give you more than this. Not a safehouse or some half-muttered promise with your blood on my hands. I’d want to give you everything.”
He looked at you now. Really looked.
“But I can’t.”
Your breath hitched. “Bucky—”
“All I’ve got is this.”
His voice was rough, worn down to its bones. He lifted the tags where they rested, cold and inert against his chest, like they hadn't once hung heavy with every name he’d buried, every order he’d followed. He hadn’t taken them off in years. Not since Wakanda. Not since they rewired the storm in his head and called it healing. Not since he’d started remembering how to breathe without a trigger warning stitched into his ribs.
But now?
Now he held them in his palm like they were something fragile. Like they might mean more in yours.
“I know it’s not a ring,” he muttered. “I just... I didn’t want to wait.”
His heart was punching up into his throat, each beat louder than the last. He wasn’t sure when he’d started shaking. Just that it was everywhere—under his skin, in his voice, in the ghost of a life he’d never thought he’d want back until you gave it shape.
He didn’t look away. Couldn’t. You were still bleeding. Still half-broken in his arms. But you were there. And alive. And looking at him like maybe he wasn’t a ruin of a man. Like maybe, even now, there was something left in him worth holding onto.
So he asked.
“Will you marry me?”
It didn’t sound the way it had in his head. It wasn’t confident. Wasn’t clean. It cracked at the center, frayed at the edges, barely held together by the breath it rode in on. Wrecked and unguarded and true in the way only something broken and rebuilt could be.
But it was his. And it was real.
You didn’t answer at first. Just stared at him—wide-eyed, wrecked, like the question had hollowed you out from the inside. And maybe it had. Maybe this was a bad time. Maybe he was a goddamn idiot for doing it now, here, with blood on his hands and guilt in his lungs and everything still burning in the corners of the room.
But then you nodded. Once. Then again. And again.
“Yes.” A whisper. Broken glass and salt. You swallowed hard, voice splitting again as you said it louder. “Yes. Of course I will.”
The sob hit him sideways. He didn’t mean to. Didn’t plan it. It just caught in his throat and stayed there, and suddenly your hands were on his face, and he was leaning in, and—
He kissed you.
It was desperate. Salty. A little off-center. His lip caught on yours, and your nose bumped his, and neither of you could breathe right but it didn’t matter. It was messy and clumsy and wet with tears and still somehow perfect.
His hand cradled the back of your head like he thought you might slip away, like if he didn’t hold on, the whole world might tilt again. And yours fisted into his jacket like you’d forgotten how to let go.
You were both shaking.
You pulled apart only because you had to. Because the world hadn’t stopped spinning even if it felt like it had. And then, quiet again, he moved.
He brought the tags forward.
Didn’t rush.
Didn’t speak.
He waited until you nodded, slow, sure, already teary again, and only then did he lift the chain and slide it over your head. Careful. Reverent. Like it mattered.
The tags settled on your chest, clinking softly as they touched your skin. They were cold. Real. Still streaked faintly with red.
But they were yours now.
His breath caught again, sharper this time. Not because it hurt. But because it didn’t. Because maybe this was what hope felt like when it didn’t come with a body count.
He pressed his forehead to yours and closed his eyes.
Mine, he thought. Not the government’s. Not the ghost’s. Not the weapon’s.
Yours.

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high water | bucky barnes x reader
Summary: You’ve stopped keeping track of the bruises. Bucky hasn’t—and he doesn’t say anything, not until the patterns start looking too much like his own, and it’s almost too late to pull you back.
MCU Timeline Placement: Post TFATWS
Master List: Find my other stuff here!
Warnings: self-destructive behavior, implied suicidal ideation, self-injury, trauma responses, PTSD, medical neglect, emotional suppression, therapy, recovery/healing themes, canon violence, referenced eating irregularities.
Word Count: 12.9k
Author’s Note: hi friends—this one started as a simple request, and it ended up becoming much more than i originally intended, something much bigger, heavier, darker, and more vulnerable so please take care while reading and only engage with this if and when you're in the right headspace! there are helpful links and resources on the original request here if you need them <3

Bucky didn’t like working with new people.
It wasn’t personal. He just didn’t trust the way most of them moved—too fast, too loud, too cocky in the spaces between orders. The ones who’d never had a knife held to their gut didn’t flinch when doors slammed. The ones who hadn’t been broken thought everything could be fixed.
You were different.
You came in quiet, already carrying whatever past had earned you the clearance to stand beside him. Torres had said you burned out in intel. Too good at your job. Too bad at pretending it didn’t eat you alive.
You hadn’t confirmed or denied it, and he hadn’t asked. He didn’t need the backstory. He could read it in your shoulders—how they tensed before anyone entered a room. How you always tracked the exits. How gunfire didn’t phase you, but the clang of a dropped fork sent a shudder down your spine.
More than that, you didn’t try to fill the silence. Not the thick, awkward kind, but the heavy kind. The kind that settled after the adrenaline wore off and the ghosts came out to stretch their legs. That kind of quiet made most people talk just to drown it.
You let it sit. Let it breathe.
He respected that. Maybe too much.
Your last mission had been nothing special. Your seventeenth time working together, not that he was counting.
It was a low-stakes intel grab that went a little sideways thanks to a hot-headed contact and a busted comm. You handled yourself fine—better than fine. You moved like someone used to ducking and fought like someone who wasn’t scared of getting hurt. That last part always stuck with him.
You never really avoided damage. You just treated it like something inevitable. Routine.
There was something about the way you took a hit—clean, mechanical, almost practiced. No wince, no curse, no flinch. You had rolled your dislocated shoulder back into place like you were brushing lint off a jacket more times than he could count.
Bucky had seen people trained out of pain responses before, had watched entire rooms of Hydra operatives bleed without blinking, but this was different. Yours wasn’t discipline. It was something else. Something harder to look at. Something all too familiar.
You had tells. Little ones. He’d started clocking them without meaning to a few months back. How you never reacted to shallow cuts but always stared a little too long at the deeper ones.
How you’d press a palm flat against bruises when you thought no one was watching, not to soothe them—but to feel them.
Once, he saw you slam your hand against the edge of a crate when the briefing tech locked up. No outburst. No tantrum. Just one sharp motion, knuckles first, and then a blank look like you hadn’t even done it. The sound stayed with him the rest of the day.
He told himself not to keep track. That it wasn’t his job to take inventory of other people’s ghosts. But your file was getting thin. Too thin. And the pieces you left behind were starting to take shape.
You didn’t act like someone trying to survive. You acted like someone trying to burn off whatever was left. Quietly. Efficiently. Without leaving a mess.
That unsettled him more than anything else.
He hadn’t planned to check in on you after the mission. He just conveniently happened to be passing the med bay on the way to nowhere in particular, and paused.
He told himself it was habit—old soldier instinct, routine perimeter checks, whatever excuse came easy. But then he saw the door ajar, the flicker of movement just beyond the frame.
You never used the damn step stool.
That was the first thing Bucky thought when he found you half-balanced on the edge of the supply cabinet on the counter, rifling through gauze packs with your unwrapped wrist pressed tight against your chest like it wasn’t already swelling.
You didn’t look up but Bucky knew that you could sense his presence before saying a word.
“Don’t say it,” you said flatly.
He stopped just inside the door. Leaned against the frame, arms crossed, watching you from beneath the heavy slope of his brow.
“I wasn’t gonna.”
“You were,” you said. “You were building to it.”
He should’ve walked away. Should’ve let the moment pass like all the others—but there was something in the way your shoulders hunched, spine curled forward like you were bracing for a blow that never came, that stopped him cold.
The cabinet edge bit into your hip, your hand already trembling from the strain of holding yourself steady, but you stayed there like it meant something. You stood there like you knew exactly how far you'd have to lean to hit the floor from the counter. Like the fall wasn’t an accident waiting to happen, but a choice you’d already measured. He didn’t realize his jaw had locked until it ached.
“You’re gonna fall,” he said finally.
“Wouldn’t be the first time.”
There was no heat behind it—no bite. Just exhaustion, scraped raw and held together by whatever dry humor hadn’t abandoned you yet.
Before Bucky could even begin to think about how to respond, you jumped down without ceremony, boots hitting the tile with a solid thunk. The movement jarred something in your side. He could tell. You didn’t flinch, but your jaw set just a little too tightly for it to be nothing.
You walked past him, dropped onto the bench without a word, and started tearing the gauze open with your teeth. Your wrist shook on the third pull. Barely. A twitch, maybe. Most people wouldn’t have noticed.
He did.
He didn’t ask before moving forward and taking the roll from your fingers—just reached out, gloved hand closing around it with quiet finality. You looked at him like you were weighing something before finally letting go.
“You're not a medic,” you said.
“You're not either.”
He sat across from you, your wrist already in his hands before you could protest.
It was already red, swelling around the joint. He turned it gently, noting the way your knuckles twitched. You didn’t wince, but the tension in your shoulder gave you away.
He worked in silence, measuring the wrap with muscle memory and years of being too careful. He was always too careful now. Always calculating how much pressure, how much distance, how much weight a person could take.
There was a part of him that hated how steady he was now. How easy the calm came when he needed it. He used to think that was what healing looked like—discipline, composure, control. But it felt more like taxidermy. All the danger still underneath, just frozen in place. Stuffed into the skin of a man who knew better than to be seen for what he really was.
He tightened the wrap. Your face didn’t flinch, but somewhere in the back of his mind, something scratched.
He’d seen people dissociate through pain. Seen it in the field, in trauma units, in mirrors. But the stillness in your body didn’t feel like shock. It never did.
It felt like practice.
“You didn’t log this.” His voice wasn’t accusatory—just quiet, like a loose thread he already knew would pull something loose. “You filed a full report. Debriefed like clockwork. But nothing about this.”
You didn’t answer.
His thumb brushed the inside of your wrist, the skin there already darkening beneath the surface. “What was it this time?” he asked, even though he already knew it wasn’t the mission. Not really.
“Doorframe. I think.”
“You think?”
You gave a small shrug, the kind that looked more like a concession than an answer.
“I was pissed off. The contact flaked. We almost lost the drop point. I...took it out on the wall.”
He didn’t say anything else, just wrapped your wrist slowly, evenly.
He didn’t like how familiar your skin looked under his hands. Not in a way he could name, just in the way his gut clenched when he saw your bruises lining up with places he’d struck in another life.
And maybe that’s why he kept his gaze fixed on the wrap, not on you, because something about your quiet made his own feel louder—like if he looked too long, he’d see himself in the stillness you wore like armor.
“You don’t have to do this,” you said eventually. Not bitter. Just quiet.
He kept working. “I know.”
The silence that followed wasn’t the same as before. It pressed in tighter. Less like space, more like weight.
He meant it. You didn’t ask for help, not once, not even when your wrist went limp trying to remove your jacket in the quinjet. You bit down on everything, discomfort, pain, maybe even gratitude, like it owed you rent.
