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frxzenheart:
zinda was given the closure of being able to know how the war ended when she was pulled into the future, able to see just how important the blackhawks were, how pilots changed the tide of the war. and she’s long moved passed that part but, being in a world where that wasn’t recognized left her feeling almost… sick. she’d watched good men die, watched her closest friends die, her lover. it causes her to frown, part of her just wanting to walk away and pretend she never said anything. but the voice pulls her from her thoughts, and it’s somewhat relieving to hear that he’s in the same boat. immediately she raises a brow at the mention of the second world war, and considering she is who she is she doesn’t question it. “ you don’t say? well, i’m glad to hear i’m not alone. ” she has no idea who this man is but that sentence alone makes her feel far more familiar with him than anyone else. holds her dog tags up after a moment. “ guess it doesn’t sound all that crazy to say but i fought in world war i, was a pilot. ” hand reaches to shake the others firmly, smiling gently. “ pleasure’s mine, zinda blake, i think that’d be a lovely idea. ”
It’s unexpected finding someone here that understands what it’s like to be displaced and having fought in the war. Thomas wishes that there had been a way to live long enough to at least see what happened after they won. All he can look back on now is old photographs and memorials. He still wants to see it, wants to see what happened in the years that followed. He won’t live long enough to have that moment of coming home so Toro doesn’t worry about spoiling anything for himself. These nerves are a raging fire deep in his chest, refusing to extinguish. However the other having a similar experience makes him feel like for once this could be normal. “Never alone. I’m glad that I’m not alone either . . . thought that I was the only one.” Toro smiles at the dog tags when they’re held up. “I sort of . . . lost mine. I gave them to my best friend to hold onto the night before I got pulled here. I’ve only been in the future a few weeks . . . weird not being in ’43 anymore.” He always made Bucky hold his dog tags so they wouldn’t melt when he played around with his fire. His hand shakes hers firmly, smiling back. “Maybe we can exchange stories sometime, Zinda.” Someone that has seen war firsthand and Thomas knows something about flight in battle considering the nature of his abilities. He glances at the front door and then takes a step forward to go inside. “Shall we?”
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saviormonster:
❝ the one & only. ❞ she smiles slightly, though god, 1943 ? he’s so young. she has almost a decade on him now, & that’s a strange feeling, when she used to be the youngest of their little group. ❝ this must have been quite the surprise. i’m from ‘56. ❞ & well on her way to outliving all of them, it had seemed at the time. only namor was left. they weren’t exactly meeting up for tea, though. she’s never been the most affectionate type ( she can’t quite remember if that had always been true, or if she beat it out of herself trying to win a little more workplace respect ) , but she hugs him warmly back. ❝ good. i’m glad you’re here. ❞ she looks slightly surprised by toro’s question, but it’s a fair one, & really — she might be the best secret keeper affiliated with the team, but this isn’t one she expected to have to keep, & doesn’t he have the right to know ? ❝ i’m not surprised they won’t tell you. after the service, when nearly everyone had left … jim & namor got into a fight. a physical one, that is. jim had been about a heartbeat away from burning the place down from the beginning, it didn’t look hard for namor to goad him into punching him instead. it was a hell of a thing to watch. ❞ no one had been stupid enough to try to pull them apart. most of the time no one could even think about it, because they were mid air or too fast to track. peggy, personally, had called them idiots, wrapped a comforting arm around ann, & lit a cigarette for the first time in years, but she doesn’t mention that.
There’s no amount of words that could truly describe the culture shock Thomas felt after waking up in a completely different decade. He’s almost disappointed by the lack of flying vehicles and everything else that Howard Stark once promised. Maybe he just got too invested in reading comic books growing up. It was so easy getting lost in the stories . . . it didn’t matter whether they were about himself or someone else. He enjoyed getting lost in the pages even if that’s something his father never quite understood. He had far too many boxes of them in his room, stacks collected in their travels. “It’s a shame that I’ll never see it.” The words coming off his tongue feel almost too real. There was so much that Toro will never get to do . . . no chance at pursuing art or seeing where his crimefighting career would take him after the war. “This is all shocking . . . it’s not the New York I left behind but it’s still home. I’m glad that I’m here too.” He wishes that tragedy didn’t plague his friends . . . they deserved a happy ending. It seems they were all doomed not to get one. Maybe this could be their chance? Only time will truly tell. “They fought?” Toro is worried about his father, always knowing how easily angered he would get when his well-being was in question for any reason. He has seen his threats toward others while suffering from any number of injuries. All fire and rage to protect his boy. It would make sense for Jim to be a heartbeat away from burning the place down, right? Thomas can’t quite imagine what that must have felt like . . . losing him. He wishes that he could have lived purely to save his father from going through all of those emotions. “Pappy has always been like that whenever I got hurt, you know? ” Which means that he isn’t really surprised by what happened at his funeral but at the same time some worry begins to settle in his chest. It might have been a long time ago for everyone but it still feels fresh. “I never liked the idea of them fighting each other. Did Namor instigate the fight on purpose? I don’t understand why he would do that . . .” Maybe it was just their grief needing an outlet that only they understood but Thomas just views them both as parental figures and wishes that they’d never ever fight again.