He couldn’t judge you for it. He just recognized it. The same way Sam had once looked at him, eyebrows low, mouth grim. The look that said: I know what you’re doing. I just don’t know why you think you have to.
When he finished the wrist, you didn’t pull back. You stayed seated, hands in your lap, body turned slightly away from him. The back of your shirt had risen when you sat, just enough for him to see a few inches of skin beneath.
He wasn’t looking for it. He wasn’t trying to notice. But it was there.
A bruise. Faded, old enough to be from another week, maybe longer. It was large enough that it likely reached along the edge of your ribs in a sickly spread of yellow-green, the kind of mark you only get from hitting something too hard and too fast.
Or hitting it more than once.
“You’ve had that one a while,” Bucky said, and the words landed heavier than he meant them to. He almost didn't even speak.
You stiffened. Subtle, but not nothing.
You shifted your shirt down, slow and unbothered. “Yeah. Couple days ago.”
He waited. Not because he expected honesty—he wasn’t naïve—but because part of him wanted to believe you might offer it anyway. That maybe the room was quiet enough, the moment still enough, for you to meet him halfway.
But you didn’t. You just sat there, unreadable, like the bruise meant as little to you as the silence did.
“What happened?” he asked finally, the question leaving his mouth like it had to push through something on the way out.
“Table corner. I wasn’t paying attention.”
He nearly scoffed. He had heard better lies from Hydra agents. Worse ones, too. But never so... bored. Like you’d already had this conversation a hundred times, with yourself. With anyone else who tried.
“That’s a hell of a table.”
“I hit hard.”
There was something about the way you said it. Flat, mechanical, like the pain wasn’t worth the breath it would take to lie better, that needled under his skin. He’d known people who wore their wounds like armor. You didn’t.
You wore them like afterthoughts. Like they weren’t worth tending. Like you didn’t think you were. And that did something to him he didn’t have language for.
It wasn't pity. Never that. But something close to anger, maybe, pressed tight behind his ribs—not at you, but at whatever kept teaching you this was normal. That damage could be shrugged off, that hurt meant nothing if it was quiet.
He knew that logic. Had lived in it for years, let it hollow him out, let it keep him moving. And still, watching you now, he wanted to shake the silence out of you. Wanted to say your name like it might make you look at him. He hated how badly he wanted you to lie better. Hated that you didn’t even flinch at being caught.
But all he could manage was: “You ever get those checked out?”
You snorted. “You think I go to a doctor every time I get a bruise?”
“No,” he said. “I think you forget half of them are there.”
He didn’t mean to say it like that. Didn’t mean to show his hand, but it was too late. You looked at him then. Eyes sharp, not surprised. Just... measuring.
He met your stare, steady.
And beneath it all, that same thought clawed at the edge of his mind again. Familiar, but unwelcome. Like recognizing a song you didn’t want to remember the lyrics to.
Because there was something about the way you looked right through him—unafraid, unbothered, half-daring him to keep pressing—that felt like a challenge. Like you’d already decided he wouldn’t.
When you finally spoke, your voice was almost calm. “You don’t get to do that thing where you try to figure me out.”
His mouth twitched, not quite a smile. “Too late.”
He moved before he could think better of it. Not away from you, just far enough to breathe. The ache in his jaw told him how tight he’d been clenching it. He reached for the cabinet with the same control he used in combat: not rushed, not casual. Just exact. Like precision might hide the fact that he didn’t know what the fuck he was doing.
The ice pack he grabbed crinkled in his hand as he turned and placed it in your palm, watching your fingers curl around it like they weren’t sure what to do. That hesitation again—so quick most people wouldn’t see it.
But he wasn’t most people.
It wasn’t even about the cold. It wasn’t even about the bruise. The swollen wrist. It was really giving you something to hold that wasn’t your own skin.
“Thanks,” you said, low.
He gave a single nod. “Use it this time.”
The words came out sharper than intended, but he didn’t walk them back. He just watched you press the cold to your ribs like you were trying to freeze the damage into place. Like maybe, if it stayed cold enough, it wouldn’t spread.

Bucky had stopped leaving sharp-edged or blunt things in the briefing rooms.
Nobody noticed. Not Torres, not Sam, not any of the rotating agents who filtered through between assignments. Nobody noticed when the cracked tablet screen on the west wall stayed unrepaired so you couldn't break it again. Nobody mentioned the disappearance of the busted chair with the metal bar that dug into your side when you always sat in it too long. And if anyone wondered why the gym’s weighted slam balls had quietly replaced the old concrete-filled med balls, they didn’t say it out loud.
But Bucky noticed. Because Bucky put them there.
He never said anything about it. Never drew attention to the way he started arriving early to training rooms, or the way his eyes tracked what your hands did when you thought no one was looking. You didn’t punch walls anymore, crack your knuckles too hard, or bite your lip until it bled, not while he was in the room. Maybe because the moment you twitched toward contact, his voice was already there—level, quiet, asking a question you’d have to answer out loud.
You were smart. You knew how to pivot.
But he knew that look. The way it simmered just beneath your skin, desperate for a release you didn’t have language for. So he gave it shape. Misdirected it. Rebuilt the landscape around it until it had fewer sharp corners to cut you on.
He started stocking the freezer. First it was one extra ice pack, then five. Then ten. Lined up behind the frozen stir-fry meals. There was always one ready. Always within reach. He never said anything about those either. Just made sure the stock rotated, that the seal wasn’t broken, that there was no excuse for a bruise or injury to go untreated.
Some nights he’d catch himself lingering in the hallway near the shared kitchen after missions. Listening for the hum of the freezer door. The low click of the pack drawer sliding open. If he heard it, he let out a breath he didn’t realize he was holding. If he didn’t, he lingered longer.
There were other things too. The black coffee you always left half-finished, now poured into a travel mug with a lid you couldn’t slap against the counter, material too thick to shatter. The reinforced strap he stitched into your field bag where the weight used to strain your shoulder when you refused to wear it normally. The tiny ceramic dish on your desk that hadn’t been there before—a place to put your rings, or your tension, or whatever else you’d started taking off at the end of the day.
He didn’t watch you use any of it. But his body tracked you anyway, across rooms, across shared mission floors, across the space between not-trusting and not-sure-how-to-care. His eyes would flick to your hands before your face. Always. Noticing. Counting. Waiting.
There were a dozen things he wanted to say. None of them came out right in his head. He didn’t know how to ask Are you okay? without sounding like a lie. Didn’t know how to say Don’t do what I did. Don’t go quiet the way I did. Don’t become a locked room nobody has the key to.
There was no blueprint for this. No mission protocol for how to keep someone from unraveling. He remembered what it was like to chase sensation—sharp, fast, punishing—because the silence underneath felt worse. Because numbness made a liar of the body, and pain, at least, was something you could feel happening.
He remembered walking out of Hydra cells with blood on his hands and not knowing whether it was his. Remembered slamming his fist into concrete until something gave, praying it would be bone. Remembered the look in Sam’s eyes the first time he said You’re not fine, and how it felt like someone opening a window in a room that had long since stopped needing air.
You hadn’t let anyone open yours.
So he did what he could. He changed the layout. Softened the noise. Kept your gloves clean and your path clear and the ice always stocked, like any of it might make the difference between a bruise that faded and one that you couldn’t stop tracing.
But the past few days had felt off.
You’d started pacing again. Not the usual kind, the kind you used to work through tension with your eyes half-closed and your hands stuffed in your jacket. No—this was sharper. Jittery. Your shoulders were too tight, your hands kept flexing like they needed to do something. Like your bones itched under your skin.
It was small things at first. The way you’d stopped wrapping your fingers before training. The way you skipped debrief and lingered too long in the equipment room, too interested in the shelves labeled discard. You were sleeping less. Eating less. Drinking your coffee like it was a dare.
It was almost enough to have Bucky pull you off the next mission. But they were short on bodies. Half the roster rerouted for a border raid in Belarus, and the rest grounded from a blown cover op in Cairo. You were the only one cleared who knew the terrain, the entry points, the grid rotation by heart.
And you’d volunteered before he could suggest otherwise.
They’d landed an hour before sundown, dropped low behind the industrial strip on the edge of the city where the power grid cut off and the roads turned to gravel. Intel had said six armed guards. Maybe seven. Standard perimeter for a black-market tech handoff. Small crew. Clean location. Nothing flashy. Get in, get the drive, get out.
But Bucky’s shoulder had been twitching since you stepped off the quinjet.
You didn’t say much during the brief. Just nodded once, already pulling your gloves on, jaw set in that way that meant don’t ask. Now, crouched beside the fence line with shadows bleeding up the length of your arms, you were vibrating with tension.
Bucky clocked the way you gripped the chain-link, tight enough for the metal to groan, like you might try to tear it down with your bare hands. You didn’t. You just released it and gave him the signal.
Two fingers. Clear.
He moved up beside you, silent, crouching just behind your left flank. He always took your left. He didn’t know why. Just felt right.
The warehouse was twenty yards ahead—low, square, the windows blown out and tarped over. Lights flickered dim behind the stained-glass haze of the plastic wrap. One truck. Engine off. Two men visible through the broken slats of the door. Voices muffled, low and sharp. One of them laughing.
“Visual on the target?” Joaquin’s voice crackled in his ear.
Bucky pressed his comm gently. “Affirmative. Two outside. Might be more inside. Moving in three.” He glanced toward you, already moving. Too early. You didn’t wait for the count.
You darted low along the wall, shadow hugging shadow, not reckless but fast. Too fast. He followed, jaw tight, senses peeled raw as you reached the first guard and struck without hesitation. Quick elbow to the solar plexus. Heel to the knee. Knife to the collarbone, pressed just hard enough to drop him with a wheeze.
The second one turned. You could’ve waited for backup. Could’ve signaled.
You didn’t.
You ran straight at him.
Bucky cursed under his breath and moved, covering ground in a blink, but you were already on the guy, shoulder slamming him into the metal siding, fists snapping in sharp, surgical strikes. Not out of control. But close.
Too close.
He reached you just as the man dropped. You turned, panting through your nose, mouth drawn tight, not winded. Not even surprised. Like you expected him to be there, already cleaning up whatever you left behind.
“You good?” he asked.
You nodded once. Too quickly. “Peachy.”
Your voice didn’t match your eyes.
He wanted to stop. To grab your wrist. To say something—but the moment passed, and you were already signaling toward the next entry point.
“North entrance,” you said. “Should be unlocked.”
You didn’t wait for his reply.
He followed you in silence, teeth gritted, pulse ticking under the metal plate in his arm. Something was off. Worse than usual. And he didn’t like the way your shoulders moved, like you were chasing something you hadn’t found yet.
The two of you reached the door. You went to breach, but Bucky caught your wrist.
“Hold,” he murmured, voice just low enough to pin you in place. “You’re running hot.”
Your eyes snapped to his. Wide. Clear. Dangerous.
“I’m focused."
You pulled your wrist back—smooth, efficient, no heat behind it, like his hand had just been another obstacle to move through. And then you were gone, slipping into the dark.