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saviormonster:
closed for toro raymond / @burnablc !
peggy lowers her sunglasses as she looks up at the man flying a few feet above the ground, eyebrows raised. ❝ toro ? ❞ that — simply put, that should be impossible. she remembers his funeral well. it had been an eventful one, what with the human torch submariner rematch out of hell. she supposes, though, that she can’t talk about impossibilities. she’s far, far from her home. she’ll have to get used to it. she can’t let anything faze her, can’t afford to. ❝ you’re looking well, for a dead man. ❞ the words are lightly teasing, fond. generally speaking, this should make her more concerned about the widespread impact of this time traveling, but — she can’t exactly bring herself to be upset about this. it’s good to see him.
There’s a feeling of surprise in seeing another familiar face. He would have thought everyone he knew back in the forties were long gone. Anyone that went to his funeral should be old and making the most out their last couple of years if they haven’t left this life yet. He finds comfort in seeing Peggy down below him on the ground, flames flickering with the wind while Toro is descending down to the pavement. The flames slowly disappear off of his skin and the happiest of expressions can be seen on his face. “Peggy?” She will always be considered as one of the Invaders in his eyes. “I last remember it being 1943. Imagine that?” Long gone are the days of longing to see the latest movie being played in the cinema, burning holes in another pair of converse sneakers, and being surrounded by war and propaganda about buying bonds. “I’m feeling well for a dead man.” His lips quirk into a lopsided grin before moving in closer to hug his old friend. It wasn’t until Toro pulled back that he decided to ask something that has been weighing down on his mind. “Maybe you can answer a question that I’ve been trying to figure out. Why won’t anyone talk about my funeral?”
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bleedvnghearts:
Ryoko can’t help but laugh, her and her sister dreamed of being invaders often. Playing in the yard, pretending they had superpowers and defeating the bad guys. Little did they know, they truly did have powers, passed onto them from their father and grandmother before them. There’s a bit of mixed feelings in this moment, feeling sad about both her grandmother and her sister not being here. But.. to know that the invaders were here and alive? Well it was all her childhood dreams coming true. “Did shops not sell maps?” Not that Ryoko ever used a map herself. She much preferred to fly above the city to find her way around, much like it sounds like Toro did too. “We should race sometime, I can fly too.” Ryoko teases, knowing fully well Toro would beat her in a heartbeat. A smile soon graces her face as Toro speaks fondly of his parents. She understands, to an extent. She never knew her mother but the loss of her father, grandmother and sister all hit her hard, once surrounded by loved ones… but now she’s alone in the world. Or.. she was. A secret hope that maybe she invaders might open their arms to her. “That’s actually really sweet. I like that a lot…Toro the torch, it’s the perfect fit.” Ryoko can’t help but think Toro is nothing short of adorable. He’s a that boyish charm that really seems to pull her in, smiling brightly at him in return. “Really?” Ryoko claps her hands once in excitement. “I can already think of a million different styles that would work on you. I think a street style might be right up your alley though.” The woman comes over to Toro’s side, pictures quickly pulled up on her phone. “Do any of these catch your eye?”
There’s a chuckle leaving his lips . . . unable to stop himself from laughing too. “Oh they sold maps in some of the shops but that also would require being smart enough to stop somewhere and buy one.” Which Thomas wasn’t always the brightest person in the room and that’s alright. It wasn’t like either of them considered that as an option back in the forties. Maybe they ere just equally as stubborn like brothers bickering to try and figure it out for themselves before resorting to the piece of paper. When flight is part of your gift then that tends to give you an advantage to figuring out where you are. It also requires knowing a little bit of geography but Toro expects to be slightly lost until adjusting to being in the future suddenly. 2012 has been proving itself to being very different and unlike 1943 in many ways. “I’ve never gotten the chance to race someone before . . . and that sounds like a lot of fun! Should we place a bet to make it interesting or just enjoy our time together?” Toro’s expression brightens after finding out that Ryoko can fly too. It makes him feel excited. He doesn’t really care much about winning, more so looking forward to having company up there in the clouds. There really isn’t anything quite like that feeling! “I don’t really remember them except for that story since they told it to me so many times. Jim adopted me when I was seven and he’s been the only parent I’ve ever really known. I’m lucky to have him as my pappy.” He smiles back brightly at Ryoko while they talk. If it were up to Toro then his style would be filled of clothes only in various army related color schemes. He could really use some help with figuring out what to wear . . . what’s considered cool. It makes him happy that the other seems so be excited about lending a hand. He tilts his head and is just staring at the phone. It’s strange and Thomas just doesn’t understand these tiny boxes. He’s afraid that he might accidentally break one so maybe getting one can wait. Are they fireproof? “Street style?” Consider him curious and Ryoko is running to his side to show him her tiny box. There’s photographs on it, the first time he realizes you can use them for more than just phone calls. “I really like the jacket on the last photograph! Where do we acquire one?” His shoulder gently bumps hers while also leaning in closer to get a better look at the illuminated screen. What kind of sorcery made this possible?
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mountebanks:
𝐇𝐄 𝐖𝐎𝐔𝐋𝐃 𝐊𝐍𝐎𝐖 𝐇𝐈𝐌 𝐀𝐍𝐘𝐖𝐇𝐄𝐑𝐄. toro isn’t jim’s by blood - jim doesn’t even have blood - but that doesn’t mean a damn thing. he’s his son. jim would know him anywhere. the luckiest he’s ever been was the day that toro came into his life, and the worst he’s ever felt was the day the boy ( because no matter how much he grows, he will always be jim’s boy ) left it, and the grief that followed. the pros and cons of being an android are often the same, and this one certainly is : he remembers everything. he remembers everything. the time he spent with his son is so precious to him, and - jim has burned, but he has never been burned, and he imagines that the pain of the memories is similar to it. it’s fitting, isn’t it ?
𝐖𝐀𝐓𝐂𝐇𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐓𝐎𝐑𝐎 𝐆𝐑𝐎𝐖 should have been a warning. that some day, toro would die, because he is human, and jim - no matter how much he wishes otherwise - is not. he never really thought about it, until the war. until toro was on the front lines, being shot at. losing him, once a faraway thing that seemed almost impossible because toro burned so brightly, suddenly became real. concrete. a danger only inches away, that jim always fended off with an anger that could terrify even those who knew him, until he didn’t. until he wasn’t there to.
𝐈𝐅 𝐉𝐈𝐌 𝐖𝐀𝐒 𝐀 𝐑𝐄𝐋𝐈𝐆𝐈𝐎𝐔𝐒 𝐌𝐀𝐍, he might think this a justified haunting. but he isn’t, so he doesn’t. he’s frozen into place, staring at his son, shellshocked. and then he isn’t, because toro is crying, and it’s like a systems override. it’s the only thing that matters. helping him. comforting him. holding him again, after all these years - it’s the only thing that matters. he jolts forwards, gently cups his face, so careful with him. “ i know it’s you. i know. you don’t have to - oh, little firebug. “ his voice cracks, and jim shakes his head as if it will clear his mind. “ i missed you, too. i missed you so damn much. “
There aren’t many instances where Thomas found himself crying this much since it’s an unusual behavior for him. Tears stained his cheeks whenever his father got hurt on their adventures. He was a sensitive child but despite all of the traumatic events that occurred in his life . . . there was a light burning deep within. He always looks for the enjoyment in every situation. It might be for the best that his mind doesn’t recall the night of the train crash. He doesn’t need those memories haunting him. There’s details about that night that Toro might never remember but he was still a toddler at the time — saving himself purely on instinct. The circus that took him in afterward treated him like a freak for being different. He doesn’t remember his biological parents but that doesn’t even matter. Jim is the only parent Thomas has ever known so the idea of seeing him hurt at all. Which means he probably shouldn’t have been out there fighting crime at such a young age but they were an iconic duo! One that was making a difference! He didn’t like going to those fancy parties though . . .
Toro doesn’t bother trying to hide his tears, the heat off his skin causes them to evaporate before they reach his jawline. This doesn’t stop them from coming though once they start. Why is he like this?
There was happiness brought into his life with being Jim’s son. They went on so many vacations together — once to the mountains where they were surrounded by snow and another time to the beach . . . just to name a few. It was a way of rewarding themselves for a job well done. Sometimes it was the little things, being taken to the theatre to watch an action film. His favorite! These were all normalcies that wouldn’t have been possible if Toro stayed in the circus. Any time spent with his father was worth it. He enjoyed getting to soar through the sky as their flames burned behind them. It made him smile and remembers fondly the first time he learned to fly with guidance from Jim — who needed to catch him a few times.
It brings him relief knowing that the other man is here . . . been searching around for him everywhere that he thought to look. He sniffled while trying to pull himself together after Jim jolts forward to cup his face so gently. He was always so careful with him. They’e come a long way since those early days of having comic books printed about them, that’s for sure. LITTLE FIREBUG manages to make him smile and for a moment his eyes stop watering. “You believe me? I ran into Namor in the city but he thought I was just a ghost at first . . . I don’t know what I’d do if you thought that too.” He can’t help himself wrapping his arms around his father for an actual hug this time, the flames flickering with the wind as he holds onto Jim. He’s not ready to let go. “I feel safer knowing that you’re here . . .” Toro doesn’t pull back just yet, enjoying the comfort of being held by the one man who has always protected him. “I’m sorry I cried so much.” This is when the younger man finally moves out of the embrace but staying close. He wants to give his father the chance to get a really good look at him now that the crying has stopped for now.
Toro smiles and a familiar expression of excitement can be seen in his eyes. “Does this mean we can go back to going on missions together? Please, pappy?”
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saviormonster:
❝ stop. stop, you cannot be. ❞ this being reality is impossible. it’s impossible. he has never hallucinated anything like this before, true, but — his mind is inventive & cruel. there is a first time for everything. he should not be surprised. he wants to sound angry at toro, knows he doesn’t quite mange it, only summoning up exhaustion & slight desperation instead. ‘my death hasn’t happened yet’ hits him like a punch to the gut, shoulders tensing. the memory of that day tastes like blood. he knows better than to play into any delusion, but he wants this to be real. he wants this to be real. he reaches out cautiously, touches him on the shoulder, unbothered by the flames, so light that it’s clear he’s expecting his hand to pass right through. it doesn’t. he looks at the place where skin meets shirt, & blinks, eyes widening. blinks again, like he’ll see something else if he does. ❝ … oh. ❞ he stares for a moment longer, than draws back abruptly, walls closing as he meets toro’s gaze for the first time. he searches for his voice, unsure of what to do, then manages, ❝ things are very different in this time. ❞
“Why are you telling me what to do?” Thomas furrows his brow in confusion but it wouldn’t be the first time . . . but his words were said with more of a playful tone anyway. He remembers being a talkative child, especially when they were all stuck on the same plane together while heading to handle some business together as a team. The Invaders were special! This often meant Namor had to request him to stop for at least for five minutes. There were also times when Toro wasn’t as annoying and snatched up the seat next to his teammate because he thinks that Namor is sweet. He didn’t care what anyone else has to say! “I don’t understand why but I’m really here.” His words serious but there’s no way of making sense of what happened so easily. Thomas doesn’t move as it looks like Namor is reaching out to him, a hand touching his shoulder despite the flames being ever present. He’s getting emotional as the realization can be seen on friend’s face that this isn’t a hallucination after all. “Do you believe me now?” His expression softens as their gaze meets again. “You could say that again . . . bananas are disgusting now. How did they ruin fruit?”