Bucky followed, jaw locked tight, breath caught somewhere between his ribs and his throat.
The warehouse interior swallowed everything. No lights. Just the flicker of a dying bulb swinging at the far end of the room, casting erratic, ghostly shadows across pallets stacked in half-toppled rows. Machinery sat quiet, half-stripped for parts. The air tasted like rust and mold and something chemical under the surface. He could hear your boots ahead, controlled. Calculated. Coiled.
You didn’t move like you were tracking. You moved like you’d already made contact in your mind and were just catching up to it physically. He hated that he recognized it. Hated the way it twisted under his skin.
It wasn’t enough to make him call it. You’d run hot before. Moved like that before. You were sharp, reliable, relentless. You got the job done. And he’d gotten good at giving space when you needed it. At trusting his read. At trusting you. At trusting himself to cover your six if it came to that.
He passed through the entryway and hugged the wall, scanning. Your silhouette flashed ahead—knife drawn low, footsteps absorbed in the filth-clogged concrete.
Static cracked in his ear, then Joaquin’s voice—tight. Focused. “Got movement ahead—cluster of heat signatures just lit up. Southeast corner. Looks like a nest. You two are headed straight for it.”
Bucky stopped just short of the next pallet stack, eyes tracking your back as you kept moving. “How many?” he asked, low into comms.
“Four, maybe five. Can’t get a clean count—they’re shifting.”
You didn’t wait. Didn’t respond. No hand signal. No check back. Just straight through the gap in the machinery like it was routine. Like walking into five heat signatures wasn’t worth a breath.
“Hey, hold up,” Bucky said. To you. To no one.
A shot rang out toward where he should’ve been if he hadn’t stopped two steps too far behind to respond to Joaquin.
Suppressor. East wall. Nest above the compressor vent. High ground.
“Contact, right!” Bucky snapped into comms, already moving—
But you didn’t duck. You ran. Toward the sound.
He nearly shouted your name. Held it in. Swallowed it like bile.
You vaulted the pallet stack, caught the edge of a rusted pipe, and swung up onto the adjacent platform like you’d rehearsed it. His eyes swept the shadows, angles and cover points burning through muscle memory, but his focus was on your back—your speed, your silence. The way you didn’t wait.
“Hey—hey, Y/N, you’re moving too fast,” Joaquin cut in over comms, voice sharper now. “Pull back, you’re ahead of your flank—”
“I’ve got it,” you said, clipped. Calm. Like you weren’t running straight into something with a heartbeat.
Another shot. Closer.
You dropped down into a side corridor without checking what was waiting.
Bucky lunged, caught sight of movement to the left just as the barrel lifted from the shadow. Timing was too tight. You were too fast. Too exposed.
No time to yell.
So he moved.
His boots hit concrete with a crack that echoed too loud, too sharp—but you didn’t turn around. Didn’t look back to see who was behind you or how close danger was pressing in. You dropped into the corridor like you knew something was waiting for you.
The muzzle flash came before the sound. Clean burst. Controlled pattern. Not panic fire.
You ducked low, barely missing the first round as it shattered a pipe inches from your head, steam hissing out in a burning rush. You didn’t flinch. You rolled beneath it, came up in a crouch, and bolted forward, fast enough to make the shooter shift his stance. It was a kill zone. Exposed, tight, bad angles, no cover.
And you kept moving.
Bucky hit the far wall and pressed himself flat, gun raised. He tracked the shooter’s position just as the man shifted his aim. Not at him. At you.
“Fuck,” Bucky muttered, breath catching sharp in his throat.
But you dodged again. Not random. Not sloppy. A calculated pivot just inside the arc of fire—fast enough to look like instinct, but it wasn’t.
Bucky fired once—center mass—dropped the man before he could realign. But by the time the body hit the floor, you were already moving again.
“Shit—guys, hold up,” Joaquin cut in, static spiking. “We’ve got more heat signatures. North end—five, no, six. That wasn’t in the schematics. They're shifting fast—looks like a flanking pattern.”
“Pull back,” he said, tighter now. “That’s not containment—it’s a box.”
Bucky’s jaw locked. “Copy. Redirecting. Fall back to extraction—”
But you were already halfway down the hall.
“Could be the handoff,” you said, too steady, eyes flicking ahead like you wanted the confirmation. “We don’t want to lose the buyer.”
“This op was recon, not pursuit,” Joaquin snapped. “Pull back. Regroup and reassess—”
“Just need eyes on the target,” you replied, already rounding the corner. Another door. Another unsecured hallway.
Bucky cursed under his breath. He hesitated a second too long before pushing off the wall and following.
You kicked the door open so hard it snapped off its bottom hinge and went clattering into the dark. The echo rang through the warehouse like a dinner bell. You stepped into it like you were stepping off a ledge.
Bucky followed, pulse howling in his ears now, lungs burning.
“Got more heat lighting up the grid,” Joaquin barked in his ear. “East quadrant, converging on your position. Fall back, now—both of you.”
Three came out of the dark fast—one close, two on the flank. Bucky dropped the first with a clean shot between the eyes, spun, caught the next with a punch that cracked his helmet and sent him sprawling. He barely registered the scream as he turned, gun raised, out of rounds, and took a blade to the arm.
Metal met muscle. Pain flashed white, but he didn’t stop. He twisted, slammed the attacker’s head into the wall hard enough to leave a dent, then drove a boot into his chest to keep him down.
Another pop of gunfire. Not at him. Ahead.
You’d already dropped one, but another was already engaging you—and you hadn’t even pulled your weapon.
The man’s fist connected with your side hard enough to stagger you, but you didn’t go down. You turned with the momentum, used it to drive your elbow into his throat, then kneed him in the gut hard enough to buckle his legs. You caught his wrist when he fell and twisted—a sick snap of bone. He screamed once, then dropped.
You stood over him, breathing hard.
And Bucky saw it.
The way you rocked slightly on your heels, like you were waiting for someone else to come. Like the blood rushing in your ears hadn’t peaked yet. Like you hadn’t gotten what you were after.
His stomach twisted.
He turned—too late. Another three coming fast, one already firing. He dropped behind the nearest crate, reloaded and returned fire, clipped a shoulder, rolled and came up behind the second. He slammed the man into a pipe, heard the breath leave his lungs, but didn’t wait to confirm.
A boot connected with his ribs, hard, and Bucky dropped to a knee, gritted his teeth, twisted, and drove a knife into the attacker’s thigh. The man screamed. He yanked it free and threw it, end over end, into the throat of the one aiming at your blind side. Blood sprayed.
Still not enough.
Still more.
A fourth surged from the dark, and Bucky barely caught his arm in time—metal hand crushing bone, human fist swinging wide, a sickening crunch somewhere in the scuffle.
His shoulder jarred, pain sparking down the length of his arm. He took a punch to the gut, then another to the jaw, sharp and high, right where the comm was fitted in his ear. The crack of it was drowned out by the static burst that followed.
Joaquin’s voice cut in mid-command—“You’ve got two more coming in from the—”
Then nothing.
By the time he got to his feet, breath ragged and vision swimming, you were already rushing forward, still fighting, and something was wrong.
You weren’t reckless, but you weren’t guarding. You met your next opponent with clean moves, efficient strikes, but you weren’t ducking fast enough. Not checking your flanks. You were exposing yourself between each hit.
You kicked one of the attackers square in the chest, sent him flying into a stack of crates, and didn’t reach for cover. You stood upright. Open. Breathing hard but not alert.
Bucky’s chest seized as he landed a punch of his own on another attacker, barely parrying the blade slicing toward his throat. He slammed the man’s head against the wall until he went still, vision tunneling, ears ringing.
There was a wide stretch of open space ahead, scattered crates, broken shelving, a flickering light still buzzing weakly from its hanging cable. One doorway, half-collapsed. Poor cover. Shit visibility.
And still, you kept going.
Bucky shouted something, he didn’t know what, but his voice ripped hoarse as he blocked another strike, caught a forearm, twisted until it snapped. He shoved the attacker into a rusted beam and kept moving, kept looking.
Kept his eyes on you.
Because he knew these moves.
Not in theory. But in muscle. In memory. In the way you angled your body just a little too far from the nearest exit. The way your hand hovered near your hip but never reached for your gun. You weren’t preparing to defend. You were giving them time to aim.
His mouth opened again—this time, nothing came out.
You didn’t see the two from the side hall. Or maybe you did and just didn’t care. One with a knife. The other with a rifle half-raised, hesitation written in the slack of his stance but not enough to stop him.
Bucky surged forward, but something slammed into him from the left. A body, heavy and fast, barreling him into a stack of old scaffolding that cracked and collapsed under their combined weight. He grunted, drove his elbow backward, felt the attacker’s jaw snap beneath the strike.
But another was already on him before the first one hit the ground. Fists rained down, wild and clumsy. He blocked two, absorbed the third with his shoulder, and twisted, slamming his knee into the guy’s ribs until he dropped.
He caught a glimpse of you between bodies, just a flicker of your profile in the flickering light.
You weren’t running. Weren’t crouched. You were locked with one of the last men, close range, his hand fisted in your collar as he shoved you hard into a rack of rusted shelving. But you didn’t fight like you should’ve. You weren’t trying to break the hold. Your elbow came up late. Your balance was off. And for one sick second, it looked like you were letting him keep you there.
Something twisted in Bucky’s gut, deep and hot.
Another one grabbed at him from behind, arms like steel cables, trying to lock around his throat. Bucky dropped his weight, slammed backward into the nearest wall, heard a crack, but didn’t stop.
He ripped the man off and flung him into the others just as another attacker charged from the side. Blade raised. Aim precise.
He ducked, caught the wrist mid-swing, and drove his metal arm into the man’s chest so hard it crunched through armor. Blood hit the air. Bucky shoved the body aside and turned—
And saw the rifle level at your chest.
Something shifted in the corner of his vision, movement too close. Another attacker, sprinting toward him, blade glinting under the flicker of the overhead light.
Bucky didn’t break stride. He turned just enough to meet him mid-charge, metal arm snapping up and crashing into the attacker’s throat so hard the cartilage gave out with a wet, crunching collapse. The man crumpled before his body even registered the hit.
Bucky was already moving past him.
Boots pounded concrete, blood roaring in his ears, breath caught between a curse and a scream. You were still locked with the man holding you, his grip pinning your upper arm, your weight tilted wrong.
Bucky could’ve used him. Could’ve let the bastard take the shot meant for you, just one more body between you and the barrel. But the angle was too tight. The shot was already coming. And Bucky didn’t risk things he couldn’t afford to lose.
He didn’t hesitate.
He closed the distance like the air had stopped resisting him, like gravity owed him one. His hand caught the edge of your jacket, and yanked hard. Ripped you clean from the other man’s grip with force that sent you both reeling.
Hard enough to twist your body out of line—just as the round fired and punched straight into his back.
He didn’t feel it right away.