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bleedvnghearts:
It comes flooding in like a dam breaking. Often times memories come back like dreams, hazy around the edges. But fitting of war to come back so violently and viscously – like a flood and Bucky’s drowning in it. A metallic taste sits heavy on his tongue, as if he’s got a mouth full of blood once again, bones ache in a way he forgot they could. His body is remembering the strain and the stress of war. How exhausting and tiring it was. But on the flip side of that there were quiet moments and those are the ones he’s happy to remember. Nights like the night Toro tried throwing him a birthday party. Nights where they had a few too many beers when they knew they shouldn’t have and sang around a campfire. Nights where Bucky was afraid but with Steve and Toro by his side he could be a little more brave. Things were so different now, his fears were far from losing war but now losing himself. Losing all these foggy memories again, he rather have them incomplete than not at all. He never wants to live in the dark like that again. It scares him. But any fear of Hydra and being caught again is outweighed by his need to keep Toro alive. Before, Bucky was so desperate to get out of this time and away from Hydra but… if things go back to the way they were – he loses his family again. He’s not sure he can stomach that a second time around when the first time he barely got to process.
Bucky laughs a little bit, though it’s a bit watery. He’s very close to tears. “I think people might like that better than what other ghosts are doing… you aren’t slamming their doors.” While he’s joking he doesn’t really enjoy this conversation. He doesn’t like speaking about Toro being a ghost, not when he’s standing right here in front of him. Because.. what if this is just a ghost? Sometimes memories haunt Bucky in different ways. The hallucinations are rare but they happen from time to time. Could he be making up this whole interaction? Could Toro’s body still be missing and this man be a figment of his imagination? The very thought gives him chills, a reunion that’s not real. A reunion that he’s so desperate for mocking him because he knows the dead have come back to life. This could very well be a fake hope that’s here to play tricks on him. If that’s the case then… it’s bittersweet because in the end he still did get to see Toro, right? “I’m.. from 2023. 11 years in the future, so.. to you it’s only been sixty eight years but for me? Seventy-nine long years.” Long, and gruesome. Those years have not been kind to Bucky. They’ve created an entire new person who’s looking for a man that maybe doesn’t even exist anymore. If anyone’s the ghost here, it’s Bucky. Bucky Barnes died in 1945 but his ghost was warped into something unrecognizable… at least in his own mind. He knows Steve would argue that fact until his face was blue.
Any worries he had about Toro being a hallucination is gone when he finally has him wrapped up in a hug. His grip is strong and he knows it, he’s clinging on as if he lets go this will all disappear. With his friend’s tears evident, Bucky’s own tears threaten to spill onto his cheeks. “You don’t even have to worry about that, Tom. I’m not going anywhere..” And that much is true he’ll fight tooth and nail to keep his family together after all these years. “You’re aren’t gonna die. We’re gonna figure this damn thing out together but I will not let that happen.” Bucky sniffles, pulling away just enough so he can look at Toro’s face. “You hear me? You ain’t going anywhere, you’re stuck with me again.”
It might not be the best conversation for them to be having while standing in front of a tombstone with Thomas’ name on it. He can’t blame anyone for thinking that his existence is a hallucination after being dead for almost eight decades. He always thought himself to be indestructible due to the nature of his Inhuman physiology, the flames that constantly burn within him that can cover his skin in an instant. The fire burns a constant seven hundred and eighty degrees and that’s always been enough even if he could always go hotter. When aflame all blades and bullets melt before touching his skin. Which became his favorite trick to use in the war even if that meant singing his uniform. He ended up having to roll up his sleeves. This became something like a shield, protecting not just himself but his best friends and fellow soldiers when the timing got tough. Thomas became so convinced that nothing could hurt him and that would become his downfall one day. Deep down he doesn’t regret dying for his country. He knows that this is all real, obvious by the way his heart is beating so quickly. “Slamming doors would just be rude. I’d knock and ask nicely to be invited in.” He laughs for a brief moment but doesn’t linger on the subject knowing it would be hard for his best friend. He always thought that they’d grow old together and share war stories with their grandkids. Thomas knows this isn’t possible. His wife remarried and he can’t bring himself to be upset. She deserved to be happy and doesn’t look her up since it wouldn’t be fair to reopen those old wounds if she were still alive. It was his time to move on. “Bucks . . . I had no idea.” His chest feels heavy with grief. His own grief.