Just the force. The hot pressure. The way his knees buckled as he used his weight to drive you both behind cover, shoulder-first into the busted scaffolding that exploded into splinters around you.
The floor came up fast. His back hit harder.
Pain bloomed wide. Viscous. Familiar.
Metal met blood. His breath caught. But his arms were already around you, dragging you flat against him, shielding you from the next volley before it ever came.

Bucky hadn’t seen you in fifteen days. Not properly.
There were sightings—passing flashes in corridors, your voice down the hall in conference rooms he knew you were in. But the moment you caught sight of him, you disappeared. Not subtle. Not polite. Not passive.
Sam had benched you two days after the mission. You’d barely made it out of the med bay before it happened, barely had time to snap at the nurse trying to check the stitches Bucky had bled through. The report said you’d deviated from protocol. That your “judgment in the field had been compromised.”
Joaquin had called for backup the second you pushed deeper into the warehouse. Said he didn’t like how quiet you’d gone. That you’d shut off your comms the minute you hit the second corridor. Said Bucky’s weren’t working either, not after the jaw hit, just open static until the exfil team found them both half-conscious under the scaffolding, Bucky still bleeding, you refusing to let anyone touch him until they confirmed they were friendlies.
You said it was a misread. A gap in the heat signature intel, faulty comms, fragmented chain of command. You said you pressed forward to confirm the buyer before exfil because the window was closing and it was a judgment call. Nothing more.
You said it all too calmly. Too clean.
Like you'd practiced it. Like it was easier to call it a tactical error.
Bucky hadn’t argued, hadn’t questioned. Couldn’t. Not with bruises still darkening along his back and the memory of his body nearly not moving fast enough still looping in his skull.
He remembered the weight of you beneath him. Not from the fall. From the way you’d gone still in his arms. Like you were waiting for the hit. Like you still thought it was coming anyway.
He hadn’t told Sam that part. Didn’t know how to.
Now, you spent your time down in logistics—sorting mission reports, filing armory requisitions, locking yourself in the comms tower at odd hours pretending to run diagnostics. You didn’t have to. Sam hadn’t assigned it. But you stayed at HQ, floating somewhere between idle and insubordinate, burying yourself in busywork and carving out the parts of the building Bucky wouldn’t be in.
Which wasn’t easy. But you were precise.
He’d find a fresh mug on the kitchen counter, the one only you used, still warm, and know he’d missed you by a minute. An open file drawer in the comms room with your notes, underlined sharp and angry. A single chair pulled out at the far table in the library, pages from an intake folder half-folded inside a book on tactical restraint.
You stayed busy. Stayed invisible. Stayed just far enough out of Bucky’s reach to make it clear it wasn’t an accident.
And yet he felt you in every fucking hallway anyway.
You hadn’t texted. Hadn’t acknowledged the hit he took. Not the blood. Not the fact that he couldn’t raise his arm above his shoulder for three days after. Not the way his vision had whited out for a second when your weight hit him and he thought maybe, just maybe, he’d been too late.
And maybe that’s what gutted him.
Because you had been counting on that.
You hadn’t looked surprised. Not really. When he yanked you out of the way, when the shot slammed into his back, when you landed hard and scrambled to your knees with your hands still bloody—you didn’t look horrified.
You looked stunned. Like you’d miscalculated. Like he was the mistake.
He kept replaying it. Over and over. The angles. The timing. Your body language. The fucking stillness in you when that rifle raised and you didn’t move, didn’t fight against the body holding you there.
It hadn’t been shock. Not like he’d wanted to believe. It had been something closer to... acceptance. Or resolve. A kind of surrender he didn’t know how to look at without remembering how it used to feel in his own bones.
But the thought wouldn’t hold still.
Because his brain refused to believe that you’d wanted that—that you’d truly been hunting pain, no—death, something irreversible. That the person he’d come to watch as closely as his own pulse had stepped into the line of fire on purpose.
And yet, It made sense. Too much sense.
Which is probably why he’d been staring at the same half-finished mission report for the last hour, pen resting idle against the table while the rest of the building went quiet around him.
He hadn’t meant to stay late. But his thoughts had been crawling too loud in his head, and the hum of the desk lamp had felt like the only thing tethering him to the present.
He closed the file without reading the last two lines. His hands were shaking again, just slightly. Just enough that he turned off the monitor before he could watch it. It was too quiet in the office. Too still in the air.
He needed out.
The corridor was cold and empty. Most lights dimmed to nighttime security mode. His boots echoed softer than usual as he made his way through the back wing and pushed open the glass door to the side balcony overlooking the north forest.
When he opened the balcony door, he wasn’t expecting anyone else to be there.
But the second the cold hit his face, he saw movement—still, but unmistakable. Just a fraction ahead and to the left, someone already leaned against the railing. No, not leaning, exactly. Perched.
Your spine curved ever so slightly against the silver rail, one leg drawn up, boot resting on the edge, the other dangling loose over nothing. You sat like you weren’t afraid of falling. Like you didn’t even register the ten story drop. The light from the hallway behind him didn’t quite reach you. Just enough spill to catch on the edges of your boots. The rest of you was silhouette, cut sharp against the tree line.
Your head was tilted slightly back. Toward the sky. Toward the dark.
Bucky stilled.
One foot over the threshold, breath caught at the top of his throat, pulse kicking hard enough against his ribs that it almost felt like warning. His hand lingered on the doorframe longer than necessary.
The glass door clicked shut behind him.
Your shoulders jumped and your head snapped around so fast it looked like it hurt.
He hated himself for it. For coming out here. For disturbing you, even when he didn’t know you’d be out here. For being part of the reason you were like this to begin with.
For half a second, your eyes landed on him. Wide. Not surprised. Not afraid. Just sharp. Like you were deciding how fast you needed to leave.
He raised both hands a little, just enough to show they were empty. If that even mattered.
“Hey,” he said softly. Voice worn at the edges. “Sorry. Didn’t mean to sneak up on you.”
You didn’t answer.
Didn’t look away immediately either.
Your gaze lingered on him a second longer before drifting back toward the trees. The forest stretched dark across the horizon, the sky hanging heavy and moonless above it. The only light came from the spill of windows behind him and the faint glint of your boots shifting against the metal.
Before he could psych himself out of it, he took a step forward. Careful. Intentional.
The wind pulled at the edge of his coat as he came to rest beside the railing, not close—he didn’t dare be close—but near enough that the chill coming off your body seemed to reach him before your voice ever would.
He didn’t say anything at first. Just stood there. Let the quiet spread wide between you.
“You always come out here this late?” he asked eventually, but his voice barely carried.
You didn’t answer. Didn’t so much as tilt your head toward him. The forest below swallowed sound. Air too still. No bugs. No wind through the trees. Just silence and steel and the ache in his back where the rounds had gone in, still healing slow beneath the scar.
He folded his arms against the railing. Forearms pressed to the metal. Let his gaze drift out with yours, out over the black line of trees he couldn’t see past. He thought, stupidly, of how quiet your breathing was. How still you were. How if he hadn’t followed the wind out here, he might never have noticed you at all.
“You’re mad at me,” he said, quieter now. Not an accusation. Just a fact he’d been bleeding around for days.
You scoffed under your breath. Not loud. Just enough to let him know it wasn’t the right thing to say. But it wasn’t a no, either.
“You’re mad,” he said again. “And I get it.”
Still, no answer.
He swallowed, jaw twitching. His voice stayed low.
“You’ve barely looked at me. Haven’t said a word. Haven’t let me say one either.”
A beat passed. Another. Then your voice came, brittle and flat.
“You think there’s something to say?”
He turned his head. Not all the way. Just enough to see the line of your jaw in profile—the hollow under your cheekbone, the set of your mouth.
“I think there’s a lot to say,” he replied.
You had barely moved since he’d come out here, but now, with the light behind you casting your face in angles, he could see it. The tiredness. Not exhaustion, not the kind that sleep fixes, but the kind that comes from being done.
Worn out in the soul. Your eyes were dull in the way his had been once. Not empty. Just... disconnected.
There was a bruise, faint but sharp, just under your right eyebrow. Thin, purple-green. Not healing from the field. You hadn’t been on a mission in almost two weeks.
He didn’t have to guess where it came from. The edge of a sink. A wall. The wrong angle of a door when you turned too fast and didn’t care whether you stopped. The kind of thing people brushed off with a lie they’d already rehearsed.
Bucky’s grip tightened around the railing. Not hard. Just steady. Too steady. Like the tension had nowhere else to go.
He should’ve said something. Weeks ago. Months ago.
The first time he saw you press your palm into a bruise like you were checking it was still there. The first time you didn’t log an injury. The first time you bled without blinking and he just helped—quietly, silently—like that made him gentler, not complicit.
He’d told himself words might push you further, that staying close without pressing was the better option. That if you didn’t flinch from him, it meant he hadn’t failed you yet. But watching you now, half-lit and barely holding yourself upright, fuck, he knew better.
He’d waited too long. Let you burn slow beside him while pretending he wasn’t also holding the match.
His stomach turned. Something deep in his chest caved in on itself. You must’ve felt his gaze, because your fingers twitched against the railing and your jaw tightened. Then, without a word, you stepped down from your perch and turned from the edge, already moving.
His body moved before his brain did.
He reached out. Caught your wrist. Gentle. Certain.
You froze. Your spine straightened. And when you turned, your voice was sharp enough to cut through both of them.
“Don’t touch me.”
You tried to pull back. He held firm, but not rough, not controlling. Just there. Solid. Like a hand pressed against the door of a burning room.
“I can’t let you walk away.”
Your arm jerked, a reflex. He didn’t loosen his hold.
Not after the last time. Not after the image of you standing too still in that warehouse, breathless and wide open, had lodged behind his eyes like a round that never made contact.
You tried again. “You don’t get to decide—”
“You’re not okay.”
The words tasted like metal. Not because they were hard to say, but because they felt late. Like throwing water on a fire that’s already gone to ash.
You scoffed. That bitter kind of sound that pretends it’s anger, but Bucky had made that sound himself too many times not to recognize what lived underneath it.
“Jesus, Barnes, let go—”
“No.”
It came out quiet. Firmer now. Not from his throat but somewhere lower, heavier. His grip adjusted slightly, still gentle, but definite. Like he was anchoring you in place, like if he let go now, you’d drift so far he wouldn’t be able to find you again.
You didn’t look at him at first. Just breathed hard through your nose, like the air might burn less that way. He watched your throat work, the way your lashes flicked down. You always looked away when it got real. So did he.
“Why?” you said finally, voice thinner now, not quite cracking but close. “So we can have whatever conversation you’ve been rehearsing? So I can cry in the hallway and you can feel like you helped?”
The words landed harder than they should have. Harder than maybe you even meant them to. But they stuck. Sharp, sudden, true enough to hurt.
“I don’t want you to cry,” he said.
It was the only thing he could say. The only truth he had left that didn’t sound like a lie.
“Then what do you want?”
The words lashed between you, sharp enough that they left something splintered in the air. Your wrist was still in his grip, but the fight had gone out of it, not physically. Not all the way. But enough for him to feel the shift.
Something in you had already dropped. Fallen back.
He didn’t answer right away. Couldn’t. His mouth was open, but the shape of the words wouldn’t come out clean. They sat there, behind his tongue, thick with everything he didn’t know how to explain. His jaw flexed, throat tight. He didn’t want to say the wrong thing. But he couldn’t leave this one unsaid.
“I want you to stop hurting.”
You flinched. Not from the grip. From the way his voice sounded—like he meant it too much.
His fingers loosened slightly, but he didn’t let go.“I want to stop watching you walk into rooms like they’re loaded. Like you want them to be.”
You looked away, eyes glassy in the low light. Jaw clenched so hard it shook your whole face.
“I want you to stop doing that thing where you ask for the quietest seat before briefings so no one will notice if you leave early. I want you to stop skipping lunch and acting like coffee makes up for it. I want you to stop tying your boots too tight.”
Your breath caught, but you masked it with a scoff. It was weak. Brittle. You tried to yank your arm away again, but he held you fast, stepping in closer, his tone still low, still quiet, but firm now. The kind of quiet you couldn’t outrun.
“I want you to look me in the eye again without checking the floor first.” He exhaled slow, barely controlled. The kind of breath that had been sitting in his lungs for days, weeks. Long enough to rot.
“I want one goddamn day where I don’t have to wonder if I missed it—if this is the time you don’t come back and it’s my fault for not saying something sooner.”
That landed. Not in your chest, but your knees. They bent just enough for him to notice the shift in your stance, like something inside you had buckled under the weight of it.
He stepped forward once more. Close enough now that he could feel the tremor in your shoulders.
“But mostly,” he murmured, “I want you to stop pretending that none of this fucking matters. That you don’t matter.”
Your head snapped back around, eyes wild. But it wasn’t anger anymore—it was panic.
“Why are you doing this,” you whispered. “Why are you saying this?”
He didn’t blink. Didn’t look away. The weight of his gaze didn’t leave yours.
“Because, you— you were standing out in the open like you wanted to be hit,” he said, voice raw. “Because I can’t stop seeing it. You, just—there. Still. Waiting.”
You made a sound. Not a word. Just air twisted into something like grief.
“You can’t—” your voice cracked hard, “—you don’t get to turn this into some kind of fucking—redemption arc for you, okay? You don’t get to drag me into your shit and—what—heal through me?”
“I’m not.”
“You are!”
“I’m not.”
“Then why the fuck did you take the hit?!”
The words exploded out of you, louder than they should’ve been. Louder than you’d probably meant. But it was out now—ripped free from wherever you’d been hiding it. Your whole body shook with it. And when Bucky didn’t say anything—couldn’t—you shoved him.
Hard.
He barely moved.
“You think I don’t know what that was?” you spat. “You think I haven’t played it over a thousand times? That I didn’t feel how fast you moved? That I didn’t see the way you looked at me after?”
Another hit landed square in his chest, open palm, not full strength, but solid. You weren’t trying to hurt him. Not physically. But your hands kept coming anyway. Another shove. Then another. He didn’t stop you. Didn’t move.
“What was I supposed to do, huh?” you snapped, fingers curling into fists before slamming into him again. “You think I didn’t know what that meant? You think I haven’t had to lie awake every fucking night since then hearing that gun go off—feeling it—and knowing it should’ve been me?”
His breath caught, but he didn’t speak. Couldn’t. You kept hitting him—his chest, his shoulder, the flat of your palm against the thick fabric of his jacket, no real damage but a growing tremble behind every strike. Your voice cracked on the next one.
“You don’t get to do that,” you said. “You don’t get to just throw yourself into it and look at me like that afterward. Like you knew. Like you saw me. Like you fucking understood.”
Another hit. Sloppier now. Your movements had started to lose coordination, your shoulders shaking too hard to stay steady.
“Stop it—stop just taking it,” you choked. “Say something.”
He didn’t. Not because he didn’t want to, but because he couldn’t say what he really felt. That he had understood. That he had seen you. That some part of him had known, and worse, he’d recognized it.
So he let you keep going. Let you shove and strike and start to cry without saying a word. He let you unload every fractured piece onto him because he could take it.
Because he’d done it, too. To walls, to enemies, to the people who tried to help him when he didn’t know how to ask for it. Because if this was what it took to pull some of it out of you—if this was what you needed just to keep standing—he would let you break his ribs before he told you to stop.
You stumbled forward, the last shove turning into something smaller. Your fists barely made contact before falling limp. Your arms trembled, body swaying forward like the strength had finally run out. Your knees buckled half an inch before he moved.
He caught your wrists, gently, palms firm but soft, just enough pressure to keep you from hitting him again. Not to restrain you. To hold you in place. And in the space between one breath and the next, you sagged, shoulders collapsing, forehead thudding softly against the center of his chest.
He barely had time to react before your full weight leaned into him.
His arms wrapped around you in a single movement to keep you from tumbling to the floor. One hand settled at your back, the other curling gently around your upper arm as your breath hitched against the fabric of his shirt.
You were so warm.
That was the only thing he noticed. Not your tears, not at first. But your heat. Like your body was trying to stay here. Trying to anchor itself against something even as your mind pushed to fold in and disappear.
He could feel your heart stuttering beneath the layers between you. And god, you were trying so hard not to make a sound. Like that would’ve meant surrender. Like silence still kept you safe.
His own throat burned.
“Don’t make a home out of pain.”
His voice didn’t lift, didn’t crack—it just came from somewhere low in his chest, as if it had been there waiting all along.
Your breath hitched hard.
He didn’t loosen his grip.
“I did that for years, decades,” he murmured, forehead tilted down, the words barely brushing the space above your ear. “Built a life in it. Slept beside it. Let it tell me who I was.”
Your fingers twitched against his chest. Not pulling away.
“I thought if I carried it quiet enough, no one would have to see it. That maybe I could burn it out of me piece by piece.”
You made a sound, something caught between a sob and a breath. Sharp. Shallow. Your shoulders jolted against his chest, not in protest, but because you couldn’t keep it in anymore.
“I didn’t mean for it to be you.”
It came out broken. Shattered at the center.
“I didn’t mean for you to be the one to—”
You choked on it. He felt it. The hitched inhale. The way your hands dug into the fabric of his jacket like you needed something solid to hold you here.
“I didn’t think—fuck, Bucky, I didn’t think anyone would even—”
He held you tighter, just a little. Just enough.
Your voice dropped to a whisper, barely audible against his shirt.
“If it had worked, if it had actually worked, you would’ve thought you weren’t fast enough. That you didn’t stop it in time. And I—” another sob cracked through, raw and shaking—“I almost let you carry that. I almost left you thinking that you failed. That you would’ve had to live with that.”
His jaw clenched. The ache behind his eyes lit up like static. He didn’t speak, couldn’t—not yet—but his hand slid up your back, slow and steady, palm warm between your shoulder blades. He pressed it there, like he could hold your ribs together from the outside. Like he could brace what was caving in.
When he finally spoke again, his voice was so quiet it felt like something sacred.
“I would’ve.”
You choked on another sob. He held you tighter.
“I would’ve carried it,” he murmured. “Every goddamn day. Thinking I was a second too slow. That I missed the one thing that mattered.”
You didn’t say anything.
But your breath caught sharp, and he felt your head shake once against his chest—not a no, not really. Just a movement. Something small trying to fight its way out of the wreckage.
Your voice came out raw, barely formed. “That wasn’t fair.”
He stayed still.
You pressed the words into his jacket like they might burn less if you didn’t say them to his face. “That would’ve fucked you up forever.”
He nodded, slow. “Yeah.”
“And I—I almost did that to you.”
“Yeah,” he whispered again. No blame. Just truth.
You curled tighter into him, like the sound of it hurt worse than the thought.
Your fingers curled tighter into his jacket, knuckles digging into the seams, and he could feel the tremor in your body shifting—less from rage now, more from exhaustion. From the come-down. From the weight.
It took a long time before you spoke again, voice rasped out against his chest, barely audible.
“I thought if I kept it small… it wouldn’t count.”
He didn’t move.
“I didn’t throw myself into traffic,” you murmured, like that excused it. Like that still meant something. “Didn’t slit my wrists. Didn’t take anything I couldn’t walk back from. I just…”
Your throat locked up. His hand didn’t leave your back.
“I just hit things,” you whispered. “Hard. When it got too loud in my head. Walls. Doors. Tables. Sometimes myself.”
The last two words were quiet. Not ashamed—just tired. Like they’d been buried too long under rationalizations and bullshit and had finally surfaced with nowhere else to go.
Bucky didn’t pull away.
He couldn’t.
He stayed exactly where he was and let the words live in the space between you, heavy and sharp and true.
“I wasn’t trying to die,” you added, softer still. “Not all at once. Not at first. Just… wear myself out. Bit by bit. So I couldn’t feel anything else. But lately I just…it wasn’t enough.”
That’s what broke something in him.
Not the admission. Not the method. But the logic of it. The way you described it like it made sense, like it was reasonable. Like the exhaustion had been the goal all along.
Of course you hadn’t cared about the bruises. Of course you hadn’t remembered when or how most of them happened. It was never about the moment. It was about the aftermath. About the ache in your joints the next day, the dull throb in your knuckles that reminded you you were still there, still capable of impact, even if nothing inside you felt real anymore.
He thought of your hands. How small they felt when he caught your wrists. How bruised and swollen one of them had been that day in the med bay, knuckles scraped raw and shoulders tight with something you hadn’t named.
You’d looked him dead in the eye when he saw the bruise on your side and said table corner.
And he’d let it slide.
Because he hadn’t wanted to push too hard. Because he’d been afraid of being wrong. Because some part of him had recognized it and still pretended not to.
“I didn’t think anyone noticed,” you said.
“I did,” he whispered. His voice cracked. “I noticed.”
You didn’t say anything. But he felt the tension spike again in your shoulders—guilt, maybe, or panic at having been seen too clearly. He tightened his grip slightly, just enough to keep you from pulling away.
“I saw every mark,” he said, voice low. “Every time you looked at a bruise too long. Every time you didn’t. Every time your hand shook when you thought no one could see.”
Your breath caught.
“I didn’t want to believe it,” he went on, slowly, steadily. “But I knew.”
His throat worked hard around the next words, like they didn’t want to come. “I know what it looks like. When someone’s trying to bleed in ways that don’t leave trails. I’ve done it. Every way there is.”
“I didn’t want you to carry it,” you said.
His answer came without hesitation.
“I’d rather carry it than bury you.”

The reception area smelled like too many kinds of tea.
There were five glass jars on the counter next to a kettle, each labeled in looping penmanship—chamomile, ginger, dandelion, tulsi, lavender. The paper sign said self-serve, but Bucky hadn’t touched any of them. Not because he didn’t want to, but because his hands had been too still in his lap for the last ten minutes and he didn’t want to break the spell of it.