Once Toro has arms wrapped around Bucky for an embrace it’s going to be difficult letting him go. He notices that the grip is stronger than he remembers but he’ll have plenty of time to ask what that means. Times have changed but no matter what has happened? This is his best friend . . . his brother. Nothing could change the fact he loves him like family. They grew up together in Brooklyn and so it brings him some peace knowing that there’s a familiar face here. “Everything is overwhelming.” He can’t rely completely on Bucky for everything with adjusting to this new time period but it helps knowing that there’s someone here who will understand why his behaviors are different from everyone else. He doesn’t understand how telephones can be carried around on these tiny rectangles in your pocket or what the internet is. Only two of many, many, many technological advancements that leave Toro more confused than anything. He’s sure there was someone talking to themselves in the street as if their friend was next to them but nobody was there. This world is odd but if he survived the war . . . he might be dead of old age before he got to see any of this. What a strange though that is. Unfortunately that isn’t how his life got to end, instead, fate took him much too early. “Thank you . . .” Tears soaking Bucky’s clothes some more.
“There was so much left that I wanted to do . . .” Thomas could have went to art school. He could study French literature and spend his evenings sketching. He always envisioned this as his way of spending his time after the war was won. Maybe have some children, chasing toddlers around the house who recently discovered that they can create fireballs. However, life took a different path. He’s learning to accept it little by little. “I don’t mind being stuck with you. I wouldn’t want it any other way. I appreciate you helping me figure out a way to stay.” They pull back a little, eyes red from how much crying he has been doing but wants Bucky to have the chance to really look at him. “How much have you been working out?” He’s teasing lightly, trying to open up the conversation to something other than his death.
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frxzenheart:
( @burnablc ) gaze lingers on the building longer than she intends, unable to bring herself to go inside. “ y’know, i’ve been by this place at least 4 times in the past week or so, ” she begins, talking to no one in particular, whoever was around. it was always difficult to go into any museum that honored war. but perhaps it was different this time for if she stepped inside there’d be no remembrance of her team, their sacrifice and contribution to the war, her sacrifices. “ just can’t bring myself to go in for some reason. ” she admits, smile faint. the feeling makes her feel weak, but she can’t help the memories that haunt her. “ embarrassin’, don’t y’think? ”
It seems Thomas isn’t the only one who hasn’t been able to bring himself to go into the museum. He feels nervous about learning what else happened in the war but he wants to know what happened. It was about learning how it ended. He died for his country and knew that deep down he would do it again. The universe seemed to have other plans and thought that Thomas deserved another chance. Which is how the man is standing here today outside of this museum. Going inside means facing all the sacrifices his fellow soldiers made over the years. His attention looks over at the woman next to him, a stranger, yet something is telling Thomas to talk to her. “Not embarrassing at all. I’ll tell you a secret . . . I’ve come by here a few times the past couple of days trying to get the courage to step inside. I’m a veteran . . . I fought in World War II in the army.” It feels strange to say it even though he had been in the forties fighting that war only several weeks ago. “I want to go inside but I’ve been too nervous to go in. Maybe we can go check it out together? I’m Thomas . . . it’s nice to meet you, ma’am.” He extends a hand for her to shake since they’re introducing themselves.
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ofcomplexities:
at least gamora wasn’t the only one who had no experience with things like this. “i always knew earth was a mess, i just didn’t know it was this bad,” she admitted. most of what she knew about earth was in regards to her inhabitants. this didn’t seem like their fault, but maybe she was wrong. “a drink would be nice,” she decided. she didn’t know if it would actually take the edge off, but it was worth a shot.
“There’s always something going on.” Thomas has seen some strange things in his lifetime but this is unlike any of those experiences. He remembers the days when Warrior Woman and Master Man were two of his greatest annoyances. Now there’s natural disasters that can flatten enormous parts of the city? He could use a shot before trying to spend the night lifting debris. He started walking in the direction of the bar, something that felt the most normal of anything going on. He drank during the war so why not during this crisis too? “If we’re going to be drinking together then you should know my name . . . I’m Toro.”
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mountebanks:
𝐀 𝐓𝐎𝐑𝐂𝐇 𝐋𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓𝐒 𝐔𝐏 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐒𝐊𝐘 above brooklyn. jim has not stepped foot in the borough in years, outside of one small grave plot ; he will not, for as long as he can help it. it’s toro’s home. it feels so empty without him, holding memories jim isn’t strong enough to face. the air up here bites too, filled with fond recollections, but it’s easier to ignore than concrete. he surveys the city below him, the glittering lights of 2012 - the shadows that lurk even in the brightness. he’s going to miss this place, he thinks. he’s going to miss all of it. jim starts to smile at the approach of another burst of light, warm. he assumes that it’s johnny, because who else could it be ? new york is his city, and toro is long dead, and toro is flying up to him now, as youthful as the day he died, and the smile slips right off jim’s face.
𝐇𝐄 𝐃𝐎𝐄𝐒𝐍'𝐓 𝐋𝐎𝐎𝐊 𝐀𝐍𝐆𝐑𝐘. he’s not angry. he couldn’t be. it’s the heartbroken disbelief of a long - mourning father, who stood at the funeral in front of an empty casket and barely resisted the urge to burn the entire place down. he shouldn’t be so surprised, perhaps, when he too has been snatched into this time from the jaws of death, but this is a thing he has never let himself dream of. they call it moving on, giving up the impossible hopes. jim knows well that he has not moved on, that it’s defeat instead that kills any dreams of resurrection. “ toro ? “ two syllables, and his voice breaks.