The room was quiet. Not library-quiet. Not hospital-quiet. Just… soft.
A low lamp in the corner spilled a yellow glow across the rug. A record player in the back hummed with something instrumental and slow. There was a magazine rack in the corner with bent spines and a potted plant beside it that Bucky was pretty sure was plastic.
He’d kicked it once by accident, just to check. The thing didn’t even wobble.
He didn’t know what kind of office this was supposed to be the first time he’d been here, at least not from the hallway. There was no plaque on the door, no framed diplomas on the wall, no receptionist typing quietly behind a desk.
He hadn’t asked questions when Sam sent him the address a few months back. Just showed up.
And then showed up again. And again. Every week.
The first few times, he waited for you in the car. The second time, he told himself he was only walking you to the door. Third time, you’d asked him—quietly, not looking at him—if he could stay inside just in case the session went bad.
Now, he came in without being asked.
He sat in the farthest chair from the door. Always the same one. Kept his hands on his knees, palms down, fingers loose. Let his eyes flick between the door and the lamp and the coat hook on the wall beside it. Didn’t let himself drift too long in any one thought.
He hadn’t even realized the receptionist desk didn’t have a receptionist until the fifth visit.
The door clicked behind it sometimes. There were other rooms, other people in the back, but he never saw anyone else come out. No one ever went in except you. You, and the woman Sam had somehow managed to pull from a year long waitlist.
Bucky didn’t know what strings he’d pulled. He just knew the woman never looked surprised to see you. Like she’d already known you were coming long before you ever agreed to show up.
He didn’t know what the two of you talked about. He didn’t ask. But the first time he picked you up, your eyes had been red and your hands were shaking. You said nothing. Just got in the car and stared out the window until you got back to HQ.
He remembered waiting in rooms like this—but more gray, with more clipboards and laminated signs reminding you how to breathe. He remembered counting tiles. Flinching at coughs. He remembered that shitty little notebook his court-appointed therapist had made him fill out. All the times he left lines blank on purpose. All the ways he’d perfected saying I’m fine with a voice that didn’t shake.
He remembered her—Dr. Raynor. Tough. Clinical. Not necessarily cruel, just… blunt in a way that didn’t land right. A woman trained to treat a soldier, not the man stitched together from what was left of one. She’d called it progress when he stopped glaring. Called it recovery when he stopped resisting.
But this felt different.
The air in here didn’t feel heavy. No tension thickening in the corners. No judgment waiting behind the next sentence. It just was. Steady. Balanced. Like the space had been made soft on purpose. For people learning how to exist without holding their breath.
It had been three months. Every week, same building, same chair, same flickering lamp. You didn’t ask him to stay anymore. You never told him not to.
But you always looked for him first when you came out.
The door opened just as he exhaled, slow and quiet, like his body had timed the breath for your return.
You stepped through first, hood down, jacket slung off one shoulder, a pen still tucked behind your ear like you forgot it was there. Your eyes scanned the room automatically, and then settled on him.
Not just on him.
For him.
Like they always did.
Something passed across your face—too quick for anyone else to catch, but Bucky had been studying you longer than he ever studied enemy movements. It wasn’t surprise. Wasn’t even relief. Just something softer. Something that lived in the space between I’m still here and I’m glad you are too.
And you smiled.
Small. Asymmetrical. Real.
The therapist followed behind you, her steps easy, unrushed, her voice carrying that same warm weight the room seemed to hold—like she knew how not to push, only open.
“I know I’m sending you out into the world with a lot today,” she said lightly, a touch of humor in her tone. “But you handled the heavy part already. The rest is just practice.”
You turned toward her, adjusted your jacket with one hand while the other reached out, not instinctively, not forced. Deliberately. You took her hand, pressed your fingers around hers, and squeezed.
“Thank you,” you said. Voice steady, but soft. Like you hadn’t needed to rehearse it this time. “I’ll see you next week.”
She nodded once, her smile faint but proud. “And don’t skip your check-in list this time.”
“I won’t,” you said, even though you probably would, but less often than before.
Bucky stood as you turned toward him.
Not in a rush. Not like he’d been waiting for his cue.
But like the motion itself meant something. Like it mattered to meet you upright, at eye level, the same way he had all those weeks ago when you staggered into him sobbing and shaking and wrecked from holding yourself together too long. The same way he’d stood between you and a bullet. Between you and the weight you had been carrying alone for far too long.
“You good?” he asked quietly, stepping aside so you could pass.
You shrugged one shoulder, but didn’t brush it off as the two of you exited the office. “We’re on the part where I have to start noticing what I do before I do it.”
He nodded. Not because he understood, but because you were talking. That was enough.
You adjusted your bag on your shoulder, fidgeted with the zipper as you headed down the stairs. “She wants me to keep a log.”
“Of what?”
“What I’m trying not to feel when I reach for something to break.” You said it without flinching. “She says if I can name it, I can sit with it. Even if it sucks.”
His chest ached in a way he didn’t have a name for.
“And if you can’t name it?” he asked.
“Then I get to ask someone else to help.” Your fingers toyed with the seam of your jacket sleeve. “That’s the part I’m supposed to practice.”
At the end of the hallway, he pushed the glass door open for you. The air outside was colder than he expected—crisp with spring, the edge of something green just starting to break through the concrete. You stepped through first, your jacket flaring slightly behind you, and he followed a step behind.
Bucky let the door ease shut behind him, the click muffled by the wind and the weight of the last few months. His boots hit pavement a second behind yours. You didn’t wait for him—but you didn’t walk too far ahead either. Close enough that he didn’t have to reach. Close enough to hear you when you said, quietly, like it might break if it was said any louder—
“I hate logging shit.”
He glanced sideways.
“I figured.”
You huffed—not a laugh, not quite—but he caught the corner of your mouth tipping up. Just for a second. Just enough.
You crossed the darkening lot in silence for a few steps, your boots scuffing over a patch of half-melted ice. Bucky’s truck sat in the far corner, the passenger-side mirror still cracked from a parking garage you’d refused to admit you couldn’t clear nearly a year ago. He never got it fixed. Neither of you mentioned it.
“You still keeping yours?” you asked as the truck came into view.
He blinked. “My what?”
“That little black notebook from your sessions.”
He squinted at you, brows raised. “You asking if I keep it, or if I use it?”
You looked at him then, really looked. And he saw it: that thing in your eyes that used to live there like a threat, like a warning sign. It wasn’t gone. Not entirely. But it wasn’t sharp anymore.
He shrugged. “It’s hidden in the bottom of a drawer somewhere.”
You smirked slightly, nodding once. “Fair.”
He reached for the handle and opened the passenger door for you—not like a reflex, but like something intentional. Like a habit he wanted to have.
You blinked once, surprised maybe, but didn’t say anything. Just climbed in with a small nod, the same way you used to shoulder through debriefs and disappear down hallways. But now, there was no rush in it. No escape. Just motion. Movement that didn’t mean retreat.
He shut the door gently once you were settled, then rounded the front of the truck, boots scuffing over the cement. The sky overhead was softening and stretched thin, all dark cloud and late-evening haze, and for a second, he just stood there, one hand braced on the hood. Watching your silhouette through the windshield. The way your fingers tapped against your thigh like they hadn’t decided what to do with the quiet yet.
Then he climbed in.
The truck creaked beneath him, the seat familiar, the steering wheel warm from the setting sun. He turned the key, and the engine came to life in one slow, coughing breath.
“You know, if you’re not doing anything,” you said, still watching the road ahead like it might turn into something new if you stared long enough, “I could uh…go for some food.”
His brow twitched. “Food?”
“Yeah. You know. That thing we’re supposed to do three times a day.”
You didn’t look at him when you said it. Just kept your gaze locked forward, like the windshield gave you more room to breathe than the air between you. But there was something in your voice, something brittle at the edges and unfinished in the middle, like you were still figuring out how to let a sentence stretch into a want.
You hadn’t said you were hungry. You hadn’t said you needed company.
But the invitation was there. Quiet. Barely dressed up.
The kind of thing that would’ve passed him by a few months ago if he hadn’t learned your rhythms. If he hadn’t spent night after night memorizing the difference between your silence and your distance. Between the tension in your jaw when you were angry and the way you bit the inside of your cheek when you were just trying not to vanish.
That landed somewhere deep in his chest. He didn’t show it.
“Anywhere in particular?”
You hesitated. Then: “Something greasy. Something you eat with your hands. Fries that are so fresh that they burn your fingers a little.”
His lips twitched. “You’ve been spending too much time around Torres.”
You blinked at him. “What?”
“There’s this place he won’t shut up about. Little burger joint off 89. Says they make onion rings the size of your face.”
You tilted your head. “Onion rings the size of my face?”
“He said it like it was the highest possible compliment.”
That coaxed a breath out of you—half a scoff, half a laugh, but it stayed. Lingered in the cab like something warmer than the heater. Like something earned.
“He’s got good taste,” you said.
“He also once ate gas station sushi on a dare.”
“Okay,” you amended, “he has… passionate taste.”
Bucky didn’t look at you, not fully, but his smile lasted longer this time. Not a twitch. Not a reflex. Just the kind of slow, quiet pull that lived in the muscles only when they weren’t preparing for loss.
The truck rumbled steady beneath them, tires chewing up road like time. You adjusted your bag in your lap, then reached up and cracked the window half an inch. The wind didn’t whip in like a threat. Just drifted. Light. Sharp with spring and pine and distance.
“You sure you’re up for it?” you asked eventually. “Sitting in a booth, being perceived.”
“I’ve had much worse days.”
He let those words stretch. Let the road roll out in front of him, long and dark and a little less hollow than it had been an hour ago.
And then—soft, like it wasn’t meant to be heard—you said: “You’re the only person I’d ask.”
His grip on the wheel didn’t tighten. But his knuckles ached anyway.
He didn’t respond at first. Couldn’t. Not without handing you the whole story of what those words did to him, how many nights he’d spent convincing himself that showing up wasn’t enough. That driving you here and waiting for you to come back through that door wasn’t a kind of love, just a half-step toward pity. That whatever thread was weaving between you, slow and invisible, maybe you didn’t feel it too.
“You’ll sit across from me, right?” you asked, suddenly. The words came fast. Too fast. Like they were covering something else up.
“Why?”
You didn’t look at him. “Just… if I sit next to people, I don’t always know what to do with my hands.”
He smiled then. Not wide. Just enough for it to pull in his chest, warm and sharp.
“Across is good,” he said. “Easier to steal your fries that way.”
You huffed. “You wouldn’t dare.”
You didn’t say it like a challenge. You said it like a prayer, something that might’ve meant don’t go, if said in a different key.
And Bucky—God, he could’ve said a hundred things.