( for @burnablc. )
1923. The year of his seventh birthday but also when Toro would meet Jim for the first time at the circus. All it took was one handshake to activate his Inhuman physiology. It didn’t take much longer after that for the boy to be adopted by the older man who’s powers turned out to be an exact replica of his own. He began fighting crime alongside him. The public called him many things. Sometimes it was just Toro the Flaming Kid or other times grouped together with his father and they were just referred to as The Human Torches. The entire experience had brought a new light into his life and never regretted for an instant leaving the circus to follow Jim around the world. They ended up settling in Brooklyn for a while. It was better than being pointed at and ridiculed for being different. He could get a similar rush doing something more proactive with his abilities . . . like saving people! It became home. It’s where he had sleepovers with his two best friends. This is where they’d play in the street and Toro would melt tires on cars if they dared to come too close. He went to school here too and always asked for a cold Coca-Cola. There were so many good memories so it’s no wonder that here in 2012 that he decided to get a small apartment in the borough. What else is nice about this point in time? Nobody seems bothered by seeing him fly through the sky. He really likes that and maybe Bucky doesn’t have to remind him not to play with fire in public anymore like he used to when they were growing up.
There’s streak of flames trailing behind him, slowly fading the further that Thomas flies. He does a few flips, just admiring how free it feels getting to do this again. He didn’t always have time during the war. It’s nice to fly just to fly. The red, orange, and yellow colors cover his entire body, a familiarity that only a select few would know how it feels. Toro started calling himself Human Torch also in honor of his father since he couldn’t exactly call himself Flaming Kid anymore in adulthood. He doesn’t mind sharing the title with other people, knowing that this era has another one. He hasn’t met him though but maybe someday?
Right now, his focus is on the other flaming figure hovering in the air looking back at him. He stops in front of him, flames receding to reveal his face and the front of his body. Flickering heat blazes off his backside and feet to keep himself in the air still. He wants his father to really see his face. Toro knows how protective that the older man has always been of him so his mind can’t really wrap itself around how he must have reacted to the news back in 1944.
“Pappy?” His eyes are tearing up, no matter how old that Toro would get one thing that never changes is the love for Jim and how he’ll always need him. “It’s me. Remember how I’d always bring those comic books about us you hated on our vacations? I’d read them on the train and you would always tell me that you don’t want to see the horrible artwork. If I wasn’t me then how would I know something like that?” He tries not to talk too fast but getting to be close to the other again is all that he has wanted since showing up here. “I don’t understand anything that’s happening. It’s been a little scary actually and then I found out I’m supposed to die in a year and —“ He gets choked up, tears falling down his cheeks but they evaporate from the heat of his skin by the time they reach his jawline. “I just really missed you, pappy.”
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bleedvnghearts:
Bucky remembers that day clearly. War didn’t seem like a good time to celebrate a birthday, not that Bucky enjoyed his birthday all that much anyways. It was just another day to him, never big on gifts or his mother trying to bake up a nice cake. It just wasn’t worth the money or the trouble when the world was falling a part around them. Instead as kids he preferred just getting a root beer and playing in the water at the docks, spending time with Steve and Toro. War was no different, there wasn’t really a time to think about a birthday. To this day Bucky doesn’t know how Toro kept time long enough to remember his birthday but that’s a memory that sticks with him forever. Not more than a few weeks later he’d lose one of his best friends and never get the time to mourn because Hydra would get their hands on him. A tragedy if Bucky ever heard one.
“You’re no ghost, I know that much.” Bucky’s been a ghost. He’s been the ghost story that haunts the dreams of powerful men and women. A ghost story that lingers in Bucky’s very shadow, a reminder. The memory is a little fuzzy around the edges, many memories still are. But he remembers that haunted house, eyes full of glee at the very thought of ghosts. Oh how the tides change, once a child so keen on meeting a ghost, now a man who’s haunted by them everywhere he goes. He’d say he’s afraid of ghosts now, only because the ones that haunt him are one’s that have died by his hand. It’s hard to look at Toro for a moment, because while his friend hasn’t changed Bucky has. If Toro had his eyes closed, he doubt he would think Bucky to be the same person. “But now it’s 2012. This is… actually the past to me.” He breathes out finally looking up at Toro. “It’s been 79 years.” The words come choked, Bucky didn’t even realize he started crying. 79 years is a long time and just about 70 of those years had been nothing but torture. He never got mourn, not really. But maybe he doesn’t have to. It a few short steps, Bucky pulls Toro into a hug. It’s almost bone crushing but Bucky doesn’t care. Toro is here.. and he’s real. That’s all that matters.
War definitely isn’t an ideal time for celebrations of any kind but Thomas has managed to keep a certain softness about him despite all of the tragedy that has happened throughout his life. Maybe that was his specialty, being able to see all of the light in the dark. He didn’t know that would be the last time they would have a night to themselves. It wasn’t easy getting a few hours away from their responsibilities but Toro always tried his hardest to find some to spare for an opportunity to make his best friend smile. They grew up together too, living close by in Brooklyn. Bucky and Steve were his first friends and they weren’t afraid of him. He remembers being so nervous about losing them because in the twenties it frightened people at first to have two people covered in flames flying around New York. Many started seeing them as heroes and they even had their own comic books printed about their adventures but Toro could never forget the look on civilians faces when seeing his form. However, none of those expressions ever stopped him from doing the right thing. Helping people was essentially his job and he enjoyed getting to save the day while punching all the bad guys — with his father’s supervision most of the time. It makes sense for that to be the reason behind his death. He died doing what he does best — BEING A HERO.