Could’ve told you that of all the days he’s ever walked through, this one didn’t ache in the same way. Could’ve told you that your voice saying his name after weeks of silence had stitched something back together in him he hadn’t realized was still broken. Could’ve told you that when you’d said you’re the only person I’d ask, something in his chest had folded in on itself with the same brutal gentleness you’d folded into him on that balcony months ago.
There was a time he might’ve doubted that. Not because you didn’t mean it, but because he didn’t think he’d ever be the kind of man someone asked for—not when it wasn’t about intel or orders or damage control. But this was different. This wasn’t about what you needed from him.
It was about who you wanted near you when you didn’t want to be anywhere else.
“Don't worry, you can steal my fries too,” he said.
And maybe it landed like a joke—soft, thrown just off-center—but it didn’t feel like one.
It felt like a door unlatched. Like a scar uncovered, not to be examined, just to be seen. The kind of offer that didn’t ask for anything in return, not even thanks.
Just meant I’m not going anywhere.
Just meant stay.

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Updated! As always feel free to use those ideas just tag me so I can read them
Hello, so I tend to have a lot of ideas for fics but I don't really have the writing skills to bring them to life. So let this be a little list of ideas for some of my favorite characters that you, writers, can use. My only ask is that you tag me in your work so I can read them myself 👀
Also, sorry I'm and idiot and I accidentally deleted the previous post 😬 so here it is again
Bucky Barnes
x reader ideas
Civilian reader kills a person - reader never used physical violence on anyone. They get caught up in a mission crossfire or smth and they have to kill a person in self defense. Reader is shaken up, Bucky helps them recover a little inspiration from punisher season 2 with Frank and Amy
Reader makes a surprise 40s themed date - Bucky mentions it in FTWS that he doesn't know "dating rules" of modern time. Reader decides to surprise him to make him feel more comfortable and get in touch with his old self
Retired superhero reader gets their drink spiked - pretty self-explanatory, it'd be pretty interesting to explore feelings of anger and disappointment at themselves considering they were trained to be always on guard and ready for "bigger threats". I think it could also go the other way around. Bucky caught in a car accident or a mass shooting and getting injured pretty badly and it hits him that he is not immune to "normal life" threats. And obviously the other person comforting them. This one is heavily inspired by a series from @pathologicalreid about retired bau reader
Headcanoncs
Bucky on a mission called 'slow dancing' - reader never had a homecoming because of some major events (pandemic, one of earth invasions etc.) because of that they never had an opportunity to slow dance. When Bucky finds out he makes it his mission to change that (maybe even does a baby homecoming just for the two of them)
Dad!Bucky & kid!teen!reader - Bucky's kid happens to go to the museum for a history class school trip and they see Bucky mentioned in the exhibition (the one from the CA:TFA I don't remember what it's called). The kid knows what their dad's past but seeing it just suddenly reminds them what he went through (war, loss, torture, ect.). They get overwhelmed thinking about how he went through all of that and still decided to do good for the world. When they go back home they just silently come up to him and cuddle into his side. They say how sad they are for him and what he went through but also how proud they are. Just a little soft moment between them two
Steve rescues Bucky and other soldiers from Hydra back in the first movie of captain America. Because of that the whole time Bucky is held in Hydra later, every time he hears sudden loud noises and commotion, just for a second he thinks Steve came to save him. He never did.
After Endgame runs a little "safe place" in his apartment for young, local superheroes where he patches them up and is kind of their mentor
For now this is it, I'll be adding more probably for Spencer Reid, Matt Murdock and more as I go on
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Bruised and Healing
"Do you know the scene where the heroine repeatedly punches the hero's chest, her blows soft but filled with all the anger and heartbreak she’s bottled up, and he just stands there, taking it, until he finally, slowly, grabs her wrists? And she just breaks, sobbing into him because it’s all too much to bear? Yeah, the real drug. That’s the plot. So sit back, grab your snacks, and enjoy, bitches."
Content Warning:
This story contains themes of emotional hurt, fear, and the aftermath of trauma. It includes moments of intense emotional conflict and personal vulnerability. There are also references to physical injuries.
GLIMPSE - “You don’t get to decide that,” you said quietly, your voice still shaky but steadier now. “You don’t get to decide what I can handle.”
Peter blinked, his lips parting as if to argue, but nothing came out. Instead, he gave a soft, humourless laugh. “You’re right,” he admitted, a flicker of his usual self breaking through. “You always are. That’s actually very unfair, by the way.”
It had been days. Days of uncertainty and endless waiting, your phone clutched tightly in your hand as you stared at the screen, praying for a call, a message, anything. But there was nothing. Not a single word from Peter. The silence hung in the air like a suffocating cloud, and the longer it went on, the more the anxiety gnawed at you.
Every time you walked into the apartment, the absence of his presence hit you like a punch in the gut. His stuff was still there—his sneakers by the door, his jacket thrown over the back of the couch—but Peter was nowhere to be found. You knew he had to be out there, somewhere, doing Spider-Man things, but you also knew that sometimes that meant danger, and sometimes that meant he wouldn’t come back.
Each minute that passed felt like an eternity, the panic simmering under your skin, threatening to boil over. You tried to be patient. You tried to remind yourself that Peter was strong, capable, that he could handle anything. But you couldn’t help it. The images of him injured, alone, or worse, plagued you relentlessly.
It was on the fourth night, when the exhaustion from waiting and worrying was starting to swallow you whole, that he finally showed up.
You hadn’t heard him come in. Your eyes were half-lidded as you sat on the couch, staring blankly at the wall, when you heard the quiet thud of his shoes hitting the floor. You whipped around, heart racing, only to see him standing in the doorway, looking like he had crawled straight out of hell.
His face was bruised, cut in a few places, and his usually neat hair was matted with sweat. His suit was torn in places, the fabric hanging from his body like something that had been through a storm. His eyes were bloodshot, tired—worse than tired. They looked hollow, haunted. He was barely standing on his own two feet, swaying ever so slightly.
“Peter…” The word came out shakily, as if you’d forgotten how to breathe.
He winced slightly at your voice but gave you a weak smile, though it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “Hey… I’m fine, really.”
You stood up quickly, taking a few cautious steps toward him, but then the reality of everything came crashing down like a tidal wave. Your fear, your frustration, and the helplessness of the past few days all rushed to the surface in an instant. The anger burned, and it consumed you like wildfire.
“Fine? You’re fine?” The words came out in a sharp breath, louder than you expected, and you took a step closer to him. “Where the hell have you been, Peter? I was worried. I couldn’t—God, I couldn’t even breathe while you were gone. You didn’t even—you didn’t even call.”
He opened his mouth to say something, but no words came out. He wasn’t ready for this. Hell, he didn’t know what to say either. His chest ached, but not from the bruises or wounds—he was aching from your voice, the accusation. He could feel it in his bones, how badly you’d been hurt, and yet, he couldn’t find the words to fix it.
“You can’t just vanish like that,” you continued, your voice trembling with a mix of fear and anger. “I don’t care how tough you are, Peter! I don’t care if you’re Spider-Man or whatever the hell you think you are. You don’t just disappear and expect me to be fine.”
You took another step toward him, the fury inside of you like a constant hum in your chest. And then, without thinking, you were on him, your hands pushing against his chest in rapid succession. One hit, two, three. Each one harder than the last. Your frustration, your fear, your worry—all of it was exploding in that moment.
Peter didn’t flinch. He didn’t try to stop you. He just stood there, letting you hit him, each strike echoing in the still apartment. His chest rose and fell in shallow breaths, but he didn’t say anything. He wouldn’t stop you. He knew why you were doing it. He deserved it.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
You kept hitting him, more rapidly now, the tension in your body unbearable. You could feel the heat of your anger in your fingertips, each strike a desperate plea for him to acknowledge the panic that had taken over you. Every hit sent shockwaves through him, but he didn’t protest. He stood still, letting you vent your frustration.
And then, just as you were about to pull away, his hand, large and warm, gently wrapped around your wrist. His touch was so gentle, it didn’t hurt—just grounded you, stopped you in your tracks. The rapid fire of your hands came to a halt, and you finally looked up at him, your chest heaving, your face flushed with emotion.
Peter didn’t say anything at first. He just stood there, looking down at you, his fingers still wrapped around your wrist, his gaze soft, regretful. But it was his other hand that reached out for you next. It moved slowly, almost like he was afraid to touch you, but then it landed gently on your waist, pulling you closer into him.
You stiffened for a moment, the tension between you still thick, but there was something in his touch—something that was more than just physical. You could feel his exhaustion, his guilt, his pain—all of it bleeding through the simple act of holding you. And then, without a word, he bent his head slightly, his forehead resting gently against yours, the space between you still filled with so many unsaid things.
His chest rose and fell beneath your hand, the weight of his exhaustion settling into your bones. And as you stood there, in the quiet of your apartment, surrounded by the remnants of your anger and his mistakes, you finally understood. He didn’t have to say it out loud. You both already knew.
Your breath hitched in your throat as his forehead pressed gently against yours. The heat of the moment, the flood of emotions, everything you’d been bottling up for days, it all surged to the surface. You tried to hold it in, tried to stay strong, but it was no use. The tears began to fall, hot and uncontrolled, stinging as they rolled down your cheeks.
You turned your face away quickly, not wanting him to see, but Peter felt it—he felt the tremble of your body as your shoulders shook with silent sobs. His grip on your wrist loosened, and without missing a beat, he pulled you close, wrapping his arms around you, not caring about his own exhaustion or the fact that he was still barely holding himself together.
“Baby… no.” His voice was strained, barely above a whisper, as he gently cupped your face, his thumb wiping away the tears that had escaped. “Please don’t cry.”
You tried to push him away, embarrassed by your breakdown, but he held you tighter, pressing your head into his chest. His shirt was damp, but you didn’t care. You needed to feel his warmth, the steady rhythm of his heartbeat beneath your ear. You felt weak, vulnerable, exposed, and it terrified you. But Peter didn’t let you pull away. He gently cupped the back of your head, cradling you against him, his fingers threading through your hair as he whispered your name softly.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you,” Peter murmured, his voice thick with emotion. He tilted your head up so you could look at him, his eyes searching yours with that familiar, heart-wrenching intensity. “I’m sorry I wasn’t here. I never wanted to hurt you.”
You sniffled, wiping your eyes roughly, trying to gain some composure, but Peter wasn’t having any of it. “Hey,” he said softly, his hand moving to gently caress your cheek. “You’re everything to me. I hate seeing you like this. I can’t stand it.”
You just shook your head, fresh tears welling in your eyes. “I thought… I thought I lost you,” you choked out, your voice raw from the fear that had been eating at you for days. “I couldn’t do it again. I can’t handle the thought of—"
“No.” He interrupted you firmly, his hands framing your face as he leaned down, pressing his forehead to yours again. “You won’t. You won’t lose me. I swear to you. I’ll do whatever it takes to make sure that doesn’t happen.”
Peter’s voice was low and steady, his tone a promise, as he brushed your tears away, his thumb tracing the outline of your lips in that slow, comforting gesture. The tenderness in his touch was enough to quiet the storm inside of you. You let him soothe you, letting him wipe away the remnants of your tears as he murmured reassurances. His words, though soft, were solid, like the quiet conviction of someone who had seen and survived far too much to lose anything else.
“I’m so sorry,” he whispered again, his lips brushing the top of your head as he pulled you even closer, enveloping you in his arms completely. “You mean more to me than anything, you know that? More than anything in this world. I don’t want to hurt you. I’ll never put you through that again.”
His voice cracked on the last sentence, and you could feel the vulnerability in him, too—his fear of losing you, of failing you. That broken part of him that was so fiercely protective, yet still haunted by the constant weight of his life as Spider-Man. But right now, in this moment, it doesn't matter. You were together, and that was enough.
“I was so scared,” you finally whispered, your voice muffled against his chest.
The words nearly broke him. His head dipped, and he pressed a kiss to the crown of your hair, his lips lingering there as he breathed you in. He didn’t speak for a moment, didn’t trust himself to, afraid his voice might crack under the weight of it all.
“Scared?” he finally repeated, his tone soft and reverent. “Of me?”
You shook your head against him, your voice cracking. “Not of you—scared for you. I thought…” You didn’t finish the sentence. You couldn’t.
Peter exhaled shakily, his hand stilling in your hair before cupping the back of your head gently. He leaned down further, resting his chin lightly on top of your head. “I know,” he said quietly, his voice thick. “I know. And I’m sorry I put you through that.”
He pulled back just enough to look at you, his hand coming up to cradle your face. His thumb brushed the dampness from your cheek, even as you tried to turn your head away, unwilling to let him see you like this. But Peter wasn’t having it.
“Hey,” he whispered, his tone firm but impossibly gentle. “Look at me.”
You hesitated, but the softness in his voice—and the warmth in his touch—coaxed you into meeting his gaze. His brown eyes were filled with something you couldn’t quite name, something raw and overwhelming, but it made your chest tighten.
“You know me,” he said softly. “You know me. You’re the strongest person I know, but I—I’ve gotta stop putting you through this. I swear, I’ll be better.” He leaned his forehead against yours again, closing his eyes. “Just… I can’t stand to see you like this. I hate it. You deserve so much better than me coming home looking like—like this.”
“You don’t get to decide that,” you said quietly, your voice still shaky but steadier now. “You don’t get to decide what I can handle.”
Peter blinked, his lips parting as if to argue, but nothing came out. Instead, he gave a soft, humourless laugh. “You’re right,” he admitted, a flicker of his usual self breaking through. “You always are. That’s actually very unfair, by the way.”
Despite yourself, a small, watery chuckle escaped your lips, and Peter’s eyes lit up like he’d just seen the sun for the first time in days.
“There it is,” he murmured with a crooked grin. “That laugh could cure just about anything. Might even get rid of this bruised rib situation I’ve got going on.”
You shook your head, a hint of a smile tugging at the corner of your lips. “You’re an idiot,” you muttered.
“Yeah, well, you’re stuck with this idiot,” he said, his tone playful but warm. “Because no matter how mad you get at me, or how many times I screw up, I’m not going anywhere.”
The vulnerability in his voice struck something deep inside you, and before you could stop yourself, you were leaning up, your arms wrapping around his neck. Peter caught you effortlessly, his hands settling on your waist as he pulled you closer.
“Hey,” he murmured, his voice quieter now, his lips brushing lightly against your temple. “I mean it. You’re the only thing that keeps me sane out there. The only thing that keeps me coming home.”
He tilted his head slightly, his gaze dropping to your lips, and his breath fanned across your skin as he hesitated, giving you the space to pull away if you wanted. But you didn’t. You leaned into him instead, your lips finding his in a kiss that was slow, deliberate, and filled with all the things you couldn’t put into words.
Peter’s hands shifted, one sliding up to cup your jaw while the other remained firm at your waist, anchoring you to him. The kiss deepened gradually, his lips moving against yours with a tenderness that made your knees weak. He tasted like salt and something metallic—probably from a busted lip—but you didn’t care.
When you finally broke apart, you were both breathless, his forehead pressed to yours again as he whispered, “I’m here. I’ll always be here.”
And in that moment, you believed him.
Border by @enchanthings-a
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Updated, again feel free to write these
Hello, so I tend to have a lot of ideas for fics but I don't really have the writing skills to bring them to life. So let this be a little list of ideas for some of my favorite characters that you, writers, can use. My only ask is that you tag me in your work so I can read them myself 👀
Also, sorry I'm and idiot and I accidentally deleted the previous post 😬 so here it is again
Bucky Barnes
x reader ideas
Civilian reader kills a person - reader never used physical violence on anyone. They get caught up in a mission crossfire or smth and they have to kill a person in self defense. Reader is shaken up, Bucky helps them recover a little inspiration from punisher season 2 with Frank and Amy
Reader makes a surprise 40s themed date - Bucky mentions it in FTWS that he doesn't know "dating rules" of modern time. Reader decides to surprise him to make him feel more comfortable and get in touch with his old self
Headcanoncs
Retired superhero reader gets their drink spiked - pretty self-explanatory, it'd be pretty interesting to explore feelings of anger and disappointment at themselves considering they were trained to be always on guard and ready for "bigger threats". I think it could also go the other way around. Bucky caught in a car accident or a mass shooting and getting injured pretty badly and it hits him that he is not immune to "normal life" threats. And obviously the other person comforting them. This one is heavily inspired by a series from @pathologicalreid about retired bau reader
Bucky on a mission called 'slow dancing' - reader never had a homecoming because of some major events (pandemic, one of earth invasions etc.) because of that they never had an opportunity to slow dance. When Bucky finds out he makes it his mission to change that (maybe even does a baby homecoming just for the two of them)
Steve rescues Bucky and other soldiers from Hydra back in the first movie of captain America. Because of that the whole time Bucky is held in Hydra later, every time he hears sudden loud noises and commotion, just for a second he thinks Steve came to save him. He never did.
After Endgame runs a little "safe place" in his apartment for young, local superheroes where he patches them up and is kind of their mentor
For now this is it, I'll be adding more probably for Spencer Reid, Matt Murdock and more as I go on
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Hello, so I tend to have a lot of ideas for fics but I don't really have the writing skills to bring them to life. So let this be a little list of ideas for some of my favorite characters that you, writers, can use. My only ask is that you tag me in your work so I can read them myself 👀
Also, sorry I'm and idiot and I accidentally deleted the previous post 😬 so here it is again
Bucky Barnes
x reader ideas
Civilian reader kills a person - reader never used physical violence on anyone. They get caught up in a mission crossfire or smth and they have to kill a person in self defense. Reader is shaken up, Bucky helps them recover a little inspiration from punisher season 2 with Frank and Amy
Reader makes a surprise 40s themed date - Bucky mentions it in FTWS that he doesn't know "dating rules" of modern time. Reader decides to surprise him to make him feel more comfortable and get in touch with his old self
Retired superhero reader gets their drink spiked - pretty self-explanatory, it'd be pretty interesting to explore feelings of anger and disappointment at themselves considering they were trained to be always on guard and ready for "bigger threats". I think it could also go the other way around. Bucky caught in a car accident or a mass shooting and getting injured pretty badly and it hits him that he is not immune to "normal life" threats. And obviously the other person comforting them. This one is heavily inspired by a series from @pathologicalreid about retired bau reader
Headcanoncs
Bucky on a mission called 'slow dancing' - reader never had a homecoming because of some major events (pandemic, one of earth invasions etc.) because of that they never had an opportunity to slow dance. When Bucky finds out he makes it his mission to change that (maybe even does a baby homecoming just for the two of them)
Dad!Bucky & kid!teen!reader - Bucky's kid happens to go to the museum for a history class school trip and they see Bucky mentioned in the exhibition (the one from the CA:TFA I don't remember what it's called). The kid knows what their dad's past but seeing it just suddenly reminds them what he went through (war, loss, torture, ect.). They get overwhelmed thinking about how he went through all of that and still decided to do good for the world. When they go back home they just silently come up to him and cuddle into his side. They say how sad they are for him and what he went through but also how proud they are. Just a little soft moment between them two
Steve rescues Bucky and other soldiers from Hydra back in the first movie of captain America. Because of that the whole time Bucky is held in Hydra later, every time he hears sudden loud noises and commotion, just for a second he thinks Steve came to save him. He never did.
After Endgame runs a little "safe place" in his apartment for young, local superheroes where he patches them up and is kind of their mentor
For now this is it, I'll be adding more probably for Spencer Reid, Matt Murdock and more as I go on
#bucky barnes x reader#bucky barnes angst#bucky barnes headcanon#bucky barnes#writing ideas#fanfic#fanfic ideas
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Fluffy fic where Bucky is tryna figure out who's leaving him the daily affirmations notes on his desk or on his locker at the gym but it's just a super shy tech girl who works on the third floor and the only time he's spoken to her was when they were both in an elevator and he mumbled a gruff "hey".
The only problem is that she forgot he's a trained assassin and he's gonna hunther down and find out why she's being so nice to him
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Thinking about platonic Matt and reader with reader who, unlike Foggy and Karen, isn’t weirded out by Matt’s enhanced senses but thinks it’s the COOLEST THING ON THE PLANET.
Matt will be working and she’ll just call out of nowhere. He picks up, a little worried something is wrong when she says with urgency, “Matt!”
His hands pause over his papers, he’s immediately on high alert. “Are you okay? What’s wrong?”
“No—everything’s fine. Everything’s great. Quick question—can you smell cavities?”
Matt is obviously taken aback. “What?”
“Cavities. Like, in my mouth. In my teeth. If I had any, could you tell?”
“Uh…” Matt runs a hand down his face, thinking about the huge amount of work he had to get done by the end of the day. “I’ve never really thought about that.”
“Okay—well, I bet you could. Do you know how much money I could save if I didn’t have to go to the dentist?”
“I don’t think that’s—“
“I’ll be at your office in ten.”
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✨Everybody knows I’m a good girl officer ✨



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Not enough people talk about how Spencer Reid would still be an absolutely amazing father even if his child was NOT a mini genius that took after him (Especially if they weren’t a genius.) and I think that’s a shame. We should change that.
Give me ALL the dad!Spencer headcanons!
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Ok I'm sorry but if I see one more story labeled x reader and when I go to read it your fugly ass OC named 'nicole' or 'bridget' are in there IM GONNA LOSE MY FUCKING MIND! THAT IS NOT X READER! I know some of you could say "well just switch it out with your name"
NO I WILL NOT! ITS ABOUT THE PRINCIPLE OF FALSE ADVERTISING! STOP IT!
Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk
And if you are one of the people that does this... I will find you and it will not be pretty
No hate to you if your name is nicole or bridget those re just examples
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a fiery diversion :.
[ID in alt text]
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I love it when people tell me about me because I have no idea who I am
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Why can't I have someone like them?? Cause like, they are just perfect in all aspects 🥹❤️💖
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