It doesn’t make it entirely easier to wrap his head around though . . . there’s so much left that he wants to do. “I’m relieved that I’m not a ghost. I wouldn’t be a very good one. I’d scare one person then feel bad and start apologizing.” Thomas prefers being alive. He wants to scream at the world all about how he’s still here. He decides to keep these moments private instead. Theres people to track down, hell, see if anyone that he did know is still alive. Would they understand? How would Toro explain coming back from the dead to those that weren’t used to unusual circumstances? It’s obvious the more his eyes observe his best friend that time has changed him but that can be said for anyone. He missed out on so much and just hopes there’s still a place for him somewhere in any of this. He worries though, Bucky seems tired — wanting nothing more than to pull him in close and let him talk all about what has happened to him. He has his own tragedies and trauma whether it was from the war, the train crash, or any of those times he had been kidnapped growing up by some villainous character. Toro wouldn’t want to be forced to talk about any of those experiences so he won’t expect that of Bucky. He’ll be here ready and waiting for whenever the time is right and his friend wants to open up. “Seventy-nine years? I thought it was only sixty-eight . . .” His words trail off, looking at the tombstone, a certain sadness in his eyes while the realization sets in that he’s been gone a lot longer than he thought. It makes his chest feel heavy, just strange at the engravings again and aright, a few tears can be seen.
Once turning back to Bucky he’s wrapped up in a hug. He wraps his arms around his best friend and doesn’t want to let go. No matter what may have happened in the last eight decades, this is still someone that’s close enough to him like a brother. He squeezes him tightly, fingers gripping onto the back of Bucky’s shirt like he’s a lifeline. “This is the past for you but it’s the future for me.” Any questions can be answered in time, just wanting to enjoy this moment. He continues to hold onto him, leaning down slightly during their embrace. “I don’t know what I would do without you here.” Now they’re both crying and he’s pretty sure they’re both going to have tearstained shirts after this. “I don’t want to die, Bucks.” He’s crying more, unable to make himself stop just yet.
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STATUS: closed starter for steve rogers
There’s an old black and white photograph in his hands, the imagery is of him standing with his two childhood best friends. Toro is in the middle with this cheesy grin on his face while his arms are wrapped around Steve and Bucky who are on either side of him. This is when they were teenagers before the war and how quickly everything changed. He feels grateful to have this memory. His father gave this photograph to him. He thinks this was before they went to sleep in that haunted house in their neighborhood. Toro smiles and for a moment is so focused on this photo that he doesn’t realize someone is approaching the bench he’s sitting on. There’s no way anyone would still recognize him from all those comic books published about him or the war propaganda that he did, right? The twenties, thirties, and forties were a long time ago. Which is still a strange feeling for him to accept. He can’t wrap his head around any of it yet and being this far into the future makes him feel like all of his accomplishments were only good for history books. “I miss these days.” He finally spoke out loud, mostly to himself, but if anyone else happened to be close enough? They would have heard him too.
[ @falsegcds ]
#CONVO // STEVE#001 // STEVE#reunion time baby#i thought about making the photo of them all in the war together but#this was cuter thank you
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saviormonster:
they had been doing so well. that’s all they can think as they see him, sharp disappointment as that familiar, panicked feeling begins to rise in their chest. they had been doing so well lately — their mind had felt clearer, there were less bursts of uncalled for anger or fear, less lost comrades lurking around corners, triggered by loud noises or bursts of light. & now … this. & now him. another friend they watched die, though less — bloody, seemingly. less accusing than usual. almost happy. it’s odd, but not enough to make it seem any different than what has plagued them for decades now. there’s something uncharacteristically pained in their eyes, unwilling to look at him straight on, jaw set. ❝ hello again, raymond. ❞ again. again, again. quiet, resigned. ❝ not today. i am too busy for ghosts. ❞ they almost want to say please, but — namor does not beg. not even their own mind will make them beg.
“You’re always so formal. You can call me Toro . . .” The two of them might be making a scene by having this conversation while hovering over the city. The people living in 2012 seem to be less terrified of the sight of fire covering someone’s skin than what Thomas grew up with. He remembers the stares and whispers in terror. He was thrown into a sideshow act so people could gasp and point at him. He was only a child, no older than seven-years-old at that point in his life. Jim saved him from all of that and being his sidekick was better than any circus act. He remembers the stories of people being afraid of his father too but this strange new world? People aren’t running away. Thomas likes that and hopes that at the end of everything he’s allowed to stay. “Ghosts? I’m really here! You’re one of the few people that really knew me. I don’t understand this new world, Namor.” Anyone still alive from the war are a select few. “Please, believe me. Whoever is behind this took me right out of 1943. My death hasn’t happened yet . . .”
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bleedvnghearts:
“You’ll have to be more specific, because just about every story she had involved you and Bucky getting lost in some comical way… She loved telling stories of you guys. I know she would have been the first person here to see you.” And maybe that’s why she came so fast. She knew her grandmother would have been the first person in line to give the man a hug. It was a shame there are now two people she never got to see before she passed. Ryoko remembers the day they found Cap, she’d never see her grandmother so happy about meeting up with an old friend. “Oh, thank you.” The woman gives him a warm smile as she follows him in. “I always thought Toro was a cute name, you know. How did you come by such a nickname?” It’s nice to be in a quiet place, it always feels like Ryoko is surrounded by people, always been asked to do things. In a strange way being sent back in time has made things quieter, a little more peaceful. But Ryoko has to wonder if it has anything to do with the fact that she’s not a celebrity here like she is back home. “I know you’re best friends with the biggest names in superheroes but… if you need any help with anything.. I’ll be around for awhile.”
“We really did get lost often. Vehicles in the forties didn’t have any of the fancy technology that exists now. All we had was pure instinct or if you were lucky enough, a map.” Thomas is smiling fondly at the memory but for him it wasn’t too long ago that this was his reality. “Often both of us forgot that I’m able to fly until Bucks was yelling at me to go scout ahead since we were lost. Which often meant I was stripping out of part of my uniform and leaping out of the window. I didn’t flame on until my feet were out of the moving car though.” Always living life dangerously. Thomas moves into the kitchen and places the kettle onto the stove. His gaze turning to look at Ryoko while waiting for it to whistle. Even the equipment in the kitchens are different. “My biological parents honeymooned in Mexico. I was born nine months later so they gave me the nickname Toro, which is Spanish for bull. Apparently it was a private joke since they saw bullfights on their honeymoon.” It’s one of the few memories that he has of them. His hands hold onto the counter, smiling over at his company. “You know I can always use some help navigating this new world. Maybe you can help me pick out some new outfits? My sense of style is outdated.”
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bleedvnghearts:
Bucky visits Thomas often. Things that keep him died to his past make him feel a little more in control, a little more himself. Even though it’s a sad sight, it brings back good memories. Memories of best friends in old army tents and the singe of fire on the hairs of his skin. That burn would be welcome again any day, that and the sadness that comes with it. Even mourning is an emotion that Bucky welcomes after having nothing for so many years. However, mourning isn’t really what’s happening here. More so confusion. Out of all the time he’s visited, he’s never seen anyone else. He’s the one leaving the flowers, keeping it clean. He’s not sure why anyone be here now. Bucky approaches cautiously, not sure what he should expect with whoever is lingering at his friend’s grave. A part of him doesn’t want anyone else to be here, this is his time to mourn not having to share this time with anyone else. However as he nears… a funny sort of feeling fills his chest. A familiar voice makes his hair stand on end. “Thomas?” He says. “Toro?” His voice a little more distressed than it was a moment before. “I.. I don’t either. – But Jesus Christ. You’re here?”
His tombstone seems to be well taken care of. Which surprises Thomas since it wasn’t like he had any children to carry on a legacy. His only family for many years growing up had been Jim, an android who’s blessed with immortality, who adopted him from a young age. They traveled all over the country helping out whoever needed The Human Torches. He remembers hearing all the stories about how his father wasn’t received well at first, the thought of a man who was covered in flames didn’t go over well with the public. Humans were afraid but eventually some of them changed their minds. Bucky Barnes came into his life soon after and had been the first person his own age that didn’t treat him like a freak. It was nobody’s surprise when they became the best of friends. Jim even started treating the other boy like his own son and Bucky would call him ‘pa’ instead of anything else. They’re all good memories but that doesn’t leave many options for who could be responsible or maintaining his tombstone. It’s large, taller than him even and a statue of himself is on the top. Time has been kind to his resting place. Thomas just wishes that he could have lived longer. It makes sense seeing his best friend here, makes him realize who has been helping clean the place and leave fresh flowers.
“I’m here. I don’t . . . I don’t know how since yesterday we were having a belated birthday celebration for you. I know you don’t like grand gestures but we snuck off for some drinks anyway. You helped me back to my cot before anyone noticed and then I woke up here. I’m no ghost. Remember when you made us spend the night in a haunted house? You said it would help us build up some iron nerves. We heard a sound upstairs and you made us go investigate. I’ve never seen you so excited. If I wasn’t real then how would I know that? It’s me. I’m confused but . . . I’m here.” He looks at the tombstone again, grief washing over his face. “I was in 1943 . . . but now . . .” He sighs, not wanting to say it since that makes it so real but sometimes you have to. “I found out I was going to die in a year. Bucks, why is there a giant statue of me on top?” His hand gestures to the monument in question before his eyes look back at Bucky. “It’s been a long time for you, hasn’t it?”
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saviormonster:
open for all / @rewrittenstart !
namor launches out of the harbor at an inhuman speed, ignores the gasps & stares of onlookers as he hovers a few inches over the docks, the way gazes follow him even as he moves further into the city. he hates new york city water ; so polluted, filthy, corrupted by carelessness. his lip curls slightly with distaste as he examines the block that had been turned into wreckage, that is beginning to rebuild, a faint sheen of water making him nearly glow. ❝ nearly every time i come here, someone has demolished a new section of this city. it’s beginning to become almost impressive. ❞ he sounds anything but impressed.
The familiar sound of water splashing onto the docks and gasps of onlookers is familiar to Thomas, having witnessed such reactions many times over the years. He turns around to try catching a glimpse of his old friend. He knows that this won’t be easy seeing a teammate you’ve lost many, many decades in the past. He needs some familiarity in this strange new world. He has his father and best friend but Toro wants to reunite with everyone that was close to him. Flames surround his feet and spread to cover his legs and stop at his waist. The ground singes while Thomas hovers in front of Namor, smoke coming off the souls of his feet. “There was an earthquake? I think I missed it but you have no idea how happy I am to see you, Namor.”
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